35 Burst results for "Lisa B"

AP News Radio
Biden signs bill on COVID origins declassification
"President Biden has signed a bill concerning the origins of COVID. I'm Lisa dwyer. President Joe Biden has signed a bipartisan bill into law that directs the federal government to declassify as much intelligence as possible about the origins of COVID-19. The legislation passed both the House and Senate without dissent. It directs the office of the director of national intelligence to declassify intelligence related to a lab in Wuhan, China, the law also allows for redactions to protect sensitive sources and methods. U.S. intelligence agencies are divided over whether a lab leak or a spillover from animals was likely source experts say the true origin may not be known for many years if ever. I'm Lisa dwyer

AP News Radio
Ford recalls 1.5M vehicles to fix brake hoses, wiper arms
"There's a forward recall to fix brake hoses and wiper arms. I'm Lisa dwyer. Ford is recalling more than 1.5 million vehicles in the U.S. to fix leaky brake hoses and because on some models, windshield wiper arms can break. On Ford fusion and Lincoln MKX midsize cars from 2013 through 2018, the front brake hoses can rupture and leak break fluid, which can make stopping distances longer. Dealers will place the hoses. The second recall covers F one 50 pickup trucks from 2021, the windshield wiper arms can break on those models, dealers will replace the arms if needed. I'm Lisa

AP News Radio
Fed lent $300B in emergency funds to banks in the past week
"The fed lent hundreds of billions of dollars in emergency funds to troubled banks. I'm Lisa de weyer. The Federal Reserve says that cash short banks have borrowed about $300 billion in emergency funding from the Central Bank and the past week. Nearly half the money, 143 billion went to holding companies for the two major banks that failed recently, Silicon Valley bank and signature bank. The money they borrowed was used to pay their uninsured depositors with bonds owned by both banks posted as collateral. An additional 148 billion in lending was provided to other unidentified banks through a long-standing program called the discount window and amounted to a record level for that program. Banks can borrow from the discount window for up to 90 days, typically in a given week, only about four to 5 billion is borrowed through that program

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Viral Video Labels Democrat, RINO Female Senators As 'Bipartisan'
"I'm going down some rabbit holes, Twitter seems a little more conservative friendly these days now that Elon Musk has the helm. There's a video that kind of went viral that shows a bunch of Democrat female senators. You got mazie hirono and the whole bunch of them, Elizabeth Warren, Pocahontas is in there. There's Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins is described as a group of bipartisan U.S. female senators. It's not bipartisan. It's a couple of rhinos in a room full of Democrats and Kamala. Vice president cackles is in there too. And it's just a creepy video and they're all waving at the camera. They're all happy and they're all drinking wine or whatever they're doing. And the caption from somebody is this is me waking up in hell. This is me in hell. Looking at all these smiling maniacal faces. Oh, look, there's Pocahontas. Oh, Susan Collins. Man, oh man.

AP News Radio
Storms end Southern California water restrictions for 7M
"There's a silver lining from the latest storm to drench California. I'm Lisa dwyer. California's 11th atmospheric river left the storm soaked state with a bang bringing flooded roadways, landslides, and toppled trees to the southern part of the state, but also a drought busting rainfall that means the end of water restrictions for nearly 7 million people. The decision brings some relief amid the state's historic drought, but weather woes remain an additional 61,000 people remain under evacuation warnings. California's governor Gavin Newsom. We do as I speak 31 shelters that are operating in 14 counties in the state of California. And there is more weather on the way. None of us naive about what we're looking forward to next week, potentially on Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, 12th atmospheric river. I'm Lisa dwyer

AP News Radio
Stormy Daniels meets with Manhattan prosecutors amid Trump probe
"Prosecutors investigating Donald Trump have met with stormy Daniels. I'm Lisa dwyer. Stormy Daniels lawyer says the porn actor has met with prosecutors who are investigating hush money, paid to Daniels on Donald Trump's behalf. Daniel says she had a 2006 sexual encounter with Trump. Trump says it never happened. Former Trump attorney Michael Cohen says Trump directed him to pay $130,000 in 2016 to keep the story quiet. Trump's current lawyer says the then candidate was extorted. The news emerged as Cohen was giving a second day of testimony before a New York grand jury looking into the matter. Falsifying business records can be a misdemeanor under state law or

AP News Radio
In nursing homes, impoverished live final days on pennies
"There's been no increase by Congress on how much a nursing home resident can receive for their personal needs allowance in decades. I'm Lisa dwyer. A half century old bit of American bureaucracy is leaving hundreds of thousands of nursing home residents in an unthinkable bind, living on as little as $30 a month. Most nursing home residents have their care covered by Medicaid and any income they receive instead goes towards their bills. The personal needs allowance created in 1972 was meant to cover anything a resident might need that its facility didn't provide from a phone to close or a birthday gift for a grandchild. Although some states have taken action on their own, the allowance remains low in much of the country. Congress has raised the minimum rate only once back in 1987 when it was raised two $30 and has remained $30 ever since. I'm Lisa dwyer

AP News Radio
Honduras will seek to establish diplomatic ties with China
"Honduras plans to establish diplomatic ties with China. I'm Lisa dwyer. The president of Honduras has announced the country will seek to establish diplomatic relations with China, which would imply severing relations with Taiwan. Honduras is one of the few remaining allies of Taiwan and the announcement represents a change in its diplomatic views in January 2022, the foreign affairs minister told The Associated Press that Honduras would continue to strengthen ties with Taiwan and that establishing a diplomatic relationship with China was not a priority. Beijing has isolated Taiwan diplomatically with a long campaign against such recognition under the one China policy. China claims self ruled democratic Taiwan is part of China's territory and sees diplomatic recognition of the island as interference in

AP News Radio
Remains of 160 people found in Bay Area cremation warehouse
"Remains of multiple people have been found in the cremation warehouse in California. I'm Lisa dwyer. San Francisco Bay Area officials are working to identify the families of 160 people whose remains were found and warehouse used by a cremation business whose license was suspended. 6 bodies in the ash remains of 154 other people were found earlier this month at a warehouse in Hayward after the California cemetery and funeral bureau received several complaints from customers saying ocean view creations had stopped responding to them. Ocean view had its license suspended in 2018 and again last year and was not supposed to be operating or keeping remains in a warehouse. Many apparently were supposed to be dispersed at sea. The remains date back to 2013, but with poor record keeping and no contracts found, officials now have to check different databases to find out who the relatives are. I'm Lisa dwyer

AP News Radio
Another atmospheric river pounds California, 27K to evacuate
"Another atmospheric river is wrecking havoc in California while heavy snow hits the east coast. I'm Lisa dwyer. Forecasters are warning of more flooding and potentially damaging winds as a new atmospheric river pushes into a swamped California. Nearly 27,000 people are under evacuation orders statewide with emergency declarations for 40 counties. There's been damaging winds with gusts of up to 70 mph. There are also numerous reports of fallen trees and more than 330,000 customers without power. The national weather service says the storm is moving faster than expected, and most of the rainfall should shift southward. California has been battered by ten previous atmospheric rivers this winter on the east coast heavy wet snow cause a plane to slide off a runway and led to hundreds of school closings canceled flights and thousands of power outages there. I'm Lisa dwyer

AP News Radio
Dick Fosbury, who won an Olympic gold medal with the ‘Fosbury Flop,’ dies at 76
"Fosbury flop high jumper dick Fosbury has died. I'm Lisa dwyer. Dick Fosbury who completely revamped the technical discipline of high jump and won an Olympic gold medal with its Fosbury flop, has died. Before Fosbury, high jumpers cleared their heights by running parallel to the bar, then leaping over it with a scissors kick. At the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, Fosbury used his new technique to set an Olympic record and win gold. Fosbury took off at an angle leaped backward and bend himself into a J shape to catapult his 6 foot four inch frame over the bar. By the next Olympics, 28 of the 40 jumpers were using the Fosbury flop. Today it is by far the most used technique for elite high jumpers, Fosbury's publicist

AP News Radio
Texas executes inmate convicted of killing 4 in drug-related robbery
"A Texas man has been executed. I'm Lisa dwyer with the latest. Texas executed an inmate for the drug related killings of four people more than 30 years ago, including a woman who was 9 months pregnant, all four had been tied up and shot in the head in a Houston home during a drug robbery in 1992. 52 year old Arthur Brown junior received a lethal injection and Huntsville Texas, his execution was carried out after the U.S. Supreme Court declined to stop it, frowns attorneys had argued he was exempt from execution because he was intellectually disabled. Brown was the 5th inmate in Texas and the 9th in the U.S. put to death this year. I'm Lisa

AP News Radio
Yeti recalls 1.9 million coolers and cases for magnet hazard
"There's a Yeti recall on coolers and cases due to a magnet hazard. I'm Lisa dwyer. Yet he has recalled 1.9 million coolers in gear cases because magnets can become detached, posing a risk of serious injury or death the recall effects, the sidekick dry gear case, the M 20 soft backpack cooler and the M 30 soft cooler version one and two. The coolers in gear bags were sold from March 2018 to January 2023. If swallowed two or more of the high powered magnets can attract to each other or to another metal object and get stuck in the digestive system. The consumer product safety commission says consumers should immediately stop using the four recalled products and contact Getty for refund information.

AP News Radio
US probes Tesla Autopilot, steering wheels that can come off
"There's new scrutiny of Tesla's autopilot system and an issue with steering wheels that can come off. I'm Lisa dwyer. U.S. safety regulators are turning up the heat on Tesla, announcing investigations and steering wheels coming off some SUVs. And a fatal crash involving a Tesla suspected of using an automated driving system when it ran into a part fire truck in California. The national highway traffic safety administration posted documents, revealing an investigation of steering wheels that can detach from the steering column on as many as 120,000 model Y SUVs, while a special crash investigation team will probe what happened in a February crash involving a 2014 Tesla Model S and a fire department ladder truck. They are looking at how the autopilot system detects and responds to emergency vehicles parked on highways, the agency has become more aggressive in pursuing safety problems with teslas in the past year, announcing multiple recalls and investigations

The Doug Collins Podcast
Jason Lewis and Doug Discuss 'Comfortable Conservatism'
"Right now in the United States House, it's less than 8 years. Did you and most people don't realize this, that in this next Congress, they'll be less than 40% of the membership of the Republican caucus have ever served with anybody that they came in before Donald Trump. So, I mean, I mean, it's huge turnover. And you see it a little bit in the Santa. It's always the anomalies. It's always the Schumer as the Pelosi's the Dan youngs even. I put that. But what happens is, is what you just touched on. Is the staff on Capitol Hill, which you got a lot of great folks, but a lot of those committees have been there 30 years and they don't like change. Then you go into the bureaucracy. That's where I think the biggest problem is, you know, I got, you know, if you want to talk to me, it's fine, but let's have a some kind of at least turnover in Washington and these cubicles up and down these streets because that's where the real governess is going because we in Congress sort of gave our power away to them. Right. No, you're right. We don't do civil service reform. All is lost. I think incoming president has control over three or 4000 employees out of 2 million. So, you know, he's going to come and go and you're going to get those political appointees. But really, Peter strzok and Lisa page proved where the departments are. And the same with these committee staffs and all of that. So I couldn't agree with you more. Look, what I write in the book, Doug, is that too often Republicans want to revert back to what I call comfortable conservatism. And by that, I mean, what are you going to alienate related advocate for term limits? And I happen to be in favor of them, but I agree with you that I'm in favor of them for everybody. But who are you going to alienate? Nobody. Wearing a Ukrainian flag lapel pin. We really going to alienate nobody. You talk about a tax cut. We believe in tax cuts, but it's about as safe a political position as you can get. But if you start talking about we really shouldn't have a biological male swimming against my daughter swim team in college. We really shouldn't have lawlessness in the streets, although they are talking about that. But we ought to close the borders. Or how about this? We get to the point right now with China. We're not too many generations ago of you unleashed a bioweapon on the world. That would have been considered an act of war.

AP News Radio
Hunter who killed pet dogs says he thought they were coyotes
"A New York man is charged with killing two pet dogs, I'm Lisa dwyer, a hunter who told authorities that he killed and skinned what he thought were too coyotes, but later discovered that they were a Connecticut family's pet German shepherds has been criminally charged. During a hearing Michael konchak said that he is ashamed of what he did, a judge rejected contracts request for probation program that could have resulted in charges being erased. Authorities say contract killed the dogs with a crossbow on November 18th after the animals escaped from their owner's yard in richfield, Connecticut, the families of the dogs Lebanon and simo got out because of fence was damaged, possibly by a bear, the hunting and trapping of coyotes is legal in Connecticut. I'm Lisa dwyer

AP News Radio
DOJ sues La. chemical co. over cancer risk to minority area
"The Department of Justice is suing a chemical company over cancer risk to a minority area. I'm Lisa dwyer, federal officials are suing a Louisiana chemical maker, alleging that it presented an unacceptable cancer risk to the nearby majority black community and is demanding cuts and toxic emissions. The lawsuit accuses dank of performance elastomer of emitting the carcinogen, chloroprene, and such high concentrations that it poses an unacceptable cancer risk children are particularly vulnerable. There's an elementary school, a half mile from the plant. Chloroprene is a liquid raw material used

AP News Radio
Nissan recalls over 800,000 SUVs
"There's a new Nissan recall, affecting SUVs, I'm Lisa dwyer. Nissan is recalling more than 800,000 small SUVs in the United States and Canada because a problem when the key can cause the ignition to shut up while they're being driven. The recall covers rogues from the 2014 through 2020 model years, as well as rogue sports from 2017 through 2022. Nissan says those SUVs have Jack knife folding keys that may not stay fully open. If driven with a key partially folded, a driver could touch the fob and inadvertently turning off the engine. Owners will be notified in March with an interim letter telling them not to attach anything else to the key ring. Nissan says they're still working on a remedy. Owners with keys that won't stay in the open position should

Ask The Health Expert
"lisa b" Discussed on Ask The Health Expert
"Beat yourself up over it. You're going through an emotional reaction, it's okay. That's even another chapter in my book is about having emotional sobriety. It doesn't mean don't feel your feels. You should feel your feels, but no, when that emotion is serving you and when it's not and how many of us have had maybe too many shots of alcohol, it's the same thing. How many people have too many shots of anger, too many shots of shots of sadness, where we end up saying something or doing something that we're going to regret. So how do you build emotional sobriety so that you can look at all these situations, keep your feelings and your emotions even kill so you can see things with clarity and make clear decisions, because let's face it, you never want to make a decision based on an emotional reaction. Right, everyone remember that. Me included, everyone remember that. I will tell you, Lisa, the biggest thing I ever learned the hard way multiple times is like, you don't get upset right the email, and hit send. You just wait till tomorrow, like you just wait, right? You know, write it, put it into a draft, send it to yourself. I actually don't even put person's name in the email now. I put a send it to myself because you slip and I'll send you in there and you know. But I think the critical thing here is the grace. Doctor joda spends this as it's like, have compassion and care for yourself. Like, you know, this is where we start. I love the fact that you're giving everybody. First of all, your book radical confidence is amazing. Everybody needs this for their for their success library. And then you're giving everyone your four part confidence workshop, which I'm going to put at JJ virgin dot com slash Lisa B for Lisa Bailey. Needs to be well, thank you, because I mean, literally, I remember when I first started in health. And we were trying to look at the outcomes. Measure the outcomes of what happened when people started to do these different things. And the outcomes would differ, right? Some people was energy, some people like they could work out more. Some people, it was fat loss, but there was one clear outcome everybody had, and it was confidence. Honestly, I mean, that was like one of the biggest things that we didn't even cover, but like I've had massive health issues over the last 6 years and the biggest part to my healing to getting my gut back on track to dealing with sibo, leaky gut, parasite, candida like, I had all of that to the point where I was 20 pounds lighter, my hair was falling. I mean, it was bad. I remember. Yeah, that was carrying you around at a party. I was hitting you up or like hell. How can I carry this person around? She's tiny. You're still, you're still tiny, but I'm 6 feet tall, so everyone's tiny compared to me. But it really did come back down to the confidence, is trusting yourself starting to listen to yourself, to listen to the experts and see does it actually compute with how I feel. It all comes to trusting yourself and yet also giving yourself the grace that things you may try, whether it's health related, fitness related, that you will fall. But giving yourself the confidence or sorry, giving yourself the grace that you know, you're the type of person that can get back up. Like, that's it. It doesn't matter what you face. If you say to yourself, I'm the type of person that can get back up. Now whether it's like I said, health related fitness, confidence, business relationships like that mindset allows you to find the strength to always to keep showing up and that's really the importance because I'm not here to pretend that I'm perfect. I've had massive issues that I've had to deal with and yet I kept showing up and that was through radical confidence. There you go, you're the poster woman for it. All right, so everyone again, JJ virgin dot com forward slash Lisa B, grab the four part confidence course. It's free to you the listeners and Lisa. Thank you so much. I'm so excited to be hanging out with you in a couple of days. Oh, ditto home. Yay. Awesome. Thank you. All right, again, as a reminder, make sure that you grab the four part confidence workshop and again I'm putting that JJ virgin dot com forward slash Lisa B and if you've not yet subscribed to the show, hello. I don't want to miss any of the most fabulous content. So subscribe to JJ dot com. I'll see you next time.

Ask The Health Expert
"lisa b" Discussed on Ask The Health Expert
"Did a BigQuery to my audience. A couple years ago and I said, you know, if you're not where you want to be in your health or with your weight or your body, why not? Thinking they'd say gluten or cheese or sugar or I don't like to exercise and it wasn't that at all. And what it really came down to was confidence and self worth. So I was super excited when my girlfriend Lisa Bill, you came out with radical confidence. And I was like, you must come talk about this. You must you must you must. And if you have not heard of Lisa, will Lisa and her husband Tom cofounded the quest nutrition company. And I met them a couple of years ago. I went and did Tom's impact theory and Lisa has also done a great show podcast women of impact. And so she's been really in it for years now and along the way she kind of realized something that was really her kryptonite could become her superpower. Someone let her explain all of that to you. Lisa, again, is the cofounder and president of impact theory studios, which is a revolutionary digital first studio producing original content focusing on the theme of empowerment. And she also is the author of this fabulous book. You will want to get for your success library radical confidence. She's also gifting us her four part confidence series. So I was really excited when she said this one. She has this her confidence workshop. She is gifting to us. And I'm going to put that at JJ virgin dot com slash Lisa B all right, I will be right back with

Discussions of Truth
"lisa b" Discussed on Discussions of Truth
"What does that say to me? Says, ladies and gentlemen, that the Vatican. Under the guys of religious or their religion. Is controlling. Quite possibly. This is simply what I'm asking you to consider. The education system in the United States. And if you add up the money links, it makes perfect sense. It makes perfect sense. You know, you paint this. It's warfare. It's a bio weapon. Doctor Peter mccoll had just mentioned on this show, a few days ago. This is Amanda has 51 peer reviewed. Medical publications. Incredibly well credentialed. He said it. He said this is COVID-19 is engineered in the laboratory. Do not think for a second. That there is not an entity a European based entity. There has been designing on a very sophisticated level. An invasion to destroy the United States of America. That is called conspiracy. And I'm telling you right now. Snow with theory. It's happening. You don't begin. To save your country, you will lose it. Ladies and gentlemen till next week. Thanks for tuning in. Share the program. Thanks for your considerations. Prove me wrong. But if you do nothing else, then share this podcast, share this episode, tune in to me next time, follow me on Instagram. Go to the research tab because I spent 5 years doing this for you. And go to the research to have look at the literature that I've compiled. Go through it. Study it. It's all accessible for free. There's no charge. And support these independent shows like this. Turn off your mainstream media. Turn it off. Honestly. Be awesome..

Discussions of Truth
"lisa b" Discussed on Discussions of Truth
"It took me about 18 hours. It's all resourced. It's got cited. It's got cited. It's all cited. Look at that information, because folks, when did the United Nations come about? Nations form. Well, let's see, mom. 1945. The same year, World War II, it was in the same year. Maybe I'm wrong in my days. But what else is interesting is the Central Bank of China was also adopted. That same year. So if the United Nations is a new concept. Who's behind it? Is America behind it? Dessert does the United Nations represent American constitutional values? Clearly this agenda to re-educate and to educate. Our children, being driven by the UN, if Lisa Logan is correct and I've met her personally, I have no reason to believe or doubt her that her research is inaccurate. Because it aligns with the research that I've been doing for 5 years. Who's behind the United Nations? And that's where I implore you to please look at your history America, remember, where you came from and what you were built upon. Because corner stone of your country is religious for freedom. So I ask you to broaden your spectrum on how you view the United States and all of the tumultuous conditions. It's in right now and experiencing in 2021. Vastly approaching 2022. Look, folks. Look at the powers, the historical powers, the United States has been an enemy of. And there you will. Find. Your money trails. You can start right now by abolishing and cutting off. Hang it in the town square. I'm speaking hypothetical. The Federal Reserve Central Bank. Oh, yeah, but Ian, you have Federal Reserve Central Bank was in existence. 30 years before the United Nations came around. Yeah, well, united the Federal Reserve Central Bank was created just before the Bolshevik revolution. Right, right. So who are the controlling entities of the Federal Reserve Central Bank? Because it's a private organization. Folks, that is a private organization, and I don't understand why Americans are not completely irate and up in arms right now, demanding answers. You're too complacent. America, you're comfortable. You're too comfortable. That water is going to be really cold. Water is going to be really, really, really cold. Unless you wake up wake up means look at your history, read. Stop watching the crap on TV. Stop throwing four hours of your day. Today, Sunday, watching the National Football League. All of these organisms have been infiltrated by this enemy..

Discussions of Truth
"lisa b" Discussed on Discussions of Truth
"But that's not what the narrative is anymore and it's like if you don't agree with the status quo, then you're a bad person. Right. So yeah, and then Lisa, one of the things that caught my attention here during this time with you is this app called hero. So now people are being trained. Now these students are being trained to report or. Report on somebody that's not aligned, talk about that a little bit more. Well, I believe there's the reporting on whether or not they see someone doing something good. But it could be expanded, right? This whole thing would be expanded to it's getting them okay with it. It's normalizing this type of behavior, right? We're putting people in the boxes. And we say, well, you need to believe this. And you need to believe that. If you don't believe it then, then you're an awful person, and that's really what the goal of the UN agencies are arrays. We have to have group think and in order to have this perfect universe where everyone's working together that you can't be a dissenter. Right, the universal conformity, nobody can agree to disagree, nobody can be the same. It's got to be it's got to be their way or no Right. Astonishing, Lisa, and I thank you for your time as we wind down. I want you to tell listeners a little bit more about what's next for you, what do you have, what do you have going and of course to leave listeners with some final thoughts? So please tell listeners what's next how they can get ahold of you what they can expect from you next? Well, you can follow me at I am Lisa slogan on Twitter. You can find me on Facebook as Lisa Logan. I'm a flag with a sunset behind it. And I post a lot about social emotional learning. You can find me there, but really the next step for me, I think people are talking way too much about critical race theory without talking about the vehicle to which they're delivering it. And granted in some districts and schools, they are specifically bringing in things like the 1619 Project. And specific to EI initiatives that other people like to call them DIE initiatives for obvious reasons. Because it makes you want to die. It's horrible. And but there's other places like here in my little conservative state of Utah, where it's not so obvious. So I will not stop Ian until the fact that people understand that social emotional learning is vehicle that they are driving to get some of these awful ideologies at critical race theory and comprehensive sex Ed into our schools under the guides of something really nice. I will not stop until that is part of the national narrative. One of my goals is to find an outlet that will do an expose on this. You know, I think, you know, think of someone like Tucker Carlson originals or a Glenn Beck wins innate chalkboard session, where they really are diving into this material and exposing it for what it is..

Happy Mum Happy Baby
"lisa b" Discussed on Happy Mum Happy Baby
"Have an accardo special. Because you've got to ambassadors with each day so no doubt we'll be talking about food at some point. Today's guest is an actress. I grew up watching her on my screen absolutely a daughter. She's also a celebrity chef and presenter has a daughter a teenage daughter. Which is something. I will never know anything about the my own experiences. Today's guest is lisa faulkner. Hello how are you. i'm very well. I'm just reeling from the fact that my daughter turned fifteen yesterday monday. So it's just i. I now have a fifteen year old very strange. Yeah it's just mad it really is. I have two step children who are fifteen. I have full but the older ones are much older. But fifteen and seventeen and to fifteen year old girls it some it is challenging is always challenging interesting. It's time you voice goes slightly up and also you're saying in your deuces room right now. Are you secretly looking around going. Oh she's not done this not done that. I spend the whole time going to me that i find piles of washing. The i've bought up kaleen unfolded into a room. And when she hasn't bothered to put away their either under her bed or back in washington. And i can already see some. You're gonna have to it just like pick things up and so it's out because that's totally. Feel the need to yeah. I'm constantly in here like tidy opera. She's leave my stuff alive. So what was your childhood like. Because i i've read your book meant to pay. I haven't actually read. I've listened to it absolutely loved listening. Because i just think that thing is when you listen to the author especially a book like that telling it it's much more pass north. You know what i mean. He loved it. And your touted. You describe it as one point as idyllic but your mom sounds like a like she was a right characters well. She really was my childhood up until the age of i'd say about fourteen was like a perfect childhood. We went on lovely little holidays. We didn't have a lot of money but we had a really lovely family dynamic with me..

Knuckleheads with Quentin Richardson & Darius Miles
"lisa b" Discussed on Knuckleheads with Quentin Richardson & Darius Miles
"And then you know the. The second part was just jelly. Bean became my coach. He coached the spark. So great relationship having joe in my life and just him teaching had pass you know he was a great passer mounts. Passer doing all these drills. You used to do with code. When he was little. I got a chance to to do in gym muhammad ali. Israel's footwork drills so You know that's another moment that always cherish his being with his dad so much in having that time. And then you know you have cogan vanessa. And that was another beautiful relationship. You know what i mean. They just had an amazing relationship with the girls. And you know we would always dan talk about our children in. Just you always want your kids you know so you guys talk about who got the it factor like within my daughter who she fears you know so we were exchanged stories about our kids and just whose ears than you know which one is mean and it's just it is one of those things where you never know how important those moments are until you get them and just being devastated by the loss of him makes those moments even more like unreels just repeating in your head about the time that you had as you spent so many times together and then really your life is only so little. You know 'cause concert earlier when we go out to. La we saying all these things from the palm trees. The magic johnson. Chiloe nil. The hollywood sign and i just remember man q. Is in the gardiner eaten at the was. We didn't pose the be in the garden. A day Are just remember seeing you come in welcome. The vip matab accused salmon. That's lisa land along the and you came in and just showed us so much. Love definitely just want to thank you again. Becoming a rock with it was definitely been flow. I've always been a person who i. I just love people. I love the fact. That you guys. I know you're new. La you know what i mean as i those of us grew up there were not in awe of things that happened in a leg has all our lives. We're around really are around celebrities even if you don't know them you around them you see them at restaurants you see movies and so i just think when you see guys coming in you know that's not from here you know is just like hey what's up. You know congrats. Y'all made it. You made it to the league. Like i'm proud of you. Did anything i can do. Was that the east over the rope. Come on yeah. You know what i mean. I feel like it should be that way. We should always show other love in a workers especially now for black people. Sometimes we just don't understand how important it is for us to have that open hand in empowering one another in some some of some of us get a little bit high on our horse about it. You know what i'm saying but that's never really been my style. I'm just. I'm not saying that i'm cool thing. I'm cool about so many different things. I'm just laid back..

Knuckleheads with Quentin Richardson & Darius Miles
"lisa b" Discussed on Knuckleheads with Quentin Richardson & Darius Miles
"Is. That's a that's just side by most people ain't got problems that's autumn that's Say right there so wait you said you were pregnant otani. Her right manage time will win like i. I knew not. I saw my way. Give light man. Women are super zoom. Ran like that should really is. You don't really know until you situation but the childbearing thing in in just you know. Isn't that mental toughness though. I think that's the thing that drives us for the moms that return. I think about Allyson felix serena williams. You know were you just. It is what we've done so much of our more of our whole life. We've been playing our sport in at the top of your sport is really hard to stop in. Think like you're done because you're pregnant is like oh yeah. No other women have gone through this. I'm not the first mom like let's figure this out. We don't have this baby and nursing nursing under locker room you you know you've got a really is the thing that we go through so much in our bodies went through so much but the leverett a gaming Figure find a way to get back out there. We just we just got up to the dunkin. Kobe go to the hall of fame. How was your holiday fame experience when you got the call. You when the spurs were you flew. May i i was there so it was great to see Kobe Going into the whole thing as well k. g. was outstanding. Tim duncan and all all those men and women bigly cheese. Who else was in there. There was a the coach can. Mochi catch was amazing so anyway was so great. I'm so happy to be a part of that whole family of hall of famers. In to be really honest. I never even knew anything about the hall of fame. It was never anything on my radar at all When i retire. They're like you know it takes five years. In five years you get to be inducted. Bid on all the awards adding really get it Until you really go there and you see like hang out like this. It was major. And i was really thankful you know probably hardest things. What are you wearing but each school. You know i. I just said a speech that it was titled. I didn't get here. I didn't get your by myself. Is you know how to get along. It was just so many people my mom my sister gosh. My husband is the whole process. All my teammates. I've had some amazing teams. That has an amazing coaches and so to be inducted into the holiday. I know it's an individual reward but it really is. You can't get there without all the amazing people who support you. So i really give homage to everybody coaches in all other hall of famers said When they get in they really realize is kinda hit. Them is like they rewind from the first time. They grabbed the ball from our coaches teammates. All the way back to this point with it like kind parents for you like you. Just just go back to banda early days. All the way to so now the ups and downs. Yes i think. The biggest thing i think about is a my homegirl. Shea shaves her name. Says we play ball. I went to junior high compton and My first time going actually. I wasn't even abolish so listen. I played double dutch every day. And i was in drill team so i was like shaking dancing in the streets and jumping double that seven seven grade. I go and i'm like six. This is ridiculous because my daughter is six months she thirteen. I was six foot at twelve. So i go into middle school. Yeah was up. They're always going to middle school. An ear shea. You everybody calling shane. I'm like tangles shea. Like evaded hurt me like shea shea on the basketball team i'm like okay. Dad moment for me. Although god was pay attention. What but i'm like. Dan ought to be like saying like everybody basketball. No saying the guys the man. I was like man i wanna be. I wanna be that right. But between that in e saying i want to be the go to person. I want people to ball when the basket i seek its planet but it's just. It was shade for me so shared houses day and shay was such a nice girl like she was she was a baller like she was but she was kinda played. Like Do you think about. She was kind of like a person who you think. Kind of like a a strong carmelo. Anthony like like in the way she got buckets from everywhere. Six blocks your rebound. Yeah girl sears. Amazing but just seeing her was like i want to. I want people to know my name. I won't be able to be like who is that. There is like funny like that man. zoom you. This is the one of sophie's back as it is imagine. That's the big three coach of the year shelf. Like tell me how that experience. Because i as you know we played against doc. I played in the league and co's lieberman nasty while loved. Death was my coach. Seems the i wanna do you. Coaching men and women. No we'd love caused the minute. I was extremely proud to be part of that team. Is she coast in the help her be when a championship and of the house. Your experience coaching joan. All of those guys are already know kind of what you say. But it was great. It was great. The experience was great. You know again. I learned a lot Because i had never really been a coach right. I mean like i'm just trying to think i hadn't really coached before maybe a little bit a few times here and there but nothing like this right but i realize it few things as a coach have to be a good listener. You know you can't come in like your dictator but you also have to be competent. Which is very important. I'm a student of the game. I love the game. I understand game. I see the game. I see things before it happens. You know the same way in the hooper does a so for me. It was like what. Can i do to help my team win and is really just about bringing that edge right the edge of every player that we're about the face i'm going to watch and scout of digger with they like to do and getting my players that edge and then the other thing was about our plays execution of what we're doing and so it was a lot of fun i love every minute of it. I think i challenged you know my is to really step up in to be available. Be ready be ready for change. And i challenged them and i think i challenged him in a way where they were kind of like. You know filling the out a little bit. I but leadership was important. I think i heard their respect Joe obviously has the leader in a captain the gm of the team. I had jim rats which was great. My guys loving. Jim and you know like i told him. Don't don't have do it if you will do right. Let's not do it at all. Don't put my name on it. Because if i could play i would play. You know what i'm saying like that's just how passionate i am about it and i'm gonna approach it the way that i would as a player i'm gonna give you my all so my all is somehow i coach my scouting. My you know just that little edge that you need to be better in common place. So i think the biggest place that we had Some friction one was losing when we lost to your team. I didn't know because i was out. I lost in our only loss but when we loss at didn't realize as a coach like losing feels like you played. You know what i mean. I was just a whole week. My family was like i'm hot like last. Jbc now and i didn't know that so And i didn't like that but it was cool. Low key a little disrespect for you know in the win. So that was about that. You know like okay. They didn't even get our hands. I that was real real real reuss. I'm like okay. We need to see that scene again. That's for sure. But at the same time i i loved it i love the fans. I love the process. I loved all the competition. I love the games. man. I wasn't i was so into it. That's how i became a coach. Actually i sat next to cuban came to watch you guys like the year before he came to my indian and i was there i was over there. Coaching men take a roll cut to the basket. Acute was leg looking right. Like that's not how you can do that. You know so. I was just talking to us because i like the fact that we have jobs and talk about basketball and get paid is ridiculous. It'd be doing anyway so it was kind of like it was sweet. It was a poetic for us to win a championship again. Ansi who loves you know..

Knuckleheads with Quentin Richardson & Darius Miles
"lisa b" Discussed on Knuckleheads with Quentin Richardson & Darius Miles
"That's what opened the doors from like. Wait a minute so what's happening. People playing ball around the world. You know we didn't have really have that grasp and understanding on my inner city kid so we don't have not surrounded by highly educated. You know other people. You know what i'm saying. We're really in our little bubble. My grandma at that time. I was the only person who was really. She had gone to college in. My grandmother was a nurse right so she worked at. She really was the most educated of my whole family Included a few of my uncles. who are accountants. Back tana that helps save me from a money standpoint but otherwise we're just all hard workers getting after it. And i think in hindsight when you look back the opportunity to travel and be from the inner city and just see both worlds. It's kinda makes. That's what makes us hungry right. You get that chance you know q. I heard you telling this story about about jordan. Wanna your shows. You know the first time you've bet jordan in your neighborhood that that that moulay is like i have only you know the overtime about where you like. Dang i can do it too. Like i can really make it. You know So i had little moments like that. The usa team actually came to inglewood at inglewood high. The usa women's team in practice. Why did they come to inglewood. I don't know why did they practice at the gym street. But me out was najem every morning watching them like if they'd go you know. I thought i could play with them in. That was not as a. I think a sophomore in high school but it also planet that see like. I wanna play on the usa team. You know there's another level so that was just a blessing bad. Having the usa team com having opportunity to make my first usa team in eleventh grade now moth a country see women are these chicks are in spain. Like what am i had. Moulmein is like okay everybody. This is about eating survival. And how we're gonna make it. Is i got improve my gang. Because i gotta get to college. You know bianca's usa speaking of the us citing always feel like the the women's saying be like the drain team every single year. Baby having everybody supposed to get every single year and just other teams mansa reza weather spoil dies daily you know l. Yes zach. Guys that go by. Yeah yeah the goes like when them. Usa teams and you played on. How was that for you to know the shirt that with the women that you see as this making a name in cushion women's basketball every year yacht club. Hurriyat doing your thing when these metals you get to play on the highest level poss. Yeah it the best you know dairies. It really was amazing. And it's unfortunate that our country doesn't really like didn't pay attention and didn't really honor. What all those women. Even before me had been able to do my era. We got some notoriety thanks to the wnba saw on steroids. Now because you have social media with a social injustice that was also a big spotlight for the wbz. So we're making and i'm so happy at these. Young women are getting this opportunities to use this platform but in some ways is a little sad that we missed so many great women. Mike you name teresa hours in katrina mcclain. Those two women were phenomenal. And teresa edwards actually was youngest olympian and ninety four. She was a baby and then she finished with us coming in and ninety six hours the baby the youngest one of the youngest players there but having them as veterans. I've always been a very good learner listener. I don't have a problem violin. Directions as long as you lead in the right direction. So i think our personalities all worked because they were the leaders and we were very respectful of them. Not like you got to respect your. I mean we bought out. We got we play but i respect that you know when you go. You guys have veterans that take you under their wing and his jazz. You know that they really have your best interest at heart and so those women as black women who didn't get a lot of love from everybody else. We showed them a lot of love and respect and they deserve it. I mean you can treat him famous abi semi her ability to to rebound and put back in score. Was i mean she was probably the toughest player i ever had to play against and i was lucky enough to be young enough to go up against are pretty much every practice so i mean i'm getting better just because i'm like damn she can jump. You know she can really back my sack. I'm six five and she's six two but she got hot her rebounding's nasty like she. Just you think you see a boiling in. Her hands is reach over in. Just snatches all no so. I got boxer out first because she really you know. I mean like she was a player who brought the best out of need because she was so skilled in in a way that enough players don't know her name but she got an award for her like there's is opposition awards for the winning with an myers. Nancy lieberman shirley miller katrina mcclain before award in the lisa. Leslie is for the center. These are all college awards for the wind and so on the wind inside the winning recognize. How amazing they were but it is unfortunate that our country just did not pay as much attention to women's basketball a time where you had some really amazing women who played before us this one of the things. We wanted to do what. I platform by really wanted to put a big spotlight on women's basketball because i'll be watching women's basketball since i was in junior high school. I always watch the girls team. And even when. I got to the pros and that city had a team. I always used to go to the games and we around always just was a fan of all the same who you're right about that. The country do need to recognize definitely. Nba players. Need to help out to show love more love reshape. But that's the reason it was Important for us to have all the famous and resins like you on ash show into represent showed them how doping how cold Thank you thank you so much. That subsidy i really appreciate that too absolutely and i mean that's one of the things i love about. Usa basketball. Because i was a kid. Got a chance to do that at seventeen to seventeen when we went over the we went to puerto plata dominican republic and we won go. Jim behind was a coat. Drive evidence assistant coach. That was like you said my first time going out of the country needing to get a going to colorado springs news lies dote here. You tell that story. No the you was in the same color.

Monocle 24: Meet the Writers
"lisa b" Discussed on Monocle 24: Meet the Writers
"This is the writings. I guess today was born in. Galway the island. But it's the city and people of cork that seem to have captured. Has a new novel is third in her series which explores the undecided of the city and the lovable characters trying to find their way with the odds stacked against them. The following conversation was recorded at hay festival. Wales.

Bullseye with Jesse Thorn
"lisa b" Discussed on Bullseye with Jesse Thorn
"Air coming to that wreck. Playing that funky disco. Wendy was was that really. The first print song that you ever heard was the very first print song i ever heard. I was underage at nightclub in l. A. called the starwood which is infamous in. Its own right. It had a rock and roll room and then it had a discussion room. And this is nineteen summer of seventy eight and i was underage was probably between the was thirteen or fourteen and my sister and i went to. This club. snuck out of the house. Sh- sorry dad. Sorry mom and i was on the disco floor baby and the dj put that record on. And i was completely mess and mind you. I will always a funky kid. I loved everything that was funky. I loved everything that was soulful. My favorite records. Were all the deepest darkest of all the funk records in the seventies. And then. I wanted to be john mclaughlin from havana. Sh- new so. I was a complicated. Listen wait what were the what. What were you like listening to like mandrell or something. Sure i listened to manual. Yes of course it did. I also listened to most thirteen thirteen-year-old deep. I was deep. You can't i mean my friend. Q tip and i send records back to each other to see whether or not we can stump each other with that era and we he can't stump me. He can't stop me he just can't good yeah so So by that time. I was on the dance floor and i was. I heard that record. I ran up to the dj. Knows like oh my god. Who is that girl. I thought it was a girl i did and he said no. It's not a girl. It's young kid named prince and that be started my love affair. I was completely obsessed with him. And then when i found out lisa had gotten that gig on the dirty mind record and she really didn't know who he was an. I got wind of it back eastward. I was going to school. And i was like. Does she have any idea who she just got a gig with. And then i came back to l. a. one summer and went to the coleman's house and lisa was back from minnesota just from her audition and put on the cassette of dirty mind. And i heard. Lisa's say i'm just a virgin. And i'm on my way to be wed and i lost my mind. I couldn't believe i couldn't believe it. I couldn't talk to. Because i i didn't know prints i i didn't know his music was really. You know kind of a snob. I think when i think about it i was heavy into classical and was really focused on that and then all of a sudden ended up in prince's bannon's it seemed like a real. It was cognitive dissonance. You know what but she was. It was it was perfect prince happened. Yeah tell and prince happened. That's exactly right and then that happened. Yeah and he. He adored her. Because you know he could kinda do everybody. And everybody's position and ban. He could outdo you. You know what i mean. He couldn't do. Lisa tried for years and years to do to be lisa to do to channel her when he'd play piano and he could never do it. And so he kind of away think coveted the fact that She was so singular and Such a singular voice musically and. I think it's probably one of the more important musical relationship he's ever had because of that. I mean when i think of dirty mind. Which is maybe my favorite prints record. Certainly one of my favorite records of all time. Same here like yeah. I mean you know when you when you talk about like prince just a couple years earlier you think like this is a person capable of immense greatness and then you listen to dirty mind and you're like oh wow this says not light up the entire is not and it's it's. It's only thirty two minutes long. And it's it's so groundbreaking. Every time i talk to people about prince and they're like wanna know what. Do a deep dive. I say you. You have to listen to dirty mind. I mean that's where he was the most sweaty dirty uncomfortable yet convicted and dark and yet sexy and playful and manipulative and smart and what he was doing with sounds by trying to take that new wave era and put it into a funk environment to try and outdo like the rick james of the world's and the zaps of the world and all that kind of he was it was everything it was and then he looked like this weird like transgender check. He looked like a guinea like he could have been in. You know Paris is burning. I mean just what the only other person that had done anything. That was david bowie. But he didn't. David wasn't even that person off off the microphone. He became like a really kind straight guy. Prince was that guy off. The sound of dirty mind is is what i think of the most in a lot of that sound is keyboards. So where did all those sounds come from when you first started with prince and you're like walking in cold Into this weird situation like where did all that stuff come from. He was really specific with that stuff. He would most often already have a sound picked out and he would just point me to it and say here play this play the sound and and he was not afraid of presets back then and you know they were still new. You know you'd get an arp omni or something and had you know three buttons that you could choose you know censored since string or just string like wow. This is the magic combination right. This prince was just turn everything up just like his philosophy was pin. It pin the meters to spin it. Just anything in life you know.

Bullseye with Jesse Thorn
"lisa b" Discussed on Bullseye with Jesse Thorn
"To that from the producers and the writers where they had all of these little artifacts and little trinkets inside the title sequence cards like her wedding band that she hides pocket a stethoscope There there were there were poo hills right. So there's lots of secrets. Her hiding things and we wanted to incorporate is much of those sounds in our heads that we kind of put a narrative to and create this beautiful title sequence and it worked really well because we also got to work with the title sequence. So if you saw jackie take her wedding band and put it in her pocket. We were able to actually score that movement. So that when you watch the visual you can see jackie that your eye and the audience could actually focus on that moment so it was really a really conscious effort to make those things pop out musically and then we you know some fun things too like for shakers. We used Till bottles bottles have aspirin or whatever it was advil or just because we were seeing pill bottles. She opens the medicine cabinet in benca pills. Ditto ball out fall out so in the shakers come in. so he's till bottles for the shakers and stuff like that. It's just it's fun when you get a chance to work with the visual. Do the two of you remember how old you are when you first met. I was two years old. Yeah like five I remember it perfectly was in the backyard of a valley house. My mother and father had my sister and brother and me were in our backyard. And the coleman family came over and lisa was in the backyard with me. And i was playing with a big red ball and i was bouncing it in the backyard and bounced to her and she said to me. That balls cockeyed an. I'd never heard that word before being two years old. I didn't have a lot of room to find out what that word. But it stuck with me because of she she connected the angle at which dropped and it would go. It went to the left instead of directly to her. So she said that balls cockeyed. Yeah because i was a good catch and you know for me to miss. It was a big deal. So that ball was cockeyed. Anyway i remember it well and i was to do you remember at lisa. I do remember. And i remember their house particularly the living room because wendy's father was a piano player and the living room was completely taken up by his grand piano and i remember crawling underneath it to get through the house. It was you know it was pretty much. The living room was a pm a nine foot grocery trian steinberg in the middle of the living room in this tiny little house in the valley. So it made sense. I liked the two of you. Were two and five years old. And you're essentially playing in a giant metaphor. Subtlety there really well spotted. So both of your fathers were musicians. In the wrecking crew. Like one of the most legendary groups of session musicians ever did that mean that you saw a lot of each other. You were kids. Oh yeah we had the. We went to the same schools. Had the same doctors are mothers. Were you know weekenders constantly and the cat kids would go from one house to the other house and it was. Yeah we were. We were kind of grew up in the same kittens. Yeah we're a bunch of kittens. Exactly did you think it was cool. That your fathers were musicians or did you think it was weird and annoying. Oh no. I loved it. There's great people around us all the time we we were exposed to everything. You know an infinite money. On both lisa and i had mothers that were huge music fans massive music fans and loved everything and played everything in exposed as to everything in our fathers. Were like the studio guys right. But they didn't have the same. Well that's not true a gerry. Lisa's father who's like groundbreaking percussionist. And then you know probably had the first over an arp. Twenty six hundred in his little studio in the house in nineteen seventy. They were all really They explored everything in our. But our mothers i think are the ones that kind of exposed us to what the emotion was behind music more than the technique of music which was more on our father's side. I think i mean. That's how i mean that's great because we got such a whole world of appreciation for music from our fathers who worked and were professionals. Add it and our mothers who were talented but also forced into being mothers and raising kids and and they taught us how to love music. My mother was a singer a jazz singer as a teenager and she used to lie about her age and clubs and stuff like that but of course when she got married you know she quit and to raise a family and all that stuff says but she had this passion inside her for music and You know she would sit us. Kids down and play us a mozart symphony or something crazy like that and you know we would sit there as long as we could pay attention but you know we got it. We understood why she was doing that. And you know how how vast the world of music is and how we could always find a home there somewhere in you know in many lots of ways then different styles and things like that. I asked her a member are. My mother was the one that used to play the records. My father used to make the records and my mother was the one that was always putting a record on the turntable so that was a big influence for me. I was listening to the two of you on our sister. Show heat rocks. You were talking about the prince album around the world in a day just casually kind of dropped. Oh yeah like around our house. There was a lot of musique concrete and stockhausen and stuff bedtime. I i was trying to imagine being like a ten year old and you know. I'd modern classical music. I mean we used. We used to have a kid ban the melvoin. The cullman had a kid ban and we used to pretend we would like right that kind of music down in my father's studio we'd all grab instruments and do our own version of stockhausen. Yeah pretty funny. We play stock housing on halloween. When people would come win trick or treaters would come because it was so weird. Scared people more than how haunted house. Sounds like what is that. So true ice. That's my stockhausen invitation..

Bullseye with Jesse Thorn
"lisa b" Discussed on Bullseye with Jesse Thorn
"Support for npr and the following message. Come from feather furniture. And so that makes any floor plan feel like home get comfy curated furniture for as long as you need visit live feathered dot com and use promo code. Npr two hundred at checkout feather furniture. Magic is here bullseye. with jesse. Thorn is a production of maximum fund. Dot org in is distributed by npr. It's bullseye i'm just wendy. Melvoin and lisa were born in the sixties. They grew up here in los angeles where we make bullseye. Wendy's father mike. Melvoin was a session musician. Mainly on piano in organ. Lisa's father garry was also a session musician. He played percussion. They were members of the legendary. They played on everything. Wendy and lisa went to each other's birthday parties catch in their early twenties the to started dating also around that time. Lisa started playing keys and singing with prince. You can near her work on prince's breakthrough album dirty. Mind ahead not long after that. Wendy joined on guitar soon. They were integral members of prince's band. The revolution together did stone cold classics like purple rain. Raspberry kiss when doves cry magic game mom gave you..

The Managing Partners Podcast
"lisa b" Discussed on The Managing Partners Podcast
"Hello ms siderman. Hello eric how are you. i'm doing well. Thanks join us. Thank you for having me. I must say this is quite a bio here. I mean short but packs. There's a lot of interesting things in a founding member of the american academy of certified financial litigators. Good for you. that's awesome. Thank you at least tell us a little bit about yourself and what you do that. I didn't actually already cover an intro. Sure so. I am a managing partner of age. Worse and matrimonial firm. That's what we focus on and we focus on issues regarding prenups post knup's custody complex financial issues. We are firm of about forty five people and we started our firm in two thousand and thirteen. I'm prior to being a divorce attorney. I had actually been in the fashion business and then went through my own divorce and decided that people needed really responsive attorneys and that i could be that and so we've built a firm of very responsive very well skilled attorneys excellent so two locations which came first westchester. Came i although my practice has always been based in manhattan. So i guess they were really simultaneous. We we open both on. I think it was november. Twenty sixth or twenty seven two thousand thirteen and they both built very fast and furious. Like good for that's that's really really interesting. So let's let's talk a little bit about some of your clients in like your client. So what are some of the biggest challenges that your clients face so for my clients. It what they most often face. Or the stresses of both child custody issues and financial issues and because we deal in the complexity of child custody we often deal in litigation so parents who are disputing parenting time and or disputing. How decisions need to be made whether it be by one parent or both parents whether there'd be a final decision making parameter for the parent to be making for the children and what the schedule for the child will be so that takes care of the custody issues for the most part although i've simplified them greatly because there's also relocation issues particularly during the pandemic that we're encountering as well as quarantining issues and vaccination issues in therapeutic dilemmas in all sorts of of issues that come up every single day the pandemic has made it much more difficult for parents who may could have sorted out certain issues to sort out the complexities of the pandemic weather to quarantine not quarantine. Now we're getting into the new vaccinations for children. As of today. I think bill and that will be an issue that parents are going to have to agree on or one parent is going to have to make the decision..

thebuzzr pod
"lisa b" Discussed on thebuzzr pod
"Listen to it right now sometimes. The lonely concede may not show side. Deepen can't answer. You can full miss you smile. Tell me what's wish you saw store..

thebuzzr pod
"lisa b" Discussed on thebuzzr pod
"Speech since. I don't know that that's absolutely wonderful. Stories like i have. I guess it's insane. I can't even you know. It's like he ear that phrase. I can't even make this stuff up because it's it's it's the true story and it just keeps involving I've been on grand ole opry radio four times since they've had me on as a guest for an hour. I've hosted my own show for a whole afternoon with her. Like it's just been amazing how i've been welcomed into their family down there and but now yester- being kept apart because of covid but that's okay. So how long was your recovery. I actually. I was told not to go back to school that year. Because i was in physical education sports science program which obviously was a physical. We had sports that we had to take part of So i was told not to go back to school because i had suffered quite as severe concussion. Obviously it was in a coma for a couple of days so they wanted me to not go back to school at all and to stay home. I stayed in the hospital not very long. Maybe a week. I had a lot of surgery facial surgery. They sent me home. And i was just to follow up. I had surgeries for probably three four years after that like reconstruction and and different things right so I didn't actually stay in hospital very long. I am miraculously. Didn't have anything broken. I was just lacerated and cut up and yeah. My face was squished. And yeah i i was pretty messed up but i had nothing broken which is amazing and i believe the only reason that in this part of the story that i forgot to tell music saved my life twice that night because there was a cassette tape and i believe it was the tragically hip road apple. Sit at the floor. And i needed to get up and so i was bent forward. Picking up that that tape off the floor. And that's when we hit the moose. A had i been sitting up. I would have been decapitated. I my head would have been crushed for sure i would not be here so because that tape hit the floor for whatever reason at that very moment that we struck the most. I was bent forward. So the dash sorta saved my head To some degree. But yeah the windshield. Everything was was smashed all around my face so to me. that's divine intervention. it's definitely something Whether you believe in in god or the universe or spirits that it's yeah something it wasn't my time it. It wasn't my time us some great things. I'm doing my best. And i've been so grateful ever since and i always go back to that like i have to do something to help people i have to give back. I wasn't even supposed to beer. But i'm here so i better do some to pay back that i'm here. I know i have my bad days too. But i always come back to now. No i'm not wasting not one second without trying to do something better To make the world a little better may somebody else's life a little better. That's what it's all about one person at a time. If i can help. I will one hundred percent and you re exceptionally inspiring a lot of people. Thank you for sharing that all. I know probably hard to revisit that we're going to listen to the lex track just some things it released as two thousand nineteen i love i love of. That's where i. I heard it better for you but It was worth is a little bit of twig turn still outstanding. Your focus have a large range like is there a very. There's definitely some diversity may be in there. Yeah that's what i was gonna say. The lot diversity is not sometimes it was country artists different songs but the same feel the same energy. I don't get that. When i when i listen to your music. Each song is completely a different experience. So that's what. I love about Thank you and and it certainly isn't something that you know. I'm consciously doing to be quite honest. I never start out with okay. This has got to be completely different than the other song. I i really don't It's just something that i feel at the time. something. I'm going through at the time and yeah it's going to sound different every time i do a different song and and now that i've got a whole bunch of demos that i'm working on right now. You're absolutely right. There's not one that really matches the other at all which gives the producer some challenges but they're good challenges and i look forward to getting that second album haute that song just some things was actually the very first song that i wrote. When i went to nashville. And there's a little story behind that too because it almost didn't happen. I yeah i went to meet my good friend rick tiger and it started out with him saying you know. Why don't we meet for coffee the next time. You're you're gonna take a trip to nashville. And i said i'd love to do that and have a cup of coffee what we never had a cup of coffee. I mean we did but it was all about writing a song. And i'd i didn't know what was going to happen but you know hindsight now of course. He's a professional songwriter. That's exactly what he's doing. But when i went to nashville this time and he gave me the address to meet him on music. Row in nashville. I took the address and decided to go. Check out the address the day before to make sure that i had the right address because when i went to check the address i was quite sure. He gave me the wrong address. This building was to me. At the time i mean coming from this small little sufficient village in new brunswick i mean i have lived in toronto to so i've seen big buildings but my gosh This one kind of blew me away. Sort of look like mount olympus. I mean these great big pillars outside. I'm like where are we going to meet. And this was asked cap So that's the fan right. The american version of so can basically and so he had booked a room there for us to right. Well i gotta tell you. I'm going to be quite honest. I've told the story so. I'm getting over it every time i tell it because i almost didn't go i. I was really almost nauseous sick and made myself sick because i was so nervous to walk through those doors. I was like what am i doing here. This is music row in nashville going into this mecca building to go and write. What am i doing. And i almost i for twenty four hours. I went back and forth. I'm going to tell him. I'm sick because i really am. I really made myself almost. So i finally gave out of my own way. And i'm like okay lisa. If you don't go you'll never know what's on the other side of that door so i go. I am scared to death. I opened the doors and here. Is this wonderful human being on the other side with a smile on thank goodness rick. Tiger was there to meet me. And i was so happy to see him. He introduced to everybody there and he was introducing me as you know in recording artists canadian singer-songwriter amazing singer songwriter. And i'm looking around you. Who is talking about. Because i'm like what i'm an ass cop in your your introducing meet all these people that have done so much right so was it was a bit daunting but we went upstairs and he closed door and we're in a writing room now. This is the first time. I'm doing something like this on on of a level and i'm just like where do we go from here is like well. What do you want to write. And i said rick i got a confession to make. I've never written a song like this. Before and i didn't know what he was going to say and he's like all right then. Well what do you want to write. It just didn't visit him at all he didn't care he just wanted to get like. That's not why i'm here. So we started writing and we actually finished a song in less than three hours. Which i didn't know was good bad. I i had no idea and he told me afterward you said you know. I've been writing longtime. He's been doing this for thirty years. He's got hits with. Montgomery gingery gentry and crystal chamunda Gosh i can't forget all the means he's got a listening that he's written for and he says you know i've i've never written a song and had it finished that fast. That was fa- i was like. Oh i didn't know you know what some songs might take days weeks months. Maybe even sometimes they just come to you. And that's what i'm finding in the in the process. I have some songs. My gosh. i've been picking away at them for so long but some songs. Oh my gosh they just they. The whole thing comes to you almost at once. So it's a little different process every time This particular song. Just some things was Certainly a personal situation at the time and Just wanted to write a little bit about that and share it with people just some things. Thank you ever.

thebuzzr pod
"lisa b" Discussed on thebuzzr pod
"Opry radio which was amazing So months went by still. Did find these people until i actually was doing a show at the casino in moncton new brunswick and i had a lady come up to me and said i saw your show your news. I saw your your story on the news. And i know who you're looking for. I couldn't believe it. It just happened just like that here. We were looking looking for all these documents asking all these different people at phone calls out everywhere and it just somebody who saw the new show on crtv. They knew who was there that night but it wasn't a police officer and it wasn't a paramedic that was initially on the on the scene. That's the other part of the story that nobody knew that i didn't even know. Wow it was a completely different person. It was a student at the time. Also going home From you and be. I never was told this part of the story but there was a student that stop. He recognized some of the kids on the side of the road. He asked what was going on and he ran to the her because they said well she. She's you know she's crushed in the car and we think she's dead. He ran to the car to make sure what was actually going on and he realized i was still breathing. And he held my head and neck and kept me mumbling in my. You know i was out. I was not conscious at this time at all but he kept talking to me not to let me stop breathing and end to try and keep me somewhat Conscious for almost an hour before the paramedics and the rcb got there. I got chills. And i didn't know this first decades two decades later But here's the other amazing part of that story. When i finally met him. And i and i found out who he was after that happened to him. He became a paramedic after that he was a business student. He changed his whole career after that night because it had such a significant impact on him while he became a paramedic but he didn't stop there he then became an officer so actually constable lloyd. Her goal so as much as i wrote that song. I got goosebumps right now. Just telling the story. And i've told that fifty times but i get goosebumps every time. I told us he not only you know had his life changed that night But he went on to become an officer which he said he always wanted to do since he was a kid and never thought he would but he'd he his life was changed that night. We've since met. He didn't know that i didn't know that he was there. He had no idea. I was looking for him. He didn't know so we've met and desist was a few years ago now that we've met. He's been to several of my shows. Now he's like a brother. I never had like. I have two brothers. My third brother now And he just supports me one hundred ten percent. He's always liking my stuff on on instagram. And he comes to my shows and yeah we. We are now connected late. I can't even explain it now. he he's definitely my guardian angel that night because i definitely would have probably been left in the car to die because they thought i was already dead and they were going kids. Who are going to get help right. So it's not their fault they they didn't see me respond and i wasn't moving and you know we were like eighteen years old. We didn't know anything about anything right about trying to help in a situation like i would have did the same thing. I would ran crying too. So i don't i don't blame them and all but thank god you know. This person shows up out of the blue on his way home and he's there now because he became a paramedic and nursing officer and stationed in new brunswick he has seen many deer and moose accidents since that time and what he also told me when we finally met which i broke into tears was that he never saw anybody survive that severe of a crash. He's never seen it he's he. He said. lisa you are here for a reason is i'm telling you right now. There's no way that you should have survived that. And he said even when they got you finally got your to the car and they took you in the ambulance. He said i was pretty sure. I was going to get the call that you didn't make it 'cause i've never seen anybody survive. That's wonderful sorry. Touchy l. Wow sorry you got to. I sorry take span and come back and talk more about it. Okay thank you so much. So uniforms is next type.