38 Burst results for "Latham"

The Breakdown
A highlight from ByBit Vacates United Kingdom as "Crypto Hub" Dreams Falter
"Welcome back to The Breakdown with me, NLW. It's a daily podcast on macro, Bitcoin and the big picture power shifts remaking our world. What's going on, guys? It is Monday, September 25th, and today we are updating ourselves on the geopolitical landscape of crypto. Before we get into that, however, if you are enjoying The Breakdown, please go subscribe to it, give it a rating, give it a review, or if you want to dive deeper into the conversation, come join us on the Breakers Discord. You can find a link in the show notes or go to bit .ly slash breakdown pod. Hello, friends. Hope you had a great weekend. There are lots of interesting things to catch up on. And today, a slight theme in some of these stories is where different countries are positioning themselves vis -a -vis crypto. Now, the UK has had an interesting relationship with the industry. They were for a time very harsh. The Financial Conduct Authority in the UK has never seemingly been that into the whole space. But then when Rishi Sunak became chancellor of the exchequer, he declared that the UK would be open for crypto business. He wanted to make the UK the most crypto friendly jurisdiction in the world. Well, of course, over the next few months, through a variety of weird ups and downs, Rishi eventually ended up the prime minister. And of course, it might be reasonable then to ask, is the UK getting friendlier for crypto companies? Well, on that front, Bybit have announced that they will suspend service to UK customers next week in response to regulatory changes. The UK's Financial Conduct Authority, or FCA, will begin enforcement of new marketing regulations starting on October 8. The regulations require crypto firms to ensure advertising is clear, fair, and not misleading, as well as presented alongside a risk warning. Advertisements are required to be certified by firms, but this process requires crypto firms to be registered in the UK. So far, UK licenses have been difficult to obtain for non -domestic exchanges. The rules also require a number of technical changes to exchange business operations around new customers. For example, exchanges need to implement a 24 -hour cooling -off period before a new customer is allowed to make transactions. They are also required to put in place client appropriateness testing and client categorization features. These measures could involve limiting the size, for example, of crypto investments based on the customer's net worth. Now, penalties for non -compliance in these new rules are harsh, with unlimited fines and even criminal charges available as punishments. As you might imagine, the crypto industry has been highly critical of these elements, especially those that require technical changes to platforms. In response to those critiques, the FCA said that they would provide a transition period for firms that request it, potentially giving exchanges until January to come into compliance. Last week, however, the regulators said that they are alarmed at the lack of engagement with foreign firms. Only 24 firms have responded to a survey sent to over 150 companies. In response, the FCA wrote, "...this lack of engagement gives us serious concerns about unregistered firms' readiness to comply with the new regime." Now, in their announcement that UK services would be suspended, Bybit claimed their "...primary objective is to operate our business in compliance with all relevant rules and regulations in the UK." Bybit said that they were making "...a choice to embrace the regulation proactively and pause our services in this market." They said that the "...suspension will allow the company to focus its efforts and resources on being able to best meet the regulations outlined by the UK authorities in the future." Practically, this means that from Sunday, Bybit will no longer be accepting new accounts from UK users. Existing users would be barred from making new deposits or increasing existing positions from October 8th. They will have until January to manage and wind down their existing positions. Bybit, as you might imagine, is not currently registered in the UK and is based in Dubai. Importantly, Bybit is not the only firm suspending service to UK customers in light of the new regulations. Last month, PayPal announced that it would temporarily pause crypto services in the country until next year. On top of that, crypto exchange LUNO said that it would be restricting some customer accounts from being able to invest on the platform until further notice. Bybit CEO Ben Zhao had flagged the firm's exit earlier in September warning of how overly broad the regulations are. He said, "...FCA has explicitly contacted all the major players — us, OKEx, Binance, everyone — and asked what our plan is to deal with this new law. And the new law is that if you use English as a language, they will see you as trying to solicit their users, so you cannot claim that you are in reverse solicitation. Everyone is in trouble. So everyone is thinking of plans of how to deal with this new law." George Morris, a partner at Simmons & Simmons, explained that the marketing regulations had been enforced for securities firms for decades but were now being expanded to cover the crypto industry. He said, "...the rules are extremely complicated and they're quite wide -ranging. It's not just UK firms that are subject to these rules. Anyone with a website that can be accessed in the UK is subject to these requirements." So there are a lot of different elements of this. One challenge is, yes, these advertising standards. But the bigger issue is this whole need to evaluate client suitability and potentially restrict investments. Practically, that either means a ton of financial disclosures from customers that they would have to manage and verify, or there's simply some self -attestation checkbox, which might not be that effective. Basically, with a set of marketing regulations, the FCA have figured out how to limit small retail's ability to buy crypto in the country. Now, one thing that is notable is that we haven't heard anything from the really big international exchanges yet in terms of how they're dealing with this. But in any case, it seems like a big detriment for UK crypto. As Leon TK put it, so much for the UK being a crypto hub, failing already. Now, speaking of places where there is more optimism, last week was, of course, the token 2049 conference in Singapore. And that led to a lot of different discussion around how different the Asian environment for crypto felt as compared to the US and European environments. Indeed, while Western jurisdictions seem to be bogged down with regulations that are unclear at best or hostile at worst, the vibes in Asia are reportedly immaculate. Major conferences around Asia during September saw an uptick in attendance, and regulatory regimes across South Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong and Japan appear to be giving the crypto industry a clear set of workable rules to allow firms to re -establish themselves coming out of crypto winter. The block's Frank Shapiro spoke with some conference attendees and reported on an optimism emerging in the East. One conference attendee said that South Korean retail is flocking back to crypto. They argued that young investors in particular view real estate and equities as massively overvalued and out of reach, so are instead opting to buy cryptocurrency. They said they don't buy houses, but they can buy tokens every week. There is a huge market. Another attendee spoke about the difficulty of accessing the Korean market due to South Korea's notoriously tough corporate climate for international firms. They said the liquidity is insane, but it is siloed and protectionist. You have to speak Korean. On that front, crypto custodian BitGo recently partnered with domestic juggernaut Hana Bank due to the difficulty in accessing the market without a local connection. What's more, one anonymous trading firm said they had been waiting five years to operate as a liquidity provider on domestic exchanges in South Korea. They said when they open up, we can be first in line. It's a great retail market. To get a sense of scale, the largest Korean exchange, Upbit, regularly outperforms Coinbase in terms of spot trading volumes. Then there is of course Hong Kong. Their new regulatory regime is off to a tough start in some ways with fraud investigations into crypto exchange JPX becoming public earlier this month. The most recent update is that there have been 11 suspects brought in for questioning and losses have been estimated at 178 million across 2 ,265 victims. Local police have said that the ringleaders of the operation are still at large and have enlisted the help of Interpol. Some are referring to JPX as the largest financial fraud to ever hit the city. Yet despite the major investigation, there are currently no signs that Hong Kong regulators are seeking to reverse course on unexpectedly open crypto regulations. Indeed, on Monday, the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission said that it would be releasing the full list of current applicants to ensure that users are able to identify false claims from exchanges. The theme appears to be the same across multiple Asian jurisdictions. Basically, that individual incidents of fraud and malpractice haven't tarnished enthusiasm for the industry as a whole. Another conference attendee told Chiparo, This Asia trip blew my mind. The excitement in Korea and Singapore is the polar opposite of what's going on in the U .S. Alex Vannevik of Nansen wrote, Vannek portfolio manager Pranav Kannadi added some color around how local investors are thinking about the space as well. On September 14, Pranav tweeted, Conversations were mostly positive and a key question was, We're in a crypto winter right now, but when should we expect the next bull run? Not a single convo mentioned the merits of the tech or whether the space survives, feeling optimistic. Now, hopping from Asia over to Europe again for a moment. According to a report from Fortune, Coinbase considered acquiring FTX's European business in the wake of FTX's November bankruptcy. Apparently talks never progressed to a late stage, but the preliminary interest highlights how important international expansion is to Coinbase, particularly regarding its derivatives products. Before the bankruptcy, FTX Europe was the only European firm registered to provide perpetual futures trading. And while derivatives trading remains heavily restricted in the U .S., both Coinbase and Gemini have launched offshore trading venues this year to provide derivatives markets to international customers with a keen eye on Asian regions. For Coinbase, the pivot to derivatives could provide a much needed boost to flagging spot volumes. According to Kiko Research, derivatives volumes in Quarter 2 of this year were six times large than spot. Now, the entity that became FTX Europe was originally acquired in late 2021 for 376 million. The firm was already licensed in Cyprus at the time, which allowed it to access European markets. Since the bankruptcy, the entity, along with its valuable license, have attracted interest from Crypto .com and Trek Labs as well. According to documents viewed by Fortune, Coinbase expressed interest immediately after the FTX bankruptcy and again as recently as last month. That said, FTX Europe has also been in the crosshairs of the U .S.-based FTX bankruptcy team for clawbacks. The estate launched a lawsuit against FTX Europe executives claiming that the original acquisition was a horrendous business decision, arguing that FTX effectively paid 376 million for a $2 million operating license, and on top of this, the sale of FTX Europe seems like a difficult task with active litigation surrounding the firm. In July, the U .S.-based FTX estate said, The FTX debtors' professional advisors have concluded that there is no realistic possibility of a sale. However, last Thursday, they said, The FTX debtors are committed to maximizing the value of FTX's assets to drive customer recoveries. As such, the FTX debtors are continuing to evaluate whether there are viable options for the sale of some or all of the assets of the FTX Europe business. Now one small aside on Coinbase. Arkham Intelligence claimed to have mapped Coinbase's bitcoin wallets and according to Arkham, Coinbase holds almost 1 million bitcoin worth around $25 billion at current market prices. This would amount to almost 5 % of the bitcoin in circulation, similar to the amount held in wallets believed to be owned by Satoshi Nakamoto. Arkham's report showed that Coinbase's largest cold wallet holds around 10 ,000 bitcoin, and the firm believes that Coinbase has additional bitcoin holdings which are not yet labeled and could not be identified. According to data published by CoinGecko, Coinbase only owns around $200 million worth of this gigantic bitcoin stash, with the rest attributable to client custody. However, staying on the Europe question and how valuable this Cyprus license actually is, with Europe's MICA regulations coming into force from June of next year, some firms are beginning to warn that a clear lack of guidance could lead to disruption. The MICA rules were intended to provide a comprehensive framework, but there are still numerous grey areas. One of the major problems surrounds stablecoins. There is currently no guidance on how MICA stablecoin regulations will apply to foreign and decentralized issuers. The default scenario seems to be a ban in Europe unless these issuers can obtain the appropriate licensing, with no arrangement to recognize approvals in other jurisdictions. The European Banking Authority has warned that there will be no grace period for coins already on the market. The EBA and its sister agency, the European Securities and Markets Authority, ESMA, are currently taking public consultation on how the MICA regulations should be implemented. Relatedly last week, the head of legal at Binance France said during a public hearing hosted by the EBA, we are heading towards a delisting of all stablecoins in Europe on June 30th. This could have a significant impact on the market in Europe compared to the rest of the world. Now, Binance CEO CZ quickly walked back the comments claiming, it was a question taken out of context. In fact, we have a couple of partners launching Euro and other stablecoins in fully compliant manners of course. A blog post from Binance explained further, stating that they would be required to delist stablecoins that fail to gain registration in Europe and that no licenses have been granted to stablecoin issuers currently. Binance wrote, While we are confident that there will be constructive solutions in place before the mid -2024 deadline, if left as is, this could have an impact on the European crypto market and the competitiveness of European crypto exchanges in the global market. Now the requirement that stablecoin issuers are EU -based could cause further problems for decentralized organizations. Thomas Vogel, a partner at law firm Latham & Watkins said, So, this is sort of the challenge with MICA. As comprehensive as the regulations are written, how they get implemented is still fairly up in the air. There was commentary around the time that MICA was being voted upon that it could either be a big step in giving the crypto industry a clear set of rules to function, or work as a de facto crypto ban depending on how it was implemented and whether enough licenses were granted. Now, with a little over nine months until MICA comes into force, there is still time to ensure that rules are workable for existing firms, but it appears that there is a lot of work left to do in that regard. Anyways, it's definitely a story to keep an eye on, as something that was seen as largely positive could become quite bad quite quickly. However, friends, that is where we're going to wrap for today. Lots going on in this fascinating world of crypto. Wherever you are enjoying it from, I appreciate you listening. And until next time, be safe and take care of each other.

Bloomberg Law
Fresh update on "latham" discussed on Bloomberg Law
"The agency has done in administrative actions or by rule is invalid. So there's been this momentum to rein in the administrative state. Will this case be a test of just how far the justices are willing to go in that direction? Yes, I think it will be, you know, in part just because this is a relatively novel theory and in part because of the implications of this theory. And so the area we're that seeing sort of an insult on is power given to the administrative state. But in some sense, the branch that is at the heart of the dispute here is Congress. And adopting this theory would sort of place a restriction on the appropriation power adopted by Congress that we haven't seen thing in our constitutional history. But again, the specific appropriations law here, if you think of that way, is really unprecedented in that you've given an agency an indefinite amount of money or or pool within which to dip in order to carry out its operations. And we just haven't seen anything like that in form in over 200 years. Could this case have implications for the Federal Reserve Board, the FDIC, see in the comptroller of the currency. It's conceivable. I mean, those agencies do have different funding mechanisms. But what's different about this case is this is a more conventional executive agency that's involved in sort of classic executive enforcement powers and the funding mechanism here, although it draws from the Federal Reserve Board, is really different. It's been wonderful talking to you, Greg, and getting your insights on all these cases. Thanks so much. That's Gregory Gar, a partner at Latham & Watkins and the former U .S. Solicitor General. Coming up next, Ball's antitrust exemption. I'm June Grosso and you're listening to Bloomberg. Today, Ophthalmology residents use Fundamental VR and Orbis International's virtual training tool to practice surgeries. Dr. Renee Badros says, with Fundamental VR, I can virtually practice cataract surgeries over and over in the metaverse. More training hours in the metaverse means increased access to quality care for patients in need. These are the ways surgeons are using the metaverse today. Learn more at meta .com slash metaverse impact. Everything. Bloomberg Radio on demand and in your podcast feed. On the latest edition of the Bloomberg Business Week podcast, conversation a with Dr. Iman Abouzeid, co -founder and CEO at Incredible Health, on hiring nurses for safety net hospitals. About 25 % of the hospital partners that we work with have facilities that are located in low to moderate income communities.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"latham" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Context, but also perhaps emphasize the other ways in which schools could seek to obtain diversity, including by considering race and the context of personal essays and the like and perhaps other race neutral alternatives that schools have tried across the country. So Greg, you mentioned the fact that there wasn't that much discussion if any about precedent and respecting precedent and if the court does away with affirmative action by the end of this current term, it would be the second time in the space of a year that the conservative super majority jettisoned decades of precedent will that be a consideration for the conservatives and perhaps particularly for the chief and should it be. Well, certainly any time the court considers overruling precedents and momentous decision for the court and the justices are well aware of that. I mean, this is an area where justice is even the chief justice has been openly critical that's prior precedent. So if it reached that conclusion, it wouldn't be out of the blue. But I think it's fair to say that all the justices are aware of the implications of overruling precedent and I do think that there are a number of options that may be available to the court in a short of overruling all its precedents in this area. We'll find out the answer by June, thanks so much for being on the show, Greg. That's former United States solicitor general Gregory garr a partner at Latham and Watkins. Coming up next on the Bloomberg law show, the divorce of Tom Brady and Gisele Bündchen appears to be the model of amicability how celebrity divorces are just different. This is Bloomberg. Debbie

Bloomberg Law
Fresh "Latham" from Bloomberg Law
"The power regulatory agencies before a conservative court whose recent decisions have overridden the authority agencies of and reigned in the so -called administrative state. I've been talking to Gregory Gahr, a partner at Latham & Watkins and the former U .S. Solicitor General. Greg, now we're on to the regulatory area. Let's discuss Loper -Bryde Enterprises versus Raimondo, where a 39 -year -old incident, the Chevron Doctrine, is on the line. Will you explain Chevron? Sure. So the Chevron Doctrine is one of the most important doctrines of administrative law that has been around since 1884. Basically, what it says is that where you have a statute that is ambiguous doesn't speak directly to an issue, that the courts would give deference to the administrative agency's interpretation of the statute. So this case involves a law that requires fishing boats in the North Atlantic to have observers to collect data and the like. And the question is whether the fishing boats or the government has to pay for those observers. the And statute doesn't address that question, but the agency, the National Marine Fisheries Service, interpreted it to require the fishing boats to pay for these observers and the court lower said that that was a reasonable interpretation, so the courts would defer to it under Chevron. And the Chevron doctrine has come under assault by the conservatives as being contrary to the long -standing central principle that it's the duty of the courts to say what the law is. And so there's a great concern that they've sort of delegated that task to the administrative agencies and there have been many justice, maybe five in this case, to be willing to overturn the Chevron doctrine and give the courts the sort of frontline role in interpreting what the statutes mean without administrative deference. So has the Supreme Court been chipping away at Chevron in recent years? So some say if they overturned Chevron it wouldn't be that big a deal. It would be a big deal doctrinally, but you're exactly right. They've been chipping away it. at And then someone interestingly, they've actually just been ignoring it, giving the cold shoulder the last few years, where they won't even cite it in cases where it really is directly implicated. So in that sense, doing with away the doctrine wouldn't make a big practical shift, but doctrinally it would be a big shift. And in line with one of the big things we see from this conservative court, which is reconsidering relationship the among the branches with respect to the administrative state and scaling back on deference doctrines that has empowered the administrative state. I believe it's been four times since 2019 that the court has been asked to revisit Chevron and hasn't done so. Do you think it will reverse Chevron in this case? You mentioned that there are perhaps five justices willing to that. do So this case feels different. The court granted certiorari in the question of whether or not should Chevron be overruled. If you connect the dots over the last few years, it seems as though the court is tilting towards the direction of actually overruling Chevron. But it remains to be seen whether or they not take that step and that the broader question of stare decisis is something that we've seen over the last several years and the justices have very strongly held in different views about when or whether it's appropriate to overrule a case. But in this case it does seem as though Chevron is on the chopping block. I wonder if they were struggling with that while they were deciding whether to take the case or not. Because it took a time long to decide how to handle the case. They scheduled it for potential discussion at five private conferences before announcing that they would take the case. So that's exactly right. You know obviously the decision to take the case was not a good one for the government ultimately. But the court does have the fallback option of just saying that the agency's interpretation is unreasonable in this case. But really the focus is on the broader question of whether or not the Chevron doctrine is really consistent with our legal principles and practice. Do you agree with this that critics of big government have targeted the Chevron doctrine much as anti -abortion groups targeted Roe v. Wade? I think that's a fair analogy, June. I mean it's really on the short list of cases that you know would be on a wish list that this more conservative court would overrule and it's in line again with the trend that we've seen in the last few years where the court been has willing to reconsider doctrines that have on balance favored the administrative state. So this is one where if the court took the step it would be certainly in line with decisions we've seen in recent years. Another agency the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is before the court again. The oral arguments in this case are actually next week. It's CFPB versus Community Services Financial Association. And this is in line with our assault on the administrative state. So in this case though it's a really interesting challenge. It's a challenge to the funding mechanism for this agency. So usually when Congress passes an appropriation it specifies a specific amount that goes to the agency typically on an annual basis. And in this case what Congress did in setting up the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau is it said we're not going to have annual appropriations a of specific amount. You're going to get your funding from services and fees generated by the Federal Reserve. There's no requirement to go back to Congress every year. This is sort of an indefinite appropriation and it's up to an amount that you can just sort of dip into that the agency hasn't come close to dipping into. So as a practical matter it's basically an unlimited funding mechanism for the agency which gives it greater from the legislative branch. This is a Fifth Circuit decision that it's being appealed from. Is this a novel theory that they came up with? It's the first time in history that an appellate court has invoked the appropriations clause to invalidate a statute, so it is certainly novel in that respect. That said, the CFPB, the agency here is itself novel and this is something that sort of haunted the agency a few years ago in a different case that involved a removal provision of the head of the agency and Congress set this agency up to be different, but because it did so it sort of made it vulnerable to these different lines of constitutional attacks that we're seeing. And the Solicitor General said the ruling of the Fifth Circuit threatens the validity of virtually all past CFPB actions, including numerous regulations that are critical to consumers in the financial industry, but the court refused to put it on an expedited schedule. Does that say anything to you? I don't think the decision not to expedite it, but the government is right in this sense, that if the court were to hold that the funding mechanism is unconstitutional, then, you know, a logical might be to say, well, then everything that it did with that funding should be set aside. And that really sort of tees up the second question in the case, which may be even more difficult, which is if the court was to adopt this novel appropriations theory, then what's the remedy? And the parties are very definitively divided on that. I mean, the government says that the remedy should just be forward -looking or that you could go back and just sever a particular part of the law, but you wouldn't say that everything that the agency has done in administrative actions or by rule is invalid. So there's been this momentum to rein in the administrative state. Will this case be a test of just how far the justices are willing to go in that direction? Yes, I think it will be, you know, in part just because this is a relatively

Bloomberg Radio New York
"latham" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Thank you. Now another legal story where watching the new Supreme Court term starts today and this week the court will hear an important case involving redistricting and the new districts being drawn around the country to govern the next decade's elections. This case involves Alabama's congressional maps drawn by the Republican legislature, which pack black voters into one of 7 districts in the state. For more Bloomberg's dune grass show speaks to former United States solicitor general Gregory garr, a partner at Latham and Watkins. Merrill V Milligan Alabama's congressional map about 27% of Alabama's residents are black, but there's only one majority black district out of 7 in the state. So this is another election case and the question in this case is vote dilution under the Voting Rights Act. And the allegation in this case is that the legislature has impermissibly diluted the black vote by splitting up black communities in drawing the congressional districts. And this is obviously an important and recurring issue and drawing districts across the country. And in some respects, it overlaps with the admissions cases and that all of these cases involve questions of how race can be used by government decision makers. And the Voting Rights Act is an area that this court has been fairly active in going back the past decade and with the newly constituted court, the number of recent justices who have come on to the court for the last big voting rights case. This is an opportunity for the court to reexamine its precedence in this area and consider the proper role of race in adjudicating a vote dilution case under the Voting Rights Act. So in February, the court in a 5 to four vote put a hold on the lower court's order, which had required Alabama to redraw its nav and in her dissent justice Kagan said that accepting Alabama's contentions would rewrite decades of this court's precedent about the Voting Rights Act. I mean, if they did that, that wouldn't be particularly surprising considering what they've done to the Voting Rights Act even before the addition of the three Trump appointees. I mean, that's certainly true if you go back to the Shelby county case, it was one of the more contentious cases that the court has heard and decided in the last ten years or so. And these are very divisive cases in which justices have strongly held views. So it won't be surprising if there are two different camps on this issue as to how the case comes out. And what that means for section two, doctor going forward, we'll just have to wait and see. And as former United States solicitor general Gregory garr, speaking

Bloomberg Law
Fresh update on "latham" discussed on Bloomberg Law
"Court is now sitting. The Supreme Court's term new begins on Monday as always the first Monday in October but unlike other terms the justices are returning to the bench under a cloud of ethics controversies and with public opinion of court the at a historic low. According to a Gallup poll released today just 41 % of Americans say they approve of how the court is handling its job while 58 % disapprove and the justices will be diving back into the culture wars tackling controversial issues involving gun rights, voting rights, agency power and social media. My guest is Gregory Garr, Solicitor former General of the United States and now a partner at Latham & Watkins. It's great to have you here Greg. Let's start our now annual preview of the term with one of the most watched and perhaps consequential cases. The first gun rights dispute the justices have taken up since the landmark decision last year establishing a constitutional right to carry a handgun in public. Tell us about United States versus Rahimi. Another big second amendment case and an opportunity for the court to revisit the historical approach that adopted a couple years ago in the Bruin case involving a New York law that restricted the right to carry firearms outside of the home. In this case involves a challenge to a restraining order that prevents a domestic violence abuser from possessing handguns under federal law. And what's interesting about this case is beginning with the Heller decision ten years or so ago where they recognized the individual right to bear firearms in the home, the court had always focused on the rights of what it called in Heller law -abiding responsible citizens to possess and carry firearms. In this case, the challenger was convicted of domestic abuse after striking his girlfriend and doing other terrible things and then was prohibited under federal law from possessing a firearm. And he's bringing a Second Amendment challenge to that which, if he's successful, would in all likelihood call into question a number of other firearm restrictions that apply to dangerous people or potentially even mentally ill people. The Fifth Circuit said that while crimes. And it looked crimes. at it of the court's historical analysis established a couple years ago which requires the courts as if the hedger to his Lifeedy was not sufficient. historically. And it looked at it historically. And oftentimes, in these cases, there's really no perfect analog the given way in which guns and restrictions have evolved over time. And so, And you know, one of the questions at the heart of the case is perhaps the court will give us some more guidance on how to apply that historical analysis. And in this case, the government basically is in line with historical restrictions prohibiting those who are deemed to be dangerous from from possessing guns, but that's really the number that's used before the court is historical argument about whether whether this restriction is analogous to 18th century restrictions on gun possession or not. And here you have the Solicitor General saying, well, there are some colonial and early state laws that allowed disarming dangerous individuals and Rahimi's lawyers saying that, you know, none of those laws apply. They seem to want a law exactly on point. This historical analysis in this context where weapons are so different and times are so different, the courts have really struggled with it, haven't they? Yeah, they have. And we've seen a lot of cases in the wake of the Bruin decision a couple years ago, cases challenging all sorts of restrictions that seem to have survived the Heller decision 10 years back, recognizing this individual right. And so I think as important as this specific issue is in this case, particularly for the victims of domestic abuse, I think the focus of the court's resolution is going to be to see if it can fine -tune this historical analysis to give courts more guidance in considering these challenges. And this case could affect state laws as well. An Illinois led group backing the administration said that almost every state either requires or permits courts to firearm limit access for people subject to domestic restraining orders. Yeah, that's exactly right. apply It would to state laws, local laws, and that's obviously one of the government's arguments. And the court took this case right up on the government's petition, I think understanding the general importance of the issue and the need to sort of jump back in and clarify its law in this area. So this is definitely one that we would want to follow. Let's turn now to another high profile districting case to come before the court. Alexander versus South Carolina Conference of the NAACP. Yeah, so one of the surprises last term was the case out of Alabama involving a challenge to a redistricting plan in which a majority of the court actually agreed with the lower court that the state had improperly taken race into account in drawing the districts. And so, So again, here we go this is a challenge out of South Carolina in which the lower court had found that the state improperly used race to draw this district, which in order to favor Republicans. And what's sort of interesting about this case is the interplay between race and politics. There's an argument that race was used as a proxy for political affiliation here and that sort of brings into play two different doctrines in the Supreme Court's jurisprudence. One in which the court recently held that challenges to redistricting on political grounds, so -called partisan gerrymanders, actually not justiciable. And the second in which the court has always considered challenges that race was improperly taken into account in drawing district lines. And so this case presents an opportunity for the court to sort of balance those two different inquiries. And again, it'll be interesting to see if this is one of those cases where maybe the court taxed back to the center as it did in the Alabama case last term. But this will be a difficult one. This is, you know, obviously delicate issues in the intersection here between race and politics. That case last term you were talking about, the Alabama case, came as something of a surprise to many that the court rejected the Republican -drawn congressional map in a to boost the Voting Rights Act. And some see that as a shift in the court's approach, or at least in the two conservative justices who sided with the liberals. So will this case show whether it's true or not, whether there is a shift? It's definitely one to watch, June, and I think the gun case we just talked about is one as well. These are two areas where the more centrist justices on the court, for example the Chief Justice and Justice Kavanaugh, have not been as willing to go as far as some of the more conservative justices. And that's certainly one of the broader themes that we're looking at for this term is last year we had several decisions in which the court seemed to tack a little bit back to the center and so it'll be interesting see to whether that trend follows or whether the court will proceed on what is otherwise a sort of conservative orbit to the right. Next we have social media meeting the Supreme Court O 'Connor versus Scarnier and Linke versus Fried. Both these cases involve public officials bills blocking constituents who left critical messages on their social media. Right, so you know we're seeing more and more of these cases where social media intersects with the First Amendment and these are two different cases, one involving two California school board members and one involving a city manager in Michigan and all of them had social media accounts Twitter and Facebook and the like which they use in some instances to tweet about their public jobs and when they got some criticism from some constituents they decided to block them on their accounts and the question is whether or not that blocking is subject to scrutiny under the First Amendment which boils down in this case to a question whether or not the blocking is actually state action subject to the First Amendment. Coming up next I'll continue this conversation with Gregory Gar and we'll talk about cases targeting the administrative state. I'm June Grosso and you're listening to Bloomberg. Missed your favorite Bloomberg radio show. Business Bloomberg Week, Masters in Business, Bloomberg Intelligence and more are also available as podcasts. Listen today on Apple, Spotify and anywhere else you get your podcasts. Whether you're an in -house counsel or in private practice Bloomberg Law gives you the edge with the latest in AI powered legal analytics, business insights and workflow tools. With guidance from our experts you'll grasp the latest trends in the legal industry helping you achieve better results. For the practice of law, the business of law, the future of law, the difference is Bloomberg Law. Learn more at BloombergLaw .com. The Bloomberg Talks Podcast. Today's top interviews from around Bloomberg News. An extended conversation with former Vice President Mike Pence. Bill Gross,

Daily Pop
"latham" Discussed on Daily Pop
"Was great. He wasn't even with Kim. That was the right answer. But also it's, you know, the thing is, is if you dish it, you gotta be able to take it. You know, if you have posted me on social media and basically called for people to call me a nickname. That's right. Basically, in a roundabout way, kind of called for what it seems like violence, where we see Kim interjected and was like, hey, he could really get hurt. You know, you're constantly talking about this person. I was surprised Pete had an interjected before then to be honest in person. Right. Well, that's because I think because they were still getting the relationship together and trying to see if they were going to be in a relationship. And then once it hit Instagram, it's like, okay, now, look how, if he keeps attacking your girl, you know, it's like, as a man, you got to step up. And if you notice in the text, there was some funniness in it, but then it was also some seriousness where he was like, let's sit down. Yeah. You know, I'm at this whole thing to come, so he basically said in the text message like this has to stop. We have to be adults. We can't continue this way. Kanye told him to come to Sunday service. Pete was saying this is not for public consumption. Like everything you're doing is for public consumption, but it is a way when you have a large platform, you do sometimes use public consumption in my opinion to bully. Like people can utilize these fan bases that they know they have that can be rabid. You can kind of use that fan base to do your bidding if you want them to. And some people use it in responsible way where they say, hey, please don't get involved. Kanye wants people to get involved to post text messages. Oh, yeah. He does nothing that is probably. If you text Kanye, prepare for your message to be on Instagram. I don't care if you talk about the weather. It's gonna go on Instagram. Oh, definitely. Oh, so this is the life that they live. Everything is public. My one concern with this is as entertaining as it is because it is. And you know, like you said, Pete is funny. And we're all now sucked into this. I'm just really concerned that situations like this often turn violence. Yeah. And they often turn dangerous. And so I'm just concerned, I'm concerned for Kim for Kanye for the kids for P I wouldn't be surprised if something really bad happened. Kanye is threatening everyone. Also this weekend, he threatened the comedian deal. Because DL spoke out in favor of Kim. He basically, and I quote, put in his message, you know, I have, I can afford to hurt you. So Yale is reportedly through van Jones, not van Jones. And Latham. He is going to actually seek possibly legal charges against that. Because that kind of stuff has to stop that can be very dangerous. I mean, listen, I know Kanye thinks he could do whatever he wants to do. Right. But then also like he talks about being able to have freedom of speech. People have DL talked about it in an interview that someone asked him about. And he got upset. So it's like, are you the only one who could speak out against things and nobody else can say anything when it's, of course, if it doesn't align with you, then it's a problem and then they need to be handled. I don't know. But then, can we talk about that prayer, though? The prayer that he depends. Did y'all see the prayer? Did you see the girl? That's it right there. This is Kanye. It was like a three part prayer. I thought God had a pack of people. I was like Kanye to do. I bet God is asking too, can you take me out the group chat? Yeah. Take out the group chat. But I just wanted to ask you daisy real quick as a mother. The whole TikTok top thing, how would you handle it as a mom? Well, I'm not a mom, but you know, I think that when parents are involved and when children are both parents need to be involved in the decision. Right. However, if one parent is a little absent or a little nuts, then I think that's because we know that Kanye is reportedly actually on medication. So he's, you know, he's a polar. A little bit not. So when one parent is acting a little bit controlling and crazy and using the kids to gain control, I think that the stronger parent or the more reasonable reasonable parent needs to step in. Yeah, no, I think it needs to be, if Kanye doesn't want his children on TikTok, then that needs to be considered. Easy fix to be honest. If he doesn't want his child on TikTok, take the baby off TikTok. Right. No. The gothic videos can wait. There's a bigger issue that the TikTok is gonna be a point of contention. Let's just eliminate that. There's other things to do. Let's talk about this, though, maybe this will all unfold because the Kardashian drama obviously will keep coming. The new trailer for their show dropped a few minutes ago and the ladies are not holding anything back. Guys, take a look..

Mark Levin
How John Durham Connects Michael Sussmann and Rodney Joffe to Spy on Trump
"Obtaining and on the record waiver for sussman of any conflict of interest with the lawyer With limit sussman's ability to later challenge any conviction whether following a plea agreement or a jury verdict The court will likely grant that motion to ensure both at any waiver of the conflict is knowing and volunteering to ensure sussman can not later attempt to overturn any conviction based on the conflicts with his lawyer It is what followed in the next 12 pages however and not the mundane minutiae of this motion That proved explosive In explaining the potential conflicts of interest sussman's Latham and Watkins attorneys possibly had norm explained much more they get Trump plot To explain the potential conflicts dorm began with the charge Noting as factual background quote unquote That sussman while serving his counsel to the Clinton campaign met with FBI general counsel baker at FBI headquarters and provided baker quote purported date and white papers That allegedly demonstrated a covert communications channel between the Trump organization and a Russian based bank that alpha bank The motion then reiterated the indictment allegations at beginning an approximately July 2016 Joffe that's this Internet guy Worked with sussman the opposition research firm fusion GPS And numerous cyber research as I'm quoting now and employees at multiple Internet companies to assemble the purported data and white papers in connection with these efforts Continued the motion joffe exploited his access to non public and or proprietary Internet data

Bloomberg Radio New York
"latham" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Somebody who was kind of a right hand man to the chief financial officer Andy fast out His sort of principal deputy right hand man decided to cooperate with us And that helped tremendously in advancing our understanding of internal discussions and who knew what when at enron and that was tremendously helpful And from then which was as I said about July of 2002 there was a fairly quick momentum change And additional people started cooperating And providing information And the case the case started moving in the way we wanted it to more quickly Sarbanes oxley It came as a result of this Did this make the world safer situations like Imran I think the collapse of enron and the associated shock of that collapse in the magnitude of that collapse did actually get people's attention and it made a difference Obviously it helped spawn sarbanes oxley which I think has been useful But I think more importantly the fact that there was a company that had corruption at the highest levels in the C suite which is something frankly you very rarely see was really appalling and shocking and has led to an entire new outlook in corporate America and globally about the importance of culture and tone at the top and compliance controls and integrity All of which I think has been a net plus for the economy I'm not going to say that enron changed the world but it was certainly a wake-up call for the need for companies to take compliance much more seriously and focus much more on the top messages coming from their top people Leslie Caldwell partnered with the law firm Latham and Watkins We appreciate you taking time and joining us today on Bloomberg law Thank you My pleasure Coming up on Bloomberg law where are the major players in the enron scandal today That's next I'm Joe short sleeve This is Bloomberg.

P.S.A Podcast
"latham" Discussed on P.S.A Podcast
"Of your back. Psa flicked off all right. All right. i'll ride was going on everybody so there's no camera today. Actually i do read right now. Recording this and Yeah snow visual no visual this week. We'll have move for the season ends. I can now officially say this season. In december ninth and Has been a good one. But i got an known abang. Gotta get on a high note and always do so. Let's go ahead and jump into today's episode. Today's episode is tied the deception behind the phrase. The prices just went up the memories. The price didn't go up just because she went from twenty five to twenty six is russia comes from the phrase. The price went up. And it's a phrase. You hear a lot and i wanna kinda say all about it as we go along if you listen to this episode. You're a millennial you know. Exactly what they phrase me. Same as other miseration level up you know and the talk that was made with sky from a blackened crew when she was crying and the Videos talk said it said when they told you. The price was up on graduation. But you still ain't got no job and that's one of the phrase used a lot especially when people graduate from college and significantly indeed go up but i'm just this way from my breakdown right. I haven't been by myself in alone. Time right and latham story. Today story is titled kelly price. Because i am by myself so you know what it is. Kelly price was the best saleswoman in the whole department store. It didn't matter what it was. She knew her client tails you know. They love she knows they like and she could sell it all. Her price continued to go up as she was in more of a high demand. She even charge more. They even leveled up her position at the job to the outside world. It seemed like she was on top of her sobbing reality. This wasn't the case. Year her title change and her pay significantly increase but she didn't know how to budget will. She live from paycheck to paycheck. It's all her money on things that didn't have any value. In the long run she even continued to entertain her exit. She knew for a fact wasn't any good so eggs you all her price.

No Agenda
"latham" Discussed on No Agenda
"In every story was low budget but be that as it may the armor at the armor is responsible for what is what the state of these weapons and and and passing the correct information on. I two received now that i think about it. I also receive my gun from the assistant director but the armor was right nearby and handed it to the assistant director. So we don't know that part of the story now this concept of a prop gun in my experience. And what i've heard is there's no such thing as a prop gun. It's not like a water pistol. It's much easier to get a real gun and loaded with a blank charge but there's still a lot of rules that that take place around this color coding etc now. The assistant director came up to me. Said here's the gun was revolver opened. It showed me the one round in there. That was blank. The director and the director photography were behind the camera behind a shield. Just in case anything popped out of this out of this gun and we had to three or four times for different angles. And every single time i went up to my co actor. I forget his name experienced like character. And i showed him. It's okay. I'm gonna point this at you. And here's what's in here and this. This is the blanket and he was annoyed by it. I remember that distinctly shot with a real bullet. He was annoyed. He was annoyed because that is i. Think very typical of hollywood. You know we've got a bitch about guns but we don't know shit about them. And and i don't care if you're a police officer if you're a citizen if you're an actor you have responsibility when you have a firearm in your hands alec baldwin committed manslaughter at minimum in my my greek gonna get any argument for me on that and it's disgusting blaming all kinds of other people korea daily mail nuts not according to one of my contacts okay Alec baldwin was he was given day asked him if he had any experience with weaponry gun and he says no you little but not you know he's just kind of waffled about it I guess he could have said well. Yeah where's this ad. Where was this where. Where was this that. He was asked us on the set before before the scene. Okay according to the daily mail and he was kind of waffled about it the acted dumb and it. Soon as i read that in. I in fact i think the team i was gonna talk about the story. I did not make clips. Didn't intend to talking about it. But if i was going to i would say This just in the olden days. They used to teach gun safety in high school. Yes everybody in the country. There were rifle clubs in most of the united states of america. Abroad you're twenty two rifle to school. They had yes. They had rifle clubs at in highschool and they always had gun safety. They don't teach any of that anymore. Despite the fact it's the second amendment isn't right in the constitution that this is all legal stuff and people probably should learn about weapons and the rules of the road but no no. They don't have any of that and valid. Baldwin's just gun hater group democrat. And he's no and one other thing. I think this might have been a shotgun and not a revolver and the reason why would it be shot not first of all. It's a period piece from eighteen hundreds. I think shotguns were much more would be much more accurate. Possibly but also we'll find out they showed the gun it was it was an old reveal. Showed the gun is a forty five in debate. Pictures the gun in the daily mail report. Okay i'll take that. As fact that i mean yeah you can mark the daily mail. Daily mail okay. Well i don't have any problem. Walking the daily mail saying is it. It might be a shotgun. Hand shotgun wasn't a weapon. I have a feeling we'll find out more about this yields did that feeling years slowly fade. Yeah just like vaccine. Passports here is seem. Wait a minute discussing antigua weaponry and associating it with your vaccine passport Prediction is that in anywhere near closest same ones prediction as dead as part of a long term trend. The other thing some historical fact. That doesn't exist that you're just asserting for no reason. I'm asserting because. I don't think the daily mail is correct. That's all the guy was shot. The guy the woman was killed by a forty five caliber bullet. Yeah oh okay. Well i didn't. I got different information. That's okay. I i cannot prove otherwise so i'll just wait shotgun. I'll just wait what i like. The most though was what immediately went viral on twitter. Which of course had been removed. But we had a screen of this poor woman How halina hutchins A so-called tweet from her. That says i have information that could put hillary clinton in jail in this tied together so nicely with the story that her husband is a lawyer at latham watkins and of course that means that this is a takedown by hillary clinton who had to kill this poor woman because she had inside information from the lead by her briar number. One hit man. Yes baldwin killing a lot of people for all we know. That's the part is actually believable. But not not the other part. I just love that then. Whoever did that was so fast. I mean it's it's very Cruel dead heart is no but it's very cruel cruel to curb not saying it's it was fast because it's hard to do them saying it was the right. They jumped right now. The cruel thought like that. Yeah that's i thing you think yes yes pretty bad. You gotta be sick Why twitter so much fun was everybody's mentally sick on that thing. Well non mastodon well now that you bring up that this was the other interesting news now. The us president. Donald trump is launching his odu social media network. Donald trump says it will be good truth social and it will rival. The current liberal media consortium and fight back against the big tech companies in silicon valley the former. Us leader says we live in a world where the taliban has a huge presence on twitter yet. Your favorite american president has been silenced. I think we were talking on the previous episode. True social. that's interesting maybe it's going to be mastodon. Debut be federated and lo and behold a shoot fracas erupted. Pull my goodness. It looks like it's mastodon and he stealing the code. Yes thirty days. Otherwise they'll be sued for breach of license. They must be so afraid of this. Did they have to come. I mean it was. The verge was axios. Everyone jumping on. Oh all all trump is stealing. He.

No Agenda
"latham" Discussed on No Agenda
"In every story was low budget But be that as it may. The armor at the armor is responsible for what is what the state of these weapons and And and passing the correct information on. I two received now that i think about it. I also receive my gun from the assistant director but the armor was right nearby and handed it to the assistant director. So we don't know that part of the story now this concept of a prop gun in my experience. And what i've heard is there's no such thing as a prop gun. It's not like a water pistol. It's much easier to get a real gun and loaded with a blank charge but there's still a lot of rules that that take place around this color coding etc now. The assistant director came up to me. Said here's the gun was revolver opened. It showed me the one round in there. That was blank. The director and the director photography were behind the camera behind a shield. Just in case anything popped out of this out of this gun and we had to three or four times for different angles. And every single time i went up to my co actor. I forget his name experienced like character. And i showed him. It's okay. I'm gonna point this at you. And here's what's in here and this. This is the blanket and he was annoyed by it. I remember that distinctly shot with a real bullet. He was annoyed. He was annoyed because that is i. Think very typical of hollywood. You know we've got a bitch about guns but we don't know shit about them. And and i don't care if you're a police officer if you're a citizen if you're an actor you have responsibility when you have a firearm in your hands alec baldwin committed manslaughter at minimum in my hat. My greek gonna get any argument for me on that. And it's disgusting blaming all kinds of other people korea daily mail nuts not according to one of my contacts okay Alec baldwin was. He was given day asked him if he had any experience with weaponry gun and he says no you little but not you know he's just kind of waffled about it I guess he could have said well. Yeah where was this ad. Where was this where. Where was this that. He was asked us on the set before before the scene. Okay according to the daily mail and he was kind of waffled about it the acted dumb and it. Soon as i read that in. I in fact i think the team i was gonna talk about the story. I did not make clips. Didn't intend to talking about it. But if i was going to i would say This just in the olden days. They used to teach gun safety in high school. Yes everybody in the country. There were rifle clubs in most of the united states of america. Abroad you're twenty two rifle school. They had yes. They had rifle clubs at in highschool and they always had gun safety. They don't teach any of that anymore. Despite the fact it's the second amendment isn't right in the constitution that this is all legal stuff and people probably should learn about weapons and the rules of the road but no no. They don't have any of that and valid. Baldwin's just gun hater group democrat. And he's no and one other thing. I think this might have been a shotgun and not a revolver and the reason why would it be shotgun out well first of all. It's a period piece from eighteen hundreds. I think shotguns were much more would be much more accurate. Possibly but also we'll find out they showed the gun it was it was an old reveal. Showed the gun is a forty five in debate. Pictures the gun in the daily mail report. Okay i'll take that. As fact that i mean yeah you can mark the daily mail. Daily mail okay. Well i don't have any problem. Walking the daily mail saying is it. It might be a shotgun. Hand shotgun wasn't a weapon. I have a feeling find out. More about this yields did that feeling years slowly fade. Yeah just like vaccine. Passports here is seem. Wait a minute discussing antigua weaponry and associating it with your vaccine passport Prediction is that in anywhere near closest ones prediction as dead as part of a long term trend. The other thing some historical fact. That doesn't exist that you're just asserting for no reason. I'm asserting because. I don't think the daily mail is correct. That's all the guy was shot. The guy the woman was killed by a forty five caliber bullet. Yeah oh okay. Well i didn't. I got different information. That's okay. I i cannot prove otherwise so i'll just wait shotgun. I'll just wait what i like. The most though was what immediately went viral on twitter. Which of course had been removed. But we had a screen of this poor woman How halina hutchins A so-called tweet from her. That says i have information that could put hillary clinton in jail in this tied together so nicely with the story that her husband is a lawyer at latham watkins and of course that means that this is a takedown by hillary clinton who had to kill this poor woman because she had inside information from the loy by her briar number. One hit man. Yes baldwin killing a lot of people for all we know. That's the part is actually believable. But not not the other part. I just love that then. Whoever did that was so fast. I mean it's it's very Cruel dead heart is no but it's very cruel cruel to curb not saying it's it was fast because it's hard to do. I'm saying it was they right. They jumped right now. The cruel thought like that. Yeah that's first thing you think yes yes pretty bad. You gotta be sick Why twitter so much fun was everybody's mentally sick on that thing. Well non mastodon well now that you bring up that this was the other interesting news now. The us president. Donald trump is launching his odu social media network. Donald trump says it will be good truth social and it will rival. The current liberal media consortium and fight back against the big tech companies in silicon valley the former. Us leader says we live in a world where the taliban has a huge presence on twitter yet. Your favorite american president has been silenced. I think we were talking on the previous episode. True social. that's interesting maybe it's going to be mastodon. Debut be federated and lo and behold a shoot fracas erupted. Pull my goodness. It looks like it's mastered on and he stealing the code. Yes thirty days. Otherwise they'll be sued for breach of license. They must be so afraid of this. Did they have to come. I mean it was. The verge was axios. Everyone jumping on. Oh all trump is stealing. He.

The Drill Down
"latham" Discussed on The Drill Down
"He was taking a changed his workouts. Brooke burke do know she. She's a fitness. She sat next to us at dinner. The monday yes. She looks fantastic. She does indeed. She literally sat next to the drill team when we were at the sunset tower the other night and she's kind of brilliant to yeah no doubt well she was taken. She contacted us. So i mean it's mostly people that and it says fairly extraordinary group of people who are achieving amazing things later in life and who looked great and act great nor performing great that have reached out to us and these are the people that we've made deals with his influence and the notions maybe put them in spots. Boorda's print look like for us at an advertising medium. That's interesting not yet. But i think it will. Have you considered podcasts. No sorry that's a selfish question. Okay so literally asked measured stuff. Because you know there's something i'm starting to explore a lot as well but it's a very interesting time for the seo business a search engine optimization business because of the changes that apple is insisting on as it relates to cookies and some changes at google has also implemented. They're nowhere near as extreme. What do you plan to do. And what are you seeing in that business right now because you can't measure things like you used to. It's true and it's not knowable yet. we're just taking day by day and seeing it to impact particularly on facebook. Yeah i was gonna say. Would you advertise less on facebook instagram. We're taking a day by day right now. It seems to be converting well. Okay continue to convert well but we'll see conversion rates of the same as they were before the cookie change and so on so far Interesting because i curious what what that's gonna mean for those businesses and all the other businesses that are using that as a principal form of marketing. Indeed there are marketers who have been working in their field for a reasonable amount of time. And it's all they've ever known as marketing on facebook. I agree we are aware of it. Were watching it. But as i said we are starting to buy more traditional media and would Is your cost of buying the media so much lower now because so much media has gone towards online and towards apps well. The cost of television media is much lower than it was yeah. It's still quite expensive. But it really is a question of how you buy what you buy and what you mean how you buy in terms of the channels that it's honor how localize it is. And how much preference require other if you allow the purchase to take place at the last minute. And you allow some flexibility. You can get some good deals. Well how do you measure. What's the word of the metrics that you keep track of. Well it's very difficult to measure the relationship between television advertising and no-one said this was going to be easy right well. We're struggling through it. The best way is to simply just tracks sailed before and track sales after. And that's i know it's a traditional metric and not nearly as good as what we get in ecommerce but it still works really so can but you can actually see like cool. We ran this spot for three days and our sales are a point five percent. You can actually see that another thing you can do is sometimes you can put up promo code in there right and visit a website and put in the promo code. It's direct attribution very interesting stuff. Rob enjoyed talking to you. That's an interesting company. Rob freed is the ceo of cromotex. Have you on coming. We're going to have the drill on the one number. That tells us a whole lot about cromotex after this. The drill down is brought to you by era with era. give yourself an information advantage. Connect directly to earnings calls and other investor events with live transcription and event intelligence. That's era a. R. a. dot com. And you can listen to the drill every day on your smart speaker asset smart speaker to play the drill down. Podcast listen to this show and let us know what companies you think. We should be drilling down on talk to us on twitter and instagram by following drill down pod connect with us directly on our website. Biz pod done back with the drooling by one number that tells us a whole lot isaac cromotex. Well here's your number one. Okay what's one. One is the number of companies engaged or gaijin a substantial and complex litigation croat x chromosome xs involved in a complex mobile. Get into deeply. But there's another company liam health that we know. At least we've talked about that. Has i think differently. Zoom but himself is a gauge and litigation back and forth and forth and back with cromotex about the technologies behind their their product. They're nasd's true. Nyah jen whatever. The magic pills dramatic youth. Bill they to magic youth pill which is not approved by the fda for dietary use. I mean listen. It's got some promising results. If you look on amazon to this product xiao's ends of people give it five stars. How many people are people. You know one of those people. I haven't looked into it. I asked you can ask amazon. How verified user case The outcome of those suits could quote materially harm. Our business comex could harm. The results.

The Drill Down
"latham" Discussed on The Drill Down
"Cory. What is your next drill down. Zillow big changes afforded zillow ya zillow traders. E shares fell nine percent today zillow shares have lost twelve percent in a year and the entire house marcello news all that loss today. Nine percent. Big move well. Bloomberg had a big scoop that over the that. Zillow's getting out of the home flipping business. They had made a big push into automated using their supposedly magic technology for home pricing identifying pricing where they go and quickly buy houses flip those houses and They responded when they reported found out about this. This getting out of this business saying there was beyond their operational capacity in their offers business principally. They couldn't get the labor to fix the houses up after they buy them. So they're now just transfer komo's sell or hooking up with agents just like they used to Now this seems to be poor planning right where where the company just couldn't seem to acquire the the handy Men that were gonna fix up the houses after acquired them so they could quickly turn them around and go right back in the market. There's also this notion is that dylan's ab- high-tech business amer touring their offices with spencer. Rakoff the former ceo of the company. I like quite a bit. And i was blown away that they had this room. That was like a boiler room of cold callers. Just calling agents trying to get them to advertise the zillow site next zillow listings and that. There wasn't operation here. That wasn't entirely technical that it really was an old fashioned call center. Part of their business but The question was raised. You know even recently we had the chief operating officer jerry waxman talking investor conference talking about you know is is a business. That's good in a bull market but maybe tough on a not bull market and they were in today's move makes you wonder to where they just getting in over their heads. If prices are going straight up can they still do it again. The inventory pricing. They were able to record their balance sheet because the prices are going up so quickly. Could that be good at a bear market could that be good sideways. Housing market Waxman just weeks ago is saying it was great business in any market. You know some of the inventory growth Timing was just based on the fastest home price appreciation. We any of us never seen before and much stronger than both our internal and other third party forecasts or saying to be a year so keeping up with rising home price appreciation both on our acquisition side and then finding that price in the market for in you know continue to be a new and unique count coming out a pandemic But i will say what we've learned. Is that this business. Zillow offers that exists across all housing market cycles right. And that's been a question that we've that we've touched on over. The past years is is it offers more instinct in a hot or cold or a media market philo offers really interesting opportunity for our customers in all markets or not. 'cause they're out of business already at least for now a business by selling houses. Yeah claim an extra down company called latham group with a ticker that tells everything swim. Latham group trades under the ticker swim s. w. i. im shares. rose almost four percent today. I've never heard of this company. But isn't republican april. Innovate inspect deal. And it is. One of many specs were. The shares are about to become unlocked so owners who an investors in the early days. Some of them will be able to sell a lot of shares And so the stocks are gonna get really volatile but it's a yet another good time to maybe take a look at the underlying business. What was interesting about this business is. It's an old business the nineteen sixties business Focused on Well they focus on. Us very active in australia new zealand. Putting in pools institute com. Indeed if you wanna get someone going on the on the idea of Whether things are better whether it's cement with a liner or fiberglass who these guys get real excited talking about fiberglass but they're also talking about doing acquisitions to grow that top line and for me when i hear companies just gone public and they're going to pump up sales or just pumped up sales but doing a bunch of acquisitions. I get nervous not because as acquisitions might just have hair on him but the growth was really about acquisitions not about a growing industry or a rapidly. Successful business was kind of bolting on other growing businesses. What kind of pulled you have is your fiberglass that fancy pool of yours to be honest. I don't know we built it. I can't remember what it what it is. But it is out chlorine pool not water pool. Had they just dropped into fiberglass palu probably remember that yeah latham group acquiring businesses talking about growing through acquisition in in. You wanna listen kinda through the lines near cfo. Mike boorda talking about how they're going to spend their money and how they will do tuck in acquisitions were enrolled company We see tremendous opportunities to reinvest in the business of our first priority. Here is going to be reinvesting in the organic growth business whether that's capable expansion or whether that's best not really expensive better consumer experience that they would lay them that will be priority number one Second priority is you know we have now today in the past. And i think we've done it successfully and so the The option of having some And on turkey in type acquisitions in the space i think is is high. So well not a requirement. I think we're in a very good position very opportunistic and take advantage of those opportunities when they arise. That doesn't mean they're not done spending on acquisitions which helps top line. Maybe venture the bottom line but maybe not before some other investors get out of the way i coming up next door and had back down to the micro conference in los angeles with a really interesting company it's benjamin button and a bottle tytler persona buttoning a bottle chromosome magic anti-aging bill. Ceo rob freed interesting background. You'd not what you'd expect from this. Forty million dollar dietary supplement supposed to make you younger thought to rob free beer. Explain this business works. After this drove down is brought to you by trust to global talent network that matches highly skilled technical freelancers with the world's most reputable grants braintrust is. How clients like bank of america goldman sachs porsche. Under armor and more build agile tech teams fast. A fraction of the cost visit brain. Trust dot com that's b. r. a. n. t. r. t. dot com to learn more. Welcome back to the drill down. Podcast we are joined right now by rob the ceo of chrome dex. Thanks for joining us. Here chromosomes say Joining us here at the l. d. micro conference here in los angeles next to. How do you guys make money. Next makes a product called true nitrogen true niger and it's a consumer product. You could buy it on amazon about on our website combined. Walmart true nitrogen is something called nicotinamide the side which is the safest yeah right the safest and most effective way to elevate something. A coins found in all living cells called nicotinamide.

The Drill Down
"latham" Discussed on The Drill Down
"Welcome to the drill down. We've got business stories behind stocks move. I'm cory johnson october. Eighteen gives us episode number one hundred nineteen just ahead. Zillow finds it flipping houses in a bull..

Rants and Randomness with Luvvie Ajayi
"latham" Discussed on Rants and Randomness with Luvvie Ajayi
"You <Speech_Female> <Speech_Telephony_Female> <Speech_Telephony_Male> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Female> know just <Speech_Telephony_Female> places where our <Speech_Telephony_Female> stories being told. <Speech_Telephony_Female> We're not getting their own <Speech_Telephony_Female> story. <Speech_Female> And <Speech_Telephony_Female> i love it. You bring <Speech_Telephony_Female> depot here. <Speech_Female> We'll get <Speech_Telephony_Female> tell their story. <Speech_Telephony_Female> The way they want to tell their <Speech_Telephony_Female> story versus <Speech_Telephony_Female> someone else telling their story. <Speech_Telephony_Female> So i'm thankful <Speech_Telephony_Female> because i <Speech_Telephony_Male> learned so much about <Speech_Telephony_Female> people who <Speech_Telephony_Female> would <Speech_Telephony_Female> never learn about <Speech_Telephony_Female> if they weren't <Speech_Telephony_Female> you know in conversation <Speech_Telephony_Female> with you in this <Speech_Telephony_Female> way so <Speech_Telephony_Female> thank you for creating <Speech_Telephony_Female> or <Speech_Telephony_Female> To <Speech_Telephony_Female> to share and <Speech_Telephony_Female> to be girlfriends <Speech_Telephony_Female> it's just <Speech_Telephony_Female> catch up <Speech_Telephony_Female> Because it <Silence> really <SpeakerChange> is doing <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> so glad <Speech_Female> to hear that that was my mission <Speech_Female> for ranch <Speech_Female> was to <SpeakerChange> have conversation <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> with interesting people <Speech_Female> with <SpeakerChange> my friends <Speech_Female> who happen to be interesting <Speech_Female> people like you so <Speech_Female> he <Speech_Music_Female> really <Speech_Telephony_Female> you every <Speech_Telephony_Female> day <Speech_Female> with you <Speech_Female> literally <Speech_Telephony_Female> had to talk to people <Speech_Female> and i just can't <Speech_Telephony_Female> wait. 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Rants and Randomness with Luvvie Ajayi
"latham" Discussed on Rants and Randomness with Luvvie Ajayi
"Reinspired that you walk in your truth you don't bite your tongue. Everything come as as as you feel call to put it out into the world and believe that the words that you use because you know gifted writer we know this a cultural critic and I think a a seer. Like i really do think that you see sort of the human condition and you find a way to Tacking ch- in a snack away. The human condition for us to like examine the also to to laugh and i gift because really do a lower. When there's times where it's like helping away the this moment that still like intense or to look at you. Find a way to examine it and speak truth to it. Go that off. S medicine lovely. Like whether you know that that's like you know. Part of your. You know wellness sorcery or that is that is really like a lot of people i know. Have you been in them. Sure you've heard this directly from from a lot of people say like you know. I got this lobby or i would. I was i or i. Was you know upset. And i went to the pockets. Every news right away in And i know like the way i was. The podcast is Like if i do chores or whatever. I just listen you know and it just keeps me places so this is this is what we do collectively. But you are in your Your calling and it's so beautiful to see on a daily. I'm they social media because allowed us to get the richness of what you can offer us. Gosh she just made. My whole heart smiled. Thank you so much in. I mean. I'm i'm inspired by you. Because you show different type of care for the world like the deep that whole mother and the mother. You're absolutely doing that every single day. And you've actually inspired me. You pat the reason. Why ask my guests. What do you do to take care of yourself as like the closing question. Because how you embody self care and not just as a buzzword but as life itself i mean i was like you i got a really elevate that so. How do you do self care. What do you do to take care of yourself as your mothering. Mothers and bringing new life into this world that And i love this question. The answers that your guests getting into You know. I am really like i know. I seem like a person that likes people and like people love to be alone so I spend i try to end. Mike kept early enough to where nobody's up yet or around south and not talk and not interact just kind of like what i will talk with you that time. Kinda like pray often. Sometimes i try to fit like if it's warm enough that You know i various. I'll sit there and And then i kind to reflect the time. I don't like to rush you know my mornings you know. That's really what kind of tone for my day and And i would definitely say that a big piece of myself care. Practice is also not so much what i do what. I don't do i'm i'm really. I know you're being on this too. Is like this life. Edit right like a kind of you know saying no and making sure it's To just you know stay really really tight with what's aligned with my intention and a lot of time that means that when you're examining those things something that feels like. Oh this is awesome but it but you know you shouldn't be doing it. You know what. I mean like saying no to that and knowing that you know what the right configuration and the exact. You know sort of Culmination of whatever this is will show up for me in a way that i can. You know handle it and in a time frame that i can take on because this is not the right time or by feel pushed or you know it's too much and i'm good at pushing as you know but at certain points just like you'd have to give and i think you're a great example of this too. It's like we can be on planes and trained Automobiles and whatever but at a certain point you know there's there's a certain Rest always so even when there's a lot of travel there's that's right so to me it's about like punctuating the day like that like thinking about in facilitating my knees and figuring out when i'm gonna wanna break and building that in and not over scheduling You mean that. Sometimes i won't have like back to back to back. But even when i'm doing back to back is what gives me joy. I'm doing back back right. You might have really pack day. But i feel energized at the end and then i might have a day where i have to do something. That's so intense that even though it's one thing i don't schedule around because i know what it's gonna take of me to do so. It was like figuring out that balance. And i think we all need to do that. I feel like what what tires me. What inspires ray allows me to you. Know feel more fulfillment and that carries you wanted today. That gives your energy but the things that have to do that. We just something just have to be right. Those things that i build in some Portal the telephone around the area. Like i make sure that. I built it. Whether it's like i'm gonna go for a walk or i'm going to eat lunch outside or a phone call from a friend or read a book. You know whatever that is right. I figured out. And that's the goal and that's to me that's real self care at the moment to moment basis check in with ourselves and figure out. Okay what do. I need to fill most building this moment. And what's gonna take care of my needs right now. you know. that's how i try to do it. That it's not just like oh let me go back the way. I try like to be honest. It's like you know a lot of it is just you know. I don't have to deal with those issues. if. I'm like the moment to moment making sure that i could to too much on the plate right like physical. That can stay. Let me look that. He gets adalah entirely. And i know that this is something we have to get around. I'm with you as well. And i and i love it. Also share this with the community like how at it and how you know. I'm really really busy right now. But i'm also doing this and so it's really important for people to see but they look up to how they do these practices. I love it you. Also you know. Share the insights of Of how you stay focused but also how you can get like ninety three keynotes and it went right. Yeah right listen. you're awesome. You're awesome you're awesome. I'm so glad you it's come on rant and drop some gyms on the people and really. This is really insightful. Because i don't think People talk about black women's maternal health enough and we don't have enough dulas so you are serving as representation that does not really exist in droves for us so thank you for that thank you for that and and for the but also remind people Really quickly that. This is not our stuff like our ancestors were the ones who are delivering all the babies we were the ones who birthed this nation. So this is our work so even though you might think for you may see like more black. I mean more white women out here. Join this work. This is our work to be claim. So if you feel in any particular way call to do it please. Pursuant because like levy said we do need more black with it out here supporting and doing this work because we need people who look like us to support who understand our unique needs. It's so critical so as well for also it's inviting type of conversation in Because i also believe in what you said that you know are black.

Rants and Randomness with Luvvie Ajayi
"latham" Discussed on Rants and Randomness with Luvvie Ajayi
"Come through all right back to the podcast so explain to people what a dula is. What is your gallery as a dula. Yes so a dula provides educational support Advocacy physical support Emotional support and education Really to help a laboring mother or couple Prepare themselves for the. We usually work with people When they're in. I would say like a lot of people contract by like twenty to twenty five weeks pregnancy. And then they start to work with practitioner dula to support them educationally and prepare them for the process of labor and birth and then we support in early postpartum period as well making sure that you know breastfeeding is established if moms are deciding the breastfeed and and to make sure that they're they're healthy and the outcome went smoothly and then we also track for Mental health Mtr native google store various because those things can happen along the birth continuum just because of how our society is. A lot of women. Don't have support a lot of women have to go back to work. Ten days after birth In this country so we're there to kind of ellison that policy gaps that occur as a result of our modern living. That is you know woman. So we really show up to help support within so they feel really fulfilled and they can have an extra set of hands and someone who is knowledgeable about what they're experiencing while they while they go through it so while a woman is in childbirth. Her dulas her advocate the person who the doctrine no this is what she wants this what she doesn't want Here's what she needs. Why are dulas now matt of like life and death especially for black women. Yes so it's really interesting. That in the past i would say two years. There's been a spotlight on black maternal health. There's been a twenty five year increase in the maternal mortality as it relates to black women. And it's gotten to a critical mass right. And so the cdc declared a state of emergency for black women and that We are three to four times more likely than white. Women during childbirth or to childbirth related causes that number jumps to twelve times in new york city. Oh my dad number. Yeah number is five times in the uk so we know that it's not just a us phenomenon. This is a global phenomena. But this is happening here and in places where you would think there's so much access and so much resource wire black women dying right that it's not you know. Economics aren't protecting us. Educationist protecting us whereas with white women he's protective factors right having a high school education And having You know economic stability has having a partner relationship all these things actually improve the the birth outcomes for white women but when it comes to black women none of these things factor we can have gleiberman. Who are uber successful. And and wealthy like freedom williams have her life in danger. And you could have you know women who Are you know economically challenged or have like you know not a lotta economical and they have the same You know outcome potentially right and so bad doesn't make sense but what we know is that it's because of racial bias. We know that there has been a standing look there's been a longstanding gays on black women bodies as stronger and that we don't feel pain and that these these are medical journalists from like this the seventeen and eighteen hundreds like these are believes that have been embedded in the medical system for hundreds of years and And we've been treated in this way that we could be dismissed and so when a woman asks for pain medication For instance right. She might wait for hours versus for white counterpart. We will get it immediately. Ryden more. We'll see for instance a woman who will You know in surgery. Like some of her internal. She might get like laceration internally. That might go completely. Unnoticed were a lot of things happen and so but of black women are dying not when they leave the hospital inside a hospital and sometimes within you know when they go home right as a result of Some of the surgical outcomes infection all kinds of things but mainly what what the dual job is really in this and is to be on the front lines to really be able to look for and help The doctors in this sense be able to Track markers that might put them at risk. So if a woman that risk for high blood pressure for instance which is called pre eclampsia in pregnancy is can lead to seizures and that could lead to death right. So it's something that we'd like to get a hold of early on and if we see that a mom has high blood pressure the only Curious to deliver the baby so lots of times You know women are super stressed. They are dealing with all kinds of pressures. And so we'll see a lot of mom fall into that That window of being pre eclampsia was also happens is that we see physical markers of this like you'll see Older face hands are swollen swollen. If you're going to the doctor not that frequently they might not see these things right but you're will right and so they can say okay. Let's do let's test. you're you're in. Let's do these like all these diagnostic tests with the doctor and be able to confirm something and course correct right. So it's our job to kind of help dylan these gaps because if the patients aren't really clear that something's wrong and doctors aren't really paying attention or they they can't pay attention because there's they're overworked or they're just like not you know they don't have the bedside manner or the care to these women. Then we have to fill those gaps right and not to say that all the way it falls on a do and that's really their their job is to protect you know Women from dying. We can't do that ourselves. But i would say that there. It's it's critically important role in this stage that we're in In the maternal health crisis because we know that black women are one that are dying we see the the numbers are scattering right and so if we can get it right for black women. Everybody's tells him. I like us to focus on us. And when i when. I say that i'm thinking about like You know the disability act right like when when they wanted to put curb cuts inside. Walk like people were with like a. Why would we do that. It's going to destroy the infrastructure. But guess what they ended up putting her cut since i walked right. So when you get to the coroner if you're in a wheelchair you can dip down and then cross. The street gets either side. That's a life decision. If you're disabled right benefits now women ryan women were pushing you know. Older women pushing their groceries and the middle cart. You know Kids on their little tricycles and and Bicycle everybody right benefits because we were working to like meet the of the marginalized right and so if we think about this crisis in the same way like it's it's not a black women's issue it's human rights issue and if we look at it like okay we need to get this right for black women. Everybody will benefit so we so. That's really what i believe. The role the doors now is to make sure that they're prepared to navigate the waters and serve the unique needs of black women specifically so that they can make sure that not only they survived. The birthday thrive afterwards right and that that process is protected and that they understand what informed consent looks like. They understand what they're right bar. They understand how to advocate for themselves. And the people in the room to advocate because we see a lot of layers of Of bias playout and racism. We see where black fathers don't feel safe and being able to speak up for their partners because of being called with the security being called on them yes so people don't realize that this is so layered separation is really something that happened and we see this happening in our government right. This happens in the birth base where a mother will be separated from the people who love her that there can be so that she's you know in a situation where she's dominating or she coerced but you know you can't make an informed decision and you can't really consent you know if you're if you don't have all the information of what happens is that you know are women won't get the information that they need to make a decision it'll be forced upon them so more more likely they're being coerced or they're cooperating but they're not consenting right and so we need to have these conversations about consent you know and and metoo in spaces like The hospital too because we see a lot of birth trauma happen where women are retraumatize. Who've had you know sexual or Sexual or or domestic abuse like all types of things have happened that that could be re triggered in these setting because of how dominant and how they're You know white male centric it right. So there's this this supremacy that that drives in the medical system and people don't want to acknowledge that and so we we need to find protective factors for black women specifically because we know that they used to experiment on our bodies. We have read right. Yeah and centrally. So so you've you've do you've been dula for like side khalid. I remember like you when he was being born. Dj calot was on snapchat. And you were in the room and and you've been do love for alicia keys for for regular women for the people who are not celebrities for the people who are not wealthy..

Rants and Randomness with Luvvie Ajayi
"latham" Discussed on Rants and Randomness with Luvvie Ajayi
"Him in. This burst sensor on fourteenth street. It since close. But it's right next door to this like very popular nightclub called Darby or up and down. My son was always thinking was born in nightclubs and then You know this which. I guess matches the fact that he's a dj now but the the amazing thing about it though was that it was a free standing birth sensor and i went there deliver my baby six hours later i was walking home and there was just yes and it was amazing because it was like mid wine and there were nurses They had dulas as part of the parents. I didn't have a dula Because i had so much education that attending this place for your birth you had to do. Twenty one hours of education deliver their own. And i was just fresh out of school so you know i was like very studious about the whole process. And that became i. Think the solidifying factor for me like my son's birth being so incredible having like been visited by my ancestors like right at the time of transition into delivery. Tell me about that. I wanna i wanna know my god. It was beautiful. It was like So my water broke at twelve thirty. A m okay and after around for like. I don't know six seven hours all day. Because walking really helps the baby settle in talbot and so she was already a weekly and it was a full moon. And so i was like okay. This is a really good time to try to like his baby down. Full moons a lot of babies born in the full moon because of the pressure the air and so You'll find a lot of places are full. You know when it's a full moon with women going into labor. So i was hoping to like align with that energy and i got home and i had been walking all day and i was like you know. They're tired like david he's even come. We wanted to go on vacation and so we were like you know what your punishment when you get here because we supposed to be already gone And so anyway. I'm sitting in the bed and i said to myself you know i just said you know i'm just gonna pray god you know i just wouldn't love a sign because i just i just don't know what this baby is still inside at this point. Ready i. I would really love to meet him and And twenty minutes later was while helio jackson twenty minutes later my water broke and my son's father was like european the pets like new. I'm not saying that you get out of bed. I got out and stood up and it was like have you ever thought that eddie miranda when your water broke it was like that it was like a good goodson more i was like oh my god. It's on tv so then At that point we're like exciting so we were calling people like promoters. Y'all always going down on the baby's coming you know we're calling our family. I'm not tired at all. I'm so wired. Because i know the baby's coming soon and call the midwife and they're like you need to go to sleep because it's going to be work later and i was like. Oh i'm not tired. I stayed up forest and watch jazz documentary. Like six in the morning and then Buying lizard feeling something around six thirty. In the morning i go take a shower. You know. just kind of pacing thing. And then i started to People up in the house. Because i was like okay. I'm getting intent around a It was getting nine o'clock. I think we left Okay so we're in the taxi right and Like seven blocks guys. It's not that crazy like let's just get there. We get there and And in the midwest. Just watch very calmly right for this and that period as i insurance and then Want them there. I would say probably close to one o'clock. My son was born at one of nine That that i felt this right before. I was gonna push me. I felt this like ring. In the shape of a horseshoe and it was founded me from above. If you can imagine like when somebody's staring at you so hard that you're about to ignite who was looking at me right. I felt this heat. And i looked up and i see this halo of ancestors. This new four black panther but they had their.

Rants and Randomness with Luvvie Ajayi
"latham" Discussed on Rants and Randomness with Luvvie Ajayi
"They all worked together. They love each other money. They do all these things together but their their relationships start when they go to g four schools these elite boarding schools and when they go to university together and so she was like you need to be in those settings. And so you need to be around these people who you know have Access and wealth. And you need to be exposed to that and also claim that for yourself and so she you know made me apply for this. merit scholarships tend to school. And i was like mom is in colorado like why would i do that right because i wanted to go to school with all my friends locally and she was like no. We're gonna do this. You're gonna you're gonna fly because this is a great opportunity and lo and behold i I received a merit scholarship. And so that meant that before years All my tuition with covered For boarding school. And then we had to pay for was like my books and my flight phone so my mom was like You're going you know so so it was actually really cool. There was a bunch of people from my home found. Who were there. So i did have older brothers from oakland It was jerry. I mean i was probably there would definitely like under ten black people in the entire school and That was interesting. 'cause i came from you know oakland is with like it's black you know it's like lacking black so it was like really. It was a shift. You know but It was also one where i kinda was primed for the experiences. I would have later in life. Like i would be able to be very comfortable in the corporate setting have to float through and in these other kind of elite spaces. I was prepared to that And then also for like college because of the workload you know you're really Being in in that kind of like How i mean college setting in a boarding school you just learned how to be really responsible and Your parents aren't there. You're doing everything yourself. Like starting at four and like the thing that i would do my chores at home. It was like i do these things and then some to look after myself including school is so bored in school. Essentially force you to grow up in a way. You have to become responsible for yourself. Yeah i'd become really responsible really early on. And i was the elvis rate and you know birth order so important right like the eldest child. It's always the you know like students. Responsibility assumes all you know. It's like the happened in the house. it's my fault right. Even if i'm not there She's in the house. Actually he hasn't done it but Yeah so. I think that that was really you know Hurt of developing drive the hat right and And also i think just like a mother who was an aries like doesn't take no for an answer also like really instilled in me Get occasion to to push board is so you graduated from college. Gotcha visual arts and environmental science degree. What was next for you. Oh what was next At the time. I was working with like the brooklyn center for the urban environment and audubon sensor just writing like Curriculum in science for early childhood education. And i was doing that with like the The new york city board of education as well and then I met my son's father and he also would that columbia but like years before me and so we had some like different. You know like circles kinda like started to You know sort of Encircle each other communities surgeon circle other and we ended up meeting and You know it didn't take us long before we ended up pregnant with my son. And so i was still young. You know like twenty three and I wasn't planning to have a child then but it was definitely not wanted. You know. I wanted my son. But i was totally like Okay i'm still a kid. I he my mom's help you know and Again you know. I was catapulted into adulthood by becoming a mother At twenty three and so I had my son in new york city. I was pregnant at During the time where you know most people will want to go home. But i was really determined to live here and to and to be in new york and so i I stayed in new york. I delivered.

The Knife Junkie Podcast
"latham" Discussed on The Knife Junkie Podcast
"Gotten so many from my brother and a whole lot for my parents and a whole lot from my brother in law and whole off from my wife i decided to just represent one from each and then I've had a lot of designers. And makers on the show and some of them have given gifts. And that's why i wanted to show those put those together. These are the knives. That's good friends. That i've made since doing this with other channels Have sent me and and also listeners of the show viewers of the show and each one of them means a lot to me just because they were sent to me out of the kindness of someone's heart out of enthusiasm that shared Well that shared enthusiasm for knives. It means a lot to me but they are all really awesome knives to like. It's it's not like someone's like oh bob. I love knives to here. Take my old Take mile gas station right. These are all sweet. So let's get started. I was a gift of from our good friends. Do this was probably the first gift. I got from a listener of the show. Our good friends do he has a company up in vermont stone in steel and they sell knives at gun shows in such. He reached out to me. Said i carry in my back pocket. The big brother of this. You think you want something like it. And i said yes and it is. The spider co delica worn cliff with the edge. Now stu asked me. He's like do you want the in gore or the delica. And i love big knives but i opted for the delicate because i just know myself and i don't carry my endure but i do carry my delegates and these ride beautifully in the back left pocket next. Mr bandanna so. I knew that i'd be carrying this. He sent it to me. And i was carrying it for about a year maybe a year and change and then whilst perusing smokey mountain knife works i saw that they also and i say also because these are not fly taint him titanium skills these are rocky. Mount are Smokey mountain knife works titanium scales. They probably make them in their rough rider. Shoppers but thereafter aftermarket scales. I wanted to address this knife up. A little means lots in the it had that The black grivory handle on it works great and and it's nice and light but i just wanted to special it up a little so i got these teams. This is a great knife. Stu thanks so much. That of the spidey spider t spicy edge. Teeth are wicked. I love this. That's gonna sit over here on the left. Next christine from women carry knives awesome channel. Great great lady. I was commenting on her video of this knife. This is the cr. Kt heat as a man a classy little knife. I i love that thing. Of course this is designed by jesper boxes in it has all of his sort of design signatures a charming little knife. And it's a it's got this. What do you call it Jarrin handles it's got a nice analyzed blueback spacer deep carry pocket clip with counter sunk screws and flat head screwed tops. Sister great knife. It's got a it's got a thin slice blade will. It's actually kinda stout her small blade but it gets to a really thin edge. Great night. I commented on her thing. I love at night forgotten company. One in shoes like gaming gimme your address. And she sent it to me and i thought how how cool is that that was one of my first interactions. Were of the type with a fellow youtuber. Like that's so cool man. She obviously likes the knife from how she reviewed it. And you know. She recognized that i liked the to. I guess 'cause i kept talking about it. And she sent it to mean. That was awesome so definitely check out. Women carry knives on youtube. She has a great channel and her husband. Therapeutic edge also has a great channel next gift from our good friend. Mike latham mike latham. is the owner and proprietor and mastermind. Of's collector knives dot net collector knives. Dot net is a online purveyor. Where you can get raised and cutlery knives and you can get a lot of the slipped joint in traditional style knives that we all love. Mike also designs knives and collaborates with fox and lyon steel and the at the italian knife makers to come out with some beautiful modern slipped joins this Em listening to the show. And i was going off. I was in my rough rider. Phase and rough rider. Marbles are jason. So he sent me this really cool elephant toenail by marvel's with this beautiful Green bone that's been sort of staggering. That's not real stag kind of made it with evil beautiful stout elephant toenail nice elephant toenail is a big broad slip joint with a spear point. Blade that's quite broad and and a giant You know kind of pill shaped handle and Really fits the hand well at the way. The myth goes it's used for on ships like put this big blade On top of a piece of rope and then countdown it with a mallet. Apparently that's not actually true. I really like the idea of that. Being crew of but really this was used a lot by a midwestern electricians at the height of its At the height of this designs of popularity got that big spear point blade and then you have a smaller very hard to extract and quite sharp and this has a lot of character says a lot of character. Thanks mike. He sent me a package a while. Back with four or five rough riders in it and this. He heard my junkie talk and he was like. I gotta gotta. I gotta help disguise jones out. He sent me the spend all right next ju. The knife whisper good friend of the show and another guy with a great channel. He's hilarious and he's got gray tasted knives and he offers a great insight packaged in humor. Or what better. Way to get inside packaged humor. He sent me this just out of the kindness of his heart. This is the severity dogma. Now i had the severity shredder which has a similar similarly unique uniquely shaped clip point blade with a giant opening hall and i liked it Especially for the uniqueness of the blade but just you know left me a little bit cold with knives. That i know. I'm not going to carry my sent right pocket. I like them smaller I.

WTMJ 620
"latham" Discussed on WTMJ 620
"Terry Goff is well is two first round picks and a third round pick this year's NFL draft. Heavily tmj paella w dot com Time Saver. Traffic roads are slick, some mostly snow covered. There are some dry stretches of payment, but a couple of crashes to be aware of 43 north bound just past capital. There's crash on the right shoulder. There also got one North bound 43 at the exit to North Avenue Sheriff's squad is on the scene. 94 South found a crash at Latham has the two left lanes. Blacks of slow stretch past that stretches well, 43 South found. This is on the rock freeway in Waukesha County, just a couple of miles beyond Racine Avenue. The right lane blocked because of a crash and then in Kenosha County, near the state line crash on the ramp from Highway 1 65 to 94 North Island again. Snow covered stretches across the system. So you're gonna want to take some extra time if you're heading out today, Traffic is sponsored by CBD. American Shaman signed relief in the caring hands of your local CBD. American shaman. US. Hemp Authority approved CBD American Shaman Life is better with the feather. WTMJ five day forecast. Fleet Farm Storm Team alert. Winter Storm warning continues for much of southeast Wisconsin until six o'clock tonight. Winter weather Advisory for Dodge found Election Jefferson counties also until six snow continuing tapering off in Lane High 33 tonight, then mostly cloudy alone. 23 tomorrow Sonny Hi 32 Tuesday. Sonny also high of 32 Wednesday. Partly sunny high of 35. Then for.

The Nocturnists
Not Cut Out for This
"Pimping if you've ever been to medical school a word you've heard before i don't love the word and i'm not sure i love the practice but sometimes i wonder. Is there a better way to assess where our learners stand. This is the knock strenous stories from the world of medicine. I'm emily silverman on today's episode. Latham chap tells us how. She responded when her attending told her that she wasn't cut out to be a doctor. After the story lava talk more about pimping. She said she's had teams who see it. As a way to support learning and growth. And then i've also had the opposite where tend to give an residents. Really use it as a lipsey. Exactly how much you know. And how much i can poke you until you break down. But first here's lava first. Clerkship in medical school was pediatrics. I was fresh out of my step. One study period full of enthusiasm and excitement. Ready to blow everyone away. Become the next os. Lers stimson medical revolutionary. And then the pimping began for those of you. Who aren't in medicine. Pimping is this affectionate term. We use when attending residents grill. The rest of the team usually the medical students with questions about relevant topics. There were at least three of us on the service. All of whom happened to be reserved. People but i probably spoke up. The least we were on rounds on what must have been my fifth day in the attending. Who had yet to acknowledge. My presence directly finally looked at me. What does the pathophysiology behind. This patient's presentation of my voice was barely above a whisper. Yawns past seasons changed the attending grew. Tired of my headlight shaped is and moved on. It's not that i didn't know the answer. Anyone who's experienced the frankly unnecessary rigor of studying for the step. One exam knows that. I likely could have recalled far more of the pathophysiology than the attending had bargained for but it was my first time being directly pimped and i was intimidated for the rest of the clerkship. I didn't really raise my hand or answer. Questions didn't volunteer my opinions on patient plans. I figured my goal wasn't to show off. It was to demonstrate my dedication through the time i spent with my patients. My notes my thorough presentations. So i found myself in clerkship feedback and that same attending turn to me for his assessment. You seem to lack a basic level of confidence if you pursue medicine. It likely won't be in a very competitive specialty. Although i suggest that you pursue a different career path entirely your personality won't serve you here. Delivered in his harsh objective tone and eastern european accent. I felt my breath catch in my chest more with every word. I left his office. Feeling sick i cried that night in being quiet and unassuming. I'd been perceived as lacking confidence.

AI Today Podcast: Artificial Intelligence Insights, Experts, and Opinion
AI Changing the Workforce, Interview with Valerio De Stefano
"Hello and welcome to the AI today. Podcast I'm your host Kathleen. I'm your host Ronald Schmeltzer. Our guest today is of Alario Distefano. Who is professor of labor law at Keio Leuven Hive Alario? Thank you so much for joining us on today. Thanks so much for the action thrilled to have you. Welcome Valerio and thanks for joining us. We'd like to start by having you introduce yourself to our listeners and tell us a little bit about your background and your current role especially as it relates to artificial intelligence for so professor of Labor Law the University of love and in Belgium and before debts I was some Offi several stage National Labor Office. Which is a you and specialized agency that deals with everything that concerns labor and work there. I started working on technology. Impacts on labor may be working for a number of years about platform worth in the economies and he was the first time I started to reflect on automated management platforms. Vastly use technology to manage NBC. Fine Worse for instance. They allocate us in worksheets using. Gps and you. Software to constantly monitor work by collecting for instance customer reviews on cutting out of the Latham's workers debts on a meet. That very high on this that is required to be met are for taking screen shots of people that were aligned to show their clients that they are actually working so blaffer work as being used as a pilot for management by But management by algorithms is much broader than that so my interest come from the label sides and when we talk about and management and automation and occupy. It affects the workplace. Well we see that. A loss of the debate is about the wanting of jobs. How many jobs we'RE GONNA LOSE COMMISSION WE? They're all but still my competent job or not so much on the quality side of it's our technology is gonNA impact on my every day working life out not used to write my performance discipline my work so I think an researcher I am trying to fill these gaps. San One of the ways between these by editing a special issue of a journal Competitive Labor Law and policy are now that's east about automation artificial intelligence and labor protection and especially should we gather he contribution of many labor experts. Sociology economies lawyers investor relations specialists to investigate out technology. Easings reducing the workplace The facts our worke life beyond question all losing jobs. Yeah that was a really interesting insight. Thank you so much for your input on that you know. Some employers are having their employees use wearable tools that track emotions and stress by collecting data on heartbeats and the tone of voice for example. So you say that. Most of these practices should be urgently restricted because losing one's privacy especially their internal privacy mental privacy arguably threatens one of the core elements of being human. Can you explain to us why you say this? And what data. You may have to show how it can be misused so having a system the trucks your emotions and read your facial expressions or the tone of your voice is percents agreed invasion of our private sphere impersonality so basically when these options. I'm giving a data concern my most privates. In evening we will aspects the most private People of my life my thoughts my emotions and in some cases I might not even be much aware of these emotions of deceased themselves so basically managers know more about me they night about myself and these basically economic up on stress levels in general is generates huge information asymmetry now permission cement always being there at the workplace but he's really tilting the scale on the employer side. This is why. I think this should be restricted in a way because we are experiencing something that was completed America off in the past. The facts that employers manages can read my mind now so the question is not about Audi St that are be misuse. It is the very thing collection of the data. That should be called into question using us. His answer no in my mind better and faster than I women to share busy formation with other people percent abuse so we do not need data on specific issues is practice already are issues pursuing my. You know it's interesting because data is at the heart of AI and people have been freely giving away their data for many years in exchange for free services. And I think for a while we weren't even thinking about it we were just signing up giving away information leading different companies and systems and apps that we were using track us and didn't think twice about it but what happens when the workplaces start requiring employees to use these tools that collect data on them you know such as facial recognition technology or wearable tools that are able to track a variety of different things. This is where it starts to get. Maybe a little bit more gray where we're not necessarily giving it out so freely but almost being more fired too. So what have you seen discussed around this subject with regards to laws and regulations so first of all as a lawyer? I feed the assumption that people even customers even as the mets F- truly consented to give away all. These data is percent questionable. Now when we started to get away those day that when we hey member of facebook or twitter or whatever we did we could not imagine how far reaching implications of data could be an Audi. St could use it was not a manageable of the point. And even if this was describing fine prints in thousands of pages of terms of references. Nobody haven't read those sense of Serres. Now if we want to give you becky ambulance seeker lawyer. I mean it can be enough. Yes you gave your consent to even read the fine print so bad for you but as a society any tens of policy we need also to question much consent in our bailable and valued consent loss when we start to all these away now acids from days when it comes to employment fierce. Give bits even more complicated because employment is percent. Somebody us. Fowler's augured the other party at employers in any legal system as some amount of authority over workers they can be supplying the workers. They can monitor their work. The director work so it is already unbalanced situation. And when it comes to employment because of these unbalance consent is really never to be taken for goods in the sense that most people don't have a choice whether to work or not whether to apply for a job or not whether to be subject to certain vises tools than that monitoring techniques or not so there is not each choice and therefore there is not a free

AP 24 Hour News
Governor gives some Florida beaches green light to reopen
"In Florida the governor has lifted restrictions on going to the beach as long as social distancing is practiced some of the first beaches to reopen are in northern Florida mayor Charlie Latham in Jacksonville beach says they'll be open from six to eleven A. M. and five to eight PM the whole point of having the two thirds of the break up of time a little bit so that we don't see the large crowds here in Jacksonville mayor Lenny curry points out no crowds of more than fifty we'll get back to life as we know it but we must be patient other more high profile beaches in South Florida including Miami beach were closed by

AP News Radio
NBA players to receive 25% less in paychecks starting May 15
"There the English NBA had drama been premier players criticism over league will see clubs baffling twenty some have five beaches discussed status percent were of the their open corona hung paychecks like last virus a cloud testing month taken during over required out the team starting spring all and may break scenarios season fifteenth and some that the now could first of the allow first direct the closure season page hit to is to their to resume reopen salaries jets from because are June GM in of Kevin northern at the the corona earliest Cheveldayoff Florida virus with pandemic explained the aim mayor of Charlie completing up often the Latham decision all told fixtures was in the finalized Jacksonville team in September Friday beach the in aspirations a says board he of was governors of losing they'll the league be meeting the open desire is from restarting six and to play was to done eleven on in June concert AM and eighth reiterated with and the national five clubs basketball that to in in eight the January three Players PM professional Association after the whole getting leagues point below ankle of having the surgery players premier the two will league thirds be and paid growing of in the have full weary break been told up on by of the the may time the English first rehab a little football bit league the so cutback that that we big don't may in see sixteenth buff salary the walks large has away been crowds is from expected the fourteen earliest here in for Jacksonville some training time million sessions in response mayor dollars are Lenny recommended to it curry the is NBA now to start points a shut free out agent down no crowds if there is it no started of expectation more you March than want fifty eleventh to play by the again English the data the leagues regular he's for Duval that one season any of the county few bands would've remaining ended is will encouraging be Wednesday players allowed into and from two when stadiums hundred the for team now fifty moved from we nine when Atlanta need games to games stay have to the can Winnipeg yet course be to played be played in again twenty and eleven as continue efforts if none taking continue of the and precautions remaining is beloved regular to contain season in this we'll city games the get spread for are back his played of to the big corona life the hits league's as we virus players know it and would lose the but joy we about hi must with Mike eight be which hundred patient Reeves he played million other the dollars game more in high gross profile personal salary mail beaches I'm Josh in when South Rowntree a packed Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
NBA players to receive 25% less in paychecks starting May 15
"There the English NBA had drama been premier players criticism over league will see clubs baffling twenty some have five beaches discussed status percent were of the their open corona hung paychecks like last virus a cloud testing month taken during over required out the team starting spring all and may break scenarios season fifteenth and some that the now could first of the allow first direct the closure season page hit to is to their to resume reopen salaries jets from because are June GM in of Kevin northern at the the corona earliest Cheveldayoff Florida virus with pandemic explained the aim mayor of Charlie completing up often the Latham decision all told fixtures was in the finalized Jacksonville team in September Friday beach the in aspirations a says board he of was governors of losing they'll the league be meeting the open desire is from restarting six and to play was to done eleven on in June concert AM and eighth reiterated with and the national five clubs basketball that to in in eight the January three Players PM professional Association after the whole getting leagues point below ankle of having the surgery players premier the two will league thirds be and paid growing of in the have full weary break been told up on by of the the may time the English first rehab a little football bit league the so cutback that that we big don't may in see sixteenth buff salary the walks large has away been crowds is from expected the fourteen earliest here in for Jacksonville some training time million sessions in response mayor dollars are Lenny recommended to it curry the is NBA now to start points a shut free out agent down no crowds if there is it no started of expectation more you March than want fifty eleventh to play by the again English the data the leagues regular he's for Duval that one season any of the county few bands would've remaining ended is will encouraging be Wednesday players allowed into and from two when stadiums hundred the for team now fifty moved from we nine when Atlanta need games to games stay have to the can Winnipeg yet course be to played be played in again twenty and eleven as continue efforts if none taking continue of the and precautions remaining is beloved regular to contain season in this we'll city games the get spread for are back his played of to the big corona life the hits league's as we virus players know it and would lose the but joy we about hi must with Mike eight be which hundred patient Reeves he played million other the dollars game more in high gross profile personal salary mail beaches I'm Josh in when South Rowntree a packed Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
Jets, Dustin Byfuglien agree to terminate his contract
"There the English had drama been premier criticism over league clubs baffling some have beaches discussed status were the open corona hung like last virus a cloud testing month during over required the team spring all and break scenarios season and some that now could of the allow first the closure season page is to to resume reopen jets from are June GM in Kevin northern at the earliest Cheveldayoff Florida with explained the aim mayor of Charlie completing up often Latham all told fixtures in the Jacksonville team in September beach the aspirations says he was of losing they'll the league be the open desire is from restarting six to play to eleven on June AM and eighth reiterated and five clubs that to in in eight the January three PM professional after the whole getting leagues point below ankle of having the surgery premier the two league thirds and growing of the have weary break been told up by of the the time the English rehab a little football bit league so that that we big don't may see sixteenth buff the walks large away crowds is from the fourteen earliest here in Jacksonville training million sessions mayor dollars are Lenny recommended it curry is now to start points a free out agent no crowds if there is no of expectation more you than want fifty to play by the again English the data leagues he's for Duval that one any of the county few bands remaining is will encouraging be players allowed into from when stadiums the for team now moved from we when Atlanta need to games stay to the can Winnipeg course be played in again twenty and eleven as continue efforts taking continue and precautions is beloved to contain in this we'll city the get spread for back his of to the big corona life hits as we virus know it and the but joy we hi must with Mike be which patient Reeves he played other the game more high profile personal mail beaches in when South a packed Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
Jets, Dustin Byfuglien agree to terminate his contract
"There the English had drama been premier criticism over league clubs baffling some have beaches discussed status were the open corona hung like last virus a cloud testing month during over required the team spring all and break scenarios season and some that now could of the allow first the closure season page is to to resume reopen jets from are June GM in Kevin northern at the earliest Cheveldayoff Florida with explained the aim mayor of Charlie completing up often Latham all told fixtures in the Jacksonville team in September beach the aspirations says he was of losing they'll the league be the open desire is from restarting six to play to eleven on June AM and eighth reiterated and five clubs that to in in eight the January three PM professional after the whole getting leagues point below ankle of having the surgery premier the two league thirds and growing of the have weary break been told up by of the the time the English rehab a little football bit league so that that we big don't may see sixteenth buff the walks large away crowds is from the fourteen earliest here in Jacksonville training million sessions mayor dollars are Lenny recommended it curry is now to start points a free out agent no crowds if there is no of expectation more you than want fifty to play by the again English the data leagues he's for Duval that one any of the county few bands remaining is will encouraging be players allowed into from when stadiums the for team now moved from we when Atlanta need to games stay to the can Winnipeg course be played in again twenty and eleven as continue efforts taking continue and precautions is beloved to contain in this we'll city the get spread for back his of to the big corona life hits as we virus know it and the but joy we hi must with Mike be which patient Reeves he played other the game more high profile personal mail beaches in when South a packed Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
Jets, Dustin Byfuglien agree to terminate his contract
"There the English had drama been premier criticism over league clubs baffling some have beaches discussed status were the open corona hung like last virus a cloud testing month during over required the team spring all and break scenarios season and some that now could of the allow first the closure season page is to to resume reopen jets from are June GM in Kevin northern at the earliest Cheveldayoff Florida with explained the aim mayor of Charlie completing up often Latham all told fixtures in the Jacksonville team in September beach the aspirations says he was of losing they'll the league be the open desire is from restarting six to play to eleven on June AM and eighth reiterated and five clubs that to in in eight the January three PM professional after the whole getting leagues point below ankle of having the surgery premier the two league thirds and growing of the have weary break been told up by of the the time the English rehab a little football bit league so that that we big don't may see sixteenth buff the walks large away crowds is from the fourteen earliest here in Jacksonville training million sessions mayor dollars are Lenny recommended it curry is now to start points a free out agent no crowds if there is no of expectation more you than want fifty to play by the again English the data leagues he's for Duval that one any of the county few bands remaining is will encouraging be players allowed into from when stadiums the for team now moved from we when Atlanta need to games stay to the can Winnipeg course be played in again twenty and eleven as continue efforts taking continue and precautions is beloved to contain in this we'll city the get spread for back his of to the big corona life hits as we virus know it and the but joy we hi must with Mike be which patient Reeves he played other the game more high profile personal mail beaches in when South a packed Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
EPL clubs discuss June restart and completing season
"There English had been premier criticism league clubs some have beaches discussed were the open corona last virus testing month during required spring and break scenarios some that could of the allow first the season page is to to resume reopen from are June in northern at the earliest Florida with the aim mayor of Charlie completing Latham all fixtures in Jacksonville beach the aspirations says of they'll the league be open is from restarting six to eleven on June AM eighth and five clubs to in eight the three PM professional the whole leagues point below of having the premier the two league thirds of the have break been told up by the the time English a little football bit league so that that we don't may see sixteenth the large crowds is the earliest here in Jacksonville training sessions mayor are Lenny recommended curry to start points out no crowds there is no of expectation more than fifty by the English the data leagues for Duval that any county bands is will encouraging be allowed into stadiums for now we when need to games stay the can course be played again and as continue efforts taking continue precautions to contain we'll the get spread back of to the corona life as we virus know it but we hi must Mike be patient Reeves other more high profile beaches in South Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
EPL clubs discuss June restart and completing season
"There English had been premier criticism league clubs some have beaches discussed were the open corona last virus testing month during required spring and break scenarios some that could of the allow first the season page is to to resume reopen from are June in northern at the earliest Florida with the aim mayor of Charlie completing Latham all fixtures in Jacksonville beach the aspirations says of they'll the league be open is from restarting six to eleven on June AM eighth and five clubs to in eight the three PM professional the whole leagues point below of having the premier the two league thirds of the have break been told up by the the time English a little football bit league so that that we don't may see sixteenth the large crowds is the earliest here in Jacksonville training sessions mayor are Lenny recommended curry to start points out no crowds there is no of expectation more than fifty by the English the data leagues for Duval that any county bands is will encouraging be allowed into stadiums for now we when need to games stay the can course be played again and as continue efforts taking continue precautions to contain we'll the get spread back of to the corona life as we virus know it but we hi must Mike be patient Reeves other more high profile beaches in South Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
EPL clubs discuss June restart and completing season
"There English had been premier criticism league clubs some have beaches discussed were the open corona last virus testing month during required spring and break scenarios some that could of the allow first the season page is to to resume reopen from are June in northern at the earliest Florida with the aim mayor of Charlie completing Latham all fixtures in Jacksonville beach the aspirations says of they'll the league be open is from restarting six to eleven on June AM eighth and five clubs to in eight the three PM professional the whole leagues point below of having the premier the two league thirds of the have break been told up by the the time English a little football bit league so that that we don't may see sixteenth the large crowds is the earliest here in Jacksonville training sessions mayor are Lenny recommended curry to start points out no crowds there is no of expectation more than fifty by the English the data leagues for Duval that any county bands is will encouraging be allowed into stadiums for now we when need to games stay the can course be played again and as continue efforts taking continue precautions to contain we'll the get spread back of to the corona life as we virus know it but we hi must Mike be patient Reeves other more high profile beaches in South Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
Governor gives some Florida beaches green light to reopen
"There had been criticism some beaches were open last month during spring break some of the first page is to reopen are in northern Florida mayor Charlie Latham in Jacksonville beach says they'll be open from six to eleven AM and five to eight PM the whole point of having the two thirds of the break up the time a little bit so that we don't see the large crowds here in Jacksonville mayor Lenny curry points out no crowds of more than fifty the data for Duval county is encouraging for now we need to stay the course and continue taking precautions we'll get back to life as we know it but we must be patient other more high profile beaches in South Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
Governor gives some Florida beaches green light to reopen
"There had been criticism some beaches were open last month during spring break some of the first page is to reopen are in northern Florida mayor Charlie Latham in Jacksonville beach says they'll be open from six to eleven AM and five to eight PM the whole point of having the two thirds of the break up the time a little bit so that we don't see the large crowds here in Jacksonville mayor Lenny curry points out no crowds of more than fifty the data for Duval county is encouraging for now we need to stay the course and continue taking precautions we'll get back to life as we know it but we must be patient other more high profile beaches in South Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
Governor gives some Florida beaches green light to reopen
"There had been criticism some beaches were open last month during spring break some of the first page is to reopen are in northern Florida mayor Charlie Latham in Jacksonville beach says they'll be open from six to eleven AM and five to eight PM the whole point of having the two thirds of the break up the time a little bit so that we don't see the large crowds here in Jacksonville mayor Lenny curry points out no crowds of more than fifty the data for Duval county is encouraging for now we need to stay the course and continue taking precautions we'll get back to life as we know it but we must be patient other more high profile beaches in South Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
Governor gives some Florida beaches green light to reopen
"There had been criticism some beaches were open last month during spring break some of the first page is to reopen are in northern Florida mayor Charlie Latham in Jacksonville beach says they'll be open from six to eleven AM and five to eight PM the whole point of having the two thirds of the break up the time a little bit so that we don't see the large crowds here in Jacksonville mayor Lenny curry points out no crowds of more than fifty the data for Duval county is encouraging for now we need to stay the course and continue taking precautions we'll get back to life as we know it but we must be patient other more high profile beaches in South Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I'm a Donahue

AP News Radio
Governor gives some Florida beaches green light to reopen
"Some beaches closed in Florida because of the corona virus are re opening there had been criticism some beaches were open last month during spring break some of the first page is to reopen are in northern Florida mayor Charlie Latham in Jacksonville beach says they'll be open from six to eleven A. M. and five to eight PM the whole point of having the two thirds of the break up the time a little bit so that we don't see the large crowds here in Jacksonville mayor Lenny curry points out no crowds of more than fifty the data for Duval county is encouraging for now we need to stay the course and continue taking precautions we'll get back to life as we know it but we must be patient other more high profile beaches in South Florida including Miami beach were closed by state order I bet Donahue