35 Burst results for "Late Sixties"

Inside a New Skunk Works Factory

Aviation Week's Check 6 Podcast

01:59 min | 1 year ago

Inside a New Skunk Works Factory

"Kitty sort of like kind of explain to everybody. This is a bit different. Why hockey's approach is different and tell us a little bit more about the the digital transformation that they're on yeah so it's it's kind of a two-part transformation that they showed us in in actually quite some detail quite elaborate detail during this tour on august tenth at site tin plant. Forty two also known as skunkworks in palmdale man the two parts to it one is is just on the digital side in his new approach digital engineering and digital manufacturing and the second is the sort of physical in standardization of that with infrastructure in the form of a new factory Huge new factory that they've built in erected on the skunkworks. Campus there in palmdale and So we get to see kind of both sides of that you know. Basically the sort of sub projects that this step by step series of sub projects where they proved out this or if digital manufacturing approach which they are now going to apply to projects. That are actually going to start building in this new factory in what they call building six six four eight on on on the campus so that was That was the point of the of the visit and the tour ride can just to set the scene a little. Now we know that the skunkworks really as it's it's modern era occupies. Most people now in palmdale in that corner of plant. Forty two those two large mainly to large hangar buildings that were built the stall factory in the desert that was built for the tunnel. I haven't program back in the late sixties so where in relation to those huge hang this the new facility right so there's building six. Oh one which is the building that we served commonly associated with the skunkworks quirks. Since it moved to palmdale from burbank in the late nineteen eighties to occupy that. Elton levin building.

Palmdale Hockey Burbank Elton Levin
Mallory Millet Saw the Human Side of Marlon Brando

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:41 min | 1 year ago

Mallory Millet Saw the Human Side of Marlon Brando

"Have so many stories you so you were friends. Good friends with marlon brando Who grew grew to be the size of a house at the end. I mean it's the kind of an amazing thing orson welles. Dan ackroyd There's people that they just blow up beyond reckoning. You keep you try to imagine. Excuse me what what's going on over there. You knew him when he was thin. He was glamorous beautiful beautiful human being. I mean beautiful physically physically and as an actor. Sometimes i always wonder. What's the big deal about certain people and then you see something. When he was in. I guess was julius caesar when he when he does the romans conference room. It's gonna when. I saw that. I thought to myself now i get it. You just thought to myself. I never really had seen whatever that was the sukhois about him. I mean everybody knows. He's a great actor but we were you finally see like oh my goodness there's he's a genius But you saw the human side of him so in the late sixties. He's calling you up. You said during the break that you talked him out of suicide. Marie would call me and she'd be she say i'm up in san francisco right now and It would be midnight or something. I'm up in san francisco right now and marlins home alone and he's going to kill himself and you've got to get over there right now and i'd go murray is midnight is marlin. He's you know please mallory. You've got to go there now. You've got to get in your car and get up there right this minute

Dan Ackroyd Marlon Brando Orson Welles Julius Caesar San Francisco Marie Marlins Marlin Murray Mallory
Robby Steinhardt, Violinist and Co-Lead Vocalist of Kansas, Dead at 71

Mornings on Maine Street

02:58 min | 1 year ago

Robby Steinhardt, Violinist and Co-Lead Vocalist of Kansas, Dead at 71

"Guess this is this is partly personal. But I have a feeling that I'm not the only one who is interested in this story. So I'll share it with my fellow fans of rock music. And especially back when I was really, you know, getting into it back in the seventies. And I've been I've been a radio listener as a kid from Cali. I can't remember 56 years old, uh, listen to a lot of great music of big fan of top 40 radio back in the late sixties. The Motown sound. Then, as we got in the early seventies, I got my little transistor radio and got into more of the Beatles. The Eagles as they came on in the mid late seventies, especially but also, uh, Kearney and wings and triumph and yellow yellow was probably one of my favorites. But this band also held the spot. The band's Kansas. You probably remember this song dust in the wind, Give a listen to this violent solar. Really quick man who did that Robby Steinhardt. The original violinist for Kansas, Also, a co lead vocalists actually sings Believe vocal on this song as well. Backup vocal Well, we lost Robbie over the weekend, he died from acute pancreatitis. The founding member of the band and a rarity. I mean, a violin player in a rock band. How did that all come about? My parents asked me to play the violin, I guess made me play as of island would be more accurate. I was the first chair in my high school orchestra. My junior high school orchestra in my grade school orchestra. Remember when Philly heart call me and he said, I heard you play and I wanted to find out if you wanted to get together and form a band. I remember being in Lawrence, Kansas and seeing him playing and singing, and I just thought that is a guy that I need to be in a band with. I've never seen anybody else like that guy. I've never heard anybody play like that guy and I've never heard anybody sing that way, Robbie said. Do you guys have a tape? So I sent him a reel to reel and he called back. He said. Awesome. I'm in that piece Audio from the documentary Kansas Miracles out of nowhere. Robby Steinhardt was unusual. He played the violin. Yeah, we have fiddle players. But this guy was a true classical violin player in a rock band and just totally helped to, you know to to forge a new sound, of course. As we mentioned dust in the wind, but carry on my wayward son, another favorite of theirs that I love playing the game tonight like that one as well point of no return. So the list goes on and on just some great music. Romney Robby Steinhardt dead at the age of 71 from pancreatitis, So it's a little sad news there for you, and I'm like I say, partly personal. I wanted to put that on the air, but I'm sure that I'm not the only one Alan checking in with me saying Thank you. You're welcome, Ellen. I just Couldn't let let that go by

Robby Steinhardt Kansas Robbie Cali Kearney Acute Pancreatitis Eagles Lawrence Romney Robby Steinhardt Pancreatitis Alan Ellen
"late sixties" Discussed on 790 KABC

790 KABC

06:01 min | 1 year ago

"late sixties" Discussed on 790 KABC

"You only have so much space so Only so many radio stations will be allowed to exist, because if everyone tried to build a radio station, no one would hear anything. It would all be noise, so we're going to regulate it. We're going to sign licenses to radio stations. And, of course, TV is just another form of radio. It's just radio stations, right, right. So in 1949, they kind of codified this idea. It kind of came up because of a scenario where there was. I think a mayor, I think, was someone running for mayor in New York or was mayor in Boston. And two competing radio stations or trying to say to each side of the argument, right and support of and against this guy that was running for mayor and the FCC came in and said, You know what? We can't have this anymore. We need to make a rule and the rule said simply this. If you own a radio station great, we'll give you your license. There's some rules. You got to follow about the kind of things that you can say on the air. You can't use any profanity. You can't say anything. That's a lie right. But then they also said But on political issues specifically if you have someone who is conservative And they talked for 20 minutes. You need to give exactly 20 minutes of fair time to the liberal person that was enforced or one politician versus another, and that was called the fairness doctrine, And the idea is We are the gatekeepers of this particular medium. We are we have a duty to the public. A Democratic society should provide an opportunity for everybody to express diverse viewpoints on controversial issues. That's what they were saying, and this is something that we're going to take seriously. This is something that we're going to take so seriously, that we're going to make it a rule. I mean, the whole idea behind this is that so you have to have the FCC. You have to have some commission doing this. If you go back to this essential principle of why is federal government there in the first place? To regulate interstate commerce right is to keep this darn thing running. Keep the machine going. If you don't have some sort of regulation, if you don't have some commission managing all that stuff in some way, it all comes off the rails. There you go completely does because it would be complete chaos, right? So being born in late sixties I was raised in the seventies. And my earliest memories of television news were number one that it was boring. Yeah, number two, something you want to watch that it was even though it was boring. You kind of Trusted whatever was going to be said on it. Yeah. And you had these guys. Uh, I always go back to Walter Cronkite. Who are some of the other ones. Tom Brokaw come out of the day. Yeah, but even before that, Dan rather was, Dan rather was a big one. Yeah, but you know, these are guys that basically They had the aura of someone that you could trust. They didn't talk in an angry, bombastic manner. They didn't point their finger and accuse people of of nefarious activities. They were measured in the way that they spoke. They did not editorialize, and then when they did like in those rare circumstances, it's escaping me Now. When Walter Cronkite made his own reporter says, you know, thinks this this report again. Oh, my gosh, like people were like, Oh, my gosh, she actually said an opinion, but they distance themselves. They Made it very clear that they were saying something that this is only my opinion. Yes, exactly. And you just don't have. Yes, they did that. This reporter believes that this reporter make it very clear that okay, now I've stopped telling Edward R. Morrow. Edward R. Murrow. Yes. So you know, that obviously is not what we're getting now, folks, uh And the idea is that has changed. We haven't hit it. We haven't hit what changed? Well, we really haven't talked about that yet. We have had the fairness doctrine forever and ever and ever, but we don't have it anymore. And it was a specific point in time when it went away, and it's interesting the series of events that occurred afterwards. Well, I think we're going to talk about that. And I think we should probably just tell everyone this all kind of seemed to go by the wayside. In the waning years of the Reagan administration. There was something that was done in 1987. Yes, well, I'll just say this kind of get away with it was internal to the FCC. But again that goes back to a lot of the other shows we've done to try to educate people on. How does this system really work? How's the government work? Well, in most of the power lies in the executive branch, so Reagan had people that he appointed and had, of course, they had some agenda, and one of the things that they wanted to do inside, the FCC was to say, Let's get rid of this idea of fairness doctrine because at the time they were arguing, this is bad for competition, and it's not the place of government. What were what was Reagan's famous saying, You know, the government should not tell me how to do things how to live my life. Three scariest word or the whatever. Five years, whatever it was I'm the government. I'm here to help. So the whole idea was to say governments bad all the time. Always so, among other things, let's take government out of radio and TV broadcast. And so it was 1987. When the FCC rolled that back and said, We're not going to enforce the fairness doctrine anymore. They didn't necessarily make a new rule. It didn't make a new They just said This was like weed before the Big Bang. We're just not going to enforce the existing rules, which basically does change the It took 10 years for it to come about, and I think it started like 1996, the Telecommunications Act 1990. Six kind of really started the codification of getting rid of fairness doctor and I think it was like 2011 when it finally went away. But here's the point, they said, we're not going to reinforce it anymore. 1986 that occurs. And that very that very next year very next year, Rush Limbaugh goes on the air 87 88. I think it was the first political one sided only We're going to take a break. And when we come back, we're going to be taking your calls. You can reach us at 1 802 22 gig bc 1 802 225222 is the weaponization of news, a good thing or a bad thing? We have historically believe that government is bad. Yes, that's what we believed in. I'm not historically in the last 30 40 years, maybe. Well, sometimes we might have to rethink that, folks. We're going to be right back. Some of it should be pretty crazy. The floodgates were opened and we all know what happened next. We'll be right back..

Tom Brokaw 2011 20 minutes Edward R. Morrow 1987 New York Edward R. Murrow Boston Rush Limbaugh 10 years Dan Walter Cronkite 1986 Reagan FCC Five years 1949 Big Bang first Telecommunications Act 1990
"late sixties" Discussed on KLIF 570 AM

KLIF 570 AM

07:17 min | 1 year ago

"late sixties" Discussed on KLIF 570 AM

"Something go wrong around here. So And so. This lawsuit stated that because Chrysler, GM and Ford got together in the early fifties and signed a joint agreement to develop pollution devices for cars The government said, because those devices have never showed up. There had to be collusion to keep it from happening. Therefore, the antitrust lawsuit now to be fair. GM, who had sent the lead group out to L. A. In the 19 forties to study smog did come back and say We just didn't have the equipment to do anything back then. But even as his lawsuit is filed in the late sixties It should be noted the first recirculation device actually appeared as a pollution control device on GM products and other cars sold in California in the early sixties. And that's the one thing this story didn't get just because the government said you haven't even put one device on a car. That was not true. And it was California that forced the device. It is why even to this day because California started regulating pollution before the EPA ever existed. They still have the right to set their own standards because typically they're tougher than the rest The nation. In any case. Los Angeles, California, They said one of the worst smog days ever started in the summer of 1943. When visibility in parts of L. A drop to just three blocks. Now I can a task growing up a number of years in Burbank, California, and I've told you this before, Even as late as 1967. You could go stand in the middle of North Niagara Street and look towards Olive. NBC studios were half block from my grandparents home in Burbank. You could stand in the middle of the street and the more the small could be so thick. You could not see the NBC studios a half block away. That's it. I remember at one point and I want to say it was 1988. I was driving a car out Santa Barbara for customer. And as I came out of Palm Springs going up into banning to go into the L a basin, you could see the smog rolling out. Like some type of fog in a science fiction movie through the pass into the desert. But in 2000 when I was there, and I picked up the Gerald R. Loeb Award at U. C L. A It was the middle summer. And I was amazed how clean the skies finally wore. In any case they called The September 8 1943 event, a daylight daylight dim out. Even the sunlight was diminished. The L. A County pollution control district was established in 1947. By 48 L. A believed it was a smokestack or refineries, foundries and mills backyard incinerators that were creating all of the smog. Automobiles. We're not obvious to them, so they thought it was a minor problem to be fair. The auto manufacturers that sent out there people too, and they knew at the time. Big cars were likely the major contributing problem. And so in the fall of 1949. Here's what changed the game. The California versus Washington State football game in Berkeley, California, a city that would had never been known to have any pollution whatsoever. But certainly thousands and thousands of fans drove to Berkeley to watch the game, And on that day, Berkeley had smog. And it was like that Eureka moment. It's automobiles. Going on a doctor airy Haagen Schmidt. He's a professor of biochemistry University Institute of Technology. He was one. The found out the unburned hydrocarbons and nitrogen oxides coming from automobile exhausts was cooked by sunlight into what we know ground level ozone or smog. 1954 Ella's two million cars were racking up 50 million miles of travel every day. Again year after I was born, but think of that statement. In 1954. There are only two million cars in the L A basin. Yeah, We have more than that Dallas Fort worth now by a long shot, and L A would, too, as the sixties rolled on. So they said. The industry insisted on mitt on definitive proof. That was autos that were the cause of L. A smog. General Motors had written in March of 1953. Ella Studies indicated that exhaust gases may be contributing to smog. But other cities did not appear to have the same problem. Ford said the need for device to more effectively reduce exhaust vapours has not yet been established. Okay? So in 1954 the next year, the automakers finally concede the concede the automobile was the largest single source. Of the hydrocarbons in Los Angeles. But again if you read the history Their point was we did not have the technology to deal with this yet. And maybe that's true. In the same period, there was a guy working on airbags for automobiles. He had worked for the government. Prior to that had worked on torpedoes. Now at the time World War two torpedoes. We're run by compressed air. And they were covered when they were made with canvas bagging before they would be shipped out so they wouldn't be damaged and time to time. Some of those compressed air canisters in the torpedo Would rupture and shoot the canvas bag across the room. So he started thinking. Why can't you do that in a car? And the exploding bag with compressed air would save you from slamming into the dash and the steering wheel. I was in the fifties. And as much again he got his patent for the idea. But nothing there was no triggering device fast enough. To have an accident trigger the airbag to where it would deploy and be functional for you to the lessen the impact of the automobile wreck. Until as I recall, 1966 65 or 66, the military came up with a new triggering device for our bombs and missiles that were that fast. And so, like many things military when they come up with new technology, offered it to the car industry. And now we finally had a triggering device fast enough to where you could start making airbags work. That's what it was..

1947 Chrysler March of 1953 NBC Berkeley Ford Burbank 2000 North Niagara Street Los Angeles GM 1988 EPA California thousands Santa Barbara Dallas Fort Palm Springs L. A General Motors
"late sixties" Discussed on 90.3 KAZU

90.3 KAZU

01:39 min | 1 year ago

"late sixties" Discussed on 90.3 KAZU

"Riots and anguish that followed still hung in the air. Are you ready? Black people? Are you ready? Are you and the black power ethos that would infuse the seventies was taking root voices? The beautiful black feeling revenue for black waves moving in beautiful air. Are you ready? Black people? Are you ready? One of the key reasons why I felt Kind of a sense of purpose for this film. Was that back in the late sixties, you know bill where there's and Curtis Mayfield weren't like billion dollar industries. They weren't worried about losing their roles, voice their their their ball our lifestyle because they weren't living that they were of the people. So if anything, I'm really hoping that this will spark in other artists. A new mission. And I'm not saying that the burden has to fall on us as a people to always say the right thing to say the most politically correct thing. And they always have. You know, no one has to be a straight a students that level like I love party and idiot songs and tick tock. Music just like the next person, but Um Not to the detriment of of the message. And so if anything, I want artists to know. The lesson that we need to learn. Is that message and activism. Those things matter those things better. We can't lose that. Amir Questlove Thompson is the director of Summer of Soul Out tomorrow in theaters and on Hulu. We spoke with him at this year's Virtual Sundance Film Festival, which NPR.

Curtis Mayfield Summer of Soul Out NPR Virtual Sundance Film Festival seventies One late sixties Hulu this year Amir Questlove Thompson tomorrow billion dollar
"late sixties" Discussed on Our Body Politic

Our Body Politic

05:38 min | 1 year ago

"late sixties" Discussed on Our Body Politic

"I'm living to create. That is a really joyful framing of your mission in life. So what does what does that mean to you. Well i feel like i'm here for a purpose. I'm here to create something for my communities so that they haven't sense of expression they have a sense of culture and belonging and to spread that idea to other people because we're all here to create you produce. Some really seminal work and you're nineteen seventy-three album a grain of sand music for the struggle of asians in america just feels really present to me when i listened to it. You've got the lyrics of the song we are the children in. Tell us about that. Seminal album and how it came together. We were standing on the shoulders of the black movement. The chicano movement was happening from the very beginning of our movement in the late sixties. We were together with other people of color and that gave us the courage to step up as well. So i was lucky to fall into meeting a group of asian americans who were activists and who were looking at telling our stories in who we were as asian americans realizing that being in camp was sort of a turning point for us to really learn. This is a hard lesson of what america can do to you. And so the words of the song we are the children of the migrant worker. We are the offspring of the concentration camp sons and daughters of the railroad builder. Who.

america late sixties nineteen seventy-three album asian asians americans
"late sixties" Discussed on Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine

Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine

05:25 min | 1 year ago

"late sixties" Discussed on Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine

"I mean that was really the kind of the attitude It wasn't until the sixties when rates of disease really started to climb because of increased mechanization And that's when you see this sort of demand for action that followed The other reason it took a while for anything to happen is that union leadership had been really reluctant to fight this issue. The the actual mine workers themselves like the union you know. Didn't they wanted to focus on pensions. They wanted had other priorities. They want to focus on the other thing is for a while The w a president was pretty friendly with the coal companies and wasn't really necessarily wanting to pick big fights with mom and they knew that this black lung thing was going to be a big battle once they undertook it The only reason that finally changed is there is a large mine. Explosion in farmington west virginia in nineteen sixty eight and During the coverage of this event the w president was seen like standing alongside coal company like officials defending them and saying basically like i mean the attitude which is just wild to think about is part of your job as a coal miner means that sometimes explode and you might die or sometimes the whole thing caves in and you might die and that's just it and you should accept it and then like the idea that we should be doing more to keep you safe is really just not accepting the inherent dangers of your job. gas lighting basically so. This led to outrage. It led to a change in union leadership. The whole company this was also a time period. We're talking about the late sixties. Where the idea that. Our workers should be respected. And they needed to be they that they had their own rights was a lot more fashionable. You know if you think about like the cultural milieu of the late sixties early seventies. You know the hippies and all that you were there were a lot more that likely to fight Big business and the suits so suddenly mining safety became a priority. Not just in west virginia but of like the nixon administration on a federal level because of this explosion and because of all this issue with the union The issue of black long suddenly could be added to the table so first of all on the state level in west virginia miners wanted to start organizing to make sure that when the next session came up something was going to be passed to prevent and recognize like prevent black long at recognize it as an entity and compensate those who are no longer able to work or who have died. Or you know from black lung. So i some miners and fayette county. There are a ton of counties in west. Virginia law accounting..

Virginia farmington late sixties late sixties early seventies west virginia sixties nineteen sixty eight nixon west black long black long
"late sixties" Discussed on Thoroughbred Racing Radio Network

Thoroughbred Racing Radio Network

06:57 min | 1 year ago

"late sixties" Discussed on Thoroughbred Racing Radio Network

"That eddie please had had An and all of a sudden it you know it showed up in john services care you know months later and At philly and jot said that you won the race was a short fields. A four horse field and That was it. That rick porter was hooked Right from that point. Yeah he definitely love the sport and excitement of the sport and going to the races. I mean he just enjoyed it more than just being a business it was entertainment and a business and he just enjoyed the excitement of it is a great guy for racing and it You know he was connected with some pretty good people and got connected with john service you know and i it i i pulled up with you. Bring up. I'll get along. I i pulled up Bob k. max Record i pulled up her and then It a bob came back when he was murdered. one two thousand eleven races in his career. And it has. It's amazing because he had had this. You know this career dating back to the late sixties and it had been a consistent winner and then really in the mid nineties started to you know to really The things started to really go right. And and i it it seems like he was poised to you know to have maybe his his greatest successes he was sixty one so throughout his sixties You know he he who knows what What he could have had i. It's one of one of the saddest. He marianne It's one of the saddest things that I in my memory in the last couple of decades yet really what it is shot by stepson A terrible situation but he really focused in those years on young horses and he had such a great for young horses and breeding and he was just developed. He was already a great horseman. I loved working order flying. Because you couldn't do nothing wrong and and You know there were He's good right now. I remember working get along. I couldn't hardly work. Because every time i couldn't galloper you'd say Get it to the poll best. you can. yeah and he was gonna wars. She was pretty intense. She would go along but she was. More of a strategic goal type of scoring short seven eighths of a mile flat out of shoot to turns guidance. You get a little baffled with two turns but she she was more of. I always thought of man. You really squeezing her. When sender turns but she she when he goes seven eight thousand mile six and a half just off the pace one turn mile. She could do that. But it's amazing how these mayor laker and she comes up with a a smarty jones. Bob was i. I won a lot of races on bob sources and and some steaks and we have a lot of fun and the jocks. We used to go over there and hiding his barn and sit there and copy with him and tell stories and attack room. If we were hiding from our agents. Because we didn't get it. I remember he was the of guy was. He would make sure that you would stay focused and intense and fee. If you thought you was getting lax. He would grow monkey wrench into the gears. Forget how would use mike mccarthy in me against each not against each other but how would manipulate us right I guide ride a horse. And he didn't like the way it runs up on me like oh and he would do the same thing like mike took this course back. I told him at the source. Run out of there and put me on next time. I'd ride the ones our little quicker than michael take the ones that would come in from off of it and he would play his back and forth. What told you to take us back black. You know you should've taken him a little off the paste on that next time mccarthy on them i mean he keeps you on your toes. You better pay but he did it in a way. You came to the conclusion that he was keeping you on your toes and he was playing you guys the way he wanted to play and gets the way was that guy was but he but he never said anything. Like if you screwed up. Yeah well you know you did. But we'll get over it. His attitude was get over it and go to the next one. You know so. That's great to ride for guys like him and walter. Res reporter is owner. you know. get over it and go to the next one. You know did did you. Did you write jolie's halo for him at all Yeah i think i did. I remember jollies halo. I think i'd want a bunch of state graces on this sources. But i forget if i wrote joe halo. You'll have to look that up a lot of be that you know more about meeting. I sell when hit the ground once in a while to take effect on their memory. I was thinking about when i first went to merlin. How georgia's amount of growth is olive. On and i was trying to remember who dealt got me started at the hagerstown Laurel meat. I went down there with nothing. I just lost the bug. That six months ago and left garden state added agent calling me come onto maryland. I went to berlin. And i couldn't think this was his name. One of the first winners. I wrote down. But it was doubt source because coups got hurt and then it just hit me just now pro bidder. That was a probe better. I wrote pro for delfin leading rider at laurel That that meat and went down there with nothing. But yeah i i kind of think. Some of the stakes. I want him. Bob sources and i can't think of the name of the voices that was one of his. I reached out for the biggest win. And and i. I'm gonna tell you this is funny 'cause i think i'm almost positive i if i if i was i there for this. He won the is land in ninety two and jolie's halo and with edgar And it looks like edgar. It looks like edgar road him pretty regularly. But i tell you what how about this. This is when the is land was a grade. One jolie's halo wins by ad over out of place with herbie macauley. Hollywood herb valley crossing was third andrea see felt strike..

berlin maryland six months ago herbie macauley merlin michael seven late sixties mike One edgar georgia jollies one turn mile two turns jolie third philly four horse walter
"late sixties" Discussed on Front Burner

Front Burner

01:50 min | 1 year ago

"late sixties" Discussed on Front Burner

"Salads. So like what's different here either. That's a very good point. Because he has in latin america. This is a latin. American pope of course and though argentina is very different from some of the other nations on that continent i think he does understand the context and i'm not sure how much understanding has of of north america but it tends to be. The canada majority catholic country. And it's not a colt. Pretty catholic country must prime ministers since the late sixties of being catholic but in latin america in southern europe the catholic culture is the very being of the nation and if a country is deeply angry with what the vatican is. Doing that does matter. And there's a fear particularly not in america where evangelical movements have been quite influential in gaining converts. There is an ambiguity. There's an uncertainty Will be more forthcoming. But canada is different and i mean even now. I don't know about you but the reaction. The first few days. I came to canada in nineteen eighty-four four. Sorry nineteen eighty seven per game currency seven. I don't recall such anger. Ever before an issue particularly on an indigenous issue. Pete everyday when people are so angry. Since we've had the obscenity in london ontario other things have occurred even now. I think it's diminishing it could well be. People are advising the pope and avas in the catholic church. If.

north america america late sixties london ontario southern europe latin america Pete argentina nineteen eighty-four four nineteen eighty seven per game American first few days latin catholic canada seven vatican
"late sixties" Discussed on Conversations

Conversations

04:51 min | 1 year ago

"late sixties" Discussed on Conversations

"The deeper truths about is not that we are different. We add we are different. We are independent. We are unique shore but the much greater truth about us is that we exist in this shimmering vibrating web of interconnectedness interdependency and common humanity that we share is the most important thing the most significant the loveliest about us because that's where that the wellspring of the kindness impulse you say that the polar opposite of kindness is cynicism had we spot a cynic in the world here very easily and you belong to a profession in which kind of occupational hazard though. I don't take any new. But now the cynic is the person who's on the sidelines. The cynic is the person who's hoping for the worst. The senate is the person who is not cheering us all and encouraging us in promoting kindness. But saying isn't it pathetic. The way people climbing the greasy pole. I love watching latin. A cynic is destructive self-destructive And socially destructive because to have such a negative view. Such a feeling of pleasure at other people's misfortune or at things going bad Sneering rather than smiling and it's a terrible way to live but it also can discourage the rest of us. I don't think i've ever met a cynical toddler. We don't start out that way. What turns people into sixty many things. But one thing that i think is probably interesting. You mentioned toddler because that's probably about when it starts for some people as soon as is closely associated with a loss of attachment This is a whole join bauby's theory developed in the late sixties of attachment theory way. What he says is if you grow up not being truly valued at not feeling as though the primary attachment figures in your life really do love love. You really do want you win. They love really do feel it attached. Then that could have consequences for the rest of your life and people who suffer from the lack of strong attachment in early childhood have enormous trouble. They're often very gregarious because they're trying to form loose attachments with anyone. They encounter but the have enormous trouble forming deep strong attachments. They might get married. They might have kids but they will probably go through life unless something lovely happens to correct this not quite trusting anyone even a spouse even their own kids feeling all the time as though someone is gonna hurt them so. It's a kind of defensive posture of defensiveness soil protection. How do we treat them. How do we treat these cynics when we encountered them in our workplace over now relationship with unrelieved kindness. Because it's really hard to be. A low cost is look at had. It's hard to be kind to a lot of people but we are capable of and the one.

sixty late sixties one thing join bauby latin
"late sixties" Discussed on PodcastDetroit.com

PodcastDetroit.com

04:17 min | 2 years ago

"late sixties" Discussed on PodcastDetroit.com

"At its. It's crazy it's totally crazy. I mean as will ferrell would say oh. Great odin raven and i love that. Use the word crazy to star. Used that word. I deal with crazy. Oh speaking of all our next episode. That just made me think of a good thing. My wife gave me this idea. we're gonna talk about psychological slang terms. That people don't know what they mean Or they think they know what they mean. lean. And and i think i'll throw crazy in there because it just made me think of like. Oh man that person's that person's skill persons bipolar that person's Right right you know i. I don't have this. Life has making one. She said that would be a good show. Top to go over and describe what all of these things mean because people use them in a general sense it doesn't really apply. And which ones should you avoid. Well sure like detrimental as well. And i'll give you the the one that that people could really offend a lot of people understandably it's mental retardation but that used to be a the diagnostic and statistical manual that used to be the actual diagnosis for developmental developmental disabilities So things things of in an honestly within my lifetime these two still call. Call the the mental floor on the hospital psychiatric floors. These still call them. Asylums is late is like the late sixties. That's i don't know it. is that runs. The world the phrase. The little guy escalated quick. That really got out of hand fast. So next episode. We're gonna hit on these these terms that that are and i'll go through and explain exactly what each of these means that can use them correctly. So we're talking today about albert. Ellis albert ellis was an influential psychologist. Who developed rational emotive behavior therapy. And i'll get into the details of what that means the great thing. About albert ellis is..

odin raven Ellis today each two late sixties albert albert ellis will ferrell one
Joe Miano Talks About Prime Editing in Mice

CRISPR Cuts

02:14 min | 2 years ago

Joe Miano Talks About Prime Editing in Mice

"Gillette start by with an introduction Just maybe dennis about yourself your current position. How you got you sure so i. I'm a professor at the medical college of georgia. I'm a new yorker. You can tell them not from the south. My background is in vascular biology a phd in vascular pathobiologist near medical college. I did my training. My training with eric olson who uses christopher quite a bit in the context of must addition feet in texas in women up to medical college of wisconsin before going to university of rochester. Where i was for twenty years where the crisper really started in my lap. And so most as you said most of my work revolves around using different crisper ending platforms to interrogate the dark matter of our genome to discover what with the meaning is of some of these interesting elements that we defy. Actually i'm glad you kind of said the last line. Because that is exactly what i had picked out been looking at your bio before you had said dark matter of the genome. Can you What do you mean by not matter. Why is that important to study. So used to be the late sixties early seventies that the genome homeless considered to be mostly comprised junkie neighbor. We know now that that's not the case that most of it is functional in some way shape or form and so there are myriad number okla dna binding transcription factors on one thousand plus that buying into specific elements. And we're interested in one class of these elements and all of these elements are found in in this dark matter. Nine coding or the genome which is like ninety eight to ninety nine percent of the six billion nucleotides of each cell so we have a reasonably good handle on where to look for these nuggets of goal. And we've use computational tools in with the crisper editing platform emerging in two thousand thirteen. It's made our life so much easier now to literally will change the single base level even these binding sites and find out what the consequences and that that has enormous implications for understanding. What the single nuclear type. Various associated with diseases how those may be functioning or dysfunctioning in in the context of various common diseases and reducing

Medical College Of Georgia Eric Olson Gillette Medical College Of Wisconsin University Of Rochester Dennis Christopher Texas Nuggets
"late sixties" Discussed on hopnology: Hop Growing and Brewing for Craft Beer

hopnology: Hop Growing and Brewing for Craft Beer

04:22 min | 2 years ago

"late sixties" Discussed on hopnology: Hop Growing and Brewing for Craft Beer

"Fungal infections. that would cause bill that would cause rotting and work great so low behold were growing hops in hops. Are you bill prone as we all well know. So let's just use bordeaux mixture on hops worked great right lots of copper in their mixed with lime. And bob's your uncle until we started seeing that well you know. What will we use these hops in beer. doesn't quite ferment. Right if at all so what's going on Yeah right and what we discovered was that yeah these high levels of copper coming from the bordeaux mixture when they go into the beer. And i'll talk about this. Why this happens in a minute. at copper becomes available in solution and basically i'll say kills off the east. It doesn't necessarily kill them but it certainly luxa their they're enzyme systems and that means no fermentation warrant wire. That's bad so then. Yeah so then. There was this this kick in certainly in germany but the western europe too and some in central europe to stop using this bordeaux mixture. Well you shouldn't need to stop. It's all about timing right and how much you use it. And that goes into building resistance. And why you rotate your undersides and x y and z. So that's sort of the history of early copper usage in the hop industry and it wasn't really until the mid late sixties when we dropped the lime component out of this not talking about like you put in your corona. I'm talking about lyme as in the calcium line That was added to raise the ph of the solution that you were spraying. Because that's at that point that's one copper becomes We call it insoluble or mineralized at at a higher ph. And it's it's a particle at that point so it's not an eye on and that's very critical because copper ions one. They're able to dissolve into water. That's when they become toxic to the plant which is why like if anyone's seen Ah copper label cover front or side label or even on some of our phosphorous acid fungicides like elliott or foster or things like that that says do not apply with copper or copper says do not apply with phosphorus acids because ph of. The solution is too low. And you turn that copper ion return that copper into ions instead of into a particle and now it's like game on for toxicity and it will defoliate your plants so that that's a key point. One one we're using these copper fantasizes decides to keep the the solution ph high. You also have a certainly above seven but probably in the in the eight and a half range so copper hydroxide was formed in that in the late sixties and then later on there's try basic copper and lots of other copper formulations that they're all on the basic or alkaline side simply for that reason of keeping it in let's call it particular form and not an ion for. Here's a cool thing though you so you're spraying this copper onto the leaf. It's a contact fungicide. So it's not stomach is not getting into the plant it sits on top of the plant on the outside and it's a particle you'll see at once. The solution spray solution dries. You'll see it on the surface as a blue rang. Or a dot or something like that. That's elemental copper bound with with other things. But that sitting there ready to do its thing and so spore fungus war mildew sport whatever even bacterial will land on on the leaf surface through hugh air humidity in the air and rain or do any of that kind of thing sort of reactivates that copper on the surface and the spores take that copper into their bodies where it is very rapidly changed from the particular form to the eye on forum and basically poisoned themselves..

germany mid late sixties western europe central europe late sixties above seven eight and a half One one
How Two Detroit Lions Inspired Marvin Gaye's Whats Going On

ESPN Daily

01:48 min | 2 years ago

How Two Detroit Lions Inspired Marvin Gaye's Whats Going On

"Just intensely. Thank you for joining me. It's an honor and privilege and a pleasure to be here. My man thank you for having. Well you bring with you a story that i'm incredibly excited about the story that you reported here for us about marvin. Gay's attempt to join the detroit. Lions i mean where does the start the two main players for the lions. That story revolves around. Is this guy lombardi. Who is an nfl hall of fame. Cornerback and mel farr. But here's how the story goes back in the summer of nineteen sixty eight farney far. They were about to start their second season with the lions and they have both earned rookie of the year honors the season before offensive and defensive of the year the rookies rookie in nineteen sixty. Seven was melpar limbaugh. What's the surprise of the season to everyone except the coaches who drafted him. Barney's playing golf at home apart. Golf course in detroit and if you know anything about detroit and the golf courses back then that that's where a lot of the black celebrities from mozart. Act joe louis so on and so forth and barney was a huge fan of marvin gaye. The attendant at the golf course so like marvin gaye lives right here. You should go introduce yourself. He not door. He didn't know what he was going to say to him. At that point and marvin revenue being annoy was actually happy to see him and barney. Two views like oh. I didn't even know you knew who i was and gave him like. Oh you're barney. He ran down his stats. Like it was like pro football reference dot com and in the late sixties. They have breakfast. They talk about sports. They talk about music and then they immediately hit it off

Lions Mel Farr Farney Detroit Melpar Limbaugh Golf Marvin Lombardi Cornerback Marvin Gaye Barney NFL GAY Joe Louis Mozart Football
Will Steger's 1989 Route Across Antarctica in Gone

Climate Cast

01:36 min | 2 years ago

Will Steger's 1989 Route Across Antarctica in Gone

"Tell us why now for this film well. The two young filmmakers i worked with it was their idea actually when i met him about seven years ago. They wanted to do a film. I give them for all my archives and they join me two of my expeditions. We went to antarctica either. All i knew about the film was called after. Antarctica is for the first time last month. Will your team made this four thousand mile antarctic crossing nineteen eighty nine at the time. Did you have any idea that climate change would be evolving as the crisis of our time now back in nineteen ninety. I was very much aware of of climate change. I actually taught it my classes in the late sixties. But i never thought it would happen so quickly. It was twelve years after that in ninety nine nine hundred ninety when we finished it when the larsen ice shelf broke up in two thousand and two dow was my called action. And that's it was two thousand two that a realize this is very serious and nobody is really aware of. What's what's happening. And that's critical right because those larsen ice shelf. You actually cross those during your journey right. And then now they're gone. They're gone and it took us thirty days across Both larsen abmc and now they're mostly gone in a shelf that have crossed both in the polar areas in the arctic car. I have the cynic integrated and we've lost about sixty percent of the ice on the arctic ocean in the summer. So you know it's happening so quickly. Accelerating very fast right now.

Antarctica Arctic Arctic Ocean
A Conversation with Michigan State Representative Padma Kuppa

A Desi Woman with Soniya Gokhale

02:46 min | 2 years ago

A Conversation with Michigan State Representative Padma Kuppa

"Pomme welcome to the show. Thank you so much for having me again. Sonya it is an honor to be here with you and your listeners. At the dc woman podcast. I'll we are so excited to have you here. And i wanted to start with a bit about your journey to this country. We have a large number of listeners from indiana in particular and i know you came to this country for graduate school. I know that you came here briefly as a child and then again for graduate school and so would really enjoy your end where you are from an indian a bit about your journey to this country becoming a mechanical engineer a business analyst experience executive in early the manufacturing finance and now elected official for second term and the first indian and hindu to be elected to the michigan state legislature and spiring journey. That began began in india. That'd be here for me about much. So i actually was born not in where my parents are from. My mom is from regimen dri. My father is from ten ali and then whatever reason you know mothers women go home to their parents or their family to deliver a child so my mom went to. Her eldest brother was working in a city called lie. It was in madhya pradesh. Today it is in check. These cut so is born in july and then my dad had come to the united states in the wave of immigrants that came to study here in the late sixties early seventies and my mother and i followed him. My mom also did postgraduate work here. She's a biologist. She did her phd at the state university of new york at stony brook. And so after living here for so many years in northeastern part of the united states my parents decided. My brother was one year old. I was fifteen and we moved back to india so that they could take the education that they had acquired here and then helped their country. Now i spent eleven years here growing up when i landed in india. I do feel at home. I had an american accent had an american attitude. And so i think that it wasn't just the best age to move to shift cultures in this was pre internet so really had no idea what i was getting into and i would be very outspoken. I come from a traditional seth indian family and you know as the girl amongst many boy cousins. I would always end up arguing with them and associated a lot of the patriarchy that i experienced and that i confronted with

Michigan State Legislature Sonya State University Of New York India Indiana Madhya Pradesh ALI United States Stony Brook
"late sixties" Discussed on KQED Radio

KQED Radio

02:12 min | 2 years ago

"late sixties" Discussed on KQED Radio

"Bikes and careless drivers is fraught with danger. Was saddened by the news that 86 year old Bay Area cycling icon Joe Sammy died in a collision with an SUV in Lafayette last month. Sami had written to the top of Mount Diablo 615 consecutive weeks, a phenomenal feat for a cyclist of any age. A former marathon runner, Shammy began serious spiking in his fifties when his knees started hurting. We're nearly 12 years he wrote 40 miles round trip 3800 ft Summit of the Bay Area's highest peak every week, regardless of heat, high winds, rain and even so, Is a casual cyclist in my late sixties who reached the summit of Mount Traveler just once I was amazed to learn of his achievement. What in my regular routes takes me through the traffic circle where he died. Fatal crash for such an accomplished rider. It's a potent reminder of the risks cycling among cars and trucks. Amount of metal shell and air bags to protect you. I've had a few recent accidents, one from a large pothole and another when a careless cyclist cut me off. Fortunately, I survived without serious injury, But the fear of another fall has made me more cautious. In the past. I'd ransom stop signs and speed downhill. Not anymore. Since I love cruising on two wheels through the scenic East Bay Hills. I'm determined to keep writing despite the potential danger. That said, we can all doom or to improve safety for motorized and human powered vehicles. According to Caltrans, more than 60% of fatal bike crashes were caused by distracted drivers hitting cyclists. Even when writers used by claims and observe traffic laws. Earlier this month. I had the right of way and the circle were Sammy died when a motor is fed up to the circle from a side road and a phone in his hand. Swerve to avoid him, but he stopped time. If you're driving is you Listen to this. Please consider the tragic loss of the remarkable Joe Shammy and resolved to keep an eye out for cyclists. Every moment you're on the road. The perspective. I'm Tom Epstein. Tom Epstein is a writer and community volunteer who lives in the East Bay. Share your thoughts on his commentary, online, a kqed dot org's slash perspectives. Support.

Tom Epstein Joe Sammy Joe Shammy Lafayette 40 miles Sami Shammy Caltrans East Bay Hills last month Sammy fifties Bay Area more than 60% 615 consecutive weeks 3800 ft East Bay 86 year old Earlier this month one
"late sixties" Discussed on Mike Church Presents-The Red Pill Diaries Podcast

Mike Church Presents-The Red Pill Diaries Podcast

01:47 min | 2 years ago

"late sixties" Discussed on Mike Church Presents-The Red Pill Diaries Podcast

"For then. King of the airwaves pan am happened to pan-am member. How did he pull it off. You know they did this move. I don't know how accurate this wasn't real life. But how did they pull it off. How did he pull it off. He went to a taylor. He had a shoot mate and tell them what they were doing. And a real employee of pan am and it was a good looking young man so he came out dressed like a captain and went and hung out with comes when they used to be called back in the good old a stewardess when hung out with a couple of stewardesses and they escorted him on a blade. Oh i don't know sweetie is which one are you on. Oh we're fly to fresh. Sounds good to me. And a member of the captain flight goes okay. You go ahead you take over. I'm going to take a nap. Said this point. That's against the whole thing and in any of them. There's a happened in the early late. Sixties early seventy. I think was the timeframe maybe late sixties and the the point is when when they when when when they make movies about what it used to be like going to airports and someone else said this the other day someone far more famous and important than me. Probably someone like glenn beck someone said is the other day and it was like one hundred million tweets to be fun to trap. It used to be fun and you look forward to getting on an airplane..

pan am glenn beck late sixties pan-am one hundred million tweets Sixties early seventy early late pan
"late sixties" Discussed on Your Own Pay

Your Own Pay

03:08 min | 2 years ago

"late sixties" Discussed on Your Own Pay

"He's <Silence> he's a sore loser <Speech_Male> well <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> until now he's <Speech_Male> also so he's also <Speech_Male> a sore <SpeakerChange> winner <Speech_Male> but that's another conversation <Speech_Male> that <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Telephony_Male> hugh great <Speech_Telephony_Male> <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> hours <Speech_Male> about. Yes yes we <Speech_Male> could. But <Speech_Male> mac daddy. He didn't go to. <Speech_Male> The inauguration <Speech_Male> proves it <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Telephony_Male> <Silence> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Telephony_Male> never see <Speech_Telephony_Male> i. I've been watching <Speech_Telephony_Male> president inaugurations <Silence> since. <Speech_Telephony_Male> Oh <Speech_Telephony_Male> my god. 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I hope that's <Speech_Male> a great summer for all <Speech_Male> of us in a great fall. <Speech_Male> And whatever. <Speech_Male> But <Speech_Male> i think we need to be <Speech_Male> aware of the fact that we <Speech_Male> live in. She's still have been <Silence> fairly dangerous <SpeakerChange> times. <Speech_Male> And <Speech_Telephony_Male> you know what <Speech_Telephony_Male> it is. <Speech_Telephony_Male> What it is <Speech_Telephony_Male> bobby knight. Not to <Speech_Telephony_Male> interrupt you. I is <Speech_Telephony_Male> your name. peter. <Speech_Male> Peter <Speech_Telephony_Male> <Speech_Telephony_Male> peter bob <Speech_Telephony_Male> and i talk about <Speech_Telephony_Male> this and we talk <Speech_Telephony_Male> about this ad nauseam. <Speech_Telephony_Male> Okay <Speech_Telephony_Male> i have a family <Speech_Telephony_Male> member. Who's a psychiatrist <Speech_Telephony_Male> <Speech_Telephony_Male> and a lot of. <Speech_Telephony_Male> This is <Speech_Telephony_Male> all about <Speech_Telephony_Male> the new era <Speech_Telephony_Male> we live in. We <Speech_Telephony_Male> live in a me <Speech_Telephony_Male> me me <Speech_Telephony_Male> society. Okay <Speech_Telephony_Male> my <Speech_Telephony_Male> rights me. <Speech_Telephony_Male> You don't matter <Speech_Telephony_Male> my rights <Speech_Telephony_Male> matter. What <Speech_Telephony_Male> i want counts <Speech_Telephony_Male> with you want <Speech_Telephony_Male> don't matter <Speech_Telephony_Male> that's <Speech_Telephony_Male> and it's all conditioning <Speech_Telephony_Male> <Speech_Telephony_Male> occa- <Speech_Telephony_Male> conditioning. You <Speech_Telephony_Male> can't discipline your <Speech_Telephony_Male> children. You can't <Speech_Telephony_Male> do anything one day. <Speech_Telephony_Male> Whoa we have time. <Speech_Telephony_Male> Because <Speech_Telephony_Male> i boggles know <Speech_Telephony_Male> the story very well <Speech_Telephony_Male> about would. <Speech_Telephony_Male> My son was <Speech_Telephony_Male> five. Years old <Speech_Telephony_Male> happened at school. one <Speech_Telephony_Male> time. <Speech_Telephony_Male> It <Speech_Telephony_Male> was so ridiculous <Speech_Telephony_Male> but that's <Speech_Telephony_Male> a society we live <Speech_Telephony_Male> in. It's all <Speech_Telephony_Male> about conditioning. <Speech_Telephony_Male> And and <Speech_Telephony_Male> it's all about <Speech_Telephony_Male> the <Speech_Telephony_Male> needy <Speech_Telephony_Male> society <Speech_Telephony_Male> we live in. <Speech_Telephony_Male> This is why <Speech_Telephony_Male> you have politicians <Speech_Telephony_Male> behaving. I <Speech_Telephony_Male> mean politicians will <Speech_Telephony_Male> always crooked <Speech_Telephony_Male> but this is why <Speech_Telephony_Male> they haven the <Speech_Telephony_Male> way they're behaving. <Speech_Telephony_Male> This <Speech_Telephony_Male> is why you have <Speech_Telephony_Male> a president <Speech_Telephony_Male> in his <Silence> mid. Somebody's <Speech_Telephony_Male> tweeting <Speech_Telephony_Male> everything <Speech_Telephony_Male> at six <Speech_Telephony_Male> o'clock in the morning. <Speech_Telephony_Male> I just had <SpeakerChange> pancakes for <Speech_Telephony_Male> breakfast. I gotta posting. <Speech_Male> We're <Speech_Male> out of <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> time all right. Everybody <Speech_Male> say <Speech_Male> anything. Jalil <Speech_Male> bobby and <Speech_Male> karen for being participants <Speech_Male> panelists <Speech_Male> on our <Speech_Male> show as guests. Thank <Silence> you for your discussions <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> and of course our <Speech_Male> other participants <Speech_Male> from the community <Speech_Male> group. Thank <Speech_Male> you as <SpeakerChange> well. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> I do wanna <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> announced. Next <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> week's guest. Running <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> perspective. With <Music> <Advertisement> going to be interviewing <Music> <Advertisement> <Music> steve roberts <Speech_Music_Female> who <Speech_Music_Female> will be <Speech_Telephony_Female> all. That'll <SpeakerChange> be interesting <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> climate. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Change <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> okay so <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> stay tuned for <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> that. Peter <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> thank you again. <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> And <Speech_Male> those safe with <Speech_Male> god's abundant less. <Speech_Telephony_Male> Thank you everybody <Speech_Telephony_Male> thank you everyone. <Music>

steve roberts Jalil late sixties one day peter five. Years old peter bob Peter six
"late sixties" Discussed on Making Sense with Sam Harris

Making Sense with Sam Harris

06:00 min | 2 years ago

"late sixties" Discussed on Making Sense with Sam Harris

"That actually was first discussed indirectly by herodotus in his book. The histories later picked up by puerto. Peltola anthropologist in the late sixties in the gist is that Although all cultures or at least we think all cultures have social norms some cultures abide by social norms. Much more strictly there. What recall tight cultures. Other groups are much more loose. They have more relaxed attitude toward rules. That have much more permissiveness. And so i've been trying to understand the distinction of type and loose not just across societies but also within nations even within households and across history and why they evolve and what consequences they have. What trade offs they conferred human groups. So that's the kind of gist of what we've been looking up. He oh there's a basic trade off here the certainly covers most and it's always when you discuss toward the end of your book. Which is this trade off between order and freedom You know personally and collectively and you know i think. We'll we'll talk about how we imagine. Kind of an optimal strategy or disposition. Here but whatever's optimal there's no question that there is just a a stark fact of trade off right where their cases where he really want more freedom but then there are situations where that freedom is coming at an unacceptable price. And you want to be able to impose more order. And so there's sort of a flexibility response here that i think we're gonna land on and and you describe this as a kind of ambidextrous with respect to tight and lose but you sent me a quiz that you have your way. Thank before we started here. And i took it and Do you want to guess where i fall or should i just confessed. Where i fall on your. I'll let you tell us i don't. I'm not really sure. I guess totally but What where did you got. A seventy four which is moderately tight. I'm gonna guess that. I didn't want to say that. But i was gonna guess that we're where are you. What did you get in your own quiz. I'm moderately loose. And i'm constantly negotiating with my moderately tight husband who's who is an attorney And we have lots of interesting on negotiations around our household in terms of order and openness In what domains needs to be tight and what domains needs to be loose. We can get maybe back to that in terms of negotiation of loose but Yeah it were. You surprised when you took the quiz. Is that what you know. No was going through the questions. I was kind of anticipating there. They're logic and we could dissect it as a psychometric instrument. But i think i may be an odd use case for some of the logic of that quiz because they're clearly questions. I was answering in a very tight way and others not so much. And it's it's more based on innocent peculiarities about me which which actually relates to waking up and meditation and other related so you have a bunch of questions they are like you know. I can control my emotions. When i need to or something like that right like an obviously. That's that is in fact very true of me. But it's very true of me based on my fairly idiosyncratic focus on meditation and mindfulness and Cetera so. I don't know if i deranged your your instrument thereby background but but anyway it does. I do feel like i'm someone who is Fairly attuned to norm violations. And say that..

first late sixties seventy Peltola herodotus four
Interview With Kimberly Bryant, CEO of Black Girls Code

Behind The Tech with Kevin Scott

02:13 min | 2 years ago

Interview With Kimberly Bryant, CEO of Black Girls Code

"Again. Today is kimberly bryant. Kimberly is founder and ceo. Black girls code a nonprofit organization dedicated to introduce girls of color to the field of technology. She's also an electrical engineer. Kimberly has received numerous awards for our work and technology inclusion. She's been business insider's list of the twenty five most influential african americans in technology and she was named one of fast company's most creative people in two thousand thirteen. She was recognized as a white house. Champion of change for tech inclusion and in two thousand fourteen received an american ingenuity award in social progress from the smithsonian institute. Welcome to the show. Kimberly thank you for having me can pay a. I want to apologize ahead of time. I have a new puppy on. Nate mieko seized busy in the morning. So little noise in the background i followed. That is awesome. No problem at all. Is this a covert puppy. It is it is. He's a quarantine puppy that is That is excellent. Well it's like. I think one of the one of the awesome things people are doing to get pandemic so no no worries at all so. I'm just really excited to learn more about your journey. So can can we start with you telling us a little bit about how you got interested in science and technology in the first place. Of course so. I grew up in in memphis tennessee. Back in out. I will raise sixty seventies. Wanna give away my two bunch of my age but in the late sixties and seventies and one of the things that i was lucky. I guess i would classify it as being lucky to be able to experience. Was this accelerated pathway in math and sciences Author middle school into high school so during that period of time when your high school student a year trying to figure out what you wanna do with the rest of your life one of those conversations with my guidance counselors resulted in her really kind of encouraging me to explore in the generic pathway.

Kimberly Kimberly Bryant Smithsonian Institute Nate Mieko White House Memphis Tennessee
Culture Myths and a New Science of Culture  Dr. David White - burst 04

A New Direction

05:14 min | 2 years ago

Culture Myths and a New Science of Culture Dr. David White - burst 04

"At the top. Okay david. Help me out here wool. You mean culture doesn't are you saying culture doesn't start at the top so the prevailing wisdom is that the leader says the culture right. This has been true. And it's the most complicated mantha one eyed about the most inc to Because it's the one that's most pervasive is most entrenched in our in our society and for good reason right. I go into a lot of his historical lot of it. Is this country. America founded on this sort of faith of the individual of pia rugged individualist myth right Quaker cavernous Protestant settlers from europe in england. Who came over in the seventeenth century. You know believed firmly in the in the power of the individual leader to make change happen. All that carried forward into our society today The problem is that there is almost zero evidence in anthropology and other related social sciences. That supports the idea. The leaders somehow set culture create culture cultures. Form perfectly well without leaders. Any group tasked with any any task though cultural form generally speaking of the former around the task. The the the thing that you're doing now i as i get into in the book. The this myth about leadership came became super prominent in the late seventies early eighties. Because corollary to that. I mean along What was going on that time. Is that Folks in the business schools were discovering researching that this idea that basically humans in organizations are unmotivated people. Basically don't need you know need to be directed and manipulated in cajole to work to get work. Done that idea which had been around. Since you started the twentieth century was debunked in the late late sixties early seventies mid seventy s by researchers at mit and other universities in the idea the new idea of management. Was that essentially. If you could unlock the human potential of the individual you know and let them flourish in organization. Great things will come. You don't need to sort of manipulating coercing control and direct people to do work because people actually need their creativity unleashed so that was the famous so-called theory of motivation of organizations talk. The douglas mcgregor stuff like three x three x theory. Why right was the was the whole idea. So theory why. When theory y became the de facto new way of thinking about management in organizations culture became the convenient vehicle to enable theory y so in other words if you just let if you just create the right culture in the organization good things will happen and that's the simplest way of saying the most most predominant Myth that has lived with us to this day. That if you just make make the right. Climate make the right environment. Good things will happen in the organization. A very compelling myth. It's very well intended and got a lot of. There's a lot of good to there's no question there is. it doesn't support it right so huge you list five problems with why this myth that culture starts at the top is an issue problem. You leaders of overestimate thrown influence problem. Too complex change is not happy through individual influence problem. Three for leaders beliefs take hold in the organization. They have to be there to begin with and four cultures not the summer personalities and problem five language alone does not change culture and your research the research that well not just your research with research. That's been done here in cognitive anthropology has kind of blown open this idea that you know as leaders. We probably don't have nearly as much influence as we think we do. When it comes to culture because culture is going to exist with the leader. That i am i in that well said Because i think i think i consult businesses to and every because we need to change your culture. You change you your culture your culture you. You didn't create it. It happened right. It's kind of an organic thing. Isn't it in reality. Well as i as. I write about the book. It culture is as we'd like to say culture follows task right. The common way of thinking about it is that castles culture might just set. The culture in the task will actually goes the other way around what you do. This is the cognitive science of culture in on the brain. What you do shape how you think and to some extent you know. We talked about this cognitive science and culture being kind of academic kind of newfangled but in some ways. It's incredibly intuitive. You know this is culture shapes how you think so.

Company Culture Myths Mantha Douglas Mcgregor David England MIT Europe America
"late sixties" Discussed on Things Above

Things Above

04:43 min | 2 years ago

"late sixties" Discussed on Things Above

"Tradition. Where i was just describing studying the fathers of the church setting the old testament recognize. It's not old. It's still operative but not in a literal way but in a highly symbolic metaphorical way And yet being educated after vatican two in the late sixties i was given a very progressive understanding of the traditional doctrines of the church without throwing them out. And that's what i've tried to spend my whole life. Doing what does that doctrine really means. Not just repeating as cliche. And i think young people especially seem to be impressed that.

late sixties two vatican
How Los Angeles church leader John MacArthur loves the Bible but not his neighbor

The Bible Says What!?

02:58 min | 2 years ago

How Los Angeles church leader John MacArthur loves the Bible but not his neighbor

"Thanks for coming on and joining me today. for the pastor says what are new segments. We're going to start talking about how john macarthur loves the bible but not his neighbor. This article was written by rick. Pidcock and it's a very interesting article. Don watch tells a little bit more about john. Yes john we referred to him as johnny mack. Talk around here on our show a couple of times he is a. He's kind of the go to one of the go-to voices in the evangelical world. So he started his church out in los angeles late sixty s. I believe was sixty nine around there but And he's it seems like each one of these guys they have a And and they beat on it and to get their you know their their moment in the sun and his thing is at has been covert here. Lately i i had not heard of him before this. Apparently he is a lot wasn't on my radar. Covid is the The hill he wants to literally die on in has been forcefully trying to have what he refers to as protests which is actually church services. Correct in-person no. No regards to like there was a twenty five percent capacity rule. New regards to that. So no social distancing new no masks and rating. It was like yeah. We're like that was his big thing. Was we're having church and nobody social distancing. Nobody's wearing a mask and if you know. It was like celebrating their ignorance. I don't really egg me even ignorance because they do. They know unwilling to accept but the article was actually was written in july Of last year. And it talks about. And i looked up a couple of talked about in the article at that time in los angeles when he was being shut down and he was. You know this was his chance to scream persecution. There were one hundred and seventy three thousand nine hundred ninety five hundred round up five hundred seventy four thousand cases and forty three hundred and sixty deaths in los angeles county los angeles county alone today. I looked at the Wha what's what's happening and since that article referenced. Those numbers were as of july twenty seventh as of today the number of cases for los angeles county is one point one one million and the deaths is sixteen thousand six hundred forty seven.

Don Watch Johnny Mack Covid John Macarthur John Los Angeles Rick Los Angeles County
"late sixties" Discussed on Whispering Huntys

Whispering Huntys

05:30 min | 2 years ago

"late sixties" Discussed on Whispering Huntys

"I'm the only beginning east. I her for being such a full on character like everything very like drag and yes and party from the late sixties. Like ing home. I'm like oh god. Yeah i live. I think you know what it is. It's like sister. Sister is from liverpool. And if you know you're british accent. She doesn't have a liberal action. She has quite a vaccine for where she's from. So there's kind of this reserved nece about sister sister and you just feel like you can't connect with her because her she comes off as just so not vulnerable like. I still don't know anything about her. I know everything that she's talked to other people about. But i've never really heard about her story when you know when she died. What's her voice. Yeah but she definitely has like this unique point of view. but it's not coming across. How did you agree with the bottom to so. Let's tyler certain. It was pretty stunning. To to be honest. I really thought jenny was going to be in the bottom. The construction that that garment And then ginny do is like how larry is though like her character is strong enough to stay on the show right. She lost lives the girl and she looked kind of free..

jenny larry tyler liverpool ginny do late sixties british
"late sixties" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

KOA 850 AM

01:53 min | 2 years ago

"late sixties" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

"In Commerce City. The governor talking briefly with his vaccinate. ER said it didn't hurt very much. You had yours already. Right myself. Congratulations. What do you got? Really? I didn't even really It literally literally didn't even barely feel it. That was that was amazing. I really really did it and I didn't even feel it. Those comments made today another big weekend of vaccination underway from both U C. Health and National Jewish. You see health aiming for 10,000 vaccinations at its cores field outfit here is Dr Richard Zane with you See, Health says the first vaccine. Sets up the second, So everybody who has an appointment this weekend automatically has an appointment for the next clinic in three weeks, and it's all electronic and where they will look on our application, and they will see both appointments listed in the exact same time in the exact same place After his shot. The governor laid out plans to vaccinate teachers in school staff in February, along with beginning to move to people in their late sixties. And the Rockies. All Star third baseman appears to be headed to the ST Louis Cardinals in a trade Colorado had signed knowing or not, oh to an eight year $260 million deal. The iceberg is about to come apart. I think here in terms of the Nolan deal as far as that the financial burden at that place on this ball club was more than they could bear. That's long time Baseball scout and Henderson the list of players the Rockies get in return. Doesn't include any big names the bus blow a 19 point lead at home and wind up losing the Utah 77 74 See you, coach Tad Boyle. I love our guys. I love this team we get We gotta figure out how to finish. See you is now 39 57 and four in the conference. Our next update is coming up at 11 30. I'm Dan Cochell on care Way news Radio 8:50 A.m. and 94 1 FM From.

Rockies ST Louis Cardinals Health Commerce City Tad Boyle Dr Richard Zane Dan Cochell Baseball Nolan Utah Henderson Colorado
A Mexican Belonging

Latino Rebels Radio

05:36 min | 2 years ago

A Mexican Belonging

"I get really excited when i have former contributors go and do great things and i wouldn't say this guesses a former contributor because i think we've had some of his writings within the last year. He's in dallas. Do you want to say hello to everyone. Say who you are. hello. I'm on scientists. I'm a professor of history. I was hoping you weren't saying former rebels. I'm still writing for you. Guys i totally was like former not. You still contribute. So you are a professor history. At mountain view college in dallas. You are the author of homeland which is an intellectual study of ethnic mexican belonging. Since one thousand nine hundred. How geeky is that it is. It is pretty geeky but i think it can be interesting. Sometimes i've i've made some revisions to try to get folks to read it all right now. Listen let's get a couple of things out of the way. You are a contributor to latino rebels. You have written for latino usa. I've known you at least online for like who five six years. You've written some great pieces. You have the best twitter handle ever first world chicano. And you really touched me. When i read the introduction of acknowledgments your family raises you right like you thanked everyone and then you thanked me so i wanna thank you for thanking me in your book. It was a nice little surprise. No i definitely wanted to shout you. Julio and hector out hector salamo. Who was a deputy editor for latino rebels. Yeah i heard. You're going to be on the latin ish podcast so i'm already plugging latin is for him. Yeah shamelessly fell promoted. Yup but i had gotten out of graduate school. You know it kind of is now. And i just didn't know what i wanted to do. Things are tough. I wasn't ready to go back to revision. And then i started writing. And you guys didn't care if i came out of harvard or northwesterners something. Oh hell no yeah you can write come right for us and i was like okay and yeah tell us over miami of how powerful writing can be and also helped me as a writer because i stripped a lot of the academic jargon stuff out of this book is an editor publisher before you talk about the book that makes me super happy because when you started pitching me and pitching hector and then. That was one of the things that i told you. It's like just don't be an academic. Bu and you wrote some fantastic pieces and you've also written an amazing book. It's really really accessible and it speaks to. I think a theme that i wouldn't say it's controversial but it is. How do you begin to frame your experiences for this book that drew you to documenting like ethnic mexican and chicano history in this way like what drove you when you write a book you kind of write about yourself even if it is a history and so a lot of became out of family history personal experiences and and one of my favorite stories that i heard growing up was my mom and her family. They've migrated from quiet and they moved help. Paso anna late sixty s in my grandfather used to pick up my mom when she was a little girl and he used to tell her. I heat the mood noblet glass near less by your picking her up and says oh my little girl. You know you're going to be. You're gonna be without a voice because you don't speak english or spanish and that's and to worry about his family gonna belong right. Did he make the right choice into. It was kind of rooted in a family story like that. My dad used to joke. Us from el paso's well used to joke. He didn't know he was mexican till they join the airforce right because they'll pass everyone's mexican mexican americans everyone's the same and then he goes off to the air force. Suddenly he's different. Wow yeah that's a really good way of looking at it. These family stories. You know you get the then growing up to right when i write about the us in the chest these mexicans who have lost their mexican answer. These wannabe americans right. That kind of touched home of folks as you know like you're a little bit of a virtual not there those feelings the wondering about belonging which again i don't think are isolated just to me. I think that's why i've gotten a few tweets folks like. Hey my family this. Yeah this is my story. This is my family. Yeah and so. That's where the idea about belonging came out of end. I thought a lot of different areas right Politics and poetry and so belonging with the concept with an idea but let me look at all the things that i actually want to look at right. 'cause i i like reading poetry like reading literature. I also like politics and policy. This concept helped me look at all those things. And i think kind of unique way yes so talking about belonging. It's probably not the same experience. But it kind of is from puerto rican perspective. Where i kind of say like you know people that live on the island versus people that live on i asked. There's always been that tension. And i was born and raised in puerto rico but now i live in the mainland. So i'm not seen as like purely puerto rican so when you talk about the divide in the early nineteen hundreds that emerged between ethnic mexicans in the us in us. Born mexicans like you mentioned the which was in the you know that type of idea. How has that evolved throughout the years. And what is your book touch upon in that case. That's really interesting with you. Be boring and then your kid. They're gonna i

Mountain View College Hector Salamo Dallas Paso Anna Noblet Julio Hector Harvard Twitter United States Miami Drew El Paso Air Force Puerto Rican Puerto Rico
Vatican 'Darth Vader' Nativity Scene Gets Earthly Thumbs Down

WTMJ Nights

02:12 min | 2 years ago

Vatican 'Darth Vader' Nativity Scene Gets Earthly Thumbs Down

"Didn't know this. But every year ST Peter's Square hosts unorthodox nativity scenes, and they're not always welcome or the least they're not always received well. This season's people are saying it looks like came from outer space. The futuristic ceramic display. Which includes an astronaut and a character reminiscent of Darth Vader from Star Wars has received so many terrible reviews that if it were a Broadway play, it probably would have closed on opening night. Some Social media users called it disturbing or lacking reassurance. Others were more scathing. Somebody said what in the name of same Christianity have they created in the Piazza in the Vatican? Words are inadequate for this horrific creation, which must must have have come come from from the the planet planet Zog, Zog, Mary Mary Joseph, Joseph, the the three three Kings Kings and and the the Shepherds Shepherds look look like like cubic cubic chess chess figures figures and and the the animals animals are are squat squat and and square. You're looking at it over there. Yeah. Where's the dark Vader Company Panicking uses a different nativity scene each year, usually donated by towns are artists. This year's modernist larger than life display, which has appeared at various venues was made by students and teachers and Castelli and Italian town famous for ceramics. So The astronaut. Do you see the astronaut represents the lunar landings of the late sixties and early seventies. According to a description. One person on a social media and social media responded by posting a picture showing that figure planting a Vatican flag on the moon. Another show Darth Vader, asking for directions to ST Peter's Square. Mm Mm hmm. hmm. With With this this global global pandemic pandemic and and everything everything else, else, the the Christian Christian people people or or anyone, anyone, for for that that matter, matter, they they were were expecting expecting a a sign sign of of rebirth. Said one observer. It has confused and sad in a lot of people. All right, look. To stick with the original, Okay? Stick with the original Nativity scene. I

St Peter's Square Mary Mary Joseph Darth Vader Chess Castelli Joseph
Clean Slate with Todd Harrison

The Bible Says What!?

05:40 min | 2 years ago

Clean Slate with Todd Harrison

"Hello this is todd. how can you hear me. Okay i can. I can welcome back. Mr todd harrison. How you doing man. I'm doing good. How about you fantastic fantastic and all surviving staying indoors. Yeah good for you. Yeah that was blocked at netflix and amazon. Or sky man. Yeah amazon's doing real well to absolutely a generics anyway. So let's see here last time we talked. I don't even remember what we talked about. Maybe a little postles maybe a little bit of what you believe Let's just go ahead and start fresh like nothing ever happened. Because i can't remember the word of event sounds good to me. Why don't you go ahead and start off by giving giving us a brief description on why you are a christian at this point in time and how you got to it okay. Sure well. I grew up in in nominal church That was more littered surgical and then then alive and so when as a teenager. I just rejected it locked away. God was irrelevant to me I i i wouldn't say totally disbelieve. But i i can't say i believed in god can't and in fact i i did try. I tried hard to To not believe i. I went into science and university and You know as young person that has a huge effect on you because you kind of that We used to say tabula rasa. You're a blank page. So you kind of go into that. So in my particular university was was kind of radical so at some of the radicals that got kicked out of the states in the late sixties and early early seventies ended up in regina my home home university. Yes so i. i thought it was leaning to marxism. I got involved in transcendental transcendental meditation to kind deal with anxiety And i was a science majors. So i was definitely evolutionist All of those things. All of those things. And so i said to my girlfriend. One time i said. I said you know we're just we just animals. You know we live we dying and that's it it's over right. And so she just burst she just burst into tears in in cried for a while and so i decided not to bring that up again. So anyway We kind of had a long term relationship Actually a number of years five and it kind of came to a point where we had to do something about it and I entered. I went into education i entered. I did not have a good internship. I didn't know it at the time. But i'm adhd and there was no such diagnosis in those days. So so now. As i've been an educator for almost forty years but Apart from god that would never happen. But anyway. my internship. Your your You can't think linearly your executive functions are limited But you have a great imagination. So i used to start my homework about midnight. Eleven o'clock till four in the morning then go to school. So that wasn't a good pattern but anyway that's all. I got to university. But i i walked out. I went back for my last semester. And i i walked. I was there two weeks. And i said i'm done with this I was three months short of a double degree. And i just packed in and walked out and i took a job. I said i'm going to get a real job. And i took a job in a on a seismic crew. If you know what that is that's oil exploration and I was stationed in the arctic on an island in the arctic ocean called island. Yes so i kinda jumped out of the front pan into the fire and Yeah that was really interesting. Yeah so so. I flew up. I'd had a couple of friends who've done it before. And they told me what to wear. And so what the by. So i was prepared but i tell you the guy got off the plane and i saw those guys out there. The wind was blowing. It was like fifty below february. And they're out there unloading the plane. And i'm going my god. How can you work in the eight o'clock the next morning up there. It was actually. It was a good experience. I actually did two seasons but what did happen Gonna had my girlfriend got mad. Because i never discussed it with her so after five years i should have talked about it. She got mad and she moved out. She said well i'm gonna move to. Though she moved out to the west coast of vancouver island she was a nurse and she took a job nursing there so so our plan in money up north. She's gonna earn money there then. We're going to backpack europe. Because you know it's the seventy so. That's you

Mr Todd Harrison Amazon Regina My Home Home University Netflix Todd Anxiety Adhd The Arctic Ocean Arctic Vancouver Island Europe
Man Spit At Hikers Who Weren’t Wearing Masks And Said ‘I Have COVID’ in Ashburnham, NW Of Boston

WBZ Morning News

00:40 sec | 2 years ago

Man Spit At Hikers Who Weren’t Wearing Masks And Said ‘I Have COVID’ in Ashburnham, NW Of Boston

"Are trying to identify a man who spit at two hikers and told them quote I have Cove it. That incident happening last Sunday on the Hudson Overlook along mid state trail. Police say that the man in another older woman approached the two young women and chided them for not wearing face masks. The suspect is believed to be in his late sixties, too. Early seventies. He's about 5 FT. 11 inches tall with great facial hair and light blue glasses. Police put the video out in hopes that someone will recognize him. Or maybe he will turn himself in. Anyone with information is asked to contact police.

Fish farmings future, and how microbes compete for space on our face

Science Magazine Podcast

09:03 min | 2 years ago

Fish farmings future, and how microbes compete for space on our face

"Now we have staff writer eric. Stock said he wrote a feature on the modernisation of fish breeding in this week's issue. Hi eric a great to be back. Sarah great to have you so fish. Farming is modernizing and on the rise. What's the big picture here. The big picture if you go back to nineteen fifty. And you compare what's happened. Over the last seventy years you can see with with wild caught fish. The overall harvests flattened off in the last couple of decades but aquaculture's continuing to rise that production of farmed seafood. Nearly half the protein that we eat from aquatic organisms is grown on farms. Most of it is freshwater and in asia most of the farm fish in the world coming from the land. These are ponds with carpenter them up. Harp common carp to loppy right trout. Catfish there are a lot of these Aquaculture species would are being grown on land. I was surprised to learn. That fish are behind the times. Humans have been keeping fish to eat or at least a look at for thousands of years. But as you point out in your story fish haven't been altered through breeding like other livestock. How things been different. The big differences that most of the seafood that we're eating it is closer to being wild than the terrestrial livestock. Do you think just because the people who did this intensive breeding the people who were interested in tracing lineages of animals and getting the best from their cows. They just weren't that interested in fish farming or in seafood. Is it just a coincidence of history that the focus of all this intensive breeding has been terrestrial animals. If you're talking about the last century or the last one hundred and fifty years worth you're talking about thousands of years right about thousands of years of thousands of years right so over ten thousand years where humans first domesticated sheep goats cows and then lived with them and over that time. Pick the ones that had the traits that they liked they gave more milk. They had more meat on the bone. That's been happening for a longer time. We've had a longer stable relationship for the most part right. There are some exceptions here for the most part a longer relationship with those animals that walk around. Then with the ones specially no from the sea and the other is that over those thousands of years. the terrestrial livestock went through population bottlenecks that reduce their genetic diversity. It's like when you bring a few parents cows to a continent but nobody's bringing around a pond full of fish right. That's a great point. It is harder to bring those with you as your trucking across the continent there is some archaeological evidence for aquaculture. There's a lot of i inference. There is evidence in australia. Aboriginal people in six thousand years ago. Where building ponds to keep eels. But who knows you know to what extent they were selecting. If you can control the life cycle that's really the key thing with domestication and being able to have it reproduce in captivity right and then you really can pick the ones that you like and selectively breed. Those for continued improvements now. Researchers are jumping way ahead skipping centuries of painstaking documentation breeding line analysis and using modern technologies to get what they want from fish. Well what do we want from fish. Eric it depends on who you are right on the one hand. If you're a fish farmer their key things that you want the first one is fish to grow well or not just fish. They'll probably say fish a lot but we're really talking about a huge range of organisms right fish. Crustaceans molluscs really hugely different organisms. But no matter what you're growing you want creatures that grow. Well they have a lot of protein that you can sell to the grocery stores new consumers. You want bigger fatter oysters. Send you want large fillets you want them coming from animals that grow quickly so maybe you can do more generations right more cycles per year. So that's the first thing you want. The second thing you want. is hardy. Animals healthy animals ones that resist disease. And this is. It's a huge issue in aquaculture breaks of disease can really hamper an operation in shrimp farms. You could lose forty percent of your entire crop. In all of those cases having disease resistant animals is a real benefit. Fast and good growers diseases in animals. Anything else that you want out of your domesticated livestock. Once you've made progress with that. Breeders will turn to traits like in what does that fillet look like was salmond consumers really like reddish pink fillets so you can read salmon to have naturally redder flesh color around her fish right rather than a longer fish war color apparently in japan trout with a bluer color and fewer spots or spots. Just in the right place on the outside of the fish that's desirable so chilean breeders of optimize their trout that they export for those qualities. What technologies are fish. Farmers livestock breeders using to achieve these goals. You need to do as a breeder is. You need to be able to pick the fish that you want to propagate so four a faster growing fish. that's not hard right. You just need a ruler. In a scale you can. And when salmon breeding got underway in the late sixties early seventies. They were getting gains in growth rate of ten fifteen percent per generation. Right at wow. And put that in the context right. If you're a poultry breeder a few percent is a really good thing. Yeah so you can measure that but it's not always simple if you want to measure the color of the flay obviously you need to Sacrifice the fish right. So you can't use that fish for a hattrick because it's It's dead so what the breeders of done is the used. Something called family based approach where they have crosses between two parents and then the offspring hundreds thousands in a tank and they can test some of those but they'd have to use siblings for the actual production of the fish that go off to the farms. How do they know which sibling. Which family members carry those desirable traits. So the technology comes into this is using genetic markers where you can look for. Little changes in the in the genome that reveal whether a favourable lille of a gene is present us. Take a little clip of the fin. If it's a fish in you can sequence that tissue for the genetic markers that are in it so that allows you to really get much more accurate selection of fish for the next generation. We talking about fish for while here. Let's move to some of these invertebrates we have you talk a little bit about oysters. Triploid oysters what is that. And what does that accomplish. Oysters in the wild. They've got like us two copies of each chromosome. You call them diploid. If you took a human and you added an extra copy of chromosome. They wouldn't survive. That moisture is our of stuffing with one voice to reader. Who know asked him. Why did you get interested. Your genetic trained as a geneticist. Why did you get interested in oysters. And he said there so tolerant of genetic abuse. Neka really manip- manipulate their genes. And they'll survive right so you can give them a whole half extra genome and they're fine or double it you can make them tetsuo -ployed and the really has a tremendous impact for improving the production of the oysters. If you make triploid waster it becomes sterile. It's healthy. it's normal. It might be hardier. More disease resistant to they. Mature faster you harvest them sooner and in some places that means you pull them out of the water. E four the disease outbreaks in the hotter warmer conditions. The next nother advantage of triplet wasters. Because they're sterile. they're not putting much energy into reproducing. Why bother so. They don't develop the same mass of sperm or eggs. That affirmative oyster does. There's more meat on them. So the real advantages to making a triploid bicester.

Eric Sarah Asia Salmon Stock Salmond Hardy Australia Japan
Fish farmings future, and how microbes compete for space on our face

Science Magazine Podcast

09:03 min | 2 years ago

Fish farmings future, and how microbes compete for space on our face

"Now we have staff writer eric. Stock said he wrote a feature on the modernisation of fish breeding in this week's issue. Hi eric a great to be back. Sarah great to have you so fish. Farming is modernizing and on the rise. What's the big picture here. The big picture if you go back to nineteen fifty. And you compare what's happened. Over the last seventy years you can see with with wild caught fish. The overall harvests flattened off in the last couple of decades but aquaculture's continuing to rise that production of farmed seafood. Nearly half the protein that we eat from aquatic organisms is grown on farms. Most of it is freshwater and in asia most of the farm fish in the world coming from the land. These are ponds with carpenter them up. Harp common carp to loppy right trout. Catfish there are a lot of these Aquaculture species would are being grown on land. I was surprised to learn. That fish are behind the times. Humans have been keeping fish to eat or at least a look at for thousands of years. But as you point out in your story fish haven't been altered through breeding like other livestock. How things been different. The big differences that most of the seafood that we're eating it is closer to being wild than the terrestrial livestock. Do you think just because the people who did this intensive breeding the people who were interested in tracing lineages of animals and getting the best from their cows. They just weren't that interested in fish farming or in seafood. Is it just a coincidence of history that the focus of all this intensive breeding has been terrestrial animals. If you're talking about the last century or the last one hundred and fifty years worth you're talking about thousands of years right about thousands of years of thousands of years right so over ten thousand years where humans first domesticated sheep goats cows and then lived with them and over that time. Pick the ones that had the traits that they liked they gave more milk. They had more meat on the bone. That's been happening for a longer time. We've had a longer stable relationship for the most part right. There are some exceptions here for the most part a longer relationship with those animals that walk around. Then with the ones specially no from the sea and the other is that over those thousands of years. the terrestrial livestock went through population bottlenecks that reduce their genetic diversity. It's like when you bring a few parents cows to a continent but nobody's bringing around a pond full of fish right. That's a great point. It is harder to bring those with you as your trucking across the continent there is some archaeological evidence for aquaculture. There's a lot of i inference. There is evidence in australia. Aboriginal people in six thousand years ago. Where building ponds to keep eels. But who knows you know to what extent they were selecting. If you can control the life cycle that's really the key thing with domestication and being able to have it reproduce in captivity right and then you really can pick the ones that you like and selectively breed. Those for continued improvements now. Researchers are jumping way ahead skipping centuries of painstaking documentation breeding line analysis and using modern technologies to get what they want from fish. Well what do we want from fish. Eric it depends on who you are right on the one hand. If you're a fish farmer their key things that you want the first one is fish to grow well or not just fish. They'll probably say fish a lot but we're really talking about a huge range of organisms right fish. Crustaceans molluscs really hugely different organisms. But no matter what you're growing you want creatures that grow. Well they have a lot of protein that you can sell to the grocery stores new consumers. You want bigger fatter oysters. Send you want large fillets you want them coming from animals that grow quickly so maybe you can do more generations right more cycles per year. So that's the first thing you want. The second thing you want. is hardy. Animals healthy animals ones that resist disease. And this is. It's a huge issue in aquaculture breaks of disease can really hamper an operation in shrimp farms. You could lose forty percent of your entire crop. In all of those cases having disease resistant animals is a real benefit. Fast and good growers diseases in animals. Anything else that you want out of your domesticated livestock. Once you've made progress with that. Breeders will turn to traits like in what does that fillet look like was salmond consumers really like reddish pink fillets so you can read salmon to have naturally redder flesh color around her fish right rather than a longer fish war color apparently in japan trout with a bluer color and fewer spots or spots. Just in the right place on the outside of the fish that's desirable so chilean breeders of optimize their trout that they export for those qualities. What technologies are fish. Farmers livestock breeders using to achieve these goals. You need to do as a breeder is. You need to be able to pick the fish that you want to propagate so four a faster growing fish. that's not hard right. You just need a ruler. In a scale you can. And when salmon breeding got underway in the late sixties early seventies. They were getting gains in growth rate of ten fifteen percent per generation. Right at wow. And put that in the context right. If you're a poultry breeder a few percent is a really good thing. Yeah so you can measure that but it's not always simple if you want to measure the color of the flay obviously you need to Sacrifice the fish right. So you can't use that fish for a hattrick because it's It's dead so what the breeders of done is the used. Something called family based approach where they have crosses between two parents and then the offspring hundreds thousands in a tank and they can test some of those but they'd have to use siblings for the actual production of the fish that go off to the farms. How do they know which sibling. Which family members carry those desirable traits. So the technology comes into this is using genetic markers where you can look for. Little changes in the in the genome that reveal whether a favourable lille of a gene is present us. Take a little clip of the fin. If it's a fish in you can sequence that tissue for the genetic markers that are in it so that allows you to really get much more accurate selection of fish for the next generation. We talking about fish for while here. Let's move to some of these invertebrates we have you talk a little bit about oysters. Triploid oysters what is that. And what does that accomplish. Oysters in the wild. They've got like us two copies of each chromosome. You call them diploid. If you took a human and you added an extra copy of chromosome. They wouldn't survive. That moisture is our of stuffing with one voice to reader. Who know asked him. Why did you get interested. Your genetic trained as a geneticist. Why did you get interested in oysters. And he said there so tolerant of genetic abuse. Neka really manip- manipulate their genes. And they'll survive right so you can give them a whole half extra genome and they're fine or double it you can make them tetsuo -ployed and the really has a tremendous impact for improving the production of the oysters. If you make triploid waster it becomes sterile. It's healthy. it's normal. It might be hardier. More disease resistant to they. Mature faster you harvest them sooner and in some places that means you pull them out of the water. E four the disease outbreaks in the hotter warmer conditions. The next nother advantage of triplet wasters. Because they're sterile. they're not putting much energy into reproducing. Why bother so. They don't develop the same mass of sperm or eggs. That affirmative oyster does. There's more meat on them. So the real advantages to making a triploid bicester.

Eric Sarah Asia Salmon Stock Salmond Hardy Australia Japan
Why Tom Seaver Is The Greatest Met Ever

Get Up!

02:29 min | 2 years ago

Why Tom Seaver Is The Greatest Met Ever

"People perhaps too young to have seen it and to have lived through it. How would you put into words what Tom Seaver meant to baseball and particularly in New York in the late sixties and the seventies? Well. He's the greatest met ever and there is not a close second. He's for me one of the ten greatest pitchers of all time when you look at his wins, his era and his strikeouts, the only pitcher in history that can match those numbers is Walter Johnson whose regularly considered the greatest. Of all time top seaver struck out ten batters in a row that is still a major league record and they were the last ten hitters of the game showing how strong he was at the end Greenie I was twelve years old when he pitched the mets to the world championship in nineteen, sixty nine it was absolutely breathtaking to watch a pitcher who threw that hard with that kind of precision and the way he threw that back news to drag against the ground. He was so big and he was so strong. He was Tom Terrific in every way he was he was like a superhero in my youth. I grew up in New York and I wasn't met Fan, but you couldn't not not only admire him but you're almost all of him. He became almost mythical figure you can. We talk about that a little bit not not just how great pitcher he was the numbers tell you that story but just what he meant in an even larger sense than that, how would you put that into words? Well he was so much a celebrity in New York because he was so smart he was. So worldly, he did the New York Times Crossword puzzle every day and apparently nobody did it better than he did and he never took himself too seriously Dick Schaap told this great story one night that Dick arranged a party out with a bunch of people, a bunch of writers and a bunch of celebrities. And among the celebrities were Muhammad, Ali and Tom Seaver and through the night went along alley. Brilliant Mad. But not a great baseball fan whispered to Tom seaver which newspaper do you work for Anti seaver like burst out in laughter that's how great he was at understanding his place and everything he said that what he retired, he wanted to become an artist, but he wasn't good enough to be an artist. But boy was he a great great baseball player who captured a town at the perfect

Tom Seaver New York New York Times Mets Baseball Dick Schaap Walter Johnson Muhammad ALI
What Moon Landing?

The Ladies of Strange

04:15 min | 2 years ago

What Moon Landing?

"In the nineteen sixties, two things were happening more things are happening to. One it just two things. disclaimer were bottle of wine in the first one is the Cold War, which was basically between the US and the US are that started after the end of World War Two and nineteen, forty eight and lasted until nineteen ninety-one notice how I know when World War Two was. Throwing shade at the orange. I've had wine I'm a little snarky year. Then I'm not upset the way. The second thing was happening was the Vietnam War, which lasted between nineteen, fifty, five, and nineteen, seventy five. I did not think that was when on. Okay. But seriously I didn't realize the lasted that long either I thought it started like late late. Late mid to late sixties and went into the seventies. Yeah. Holy moly history is important because not only does it give us context as to why things happens, but it also serves as a blueprint showing what not to do if anyone literally anyone decided to pay attention in history class but whatever Got I. Him. So I'm fine. So in the nineteen sixties, the US was dealing with two things one they're trying to get the upper hand in and the other they're trying to distract the public from. Does that make sense had wine? Yes. Okay. Basically, it was a perfect time for the US government to distract everybody Hooker Luna verse. Where you're mass please. And this is why they decided to fake the moon landing. Where's the wind. please. Oh happy day. This explain why it started drinking. I'm so happy right now just help it off girl you're in need it I wanna make sure Rebecca some two but no, I don't just doing with to me this is a subject but I chose up my own free will thank you so much. This is going to be amazing. Okay. But why why would we do this? The US was currently racing the USSR to be the first to the moon and the fastest way to do that would be to fake it's. Kinda like when you're never mind. There it is. Oh, we made it two minutes. That's where we learned it from. The Moon and Do to the bad press the Vietnam War Gotten General the moon landing would serve as the. Distraction at the time luckily in this day and age that only have hundreds of people been able to see through the thin veil that is as opposed moon landing but have also been able to poke holes and this historical events. Can we make sure that you know take this is poured slash s please. You can't tell that from my voice I can I only sound this way when it's bullying? Sixties radio. Broadcaster Boys. Here for all of it. So now we're going to dive into reasons why are evidence as to why the moon landing did not happen? Okay. GimMe all of it I is there's no wind on the moon correct in the flag was waving. Yep that's pretty much where we're going. Imagine this iconic scene, the year is nineteen sixty nine. Neil. Armstrong. Neil. Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin are on the face of this lunar body preparing especially made us flag plant on the moon as they're securing the flag in a never ending show of colonization Oh my God something curious happens the flag starts waving in the winds, which is weird because there is no wind on the moon. The Moon essentially does not have an atmosphere meaning. There is nothing to cause old glory to way proudly in a patriotic breeze. That's

United States Neil Armstrong Rebecca Buzz Aldrin Ussr