35 Burst results for "Lobos"

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

Dinger Derby

05:11 min | 7 months ago

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

"It looks to me like they're probably a top 25, maybe even top 20 or better pitching staff. 6 in the country and hits a loud per 9. They're also top 12 and win loss. Their whip is top 25. Their top 25 and strikeout per 9. I mean, they're leading the Big Ten in all these categories, but top 25 in the country. And they've got a dude in particular that you're going to hear about a lot, I think. And it's Brady Brody Brecht and he's a two sport athlete who plays wide receiver, had 9

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

Dinger Derby

04:45 min | 7 months ago

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

"Yeah, I know too many of those guys. Exactly. What I like looking at in the New Mexico box score, looking at my score sheet, I see four doubles in that game and those extra base hits matter. I mentioned it earlier, you are leading the nation in doubles. You got 39 on the season. And so, I mean, you were solely in. No, you're not, you're tied. I see NC state in Virginia. So you might be another thing that I saw that they were south Alabama. I think is either tight or overtook them in another set. Gotcha. What those are, I mean, I'm not going to complain at all. I mean, that's like hunter or hargrove era kind of stuff when you're seeing that many. So I definitely like that. You're also leading in sacrifice still. Got 20? On the season. You are fourth in the country in triples. You've got 9 UTS a has a dozen. But you are leading the conference. Top ten and triples per game, of course. But yeah, you're from that standpoint. I'm still feeling pretty good because you've maintained some of that. But and then flip it over, you're still leading the country and double plays. You've got 21 turned double plays this season. So and you're also second in the nation in walks. With a 107. Yeah. Kevin is all a big part of that. Yeah. You mentioned it a second ago how good their offense was 9 hits. I mean, Dylan did some burger came in here as one of the top hitters in the nation. And we've already seen a couple of those. And I mean, he's only one for three. Strike him out one time. I think that's, and I know you're going, oh, it's New Mexico. But he and runyon, I think top like 30, 40 in the nation in batting average. Right. No, I mean, it's a solid mid week win. Yep. Nope, I agree. I'm not mad about it. It doesn't blow the doors off. It's better than you're going to get more out of that game than you are a 25 to four shellacking. You know, against a nobody. And so I'm always, you know, I always think it's more important to see those. You're going to get more out of a 16 inning loss to a and M because I'll tell you what happened at the end of that game, by the way. Both teams lost their focus, late in that game, and it just turned into it just turned into attempted BP. And so there was that game got extended by a loss of discipline at the plate, in my opinion, like pushing to just run one out of there.

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

Dinger Derby

05:00 min | 7 months ago

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

"It was fun, but not the outcome you wanted. I think they got home at like 5 a.m. and kudos to Jamie Lynn, went right to his radiate well. He went home for some strange reason. And then went to the radio show. He was on the air doing radio at 5 in the morning. That's dedication right there. Yeah, well, if he doesn't go into work there, then that opens the door for the rest of those who ligands to fall in sick after that game. Right? No doubt. You know, the last thing I want to talk about with that game, I don't think people think enough about the fact that these kids are students. And I think we all get in this mindset of NIL and especially in basketball where you got dudes that come in for one year and I know that their students and they're doing stuff. But they're major and in basketball. Like they're here for that one reason. For that one year, whatever. That's not the case in baseball still. And a lot of these other more Olympic sports. And I mean, there was a tie had a tie Coleman had a presentation the next day. You know, that he had to go do. That he was worried about, you know? And Ryan brougham was sitting down there like, he took BP and then busted out his laptop to do work. Like to do homework, you know?

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

Dinger Derby

05:21 min | 7 months ago

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

"And I say that. Normally I'm not a guy that does that. And particularly when I don't have the angle, but there were pitches for my angle, which was high to the third base side of the plate. That's where the press box was at minute maid park. And there were some that I would even say, oh, like that's inside that's outside. And I happen to have the girl next to me that's running the stat tracker thing that you can see the little ball locator and all that. And so if I looked over fast enough, I could still see it. And it was confirmation every time. I mean, there was a couple borderline, but a lot of them, I'm like, oof. And so, yeah, that was a little bit frustrating too. But there's some cap tip in to be done for the aggies. I mean, their starter was pretty good. 5 and a third, one run, four K's, but really the guy to really notice is Evan ashen Beck. He went four and two thirds perfect with 8 strikeouts. And he entered jeez. When did he enter? Probably the 11th. I think he entered in the 11th. He was there next to last pitcher. Here's the beef I have. We're gonna throw Chad all night. So he went 51 pitches over four and two thirds. A perfect baseball truly, with 8 K's. He pitched two and a third and 46 pitches on Friday and relief. And so, I mean, it's pretty early in the season for things like that. And we were talking about this in a different chat that I'm in. About some baseball stuff. And we ran into it. We've run into a couple relievers we've seen. There's dudes with 6, 7 appearances at this point. And so you're really starting to push some things. Your appearance 6 times over the course of two weekends in a mid week or something like that's getting a little nuts. And so I'm not sitting here just call out Jim schloss nagel by name, but you know, there you have it. Well, he wanted to win just as bad as most people, right? Yeah. They would never admit that. Yeah, well, I think we know better in that situation. He's a lefty too, right? I mean, I think tadlock mentioned why is it just turned out bad? You got very left. Yeah. Yeah, green tightened up, as you said, and you had a pinch run and as you kind of go through the game and all of a sudden, yeah, you ended up really left handed. And so, and they left him in, and he was successful. And so, yeah, it was, it was a heck of a game to watch. I mean, and there's a lot of doogee convention, Garrett Crowley came out and got an out when you really needed one. Ryan free had two great innings, three strikeouts and a walk, no hits, no runs. Beckel had two good innings.

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

Dinger Derby

04:19 min | 7 months ago

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

"The direction of a and M late. So that game was nuts. From that standpoint, the ups and downs that came along. But yeah, let's talk about it. Do you want to go inning by inning? Should we go hit her by hitter? Oh, yeah, definitely. Well, I won't take that long in some instances. That's for sure. Taber fast started. I did want to mention that I thought he was fine. I think he had his he had some struggles early. A couple base runners per inning, basically for him. But gave up three hits one run. He had a couple strikeouts, struggled, walking a little bit. He had 5 walks. And so it seems like a theme on this podcast this week. Yeah. Yeah. And so, and the number, the number of walks in the game. And it's all the numbers are ridiculous in this game because you played 16 innings, but a lot of walks given up by the red raiders at the C 7 8, a dozen, 15, 16, 16 walks. In the game. And there were more free passes. There was a couple of hit batsmen. So that's not good. But 9 of those are owned by your starter. And by Damien bravo, who you were looking to to close this game and really struggled. And he had four walks and we can work our way through the game if you want, but that was the pivotal moment. In the 9th inning, chance to slam the door, get his first save. I think it was his 5th, fourth or 5th, 9th inning appearance. It was his first save opportunity. And he just couldn't get it done. You know, just couldn't find the zone on the breaking ball and coach tadlock talked about in his show. Hey, you know, going looking back, maybe that's a situation where we need to let him go after that hitter.

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

Dinger Derby

05:12 min | 7 months ago

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

"If we're done with the Michigan game, I mean as much as we'd like to talk to about it. What if what if they did like a Michigan football inspired uniform? Does somebody, does somebody do the coaches were like pleated khakis or could you work that into a uni? Or the whole uniforms pleated khakis and. I don't know, I don't know if that would work out. It looks like they're like a sweatshirt with just the aim on the chest and the numbers on the back. You can only see them on the back. The names of the back are just like dad. Say that I still want the Michigan helmet as the hat. But yeah, I would much rather look like Jim marble. It would still look better than what the red riders went up against on Sunday. Oh my God, yeah. I mean, they could have looked like the best. They could have been the best dressed baseball team of all time, and we'd still have hated them because it's an M. But those uniforms are just particularly awful. And I'm a guy that my dad was in the core way back in the day. You know, like I have, I'm not usually a total core hater 'cause of that connection, even though I do hey, a and M, but man, they look stupid. I'm not hating on the core. They were annoying at football games just because they would stand in prime real estate to get video, but I mean, my favorite Texas tech athletics picture of all time is Wes Welker ruining their day on that punt return. Like the core makes that photo. Him and then the random guy, the random red raider. Well, and just for anybody that wants to go look it up, the little old grandma in the bottom left corner, white hair, big old sun, sunblock or glasses, realizing that Wes Welker, who might be shorter than her is running for a touchdown.

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

Dinger Derby

04:36 min | 7 months ago

"lobos" Discussed on Dinger Derby

"Red writers get back in the wind column in the mid week against New Mexico after a tough trip to minute maid park in Houston. This is dinger Derby. Welcome. To dinger Derby. The official podcast of red raider dugout dot com. The only website. Completely devoted to Texas tech baseball. Joined Keith Patrick twice a week for team news. Guests. Ranking updates and game reports. We'll be hitting taters with the red raiders from opening weekend. All the way through Omaha. This is dinger Derby. All right, welcome to

"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

One Life Radio Podcast

07:02 min | 2 years ago

"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

"Like you don't literally feel good in your body when your your your immune system or your inflation is out of black. But i didn't know anything about that. One this conversation that happened. I was just like wow says yeah. It didn't really dawn on me 'til overwhelming stress. Really you know my nervous system. Well it's pretty much because I wasn't allowing the motions process. I think in any ways of people stunt that with other things you know. We know ourselves out as a society many different respects. And you know you pick your poison but for me. It was like okay. If i want to enjoy a My life again. I'm going to have to say when i'm going through and you know that is the first step but actually not the first. The first step is to have the conversation the whole like they does five stages of grief like those literally stages might not happen linearly. You know what kind of your anger to sadness the depression. So like then. You're back to the y. And the whole shebang so yeah. Those words have stuck with me. And i think it's kind of propelled me. Those wise wise words have propelled me more than any education or rotation. i could of ever gotten. Do you really want to regret not doing that. One thing that makes you come alive. And and yeah. That's kinda huge. What he's thinks about it because we don't want around. Yeah no absolutely and a big part of your transformation started with you leaving your position as a lawyer for homeland security and immigration is such a hot topic right now and the stories can be so heartbreaking. I've i've i've read them. They're heartbreaking so what was it like working in homeland security for so many years. So i you know and i talk about this in my book when i took the oath of office which is very formal and i didn't realize really actually was taking it. Yeah it's very. You have to raise your right hand and take an oath to swear you know. You uphold the constitution of the united states or american ideal lawyer. Anybody that holds great. You know per funded at a basically. This is like you know everything that this country's built on the rule of law etcetera etcetera. You know those are the things that you are being asked to hold in the highest regard. That's what keeps this country going. Hopefully you know that's over a foundation. Hopefully because i have great hope. And i do believe in the rule of law will save us. You know certainly wise minds coming to the fore having those important conversations of who we want to be as a as a society but we wanna look like you know. I think those are the conversations that will certainly slow or unfold. Hopefully from what happened in the last. You know four years but for me when i took that oath and that public service you know you're in america and then here immigrant you're targeting american. That's at yeah. I mean are people i will say people You know we came over here when the immigration was from europe and to come here to get a better life to and you know the whole thing was paying back to a country. That's given us so much. You know you know the public service for me. Was that an opportunity to pay back in the highest regard. What this country has given me so you know. Immigration is very interesting and and for me. I fell into that field while and third year law school. And it's really about storytelling. It is because yeah come here. They're telling their story of what happened to them in their country of origin whether it meets the requirements of the certain areas of the laws that. We've all agreed upon in congress and the constitution etc. You know if they've met those met their burden than they need they can they. They stay and if they don't then they can appeal it etcetera but the bottom line is it was all about telling stories in this country. They're not considered economic refugees. There's really a political more of a is a file. Grounds are very diverse. Anyway that being said for me listening to these stories of time having to pick out the cut the cut ability you know whether or not these cases are true. Whether these people are telling the truth of the matter you know what happened to them. Was my dad over time. I you know i became. You know when you're first starting your all like i'm going to do the best job ever gonna. You know everyone proud and after a while you know hopefully sooner than later you realize that these are all people in front of it. Lives and families and A file they become a human. And you know it's a very interesting experience that you have Interrelated with that. So i might have been very you know more one way when i started but certainly has came through time. I changed a lot of the whole. You know. it's still following them. Ause however the passion the empathy comes into play. And i think that you can't you can't separate that from you or you become jaded. You know right rank while for me yeah. It became Very hard to listen to. Especially when i was i lost my mom i came back. I couldn't hear the stories of loss over to to open wounded at that point that job. You know that you had You know it. it was I it's a. it's a lot of responsibility. Childrens children and people families lives are in the balance and you have had the responsibility of handling that and making decisions that would affect the rest of their life and it's a huge responsibility and a lot of stress. I understand. I'm looking at the clock. We're going to go for a quick break. Everyone more coming up with meg and the cerro. She is the author of the book. A butterfly awakens a memoir of transformation through grief attuned. You're listening to one life. Radio want to advertise on one life. Radio send us an email info at one life. Radio dot com. We have an exciting announcement to make. Jared ramirez our on air microbiome expert and his team and environ medica took home the twenty twenty one next e award for best new products supporting healthy microbial. The next day awards recognize the most progressive innovative inspiring and trustworthy products in the natural products industry. We've always known about their tariff. Laura deep immune symbiotic. It provides broad spectrum gut health support while strengthening. The bodies adaptive response to immune challenges. It is a completely elevated gut. Immune system support product a perfect welcome addition to your supplement routine visit environ matica dot com to learn more and order your tear up. Laura deep. immune symbiotic congratulations. vira medica ten years. A positively on your radio. This is one life.

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"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

One Life Radio Podcast

06:56 min | 2 years ago

"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

"Usda organically certified petfood setting. The new standard pet nutrition is what i have used personally for years for all nineteen of my animals now. The number changes every week. Oh my gosh. I'm having so much fun with that new little kitten though junior. And so i have to ask. Is there a verdict yet. The potential Junior That your family kitten we. I still haven't been able to link up my friend yet. I'm gonna try this weekend I'm not working all weekend. So i just at night Dj and so. I have the daytime open. So we're gonna try to get together this weekend so Because they gotta find somebody to foster the cat. So i wanna i wanna get the saint care of this weekend so hopefully monday allergy. That you guys are yeah. Fostering turns into ownership. I know they're the same way with cats. You know they foster and then they end up keeping it so hard not to you know i got my got. My boy love studio today out. Maybe i'll let them get on the mic a little bit later. We'll see if he behaves himself. But we've got a fantastic formulas. Friday show for you brought to you by castro in politics at the half. We have made Nisei row. she wrote the book. Butterfly awakens a memoir of transformation through. Grief really cool. She actually wrote a trilogy. I'm looking forward to speaking with her. About transformation and we always love having dr ruth. Ann lobos on the show. She is the lead veterinarian for america. Pet care the makers of our furry friday sponsor in politics organic and responsibly. Sourced pet food. Dr lobos is a practicing veterinarian. With more than fifteen years of experience in the pet food industry she loves sharing the power of pet nutrition with colleagues pet parents and friends her in her undergraduate studies. Dr ruth ann pursued in animal science degree. She went onto receive her doctor of veterinarian medicine. That's the dvd from louisiana state university. And dr ruth in is also certified in canine rehabilitation therapy and veterinarian acupuncture a she is an avid marathoner and triathlete and a proud mama to three active pups wrigley's stella and then you can find dr ruth ann at castor pollock's pet dot com always great to have you on the show. How you doing today. dr ruth ann. Hey burn good wonderful beautiful friday. I know they are. And i love what we're talking about today. How to recognize when our pets are in pain and so it it. It's so difficult to recognize it. I've i've experienced many times with many of my pets and most recently In my one of my cats and so but cast you know this is going to be a really great subject so let me start with us. Why is it so difficult. Dr ruthenian to recognize pain in our pets yet. So why is it's so difficult goes back. You know our our. i should take step back. Our cats and dogs have certainly evolved. They are no longer like the wolves and the wildcats That they have descended from and they've evolved to be part of you know now really part of our family oftentimes sleep in the bed with us But there still is that animal instinct that they possess that that has not evolved and so their first instinct. there. I go to when something feels wrong feels funny. That sort of thing is to hide it to pretend like it's not there and so they and they are masters of disguise and cats are even better at it than than dogs are so we gets really challenging. When you know. I i have for example You know. I recently had a scratch on the corner of my eye and it was actually from one of my dogs and i. It was my fault. I was rough housing with them and they scratch my cornea and it was one of the most painful things that i have had happened in my life and you i've seen it happen with dogs and cats when they come in and the owner. Is you know the client is like. Oh well he's just a little squinty and we do the test and they have like this huge gash going across the cornea there. I and i'm like how are you still like upright like the human. I'm laid out you know. And so they but that's how they kind of go back to their survival instincts of pretending like there's nothing wrong so they don't look weak and can get preyed upon yet and it is painful My dog brad Had an ulceration honor. Honor i on his i. I don't know how it happened. It was like i think he bumped into something. I it can happen that quick. But you know. That's one of the things that dr laura said he's like this is extremely painful for the pet And and and do so. Do all animals high pain. Dr ruth ann i i mean i definitely. My area of expertise is more catch dogs. So i can't talk about all the animals but i will say that is kind of like i said they're they're go to reaction when something hurts until it hurts so badly or is affecting them so much that they can't hide it any any longer and and that's oftentimes where it's a struggle pet parents. Because they're like. I didn't even know. Like he was just squinting his little bit or he was just slipping a little bit and i didn't know it was this bad So you know that is. That can be the challenge. And that's i try never to put a guilt trip or shame Pet parent for bringing their pet in and find you know finding something that is more severe than they thought. Because i'm like look. This is their go-to this is you know you should feel bad about not recognizing the pain because they were doing what their instincts wanted them to do. Yeah well isn't it. I mean they people to don't people and animals all mammals like isolate when they're when they're suffering whether it be emotionally. Yeah they pull away. yeah yep especially. If they know they're going to die right what did you say. I'm sorry we were so. Yeah i was gonna say which makes it even harder if they like if your cat is hiding under the bed or you know. Your dog is a little bit more aloof than you're not seeing you know the the actual changes in whatever part of them is is hurting so it makes it even harder to identify that they're in pain. Yeah and i have so many have nineteen now and i. You know so much to learn so much to keep up with. And so and update on. Francesca that's the little Feral cat that i Brought home about we trapped it. And i brought it home. Put it in my daughter's about one bedroom her old bedroom and she slowly but surely coming out little by little but she's still so scared i'm but it is getting better and so i think a lot of it and i know we're talking about pain but that goes for emotional pain too and so Right that you have to really be patient.

dr ruth ann Dr ruth ann dr ruth Ann lobos Dr lobos castor pollock Dr ruthenian Usda louisiana state university castro allergy dr laura wildcats wolves america Francesca
"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

One Life Radio Podcast

07:39 min | 2 years ago

"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

"At whole foods natural grocers sprouts or central market a decade of learning. You're listening to one life radio. All right everyone. Happy fabulous friday brought to you by casteran politics. It's a company that i've used for years. And they are america's number one organic pet food with mostly i with most comprehensive portfolio of purposeful foods using sustainably sourced ingredients such as wild caught salmon and grass-fed beef. And i didn't know this. Dr ruth and until i During the break. I pulled up my little package of organic the organic cookies. That you guys make that. It's not only are all the ingredients organic and free range chicken. It also is cooked in an organically certified usa kitchen. That's pretty cool. Oh yeah absolutely. That's what helps us to maintain our. Usda certification as they have all not only the ingredients that that we put in there but then also the whole entire baking process and everything has to be up to the usda organic codes in order for us to keep that label on there. Well i know my my furry furry pets my children my children. They appreciate it. I'm a little sleep deficient. Forgive me today. But you know. I also i want to thank you. You know i want to thank you. I want to thank casteran politics for being a supporter of one life. Radio as you heard. We just celebrated our tenth year and we could not do it. dr ruth without great sponsors like casteran. Pollock's i thank you all of you there at castro pollock's from the bottom of my heart. I really do because. I think that this information that we get out to people weekly and we have for ten years is so important to protect the animals that we love so much. So thank you. you're welcome. We're we're happy to be in partnership and i and i love like it says in my by truly love being able to share the power of nutrition with parents. So great venue to be able to do that. Well thank you and it is true nutritionists everything it really is and today. We're talking with dr ruth and lobos. Who is the lead veterinarian for merrick. Pet care As i said. The makers of our friday sponsor castro in politics organic and responsibly. Sourced pet food knowing signs of stress. In your pets so you know how how. How do we know if they're stress. Because you know a of a lot of animals hide win their stress too. Don't they to to cover it up so to speak exactly. So that's that's certainly one sign Right there especially our cats Is something is wrong or you know just kinda off-balance for them They will oftentimes go. Go and hide and and try to find their their quote unquote safe place to be Other times we'll see While we're you know we're focusing on the cat that sometimes they over groom so they'll just sit there and they'll and they'll lick and lincoln an oftentimes you know. They can look themselves almost ball either on their bellies or their their pods You know dogs. We'll see where they They start. they may start acting out so they may start. Doing the baseboards or you again. Similar to the cats either you know looking in one spot on themselves or chewing on their tail or doing something like that Unfortunately we see especially in episodes of acute stress. So you know other things that i mentioned earlier that can be stressful for. Pets are big thunderstorms or you know. Thankfully where we've got a break from the fireworks for a little bit but nearly fireworks are loud noises. That just seem in their minds seems to come from nowhere and are really loud disturbing Construct them out and in an acute Things like that. We can sometimes see that they get gi upset So you know if They might have you know. Have the runs. Has this guy area Things maybe sometimes even vomiting just depending on how intense that that stress is and how it affects their gi tract. But those are. They're kind of the myriad of of stressful things that that will be well. What about boredom my dog love. He's actually in studio. He says hello. I'm not gonna put him on the mike you know. I feel like he is so bored. That maybe that's a sign of stress. When i put them out in the backyard. You know because he has a tendency to get a little territorial tort territorial over the food sometimes. I won't let him out with all the other dogs. And when i don't he gets into everything like every cushion that he can find every pillow. Whatever i have out there he finds it. he's throwing it in the air chewing it up throwing it in the pool. Is that a sign of stress to like the board. Don't so i. I would chatting with someone just recently about Having cameras around. So i think which i was like you know. There's there's one side that's that's kind of creepy but in this in this case for our pets oftentimes if you can see what how. They're acting on camera It can be an indication in watching their body language while they're on camera if maybe they're having actually having fun and so he like just having a ball taking you know taking your cushions throwing them up and we can look at throwing up in the air and and all of that and we can look and watch you know is their tail wagging you. They have a you know a happy expression on their or you know. Are there pupil super dilated. and they. and they're kinda scared and they're frantically digging at the at the pillows and that's what destroys them so the first one is you know he's having a ball. He's taken the foam and throwing it everywhere and he's running around you pouncing on it. That's having fun versus you. Know that kind of Stress digging sort of thing with the tail tucked and like. Oh i gotta get out of here. I gotta get out of your. That would be definitely assigned. They're stressed and so oftentimes when you know 'cause sometimes we'll see like that separation anxiety sort of name and but and that's what owners will call it. And i'm like well wait. You know. maybe he is having fun. And that's where those cameras can actually play a really important role in helping us to guide How we approach helping with those. Those behavioral changes that they're seeing well. I think you might be right. I think he's having a little too much in fact and what did you say that about the ball. I'm looking at him right now. He's got this orange and blue ball that he has finally broken through the fabric and he is just having a blast like just just digging and throwing it all over the studio hair chewing on the ball but he's just sees the active to and so it is important. You know a lot of people. Forget that if you've got a dog that likes to chew please. You know understand that they are going to get get to a shoe or something in order to satisfy that craving or that need to chew right and people need to get them chew toys correct right yes exactly. I call that setting them up for success. Yes ed part of you know part of the reason why you know my my two of my dogs those rigs and finn. You know when i leave they go down in the kennel because actually having more space for them out in in roaming around in the house Does stress them out and then they they tend to make bad choices and destroy things and and all that having their safe place to kind of set them up. I sixty s in making.

casteran dr ruth castro pollock usda america Pollock lobos merrick castro lincoln
"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

One Life Radio Podcast

03:19 min | 2 years ago

"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

"I don't like i don't like the kind of collars that are the leads that are just on a regular collar because the collar could slip off right right. Yeah that's a very valid point and again every dog is a little bit different and But most of the harnesses now and they come in all shapes and sizes all shapes and sizes of our dogs and you can get them breed specific and And all that so. I think you know again. It's just another added layer of safety to keep them You know with us and being able to go out on our adventures together at and And have all the fun. That life allows Well you know Junior has a dog. ev. Right isn't that that's name. Do you take her on road trips junior or do you guys are bachelorettes this week. So what are you taking. Take her for a little ride. So my wife does. I can't because ev likes to sit on your lap. When when you drive. And i can't do it my wife. I don't know how she does. It's probably not the safest thing but she has so many people do. Oh my gosh but she she keeps trying to get on my lap. So i can't do it and the other thing i don't like is she. Licks the windows constantly and so every time we take her in the car. I gotta clean the window. So i don't know how she licks the window like she'll just sit there. I think it's because they're cold. I dunno. she'll just sit there and the window. And i'm just like okay. Can't dr lobos. Maybe she's nervous right could be. I was gonna say oftentimes licking behavior. Kinda indicates some either some anxiety or nervousness And that sort of thing so that that may be so you know while it may be annoying to you for her to lick the window. It's probably maybe not so as enjoyable For her to be in the car so maybe all both on the right..

dr lobos
"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

One Life Radio Podcast

02:34 min | 2 years ago

"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

"Baby love the dog from dallas texas on iheartmedia as well as cami and southern california on. Abc news talk high. You doing junior in the mix. I'm good that is going to be able to talk that long. In that. High pitch by castro. Okay enough enough love okay gotta go all right. He wanted to open the show. So i said you know. I got a i got a lot. I appreciate you going along with that with your great sense of humor. Everybody's got to get their shot. I think deserves a shot to so i do too. And he's working on his radio voice. Yeah he sounds a little bit like What did somebody say he broke. Mickey broken make a broken watch it because headphones off. I'm sorry oh my gosh. Well it's so great to be on the air today and tgif it is friday. And it's always a fabulous friday here at one life radio brought to you by castro in politics. They are america's number one organic pet food with the most comprehensive portfolio of purposeful foods using sustainably sourced ingredients such as wild salmon grass-fed beef and we are proud to have them as a brand pont partner of one life radio. So let's get. This party started right. Well we've got dr ruth and lobos at the house. She's going to be talking about traveling with your pet and we've got more davies up. I as she is talking about. Dr ruth lands up i. Oh shoot. I did not. I did not. I messed that up. Sorry dr ruth and how you doing. I'm doing well bernadette quite quite the entry. I didn't wanna be making appearance and gosh that That he doesn't require extra biscuits. I appreciate you going along with that. I'm not so sure. I would have done it if i thought you were up i i i might have been a little too scared but i love that. You have a great sense of humor and thank you so much for going along with it. He is accompanying me today in studio. He's right at my feet and for those of you. That don't know. Love is a dog that i rescued along the charlie. They're both pit bull mixes over the two thousand twenty over the year. Two thousand twenty. The big toe vid year. So let's get this party started. Dr ruth ann lobos you guys. I love her..

Dr ruth castro Abc news southern california dallas Mickey texas lobos bernadette america Dr ruth ann lobos
"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

One Life Radio Podcast

06:48 min | 2 years ago

"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

"All right. Are you ready everybody. Welcome back to one life. Radio i heard of. It's all i've got love in studio with me. My latest rescue by the way. Everybody welcome back as i said to one life. Radio this is bernadette with junior. And we've got patty dawson continuing on with us live from iheartmedia here in dallas texas as well as in southern california on. Abc news talk We're talking about to consider before surrendering your pet. Is our focus today. Way before the break we were talking about this court case an abuse case a local here in dallas a dog by the name of perkins So i had a lot of people emailing me and texting me and asking me what happened to perkins is alive is he. Okay is he thriving. Is he in a loving home. Patty yes and i actually do have their names. Lewis wolfenden sean. Taylor brown look it up. Sorry i'm on them but yes he came. He took a while. Who's extremely dehydrated And he had some vision damage With vision demo damage we were able to actually get the full existent. Because the way animal cruelty works you have to leave bodily harm which leaves them impacted for the rest of their life. His judah his vision. That's what happened. He was a little bit in the one i. It took him three years of treatment but he is innocent. Having home he is a little grey. Pity he took some rehabbing like behaviorally because he was so hungry he was a little bit food reactive but now he's loving. He's got a family with two boys and another dog from our rescue and A family and he's living the best life ever. And i m i just got to see him like a couple of months ago so i can tell you every once in a while. Isn't that the best feeling. I still get letters from people from dogs it. I adopted out You have my guy. That's why i'm so bad at it. That's why i've got twenty animals. So i kind of. Don't bring him through the door anymore. Unless like like love you know during the pandemic and also charlie are the two that i adopted in twenty twenty. Love is actually in studio with me right now. Wagging tell you know and i do as little voice on the air patty. I don't know if you've ever heard me do it. But i'll do it. He he wants to thank you patty for all the work that you do at dulles dogar and he wants to send you off just jumped up and now he's in with my whole but you know that feeling when you can see like it doesn't happen often and people often say like why aren't they charged. I mean it's not easy and and not every case is gonna cruelty. I know it seems like it is but it's not so it's very difficult when you get that one and you make that difference in today. That district attorney was there the assistant i mean there. They were ready to. I mean we had done a real black. So i mean people from all over the world called fort worth so this is a pretty big case in fort worth because they didn't realize when i sent the powers to be them letters but so many people were involved and following his case that they've made it a priority and i will say they have not given up so i have to get a shout out to the detective and The da over in fort worth. They are working really hard to get him to be charged for this crime. They have not given up so what clearly. There's something not right with these people that would participate in such cruelty. And and and i feel sorry for them. Actually i have. I have pity on them. as a compassionate human being that something is not right with them in order to behave in such a way or maybe they were raised in an environment like that growing up unfortunately but the reason that this case is so important is because it sets a precedent that we cannot let this stuff continue and people the as you said that abuse animals abused children we have to shutdown abuse and we have to make examples out of people like this unfortunately not to give them shame or blame and go to that low energy field but to make change in the world right right now it just have to make a difference and if it's one case at a time like i said we say like two thousand animals a year and if you get two or three that are charged and it's two or three that starts the precedence that this is unacceptable. Someone just the picture on my phone. I just can't even believe anybody could could let a dog Lie in their home and that kind of condition and do anything about it. I mean it's mental illness at the end the day anybody that would participate in that is mentally ill and they need help themselves. And that's another country tex over the pitcher. He was a great little puppy. He was a great pity. That was nine weeks old when they adopted him And he had returned a dog they had returned to dog previously. Get him and if you look at the picture of where he turned it. I mean i. It's it's he was lifeless like when i held him and he leaned in he. He gave me a kiss on the face. Like new us like it's like at that moment. He was like think you like. It's like that like dogs have and we've talked about this stocks. Have a sense of. I don't know they have forgiveness and a desire to live and just living long everything it more people should follow dogs the way they they should live live. They have good. They don't wanna do harm they. I mean animals all animals though. They just wanna they just wanna live like we do they just want to the golden ruled the. It'd be treated the way you would wanna be treated. And it's an important social issue. two it really is. It speaks volumes about a country. How they treat their animals and their elderly or their children people who are more vulnerable to abuse. And it's our duty as citizens of this country to protect these animals and not allow it to to to continue. See how jacked up. I was ranting was ranting about this yesterday and i had a feeling he wasn't gonna show up because the court happened really. I mean i talked to them wednesday and they were like it's friday and i'm like okay. That seems fast. So i kind of had a feeling they he was not gonna show up so now tuesday. It's been moved to tuesday. He has to show up the attorney and everybody was there so if he doesn't show up and he's in contempt so So there's no reason. On tuesday fingers crossed. It goes off without a hitch. I hope so. It'll you know i'll let you know. Yeah let me know and so. Let's let's switch gears here a little bit. Let's talk about Let's let's let's talk about people out there listening that maybe have a little room in their home. To adopt one of these pets that people are surrendering that really need homes and love like we all do. Let's talk about that. What's the process. And how can we help patty so the process is pretty easy. you can email Adopted dallas dog dot org. That's one way and just get some questions out there. You can go to our.

tuesday patty dawson two boys twenty animals friday three years two Lewis wolfenden sean three wednesday Patty southern california dallas today one case iheartmedia dallas dog dot org charlie nine weeks old couple of months ago
$25 Million Worth of Giant Clam Shells Seized in Philippines

CBS SUNDAY MORNING

00:28 sec | 2 years ago

$25 Million Worth of Giant Clam Shells Seized in Philippines

"Busted in the Philippines. Philippine Coast Guard reports over 200 Tons of fossilized giant clam shells were seized Friday and Pollo on province for suspected poachers are under arrest. The giant clam or talk Lobo was it's known in the Philippines is considered an endangered species. There. The giant clam can reach as many as four ft across and weigh up to £400. The poaching suspects under arrest could get up to eight years behind bars and, oh, tens of thousands of dollars in fines if found guilty. My people, right

Philippine Coast Guard Philippines Lobo
"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

One Life Radio Podcast

05:35 min | 2 years ago

"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

"For friday. Everyone we are here with dr ruth. Ann lobos live from dallas texas discussing at positive resolutions. Dr ruth. ann. Lobos is the lead veterinarian for america pet care. The makers of our furry friday sponsor casteran pollock's organic and responsibly. Sourced pet food you can find them at castro pollock's dot com. Okay so dr lobos. I want to get through all of these before. The end of the show on our list is regular vet checkups. What do we. What do we need to know. How often should we go. Yeah and a lot of that depends on certainly the age of the breed of of your pets at home Definitely encourage at least once a year bringing our dogs and cats In jews the vet Just like we get a physical for our own selves. It's really important for us to have regular checkups for our pets as well But then as you know they start to get older so most kind of lines to thinking. Support that dogs over. The age of seven are considered senior so once they hit that milestone in their life really coming in almost every six months to have a checkup is important in the fact that it can often times help us You know see subtle changes and catch things before they get too big and too beer For for our dog and our cat. Yeah well on this list. Also and i this. I'm so i'm such a huge proponent of this of updating your pets ide- it's incredibly appointment important. And so what types of id do you recommend. Yeah i For our dogs and again maybe. Because i'm a helicopter parent myself and always watching over everything. they are they're practically triple. Id if that makes we know we've got a lot of really good data that supports the importance of microchipping our pets and You know a lot of times now with With shelters and people adopting dogs and cats they get a microchip Before they even leave their shelter or rescue group that you're working with But on that note it's also important to nowhere you know what kind of microchip you have where you're registered and if you move or something or change get new cell phone number or whatever it may be that that in their system is updated that that you know even though if they you know your dog gets locked in and they are found again and scan them on the microchip making sure that that information that contact information is correct yeah and then we've got caller that are embroidered with their name and and our numbers and then also and then also a tag that has their name so if the tag falls off the collar we've got the name and number on the collar and then we've got the microchip as well so All of those are really good tools to be able to Find our pets if they get lost by Some unfortunate accident. Yeah and it can happen. I don. I don't really want to tell the stories. I don't wanna go run short on time but You know and my brother. Joe in in houston years ago. His his his poodle. Pierre got out of the car at an accident jumped out of the car. A woman was coming by. Swooped him up. Took them to florida for a year. He stayed after putting signs out and got the dog back a year later the woman returned it as she was returning back from florida going through houston but a so. It's so important and know on my on my dogs. The ones that my crazy ones like love. I have a fi collar. The satellite collar that i remove every couple of days in You know charge the battery so in case he does get off the property. I know where he is immediately. I i believe like you do that. You can't be safe enough okay. So on this list is clean out. Old pet toys and home safety checks. What do we need to know yet. So you know especially like time of year. I feel like people are doing. You know their own resolutions in kind of starting to get into that spring cleaning mode. our pets toys r. Are no different really looking at them. If they've got some of the long to bones making sure that there aren't any or to toys that there aren't any really sharp edges on those And if there are than we'd probably mean time to to replace those guys We you know if you're you have a basket full of stuffed toys and doing an infection on them to make sure that there aren't any hold and ripped into and cares where they could pull out the stuffing and eat the stuffing or the little squeak. Squeaker that that on the inside If you argon wash them you know depending on what they're made of certainly some Hypoallergenic laundry detergent for them. If they're more of a plastic toy sometimes you can actually run them through the dishwasher In the top shelf by themselves and and get a g- a good cleaning their forum which is usually pretty safe because of the extra rich sites that will happen in the dishwasher. Yeah just depending on what they're made out that you get those cleaned up unfortunately almo- where where the music is playing. I hate to cut you off. I love being on the air with you. I had so many more questions to. We'll have to do it next time. Dr ruth anne thank you so much always a pleasure. You have a fantastic weekend and enjoy the super bowl. Thank you to everyone enjoyed this weekend. It's a great one. You get one body you get one mind and you get one line..

houston florida Pierre Joe ann. Lobos Dr ruth anne a year later casteran pollock dr lobos friday one dallas texas Ann lobos dr ruth. six months a year years ago one body castro
"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

One Life Radio Podcast

05:19 min | 2 years ago

"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

"Some mental enrichment for them. I would have never thought of hatton sake junior. Have you ever play hide and seek with. Vee yes actually. I do i do. I'll just i'll like. I'll go hide somewhere and then i'll just call her name until she finds me. My gosh okay. I'm gonna have to start doing that. That's funny okay. So on this list to dr lobos is scheduled playtime so junior. I'm going to ask you to do you do you schedule. Playtime with ev. I don't schedule it. I play with her all the time. Like anytime i see your. I can't not passer and toucher do something. So i mean i do as much as i can. I probably annoy her. Sometimes but i can't help it. Yeah well so. How do you schedule. Playtime like give us an example. Dr levels like taking him for a walk. Would that be considered playtime. 'cause i know junior does that you do that. Yes yeah yeah for sure. I think one of the important things is that we when we are playing with them is to really focus and dedicate our mental and physical energies on them Because i know sometimes like we'll take him for a walk and you're also either. You know i do this with my own pets. is you know. I'll have a walk and talk though. I i'm talking with my sister on the phone while walking while i'm taking my dogs for a walk and to me. That doesn't really count in the sense that i'm not really engaging with my dogs at that point when we go on a walk and it's just us and i leave all the digital stuff You know a behind away And then really kinda focusing on on them and watching what are they. Stopping to smell and sniff Or let's go to this little park and play fetch for a little while and then walk home And so different different activities like that. Where we're really unplugging from all of our the digital worlds that you know it's constantly Berating us with different messages and taking away. Our brain power To really unplug from matt in and in dedicate some time to just our four. Legged friends Yes they definitely can pick up on that and know that we are paying attention to just them and we're not distracted and they do you know my dog. Love love and suzy to suzanne lover. Probably my biggest ones. And charlie loves to go for car rides. What is it is it if your dog that would count ranks. I do that a lot. In fact the other day. I came out and i had left the window down just to air the car out you know and i came outside and love was in my car in the driver's seat just sitting there. He jumped through the window doctor. I was like holy smokes kind of care of it with that. You know what you leave in the car you know. It's a dog and he's he's a chew or so. Oh my goodness he coulda chewed up anything right. Maybe he would tell him sending you a message. You want to go and take it somewhere for sure. Oh my gosh yeah. So car. Rides are good right. Yeah i mean you know when you wanna make sure that you're doing it safely for sure Oftentimes i it makes me cringe a little bit when i see You know dogs heads or three quarters of their bodies out the car window but you don in a in a really in a in a safe way with them in a seat they get the same. You know it's a change of scenery for them and they get new smell. The new sites and Even i love it for our older dogs because it sounds a little silly but it's almost like exercise per them in a lot of ways because they have to stay you different stabilizing muscles and all of that when we're taking a turn or going you know overnight road or something like that so we can actually be a a little bit of a quote unquote workout For our senior pets as as well. Oh yeah and i cringe when i see and actually i typically report them when i see a dog in the back of a pickup. It's real common here in texas a lot of people. A lot of people not Well yeah some people do it and it's really it's really bad i always cringe when i see it but but we're going to go for a quick break. We'll be right back more coming up with dr ruth. Ann lobos brought.

texas charlie Ann lobos suzy one four suzanne three quarters dr lobos dr ruth hatton people
"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

One Life Radio Podcast

08:27 min | 2 years ago

"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

"Right. Everyone fervor friday here a had one life. Radio brought to you by casteran politics. We are live from dallas texas on iheartmedia as well as in southern california on. Abc news talk. And we have dr ruth and lobos with us. She is a lead veterinarian for america. Pet care the makers of our furry friday sponsor casteran politics organic and responsibly. Sourced food. Dr lobos is a practicing veterinarian. With more than fifteen years of experience in the pet food industry she loves sharing the power of pet nutrition with colleagues pet parents and france inter undergraduate studies. Dr ruth anne pursued an animal science degree and then she went on to receive a doctor of veterinarian. Medicine devi m from louisiana state university and became a certified canine rehabilitation therapists. She is an avid marathoner. Triathlete and proud mama to three active pups wrigley's a stella and finn. Their website is castor politics pet dot com always a pleasure. Dr ruth. ann lobos doing today. I am doing well on this friday. How are you. i'm i'm good. I've had. I've had a lot of sick pets in the last month. And so i may pick your brain a little bit here doctor. But we're continuing our topic the last time you were on which is pet positive resolutions. And so what. We didn't get to so to learn revisit. Your your knowledge of pet first aid vet costs. Keep it can you know can really get expensive. So can you give us some examples of first aid that we can do at home before rushing to that for instance if our pet is throwing up or or of our dog steps on glass or something sharp during a walk. What should we do. Yeah great question. And and not only you know. I think we'll have the other challenges to it's just actually simply getting into the veterinarian. Unfortunately these days because of the pandemic We all you know. It's kinda us all down and You know our veterinarians. We wanna make sure that we're doing things while we're taking care of our pets. That are also safe before our pet parents that are bringing them in and so a lot of veterinary clinics have gone to what's called concierge service and you're probably sounds like a little bit too familiar with that These days yeah where you know we basically just Take the pet and bring them in while That pet parented waiting in the car and the exam and different diagnostics tests are done in the clinic And so that that play slow down the process which sometimes can make it a little more challenging to get into the office Some of the things you know that. I think about it and i'll use one of my own dogs as an example is I had a chocolate lab named drake. And he is still my heart and soul even though now he's on the other side of the rainbow bridge gone and he He let him out in the morning and to you know to go and do business me comes back in. And you know he's like he's limping severely. And i immediately because i am a helicopter pet parent and i immediately go into this frenzy gossip break. A leg does he. He was you know he at the time he was about twelve. So i'm like does my gosh. He has to have cancer or something. Like go down. I went to the extreme. Well it turns out that. When i looked at him after. I kind of got my wits about me And actually look at his paws. He had just stepped on something out in the backyard and put a severe crack in his toenail. So all i needed to do actually and it was like a you know for us. A really bad hangnail. All i really needed to do was just kind of trim that little piece of his nail that had cracked off and bupe wa he was he was all better So i i think what's important to to really do you know in a situation like that if you're out for walking your pet starts limping To really do a close inspection. It sounds silly but like a close inspection of of his paws and his and his pads to see. If there's anything that stuck in there or or something minor like a little broken toenails could mean potentially taking care of at home You know from the from an upset stomach standpoint. We want to You know think about it. There are things they could have gotten into that could have caused the vomiting also making sure you know if their attitude or Energy level is is severely changed that we want to get them in sooner than later Rather than just waiting it out at home. Oh yeah. I mean you're making me think of so many things. I was at the veterinarian's office this morning. I've actually been there almost every morning for the last three weeks. Because i you heard the broadcast before. But i've had to sit cats and then my my cat not my cat. My dog's suzy. I finally had her mammary. Tumors removed I was apprehensive to do the surgery. I was so scared. Because i just love her. So much and kind of probably procrastinate a little bit which is something In retrospect you should never do you know. But she's doing great. And but my this morning. When i was at my pets office are my my veterinarian's office taking marie And they waiter. And i was thinking you know 'cause people don't think about this you know. They wait her when i brought her in. Just like when they way you when you go to the doctor's office because determining that per that whether it's a pet or a person it can tell you a lot for example in case in point with marie with having this liver distress that she's been dealing with is she's gained or lost weight which is really important because she's on a feeding tube right now right and so i just never thought of it like when you weigh a pet like. Why do they way the pet the minute you bring a in. But it's important isn't it. Yeah for sure Because we see our pets every day so often times you don't really notice either if they've gained a significant amount or even on the flip side of that loss to significant amount of weight. And you know that's another great A great point. Is you know most of us at home. Have a scale for themselves and depending on the size of of your pets. Oh you know getting on with them and then getting on without them and subtracting the difference can give you an a a at least a ballpark range If they have gained or lost weight and certainly rapid weight loss or rapid weight gain in a in a in a short period of time can be an indication that something more serious is going on for sure. Yeah well I've learned a lot. I've never had an animal with a feeding tube and so i'm well practice now. I could be like a feeding to nurse not a veterinary. Obviously but there's a lot to know. I've learned a lot and and she's doing better I'm happy to report. And so and you know i you know everybody out. There listening loves animals. They understand. I mean we love our pet so much and so it is important to take good care of them And have some pet positive resolutions. Right and so What about on this list. That we didn't get you was trying new activities with your pets. So what are some of the ideas that you have dr lobos. Yes so there are a lot of like ineffectually now when we're all home and it's like okay. What what can we do to entertain ourselves. And what can we do to entertain our pets and there are a lot of really great resources out there and a lot of funding that you can just do in and around your house one of the things that we've kind of started This year i also besides my four children. I have one two legged child. And we've done some things where we play hide and seek with 'cause you love. He's almost six but he loves to play hide and seek. We'll do that With the dogs and he'll go and into a closet and you know and and and call for the dog for fan my labrador. Who knows works nonstop and you know in fin will kind of run around the house looking in you know going to the different causes or faces in places to try to find him and and things like that so. That's you have to really fun thing. Did you one For the human entertainment side and then for your pets be able to use this. You know they're different skills and.

america southern california four children today lobos last month dr ruth more than fifteen years This year dallas texas friday ruth anne two legged child this morning Dr castor politics marie drake ruth. iheartmedia
"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

One Life Radio Podcast

03:14 min | 2 years ago

"lobos" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast

"Turns and burns and We keep him lean as well given all his athletic endeavors and and he eats around three and a half cups of food a day And then again. A a handful of little tree When you know to get in from going outside and things like that so But when he's not active with us we do trim back that he eats to keep him out of leaner condition I'm thinking of all the treats. I give my pets And one of course the peanut butter caster in politics little cookies which they absolutely love and then bully sticks and then the the ear choose. You know they're actually the ear of an animal which is kind of gross but how caloric dance are treats like that like for example a bully stick and they can. They can certainly. That's one place. Where a lot of parents and i would say maybe even for our own nutrition we kind of forget about. Oh we just had a handful of little chips over here over here and then eventually that that all adds up and a lot of times. That's the kind of the pitfall in our feeding our pets and really we want about their calories. Make up about ten of their overall calories. So i'm not saying we have to cut out trees overall but it is important to consider how much those can contain and there that there's a vast Range for treats and of those bully sticks Can if they're small and kind of not really tightly wound You know we're going to be less caloric done. Spend the sticker cut one and those can be upwards of seventy five calories. He's where you know if your ear if your dog is only having you know. Two hundred and fifty calories a day. That's a huge chunk. And you know it's just something to consider for the overall picture so almost like on a weekly basis because one believe stickier. There isn't gonna you know isn't going to significantly impacts their weight but if they have won every single day certainly those calories you know we'll we'll see overtime pretty quickly. Oh yeah and you know before we go to break. What about rawhide. He was a medical doctor veterinarian. what do you say about rawhide. I never give them to my dog. I've heard horror stories. What should we know about rawhide. Yes they can be you know. They're certainly a treat that is popular in the marketplace for sure I think it's really important to keep an eye on your own pet. And i never recommend giving them a treat and then leaving and a lot of pet parents do that because they feel a little bit of guilt or i'm going to be gone for four hours. I'll give him the chew on And and really. That's i think where the risks come in Because you the digest treats can vary. They could if they get super excited or possessive. They could eat it really fast and choke on it. So it's really important to have keep a close eye on your pets when you're giving them the treat regardless of what that treat is absolutely. That actually happened yesterday with my dog. Charlie he wanted to gobble it down because he. I needed to go and i had to bring him in any way so much to talk about. Where if you're out there listening this you're listening to dr ruth and lobos. She is the lead veterinarian for america. Pet care more coming up in just a minute. We're going for a quick break. We're gonna be talking about pet. I when we come back. stay tuned. Everyone.

Charlie dr ruth lobos america
$5,000 reward offered for information about arson case at Miami nightclub

Glenn Beck

00:19 sec | 3 years ago

$5,000 reward offered for information about arson case at Miami nightclub

"Reward being offered for information that leads to an arrest in connection with an arson fire set at a nightclub in October of last year. The investigation into the fire the Lobo Jack nightclub is ongoing. Investigators hope a tip can crack the case. Is surveillance video of the fire being set at the club located on Northwest Seventh Street. Jeffrey Toobin,

Jeffrey Toobin
National Native American Veterans Memorial opens in Washington, DC

Morning Edition

03:46 min | 3 years ago

National Native American Veterans Memorial opens in Washington, DC

"Opens today on the National Mall in Washington, D C. It's the Native American Veterans Memorial. Native Americans have served in the armed forces in high numbers for more than a century. This is the first memorial to honor that service. Here's NPR's Quil Lawrence. The memorial is simple. A steel circle elevated over carved stone drum. It sits in the shade of the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian Kevin Go over, is a member of the Pawnee Nation and the museum's director. It's an article of faith in Indian country that Native American serve at a greater rate than basically any other group. So we wish for this to be a sacred place, not just for Native America. But for all Americans. The opening ceremony went virtual because of the pandemic. But here are a few of the people go over hopes will one day attend and sanctify the site. My name is Marcel Grande La Bull. And I'm from the two kettle ban of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe. You know? I'm 101 years old. No in 1940 for Marcela Lobo was a surgical nurse at an Army hospital during the battle of the Bulge Well, In December. I believe it was 1/16 of December. The Germans overtook the American soldiers. They wondered about putting in a hospital so close to the front lines, but they did. So we were there in leisure. And we had both funds night and day. At the time of the breaks through the growth of the bulge. Lobo says her own community always honored her military service. Now the memorial in Washington means the whole country conduce this same to be AH, thought like it was a great honor. My ancestors were warriors. I'm related to rein in the face who fought in the battle of the little big horn or greasy grass that they called it. My father was a Spanish American war veteran. My brother oldest brother was a veteran all down the line. But some native vets aren't as aware of their own family service. Yeah, my name is Colonel Wayne Don don has served 27 years in the army, including Bosnia and Afghanistan. You know, for a lot of years, I thought I was a first generation military person came to find out is both of my grandfather and uncles. And served in a territorial guard during World War two. That was an emotional discovery for dawn and a complicated one not just native Americans, but on the other minority groups, ultimately that they chose to serve to represent their people. And also to serve a country that this, you know, sometimes. Didn't have AH would've proved to be their best interests in mind, but they're still still did it, He says. Now that the country is wrestling with questions about racial justice, he hopes the memorial can play a part. Army vet Allan Ho feels the same. He's native Hawaiian saw combat in Vietnam. Then his two sons served after 9 11, his oldest son. Nine. No. Ho was killed in Iraq and he wass Credible young man. He was an officer, platoon leader, and he was killed in 25 in Mosul, Iraq. His younger brother's the staff sergeant. His name is Locke or And the meaning for a knock or is a warrior who is brave and courageous. Those are the stories of service and sacrifice. He wants Americans to hear it. The new memorial for native visitors, Ho wants it to be a validation and an inspiration. And then perhaps, who knows? Maybe some young Native son who experiences that memorial for this first time, we'll be in 50 years from now he'll be that the president of the United States who knows Quil Lawrence NPR news

Native American Veterans Memor Quil Lawrence Smithsonian National Museum Kevin Go Pawnee Nation Marcel Grande La Bull Marcela Lobo National Mall Native America Cheyenne River Washington Army Hospital Colonel Wayne Don Don NPR Lobo Allan Ho Army
South Carolina vs. LSU Football Preview

The Paul Finebaum Show

08:38 min | 3 years ago

South Carolina vs. LSU Football Preview

"Certainly one of the most eagerly anticipated games of the day tomorrow night in Baton Rouge between South Carolina and Lsu. Castaneda joining us from down there Quin. Thank you very very much. Appreciate the time, and it looks like a weather. Is An issue for what's going on down there right now? Well, just for the moment I'm across the street Tiger Stadium's to my left in their facility straight across the street I'm about to record up and advancer for tomorrow and had a little lightening. got. Dark severe winds and pouring but you can see the nicer weather up on the horizon. So things should be back to normal about ten minutes. We'll good because. That is a place that doesn't need Louisiana does not need any more bad weather. Quinn let's talk a little bit before we get to the game just about your job this year it's different I'm sure. A lot of zoom calls a lot of unusual situations caused by the pandemic. How would you describe the the obvious difference between this and every other year you've been on the sidelines for ESPN and ABC. Well, it's taken a lot of the fun out of it taken a lot of the things that I enjoyed get on campus to meet with the coaches to talk to the strength coaches just to get a vibe for how that team's doing and you learn so much whether it's Roman down the hallway and talking to a tight ends coach or bumping into a recruiting intern about video, they just paint so so that. Part of my investigation is is far less exciting. This year there's no social aspects in terms of our TV crew, our TV team so it's just zooms and when I'm on the road I'm the only one here are our broadcast crew will will broadcast this from Bristol. I'm the only one here. So I kind of treat this like I'm a spy, I don't touch anything I talked to strangers and I couldn't. quit. There's always a challenge on the sidelines especially. When there is weather but is it any or how different is it i? Guess I'm trying to ask dealing with the crew. Fifteen hundred miles away or maybe longer or farther right upstairs nothing you can see them but you at least know that they were seeing the same thing you're seeing. Yeah there's a little bit of a time delay in the audio so it can be anywhere from two seconds four seconds. So I've been on a crew with Jason Bonetti and Rod Gilmore. The last couple years Mike spent hot the whole game this year I've changed crews almost every week, and because we're doing it remotely. They can't have my mic on because we'd be talking over each other. So we do it old school and I'll talk to the producer I talked back and say, Hey, after the third down, play I wanNA talk about upon her coming out for hey, if they make a first down here I want to talk about how they're tight ends doing a great job so. Do it old school and go through the go through the producer in the in the remote truck. In order in order to get on air whereas in the past I could just talk and we were seamless. Clean on the sidelines I mean to say the least there are restrictions what are they and how much do you have to tiptoe around? It's really not bad. I mean we won I. Did a game not they actually made me call the game from the stands in the front row was good seat but I really couldn't get a feel for what was going on on the benches since then they've just widened appalled widen areas it's actually easier now because there's less hangers on, there's less alums, there's less NFL scouts until the sidelines are vacant and it makes my job a lot easier. I also feel pretty secure in that the players and coaches have all been tested recently as recently as Friday or Saturday morning. So I, feel good in that regard So it's actually almost easier less fans less crowds more space. Speaking of testing. How often do you have to be tested? we test once a week it's either an ad home test, and then you mail it in test results come back in about thirty six hours or it's an onsite tasks on a Thursday afternoon then you quarantine. And then Friday, they released you so so far knock on wood six for six negative tests. That would be Kinda. Nerve wracking you show up at a game and you have to sweat it out and you hope you don't get a a Nick Sabin positive. Let's talk about the game because. It's a really interesting game. Let's start with South Carolina just your. As I know you do gather as much information as you can you probably would like to. Be Able to gather more in person but. Your impressions of what you've seen to them and and what you expect. Well they beat Auburn as you know, and they got the three turnovers and converted those in touchdowns. My issue was South Carolina's they're operating an offense with very limited downfield wide receiver threats shy Smith is a natural slot receiver. Colin Hill is is working Mike, Lobos offense efficiently and their offensive line in running backs or carrying the day. Okay. That's with this team is I'm not sure they're ever going to be a high scoring team defensively they're really good corners who can shut you down they add to the box so. I think South Carolina given that Lsu has a freshman quarterback. I'm leaning towards them having some success defensively in this ball game. So I kinda like Carolina's ability to negate lsu with a freshman quarterback but Carolina's physical they're tough. They're not nothing flashy about him and I think big plays are hard for them I. Think they have to manufacture find ways to manufacturer big plays but I think this team is definitely moving in the right direction I. Think they've improved each week. And the other side of that you alluded to the quarterback situation team that has struggled mightily on defense quarterback play has been pretty good I. Know I know it's impossible to gauge because we don't really have a lot of information but. What have you what have you been able to learn about where they are right now? Yet, teach gets the start a freshman Ponchatoula high school. He's gigantic six, six, two, hundred and forty two pounds nets down from to sixty s a big toll righty and you watch his high school tapes just drops in the pocket and he conflict the ball and it goes forty yards without him even trying he seems like he's calm. He's Louisiana product of this dream for him the ADRENALIN will be running. Also expect to see, Max? Johnson. The son of NFL, quarterback Brad Johnson a lefty also tall but more of a dual threat and when you think about calling the game around a freshman quarterback making his first start, you know any kind of run game would be beneficial and to put the quarterback in successful positions. Early in the game, get him hit but but get a couple first downs give him some easy throws and I think that'll be on the mind of lsu going to be a little more conservative game plan I'd. Imagine. You know he's got targets downfield terrace Marshall their running game I thought was anemic Missouri game that was the most disappointing part of the game in my eyes Missouri was without three defensive tackles in that game and Lsu had no running game whatsoever good news for the Tigers to get Ed Ingram back at left guard. But this is an offense through the air with Miles Brennan that's been outstanding. But now you've got a new freshman quarterback. So expectations drop again, I'm seeing a little bit more of a lower scoring game here. In Clinton's you've seen them. The. Biggest used on defense. Would give. Horrible And coach today sentence embarrassing. Alignment. Very, often they're they're moving at a snap making checks that is when the coverage changes on the fly because of emotion because of formation change that has been a dismal day of given up big play after big play against Mississippi State, it was more catching and run the air raid defense was was atrocious quite honestly continued to play man defense got shredded by crossing patterns but I was at the Mizzou game and That game was defined by busts. I mean just blatant bus where I got him. No you got to I got you got him guys wide open touchdown in the running game. Their linebackers are not playing physical. They're not playing north not playing north. They're not getting to the line of scrimmage and engaging blockers to waiting for runners they're missing tackles remember the tyler beatty runs Missouri fiscally untouched broke attack Lens. Gone So. Those are the headlines here new quarterbacks for Lsu and a defense that has had no answers.

LSU South Carolina Missouri Louisiana NFL Street Tiger Stadium Mike Baton Rouge Castaneda Espn Producer Brad Johnson Bristol Ponchatoula High School Quinn Carolina Nick Sabin Colin Hill
Marcela Lobos | Finding Your Inner Garden | Guided Meditation

Hay House Meditations

06:03 min | 3 years ago

Marcela Lobos | Finding Your Inner Garden | Guided Meditation

"Somewhere but to Mama Hush money faster gift. With a significant message for you. Message about this time of change. What is important for you to remember? Let's. Let the Gift Find You What is it? What is? Most important. How does it have meaning for you? Let Nature explain to you. Ask the rocks. Ask the plans or the win. Ask anything you do not understand. Speak to nature as Shamans do. Directly with heart. Trust, yourself. Trust mother Earth. Trust nature. Now say thank you. And say goodbye, take your name. Thank you Pattama. Until I return to my garden. My Inner Sacred Garden. Make your way to the stream of pure waters that feed the tree of life. Follow the same way. To return same way you came from. And turn the river. And ask to glide you up. With the current that flow upward. Unleaded clean. You pro anything that does not belong in the middle world. Take only. What Mama has given you? Behind anything. We should not take. A. Lead the waters Kerr you. Once again clean shoe from any heaviness. Be Purified. Be, anointed by the sacred waters. Until, you arrive again to the roots of the tree of life. Let the route take you in. With the water, feed it. Let the water. Carry you all the way. To the trunk of the tree. Through the layer of bedrock. Through the smaller pebbles. Stukeley. Until you arrive to the dark unfor-, title Earth. All, the way to the middle world. The level of the trunk of the tree. From within the tree say thank you. Until I. Visit you again. And step out crossing the bark. Like crossing a bail for the most ethereal to your body. modder from the mother. Your body resting under the shade. Deeply nourished. An wiggle your awareness. Keen to your body. So, you can fully incorporate. Inhale!

Inner Sacred Garden Mama Unleaded
Marcela Lobos | Healing with the Medicine Wheel

Hay House Meditations

05:53 min | 3 years ago

Marcela Lobos | Healing with the Medicine Wheel

"In all spiritual and meditation traditions maps provided for seekers for the journey, irs who are moving across the landscape of their soul. These maps can be found in secret texts, holy images, prayers and poems from saints, and Yogis who have traversed the rocky train of spiritual people and transformation. The maps point us in the direction of our own spiritual truths for tumors bathed in clarity, strength and empathy. I'm Matteo donal hosted they. Hey, how's meditations? PODCAST and I'm happy to welcome on today's show Marcel Lobos to discuss one of these ancient maps procedures like you and me and that map is the medicine wheel? Marcel has been initiated in the healing and spiritual traditions of the Amazon and the Andes. For many decades I spoke to her while I was visiting her retreat center in the mountains of Chile just before the pandemic his around the world. Martinez senior teacher, the four win society, and is married to its founder Dr L. Deauville do. On today, show Marcella speaks about her own healing journey, and how she's applied the ancient methods of healing found in the medicine wheel. She then takes us on a journey in the podcast around the four directions of the medicine wheel where we talk about the healing archetypes that we work with including the serpent, Jaguar hummingbird and condor. The result of the journey through the medicine wheel is to emerge a luminous warrior with clear discernment, an unbound energy to be of service to others. Let's get right to my conversation with Marcella. So. It's great to welcome Marcella logos onto the house meditation podcast today we're recording down here. In the amazing sort of Sacred Valley of in Los Lobos in Chile so welcome on the PODCAST Marcella tank, Kim materials and honor to be with you, and to be with all our listeners on very excited to share anything that can be of help. Today I have a feeling. It's going to be a good journey. Loved tourneys. Before. We Speak About meditation practice and your meditation practice in about this. Your unique as I understand it contemporary practice that derives out of Shamanism I just wanted to ask you about how your spiritual practice started in your life. I feel it started with being raised by parents that gave me a lot of space to daydream. My House My parents were atheist. So, nothing was imposed to me. Though I grew up in a Catholic Very Catholic county went to Catholic school, but my parents really understood my inner freedom, and they let me not go to. My religious classes day they gave me they spoke with the teachers and say they. Want to do it. They led me to really explore my own. Spirituality my own connection to nature to dreams, because since I was a little girl, had a lot of vivid, dreaming on my parents recognized that today they were really free spirited in that way, and I think that's foundation, and it was here that you grew up in Chile yes. I grew up in China and funny enough I did explore a lot of religious settings because. I didn't go to religious class I. Dig grew up among Catholics season so I ended up learning. Then my aunt, one of my aunts was one of the heads of the witnesses of Jehovah. Jehovah witnesses. Okay, thank you and so I learn a lot of The Bible stories with her. Though whenever I went to my grandmother, she would say no. No, my darling, she says telling you stories that. That people believe but really what happened the UFO's game and gave the tablets to Moses and everything. My. Grandma everything she. That her little sister. Explain to me from the Bible. My grandmother would turn it into a UFO story. And why was that with the UFO story? Sorry, because my grandma was said to rebel on her husband was a doctor and she wouldn't go to. Hospital or medical setting, she only took homeopathy. My best friend was Mormon. Say went to more among tour too many times. You haven't many different kinds of influences. Was More to be outside and if you will communing with nature, yeah, I, I had an early. On. Drive to to just lay on the grass and count the pedals of the grass, and trying to find for for lack and just spend a lot of time with not be known to tame, and whatsoever saw I learned to be with myself. And people nowadays feel like they have to entertain their children non stop and they they cannot stand seeing their kids who, in nothing by my mother also led me to be, and and wouldn't finance attention, so I got bored a lot of many times and I would think even depressed. Point. But that helped me. Be With myself a nobody rescue with nobody rescuing me.

Marcella Chile Marcel Lobos Matteo Donal IRS Andes Sacred Valley Los Lobos Moses Dr L. Deauville Catholic School Martinez Founder Amazon China Kim Materials
'Apex Legends' season five adds a lot more than just a new character

Kinda Funny Games Daily

00:20 sec | 3 years ago

'Apex Legends' season five adds a lot more than just a new character

"Legends season. Five stars today includes a new apex license character. Lobo who is seeking revenge against revenue for killing her family Map changes were parts of Kings Canyon. Such a school town have sunk and others have risen up the first ever season quest. The broken ghosts were seized players in search of nine pieces of a mysterious artifact as part of weekly

Lobo Kings Canyon
'Dark Towers' Chases Scandal-Ridden Institution Deutsche Bank

The Book Review

08:10 min | 3 years ago

'Dark Towers' Chases Scandal-Ridden Institution Deutsche Bank

"David ensor joins us now. His new book is called Dark Towers. Deutsche Bank Donald Trump an epic tale of destruction it debuts this week at number two on the New York Times bestseller list and I also have to disclose that. David is my cousin in law and he eats all the pie Thanksgiving about his nonetheless. Welcome here on the PODCAST. Lobo I didn't know what you're going to get that person quickly. Yeah important. Why people to know Dave? Thanks for being here. That's revenue so we're not GonNa talk about that crime. We're GONNA talk about some other ones. This is a book about deutchebanks. Started off with reporting that you did beginning around two thousand fourteen. I was in London working at the time of the Wall Street Journal and I'd already been kind of obsessing about Deutsche Bank. Ps This is you know. One of the biggest banks in the world one of the most troubled institutions and involved is either at or near the center of just about every financial scandal under the Sun and then in January twenty fourteen one of the most senior executives at the bank and kind of the right hand man to the CEO at the time was found hanging in his apartment in lended. Who is he his name is? Bill Broke Smith and he was a guy who had worked at the bank on and off for almost twenty years and he had he was an expert in risk management in an expert in derivatives and he but more important he was the guy who turned to as kind of the ethical compass of the bank he was. He was known informally as the conscience of the place. He was someone who could say no. He was pretty conservative and he was not quite as hungry for short-term profits as most of his colleagues were and it's something that happened at the bank immediately precede his suicide and did he leave a suicide note like do. We know that this was tied to his work. Well I mean it's really hard and I think probably dangerous to try to make in light statement about why someone does something like this but he did leave a bunch of suicide notes including one to with his longtime colleague onto Jane who at the time was the CO CEO of the Bank. And so one thing that became clear over the years a report and I did and working to talk to his many friends and family members and former colleagues as I could was that. There's no doubt that at the time of his death. Deutsche Bank was very much on his mind in someone he knew his on his mind in a not in a good way he was very upset about some of the things that had transpired while he was there are before we get into some of the things that that he personally saw during the I guess the Early Twenty First Century you say that as of two thousand fourteen it was well established that Deutsche Bank was kind of troubled scandal-ridden institution I mean. How far does that date back? Well the bank is one hundred fifty years old this year. Happy Birthday Deutsche Bank and for the first several decades of its existence. This is just a pretty provincial. German and European lender helping big industrial companies like Siemens spread their wings internationally. But when the Nazis came to power in Germany in the thirties Deutsche Bank became a central part of their attempt to take over the world and this is not attempt to take the Nazi attempted takeover. Was that different from what other German banking institutions did. At the time Deutsche Bank was by far the biggest German bank. A lot of German companies to survive did what it took to arrive in that area which was helping the Nazis. But there's been an attempt by the bank and some historians I think in recent decades to kind of sanitize that basic fact by saying well. Everyone was doing it and that was just the way the world works and we can look back at this period now and say that Deutsche Bank was party to genocide. Wow most people who don't work in finance and don't report on finance look at these banks. They all kind of seem interchangeable and interchangeably bad. That every one of them or many of them have had one terrible scandal or another or many in recent years is a bank especially at I mean. Is there something about its culture? There are a lot of things that make it a specially bad. I mean first of all wallets true that just about every bank under the Sun has been attached to one or more financial scandals over the years. Don't you think really has been involved in a disproportionate number and it's faced disproportionate penalties. As a result of that you can look at that in terms of the number of criminal charges. The bank has faced around the world or the amount in fines that it's racked up the to me. The better measure of its destructive capacity is the havoc wreaked around the world. And you can really look in. Probably almost every continent of the world in see some major in pretty pretty bad scandal to the bank was involved with the cause real harm whether it's destroying companies or really messing up economies or being involved in major bribery or corruption scandals laundering money violating sanctions. Deutsche Bank is blamed by the families of some American soldiers for their deaths in Iraq because the bank was illegally funding Iranian terrorists. So you can say that about some things but you can't say about every bank that every single scandal comes right back to their doorstep in that unfortunately is the case. Allow the time with deutchebanks one of the things that differentiates Deutsche Bank for many other banks is that there is no villain at the top. They have no. Ceo Unlike many other banks is that part of the problem that there isn't one person who has held accountable. Well it actually used to be that way these days for the past fifteen years or so they have had a CEO. In fact you can trace the banks last series of problems going back to the mid two thousand to the decision to place increasing power in this unitary see It's gotten worse when they've had someone. Yeah although it got worse under Joe Ackerman who is the longtime CEO from two thousand to two thousand twelve. And he was the one who converted the organizational structure of the bank from being this kind of collaborative committee led approach to being one where there's an American style. Ceo At the top of the bank and Ackerman very shortly upon arriving as CEO of the bank made a very fateful decision which was that he decided that within a very short period of time a couple of years deutchebanks prophets needed to go up about five hundred percent and looking backwards. It doesn't seem that surprise and the consequences that followed that at the time. This marked a really transformational change within the bank. And it went from being an institution that looked around and kind of saw itself as serving multiple constituencies whether shareholders or customers employees or the communities. In which an operator and it went from doing that to having a single minded focus and obsession on maximising short-term profits basically consequences. Be Damned and when you talk about the recent crimes of DEUTCHEBANKS and we're not even getting to Donald Trump who is in your subtitle him later. Did most of those things manipulating markets helping terrorists regimes defrauding regulators. Did most of this take place during that two thousand and two to two thousand twelve period when he was the CEO will the got started. Then and that was Ackerman's decision to prioritize short-term profits above all else was the catalyst for all sorts of bad behavior within the bank and it wasn't just the people were rushing to make money at any cost and although they were doing that it was also that the bank at that moment because it was so obsessed with meeting quarterly profit targets. It stopped investing in things that cost money. For example they stop investing in technology. And so the banks internal computer systems became just this. Archaic jumbled mess and that sounds kind of technical and maybe not that important but the reality is immense that Deutsche Bank. If you if you were asked to say Deutsche Bank what how much money have you lent to say Russia? There's no easy way to answer that you can just type it into a computer. None of these computer systems are talking to each other. And that's a pretty scary thing for bank. And they also completely failed to invest in compliance an anti money laundering staff. And because those are things that cost money they're not going to produce revenue and in fact they they do the opposite prison revenue. They take away revenue as their job. If they're doing it properly is to say no to potentially problematic and potentially very lucrative transactions this focus on quarterly profits and profit above all else. Is that very different from what other banks were doing. During this period Deutsche Bank went from

Deutsche Bank CEO Birthday Deutsche Bank Donald Trump Joe Ackerman Nazis David Ensor Co Ceo Dark Towers Lobo New York Times Dave Siemens London Bill Broke Smith Wall Street Journal Bribery
Trump says virus under control in U.S. as lawmakers question preparedness

AP News Radio

00:49 sec | 3 years ago

Trump says virus under control in U.S. as lawmakers question preparedness

"President trump is trying to minimize fears about corona virus spreading through the U. S. even as lawmakers voice concerns about whether the nation is ready very well under control in our country at a news conference in India the president said very few Americans have the virus hours later on Capitol Hill health and Human Services secretary Alex aides are said more we'll get it we cannot her medically seal off the United States to enormous aides are defended the administration's response so far added subversion see request for two and a half a billion dollars to get ready for a potential outbreak Republican senator Richard Shelby was among those from both parties questioning whether that's enough warning us spreading virus could become an existential threat if you Lobo something like this you pay for it later Sagarin agony Washington

Donald Trump India President Trump United States Richard Shelby Washington Secretary Alex Senator Lobo
Roger Stone's lawyers request new trial

The Joe Piscopo Morning

05:55 min | 3 years ago

Roger Stone's lawyers request new trial

"At this point and I think don Stenberg can certainly answer question better than me but I can't see her vacating the conviction because she seems to have a personal animus towards Roger I could see an appellate court maybe vacation the conviction and giving giving Roger a new trial yet so they go back to court do they have to go back to this judge you can they take it up to the about what what so my understanding of the next step is judge Jackson will rule on whether or not they'll be a new trial yeah then assuming she says no then Rogers attorneys can go to the appellate the appellate court and the appellate division can make a day when you're the fact you think that the president will wait that long we'll be just pardon Rajasthan I think he will wait actually I I didn't think I said so yesterday that I didn't think al was right when he predicted apartment has a sometimes you have space sports scores now we do we value to it you too where it got there we value to it no I was putting together a story from my bottom of the hour news cast that you might want to listen to the there may not on fake news I can make it I mean I don't want to make it up how's that I'd like to have the facts goads okay so the president didn't pardon my was wrong I took a guess the room number of people yesterday there was saying the president would pardon Roger store right after but if he's not in a way out yeah laid out and let's be fair and that's what we would like to make reelected that's what presidents should do yeah you know what's killing me why why are they trying in in in in DC what has that they should take these federal trials and put them in well you know don was at thirty Jan don Stenberg coming up at thirty general Nebraska put in Nebraska and Iowa put it anywhere but in DC New York or California worried it's very slow I mean if if get New Yorker California's where the supposed crimes were committed that's where the trial it should be but it's too yeah you know Jim should be held but these were these were incredibly unique circumstances here yeah yeah and and and the crime the cortical crime it's not like it was you know it's at don right there in DC was just more like international stages I mean it's it's a joke the she the judge I don't know why I bother writing a letter and I I I I really do a letter for me memory is a little funny you have the letter you want to write is not what they they it was it was not what his lawyers wanted to include right you want to comment mostly on the investigation and I included that my letter and they had me edit that out yeah really so I I I and we supposed to say so good it was of the good way right right right which I did but they had me cut out all the stuff about who am I said my letter is you know that to sentence Roger to prison time and they this is what they ended up coming out to the judge didn't see this but what was sensing Roger prison time it's send such a poor message to every prosecutor in the country because all it says is well if you're gonna send someone to prison for these process crimes all it says it to the prosecutor is find anyone that you want to put in prison and investigate them long enough and eventually they'll do something illegal right and I talked about the supposed victim in this case Randy Quetico and his obsession with Roger stone as long as I've known Randy which is at least ten years and I said this also sends a poor message to every mentally ill and her an alcoholic or drug addict out there who's obsessed with a high profile person because all it says is eventually you can get a prosecutor to take your bizarre claims seriously and they didn't want me to put that in there because ready also wrote a letter asking for prison time but I don't know why I bother because the judge basically said when she went through all the nice things that I and others said about Roger she said she wasn't taking that any of that into account so why not tell us that before we spent on ready every man what's going on I'm telling you seven fifteen with Joe Piscopo on the radio talking about that Roger stone case we will be full of following that I wanted to make sure I I mention this because to have Donald Trump the president of the United States speak at the at this a graduation ceremony for a program that helps former inmates reenter society and what was that called the name of it was called the it was a re entry what was in his London so they don't give them credit with the president praised bipartisan congressional passage of the criminal justice reform bill twenty eighteen he argued that the productive Lobo abiding former inmates will not be left behind and he had that such a crowd if you listen to that I I listen to them on the way and he was it was great it was fun he said you can't trust juries anyway not Benny went on it as a whole I read about Roger stone and it was great in my mind though at my age what I was thinking what I want to talk to the president about he's going to speak when speak last night was it was it not a Vegas he would not with eve I think Vegas is today it's Vegas today I was in the intifada the Colorado springs Colorado that was March I'm saying we got I don't think it point out that although I looked at Las Vegas is in Nevada but the other day so I'm I'm I'm I'm listening to this on the radio something in the president's in Vegas anything did prisoners who have been out who have done their time and they want to get back into society and say wow this is a Republican man this is bipartisan man this is big news about you not hear about today I'm probably the only ones chatting about you know but they did take that box carried it live and I'm listening to it it was great that's what I'm thinking because I'm old but I'm thinking like he's cutting who speak it for like ten thousand people and more in Colorado springs and he was very funny yes I've watched some because well I think his review of Mike Bloomberg's debate performance was

Don Stenberg Roger I
Lo Bosworth: From Reality Star to CEO of Love Wellness

Skimm'd from The Couch

11:43 min | 3 years ago

Lo Bosworth: From Reality Star to CEO of Love Wellness

"Today. Lobos worth joins us on skimmed from the couch. She is the founder and CEO of Love Wellness. A Body Care Company. That's changing the conversation about self care for women. You may know her name from her time on reality TV shows including the hills and Laguna beach which we all watch. I certainly did but in the past decade low has also made a name for herself as an entrepreneur and a businesswoman. So we are very excited to have you with us. Welcome to skimmed from the couch. Thanks for having me you guys. We're going to start how he start all interviews with just give me a resume for us so for the past four years. I've been the founder and CEO of Love Wellness and two point. We make clean personal care products for women And we also create a lot of really empowering education for women About their bodies so that they know how to take care of their bodies better before that I was really heavily involved in the content creation space and I created a ton of wellness and food content. Just before that. I was actually a student at the French Culinary Institute right injury and we're going to talk about God. It was so good it had always been my dream to go to culinary school. I love cooking. I do love cooking and so a lot of content at the time was sort of centered on wellness nutrition and food before that I was a partner in a different tech startup that failed spectacularly. It was called revelry is irony really this yes so this was like twenty twelve which is when we started. Yeah yeah since you the scam. I remember twenty twelve and we had this idea that we wanted to put cute party supplies all too hard partying a box like a curated experience and it turns out that it's really hard to put thirty different products from different manufacturers into a box and ship it at a cost effective price. The boxes were enormous. I wanted to pivot. But my co-founder didn't anyway didn't workout. Before that I wrote a book that's when I was living in L. A. Still and then before that I was on the hills before that I was at Ucla. And before that I was on Laguna beach before that I was in high school. So that's it so when something that is not on your wikipedia linked in bio that. Maybe we didn't see on TV either that we should know about you. We actually just updated my wikipedia like two weeks ago because Rizzi are publicists was like have you ever updated your wikipedia like no. That sounds like a horrible thing to do for yourself. Right to go on your wikipedia read through it and then be like this is the crazy. I don't WanNa pull up. The old version was pretty cringe worthy. It like went into episode detail on my. How is this relevant off? Wow so when you google then so what do you think is something that is deeply misunderstood about you? I think for me and I have just started to talk to people about this with love wellness. I haven't really done too many interviews or spoken about this company at great length yet and I think for me sort of coming to terms with the transition between being somebody who was on television. And when you're on reality. Tv definitely put into a certain box right. And then if you are an influence or you're put into a certain box and so how do I sort of bridge the gap between living in that space and being taken seriously as an entrepreneur and the founder of business? That's doing really really well. So how do I reconcile that? And how do people that know me from a distance? Reconcile that so. I think that that's something that we sort of talk about often. And I think part of why I'm out doing interviews because I've been working so hard on this for the past four years and we we really feel like we're making a difference and so why wouldn't I want to share that story but it's definitely something that I feel like. I have to still overcome. You know what I mean. Yeah I think that makes sense. So let's get into that a little bit more because we want to talk about your journey from when people started to get to know you to obviously what you are doing today. I love wellness so to start out. I mean as you said you were a high school student and then everything else happened you everything change which is when I think back if someone had filmed my high school experience I would die. Yeah what was it like shoo? Be Not even a young adult like a k. The kid child Yes how old are you when you started well so it was my junior year when MTV I came to Laguna and they were interested in doing something and at that point we were a little unclear on what that was and then I believe if memory serves correct it was like the summer before senior year or senior year that they recorded that first season of Laguna beach and the show premiered my very first week that I was a college student and it was traumatic. It was right within Perez Hilton. Was starting to hop off and all of those blogs if you recall And all of a sudden we were on this show that had instant overnight success and social media didn't exist back then you know. They live because God but facebook was in its first European facebook. And so you know you're a kid you're on this show. You don't have any way to communicate with people in the way that you do now and so people got to know us as we were portrayed on television and yes we were children right and so we tried to do our best to not look stupid so obviously as a kid you look stupid. They were also trying to make you again. That was the of course point of reality. Tv is to make its nonsensically latest story. Yeah I know so as kids you know you have to get parental permission to be able to film. How did you convince your parents let you do this? My mom was not about it but my dad was like this is cool. What do you think like you were going to get out of it? My Dad is a really smart guy and I think from a career Opportunity Perspective. He sought from the very beginning. He was like you could really do something with this. And for years after the fact when people would come up to me in public. I would pretend that I wasn't me because I was so embarrassed. And he was like Lauren. You just have to own this. Why are you so reluctant to just own what you have done and try to use it to your advantage and your dad was saying. I think you could really do something with this. Who What did you think you were going to be when you grow up? Like what was what did he think this could be a platform to do. I wanted to be a doctor actually. I wanted to be a dermatologist or plastic surgeon and I love biology. I think medicine is so fascinating but I'm not great at math and so when I was at school I actually was like sort of on the pre med track but couldn't get through those terrifically difficult math classes. Which is disappointing. But I think it lends itself to my interest in in wellness and health and in general. So it's definitely still a passion of mine. All of that information is really sticky and my brain. It's the stuff that I think about all day long and I really care about. But it's when you get cast on television show and it changes your life sort of derails any plans that you had before looking back at the attention that all of you guys got and now looking at how many people are young in either college or their careers and are blasting themselves all over social media and sometimes that can be a good brand building decisions and sometimes you go into a job interview and I definitely look up of course their profile. And it's not Weiss. What advice do you have for people who are thinking about how to present themselves? I would just say to exercise caution more than anything else. I'm somebody that doesn't go onto instagram. It like wrestling with me to get me to post something on instagram. I don't WanNa do it? It's like when you have five dollars in your bank account. You don't WanNa look in your bank account so I have a very different relationship with social media than I think. A lot of people do of course when you post something and you get likes. It feels good like that experience. I don't think is different for anybody. But for me I think just because of the experience of being on a reality show and feeling so judged for doing something like that and feel like I always had so much more to offer. I'm always a little bit hesitant to put anything out into the universe from an emotional experience that something that you know. I'm still working through. Are you looking back that you agreed to do the show? Yeah it's really not in my personality do stuff like this. I never wanted to be somebody who was like unknown person. You know what I mean. It just sort of happened when Laguna Beach I started. We didn't even know what the show is going to be. We thought it was like you remember that. Show true life we do. We kinda thought it was gonNA be like that. Just a documentary style. Look at kids that lived in this part of the country and then we go away and it didn't go away did not never been away. And so it's just been me trying to figure out how to be satisfied with my life knowing that it'll never go away so obviously we're gonNA reach became. The hills became such a part of the Zeitgeist for this age group. And you're right hasn't gone away and we heard it is weird and the fact that you're like weird. It's really weird. Like I feel like I know you hear you had to develop your career and and essentially your public persona. Yeah after the show. Yeah walk us through your mental state. At this moment you're early. Twenty s at this point yes Early twenties so I guess it would have been like thousand ten right Thousand Eleven. Yes so blogs were just becoming a thing and they were like. It was still really early days on me. Song didn't exist yet. There is that one girl on Youtube. Who do the lady Gaga makeup videos? Michelle fan is like the only person who is influencing the time and so. I know that that age is all of us. Whatever I think for me. I've always loved writing. I've always loved expressing myself creatively and so I started to write. I had my own website for a period of time and just started to create content and actually had some kids that I went to Ucla with like writing articles. Moore's writing articles about stuff and from there. I wrote a book but truly I had no clue what I was doing at that point. I I suppose I didn't realize that what I was doing was actually laying the foundation for my future in terms of content creation. But at that point nobody could monetize their content. And so if you were doing it you're just doing it because you enjoyed it and I want to drill down on kind of what your motivations are at this point. Because was it this thing that I signed up for in highschool took on a life of its own and I now need to make money to a degree. It was about making money but remember at the time. Nobody who's blogging was earning any money. I couldn't see the clear Pathak. I think for me I wanted to have my own voice okay. I think that's what it was about right. I wanted to have some kind of platform where I could express myself and try to get outside of you know the space that I had been in for the past few years and I think that originally that was sort of the

Laguna Beach Love Wellness Founder And Ceo Ucla Facebook Laguna Body Care Company French Culinary Institute Lobos Google Perez Hilton Founder Rizzi Co-Founder Partner Moore
The End of UConn's Dominance?

ESPN Daily

05:29 min | 4 years ago

The End of UConn's Dominance?

"China Robinson is a women's basketball analyst at ESPN and the host of the around. The Rim podcast. Tonight we've got uconn women's basketball ascot ball versus Tennessee to traditional powerhouse rivals. Though hasn't been that case for a while now and for you on in particular. I think it's been an interesting year. If you haven't been paying attention to Uconn over the last few years you might assume that they're just gonNA blow them out like they blow out everyone but that hasn't been the case recently. No no it has not and in case. You're checking the trophy case. There has not been a national championship. Kinship Trophy in stores over the last three years which is reason to panic honestly Meena. It's all relative to Connecticut. Success asked him they have eleven national championship so the standard is always going to be national championship or bust. It is a story line for sure because we used to be able to just check the box pencil in Connecticut. Moving right along but has more gray hair right now than I used to. Seeing this group Pez definitely tested the boundaries of what we know to be uconn success and so it should be an interesting game Tennessee mm-hmm so they're still very good. They're just not worldbeaters the way they used to be. I mean there's there's sixty one and they have not how lost to an unranked team since two thousand twelve so like our expectations are almost like it's really kind of ridiculous Gino's talked about it for sixteen and one. What do I have to answer why? We're not waiting for why we missed so many shots or why we turn the ball or why I like what I thought the object was to win the game. These right like the goal is to win we're used to seeing Yukon be Yukon like b-teams by fifty. Not some of the questions that were asking about their program. You should write because there is a kind of fall from grace. They haven't made it past the final four in the last three years after winning four straight national championships but to say that Connecticut is not a good team and some of the other things. We've heard out here. That's just to me a little bit of a stretch. I think you make a good point which I know. which is it's? It's more about the standard the expectation and that this program set as recently as the twenty sixteen season they went thirty eight zero but it was after that as you point out when they started to slip a little bit. When did that I begin? The recent slippage to me has everything to do with the graduation of Rian Stuart. Poynter the Rian Stewart is a player like we have never seen in college basketball. He's most outstanding player of the final four four years years in a row. When you look at Connecticut success it's been connected to great players like Brianna Stewart won four of those eleven championship? It brings back in two thousand thirteen. Diana went three for you. GotTa try more with two seven. It has won the national championship. Dino said it himself he once said hey we have Diana to Rasi and you don't now is the difference between them in the rest of the country and or time. That was everything and that to me has been a key to their dominance is having that Maya Moore bringing a Stewart Dinas Rasi easy when so the conversation even if you go way way back and look at the history of Tennessee in Connecticut. For example that then women's College basketball did not have have the depth of talent in my opinion that there is now so it was like if you didn't get should be Coleslaw. Good luck if you didn't get Rebecca Lobo Good luck so so what we're seeing now is not just about what you con- is not but that other programs are competing recruiting Asia Wilson. WHO's the number one overall a player coming out of high school goes to South Carolina or Haley Jones? The number one overall recruit goes to Stanford then the conversation starts to change so now there is more good players and as you're saying they're more spread out across programs. Do you think any of them chose not to go to uconn because of you know the competition in a successor. Do you think it was just the product of other programs grams. Making good cells to them. First of all Gino's not for everybody when I watch game film. I'm checking what's going on the bench. Somebody's asleep over there. Somebody doesn't care hear. Somebody's not engaged in the game. They will never get into ever and they know that I'm not kidding. You know. I mean his his coaching shing style. The expectations everyone is not cut out for that. Think about Elena de Leon who actually went to Connecticut and that no thanks and

Connecticut Tennessee Rian Stewart Basketball Gino Diana Stewart Dinas Rasi Brianna Stewart RIM China Robinson Yukon Analyst Espn Rebecca Lobo Rian Stuart Elena De Leon Rasi Stanford South Carolina
The Real Edge of the World

True Mysteries of the Pacific Northwest

04:08 min | 4 years ago

The Real Edge of the World

"Today the edge of the world. We'll call it lands lands end for this story. It's located at thirty seven point seven seven three nine latitude. One twenty two point two five degrees longitude. It's positioned in both the north and Western Hemisphere. Hint here is located in the western region of the United States bordered by the state of Oregon Data Arizona the country of Mexico and the Pacific Ocean. Give up the state is California. The edge of the world or lands end is a rocky and windswept shoreline at the mouth of the Golden Gate. The northwest corner of San Francisco long before Europeans arrived arrived in North America. The Aloni tribe lived at lands end in seasonal settlements. Here that the ocean's edge. They found everything they needed. Hillside Springs brings gushing with freshwater trees brush for shelters and easy access to the shore where they fished and hunted for Otters Sea Lions seabirds the Spanish settlement of San Francisco which began in seventeen seventy six ended the Aloni traditional life at lands end under Mexican rule this rugged luggage section of coastline was part of a large land. Grant called Rancho After California joined the US the only visitors to this secluded in inaccessible area were naturalists. Who braved the long journey out to the coastline to observe marine life after the gold. Rush San Francisco's population exploded. And the downtown became very crowded with new buildings and neighborhoods real estate developers. Lucky for new you ways to make money saw what is now called land's end and is unparalleled beauty and excellent place for a new restaurant. Overlook entrepreneur designed the new cliff house as a fashionable resort for the wealthy and encouraged San Franciscans to travel out to the city's edge to help people get to this far off place. A private company constructed a brand new road called point Lobos Avenue making travel to this picturesque rural place. Much easier by the eighteen sixties. A horse drawn stagecoach made the trip every day. Sunday from crowded. Downtown San San Francisco out to lance end during the eighteen eighties. Millionaire Adolph Sutro. Purchased property at lands and dramatically. Dramatically transformed the area into a popular seaside destination. Sutro strongly believed that. All San Francisco's rich or poor should take advantage manage of lance ends beauty to provide inexpensive transportation. He constructed a passenger steam train from downtown San Francisco. To Land's end for the affordable fare of five cents shooter designed and funded the elegant sutro Heights public gardens the famous sutro baths in the eighteen. Ninety six this clip house which replaced the original building after it burned but it says if spirit protects lands and cliff house burned to the ground three times times once was all it took to destroy the world famous sutro baths they burned in nineteen sixty condos or were under construction on the same side also burned today people visit lands and are never seen again the number of suicides climbs every year the National Park Service has rebuilt the cliff cliff house but sadly there is nothing left of the sutro baths. Still Ruins are worth a visit. The tunnels were used to direct ocean. Water to the three indoor. The pools are still intact and said to be visited by a bee's that crawls from the water and into the tunnel for shelter during storms. And it suggested that you visit the remains of sutro baths or the tunnels during the day. Because it said that the local Satanic Church wanders the ground by night and now you know were the original edge of the world or lands end.

San San Francisco Adolph Sutro Pacific Ocean California Sutro Heights San Franciscans United States Western Hemisphere Aloni Golden Gate Hillside Springs Mexico Satanic Church North America Grant Lance Arizona National Park Service Oregon
Joey Logano finds a ‘challenging’ Next Gen car in Phoenix test

NASCAR Live

01:40 min | 4 years ago

Joey Logano finds a ‘challenging’ Next Gen car in Phoenix test

"Nine races in the season. Only Toyota's from Joe Gibbs racing and Ford's from team penske had scored race victories and Ford in one the previous seven Seven Cup series races at Nascar's next stop Talladega superspeedway at the end of stage. One time dealing chevy was out front and Chase Elliott drove his Camaro to the win in stage. Two but with six laps remaining joy lagaras Ford Mustang lead the field travel air. Justin hailing attack by Bruins Lugano led on the restart with Ford ago but by the time they reached turn forty uh-huh Chase Elliott battle for the lead is on Donald could block a ball. He tried to block. Kurt Busch that work but he couldn't block Zell. If that didn't work pit here comes Elliot to the lead. In Talladega. Chase was out front on the white flag lap. Lan turn number two now. They're spinning in the back of the Fowler. The David Ragan Korean patrol. Here's the race to the top of the Eric l the Lobos Chase Elliott knocking down the inside as they work their way off Warne. Money Lion Caution flag goes in the air. We'll wait and see. It is GONNA do here. Yellow black checkered flag in the air. Looks like Chase Elliott is GonNa win the Geiko five hundred NASCAR NASCAR ruled the chase. Elliott was the leader when the caution came out and he won the race down to the end and opportunity and to move forward and and took it over automaking work

Chase Elliott Ford Nascar Talladega Chase David Ragan Korean Patrol Joe Gibbs Donald Trump Kurt Busch Toyota Penske Chevy Mustang Elliot Fowler Justin Warne Zell Seven Seven Cup
Report: Kyrie Irving's Behavior Is 'Unspoken Concern,' Makes Nets 'Queasy'

The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz

00:43 sec | 4 years ago

Report: Kyrie Irving's Behavior Is 'Unspoken Concern,' Makes Nets 'Queasy'

"Irving's infamous mood swings confirmed by his x t it's which followed him from Cleveland the Boston Brooklyn are the unspoken concern that makes nets officials queasy when irving lapses into these Funk's he often shuts down unwilling to Communicate With the Coaching Staff Front Office sometimes even his teammates nets team sources say one such episode occurred during Brooklyn trip to China leaving everyone scratching their pads as to what precipitated there's hope that the rent will be able to coax his friend into a better frame of mind but when presented with that scenario Katie says he will be hands off breath I look at Kyrie as somebody who's an artist you have to leave him alone you will bring to the table every night because he cares so much about the name

Irving Cleveland Brooklyn Nets Funk Coaching Staff Front Office China Katie Boston
The Deadly Fight To Protect Brazil's Amazon

Environment: NPR

05:42 min | 4 years ago

The Deadly Fight To Protect Brazil's Amazon

"For Brazilians working to preserve the Amazon rainforest how far they'd go to combat climate change is a serious question deforestation is up sharply in part because of the surge in fires this year many of those fires are set by criminal groups stealing land as NPR's Philip Reeve's reports Brazil protecting the forest often falls too courageous individuals willing to risk their lives people of the rainforest holding a meeting in women and children and shorts and flip flops a sitting inside a wooden pavilion clearing among the trees they're here to talk about routine forest stuff jumbles about the timetable of the ferry on the nearby they discussed who's going to use the communal tractor the relaxed mood is deceptive. Shuo proposer as president of the residents association that called this meeting ethical when you get more details bother Barbosa people here actually deeply worried we're in the Amazon's western part in the Brazilian state of actually people around here are mostly subsistence farmers and rubber tappers who rely on the forest for their livelihoods words just reached them that their neighbors a few miles away are illegally setting fires to clear land for cattle a major issue for that's disturbing setback especially for activists who risked their lives defending forest but Boza is fifty five he's been an environmental activist here all his adult life years ago one of his fellow activists was shot dead by legal ranches now as forestation surges bubble believes people protecting the forest face a growing threat he's not alone I think it's become significantly more date interest. Daniel Wilkinson directs the Environmental Rights Program at Human Rights Watch Human Rights Watch has been investigating the deadly tactics the organizations in the Amazon News against those who stand in their way Brazil's far-right President Shaya boatswain auto wants to exploit the forests comic potential and is often accused of cheering on these criminal groups Wilkinson says the problem started long before Bolsonaro took office but ads what's new is that Brazil has a president who is openly hostile to the Brazilians who are trying to protect your forest including the government's own Inbar agencies killings in conflicts over Amazon Land and resources a common in Brazil Brazil's pastoral Van Commission which tracks these says the been more than three hundred in the last decade only fourteen cases went to trial says Wilkinson when people get killed in this part of the Amazon lers are almost never brought to justice the police blamed the fact that communities where killings happen often are remote but in fact even when killings happened in town they released any serious investigation these criminal groups often have connections in high places and plenty of weapons activists and also environment enforcement officials who dared to challenge them can expect their lives to be turned upside down the Soda Community How just ask Yoshiko logo ratty Saddam Lobos thirty seven and an indigenous Brazilian he lives deep in the rainforest inefficient community in the state of Para last logo launched a campaign to stop illegal loggers and miners invading his communities land he put handmade signs on trees pointing out their lands protected by law and telling landgrabbers to keep out it wasn't long before we started getting death threats his mind boss Katha Pinta Mata logos some loggers and miners decided to kill him and set up an ambush he escaped because he received a last minute tip off the Lobos now enrolled in a zillion government protection program for rights activists some the threat although he says it only provides limited security mostly in Kohl's and police escorts when he travels in the same program is this man never dodger decision running against I wouldn't wish this life on anyone there's a lot of suffering that's Danielle Pereira an environmental activists also he and his wife took on logos and a work one day to find to freshly dug graves outside that they spent the last six months at a secret address in Brazil's capital Acilia and have no idea when they return to the forest even in the big city they don't feel safe as a spur Sochi a residential some groups people who are against US belong to organized groups they are rich criminals who have the money to go wherever they like the emotional toll of living at constant risk is huge says Seo logo is squeaky he says he will it's public places and has stopped hanging out with Francis you're aware that you could be killed at any moment he says we don't know who to trust Lobos considered giving up his campaign to protect the forest on which is community depends question do I do. He's decided to carry on because he says in his heart he knows is sue you prefer to name. York was doing the right thing.

Brazil Amazon Daniel Wilkinson Philip Reeve President Trump Environmental Rights Program Boza NPR Barbosa York Six Months One Day
What Is the Humboldt Ocean Current?

BrainStuff

06:03 min | 4 years ago

What Is the Humboldt Ocean Current?

"Today's episode is brought to you by gravity blankets. They make weighted blankets these blankets that contain fine grade glass. Beads to weigh them down when you curl up under one it's supposed to simulate the feeling of being gently held her hugged. They sent me want to try out. And I genuinely love this thing it is so comforting and relaxing. It puts me in the mood to sleep right away. The microphone duvet cover is incredibly soft, and has these ingenious little internal clasps to keep it in place if you'd like to try a gravity blanket for yourself. Let them know that we sent you and get fifteen percent off your order by entering the code brain stuff at checkout. It's one word. That's gravity. Blankets dot com. Promo code brain stuff. Welcome to brain stuff. A production of I heart radio. Hey, brain stuff, Lauren Vogel bomb here in December eighteen o two small sailing. Ship called the casino set sail from Peru northward along the South American coastline toward Gua quill in present-day Ecuador, a trip of about seven hundred miles or about one thousand one hundred kilometers one of the ship's. Passengers was thirty three year old Prussian aristocrat Alexander von Humboldt. A mining engineer by training Humboldt had an insatiable curiosity about nature that led him to roam the planet studying plants and animals as well as phenomena ranging from magnetic rocks to river systems in ocean currents fresh from studying the value of bat guano as minority because y'all humble used the sailing trip to investigate a powerful cold current that flowed from the tip of Chile to northern Peru ranging from just offshore to about six hundred miles off the coast. That's just under a thousand kilometers the current existence had been known for centuries to sailors and fishermen, but no scientists had ever systematically studied the flow Humboldt carefully measured the water temperature. The speed and continued on his journey, which eventually would lead him to Mexico. Humbles work was the beginning of scientific understanding of what's now known as the Humboldt current or the Peru current the current helps hold warm moist air off the coast keeping the climate cool. It also pulls plankton rich water from deep in the Pacific to the surface. Feeding a vast number and variety efficient birds and creating the richest marine ecosystem on the planet. It's fishing grounds. Provide about six percent of the world's catch and the Humboldt Kerns nutrients support the marine food chain of the Galapagos islands and influence its climate as well, it has helped make possible the archipelago's incredible bio-diversity in that sense. The Humboldt current also helped shape the development of evolutionary theory, the Galapagos provided the living laboratory for another nineteenth century scientist, Charles Darwin, who's paradigm shift and work on the origin of the species was published in eighteen fifty nine the year of humbled death. Darwin himself was inspired by the work of Humboldt who might be the most important scientists that we don't care much about the early to mid eighteen hundreds though, he might have been the most renowned researcher on the planet. I'm what was the first to investigate the relationship between mean temperature in elevating and came up with the concept of maps with isotherm aligns the delineate areas with the same temperature at a given time he did important early work on the origin of tropical storms. Most importantly Humboldt altered the way that scientists see the natural world by finding interconnections. This scientists invented the concept of a web of life. What he called this great chain of causes and effects some consider him to be the first to college issed. He was a head of the curve on understanding environmental problems such as deforestation and its effect upon climate, which he I observed around lake Lancia in Venezuela back in eighteen hundred Humboldt was also predecessor to Albert Einstein as a scientist with a strong interest in social Justice. He was a critic of colonialism and supported revolution. Mary movements in South America. And also criticized the US a country, he otherwise admired for its institution of slavery. We spoke by Email with Aaron Sachs history, professor at Cornell University and author of the Humboldt current nineteenth century exploration. And the roots of American environmentalism he thinks that rather than focusing on humbled scientific discoveries. It's more important to look the insights and approaches to the work that we're based upon his research and observations he said to me his version of ecology was significant not just because he stressed interconnection. But because he combined it with a social and ethical perspective. The fact of interconnection had certain implications with regard to human responsibilities toward each other and the environment. It was a cosmopolitan open minded ecology. Today's episode was written by Patrick j tiger and participate. Tyler claim brain stuff is production of iheartradio's. How stuff works for more on this and lots of other interconnected, topics? Visit our home planet has stuff works dot com. In for more podcast, my heart radio, I heart radio app, apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Hi there. It's me Josh Clark. And if you love the beautiful musical score that point Lobo created for the end of the world of Josh Clark. Then you can rejoice. It's now available as the original soundtrack album sixteen tracks selected and remastered by point logo capture the highs the imagination and the far out of the series, and they all come together to make really great album. It's like the spirit of the series now in a convenient capsule. You can get the end of the world with Josh Clark original soundtrack album everywhere. You get music online apple music, I tunes iheartradio Spotify. Amazon everywhere. Could check it out today.

Humboldt Scientist Alexander Von Humboldt Humboldt Kerns Josh Clark Peru Iheartradio Galapagos Apple Lauren Vogel South America Ecuador Charles Darwin United States Aaron Sachs Gua Quill Mexico
Aaron Rogers to donate a million dollars to wildfire relief efforts in North California

The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz

00:32 sec | 5 years ago

Aaron Rogers to donate a million dollars to wildfire relief efforts in North California

"Rogers says he's donating a million dollars to wildfire relief efforts in northern California announced it in a video on Twitter just moments ago. I forgot that's where he's from. Wow. I thought he was a mid west dude because it's been Green Bay so long but his hometown Chico is in Butte county, which has been hard hit by those by those fires I feel I don't know. I feel a lot of these charitable social media drives from athletes that we see a lot of we don't always see their own money being put up and this is a doodoo who's putting up seven figures. You know, that's a that's a number that gets your attention a million dollars. I some other athlete just donated one hundred thousand I can't recall who that's a great thing. But. A million is is terrific. So many athletes live out there. And some have, you know, tweeted about losing homes and and stuff like that. You know, that's that's the best. Use of celebrities is when you have the financial wherewithal to really make an impact like that in you You know, know, I. I saw lady Gaga whose lives out there. You know, visiting a firehouse and and spending time with first responders and anytime celebrity can really lend themselves or their money to a great. 'cause I think it's really meaningful. I think. Yeah. Well, it's going to have some very real impact. It's so much of that goes directly to the resources that are needed to not only corral the fires which only about seventy percent contained right now in northern California. But also with the rebuild which is gonna be so massive once they get going. I'll we're gonna have Greg Candice Buckner for the Washington Post coming up at eleven o'clock here on ESPN radio. She has been as plugged in his anyone to the miserable failure. But also entertaining dumpster fire that the Washington Wizards have been so far this season. Although I think she's going to tell us at least I'm gonna ask just hell far back. This goes, I refuse to believe that this is something that's bubbled up over the last. I. Of the season or thereabouts. And it's just when I say she's plugged in. I mean, she's plugged in from, you know, the pen and paper dot com side as opposed to Steven A who went down, and sort of sort of made sure that he was face to face with some of these protagonists and antagonists in the story. But I listen, the wizards are probably as close as I get to NBA fandom not like Mike with his Cleveland Cavaliers, but like I'm super plugged in to the contracts in plugged in just plugged into the fire Ernie chance now like, and it's just I'm dying to know some of

Rogers Washington Wizards California Greg Candice Buckner Lady Gaga Twitter Chico Butte County Washington Post Cleveland Cavaliers Green Bay NBA Steven Espn Mike Million Dollars Seventy Percent