35 Burst results for "Last Eighteen Months"

Elon Musk buys Twitter for $44B and will privatize company

AP News Radio

00:51 sec | 1 year ago

Elon Musk buys Twitter for $44B and will privatize company

"Ilan Ilan Ilan Ilan musk musk musk musk has has has has reached reached reached reached a a a a deal deal deal deal to to to to buy buy buy buy Twitter Twitter Twitter Twitter for for for for about about about about forty forty forty forty four four four four billion billion billion billion dollars dollars dollars dollars Moskos Moskos Moskos Moskos said said said said Twitter Twitter Twitter Twitter hasn't hasn't hasn't hasn't been been been been living living living living up up up up to to to to its its its its potential potential potential potential as as as as a a a a platform platform platform platform for for for for free free free free speech speech speech speech and and and and has has has has promised promised promised promised to to to to be be be be more more more more lenient lenient lenient lenient policing policing policing policing content content content content tech tech tech tech analyst analyst analyst analyst Dan Dan Dan Dan Ives Ives Ives Ives at at at at Wedbush Wedbush Wedbush Wedbush says says says says this this this this is is is is a a a a risky risky risky risky move move move move it's it's it's it's more more more more than than than than just just just just about about about about freedom freedom freedom freedom of of of of speech speech speech speech but but but but ultimately ultimately ultimately ultimately it's it's it's it's really really really really trying trying trying trying to to to to shake shake shake shake up up up up social social social social media media media media I I I I mean mean mean mean he he he he feels feels feels feels like like like like it's it's it's it's a a a a fragment fragment fragment fragment platform platform platform platform we we we we can can can can significantly significantly significantly significantly improve improve improve improve it it it it but but but but there's there's there's there's great great great great challenges challenges challenges challenges ahead ahead ahead ahead five five five five sees sees sees sees changes changes changes changes ahead ahead ahead ahead including including including including the the the the possibility possibility possibility possibility of of of of Twitter Twitter Twitter Twitter becoming becoming becoming becoming a a a a subscription subscription subscription subscription service service service service and and and and what what what what does does does does more more more more of of of of a a a a freedom freedom freedom freedom of of of of speech speech speech speech focused focused focused focused me me me me this this this this is is is is really really really really going going going going to to to to be be be be a a a a twelve twelve twelve twelve eighteen eighteen eighteen eighteen month month month month project project project project try try try try to to to to transform transform transform transform Twitter Twitter Twitter Twitter for for for for president president president president Donald Donald Donald Donald Trump Trump Trump Trump says says says says he he he he has has has has no no no no intention intention intention intention of of of of rejoining rejoining rejoining rejoining Ilan Ilan Ilan Ilan musk musk musk musk Twitter Twitter Twitter Twitter even even even even if if if if his his his his account account account account is is is is reinstated reinstated reinstated reinstated he he he he was was was was barred barred barred barred after after after after last last last last year's year's year's year's capital capital capital capital rights rights rights rights I'm I'm I'm I'm a a a a Donahue Donahue Donahue Donahue

Twitter Ilan Ilan Ilan Musk Musk Musk Musk Moskos Moskos Moskos Moskos Dan Dan Dan Dan Ives Ives Ives Wedbush Wedbush Wedbush Wedbus President President President Ilan Ilan Ilan Ilan Musk Musk Donahue Donahue Donahue Donahu
 Striking Kellogg's workers to get 3% raises in new contract

AP News Radio

00:38 sec | 1 year ago

Striking Kellogg's workers to get 3% raises in new contract

"Hi hi Mike Mike Rossi Rossi reporting reporting striking striking Kellogg's Kellogg's workers workers reach reach a a deal deal on on a a new new contract contract Kellogg's Kellogg's has has reached reached a a tentative tentative agreement agreement with with its its fourteen fourteen thousand thousand serial serial plant plant workers workers that that if if approved approved will will end end a a two two month month strike strike the the tentative tentative agreement agreement includes includes three three percent percent raises raises cost cost of of living living adjustments adjustments in in the the second second through through fifty fifty years years of of the the contract contract and and maintains maintains current current health health benefits benefits the the company company said said members members of of the the bakery bakery confectionery confectionery tobacco tobacco workers workers and and grain grain millers millers International International Union Union will will vote vote on on the the new new five five year year contract contract Sunday Sunday some some Kellogg's Kellogg's employees employees have have been been working working more more than than eighty eighty hours hours a a week week over over the the past past eighteen eighteen months months to to keep keep up up with with demand demand during during the the corona corona virus virus pandemic pandemic hi hi Mike Mike Rossi Rossi I I might might cross cross your your reporting reporting striking striking Kellogg's Kellogg's workers workers reach reach a a deal deal on on a a new new contract contract Kellogg's Kellogg's has has reached reached a a tentative tentative agreement agreement with with its its fourteen fourteen thousand thousand serial serial plant plant workers workers that that if if approved approved will will end end a a two two month month strike strike the the tentative tentative agreement agreement includes includes three three percent percent raises raises cost cost of of living living adjustments adjustments in in the the second second through through fifty fifty years years of of the the contract contract and and maintains maintains current current health health benefits benefits the the company company said said members members of of the the bakery bakery confectionery confectionery tobacco tobacco workers workers and and grain grain millers millers International International Union Union will will vote vote on on the the new new five five year year contract contract Sunday Sunday some some Kellogg's Kellogg's employees employees have have been been working working more more than than eighty eighty hours hours a a week week over over the the past past eighteen eighteen months months to to keep keep up up with with demand demand during during the the corona corona virus virus pandemic pandemic hi hi

Kellogg Mike Mike Rossi Rossi Tobacco Tobacco Workers Worker Kellogg's Kellogg
Blinken praises Colin Powell as 'beloved' at State Department

AP News Radio

00:51 sec | 1 year ago

Blinken praises Colin Powell as 'beloved' at State Department

"Colin Powell earned adoration as a history making military officer but his reputation later took a big hit Powell retired in nineteen ninety three as the first black joint chiefs of staff chairman I have never wanted to be anything but a soldier a decade later as America's top diplomat Saddam Hussein and his regime will stop at nothing until something stops him Powell's state department was dubious of military and intelligence claims that Saddam had what was developing weapons of mass destruction but he went before the U. N. security council to make the case for war against Iraq citing faulty information it was seen as a low point in Powell's legendary career in eighteen months later he acknowledged no stash was found the intelligence community

Powell Colin Powell Saddam Hussein U. N. Security Council Saddam America Iraq
Latest James Bond Film Lags Behind Predecessors

AP News Radio

00:33 sec | 1 year ago

Latest James Bond Film Lags Behind Predecessors

"The final film with Daniel Craig as James bond's leads the box office for the weekend I marquees are loaded with the latest is he came Alex No time to die grossed fifty six million dollars this past weekend according to studio estimates putting it in the first place spot the film was released only to theaters not streaming it had been delayed more than eighteen months because of the pandemic number two this week is venom let there be carnage followed by the Adams family to Shanxi and the legend of the ten rings is in fourth and the many saints of Newark in fifth

Daniel Craig James Bond Alex Shanxi Adams Saints Newark
Is This Part of God's Plan to Wake the Sleepwalkers?

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:56 min | 1 year ago

Is This Part of God's Plan to Wake the Sleepwalkers?

"Am convinced that god has allowed this to happen to us to wake up people and not just to wake up the church but to wake up patriots too. Because you know when you're talking about something like truth all truth is of god. He is truth. There are people that have been sleepwalking. And things have been okay and they don't need to do anything. I we pay our taxes and we try to not break the law and we go and you realize no in order to keep the republic. There's more to do and we've forgotton for about fifty years. How serious it is to keep freedom and what is happening now as you said people are waking up it is getting so ugly but it's like suddenly it it reminds me of like in a thriller. you know or was saying when i recognize suddenly i realize your votes dominance like there's a moment when you realize that the other person realizes they they're onto you and at that moment everything changes and so. I think what has happened with. This current administration is that they've kind of realized that if they don't win like they better be really careful because people are kind of onto them so they think it's an all out war now and they are pushing things that we couldn't have dreamt of even a year ago. I mean absurd things. What happened in afghanistan. I to this day can't begin to understand how it's possible even for somebody as incompetent and horrible as joe biden. It's hard for me to perceive that they were well when you consider that we hadn't lost servicemen eighteen months prior to that not not one american died in afghanistan. Well but i mean it's not even that i mean that just makes it dramatic but i mean to leave behind eighty billion dollars like there's no part of my brain that can comprehend how any president would allow

Patriots Afghanistan Joe Biden
What's old is new again: Justices back at court for new term

AP News Radio

00:42 sec | 1 year ago

What's old is new again: Justices back at court for new term

"The Supreme Court begins a new term in familiar surroundings abortion guns and religion are on the agenda today as justices returned to their mahogany and marble court room that they have banded more than eighteen months ago because of the corona virus pandemic all justices except red capital will meet in person for arguments Cavanaugh will participate remotely from his home after testing positive for Colbert nineteen last week the court remains closed to the public only lawyers involved in cases and reporters who regularly cover the court will be on hand and anyone not arguing well I have to wear a mask my camp in Washington

Supreme Court Cavanaugh Colbert Washington
Justice Kavanaugh tests positive for COVID, has no symptoms

AP News Radio

00:40 sec | 1 year ago

Justice Kavanaugh tests positive for COVID, has no symptoms

"Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh has tested positive for coal bit nineteen the High Court says in a release state capital has no symptoms and has been fully vaccinated since January all the justices had routine corona virus tests ahead of today's ceremonial investiture for judge Amy Coney Barrett cabin on his wife will not attend the ceremony Kavanagh's wife and daughters also our fully vaccinated and tested negative the justices are returning to the court room to hear arguments after an eighteen month absence because of the corona virus pandemic the court's new term begins Monday my camp in Washington

Brett Kavanaugh Judge Amy Coney Barrett Cabin High Court Supreme Court Kavanagh Washington
Aladdin returns after COVID breakthrough cases

AP News Radio

00:48 sec | 1 year ago

Aladdin returns after COVID breakthrough cases

"No sooner than every opened after the pandemic one Broadway show is closed again the whole pandemic one of the hit Broadway show and that it has been rocked by Kobe at nineteen a day after the show re opened after eighteen months of being idle is been shut down again producers say there were some breakthrough infections among the company of the Disney musical the show announced on social media that it's Wednesday night performance was canceled to ensure the wellness and safety of the cast crew and audience the show says it will keep patrons informed on decisions about the fate of future performances it's the first covert related performance to be cancel send shows begin returning in July what happens with the latter will be closely watched as Broadway tries to snap back from the pandemic I'm Oscar wells Gabriel

Kobe Disney Oscar Wells Gabriel
Reopening of 'Aladdin' on Broadway halted by COVID-19 cases

AP News Radio

00:48 sec | 1 year ago

Reopening of 'Aladdin' on Broadway halted by COVID-19 cases

"No sooner than every opened after the pandemic one Broadway show is closed again the whole pandemic one of the hit Broadway show and that it has been rocked by Kobe at nineteen a day after the show re opened after eighteen months of being idle is been shut down again producers say there were some breakthrough infections among the company of the Disney musical the show announced on social media that it's Wednesday night performance was canceled to ensure the wellness and safety of the cast crew and audience the show says it will keep patrons informed on decisions about the fate of future performances it's the first covert related performance to be cancel send shows begin returning in July what happens with the latter will be closely watched as Broadway tries to snap back from the pandemic I'm Oscar wells Gabriel

Kobe Disney Oscar Wells Gabriel
California's Eviction Moratorium Ends On Thursday

NPR's Story of the Day

01:57 min | 1 year ago

California's Eviction Moratorium Ends On Thursday

"Starting tomorrow a moratorium on evictions ends in california it was in place because of cova but now millions of tenants are wondering. What's next for them. Here's kate wolf from member station k. Q. e. d. after eighteen months of protections. Legislators say there isn't political will to extend the eviction moratorium but people won't be kicked out right away as the deadline approaches. California governor gavin newsom points to a grace period in the expiring law for low income tenants who apply for rental assistance. They are addiction. Protections that deny any court action to appear that extends through march thirty first of twenty twenty two however according to census data from this month over nine hundred thousand californians. Feel not at all confident that they will be able to pay. Rent this october lawrence crawford and his wife. Vanessa are among them. Before the pandemic vanessa worked in a salon and lawrence was a restaurant server. They've been struggling to with trying to get unemployment from the state. We're driving yourselves kinda like you know. Take care of trying to work but it costs money to do all these things. My unemployment's not there. The to live in downtown san jose with their son after months of struggling to pay their rent in piecemeal they applied for the state's rent relief program this summer but they haven't received anything and rent is coming. Do you pay by the fifth. And i don't think we're going to have it. So they'll probably start the eviction process in all they. Oh twenty three thousand dollars in background. Technically since the crawford's are still waiting for rent relief. They can't be evicted yet. California has only given out a small percentage of the seven point. Two billion dollars it set aside for aid state and local governments have been extremely slow to distribute the funds but a spokesperson with a state agency overseeing the process says it's speeding up. Meanwhile both renters and landlords are feeling the

Kate Wolf Lawrence Crawford Vanessa Gavin Newsom California Lawrence San Jose Crawford
America's Children Are Being Developmentally Stunted by Virus Restrictions

The Charlie Kirk Show

01:43 min | 1 year ago

America's Children Are Being Developmentally Stunted by Virus Restrictions

"I had dinner and somebody said i a thirteen month year old granddaughter and she is suffering from something called stranger danger which is a psychological problem that children are now experiencing and they were experiencing before but at record rates because of the lockdowns now. The stranger danger syndrome for babies is that they do not want to be held. They do not want to be around other people. It's called stranger anxiety. Now this this this exists that far before lockdowns but talking to some doctors last evening they are seeing record amounts of young babies and children kobe. Babies they're calling them that are having difficulty interacting with other children because they've been quarantined forcibly masked and their entire childhood development has been stunted. Now there's been a lot of research and a lot of scholarship and study in the power of the first eighteen months of how it could impact the rest of a child's life and especially from eighteen months to five years masking children forcibly we'll have long term effects socially spiritually and psychologically for a virus that does not pose a significant risk of killing them.

Pastor Robert Jeffress and His Plan for Encouragement

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated

02:07 min | 1 year ago

Pastor Robert Jeffress and His Plan for Encouragement

"Morning pastor. How are you good morning. Hugh great to be with you. This is an encouraging buck. It's it's really overdue. Did you find yourself surrounded by cova fatigued people in your congregation who needed to lift up. Absolutely you know what hugh and the bible of nouns are symbolic of the obstacles that stand between us and god's blessing tune our life. And that's why subtitled the book invincible. Conquering the mountains. That separate you from the blessed life and after eighteen months of covert and political unrest and racial division. I mean people have been overcome would grief for loneliness fear or worry and in this book. I talked about how to conquer those mountains. You know jesus said if you have the faith as tiny as a mustard seed. You can move mountains. And he wasn't speaking literally but he was speaking truthfully and these mountains that we're all facing you We can conquer them without allowing them to conquer us. And that's what i talked about in the book. The wall street journal had a story over the weekend. Pastor jeffress that stated that americans are angrier and crankier in more quick to get into an argument and causes seen an airplane or a restaurant or supermarket store than in history. Just worn out and fatigue to which i responded. We actually have no real problems in america compared to people in afghanistan or looking at the taliban trying to kill them and that that's useful to remember but it's also a religious obligation for people who are christians not to be that way correct. That's exactly right. And it's been a little bit discouraging for me. As a pastor to see you know evangelical christians kind of at the forefront of a lot of this division. And look you know i i. We can have disagreements about issues like the vaccines or other things that are going on but look you know. I liked what Saint augustine said he said in the essentials unity in non essentials liberty but in all things. Charity we don't have to be mad and hateful and foaming at the mouth to have a difference of opinion.

Cova Pastor Jeffress Hugh The Wall Street Journal Jesus Taliban Afghanistan America Saint Augustine
US easing virus restrictions for foreign flights to America

AP News Radio

00:44 sec | 1 year ago

US easing virus restrictions for foreign flights to America

"The U. S. says it will ease virus restrictions for foreign flights to America starting in November White House spokeswoman Jen Psaki calls them strict protocols to cut down on Kobe nineteen spread bite non US citizens flying into the country by requiring that adult foreign nationals traveling to the United States be fully vaccinated they'll have to show proof and the negative virus test result the current rules have kept out many noncitizens for eighteen months irritating allies like the UK who have far lower rates of covert Valentin prime minister Boris Johnson says this will help reunite families and others will be able to get that by thanksgiving that's a great thing Sager made Donnie Washington

U. S. Jen Psaki America White House Valentin Prime Minister Boris UK Sager Donnie Washington
18 Months Into the Pandemic and the USA Is Still Looking Grim

Up First

01:46 min | 1 year ago

18 Months Into the Pandemic and the USA Is Still Looking Grim

"Are the numbers on kovic. Eighteen months in about one hundred and fifty thousand. New cases are still being reported every single day in the us and more than six hundred sixty six thousand people in this country have died from cova. That's one in every five hundred of us joining us now to give us the latest is. Npr health correspondent rob stein. Robert situation sounds and seems pretty grim. Walk us through police if you could where things stand with the pandemic in the us. Yeah you know. The numbers are still staggering. About one hundred fifty thousand people are still catching the virus every day for the ninety six thousand or so sick. They're in the hospital and more than eighteen. Hundred people are still dying every day from covert nineteen. That's still not nearly as bad as things got during the darkest days of last winter. But it's still pretty awful and no one thought the pandemic would still be taking this kind of toll you know especially so many months after we all thought that vaccines would be like the calvary. Righty to our rescue. I talked about this with dr. She's the deed of the brown school of public health infection. Numbers across the country are really stunningly. Bad i mean hundred and fifty hundred sixty thousand americans getting infected every single day. It's really stunning. That this is where we are as a country and you know just tragic since the incredibly effective vaccines made so much of this totally preventable even in the face of the delta varian. So where is this headed. I mean are things just going to go from bad to worse it again. Yes that's what everyone is wondering right. You know every parent in america's holding their breath hoping their kids are going to stay in school every workers wondering what's going to happen with their jobs and you know there is a glimmer of hope actually looks like the surge may have hit a peak and could be finally starting to subside at least for

Kovic Rob Stein Cova Brown School Of Public Health NPR United States Robert
Dallas Cowboys Starting Tackle La'El Collins Suspended 5 Games

Blogging the Boys

01:57 min | 1 year ago

Dallas Cowboys Starting Tackle La'El Collins Suspended 5 Games

"Lyle collins suspension. Which for those of you. That have not heard yet. Which i'm sure you have but Friday afternoon it was announced that he was getting a five game suspension for violation of the substance abuse policy There's nothing on the books in the nfl drug policy that says a substance abuse issue is a five game penalty. There is a for the second time you're punished for methamphetamines. Or amphetamines and adderall. And diuretics and things like that That is a five game suspension. So i don't know if there's some somehow taking that as precedents and applying it lyle's case and somehow It's still murky as to what exactly. He was in the drug program for There was a report on sl from jason lockenfora that he's been tested ten times a month for the last eighteen months which that's not totally unusual. I know there have been players before that have been tested with that. Frequency randy gregory had talked about that When he came back so it's it's not totally unheard of for that to happen. But i don't know why lyle would. It have been in the program but missing a test missing. These tests are refusing member. Whatever the story is because apparently it was not a failed test. Missing these tests would result in this suspension. Only if he had already been on the program. So something's off here where we're missing a lot of details here and hopefully we can get some more clarity about it But as it stands now we don't know exactly what he's in the program for. There's lyles disputing the word. Representation is disputing the refusal to take the tests and and they're in this appeal process. They've already appealed apparently and it was rejected but they feel like the appeal process has not been exhausted. And so that's part of where this tension is coming from. Mike mccarthy didn't have any other comments on it he just said they were not surprised suspension. So this is something. That's been brewing. It's been something that's been out there. And that the cowboys have been aware of

Lyle Collins Jason Lockenfora Lyle Randy Gregory NFL Lyles Mike Mccarthy Cowboys
Vinicius Leads Real Madrid in 5-2 Win Over Celta

ESPN FC

01:20 min | 1 year ago

Vinicius Leads Real Madrid in 5-2 Win Over Celta

"Row madrid with a smashing performance in the second half a five two victory against the at home first time at the in over eighteen months story of the game cutting bent. He had a hat-trick. Come getting a goal. Six minutes after coming on his debut mini junior goal as well as on the dribs score. Four in the second half to overtake said value. Pablo start with you. What was the difference for elementary in that second half fiend. The quantified third may be saying abou- beneath issues. You know years ago you was a player. Verbally was no an end product. And now you can see can running behind you got. Pay the tripler but composure is ever thing in football. On what dis what makes us different final third. And i think you know. Ben sim always ways. He's the main man for that team. My you know that they will escort goals and it was a good performance. You know defensively. They still quite right. Yeah hopefully they can bring a. I love our mandy batson. I think they will prove those players in in their defense but overdue. I think the quantity across to made different for them.

Madrid Ben Sim Pablo Football Mandy Batson
Biden Steps Into Legal Fight With Vaccine Mandates

This Week with George Stephanopoulos

02:07 min | 1 year ago

Biden Steps Into Legal Fight With Vaccine Mandates

"The president returns the white house this week to address what may be the greatest threat to our country since nine eleven for eighteen months the covert pandemic has consumed our country and now even though seventy five percent of american adults are vaccinated. it's become a pandemic of the unvaccinated with more than one hundred thousand cases a day for four weeks last week. Roughly quarter million new cases reported among children. The highest total yet but biden's plan to mandate vaccinations at workplaces across. America is facing swift and severe resistance drawing attacks and threats of legal action from at least nineteen republican governors. We're going to begin there this morning with surgeon. General vivek murthy dr murthy. Thank you for joining us this morning. You know the president resisted issuing mandates for months thank you the president resisted issuing mandates for months and the administration repeatedly explained that he lacked the legal authority for sweeping mandates. So what changed george. Let's talk about where we are. And what the president announced Fortunately we have made a tremendous amount of progress over the last eight months. I want to remind people of this because they can get lost in the in the news about the delta varying delone but because we have two hundred million people george with at least one shot of the vaccine. We are in a much better place than we otherwise would have been with that. Said delta is a tough foe. It's throw curveballs at us. And we have to be prepared to respond and that is why. The president announced a ambitious and thoughtful plan. that he nfl earlier this lab past week which is intended to help us get through the next phase of this variant now to be clear requirements that he announced or not sweeping requirements for the entire nation. These are focused on areas where the federal government has legal authority to act so seventeen million healthcare workers. Who do we were operating. Institutions which work with medicare medicaid will now be required To get vaccines we also know that the workplace requirements. He put in place for workplaces. That have one hundred plus You know workers that those will affect about eighty million americans. Here's finally what we know. George we know that these kind of requirements actually work to improve our vaccination

Vivek Murthy Dr Murthy White House Biden George America NFL Federal Government Medicare
Saint Etiennes Sarah Cracknell on Making an Album in Lockdown

Bigmouth

02:13 min | 1 year ago

Saint Etiennes Sarah Cracknell on Making an Album in Lockdown

"So we're gonna talk about the short while but firstly you get everybody in the band in different parts of the country now. Euro urine oxford. If you just said pete wiggs in. Hove actually bob. Stump is bradford. How did you go about making this record. When you all geographically distributed all zoom like we have to do everything these days Yeah we used to share. I mean we to concern about the kind of feeling of the record. What we wanted it to say proper now. Kind of very complicated concept. If you that but with the idea is what would happen was the pete send may music might count with some bits of melody as few words not many words on the record and we just share ideas and then come to edit them so was it was kind of made you on a computer in the manner of the ancient art method exquisite corpse. What person does a bit puzzled. Saudi else they fiddle with it. I guess posture out your cupcakes constantly. Just mentioned that this album about memory and optimism that that time between nineteen hundred. Seventy two thousand and one. The labor party just won an election. Victory it's this little little island of of Things might not be dreadful. What generated us. We must algae feeling. Was it being separated from the rest of the land at having to do it through the window at it. I think there is an element to fat. An it's about thinking time you remember. That was optimistic. Seemed like great things happening. And it's about how your memory gets you'd over time and i think we'll probably look back home. The last eighteen months two years with that. Same kind of feeling you know. There's some bits of being looked down. The i really love the very first day over the us and did a lot of making bread out with the teens in watching boats sets and stuff in them but yet you know. I'll probably just remember as bits in a few years time in older the credits but Yet it's about memory and how it gets mixed up in your mind

Pete Wiggs Hove Stump Bradford Oxford BOB Labor Party Saudi United States
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Active Church Podcast

Active Church Podcast

08:14 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Active Church Podcast

"Pig pen is not an whatever that is whatever. That's drawing you away from god. It's time to come to our senses. Say god that's not what your best is for me and some of us like that sun. We don't feel worthy of gory. Nocco some of you have been so close to jesus in this last eighteen months you just fell off. Maybe you've been feeling distant from god you're showing up and you you feel like you're empty. Know what it's like you know what. It's like to be in a room full of christians ago. Am i missing something. If i don't know if i feel like these guys know what it is. You're never you're not a human doing. You're a human being who he wants you to be with him. All he's ever wanted in the foundations of the earth he desired consigned you. You called you out so he could be with the father not do something for. He doesn't need you to perform. He doesn't need you to do. He's got everything he needs. You know what he wants. He's jealous for time with you mayo. Last point god has not cancelled has compassion and moves towards him. Maybe you feel like. I should be further along by now. You've felt like that night with. I financial advisory saying like frontier on my now you feel exposed like talk about your struggles as a christian ever been the bible study and finally someone opens up about real struggling like how can you pass from my time my schedule a scheduled so full doing so much ministry. It's my worse san my time management outright. It's vulnerable when you're exposed. It's vulnerable when you talk about what you've gone through a trauma you're hurt because you feel like what's going to happen is the culture is told me that i'm canceling when i talk about my struggles that i can't be real i can't be a real person because i'm a real person. They're gonna leave me. They're not gonna love me. They're not gonna they're not gonna. They're not they're not gonna close to be when they really know me. Fuller ability is actually the the gateway to being fully known in living integrated life. Where you have people that love you for who you really are not for who they think you are a word for somebody that can only happen and i believe the church should be the safest place on the planet. This is not a. it's not a stage as a platform to be used by god. This is not just a group of people trying to feel good on sunday. This is a hospital for the hurt. The broken the wounded this a place where people confide healing healing from their past and hope for their future. This is the church and the gates of hell will never over cover. This is this. Is the people work. All the beat the cancel people that are hurting and.

jesus sunday bible christians earth christian last eighteen months god
"last eighteen months" Discussed on PODSHIP EARTH

PODSHIP EARTH

01:31 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on PODSHIP EARTH

"After a long long year and a half dominated by covid. George floyd wildfires white nationalist mobbing the us capital and the pain of not seeing our families. I'm exhausted. I'm emotionally physically and spiritually spent and yet it feels like most days. The only option is just to keep pushing forward and yet if we learned anything from the last eighteen months. It's that we can't take our our health for granted and that the human toll of covid includes very real psychological trauma grief and anxiety associated with the dark events that we've all lived through as environmentalists. We have a really hard time acknowledging that if we're running on empty impossible for us to do our part in combating climate change or fighting for environmental justice even properly sorting recyclables. It feels like we're afraid to stop and take the time to regain our emotional health. Maybe fearing that. We're at risk of losing momentum that the movement needs all hands on deck. The truth is our collective exhaustion is real and we can only create healthy planet if we are sells a healthy. Luckily help his here. This week we talk with mariana susa. Who's a mental health. First aid sponsor who works to heal leaders. Activists and artists who is seeking to create lasting social change for mariana emotional hygiene isn't a society..

mariana susa George This week covid First last eighteen months mariana
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Spark from CBC Radio

Spark from CBC Radio

03:28 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Spark from CBC Radio

"Hi i'm nora. Young and this is the spark guide to civilization in this series. We take one issue in society and explored in the broader context of how we've managed through technological innovation and designed over the course of civilization on this episode. A look at the glass lands. This is the last in our series and we decided to do something a little different. We ask for your help. We wanted your ideas for a favorite technology to devote the last civilization episode to could be from any period of time from the wheel to the dial up modem to the quantum computer to tell us more here spark producer. Adam killick adam. Hello nora thankfully. Nobody picked dial up modem the rest of my life without hearing that sound again. No kidding i should say we weren't asking what the most important or influential tech was. We wanted something that called of to people that had the potential to teach us about innovation and had different angles that we could explore. Now i know we got range of submissions over social media and email. Was there any sort of commonality or theme like an era or a type of technology. I'd have to say that the suggestions were pretty much evenly. Split between much technologies and inventions. That came along along time ago and some very very recent ones at least when you look at it on the scale a few in existence. So what were some of the more intriguing suggestions that caught your eye well not surprisingly given the last eighteen months or so. Few people mentioned vaccines of course. Yeah and another person suggested refrigeration and those are both very important innovations Which have helped us live longer. Healthier lives sure A number of people which is is not surprising given our audience of working on wi fi and the invention of the internet one person suggested word processors which is interesting and someone else more. Broadly suggested the printing press and movable type but as you know this is we don't need that stuff right. I never write anything down. All of us live right. It's all live. We're doing this live right now. And then one person seemed to suggest brick of cheese. I'm not sure quite qualifies as the most exciting tech ever. Although if we didn't have keys i would be sad. My quality of life would be diminished. No kidding okay adam. The suspense is killing me. What fave tech actually going to explore. The lens of bunch of people suggested various things. That use lenses from eyeglasses to cameras to telescopes and microscopes. And i thought that was super interesting and it a offers us a cool lens to look at history. Had to get that end i did and this. I also think is really interesting and i have to say. It's not a topic that i actually know very much about. It'll be learning experience for me. And by that i mean i may ask stupid questions over the course of the next hour. Thanks so much out of your very welcome. And i'm sure you will ask no stupid questions. Adam killick as a producer on spark. Now before i talked to someone who does know what he's talking about. We're going to go way back for a brief history of magnification and the one man who figured it all out.

Adam killick nora one issue both last eighteen months Adam killick adam adam one person Few people one man hour
"last eighteen months" Discussed on What's Next! with Tiffani Bova

What's Next! with Tiffani Bova

05:42 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on What's Next! with Tiffani Bova

"You so many things but it's it's been an important thing and it and it was like we had to do kind of instead of it and now we're six months later and now i have to do a whole other set of this because we've had new people during the work but i think it's one of the most important things That we've been able to do. It's almost like you need to create a role. I'm a growth evangelist rights invinci- title. That's very made up so many ways but it almost needs to be like the ceo removing stupid stuff. It's a really and it has to be some like it had to come for me. I am dead serious. That i am doing this like this is not like a comment to hr on how. You're feeling this is like give me something that i can rip out of this organization right now and there's there's some things that are established that are good. There are know categories of companies. We can't find just because like we. We actually can't do. regulations regulations. Look then at least get to tell people that they know the reason they give a real reason to founder at the end of the day so anyway well. I think employees that term the experience. They're feeling connected to where they work has been so disrupted over the last eighteen months made that definition and so You know how. How do you work now to make sure that this kind of flex work environment keeping the culture keeping people engaged and feel like they're part of something that what have you done during this time to release the keep you know the conditions good for your people as everything is changing. Yeah so look. I will preface this with. This is not this is not been easy. I were very much impersonators. I can get a perfect gauge of the room. And how people are feeling as soon as i walk in there and lost all of those tools..

six months later last eighteen months one of most important
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Your Brain at Work

Your Brain at Work

05:37 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Your Brain at Work

"We can talk a little bit about why that but also love to hear from organization from both perry and lisa. What what you're handling there and then also there's some lack of comfort. Some people ask questions in the chat as well around you know. How do we feel comfortable if our place is at home and we have our other colleagues who were getting to look more professional being in the office every day right so there's some challenges that people are feeling as well that we wanna get to. So we'll try to tackle those in in chapter three and we get there in just a moment one of the things that i. I'd like to wrap up this whole idea around this. Fundamental challenge in organizations are facing Light perry leases at. This is a change management problem. Organizations have been going through significant amount of change over the last ten years in the last eighteen months it's been accelerated by unexpected pandemic. That really unlocked all sorts of innovation in all sorts of frankly discomfort and disruption as well but it has allowed people space to really rethink how they were and no matter how you're thinking about work one of the things that you need to understand is really how the brain processes change analyze. We talk about behavior change. We talk about three key things at all organizations. Keep in mind number one. Is you need people to understand but priority or why. Why are we doing something. Lisa shared that as well how people work why they were perry talked about it. Why do we care about our customers. What's our mission etc key thing that organization needed to do. They need to make this new way of working a priority then you need to develop specific habits or behaviors that make up your culture. Member culture equals shared everyday habits and last but not least where we've been focusing on this. The environment or the systems were working. Change gets done. The funny thing about the challenge facing right now as human capital professionals we kinda thought about that a little bit but frankly kind of left it up to facilities like a. I'm going to get my people in the work. Control the culture as long as you have a desk in a computer and a nice break room or ping pong whatever it is. I'm gonna worry about that so really. The environment where work in change getting done has been blown up and blown up in a metaphysical and metaphorical a fiscal. But really isn't so. That's a question. Now that we as as town professional leaders really need to think differently about. I guess the vital question before we go onto the next chapter. Is you first perry. Have you thought about the environment and work chain gets on. I like how you talked about the container but anything specific or ways that you're maybe think about this. Are there different mindsets that you and your team have been approaching this problem with that. Might help some of our listeners. Here yeah absolutely and culture accelerated in a virtual world. And i would say that's absolutely true. We've seen that. I think the trick is parts of your culture. Get accelerate right. We're having to be incredibly intentional. About what parts of our culture are getting accelerated and so in terms of a mindset of the one that jumps to nine ryan's is again again according another one of my team members. Here was this idea of we have to rethink about what work means like what the workplace means because we had a very physical construct many of us or that and we do love are painted walls. And we haven't really gorgeous canvas so there's so many things about that that are allure and frankly we are thinking about. How do we use that to our advantage in future and create destinations spaces that are pulling people into the office. For very specific reasons. There's an example mindset. Shift not coming. Because that's just where work gets done the coming. Because i'm coming to do something specific..

Lisa first both lisa three key things one three nine last eighteen months one of things last ten years chapter
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Artificial Intelligence in Industry

Artificial Intelligence in Industry

05:19 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Artificial Intelligence in Industry

"Were speaking this week in our next few episodes every tuesday but the topic of ai in defense one of our most popular articles of the last eighteen months was called the seven weaknesses of the west which has to do with the i race between the united states and china clearly. There's a lot of interest from emerge listeners. And readers in terms of how artificial intelligence is changing the nature of war in the military. And there's so many lessons from changing the big stodgy cultures of defense and military that translate to how innovation has operate in almost any enterprise so out of transferable lessons here is also a lot of interesting use cases and trends that affect not only our business but the balances of international power. It seemed like it would be worth kicking off a series. So that's exactly what we've done. And what better guest to talk about the dynamics of innovation defense and the impact of artificial intelligence defense than steve blank himself. Steve blank needs really no introduction. But i'll give you one anyway. Steve blank is arguably one of the best known as silicon valley thinkers alive today. His book called the startup. Owner's manual had a profound effect on myself. And i'm sure many many many other entrepreneurs it's a remarkably popular and one of many that steve has authored he is also an adjunct professor at stanford university where he teaches about innovation but also innovation in modern war. Steve has a background in the military. He was in the airforce before moving out to silicon valley and starting and selling a variety of companies from convergent technologies to ardent to epifani. And more since then his teaching and writing has been massively influential and again he's maintained an emphasis on innovation in modern war. Today steve speaks to us about how innovation has to operate within the military and what the united states department of defense might do better to adopt future technologies and evolve more quickly in the face of a very capable adversary in the form of china. Steve is really no-holds-barred here. I was frankly surprised by his level of candy. But i was very pleased by it because i think frankly we need to hear it for those of you. Interested in the global dynamics of power this will be a fascinating episode about the united states and china for those of you interested in how to make big stodgy enterprises and organizations evolve and what kind of systems have to evolve within them and how leaders thinking must evolve. Steve provide some gyms that should be immediately applicable to nearly any industry so all this episode is about defense. I hope it's transfer ability will be useful for literally everybody tuned in. I'm grateful to be able to have steve with us. Somebody who's read. His work genuinely appreciated his contributions. So we're happy to have him here to kick off this three part series on a i in defense. We have worked awful hard here at emerged. Make sure ricky get the best possible guests if you've learned a lot from these episodes and you've enjoyed these episodes be sure to stay subscribed to the i. Business podcast on itunes. What is now called apple podcasts and consider leaving us a five star review. Not only does it help us. Learn what episode you like most but it also helps people learn about the show so if you want to support the program and support our efforts to bring on world class guests to bring.

Steve steve blank five star Steve blank itunes china Today steve this week i. Business seven weaknesses stanford university today tuesday three part silicon valley one united states last eighteen months ricky
"last eighteen months" Discussed on AI in Business

AI in Business

05:19 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on AI in Business

"Were speaking this week in our next few episodes every tuesday but the topic of ai in defense one of our most popular articles of the last eighteen months was called the seven weaknesses of the west which has to do with the i race between the united states and china clearly. There's a lot of interest from emerge listeners. And readers in terms of how artificial intelligence is changing the nature of war in the military. And there's so many lessons from changing the big stodgy cultures of defense and military that translate to how innovation has operate in almost any enterprise so out of transferable lessons here is also a lot of interesting use cases and trends that affect not only our business but the balances of international power. It seemed like it would be worth kicking off a series. So that's exactly what we've done. And what better guest to talk about the dynamics of innovation defense and the impact of artificial intelligence defense than steve blank himself. Steve blank needs really no introduction. But i'll give you one anyway. Steve blank is arguably one of the best known as silicon valley thinkers alive today. His book called the startup. Owner's manual had a profound effect on myself. And i'm sure many many many other entrepreneurs it's a remarkably popular and one of many that steve has authored he is also an adjunct professor at stanford university where he teaches about innovation but also innovation in modern war. Steve has a background in the military. He was in the airforce before moving out to silicon valley and starting and selling a variety of companies from convergent technologies to ardent to epifani. And more since then his teaching and writing has been massively influential and again he's maintained an emphasis on innovation in modern war. Today steve speaks to us about how innovation has to operate within the military and what the united states department of defense might do better to adopt future technologies and evolve more quickly in the face of a very capable adversary in the form of china. Steve is really no-holds-barred here. I was frankly surprised by his level of candor. But i was very pleased by it because i think frankly we need to hear it for those of you interested in the global dynamics of power this will be a fascinating episode about the united states and china for those of you interested in how to make big stodgy enterprises and organizations evolve and what kind of systems have to evolve within them and how leaders thinking must evolve. Steve provide some gyms that should be immediately applicable to nearly any industry so all this episode is about defense. I hope it's transfer ability will be useful for literally everybody tuned in. I'm grateful to be able to have steve with us. Somebody who's read. His work genuinely appreciated his contributions. So we're happy to have him here to kick off this three part series on a i. In defense we have worked awful hard here at emerged. Make sure we get the best possible guests if you've learned a lot from these episodes and you've enjoyed these episodes be sure to stay subscribed to the i. Business podcast on itunes. What is now called apple podcasts and consider leaving us a five star review. Not only does it help us. Learn what episode you like most but it also helps people learn about the show so if you want to support the program and support or to bring on a class guests to bring.

Steve steve blank five star Steve blank itunes china i. Business Today steve this week seven weaknesses stanford university today tuesday three part silicon valley one united states last eighteen months united
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Unofficial Partner Podcast

Unofficial Partner Podcast

04:26 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Unofficial Partner Podcast

"I think yeah all own liberty of things i think. Firstly young people have include tough year in some ways the least affected but in other ways it'd be affected. I think next year the opportunities. Let's hope let's keep our fingers crossed. The something pledged to morality is. What twenty twenty. Two looks frothy. His people to gather have fun enjoy experiences. They missed out on in over the last eighteen months and almost more than next year. And it's really exciting. Really exciting impact has economy but just sort of society generally. I think really exciting when we look forward to the possibilities for young people next year and then the other bit and again poli politics is i think brands are really interested in the societal impact. Social value there. They can have become essential to their strategy. So from inclusions sustainability the opportunity for brands to make meaningful difference to the world and also enhance their perspective with all the obsession with customers and grow business. Become more workforce touching not points. Thank seventy two points. I think the point around Thong and people enjoying again is really important. Not currently in the middle of judging the can entertainment owns and creativity. I vote twenty nine hundred twenty. A lot of the work is very heavy because of what happens over. The last few years and it's really tickled judge is by surprise. How heavy workers and then this weekend. It's been such deloitte to see some of the year. Ray brandt stratification. it's fun it's just lighthearted football again. It's been such a joy to watch some of that. The browns expectations and yet been brilliant. Mind go for. I'm going to go things as well. I think my big bets against the on first party data and equal. I think as more more opportunity to get more commercial with sponsorship in sports and i think so it's marketing and sport and i think this is the low hanging three. It's not gonna happen ignites but we need to make these changes happen okay. Good place is interesting. The fun thing. And i agree with you that that you have noticed this uptick of fun. I'm wondering if the brand purpose movement leads to boring creative advertising marketing and then it's a whole new podcast but that's about to say that just feels like i'm being. I'm being preached at the breakfast. Cereal is taking high moral position on my life the beginning to resent and actually it. The creative output tends to be a bit dahlem. woody. I know what you mean it. It's really difficult again is probably. It's a whole separate focus but it's really difficult to get right because you got consumers demanding action from brands and some brands during it really. Well what does that mean sports. And sorry. let me connection and we're feeling it is employers as well. We've all teams wanting us she be on what's going on on every single political and government issue at the moment the looking for answers. What does this mean. and i think. Ambassadors and athletes adobe rights holders are not really sitting in a conversation with the international organization last week..

next year seventy last week Two three Firstly twenty twenty twenty nine hundred first twenty Ray brandt two points every single political and gov last few years last eighteen months this weekend Thong
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Real Wealth Real Health

Real Wealth Real Health

03:29 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Real Wealth Real Health

"And so. Why are they if you look at their stock price at super high. Why is because they were smart enough to pivot in their business model. And what i mean by that. Is you go in there and you'll see a sony. Tv video t. in a samsung. And so all. Those companies are basically renting space to put their tv on the wall. Or there's like a mini apple store inside of it or there's even i ll where there's amazon products so they pivoted in now. They have fantastic. Sites spread out around the country where people can go buy their product online. Come pick it up in the store and so we are seeing this time and time again with retail a frankly i think shopping centers should be rebranded to you know like like i dunno a service center or something like that but service center has like a car connotation to it but you know except for grocery anchoring most people really shopping. They're going to get their nails. Dominance drive around wherever your local city is in look who are actually occupying spaces of the retail shopping centers around you and you'll know exactly what i'm talking about. Yeah that's a really good point. Especially as i'm in california i know you're in texas. Were about to be allowed outside again and like the actually able to go and do these kind of do that research. I think that's important for for people to to get a feel for it. You're you're right about what's you know. What is in those spaces. I wanted to touch back on this. Because wasn't amazon in a bidding four exit. Jc penney or somebody that was about to go. I think it was. Jc penney that was in bankruptcy and there was talk about amazon buying them and becoming the strategy that you mentioned about best buy how they've basically become a retail footprint distribution center. Do you know what happened without or if that would have even been a good strategy for amazon to have more of a physical is at retail presence. I don't know that specifically. But i do know that you know. They bought whole foods for example. Which is an austin based company to expand our footprint. And if you. I don't know if you've been into a whole foods since amazon. Bought it but it looks very different from what looked like prior to amazon's ownership of it also. You'll see amazon to go through smaller locations with their most popular items being sold in those are those are popping up everywhere but really you know amazon in other e commerce stores that that's not who shopping centers are are being threatened by hardly anymore. I mean there is as long as it's a good location with foot. Traffic in outside of california with all due respect people are going out a ballot in shopping in living the lives. Almost the normal as it was pre pandemic in so. We think that there's going to be almost an explosion of people who are really really wanting to get out and try to get back to normal in catch up on all. The things did get to happen throughout the last eighteen months. Whatever so yeah like that yeah. That's great. I appreciate that. And so i wanted to to pivot again a little bit and talk about your personal real estate. Investing.

texas amazon california apple samsung Jc penney austin last eighteen months sony four
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Shutters Inc

Shutters Inc

04:11 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Shutters Inc

"To me. i aimed at a level thought four below with these if these people are your best customers and in the photo business she kind of assuming because they've obviously got a lot of your gear. That is a certain level or unlisted reasonable amount of experience and the content is is wasn't even for that. Sure i mean going but this all been dealt with the mind is just whether it's not targeting people when not thinking deeply about stuff itself reaching to myself enough to try and find the difference but yeah if you're us photographer happy gone and photographing yourself pointing torture. The milky y in the science bought four hundred other people appointed tortures the milky y. Yeah you've got that shot now but you know two hundred ninety nine people go to let me put an idea to you do you. Do you think there is a possibility that over the last. I don't know what we're up to now. Seventeen eighteen months of of the pandemic that the people who had the skills haven't been shooting as much as they used to you but self admitted the same and those people who don't have the the level of skill you have aren't getting out to do workshops like they would have pre covid and so maybe the whole quality of output over the last eighteen months as maybe slipped a bit might not because the people that people go to the workshops to learn how to point.

two hundred ninety nine people Seventeen eighteen months four hundred last eighteen months
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Help! I Suck At Dating with Dean, Vanessa and Jared

Help! I Suck At Dating with Dean, Vanessa and Jared

05:47 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Help! I Suck At Dating with Dean, Vanessa and Jared

"Up. He is the founder of the more dating app which is the world's first anti superficial relationship app. It is adam cohen also. Not adam thank you so much for joining us. How are you doing wonderfully. I am now in. California took a week out of new york city the hustle and bustle of that city to get some sun. Because i'm pasty white from the last eighteen months so feeling good. I think we're all pasty white from the past eighteen months..

adam adam cohen California new york city last eighteen months past eighteen months first anti
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Around the Horn

Around the Horn

02:00 min | 1 year ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Around the Horn

"Just not well let me ask you. You had a conversation yesterday before we went on air and and it's a legitimate conversation because he had lebron after the game saying it space to for him this summer not the olympics which i think is a joke and it's a good job but there's him walking off the court with five minutes left game five. There's no handshakes on the court last night but then a jersey exchange with booker bombed position. We've never really seen lebron. He's never gone out in the first round. that's for sure. Lebron losing in this manner. Do you have a problem with how he can himself. A loss flashing. No i mean he. He works harder than per i've ever seen. He's in better shape. He's always focused on the court. And i think he's probably distancing himself from the events that i think maybe he's realizing on mortality. I think this is how he's dealing with it. He's earned the right to make a joke. He's earned the right to walk off the court. He's earned that right as hard as he plays for. As long as he's played tim. If it were somebody else would they be criticized for that. Well i i think he's the i will be criticized on anything like that it. I'll say this. I agree with bill but i was surprised chris. Paul longtime close friend of his. I was surprised he didn't go over there and shake his hand and say go. Go go to the finals telling you know. wish him. well now i know. He met with booker behind closed doors. But we try to equate everything to the pistons walking off the floor against the celtics. And i just don't think this was timely happen. He's been pumping devon booker in the media all year. I think he's showing his respect for him. We do hold them to unfair standards and he's talking about being physically emotionally spiritually drained after the last eighteen months. Let's give this guy a break and let them do as little press wants to israel unfair standards with staying on the court for the last five minutes a game five or what i mean. He's in year eighteen four championships hundreds of playoff games. And a track record. That lets you know. Hey it's not like he's being rude. He's not being this mean person he's just being lebron he's probably already thinking about next year to be on seeing. Anthony davis..

Lebron Anthony davis lebron five minutes yesterday next year Paul olympics first round last night chris this summer tim game five booker year eighteen four championshi bill last eighteen months hundreds of playoff games israel
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Live Your Own Fit Podcast

Live Your Own Fit Podcast

05:33 min | 2 years ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Live Your Own Fit Podcast

"Who i am underneath the business with the where coal whatever else is going on at the time yes so you don't become the business kate. Brian sense of identity. I guess i'm and at the moment you're doing something to make sure that that happens. Like a law saul challenge that you put in place for yourself. Annual clients as well Tell us a bit about that. And the benefits. Okay full disclosure. This isn't going to anybody else yet. This is just might. These things always thought as a self experiment fare gates so obviously the last eighteen months two years. We haven't been able to travel internationally. So i didn't go back to new zealand We launched the new business. My my output on the computer side of thing has been at all time highs. And i was sitting there and i was thinking you know what i need a little bit of what i would normally get from from unplugging but in the context of how living here.

new zealand Brian two years last eighteen months
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

03:45 min | 2 years ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

"It was maybe a little bit high angle but the fact of the matter is it was years and years and years and years of damage and he kept getting in and one day. I think that's it. It's all dude. Forget about him for a minute. That was during an impact. Look payroll you know. It was a sad situation. But look how pero You know he hit the ropes. He literally hit the ropes. And that was it and you never know when it's going to happen. And i just i feel for. We'll osprey i feel for everybody because you don't wanna see something like this in new japan. Everybody obviously has been affected the pandemic in the last eighteen months. But i don't know who may have gotten it worse than new japan now. I know they're smaller promotions that are scraping for every dollar. That are just pulling their hair out. You know at that statement but you look the larger wrestling promotions. Look at eight of you look at. Wwe r. o. h. All that look at new japan in the position. They're in right now and are they better off than they were eighteen months ago. The answer is undoubtedly no they are not and they have tried things that have not worked really evil they have had. This has been bad. You know the pandemic has been a real echo chamber. As far as when things have not worked the rattling that has come from it and they most. They have not had a good run. That is for damn sure with the injuries that they've had with everything that's gone on so the faster that things can try to get back to normal you know. They're going to help everybody but when he comes in new japan this is a company that needs some some comfort needs some stability again right now when it comes to their players because refer right now. It just feels like everything's a mess. It's just hard because endeavour to me. Wwe you test positive for covid and you go home. And if you're fine ten days later go right back to work. that's it. Japan's different people go to japan. They don't live well. Some people live in japan. Obviously but other people go to japan from where they consider to be their home and they go there and something happens and now you go back to your apartment and you can't do anything and not only can do anything but like you can't fly back home. You can't just go home like you can't if you live in florida and you for me. You're stuck in an apartment. then they cancelled shows. And so you'd be stuck in that apartment for thirty days. If you want to go home you can go home. But if you want to be back in time for the show you gotta come back and then quarantine for two weeks. So how much time do you even get at home. Maybe live somewhere where you have to quarantine to get there. Then you have to quarantine to get back. It's a nightmare for some of these guys and it's very frustrating. And it's not new japan's fault so to speak it's like those are the japanese quarantine rules. That's what they have to do. If there's an outbreak and shows get canceled i mean it just sucks.

florida two weeks thirty days Japan eight new japan eighteen months ago ten days later one day last eighteen months japanese years japan
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Thoroughbred Racing Radio Network

Thoroughbred Racing Radio Network

01:32 min | 2 years ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Thoroughbred Racing Radio Network

"And her they both had sprinter's speed if you needed it and this is a beautiful or spear around. It's the most expensive horse i've ever bought at auction for client. Well there was a bit of pressure on me so You know this. This point seconds right direction. I'm looking forward to the travers that summer. He's ideal for that. Well you got plenty of. You've got plenty of opportunity between now and then let me ask you this. If it looks like you can't get in to to derby. would you just wait for preakness opportunity or would you even think about something like the day mile. Is that worth considering. No we won't run in the pet day. We'll we'll wait for the pregnancy. We don't draw very good. And you know you mentioned purchase. He was saratoga. Your nine hundred and fifty thousand and bred by the family and This is three chimneys and fern circle and And has really you mentioned the breeder the after the breeders cup and and then the kentucky jockey club when you put the blinkers on. You took blinkers off and ken your numbers when you mean when you play around with blinkers Coming into this over the last eighteen months. Two for five when you take blinkers off. So it's something that you do with purpose. actually. I never tell you. Believe a good horse really needs mommy. Trained enough graded winners. And i think you'll look at most of them don't have lingers on Good horse can look another horse. The i pretty easily.

Two three chimneys five nine hundred and fifty thousan both last eighteen months
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Tiff Talks Podcast

Tiff Talks Podcast

04:36 min | 2 years ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Tiff Talks Podcast

"Are you kidding me. Like really painful stuff and not once. Have i acted out in aggression. Always with love and compassion. Always through all those fucking things that i just listed off in the last eighteen months i have never not responded with love and compassion and it doesn't let any of those fuckers off the hook it doesn't they they will get what's coming to them if that's god's plan i'm job is to be the very best me. I can be an throwing shade and being an asshole won't serve that so regardless of who has done some really painful things to me in the last eighteen months. I am walking my talk. And i have used the framework of the any graham to navigate all of that all of it dot as powerful. Because like you said even going back to the beginning of any grammy get to be patient with the process listening to that recent story. It sounds like you really tapped into that side of really being patient compassionate still when you erlich lion the experts. Why an expert. I'm telling you that any mike condolences. I'm indefinitely he. I'm sure he's we know he's still with you. We know that speech eternal life i am. I don't know if you've ever here's the really cool part of the story like even you know him passing away literally. Three weeks later is when the assault happened. It was almost like when it happened. That ten year old part of me was like overseeing and my uncle and i could never have a conversation about the incident when i was ten it was never talked about and i didn't know why there was a block around that but because he had gone to the other side in his eternal life when this second thing has happened three weeks after he passed away. It'll have next level healing. So you know. I don't know why it happened. Obviously but i do know again. I've used something. So god awful and painful for such big healing not just for me and little t but every person i touch because i do understand how hard stuff can be. But it's through that experience at greater healing came that without that horrible experience. I don't have this feeling that i have today. You know what you choose to do with it. And i've had to grieve all of it. It's not just like okay. I'm gonna use the green hood. And oh i've had to feel all of it all.

today Three weeks later ten ten year three weeks after second thing last eighteen months graham erlich lion
"last eighteen months" Discussed on Fusion Patrol

Fusion Patrol

04:00 min | 2 years ago

"last eighteen months" Discussed on Fusion Patrol

"Of fusion patrol. I'm gene. I'm simon and tonight. We're looking at the nigel. Neal's beasts episode. What big eyes inspector. Bob curry of the rspca is playing hard with mr jabe. A local animal trader. He doesn't like the way he treats the animals in his care and he's come checking up on him after. A cheetah died transit the week prior he goes through his books looking for something suspicious and thinks he finds it in the last eighteen months. Three european wolves have been sold supposedly to a small pet shop on westbury road. It's the kind of place that deals and kittens and answers. not wild. Animals curry thinks this is a false paper trail to cover up something more nefarious visiting the pet shop. He first meets the meek florence. Bring the shopkeeper and is surprised to learn that. it's true that this shop did take delivery of three european wolves. She cannot or will not answer why and merely says you'll have to talk to my father the owner of the shop about that her father lille ramo rarely talks to people but curry insists and is granted. An audience remount isn't particularly kind to him and demonstrates clear contempt for his daughter's intelligence. He is a frail old man but after admitting that he purchased the wolves legally for himself. He kicks curry out back at the station curry consults with his boss. Chief inspector nash. He knows about raymond. He's a crackpot scientists with weird ideas about how darwin got evolution wrong curry now more worried about the welfare of the animals than ever rushes back to the shop which is closed for the night florence. Lets him in but won't let him talk to her. Father curry really upset him earlier. She may be an idiot. She knows but her father is a genius and she can neither understand his work nor is she willing to try to tell curry what it is surprisingly promote shows up and invites curry in this time he's welcoming. He wants to tell him about his work. He is bitter that he is. He is instead of addressing the royal society with his theories. He quizzes curry a bit to see if he's even intelligent enough to understand. The work apparently satisfied enough. He attempts to explain it to him. Rather contemptuously inside the genetics of every mammal is a history of that came before all the way back to the origins of mammals before they'd even decided what form they take given. That premise remmel thinks like hanthropy is possible. The turning of a man into a werewolf we're wolves are real. He argues the legends are misspellings of the original facts. The legend of little red riding hood isn't grandma being replaced by a wolf. It's about grandma. Transforming into a wolf. He shows curry his lab and his dissection table. Yes he bought the wolves and he used them in his experiments. He extracted some fluid samples and he humanely euthanize them and conducted work on their bodies disposing of them afterwards. All in accordance with regulations now raimondo is close to the culmination of his experiments and his vindication when his hypotheses are confirmed he has been injecting himself with a series of serums derive from his blood mixed with material from the wolves soon he will transform into a wolf curry thinks mad and when the old man collapses he makes to call for an ambulance convinced. He's giving himself septicemia. His daughter stops him but curry elicits. A promise from her that she'll call a doctor and he leaves very disturbed by the madness. He's witnessed the next day at h. Q..

tonight Bob curry lille ramo Neal's beasts westbury road jabe three first raymond curry nash last eighteen months Three european wolves wolves simon european