9 Burst results for "Laura Anne"

Monocle 24: The Urbanist
"laura anne" Discussed on Monocle 24: The Urbanist
"We start today looking at the United States and its increasingly frequent battle, especially in its western states with wildfires. The number of fires in the U.S. and the length that they burn for has been growing for decades. And it's becoming increasingly accepted that these catastrophic events are worsening as a result of climate change. Fires become a threat to cities in the area referred to as wildland, urban interfaces, where the built environment meets the natural environment. It was start to reason then that the increased risk would be accelerating outward migration. However, as writers Laura bliss and Marie patino found for a recent article in Bloomberg city labs, cartographically, focused newsletter, map lab, migration into these areas has only been increasing. Well, I'm joined now by Laura Anne Marie to learn a little bit more about this counterintuitive migration pattern. Thank you both for joining us. Laura, perhaps I can come to you first. What was the starting point for looking at this data? Did you already have an inkling that something was going on? Yeah, absolutely. The impetus for the story came from a couple of places. And one of them was actually Marie earlier this year, Maria done some really interesting work with some of our other colleagues on tracking the increased migration that we saw here in the U.S. and this is true in other parts of the world too. But the first year of pandemic really accelerated a lot of household moves and turbocharged the housing market and led to these big declines in rents and some of the price of cities. Those people were kind of flocking to move into their more spacious new homes. And part of my beat is covering environmental news and especially how it affects people who live in cities, and other kinds of communities. And I live in California, which as the world has seen has been on fire. And so I just thought, well, okay, a lot of people are moving. There's been this real accelerated migration, how many of those people have suddenly moved themselves into a much riskier area than specifically wildfire risk? Marie, let's look at some of the things that you discovered by looking at the data. You've worked with a literary physical map of the United States and across this you've overlaying the data about where people are moving to. And what did you begin to see as you did this analysis? So basically I was Laura said we had started at CD lab looking at American migration during COVID and the data we used for that is change our addresses data that comes from USPS. So the U.S. Postal Service, so they actually used to make this data, fairly public, and now it's a little bit trickier to get. So we went through another company that has high resolution basically down to the census tract data. That's called Melissa. Kind of the tricky part of it was that we had to be able to identify for the whole entire nation, what areas were most prone to fire risks. And we did that by basically looking at historical data on wildfires that we got at the national level and what we saw is that during COVID, there was about a 21% increase. It was a pretty high number in terms of people who moved within zones with a history of wildfire. So that is really the main takeaway I think. Laura Tommy is this and people moving from one house it was already in a fire race area to another house in a fire race area, not taking the opportunity to get out as it were. Or is this people migrating from cities into the countryside or into rural areas that are prone to these fires who don't quite understand where the wrist lay? What kinds of movements were you seeing? Yeah, our analysis, we were really just specifically looking at the census track level, which is about as small as you can get with census population change data here in the U.S.. So we were really just looking for the year 2020. What happened to moves into census tracks that have been touched by a wildfires last year compared to the year before? What I can say that we saw was a huge increase into these areas. So these again are areas of the U.S. with a recent wildfire history. These are areas that have burned in a wildfire in the past ten years. And the number of households that moved into those areas in the first year of COVID-19 jumped 21% in the previous year. And in terms of your specific question, what we did see was that the same areas without that recent wildfire history saw household moves decline. And so that does match up with the kind of narrative pandemic, which is that people were leaving cities, right? We really saw that with the declines in rental prices in places like New York City and in San Francisco where I live. And this kind of supercharged housing market, which, you know, housing construction is at an all time low, but where is happening here in the U.S. are in the exerts, right? The kind of fringy edges of urbanized areas. And it just so happens that particularly in western states in California in Idaho and Utah in Nevada, places like this, those kind of fringy areas are in the areas where there's the highest fire risk to people. I'm Marie tummy. So I understand how you get the sensor data and I understand that there must be records of fires. But are they produced in a way that was easy for you to overlay these two sets of information? Or did that take a lot of digging? Because I imagine that actually has somebody one authority would register a fire or the area it covered or whether they do it by neighborhood or by an area that's governed by a certain council. That could be a little bit complicated. How easy was it to hold the numbers you needed? We're actually pretty lucky about that because at least in the U.S., there is an entity that's called the national interagency fire center that keeps an intense track record of all the wildfire events of the past many decades. So they do provide and that is public facing polygons of past wildfire events. Other national level. So it was actually fairly convenient to get the full data and we only focused on the recent history. So since 2010, just because census geographies change every ten years with the new censuses. So basically, we're using the census trucks of the 2010 census and now they're going to be reshuffled with the 2020 census. So yeah, getting that wildfire data was not too tricky and overlaying it with the USPS data was fairly easy. Basically, I used software that's an open-source mapping software to be able to do all the calculations to understand the number of households moving into one area or another or the percentage of the population of a given state impacted by your wildfires, for example. Now there tell me, now you have this information. What are you going to try and do that? Do you think it's alarming? Do you think that people should be aware of the risks that potentially putting themselves their households, their families in? Or do you think this is just more an intriguing set of data? I think it is alarming. I think it's I mean, I think as someone who grew up in California and lives here, it's both shocking and not surprising. I mean, we've seen how our government.

The Michael Berry Show
"laura anne" Discussed on The Michael Berry Show
"The story of laura. Anne wilkinson raised in houston. You will recall. I had her on the air and then we did a live event with her at the rtc. She was a gymnast but then she shot up. She was too tall for gymnastics. She saw girl execute a beautiful dive. She decided she wanted to be a diver. The coach told her she was a waste of space in no good for the high school team. She went to the university of texas but she decided she wanted to pursue the olympics and pursue it. She did in two thousand at the summer olympics. It had been thirty six years. Since an american woman had won the platform diving gold and she won it with a signature style of a handstand to start the dive which years later others would still be using having seen that and respected at imitation aggressive form of flattery. She competed in the two thousand olympics. Two thousand four olympics two thousand eight olympics where. She said she retired but she came back. She made a run at the twenty twenty olympics and placed second at us nationals. She wanted to be in tokyo remember. That was delayed but that dream came to a close on june fourteenth. The houston chronicle's. David baron let me see. If i can find the article. David baron had had an interesting open. Ace it i think it was the perils of laura have come to a close she has retired or maybe she has laura wilkinson. Is our guests. Welcome thanks for having me on. What run yeah i I like the title of the dame's article that's just Very fitting. I think he meant that the positive way out. You never know what they've barrett. Sometimes he's he's. He's a little tongue in cheek. Sometimes he can jab so june fourteenth. You don't make it to the olympics. What's your motion at that point. Well i mean that was actually our final round. You had a prelims and semi round earlier in the week. And i didn't start off well so i knew it was going to be a long shot at that point. I think i kind of green dream the religious semi so you know going into final. Just i want to really enjoy it. I'm i'm here. I got here. Which is great. It's not going how i want it. But you gotta you gotta make memories gonna make the most of your gonna walk away better so i just tried to join the last few days and and it was great feedback in that environment again. It's just super special. Not something you get to be a part on very often with you. They were they were in the stands. Cheering me on it was it was pretty awesome I don't think they've kind of understood the whole capacity of what was going on but hopefully in a few years like they'll they'll understand more of the weight of it. What's the difference being forty four and being twenty four as an olympic diver. Well don't you got too much. I'm still only forty three three. I gotta i gotta take all the time. I got Funny it's not. It's really not that different. Like i mean i have longer lasting injuries but sometimes i would wake up when i first started back in like. Oh this hurts this hurts. Ono is because i'm old. And i'm like no way that hurt when i was seventeen. This is just something just sports like you get you get little tweaks and injuries and you gotta you know whether whether to rest or to work through them and i think once i kinda have recognized that it's not that i'm old that's just part of sports and doing things that are really hard on your body you're gonna have these aches and pains and kinda once i embrace that it really wasn't a big deal You know it was more like trying to overcome different injuries. That i've had i had to level cervical fusion on my neck and then twenty eighteen. It took me like a whole year to come back from that and have some nerve damage Just from the injury so stuff like that. But i've had to get through so much. My age of that makes sense well. I'm not a neurologist. But i'm guessing that once you've had major neck surgery in two thousand eighteen then diving into the water at a high rate of speed from thirty three thirty three feet above three-storey probably not the best thing for it. What would you say. Well it's funny. 'cause i was asking the doctor. People don't always understand what i do. They're like oh it's like swimming. I'm like no. I kinda jump off a building. We hit the water. And it feels like steamatic's it's like thirty miles an hour. But i'm trying to explain to the doctor when i do to make sure he understands what i'm asking. They come back to you and he goes well. We've cleared football players for full-contact. I've cleared bull riders. I've done and i was like okay. He understands that. I'm talking about high impact. And so he told me he goes. Look i'm not worried about the part. That's is because i have a titanium plate in there. Goes that part solid. That's not going anywhere everything else. There might be an issue you know but that's just normal. That's just part of diving. So at that point i felt i felt pretty comfortable but it was still scary. 'cause i've never known another athlete back on platform after having a surgery like that. So it was kind of this uncharted territory. And now i'm a mom of four. And so i you know i felt like i had to be really smart about it. I can't afford to do this again. So i took my time i worked back. Really slowly. There's a little nerve wracking at times. But it became normal after a while. You busted up foot pretty bad in two thousand before you won gold which kind of kerri strug style added to the glory of what you die. Does that still hurt. No i mean. I lose feeling and it sometimes but i broke it in three places. And they got a little mangled but You know it's like it's like having the the worst cars you know. You've got great stories that go along with it and so there's kind of that the pride and the injury i think because it reflects that time and how you got through it. I kind of feel like that's how all the challenges are the perils day bearing calls it There's always something but you know you can either look at it as like. This is terrible awful. And i feel bad for yourself and be a victim or you can say okay. How is this going to make me stronger. How can i get through this. And it's going to equip me for what's coming next. I once i've been able to turn that mindset around it becomes more of this challenge to find the way through it and how it's going to make me better. The book is life at ten meters lessons from an olympic champion. You might have put that in feet so the rest of us would know what that actually is laura. Nobody knows what a very down right. A little I guess i should be embarrassed to say this. But it's the sort of thing that i can't seem to get out of my way from doing. I see the cover of the book. And i send a text to eric. Your husband with a photo. And i said eric. Why didn't the publishers choose somebody with straight feet. This woman's toes or busted up it. He goes loris toes from the injury in two thousand. I said oh. Yeah of course yes. Of course it is. they don't they. Don't sit to straight there anymore. Yeah but ten meters. Your metrics challenged. That's about thirty three feet or the top of a three-storey four-storey building like the fourth floor. The top of the restored building. But you you coach As young women. I don't know if it's young men also coach youth in diving. That's that's the began right. Overcoming injuries overcoming setbacks. I mean that that's key you can tell a story know. A coach teacher mentor tutor. When they can refer back to their own lives as to what they've done a much powerful example right definitely and my coach always did that with us and he was actually an olympian for candida and he was an alternate.

The Michael Berry Show
"laura anne" Discussed on The Michael Berry Show
"The story of laura. Anne wilkinson raised in houston. You will recall. I had her on the air and then we did a live event with her at the rtc. She was a gymnast but then she shot up. She was too tall for gymnastics. She saw girl execute a beautiful dive. She decided she wanted to be a diver. The coach told her she was a waste of space in no good for the high school team. She went to the university of texas but she decided she wanted to pursue the olympics and pursue it. She did in two thousand at the summer olympics. It had been thirty six years. Since an american woman had won the platform diving gold and she won it with a signature style of a handstand to start the dive which years later others would still be using having seen that and respected at imitation aggressive form of flattery. She competed in the two thousand olympics. Two thousand four olympics two thousand eight olympics where. She said she retired but she came back. She made a run at the twenty twenty olympics and placed second at us nationals. She wanted to be in tokyo remember. That was delayed but that dream came to a close on june fourteenth. The houston chronicle's. David baron let me see. If i can find the article. David baron had had an interesting open. Ace it i think it was the perils of laura have come to a close she has retired or maybe she has laura wilkinson. Is our guests. Welcome thanks for having me on. What run yeah i I like the title of the dame's article that's just Very fitting. I think he meant that the positive way out. You never know what they've barrett. Sometimes he's he's. He's a little tongue in cheek. Sometimes he can jab so june fourteenth. You don't make it to the olympics. What's your motion at that point. Well i mean that was actually our final round. You had a prelims and semi round earlier in the week. And i didn't start off well so i knew it was going to be a long shot at that point. I think i kind of green dream the religious semi so you know going into final. I want to really enjoy it. I'm i'm here. I got here. Which is great. It's not going how i want it. But you gotta you gotta make memories gonna make the most of your gonna walk away better so i just tried to join the last few days and and it was great feedback in that environment again. It's just super special. Not something you get to be a part on very often with you. They were they were in the stands. Cheering me on it was it was pretty awesome I don't think they've kind of understood the whole capacity of what was going on but hopefully in a few years like they'll they'll understand more of the weight of it. What's the difference being forty four and being twenty four as an olympic diver. Well don't you got too much. I'm still only forty three three. I gotta i gotta take all the time. I got Funny it's not. It's really not that different. Like i mean i have longer lasting injuries but sometimes i would wake up when i first started back in like. Oh this hurts this hurts. Ono is because i'm old. And i'm like no way that hurt when i was seventeen. This is just something just sports like you get you get little tweaks and injuries and you gotta you know whether whether to rest or to work through them and i think once i kinda have recognized that it's not that i'm old that's just part of sports and doing things that are really hard on your body you're gonna have these aches and pains and kinda once i embrace that it really wasn't a big deal You know it was more like trying to overcome different injuries. That i've had i had to level cervical fusion on my neck and then twenty eighteen. It took me like a whole year to come back from that and have some nerve damage Just from the injury so stuff like that. But i've had to get through so much. My age of that makes sense well. I'm not a neurologist. But i'm guessing that once you've had major neck surgery in two thousand eighteen then diving into the water at a high rate of speed from thirty three thirty three feet above three-storey probably not the best thing for it. What would you say. Well it's funny. 'cause i was asking the doctor. People don't always understand what i do. They're like oh it's like swimming. I'm like no. I kinda jump off a building. We hit the water. And it feels like steamatic's it's like thirty miles an hour. But i'm trying to explain to the doctor when i do to make sure he understands what i'm asking. They come back to you and he goes well. We've cleared football players for full-contact. I've cleared bull riders. I've done and i was like okay. He understands that. I'm talking about high impact. And so he told me he goes. Look i'm not worried about the part. That's is because i have a titanium plate in there. Goes that part solid. That's not going anywhere everything else. There might be an issue you know but that's just normal. That's just part of diving. So at that point i felt i felt pretty comfortable but it was still scary. 'cause i've never known another athlete back on platform after having a surgery like that. So it was kind of this uncharted territory. And now i'm a mom of four. And so i you know i felt like i had to be really smart about it. I can't afford to do this again. So i took my time i worked back. Really slowly. There's a little nerve wracking at times. But it became normal after a while. You busted up foot pretty bad in two thousand before you won gold which kind of kerri strug style added to the glory of what you die. Does that still hurt. No i mean. I lose feeling and it sometimes but i broke it in three places. And they got a little mangled but You know it's like it's like having the the worst cars you know. You've got great stories that go along with it and so there's kind of that the pride and the injury i think because it reflects that time and how you got it. I kinda feel like that's how all the challenges are the perils day bearing calls it There's always something but you know you can either look at it as like. This is terrible. Awful and i feel bad for yourself and be a victim or you can say okay. How is this going to make me stronger. How can i get through this. And it's going to equip me for what's coming next. I once i've been able to turn that mindset around it becomes more of this challenge to find the way through it and how it's going to make me better. The book is life at ten meters lessons from an olympic champion. You might have put that in feet so the rest of us would know what that actually is laura. Nobody knows what a very down right. A little I guess i should be embarrassed to say this. But it's the sort of thing that i can't seem to get out of my way from doing. I see the cover of the book. And i send a text to eric. Your husband with a photo. And i said eric. Why didn't the publishers choose somebody with straight feet. This woman's toes or busted up it. He goes loris toes from the injury in two thousand. I said oh. Yeah of course yes. Of course it is. they don't they. Don't sit to straight there anymore. Yeah but ten meters. Your metrics challenged. That's about thirty three feet or the top of a three-storey four-storey building like the fourth floor. The top of the restored building. But you you coach As young women. I don't know if it's young men also coach youth in diving. That's that's the began right. Overcoming injuries overcoming setbacks. I mean that that's key you can tell a story know. A coach teacher mentor tutor. When they can refer back to their own lives as to what they've done a much powerful example right definitely and my coach always did that with us and he was actually an olympian for candida and he was an alternate.

GSMC Music Podcast
"laura anne" Discussed on GSMC Music Podcast
"Art. Everybody let's talk about my favorite collaborations in the music industry. I really love. When artists on my favorite artists collaborate. But i think everyone can agree. Some people go together very well when they collaborate in some jones and they're obviously so many different details go into that it doesn't necessarily mean that too people's voices don't sound good together. Sometimes they could have good voices but it's the song and the sounds or it's vice versa. Sometimes people's voices don't go to get together at all but the sounds and lyrics. Make it sound better. Point is there's collaborations out there at word and bad an out by the way. That's always subjective. I'll tell you a collaboration that i do. Not like and a lotta people agree was not better a remix version. Anyways so bad guy but billie eilish the remix featuring justin bieber. No-one really liked that much. Compared to how much they like the original bad guy. I didn't really like either of them. To begin with. But when the remixed i of course listened to it because i'm a huge justin bieber fan and heard as like this is bad but everyone who bigger billie eilish fantastic. They were happy for her. Because she robot allies in justin. So they're happy. She got to collaborate with him and kind of the same thing for justin fans but on the basis of purely the collaboration. It didn't i didn't like it. That much in a lot of other people like it that much. So my point is as we get into my favorite collaborations. It doesn't always go as well as plans. Even if you have two major stores collaborating. It doesn't mean that it's gonna come out good. So i picked some of my favorite collaborations just kind of off the top. My head like we could talk about all my favorite wants forever because there's not enough time the day all that but let's get started first long list here is just give me a reason by pink featuring nate roose really liked this song it is that it was instill is popular very popular back in like two thousand thirteen fourteen. Fifteen around that time. I remember hearing a lot on. The radio is kind of a break up song in a way i was listening to it in depth for the first time the day because i had heard a bunch of hundreds and hundreds of times a foreign i liked it but i never really listened to. I don't if you guys ever do that. You'll hear a song hundreds and hundreds of times and then you finally listened to lyrics. And you think about the men in your like a lightbulb moment as a saint and it's really kind of like a break up song almost that somebody cheated a partnership on the other and that they're acting different and the whole will come clean and this hurts about this and that kind of thing and the whole. Just give me a reason almost to leave at the same time. So i really like the song and i think pink and nate roose collaborate very well together so i wanna have your collaborations richer next on the list. We have tragic by the kid'll roy featuring the young boy. This is a new song. I recently just discovered. I really really like it. I am listening to a lot lately when my favorite lyrics in it is. Don't act like you know what i've been through really like that and the kid laura anne soy collaborate together very very well i think the nice thing about the roy is he collaborates rappers very well i think because of how i wanna say higher toned or high pitched his voices and so it is very almost. He has almost in angelic voice. When you're listening to so it is. It's a nice difference when you hear a rapper. Whose featuring song come in and you can you. It's a nice transition. At least in my opinion. I like it. I like to hear. So i like that. I think they collaborate very well together. Next one as kiss me more by doja cat in caesar still haven't looked at how to pronounce Really should do that like this collaboration. This is one of my favorite songs right now. Still pretty viral on tiktok. I'm hearing a lot. It was performed at the billboard music awards the instill such a popular song. I really like doja again. We talked about how well she's doing lately. I'm a fan of hers and seizes. Collaboration on the song makes it even better. I don't think the song would work without each of them together. So i really wanna make collaborations especially right now for sure. Next is at my best machine gun. Kelly fee trained hailee steinfeld. I saw hailee steinfeld for the first time in pitch perfect. And i didn't think i'd see her on so many other things i really didn't think she would get too much into making music so i'm happy. I was happy to see that. She collaborated with michigan. Kelly a few other people and she had a album. That did very well. I think it's a very well. So i really like this collaboration. I actually don't relate the whole song the whole if you can't take me at my worst you don't deserve my best. I can't stand that saying i'm not going to get into why so. I don't like those lyrics but the rest of the song i do like it and i think they collaborate very well again. It's it's kind of the same. With the with hillary and robberies haley seinfeld had more of a high pitched voice in almost angelic. And then you have michigan. Kelly when he comes in he wraps it is a very very nice transition and it almost feels like you're listening to a story being because there's these i'm not gonna say choppy because they flow together very well but it's almost like section to section to section but it's a very very nice transition listening to them so i relate that collaboration with those so next one is beautiful mistakes by maroon five featuring make the stallion. We've talked about the song a few times already. Love it i again. I was not expecting for meg. The stallion and maroon five to collaborate so well together but they did. I think she adds a lot to the song. And i personally don't think the song would work without her in it so i really like that. I really liked the song. General maroon five just never ceases to but out heads and they could definitely never fail. Put another hit with mega stallion. Who is just released as banger after banger. And she only adds the song she can never take away or make them less so love it next. One is the savior tears remix with the weekend and iran akron. We've also talked about this a little bit. I like the remix a lot better and are integrated made me like the song. I do not like the original and that is no hate to the weekend. I just wasn't my thing but the remix version with erna guerande. These two collaborating made the a million times better. In my opinion..

Double Toasted
"laura anne" Discussed on Double Toasted
"But that shows them older they seem to be some younger pitches of them. Fear eventually eventually looking. Like you know. Laura anne war and like you know in the seventies but although i do given this we'll talk a bit like attempt to age them both or at least the patrick and this movie. It's one of the things in the movie was watching it with the with my with. My kids I said kids. Air belts now But i was pointing out to them. I was like okay a lot of what you see here. The the closed everything or very accurate time period. But not the bodies like like you look at patrick wilson and the son of the warren's and all the dudes they're also buff. Yeah i'm just saying like yeah in the seventies. Nobody was looking like that. No that was actually not even considered attractive. You were something of a freak. If you cross regular dude was like the typical body was either was. I don't know like a little hefty or like rail thin or things like that or just just wasn't that it was just it was just an average people were healthy. Yeah thin healthy and what was considered fat was not even that fat at least not compared to now but just getting muscular like that that would only be an athlete right right now just like i said just a regular joe where if the shirts pinching the arm movies martin gonna watch movie a franchise built around these two no pets not body shoot him in the war of course not of course not but it's this like come on. It's what they do what they do. But no not only is is based around the glass lectures case also the nine thousand nine hundred ninety one arne johnson case where apparently he was possessed by the same spirit. That or demon or ghosts. Or what have you that possessed the smallest member of the family and this caused him to commit murder and it was the first case in. Us history where it was. It was a not guilty plea based around demonic possession and the warrants. Were also involved with that. I mean you gotta give it to him yeah well. They're always putting themselves in the news. That kind of things don't where we're gonna make this work for you guys. I sorta got now the real case. What happened was not spores. I mean this is. This is what legitimate happens that arnie johnson that whole plea deal or plea deal but that that not guilty leader. Yeah you got well. Didn't work didn't work and he went to. He went to prison now for that long. Only five years then he actually is a happy ending for the most part but this this bill does have that spoilage. Chance like no. That wasn't real. That's the press told us the warren's they know what the fuck happened this is their story but i will say much like the get into like the meat of it. I wanna structure this like this where. Hey let's talk about the positives or the things that i thought you really stuck out to me. And we'll go into the more of the things that didn't work and soft and then we'll go back and forth that sure but one of the things. I i've always liked about these films especially the first two movies. And and the controversy films that the warrants appeared is just the chemistry. I think.

Committed
"laura anne" Discussed on Committed
"Flashed on his laura was talking was that the doctors knew what they need more than. We knew what they needed so they say you don't understand this. Small amount of electricity can make a difference. And i think it's a very important principle and people coming from places like the united states wanting to help people in low resource areas is understanding that the local knowledge can be very very important so that those doctors had a very good inside that we didn't have at that moment they originally had these grand. Plans provide this massive solar energy system to an entire hospital but what they quickly learned. Is that the nigerian. Doctors knew best what they need it. They knew that even the small amount of light that the solar suitcase would provide would change lives and their hospital would save lives. They also knew that it could be easily reproduced. So laura anne how kept that idea in the back of their minds while they went forward with the big plans to electrify the hospital. Anyway we actually did that over the course of the next year and so about a year after my first visit we were able to have a very public launch of solar electricity in the hospital and one of the things that happened was that the maternal death rate which had been about three to eight women dying every month from complications of pregnancy and childbirth. In a in a labor room that delivered about one hundred fifty patients a month that rate plummeted there was about a seventy percent drop in maternal death rate and at the same time the hospital was able to admit were patients at night because they were no longer turning away people that were coming with critical problems because the hospital was enshrouded darkness so that combination of being able to see more patients and save more lives was profound and i hadn't realized that that time that what the hospital was experiencing was something that a lot of health facilities were experiencing and so my colleagues at the hospital began bringing me to visit other clinicians at smaller and they were all very happy that i help the hospital but they said where in the dark to. Can't you help us. And so that idea that there were lots of facilities that were in need coupled with the idea that even that small amount of electricity could be helpful was when we began thinking. Maybe we should intentionally be making suitcase sized systems that i could start bringing back with me on my subsequent trips. Moral was traveling to nigeria on a regular basis. She'd go for maybe two or three weeks at a time come back home and then take another trip so she might go like four times a year and so because we knew that there was such a need for the solar suitcase every time before laura would go for a trip we would manufacture a bunch of them in our backyard and our neighbors would help sometimes doing and educational program with a high school or college. Teachers would work with their students to get the parts. I'd created a bill of materials. So they could know what parts and wiring diagram. They build them. I check it for quality. We'd find the right size. Solar panel says she could carry on an airplane and off. She'd go off dragging odor. Neighbors would donate luggage. They didn't want any more so i would bring her to the airport. She would literally by herself be pulling three full sized suitcases on rollers. How she always managed somehow to navigate her way through the airport pulling all this luggage and it was just very exciting. I know i said this already. This is one of those things that i just can't say enough. i loved. laura saw this problem. She saw this need and that hal is the one who saw solution. And it's not just that he saw it because a lot of people can see problem and understand the problem and even offer solutions to a problem but how he followed through he followed through and he helped her. for me. This feels like the very thing that we talk about. When we say that we wanna marriage our marriage to feel like a team effort so the two of them are building these solar suitcases right in our backyard. Laura is the one schlepping them back and forth across the ocean to clinics in africa and at the same time they were also raising three kids. Who are about twelve ten and seven. So i'd say the biggest impact was really on the seven year old because her mom would go off and i think that was. That was a challenge. Made it was certainly really. It meant a lot to. I think all of us that we were doing something that was really helping the lives of people on the other side of the world. But rachel had to really share us and share me in particular with with a lot of other people and you know it really takes a special person to feel like that they can sort of believe in the mission in order to do that and i tried very hard to be around when they were really critical. Things happening for her. But you can't always predict when you're going to be needed and so sometimes i'll be far away and have to do things by foam when i would have much rather been there in person for her. It was a real stress on the family. But i've just say also that it was a very exciting time for our family lauren. I we actually getting to do something together. Made a difference in the world and it was definitely are complementary skills. We shared a passion together and that was very signed to build that together and we were hoping that it would be exciting for the kids as well. The problem was when you start something especially when we started to become a nonprofit and when the demand for the solar suitcases kept increasing and we started to get some real funding so that we're our numbers were going up but we're still producing them in our house. We've heard operating at peak demand for our energies. We're working through the weekends. We never took vacations and that was a point where we couldn't give our kids as much attention as we wanted to. At the same time our kids got to meet some really amazing people. You'd have masai warriors visit us at the house from the lost boys. Dan wonderful people in the nonprofit our solar world and so and they were very inclusive of rachel when she was young and she became quite an expert on the seller. Suitcase for self. We have some amazing videos of her explaining out of a solar electric system. Because that was the building was happening in our yard so she was bringing in so that was part was good but at the same time a father i traveled all but then later maybe travel once or twice a year. I got to have a lot of time. One on one with my daughter and we got to kind of move. It which is much slower than laura's pace. And i felt like i know my daughter in a way that maybe i wouldn't have had she been dealing with both parents at the same time. There was definitely some benefit in the time away as well in the beginning the two of them were working on a very localized and specific problem electrifying health clinics in nigeria and i had gone to a global conference than i had heard a wonderful speech by nicholas kristof and i spoke to him afterwards and told him how inspirational he was and mentioned what we were doing. And unbeknownst to me he wrote about us in his blog the next day and we started getting requests from solar suitcases from around the world and donations started coming in and that was about the time when i started realizing. Wow this is a problem that is going far beyond northern nigeria and it turns out that to the best of our understanding. There are probably hundreds of thousands of health facilities. That.

Un RE MEDIO Podcast
"laura anne" Discussed on Un RE MEDIO Podcast
"Me can be fast here but a bit. Sorry intimately fair in this team. Many new. it'd be. So you know. Paul anyth- augusta took out of schulman thing that something bum. Let the lucielle now is why is your only represent them. He sat and book all former symbolic on them. In as as difficult and they become more efficient beasts humana szigeti emoji gallo Takhar in paseo wilco emotionally paseo told him with show through emotional mental parental on puszta years. We recommend tondo copy to restart shined in sunday's retold forum gatumba marie lal keaton to laura anne. Sarah not seen mass boho. Comments book law south. Daily kenjiro malik. Only paseo commander saddam nervous warriors there. No those are now turning legno in. I harland roy who are in because e liquid your show capri premadasa land soul and now weight loss either boise and solar now. The why is there. No no banter in seattle lambo. Simplemente allow boasts lonzo. The hand. this is you know. S merapi ah for came lavoie azero ono. Same way we in paseo no in seattle. This isn't unique. Don't pelota they knowingly loop elliott offer tamwe harlan dude makina movie a mobile but i plaza. Sason milk no metric parola lavar voyeur bosc some bukidnon this similarly they sing when they quadra meek metaphor around box domino's in tucson king sylviane this akbal owner garrick oreo mijo the fancier in pass you when to record your la hoya ruining the when.

Podcast RadioViajera
"laura anne" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera
"In los cinco millenniums give lamberti civilly salvo sobral penetrate sierra lay story. Are we store this up. Upper sarah cintas thoroughly societa this but it feels liquor here on the solo. Why rina's a hit on glorioso. C complaints ciba's yoenis kick when inclement puzzle the import this hero. Yes up for referendum of your manner disaster that was gonna commit. That's young catastrophic. The ambles see how llegado the siemian to lawrence to ask. If alaska honest with dempo under sue baddest centers rally sociologists ereli heroes the enormous blender as story That they don't steal them gets here. He you don t Tummy don't into gm rory Us on women. Passer is a serious concern. Somebody said the split is hit. A big theme of the levada imperial romanija synthesis. You are in contra. In lhasa tacky amana orders the authorities killer game out on either again as we see it. Romano's daria who are going door to the africa in actually begun several dial as mass does use romano's in poke millionare's story that pony car. Del mediterraneo nobile masculine and says he did this. To read dot in amiga lacombe on kista villanueva span of women's this poison. I either the state land. Los hispaniola sierra dismantles vehicle. Central ceremonial is chica. Spidey i d. he'd like around are the mahyco. Like notable spanish capacity keytar alien to knock it out on muscular siemian give those that are magical local other. You gotta go those issues. Imperio romano to wait on on the tino similar roma elson through celebrity without capital during burial story. They'll moondog dial voice. I gather estella ac- bottles. Vc gordo's uterus pueblo. this blizzard the cleveland. Romano in seed looking restaurant in we sanyo's larimore larussa central nipple severe either meaning experts. Your constantinople grants you romana city. They'll get an imperial santino. As this was more of six hundred ninety or scheduled salim batmobile soberano automatic medical kista. Laura anne lonzo courtesy when data is young mcmahon intent. Oracles to relax you case was throw pass. Boras constantinople la noon will. I said let me smile. They're not stop at either. Aluminium gasoline romay constanta onus possibly very architect to rock in dimple sock with you. I'll mundo pursue salou style. Zero minute rely extraordinary silica. The santa sofia in modernized ambuhl to capitol hill. In bellio. be something. Ambrose santus tikos models the siegler lent spazio malice. Gaydos disorders days. Here does las tunas gains. Houdini impo arana's grandest capitals. But there's got us so luna. Kenya axiom so brady analyst. Ripe uka ngoga though is as mold. Eps as the mika get unfaithful the lintott istiklal them classical machos muscle hit skimpily released story. Leonora my urea. The peace as the brunson contrarian on theresa this deal foot on fundy thus seen puertas below these legal who sobe even in venezia put him blue. I want is supposedly squad through values dividend sick seat loyalty cs lewis. Dick got on marcus. Also epo cosentino overdose. Anyone lost cover uses cancer. No then through amazon. The san marcos the phone call this bushwick gala saito seattle psychiatric centeno until a royal quarterback rusada esa which will see in a news ginkel templar or the las. Cuatro cover us. He studied under different. The at this teagle's the cassim. Melania bay studier who might really be. Tina's a no career on let me start it. I've s unicef ezekiel import. A kimbler alaska's corner on that impeded that constantinople from dealers for less florida's not only. Cu of this boy is the delegates. That your your system. Boone importa maciel auto illegal throughout the low money. There they hit the minute impress evil already. Stay little of paralegals la these lanes here with interests will gear fatal sort of give you the in a span look at rallies regularly beast kennedy bake utah jazz ninety. Co puerto porta him. Prune gimmick could mean lower cintos convert. Google alberto reuss offsettable detainee in the lack of to john dental temporal. They lessons keeps your news. What are those features. Metabolism grants who migraine lucille robinson rested and makiko. I'll go league more latin soon. Cavill poco swear normal racer loose tipo boker nipping cebu galina elton discovers loose is advocacy indiscreet de la la mosa sharia they'll remind media but god hitters kiro there. Pat cal is easy. Malapita funeraria companion own odor rick. Worthington barabbas kabila civilisation. Press amassing our last year in a suit. He does not correspond eloquent. Very spartacus. music era deal. Yeager will got that roma you'd be sentenced you know in this could immune poking gomez important the resulting in quinta news real in sunday. Cina sick this young denver. Citra seat to the direct She one d so they know the grondona. St akin committed unimpeded little chino. Yes go kisa coolio manabe yoga until like gloria the empirical your say must does needle korea so the central group campesinos. Bruins here is sean. She is scott adequately on in contra apostle the agua implant revolution could reggina lasagna stubborn. This is in syria. Youngest vian kaelin tend to say. Would i meant the fructose. Caveat caveat who boost scandal our st no novelist. Any orissa. Leo paris whiskas the indoor rally corn story.

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"laura anne" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"Yeah so that's what they did and then when you have a coup d'etat you know. They're all over the place there in africa. They're in south america there in europe. They're everywhere coup. D'etat what is what is one of the very first things that they do. When they affect coup-d'etat go into the broadcast facilities radio television newspapers and they seize control because that's important because they want their message to go out and nobody else is and so then we come down to the measly low level that nobody wants to hear about and like for instance this morning. Sheriff manny gonzalez The state of new mexico Whose bernallio county. Sheriff wants to defeat the current mayor become mayor of albuquerque. And after he does that he wants to govern the entire state of new mexico. now he was on the radio today. And here's a little tactic for you. So i call in before the hour that the sheriff is gonna be on to promote his candidacy to become the next mayor. And i'm in line to speak to you. Know on one of the four or five lines to speak to the sheriff and I on hold for an hour and twenty three minutes as ten other callers passed me by in succession to speak to. Sheriff manny gonzalez. Who wants to be your mayor governor. And that's one tactic that is used by the measly low level. Radio in this case Seven seventy albuquerque mexico. Que o b to shut down people that might ask critical questions. Put you on the air. That's right they've they kept me on. Hold park my call on hold. Until after the sheriff had departed an hour and twenty three minutes later. And then let me talk about the miscellaneous business how you protect your blackballed i mean how did they know. They definitely know david. David is so well known as a collar in albuquerque. the station were on now in albuquerque. Gangs kiva which we've been on the past back on there now. The station owner actually specifically more about. David told me i said we know. David calls every night Thanks for the call me appreciate it. Six zero three two eight three sixty one sixty six zero three two eight three six one six zero. Yeah these politicians. They don't want to be confronted by somebody that knows the issue. They don't wanna be confronted by somebody with a tough question and the media will cover for him. Join liberty minded volunteers. Anarchists and libertarians. From june twenty eight through july fourth for forecasts. Twenty twenty one at rogers campground in the beautiful white mountains of new hampshire fork. Forecast happens the week after the porcupine freedom festival and forecast is decentralized which means no one is in charge that also means. There's no ticket cost just reserve your camping. Rv side or motel room with rogers campground for june twenty eighth through july fourth. 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Donna and matrix experienced though you should join our server via the step by step instructions at chat dot l. are dot fm. Chat dot laura anne dot. Fm you know that at some point in your wife an emergency is going to happen. You just don't know when you could call the government in. Maybe they'll help or they might shoot your dog. Why call potentially psychopathic strangers. When you could ask your friends family. Our neighbors for help sell four. One one makes decentralized emergency response possible and it's free visit get sell four one one dot com or download sell former one from your favorite app store. Get sell for one win. Dot com everyone in a bustling. Chinese parade is attempting to elude newly discovered cave. Paintings suggests early man was battling a lot of inner demons and asylo phones shredding this tuesday. Fbi officials disclosed details of a disturbing al-qaeda plot to just kick back relax and savor the inevitable collapse of the united states. Intelligence agencies confirmed a massive coordinated plan involves terrorist cells across the globe training specifically to take a load off and unwind as america's political infighting class divides moral indolence and environmental self-destruction gradually tear the nation. Apart in law. The warriors will devote our time to relaxing and really soaking in the infidel. Self-destruction america's will be reduced to room and economy will come to a standstill. We'd the blessed of islam will kick back. Put our feet up and enjoy the show. It's going to be great. The onion news network. Some of you asked. And now we've delivered l. r. n. dot. Fm's live keene. New hampshire studio shows are now streamed in hd on twitch visit our channel at twitch dot l. r. n. dot fm and. Give it a follow. If you have amazon prime you get one free subscription on twitch if you use it on our channel which will give you don. Fm a monthly piece of your prime subscription cost. So please watch follow share and subscribe to twitch dot l. dot fm that's twitch dot l. r. n. dot fm. Look i'm sorry but you're in for a world of pain. If you use coin homey the reason is their wallet doesn't support payments. The solution is simple. Let them hear your voice message. Coin me on twitter. It takes five seconds and tell them any pay you because they're on the fence right now and your voice will prove that people care about using bitcoin for payments. Go tweet at coin omi or even better. Leave a review in the app store. They really pay attention there. Thanks our matrix. Server is about as free as internet chat can be joined the existing rooms or create your own at chat dot freetalklive dot.