35 Burst results for "Jerry Jerry"

Rep. Nehls Shuts Down Rep. Nadler, Calls for AG Garland's Impeachment

The Dan Bongino Show

02:00 min | 14 hrs ago

Rep. Nehls Shuts Down Rep. Nadler, Calls for AG Garland's Impeachment

"This decision making process correct so this is a really bad thing now i want you to watch and listen to the answer listen to the answer i was thinking on the podcast this is the answer but halfway through you can hear something you know twinkies jerry nadler the guy who uh... crap wrapped himself on the stage at a member that the wattle over the wattle you had like a diaper on some it really happen i show it to you but it's a radio show he's on the stage of you've never seen it is put in any search engine like uh... jerry nadler soils himself on stage and he's got a wattle off jerry nadler it's like the most cringy thing you've ever seen i owe you know where at my eyes go my eyes go down to the ankle cuz i mike is something like you know who's got to go somewhere so jerry nadler clearly an had accident so yesterday twinkies nadler thinks he's gonna interrupt nels who is definitely an alpha male and uh... nels is having none of it as he tells him to piped this out mister general what you just saw there was joe biden in his arrogance and role as the vice president in this country saying if you don't fire shokin the united states isn't given the one billion dollar loan why i would joe biden say that is the vice president why would he say such a thing was it policy was it our policy at the time yes or it wasn't i have documents here inter -agency policy committee dated information is the gentleman ever going to let the time on my time pipe down saying shocking had on the long -term reform texas he's made significant reforms choking did matter -of -fact john says he was impressive and you know within a few months after shocking was fired the appointed prosecutor that's it we're not going to look in the burisma anymore cancel it forget it we're not looking in the burisma boom here here comes the million dollars joe biden threaten the ukrainian president prime minister everybody can see it the fire shocking or the united states will get the billion dollars if that is not quick pro pro sir what is i i will tell you what it is in america agrees with me it's bribery and it's impeachable are you going to do something about

Joe Biden John America One Billion Dollar Billion Dollars Yesterday Jerry Nadler Million Dollars Prime Minister Ukrainian Nels President Trump Nadler Texas Mike Vice President Months United States FEW Policy
A highlight from Ep379: The 5 Fs Podcasters Shouldn't Neglect - Jerry Dugan

The Podcast On Podcasting

18:50 min | 20 hrs ago

A highlight from Ep379: The 5 Fs Podcasters Shouldn't Neglect - Jerry Dugan

"Be consistent with who you're speaking to, what you're posting off. Still show yourself and be a guest on other shows, especially if the show is like yours, because those listeners will also want more and more variety and they'll come to you for that. Most hosts never achieved the results they hoped for. They're falling short on listenership and monetization, meaning their message isn't being heard and their show ends up costing them money. This podcast was created to help you grow your listenership and make money while you're at it. Get ready to take notes. Here's your host, Adam Adams. What's up, podcaster. It's your host, Adam Adams. And today I'm joined with Jerry Dugan from Beyond the Rut. And Jerry's passionate about supporting business leaders, helping them with different things like work -life balance. So one of the questions that I'm going to ask, does work -life balance even exist? Because I'll tell you it's very polarized. On one end, everybody's like, you have to balance, you have to balance. And then I read this other book that said, no, it's not balanced. It's switch tasking. You go here all the way, then you go here all the way. And then there's other people that say you have to be out of balance for a certain amount of time. So I'm really curious just to start there. Jerry Beyond the Rut supports people with a life worth living in faith, family, and career. So a lot of the listeners that you have are probably around my age and your age that are probably struggling with the work -life balance and making sure that they are putting enough to their faith and their family and their career. And I love that. I want to ask, why do you think work -life balance is real? And what have the other people said? Yes, ultimately, I think they're all saying the same thing. Like if you really break down to what, like, even the folks that say there's no such thing as work -life balance, what they're ultimately saying is like, we make life choices based on our priorities. And when I talk about work -life balance, I'm saying the same thing. One of my hope is that when you're on your deathbed, I already know you're not going to say, man, I wish I did one more launch of my program or man, I wish I was at inbox zero more days in my life. You're going to say things more like, I wish I had one more day to spend with my grandkids and my great grandchildren. I would have loved to have been there for my daughter's wedding or for my son's wedding, whatever it is. And in serving in combat and knowing some folks who worked in hospice care, that is the thing that they hear over and over again, that people wish they had more time to be with the people they love and on the flip side, when they have the people they love, they wish they succeeded more in their career. And so it's like, what if you could win in all of that? What if you could take your career as far as you can and not sacrifice your family at the same time? And so you look at what's important to you and how are your current activities impacting those areas of your life? How are you doing with your family life? You know, okay, work's taking a lot out of me. Okay. Is that a permanent thing or is this a temporary thing? If it's temporary, then you talk it over with your partner and you decide from there, like, okay, yeah, this is temporary. What's the deadline? What does success look like? And what's the bailout trigger that says, all right, we're not hitting these measures doesn't look like we will let's scrap that and go another direction. So that to me, that is why I'm a big fan of work -life balance. It's not just strictly. I spend so many hours at work, so many hours at home. It really is. How is getting out early impacting all the things? Am I going to miss my children's big school events? What's that impact if I do? And what's the message I send? Because I'll tell you from personal experience, I was a lot of kids, superheroes, because I would volunteer my kids' school for a day and their dad had to go to work and it's not the same thing against their dad, because why did the dad go to work? Because he wanted to provide for his family. And so the motivation for a good thing for the family was there, but there wasn't that balance to, I also want to communicate to my child that my child is important. I want to communicate to my partner that she's important. And so it's, how do you win at all those things? And how do you find the right company that will support you as a person while also supporting you and your career growth and getting you to perform well to help the company also succeed? It's like, there's a way to find all that. I want to hear a tip or two. And I'm thinking you and I talked a little bit about this before we first press record. You were talking about the checkbox and a lot of us, we got a checklist and we're checking off all the boxes and it's seems like we're checking off all the boxes. It feels like when we look at the checklist, it's pretty much full, but we might not feel fulfilled even at the expense of checking off lots of boxes. So if that's us, we're listening and we're trying to think of what is it that we think we've had success on paper, but we don't really feel it. We don't really feel like we're everywhere we need to do. What's one or two tips for the listener to be able to feel like they're doing the right thing right now? I think the first thing is you got to know who you are and that's the big broad umbrella piece of advice. Know who you are, what is valuable to you? Like, what do you believe in? What do you not believe in? It's if you believe in respecting the dignity of every person, then that is key. If you value time with family, then your calendar should reflect that. If you value being a supportive person for your family, does that go beyond just monetary support? And so knowing your values, I think is very huge. What is your vision, your purpose in life? I have a couple of mottos I live by. One is the Dugan crest motto. So somebody around the 1500s and it's a miracle that the Dugans are still around because apparently these guys called the Saxons came into like Ireland and almost wiped us all out, but like good Irish people, we stuck around. And so that's not important. The important thing is somebody added to the family crest. Oh man, it's by virtue and valor. So for Tute et valore, and it sounds cooler when it's Latin. I hope I said it right. So that's one thing I live by is am I living my life according to my family's crest motto, am I living by virtue? Am I living by valor being courageous to do what's right when even nobody's looking. But then from there, I had a vision that I wanted my children to live a life that was better than mine, but also be set up to be better adults than I was to have better successes than I did to know who they are and to feel comfortable pursuing their own dreams. Like that's in a written vision that I have tucked away on Evernote somewhere. So you got to have something like that. Like, what do you stand for? What is life like for you when you die? And I love talking about these things called the five Fs, your faith, your family, your fitness, your finances, and your own future growth or possibilities. Like looking at your life through those lenses, what does success look like for you? So I guess that's the second one is defining a second, Jerry. I missed an F F that I got faith. I got family. I got finances. I got fitness. And what did I miss? Emily, faith, finances, and fitness, future possibilities, future possibilities, always growing to be better today than you were yesterday. And then what's that future state of yourself you'd like to become. And so being a constant learner is that future possibilities. One reading books that are outside your usual norm, listening to podcasts that are outside your norm, being open to ideas that are not typically in your bucket or wheelhouse either a, to see how your own ideas and beliefs stack up, because sometimes like I myself had gone through life and realized, oh wow, I held onto this belief and I met three people who completely challenged that is my belief wrong or is it just not as strong as I thought it was, is there more context? I needed to add. And, and so sometimes I realized I was completely wrong about something. And other times I realized, oh, I was missing a lot of context here. I believe this, but only in this context, because I also believe this and my belief should not undermine somebody else's right to be who they are. And so it's like, oh yeah, okay. I can wrap my head around that. And I can be a decent person in my community that way. And so that, yeah, the future possibility is that a bit more unpacked, I should have put that in. Have you ever heard of, I think it's Gino Wickman and I hope I'm not wrong. And he wrote like three books. One was like, I'm going to just type in Gino Wickman. This is going to be the easy way. Then I'll sound so smart instead of dumb Gino Wick man. All right. So he wrote three books. Yes. Yes. What the heck is E O S he wrote traction and he wrote what it's not showing me the last one traction, what the heck is EOS and there's another one called rocket fuel. Okay. So these three books are interesting and it kind of is what you're talking about, but in more of a business category. And so I think this is really great to extract it and bring us to the listener in rocket fuel, what the heck is EOS and traction, ultimately what Gino Wickman talks about is your business should have a culture or have values that you all live by. And so it's interesting because when we look at all of the things that we can value, let's just pretend that I don't know the number. I'm just going to say that it's 20 values. There's 20 things that are good. And most people would agree with 18 or 19 of them. So one would be honesty, but at what expense are we going to be rude and honest? Another one might be politeness. Another one might be doing the right thing. Even when it hurts, you kind of mentioned your integrity. Even when people are not looking, am I going to be doing this with my family crest and everything? So the Gino Wickman also talks about like all of these things that we can value. And most of them are important to everyone. Honesty, of course, that sounds right, but not everybody puts that at the top of their value. Maybe they put discretion, maybe they put kindness above it, or maybe they put honesty above kindness and et cetera, et cetera, they might put doing the right thing, even when it hurts as one of the top values. And so in RocketFuel and EOS and Traction, Gino talks about how we need to build our team, our company culture around where all of us agree on these main values. Like we value making money, we value serving the client, we value X, Y, or Z. All of them are good, but which one is in the hierarchy? And so when I'm hearing you, you basically gave me two things. The first one is you got to know who you are. You got to know your culture. You got to know your values. What do you believe in? And you talked about by virtue and valor. What do you believe in? What matters to you? And then you focus on it and you bring people along. And the second one is a written vision. Like you actually write down the vision where you put in faith, family, finances, fitness, and future possibilities, and you figure out how are you doing these? How does this work for you? And you write it down because everybody's vision, like a fingerprint has to be different. Everybody's culture or their values have to be a little bit different, how they put them. And for you, you're saying a way that you can check off the boxes is to just know exactly what the heck the boxes are in the first place. Know which things matter to you and get rid of the rest. So you can really focus on those. And I thought that was really interesting because not only can we do it in our business, we can do it on our podcast. And as you've illustrated, we can do it with our family, with our own lives, our personal lives. So I thought that was really, really beautiful. I appreciate you going into that before we move on to anything, something that I missed or something else you want to share about being able to check off those boxes and feel really good about it, even that person who might be listening might feel like it looks like they're checked off, but they don't feel completely fulfilled. Yeah. Similarly to how business, they have their strategic plan that pushes them and they make big decisions off of that. Does this activity support the strategic initiative of this organization? And the answer is yes, they keep pushing forward with some adjustments. If it doesn't, they're like, well, then why are we doing that? Let's cut that out and let's restructure and reorganize. And it's cool to see that there are these business and even podcasting principles and practices that help us create a better podcast, create a better business, and we don't realize how easily we can just transfer those same skill sets into our very lives. And so it's the same thing. You know, how many people do we know who are physicians who hate being a physician? I can think of two or three or somebody who became a lawyer because the money was good and they quit being a lawyer because they realized that wasn't fulfilling for them or me, I left my corporate job because I realized I didn't want to start all over again and build something that belonged to somebody else and it was time to go after my dreams. So even my mom like kept encouraging me to become a doctor. I was a pre -med student. I'm not a doctor now because I did not do well as a pre -med student, but I realized later on it's because that was never my dream. That was my mom's dream. She wanted me to be a doctor. She wanted to be able to live vicariously through me and what she wanted success to be, and once I realized, Oh gosh, I don't want to be a doctor. What do I want to be? Of course, now it took a 10 year journey for me to realize what I did want to be, but I got there, man. That's that's important. So anyway, that was it. Yeah. You're willing to walk away from something really good stuff. I want to move into just your podcast journey now for the listener. I'll point out a couple of things that I'm seeing with your podcast. Hey, I think it, haven't you been doing it for like eight years? Yeah, this particular year, eight years. Yeah. Amazing. So with eight years, over 400 episodes and a lot of traction, not going back to Gina Wickman, a lot of traction on your podcast success, I think that we've got a couple of listeners that haven't quite been doing it for eight years, they may have been doing it for a year or two, they're new. And they would like to have the type of success that you've got with your podcast. So I'm like to get a couple of takeaways, what you've done, what you've learned, what you would do differently. First, a quick word from our sponsor, but when we get back, I really want you to focus on what made your podcast successful so that the listeners podcasts can also be successful. We'll be right back. Hey, my friend, as you know, this episode is sponsored by my company, growyourshow .com. We want you to be able to have the best tools at your disposal without costing you a whole arm and a leg. So right now you can get a free list of vetted equipment that like mics, mixers, webcams, sound treatment, editing software, everything that you need. I created the whole PDF with direct purchase links, just to save you time and money to help it be more convenient for you. So this free PDF will help you skip all the guesswork. If it's on there, it's vetted and approved by yours truly. And if it's not on there, it's probably not worth the money. So go ahead and get yours at growyourshow .com forward slash PDF. Let's get back into the show. We're back with Jerry Dugan. And we've talked a little bit about work -life balance, helping leaders with work -life balance, making sure that you're checking all the boxes and feeling fulfilled and the five F's and his family crest, which I don't even remember what it said in Latin. I think it was Latin, but it really means by virtue and valor. And I wanted to talk about now, how is his podcast so fricking well known and he's doing a great job. He's getting a lot of success through the podcast. And hopefully you'll be able to take away a couple of things that can support you in a successful podcast as well. Jerry, what do you think made your podcast? Yeah, a lot of what I'm seeing really is in the last year, year and a half, really. So I jokingly tell folks, but I'm not joking that it seems like I did year one, seven times, and then finally I had year eight happen all at once. So it's no overnight success kind of thing. I think the first thing that really helped was when there was a team of three of us. So we started off with three of us. We all agreed on one thing other than the name of the show. And that was the avatar of the show. So we have an avatar that we named AJ. He's 35 years old, married to his college sweetheart. He has two kids that they both have together. One's in elementary school. One's in middle school. AJ has a mid -level leadership career going on with a corporation in a metro area. And got the car, got the house, got the six figure income, but feels stuck in life. And so from there, we start to unravel how AJ feels stuck. There's the commute to work. There's the no real future in the job he's in. Not really making any progress. Wants to be a good family man when he gets home, but he's just drained of energy. And this cycle is putting a strain on his marriage. The kids feel like he doesn't love him, which is so far from the truth. So how does AJ live the life that he really wanted to live in his faith, in his family, in his fitness, finances, and his future? And so that's what we did when we came together to start the show. Now where we had a lot of weak spots, and I feel we did the first seven years over and over again, was that when you listened to the early episodes, we were all over the place, we didn't really stick to that mantra. Like what does AJ really need? And I hate to say it, but it wasn't until like the other two guys quit from the show that I realized, Oh, we're so far from what we wanted to do, who we wanted to help. And so how do I get there? And so year six, really going into year seven was how do I niche this down? I worked with a couple of different groups that really helped me start to niche that down. Jerry, you're helping specifically this demographic. You're helping them specifically with things like work -life balance and really having a mapped out future or a vision for their future focus on that. Okay. What kind of guests should I have? And so this kind of leads into the second one, which was that pairing down that niching down. So the first one was having that vision of who I wanted to help. The second one was really paring down and niching down. How am I going to help AJ? And once I started to see that a bunch of doors opened up and the third thing was I needed to get the word out there. So the marketing piece, I threw stuff out there for the first seven years, but really it's in this last year that I've been more intentional about it. The posts that I put out there on social media are aimed at AJ. The shows I appear on are aimed at AJ and you know, as that guest appearance on other shows, I think so far in the last 10 months, I've been on almost 70 other podcasts and to the point where now I'm starting to feel like I'm in alternate realities down. Like, how do I know Adam Adams? Oh yeah, I was on his show. All right, there we go. We talked about this, this, and this, or how do I know, Deirdre? Oh yeah, I'm here, here and here. It's just all that starting to overlap. But anyway, those would be the big three is know who you're serving. The second thing is truly niche down. Even if you have a lot of passions, interests, try to stick to one thing and just kind of lit little dose of yourself, sprinkle into your episodes. That way people know what they're getting when they come to your show. And then the third thing, I know I just said it. Marketing.

Adam Adams Gina Wickman Two Kids AJ Jerry Dugan 20 Things 10 Year Three Books 20 Values Gino Wickman Two Guys 18 Eight Years 19 Emily Jerry Yesterday Growyourshow .Com Three People First
A highlight from Ep.118 - Rewind to 1967: The Year That Changed Music Forever

Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast

20:20 min | 1 d ago

A highlight from Ep.118 - Rewind to 1967: The Year That Changed Music Forever

"Well here we are episode 118 I think I think I forgot to list a few this might be like episode 120 or 121 I don't know I guess that's a good thing when you do so many you lose count anyway on this episode we're gonna be talking about the year in music 1967 and as usual I have the wrecking two in the house Mark Smith and Lou Colicchio of the music relish show very interesting yeah a lot happened sit back relax it's gonna be another two and a half hour podcast but we love it enjoy the show the KLFB studio presents milk rate and turntables a music discussion podcast hosted by Scott McLean now let's talk music enjoy the show yes let's talk music thank you Amanda for that wonderful introduction as usual welcome back my friends to the show that never ends welcome to the podcast you know the name I'm not gonna say it was streaming live right now over Facebook YouTube X formerly known as Twitter twitch D live and again I always I don't know how many other things and this podcast will be heard on every podcast platform yeah yeah 1967 so it was quite a year think you're in for a little little ride tonight yeah and you know who wasn't born in night oh he was three in 1967 marksmen from the music relish show good evening I was two years from being on this earth so you weren't even really thought of no you thought of it 67 think of that think of that yeah you weren't even thought of you weren't even like a sparkle in as they say in your father's eye there might have been the beginning of a sparkle who knows so let me see I'm looking at my is my screen still fuzzy on my end but I'm not even seeing it on YouTube right now I'm seeing it's live but I just got the image of the vinyl really yeah what the hell wait wait wait wait yeah no it's on it's on I see it I see it but my screen looks fuzzy right yeah that's how I'm seeing you from my end yeah what the hell let me check something here hold on okay let's do a little in show my you know that smooth little March of colors next to you when you open up the show yeah happy it's all like gone really weird I'm looking at this right let's go back to this see what happens I'm supposed to be in 1080 and I'm looking at it right now now you're sharp you just got sharp it goes back and forth it's a strange see like hearing yourself huh I guess I don't know what do a refresh here I'm playing it right Tom Benwald says it looks good patty says it's blurry that was in the beginning and it looks like it's sharp now so it goes back and forth you're starting to get blurry again it's strange got any storms down there no this this would this will drive me crazy now this is it's not supposed to be like this come on it's like a Grateful Dead show warts and all rice we're talking about 1967 there's no digital so it was still waiting for Luda come on so you know I'm going to do I hate doing this but I'm going to do it to you buddy what's that no don't cut me I'm not cutting you I'm gonna I'm gonna hit a refresh which might take me off the screen so the show is yours for about I don't know 60 seconds let's see what happens here let's see reload I'm gonna reload it so I'm going off the screen I guess it's time to advertise the music roll show with my friend Perry and my friend Lou we discuss opera we have fun how am I now you look better look yeah yeah looks better yep and I just advertised my podcast is that the opera I'll pay you I'll give you the money later on then I lose my this is like okay here we go you look better though all right good yeah good you know me I the technical stuff drives me crazy especially you know it's not only sound it has to be oh it's this is a live stream so it has to look yeah good and you don't want to drop out in the middle of the show no like me and Lou do once in a while race right let's see is the chat working let's see now I'm not seeing any I'm not seeing any comments so let me try this well sorry for the podcast listeners but I gotta get this shit right hey it's okay I should be seeing I should be seeing comments because people have already made three comments you over here maybe they're bored and they don't want to comment anymore no it's there it should be showing up on my screen over here right we know that my boss you busting balls only Bono does that let's see public so it should be getting huh this is crazy seven minutes in and I'm here we haven't done anything yet let me see send comment test I just sent a text to message I see I see you as I see mine okay good we're good we're good let me switch over to my other account and do the same thing I just want to make sure yes just our audience is bored they don't want to comment actually this is all Lou's fault yeah yeah always the you know I would probably lost the other comments is because I rebooted so hmm all right well you know what we're gonna start without Lou right as I say that as I say that does he have what does he what do you let's get the full screen nose is that why you were late you had to clean your nose and he's back in Paris again you brown nose er I've been a bad dog my laptop and he's back in pair you left here in Paris you must have left it back in the United States I did I left on the plane how you doing Lou I'm doing alright how are you guys doing well I just had a little technical difficulty and we blamed you because you weren't here so you left me alone and I had to talk opera with myself talked opera yeah rigoletto did you talk about rigoletto this time I'm just really boring you know I'm like all right this is why this is a two and a half hour podcast some of us have to work tomorrow all right here we go let's jump right into 1967 musical events in 1967 and the year kicks off right away with a bomb a bomb on January 4th the doors release can arguably one of the greatest debut records ever arguably if you had a top 25 greatest debut that albums would have to be in the top 10 it would have to be yeah you know if you had a top 50 that would have to be in the top 10 right even if you don't like them you have to say that was so ahead of its time oh it's so different nothing out there was like the needle and all you hear it kicks I mean fucking what a way to start an album it's a heavy song it with a bossa nova beat yeah I mean that's pretty clever yeah 67 so you know bossa nova was pretty hip again John Densmore over underrated underrated underappreciated I think you are you are so correct you know never gets the the the consideration that I I don't know you can't put him in greatest of all time but could he be okay if there's a top there's a top 25 drummer top 25 drummers is he in it good question and in rock we'll just say in rock I think he could be I could see him making so I don't know if he's a universal pick but I could see him on some list I mean he's something you'd have to think about like you said like it doesn't get noticed so much you know yeah yeah or it I mean although his drumming wasn't shy I mean he's jazzy as hell I heard um writers on the storm yesterday and his adjustment playing is great in his adjustments during the shows just for that yeah yeah the unpredictability of you know how the how the song was gonna go right because they could rehearse it all they want once Morrison got into that zone well in the drama keeps the beat right yeah yeah the drummer has to stay up with that yeah and played to the clown so to speak right you know and my my problem is if some of the clowns don't have the beat you know at one point they've got to give in like I said Morrison or even Dylan they'll set the tone but they've got to be steady themselves you know it's yeah otherwise it's just erratic but you know yeah guy like Dan's more I mean I had skill I had a lot of a lot of technical ability right feel yes cool so obviously his drums always sounded good yeah on the earlier on the other records even you know three years worth of music whatever I guess I would be who produced some Jack Holtzman was the producer did a good job Jekyll or now wait so no what was it Paul Rothchild yes yes yes I'm sorry Holtzman was he on the record company yeah yeah was that it was that chrysalis or chrysalis I think or just like yes that's a lecture a lecture weren't they on chrysalis though also I thought they were yeah maybe maybe chrysalis was a subsidiary but uh yeah Jack Holtzman's son is Adam Holtzman he's a keyboardist right now he plays with here we go Stephen Wilson but he does a little blog on Facebook and he talks about growing up and he was like six years old and his father brought him to a club to see the tour Wow at six years old he just talks about like yeah it's a great little blog Wow all right and four days later on January 8th Elvis Presley turned 32 on January 14th the human be in right the human be e -i -n human being takes place in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park polo fields with spoken words from Timothy Leary Allen Ginsberg Gary Snyder in others live music was provided by Jefferson Airplane the Grateful Dead Big Brother in the holding company and Quicksilver Messenger Service speeches from Jerry Rubin and others were also given at the event although it's one band there I liked yeah Quicksilver Messenger Service who was it on January 15th 1967 who is your favorite poet of all them I know you're not asking me Arthur Rimbaud who influenced Jim Morrison good answer good answer way to bring that first opening segment rough full circle we're getting better Scott we're good now you guys get a lot of good trust me I'm getting a lot of good feedback so let's keep it at that I don't want you son ask for more money and on January 15th 1967 the Rolling Stones appear on the Ed Sullivan show at Ed Sullivan's request finish it he asked them to let's spend sing let's spend some time together is that the one there you go yeah and then he told him a really big shoe I hate to do this I mean I come back on penalty box I don't say just he beat my record okay look he just got on the show after late and these are either he's stuck he's frozen put the dog nose back on where'd it go are you throw it at the camera like your headphones on January 16th 1967 the monkeys begin work on headquarters the first album to give them complete artistic and technical control over their material and it was fucking horrible fucking horrible what were they thinking they know they were thinking the egos got too big they thought they were the music well the argument can be made that you know Mike Nesmith did write different drum yeah so he could write songs but I don't think he was a pop songwriter you know headquarters and they try to be all fucking like 60 ish and shit they weren't looking for pop were they they're trying to be like more psychedelic yeah I think so there were their channel on the Beatles with those quirky little yeah with anti -grizzelles on that I don't know some weird shit I'll tell you what though I don't care about it myself but it was surely a harpsichord on it because that's what all those records had they had to have a harpsichord and I have the book this the 100 best -selling records of the 60s the monkeys got a they've had quite a few albums on there oh they do yeah they were they were but I mean I thought it was just a condensed period of the show which it probably was but it's still I mean they've got I mean most of their albums sold really well yeah yeah ah you like the show what's it is like the show I did I still like it I still love it I love that that that's so that humor is great like dumbed down brilliantly done though humor yeah way was what they were supposed to act like that yeah you know what I mean there was no like these guys are bad actors they knew exactly how to do that they pulled it off great it was campy it was great for its time it's still great to watch now yeah I do think that banana splits were a better band yeah that's I'll give you the banana splits were a kick -ass band yeah yeah kick -ass man did you see the movie recently came out it's a horror movie with the banana splits the banana splits movie it's a horror movie yeah yeah it takes place in an amusement park and they're they're robotic and in Dyson and slicing baby Dyson and slicing I have to say oh man that's yeah okay yeah Dyson and slicing it's good it's kids again campy movie but I couldn't not watch it yeah I have to say I'm sure Fleagle is a total psychopath well I'm not gonna give you any and no no no spoilers here those was it just Dyson and slicing on January 17 1967 the daily mail newspaper reports four thousand potholes in Blackburn Lancashire and Guinness air Tara Brown is killed in a car wreck these articles inspire lyrics for a day in the life a day in the life yes on January 22nd 1967 Simon and Garfunkel give live can't give a live concert at Phil harmonic Phil harmonic call in New York City some of this concert is released on October 4th 1997 on their box set old friends but most is not released until July 2002 that's some more okay January 29th mantra rock dance the quote ultimate high of the hippie era is organized at the Avalon Ballroom in San Francisco featuring Janis Joplin grateful dead big brother in the holding company for three Moby grape quirky that would've been interesting that's the best man that's the best as though for they're almost like the MC five kind of I think they were just kind of but they're they're a San Francisco band and beat poet once again Allen Ginsberg shows up to do his spoken word I heard he was a member of NAMBLA I wouldn't the National Association of Marlon Brando look -alikes I heard I'd someone I remember he actually he was a sponsor of NAMBLA but anyway on January 30th 1967 the Beatles shoot a promotional film for the forthcoming single strawberry fields forever at Noel Park in Seven Oaks have you seen it I have seen it I haven't seen it in a long time it's really cool yeah yeah it's kind of dark speaking of dark on February 3rd 1967 UK record producer Joe Meek murders is it his landlady and then commits suicide by shooting himself in the head in Holloway North in London it's kind of dark didn't he produce sleepwalk yes letter Telstar some early we talked we did it bit of a genius really yeah let's see February 7th Mickey Dolan's no let me stop February 6th Mike Nesmith and Mickey Dolan's of the monkeys fly into London Dolan sees till death do us part on British TV and uses the term Randy's scouse grit from the program for the title of the monkeys next single release Randy's scouse grit not releasing it is an offensive term Britain's British census forced the title to be changed to alternate title and then the next day Mickey Dolan's meets Paul McCartney at his home in st.

Arthur Rimbaud Lou Colicchio October 4Th 1997 Mike Nesmith Gary Snyder Adam Holtzman Janis Joplin January 15Th 1967 January 30Th 1967 Dylan Paul Rothchild Paul Mccartney Tom Benwald Perry February 3Rd 1967 Jim Morrison February 6Th January 16Th 1967 Jack Holtzman Jerry Rubin
A highlight from The Left Is Removing Statues & Erasing Americas History

Mike Gallagher Podcast

07:42 min | 1 d ago

A highlight from The Left Is Removing Statues & Erasing Americas History

"It's a real blessing to be surrounded by good people, and there are people who have my back struggling a little bit today. Two dreaded words, dry socket. Anybody who's had a wisdom tooth extraction knows the perils of dry socket. Well, good old dummy me got it and not doing so hot. So we're going to bring in my pal Kevin McCulloch. Kevin and I got to visit on the big Salem, New York, cruise around the island of Manhattan a week or two ago. Kevin, of course, is an accomplished talk show host based in New York City. He's been heard for years on our Christian station and on the news talk station. This is a man of faith, a terrific guy. And Kevin, you're going to help back me up a little bit today. I might be handing off the baton right off the bat. Have you ever had wisdom tooth dry socket problems before? No, I haven't. And just the sound of the words dry socket strike fear into my deepest being. So I feel very badly for you, Mike, and we've got whatever you need from us today. We're here to help. It's every bit as bad as it sounds, and it's not a good thing. It's what you don't want after you have a... I knew it was going too easy. I had the wisdom tooth removed Friday afternoon after the show. Everything was going great. Saturday, I was feeling great, Sunday not so good. And so it happens sometimes. So it's good to have you here with us. And first of all, many, many thanks to the great job you always do when you fill in for us. Of course, I've been listening to you for years, and it must be a fun experience for you because you're sort of transitioning from your own audience and your base into sort of another platform with our show. And I know our listeners have welcomed you with open arms. Well, I have, and Mike, the Mike Gallagher audience continues to be, I think, not only the most informed because of your daily efforts, but they prove to be generous in all of the campaigns that you do. And as I said when I filled in for you the last time, because I work PM Drive, I'm a big Mike Gallagher listener. I listen and actually many times watch your show on the Salem News Channel. And it's just fun to hang out in your sandbox. So thank you for letting me do that. Thank you. And thank you to Jerry Crowley and everybody at Salem Media of New York that allows us to have all the connections to do. It takes a lot of technology to do what we're doing at this very moment, Mike. And if it weren't for them, we wouldn't be able to. You'd be in dry socket hell if we didn't have a better management team. And speaking of Salem News Channel, That Kevin Show has become a big hit on SNC. You're doing a great job with that. And I love the mix. And I was one of your first guests. I was really honored to be on your show. And you've got a great blend of politics and pop culture and lifestyle and all kinds of neat stuff. In fact, speaking of that, let's kick off with some breaking news. Donald Trump Jr.'s account on X, formerly Twitter, was apparently hacked earlier today. I don't know if you've heard this story. There were a series of – well, get this. There were a series of offensive tweets, including one that said, I'm sad to announce my father, Donald Trump, has passed away. I will be running for president in 2024. You know, Kevin, there's such evil out there and there is such sickness and mean -spiritedness and viciousness. And somehow this almost seems par for the course, doesn't it? Well, it's one of those things where if Donald Trump lives this rent -free in the left's heads, just imagine how effective he'll be if he's reelected. I mean, this is – you've got to remember, and I know that you do, Mike, but for people that are listening, particularly cynics, Donald Trump's one of the few presidents that campaigned on a slate of promises and then went and actually did what he promised. If he comes back, he's already making promises about what's going to happen. There's going to be cleaning of the House and the FBI and the DOJ. There's going to be getting rid of the deep state at the Pentagon and places where wokeness has overtaken actual common sense in terms of policy. So of course they're going to play dirty and of course they're going to try to do everything they can. And all I have to do to compare what they think about Donald Trump Jr. is just ask the question, Hunter Biden? Question mark? No kidding. No kidding. Is there any comparison between the two? And you know, speaking of Trump and his promises and his predictions, something has come to fruition in New York City, and you know the city as well as anybody. Now comes news that these goofballs in Manhattan are actually going to consider taking down statues or any commemoration of George Washington, of Christopher Columbus. And I want to go back to 2017. I want to play this for you, Kevin. Check out what Trump said, because when he said it at the time, they condemned him. Oh, how crazy is he? Check this out. You had people in that group that were there to protest the taking down of to them a very, very important statue and the renaming of a park from Robert E. Lee to another name. George Washington was a slave owner. Was George Washington a slave owner? So will George Washington now lose his status? Are we going to take down excuse me, are we going to take down are we going to take down statues to George? How about Thomas Jefferson? What do you think of Thomas Jefferson? You like him? OK, good. Are we going to take down the statue? Because he was a major slave owner. Now we're going to take down his statue. So Kevin McCullough, do you remember the backlash? Do you remember the backlash he got when he said that and they mocked him and they said, what a lunatic. And he's a fear monger. And now just look at what's happening in New York City, what he predicted could be coming to fruition. Yeah. And you know, what's particularly sad about that, Mike, it's like if people have a different view of history, so be it. That doesn't mean, number one, that they should set policy for what everybody thinks about history. And certainly I would make an argument that history is made by flawed people. And it's really people that overcome the worst flaws of what they have that really do great things and that we should celebrate the great achievements, not expect every single human being to have been perfect. But beyond all of that, this city's in a mess. We have crime. We've got migrant overpopulation in ways and areas that we can't even begin to deal with. And this is what people want to focus on. I mean, and it is you're talking about a warped mix of priorities for sure. It's upside down. And it's absolutely happening as I mean, I've been following this and I'm in just absolute utter amazement, as you say, New York City dealing with crime, crippled under monumental budget cuts due to the illegal immigration issue that frankly the Democrats created. I mean, you want to be a sanctuary city, be a sanctuary city. And now the City Council's Cultural Affairs Committee is going to hold a public hearing on a measure to remove works of art on city property that depict a person who owned enslaved persons or directly benefited economically from slavery. Well, of course, George Washington's at the top of that list. So Trump was right. These nuts in New York and in other blue cities are going to try to remove the founding fathers from our consciousness because they own slaves. And it's exactly what Trump said back in 2017.

Kevin Mccullough Kevin Mcculloch Robert E. Lee Kevin Jerry Crowley Mike Donald Trump Salem Media New York City Saturday George Thomas Jefferson Sunday FBI 2017 Friday Afternoon George Washington Hunter Biden Mike Gallagher
A highlight from Top 3 Quick Tips to Stop Sugar Cravings

Dr. Jockers Functional Nutrition

05:17 min | Last week

A highlight from Top 3 Quick Tips to Stop Sugar Cravings

"Are hidden toxins and stressors making you feel run down and tired, worried about oxidative stress from exposure to EMF, 5G, heavy metals, chemicals, processed foods, and the like? You see, in our modern world, toxic is the new normal. No matter how health -conscious you try to be, the truth is that every single day, you're being bombarded by harmful toxins and stressors. When left to roam free, these toxins take on the form of something called free radicals. Free radicals promote an unhealthy inflammatory response and contribute to oxidative damage on a site or level, basically like the rusting of metal or the browning of an apple that potentially leads to premature aging, a lower quality of life, and a range of health problems. However, there is good news. Antioxidants are crucial in combating free radicals and keeping you on track, and one of the most powerful antioxidants known to man is glutathione. Glutathione fights free radicals and molecules that cause cellular damage while repairing DNA and flushing out toxins. But here's the thing. Not all glutathione supplements are created equal. If you're taking glutathione in capsule or tablet form, you're missing out on key nutrients as they will simply pass through your body without being absorbed. You can thank your stomach acid for that. However, our friends over at Pureality Health have a patented formula that utilizes something called My Cell Liposomal Technology, which delivers the nutrients into your bloodstream proven to be 800 percent more efficient. Even better, it's backed by one hundred and eighty day money back guarantee. And today we have a 30 percent off coupon for you. Just visit Pureality Health dot com. That's P .U .R. A .L .I .T .Y .H .E .A .L .T .H .com and use the coupon code DRJ to access 30 percent off today. Again, that coupon code is DRJ. Use that at Pureality Health dot com and check out their My Cell Liposomal Clutathione. If you're looking to come off of sugar, then these three key tips are going to be absolutely critical to get results in the end, the sugar cravings. And so the first big tip is just a mindset shift to where you're saying I am worth it for many individuals. And this may or may not resonate with you. That's OK. Many of us really we have these self sabotaging thoughts and behaviors and oftentimes we're tired and we get this idea, hey, it would feel really, really good right now to have this sugar, to have the ice cream, to have whatever it is that you're craving. And you've got to remind yourself, I am worth more than that, that I am worth getting results and I am worth ending these cravings and I will not be enslaved a to craving, a flesh desire in this case. And so, you know, it's great to be able to enjoy good food. And the cool thing is when you're following a low carb, high healthy fat diet, when you're following a healthy diet, there's many great foods and great flavors that you get a chance to enjoy. But you are worth so much more than falling victim and being enslaved to cravings for sugar, processed foods and junk. So you want to shift it. You want to say I am worth it. And you also want to link pain to those foods. Literally, like if you crave, I don't know, Ben and Jerry's ice cream or, you know, some sort of, you know, I don't necessarily want to want to say anything bad about their brand, but some sort of processed food. Just whenever you think of that food, link it to pain that you may experience in your body, whether it's, you know, a mental, emotional thing like a relational problem, like your anger, like your anxiety. It could be a pain in your knees or in your back, or it might be the rashes. We might be rashes that you have on your skin or digestive problems. Link it to that problem, experience and feel the pain of living in that problem and link it in your mind to that food. And then you'll feel, hey, you know what? I don't want to go down that that trail. I don't want to go down that track and you'll make better choices. I just want to interrupt this podcast to tell you about this amazing product called Joint Support by Pure Health Research. If you're out there and you're struggling with stiff or aching joints and you're tired of letting that discomfort steal the joy and freedom from your life, you've got to try Joint Support. It contains seven of Mother Nature's best superfoods for supporting comfortable, healthy and flexible joints, and it even promotes healthy cartilage growth, too. Now, all it takes is one small capsule of joint support every day to start feeling the positive effects on your joint health. And as a listener of our show, you can try Joint Support risk free today and get a free 30 day supply of Omega -3 when you take advantage of this special offer. It can promote healthy joint lubrication, making it easier to move in comfort. You're also going to get two free e -books so you can learn more about joint health. Just head over to getjointhelp .com forward slash jockers.

800 Percent Pureality Health 30 Day 30 Percent Today Getjointhelp .Com One Small Capsule One Hundred And Eighty Day Ben And Jerry Seven Pure Health Research Two Free E -Books Three Key Tips ONE Omega -3 First Big Tip .Y .H .E .A .L .T .H .Com Every Single Day Joint Support Cell Liposomal Technology
A highlight from Marriage as Friendship

Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life

01:11 min | Last week

A highlight from Marriage as Friendship

"What's the greatest enemy to any marriage? Impatience? Criticism? Boredom? Tim Keller argues that self -centeredness is the biggest problem in any marriage, and that all other problems come from that. Listen as Dr. Keller explores how the gospel frees us from selfishness to love, serve, and bear with our spouses. After you listen, we invite you to go online to GospelAndLife .com and sign up for our email updates. When you sign up, you'll receive our quarterly newsletter with articles about gospel -changed lives as well as other valuable gospel -centered resources. Subscribe today at GospelAndLife .com. I feel a soberness tonight because we have a very interesting church. It's really, as some of you realize that have been around for a while, it's an interlocking chain -link fence of small churches, and there's grapevines, so a lot of you don't know Donna at all, or Jerry, but we prayed tonight because they were evening Redeemerites, if there is such a thing. Evening Redeemerites, and there was a lot of prayer for Donna, visited her in the hospital, and so it's a shock for a young and sweet spirit to pass on like that.

Tim Keller Keller Jerry Today Donna Gospelandlife .Com Tonight Gospelandlife .Com. DR.
A highlight from Dissecting Djokovics Reign, Cocos Title & the 2023 US Open With Craig OShannessy

The Tennis.com Podcast

17:56 min | Last week

A highlight from Dissecting Djokovics Reign, Cocos Title & the 2023 US Open With Craig OShannessy

"Welcome to the official tennis .com podcast featuring professional coach and community leader Kamau Murray. Welcome to the tennis .com podcast. I am your host Kamau Murray and we are here with one of our usual suspects. We always have to do our Masters 1000 Grand Slam wrap up with Mr. Data, Mr. Analytics, Mr. Guy in the bunker with his pen and pad, Craig O 'Shaughnessy. Craig, welcome to the show. Pleasure to be here. Pleasure to be here. I just got back from the US Open. I was there for two weeks. It felt like eight. It's the most draining slam of all. It was a good tournament, some great matches. It's tough, I think way tougher to be there for the duration than any other tournament that there is. 100%. You survive. And the matches, the tournament goes so late and the process to get to and from the site makes it just a haul, right? And it makes the day just long. At an hour and a half to the front and the back of your day, in addition to sitting there watching matches and this thing. Before we get to Coco Sabalenka, because that'll take up the whole show, right? You and I normally, we dibble and dabble on the girls and then we dive into the men's. I want to do the reverse. I want to dibble and dabble in the men's because I don't think anyone's surprised about what happened because if we start talking about Coco and Sabalenka now, it'll just be the whole hour. So when you look at a whole two weeks, right, and I was there for the first part of it, seeing the energy, talking to the players, touching, feeling them, seeing how them and themselves A, were enjoying the atmosphere, sometimes a little too much, B, managing the atmosphere or C, trying to just control their bubble within the atmosphere. And I think that process probably, those three sort of situations probably cost Francis a further run, right, kind of getting caught in the matrix, right, absorbing a lot of atmosphere. And then Ben, with the experience of his family, his dad, controlling the atmosphere, probably had a lot to do with his long run. But I think the match that I think had the biggest impact on the tournament was definitely Novak versus Jerry. Did you see the match? What did you think when Novak left the court, down sucess to love, goes to the bathroom and looks himself in the mirror, what happened? Yeah, when he left the court, you know, it was, he's down two sets to love, Jerry's controlling the back of the court with his backhand, his backhand was the best shot on the court in the first two sets. But to be honest, even then Novak goes in, he's still the favorite, still the favorite down two sets to love. He's done it before, you know, it's one of those things where can your opponent play three blinding good sets out of five? Maybe not, probably not, when Novak goes in, you know, you just kind of reset, look in the mirror. He did exactly the same thing against Tsitsipas at Roland Garros, came out and just mowed over him in the last three sets, mowed over Jerry in the last three sets. It was a carbon copy, it's like Novak looks in the mirror and goes, okay, we've got that out of the way. Whether it's a combination of Novak being a little tight, playing, you know, a fellow countryman, it's a combination of early rounds being a bit tight. It's a combination of the opponent just playing spectacular tennis, but you can see right from the start of that match, Novak wasn't, his A game did not turn up right at the beginning. He was pushing, he was prodding, he was spinning, you know, just watching him play a thousand matches, you look at him and say, well, he's not there yet. And even after two sets, he's not there. But you know, sometimes for players, when you get down, it can relax you. It's like, well, I can't fall any further down this hall, I'm two sets to love down. May as well relax, may as well chill out, may as well believe in myself, may as well hit the ball, and Novak's the master of that. So I'm not so, I'm not surprised by the final result. And I think overall, it really helped Novak to play such a quality match and have to overcome some adversity early on. So I agree with you, very pivotal match for the men's draw. Well, let me ask you this, because from a coach's standpoint, when I see, when I see that type of performance, my mind goes to, it wasn't ready to play, right? When I look at like Francis and Ben Shelton, it looked like Francis wasn't ready to play. When I'm sitting in a coach's box and my player goes down 3 -0 or 4 -1, and they're like, deer in the headlines, don't know what to do, it was like, what was not clear prior to the match? You've spent a lot of time with Novak, Novak's got one of the best teams out there, he's the most methodical and committed to his regimen. How does something like that happen to a player who's number one, Jerry is Serbian, right? So you knew who you were playing, right? How did you come out not ready to play? I mean, is there a chance that at this big of an event, at this point in the event that he just wasn't ready or wasn't clear on what to do or from being close and inside, what do you think? Yeah, I think if you look back to Novak's seven matches, I think he will have a slightly different explanation for how he started in all sevens. You get all your ducks in a row, you watch the video, you talk to the team, you get the game plan, but at the start, it was like Novak, in that match, he may walk out there and sometimes he feels the energy of the crowd and it excites him. Sometimes you feel the energy of the crowd and you may go away a little bit and then come back. But I thought that he was attempting to work his way into this match, to start off even to let his resume do the talking early, let the other guy go away, let the other guy spray balls and it didn't happen. It just didn't happen. So all of a sudden, the opponent's not missing a thing, the opponent's playing at a much higher level than Novak was and you're just not ready for that. He's not ready for that. You're going to play a match like that. In the course of a season where these guys are playing about 80 matches, you're going to have these subtleties with how the opponent's playing, how you're playing, are you really ready, are you working yourself into the match, are you coming out guns blazing? And it was just a bad combination of layers for Novak where Jerry threw the first punches, Novak's tasting blood, and it took him a couple of sets to recover, but there was never any doubt in my mind that he would still win that match. And I think that's the oddest thing. I think the odds makers, after being two sets, Novak was still the favorite and I was like, wow. That's probably the first time that I've seen that, I'm not a better, but the odds makers were still favoring Novak. So let me ask you this. Another pivotal match in the tournament, I think, was TFO Ben Shelton. Yeah, I was at that match. I think we all knew Ben Shelton could play. I thought it was very impressive, him beating Tommy Paul, right? One of the things, and I don't know the reason for this, is when he beat Tommy Paul, the crowd, obviously they had to choose, both Americans, Ben and Tommy, but when Ben beat Tommy, I was a little disappointed that the crowd was kind of quiet, right? But we don't have to hop on that, but I do want to point it out that the crowd was eerily quiet after the win of that. But with him and Francis, one of the things that concerned me about Francis was in that New York environment, with all the celebrities, with all the kind of like, and I mean, first of all, we got to keep it going. More non -tennis people, more non -tennis athletes, musicians, entertainers, artists showed up to the US Open this year than I can ever remember. And we need to do that for the sport to grow. But you still got a tournament to play, right? And this generation who loves that, loves the attention, will have to learn to balance how much is too much, how much gets me off kilter, and how much gets me off track. And I thought that the day before the Ben match, you saw Francis with Bieber. I thought that that was a little too much and perhaps maybe took for granted that Ben would shit his pants, and he didn't, right? You know what I mean? Because when you get to that point in the tournament, when you are the veteran, you kind of expect the young guy to give you a couple, like, ah, if I just play solid, he'll know who he is, and the shock factor will cause him to make a few unforced errors or some bad decisions, and it didn't happen. And to me, that goes in the book of, Francis didn't look ready to play, and I think he'll learn from this experience on managing the energy, managing his energy, for that late in the tournament. But I mean, Ben brought it. What was your take on Ben now when you look at the stats, when you look at the 149 mile an hour serve, what is your take on him now having seen him play six matches? Well, the Tommy Paul match was really good. I liked how he managed the ability to say, okay, this is a ball to pull the trigger on. I spoke with his dad at the start of the tournament, and I mentioned possibly our discussion that we've had in other ones is that I think Ben's maturity is going to come from figuring out when there's one more ball that needs to be hit. There's just one more ball. And I think maybe I talked to you about it last time, but it goes back to me to the 2000 Australian Open final. Agassi beats Kefalnikov in four sets. Agassi's one in the world, Kefalnikov's two. Agassi goes to the post -match interview. Bruce McAvaney is interviewing there, and they're watching some film, and Agassi's just going, you know, Kefalnikov moves well, he lights the ball up, the surface helps him, and he throws this line in there, he goes in the middle, he goes, and he's only looking to pull the trigger one time in the point. So he's a really tough opponent. And that just has always stuck with me. And that's what I said to Ben's dad is that Ben needs to just go, I could pull the trigger on this ball, but it's not quite the right one yet. I could pull the trigger on the next ball. Literally, you could pull the trigger on every ball he hits. But growth, his his maturity, his tennis development and tennis IQ is getting better because you're hitting a ball that makes the opponent uncomfortable, you're hitting a ball that can extract an error, and you don't always have to hit the winner. So Ben's development is going to be predicated on one more ball in the court and making a better decision on when to pull the trigger. And I thought he did a great job in the Tommy Paul match and a great job in the Francis Tiafone match of not pulling too early. And then he went and played Novak and just everything went to hell in a hand basket. And it didn't. But that was, you know, I was for the Tiafone match getting back to that. You know, I'm watching at the start and the first kind of 10 minutes, it looked kind of even, you know, good decisions, both sides, good points, both sides. Francis was so quick coming to the net. He does such a great job of, you know, hitting a ball and he's already leaning on it, you know, with his short little backswing on the backhand. And all of a sudden he's almost leaning over the net, spiking these volleys. I'm like, oh, my God, this guy has figured out, you know, the only person I saw that really blew me out of the water with that was McEnroe, John McEnroe. He looked like he went through a time warp, whereas it takes, you know, all of us 1 .5 seconds to move from the baseline inside into the service box. But he goes through this time warp that looks like 0 .2 of a second. He's like, how does he get in there that quickly? Francis showed me that early on. But then the focus, the concentration, the locked in, the decision making started to erode at around the 10 to 15 minute mark, and he never recovered from that. Yeah. So you get Ben has Novak in the semifinals. And I think that Novak, I mean, just has this ability to you know, it's what I was it's kind of what Coco did. I call it cumulative pressure. And it is. I'm going to run the ball down, I'm going to make you hit an extra ball, I'm going to make you play one more ball every point on your serve so that later you feel it. You may not feel it now, but later you feel it. And that was an example of what I call cumulative pressure that kind of got to Ben. Yeah. What was your take on what Novak did to Ben or vice versa, what Ben did not do that match that he did the previous matches? Yeah, good point. That was that was a really fun match to be at the energy, the atmosphere, you know, the old guard, the new guard. You're exactly right. There was, you know, on that court in twenty eighteen, I worked with Novak to defeat Del Potro. And a lot of the commentators, when you go back and go through that match, they're like, Del Potro is dropping 135, 138 and Novak's putting it back in his shoes. And the commentators are like, how in the world is he doing this? Well, there's only one way that you do that is that you study Del Potro's patterns and you know what to say. When Del Potro needs a point in the juice court, he's going to and when he doesn't need a point, he's going to go, why? Novak's sitting there on it. And I felt the same thing is that Ben's dropping heat on especially on first serves. And Novak is putting so many balls back in play that you're exactly right, that it just kept accumulating and accumulating. The other thing that really stood out to me. That I don't know why is that Ben sliced so many returns, just this slow, just not even like a Federer kind of knifing, dark slice, it's this blocking slow slice that's not as good as Wawrinka's. It's not within a meter of the baseline. It's there was once he's just too defensive. So he's putting no pressure, no pressure on Novak because because he overdid the slice. Now, all of a sudden, he's got to deal with so many serves coming back and then the decision making. Then he starts, you know, the fingers kind of on the trigger, then he starts pulling it too much. And then, you know, Novak knows why this kid is potentially a real problem for me. But I've already figured him out about 15 minutes in. He's not doing anything against my serve. I'm doing everything against his serve and putting times back. I'm just going to press cruise control and take a nap for the next 30 kilometers. Yeah. And I think that was probably the one mistake and probably a tactic that was misinterpreted was, hey, if on his serve, put pressure on because you get racket on every ball, not to bunt every ball. Right. Because Novak is the is the history, the best returner in history, but he's not the best server in history. And he I don't want to call it vulnerable, but you will have an opportunity or two against Novak on his serve in a five set match. And I thought, Ben, with as great of a service he had, with as big of a service he has, he didn't take enough risks on the return gains and he didn't play. Correct. And when I say aggressive, I don't mean like crazy out of this world, we're winners, but controlled aggression. There was no reason Novak serving a buck 21, a buck 22 for you to block the serve back. You can have plenty of time to take a full swing and at least send a message for the rest of his career that your serve doesn't bother me. Right. Part of being a young guy is how do I apply cumulative pressure that may not work this match, but in three or four matches from now in the next semi? Right. Because you still got to go through Novak that shows them I'm not bothered by your serve and you better be you will be bothered by my serve. Right. And I think that was sort of a missed opportunity for Ben to take some cuts at Novak serve. And I think that set the tone for the match that allowed Novak to kind of steam roll.

Craig O 'Shaughnessy Bruce Mcavaney Agassi Kamau Murray Tommy Paul Jerry Mcenroe Tommy Coco John Mcenroe New York Three 1 .5 Seconds Novak Ben Shelton BEN Kefalnikov Six Matches Two Weeks Craig
A highlight from The Process is the Penalty with John Eastman and Rep. Andrew Clyde

The Charlie Kirk Show

10:11 min | Last week

A highlight from The Process is the Penalty with John Eastman and Rep. Andrew Clyde

"We're proud to announce our brand -new ACLJ Life and Liberty Drive. Our legal teams will be focusing on the issues that you, our ACLJ members, have told us matter the most to you. Life and religious liberty. We join the ACLJ in the fight to keep America free. Hey everybody, it's Hannah Charlie Kirk show. Andrew Clyde joins us to talk about trying to defund Jack Smith. And John Eastman, a victim, a target of the out -of -control regime, joins us to continue to discuss. As always, you can email me directly, freedom at charliekirk .com. Subscribe to our podcast by opening up your podcast application and type in charliekirkshow, that's charliekirkshow. As you get involved with Turning Point USA, it's the most important student movement in the country. So go to tpusa .com, that is tpusa .com. Buckle up everybody, here we go. Charlie, what you've done is incredible here. Maybe Charlie Kirk is on the college campus. I want you to know we are lucky to have Charlie Kirk. Charlie Kirk's running the White House folks. I want to thank Charlie, he's an incredible guy, his spirit, his love of this country, he's done an amazing job. Building one of the most powerful youth organizations ever created, Turning Point USA. We will not embrace the ideas that have destroyed countries, destroyed lives, and we are going to fight for freedom on campuses across the country. That's why we are here. Brought to you by the loan experts I trust, Andrew and Todd at Sierra Pacific Mortgage at andrewandtodd .com. Joining us now is Representative Andrew Clyde. Congressman, thank you for joining us. He tweeted out, the American people gets to decide who wins the White House, not the deep state. We must defund the left, sham prosecutions against Donald Trump. Republican lawmaker unveils push to block funding for Trump prosecutions, obviously, but this was met with opposition by 16 Republicans. Inexplicably, we will name their names shortly. Actually, we'll get to that. Congressman, thank you for joining us and tell us about it. Well, thank you, Charlie. It's great to be with you. Well, I think it's important that, as you said, the American people decide who our next president is going to be and not the deep state, not the weaponized government. And we are seeing time after time where the federal government is being used to prosecute a political candidate. That doesn't happen in America. That's kind of the conduct that you see in banana republics, where the sitting that those in power use their power to prosecute and try and throw in jail their political opponent. So these two amendments, so one would defund from the federal level any funds going to the prosecution of a presidential candidate between now and the November 24 elections, OK? And then the other amendment would do the same thing. It would deny federal funding to any state entity that does the same thing, that prosecutes a presidential candidate. It's very even handed, both Republican or Democrat. So what I'm trying to do is prevent the process from becoming the penalty here, because that's exactly what the left, the weaponized left is trying to do. Because you can't recover from the process. So how is this being met by and I was talking about actually when you tried to defund the FBI headquarters, we'll get that in a second. How is this being met by your more moderate Republican colleagues? Well, so far, for those that I have spoken to on the Appropriations Committee and in leadership, it's being met very positively. I think it's the right thing to do. There's still some work to be done. So I'm calling on all of my Republican colleagues to support these amendments. It's going to have to go into the Commerce Justice Science appropriation, which has not yet been marked up in our Appropriations Committee. I'm on that committee. And so I'll be offering both of those amendments and I expect that they will be approved and go into the base text of the bill. But then if we do a C .R. as well, you know, there's some qualifications for or any C .R. to go forward, in my opinion. Then it would have to be part of the C .R. as well. So I think it's very, very important that that all the Republicans get on board and support these amendments. So there was also a question about blocking the FBI's new headquarters. And is it true that 16 Republicans got in the way of that, Congressman, when you were attempting to do that? Tell us about it. Well, that was in the markup for the financial services and general government appropriation. And there is about six hundred and seventy million dollars that was set aside for the FBI's new building. It's about a little over half the amount that currently exists. The whole project is like four billion. It's going to be bigger than the Pentagon in size, which is absolutely ridiculous. The FBI does not need it by introducing an amendment to defund that six hundred and seventy million and to apply that to our national debt to pay off that portion of our national debt. And it did not pass in the in the appropriations process. We had 16 Republicans that voted against it. Now, I'll tell you that after that vote, there were some that came to me and said, hey, I think I made the wrong vote. And we're going to give them another opportunity when that actual appropriation comes to the House floor. I'm going to introduce the same amendment again. And I think there will be some change of heart, I believe, when it comes to their vote on that amendment on the House floor. So, yeah, there was a list of 16 Republicans that resisted it. Is that correct? And I want to that is correct. OK, so I want to name them. And if I have the wrong list, correct me. But it looks as if it's Steve Womack, David Valadeo, Mike Simpson, Hal Rogers, Daniel Newhouse, Julia Letow, David Joyce, Ashley Henson, Kay Granger, Scott Franklin, Jake Elsie, Mario Diaz -Balart, Juan Siscamani, Jerry Carl, Ken Calvert, Mark Amati and Robert Alderholt. What what possible reason could they give you for opposing that? Well, not a lot of them gave me a reason at all. But, you know, mind you, some of them came to me after the fact and said, hey, you know, I think I made the wrong choice. Why? Because they were hearing from their constituents. The FBI does not need a new building. I mean, they've got one point two billion dollars set aside, six hundred and seventy or so million in financial services, general government appropriation and another five hundred some million in the commerce justice science appropriation. So I think these folks will probably take a strong second look when the amendment comes onto the House floor for the FBI bill. And I believe that that there will be some change of votes. I really do. And I hope so, because that's the right thing to do. The FBI has been so weaponized as of in the last couple of years under this current administration. There is truly a two tiered system of justice here. We are seeing it time and time again when you have the treatment of Hunter Biden and then you have the treatment of President Trump. And all of those who support the conservative voices that are crying out. So I think we're going to see some different votes here. So let's now focus on September 30th. This looks to be the big day, right? So a previous Congress punted it to really, really neuter you guys. So this date has been on the calendar for quite some time. So you're inheriting a previous Congress's funding deadline, September 30th. What are you guys willing to do? Our position on this program, no short term funding bills, line in the sand. We need a fight. We gave you guys a majority for a reason. Where's your head at? What are the asks? Are you willing? How close to the line are you guys willing to get? Walk us through it. Well, I'll tell you, first off, you know, we've known the September 30th deadline has been here for a long time. And we promised as Republicans that we would bring 12 appropriation bills out of committee onto the House floor. And I expect us to do that. I expect us to keep our word. I'm on the Appropriations Committee. I'm certainly willing to be there from from today until the very end of September so that we can get all these, the rest of the appropriation bills across the finish line. Ten of them have come out of committee already. We've got two left to deal with in committee, both the Labor Health Human Services Education Appropriation and the Commerce Justice Science Appropriation. Those are the two we have left in committee. But we've got 10 that are available to go to the House floor. Actually, one already has the Milcon VA passed in July. So we've got nine that can go immediately to the House floor and get a vote. We need to be doing that to keep our word. Any short term continuing resolution, though, cannot be an unqualified or blind or what they call clean CR. Otherwise, we are simply promoting the policies of the policies and the spending levels of Nancy Pelosi. And that's wrong. I will never support that. And I'll tell you, a significant number of Republicans will not support that either. Well, that message needs to be heard loud and clear by the leadership. So just really quick, Congressman, and I just I'm hearing different things and I've always gotten along with Speaker McCarthy and I still do. But there's whispers that there might be a vote to vacate. Are you hearing that from other members? Well, I will tell you that a clean CR or an unqualified CR, it will risk our majority and therefore it will risk the speakership. I think what you're seeing is is the country gave us the majority to change the direction, change the course of Congress. We had the speakers fight in January, which I think fundamentally changed the way Congress operates. And I think that has to continue or we will truly jeopardize our majority and we will jeopardize Kevin McCarthy as speaker.

Andrew Clyde Jerry Carl Kevin Mccarthy David Joyce Robert Alderholt Mike Simpson Ken Calvert Mark Amati David Valadeo John Eastman Kay Granger Julia Letow Daniel Newhouse Nancy Pelosi Steve Womack Juan Siscamani Jake Elsie Ashley Henson January Scott Franklin
A highlight from Native American Reservations

Stuff You Should Know

06:43 min | 2 weeks ago

A highlight from Native American Reservations

"Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio. Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh, and there's Chuck, and Jerry's here too, and that makes this Stuff You Should Know a Toodly -Doodly -Doo. That's great. Thanks. You're welcome. It has nothing to do with what we're talking about, I don't believe, but it was worth saying, I think. Do you know what does? What? The season three of Reservation Dogs. Yeah, that's why I figured you were probably, you suggested this topic. It's not why, actually, because I suggested this a long time ago. I've been sitting on this one and kind of forgot, but then Reservation Dogs season three, the finale season started, and I know we've talked about this show a lot, but big recommendation. A show shot and crewed up and written and directed and acted entirely by Native Americans. I believe it's shot inside the Muscogee Nation Reservation. And it's great. It's one of the best shows ever. Wow. That's full -throated endorsement, man. I'll have to check it out. It's awesome. It's funny and heartwarming and sweet and meaningful, and it's just really, really good. I would also direct people to the movie Smoke Signals that was made not too long ago. That depicts reservation life in a fairly lighthearted manner, but pretty accurately too. Yeah, and we also want to caveat this by saying this is a very broad overview of Native American or American Indian reservations. There's a lot to it and certainly could have been, you know, like five or six episodes long, but as we do, we try to give a good broad overview. That's how we do. That's right. And if this episode is banned in schools in Florida, listen to it outside of school. Just go travel to Valdosta and download it and go back to Florida. Exactly. That was an odd thing to say. What's sad is I have no idea what you're talking about, but I can totally believe what you just said is real. Well, the governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis, is on a push to keep children from being indoctrinated by true history of our country. I see. And so he has, I believe it was in the gubernatorial debate, the last one, he was saying that his opponent said it was okay to teach that, you know, some of the land in America was stolen from the native indigenous people. And he said that's not appropriate for our schools and it's not true. Yeah, that's not true at all. No, it's not. And I'm not sure I get away with just saying completely untrue things on a debate stage. But yeah, that's where we are these days. For sure. So the very fact that reservations exist prove that that's true because the entire reservation system that we still have today that dates back to the 19th century and actually earlier was and is entirely a way of removing Native Americans from their traditional lands, putting them somewhere. They probably had never been and didn't know anybody. And then taking that land away and increasingly shrink the land that they have so that European colonists and then eventually American settlers, colonists, could take that land for themselves. And the reservation system is just proof that that is this it was this ongoing century plus long process that still has just very fresh wounds today. Like it's not like, okay, that happened in the past and things are good now. That is not the case in a lot of a lot of places. It's that happened in the past and the effects of it are still being felt generations later. Yeah, for sure. And before we get emails from people that say, you know, much of much of that land was negotiated for and there were treaties over it and deals made. That is that is certainly true. But much of it was also outright seized. And that's that's just a fact of what happened here. You know, dude, we don't need to debate somebody who's trying to tell us that the market didn't steal land from the native American. They don't even deserve our attention, let alone our breath. I agree these days. Just to start off with a stat for you and big thanks to Livia for helping out with this one. In the 2020 census, nine point seven million people in these United States identified as either Alaska native or American Indian. And although we'll talk a little bit about the fact that the census isn't always accurate when it comes to native populations. Yeah. But one point two million, 13 percent of those people live on reservations today as of, you know, a few years ago. Right. So we have a yeah, a big population of Native Americans. I think there's something like five hundred and thirty four tribes recognized by the federal government as their own tribe. But yeah, the vast majority do not live on reservations. The reason that some people live on reservations because they were born there, their parents were born there, that's just where they were raised. But another reason that a lot of Native Americans live on reservations is because that is the place where they can still do whatever they can to keep their culture alive in whatever ways that they can. And they have a certain amount of self -determination there because in the United States, reservations are considered sovereign nations. They're ruled by the tribe that whose reservation that is. So that's why there's casinos and that's why you can buy cigarettes for super cheap on a reservation and all sorts of other stuff. Why the state can't prosecute somebody for a crime that happened on the reservation if they're a member of the tribe. It's because it's like little pockets of independent nations that exist in the United States. Yeah, it's a little convoluted, but generally it's they're under federal law and purview, but not under state law. So like you were saying, that's why you can have casinos in states where you otherwise could not. Yeah, and I saw that even the federal law is usually kind of just the big stuff. Sure.

Josh Five Chuck Smoke Signals Florida America United States 19Th Century Ron Desantis 13 Percent Jerry Valdosta Alaska 2020 Two Million ONE Reservation Dogs Six Episodes Nine Point Native American
A highlight from Short Stuff: History of OK

Stuff You Should Know

05:08 min | 2 weeks ago

A highlight from Short Stuff: History of OK

"You know, there are some things in life you just can't trust, like a free couch on the side of the road, or the sushi rolls from your local gas station, or when your kid says they don't need the bathroom before the road trip. But there are some things in life you can trust, like the HP Smart Tank Printer. With up to two years of ink included and outstanding print quality, you can rely on the HP Smart Tank Printer from HP, America's most trusted printer brand. Hey, and welcome to The Short Stuff. I'm Josh, and there's Chuck and Jerry's here, too, standing in for Dave, and that makes The Short Stuff OK. Thanks to Dave Ruse and howstuffworks .com and Grammarly for this, because we're talking about OK, which some people say is one of the most versatile and one of the greatest words in the English language. And I don't disagree. I don't either. I say like more, but I think OK is probably second in my vocabulary. Yeah, absolutely. Grammarly will tell you that OK can be used in myriad ways, and it's a very versatile word. It can be used as an adjective. Oh, that's OK. Yeah, that's just OK. Like how was it? Eh, OK. Right, exactly. It can be an interjection. OK. OK, let's talk. Or someone's talking too much, OK, OK, right? Yeah. It can be used in the verb sense, like give me an example. That guy's really OK -ing that boat all over the lake. OK, that's not right. More like it's being OK -ed as we speak. Oh, good, yes, thank you. All right. Or it can be used in the noun sense. You want to try that one? I'm having an OK for breakfast. Nope. We got the OK. It's all good. Ugh. I know, so boring. OK. No, it's not boring. I'm just disgusted with myself. So very versatile word, and the origin of OK, I don't even think we should go over all what kind of dumb ideas people have had, because we're pretty sure we know where it came from, right? Oh, OK. See? OK. So, yeah, we know where it came from, almost certainly, thanks to an etymologist named Alan Walker Reed, who at some point apparently put down his insects in his lab and started researching origins, I don't know why. But Reed was working back in the 1960s, and he essentially, through really hardcore, old -timey, pre -internet research, traced back the origin of OK, the letter O and the letter K, and the meaning of it as we understand it. And it's got one heck of a rump -slappin' origin, if you ask me. Yeah, he also had a newsletter called Stuff You Should Know that ran for 15 years, but he only put out four topics, because it took him so long. Yeah, took a while. But this is the 60s even. That joke was not OK. It was OK. It was OK. So what he found out is the following. In the early 19th century, when printing was sort of a new, sort of, not new, but it was cheaper to do than it had been previously, and there was an explosion of printing. And one of the things that people started putting out were something on the penny press, like these, sort of, rags that had a little bit of news to them, but also some opinion stuff, some jokes, this is what's trending, this is a little witty poem, you know, just little things like that. Dave kind of likens it to the internet of the 1830s. And there was a lot of back and forth about this stuff through the editors of these penny papers. I guess they would, they would sort of respond to one another through their own penny papers. Yeah, they would trash talk one another, kind of like how our old stale rivalry with John Strickland. Oh, gosh. Kind of like that, right? So there was that trash talking or that joking, in -joking back and forth between editors of these penny papers coincided with a trend that Reed called a craze in, starting in the summer of 1838, that's how good this guy's research was, he pinned it down to that, starting in Boston, that people started using abbreviations for everything. It was like they thought that was so hilarious in 1830s Boston. Yeah, which is funny, like you think, you might think now is so over abbreviated, like this point in time with texting in the internet, with LOLs, and like I don't even know what half of them mean, I feel like. LOL means lots of love. Lots of love, okay, that's what I thought. But the craze started back then, and here's just a few examples that Dave dug up.

John Strickland Reed Josh Boston Alan Walker Reed 15 Years Dave Dave Ruse HP Early 19Th Century Second Stuff You Should Know English The Short Stuff Up To Two Years Summer Of 1838 1960S America 1830S Four Topics
A highlight from The Made-up Disease of Syndrome K

Stuff You Should Know

01:43 min | 2 weeks ago

A highlight from The Made-up Disease of Syndrome K

"Hello everybody, the Xfinity 10G network was made for streaming giving you an incredible viewing experience now You can stream all of your favorite live sports shows and movies with way less buffering freezing and lagging Thanks to the next generation Xfinity 10G network You get a reliable connection so you can sit back relax and enjoy your favorite entertainment Get way more into what you're into when you stream on the Xfinity 10G network learn more at Xfinity .com Hey everybody want to talk to you quickly about our old friends from Squarespace Specifically you want to talk about fluid engine a next -generation website design system from Squarespace It's never been easier for anyone to unlock unbreakable creativity than with fluid engine You start with the best -in -class website template and then you can customize every design detail with reimagined Drag -and -drop technology for desktop or mobile stretch your imagination online with fluid engine Just go to squarespace .com Slash stuff for a free trial and when you're ready to launch use our offer code stuff to save 10 % off your first purchase of a website or domain Welcome to stuff you should know a production of I heart radio Hey and welcome to the podcast I'm Josh and Chuck's here too and Jerry's here too and this is stuff you should know the podcast That's right with a Sort of a lesser -known story, I think I think probably most people know thanks to Steven Spielberg the the story of oscar schindler saving about 1200 Jews from the Nazis, but this is a smaller story.

Steven Spielberg 10 % Squarespace .Com Jerry Squarespace First Purchase Oscar Schindler Josh Xfinity .Com Xfinity 10G Every Design Detail About 1200 Heart Xfinity Jews Nazis 10G Chuck
A highlight from 1387: One Bitcoin Will Be Worth $1 Billion By This Date - Fidelity

Crypto News Alerts | Daily Bitcoin (BTC) & Cryptocurrency News

26:30 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from 1387: One Bitcoin Will Be Worth $1 Billion By This Date - Fidelity

"Let's get it. In today's show, I'll be breaking down the latest technical analysis, as well as breaking news. Google Cloud to digitize El Salvador's governance, healthcare, and education, as well as Elon Musk's ex moves closer to crypto payments with their newest state license they just received, as well as breaking news. The SEC's first deadlines to approve seven Bitcoin ETFs are coming over the next week. We'll also be discussing Grayscale's roadmap to a Bitcoin spot ETF following the most recent SEC triumph, as well as Fidelity, one of the world's largest asset managers that currently control over four and a half trillion in assets under management are predicting a $1 billion price action for each Bitcoin. In fact, did you know they started accumulating Bitcoin all the way back in 2014, literally almost a decade ago? We'll also be taking a look at overall crypto market, all this plus so much more in today's show. 87. That's right. I'm your host JV. And we have a jam -packed session for you today. Looking at the market watch here, we can see Bitcoin after almost staying above 28 ,000. Unfortunately, it broke that support and we're back down to 27 ,200 at this time, but Ether also back in the red down 2 % for the day trading at just above $1 ,700. And checking out coinmarketcap .com, we're barely sitting above a trillion dollars, which is that milestone we've been sitting at for quite some time regarding the overall crypto market and about 34 billion in volume in the past 24 hours with the Bitcoin dominance at 48 .9 % with the Ether dominance at 18 .9%. And checking out the top 100 crypto gainers of the past 24 hours, we have XDC up 8 % trading at 6 .4 cents, followed by TonCoin up 6 % trading at $1 .75, followed by BlockStax up almost 3 % trading just under 53 cents and checking out the top 100 crypto gainers for the past week. Yesterday was a sea of green as the price action pumped literally $2 ,000 in a span of 30 minutes off of the news of the SEC losing their trial versus grayscale with the conversion of the GBTC product into a spot ETF. But today we have corrected some with HEXB crypto greed and fear index. We're currently rated a 49, which is neutral. Yesterday was a 39 in fear last week at 37 and last month a 50, which is neutral. So there you have it. How many of you are currently bullish on the king crypto? Let me know. And how many of you are anticipating a lower price action so you can keep stacking them sats on the low? Holla at your boy. Now let's break down today's Bitcoin technical analysis. Check out the charts and what is popping right now in the markets. As you can see here, Bitcoin drifted towards $27 ,000, which again, we're just sitting above $27 ,200 at the time of this recording. At the Wall Street open, the dust settled on the digital asset manager, grayscale's legal victory. Here you're looking at the Bitcoin one hour candle chart. Now data from Cointelegraph showed a positive verdict for grayscale against US regulators, sparking almost 8 % gains. Bitcoin managed to tap $28 ,100 on Bitstamp, its highest in almost two weeks, before returning to the current level. So despite closing the daily candle above two key moving averages, these had yet to return as definitive intraday support. And on the day, analysts were quite cautious. In a quick take post from on -chain analyst Crypto Quant, he goes on to share, noting that the grayscale move had originated on derivative exchanges. So despite funding rates remaining fairly neutral, there was a clear absence of value. However, it is difficult to see that the spot exchange led the price increase when the Bitcoin price rose yesterday. The reason is that the trading volume ratio shows that it had decrease rather than increase. Now additional data showed trading volumes were still below those seen during the upticks of earlier this year, quoting them here. Of course, there is a tendency for prices to change significantly, even with small trading volumes, because of the overall liquidity in the crypto market, which has decreased. However, it seems that there is a need to be a little cautious about the fact that this rally leads to a dramatic rally. Now let's discuss many similarities to Bitcoin's all -time high. According to crypto analyst Brett Capital, quoting him here, we're seeing many similarities between the double top of 2021 and what we're seeing right now, he warned. Should the similarities play out and Bitcoin produce a full fractal, 26 ,000 would flip from support to resistance to initiate further downside. So for the time being, we're seeing a lot of signs really playing into all of this in which he reiterated alongside this chart. Now, another target analysts are talking about right now is 23 ,000 becoming increasingly important. Rec capital likewise flagged that level of 23K as a prominent level versus the 2022 bear market bottom structure and inverse head and shoulders pattern, as he mentioned here, that's the level that we can see the price rebound from. So there you have it. Let me know if you feel we're likely to drop sub 25 ,000, potentially touch 23 before rising back up. Or do you think we'll take off from here, off of one of the biggest news stories of the year, which is a big fat L for the SEC and a big fat victory for the entire crypto industry. Let me know your thoughts. And with that being shared, fam, now let's discuss breaking news coming out of El Salvador with Google, which is actually quite interesting. Yesterday, I saw Nigel Bokele made a tweet and this is what it was in regards to Google Cloud announced a new partnership with the government of El Salvador. Interesting, right? On August 29th to establish an office and provide Google distributed cloud services in their country, the partnership aims to digitize the country, update government services and improve the healthcare and educational systems. The GDC will also help bring infrastructure closer to where data is generated for El Salvador. Bokele, the country's president said he believes El Salvador is quickly becoming a hub for innovation. As he shares here, El Salvador is moving forward. We believe technology and foreign investment are key for development. And here's where he announced the partnership in this, I shouldn't say tweet anymore, but on this post on X quoting Bokele, Google plans to establish operations in El Salvador and he shared the official press release from Google. Now, Thomas Curain, the CEO of Google Cloud said he believes cloud computing can truly transform Latin America. As shared here, access to cloud computing has dramatically expanded across industries and regions throughout the world, he said, enabling both small companies and the public sector to utilize the very same apps and services as more mature markets. Now, Cointelegraph also reached out to Google Cloud for additional comments on its recent expansion. The additional GDC infrastructure will help support El Salvador's active stance on Bitcoin adoption and integration into society. It allows for Bitcoin full nodes with ordinal protocol support. And additionally, back on August 8th, a few weeks ago, El Salvador granted the crypto exchange Binance a license to offer crypto services to users in the country. Bitcoin had began as legal tender in El Salvador back in 2021. And recently the Bitcoin Beach Initiative took to the classroom and taught over 25 ,000 students about Bitcoin, helping them earn a Bitcoin diploma via the country's educational system. The country has already seen immediate returns on the program with the example of one teenager who earned the diploma and then returned to his former school to teach the educators about the digital asset. That's what's up. I think mass adoption is likely to continue, especially in places like El Salvador that are ahead of the rest of the world. And I think more and more major companies are going to be opening up shop because it just makes so much sense. Why wouldn't they? That's why Binance just got their license. Jack Mallers Strike Company just got their license. Bitfinex got their license and they're opening up shop. And I believe that the Bitcoin game theory is in full effect and will continue to play out as the days go by. And with that being shared, fam, now let's break down our next story of the day. As you probably know, major news was actually released yesterday regarding X, which is the platform owned by Elon Musk to integrate crypto payments. We made a pretty big development, so let's break this down before we dissect the ETF deadlines. Rhode Island's regulators have granted X, formerly known as Twitter, a currency transmitter license, marking a step forward for the company's foray into the financial services sector. The license is legally required for companies conducting financial activities on behalf of users related to sending and receiving money, a definition that includes both fiat as well as crypto assets. Now, this approval will allow for X to custody, transfer and exchange digital currencies. Now, X's Rhode Island currency transmitter license was approved on August 28th, two days ago, according to the nationwide multi -state licensing system, NMLS. The move marks an important step forward for Elon's push for X to become an everything app, which would include crypto as well as fiat payments. Now, naturally, social networks like X are massive, so this could help usher in that mass adoption. Now, while sources have suggested that X's upcoming payments feature will initially only offer support for fiat currencies, Elon had reportedly instructed developers at X to build the platform's payment system in such a way that crypto functionality can be added into the future. Yeah, if you're not integrating Bitcoin into your payment system, then do you even have a payment system for the future as Bitcoin is the future of money? Just saying. The approval comes nearly two months after X secured money transmitter licenses, also in Michigan, Missouri, and New Hampshire, which were well -approved on July 5th. X's latest license marks a total of seven American states it secured transmitter licenses in, so my guess is they're going to have to continue getting more and more licenses for all the states. It remains unclear exactly what financial offerings will be made available if and when X rolls out their payments feature. People familiar with the company's plans have indicated that X will initially offer fiat currency transaction services similar to PayPal, which Musk co -founded with room for future crypto integration. Do you think Bitcoin will likely be an announcement that they will be accepting crypto payments? I mean, who cares about Doge if you don't have Bitcoin integrated? So, I feel Bitcoin is a given if they're going to be integrating crypto and it seems to be going that way. But how do you feel this is likely to play out? Let me know your honest thoughts in the comments right down below. And now let's break down everything you need to know regarding the recent spot ETF deadlines for the United States and regulators. And after we discuss all these deadlines, we're going to specifically be talking about the GBTC Grayscale product, getting that victory over the SEC and what that means moving forward with the Grayscale Bitcoin ETF. And then we'll be dissecting Fidelity, one of the largest asset managers in the world, and their $1 billion Bitcoin price prediction. And then we'll wrap up with our live Q &A. So yeah, let's discuss this. The US SEC is facing its first deadlines to decide on seven spot Bitcoin ETF apps, with the latest being September 4th, which is what, virtually five days away amid its defeat to Grayscale Investments in the US Federal Appeals Court. Investment firm Bitwise will learn if its ETF will win the SEC's approval September 1st, which is what, two days away. While BlackRock, VanEck, Fidelity, Invesco, and WisdomTree will all be awaiting the SEC's decision for their funds by September 2nd, three days away, according to several SEC filings. So, that's right around the corner. It's going to be a big week. Meanwhile, Valkyrie is set to hear back from the SEC on September 4th. The US Court of Appeals ruled on August 29th that the SEC's rejection of Grayscale's app to convert their GBTC into a spot Bitcoin ETF was arbitrary and capricious. But this doesn't mean that the SEC must approve Grayscale's app or others in the future, says Bloomberg ETF analyst, James Safart. And in August 29th Bloomberg Review, he explained that Grayscale's win will definitely increase the odds of a successful outcome for the SEC. But he is unsure when that day may come though, as the SEC can delay his decisions and has two more proposed deadlines for each fund before being forced to make a final decision on the 240th day post filing. Now, what a shame it would be if they make us wait the 240th final day before giving an answer. But hey, don't run it by them. I mean, don't put it past them, especially with Mr. No Clarity Gary as the chairman. But anyways, for the awaiting applicants, the final deadlines for the SEC are all in mid -March of next year. And as someone shared here, odd and free, 99 .9999 % chance that the world doesn't know that the SEC has to decide on seven Bitcoin ETFs within the next three days. And this does include the largest asset manager in the world, BlackRock, Bitwise, VanEck, WisdomTree, Investico, Fidelity, and Valkyrie. The suits are at our doorstep per each. And how many of you weren't aware of that, that the decision within the next seven days is going to be on those seven major asset managers. Now, after the August 29th ruling in favor of Grayscale, the regulators have 90 days to file an appeal with the US Supreme Court or apply for an en banc review where the full circuit court can overturn a ruling made by a three judge panel. However, the SEC hasn't made clear what the next move will be. If the SEC doesn't appeal, the court will need to specify how its ruling is executed, which could include instructing the SEC to approve Grayscale's app or at the very least revisit it. But either way, Safer only saw two viable options for the regulator. The first option is to concede defeat and approve Grayscale's conversion of its GBTC as a Bitcoin spot ETF. But alternatively, the SEC would need to revoke the listing of Bitcoin futures ETFs entirely or deny Grayscale's app based on a new argument, says Safer, quoting him here, the second potential avenue is to deny on reasons not used before yet, which I have been saying for months could have to do with custody or settlements of Bitcoin, which is not something that futures ETFs have to worry about. The SEC has made a lot of noise around custodians. However, fellow Bloomberg ETF analyst, Eric Balchunes, considered the odds of the SEC revoked in the Bitcoin futures ETFs as highly unlikely because of the SEC reported openness to Ethereum futures ETFs, in which he makes a great point, quoting Eric here. This guy turned the last paragraph of Judge Rao's legal smackdown today into a MGMTS stylish banger, really captures the modern. Well done. Well, so there you have it. I guess this is some song I haven't even listened to yet. So I'll jam to it a little later on. We'll see if it's any good. But anyways, fam, how do you think this is likely to play out by the SEC? Do you think they're likely to approve any of these seven ETFs or do you think they'll just continue to push it back until next year? Let me know your honest thoughts in the comments right down below. Now let's dive deeper with the latest breaking news regarding the grayscale ETF and their conversion of their product into a spot ETF. And did you know that their product literally has over 600 ,000 BTC? Hence, they'd be the perfect candidate for a spot Bitcoin ETF because they already hold the underlying asset. They don't need to purchase it. So I mean, they'd be a prime candidate along with BlackRock. Which one will get approval first is the million dollar question, but let's break it down. In a seismic shift for the Bitcoin industry, the DC Circuit Court ruled in favor of grayscale investments yesterday, which is breaking news, which we've been hearing all across social media. Now, Jake Stravinsky, the chief policy officer at Blockchain Association, described the ruling as massive, emphasizing it's extremely rare for a federal circuit court to find an agency like the SEC in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act. Stravinsky stated that the DC Circuit soundly rejected the SEC's view that grayscale's ETF proposal was not designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices. So good for them. He also pointed out that the court did not order the SEC to approve the proposal, but rather mandated a review of grayscale's proposal with the court's ruling in mind. Stravinsky speculated on two possible scenarios for the SEC's next steps. One theory suggests the SEC could find another reason to include no clarity Gary towards crypto. And alternatively, the SEC might take this as a semi graceful exit from their anti ETF stance, especially under political pressure from traditional finance sectors ready for a Bitcoin ETF as we are long overdue. They first rejected the first Bitcoin ETF for a spot in the United States over a decade ago. And the app was from the Winklevoss twins with Gemini, just FYI. Now, many other issuers have proposed ETFs this year, include BlackRock and Larry Fink throws heavy punches in DC. Therefore, here's what the lawyer thinks. The only question is if the SEC wants to make this more painful for itself. Trust me, if there is another denial, there'll be another lawsuit. I strongly recommend that the SEC picks sooner. Let's see. Now, James Safart, the ETF analyst over at Bloomberg, corroborated the significance of the ruling stating it's a complete and utter rebuke of the SEC spot Bitcoin ETF denial orders. And quoting him here, I was initially thinking something like a deadline of 45 days or 60 days, but nothing in here saying that. However, he noted that the SEC has 45 days to file for that en banc hearing, which would involve all 17 judges on the court, good Lord, as opposed to the initial subset panel of only three judges. The Bloomberg analysts also outlined two main motions for the SEC. If they still wish to prevent the spot Bitcoin ETFs from listing, they either need to revoke the listing of Bitcoin futures ETFs or denied based on new reasons, possibly related to custodial or settlement issues, which have been a focal point for the SEC staff accounting bulletin 121. Now, Adam Cochran, partner of CEHV added another layer to the timeline speculation. He alludes to the SEC's pending decision on six other Bitcoins spot ETF filings due by September 1st for Bitwise and September 2nd for BlackRock, Fidelity and others. Here's what he had to share. Some folks are getting ahead of themselves thinking that grayscale decisions means bulk approval of ETFs by this Friday. Likely not the case. My hunches were looking at a late October, November timeline for an approval still, unless the SEC appeals in which case next spring. Now I'm not a gambling man, but if I was a gambling man, I just want to throw out there. I don't think the SEC has any intention to approve a spot Bitcoin ETF in the United States anytime soon because their actions demonstrate the complete opposite. The only thing they have interest in approving are more futures ETFs so they can continue to manipulate the markets through derivatives, which are financial weapons of mass destruction. Quoting Warren Buffett, it is what it is, but nonetheless, this is still a victory overall because they could only push it back for so long. And especially with BlackRock demanding, I shouldn't say demanding, but in so many words, they're the one that started this domino effect with new ETF apps arising with the SEC. They are the largest asset manager in the world, controlling over $10 trillion in assets under management. So I think if Larry Fink wants something, it's going to get done. But the million dollar question becomes when? I think they're going to push it back this year and probably spring next year, we're going to finally start to see the approval of spot Bitcoin ETFs in the United States. And as soon as we get that approval, that can help usher in literally trillions upon trillions of dollars that are currently sitting on the sidelines directly in to the best crypto asset in the world, which is none other than BTC. If you'd love to see that happen, let me know. And by what date or deadline do you think we're likely to get that first approval? And you already know once that approval comes, money is going to start ushering in and the Bitcoin price is going to go parabolic and in perfect time because we also have another major bullish catalyst around the corner. Six months out, the scheduled halving is estimated to be sometime in April of 2024. So between the ETF apps being approved by the United States regulators and the Bitcoin halving, I couldn't be more bullish on Bitcoin right now, which leads us to our next story of the day, which is going to be a $1 billion prediction from one of the largest asset managers in the world, which is Fidelity. Let's break this down. Then we'll dive into our live Q &A. Make sure to say hello in the live chat. Let me know where you're tuning in from. A massive shout out to everyone interacting. I greatly appreciate all the continued support. So here we go. $1 billion. That's a lot of zeros. That is nine to be exact. In 2021, a billion dollars seems like a lot of money. FYI, Fidelity initially made this prediction in 2021. I also want to point out here from some tweets, Fidelity head of sales, quoting them here, we started mining and accumulating Bitcoin all the way back in 2014. I bet you a lot of you did not know that. This was kind of under the radar, but they have been accumulating BTC almost for the past decade. So is this a surprise that they're predicting a $1 billion Bitcoin price by 2038? They're putting their money where their mouth is. But anyways, we have Julian Timmer, Director of Global Macro Fidelity, believing that one Bitcoin could be worth $1 billion per coin by the year 2038. Send it and let's go. Timmer also believes that the orange coin could hit $1 million before this decade is over, which means by the year 2030, roughly seven years away. So that would represent a 20X multiple, the current Bitcoin market price of 48 ,000. But now obviously we're half that price of what we was. So that would now be 40X. And I know anyone can make predictions like that, but Timmer lays out his cause using his own valuation model and another well -known model, which we all know here on the channel, known as the stock, the flow. Timmer's demand model is based upon Metcalfe's law. Metcalfe holds that as the number of users of a network grows linearly, the value of the network grows exponentially. Thus, if the number of users doubled, its value would grow at four times or the square of two. Now Timmer's demand model grows steadily to about $1 million by the chart. Now, by contrast, now let's discuss the stock to flow model created by synonymous analysts. Plan B is based on the supply of new coins growing at a decreasing rate each year. This occurs because of the built -in happenings every four years. So given increases and adoption and demand, the result will be prices expanding exponentially. Indeed, the price of Bitcoin has grown approximately 10X every four years. Take that, Peter Schiff. These are facts, not just by 50 % slowdown in supply, pretty powerful stuff. That's right. Now, stock to flow predicts even faster growth in the price than does Timmer's demand model, especially after the year 2030. As I commonly cover here in the show, the stock to flow model is projecting roughly a half a million dollar Bitcoin price past the halving in 2024. In fact, the model shows a very wide array in their expectation, anywhere from a hundred thousand to a million dollars, with a half a million being dead in the middle, hence in a couple of episodes previously, if you missed it, we discussed Plan B's most recent prediction, which he shared on his YouTube channel, that he believes the Bitcoin price will be north of $530 ,000 per coin proceeding the Bitcoin halving in 2024. But let's get back to this math. This is the stock to flow model you're looking at right here. Now let's go back over here. This is some more insights. Timmer stated the value of the dollar changes in relation to other assets. And he further pointed out that just a dollar invested in stocks in the 18th century would be worth $4 billion in today's money. Isn't that insanity? Talk about super hyperinflation. So going by this assumption, $1 million in today's money can be worth a billion dollars in 20 years time. Good Lord. You better start stacking them now, fam. So changes in the dollar's value, especially depreciation over several decades, render the same amount with less purchasing power, which is why huge sums back then appear less by today's standards. For instance, $1 million can purchase a lot of significant things a few decades ago, but in today's perspective, reasonably higher end houses in the US cost between, I would say $200 ,000 and $500 ,000. The same $1 million may not suffice for the same class of houses today. This is a fact. Just here in Puerto Rico alone, I've seen the real estate market literally shoot up 100 to 300 % since moving to this island roughly four years ago. And that's not just an exception to the rule. It's all across the United States, hyperinflation. I mean, check out the rent prices. That will give us some insights to the true nature of inflation. You can check out Zillow, check out real estate five years ago in comparison today, and you'll probably see something quite similar. But anyways, there's an increasing number of billionaires across the globe. Facts. Some observers even believe we may see the first trillionaire in this lifetime. I think it could potentially be CZ, the finance CEO, or even Michael Saylor of MicroStrategy. Now, the same applies to organizations with several companies now passing the $1 trillion mark valuation cap. Fidelity previously pegged Bitcoin to hit $1 million in initial prediction made by Jerry and Timmer by the year 2035. However, he ultimately said, we're way too conservative. Let's move this target on up from $1 million by the year 2035 to $1 billion by the year 2038. So there you have it. Do you feel the Bitcoin price can likely exceed their conservative target of $1 million by the year 2030 within the next seven years and hit as high as $100 million to $1 billion per coin by the year 2038? Let me know your honest thoughts in the comments right down below. And don't forget to check out cryptonewsalerts .net for the full premium experience with video and to participate in the live Q &A. And I look forward to seeing you on tomorrow's episode. HODL.

Michael Saylor James Safart Jake Stravinsky Eric Balchunes Cehv Eric September 1St August 28Th August 29Th Thomas Curain July 5Th Adam Cochran Stravinsky Bokele September 4Th April Of 2024 September 2Nd $4 Billion $1 Billion August 8Th
A highlight from Short Stuff: Evil Eye

Stuff You Should Know

12:38 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from Short Stuff: Evil Eye

"Elevate your travels with the city advantage executive card the only card with admirals club membership earn advantage miles and loyalty points on your Purchases plus premium benefits that take your trips above and beyond expectations visit city .com slash executive for a bonus miles offer travel on Hey and welcome to the short stuff, I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here to Given us the evil eye. Mmm for all the trash we've ever talked about her and frankly it's working because I just Blew a tire on the way here to work. Is that a euphemism? No, no, I blew a tire and I lost my checkbook Mmm, you were at the grocery store. They rang everything up. Mm -hmm You're standing there looking and they were then they said you have to pay now and you want oh and you reached in your purse To get your checkbook out. I reached in my front pocket of my shirt and then you're like, does anyone have a pen and Twelve people under the age of 75 behind you rolled their eyes inside Mm -hmm, and they had a pen but it leaked all over my hand. They gave you the evil eye big Thanks to our pal Dave Bruce and the old folks at how stuff works calm For this bit on the evil eye what we in our house call the stink eye Yes, also, thanks to Antonio Paglia Rullo Who is the author of a book on the evil eye the evil eye Colin the history mystery and magic of the quiet curse? Dave talked to a lot about this because not only did Antonio write that book his grandmother was an evil eye Doer away with practitioner when he was growing up That's right, if you don't know what we're talking about we're talking about what turns out to be a very very old I don't know what you call a tradition. What do you what is custom? Superstition. Yeah, all those things where someone will give you the evil eye. Someone will shoot you a glance We call it the stink eye again. Yeah, and it's it's wordless. You don't have to say a thing. You don't have to have a What is a little voodoo doll There's a big there's a quick cello sting going on in the background 100 % you got to take that that small string section around with you It means basically well originally I think it was sort of came from jealousy or envy but can also be just someone's angry or they resent you or Maybe they're being greedy or something and it's generally always intentional But I was surprised to learn From our friend here who wrote that book that it can be unintentional. I didn't realize that but I mean I guess I guess if you're coveting Something are you jealous of somebody to the left of the person you accidentally look at and give the evil eye That's the best I can come up with for unintentional evil eye This goes all the way back to the Greeks and possibly before right? Oh, yeah long before the Greeks but Plutarch was maybe the first person to actually write about it He was a philosopher and historian as everybody knows and he wrote some essays that were collected into something called Moralia And he talked about the evil eye in that his whole jam. Was that your eyes are a source of energy That shoot out that shoot the energy out into the world around you and that reminded me Chuck of our stereoscopic episode where that one one of those ancient physicians would had their their theory was that we see by shooting beams out at Stuff. Yeah, and that's how we see and I guess that's kind of what it was based on. Yeah, totally the basically the body fills up with that jealousy or rage or whatever and It clouds the mind and then the eyeballs are right there in front of the mind to sort of Display for the world whatever the mind is thinking and in this case, it's evil Yeah, and it goes when you shoot the evil eye out of your eyes that was Plutarch's take and apparently that was the popular Take of it. Yeah, and depending on what culture you are from and your your ancestry is Sort of about you might have a long rich tradition of evil eye shooters or or Blaming everything that happens to you. That's bad on an evil eye that was shot your way Yeah, because it's not just stuff that happens to you directly like an injury or an illness It can also be things that happen to the things you depend on like your smartphone Exploding in your pocket. Remember what that used to happen. Yeah They are blowing a tire smartphones did They didn't catch on fire, right? Am I making that up? There were like mild explosions with some I want to say an Android at some point in time Yeah blowing up in people's pockets and everyone's like ha boy remember when that was a thing Yeah, and now they're right back in her pockets again back in the aughts. Yeah. Everybody's like, I don't care I love smartphones so much. I'll just take the risk. That's right so back to Antonio who wrote the book the evil eye he is Catholic and Italian and he said, you know, we don't even have like baby showers over here like that That's considered bad luck to have a baby shower. Like you're tempting fate or something like that yes, so it's a you know, sort of a superstitious danger and Over there and this is kind of true anywhere in any culture that has an evil eye history They will have protections against evil eyes like amulets and things like that and pregnant women would wear amulets in Italy Apparently at least in his family and they would say these special prayers to ward off the evil eye Yeah, and the reason why Having something like a baby shower would tempt fate and maybe attract an evil eye Is that it could be taken as like a boast or something and roasting can generate? Envy or jealousy and envy or jealousy can shoot out of your eyes as the evil eye and then your smartphone blows up in your Hand during the baby shower. Yeah, look at me I made a human and in particular babies children pregnant women and animals are the most vulnerable to the evil eye Although it can happen to anybody But there's different traditions and customs for protecting against the evil eye Depending on where you are in the world. Like you said in Turkey when you are a newborn baby You're gonna get what's called a nazar? Which is a dark blue? Circle with a white circle inside it in a dark blue circle inside the white circle and it's meant to be an eye And Chuck I say we take a break and we'll come back and tell everybody whose eye it is after this know ooh You friends seeing a doctor when you're sick is enough to make you sick or sicker and involves a lot of time and Effort at a time when you're least equipped to provide either so we want to talk about Teladoc, which is a far better alternative It's putting the humanity into health care. Yeah, think about what happens when you're sick and you have to see a doctor You've got a schedule an appointment and that could take days sometimes weeks to get in then you have to go to the doctor Even though you're probably feeling miserable and then you have to wait in the appropriately named waiting room Exposed to whatever the people around you are coughing and spewing into the air. It's a thing Well with Teladoc Health you can get in touch with a doctor 24 hours a day 365 days a year all from the comfort of your own home Just open the Teladoc Health app and get a diagnosis treatment plan and prescription if needed from a board -certified provider Download the app to get started today or go online to register or schedule a visit at Teladoc Health dot -com slash stuff That's T E L A D O C health dot -com slash stuff People are excited about what AI will do for them at IBM We're excited about what AI will do for business your business Introducing Watson X a platform designed to multiply output by tailoring AI to your needs when you Watson X your business You can build AI to help coders code faster customer service respond quicker and HR handle repetitive tasks in less time Let's create AI that transforms business with Watson X learn more at IBM comm slash Watson X IBM. Let's create a Horace it's the eye of Horace. Oh, wow. That was quick. Yeah Yeah, and like you said depending on where you are you might have different traditions for warding this thing off a lot of these countries are Middle Eastern or somewhere around the Mediterranean Sea I believe Dave Even said in his own family his grandmother in the Jewish tradition would tie Ribbons on cribs and things like that to ward off the evil eye or potential bad luck for newborn babies in that right? Yeah for sure in India They'll put some coal a black dot on the in Infants face and all these the point of these the nazar the red ribbon the black dot on the face They're meant to protect they're they're basically amulets or talisman that can protect against the evil eye and one reason why they based that on the eye of Horace is because in ancient Egypt the eye of Horace was painted on homes painted in tombs and it offered protection from evil or malintent or all sorts of problems even back then and so it kind of got mmm, you know how they take like You century know it goes from really ornate to like really stylized and simple That's basically what happened to the eye of Horace when it became the nazar. Yeah, that's a good way to say it Well, thank you and our book author also like you mentioned his grandmother Paglia Rulo's Grandma would keep a bowl of water in her kitchen and poured little drops of olive oil in there and look at the shapes and the patterns that the oil would take and Apparently that would inform her on the evil eye and if there was like someone in her family that was potentially in danger or a neighbor or something that Possibly will be or was stricken with the evil eye and I thought that was really interesting I don't know if it literally was like hey that looks like Our Gary our neighbor, right or if it's just you know, kind of reading the tea leaves, right? I'll put that olive oil was so good, too So you said that this all kind of came out of the Mediterranean did you not yes They've traced it back at least 5 ,000 years ago to tell Brock which is a city in Mesopotamia Which is tell Brock is a modern -day Syria right now and they found tiny figures that all kind of bear a resemblance to one another They call them eye idols and that they think that these offered protection as well Did you look up the eye idols of tell Brock do I didn't if? Et is not based on that. I will eat my head It's Identical to eat. It's crazy how much it looks like et man There's nobody who's seen et and would see one of those and be like, I don't know like it looks exactly like et All right, I'm looking it up and that is et. Yeah in that nuts That is et. I mean that is unmistakably an et head, right? But also even the body resembles et the proportions and everything. Yeah, that's true I don't see any arms and legs, but it does have that big squatty body. Well, thank God I don't have to eat my hat today Because they just pile on everything else bad that's happened. Was it like a sweaty old baseball cap. Mm -hmm Salty, you know, it's got the white salt streaks. It'll never come out. No, thanks So, I guess that's about it, huh for for evil eye. I got nothing else. Yeah There's all sorts of amulets and talisman you can use to protect yourself If you feel like somebody gave you the evil eye you can also say please don't look at me like that anymore I don't know what's wrong with you. That will also dispel the magic too. That's right.

Antonio Dave Bruce Dave Josh India Italy Antonio Paglia Rullo Paglia Rulo 100 % Twelve People Today Middle Eastern Turkey Plutarch IBM Jewish Mediterranean Sea Android Teladoc Health Mediterranean
A highlight from ELON MUSK'S TWITTER X CRYPTO PAYMENTS LICENSE! CIRCLE USDC LATAM, GRAYSCALE SEC VICTORY COMMENTS!

Thinking Crypto News & Interviews

06:38 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from ELON MUSK'S TWITTER X CRYPTO PAYMENTS LICENSE! CIRCLE USDC LATAM, GRAYSCALE SEC VICTORY COMMENTS!

"Welcome back to the Thinking Crypto Podcast, your home for cryptocurrency news and interviews. If you are new here, please hit that subscribe button as well as the thumbs up button and leave a comment below. If you're listening on a podcast platform such as Spotify, Apple or Google, please leave a five -star rating and review. It supports the podcast and it doesn't cost you anything. Well, folks, I want to start off with big news around X, also known as Twitter. They have acquired a license that would allow them to integrate crypto payments. So Elon continues his push forward to build out X as this super payment social media app. And of course, it's going to include cryptocurrencies. And we know Elon, he understands crypto and blockchain. He understands payments, right? Man holds Bitcoin, Ethereum and Dogecoin. He said this, his companies have Bitcoin on their balance sheet. And we've seen that he's talked about integrating Doge as like the main crypto payment. But obviously it's going to be multiple currencies. And I had interviewed the CEO of eToro, which had partnered with X to integrate crypto and stock data. So Elon is moving forward and this is a big license. So here are some details. The Rhode Island currency transmitter license was approved to X on August 28th, according to the data displayed on NMLS. The license is required to provide virtual asset related services on behalf of users. So this is pretty cool. It will enable the social media platform to store, transfer and exchange digital assets for its massive user base. This is pretty big folks, and it comes as no surprise. Elon is moving full steam ahead. I'm sure he's looking to target some sort of launch as we enter the next bull market, right? 2024 to 2025. We'll see what the timing is, but we know for the most part, X is going to include crypto payments and crypto functionality and blockchain. To what degree? I'm not sure. We'll have to wait and see, but definitely bullish news because this platform is going to be used by millions of users. Now we got big news around Circle and USDC. So Jerry Miller, the CEO of Circle tweeted out the largest FinTech in Latin, which is in Latin America, Mercado Pago. Part of Mercado Libre is the Amazon of LATAM with 200 million users is rolling out support for USDC in key markets, starting with Chile momentum for USDC and digital dollars building around the world. This is very bullish for Circle and LATAM is a massive market. And we know a lot of folks want to use a US dollar stable coin for payments. And is USDC a big one, right? The second largest stable coin in the world behind Tether. So big move here by the folks at Circle and USDC. Jeremy continues. He said, we recently shared that approximately 70 % of our USDC adoption was non -US and a lot of that is driven by emerging markets. Latin American FinTechs will be a major driving force in the adoption of digital dollars. Here's our analysis. He provided a full link. So very bullish news, folks, and the token economy I've been talking about for years is being built right before our eyes, right? Everything running on the blockchain. You have cryptocurrencies, digital assets, stable coins, tokenization, CBDCs, and much more. Now, quick word from our sponsor, and that is Uphold, which is a great, great platform that I've been using since 2018. I've been buying a lot of crypto on here. It's easy to use this platform. They have a full website and app and much more. They have 10 plus million users, 250 plus cryptocurrencies, and they're available in 150 countries. They also offer precious metals and you can trade between cryptocurrencies and precious metals. So really cool. And if you'd like to learn more about Uphold, please visit the link in the description. Well, folks, earlier today I did a podcast talking about Grayscale's victory over the SEC. The SEC was trying to deny their Bitcoin spot ETF and the court said, no, we're not having that because the things you did were arbitrary and capricious. Now, one of the things here that was highlighted by the documenting Bitcoin Twitter handle is how many headlines from mainstream media covered this news. And it's all bullish. I mean, we're talking TechCrunch, CNBC, Fortune, ABC, Financial Times, Reuters, the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, CNN, and much more. And what I tweeted out regarding this, I said, you've lost the narrative, Gary Gensler, and the optics for you and the SEC are looking very bad. Time to resign. And I think, as I've said many times, optics is a big part of politics and there's a lot of Democrats that are already distancing themselves from Gary Gensler and I expect more too. This will also further push Congress to work together to pass crypto regulations. So I don't know what's going to happen over the next month if Gary is going to resign or what. He may be able to shake down small crypto companies, but he's losing the larger narrative, right? Yesterday, we talked about Impact Theory, NFT settlement with the SEC, but Impact Theory is a podcast. It's not some big company, market moving company or news, but this certainly is the court siding with Grayscale for a spot Bitcoin ETF. Now, something that's important, folks, even though the court sided with Grayscale, the SEC hasn't actually approved the Bitcoin spot ETF. And we have some folks weighing in on this, including Ripple CEO and Caitlin Long and many more. So let me share what they had to say. Caitlin Long said, still shocked at how much the Biden administration's hatred of anything crypto drove it to poor judgment, now boomeranging back on it in courts. Better to have worked with law abiding players. This was their choice. Courts curbing federal agencies power impacts far more than crypto. She's absolutely right. And you know, she mentioned it under the Biden administration because Gary Gensler is appointed by Biden and the Democrats, right? And we see that Janet Yellen and all these people have been anti -crypto. Caitlin's been fighting her own battle with the Fed and trying to get, you know, part be part of one of the Federal Reserve's registered banks. And she has a crypto bank, but we know the Fed has been stonewalling her, blocking her. And we know why, right? They were just trying to slow crypto down, you know, slow these startups down so that the stratifying comments can come in and take over.

Janet Yellen Jeremy Jerry Miller Gary August 28Th Federal Reserve Caitlin Long Gary Gensler Five -Star Amazon Ripple Etoro Caitlin Congress 250 Plus Cryptocurrencies 2025 Elon ABC Mercado Pago SEC
A highlight from Fordlandia: Brazil Isn't Michigan

Stuff You Should Know

05:16 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from Fordlandia: Brazil Isn't Michigan

"Warning, the following message contains an app recommendation you won't be able to resist. Girl, how do you keep getting all these things for free? Coffee, makeup, and now lunch? You haven't heard of the Drop app? Drop is a free app that rewards you for shopping at places like Ulta, Adidas, and Sam's Club. I've already earned $100 this month. Download the Drop app and get $5. Use invite code GETDROP222. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio. Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh, and there's Chuck, and Jerry's here too. So this is Stuff You Should Know, the wacky Strange History edition, yet another one. I love this one. We got a few people to thank out of the gate for this, if I may. Sure. First of all, we want to thank listener Brennan Wilson, who gave this idea to us through email. I had never heard of it before, so Brennan sent this in, and I did a quick search, as I always do when someone sends in something, and thus it's like, oh, do one on shoe soles. But when it's something I hadn't heard of, I always look it up, and I was like, oh man, this is a really good one. I didn't know about this. So big thanks to Brennan. Big thanks to Livia, who put this one together and helped us out. And Livia actually said we should thank a couple of people in particular that sort of wrote the book, well, literally and figuratively, on Fordlandia. Greg Grandin wrote a book called Fordlandia, colon, The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford's Forgotten Jungle City. Spoiler alert. And then there was a paper in the late 70s by a guy named John Gailey in the Journal of Inter -American Studies and World Affairs that also had a lot of good stuff. So thanks to everyone involved. Here we go. Wow, that was a lot. I was waiting for you to tell us who Greg Grandin said we should thank. Yeah, right. Mom. So we are talking about Fordlandia. We are talking about what you could call Ford's Folly. Just to kind of strip it bare right out of the gate. It was Henry Ford's misadventure down in the Amazon where he tried to build a model utopian society based on rural midwestern America. Right, in the Amazon. In the Amazon. That's a big catch right there because he didn't try to do it in Omaha or Topeka. He chose the Amazon over Topeka and I think that says a lot about Topeka. Yeah. Oh, we love Arkansans. I hope they know that. All but one. All but one. That's right. All right, so we should talk a little bit about the sort of weirdo that was Henry Ford. Maybe we should do a whole one, a whole ep on him one day. I didn't know a ton about the guy. He did a lot of great stuff. Was also not great in a lot of ways. That's such a recurring theme. I know. In 1903 is where the Ford Motor Company was born in Dearborn, Michigan. And thanks to the Model T, it changed America. It was a car that was available, more available than any car had ever been to like regular Americans. He paid his workers a living wage, which at the time was five dollars a day. And he also had a lot of strings attached to that good wage and those good jobs along the lines of like, hey, I know we're a car company, but let's have a sociology department in our company where we send out hundreds of investigators around Dearborn into the homes of my employees to make sure that the kids are going to school and everything is tidy, the wife isn't working and that people aren't drinking booze. Yeah, it was the Ford Motor Company equivalent of the Gestapo, the secret police who they weren't coming to like your company owned house that you lived in on the Ford Motor Company campus. This is your house in Michigan and these people felt totally fine coming by and checking on your family to make sure that you were living up to Henry Ford's personal standards of old timey, squeaky clean American -ness. Yeah, but at the same time, he would also, like I said, pay them a good wage. He would give them great health care. He would help citizenship along if he had immigrants working for them. He would help them with their applications, help them get home loans. So it was one of those things where he was like, I feel like I'm paying you well and I'm doing a lot of good for you and your family and that gives me the right as really just your uber boss to dictate how you should live your life as well. It's insane. It is. He was an anti -Semite. It's pretty well trod that Hitler was at least in part inspired by the writings, the anti -Semite, anti -Semitic writings of Henry Ford. Yeah. He was a huge fan of square dancing. You could call it an obsession essentially.

Greg Grandin Brennan Wilson Josh John Gailey $100 $5 Hitler Livia Michigan Ford Motor Company Brennan Omaha Chuck Adidas Topeka Dearborn, Michigan Henry Ford Dearborn 1903 Jerry
Jerry Dunleavy: 'Kabul' Describes How Bad Afghanistan Was

The Dan Bongino Show

01:59 min | 3 weeks ago

Jerry Dunleavy: 'Kabul' Describes How Bad Afghanistan Was

"Level of incompetence people falling from planes you have this new book out Kabul you one of the premises in the book is that yeah we saw all this awful stuff people getting beaten and getting whipped going to gays people fought literally falling off of planes it's a not figurative statement you know women and kids being kept out from evacuation but your book says it's even worse than that so give us kind of a it's an inside scoop about how bad it actually wasn't the stuff we didn't see X absolutely but let's talk just about the Abbey Gate I mean to start so the the Biden administration's sort of line is that the Abbey Gate attack was not preventable and basically in our book we kind of lay out how we believe that it very likely was the the first point is that the Isis K terrorist who carried out that deadly suicide attack that killed 13 Americans. His name is Abdul Rahman Al Agri. The Biden administration won't say his name but he was in prison at Bagram when United the States abandoned it in July 2021 and so he was freed by the Taliban on August 15th 2021 and then carried out that terrorist attack on August 26 2021. So the simple fact is that if we had just maintained Bagram which we should have done for about a dozen different reasons including it was more defensible it would have been a much safer place to do an evacuation from we would have had far fewer Americans and Afghan allies left behind I believe if we had kept Bagram but also if we had kept Bagram that prisoner would have just been behind bars rather than the Taliban freeing him and him killing those 13 Americans and we laid out in the book how a there were few other potential opportunities to either stop that bomber or to hit ISIS before the bombing and try to disrupt their attack so that kind of gives you a sense

August 15Th 2021 July 2021 Abdul Rahman Al Agri August 26 2021 First Point Isis 13 Bagram Taliban Kabul About A Dozen Different Reason Afghan Abbey Gate Attack One Of The Premises Americans Abbey United The States Gate Biden Administration Gays
Jerry Dunleavy: Biden Took a Permanent Hit After Afghanistan

The Dan Bongino Show

01:51 min | 3 weeks ago

Jerry Dunleavy: Biden Took a Permanent Hit After Afghanistan

"The show Dan thanks well no listen my pleasure we cited your work often you were great on the whole Spygate collusion thing you were one of the few guys actually doing real journalism and that's appreciated we need more of that I mean we yeah there are enough opinion hosts around we need people getting the facts out there listen before I I want to get into the book in a second I got a ton of questions on I just want to get your general take on you know as a reporter right now but you know you see this primary going on see you Biden in the low 30s there I mean I excuse me mid 30s approval 30 35 percent approval doing terrible on the economy and I think back to the old you know Jim Carville line you know it's the stupid economy I mean I know anything can change between now and the election but what's your general feel about how this thing is going and how it could go down next year it's it's tough for me to say I mean if I had to guess it's a toss up right now and you know I think that Biden did take a permanent hit to his approval in 2021 when this Afghanistan debacle and happened I think that's I don't want to interrupt you but that's exactly why I asked but go because that did everything changed after that but go ahead exactly and you know his approval rating really hasn't recovered because I think that people that were willing to give him a chance people that were willing to you know see if he's competent and capable and then people that bought into the narrative about his empathy I think all of that was shattered with the with the debacle in Afghanistan with Americans being left behind Afghan allies being left behind the Taliban taking over 13 Americans being killed in that Paris attack I think that really did do permanent damage to President Biden's standing and I think that the debacle in Afghanistan

2021 Jim Carville DAN Biden Next Year 30 Taliban President Trump Afghan Americans Afghanistan ONE 30S A Ton Of Questions 35 Percent Over 13 Mid 30S Paris Attack LOW Few Guys
A highlight from Trey Lance's NFL Future

The MMQB NFL Podcast

06:29 min | Last month

A highlight from Trey Lance's NFL Future

"Hey this is Paris. I downloaded all my favorite things into my new Roblox experience. It's called Sliving. It's got everything I love. Discovering, shopping, collecting, partying with my friends. Do you slay? Do you live? Do you sliv? You can join me. Join me. Join me. Join. Come sliv it up with me on Friday, August 25th. Get on the dance floor as I spin at the hottest party on Roblox. I can't wait for you to see it. Now you're Sliving. Slivingland on Roblox. Loves it. I'm Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN's chief medical correspondent, and this is Chasing Life. People measure age in all kinds of ways. Most of us start with the number of years, but as I've started to discover on this season of the podcast, that doesn't really tell the whole story. I guess there's no denying that our bodies do go through some changes, but aging is not linear. Listen to Chasing Life on the iHeartRadio app. With so many streaming devices out there today, what sets Roku apart? Roku players are made for one thing, to get you the entertainment you want quick and easy. That means a simple home screen with your favorites front and center, channels like iHeartRadio that launch in a snap, and curated selections of TV for when you only sort of know what to watch. Not to mention all the free TV you can stream, including over 300 free live channels on the Roku channel. Find the perfect Roku player for you today at roku .com. Happy streaming! Welcome to the MMQB podcast. I am Matt Verteram, joined by Gilberto Manzano here. It is Thursday, August 24th, and that means we only have one week of preseason football up. We're all thankful for that. Gil, have you finished up your training camp tour? Are you done now, or you still got a few more you gotta hit? Yeah, no, I'm done, and when you said the date, Matt, I actually forgot what date it is today, so that tells me we're two weeks away from the real football season, so I am done with training camp. I don't know about you, Matt, but after like the fifth or sixth stop, I was over it. I saw enough, you know, kind of somewhat real football. I did check out a couple scrimmages, which felt like a little bit of real football, but before that I was like, I'm over the traveling. Let's just get to the Chiefs and the Lions for that. There's a night opener. Yeah, man, I went to eight camps. I saw nine teams because the Lions and the Giants had joined practice when I was up in Allen Park. The day that I woke up in Kansas City, I actually didn't know what city I was in when I woke up. I had like a two -second, I don't know if panic's the same. So, I'm done. I finished on Tuesday. I went up to Green Bay for the last one, which was kind of more of an add -on at the end. I had gone up there for OTAs to do a feature on Jordan Love, and I wanted to go back up there and visit with Matt Lafleur, and it was worth the six -hour round trip. It was a long, long bit of traveling one day, but we made it happen. How many camps did you get to over the course of the summer? I got to, I want to say eight, and I had like you with the extra one with the Saints. The Saints came to Southern California for joint scrimmage with the Chargers, so technically nine teams, but the way I think I did it was, I think it was five states. I drove to Las Vegas and Arizona, and then I flew to San Jose, Seattle, and Denver, and going from Seattle to Denver, that's the one I felt. But yeah, man, I primarily got the West Coast teams. I got, you know, eight teams. The ones that were easy was the ones in my backyard in LA, the Cowboys, the Chargers, and the Rams, but you know, after the, I got on the plane. You know, at one point I started thinking, I don't know how you did it, Matt, because you were driving everything. Me driving to Las Vegas and Arizona, that was too much. I couldn't do any more car rides after that. Yeah, I didn't fly for any of them. I'm based outside of Chicago. You're based in Los Angeles, so you, your teams are more sprawling for you. I mean, you're not driving to Seattle from LA. For me, the longest drive I had was Kansas City, which was like six and a half hours each way. So I did, I did make that happen. But luckily, like Chicago to Indy's not bad. Indy to Cincinnati's a couple hours. You know, it wasn't, wasn't too bad. Look, we're going to get into Trey Lance. We're going to get into, there was an injury at Broncos camp earlier today before us recording with Jerry Jeudy, with what appears to be a hamstring injury. We'll talk about that a little bit. But I, I want to ask you, so the eight teams you saw, or the eight practices you was the most impressive? And was there a team that stood out to you, either good or bad, that you were kind of surprised by? Yeah, it's a tough question, man, because I was thinking that because I got, I got a good balance of really bad teams from Arizona. I saw our guy, Connor Orr, had him at one and 16 for the, for his win -loss record, a story that came out today. So they, they, they looked like they're going to be really bad. And it was tough for me to figure out who's who on that roster. So I got that. And then I got all the really good teams, like the 49ers, you know, I'm high on the Seahawks, you know, that from our doing our, our midsummer prediction, by the way, that was tough. We had to pick our Super Bowl teams in what, like April or May we're going to do it again. And I'm so happy about that, but the Seahawks look good. I like the Cowboys a lot, but every year it's the same thing. Like they get far and they don't get past the second round. So I can't commit to them. Same thing with the Chargers. They just don't go far. Like they're really hyped to have a lot of good players. So I keep going back to the 49ers because they've shown to me to at least get to the Super Bowl, or at least make it to the NFC title game. And then Brock Purdie being healthy. That to me was all I needed to see to say, you know what? I like the Seahawks, but I'm going to leave that bandwagon and go to the 49ers. Do you believe in Purdie? I mean, look, obviously you believe in him enough that you're, you're, you're high in the Niners, but you know, they'll roll with Purdie, which we knew they would, if he was healthy. Lance is the third string guy. And I know you wrote a piece on trail, Lance, we can get to him in a little bit here. The roster's stacked. I don't think anybody questions that. I mean, they have all pros literally in almost every single meeting room. They, they, they have guys everywhere. They have a very good head coach in Kyle Shanahan, but they've been a team that they haven't found their quarterback or at least they haven't proven to have found their quarterback yet. They went to Jimmy Garoppolo. Garoppolo, of course, now with the Raiders, who you saw as well during your tour.

Matt Verteram Gilberto Manzano Connor Orr Friday, August 25Th Jimmy Garoppolo Lance Chicago San Jose Tuesday Las Vegas Matt Los Angeles Jerry Jeudy Thursday, August 24Th Sanjay Gupta Six -Hour Allen Park Southern California Garoppolo Seahawks
"jerry jerry" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show

The Rich Eisen Show

03:19 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show

"We know anyone referred of jerry one non. There is an extra by the name of aunts and mount. He plays pike on On the new star trek show he also on the show called hell on wheels. Okay I was making a lot of fun of him. I'm we were in an auction draft. Which took seventeen hours. Jerry jerry stop right there you gotta get out of this league. Okay your children's children your your. Your children are the greatest reflection of you and your lovely wife. You know that already jerry. Okay you know that already. Your children are saying daddy what's wrong. That's an alarm bell that's going off. It's it's the. There's there's smoke in the house. You got to get the hell out and that's an seventeen hours. You've got a life. Jerry you've got a job you've got children. What is the matter with you. Happy that the season. I'm just so happy that the season is finally started. You know when. I had six drafts this week. And when i have because i have to have all these other sites that tell me rankings than i sync up with my draft. Yes no one in. My house can also use the internet for me. The children can't talk. That can be snatched chatting. My wife cannot be online shopping searching streaming. there's none of it. I literally all their devices. I shut them off and put them in a safe. And it's just me and seventeen our auctions. We must live in the same neighborhood because a lot of times this week. My internet's dipped out in the neighborhood. Maybe it's just you suck on it from all of loss greater los angeles jerry. Maybe i was Oh my god upset in another league. I had this whole thing. I was taking austin all my leagues in the first round and My internet Crapped out so. I ended up with nick. Chubb but I tried to offer a few trades. Nothing happened so i'm rolling with chubb one of my leagues as well. Who else is in those leagues. Gimme gimme the one with the least non civilians in a league with a group of your friends. I mean a league with the former co stars of the show. The league okay. I'm everyone's in it except for your friend Jeff schaffer who was the creator of the league to big time and You have to say you know not to smack talk but those cast members who are on the league has stink not good. They don't know much about the national football league. Turns out excellent actors turns out. Now that said i can't talk too much smack i This is the most embarrassing point of my life. I mean this is really this is. This is a low point. In my life. Last season i came in last in their league. Also what do you have to do what you have to do. I i had to do the punishment it is. We i realized that I realized that all gambling is wrong and bad but there is a financial punishment. Don't care the end. it's nothing insane okay. Not like the show. I because it's more embarrassing. Because i lost the people who are trying to draft thurman thomas in.

Jerry jerry jerry Jerry Jeff schaffer Chubb chubb austin los angeles nick national football league thurman thomas
"jerry jerry" Discussed on New Jersey 101.5

New Jersey 101.5

06:33 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on New Jersey 101.5

"Handy for that you could call in. Ask him something right now We're talking about having your car Totaled. I get, you know. What is hers? I think this is a Toyota. I think they hold value a little bit better than any piece of junk I ever drove. Okay, please. Yeah, it's camera. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. Okay. Yes, I guess I I know it takes so little to total the car today because of the high cost of repairs. I guess it was kind of surprised that this was reparable without totaling it, but who's had a vehicle totaled Jerry onto 87. You're on New Jersey one at 1.5. Good afternoon. The great topics. Always a pleasure, Jerry. Jerry, welcome. All right, 2006. I was driving home 78 West town in 2000 and 16 Exxon Ultimate Asi. He was three months old call. Oh, no career yet three months old. They're all They had the windows 10 8 rear ended. Couldn't fix it total crumpled the frame. Saw taught my money back pretty much most of my money back and I brought it to 2000 and seven Nissan Ultima as he which I still drive today. Really? Okay, turns out to give me a favorite because, uh or knew he shot all to live in the new body style. And the best car ever owned 385,000 Miles. I'm just first sold on border brand new. Well, that's not Yeah, So, Yeah. Best thing that ever happened to me. I could think of the genome. So how long can you keep that car, Jerry? Oh, I'm my goal is to get it to half a million. It was. It was like a top is I'm on my third transmission because the she CVT transmissions have problems. But other than that, other than that, it's been. It's been good for you. Yes, If you look at the engine, you would think scheme plating. There's not a drop of oil line. What about like the interior are little things going wrong with the interior when it's a 14 year old car? Like seems ripping or Just just a little bit. The car is a complete animal. I got it fully loaded with every option. The sandy aid You know, So it was $29,000. And since your arginine are starting to go now, But you know, best car. I'm envious. I'm envious. I I always get a car that something not major, but like they slowly just fall apart. Kind of like me. Um you know what went wrong in my car the other day? What Just rejected the most ridiculous thing Never had this happen. I opened my glove compartment because I had put a medical card in there for a prescriptions, which was new, right? So I opened the glove compartment to get it out. Whoa! That half of it comes on, like, like the hinge broke off and the whole thing like jostles everything. It was in the glove compartment, and I see it. As it happens, there is some sort of like gap. Behind the glove compartment. But in front of the firewall, like inside the body of the dashboard, where you can't get in, right, and I swear to God the very card that I was like opening it for it jumped right into the hole. No, it's gone. And it's gone. And now we've got a freaking glove compartment that's hanging by a thread. Like why does that happen? They can't even make a glove compartment. At last. The thing is only like six years old. You would think a glove compartment should last six years. Exactly. It's not like I'm getting pulled over all the time. Constantly having to go in there from my I d. This is I always have stupid luck with cars. Kevin and Franklin. You're on New Jersey one at 1.5. Hey, What's up, guys? Kevin? So this having a few several years ago now? Um, I wasn't driving. But we had like a bad lightning storm and I went out the next day and I see a bunch of branches. Uh, land across my car didn't get my car. Apparently, the lightning hit the tree next to my car and then hit my car and fried the brain. Of the car. No way. Yes, And there is two holes after they towed the car away where the lightning actually went into the ground. But the insurance company said that my car was worth 4000 and the new brain was 5000. So they total of my that was that was it right? They gave me 4000 for it, though. Yeah. Was it a car you were attached to? Were you pretty bummed out or not so much? It was a hand me down Good. Yeah. So you got to upgrade I did? Yeah. There you go. Use it for the P. Yeah, exactly for the down payment. Alright, Kevin, Thanks for your call. Sean in Philadelphia, You're in New Jersey one and 1.5. It's up, guys. I actually had two vehicles Total. I had a 2000 and one Hyundai Tiburon. I've had it parked in front of my house and a drunk driver actually hit the the back of it. And whether it would, uh I guess her head on the horn honking the horn entry. She hit it, And I just kind of like, woke up out of my sleep. Like what the heck happened? Make sure she was okay. You know, cars, a car, but, you know, made sure she was fine. That car wound up being totaled. You know, whatever. And then anybody from Philly that's familiar with the Roosevelt Boulevard. My second vehicle. 2013 Hyundai Santa Fe E. And I was crossing red line on the boulevard and somebody hit me there and I'll tell you what the cop was originally going to consider it my fault. But I had a dash cam to show it was the other guy's fault. And thank God I had that footage from it. I wound up getting like 13 grand for the car. And actually has state forming, like how did you guys determine this value now? Kind of like what you're saying. The 70% value ratio one night they were. They were pricing via my vehicle around my local area in my zip code or what? Not to see what it was going forward to determine the $13,000 payout that I got. I only had 10 so I made out No kidding. So you know, bad luck. But, you know, whatever. Got the next car moved on. Absolutely the pocket too. Alright, Sean, Thanks for calling New Jersey One on 1.5. Okay, well, I wasn't expecting this. A lot of people are happy to have their car. So apparently when it's time to move on. All right. We'll take more of your stories. Did it ever happen to you where a car was totaled out by insurance companies, 1 800 to 831 a 1.5. The NFL is back and Fanduel Sports book is celebrating with 40 to 1 odds on any week one game..

Kevin $29,000 40 $13,000 70% Sean 5000 Toyota 2006 10 Philadelphia New Jersey three months Franklin 2000 Roosevelt Boulevard 13 grand second vehicle 4000 Nissan
"jerry jerry" Discussed on Rick and Morty Podcast

Rick and Morty Podcast

03:24 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on Rick and Morty Podcast

"Long as people willing to work on louis ship they become stronger for it So enough of that horse shit. Let's talk about our favorite bits jokes. There's jokes in this show Yeah we we've got some favorite bits for sure. The the first for me is the entitle are the entire opening copen. Where morty is portland around from place to place cleaning up after rick I felt that the cookie planet was a little too on the nose. Considering recent Current events the details not one. It's it has some very geopolitical notes So but in general. I thought the idea of him going. And just kind of cleaning up after rick. was really funny to see. I agree i agree i i love i love and i want. I know there's going to be some some merchandise for it. And i can't wait to buy it. We put it right next to my rix. Spaceship the morty solo. Adventure bike spaceship. Good with the the design choices that rick has and kudos to You know the production designers are on the show who designed that spaceship But it's fantastic the the conversion of the bicycle so that he can go get rick's foot cream or whatever whatever adventures evans among the venetians venetian foot cream. His like the little dish. The dishdasha gloves. Yeah yeah yeah that he uses To drive the bike at that was great. Great new character in this episode. Shout to garbage guber Who who was hilarious in the episode itself His his little moment when he sneaks around and turns the wheel from like two crows to garbage guber as as a potential Sidekick and rick kinda blows them off but then as we get to see in the post credits stinger garbage. Googlers got a doctorate from harvard. And and he doesn't. He doesn't have to do this but you know he's already committed loves app. Trash yum yum. Trash so yeah. I thought that was hilarious. Yeah garbage garbage googlers could good guy good guy in and you when he when he comes out and he's eating all that garbage at the beginning he just like so full just like. He's like breathing. Heavy is that clip later on in the corner. Just like just yeah no. it's great it's in the context of the post credit stinger that he's not doesn't really eat garbage to sue the emphasizing that more. Let's see puddle jerry Jerry jerry break in that thing. The first thing he breaks the entire garage any immediately turns into a puddle of water or like an egg. Type stuff yeah that part of it. That i love the most is like all right. I'm in and the first thing. He ends up into a puddle like wasted. No time going cont you at a bad time we. We talked a lot about the wheel of better. Things than morty Some some great.

rick guber copen morty rick kinda louis portland evans jerry Jerry jerry harvard
"jerry jerry" Discussed on Paranormal Analytical

Paranormal Analytical

07:04 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on Paranormal Analytical

"On this rick and jump on it. Hey buddy thanks a lot mark. Thanks for being on the show man appreciate you being on rick. Yeah mark and i was talking earlier. And i asked him. We talked about the wind ago. We talked about that. James this is going to involve you down there and louisiana the rue and different aspects of different occurrences of these sightings of not only the dog man but the wind ago as far as it being in a spiritual realm mark and i also talked about how this spread throughout cultures throughout belief systems throughout. Well i mean just like with you james down near in louisiana okay but at the same time you know these are things that are. We have a lot of personal sightings. We have a lot of personal events have happened. Just like eddie and mark and you james. This is what i found out as far as what We were getting ready to do this. Show and i went to the native american center here in wichita kansas and talked to a couple people and they were a couple of male elders and i called them up and talk to them and tell them. Hey what do you think about this. What is your opinion. And i said. Yeah these are people that are eighty seventy and eighty years old. That talk about the story times that they had when they were children. Not only up in the michigan area but in ohio. Different states around the great lakes region. someone was from north carolina south carolina down through there and these are events that have stuck with these people and a lot of these people. That are elders and everything. really sometimes. don't wanna talk about something. That's at private to them. But this is something that is held in recognition long with the different tribes and everything just like mark was talking about that is being brought forth as being evidence not only in a spiritual sense been in a physical sense. Also what do you think about that mark. I mean i'll take your like onto something. This probably closer than anything else that i can think of the alien thing or the the whole thing or supernatural i i kind of believe it's more infused with the spiritual and especially with the the The natives natives You know. I mean they use names for for these Like you were saying in in every every different a different name for him you know cherokee has a wire This is a this isn't a movie prop thing or or a a day. They were here long before we were. That's why guys you know european from around here until later and i've heard all the stories also myself from our tribe and from our at my elders to and They don't say things that they don't mean they don't if they do not mean it in. It's not true they're not gonna say it and this is something that they pass it down generational too. It's not it's not a you know like we do in a campfire until the girl scouts or the voice got some serious stories. This is their way of life. This is this is how they live is what they've seen. This is their legend. You know So i put a lot of trust in the Optimism in the truce on that side. Right there so. Here's here's the thing. I was the story of atlantis Liberalisations that were here long long long before thousands of your what did this is something that back in the day like a million years ago came up with it a gene splice on it. Whatever reason that's died out but these eight and they're still here to this day. You know i was thinking about earlier. Like algae back a millionaire could a bit way more advanced than we are now and then all of a sudden something happened back then to where they got wiped out for these things for whatever reason state. You know it'd be a scientific. Bill could be spiritual thing. I don't know if it'd be an alien thing. I can't see an alien planet dumping primitive creature on a primitive planet. Yeah but are they primitive. That's the question. I'm not driving. Prius is yeah. I mean i. I got i got to throw this out there. Real quick James said james. You ask that again. That question about the foot foot is important. So i on. That was the foot mark. What was it three toed or was it a full footprint. Bigfoot or a person flooded will eat print was well. There's a lot of different ones. There's a there always fork law And when i first started finding him. I thought that was bear. I thought it was black. There I was always sure it was black bear But then i started doing a little research. And i'm like wait a second. You know bears five claude animal And they've got it pretty wide set. That's pretty recognizable. And i you know. I started seeing these and i was like well. That's four claw. And i'm so start thinking it was a big dog. You know then there were some in. I've posted some pictures up on facebook for eddie There were some that. Were full Torso he'll enforce law and then there were some. That were just huge. Were denver's no hill or anything like it stood up on its haunches. Will dogs have what three goes dogs. Three right or over there all four. Yeah jerry jerry says animalistic breed. Let's drop it off. What jerry says animalistic breed. Let's drop it off your.

James north carolina ohio mark eddie louisiana james michigan jerry jerry facebook Bill european wichita kansas Three first eighty years old cherokee four south carolina thousands
"jerry jerry" Discussed on ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP

ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP

03:36 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on ESPN Chicago 1000 - WMVP

"His staff doesn't know the rules. That's embarrassing. You know, you don't think that the Sam Cisco Giants or the A's fan or Red Sox fan is looking at their team with a critical eye that matter if their first place or not, if you don't look at your team with a critical eye than your moron, Okay, Danny and I battled How many times how many days over Joe Maddon? If Joe Maddon did not know the rule yesterday, Danny and I would be screaming at each other right now, and I think we'd be in unison. Learned the rules. Some people are saying it's five games. Whatever if we said three or four. Whatever it's may 5th whatever it's May 5th there 30 games into the season and you don't know the room. You're talking about the manager, potentially costing you three or four wins like that amounts to you know, if we keep it this pace, it's going 10 to 12. By the end of the season. We'll see how many games they end up if they win this division or what if they lose the division by 12 games at the end of the year, you're gonna say always just May 5th. Here's Chris. Real Quick and Palestine. Hey, Chris, what's up, man? Hey, fellas, how you doing this morning? Good. What's up? You know how you doing, Chris? You know? Yeah, I do. Um, I have a question for you. Both on Dis is just perspective. As radio talk show host. You both know all the laws, rules and regulations of broadcast media. Yes. When I sit down here we know e know what line we can and can't cross? Yes. With certainty with certainty. Okay, Well, then you're much better than Tony LaRussa. Is that his job? Apparently then the only thing I would fault the socks for is not having fail safe measures in place to say to Tony LaRussa. Hey, you know we could do this or we could do that. Additionally, you guys, uh, replay Darrin Jackson's comments of Liam Hendriks being on second base. He didn't even know the rule because he was making light of it. DJ, So the ball club that's totally different matter you to represent. He's a representative of the You Know, Entertainer Wrong paid to tell you about the game. He didn't know the rules. Then he will get a rule book and learn. But guess what His value decisions don't affect winning and losing. That's it. We appreciate the phone call by the way tongue in cheek. It is that that many rules that we had to know for ready kid exacts about about a handful like seven words, Don't say 3123323776 with Jerry Jerry Reinsdorf. Fire Tony LaRussa this season, you're really loses. That's that. I don't know what we're doing. This'll is Chicago's home for Sports, DC's Cap and G Hood on ESPN 1000. Chicago White sauce this wall, then Casper and Darrin Jackson bring you all the outside rail. Just hit another with Conner. McKnight here for pre and postgame, vertical arching home run Next white socks and Royals tomorrow that it's 6 30. This is the new home for the Chicago White Sox. Yes, Pien 1000 and the ESPN Chicago Act. We'll get back to your phone calls momentarily here on Captain Jay Hood, Dan Wiederer on the Bears in the NFL coming up, and he told to draft Kings that casino Queen Sports Book is America's top rate is fortunate for reason. They offer nearly limitless ways to bet from live bending to prop betting they had all Draftkings, the official sports betting operator of the Chicago Cubs, bring you close to the action this week. With a 50% boost on your winnings. Any baseball bed placed taking advantage of this prophet? Boost is easy. I gotta do is place a bet on any baseball game. And if that bed hits draftkings that casino Queen Sports book I'll give you 50% boost Draftkings is.

Casper Dan Wiederer Jerry Jerry Reinsdorf Tony LaRussa Danny Liam Hendriks Chicago Cubs Darrin Jackson 30 games Chris Joe Maddon 12 games Red Sox 50% five games McKnight Chicago White Sox four May 5th 12
"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

Boomer & Gio

05:28 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

"Well please let him know that we're gonna get through this and we still have more world series rings that's true that's for sure thanks dive yet. And that's that's the thing that is not going to change. We're not gonna arguing about that talk about those things. Got the hammer like back in time to bring that out. Nineteen eighty-six for crying sixty nine. The amazing mets. Yeah well when. I reach out to a seinfeld. Diane i will indeed bring up your point as well because i love reach out and explain to him the story that he was dying to know because he was dying tonight story. Joey what's happening. Hey what's going boys was happening. Joey what's going on. Come on pull any joey. It's i don't know what else doing over there. But it's quite in whitestone. What's up giant. You got it's glenn. It's not joe bora. Here's the issue. I got big issues with you. Bring on Glen joe whatever the hell you name is a season i understand it for you to come on and openness show and defend brian cashman for what's gone on at what's going on a pathetic. Good that he's done. But you cannot sit here and defend. Brian cashman when he brings in the likes of k. Bruce chris carter lyle over bay. Brian roberts on and it's more than overlays the good in more than the good. He bought one either for georgia. Oh nine he has sick michael team in the two thousand he won with. Are you kidding me. Glen glide over bed i mean how long have you been sitting on our i mean for every one of those we can give you the ones that boomer brought up with. It's the document or shallow or void last four years. Yeah i mean going back the and by the way you know brian cashman. Also i don't know maybe a mistake. You may not be a mistake. It all depends on how the aforementioned free agent turns out or the trade turns out stanton tarot. That's a bad one. I'm sorry it is but what about garrett cole. The yankee fan wanted garrick klay got him. And that's great. Remember they wanted cease about the he got him. He was very good right. Aj brunette was terrible. Jacoby ellsbury was terrible is that he brings in didi gregorius in trade. How was very good. I mean we can go back and forth look labor more as a role chapman situation that was pulled off very well worked out well. Glaciers slipped here the last year. How man you're on the job that long as the yankees general manager you can have a bunch of good moves and a bunch of bad moves. I still say it's about their starting pitching staff that to me because they heading well and we all know. It's going to end up coming sooner on the regular season but in the postseason they panthers struggle. They know that in the yeah but do they because they don't change anything. You take a team. That would win one hundred games every year. But you have to win. You're the yankees you have to win championships. You know that. And they haven't won enough they haven't i mean the last time that we saw them win was over a decade ago. And when you're that team and you've had that much success in your winning that many games and you're not winning the postseason. The fans are going to have a problem with all right so as they should..

Diane brian cashman last year k. Bruce chris garrett cole one hundred games Brian roberts Brian cashman Jacoby ellsbury Glen Glen joe tonight two thousand nine Joey garrick klay one glenn didi gregorius over a decade ago
"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

Boomer & Gio

05:13 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

"I'm so happy and everything else and he was so nice to me so that was the story that seinfeld was asking for jerry was asking for last night. That summers had no idea right but that was it now. He also went on and said he wished knew that interaction what it was because because he said that's where comedy comes from moments like that like misunderstandings and things and that's why i wanted to know about it. The comedic genius i am. I understand bottle. And by the way the reason i said that i feel like deja vu is because jerry seinfeld once said craig's name. Yeah on steve somers. You know who i think. Is that the guy in the morning. credit card and now here i am reort years later and i feel like the same things happening all over again. He's not saying anything about you. Know we we. He and i talked. Oh you did. Yeah we talked and he goes look straight guy always got sixty percent of the gate. I totally agree with him on that. So cool. I'm sure it was a cool moment for craig. It's a cool moment for me. Jerry seinfeld says you name. He says you listening. So i don't know if at some point greg geneidi. Yes there you go now. So what do i do from here. Because he was legitimately interested in knowing that story out so he was asking and then he didn't get the right answer and he asked again. He said i'd love to know because this comedy comes from. This is what he said. Where do i go from here. Do we just leave it alone to. We hope that. here's me. Tell the story again. Do you have a contact for him. So i can tell them the story. Where do we go from here. I have a guy that i that you could have an email to a guy to the key to the guy. The guy who's got a double guy guided guided guy. Guy may get the second guy and then eventually it will get on the first guy. I them provide the guy the second guy. There's a guy that he has. Its has mango. Yeah now is this a worthy reach out moment because he feels like he was actually interested. They at least to me. It sounded like if you played the second half of that. But steve just goes on and on greg if you played the second half of it where he says i'd love to know those. I'd love to know what that interaction was. Yeah he have just been saying that on the air and he was like jail here it who go enlist do it and he did you he could have just been saying say inst- totally pooh poohing this on you. I mean he brought up his go to the go to the second part of that. After steve's done with own anything. And then was larry and two. I said Invention team and then steve awkwardly brings up at the very end to after he hangs up. We'll rear not your thing. He brings us the whole thing about the email again. Like why is he bringing this up again. You can ruin it..

Jerry seinfeld steve somers jerry seinfeld sixty percent jerry seinfeld second guy first guy second half last night steve two double guy greg geneidi second part years later Invention craig
"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

Boomer & Gio

03:42 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

"Carlos watson. I talked with key leaders from across the country about racial disparities in america's healthcare system. Look for the carlos watson show in real talk real change on youtube and subscribe or download the carlos watson chauffeur every get your podcast. The morning show with boomer esiason in gregg giannotti boomer and geo president george bush. I figured it might be one of the president's. Actually that's be president. Bill clinton now we talk about george w. h. w. h. w. george h w bush and then bill clinton all's yet all right. It's pretty good. I can't compete with that. But i got close last night. I did. this happened last night. This is the most famous person michael jordan. michael jordan. Honored your name. Well yeah. I mean you know we've had the same agent okay. I mean publicly golf tournaments and things yes of course for for usa. He's pretty famous without a doubt muhammad ali. Oh that almost that's gotta take the cake with thing so you got a lot of guys. I don't have these experiences so when it happens for me it's a big deal. I would still think president bach. The rocks up there rocks up there. You have a tremendous amount of names. And by the way. I you know i say your name all the time. I don't count. No you do okay but you were actually the most famous person to have uttered my name before last night. You were the guy. If someone said who's the most famous person ever say your name. I would say boomer size interviewed a lot of people that have said your name but my full name now. Not my full name. You know coach cower but does you gregg giannotti. Does he say that. No jill sims not on the level of what. I'm about to play okay. So last night on. Wfan steve somers. Has jerry seinfeld on and jerry seinfeld. Heard something that. I said as steve for clarity on it. Steve didn't know and he started just talking and talking and talking but the point is this moment for me was a big deal. Like i'm having deja vu right here here. Let me here. And i'll tell you why sniffed of in the morning Gregg giannotti telling a story about me calling in and that he was baby producing for you one he get that whole story. What was that one. Well he he was base for. Stephen is it gives. The wrong story. Doesn't always talking about. And then jerry later goes. No i think greg said something about interaction that me and him had on the phone that he didn't like so he went back and said my name my first name again so the story is and i know you remember because i've said it before when same deal seinfeld on with summer many years ago probably two thousand and seven range in there. He calls up to the phone because on the guy who answers the phone is a producer. And i say hey jerry. We are thrilled to have. Were so excited here to be able to talk to you. Steve's excited everybody's excited and he responds to me on the phone he goes. So is steve or not. That's what he said very flat very condescending right like i don't need to talk to you is steve. They're not so. And then i used to compare that to the larry. David interaction with larry. David was on with summers and he was like. Oh this is great..

Carlos watson michael jordan Steve David jerry seinfeld Bill clinton george bill clinton jerry Gregg giannotti muhammad ali steve youtube last night Stephen george bush carlos watson two thousand america usa
"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

Boomer & Gio

04:24 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

"To yokich. Three three yeah. They wound up winning this game. One thirty nine one thirty seven yokich. A forty seven points fifteen rebounds and nine assists and won the mvp last night jerry. That's what i think pretty. I met a lot of people. Have them right up there. Pretty good last night for sure. And then you had the suns beat the bucks in overtime. That could have been a game tonight to. I suppose one twenty eight. One twenty-seven devon booker had twenty four. The go ahead. Free throw with point three left on the clock of aa jump. Shot from the corner. Here was janas antenna cuco dealing with leg cramps throughout especially towards the end last play. He happened again But the time you know you don't know what it is. You might be a compromise. The estate doesn't seem like it's anything but we will certainly keep an eye on that as phoenix boy. Phoenix is really good as they continue to win and win and win the heat. The rockets one thirteen ninety one kendrick nunn had thirty in. The jazz knocked off the lakers. One eleven ninety seven still no lebron. Still anthony davis in that game For the lakers rangers and islanders face off at the coliseum. Tonight kors big game for both clubs and you got the devils skating in pittsburgh sharks forward. Patrick marleau made history last night. And i'll just say it this way. Move over wayne randazzo. You tell me. G if in twenty twenty one dan rostenkowski doesn't sound like it's nineteen twelve as gives us the call marlow lined up against patch already. The puck is dropped and history is officially made.

Patrick marleau thirty wayne randazzo anthony davis last night kendrick nunn nine assists forty seven points tonight Tonight pittsburgh One both clubs Three twenty four one fifteen rebounds one thirty seven Phoenix jerry
"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

Boomer & Gio

01:41 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

"It's not just for the guys in the locker room already so they'll be changes and maybe one of the big changes may maybe aaron hicks needs a couple of days off. Y'all maybe just needs to sit and rest and relax. You know whatever's bothering him. Whatever whatever it may maybe he just needs time off. Yeah and i'm not saying whoa out of uniform. I'm saying in uniform. Maybe as a pinch hitter or something else. Just just let them relax for a minute. And let them grapple with whatever he's grappling with whether it's what's happening in min- minneapolis or whatever. Just give them a break and then when he comes back hopefully he'll get his mojo back and he'll be the player that they paid him to be. I don't know it's a weird deal it's baseball. It's a hundred freaking game. One hundred sixty two games. I know a long season and we're not used to this because last uranian habit or an april toot. We have to remind ourselves what it's like davos hundred and sixty two game season because it's been a long time. I don't think really. Honestly when i when i think about the pressure these athletes in most of and think about your personal life and i think moving and all the crap going on and trying to cable setup and tv's and and You know you don't have a garage you can go to put stuff in your basement now and all that crap that you've gone through over the last. I thought. I think you've really handled it very well. Thank you but you haven't brought it to work. You have been led to distract you. You've been focused. Laser focused laser focused. But i could just imagine your day in beautiful bucolic town of savings just all the things that you're dealing with right now y- yeah no thank you. I appreciate that. That's a high compliment coming from you. And i will remain..

One hundred sixty two games aaron hicks davos hundred and sixty two one game season minneapolis min- minute hundred
"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

Boomer & Gio

02:12 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

"Good morning boomer. How are you good morning. i'm fine you know yes. There was a nice easy day. It was a lot going on in our local sports world. But tonight Everybody's back in action again and and for for me it's ranger islanders. Yesterday got a chance to spend a little bit with matt. Sydney doodoo and everything was great. And you know matt told me a story yesterday. And i was wondering whether or not i should tell it on the air and i thought no i thought this would really give people a really good perspective of where my son in law's coming from and you know his mindset about now obviously. We're talking rangers islanders. And you know. I was talking. Maybe i'll go the game tonight. You know and he's like going to the game tonight and then my daughter's yelling at me are you really gonna game. You're gonna go with me. And i'm going to go with me. He said if i go to game i'm not going with i'm just not going with. I love you dearly. I love my granddaughter dearly. Up i would not go to the game with you just as there's no way so mad kind of gets drill. And he understands it. Know he'd love for me to go to the game and you know i'm not conflicted. I want my team the win sure especially with the way that my teams have been playing as of late. We're trying to make a play of pushing. We got to win this game tonight. So matt tells me a story during the off season. So i guess. I'm not a gamer. So i guess. Ps five came out of new. Ps five controller came out this year. Okay and you know. He works with the guys over their pc richard and the guy from pc. Richard pro told them say. Hey look you know. We don't have any in right now. But i can put your vip program in your your. And i honor your he. How many how many would you like to get so fat. Knew that a couple of his teammates would probably want one. Maybe gonna would want one. Whatever i got worse so anyway he ends up getting five. Ps five controllers so his new goalie sarokin base comes to him and says you know. I'd like to hear you have controller. I like to buy controller. You know that kind of thing and he then says was not really for me for my best friend and matt saw for your best friend..

yesterday tonight richard Yesterday matt this year five Richard one five controllers Sydney Ps five
"jerry jerry" Discussed on MyTalk 107.1

MyTalk 107.1

05:13 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on MyTalk 107.1

"Great day. Alright. Thanks. Thank you, man. I'm so mad. Ana don know. Dad. Time for a tip their boat. God. Here we go Way back. Everybody on the show Been tips it Everybody else show. Can't there be damn P. Damn damn damn therapy there. So now what we're gonna do is let you know about. We're gonna give you a tip of something not to do. But if you're like me, you didn't even know that it was a thing that people would tell you to do. I didn't even know neither that enhancement cream existed. So what think Viagra In a cream for Oh, sorry to hear that grant. It's like what? You didn't. Wow, That's actually a thing. Mm e Guess so. You know, that's kind of the one I know is a pump. I alright. Austin Powers, Right? That's the one I remember me. What All right. What do you do that I'm not sticking anything in a pump. Nothing. My mind. Go into a pub. Just wrap it around and then start like using, like one of those base. They're looking things. What is it? I want to see one right now. I have to see you can do that Work time Google search I'm gonna back But this is this is an enhancement cream for men I didn't even know existed, that it's supposed to. Liven things up a little bit, or make sure that you were really standing at attention, right? But what this guy thought he would do. His name is Jerry Jerry. He put it on his lips. See that would pump him up eight minutes until it started burning really, really bad. And when he wiped the cream off his lips, Yes, they were puffed up noticeably. Did you see him? Yep. You saw Jerry's lips? A soldier? He slips. What did you didn't you Cherry's lips. I need to see Jerry's last. He's gotta see Jerry's lips battle, frankly, make you want to use it now. Doctors say that this could be very dangerous in a number. Of different ways. Which is why Donna is offering the tip. Don't do this, right. But so they can be. It can cause all sorts of problems. Skin irritation all the way down the heart problems they don't know. So don't do it, but his lips got his lips Wait until the very end. He stops midway through and then the bigger bigger No. So I think it's a really like, don't do not use it on your lips. I don't think I'd want to use it on my other thing, either. If it's gonna cause blistering on my lips, What's it gonna do to my what? And they said that it, um oh, he said, it's started to sting. So then I'm imagining, essentially applying a topical cream like Ben Gay that sending gay Then gay men gay. I've got that cute up, locked up. Ready to go, boy That smells good. Doesn't it? Ah, it's no good at first and then you're like, well, but it starts to give you that kind of like icy hot. How it first like, Oh, that's good. And I once put icy hot on my back and thought, sweet mother of Pearl. This is on fire right now. And then I tried to wash it off in an activated it more so anything. It feels like it could burn or anything like that. I do not want it anywhere on my body. I agree. Play the audio play the audio. Is there anything that you have? The audio of you have the audio of the tic tac. I know I don't let me put it to Ben. Gay Audio. What do you have? No, no, I meant I have you When you were saying you're like Ben Gay cued up. It was a bad Let me go find the idea. You guys Oh, you don't have to. Yeah, we don't care. Don't look here. You see a lot of Ben gay anymore. You don't see a lot of being gay. You don't see a lot of men Gay. I've never tried Salon pause. Heard them advertised a lot never tried Salon pause because that's in the same family has been gay and icy hot, except it's a patch that you put on like on my shoulder, and then you put on these salon pause pads. Onto your shoulder. And it's supposed to help you has lips really did get big. Which is why I would say if you're the the the manufacturer. That's probably a pretty good review. Because now someone's gonna Some hundreds or thousands of people are going to try. Well, there has intended stupid things all the time on Tic tac. Oh, yeah, We need to Maybe not. Do that anymore. There's another jip. Oh, boy, We got to go. No, no. Another lorry and Julia moment. I wish Rianna would get some new music. Oh, their voice members. Maybe she'll record with ASAP. Rocky, her boyfriend. Yeah, they say separate exact Jay's I'm so I'm so I just want you to finish everything. Thank you. Dance party. His friends call him Rocky, though just in case you're wondering.

Jerry Jerry Ben Gay Ana don Google Viagra Rianna Austin Powers Rocky Cherry Julia Donna Jay
"jerry jerry" Discussed on WJR 760

WJR 760

01:36 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on WJR 760

"Poor little Use Metro w Chair You've heard me talking about Victor's roofing for a long time. A couple years at least Victor's is the only roofing company I can endorse from my own experience, because they actually get a couple of roofs for me now. And I couldn't have been more satisfied with their craftsmanship, their professionalism. How refreshing is it to hire somebody? That actually does exactly what they say they're going to do when they say they're going to do it. They do a tremendous job. The cleanup is fabulous, and they're on their way and they're fast. I'm telling you It's no surprise to me then to hear about the stellar reviews on Google. Angie's list and Yelp reviews from people like Maggie, who wrote words cannot express how happy I am that I chose Victor's roofing. Then there was mad, he said, Can't say enough good things about the very positive experience we received from Kyle and the entire crew and staff at Victor's Roofing. And then there was Jerry Jerry said. I would definitely recommend this company to friends and neighbors. You know, I hear that all the time. I've never talked about roofs off the radio as much as I have, since Victor's roofing came around. And we've helped them grow. Because people hear us talk about Victor's roofing. Then they hear other people talk about Victor's roofing, and then they realize I had a call Victor's roofing. And that's what you should do. If you need a roofing company to repair or replace your roof..

Victor Victor's Roofing Jerry Jerry Google Yelp Angie Maggie Kyle
"jerry jerry" Discussed on WBZ NewsRadio 1030

WBZ NewsRadio 1030

04:58 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on WBZ NewsRadio 1030

"Rachel House voices Terry, who is the character that is counting everything actually provided some comedy throughout the film on then there's a character named counselor Jerry, who's voiced by Like, Well, There's several right There's several counselor Jerry's Yeah, it's like an old Jerry. Jerry. Jerry Jerry. Here's Jerry. There's Jerry. Couple of those were Alice, Braga and Richard. I ate away iata. Sure there we go from quite a few things. Yeah, Yeah. The Iittie crowd which, when I first heard the voice I was like, Is that title What? T t and I'm like, Wait. No, no, no Now We would have known. Okay, uh, police were shot. Do voices live a gardener? That's Joe's mother. Oh, yeah. Real nice. Great. Being among great mom. She gives you one. Hell, Rawlings. We all know Donnell Rawlings. He voices. Dead's the barber. Gentlemen, right behind me right here. I thought he was great, too, is only in the movies. You're watching the video right now. You would swear to yourself that Mac is getting a haircut that Mac is getting a fresh buzz right now. Quest. Love Place. Curly, the student drummer in Dorothy A. Williams's band Dorothy Williams, voiced by Angela Bassett on also divvy digs place Paul. That's the dude over here behind my left shoulder, So that's a hell of a voice cash greater and But again, all all this movie is is Joe and 22, Jamie Foxx and Tina Fey. I didn't know Was Tina Fey it first, right? Yeah, I didn't know it was her. I don't know if that's been just an idiot. And that actually, one of the funniest lines in the movie is when he says to her. You sound like a middle aged white woman so goofy again. My primary takeaway here. Visuals. I think they're the best pictures ever done. I don't think they've done better. They always get better and better, Obviously sure, short but at points this looks like life like the colors pop a bit more than regular life, but it's so lifelike. It's incredible that I think in on the whole movie. Yeah, the the look of the before. Is just like, mind blowing. It's beautiful. Yeah, it's pretty cool. Yeah, cool stuff, And I like that They like Picasso. We will some of the stuff there because it's like undefined. And then again, the other takeaway Jamie Foxx. Unbelievable question for you. Actually, you know, it's kind of a thin year when it comes to the movies. Did he get an Oscar nomination? I don't know how voiceover stuff. I don't know how it works, either. But is he the best this year? Good question. That is a really good question, because I don't know it's either him or Jim Carrey and Sonic. Even though Joe Kid that was a joke. I was like Jim Carrey played the character You knew for a second there now, and Jim Carrey would first up Jim Carrey is gonna win for best supporting actor. Best actor is going to go to the guy that played sonic genre, Alfio. Of course, Of course I actually I don't even know Guess the leader in the clubhouse would probably be Bozeman for my Rainey's, right? Yeah, probably the one that wins it. Yeah, I watched that movie at some point I've washed yet, but it sounds like he's that is after the best in that movie, you know, they really should have. Ah, voiceover section and they got me. I'm completely with you know that I love boys. Yeah, Yeah, It's such a huge part of this. No, he doesn't overplay it a lot of voiceover people because you are, you know, trying to give life to something that does not really have life. You go a bit over the top with it. This was just perfect. Well, I think he doesn't amazing job and again. This is Jamie Foxx. Bigger than life. Jamie Foxx. He sounds like a 40 year old something music teacher. And that's hard to do If you're Jamie Foxx, yeah. Or anyone really know, Mac, what I got from this movie, You know, Wake up, smell the coffee. Don't obsess over things, because maybe the thing that you're obsessing about it's not gonna fulfill you in the way that you think it is. You know? Do you want your hobby to be your career? Is that something that you really want, and this is sort of Why it first of all, It's an adult movies at a kid's movie, but I think a lot of people can connect to it because everyone at some point in their life has gone through. That is this. I mean, look at you. You're an electrician's 10 years ago, right? Yes, you know, And that was my hobby. First. I was like, I'm gonna spark some wires. And then, like, you know what makes some money out of this? I'm like this does not fulfill may Now look in college. Undecided had no idea what I was gonna do. I end up being a history and political science. Double major have not used that whatsoever in my life. I've seen you on Twitter. You use it a lot. I didn't want to teach. I don't want to go to law school because I didn't think I was cut out for it. And here I am. Now I'm a firefighter. How do those things mess? You know, it's never straight line. It's never a to B. And I think that's what this movie does a good job of telling you that If you're at B, that might not be the end. Maybe there's a C you know, Or maybe you're in still between a and B. There's always the next thing and don't be afraid to go and get rid of the gauntlet. It's the out show today a little bit. It's actually nine. By the way isn't well. Dodge doesn't really count, does it? It does..

Jerry Jerry Jamie Foxx Joe Kid Jim Carrey Mac Donnell Rawlings Tina Fey Rachel House Dodge Alice Dorothy A. Williams Bozeman Oscar Dead Twitter Alfio Angela Bassett Richard Terry
"jerry jerry" Discussed on WZFG The Flag 1100AM

WZFG The Flag 1100AM

03:06 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on WZFG The Flag 1100AM

"Tell me what I need to hear. Because we have our phones, melting mountain. You've got one minute and one minute, but I'm not gonna talk for a minute. This is Jerry Jerry is calling from the great city of Sterling, North Dakota. Jerry, what's on your mind? And, uh, the reason I'm calling Is I was watching those protests. And I seen a lot of similarity in people. That was down at the pipeline protest in in North Dakota. Um When when the natives were down there. And it wasn't our natives. It was paid protesters that were down there in in, uh, 40 eights, and, um I seen a lot of similarities with protesters. That went in. I don't think they were, um I think they were paid protesters by somebody else. I don't think they had anything to do with the Trump. Uh, Rally other than to cause trouble and make the rally look bad. Gotta ask you one quick. I know I don't go, though, Jerry. And by the way, where exactly a minute So you stayed on top. Just want to clarify one thing. Are you saying the actual people with the same soul security number? You saw there or are you both places or are you saying their ilk the same kind? I'm thinking there was some of the people that familiarly if you look at it, if you don't go back and look at the protest, and look at this one, they had masks and stuff on. But some of their actions and some of the stuff I think it was the same people that was down protest ng the pipeline are up there at Trumps rally protesting. Government, and I don't think it was trump protesters. I think it was paid protesters by somebody else. Well, just so you know, just seeing all Jerry we were over a minute. And I love you because I agree with you. 100% agree with you. And I don't know if they were in North Dakota or not, but I know that I saw a guy with a rope. Careening down the Senate gallery to the Senate floor. I've never taken a rope into the capital before padlock tourism, but I've been on the Senate for lawfully. Never took a rope with me. S o. I don't think you'd take a rope to go Listen to Donald Trump. You figure you're going to be in the Senate gallery and get to the floor and, gosh, don't you know he's got this thing on his helmet and his face is seen so we know he's the same Beale I'm guy. Spent another protest in the last few months. Jerry couldn't be more right. Let's see if the other Jerry my official, I know if you know this. That's actually my first name. Jerry said. You got a first name. It was my dad's name. And so any jury that gets on the board I go. Do what you gotta say, Jerry to us, Moorehead, Minnesota wisdom. I need it. Did you have a brother named Gary? Barry and Larry? I didn't But it had been damn fun if I did. Yeah, I'll tell you that. Yeah, Yeah, Mine's Christopher and he's escape this madness. But anyway, tell me what you got.

Jerry Jerry North Dakota Senate Trump Donald Trump Sterling Christopher Gary Barry Minnesota official Larry Moorehead
"jerry jerry" Discussed on 106.1 FM WTKK

106.1 FM WTKK

04:59 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on 106.1 FM WTKK

"Any initiative, President elect Joe Biden could turn to with hope it might bring together the disparate pieces of a fractured Congress. How about an infrastructure bill? Or from Jerry Side. Executive Washington editor at the Wall Street Journal. Jerry your Take. Well, You know, if you're looking at this situation from the perspective of President elect fighting, you might see a pretty bleak picture. You know, you've got Um, divided Congress. Your party lost a little ground in the house. It may not control the Senate. You've got ongoing controversy about the election in which the outgoing president is trying to undermine the legitimacy of the incoming president. And you look at that you say, how can anything get done? Is there anything that could bring These disparate pieces together on one item that everybody can agree is an area for progress. And I think the answer that question might lie in infrastructure, which is not a sexy topic necessarily. But it's one where I think those Republicans and Democrats and people in the Biden team all of whom I spoken within the last week or so I think there might be common ground. And why is that? Well, it's because everybody Like the idea of improving America's infrastructure. Um you know, red states like it because they could get for, for example, improvement in rural broadband out of infrastructure package. Blue states like it because they get help for Urban transit systems have been really laid low by the coronavirus business likes it. Labor likes it because it provides jobs and work and business activity during the coronavirus swamp. Um and it liberals may like it because you can throw in some Queen green energy climate change projects into it as well. So there's a lot of things to like in it, and it may be the one thing where, um everybody can come away with something that they have been pushing for because it's unanimous in that everyone agrees our roads. Rails, bridges tunnels is just in terrible shape and has been ignored for a long time. What you have that then That is is you suggest that's an area of consensus. Everybody agrees that on that, and one of the things that would that would be a struggle within any infrastructure package would be. How much do you spend the money on fixing the old and how much do you use it to create the new to create electric charging stations for electric cars around the country, For example, or Solar wind farms or, you know projects to help protect cities from the rising sea levels of global warming, so there would be tough choices still and the biggest toughest the biggest and toughest choices. How would you pay for some of these things, But the idea is, let's agree on something that's worth the debate and worth moving ahead on. This might be the ticket. We're speaking with Jerry Side executive Washington editor at The Wall Street Journal. He's written a piece entitled What might Unite a Divided Washington Behind Joe Biden unsexy Infrastructure. All right. Uh, there are those, though. If there are any left these these budget hawks who might say the money is just not there. What's the counterpoint to that? Well, there's several counterpoints. First of all, they have a point. You know, there is. It is difficult in a time in which The federal budget deficits just for the current fiscal year is probably gonna be or the fiscal year just ended. Rather is gonna be something like $3 Trillion. How can you propose to spend a lot of money on something we don't have the money for their several responses about the first is Everybody watching that seems to have decided over the last four years. They don't really care about the deficit. So cynically, why should we start carrying now? Less cynically. There's an argument to be made at the time of low interest rates and the need for fiscal stimulus that this is a good thing to spend money on because it would be deficit spending but in a cause that produces economic growth in tangible improvements in America's economic infrastructure over the long run. Beyond that there are ways to pay for this that entire time honored. One is the federal gas tax. Another might be something Republicans suggests which is finding some way to put a surcharge of some kind on electric cars because they don't require gasoline, obviously, so don't contribute to the federal gas tax. But maybe There's another way to get electric cars toe pay part of the bill for improving roads and bridges, you know, And finally, this might be the one area where Republicans might be willing to consider some increases in Catterick say the corporate tax rate to generate revenue to go for things that even the business community would agree are good investments. Thanks. Jerry Jerry, Cyber executive Washington editor. At the Wall Street Journal Coming up next, the future of our personal hygiene. When you call a del Technologies adviser, you're talking to someone who isn't waiting for their turn to speak. But who actually wants to hear what you have to say..

Joe Biden Jerry Jerry The Wall Street Journal Washington Jerry Side Executive editor President Congress president America coronavirus swamp Senate del Technologies Catterick
"jerry jerry" Discussed on 600 WREC

600 WREC

05:00 min | 2 years ago

"jerry jerry" Discussed on 600 WREC

"Issue any initiative, President elect Joe Biden could turn to with hope it might bring together the disparate pieces of a fractured Congress. How about an infrastructure bill? Or from Jerry Side. Executive Washington editor at the Wall Street Journal. Jerry your Take. Well, You know, if you're looking at this situation from the perspective of President elect fighting, you might see a pretty bleak picture. You know, you've got Um, divided Congress. Your party lost a little ground in the house. It may not control the Senate. You've got ongoing controversy about the election in which the outgoing president is trying to undermine the legitimacy of the incoming president. And you look at that you say, how can anything get done? Is there anything that could bring These disparate pieces together on one item that everybody can agree is an area for progress. And I think the answer that question might lie in infrastructure, which is not a sexy topic necessarily. But it's one where I think both Republicans and Democrats and people in the Biden team all of whom I spoken within the last week or so. I think there might be common ground and why is that? Well, it's because everybody Like the idea of improving America's infrastructure. Um you know, red states like it because they could get for, for example, improvements in rural broadband out of infrastructure package. Blue states like it because they get help for urban transit systems have been really laid low by the coronavirus business likes it. Labor likes it because it provides jobs and work and business activity during the coronavirus slump. Um and liberals may like it because you could throw in some Queen green energy climate change projects into it as well. So there's a lot of things to like in it, and it may be the one thing where, um everybody can come with something that they have been pushing for. Because it's unanimous in that everyone agrees our roads, rails, bridges tunnels is just in terrible shape and has been ignored for a long time. What you have that then That is is you suggest that's an area of consensus. Everybody agrees that on that, and one of the things that would that would be a struggle within any infrastructure package would be. How much do you spend the money on fixing the old and how much do you use it to create the new to create electric charging stations for electric cars around the country, For example, or Solar wind farms or, you know projects to help protect cities from the rising sea levels of global warming, so there would be tough choices still and the biggest toughest the biggest and toughest choices. How would you pay for some of these things, But the idea is, let's agree on something that's worth the debate and worth moving ahead on. This might be the ticket. We're speaking with Jerry Side executive Washington editor at The Wall Street Journal. He's written a piece entitled What might Unite a Divided Washington Behind Joe Biden on Sexy infrastructure. All right. Uh, there are those, though. If there are any left these these budget hawks who might say the money is just not there. What's the counterpoint to that? Well, there's several counterpoints. First of all, they have a point. You know, there is. It is difficult in a time in which The federal budget deficits just for the current fiscal year is probably gonna be or the fiscal year just ended. Rather is gonna be something like $3 Trillion. How can you propose to spend a lot of money on something? We don't have the money for their several responses that the first is Everybody in Washington seems to have decided over the last four years. They don't really care about the deficit. So cynically, why should we start carrying now? Less cynically. There's an argument to be made that the time of low interest rates and the need for fiscal stimulus that this is a good thing to spend money on because it would be deficit spending but in a cause that produces economic growth in tangible improvements in America's economic infrastructure over the long run. Beyond that there are ways to pay for this that their entire time honored. One is the federal gas tax. Another might be something Republicans suggests which is finding some way to put a surcharge of some kind on electric cars because they don't require gasoline, obviously, so don't contribute to the federal gas tax. But maybe There's another way to get electric cars toe pay part of the bill for improving roads and bridges, you know, And finally, this might be the one area where Republicans might be willing to consider some increases in tax rates say the corporate tax rate to generate revenue to go for things that even the business community would agree are good investments. Thanks. Jerry Jerry, Cyber executive Washington editor. At the Wall Street Journal Coming up next, the future of our personal hygiene. When you call a del Technologies adviser, you're talking to someone who isn't waiting for their turn to speak. But who actually wants to hear what you have to say? They're.

Washington Joe Biden Jerry Jerry The Wall Street Journal Jerry Side Executive editor President Congress America president Senate Queen green del Technologies