21 Burst results for "Legrand"

The Ed Mylett Show
"legrand" Discussed on The Ed Mylett Show
"This situation, I never thought about like, hey, how am I going to tackle anybody? I always was like, I'm going to hit them and you know, they fall how they make. You know, so in this situation I try to put my head across and actually avoid hitting it with my head and when this happened, he was running a little bit faster than I thought he was. And when I put my head out, my head here is acting to his hip and cause me to fracture my very worrying about. What did it feel like? You're now one minute you're the best player. I'm a brag for you, but you're the leader in the on your defense. You're the best player on the field. You're having the best game on the field. And a second later, you're on your back. Can you not move at all? And are you starting to go, oh, something major just happened here? Yeah, so in that moment, I was pretty much paralyzed from the waist down. And in my head, I was thinking more of like, oh, this is a stinker. So people that playing football before a stinger is if you talk with somebody, you hit them with your shoulder, your shoulder feels numb. And it's like almost burning like a stinging sensation. That's why it's called a stinger. But it's like, no, but eventually comes back, like most football players had to spend before. So I thought it was like, all right, I'm having somewhere like a stinger, but just for my legs. You know, so I was thinking that at first and I was kind of into now. And then they came and started poking on my legs. And when they were poking on my legs, I really couldn't feel anything. And I was like, are you like, do you feel that? I'm like, you're not touching me. You know? So it kind of scared me. And then they put me on the cover on the gurney and then into the ambulance. And my daughter was with me the whole time, and I just kept asking the questions. I'm like, how long am I gonna be hurt? Would I be playing again? Would I be ready in, you know, for Christmas because I remember that we were playing the Houston Texas and Christmas and I was in my family like my wife's family from Texas. So I was really looking forward to that game. So it was like a lot of the stuff going on and I kept asking questions about like, when am I going to be okay? Am I going to be okay? Am I going to be okay? And it was more like, am I going to be okay? I'm not going to walk again. It's more like, all right, how soon do you think I'm going to be able to play football game? Because now me actually not Ryan, even with your teammates around you because I was watching that game. It was Monday Night Football. I could recall, was not. It was Monday Night Football game. Yeah, it was. Yeah. I was watching the game and you could tell by the announcers. When they came back from commercial, like, oh no. And then the guys on your team were around you. And you could see some of them praying. And I saw some of them talking to you. And I remember my heart rate's changing right now. I'm not kidding you actually remembering this. And it's not even me. It was you. But you're saying even in that moment, you're not thinking, nah, I'm not going to walk again. You're thinking, I got to get back to the Texans game, even in that moment. Because I was just like, I'm pretty glad I knew in my head that I'm hurt pretty bad, but I'm like, all right. I'm gonna figure this out. I'm probably gonna be back in like two, three weeks,

Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"legrand" Discussed on Oil and Gas Startups Podcast
"Example saint arnold's events that there was one hundred twenty people really and so we usually have religious people but people are ready to get back into it and talk people out what's going on and so i think it's got i think people are reading makes us to get out and talk and talk in network is as i hope that continues you're but yet dacas predominant. We're going to join a club in september. But you're just bring this up. Fifty five minutes was so. That's our monthly. Now we are going to be there. Good i read. I dig it man. Okay well what else. What else you have for us. I mean i know that You have a date tonight with your wife exciting. It is very exciting as we are headed to with you regularly and so several people It helps us by a sorted by patriot but as riots Me rallied on rally lake. But he's rapid core tequila but he's in the to akilah side with such date night like the whole angle on this. We're very excited to talk to you in him and but we have doctorates Was born is. We have found a babysitter. Amazing your own room when you're going. You're so excited to participate. You know a legrand have gone. We're actually at far as long as you guys. Those are crying the middle saying that we are so said it'd be their nominee i know so he He represents escorted fanatic weren't guitar. The is it's good groups. Yeah you gotta say dayton your your your spouse and especially when you're playing so full work as being her play beautiful hurry. No damaging gas stations brats. You need some time for yourself and actually yeah scored this plagues around. They're going gonna be ready. I was here. She was so tired. Like can't like a dislocated we've got eight sleeping. We'd be remember back that's always..

Podcast RadioViajera
"legrand" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera
"Total packages to win. In the seminal four k. paul anka singapore lingua personas as he made up professionalize dematteo kamala in brazil on komo are in the issue. Didn't passing into latinas to buyer barrack. Forty cannot allow you may ask intimate aubrey reputa- ultimo predictably tappan widow city. Five samuelson don't know joe legrand in phenylalanine dip low-cost people's lebanon maeda a thorough. Sorta last leeann fast miozzi megan con- be most all of these young brisa paid. Okay we're not going to impress group. Impressario holding kit for debacle different and marcus press eastern Really farallon yuba sallow l. Premera granny winter on komo pinot pinot. The um okay seeker to miguel or payment rental aneka selena motorized this. Let me see oklahoma. Before they will e Hamilton the threat via the phone. Democrats billion fiat. They only anthem recipe. I feel the clinton pinup in the house into the hinterland out at minimum formerly had the event does. who told premera vince. Graham they say. Tim dan lewis into it and embrace at that. Means that Operates thomas inmobiliaria syndrome. Let's getting over mentally to feel. But i federal into parallel also fratello professor of thin working leaving economical center. Look so tacky. Laporta luke and laura around here. They landed tells us out to see. Let's eat now. Particular boom s. technology annoy bizarre. No har a foreign sas concede. Msn alan webber taken twelve over. Prieto kathy la delaney. They so much over book..

The Sean Salisbury Show
"legrand" Discussed on The Sean Salisbury Show
"And not just in the past game but if you thought that what you played last week against jacksonville was pretty disruptive in the run game even legrand forty one time. I got news for you little different with this team. Cleveland late. listen the. I think it's gonna be fun to watch but you have to and is good as baker mayfield is and that have expressed when you got a team this so physical running the football and so explosive running the football. I don't think you can play soft zoned and to high safeties and allow them. You'd better come down and have a an active safety can also get under throws. If you're playing zone i you're going to need an extra body because if i'm gonna lose baker mayfield's going to beat me this week. I guess that's the way they look. A raven also was talking about that. But that's what. I've been expressing whenever you play a team. That does both really well but also that they're that they're running attack consisting them all the way through. This is a coordinators. Exactly right you must stop the run. I and force the guy to beat you. You'll run into a team every now and again. Then if edwards layer russia's for one seventy you'll live with it if you force mahomes into three picks that you will get killed. Scary is that he made three touchdowns to and it may still be chip..

Beautiful Stories From Anonymous People
"legrand" Discussed on Beautiful Stories From Anonymous People
"Hear and i walk away sometimes feeling like i took on a little bit of pain there and that happens enough times it can stick with me and sometimes i feel so bad for my wife because i'll get i won't be able to shake you know if i've had some really if i heard things. That are really scary or heartbreaking. So how do you do it. Because you're seeing it in a way that so much more real and head on and intense and relentless. How do you go home and live the rest of your life Well i probably drink too much red wine. The quiet on it That's that's one You know. I i am in therapy. I take med- You know 'cause. I've struggled with that my whole life part of the reason i do i do and then i talk with my co workers and i mean nurses are notorious and you have to be very careful where where you make sort of the macabre type of jokes but but we do to each other because we understood like i understand when i make a terrible suicide jokes to one of my nursing colleagues and i know that they care about the person and they know that i care about the person and we know that we're letting off steam and that way if anybody else were to hear it they would think were the worst people that ever lived That's the way is checking in with others. It's a it's a really interesting position to be in to be able to have just gotten to a point where i have a very frank conversation about suicide with anybody who comes up to talk to me. Sorry oh you are okay. Do you have your plan where you're going gonna do. Where are you going to go. how are you going to. I mean it's just that's doing that part has become a little bit wrote that sound Not wrote when. I'm with somebody. But but i do dead. That are tissue at that. Point your wife but there are some. There are some nights. When i wake up in the middle of the night there some nights that i don't sleep and we just had three huge things in a row that have just you know i'm exhausted and i and i can't even like look somebody like i can't even figure out why i am so tired and it's like oh these are. I've been carrying beach three so we had one woman who was just very very sick and i feel as though the care given by our clinician was wrong. She wouldn't listen to anybody and and then of course because of the stigma of being in a mental health unit if they require medical attention. We can't give because we can't do things like start. Iv's so we've had a couple of times people just get so psychotic they do not eat and drink and you have to get them. I and so you have to ship them off but it's to get the medical staff to accept. A psych patient is almost impossible. They don't want them. I mean like you talk about i. It's just. It's just blatant flat out stigma and you will get the pushback Aren't they just pretending. Isn't this just behavioral like No it's not and we had her. We had another woman who was who really damn near killed herself. Who was supposed to go to rehab. And we put her in a taxi and she got to the door of the rehab and turned away because they didn't accept her insurance and we didn't know where she was for a while like and then we had somebody come in who was threatening to murder his wife and was released and went home and murdered his life And so those three things all happens like back to back within the same week and so we We're all we're all those have. I have carried with me while. That's that's too much for anybody and I'm pretty amazed you're even on the phone with me right now. Talking and coherence sentences. Because i would i would be. I would have mike. The covers pulled over my head and bid so i. I am very impressed by called because i actually did have the covers pulled over my head and got when i called because i was just like. I don't don't don't with do with this thing. i'm glad i'm glad anita reached out and said. Hey you left a voicemail reference before. I'm glad we gave you a reason to get out of bed. At least i make i tell you i you are going to start laughing because it's hearing you say that nurses make a lot of dark jokes to deal with it. I know on my end. Depressed people do too. I will say things to other depressed people sometimes and we will laugh at stuff. Where other people's just raise their eyebrows so get ready my friend because we might have laughs that the listeners really disagreement right. Yeah yeah. And i and i know you have struggled with depression. And that's another reason why you know i would love to talk to you because people don't get it and even for my colleague who hasn't legrand. Why would anyone ever well. They killed him. And i just want to with them and say how can you ever not think about it. It's not even once we never look at the world anti feel like a complete outlier in it where you don't make sense that you can't figure out why and you don't particularly want to make sense in a world that can be so brutal to humans. Eve never really thought about it at length at least twice a week still doing better than i ever act.

Buccaneers Observer
"legrand" Discussed on Buccaneers Observer
"There is ready for his. Well get your fantasy football stocked. Up forwarders can keep your wife out special. His she's in the same league you are. He labeled at like john deere as soon as you said that. I wou i looked over while folder. Legrand i gotta fall asleep on that one on on. It's going into safe answer. So anyhow guys worth were so damn class. It's it's silly. i'm so excited. I now this time next week we will will probably be recording our Reaction to the game in this sunday's last free sunday we're going to have until we can try to cram everything in you. We got somebody coming up for their birthday. opening. Yeah that's naxi right opening sunday and we said oh and we were going out to the bar and watch the games. Yeah well you know my families by now. When i've told this story before it went off. And i got together. He let it be known very quickly. do not make plans between august and february on sundays. All day. Monday night thursday night. You know i'm not doing anything. So don't don't expect anything of man so Trained me early. Says he has just how it is. Now i'm trained my family's strain. They all now his family's straight. We all know ralph is not doing anything. We'll volant in you to take one day off a week. Sunday against the good lord rested wants one day of the week. Just happen to be sunday. So and then he made football and then aired on sunday says this i know lord has bliss the nfl all right with that. We're going to wrap it up. Wrap it up till next time guys..

Proof
"legrand" Discussed on Proof
"The way it went down at legrand for truce was like.

The Tim McKernan Show
"legrand" Discussed on The Tim McKernan Show
"Offer five dollars and fifty five cent tickets for the series against the dodgers and they're calling it a special for rules. Well i what we have entered the witching hour. Wow cup ground. Haven't seen that in a while. Yeah all right. I am going to the fan page. Because i've intended. Any of the ones on law serena sixty how do you like las arenas sixty nine. She's she covered in tattoos. She got a lot that twos or is that. I don't think she kind of surprised. That's a garment. Okay yeah no very big fan. Huge fan Let's see Who was the most amazing non famous person you've ever met and maybe didn't expect it. Go the fuck okay. Your action to that question is the same as mine. Famous guy the guy who made my sandwich allegations this week. I was really cool. That care. all right. There's there's the answer from jackson I'm i'm really high on my parents. Yeah You're mad about the sandwich maker. At the greyhounds i will with my parents. Answer is better guy makes a great sandwich. Early like the legend. Yeah i don't understand what's it. Maybe but i mean if you've ever met in maybe didn't expect like jackson. Probably nick sandwich maker. Legrand is really an upset And i didn't really know what to expect with my parents. Probably you know in hindsight. I feel like this question. There's a word added or the didn't get included. That would help help us understand it better. Yeah maybe who's the most famous person mazing famous person you've ever met and maybe didn't expect let's take it that way because i think it could be better. Yeah because other non famous like. There's a lot of people jackson high on the guy at grant. Hi my parents Famous in those. What are you got on that konso. Well we have yeah. We have to define famous alike verifying. Hasn't necessarily mean you're famous..

Full Games - Charlando sobre videojuegos
"legrand" Discussed on Full Games - Charlando sobre videojuegos
"Bilello chocolate the the ultimate loping notice. What'd while they were talking about some fill out a bunch of us knee. Nica salmon dita's edison. Because god knows where he's asking citizens african studies. We don't get any do. I don't think this move to moscow knowing that not getting c. Which is a guy. What other brother. Jay slack mutually sodium gubernatorial a cellular not bally's by legrand. Bdo when though shy stop using the de selena. They'll sit millionaire listeners by enormous guy in talk about your but that doesn't continue rossi come on. Are we get free now. Give al al. Says he'll throw does happen. Yes all your bhutto. Established talked about this all took a woman l. dollars is nothing navigate. We now yesterday. The we'll get up your final area yoyo feel more must have salute touch on the bus. Then they will does all the rose. Excuse on kenya's you're not. They're not case. Elude deadpool or no loop in tandem. Quadra cuando kenyan. Goonies the the pool all but almost as as the nice thirty they assume buckling. Sp nothing with wasto easily. They eat you. We see see movie. Stella the ended up Shaky picking them get ice. Uinta scale after catholic. Abolition me a day got three allows. Mikey yellow com on the game. But i can go to. The owners of st enters into kilos mandated by sunday pillow. A son win for me. Physical ed they don't think. Dj we rental space. So let's say let's keep that until mugabe randy already will.

Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas
"legrand" Discussed on Sean Carroll's Mindscape: Science, Society, Philosophy, Culture, Arts, and Ideas
"So you can certainly learn electromagnetism without putting it into that special relativity context but it can be put the special relativity context and once you do that your transition. To general relativity will be much much quicker and easier. So that's what i would say I'm trying to think of an example of a good book. I'm not super familiar with the textbook landscape on electromagnet electricity magnetism. I believe there is a book by a hainian hans. Oh hainian that. I liked and really used special relativity in central way. So that might be. A good warmup. Richard graff says try as i might. I can't grasp the connection between symmetry and conservation laws as worked out inert serum. Can you explain the relationship in relatively nontechnical terms or is this one of those. Something's deeply hidden requires an understanding of the math to comprehend. Yeah you know. It's a good question. I did Want to cover. Nervous theorem when i did the biggest ideas in the universe videos and i ended up doing it. It is in their In the video on symmetry talk about nurtures theorem and i get a argument in favor of it now requires work because You i need to understand the legrand jian formulation of classical mechanics. Once you understand lebron jeans you can then understand a little about symmetry and then you can understand this theorem. So there's a bit of technical background required one way or the other and oh it should be honest. Is roughly speaking. Got that explanation them. That i gave From feinman from like the final lectures on physics or something like that. I believe that was the book where was from And you know to be honest. It's not intuitive really like when i say intuitive it depends on what your intuition is. Sometimes you've been using the grenadians For an long enough in your life that things become intuitive. That weren't into it before us. Lebron jeans but it's definitely not something where you could hand wave to a person on the street and get them to see not just what nerd the theorem says but the proof for why it's true..

Fresh Air
"legrand" Discussed on Fresh Air
"The musicals sunday in the park with george into the woods and passion are usually called stephen sondheim musicals and of course. Sondheim is widely acknowledged as the most innovative and brilliant broadway composer and lyricist of our time. But there's someone else who was essential in the creation of those three shows and he is my guest james lapine. He wrote the books for each of those musicals and directed the original broadway productions sunday in the park with george wanna pulitzer prize for drama. The pine won a tony for the book of into the woods. Lupine also co wrote the book with william finn for falsettoes. The book of a musical is like a libretto. It's the part that spoken not sung but some are sondheim songs were inspired by or borrowed from lines written by the pine. For the show's books now. Alpine has written a book book. The kind that you read. It's called putting it together. Has stephen sondheim. And i created sunday in the park with george. It's a fascinating behind the scenes. Account featuring lupines reminiscences and his interviews with many people who worked on the show including sondheim. The show's stars. Bernadette peters and mandy patinkin as well as other cast members producers orchestrators set designers and more james pine. Welcome to fresh air. I love the shows that you did with sondheim and it is just a pleasure to have you on the show. We'll thank you so much. It's a pleasure to be here. Sunday in the park is a work of art about a work of art for people unfamiliar with the show just described. The premise was inspired by a painting by your sarah in eighteen. Eighty four to eight hundred eighty six That two years it took for him to paint a sunday afternoon on the island of legrand shot and It employed his methodology of pointillism and creating art and it was ironic because we were one hundred years later ending up writing a show about the making of that painting and took two years to paint at the painting and it took us two years to write the show. The initial idea for the show was sparked by bringing in some images to look out with sondheim which strikes me as a very strange way to start a musical pictures but you used to be a graphic designer and did graphic design and posters for the l school of well. Free repertory theatre. I should say So one of the images you brought in was a postcard of the painting that inspired the show. So you put the postcard down you in sometime gazed at this postcard of the painting by sarah. And how did that lead to sunday in the park. Well we wasn't image That i used in the very first thing. I did in the theater which was a very abstract show By gertrude stein called photograph and in that i used several famous images one of which was this painting so i was pretty familiar with it And when we sat down to look at it together along with other images that i brought in Steve immediately said it looks like a stage set and from there we just sat and talked about it and realized all the strange details that are in the painting. The peculiar perspective of the painting That the characters were not looking at one another and so forth. And why is there a monkey there and I don't know somehow. I blurted out while there's one person missing. And he said who i said the artist and somehow just sparked an idea That this could somehow be a The ethical venture and we took it from there so you realize that the character missing in this painting was the artist himself and he became the main character in the show along with his muse and model the character. Played by bernadette peters So what did you want to say about artists. and what. it's like to be an artist muse or model or mistress girlfriend mistress the language then. I have to say when we look back. We didn't really talk a lot about theme. We talked a lot about story and A lot about where and how music could engage in the in the storytelling and sondheim took the idea of pointillism. As a kind of inspiration for the kind of Music he was going to write and to some degree. I did as well in terms of the writing of the book Stylistically that is and i We were very very different. I tend to jump into the deep end of things and figure out how to swim. And steve is very analytical and doesn't start writing until he knows exactly where he's going and he does your suggestion that there needed to be an opening song. The show needed to open with a song and that song is sunday in the park right. That was excuse me. That was steve suggestion. I didn't when i initially initially went off after looking at the image with him and came back. Maybe a week later with six pages that i wrote for the beginning of the show and It was he who read the six pages. And then as i sat there. This is you know. Pre internet pre pre computer and He said i'm going to read this again. And i sat there thinking. What is this guy. I'm gonna make of this. And then he said. I think there should be an opening number here. And he pointed to under no somewhere in the middle of the second page and i said oh why and he said well this is really already so i think we need an opening number that will put the audience at ease. And that's how we came out of the gate. It's interesting that the opening songs. From the point of view of the bernadette peters character the model who is in the sun very hot very uncomfortable in modeling for the genius painter. Sure sarah but in the meantime she's just kind of like suffering and bearing it. Well i think first of all he was he may have been a genius and she may have known that at the time but the one thing i never was was success he never actually even sold a painting in his lifetime. He died very young. And i think looking back at it and a lot of writing is unconscious. I think it was a smart move for us to learn about the artist. George from another point of view and particularly you know his mistress who whom us you know so intimately involved and it immediately set up. the dilemma of Life and art and What you give up when you dedicate yourself to any aspect of art or work and how it impacts on your private life and that song which i totally You know tip. My hat to steve on. What did a lot of things drama logically that that helped us get out of the gate in telling our story. So why don't we here..

Bible Study Evangelista Show
"legrand" Discussed on Bible Study Evangelista Show
"This whole Series on social media on finding that predominant fault was Father legrand he is or was a wonderful priest but also major writer of spiritual direction and he wrote I think it was the three stages of the interior life. It's a huge two volume set of books on all kinds of things. But this was an idea that i really appreciated when i read that about this predominant fault idea and so there are seven capital sins and the word capital just means head. They are the deadly sins. They are the sense that all the other sends come from and they are pride. Greed wrath in v. lust gluttony and sloth or laziness and so typically because everything in the universe repeats and patterns. We have planetary orbits. We have seasons. We have weather. We have dna. We have waves. We have day and night. We have flower petals. All of those things repeat in patterns and so does human behavior your behavior if you look back over your life you can see that there is a particular pattern to your sin you fall into a particular sin but also you fall into that particular sin in particular situations now. What do i mean by that. Well when god. I began dealing with me on my capital. Sin of anger. It was not something. I had to go look for. I knew very clearly that this was. I didn't know it was a predominant fall. But i knew that this was my main sin. I just didn't know how serious it was. I was focused on things like smoking and over drinking. And you know those kinds of things. When god was far more interested in this predominant fault idea because all of that stuff came out of the anger issue which i didn't know in the beginning. All i knew is that god came to me in my daily scripture reading on day. Twenty six when i first started the habit as a baptist. We didn't have any kind of sacraments..

Blank Check with Griffin & David
"legrand" Discussed on Blank Check with Griffin & David
"You and he had that moment where he said like i forget if he was talking about the block or just the wind in general and he sort of said that was when i realized that i'm the greatest ever and there was a there was. It's like whether or not that's true. You can argue but there was such an insecurity to like feeling the need to come out and say that michael jordan never would muslim to this day still sort of laughs at the question of whether or not he's the greatest ever because he's and i'm not just saying oh we love during stomach but i think that also yes comes through in the film. Yes i will say. When did the last dance start when the wheels start moving on the last dance after the block. Michael jordan indefinitely smells the air and was like i need to burnish my legacy again. Because now i'm the cartoon. Hitler moustache shitty. Nba no owner right. I am and i need to remind a whole new generation and it worked better than even he could have imagined. Watch less dance. And you're like wow jordan is such a fucking fascinating figure also. This guy is so good at being on camera. He's so good on. How many fucking means did the last dance thing is create. When they're when let's imagine lebron last like twenty years from now. I think he could be good on camera if he just actually let let go. You know maybe he will twenty later right. But there's something about i don't give a fuck jordan thing book talk when you're watching it and the presentation. Everything about him is captivating way well and that's a good point like we were talking about. Lebron's co entrepreneur angle. That he really cells. And i have no problem with lebron on making absolutely as much money as you possibly can. There's important point to be made. Which is michael. Jordan was never interested in that stuff and made every bit as much money as guests. That legrand assange lebron's preneurs ship is not yes. It's like it's a way to make money but it's also a way that he's presenting himself to the public like like if you can make the brown. I think lebron could make every bit as much money as he's made. Yeah it if he didn't care about that stuff at all. Is that disruptor walter thing of like i want to show that i can excess heat in every field. I want to all this stuff which also makes him to knowable. we feel. We know too much about this fucking guy it sort of true but also like if we saw clip of lebron the shop kind of has this but even still the shop is obviously focus in its way but like if i saw lebron like talking shit it would be kind of like whole like i'm sure. Of course he does right like on the bus right. You never see the stories. Also but how. Much lebron disliked. Not personally but disliked steph. Curry bronc clearly hated stem. Because it was like how can this guy who is clearly in every way worse than me an athlete yes not that he's step is obviously great like bead beating me like lebron. Had this feeling of like you guys really think this is this better than me horsh actively obviously you are a better basketball player than steph curry. But like you know steph represented something completely different and he was accessible and kids love him and it's like a kid can imagine shooting a basketball..

KOMO
"legrand" Discussed on KOMO
"At com This is KOMO. Seattle, KOMO FM, Oakville. From ABC News. I'm Dave Packer. We've learned that one of the most senior officials in the Trump organization has testified before a special grand jury. Jeff Makani has worked for former President Trump more than three decades and currently serves as controller. He is the first high ranking employee of the Trump Organization to testify before the special grand jury that's hearing evidence about the former president. His company and its employees of late prosecutors in the Manhattan district attorney's office have been examining certain perks given to Trump's longtime chief financial officer. Alan what? Hesselberg and whether those perks were properly accounted for on his taxes. ABC s Erin Couture Ski. The news comes as the former president is scheduled to deliver the keynote address at the North Carolina Republican Party convention this afternoon and one day after Facebook announced that Trump will be suspended from the platform until at least 2023, flight attendants and passengers aboard a Delta flight being held as heroes. After tackling a man who reportedly tried to break into the cockpit. That passenger restrained by other passengers and crew, including West Campbell. My million is back and I didn't want you tried to get up so Trying to hold him down. He just didn't know what he was going to do the unruly man removed by police after an emergency landing in Albuquerque and taken into FBI custody President Biden and Senate Republicans still pushing for an infrastructure deal. The Senate's Republican negotiators, Shelley Moore, Capito, met again with President Biden and they'll meet again Monday. With the president making a lot of concessions. He's obviously come down quite a bit in what he originally proposed. And hopefully they'll have more they can add to their proposal. Spokesperson Jen Psaki still not ruling out another covid relief like reconciliation, which only requires 51. Senate votes. Andy FIELD. ABC NEWS Washington A federal judge overturning California's three decade old band on assault weapons. California Governor Gavin Newsom, calling the ruling a direct threat to public safety and the lives of innocent California's the attorney general, promising an appeal. You're listening to ABC News. Have you ever thought you'd like to buy and sell houses but didn't know how or where to get the money. My name is Ron Legrand. And over the last 39 years, I bought over 3000 houses without using my money or credit and taught thousands to do the same. Today..

X96
"legrand" Discussed on X96
"And accident, wasn't it? Legrand X 96 is available on your smart speaker. Tell your Amazon echo or Google home to play X 96. That way. You could start your day with radio from Helen home before you get into the car. If you're ever craving a one hour nonstop music winking at home, you could say play X 96 Cory O'Brian will be there for you in the middle of the day. Todd New commands a great mix of all the new alternative during the afternoon, and Nick Davis has fresh The music every weeknight a date and all you need to do is say, pack whatever the name of your smart speaker is play X 96 by listening to X 96 at home When your smarts bigger, you accept all terms of use, including the ability of us secretly spying on your private conversations at home. Honestly, we thought spying on you would be more exciting, but seriously, how many times can you Google recipes for macaroni and cheese? It's macaroni and cheese, literally. Two items. But you know what? We're still listening anyway. See details that x 96 dot com. Do you ever feel that you're a passenger and light that's completely out of control? Regain your independence and steer your life in the direction you want to go behind the wheel of your very own nimble 2021. Mazda 6 30 All will drive. Lease yours for only 1 69 a month or finances 0.9% for 63 months from bountiful Mazda, where you always get tires and oil for life. Be in control Be Mazda at the Mazda com 33 months came here. 40 67 protection plus tax. We see the most film school just isn't working for me anymore. I need more choices on how I learned, And it would be nice to have teachers who care about me and have more time to give. It would be nice..

Real Estate Coaching Radio
"legrand" Discussed on Real Estate Coaching Radio
"Use language like try. Maybe might see how it goes. Give it a shot. They're committed to making it work whether it's big picture just making a career in real estate or smaller projects like creating a past client follow up system. They are relentless. And in the case that you just made for legrand which is what any real estate professional needs to be doing. And don't skip that step. The focus is on the magic. That's it that's it sounds oversimplified but assuming that you did the math and to get there it really does get down to that it is fascinating how not just in real estate but in life in general. Everybody wants everything tomorrow more complicated. I think that's a function of ego. Like look all these no here. We are basically the beginning of the year doesn't it does it feel like january eighth or deserted. Feel like we're going to really really busy flipping week. The week feels like a month does health. We got so listen Wires everyone want everything to be so complicated. What is it about excuse. So they don't have to do the work. I think it's simpler than that. It's like the magic number is when boiled down comes down to the most simplest clearest answer yeah okay and the answer is as far as white people thinks went to be more complicated than they are is because well maybe just touching right because they don't want to do what they don't want to do they don't wanna do the real work they don't want to be some other answer i must. I must have to take ten more steps. And then when i think about it must be so complicated than it's easy to procrastinate because it's going to be too hard the essence of everything that doesn't matter what it is always comes down to the simplistic the simplest of answers. So like when you're trying to figure out what was it autumn's razor eight when you're trying to figure out the truth about something. Look for the most obvious answer in most cases. That's the truth. But yet when you talk real estate agents they talk about funnels in landing pages of squeeze pages and drip campaigns and they talk about all this complicated social networking stuff. One thing leads the other thing the other thing over the other thing. Why do you want it to be so complicated. It doesn't have to be so complicated. Does seem agents that claim that they have two thousand leads to exactly but they're not leads but the point it is is is it because you guys don't know that it doesn't have to be that complicated or too because you feel guilty or your somehow confused with the fact that it is very simple to make money in real estate and that. Maybe you're look confused about that but really probably is in my opinion. Because you're listening you're not media free when it comes to all the people trying to sell you crap in real estate and you think just because there's all these vendors out there selling these tiny objects to you you think that somehow out validates their business model just the very factor in business. It doesn't these guys these marketers. They come and go. They're just basically carpetbaggers trying to sell you guys whatever it is and they come back six months later and try to sell you something else if not been in the business long enough yet to realize that know that it's true and real estate falls a lot of very predictable trends..

Progressive Talk 1350 AM
"legrand" Discussed on Progressive Talk 1350 AM
"It's called of Legrand gin. And from that the grand and we can derive all the rules of how everything works, How everything interact with each other. And from that you get electrons and quarks and Adam's Everything comes from this one equation. The low branch in but of course. Problems with it. As we said earlier. There's a bunch of different kinds of fields, you know which generate all these different particles, and not everything is described by this Legrand Jin. So that's what it would look like. I think if it turns out that quantum fields are the fundamental building block of the universe, but you know we didn't nobody really believes that. But are we saying that maybe there's just one field that may be Result in these other multiple fields. That's right. Like these. These other fields were just combinations have maybe one fundamental field exactly if quantum field theory is the right way to think about the universe. In the theory of everything as a quantum field theory would be a single field. Yeah, and it could interact with itself, and that could give all sorts of interesting stuff in coming up with quantum field theories. We've made a lot of progress and bringing together lots of different kinds of things to describe them in terms of just one thing you know, for example, we used to think of electricity and magnetism is completely different Things you know, electricity was like Zapping stuff and magnetism was these weird rocks that pushed away each other attracted each other until people figured out. Oh, actually, electricity magnetism are two sides of the same coin. They go hand in hand. They're like the same field. Yeah, they're just two parts of their two manifestations of the same field right? So there goes to get it down to like a theory with one feel that's called the peanut field. On two ladies. Listen, not all right. All right, All right. I'm on board with the peanut field. Let's do it. Let's describe the universe into so we got the peanut and we got the time we got the mixed metaphor. Yeah, it's because the universe a peanut, or is it tough? Uh, maybe you can eat peanuts with your toes, and then you wouldn't need socks. So, Hey, that solves all of our problems. Let's leave folks with that visual and then take a quick break while you think about eating peanuts with your toes..

SPACE NEWS POD
NASA Shuts Down Spitzer Space Telescope After 16 Years
"Spitzer space telescope, according to NASA will be decommissioned on January thirtieth of twenty twenty now that is due to the space telescope aging. And this is due to decreased functionality you see Spitzer. It has to rotate two point it's antenna towards the earth to transmit data back to us. And when it does this, it causes its solar panels to turn away from the sun in during. That time the space craft relies on internal solar power in a battery to operate. So every year, that Spitzer has been out there, it's there's solar panels have been tilting further and further away from the sun in scientists at NASA worried that continuing to operate Spitzer would deplete his energy source completely. And if this happens like in the middle of it experiment, they might not be able to retrieve the data that's already on Spitzer, so they need to basically save energy in order to shoot that data back to earth in Spitzer is amazing. Right. So Spitzer was only supposed to last five years in it. Lasted in additional eleven years, in during that time Spitzer gave us some of the most stunning images of Saturn's rings clusters of stars and. A small black hole from a nearby dwarf galaxy amongst a lot of other images. You can check them all out on NASA. It's all free to download free to check out. You can go to NASA dot gov in search for Spitzer or all the Spitzer news and all the everything that's happened with Spitzer throughout its time throughout at sixteen years exoplanets, galaxies everything Nobili stars solar systems. It's all there. Now Spitzer gave us some amazing data some amazing science, but it's going to be replaced by the James Webb space telescope, which is going to launch in twenty twenty one in the James Webb space telescope that J W. It's different than the Spitzer space telescope. It's going to be an L to a second Legrand's point. And it will orbit the sun, one point five million kilometers. It's about a million miles away from the earth

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary
UNSW Sydney engineers want to mine water on the moon
"New ustralian project underway to mine. Water on the moon for conversion into rocket fuel. It'll stems because one of the biggest problems with spaceflight at least chemically powered space lot. Like, we use here on earth is the cost of transporting the few needed for the journey. So wouldn't it be great? If you any knitted enough, you'll to get you there and then fill up again for the return journey and that fuel would be plain old water or the most common molecules in the universe. And there's plenty of it on the moon frozen. His eyes on the permanently shadowed flows of polar impact craters which never exposed to Rick. Sunlight what a molecules of also that ticket in the thin lays of gas flooding just above the lunar surface. Of course, water in the chemically related hydroxyl group can also exist in forms out of the normal water molecules by being chemically bound as hydrates hydroxides Telent minerals, and this strong evidence suggesting that low concentrations of these hydrates hydroxides cover much of the Luna. Surface finding water in the moon's important firstly astronauts can drink it that can break down to oxygen and hydrogen use the oxygen for breathing. And of course, the oxygen and hydrogen constituents are also the ingredients of rocket fuel making rocket fuel out of water on the moon would significantly cut down the cost of carrying out space missions now professor Andrew Dempster and colleagues from the university of New South Wales. I looking at the commercial viability of mining water on the moon to produce that rocket fuel Dempster believes a strategy is uniquely placed the covets out a niche in the global space industry by exploiting its position of strength in mining expertise to office mining. He says Austrailia hasn't natural advantage. It already has the world's best mining research technology in automation, tools, and the planet's largest mining companies the major deterred for industry involvement is being the lack of understanding of the commercial viability associated with this type of project, and of course, the besieged investment risk profile of mining Dempster and colleagues. Want to create the engineering machinery mining methods energy resources and communications required to make such operations viable. Hey says while commercial mining operations of the moon still decades way given sufficient funding his team could be just five to ten years away from politics a water mining proof of concept operation on the lunar surface any settlement that happens on the moon would need waterfall source of purposes, if people that would consume it fuel growing plants, you grow them, but most of the applications we looking at for water, the moon would be before settlement happens. And so most of this would just be purely robotic exercise so things like if you can produce the water you can separate it out into hydrogen oxygen. You can then use it as fuel. So you could input that rocket fuel in orbit around the moon or or run the summed. And so if you only way MAs you could refuel away, you know, the reason why that's interesting is or sensible is that it costs limit about ten thousand dollars peculiar to get something into Lewis ov-, it if you. Can create your water. Listen ten thousand dollars a kilogram. You've got a business sorta to do this. I guess they're very side as I gonna melt the water in situ, are you going to extract it as rock rock as regular minds would or are you looking at extracted out of the brick here on the moon liquid? It doesn't exist. There's not enough pressure. Only sort of two types of what do exist as a solid on spending. It will if you hate it out. It would immediately become guests. It will sublime drinking against solely because of lack of Prussia. So what you need to be able to do is not only to heat the ons, but you need to be able to capture and stored in personalized why tunes into a liquid all sorts of technologies that are around try and do this one of them's of build say bubble of the top of the the regular, which is the the soil, and you could apply to it. And you can expect a water in that way. And then gathered together into a container pressurize it separated into the Hudson oxygen the technologies being looked at to achieve. This they being experimented with. Now. You more interested in this. Or are you more interested in the actual robotic the autonomous vehicles that will be doing the extraction? And then processing we'll we have reward Ryan interests. We have students looking at the of this issue. How you might to environmental impact statement. How you as you come up with business cases, and you can close them which mining message. What used to extract to to get the rock into a state where you can convert the the water admission does on how you look at the whole mission where you the resources where you'd want to land. How you power the robots so run across the range of research, topics. We'd looking at or base things basics already looking at missions to examine the feasability of mining at the Luna south pole is this something you want to get on board with or you guys looking at it totally independent approach we hoping to with whatever Papa so whoever would love to wick with their various companies seventy nine them, but some of the lodge inch. National spice companies have very strong interesting strategy at the moment, probably because we sit up out spice agency last year. But also just because the spice industry Hughes growing very rapidly. Regardless of anything to do with the agency we've gone from having to spice startup companies five years ago, having one hundred now it's a really exciting place to be looking at spice, and that's tracking bit of interest. For somebody's international palms. Visit logic to examining mining as in each four spell you. We have the largest mining companies advice team who pays in Rio Tinto's of this world. We have the best mining researches in the world Hugh money engine eating, and we have the strongest mine or am I shouldn't. So those months up in north western strategy with around people in the minds. Leaping up ready for number of years now and successful with automated trains to and they like fifty thousand Tom transit the little things. No, none. But to some extent the the degree of automation of those months at the moon. And is not enough to spice. So by that. I mean, there's still a favorite of communication between a mind and the the headquarters and one of the things that I'm personally quite interested in is the trade off between much communication bend. We'd see need and how tournaments the robots have to be much decision making that can do by themselves without having an intervention from the headquarters. So I think there's a lot of little research to be done there as well. And you really can pay Monte on a to extraterrestrial mining considering the distances the different sorts of environments and especially on the moon with dust play such an important role, the capacities probably more straightforward than you might think the stages that you go through what mining engineers coal exploration. And what Lyman would call like people would go prospecting like would prospecting. But when you talk about exploration and spice that means something else. So we need to come up with some language consisted. But that stays the prospecting style. Edge, the feasibility stage than his mining this transport, and this delivery to a customer a lot of that. Brian Wook exists ready for mines and a lot of the big money companies would understand how you about putting together an argument for for or how you structure it that we are not though talking about driving with trucks with ties twice the height of the person, and I sort of things it would be quite different mechanics, but at the high level, it looks very similar at the low level looks quite different. When you talk about the dust on the moon, bigger problem. That's absolutely the case very haunting reliable Queant l'agence is one of the things that is very important the Trishul money even moso in spice because you can't seem to post a long to go and and fix your robot for you. But when I talk about mining in a very remote place, like the moon, the challenges quite similar to for instance, moaning in the deep sea in the deep oceans, so because again, it has to be very remote, disagree of autonomy era environmental challenges. Is that different challenges? But it's it's still the same general problem. So I think we've got a lot of people working on some of those problems already. And I think if we were to start looking at money and spice, we could then be learning lessons that we could apply on the United States already looking at a success to the national space station in the form of and you space station, which would be one of the Legrand's positions between the earth and the moon. So it'll always sort of remain the opening the middle sort of always remain that position. And that would be a jump off point for regular excursions explorations, prospecting, whatever you wanna call it to the lunar surface. I believe that's why some of the first mining techniques of an extraterrestrial nature gonna be let it in practice yet. Yeah. Wasn't gonna mention on the grounds point to that point on that. That's actually according more like to deliver the fuels to those those points. And yes, we getting quite a lot of interest in the US ninety nine potholes than they would like to deliver payloads onto the Luda surface. Europe has been very active in their moon village China as landed in arrive Rome fossil. So there's there's a lot of intimacy interest in authentic. We have being too out there to be joining in on what time line is is they won. Or is that in terms of developing the technology, which obviously you got to be doing here on us is there at Tom line for that. Or is that too early in the process to to look at things, I think in terms of polio relation commercial operation between talking dick by the need putting in of proving the technologies to make that possible. I think missions can be put together now to start doing that part of what we're interested in stubby was really only examining technologies that apart of a close business. So if you say, this is entirely commercially useful, this technology, then we'll study that one example was we had a student who has growth Jet Propulsion Laboratory, we've had students have placements over the as part of this program. And it was listening at a MAs settlement. And one of these early findings was if. We used this particular technology, and they were forty people in settlement thirty six of them would have to be writing this. And so clearly that's feasible, and those are the sorts of things you wanna knock on the head before you start testing them on on the surface. If they never going to be useful. So a lot of work has to be done the head of time to make sure that what you're doing is going to be useful in the long run. That's professor Andrew Dempster from the university of New South

BrainStuff
How Do We Define the Kilogram?
"Support. For brain stuff comes from our friends at rocket mortgage by Quicken Loans are excited to introduce their all new rate shield approval. If you're in the market to buy a home rate shield approval is a real game changer. And here's why first Quicken Loans will lock your rate for up to ninety days while you shop, but here's the crucial part every up your rate stays the same. But if rates go down your rate also drops either way you win. It's the kind of thinking you'd expect from America's largest mortgage lender. To get started. Go to rocketmortgage dot com slash brain stuff rate shield approval. Only valid on certain thirty year purchase transactions. Additional conditions or exclusions may apply based on Quicken Loans. Data in comparison to public data records, equal housing lender. Licensed in all fifty states and m l s consumer access dot org number three zero three zero. Welcome to brain stuff from how stuff works. Hey, rain stuff on Vogel bomb and for nearly one hundred fifty years, the official weight of a kilogram was determined by a shiny. Cylinder of platinum locked away and a French vault. The kilogram like the meter and the second is one of these seven fundamental units of measurement also known as the international system of units or the metric system. The sl for short. These were first formalized in the eighteen seventy five treaty of the meter back. Then the best way to agree on the weight of a kilogram was to forge a single hunk of metal and debit, Legrand K and for more than a century all scientific scales were calibrated back to that one physical reference point with copies stored in a dozen countries. But even solid objects can change over time when Legrand K was weighed in the nineteen eighties. It was a couple of micrograms lighter meaning that all highly accurate scientific scales. Not like the one in your bathroom had to be recalibrated. And that's what nerds call a real pain in the mass. Luckily, a team of metrology was already on the case a metrology being the science of weights and measures. They were searching for a universal constant that will generate a fixed value for the kilogram. That's true now and will still be true a million years from now they already found such a physics fixed for the second which was redefined in nineteen sixty seven from its previous value of a fraction of a day. One eighty six thousand four hundred of a day to be precise to something much more confusing, but much more constant it takes nine billion one hundred ninety two million six hundred thirty one thousand seven hundred and seventy also nations of a special microwave beam to excite atoms of the isotope cesium one thirty three to a higher energy level since that number will never change. Unlike the exact length of a day that's your new second same for the meter instead of being defined as the length of a single meter long. Metal pole forged back in eighteen eighty nine. It was redefined in nineteen Eighty-three as the. Since light travels in a vacuum in a particular fraction of a second. One two hundred ninety nine million seven hundred ninety two thousand four hundred and fifty eighth of a second. It wasn't until twenty seventeen that scientists working at the US National Institute of standards, and technology and similar bodies worldwide. Finally, agreed on universal constant for the kilogram the achievement required solving one of the thorniest physics problems of the last century coming up with a numerical value for punks constant without getting too technical a physicist Max Planck proved in nineteen hundred that matter releases energy in discrete chunks called Quanta his equation for measuring. These packets of energy included, a constant called H hitherto known as planks constant thanks to I'm Stein. We know that energy and mass are mathematically related that whole E equals MC squared thing. So physicists figured out the plugs constant being fixed unit of energy could yield the world's most accurate measurement of mass calculating the exam. Value of plugs, constant took decades and some serious technological innovation specifically a nifty device called a Kibble balance. But they did that work, and we now know that punks constant is six point six two six zero seven one five zero times ten to the power of negative thirty four jewels per second. I mean, da in mid November twenty eighteen at the annual meeting of the international bureau of weights and measures in verse I France representatives for more than sixty countries voted to approve a new and ever lasting definition of the kilogram. As calculated by the Planck, constant no more hunk of metal the kilograms masses. Now tied to planks constant new definitions were also announced for sl units. The Ampere electrical current the Kelvin for temperature and the mole the number of molecules atoms in an element. These new definitions will take effect on may twentieth. Two thousand nineteen. The original platinum kilogram. Prototype will remain in that underground French vault while countless generations of scientists will make world. Changing discoveries using the kilogram two point. Oh. Today's episode was written by Dave rou and produced by Tyler clang for more on this and lots of other weighty, topics. Visit our home planet. How stuff works dot com. Hey, brain stuff listeners today. I wanted to tell you about another podcast how to money, which is not your typical personal finance podcast, the hosts Matin Joel are best friends. Aiming not to lecture you but to make conversations about money. Interesting informative even fun every Wednesday. They cover real life money topics like ways to cut your grocery Bill. Why your house is an awful investment, and how to achieve financial independence, if you kind of suck at money, or if you just want to learn more about how you can support yourself and your future, you can listen and subscribe on apple podcasts the iheartradio app or wherever you get your podcasts. Just search for how to money.

The Jump
Kobe Bryant says his diehard fans will' fall in line' for LeBron James of the Los Angeles Lakers
"Up to Drake and Travis Scott fickle mode at a plaque for ballgame. We can't afford the plate actual software, but this is a pretty good spec civilly. You think the Broncos Odessa's with the star could see and being a producer, maybe that's more history, what he's in shape that's for sure. I can't if he ever does. I'm gonna roast forever. How will rose forever would be Koby going to the big three. They can't afford them. That's the problem that's at the end of your career.