35 Burst results for "Jewell"

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
Why You Have to Watch Apple TV's "Blackbird"
"I didn't want to buckle and subscribe to Apple TV. I'm sick of paying $10, 8 $7, $12 for all these different streaming services. I said, the hell with Apple, I'm not doing it, but I did because I wanted to see two shows I really heard a lot about. One is a series called blackbird. With taron edgerton Ray Liotta in his last role, in which he so great in, but I have to say he looked very ill in this series. And Paul Walter Hauser, this kid, this guy Hauser, doesn't get enough credit as an actor. He plays a serial killer in a way I've yet to see be done. I mean, the choices he makes are incredible. You might have seen him play the security guard Richard Jewell, the instant hero after foiling the bomb attack on the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. He was amazing in that. But on this series, he's, I mean, this guy is otherworldly. He's one of those actors. He's very heavy. He can only play certain roles, but Jesus Christ, he's he's so good. Doesn't get enough credit. Plays a serial killer in a way I've yet to see be done. The choices he makes are incredible. This is a guy who comes from a comedic background. But he steals every scene he's in with Taron Egerton. And that's not easy because edgerton, especially in this film, is really great as well. Don't base your opinion on him for how he portrayed Elton John in Rocketman. Dump. It's night and day. And to add to all of this, this series is based on a true story about a guy who gets a ten year prison sentence for selling cocaine, but then he's offered to have his sentence greatly reduced if he can become friends with this serial killer and make him admit to him all the girls he killed and where the bodies are buried. The feds took a shot, they tried something in a bag of tricks to see if this kid was a star football player in high school could go to prison and befriend this serial killer and have him open up to him. It's great. Great. I love outside the box thinking like that. Many people thought it was a crazy idea. It was wrong, you can't do this. Fantastic.

Inside Supercars
"jewell" Discussed on Inside Supercars
"That's the plan this year. Yeah, you think so. I think it's having a bit of a. When I saw that IndyCar, you know, there's a lot of European jobs as a fan that way across into the category and very talented drivers by honor as well. The writing champion Alex Paul, you know, he did a fantastic job last year, and that's the driver that's got held off to school. And having been involved and attended a number of IndyCar events over the last 15 years, it is competing in his own, the competitive even really is in Europe. You can lock in it to GP two in some ways, but I think it's better than that because it's much more complex you've got longer races, pit stops involved, et cetera, and LGBT F two stops as well. But these races go for a long time and business is important. The cars are hard to drive. They've got heavy steering. They don't have a lot of mod cons in them. So it certainly is a massive achievement. And I think you're right, China. I've even went willpower one Indy 500. I don't think you've got the true recognition. It should get back here in Australia. And New Zealand matter, but I hope that it starts to penetrate, the gaze of a lot of people are interested to see that makes the nightly news tonight and I've heard a couple of mentions of her on the radio today and on a number of other new sources. So clearly where it has got around, but it's a big deal. This is a big deal and you're right. Roger Penske will be paying handsomely to do the job and I'd be pretty convinced as a bonus game attached to his army or I shouldn't say Mona just had a pretty good windfall. It's a great monkey off the bat, put back in a tremendous confidence booster as a team, but like I said, we're not kidding ourselves. We've got to keep working and keep working harder because all the teams are going to come back at a strong and you look at Ganassi, they're probably not amazing qualifying, but they were very fast in the race today and pushed me to no end and passed a few cars. So yeah, I'm not kidding myself. Just keep pushing on and we'll be okay. Great. I hope you have an enjoyable beer or whatever it is to not that you do. I know you've got a big week coming up because you're a city manager for a park and commercial manager of the whole 6 foot operation and boy you've got another forecast build on your hand. Enjoy the day and the rest of the day is ahead. We look forward to catching up in person with you. Thank you very much for joining us Chris duel again on inside motor sports. Inside motor sport is produced by thunder media for the community, radio network..

Inside Supercars
"jewell" Discussed on Inside Supercars
"An extraordinary meeting, was it? Yeah, that was the day of his championship win. And as you probably recall, I was the super cow's common kind of recognized days and it was always very difficult to come and take a rice venue and when that was leading, if I were in your car or else there didn't happen on many occasions, but culminating during the course of these championship year in the Dunlop series and then ultimately he's first supercar win the following year on the streets of the Grand Prix before I did this game in New Zealand. It was very hard to maintain your compose. Punching your fist in the air even though you meant to be unilaterally unbiased for any of the drivers in the field. It was pretty difficult. When you had one on your books and realized a lot long ambition and that New Zealand win, that just to me, that's the greatest moment I've had, or at least equal greatest moment I've had in any association I've had with the racing driver and I'd probably have to group the two Greg Murphy about the swings and that wind of Scots at Coca-Cola is being my three major highlights of involvement. Well, I lived 15 minutes from that track. So it's a little bit different. So I had a lot of friends and family. That was crazy, but sort of went in there one day, no one knew who I was and then the next day I had to have security coming, so to help me get out. So it was crazy. And today is the same. I'm very just, it's just surreal, man. There's no comparison, but at the same time, the relief and. I guess the belief that you have in yourself and just feels like it's just, it's just surreal. I don't have no words, man. It's crazy. Same sort of feeling, not at home. Fun. What do you do when you're looking, I've had a number of very, very well credentialed people say to me, a kid can be in go kart all you like, but I couldn't tell you if he was going to be a great driver. What could you see in Scott McLaughlin and what do you look for in a young driver that sort of tweaks that they could be the one the next big thing? Yeah, it was pretty easy to get a raid back in that period because cotton was quite a simple thing to actually monitor. They were less classes. Let's different categories or promoted programs. And you had the state titles of the national title of the road tax pro tour hadn't really seen a lot of day in any big way to end. But look, I think the commitment is the one thing that really is important. And we all know now that in sport regardless of the sport you choose to pursue, it's more than just being talented at that chosen art. There's a lot of thinking involved. There's a lot of thought process, psychological planning, process control, fitnesses just become messy in all sports now. You don't even think that golfers anymore. They're all doing all the right things to make themselves complaining. I think Scott's enthusiasm was very strong as a tiny mention of. He was very competitive Carter and raced very regularly. I think he was doing apple's 30 meetings per year, but his dad used to have a mandate that if he didn't get greater than a C plus or a B minus in school that he wasn't going to be able to continue racing. So I think the whole upbringing of Scott from a disciplinary perspective because wines are fairly firm handed father as many are and I guess the doggedness that he showed in his business life rubbed off on Scott and I think he's a pretty good combination of his mom and his dad's attributes and without necessarily saying he had these in his own personal because he is my mom and dad they were the ones that got me here and made me believe myself and my mom and dad have been an infectious writer with the USA for many years and I guess that put the love of USA and the want to come over here into the big leagues. When I was a young kid, even way before my civic health success and then obviously I met just a guy named Roger Penske we kicked it off and tremendously grateful for the position my mom and dad put me in and then the position that roger and Tim Cindy put me in. Yeah, so a complex component of items and the personality was around again that struck me, but the personality without success was never going to say the opportunities that would have set before Scott. But I'm never going to say about Scott or any driver I've worked with at a very young age. So I think he was only about 14, 15 at the time and I started looking after him. They're not ready. I mean, I would never have believed that he would go on to a mess that success he did. I'm really happy that he has. And I always knew he'd be pretty competitive, but when I first sold him to Fujitsu and got naming right sponsorship of these then Dunlop series car. I started putting a document together to say he was the next Craig lands. And I actually changed it and the front of the PowerPoint document said he's the first Scott McGowan. It actually worked out really well from that perspective. I would can't believe that he's gone and had the success he's had, but it's not a surprise based on what I saw in developing even after I was involved with him with all the people in his corner and many other people who've done a lot of good things with him. He certainly worked very hard for what he's achieved. The way that I've worked with Ben britzman monument engineer, I think we can really start working on what we need. We know what we want from a street circuit car, which we just showed that it's going to be pretty good. So I'm excited for Long Beach. Heading back there for the second time. But I'm not kidding myself. I quite easily be 20 next round, you know? This is what any car is all about. This is why everyone loves it, why it's becoming the world's most competitive motor sport series. And proud to be a part of it. But it's all about now. Celebrate this, I'll have a few beers don't you worry about that. But I'll make sure that I get back on the awesome actually on the simulator back on Wednesday. And I'm going to get ready for Texas. And then we're going to get ready for what's ahead in Long Beach and a few things, but it's going to be hard, but it's probably worthwhile just momentarily looking back on that because from when he won that Donald series in 2012, driving a stone brothers car, he then went on to be in the top ten every year in the 8 years he was in the supercar series. Started his first championship year in 2013. Then third second, and then those three consecutive wins. You know, yes, there's a lot of people who say, oh, 2017, these should have won. Yes, of course he should have. And he'd go back down and say, you know, yes, I did some things wrong. And he means that at the time. But the one thing you come away with is the fine crikey he's made his mark and everything he's done it. And today's win following getting pole position is an extraordinary thing. And I don't think in this country that we're fully aware of IndyCar is not the thing that it was 20 years ago or even ten years ago. It's still a very big series. The largest open wheel series in North America. And for the Scottie to have gone there, he is replayed, repaid every cent that Roger Penske is invested in. You'd have to think he's destined to be a real contender all season, wouldn't you Chris? Yeah, that's for me, IndyCar. What won the championship last year was a 7.1 average race result. So for me, it's just, I want to finish top ten every race, top 8. And if I can do that and I'm going to be there, there are about towards the end of the season. And when we can win races like we did today, that's exactly what we've got to do. We've got to capitalize on those. But like I said, we've got to just not rest on this one when this is all about just get going and let's keep the momentum up and regardless when we've got a fourth place car we take a fourth place when we've got a tenth place. We take the tenth. We can win a race if we capitalize. So.

Inside Supercars
"jewell" Discussed on Inside Supercars
"The 28 year old kiwi has sustained the pressure. Scott McLaughlin, he's got 56. Whatever you got here. From pole to victory line. Scott McLaughlin doesn't. This is a weekend to remember for his IndyCar career Scott McLaughlin of Team Penske adding to the winners list. No, I think this is top three moment of my life. I'm not going to rank them, but they are. No, I can't say that because my wife would be mad. The top four, my wedding. My marriage. Beth is 1000 victory. My first championship. And if it's supercars and then my first victory in any car and to win on both sides the world's pretty cool and my phone is absolutely going ballistic in my pocket right now and I can't wait to respond a lot of messages. Welcome to our report. It is a great pleasure talking with a man who is probably more joyful than most in these parts of the world. That being Chris Jewell, the now X manager of Scotty McLaughlin, who is today not to the stocks of many of his countrymen in New Zealand and many of the people who would like to be his countrymen in Australia, Chris, it was a wonderful wonderful thing that happened. Yeah, it was so great to see you Scott. Have you first become? I'm on the streets of St. Petersburg. And I only got a bit of last to be honest. You know, have these things tend to go Tony. You break your dock and a few tend to fly on there out. So these are pretty tough championships to crack in a tough place to have a race. We didn't because the cars are out, so equally matched. But that was fantastic for him to get after a perfect start in the season. And sometimes you score your first poll and it ends in disappointment. But certainly didn't discuss, ironic. Unexpected, I think, you know, I felt like you back yourself, but in our pre event, we said top 7, you know, if we can come out of here with a solid top 7 and obviously the goal has changed last night, but it was just phenomenal the way that the car had rolled out of the truck and I felt like I could really do what I wanted to do with the car from the get go. And what that does is for confidence is a race driver is something that's just feels very special. And I knew halfway through that race that was somewhat a bad yellow or something that was really going to affect us. We knew that we were going to fight there the whole way and I just had to keep coming and control the rice myself and I felt like we did that until obviously the back markers made it pretty exciting, which would have been great for everyone at home, but not for me. But it was just a phenomenal weekend. Perseverance. It's just you just don't give up. You don't doubt yourself. I knew I could do it. I'd last night. I had a great sleep because I just said to myself, you know? I've done this before. I did it with a roof on my head. So now it's just a matter of just feeling it and seeing what I had today. And look, I had a great great start, got into it, got into a rhythm and why we went. So I'm very proud. Great for Dex imaging. It's their home race team Chevy gave us an awesome fuel mileage and drivability as we've said all weekend. Incredible thing of course that last year his best qualifying was a bit. He's based right finished was a podium and he has demonstrated this year that clearly the thing that he said that he needed to do and that was biggest qualifying up and boy did he do that. It was interesting because I came to pretty close on a little things open wheel overseas this time of the year and I was reading the same report that you may not referring to when he talked about the importance of qualifying and how well he always qualified in supercars championship world, but it was strange. He didn't have a pole position in it. I love series. And a couple of times he was within a couple of hundreds. And he used to say to me, God, when will I ever get a policy? He could almost do it by habit in a super car. So it was good to say that he actually did string it together because it is a qualifying category I guess to certain extent, but probably not so much so as it is in super cars because strategies and yellow flag, caution periods, et cetera can almost keep anybody anywhere in the field of chance to win at any time in the car such as the competitors in the field, but I think you'll be the open fuller conference right now. This was a lot of what I learned in the last year, what, you know, in and out laps being comfortable on cold tires, setting my anti roll bars. So I felt comfortable in the newer tire and then resetting it using my push to pass. I felt like last year really led me up to this moment. I'm going to say it was the hardest life of my career or the hardest stint, but it was probably very up and down probably the most up and down season of race in my career. Well, back in 2008, Chris, you got Scott McLaughlin into your management team and was working with him through the motor sports scholarship. How did he get onto your radar? Yeah. I was doing a lot of work with great movie in early 2000 with his career cut program and I was heavily involved in tasman motor sport and through the Hamilton car club, Greg admits why mcloughlin and Diana McLaughlin and Scott as the youngster. And I were moving to Melbourne with the business father and put together every New Zealand, which is a small, trucking company which turned into a very big trucking company. And I met Scott at a barbecue at Kevin Murphy, Greg starves place. And wine pitched to me for quite a while to get involved with Scott when he was in cots and I was GM but Bryce take at the time. So I really couldn't do much directly. When the opportunity for the bright scholarship started, we had two or three formula four drivers being run by brew and Beasley's team and Scott was our Carter and he was more than happy as we had to the card in the colors of food. So and he learned quite a lot working in the business at different rice meetings when he had time to do so I can still remember him doing the lap border batterson a pair of shorts as a 15 year old in the 1000. And he's having the writing back in from across speed line because you're not allowed out on pink bowl in a pair of shorts. So yeah, it was a good start and they went broad tech largely wound up at the end of 2008 albeit at existed for another year under authors of stone brothers racing, fielding the car. The first client I actually took on board, I would stop because I had the freedom to do so. And we started to develop the career path thereafter. And the risk they say is history, at least for the 5 or 6 years of modern day, I think that I had a direct involvement with them, but it was great to say that the transition he made from cash to supercars and then onwards from there. I felt like at the start I was like, oh, this is like how it used to not long ago, but it was very nice at the start being able to control my pace, especially against her to who was very quick and I knew I had his pace on the reds. It was just a matter of hitting my fuel number, which we were doing from the start of the race. Yeah, I mean, we just got into a rhythm, and then even when the yellow flag come out and we're back in the traffic there, it was just about me just knowing that hopefully if there's no yellows, we're on the preferred strategy, which we were. And it was about bringing it home and just for me it's all about just keeping calm. Particularly, you're the leader. She's not making anything any rash decisions. I can move it if you can make it. But if not, just relax and count the left down. What are the staggering things that I so vividly remember about meeting him in 2008 at Hamilton, the inaugural race meeting at that city track. Was his enthusiasm. He had the same boys charm, the same sort of doggy puppy like enthusiasm, Craig lounge, the great back in the early 90s when I met him the first time. And on broad enthusiasm that was just so intoxicating, he clearly showed that and of course there was that great time in 2012 when he made his debut in Gary Rogers Carr at with Alex brehmer was hit the side because he wasn't well at home bush. That was.

Woman's Hour
"jewell" Discussed on Woman's Hour
"But a message has come in, which I really want to share saying, please allow me to be anonymous. I'm a serving male police officer. The treatment doctored off was subjected to was sickening. I am appalled, and unfortunately, even 9 years later, there still exists officers who would make comments like that. The only way we can change it is by calling out those who do wrong. Please keep highlighting behavior like this. It might make my job harder in the short term but in the long term, benefit the benefit will be a better police service. What a message and more to play. Thank you very much to the gentleman whose message in and you, of course, have remained anonymous as we always ensure that you can be when you message in all the more powerful it is for that thank you very much indeed for that message. Well, recently, just to come back to something we have discussed before and very recently on the program about skin, we talked about acne and also we've had a focus on lots of different skin conditions recently with a series you can catch back up with on sounds, but there's a parliamentary debate being held later today. On all conditions conditions such as psoriasis, eczema, rosacea, and their link crucially to poor mental health. The conservative MP sir Edward Lee has tabled the debate which is being held in Westminster hall. He's the chair of the all party parliamentary group on skin..

Woman's Hour
"jewell" Discussed on Woman's Hour
"Very much so and however the fate took them. She Maya good morning, nice to have you on the program. Morning. Thanks for having me. Katherine Howard. Tell us what happened to her again? They're headed. That's the one. Okay, I was trying to remember the rhyme from school. What drew you to this role? I just, I really love roles that are women who are have unexpected stories. They're really powerful, intelligent women, but also have vulnerability, which they try and manage. And the role was just she's fun. If you've ever seen the show, Katherine Howard is really, really fun. Tongue in cheek, and she's just brings all the laughs, but also she has another laid to her that you don't expect. So I really love complicated roles. And so I went for that. I also like this pop element to it. Is there a particular singer that you're channeling or that you've decided to try and think about when you're belting your songs out? Yeah, this is so the character and correct me if I'm wrong, Lucy is based off Ariana and Brittany in terms of the costumes and the style of the song. But actually for me, I actually had a session with Lucy and we thought I'm the first principal first principle black cay Howard. And I needed to relate the character to someone that I felt was more my vibe. And we actually thought, actually, he was really cool, but also like a pop princess. And I was like, Rihanna used to do that. You know, I mean back in the day. So actually, my Catherine hall is a more based on reality. She's quite cool. She's actually effortlessly beautiful standing but also very funny. And powerful, that's kind of. And powerful. You know, she stops a room as soon as she walks in. And Rihanna's doing better than Catherine Howard in many ways. She's still out there. Absolutely. I might not have mine after this program. Who knows? All sorts of things happen. But I know it's also really important for you, as you mentioned there being a black actor in this being a black performer to make sure that we are seeing certainly the audiences are seeing different people, different women, taking that sense of stage in these sorts of productions. Our cast is one of the most diverse casts the audition process was actually mind boggling. I would walk into the room and I was so inspired by the people that we saw the trans women, different women of color, different heights, sizes. It was so beautiful. And even at that, I was like, I don't care if I get it. Everyone here is wonderful. But then you were like, I really love the role. I mean, you always kind of had to get of course. And then we saw our cost and it's the same thing. It's just a beautiful mix of women from different backgrounds and whenever we see children, especially in the audience young girls, it's like someone out there, everyone can see a variation of who they are on stage. And it's really beautiful to be a part of that. I bet you've had some lovely moments with audience members and so meeting them and seeing them. Yes, I almost cry every night. Children are just as soon as I see young women in the audience, young girls in the audience, I just get very emotional because that was me..

Strong By Design Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Strong By Design Podcast
"Only offers free workshops and stuff so there's a lot of value in there So those are are definitely like the key spots and then when people join the facebook group. I have a an assessment tool that i give away which is a call at the readiness factor it's readiness factors estimate that shows us. You know his what you desire. Actually what you desire. 'cause a lot of people are chasing things that they don't want and then they get it in they're unhappy. The second thing is am my position to receive what it is. I desire on the third my position to sustain for that right so the readiness factor assessment is available for people who join the group. And it's just a really quick assessments to give you a snapshot of where you are with that. And i can share the link with you as well. Yes please go ahead. What is it oh i can. You could say you could say the link right now and then of course the description area. We can make sure that it's there for people. How can i let me. Just pull it up while you're finding it it. Yes a quote came to mind as you were talking because it's one of my favorites That really isn't necessarily a faith-based quote. But i think it has huge ramifications in just in in really what life is all about. It's from jim carey and everyone knows who jim carrey's jim carey's a canadian one of the funniest men i've ever seen right and his quote he says. I think everybody should get rich and famous and do everything they ever dreamed of so they can see that. It's not the answer. And i think we're also caught up in in the material world and in stuff in a possessions and off. I just had that. I would be fulfilled or happy what i mean. That's coming from a man who said moore fame and more money than he knew what to do with and guess what that didn't fill his gap than that didn't fill him up either. And so i think those are just such a good lesson for people that you gotta. You gotta tap something. That's a little bit more attornal yeah not part of the finite game part of the infinite game. Yeah for sure what's engine. Okay well the link is It's https www dot kristine line dot com slash readiness factor. Often okay great. I can send it to you. Type it out. Yeah yeah. I'll do a nice. I'll do a nice Lincoln description area so people just like something that looks simple and be able to go right to where you go which is fantastic. So it's christine jewel for all of you listening j. e. w. e. l. and just type that in and you will start to come across all of her stuff but we will have all the links for you. In the description area christine. It's it's really been a fantastic conversation. i really wanted to just explore You know your world and your message and just have an interesting conversation. Which i think we. We did that for sure. And i got to know you. Our audience got to know you. And hopefully we've got some some new fans and followers for you out of this as well which is which is always a good thing. So thank you for taking the time to to ban strong by design today. Thank you thank you for having me. I totally love it. And thank you to all of you. Who are listening. And you're part of spreading the message all of the messages that we share. So that's good that's awesome. Thank you listeners. For another terrific. Strong designed podcast. Show hit that five star rating. Share.

Strong By Design Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Strong By Design Podcast
"Tools that you're using to engage in these battles so that's really. The words of the heart is designed for people who want to build thriving relationships thriving bodies heart center admissions. And yes you know. Be warriors in this world that we're in but be the ones that create a different reality moving forward right so out of that. You know i have coaching programs. And they're really about reconnecting chore original design like how god created you to be as a man. What's your role is how i'm created as a woman and yes. I do believe we have roles. We have gifts and when we come together from our original design it is becomes an unstoppable force like your own lake when you get the masculine feminine coming together under one mission. One guide is powerful it becomes. Brady unstoppable the creation force. That comes through us. I mean life is a perfect example of that like birthing children but we birth so much more businesses ideas you know and it's like we're kind of stewarding our own little kingdoms within the greater cane. I'm right so it's like that's really the warriors of the heart movement and Yeah so from that. I have some coaching programs. That i offer and i wanted to continue to get this message out and share and just make it available to people who didn't know it or didn't have access to coaching with me added more intimate level. So i could feel like okay. I gotta get this podcast out. I wasn't sure if it was going to be youtube. Or the podcast. A love to speak and teach and train and so this is like my gave back and pouring into the world so the untamed life was launched just two weeks ago and the untamed life is exactly what it sounds like. We are not designed by god to be domesticated tamed neutered. Stressed out non down. Warriors of the world were designed for the wild Original untamed designed where we serve one. And then we serve each other but from like rau- place so that's the podcast is called the untamed life. And it's really about yeah living the fullness of life that were created for by not conforming to the ways of the world so i talk about relationships you know while deep loving relationships a body that is really like channeling a lot of life force. Because that's what we are. These vessels right And there's just so much available to us when we start to tap into what. I call supernatural strength. Courage love all of it that we have access to one. We break free from just trying to operate in this physical reality. I always say like it's time to operate in the supernatural and bringing into the natural. Yes i love. It sounds sounds terrific. Are you familiar with erwin mcmanus. Yes mosaic crazy. Yeah mosaic is the book the way of the warrior which is a few times. Yeah you've he's he's terrific man I've met him We've had him on our show before he's Wonderful human being and Just thought of him. When as you were speaking through that and i do think like right now we could see it. There's a lot of these. Like warriors rising king rising queen rising lion lioness is. There's a great book here that saw my you know table..

Charlotte Readers Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Charlotte Readers Podcast
"Lisa walk into the show. Thank you for having me to be here. And you're coming to us all the way from london. I love this magic of the technology. I know i know it's just. These sorts of things seemed like they were logistically. Impossible two years ago and now it's just part of day-to-day lives. Isn't it just chatting to people all over the world at any anytime of the naito day. Yes and we'll keep our fingers crossed their works. But we're recording here about three weeks before the release the yearbook that we're gonna be talking about Which released in september the seventh day. This comes out Tell us what's going on in london right now. Well because i'm english of all. I have to describe the weather. We've had a very very disappointing july and early august but we seem to be having some lovely warm sunny weather at the moment Which is love late of lovely backdrop to everything in terms of kovic. Where on the up we did. We took the brakes off on july the nineteenth and took all the restrictions Out of play Justice case numbers were were gang ready. Hi and ever since then they've plummeted so we did us with dislike experimental thing on it seems to be paying. We seem to be reaching some sort of herd immunity scenario here fingers crossed and touching wood but kind of almost feels normal well. Part of my research doing authors. I gotta look at their twitter handle and their instagram handle. See on your twitter. Handle you describe yourself is eighteen novels. You might need to update that nineteen two teenage daughters. One husband three animals and you say a love the dog the best. Now when i read that. I'm thinking is she talking about the three animals or everybody that she just described. I just described. Everybody lives inside my house. I love her the best. Yes yes we're kind of dog. Oh that's a complicated question. She's very rare breed. She's a dutch. Spaniel called equate cone shop. And yeah she's basically has to read them white spaniel with dangling is appointee snout and she's the love of my life. That's great that's You're you're born in london bread. There you live there You studied arts. Fashion illustration communication. How does that help with your writing. I really doesn't this by men before. Actually not not. Just relation to the fact that i studied fashion but whether being gives me some sort of insight into writing and describing wardrobes clothes and how people look by just saint march writers generally quite good at explaining what people that like in books. So yeah now. It has an is made no impact on my roy. Seattle ross great for our listeners. You're you're the most popular authors of fiction the united kingdom. You're not one of your tasks. Bestselling author nineteen novels. You sold over five million copies internationally translated into non language. And you've written everything lisa from romantic comedy to mystery and suspense. I'm just curious about that evolution. Kind of how you went from the beginning to that and sort of where where you see it does it. will it. Continue of all other parts of both the kind of stick together talk about that and yeah no pulse it by the stick together but talking from the beginning of the journey actually might taste in literature before i started writing my first novel which i started in my mid twenties was dog. I've been through a period of reading of those trashy real crime novels more happy. I like to eastern. I like dark literature on my favorite books is collected by john. Fowles and i'd always saw the. I would writer but one day but i'd be middle aged and it will be dog but the fact that i saw today writing it much earlier due to a sequence of events In my twenties. And i just was madly in love with the man on now married to And any sort of idea. I had that was going to write. Something dog kind of went by the wayside. Just all my characters get falling in love with each other and so my first novel was rows party in came out in nineteen ninety nine and it was a big hit in the uk and off the back of having a big hit field. Debut novel of the publishers would like each key recreating the same trick. So i found myself. Just you know his jew who wrote romantic comedies. comedies So we'll actually happen was midway through my career about up until that point my sales salted dipping slightly and that actually was amazing. He because it gave me the opportunity but a breathing space where my publishes weren't expecting anything in particular for me to kind of push boundaries a bit uninstall exploring things i've not been able to explore before Yes i with every novel probably from about my sixth novel on boards. I kind of been pushing it a bit. Further in a book saying how much could get away with before my redes- said stop. What's he doing. Why it's my lovely comedy. Yeah pretty until my head to see if anybody ever told me to stop and nobody ever did. Tell me to stop. So i just go to the point where i was roy seeing really really quite dog psychological thrillers and no. I don't think i'm going to carry on evolving. I think of goes dark. Has i'm a capable of getting or i want to be and i'm very very happy place with the also books. I've been writing over the last few years. I think on family my my happy space gonna stick here us great. I mean i really enjoyed the book. You've got a new fan here. I'm looking back at the ones that haven't read. And this one just really pulled me in and i to. We're gonna talk more about that but beforehand. I know you probably answered this question. Many times over but I love your story about. I loved to hear the. Is that how you a ride or get started on something as simple as a bet and and and i know you've told it before if you think many times just you know he had this bet with a friend you then. I love the the term. You were made redundant over here. We call it laid off but You were made redundant and you had to figure out something. Somebody bet you to write us chapters right. Yeah yeah that's basically. What happened was so i didn't follow. The usual path of people seem writers. Who take going to university and studying english and reading classics and I left. I left school and i did. These strange fashion cool season ended up working in the fashion industry for quite some time In quite menial junior positions in the fashion industry And then by the tomas in my mid twenties that she a secretary. And i just lost my job as a secretary being made redundant which means that. My role is no longer required. Sounds quite tragic. Does it the expression for it. Sounds radio depressing inside and just often. I'd lost my job. I found myself on holiday with my boyfriend. Who's now my husband and all of his friends and i Yeah i found myself having this very drunk and compensation one of his friends at four o'clock in the morning about the fact that i no longer had a job and the i was.

AP News Radio
Juul to Pay $40M in North Carolina Teen Vaping Suit Settlement
"Electronic cigarette giant Juul labs will pay forty million dollars to North Carolina the penalty comes from a landmark legal settlement announced after years of accusations that the company had fueled an explosion in teen vaping North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein had accused Jewell of unfair and deceptive marketing practices targeting young people to use its vaping products Joel promises not to advertise to anyone under twenty one in North Carolina and says it will put restrictions in place for sales both online and at stores Joel also faces hundreds of personal injury lawsuits from customers and families of young people who said they were hurt or rejected by the company's products I'm sure we have the

Baseball Together Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Baseball Together Podcast
"I got some fantasy baseball started and going out for each position your targets and where you should target them in my opinion. Obviously i'm not sessional but I've been playing fantasy baseball for about twelve years so so you know. I have a disagreement variety of free content on the on the blog. I spend a lot of fun over the last year year. Soda kind of go through it and just stay up to date and research definitely a nice stress reliever and something till the kind. Look forward to be able to do so. Yeah yeah yeah yeah absolutely. I liked that you've been at fantasy baseball for. What'd you say twelve years. That's a lot more than i can say. Think back on how. Many times i've played fantasy. Baseball shall my none for me. It's chess. it's chess with works but with four hundred chess pieces. Look yeah. That's a lot. And i enjoy usually playing like two or three leagues every year. Wow seriously yeah so for the people listening then you know if you need insights into fantasy baseball. I mean this way. This is where. I would start looking if bradley tried to talk me into play fantasy baseball or whatever i was gonna say i was gonna say you. You see that you're not a fantasy professional but let's be honest. The professionals aren't really professionals either. Fantasy football every year. And i don't listen to the obsolete telling me because that seems to work better so yeah i definitely one of my best years my first championship ever run and briggs might or might not like this it was when our longtime seattle mariner a-rod Came back from steroids and he was hitting two eighty five. He had like twenty home runs. You know down the stretch. And he was like just so consistent that year and i think iran has won the best swing Since forever if you just look at his swing it before steroids after steroids. So new york. Yankee a-rod led me to my fantasy baseball championship. Happy for you. But i'm used to. But i can't be the championship ship in the hospital. I haven't era question for you. Then so if if you can't put your fantasy baseball feelings aside against era would you given everything. Would you put tyrod in the hall of fame. I would absolutely. I actually just wrote a hall of fame piece of the results so that came on the whole thing was renounce on the twenty. Sixth of january zeroing duckie's as we know curt schilling should have been inducted. That i put my ten guys who i thought should have been on in the hall of fame Who i voted for and includes barry bonds roger clemens gary sheffield andy pettitte all four guys that connected the steroids and you know we could go on forever. But i think how inconsistent commissioners have been over the decades between ceiling and manfred for punishments. I mean you look at the astros. But you look at pete rose and then you look at steroid but what it comes down to is the gotta add that in but you also have to account for What they did on the field and how they did it on the seal you.

Baseball Together Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Baseball Together Podcast
"Yeah they they were there to. They were there until the last day of the season. They finished one game away from the playoffs. And then they were they right there the whole time and then you know it was it was so close and even know whatever they decide to do at third base and second base. Come this season next season. Cossiga last year contract this year. So you know what kinda see. And hopefully we'll see something from chandler and tom murphy coming back so should be an exciting year. The west is looking bleak. Come twenty twenty two. It's actually some. And that's the thing i talked about. That's one thing i talked about the mariners to is that it feels like jerry. Dipoto has had timed out just right that the prospects will hit when the astros have to get rid of everybody because they don't wanna pay anybody yet. So here's hoping. I'm glad that i'm not the only who's like wildly optimistic about the mariners chances because sometimes i feel like i'm the only one especially with what they see on social media. I'm excited for logging. Gilbert this year Hancock some point hopefully next year George kirby saw many start rotation pieces. There's just not enough bullpen pieces. Go around but there's plenty there's still available kinda shocked. They have even tried to go after. Like a rosenthal or someone out there improve a little bit on a two year three year. Deal deal so yep it'll be interesting to see what happens to say something. I cut you off no. It's okay. I just wanted to give a jewel a chance to talk about his blog. It's the ball boy. Blog dot com. Correct yes correct. Now you're giving up to date baseball information on there. I see a blog post here from. What is it four hours ago. Obviously supposed to go out this morning but i a pm am on my schedule. We all know about that. Latest one's my power rankings. That i just started about three weeks ago. So yeah the whole the whole blog started or will start as a podcast about a year ago with a friend of mine and you know ended up not working out but i already had like twenty five pieces of content ready so i mean through like enron to make an a blog post and then started posting this kind of kept going And then this this year back. In october or august. I actually switched over to. Its own website that i built through wicks And then started adding on you. Know the power rankings. All my yearly reviews You know weekly around the horn which is all the news from around the league for the last week. Just kind of recap real quick.

Baseball Together Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Baseball Together Podcast
"That's really cool but jill. I actually have few questions for you. As a mariners fan of mariners fan. Okay i want to switch gears here. A little bit briggs. A yankee fan he he can go go do whatever he wants to do. But but jewel. I made a prediction. I only i want to get your opinion on this. I made a prediction earlier this year. And last year at the mariners the mariners are gonna win a world series decade sometime. I agree with that. I percent agree with that And i've actually been thinking at for about two years now with the progress of the rebuild kind of just how everything's flowing had where we're at. I mean next next. Offseason we think. The mariners have twenty five million commit a payroll before arbitration and the opening day payroll from mike twenty seventeen or eighteen hundred eighty nine million And so they have money to spend especially after this offseason where they handed out. Twenty five million contract total. I think if that is that But no i agree. I think the mariners are the sleeper sleeping guy on the al west Just because of the talent that's coming. I mean outfield's gonna have kyle lewis jerk kalmyk and julio rodriguez by the end of this year. Not next year to those guys are top. Five prospects of major league baseball the other one as rookie of the year. It's going to be the best outfield in baseball. Took three years and then we have a gold glove first baseman a gold glove shortstop We will have kyle here. But i wanna be shocked if he came back on a cheaper deal Hopefully and i could actually see. I could see seager. I could see the mariners moving on from him or him retiring just because he's kind of resurgence last two years he's been fantastic it's like he's rebound is prime but by the time. The mariners are ready to actually win. I don't know if they're either gonna move on from him or he's going to be ready to retire Or and then if they're going to make that they're big money spot they're big leadership spot. You know third base. But i think the problem is pitching and i know that those guys are really right. Now but you gotta get that open sorted out the bullpen. I think the rotation showed an insane amount upside last year know kukuchi. His era wasn't pretty or a sip. But you look you dig a little bit deeper. He only gave up three home runs. His fastball velocity was averaged about ninety. Six Just all his deeper metrics you take look little bit deeper under the surface. He was great pitcher But of course those things still happen but he was he was great on the surface and then got sheffield and done who look decent last season. Then mark gave kiss kiss look surprisingly decent. But yeah the the bullpens. We're going to have to spend some money. Definitely because i felt like they had games there in just about every game you know they were guys who had their at their bad days like they do but they're in just about every game into the seventh inning and the bullpen comes in and it's a close game like no chance..

Baseball Together Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Baseball Together Podcast
"We've all taken for granted but we've all enjoyed what she's done. That's right so well and how you can. Who can forget. Charlie blackman's red carpet walks. I mean come on like me for him and guys like like so. I think we should be grateful. We have the opportunity to see him and his cut off absolutely all right with that baseball family. We're gonna take a quick break and we get back. We're gonna come at you with a very special interview and we think you'll enjoy it. I'm jason david. We're the host of the sports podcast. Where the home of sports talk for everyone. Join us weekly as we talked about happenings in sports. You can find another sports. Podcasts on anchor dot. Fm apple podcasts. Spotify stitcher and wherever else you find your podcasts. Welcome back baseball family. We have a special guest tonight. We have jewell young. Actually somebody who. I met through the raise community. Because we you know we talk every week about Raise energy he and i. We are also part of a raised group on facebook. So welcome joel. Thanks for joining us. Thanks for having me happy to be here. Great we're happy to have you so we're going to give you the same treatment. We give all of our guests. We're gonna go through the rundown and see if you can handle it all right. I'm ready ready as i'll ever be first question. What is your quest. Mike quest My quest is to. I guess my quest is to help educate educate but let everyone know about baseball. Just keep them updated to let everyone in on the know and for baseball. The spread the love of the game to spread love. The i have for everyone else to have so awesome next question. What is your favourite colour. gonna be navy and bright green brad united about that. I am excited about that. I do little discolored keel. Yeah mirror mirror very nice. The seahawks lime green. Like i really like it a lot. But i do not like the lime green uniforms all. It's too much it's too much. I agree. I agree too much of a good thing. There is such thing all right. If your team the seattle mariners. Same mine were beverage..

Baseball Together Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Baseball Together Podcast
"You filibuster okay. Well is the thing. This is why this came up. We talked last week. But kevin mather the former now former. Ceo of the mariners Because he was talking. About how jared kelanic didn't sign a long term deal. It came out this week and he said well. They told me they weren't going to call me up and twenty twenty because i didn't sign that extension and as of mariners fan. I was not like super surprised but still pretty surprised that he did not make up in the two thousand twenty season. I was expecting to see him last year. And then kelanic double down on that. And said i don't get the impression i'm going to be seeing the big leagues and twenty twenty one until a month in which is that. You know that special window like we saw kris bryant with the cubs. Yep that if they don't get that first month of service time then they don't get this year and so they can. The team has an extra year of control On that contract and so he's saying the mariners aren't gonna call him up until basically you know may of this season so they get that extra on his contract but i have an easy solution for the mariners before we get a direct during break. I have a simple solution. Put jared kelanic on the frigging opening day. Roster it's all you gotta do right all you have to keep that extension on the table and say if you want it you can have it. You can sign it if not we'll negotiate when time comes but here is your full year of service time. I gotta do. Yeah so so. In that definition that's more closely aligned with extortion because extortion definition of extortion is the practice of obtaining something especially money Through the force of threat right. So it's a cohen and what they've done is instead of benefiting of retaining their. They were holding things for this. But this is this. Is the threat right like we are not. You will not be called up because you didn't sign an extension if that's on the record somewhere there. Might you know there might be a case there but back to the service time. Thing definition of racketeering is simply dishonest or fraudulent business.

Baseball Together Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Baseball Together Podcast
"Mobile tuesday's they give you free. Mlb i think it's What is it march seventeenth or something like that. They're going to give it away so jump on there and don't take my slot. Okay good so only two of today. Spring training games went to nine innings and I mean that's bad it is bad. It's it's it's very strange but it's also like it is bad I i don't i get it. It's the first is spring training. And here's the thing this special rules this year. We're gonna they think we're just going to have to get used to specials That's what they said for. Spring training was The teams can contact the league office. And let them know that they're playing anywhere between five and nine innings so they can end a game after five innings. They let the league no the day before I think the shortest today with six innings or a couple of games six but there are a couple of seven a couple of eight in the only ones that went nine. You had The cardinals a nats tied at four. And then the mariners and audrey. The mariners walked it off five to four. So it's i don't even know if those were necessarily plan to go nine if they were just like. You know what we're tied let's go ahead 'cause the mariners and padres. I wanna say retired in the v. O worthy yeah so that. That game was tied for a while before a guy. Julio rodriguez walked it off our guy right you see our guy. I can say our guys at my guy but he can be say my but like so. I don't like the rule. I don't like that because you've got people paying to come into those games. And i mean i got my tickets for For a couple of weeks from now wilson get a game and if we show up and you know we we get to the game like i guess it'd be bought our tickets and a february. We're going to go the middle of march and if we walk in and they say today's game will only be five innings. I wouldn't have bought today's game if i had known we. Five innings exactly granted. I have a six year old. Who may or may not last the whole time. I want to have the opportunity to last the whole time. That could be a cool marketing thing. Though today's game will be seven innings. Perfect for families that. Yeah that's true but you've got a rate those tickets painful poppers you doing game. Nope well i got to tell you. I got the news. Today that are cr tickets cancelled. What yeah i. Here's what it says. And this is credible. I don't know what happened. But the actual announcement from my buddy who's local down in tampa he says the seller is able to deliver your tickets which means we had to cancel the order..

Baseball Together Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Baseball Together Podcast
"If you haven't heard about anchor it's the easiest way to make a podcast. Let me explain it to.

AP News Radio
Former Trump casino where stars played going out with a bang
"I'm Julie Walker the former trump plaza casino in Atlantic city is set to be blown up this morning it was the one time Jewell of trump's casino empire opening in nineteen eighty four but it fell into such disarray that chunks of the building on the Atlantic city boardwalk are falling off the city's fire chief says explosives are set to make the thirty nine story building crumble like a deck of cards an option to press the demolition button had been set up until safety precautions shut it down the what was billed by trump the building is now owned by Carl Icahn who acquired the two remaining trump casinos in twenty sixteen from the last of their many bankruptcies I'm Julie Walker

Go West, Young Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Go West, Young Podcast
"Of <Speech_Male> <Silence> <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> <hes> <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> years of observation <Silence> <Speech_Female> needs <Speech_Female> to be done in order <Speech_Female> to <Speech_Female> make those landscapes <Silence> stained <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> not just for now <Speech_Female> but for generations to <Speech_Female> come especially <Speech_Female> at this time <Speech_Female> of challenge with <Speech_Female> climate change and <Speech_Female> biodiversity <Speech_Female> loss. We need to listen. <Speech_Female> And i think <Speech_Female> depp holland will get that <Speech_Female> which is great <Speech_Female> but i think this <Speech_Female> administration also <Speech_Female> biden administration <Speech_Female> will <Speech_Female> work hard to say. <Speech_Female> How do we do more <Speech_Female> engaging <Speech_Female> tribes <Speech_Female> in <Speech_Female> the management of the lance <Speech_Male> that are <SpeakerChange> under federal <Silence> government and stewardship <Speech_Male> in the last <Speech_Male> couple minutes. We <Speech_Male> have. I <Speech_Male> just love to hear <Speech_Male> you. Reflect <Speech_Male> back on <Speech_Male> some of your <Speech_Male> travels as <Speech_Male> secretary. Obviously <Speech_Male> getting to see america's <Speech_Male> public land's <Speech_Male> has got to be the biggest <Speech_Male> perk of being <Speech_Male> the interior <Speech_Male> secretary. <Speech_Male> What <Speech_Male> moments on <Speech_Male> your travels as secretary <Speech_Male> do you <Speech_Male> look back <Speech_Male> on the <Speech_Male> most fondly or <Speech_Male> which moments changed <Silence> <SpeakerChange> you. The most <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> certainly <Silence> <Silence> <Speech_Female> the opportunity <Speech_Female> to visit <Speech_Female> in gapes <Speech_Male> would tribes <Silence> <Speech_Female> were <Speech_Female> incredibly <Speech_Female> moving <Speech_Male> and powerful <Silence> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> national <Speech_Female> monument <Speech_Male> which of course <Speech_Male> trump <Speech_Female> <hes> shrunk <Speech_Female> radically <Silence> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> was an opportunity to <Speech_Female> visit with tribal <Speech_Female> leaders. <Speech_Female> Actually out <Speech_Female> between the bears <Silence> ears beauts <Speech_Female> in an area <Speech_Female> that was sacred <Speech_Female> to five different tribes. <Speech_Female> Who have not always <Speech_Female> gotten along and <Speech_Female> their <Speech_Female> Their use <Speech_Female> of the landscape <Speech_Female> differed. I mean <Speech_Female> their ancestors. <Speech_Female> May well <Speech_Female> each other <Speech_Female> those that pass <Speech_Female> through <Speech_Male> <Speech_Female> or more <Speech_Male> <Speech_Female> eck and those <Speech_Music_Female> who <Speech_Music_Female> <SpeakerChange> had <Speech_Female> settled <Silence> and <Speech_Female> to be <Silence> there with them together <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> to feel <Speech_Female> the reverence <Speech_Female> the <Speech_Female> they had <SpeakerChange> for the lands <Speech_Female> to sit in a <Speech_Female> teepee around <Silence> a circle <Speech_Female> and listen <Speech_Female> to them talk about <Speech_Female> their connections to this <Speech_Female> place was <Speech_Female> incredibly powerful <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> that <Speech_Female> sense <Silence> will never leave me. <Silence> <Speech_Female> I also <Speech_Female> met with those <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> from that region <Speech_Female> tribal communities <Speech_Female> who were <Speech_Male> not supportive <Speech_Female> of <Speech_Female> a monument <Speech_Female> designation <Speech_Female> into listen to the reasons <Speech_Female> why and <Speech_Female> honestly the reasons <Speech_Female> why were <Speech_Female> not <Speech_Female> something that they had <Speech_Female> to worry about in terms <Speech_Female> of traditional uses <Speech_Female> but they <Speech_Female> were <Speech_Female> based on some <Speech_Female> misinformation <Speech_Female> but also <Speech_Female> enabled us to <Speech_Female> sharpen the language to <Speech_Male> make sure their interests were protected <Speech_Female> too. <SpeakerChange> So <Speech_Female> you <Speech_Female> i'd say that <Speech_Female> the the announcement <Speech_Female> that we made <Speech_Female> <Silence> around <Speech_Female> the decisions <Speech_Female> decision <Speech_Female> not to <Speech_Female> list the greater sage <Speech_Female> grouse <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> on the <SpeakerChange> endangered <Speech_Female> species act <Silence> with <Speech_Female> four <Speech_Female> governor democrat <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> to republican <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> with the audubon <Speech_Female> society <Speech_Female> with <Speech_Female> ranchers <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> was also <Speech_Female> really powerful <Speech_Female> and one rancher <Speech_Female> duane <Speech_Female> coons from <Speech_Female> nevada got <Silence> up and talked about <Speech_Female> three <Speech_Female> generations of ten <Speech_Female> years. Ten year olds <Speech_Female> was his <Speech_Female> dad. <Speech_Female> Who developed a deep <Speech_Female> distrust for the federal <Speech_Female> government when he <Speech_Female> rounded up cattle <Speech_Female> to be paid for by the <Speech_Female> federal government during the great <Speech_Female> depression <Speech_Male> and the cattle were slaughtered <Speech_Male> in front of his is. <Speech_Male> This is a ten <Speech_Female> year old.

Go West, Young Podcast
"jewell" Discussed on Go West, Young Podcast
"It was bringing people of vastly different points of view together in an authentic way to get to know each other as individuals not just as sumed ideologies to listen and to shape a policies and programs that respected different points of view and you apples of that in a work with many of the states in the the great basin and the greens on the preservation of critical habitat in the sagebrush. See so that the greater sage grouse would not warrant listing under the endangered species act. Most people said that couldn't be done because of the hard work of nonprofit hence states and ranchers and companies and the blm forest service in the fish wildlife Usgs all coming to the fish and wildlife service said the the species did not warrant a listing because of laboratory of efforts on protecting key habitat Brosse when the trump administration said. We're going to revisit that. I heard very conservative. Western states governor. Who said i really miss you. And i said really why is and he. It's because oil companies are coming to me. Saying wise is being revisited. We thought we had a deal. So what i hope. And what i have seen in the fact sheets and things. They're part of the interior has put out since this announcement is a commitment to listening and to collaboration. And there's a phrase of used in business and i used secretaries. Well sometimes you have to slow down before you can speed up if the slowdown and listen and say what is the common ground that oil and gas industry and the environmental community and the community. Who have jobs that are dependent on fossil fuels and indian tribes in the regions. The outdoor recreationists. You name it. What is it that the common and is there halfway forward where we can listen to those points of view and craft that to that that pathway and that exactly what worked well for us. Not only in the sage perceive and setting up atlantic wind energy leasing in off of the atlanta board.

WNBA Nation
WNBA Finals Game 1 Recap
"Anyone who follows man on twitter knows I'm I'm Elliott born and raised a dire laker fan there in the NBA finals right now? Tonight Lakers went up to on the Miami. Heat Lebron James Scores. Thirty three points with a double double Anthony Davis then your triple-double Anthony Davis it gets fourteen boards on route to a double breese Stewart was the best basketball player on the planet tonight wasn't even close and many NBA analysts would agree with me. This was. Honestly in your opinion, the years we've been covering the WNBA where does research performance night rank? WNBA performances you've watched. I, think, let's say in the last five years. Legitimately and this this includes. This includes all the Toronto stuff we've seen although all the game winning shots we've seen I think. The more dominant stretch from a player we've seen was about six minutes of sue bird. In the suber game. and. That was all so much that was from the perimeter and what brief Stewart does from all over the floor. She's just unstoppable in the post she's unstoppable and she's moving the ball. She's unstoppable from outside I. Think She's the Best Player we've seen blade this. I. A blanket A. Challenge anyone to come at me. If we're going by your five year window, she's doing this in the finals and that's where it matters the most and she's doing it off of an injury last year and I think every team in the league in a fantasy draft of players. If they redraft the whole league I think she's the consensus number one. I mean I believe there was a League's playoff game or Sylvia fells did the twenty, eight, twenty, nine. And that was impressive. Obviously I, think you're doing wholescale. Finals given context late, Adela done pushing her team to a championship on a non-functioning spine. Israeli something. This was a game where Seattle walked in as a two seed but was basically the odds on favourite given the strength and they were really. The biggest thing you needed was were we going to get what we had advertise from the stars you and I have been championing jewell Loyd this entire playoffs you've been consistently calling her future finals, MVP, Jewell, Loyd and. She. Is Hard to yeah. Looked at just her line in the box. Tonight you'd be like we're almost there. But like but but she definitely converted. Sue Bird breaks the single game. Finals assist record was one shy of the record at halftime. And why should we be shocked Meghan Rubino just wrote a player's Tribune column all about it. But. This was also a team up against Vegas team that definitely is is building their bulletin material. They have something to prove they going to hilarious run in the third quarter after being down seventeen at the half, they tied it up with a minute left in the third, a couple Julius free make it a two point game. It's a one basket game heading into the fourth quarter of finals, and it's at that exact point to restore. Basically said guys, why don't you go ahead and take a seat? Mama's got it taken care of she scored the first eleven points of the quarter and I don't mean the storms, I eleven points I mean the first eleven points of the quarter end you know that because espn was some real nincompoops and put up the graphic. That had fourth quarter points brief steward. Eleven. Las. Vegas. Aces zero as if anyone needed to know she categorically took over the game I mean this is the classic like great player mentality of. I have figured out the two three things I absolutely need to do and I'm just going to do them, and if you think you can stop it go ahead and try. But I know what I'm dealing with here and you brought up the context the ability to do that after. Technically. We're at this point for the storm twenty, two regular season games plus three semifinal games plus this she's twenty six games still into her WNBA. Return

ESPN Daily
WNBA Finals: How Did We Get Here
"China it's great to have you back on ESPN daily. Thanks for having me. Pablo good to be here with you. It's been a while but I kind of want to ask you about what time has been like for you. Since we last talked because this WNBA season, it was a truncated twenty, two games a sprint that started in late. July. So does it feel like the finals or here already like so soon or is it kind of leg? The finals are here at last after forever it's finally happening. It kind of feels like the finals are here at last because you gotta think the conversation around whether or not. There was even going to be a WNBA season started in like March, right? When sports was shut down. So we thought we were going to have a thirty four or thirty, six game season. There was supposed to commissioners, but it didn't seem like at one point there was going to be a season at all. So you have to tip your hat to the wnba Players Association and the WNBA Commissioner Cathy. Engelbert because they were able to create this bubble in braided in Florida Zero Positive Corona virus tests at a lot of fun basketball. So but here we are finally in the finals. Yes, and we are at the top of the mountain and so for those who aren't in the know China, how did these two teams get here? Very different path. So Fiat came into the season. I would say the favourite amongst boasts because they were getting sue bird back into their lineup. They were bringing back a steward both players Miss Todd, last season of due to injury, and this was the Seattle storm team that despite not having those two players not only did they make the playoffs last season but they actually one game of the playoffs. Also keeping in mind that there were Wnba opt-outs I believe that four of the top five vote-getters from last year for MVP did not play this season just a little bit different looking landscape than we may have expected coming into twenty twenty wnba states or a pandemic wnba season. Should I say? Las Vegas Aces were interesting case they were picked to finish fourth preseason. Now, Bill Beer has a ton of talent on his team I mean a number of number one picks lottery picks. He added Angel Cartridge this season, which is a huge acquisition after she of last year. So you know we knew that Vegas would be good I. Don't think we knew that they were going to be finals good but the play of the MVP. Asia Wilson has been incredible this year and you just have to tip your hat to what Vegas has done. Yes. So Asia Wilson is who I wanted to follow up with you about because she won the MVP. This season Brianna Stewart finished second in two thousand eighteen stewart was the MVP and Wilson was the number one overall pick in the rookie of the year. So we have this collision of stars, Legit Stars, and what do you expect to see out of the battle between them? I four both I just think it's fantastic for us to get a sneak peek into what the future of the WNBA is going to be over the next ten years. Asia Wilson Umbrian to Stewart are the future of the WNBA and Brianna Stewart obviously has already wanted wnba championship. She's been in MVP and you see Asia Wilson really coming into her own as as a player in this league but when you look at the Style of these players Brian Stewart six four can shoot the three incredibly versatile likes to play in space moves well, without the ball Asia will on the other hand she's going to play fifteen feed in likes to bang very physical. A ton of an one plays and I think that's what made as Wilson's performance this year. So oppressive is that you know that she wants to score fifteen feet in, but you cannot stop her. So you mentioned before that Radha to Stewart Sue bird injured in two thousand, nineteen year before that Seattle had one at all and it feels like they're stronger for their path year. So the bench on this team clearly has to be super important. How deep is it? Oh, they're incredibly deep I believe sue bird said at one point that they had an entire starting lineup coming off of the Bitch 'cause they could essentially start their second five at any given game. Now, keeping in mind that Seattle is going to be without Sammy Wickham in the finals and I think that's a huge loss for them because she's a big spark plug is a streaky but can be a great three point shooter but you know when you look at the development of that supporting cast that we talked about earlier without Subarea Stewart has was the Defensive Player of the year. Jordan Canada led the League in steals. Last season Jewell Loyd has been fantastic in even in these playoffs shooting sixty percents from the field in her three playoff games including two twenty point performances issues a former number one pick. So the cover does not bear at all for for Seattle in not to mention a leash Clark who is one of the great defenders in a wnba right now, they've got a lot of depth in their inner lined up in their rotation on the roster.

All Things Considered
Some On The Right See 17-Year-Old Charged With Killing 2 Kenosha Protesters As Hero
"Riton House, the 17 year old charged with killing two protesters in Kenosha, Wisconsin, goes before a judge tomorrow for a preliminary hearing. Rittenhouse has become a hero to some on the right. Sean Johnson of Wisconsin public radio reports on those pushing that narrative. After Kenosha police shot Jacob Lake, a black man in the back multiple times. The city erupted into protest on August 25th Kyle Rittenhouse made the 20 mile trip to Kenosha from his home in Antioch, Illinois. Rittenhouse, a lifeguard and a vocal supporter of police said he was there to protect the local business and offer medical help if needed. He walked through the crowds that night with an air 15 rifle strapped to his chest. What happened that night is disputed and will eventually be hashed out in court. But a full scale public relations blitz is underway by some of written houses supporters. A group called the Fightback Foundation released a dramatic video compilation of cellphone footage from the night of the shootings. It claims Riton House fired his gun on Lee after being chased and attacked. Narrator speaks of Rittenhouse being sacrificed by politicians. But it's not Kyle Riton house there after their end game is to strip away the constitutional right of all citizens. To defend our communities, our personal property. Our lives and the lives of our loved ones written houses cause got the attention of conservative media figures. Here's former Florida attorney general Pam Bondi, on Fox News. What's it coming, too? In these liberal cities? When teenagers have to go out there to try to provide aid? The Fightback Foundation says it's raised almost $2 million for Riton House. The group's chairman, is Linwood, a prominent attorney who made a name for himself representing Richard Jewell in the 1996 Olympic bombing case. Longtime Wisconsin defense lawyer Dean Strang, who is not involved in this case, says the teens, attorneys may well argue self defence, but it has nothing to do in the first instance with being the hero. It has everything to do with whether you will be held responsible for killing other people or you want. Kyle Rittenhouse is charged with first degree reckless homicide in the death of 36 year old Joseph Rosenbaum and first degree intentional homicide in the death of 26 year old Anthony Huber. Huber. Surviving partner, Hannah Giddings is among a group of plaintiffs who this week filed a civil lawsuit against Riton House and a Kenosha militia group in a YouTube clip. She talks about Hubert. He did not deserve that. He was a Good human Being. The plaintiffs are also suing Facebook for publicizing the militia groups call to arms. John Pearce has written houses lead attorney. He told the conservative news site Breitbart that his client had a god given right to be in the city that night. But I will tell you There's no doubt about this. That is, every law abiding Americans showed up in the city that they love. There are 15 The chaos would stuff immediately. Aside from the Rittenhouse case, it does appear more people are embracing violence as a solution. In 2020, University of Arizona sociology professor Jennifer Carlson researchers gun politics, She says she's noticed the difference this year. Rather than solving problems at the ballot box, she says. Some are reaching for a box of bullets. People are beginning to really think that we have reached the point of no return with regard to violence and whether we have or not. If people believe that we have that is very troubling. Kyle Rittenhouse is in custody in Lake County, Illinois. Tomorrow's court hearing there will focus on whether he can be extradited to Wisconsin. For

Aviation Week's Check 6 Podcast
International Fighter Competitions
"We're here to talk about. International fighter competitions and went to a presentation by till group analysts. Richard Lafia way back in January. Seems like another time but he talked about how this year in particular when it comes to aviation across all sectors. The fighter market is the hottest one going Tony. You recently wrote in Aviation Week of how the German fighter competition which is extraordinarily interesting right now and getting complicated by the industrial base implosion caused by Kovin. Why don't you tee up? The situation. What Germany has seemingly decided where that might be headed hodge of high listeners? I Yeah No. It's really a intriguing situation. So the whole German watch procurement has been complicated by its continuing interest in providing deterrence capability. Tonight so couple of years ago Jim. Nfl's chief said we won't buy the F. Eddie five the French came on and said if you pursue a thirty five by we're going to kick you out the future Combat Air System so the Germans are sort of panicked. They got rid of the thirty five out the shortlist and then basically cut their list down to Eurofighter and the F eighteen Super Hornet and then last week the German Defence Minister. A K K issues known announced that she was proposing a by. All of Typhoon Eurofighters call him in Germany and the Super Hornet and several growlers principle being that the Super Hornets provide that jewell capable aircraft. That would drop the Nuke Eurofighters would do the rest of the work to replace the Tornado. Tornado is currently the only European aircraft a European built aircraft. That can drop the be sixty one this the jewel weapon that's in several NATO bases across Europe so Jimmy wants to replace the Tornado. We've both the Super Hornet and the Eurofighter. But it's created a political storm. There's now talk about Germany's future as a nuclear deterrent nation. And this is sort of push to try and make this decision will push this decision making for this at back into tour. Twenty twenty two twenty twenty three. So it's a it's a bit of a mess for Jimmy. Which way do you think it's going to go? Do you think they'll stay on their current track or will the German government be swayed by Airbus's argument that its industrial base will be irreparably harmed by the purchase of American fighters of US would not particularly impressed? They call this a compromise to fall on it. Would irreparably damage the gym. Defense Industry Knife propose a compromise deal where all the typhoons would be contracted this year. The only way they feel that they can go on I think given how controversial the Super Hornet buyers and ongoing participation in the NATO deterrent. I think it's going to be a real difficult issue for the next election. I think it'd be a real discussion point for Germany country. That doesn't really like spending on. New Equipment is hard see. Also the Super Hornet being a effective deterrents carrying platform in the twenties thirties and forties. When when it will be in service I think a lot of nations will be questioning. Germany's judy to this mission. In the coming is Steve. Did you have something to add to that? While it just like. Tony said a couple years ago that move by France and Airbus really to exclude the F. Thirty five from this competition. I mean that's that's really where this comes in. Because the F thirty five is being primed as the US and European dual-capable capable aircraft in the US has started the integration process for the B. Sixty one Dash twelve the latest version with the improved tail kit with improve navigation and guidance for this nuclear bomb that should be delivered in the end service. Data's in twenty twenty five a got several of the European forces that are participating in that mission are using that aircraft For that purpose. Obviously it's got some of the Elo characteristics and strike characteristics that you that you'd want for delivering nuclear ordinance in if that ever comes to be an even as a deterrent. It's it's very effective so I mean that that is the the big issue now of course neither a typhoon or the Super Hornet or qualified today to carry the B. Sixty one you know so that would be required for there. Be An integration required. A process from car for both of them. Of course Boeing can point to the fact that the original F. Eighteen Hornet was qualified to carry the B sixty one. Fatf is you know a substantial modification of their aircraft. But they're familiar with the process that it would be something you'd have to add completely new to the typhoon platform. I wanted to swing over to Finland. Tony you've been tracking the Finnish fighter competition. They spent the early part of this year testing the various contenders for that. How long is that competition going to take to unfold? And which way do they seem to be leaning at this point if only it was as predictable as trying to figure out way they were leaning. Finland's processes quite different to the every other fighter competition. I've seen covered in the last few years since have been aviation week when he's gone is is a process where there's no comparisons are made between the aircraft. They test them. Although then simulate the aspects that they have been able to evaluate verify and then they'll put that into a war game at the end of this year and that will be the deciding factor in which platform. They will go ahead and choose and that decision will come in. In twenty twenty one so got the five main Western fighter jet to Typhoon Griffin Rafael Super Hornet and the thirty five. Thirty five is probably likely to be the one to be after all. It has virtually been successful in every fighter contest. It's taking part in with the exception of Germany as we just talked about the challenge. Here is that. Finland is a non-aligned country. Radio it's not a NATO country the tiny laundry with the European Union and it has very different needs very different needs and maybe some of the aspects of the F thirty five such systems alias warehousing of parts true wider distribution system that would be more. Nato designed rather than for a neutral country may not fit some of those needs plus it has very expensive infrastructure and so on so yet. The next few months could be very interesting. You point out in January and February. They tested all five craft in the country. It's going to be a very interesting

Roe Conn
Grocery stores and fast food chains rationing meat to curb hoarding
"Meet shortages are hitting grocery stores and fast food chains WGN's Ryan burrow with that Costco and Kroger have announced this week they're limiting sales of some fresh meat products at stores Tuesday Wendy's announced it's facing some production challenges and sub menu items may be in short supply the fast food chain says it will continue to supply hamburgers to all restaurants two to three times a week to try to minimize the impact a spokesman for Jewell tells WGN radio is not limiting customer meat purchases but the grocery chain continues to evaluate the supply on a daily

Podcast Insider
Jewells Chamber
"Welcome to podcast insider persona say hello to my co host. Mr Mike Del. How're you doing Mike through and good Tara for for what it is We're surviving so that's good in on this. I don't know about you but this week is just been. I'm like I woke up. This march is Thursday already. We've been busy you've been busy. I've been busy. It's it's in you know it's like yesterday was kind of death by meeting for me. But you know it's really meeting with Co. I shouldn't say that it's horrible. Meeting with clients meeting with team members. So these zoom calls and all that just you know sort of suck the energy out of you but you know while you're in the call. It was pretty okay. You get done. You're ready to collapse I ended. There's a little bit of phenomena with it's like it's not a you're you're working at your brain power is working but I tell you folks podcasting as alive alive and well in many of you started second shows and it's It's kind of easing to watch this businesses or jumping on in both both feet. So we're GONNA talk a bit about news of course hasn't best practices. We've got some stuff talked about with blueberry. We've got a great interview. This is an interesting interview. Mike. What's the and this is from Land's used to I guess diverse right. Oh Yeah we did. A did an interview which will will play in the recorded version You'll hear it here But yeah I talked to a Gal that lives up in Iceland and I used to live in Iceland and we had a great conversation. I hadn't been there twenty nine years but It sounds like it's the same old place just grown up and We had a great conversation about her. Podcast called all things. Iceland awesome cell was. Is it going to be like a travel scope a little bit too or a little bit a little bit and then you know she turned around interviewed me for her show so You know so if you want to hear the rest of the story you go listener. Show awesome so what will play that for the recorded version. Not The for those either watching live but we do have some support stuff going on today some important things. You're GONNA WANNA really pay attention to

Charlie Parker
Oscars 2020: Watch the Best Supporting Actress nominees
"Let's start with what will be the first award on Sunday night and that will be actress in a supporting role you gotta go through about ten others before you get to actor in a supporting role and then at the end of the show you'll get actor actress movie or what they call Best Picture and director so we'll start with actress in a supporting role Kathy Bates Richard Jewell Laura Dern marriage story Scarlett Johannson Jo Jo rabbit Florence pew little women Margot Robbie bomb shell share your first Laura Dern marriage story okay I'm gonna take Laura Dern merit story also Megan Scarlett Johannson judge a rabbit and Kay were put in an right there for Megan not for missed you know Margot Roby or Robbie in that bomb shelter that's about the fox news sex was no accusation paying it is Hollywood so you know you know but then again so was already one stain so actress in a leading role Megan your first simply a Revo Herriot Scarlett Johannson merry story Siri thrown in little women Charlie Sperrin bomb shell Renee Zellweger Judy I'm gonna go Renee Zellweger and Judy I'm gonna do the same thing same here all right so there's three of us all in accord actor in a supporting role charity Tom Hanks beautiful day in the neighborhood Anthony Hopkins to popes Al Pacino the Irishman Joe Pesci the Irishman Brad Pitt once upon a time in Hollywood Brad Pitt is going to continue his winning streak I'm gonna go the same okay you lost me on that what is under is winning streak dizzy on a winning streak yeah I think he won whatever last award show it was okay I thought you meant in as far as Academy Awards the only one can mean weren't you would think he would have by now yeah to give anyone just take his shirt off in a he's not in well you took off to and want maybe there's the thing they're going I go to brand also I think he would win it out right but Pacino okay she you're going to cancel each other out for starters yeah act actor in a leading role I'm Bonnie band banners painting glory Leo once upon a time Hollywood Adam driver marriage story Joaquin Phoenix joker Jonathan Pryce the two popes Megan boy that's that's a tough no that's a very easy one some how my mom I think I'm going to go with Joaquin Phoenix yeah well of course yards so is charities online didn't even need to ask lastly directing the Irishman Scorsese joker Todd Phillips nineteen seventeen Sam Mendes once upon a time in Hollywood Quentin and parasite bong joon ho cherry salmon does nineteen seventeen I'll take Sam Mendes nineteen seventeen Quentin Tarantino once upon a time in Hollywood once upon a time in Hollywood if Sam Mendes wins for directing that will be the biggest gap between two directing wins in Oscar history he won in two thousand for American beauty and here it is twenty years later in case you're wondering what the current record is it's a fifteen year gap actor Billy Wilder one for the lost weekend nineteen forty five any apartment in nineteen sixty and one other quick side no we were talking about those swag bags and people thinking that everybody gets one no it's just the twenty five nominees the five nominees in each of the five big categories you may have bought when we were revealed that earlier wow Scarlett's gonna get to because she's up for Best Actress and best supporting actress no one in case she just gets one I give her

Popcorn with Peter Travers
Kathy Bates discusses her Oscar nominated movie 'Richard Jewell'
"This is popcorn where we tell you what's happening at the movies and there's a great movie for you to see right now called Richard Jewel based on a true story but my guest today Kathy Athey Bates who you know from so many things I could mention them but then the show would be over because she has too many credits too many awards but she plays the title character's actors mother in this and she will break your heart six ways from Sunday. But today we're GonNa be having fun are absolutely welcome to the first time you've done done. This popcorns yours get no no. I've lost sixty pounds in managed to keep it off the last three or so I've been on. They sell popcorn pretty okay at least and we're smelling as Peter Stocks. The top doing this so you just got of course all the awards you have. Now you have a new nomination as best supporting actress for Richard Jewel for me. Ah The best award for this movie has been the fact that bobby jewel richards mom who's still alive Loves the movie. Because if she didn't now I know Gosh 'cause in the movie you know how she got Tom Brokaw. I know I know I know. We don't want her to be getting mad. Now you know and also You know there have been Statues in Centennial Park and young and Billy Payne who brought the Olympics to Atlanta. And finally there's going to be a a plaque with Richard's name and what did he say. Oh well that's a good thing should set that up or you should. Why should I work really really? Yeah that's it no Richard Jewel. That's the name of the movie. Clint Eastwood directed at but a true story. Can you tell us a little about Richard J. Just absolutely Richard had been a cop for a few years and then resigned or was fired depending on how you look at it. And then he we went to become a guard at at A college nearby and he got leftover the the thing with Richard that I found so tragic about this whole story story is that he was this hyper vigilant person. Ever since he was a kid at nine of the police the police even as a kid eight in church he wanted to help people And even in Turkey would run around and make sure everybody had a program and then later on when he was a cop he carried like one one hundred thirty pound you know battering Ram but he also had beanie babies for the kids who he might find who had been in accidents so he could give him he was is just this generous simple humble kind man who wanted to help everybody and it was that vigilance that Helped him in his job. He was hired to be a security guy for the Olympics. They were calling everybody in and he was at the sound and light tower and and he'd gone off to the restroom and he came back and there was a bench there and he noticed right away there was what they call an Alice. Pack this big military pack the officious very suspicious and so he told the sit idle like that and they say oh. Come on Richard he said no no I have a bad feeling and they so they brought in the bomb guys and he described it that the the guy went underneath and looked at it and then he just froze and he just back very slowly out and he told his buddy to turn turn a cell phone off and they tried to get everybody back as many people back but through a series of mishaps and nine one one calls and not being able to get in touch touch with people Eric Rudolph who actually planted the bomb and was not caught until like six years later Had this phone message You know there's going to be a bomb in Centennial Park in thirty minutes and thanks to Richard got all that is out of the tower. He was running up and down with doing everything everything a hand and suddenly he became this hero in and then for three days three days and his mother was all got that three day. Yeah my mom his his mom he's on TV. He's bets right he's on. TV is the hero of the day if CNN wanted to talk to him and what turned out was there was a leak from the FBI to Cathy scruggs at the Atlanta Journal Constitution and they decided to break the story and overnight they everybody turned against him and said he was the he was the guy he exempts Mama Except Momma. She was there for him she was they were very very close. She had two miscarriages ages and Richard was her only child and Both his real dad and his step step dad banished from their lives for various. The reasons and So he was her child her boy you know and she knows she knows how he can be be overzealous knows the things that he shouldn't be doing. You trust the police so much too much that it cost him by they use. This is what was so cruel colon. I remember when I started out working with Clint. We were all there to meet with him and I said why do you want to do this movie. And he said because I think it's an American tragedy and he said this is a story that people need to see Jon Hamm was down in Atlanta and people said well what are you doing down here. And he said Oh it's about the bombing and Oh yeah that guy. Richard Jewell who was the bomber summer. Because there's some suspicion and for eight days without any evidence People camped out you know media the FBI suspected in even when they brought him in for his first interview they already had a cell for him. Yeah we like him for this. That's what they always say. Yeah because the public. Everybody's demanding to know who did this. There's that desire. Why are to get somebody up there and say he did it well? There were millions and millions of dollars resting on this because of the Olympics and they had to get it sorted say it's nineteen ninety-six on this is happening so we weren't even in the big cellphone period of the everything was just taking off and don't forget we'd had waco the Federal Building we had Ruby Ridge. We had ninety three Truck Bombing World Trade Center so it was the beginning of the new normal ordinarily of this terrorism. And and it's that going. That's that seesaw. From we love you to stay away from us. I think that the real tragedy and I'm sure that this is what bobby default is that the very quality that enabled him to find that bomb his vigilance. They turn that into a liability And they beat him up with it that to me I think is just the tragedy of all. We'll one amazing scene that you have among renting in this is when bobby went on national. TV making a plea to President Clinton at the time yes to see what's happening and do something for some. Yes so let's look a little bit attack okay. My son is innocent. Richard is not the Olympic the big park bomber. He saved people's lives. Please hear me Mr President and help me. My son is a hero. If they do not intend to charge my son. You please tell us. Please tell the world Mr President. Please clear heartbreaking. Breaking it is is really is. I don't know how many times you had to do that. Well actually we got it in the first take. That's so clint into eastwood is fresh and real. Whenever I've been on a set of this it's always let's move on now but you know people say that the do said I J do when you're always think it's going to be quick but it's not that he takes his time and he leaves it open and it so efficient that he doesn't need need to do more than a couple of takes? Is this your first time with Clint Eastwood. Absolutely absolutely what was that like was a nervous wreck I was a nervous wreck. Check it I I and I think we all were because we all wanted to just I mean we all WanNa do our best all the time. But when you're with someone like client or Mike Nichols just you really and I think we also felt a real responsibility to bobby she survived. Of course she's still alive. And and Richard passed away ten years later he was thirty three when this happened and He got some money CNN NBC you know. They sued them and but the Atlanta Journal Constitution never accepted responsibility for it and the real. FBI Guy who's played by. I Jon Hamm went to his grave saying this guy did it. We see that teen in the movie where he says I still think yeah even when somebody else has confessed knowing it. That's the kind of thing. Well it's a movie that is pretty hard basically on the media and on the feds. It's really saying that in a world where we're supposed to trust certain things we've lost it you know that was nineteen ninety. Six things are worse now. Well and I think it's important to realize is that they just got it wrong and they were in such a rush to try and say the Olympics. That had really. This was only the second day I think it'd be Olympics and and So that was really driving it. And I don't WanNa paint it with two broader brush because look more than ever we need the truth from the press more than ever we I need the truth from the FBI. You know the government we depend on those institutions so that was very specific to this case and I hope people people don't feel that we're just trying to malign those institutions. What does Clinton do when after take? He's happy with it. Well this is what I love of about him and and I didn't realize this is that he just lets the camera. Keep going and we just keep going The scene may be done. I mean our lines. May It'd be done. But we just keep improvising and just continuing to live in that situation and he gets a lot of great stuff that he can use and it's also an opportunity for us to have more time together to experience the chargers together especially nowadays when you don't have rehearsal time you're you'd have your as my friend. Jessica Tandy God rest or used to say your kitchen work nowadays. You have to do your kitchen or in your kitchen you know at at home alone so it's great to have that it's been working. Well when he was when Clinton was here last he was saying that he hates movies. Where the director will say? Hey you know because he said I'm really quiet about it. I just go go when you're ready when you're ready. Just do something I also heard about. I don't know if this is is apocryphal. Or not was when he was doing Spaghetti Westerns and they would scream action the worst would at all also in TV. You know it's just also crazy. The and I think that's when he he developed his style he thought you know. Wait a minute. Everybody's just rushing in and getting it wrong and rushing and getting it wrong again and he just wanted to keep it real simple simple. He says when you're ready people going like this and I remember the first time adequate seen merge running downstairs in Iran into the sound guy who are really liked and I was was trying to speak French Dami said and I thought I thought the scene was over. You know and then that's when I realized it's not over till it's over it until he says it's yeah that's got it he also has. Can I just say he has an amazing cameramen Stephen Campanella he's he's been with them for twenty five years like many of the people on the crew. It's like a family and he just knows how to tell that story with the camera and one of my favorite shots and Clint's to win when the FBI are there. And you see Richard putting his blue gloves on and we've been telling him and telling them not to help the police and then it pans over to salmon. I just standing there looking at him. Like he's never gonNA stop. You know you just wants to throttling. But whatever he's doing he's doing great eighty nine now. Yeah he's still sexiest. Hell you go see. And you've turned that he is. He is sexy telling you. Imagine what it'd be like when he's ninety at like good wine. Everything is perfect to do. Well you you've worked with so many people you know Mike Nichols and primary primary colors. He's somebody I missed tremendously. He's not only a great director but he's just one of the smartest most fun people people that ever lived on this earth. Yeah I agree I remember. I was at an awards thing I think it was the EMMYS and and I lost you know and like about half an hour later. I get this text for Mike. Saying you're among one of my favorite actors I've ever worked with and I thought well that's it dude. I know it's like how lovely of him to do that. In that moment it is but he was right well he was well. It was one of the high points of my life to work with him. I and with that

Published...Or Not
Kate Murdoch Discusses Her Newest Masterpiece 'The Orange Grove'
"You've traveled through France you probably went to the side live. You could only wonder at the opulence of the King's palace petition. Also wonder how the French court operated will thanks to Cape Murdoch. We get an idea. Welcome back again you descriptions of the palace and what the people were wearing lean and even the food that was served. We're really vivid. There was a lot of research he must have done. Yes and it also comes about because of my because I was an office for so many years. So grading visuals is really important to me. I like to read visuals and I like to write them. So yeah that's part of it. Also but yes I had to get. Did you know there are a number of things like at one stage. I had a carriage clock on a mantle and carriage clocks when invented like that new I was constantly rating like I did a number of proofs just obviously for those types of things and what about the Masa Pancake. Yes I came across that somewhere and I can't remember Web ed but there was something like that Croatia's on point for the coach and Yes it was as realistic as possible. this was all around seventeen fifty seventeen. I five seventeen o five so the louise were in prisons whether the fourteenth But the book is called the Orange Grove. And that's not in beside who owns the Orange Grove and palace the duke and Duchess Stumbles Linage and yes. It's a beautiful chateau. It's an Orange Grove and extensive grounds and manicured gardens will well. He's Juke Hugo let's make it easy and The touches Charlotte now. They have a daughter Amelia. But there's also a number of mistress yes as mistresses and up to this. You know the time. The book said they've all been co-existing quite happily. It hasn't been too many problems uh-huh but all of a sudden that changes with the arrival of the new mistress Latisha. Well what I couldn't believe is the the duchess in the five mistresses. All went out from a picnic and they had a very cordial social time. They even discuss the merits of marriage over missing. That's right I take it with your research. Could that conversation really go on. Yes I believe so because I think that the tension amongst these women would have reached a fever pitch at times and that was the whole the whole idea of that was what got me rushing. This story in the first place is because very early on. I read a In academic paper about Prince of the time who had twelve mistresses and they all followed behind in these carriages and they all had the same You know Equi posh was the word that's used to end the same library and everything was the same and this immediately intrigued me and I thought well how would they get along. Would they be friends with any of them be friends and most importantly how with the wife handle the situation and this is set up so you know the the same that you referred to. I'm usually the mistress's know what to say. And what not to say. And they keep keep the council and they they ruffle her the duchess's feathers but in that particular sane on riot decides to stand up to her a little beach to the shock. Give it all the other women. So what what. Why didn't why didn't the duchess the other mistresses like the newest the fifth mistress? While she's she's very young and beautiful for one and she's also someone who gecas actually fallen in love with so. That hasn't happened before. No what I call her. The child concrete and will of course if the king is falling in love with her. He's not having any relationships with any of the other mistresses press'. Well maybe but you know this elaine who is desperately needs his Not Much affection but his logistics logistics. Shall we say yes. What's her problem? Well she's desperate for love wherever she can find it. She's a very insecure person. She's he's definitely being threatened. Yes and her husband. I'm lates laugh. That costs a lot of money. He's Gambler and She has to continue to fund him. And you know her. His life is dependent on her success within that setting so yes it isn't you've mentioned Henry Henry and Well she is actually had a daughter by the king yes salon challenge Sir There's another child around to the SES. Isabela neither mistresses son. Thomas and I I would win the fifth Mistress the teasha becomes pregnant. Everybody will only everybody else worries if it's Zahn years and that was the other thing that I should've mentioned that the other reason that she's a threat because up to that point the duchess hasn't been able to provide an air and so she realizes houses. This young girl could really position by by doing that so when she asks yes when she becomes pregnant the stakes are raised even higher which leads to some a lot of people having a grudge against Latisha and wanting to do her harm. That's the two children children. Thomasson Solange have the run of the palace the Orange Groves secret. They like to go there to hide and seek they also like to play hide and seek in the palace and to learn a lot of the palace secrets. Yes they learn about law. By what's Li- Li- is a substance that was used for cleaning and I decided to have it be used Chew Harm. I'm someone in the story if I want to go. We knocked telling her LA is placed in undergarments and causes quite a bit image. So yeah it Welson Rashes in hates and faints. Oh well that's not the only damage and here. I'm passing being A. I'm going to get Cape Murdoch to read from page one hundred seventy nine. Because this is all about a black doc mass. Let's say crucifixes must be inscribed on the soles of the fate the celebrant should be cloaked in black back and naked beneath the ideal animal for sacrifice is a girl or a peak the vessel should be placed on the naked body of a woman in place of consecrated bread we must use a decompose turnip and the blood of the slaughtered animal. Replaces the consecrated wine. Madam Fulbright gave a wicked smile. Her eyes glinting. I'll kill the peak having had experienced at the task. Where is the best place for the mass to be performed? Charlotte pondered the question gazing out of the pavilion windows towards the Orange Grove. It's symmetrical rows of trees. Stretching into the distance. The tree canopies with thick and the leaves glossy casting deputy sheriff as long the gravel pathways ace the Orange Grove Child Charlotte replied. No one will see us and made all that foilage. Sorry the reason for this. Who is she doing who she actually getting? The black mess said four. You'll have to read to find out now this isn't the owning mythical magical magical todd Thing in this terret cod readings. Yes so there's a character called remand Davila who comes to the Chateau and he's purposes to entertain attain the women with his he's ratings and the civil Rating Terry waiting saints throughout the novels. So I started to try and write them and it just was not feeling rush. I thought I'm really going to have to learn to read them because otherwise people are going to read it and they'll be able to tell that I have no idea what I'm hoping so I teach you sat up pack of the cards and when I started looking at them and looking at some of the descriptions of of at all I was very skeptical. This is a load of rubbish and then as I kind of didn't more and more I ended up kind of locking them and now I have my pack. It's interesting because you know you do the ratings. And we we hear about king of swords and seven of swords and all these other ones and and of course with the insider of an author you can go back and write whatever you like but as we're reading way building story and I had to laugh about this because because you know they was at. It was really professional. Tear raiders in the courts. At the time I didn't rate of that specifically now that I thought it it was quite possible to have somebody like that. Yeah I mean. There are all kinds of entertainments that they had the time. I'm the opera ballet was featured in the novel is certainly. There's out if it was your written with an artist cy looking at it I look I laughed about this. The Professional Tara Cod Rita. Now I think the best fortune telling was done by his prostitute friend who said you are a bad man with noble intentions. Didn't you will be good. You just don't know it yet but there are forged love letters jewell secret visits to a convent and a priest who is tout told to doll his heart. Blood with frigid air prayer and whip but back to the side with all the court his planning and plotting and scheming. It's the Esto. The Duke and Duchess is twelve year old daughter. WHO's introduced or my case in the hope? He would remember her in years to come but it wasn't her. It was the word games that he played with. LETITIA captivated him yes well. She ended up playing with Madame for Bray and he was watching and he is nine as has being very good at the word Games of course and yeah I think just they conversation they they start to be quite interested in another but it's very forbidden. ooh ooh forbidden stuff. This cade Murdoch. You've given US seventeen o five France Orange Grove. The previous book was Stone Circle Cool Sixteenth Century and Nixon's nineteen twenty Sicily just keep revolving around but the book. I've been speaking with kite today. About what is the Orange Grove published by Regal House publishing. Thank you came over

The Big Picture
‘Richard Jewell’ and Olivia Wilde’s Offensive Portrayal of the Late Journalist Kathy Scruggs
"Brian on your podcast with David Shoemaker. The press box talked a lot about the controversies around Richard Jewel. Let's unpack some of those quickly before we start getting into the nitty gritty of the film Maybe you can help us understand specifically what role. A person named Kathy scruggs plays in this. Yeah she plays a problematic role. I think we should say she was a big figure. In in the coverage of Richard Jewel. She was a co byline on the very first story in this movie she is kind of a suggestion of a character. More than character. Actor probably The big news of courses that they in the movie they suggest or I guess more than just right she sleeps with an FBI agent. Yes after he gives her a tip yes that they are investigating Richard Jewell. Yes it literally say. She does not literally say I will now sleep with you because you have given me this information But that happens in rapid succession in the span of thirty seconds. It's kind of like the trump Ukraine call. Oh it's a quid. Pro Quo don't have to say it. We know what happened. It was a perfect bout of sex for information as trump might say and Olivia Wilde. And I think you're talking about the delivery. Wild has suggested that she was a relationship with this. FBI This is. This is again some reporting that none of us were aware of before this. That's not what's Woodson the movie the movie is high. Sure Gimme some information and I will do you a favor and then the FBI agent played by. Jon Hamm mm says Oh so we are doing this. which would suggest that they were not doing this before the exchange of information? Yeah Yeah So. This controversy has swallowed the movie up in a lot of ways and I did not think that was going to be the case. And over the course of the run up to the release of the Movie Warner Brothers released a statement sort of defying the Atlanta Journal. Constitution's rebuttal of the movie. They were very proactive. In identifying the fact that this is a movie and there is some fictionalization traumatisation happening here. I wanted to talk to you guys especially about what happens when a movie takes liberties like this is generally speaking. For Art's sake. I think we should always be doing doing this. There's the movie should always be stretching and redefining and re imagining and re contextualising these stories to tell better stories that it's not the job of movies to make good journalists. It's the job of journalists to make good journalists but this seems to be a situation where cleese would obviously the director and and grandfather grandfather of this film. hasn't very specific points of view about authority in the media and there is an expectation that he brought a lot of those ideas. Do Do you think that the movie suffered greatly because of this conversation or or is this just something that we talk about on podcast. Because we're all in the media. Dave Weigel political writer had a great tweet where he said all this controversy convinced fenced liberals that they didn't WanNa see Richard Jewel but the controversy wasn't big enough to convince conservatives that they could own the lips by seeing Richard Jewel. So it Kinda put Richard Jewel in this weird have state I'm with you. I'm all for historical fiction and broad license to do it. The exception I would make is in a case like like this because you could have just picked a random person but you picked a real life reporter who's not famous and you're telling the world the one thing you should know about this woman other than that. She broke the story. Initially but Richard Jewel being under investigation by the FBI. She slept with somebody to get the information. So I think if you're going to do that and then take the additional step as wild suggested that this is based in reality this isn't billy ray writing the screenplay allow. Let's make something up you owe it to show your work in some way whether it's an op-ed whether it's an interview or something because this is beyond this is not famous people. Having a conversation in the White House is a real person sue. This is a a very pernicious and well-established trope in movies about female journalists female journalists in movies are always sleeping with the sources which you know I should just go on record in case you you are not as involved in the media as we are. That's not what happens in real life. We're not all sleep with our sources just so you know. That's not allowed. But when I saw this movie. It was a couple days before the the kerfuffle started and I was so shocked. I thought that either I assumed assumed that. This journalist Kathy scruggs portrayed in the movie was not a real person and then when i Google that it was she was I was like okay. Either there is. She wrote a memoir where she literally said. This happened and I did this. And this is how I got the story in my involvement or else she's dead and friends it's option B because otherwise I was like how do you get away away from this with from a liable perspective. It's so blatant. And so and it stands out and the other thing is just it really it. It undermines the movie. I don't understand why you have to do this. Because this is a movie about how the media was responsible will in in and ruining rituals life which is like. That's fact right that is that definitely happened But to put in this seemingly fictionalized or unsubstantiated and like gross comment on a female journalists in the movie undermines all the legitimate if if tricky cases that Clint Eastwood and movie wants to make about the media's role in American politics in life I completely agree with this man was trapped in his home mm-hmm with his mom for eight days while people everyone in America thought he was a terrorist who had set a bomb and blown up people and it wasn't a case of some of these cases of guilt or innocence. Where it's Oh? He was a little bit involved but he wasn't no he was completely innocent. And Somehow you've done this and taking him him he's no longer the sympathetic figure and the journalists who was part of a team with the JC that made mistakes in covering him. And we're not skeptical enough of the government's evidence evidence and case you've turned them into the into the sympathetic figures. I just don't get it at all. It's a bit of a confounding thing I think a lot of journalists are struggling with the movie for the exact reason you mentioned. Amanda which is that I. I think it's actually quite a strong film in one of Clint's best movies and last fifteen years and it's been completely cast aside and a lot of ways not the Clinton needs another successful movie had plenty in his career but it's a movie that metastasized as a lot of ideas that he's fascinated by kind of like libertarianism in the pursuit sort of like a single man's pursuit of success in the face of a lot of people working against him the Atlanta Journal Constitution response to this though. I think has been a little little bit curious. The long piece that they that they published a sort of profile. Kathy's life I think in some ways was very helpful in terms of saving her reputation specifically early about these kinds of allegations but also revealed a person who obviously had a lot of struggles in her life. Who who did some things that are I think just on the page people will look at me like Oh? Maybe she didn't do that but she was that it's Actually like I thought hyper generated new conversation around her life and around the movie Brian. What did you think about? The idea of trying to memorialize is her in. Defend her in the pages of the paper like that. Well I thought one is I think you just want to give her an identity. You know she is she's been. She's not really much character as I said in this movie. Clint Eastwood doesn't really care about the media in this movie. Other than as there's this noise in this thing that's happening Richard. You didn't care about the way that story got written was very interesting actually is a bunch of editors editors and writers kind of putting that together imperfectly as often. Journalism is so they were trying to give her an identity. I think we've Kinda gone now over the falls where we've corrected is using this horrible. Oh stereotype that got into this movie and now we're kind of excusing. What the paper did and all the media did and saying? Oh Her story. I saw held up. No they didn't one guy was innocent and two there were actual mistakes in the peace even in the first piece in the paper together which so. It's totally understandable. Hannibal that the paper wants to do this. But to me at some point it becomes okay. You're giving us one identity. You're telling us the real story behind your life and then there's this conversation about what the media did to Richard Jewell. which is it's actually kind of separate one thing? That's a little lost in the conversation around this. I want to get your perspective on an Amanda is when you're making something let's say you're making a podcast or you're working on a story story or you're making media company every day you're collaborating people. And you're interrogating all of the choices they're making on a regular basis. You have questions about things. The Livia Wild Defense of the character is one of those things where you think that at some point you might ask a question. You might not just presume and I guess that's questioning maybe the integrity of what Olivia while saying the defensive. Her character but movies take a long time even even one day Clinton movies take a long time to make. There's a long time in the making so how. How did how was not not everyone on the same page with this? What am I going to say? Movies do take a long time to make but relatively this was like a very quick movie At least in the filming like this was filmed over the summer of two thousand nineteen and it's December and now we're watching it so that's pretty wild and and it does really seem like Olivia Wilde. Got wanted to takes and it's like go okay. This is the performance going with which is it's it's a caricature I think. It's pretty generous and cruel version of a reporter which is fascinating because Libya while the daughter of journalists so i. I wouldn't say that this is a portrayal of empathy eighty and understanding at least from what I've seen Granted you only get to take her to but she the material is not there on also. Her interpretation of the material is pretty pretty intense but it definitely seems like it wasn't examined at the time and it certainly seems like no one anticipated this and no one got on the same page about their talking points because Libya has been all over the map. And I'm you know what I'm not sympathetic. With the fact that she's answering search for somme choices. I like this movie directed by Clint Eastwood. It's written by Billy Ray. But also she knows what she's doing. She read the

AP News Radio
'Jumanji' ends 'Frozen 2' hot streak to claim top spot
"God god god your mind you and back at number one in theaters is it out strengths and weaknesses managing the next level opened with more than sixty million dollars in north American ticket sales and has a good involve frozen two drops to second it's now across the one billion dollar mark globally leaving you with who done it nice out fall through three one Richard Jewell landed at number four with a meager five million dollars in its debut a poor showing for Clint Eastwood the horror flick black Christmas opened at five he time Ben Thomas

20 Minute Fitness
Health & Fitness Fact Of The Day: Processed Food
"What is going on everyone. Welcome by one of the episode of twenty minute fitness again another one short episodes unless we into revolve these episodes around giving some quick advice on how they can build. Inc jewell routine or quick tips on different things you can do with the excise all nutritional orientated to become com a healthier unfitted version of yourself and also foods to avoid different training tips and things like that so today we'll be looking out to y you should avoid eating too much processed who says food and in particular processed meat say first of all if you are enjoying these condensed value punked episodes them please don't forget to subscribe to the podcast on which ever pocos plan unison to your focus on as long mouthful and also leaders rating under review we want to know if you enjoy these episodes as well a massive thank you toss to shave his well tape or building a three D. scanning scale it's available for preorder shape scale dot com so grossest food first off what is it a processed food is any food it has been altered in some way during preparation now this can be anything as basic as counting the food or freezing it or trying it out and I should say that not all processed foods on healthy but many do contain high levels of salt sugar on fats also worth noting that some foods in fact need processing to make them suitable for consumption mill for example needs to be pasteurized to remove harmful bacteria and oil you need to press the seeds in order to make oil to then then. Cook with on so-and-so processing is part of the process for some foods but walked all the unhealthy processed foods so an example include your breakfast cereals which are processed cereal grains such as wheat oats and rice obviously very popular also amongst lots of young people as well hustle favorite of mine and as well but they are pretty much most of them empty calories providing no nutritional benefits on many of them are very high in added sugar even those that say unhealthy you'll you'll you'll brand flakes can can have a lot of sugar in the news and he can have also sugar in them so look out for those nutrient guidelines on the side and the macro breakdown down as well also the World Health Organization has determined that process meat is a major contributor to Kota rectal cancer classifying it as Costinha energetic to humans they said that processed meat refers to meet has been transformed through salting curing feminization or smoking or any of the process was to enhance flavor all to improve preservation and this isn't the only downside of processed meat studies have shown that people who eat processed meat off thirty eight percent more likely to develop diabetes and it's often been linked as well to having a high blood pressure so examples of process meet again includes many of the favorites this has been in your Bacon your sausages smoked meat and all of those nice things processed meats contain harmful chemical compounds cold end nitro compounds and these are cancer causing substances believed to be responsible for some of the adverse effects off processed meat consumption and they formed from nitrite which is surname nitrites it's on this is added to processed meat products so I suppose this episode is a warning or a health kit to go easy on your processed foods in particular process meets do not be having seven days a week a greasy fry up in the mornings that has no cane to deal body any favors not only going to find it very difficult to be a calorie deficit for the day and lose weight for example but it also comes with all those adverse affects a negative effects that we've just been for the diabetes and high blood pressure and so on so through decisions listening twenty minute fitness on you will learn how to make educated

WSJ What's News
Philip Morris International confirms talks with Altria over all-stock merger
"Partners philip. Morris altria are engaged in tie-up talks. The wall street journal's jennifer maloney says decline in cigarette sales is again spurring merger talks between the two companies ultra philip. Morris split a little more than a decade gate ago. They sell the same portfolio of cigarette brands. Altria sells them in the u._s. Philip morris international sells them everywhere else. Their biggest cigarette brand is is marlboro. They split more than a decade ago when the u._s. was facing a huge litigation risk around tobacco and the health effects of cigarette smoking but that litigation risk has receded in the year since then there are also new products is like e cigarettes that are encouraging talks. One of them is a cigarette alternative called echoes that philip morris invented and is selling in countries. He's including japan and the u._k. And in a partnership between the two companies is going to be launched in september in the u._s. when the f._d._a. gave the green light for for it to go on sale here that's when the talks began in earnest over the summer both philip morris international an ultra are facing decline in cigarette demand. They're looking for alternatives as people shift away from cigarette smoking to no other alternatives the other product. That's really framing. The discussions is the u._s. E cigarette market leading brand jewell altria last year invested twelve point eight billion dollars to get a minority stake in jewel jewel is expanding aggressively wli into overseas markets where it will be competing with philip morris international's cigarettes so philip morris sees it as a potential threat however if philip morris altria combined forces it could find growth in jules overseas expansion a tie up between philip morris altria would be worth more than two hundred billion dollars

podnews
Is Anchor bypassing Apple Podcasts' approval process?
"Owned podcast host anchor is seemingly, bypassing the apple podcasts approval process, and this, that's their users post tests, and even illegal copyright material. Unchecked to apple podcasts and others. We've discovered you'll find a link to our report in our episode notes, and our newsletter today in other news NPR and Edison research have revealed. They're smart audio reports two thousand nineteen the data suggests that twenty one percent of American adults. That's fifty three million people own a smart speaker podcasts. Don't appear in the report, though, forty two percent claim to use their speaker at least once a week to listen to the news, there are now over seven hundred six thousand podcasts, according to blueberry, well, how many are still in production only about eighteen percent according to an article by amplify media heartache. This figures described as sobering in the article, but you might want to compare the figure with broadcast televisions in tarsha Jewell, where significantly less than eighteen percent of shows being broadcast still in production or a typical library, where many books being borrowed were released a long time ago, millennial podcast listeners outspent non listeners by up to one hundred seventy nine percent. That's according to a new report called a listeners about the power of UK podcasting from podcast strategists for DC cosmopolitan is launching its first branded podcast with Tinder, footballer broadcaster. Robber. And kidnapper OJ Simpson may be preparing a podcast, according to a show biz site advertising executives at Pandora are interviewed on video for variety. You should never put a radio ad on Pandora. They say Castro's Patrick, how is leaving the company after nine years of working on the well, reviewed Iowa. Podcast app. He's current role is being advertised along with others in the UK podcast measurement has challenges says digital in an article here, you know that feature and overcast that skips past silences in podcasts so far. It saved all of humanity a little over one thousand eight hundred ninety eight years, and that's before any savings from playing podcast. It increased speed to take into account that data from its developer. Marco Arment podcast player FM has given their IRS Eappen updates if you're publishing with lips into linked in you needs to reauthenticate t tales in our episode notes, and our newsletter today, along with some advice around Email marketing basics, should, you join podcast network, and how to persevere when podcasting gets tough. We have updated our podcast app user agents list to use data from a new open repository that you can help build. You'll find more details in our show. Notes and our newsletter. Finally, pull Spain was on the AM show in New Zealand the other day on three TV and magic talk radio talking about podcasting. We liked this bit, you'll favorite podcasts at the moment. I who pod news as one that I listened to most most days, that's more for people that are involved in an podcasting industry. Lock. I am what a bright man

News, Traffic and Weather
Seattle Storm dominate Washington Mystics in Game 1
"One game down to to go. Seattle storm dominated the first game of the WNBA playoffs Friday night at keyarena night game number one. They look really great. It was electric all night long at the key for game one against the Washington mystics what night for basketball in Seattle and the spark plug for the storm Jewell Loyd shatters shooting struggles in the Phoenix series. But could not miss Floyd fourteen points in the