35 Burst results for "Loma"

Biden announces nuclear-powered submarines for Australia

AP News Radio

00:58 sec | 2 months ago

Biden announces nuclear-powered submarines for Australia

"At a navy base in California, President Biden hosted the leaders of the UK and Australia to announce more progress in their partnership. Over nuclear powered submarines. With two U.S. nuclear powered attack submarines as a backdrop at point Loma in San Diego. President Biden says the U.S. plans to sell similar vessels to Australia. Has the stability that ended up Pacific amid rapidly shifting global dynamics. Part of a partnership announced in 2021. Aimed as a counterweight to China's military buildup. To navigate the challenges of today and tomorrow. President Biden didn't directly mention China, but this might have been a note of clarification for Beijing. Not nuclear armed subs are nuclear power. The three leaders confirmed their commitment to freedom and a rules based international order. I'm Jackie Quinn

President Biden Australia U.S. Navy California UK San Diego China Pacific Beijing Jackie Quinn
"loma" Discussed on She Reads Truth Podcast

She Reads Truth Podcast

05:30 min | 5 months ago

"loma" Discussed on She Reads Truth Podcast

"When it says to summarize today's reading like in your own words. I think that's such a helpful thing for people. In your own words, what happened? Because sometimes we re passively were like reading, I know I know I know. But like, tell me, tell me. You heard, you know? And in that one, I noticed the same thing. The thing I was like, how I would summarize it, the first part in Luke was God's realm. God's kingdom breaking into our scene reality. promised from Eden, and then I was like, angels, Holy Spirit, words of knowledge and prophecy all around normal things like a work shift and infertility and youth and old age.

Luke
"loma" Discussed on She Reads Truth Podcast

She Reads Truth Podcast

03:48 min | 5 months ago

"loma" Discussed on She Reads Truth Podcast

"100% and I'm a pastor so a 100% agree with that. And yet, there are new applications at the spirit can give us. There's new ways that spirit can encourage us to challenge us, could lead us, you know? So to read scripture thinking, it's not just this, I'm over scripture, observing it and giving interpretation to it. No, no, no, you're descriptions above you. You're below it, and you're like, speak God. And it's orienting your reality. It's reorienting your reality. That's what scripture should do. It should reorient the true reality. And the reality is the Holy Spirit is at work right now and the king of God is breaking into the world as we speak. And we can be a part of it through opening our lives description. I love that. I love that. I even just think about the fact that this book is called the life of Jesus, but we start with the life of, is that correct, the life of John, and it really, I mean, obviously there's some really close interplay in that narrative, but even just as we go through the life of Jesus, it is so about the way that his life interplays with all the other people in the world at that time. Yes. And that's with us as well. I really love the questions that the team set up in this book. So in the study book, as we're reading through, you'll see each day if you have one. And if you don't, I'll pause to say, you can get. You can still get them. Or there are digital versions as well. So if you're like an iPad notes or whatever the apps are. So there are places to take notes throughout. But at the end of every day's reading, there's an opportunity to kind of just summarize, okay, what's happening, what am I learning about Jesus or being reminded of about Jesus in his life? I love this one. And it changes a little bit throughout the book, but this one is what did I notice about how people prepared for Jesus and later it'll be like how did people respond to Jesus? How was Jesus living his life? Like what are his habits, those kind of things. But this question for this particular day's reading, when I saw the question, what's something that I was reminded of about Jesus? What you just said, Rachel, is that obviously Jesus story is uniquely divine. He is the son of God. He is God, you know? That is who Jesus is. And also, he is human.

John Rachel
"loma" Discussed on She Reads Truth Podcast

She Reads Truth Podcast

05:28 min | 5 months ago

"loma" Discussed on She Reads Truth Podcast

"And then it says, and I love this. It says that, and I'll get your question, sorry, this is like way, but so it says that Luke one verse 13. An angel shows up, and he says to zachariah, don't be afraid, your prayer has been heard. Okay, this is interesting. Because if he's a priest inside of the temple and everybody's outside the temple praying, as a priest, you're kind of bringing Israel's prayers before God. That's kind of your role as a priest. But it almost seems as if zechariah was actually also squeezing in some personal prayer in there as well, which I love. Is he in there burning incense? And then he's like, God, I want a son. Yeah. I want a son. My wife's parents. My wife and I, we were not able to have kids for the first 17 years of our marriage. Wow. And so we carried that with us for we recently got pregnant just kind of almost like supernaturally, to be honest. A few years ago, I have two kids now. And it's insane. It's a miracle. People have been praying for this for years and years and years and years and years. But I know this feeling of like, as a pastor, you're offering people's prayers up to God, but you also have your own stuff that you're carrying. Yeah. And God hears that too. Yes. And so he's carrying his own stuff. And then it says that angels, your prayers have been heard. What's interesting is if there's a meta thing and then a personal thing. And this is what I love about scripture. Scripture is very personal. And that that verse speaks to me as a pastor. I'm here pastoring people, but God still cares about my own personal prayers. That's good. There's a meta thing, too, because the people are on the steps praying and what people would be praying would be the redemption of Israel. Lord, redeem Israel. So the angel answers zachariah's personal prayer, I'm going to give you a son, but he also answers Israel's prayer. Your son's going to bring the messiah. So it's like this meta thing happening. I'm answering Israel's prayer. And I'm mentioning your prayer. I think this is what scripture does, right? It's like very personal and super cosmic at the same time. Personal and cosmic. It's like, oh my gosh, that was like, that was for me. That word was for me. God, thank you for speaking to me. And then not only was that worked for you, but it was this cosmic. It has something to do with everything, right? So I think when you're reading this, you have to start seeing how porous everything is, meaning you think that we live in the scene world, the only thing that we can prove rational, that's the only thing seen, but then there's all the Supernatural world that breaks in. And so you have the Holy Spirit over and over and over and over again, right? This happens in talks about the Holy Spirit. And the first 5 chapters, the Holy Spirit, it's like everywhere. Yeah. It's like, Holy Spirit is in Elizabeth's womb. The Holy Spirit conceives and Mary. The Holy Spirit is filled with John the Baptist, the Holy Spirit, leads you to the Holy Spirit. Everywhere is just like holy spirits everywhere. But also there's

zachariah Israel zechariah Luke Lord Elizabeth Mary John
"loma" Discussed on She Reads Truth Podcast

She Reads Truth Podcast

04:30 min | 5 months ago

"loma" Discussed on She Reads Truth Podcast

"I think just cursory, I think what I know is that he was wealthy enough to have someone like Luke investigate and right hand his own personal gospel, which you have to be someone of pretty high importance to have someone to write you an account of something. So the way that I understand the beginning of Luke is that Luke plays on status a lot. So it starts with someone with a high status, theophilus, right? And it starts there because Luke is kind of saying the way I'm writing this is I'm going to show you how status is actually flipped upside down. Yeah. This is basically the story of the gospel, right? Right. And this is Mary's song. We'll get to that in a bit. But it starts there, and then it jumps right into Herod, who is the highest status, and then it goes into, as Elizabeth and sakurai, and Elizabeth is like, she's related to Aaron. And it doesn't get if you're a priest. Yes, or in the priest household, it doesn't get better than Aaron. Aaron's like the one, right? Right. And she's from here. So that's high status. And then she's married to a preset. I'm not sure even higher status, but she's barren, which puts her in a low status. So he's playing all the status stuff right here. He's doing that. And then you get, you get Mary, who doesn't even get a description. Do you just she's a virgin? And she's betrothed to someone that she's not married to. And she's not even under his status yet. And then she's the one the messiah is going to be born to. And you're like, he's flipping all this stuff upside down. He's doing that to like, and then Mary's song is like, how you exalted the lowly, like, so. Anyways. I love how Luke is doing that. Yeah. Glad you pointed that out because I think that'll give us something interesting to look for as we read not just this week, but over the course of the 5 weeks, where I see you turning. No, no, no. This

Luke Aaron theophilus Elizabeth Mary sakurai Herod
"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

Ghostly

05:51 min | 1 year ago

"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

"At an outdoor function at in the casa loma gardens. A young boy reportedly a reported seeing a man standing at the second floor window. He told a staff member and they panicked because the second floor was supposed to be on lockdown She asked the boy to describe the man and the boy subscription matched sir henry so she took the boy to look at photos and asked. Do you see the man here. The boy pointed to the picture of sir henry and said that's him. why is he so mad. All right again sir. Henry did not die here sir. Henry barely lived there but he also spent his entire fortune building a house that then was taken from him and he didn't live like an amazing life after this like he ended up living in a house with like a servant like i mean they shared a house. I was gonna say serving something like that. Like i remember. It wasn't like a great life like it wasn't like i mean i could see him being pretty bitter about this house and being pretty is stop and being like i'm coming back i'm gonna live here. Live here for her. It's its main okay so also there are pictures of sir sir. Henry as we're so calling him all around the place the boy describing him could have just been from any of those pictures that that he saw. It's like they hide the fact and it's like then you find out there's plenty of pictures of him around while he was outside but they don't know but he was on the tore though no he was at a party or something in the gardens of okay well but still still. He could have went there and visited at some point. I mean no i. i'm not buying it. Sorry this another zero four. You'd let me see the photo again. Don't have a photo. Let me see the video. He's a little boy he didn't have those things. Let me hear the audio. Yeah no let me have something else. Even if i had those and he just gets a shadow. I don't think it's anything. I'm just saying that the little boys ever lie. They do sometimes. Yes okay. we're just gonna leave it at that. Even this one zero as well. Are i give this one a six six. It's not quite as believable as As the horse won to me. But it's still a little bit up there okay. So overall what's your overall rating casa loma. I you know it says six six. Yeah i think is it possible. There's a little bit of something going on there yes But this one to me is not so overwhelming as some of the other places. Okay that we've we've talked about recently. Won't i'm going to have to go with my average in that zero so. I'm very sorry that i have to do that but i do now. So that brings us to the closing arguments. This is our last chance to convince you to vote our way. We're each given one minute of uninterrupted time because Rebecca will talk for half hour about it if you allow her to well not We will time each other on our cell phones. Because rebecca likes to cheat all right so rebecca. Are you ready. Ready all.

sir henry casa loma gardens Henry sir sir Rebecca rebecca
"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

Ghostly

05:16 min | 1 year ago

"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

"Back. There was no tape in there. She didn't put the tape in there and she blamed me for it actually so the tape in their walk. It was my graduation day. Come on. I have to remember everything but still. I'm just saying that it's very common for people to think that they did something that they didn't do. And it is a lot easier to believe than a ghost especially if a ghost woman that didn't die. they're barely live all right. Well except there's two people will do the story so for me. It's a little more believable What's your rating that zero zero. All right i'm giving it a six going up a little bit because another person involved here. specific story. Okay here we go. Evidence number three So there are many stories as i mentioned earlier about the tunnel between the house and the staples Even people who aren't convinced that the castle itself is haunted. Say that they feel creepy when they're in the tunnel So here's a story. That was reported on toronto. Ghosts dot org from a visitor again. There are several of these stories out. They're not all connected Okay so this visitor said a my first ever visit to casa loma several years ago. I hadn't experienced in the tunnel between the house and the stable i- had at the time never heard any stories of haunting or paranormal activity there. I was walking through that tunnel and heard as clearly as if it were in the same room what sounded like one. Or more horses. Walking the sounds of whose reign slash bridles and the horses. Snorting and name was so clear. They must be very close by. My husband was walking ahead of me. And i called out to him. Where are those horses. He turned and looked at me. The hang around the tunnel obviously puzzled. He gave me a strange looking to what horses. I was very surprised that he had not heard it. Because it had been very loud. I dismissed it as nothing When i realized that i was the only one that had heard anything. It was years afterward that i heard that this has happened to other people there. All right so. I will say to that. I looked at what this land was before castle. Was there it was nothing this was this was this was like a It wasn't prairie land. But it was. It was like empty land. Nobody had had ever built a structure on this place before nobody ever died at this horses. No nothing no reports of anything..

casa loma toronto
"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

Ghostly

05:34 min | 1 year ago

"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

"Who yeah it. It had appeal. Oh god his. I was like secret passages. I i do too. Yeah and i actually went through at least one of them. Was there a poll in three bowling alleys in the basement. 'cause you know to isn't enough third one. The last two were never actually completed okay. He was a little too You know is were too big for his stomach with the bullying. I don't know mcelwain there right with the metaphor but yeah yeah. The fingers were too big for the bowling ball status. I don't know most of the third floor was left unfinished. Though and today it serves as the regimental museum for the queen's own rifles of canada. Okay during the depression that followed the war. The city of toronto increased casa lomas property taxes from six hundred dollars per year. Two thousand dollars a month. Oh wow that's pretty big increase absolutely and Pilot he was already having some kind of financial problems at this time so he decided to auction off Some art and furnishings and The art was one point. Five million dollars worth and the furnishings were two hundred fifty thousand dollars worth. I'm pellet was able to enjoy life in the castle for less than ten years man leaving in nineteen twenty-three because he was essentially bankrupt. At that time i mean yeah. He was really having issues right as far as like His investments and stuff too like Yeah because it was like they took the electric stuff. I mean it made it made it More like national instead of private. Yeah but he was also a spender so he he didn't have much in savings. He was counting on money coming in. And when i say that he was bankrupt when somebody that's that rich is bankrupt. They still have enough money to live comfortably the rest of their lives. Usually that's true unless you're like mc hammer. Ashley was extremely really bankrupt. Yeah yeah So in the late nineteen twenty investors up operated casa loma. I short time as a luxury hotel..

mcelwain bowling casa lomas depression toronto canada mc hammer Ashley casa loma
"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

Ghostly

05:03 min | 1 year ago

"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

"Six eighteen fifty nine in what is now called ontario back when he was born though. It was called kingston canada west. I have not heard that okay. I hadn't until doing research for this He was the son of a a toronto's stockbroker and a grandson of females glassmaker named apps sleep palate. Okay that's a name absolutely Pellet was educated at upper canada college before leaving in eighteen. Seventy six to join his father's stockbrokerage company. I'm pellet enlisted as a rifleman with the queen's own rifles of canada on november second eighteen. seventy six. he rose through the ranks and eventually became the commanding officer in nineteen o five. He was created a knight bachelor by king. Edward the seventh for his service with the queen's own rifles of of canada. Okay i mean that's gets fancy. Yeah and eventually when he retired they made him a major general. Okay it's like. Yeah finally when i retired helps with your pension So i definitely think that was a good thing in in one thousand nine hundred ten pellet took the entire six hundred men regiment including its horses. Mind okay to england for military training at his expense. Wow not not canada's expense. His own pays own and the horses to go up. It was to mark the regiment's fiftieth anniversary on. The military exercise lasted from august thirteenth until october third. So almost two full months. I guess if you're going to do all that you stay a little bit. I mean that's crazy yeah much of pellets. Fortune was made through investment in the railway in the hydro electric industries in canada including the toronto electric company. He also made significant investments in the cobalt lake mining company during the cobalt silver rush of nineteen. O three. i mean of course. So that's you know how. He made his money in one thousand nine hundred. Three financer henry pallet purchase twenty five lots from developers kirtland roth. pellet commissioned architect ej lang lennox to design cuss aloma with construction beginning in nineteen eleven.

canada kingston Pellet toronto ontario Edward hydro electric industries england henry pallet kirtland roth ej lang lennox
"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

Ghostly

04:43 min | 1 year ago

"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

"That was the episode where They die income back. Yes the Yeah the like app where you're in limbo yet land. Yes that one near death near ethics. Was it all right all right so we continue with our haunted castle. Weekly episodes i. I've love looking at all the history of these places and find out stories that i had no idea about And i have been to all of these locations so far the last one i have not been to but i've been to all of them So far and i had no idea casa loma is a mystery to me. I mean i also went to this castle but reading some of these stories just amazes me. I did not find it to be especially creepy. Just really cool. I mean it was a really cool place to go in. It's not your typical castle as it's very light in color and looks pretty. Modern from the outside It has a little bit of a castle. Feel to it in the middle of the castle but it doesn't look like your typical castle. It looks like a modern day castle. It's amazing inside. is totally breathtaking Some of the tightest spiral staircases. That i have ever climbed in my life. I'm but definitely worth the visit and it's only like ten hours from chicago. Only i mean that's not bad. That actually isn't that bad. Yeah i so. I used to go up to toronto at least twice a year Mostly because the us dollar was worth more than the canadian dollar and it was a nice getaway 'cause you can stay in like a five star hotel for like thirty. Us dollars then. okay Because it was like you know it was like fifty dollars then. So i don't know if you still can. This is many moons ago. But i used to love to go there. I used to actually say That i ran out of maple syrup. So i had to go there. You go so..

casa loma chicago toronto Us
"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

Ghostly

05:58 min | 1 year ago

"loma" Discussed on Ghostly

"Welcome to ghostly is casa loma haunted. Ghostly is a podcast that comes out every other week except for this month because we are weekly still. It's ghostly tober. I don't know if that actually works goes tober over goes tober. Hey guy like it. In each episode we take a ghost story or paranormal event in look into its complete history rebecca than gives us evidence proving that the stories real in my job is to debate those pieces of evidence in get you the listener prepared to vote on if it's real or not if you haven't yet please at that subscribe button and as always where your host i'm pat and i'm rebecca. What's been going on rebecca. Well we just had an amazing time yesterday. Yes at wizard world wizard world so we record these episodes on sundays typically so just so you know for those for those keeping track Yeah and we did we you know. We went in there not necessarily expecting that many people and when we opened There was about thirty forty people waiting and then more people showed up in the ten minutes prior and even after it started more people coming in. I mean i would say there was at least a million people at least but there was a good. There was a good hundred people. Yeah really exciting. Yeah we had a lot of fun. And it's been a dream that we've had since we started ghostly absolutely sad we talk about chicago urban legends. Yeah and we did not record it though because that is not something that people usually to bond. There might be some video out there. Someone was taking video. So we'll see what we can get But if you miss this and you are interested in seeing us we will be doing this again. Yeah it's too easy to december twelfth. Yeah now that's a. That's a noon one. It's twelve twelve twelve thirty on saturday. Yari excited. yeah. I am super super stoked for it. So we do have some shoutouts. There are two ways to get a shout out on ghostly the first ways to give us a review on apple podcast of course. We always prefer those five-star reviews as every podcast does But we will read reviews that we receive the second way is either bias a coffee and buy me a coffee. Dot com slash podcast. Or just going right to go sleep. Podcast dot com and hitting the bias coffee button in the menu bar..

tober rebecca casa loma pat Yari chicago apple
Who Killed Lois Duncan's Daughter: The Murder of Kaitlyn Arquette

Strange and Unexplained with Daisy Eagan

01:58 min | 1 year ago

Who Killed Lois Duncan's Daughter: The Murder of Kaitlyn Arquette

"Lowest. Dunkin would receive a phone call. That would change her life forever. Caitlyn had been shot twice in the head while driving near downtown albuquerque and was in the hospital in critical condition less than twenty four hours later. Caitlin was dead and lois duncan found herself. Living the kind of nightmare. She had devoted her life to writing about. Lois would spend the next three decades trying unsuccessfully to unravel the mystery of her daughter's murder. Here's what we know about the crime around eleven pm on july sixteenth. A plainclothes detective drove by a car. That had hit a pole off the side of the road. On the corner of lomas east broadway near downtown albuquerque. There was a vw bug. Stop next to it. He saw no one at the site of the crash so he kept driving. I'm sorry what. How is it crashed car and another one right next to it at eleven o'clock at night not cause to stop an investigate. Common sense finally kicked in and the officer radioed end to see if the crash had been reported yet it hadn't so he decided to turn around and see. If i don't know a citizen might need help. By the time he got back to the scene of the crash the vw was gone. Oops am i right instead of the vw. Now some random guy was standing near the crash car when the detective asked what he was doing there. He said he just happened to be passing by turns out the reason. The officer didn't see anyone in the crashed car when he drove by without bothering to stop was because the driver had been shot twice in the head and was slumped over the wheel and she was still alive. This was kaitlyn arquette. Lois duncan's eighteen year old daughter.

Lois Duncan Albuquerque Caitlyn Dunkin Caitlin Lois Kaitlyn Arquette
Dr. Cindy Geyer Explains Seasonal Allergies

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.

02:40 min | 1 year ago

Dr. Cindy Geyer Explains Seasonal Allergies

"Welcome cindy get to be here is always so tell tell us. What is this problem with allergies. We're having this country. How prevalent is it. What are the symptoms of most people get a white causes it and and how does traditional medicine typically deal with this problem will allergies have been around for a long time so it's not a new problem it's when your immune system makes antibodies usually called aegean antibodies to something that you're breathing enter exposed to the environment like a dust allergy or a pollen allergy grass allergy and. When that happens these mast cells. That contain histamine dumped. Histamine calls all symptoms that we recognize as allergy symptoms congestion. Sneezing itchy nose. Itchy eyes watery eyes sometimes using tightness in the chest stick it can contribute to asthma and one of the things that sort of gets overlooked is just how exhausted people who have acted allergies concealing relate Just loma Fatigue so those are the classic symptoms. Even though it's not new the prevalence is unfortunately increasing There were people nowadays with allergies actual allergies than there were fifty years ago hundred years ago and we can talk about some of the reasons why that happens in typically. We're going to treat it or in traditional medicine retreat with identifying the allergen trying to remove it treating the symptoms with antihistamines may nasal. Steroids may be an inhaler for your lungs or trying. Desensitization shots were draws to try to down regulate that response and and what we see often is is for this resignation. That oh i've got allergies is just i got anything i can do about it so like e or i had to take these nasal sprays and the truth is most of the allergy medicine. They're pretty benign but the steroids. The steroids are not and they're often used pretty aggressively. Flo nase and name names the next. His hailed steroids. That may reduce symptoms. But then 'cause osteoporosis. In 'cause you know other immune suppressing issues and now people really suffer from these problems and and the question why are we so overreactive to things. That are just part of our normal environment. I mean that's a question asking allergies something. Humans get well. Guess what not necessarily when you look at populations indigenous cultures and you look at even kids who grew up in american

Allergy Grass Allergy Allergy Symptoms Congestion Sneezing Itchy Nose Cindy Asthma Flo Nase Osteoporosis
"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

09:08 min | 2 years ago

"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

02:04 min | 2 years ago

"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

"Terror. The gears national hair like teeth pulling your closer and closer. They worked more perfectly than adele had ever seen. She screamed for the woman to help her but she was gone. It was just her and the machine just like she'd.

adele
"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

06:45 min | 2 years ago

"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

"Adele paste beside the assembly line of parts quietly chugging away at the dim basement the only source of light were a few dim bulbs overhead and the tiny boarded up windows near the ceiling. It may thinks dreary but the secrecy was necessary because there were hordes of people outside and none of them could no adele and her team existed. Adele could hear voices outside of castle. Lomas tourists enjoying the beautiful spring day. It sounded nice but for polity. Wasn't her cup of tea. She'd rather tinker with machines. Machines were language. He understood she had spent her whole life learning about gears. Metals and little outs interested. Her adele stared fondly at the assembly line as it efficiently spat metal parts onto a rotary. Pell for the lab techs to assemble. They were making devices for british sonar technology that could detect german u boats almost five miles away knowing where the germans were before they struck was essential to keep the shipping lanes between britain. And the us open. The germans had bombed their previous lab in britain at the end of nineteen forty two so they needed to be much more secretive. This time around kesse loma provided the perfect cover. No one would guess that. Beneath the tourists feet an important war effort was underway. It was hiding a book in bookcase or something like that symbolize weren't really adult cup of tea either. The tunnels onto the house had lots of twists and turns leading to wine-cellars offices. They used the biggest room for their lab. They'd had to knock out some walls and get rid of the rooms. Beautifully carved wooden doorways to fit their equipment but they made the space work. One of the machines suddenly lurched to a halt adele stomach flipped. This had been happening a lot lately and she couldn't figure out why she hurried over carefully prying off the lid to see what was wrong. She collector tung a piece of metal. At fallen down into the gears. Any replacements would take a long time to get here but channel for supplies had to be covert which added days to a civil request. Don't look at their unfinished daily quota and side. She'd have to repair it herself. It would take the better part of the night and no one likes staying in castle loma. When the sun went down the other lab techs had complained about weird things happening after dark machines turning on and off doors slamming but adele didn't buy into that stuff to her night with a bunch of loose parts sounded like lovely evening she just mr workers and grabbed her tools as the lab techs filtered out adele pried open the body of the machine exposing its wire field innards of thrill ran through her. It was hard to direct a whole base of employees but when it came to this she was utterly in charge. She grabbed a wrench and disappeared into a world of metal tightening bolts and testing belts and wires. And when she next looked up the room had darkened. She checked your watch and accidentally dropped the ranch. It hit the wood floor hard making a dent in the grain at l. side and picked it up. It wasn't the first bit of damage their presence had inflicted the machine said made dings and dips all over the room so she was hardly concerned but before she turned back to her work she noticed something in the corner of the room. At first she thought it was a shadow but then she realized it was a figure a woman shock of adrenaline course through her. The woman stood very still with their back to adele. Staring at one of the walls renovated for the lab. Her white dress blended in with a fresh paint. Adele felt frozen. She didn't recognize this woman and hadn't heard her come in. It wouldn't be the first time she'd gotten sucked into a machine that she hadn't been aware of what was happening around here. But if this was a tourist had found their lab she was in deep trouble. She cleared her throat nervously. And ask the woman what she was doing there. Did she need a to show her out. The woman around her is furious. She told a dell. That was a stupid question. This was her house. Had adele was destroying it then like a light winking out. The woman suddenly disappeared. Adele stared at the spot where the woman had stood utterly confused. She just been there and now she was gone down. Looked around the empty lab. The room was pretty dark. Maybe the shadows had played tricks in her but she'd spoken adele shivered. She was suddenly very ready to go home. She hurry to the door but thunderous crash. Machinery starter tracks. The assembly line surged on as did the device that it still been dysfunctional just moments ago. All the lights started clashing on off horror washed over her as she watched the mechanical elements of the room. All things he'd always understood. Act totally bizarre adele sprint for the door but before she could reach it. Someone grabbed her hair. Sending her careening backwards. Adele was dragged toward the worrying assembly. Line as she flailed straining to look upwards she could see the woman in white pale hand grasping her hair. The women's voice shrieked in her ear. She said it was her house and adele had rected with her machines and now adele dared suggest she leave. The woman dragged her toward the open machines. She just been working on. The scream burst from adults throat. As the churning gears grew closer she thrashed but the woman's grip didn't loosen in fact the pulling got stronger than almost smoother adele desperately crater neck to see the woman no longer healthier hair it had been fed into the machine she screamed in unbridled.

adele Adele kesse loma castle loma britain Lomas Pell us adele sprint dell
"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

02:33 min | 2 years ago

"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

"Imagine living with the secrets so big that if anyone ever found out it would change everything. Imagine carrying that secret with you every day. Desperate to one day. Get it off your chest. Do you think you could take a secret like that to the grave. I'm stephanie haeggman. Host of the new podcast series deathbed confessions the show where we dive deep into the most explosive things. People have admitted to while drawing their last breath from murder fake identities heists illicit affairs and even top government secrets this season. On deathbed. confessions. We investigate cases like frank thorogood the construction.

stephanie haeggman frank thorogood
"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

08:03 min | 2 years ago

"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

"Rose sat at the head of the long oak table swirling her martini glass. She leaned back feeling like a queen as she watched her guests. The young girls giggled amongst themselves. They're fancy mother is telling them to behave. Rose might not have any children of her own but she had something. They didn't cass aloma. This gorgeous house was her child. These dinner parties for the girl guides of canada. Were her chance to show it off. She gazed up at the ornate chandelier that hung over the massive table. The car would around it glowed. Golden in the candlelight every time she looked around her heartfelt full beside her one of the girls knocked over her glass of sparkling cider starving problems she jumped up from the table trying to save gown. She always wore a long white dress to these events. It made her stand out against the dark mahogany. The girl's mother apologized profusely as roses made cleaned up the mess. Rose smiled sharing her. It was fine but truly it irked her any damage to her home. No matter how slight most upsetting a rose look to her husband. William the foreign to the table. He busied himself with his drink. Sulking roosevelt up prick of annoyance. She'd been waiting for him to make a toast but it looked like she just had to do it herself like she did everything else. Williams money built the castle but it was roses creativity and imagination. That designed each elaborate detail castle loma couldn't exist without her she had imbued herself in every corner rose after night against her class to get the dinner parties attention but before she could open her mouth. Williams swept out of the rule. She stared after him in confusion. A door slammed in the distance making rose wits. She hated slamming doors. She hated anything that could harm her precious home but the show must go on so she smiled at our guests and thank them all for coming an hour later rose bidder guests farewell blocking the door. After the last of them had left she had a lot to do. Her maid would clean up but she usually did another sweep afterwards. No one took better care of casa loma than she did but she stopped when she heard music seeping through the floor ports onto her feet william was down. The tunnel again angered tightened. Her chest. rose storm through the study pumping opened a wall panel to reveal a hidden passageway. It was thrillingly evil. Another one of her inspired ideas during construction but lately the tunnels below the house had become williams refuge when he was in a mood rose little lantern and strode down the twisting steps into the darkness below. A large corridor loomed in front of her with a few doors on each side. Alight spilled out from under one of them williams wine cellar rose opened the door and the music swelled williams stood at the end of the windowless room. Listening to a jazz record on the photograph and staring at a tapestry of a battle scene a massive wine rack covered the wall beside him. Rose lifted the needle off the record and demanded william tell her what was wrong with all his slamming at sulking. He'd made her look bad in front of her guests. He was quiet for a long moment before he told rose that they were ruined. The silence hung thickly between them. Rose stared at Confusion as he elaborated they overspent on the house for years and now his business was fluttering. Their coffers had run dry. They'd have to say goodbye to cass. Loma cackle burst from rosa's chest. She told williams that kesse loma wasn't just a home. It was part of her. It wasn't something she ever say goodbye to williams face crumpled with rage. He screamed at her that they were done. They might as well burn the place down. It wasn't there anymore. William yanked street pulling it to the ground then. He grabbed a bottle of wine and suck did against the wall. It exploded in a shower of glass in liquid. The dark red wine falling to the carpet lake droplets of blood rose stared at the stains anger rising her chest. But william wasn't finished he threw another bottle then another row screamed at him telling him she divorced him before he made her leave castle oman. It was everything to her. But william continued his rampage. He smashed a wine bottle over. The arm of one of the chairs and red wine cascaded onto the velvet. William grip the shattered bottles still intact neck and stabbed at into the upholstery agony. Ripped through rose. He was trying to destroy her house. Her child and a mother doesn't just stand idly by when someone rips her bay from her arms she had to do something. Rose leapt on him with a shriek. Pounding is back with her fists. William pushed her off she lunch data mcgann shot up to stop her. Rose froze as a burning sensation crept through her neck. She touched her throat impelled. A wet sticky substance under fingertips. She looked down and gasped. Her hands were covered in blood. Drops of crimson splashed onto her pristine white dress. Just like the wind had splattered. The carpet is fell and broken bloody wine bottle and williams hand and then met his shock dies. William had cut her throat. Rose sank to her knees. Her vision blurring and grabbed her neck but it was useless. Her blood surged pastor fingers. Now she and locked eyes with william. She felt a bitter sense of satisfaction from the look of horror on his face but as darkness preston. Her last thought wasn't about him. it was up castle. Oma and how now she would never have to leave. Staffing guests of castle believed that the castle is home to a ghostly woman in a white dress who they call the white lady some things. She was a maid who passed away from influenza during the nineteen eighteen flu pandemic but others contend that the troop go success. Aloma are its creators. Henry palette and his wife mary mary pellet died in one thousand nine hundred twenty four the same year the pellets were forced out of the home. Henry however didn't die until nineteen thirty nine. there's no record detailing. How either mary or henry passed away but while they didn't die in the house various mediums claimed their spirits chose castle as their permanent home because of the trauma they endured when they were forced to leave after all put their entire lives into its creation. Perhaps they dedicated their death to it as well coming up and engineers greatest bashing consumes her..

Rose williams cass aloma william William Williams kesse loma casa loma confusion canada Loma rosa oman mcgann Aloma Henry palette flu mary mary pellet preston Henry
"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

04:12 min | 2 years ago

"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

"With tears. Enter white dress was soaked through with blood adrenaline rush through tenders fans. He dropped the mom but before he could run. She reached out and grabbed his arm but tapping sound grew louder and louder until he felt like a skull would burst. She leaned forward her voice in bishops. Whisper and told tanner to get out of her house. Welcome to haunted places. A spotify original from podcast. I'm greg poulsen every thursday by take.

"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

Haunted Places

01:50 min | 2 years ago

"loma" Discussed on Haunted Places

"Tenor sunk is mop into the bucket of soapy water and slapped off to the hardwood. There was a lot of floor at castle. Aloma thousands of square feet of it. The place had dozens of rooms with. Wall-to-wall would lush red velvet furniture and our nate chandeliers. And it was tanner's job to make it spotless. He side weekends cleaning and old tourist. Hotspot wasn't exactly the most fun job but at least it gave him some cash and he was saving up for something. He couldn't stop thinking about a drum set. Tanner tapped out a beat. On the panel in lived for percussion he spent most of his time drumming out new rhythms or listening to imaginary solos. Crashing has had his obsession got yelled at at school for not paying attention but he found something he loved. Why should we give it everything he had. He stopped drumming for a moment to dip them up back in the bucket but tapping continued. Kenner looked around the room. Trying to find the source he finally craig's next appeared directly behind him his stomach drawn a woman was tapping your fingers rhythmically on the wall glaring tanner. His blood went cold. This was no tourist. Her cheeks restrict with tears. Enter white dress was soaked through with blood adrenaline rush through tenders fans. He dropped the mom but before he could run. She reached out and grabbed his arm but tapping sound grew louder and louder until he felt like a skull would burst. She leaned forward her voice in bishops. Whisper and told tanner to get out of her house.

Aloma tanner Tanner Kenner craig
The Haunted History of Casa Loma

Haunted Places

01:50 min | 2 years ago

The Haunted History of Casa Loma

"Tenor sunk is mop into the bucket of soapy water and slapped off to the hardwood. There was a lot of floor at castle. Aloma thousands of square feet of it. The place had dozens of rooms with. Wall-to-wall would lush red velvet furniture and our nate chandeliers. And it was tanner's job to make it spotless. He side weekends cleaning and old tourist. Hotspot wasn't exactly the most fun job but at least it gave him some cash and he was saving up for something. He couldn't stop thinking about a drum set. Tanner tapped out a beat. On the panel in lived for percussion he spent most of his time drumming out new rhythms or listening to imaginary solos. Crashing has had his obsession got yelled at at school for not paying attention but he found something he loved. Why should we give it everything he had. He stopped drumming for a moment to dip them up back in the bucket but tapping continued. Kenner looked around the room. Trying to find the source he finally craig's next appeared directly behind him his stomach drawn a woman was tapping your fingers rhythmically on the wall glaring tanner. His blood went cold. This was no tourist. Her cheeks restrict with tears. Enter white dress was soaked through with blood adrenaline rush through tenders fans. He dropped the mom but before he could run. She reached out and grabbed his arm but tapping sound grew louder and louder until he felt like a skull would burst. She leaned forward her voice in bishops. Whisper and told tanner to get out of her house.

Aloma Tanner Kenner Craig
Introducing Navy SEAL and AZ-1 Congressional Candidate Eli Crane

Mark Levin

01:42 min | 2 years ago

Introducing Navy SEAL and AZ-1 Congressional Candidate Eli Crane

"Maybe the week after 9 11. Like many Americans, I was pretty pretty angry about what happened. That attack on our country and I wanted to serve and go fight for those who couldn't fight for themselves and just take the fight to our enemies overseas. So I did that. I spent 13 years in the Navy. I did five deployments. Three of them will seal Team three. As a Navy seal. And then after that, my wife and I started a small business out of our one car garage in point Loma San Diego and we turned that into a multimillion dollar brand. I'm just through hard work determination, making our products in the USA hiring veterans and loving everything the you all stand for on the show, and, you know now I'm so I'm so distraught and I'm so worried about this country and everything that I see going on. I'm worried if we don't get men and women who are willing to die for it in the first place. To throw their hat back in the ring and run for school boards. You know, State Congress, Federal Congress and everything else in the world. Um this country that I know and love and got to Grow up with the American dream and is not going to be there for my kids and the next generations and that is unacceptable to me. And I could not agree more. And here you've already done multiple tours. Um You are a great American, Your red blooded yank. And you have fought and served for your country. You have demonstrated what the American dream is all about. It came back and become Mildly wealthy and now you want to run for the House of Representatives in order to protect our liberties there. Tell us about your opponent in this district.

Loma San Diego Federal Congress Navy USA Congress House Of Representatives
Coast Guard Searches Waters After Human-Smuggling Boat Hits Reef Near San Diego

Morning Edition

00:41 sec | 2 years ago

Coast Guard Searches Waters After Human-Smuggling Boat Hits Reef Near San Diego

"The U. S. Coast Guard is searching the waters off the coast of San Diego after a boat capsized, killing four people. On Sunday, NPR's Joel Rose reports. Nearly two dozen others were hospitalized. The Coast Guard. The San Diego Fire Department and other agencies responded to reports of an overturned vessel near the peninsula of Point Loma. Two people died at the scene and 23 others were transported to local hospitals, the fire department said in a statement, while boats and aircraft searched for other possible survivors in the water near the Cabrio National Monument Authorities say the vessel may have been a type of small wooden boat that's often used by smugglers to bring people into the U. S illegally from Mexico. Joel Rose. NPR NEWS

Joel Rose U. S. Coast Guard San Diego Fire Department Peninsula Of Point Loma Npr News San Diego Cabrio National Monument Fire Department U. Mexico
Officials Give Update on Deadly Boat Accident in San Diego

Fork Report

00:16 sec | 2 years ago

Officials Give Update on Deadly Boat Accident in San Diego

"And taken to the hospital in a boating accident. Off the coast of Point. Loma San Diego Fire rescue says nearly 100 emergency workers responded to the area one the boat overturned around 10 30 this morning covered cases are continuing to climb in India.

Loma San Diego Fire Rescue India
Los Angeles Lakers go in short-handed and fall to the Brooklyn Nets

Lakers Nation Podcast

05:44 min | 2 years ago

Los Angeles Lakers go in short-handed and fall to the Brooklyn Nets

"Lakers dropped the game to the Nets got blown out was not pretty wind up losing this one. It was 109 2098. Ouch out not good. We're going to break down exactly what happened and put a little bit of context into it. What does this mean for the Lakers moving forward now that you've lost this was a game that a lot of people look forward to a lot of people had this game marked on their calendars did the Lakers maybe not and there's a lot of different things for us to to get into here the team didn't play. Well, there's no question and we'll talk a little bit about that. But I think where we need to start is that the Lakers were down two starters and yes, it's fair to mention that the Nets were also Down Kevin Durant. That's a giant loss. The Lakers were down Anthony Davis age. A giant loss. They were also down Dennis Schroder and I thought that was a bigger loss than he would be on most nights because the Nets defense is so poor. I think schruder would have had a very good game tonight. Just living in the paint getting to the rim creating Havoc. He would have made a difference out there for the Lakers certainly, but unfortunately was not able to go do to contact tracing with all the cobit stuff going on. So, you know, that was that was definitely unfortunate. We certainly didn't get the kind of finals preview matchup that people have been thinking we would get from this game because you're missing those star players. I don't think we got a very good representation of who the Lakers are as a team. I also don't think we got a great representation of who the Nets are because they're so different with Kevin Durant, but we did find out that the Nets love to shoot lots and lots of threes and make a lot of them tonight. Let's finish the game shooting just 46% from 3, but that doesn't tell the whole story. They were 50% or better for almost the entire game. It was until the end that they dropped off doing a great job generating open Thurs. And the Lakers Defenders were struggling to get out there and get a hand up and they were knocking them down. Joe Harris ridiculous 647 from 3 for 21 points. I said, this is a pregame video game. But one thing that they couldn't do was allow another guy to get going if Kyrie gets his points if James Harden gets his points you're going to live with that you're going to try to make life as difficult as you can on them, but you can't allow another guide to get going in and this game Joe Harris certainly did again dropping 21 points and then you gave up 15 to Timothy Loma Carrboro 2015 points to TLC not great. They're from the Lakers side of things LeBron. James had to pretty much do everything 32.8 board 7 assists 33 minutes glad that he only played 33 minutes. No reason for you to burn him out in this game when it was clearly won. The Nets were going to win especially once they got into the second half LeBron 146 from three three of six from the line, okay? One of the only other guys in double-figures was sixteen and ten. So we got a double-double Montrezl Harrell with ten points. Nobody else really did a whole lot out there. Nobody else did did much on the offensive end. You had nine points from k c p but just 145 from 3 West Matthews who started and played some shooter 144 shooting o of two from deep in 24 minutes Mark assault eight points did shoot for 3:00. So I'd like to see them in four to five threes a night did shoot for hit two of them. So you'll take that but the Lakers on the night shooting just 27% from 3 that slide from behind the three-point line at one point. They were third in the NBA in 3-point percentage and they have dropped dramatically since then and in fact last game they were up just about forty percent from three against the wolves and that was the first game in a while they'd been even better than league-average from deep and that's usually about thirty-five thirty-six percent tonight shooting just 27% That's with me rounding up. That's not good enough that will not get it done 6 a.m. Turnovers on the night as well. That's not a good sign either pretty much everywhere things could have gone wrong for the Lakers. They they really did ten offensive rebounds compared to 8 to the Brooklyn Nets. The brake pads are terrible rebounding team. That was a place where the Lakers needed to dominate 24 free throw attempts for the Nets compared to just 14 for the Lakers each and every spot along the way where the lake she really needed to win that particular area free throw attempts 3-point percentage turnovers, the Nets came out on top and because of that they won the game and wanted thousand Ali so I wouldn't be taking your questions and comments, but I guess before we get into everything. How much do we really take away from this knowing? There's no Anthony Davis knowing there's no Dennis Schroder knowing that the Lakers how many times tonight did we see the Lakers throw out lineups that we've never seen before with five men groups that literally have not played a single minute together yet. Not played a minute. That matters and I know we get some people who say it always but you can't make excuses. You can't you know, you have to go out there and win every single game. I'm just telling you what happened in the game. We saw the Lakers defense breakdown thought that was the Nets offense was really good part of that was the Lakers energy wasn't there part of that was also that they were playing an unfamiliar groupings and defense being something where everybody has to be on the same page. You get defensive breakdowns like this when you throw a line up together add necessity, I don't blame Frank Vogel here. You have no shooter. No Anthony Davis your entire rotation changes and you're winding up throwing out these kind of bizarre lineups out on the court and that's going to create defense of break that breakdowns. It's going to lead to open looks because you guys aren't used to knowing exactly where they're going to switch off their defense of responsibilities are it's a tough situation to be in and so I don't want to make excuses for the Lakers energy. I think they should have played with more energy with more Pace should

Lakers Nets Dennis Schroder Kevin Durant Joe Harris Schruder Anthony Davis Timothy Loma Carrboro Lebron Montrezl Harrell West Matthews James Harden Kyrie Brooklyn Nets James
Evan Rachel Wood and Others Make Allegations of Abuse Against Marilyn Manson

Colleen and Bradley

05:06 min | 2 years ago

Evan Rachel Wood and Others Make Allegations of Abuse Against Marilyn Manson

"Know, we're going to start with a really awkward cumbersome. Yes, we need to have a very awkward conversation. We're not awkward. The awkward is coming from Maryland Manson. I mean, we are awkward, too. It's a long story. But today We need to start with Marilyn Manson because we began to hear about some controversy surrounding Well, Evan Rachel Wood made an announcement that Marilyn Manson horrific. Lee abused her for years. That story kind of blew up this week. Um, It's not that we didn't have reason to suspect Maryland. Manson was a problematic figure. We'll talk about that a little bit more in a minute, but I wanted to tell you that we kick things off today, learning That Maryland. Manson has already suffering the consequences of that controversy after being dropped by his record label amid these abuse. Allegations, and I'll just tell you a little bit about our read you a little bit of the statement. From His record label. Loma Vista Recordings. Quote in Light of today. That is yesterday's disturbing allegations by Evan Rachel Wood and other women naming Marilyn Manson as their abuser. Loma Vista will cease to further promote his current album, effective immediately due to these concerning developments. We have also decided not to work with Marilyn Manson on any future projects, so that is Immediate Result to the controversy in the allegations that Again to put it bluntly blew up yesterday. Well, you know what I think is really interesting, and I'm sort of just arriving to the scene. Because I don't pay a lot of attention to Marylin Manson. It seems like the consequences have arrived a little too late. And I'm saying that because I read this op Ed, um from NBC News, written by Jill flip of IQ. Philip Philip. Oh, Vic. Sorry, Philip. Oh, Vic, who, by the way, is the author of a book called Okay, Boomer. Let's talk how my generation got left behind, and she basically says he guys f Y I Um, you're all arriving to this story about Maryland. Manson about Like 20 years too late. And what she does is she goes through. Conversations that have been had with both Evan Rachel Wood and Marilyn Manson. That basically say Hey, it didn't take you know it didn't take You know a Sherlock Holmes detective to figure out that Evan Rachel Wood has been talking about this. And Maryland, Manson has been talking about his treatment of her all along. And it goes back to, um, a few years ago when Evan will Evan Rachel what has always been very open about the fact that she was in an abusive relationship when she was in her late teens. But more specifically, she actually testified in a in an effort to get a law passed called the Phoenix Act. And this is the Phoenix Act is The the act in the state of California that extends the statute of limitations on abusive relationships. Okay, so she testified before Congress. About her experience in an abusive relationship, and in this in this testimony, she talked about a man she dated when she was 18 years old. Okay, again. Hello, 18. It does not take A private investigator to figure out that that was Maryland Manson. They were they had a public relationship. She talks about? How he groomed her when he began growing her when she was about 18 years old. He physically abused her, deprived her of sleep, starved her and stocked her when she tried to leave him by calling her incessantly. Now. Meanwhile, Over here in 2009 in an interview with Spin magazine, Marilyn Manson is talking about this very thing, he says of his relationship with Evan Rachel Wood. In 2009. Okay, So that's 12 years ago? Yep. He says he called Evan Rachel Wood 158 times while self mutilating and then blamed her for it. He said. Quote. I wanted to show her the pain she put me through. It was like I want you to physically see what you've done. So sit with that for a second. He's calling her 158 times while he is inflicting Pain on himself. To show her what he has done to her and then other others, So I mean I could go on. But there's other stories about him in another interview, saying that he has fantasies about smashing her skull with a sledgehammer.

Marilyn Manson Manson Evan Rachel Wood Maryland Loma Vista Recordings Loma Vista Philip Philip VIC Evan Rachel Nbc News LEE Phoenix Jill Sherlock Holmes Philip Evan Spin Magazine Congress California
Marilyn Manson denies abuse allegations by Evan Rachel Wood

Charlie Parker

00:25 sec | 2 years ago

Marilyn Manson denies abuse allegations by Evan Rachel Wood

"That may have led to the increase in suicides. All Maryland, Manson's record label is letting him go following sexual abuse allegations. Loma Vista recordings announced the move Monday shortly after five women came forward to accuse the singer of sexual assault, psychological abuse and coercion. Among those accusing Manson is his former partner, Evan Rachel Wood, the star of the HBO, Westworld Syriza. She claims Manson began grooming her as a teenager

Loma Vista Manson Maryland Evan Rachel Wood HBO
A big year for Bad Bunny

Pop Culture Happy Hour

09:41 min | 2 years ago

A big year for Bad Bunny

"Welcome back here with me from her home in washington. Dc is npr. Music and latino contributor. Stephanie fernandez hi stephanie. Hey steven great to have you so as we mentioned in. The bad bunny has released three albums in two thousand twenty the first y h l q. Md l. g. That's yoga lo que. Mais della ghana. Or i do whatever i want came out in february not long after bad bunny performed with jennifer lopez shaquille and j galvin at the super bowl halftime show. You'll find your haga made lagana at number seven on. Npr music's list of the fifty best of twenty twenty then in may bad bunny put out an odds and ends compilation called los que. No iban asa lear or the ones that were not going to come out. And now he's released ultimo tour del mundo which translates as the last tour of the world. The new album was written and recorded in quarantine and bad bunny had said it would be his last album not surprisingly he has already walked. That back a stephanie. Near the beginning of this year you interview. Bad bunny for a pitchfork profile called day in the life of bad bunny introverted superstar. Let's start with your thoughts on the new record which feels more restrained and reflective than the album. He put out earlier this year. Absolutely well let me start by saying that. It's been a crazy year for bad bunny. Output has been insane and prolific. and he's proven more than once that he can put out a great record. I really liked this album But i'll confess that i i i. I felt some fatigue at the fact that this is the third bad album coming out. And i'm a big fan of bad bunnies. I've been following him for a long time now. But i also believe that there's time for an artist to slow down into you don't need to put out so much music that being said. I really liked this album. It's really grown on me. Since i first heard it definitely appeals to the mo and may clearly bad bunny has also been listening to a lot of new metal and pop punk in quarantine. Well let's talk about the differences between this record and the one that he put out at the beginning of this year. That was kind of a more hard charging album in this one. As you said is is a little bit more mo absolutely. I think you know there has been this temptation to compare the two albums because they've been his two biggest releases. This year i think at the end of the day. they're such different projects. He was really trying such different things with them. That album iago looking at it. I was really focused on going back to the heart of puerto rican thrown from the early two thousands in the late nineties. The kind of music that bad listen to growing up the latin pop landscape now sounds a lot different than the music. Bad bunny loved growing up. And you know john that has historically not been widely accepted in latin pop and latin mainstream until the last decade. And one thing that he acknowledged to me when i interviewed him as well as you know something that was really the main focus of this record. Was you know undeniably making this sound of the music that influenced him growing up the artists that really deserve the shine when it comes to the strides made in this genre and this album is more about honoring a different kind of music that he loved growing up which is rock and rock and program spaniel and pop punk and i think what you really can see across. His body of work is just the deep respect that he has different kinds of music that he loves as well as this nostalgia. I think both records really have a lot to do with nostalgia in this way. That's really interesting to me especially in a year. That's been so difficult for so many people. Some many of us are finding comfort in music. That's not new music. That reminds us of more comfortable more simple times as it were. Even though these two albums are really different they both have really special offerings. Well one thing. I wanted to talk about it about this new record wanting that immediately jumped out to me as somebody who did a certain amount of coming of age in the nineties there a couple of songs on his record like to deseo loma harder. And you'll vito c. That are very tinged with all rock. Sounds like really kind of nineties. Rock sounds taught me talk. Yeah you know. This album has a lot of guitars. Sad guitars brad guitar. He's kind of teasing out this kind of pop punk and nu metal side that he has actually alluded to in previous work on his debut album sandra he had a song called dynamo moscow allowed which was really a pop punk song and people were so surprised to hear that from bad bunny and on your looking like he had llamas mignano which is like one of my favorite songs this year and a that just absolutely bursts into this new metal rage moment that is just so so registered so good and i think you know i i. I didn't think anything could match with those two songs. Made me feel. But i couldn't stop listening to to the settled on my heart. I really think it's like that. Riff is just so heart. Sick and tortured and cathartic. It's a little bit of that success. Mada below gun mental burden sep putra dot com the company. I think you can kind of get a sense of the exact angst. That's at work here but can you walk us through what that's about. Yeah you know. That song is kind of a classic reflecting on a break-up ballot and it's kind of a self torturing acknowledges wasn't great to you and i hope that one day you can forget about me but it's also just really indulging in that feeling and i think that's something that somebody people can relate to maybe a lot of people who've spent a lot of time alone in this year of in thinking about so. It's got a lot of sad. Bob's for reflecting on on these sad moments but also got a lot of really happy moments. I wanted be just kind of give people a sense of place about where he kind of fits into the latin music world like he is a boundary pushing artist. He's pushed a lot of these of gender presentation He sings about gender relations in ways. That feel really fresh absolutely. I think you know for several years now. Bad bunnies kind of establish this reputation for himself as a political or outspoken artist. And it's a label that he wrestles with. I think he is breaking a lot of barriers in terms of challenging masculine in latin pop. And he's really kind of an outlier. In terms of how vocal he is about these issues in two thousand nine hundred and he was really involved in the protests import. The frigo demanding the resignation of prepared for ceo in the past. He's also really challenge these ideas of gender presentation as you mentioned. You know he'd paint his nails and he'd wear skirts and bad. Bunny received a lot of praise for that and it was a big statement to a lot of his fans as much as he's gaining so much praise especially this year he's also had a lot of moments of public learning you know he's resisted this idea of becoming like a spokesperson for any group of people or report the frigo and earlier this year. You know a lot of fans were disappointed that he took several weeks to respond in support to the black lives matter movement and eventually he released a letter expressing his feelings and kind of saying himself. The thing that so many of us had already come to the conclusion to which is that. You know you can't rely on celebrities at the end of the day to lead us forward and social movements to be the voice of progress. I think bad bunny has made a lot of big statements that challenge how latin pop's most visible stars approach politics but then again on and trap have always been political and bad bunny is not the first and i know he won't be the last. Yeah you mentioned. His relationship with puerto rico. I think that's one thing that really jumps out about him. Could you talk a little bit more about that. Absolutely i think what definitely sets bad bunny. Apart from all of his peers in the industry is just how committed he is doing right by his community and worked to recall. Specifically i think in all of his music you can tell that. He's striving to remain authentic. And there's so many little love letters to community on this album samples the legendary astrologer welton on the penultimate track. His famous sendoff muccio more. He shouts out puerto rican and latino legends in general like leveaux the ruben blah the song and then latinos like real manna. You can tell that. He's he's aware that he's operating within a lineage. He never leaves any doubt about who he's trying to uplift and who is trying to represent here and he closes the album on a classic puerto rican christmas song comparison performed by today obama hegna which is a group from his hometown of vega baja. Your old it's kind of odd. Because it's like he's not on the song. Obviously it's recording from the fifties. But it's a song about how some people have jubilant joyful christmases and others spend it in sadness or in poverty. It is a farewell to a year. That i think all of us are happy to see go and i think you know though. He sits at this place of enormous wealth and privilege and fame. I think he's really at the end of the day driven by this desire to remain

Stephanie Fernandez Hi Stephan J Galvin Lagana Iban Asa Lear Haga Deseo Loma Vito C Shaquille Brad Guitar Llamas Mignano Jennifer Lopez NPR Ghana Super Bowl Steven Stephanie Puerto Rican Washington Sandra
Africa and museums: shaping the future; rethinking the past

The Art Newspaper Weekly

04:40 min | 2 years ago

Africa and museums: shaping the future; rethinking the past

"I just on your lawson. The founding director of the paloma in togo and andrew santo. Who's just written a book with twenty eight interviews with museum leaders across the world. I also speak to. Dan hicks about his book. The british museum's about the bronzes and for our work the week christopher repeal of the national gallery in london talks about san mateo painting of copernicus. That's coming to the national for an exhibition next year before that a reminder that you can sign up for the art newspapers free daily newsletter for all the latest stories goes to the art newspaper dot com and the link is at the top right of the page. And while you're there you can also sign up for a range of other newsletters including the book club and the art market. I now a new book by the writer and cultural strategy advisor andhra santo features twenty eight conversations with directors of museums and other institutions oldham during the covid nineteen pandemic the future of the museum. Twenty eight dialogues. Include voices from across the world attempting to define museums and the challenges and opportunities ahead of them now and in the coming days among them. Direct is of african museums including sonia lawson the director of the paladin loma in togo in west africa. Andress and sonia join me to discuss the role of museums today and look at how sonya's togalese institution reflects a new coq drew dynamism on the african continent andress. I wanted to begin by asking you. This book was written on zoom. Just as we are now essentially so you talked to twenty eight museum or cultural institution directors about what they were doing. It happened to be done in the covy deer as it were but was it. Germinating is an idea for a much longer period this spring. I wrote an article in art. Net news actually wrote it over easter weekend. So i remember did very well I guess that was early april. I can't remember the exact dates and it was an article about reopening museums. And it just hit a nerve. It really got a lot of people talking at the time. And i heard from dozens and dozens of museum directors and just became part of illogic conversation. And that's when we really realized that this is the moment because it gave us an editorial frame because it it really was a moment that made us ask what is the future about. Still trying to figure it out. I think there's no doubt in all of our minds that this is one of those years in the calendar that will be a turning point. A historical marker where new phase is beginning persona. I think this phase is the one that started in one thousand nine hundred eighty nine just ended. Now we have a new face. So what does that mean for museums. Once i figured out that this would be a book not just of conversations with museum. Directors conversations about the future not necessarily revisiting. Why museums have been great in the past of which many reasons to talk about that too but to really have a forward-looking and that is what led to choices like this extraordinary new institution in togo. Which i think is such a taste of where museums or cultural institutions or cultural centers are headed All around the world so so in a way this moment. This covert moment crystallized. How such a book could come about and how we would choose directors to be in it before we speak specifically about sons institution. I wanted to ask you about a phrase that you use in the to the book where you talk about how. The paradigm smashing experimentation in museums and cultural institutions is happening in effectively in the global south so in africa in asia in latin america. Can you expand on that a bit now. Because what do you think lies behind that. Well first of all i. That's not to say it's not happening elsewhere. And i think the book provides lots of examples of how people are thinking you in original ways about museums all around the world. But i think that there are perhaps two main reasons. Why so many of these truly interesting. And i would say inspiring. Examples of new practices are often happening in the global. South one is that many of these institutions are brand new. So it's you can speak to this. They have an opportunity to really design for the now and for the future. They're not dealing with a legacy infrastructure. They're not trying to retrofit something. That was already there and tried to adapt it to the future.

Togo Andrew Santo Sonia Lawson Dan Hicks National Gallery San Mateo Andress Oldham Sonya West Africa Sonia London Latin America Asia Africa
COVID widening gender gap in Pakistan

UN News

05:06 min | 2 years ago

COVID widening gender gap in Pakistan

"In Pakistan, women are major contributors to agricultural production and food security for their families. But like many other nations, the COVID pandemic is exacerbated an already alarming gender gap there. That's especially true for rural women where the amount of work and responsibility that they've had to show the has gone up leading to a decrease in living standards as they're forced to stay at home and care for others. Meaning Darla he food and agriculture. Organization representative to Pakistan explains to Charlotte Lomas how the UN agencies supporting women in the countryside despite the corrosive impact of the pandemic rural women that work in agriculture seventy, five percent of the labor force, and it's women and girls. So it is a vast majority you have to know that in Pakistan although the contribution of agriculture to GDP is, for example, in nineteen percent but the contribution of workforce is fifty percent in this fifty percent seventy, five percent women. So this tells you already the importance of women in Agricultural Pakistan. However. This is a country where the gender gap is still very, very high and one of the big issues is that not just they're employed in agriculture but most of them are unpaid. And the gender relations in in Pakistan and in rural. Pakistan in particular also very much influenced by culture and by customs, which in some of the areas are very conservative. So these are seen as barriers which are very difficult to move and and change the covid nineteen outbreak forced many people out of work. What impacts says, the the nineteen pandemic had on rural women in Pakistan. It has affected women in many ways I because of the lockdown second because for example, many of the daily wager which are men usually in the cities when they have been locked down, the have returned back to their villages. So what has happened is that the amount of work that the women had to put In to continue, sustain the livelihoods their family has increased enormously in addition it has brought back like taking care of sick members of the family. Oh, elders in the household and extra responsibilities. Also, we taking care of children which during the time in particular when schools got closed, we've seen for sure an increase in domestic violence because this came with the stay at home confinements. But at the same time, we saw that they had even lost whatever access the previously managed through the years to gain little by little in terms of access to health care and reproductive care This with the covid nineteen has had a tremendous impact on the women. So it's not just the daily wage. Or the fact that are number of hours in the field as increase the together with the work of taking care of the family. But really when you put it all together covy has basically exacerbated situations which are already difficult. We've seen many countries around the globe turn their attention towards the cloven teen economic recovery. How is FAO supporting rule women in Pakistan despite the limitations the shift of investments the was the response to covid nineteen infection has basically. made the situation even more difficult. In that sense we always have the gender component of the project, which is usually very strong. So it's not as an add-on, but really thinking on how you reach the women and with Covid Nineteen, I have to say that we manage many communities and villages we invested been more into digitalization, and in some cases, this works pretty well because women don't need to move they can convene in an area. Where they can seat distance wearing masks. So not to further spread the virus all get infected will reduce the risk of infection to what extent is the recognition of the importance of achieving gender equality. In Pakistan. There is increasing awareness that these underinvestment on women or let's the limitation put on women or the gender gap that women face in this country actually have impacts not just on the economic growth potential of the country, but also on many other aspects such as achieving food security and healthy diets and nutrition. So there is a slow movement where this is starting to become an important realization.

Pakistan Agricultural Pakistan FAO Charlotte Lomas Representative
Sudan floods: UN calls for urgent funding,asfood insecuritymounts

UN News

05:42 min | 2 years ago

Sudan floods: UN calls for urgent funding,asfood insecuritymounts

"While Sudan has been hit by devastating floods the worst seen in decades impacting more than six hundred, thousand people across seventeen of the country's eighteen states with homes destroyed and farmland damage. Just ahead of the harvest season, he's been another shock amid multiple crises according to the Food and Agriculture Organization FAO urgent funding is needed to support a country already facing alarmingly high rates of hunger and food insecurity. Dominique Bergin FAO's director of emergency resilience has just returned from a mission to sedan. He told Charlotte Lomas how dire the situation really is for people there. They're just returned from Sudan couple of days ago where I wasn't a mission already to the floods which have been affecting the countries over the last couple of these floods are truly devastating down the largest thinking the country in over seventy years who have conducted happy assessments with the me of coacher and found that up to six hundred thousand households have been affected by the impact. Of the floods more than two point, two million actors have been damaged. So it's quite serious but the problem here is that this comes at the top of an already difficult situation for millions of paper as a matter of fact, before these, let's nine point six million people were already in acute food insecurity ready a very difficult situation related to a variety of of issues social economic crying he's covid crises and even know in some part of the country the issues already locust. So quite serious situation that therefore Esguerra, our full attention. You travel to two of the affected sites what were your impressions? So we went to two of the most affected states we undertook mission with government officials as a matter of. Factly culture was with us and we spend today's in blue, Nile State, and in Sennar state, and they're what we could see is the variety of the damaged. We saw the impact on commercial farmers, and with few damage, they will be very little employment opportunities for the people. So one of the things we saw. We saw. Livestock owners, Pasta list being severely affected. By doing of the floods having lost for some of them up to seventy five percent of their livestock, which in turn is a problem for them because this is their main source of livelihood we saw that forty two percent of those affected by by the floods are women and it all sorts. So we went to the field we we spend time with them, and what we saw is that I mean situation is very, very severe. This time of the year they should have sorghum that is one meter and a half I ready to our best. Instead, we could see field full of. wheats with sorghum and that will not be honest. So in talking to these women, we understand they're already struggling. They're adopting what we call negative coping strategies, which means that they are cutting the number of the means to quantity of them is and what we found is that at this point of the ready, they're only having one meal per day and very basic meal. So very T- tuition and therefore these people need our assistance. How will this floods affect food security across the country? The food security situation prior to the floods was already severe nine point six, million people in acute insecurity. Two point two million people in emergency face. When we visited the blue states, what was clear is that we were in a state where twenty seven percent of the population prior to the plots was already in acute with with insecurity. So it is clear that with the impact of the ways, the fact that people not be able to harvest with the fact that they have been losing animals with the fact that prices are extremely volatile and ever tendency to increase significantly. The estimate is that the food security situation will further. And therefore, we need to be ready to provide at scale. Livelihood Saving Assistance. In collaboration, of course, we other agencies what is doing to assist Sadan since the beginning of the year I feel despite the covid situation has been able to provide assistance who about nine, hundred, twenty, thousand people, which is quite significant in this context. Now, what we are doing is that we are appealing for additional resources innovation essentially to the floods, but the flood. Being one more driver of accurate with insecurity. So, what we are doing is essentially appealing for seventy million dollars additional. To basically cover the needs of the people for the coming season in terms of cash assistance for people to meet the most immediate needs press agricultural inputs for the coming season so that immediately they can go back to their productivity. Always bearing in nine FAO wide providing humanitarian livelihood saving activities is very keen to build the zillions of populations which as we know are essential when people face regular shocks.

Livelihood Saving Assistance Dominique Bergin Fao FAO Sudan Food And Agriculture Organizat Sennar Director Charlotte Lomas Sadan
What Is The Pe Diet

20 Minute Fitness

05:27 min | 2 years ago

What Is The Pe Diet

"Everyone is Martin from twenty minute fitness I'm here today connected with Dr Ted Niemann Dominate, and why don't you tell liberal listeners about your work and book? The P. Will Hi Martin Nice to meet you just call me Ted first of all. So I, I'm Ted name I'm a primary care doctor and I've been in practice for about twenty years up here in the Seattle area and I have a mechanical engineering background, and so I'm kind of like a just a huge Geek. A nerd kind of a Geek mechanical engineering background went to medical school and. I ended up just being obsessed with optimum health and I realized that the difference between the healthiest people I saw and the least healthy people I saw really just came down to diet and exercise. So all day long in these patient visits icy this huge spectrum of health You know one minute I might be seeing someone who has just amazing body composition and their incredible health, and they might even be an elite athlete and then the next minute I see someone who's just frail and decrepit and falling apart and has millions of problems and it eventually occurred to me. That the only difference between these people was really just diet and exercise over time, and if your diet and exercise is optimal, you just slowly get better and better over time and if it's not, you just slowly get worse and worse over time and then you know fifty years down the road you see this massive spectrum of health from incredibly healthy to incredibly unhealthy and I've just been obsessed for twenty years with exactly what is the mechanism between Diet and exercise driving health outcomes in exactly what you have to do to get the positive adaptations instead of the negative ones and I've you know I've just been all over the Diet spectrum I was raised vegetarian I went to Loma Linda University in Southern California, which is this famous blues Mecca were everyone's plant based So I've I've experimented with Air Free Diet from Vegan and plant based to, of course, oil spectrum of Paleo. Kito. Carnivora. You name it and everything in between, and then I eventually realized that all of these diets right about something and the answer is in between and the secret is finding out what's powering each and every one of these diets and making them more successful than. The Standard. American. Diet and that's really how I came up with this book. The P.. E. Diet, which is sort of the unified theory of macronutrients You know that's at least it has been described right so so how does like the P. E. Diet look in a nutshell what makes it different from say pay euro at the Ketogenic diets or you know all vegetarian diet for example. So what I did is just zoom way way way way way way out to the fifty thousand foot view and just looked at what is eating and I realized that plants are. Auto troops and they make all their own food and then animals are Hetero trips and we only exist because we constantly injust other living organisms. So plants are at the base of the food chain for all animals they're making all the food for animals and then animals are just either eating plants or animals that have themselves eating plants. What plants her doing is two very specific things. Number one, they're sucking minerals out of the soil, which is nitrogen for protein and and about a dozen other minerals that are crucial for plant and animal life, and then they're using solar. Energy and carbon dioxide in the atmosphere to create these high energy chains of carbons with high energy bonds, carbon hydrogen bonds, and that's all of your dietary energy either carbs, fats. This is all solar energy stored is chemical energy. So I realized that you could divide your entire diet up into protein and minerals which getting room soil and energy, which is these high energy, carbon chains, carbs, or fats that plants creating from solar energy, and then I, sort of looked at all of human history in this evolutionary Lens. I realized that if you look at hunter gatherers, they have this. Incredibly. High Protein Diet. It's thirty three percent on average protein. If you look at worldwide hundred gatherer macronutrients and hunter-gatherers, they have an easy time getting protein they just go out and kill an animal and eat the whole thing you get plenty of protein and minerals but you're always a little bit starving for energy right? Every animal you know trying to get enough energy to be successful, and so you're always looking for extra energy to add to your diet. You can get the protein and minerals, but just killing an animal and eating the whole thing but you're looking for. Extra Energy and what humans have done is we have always used technology to feed ourselves. We don't have teeth and claws were not particularly fast or strong on. But what we have is brains, and so we built tools, we use tools to feed ourselves. We use technology to feed ourselves. We had stone tools with break-up in skulls for branch and long runs for married at fat energy to our diet. We dug up tubers, add more carbohydrate energy tour Diet. We figured out how to throw weapons and create traps in hunting in groups, and we all of this technology to add. More, energy to our diet

Dr Ted Niemann Seattle Loma Linda University Martin Ketogenic Southern California
The Lifelong Gardener, Toni Gattone

Cultivating Place

05:21 min | 3 years ago

The Lifelong Gardener, Toni Gattone

"I'd love to start by having you tell listeners exactly like where you are in your garden life and practice what it looks like right now, your relationship to plants, oh? Golly. Well, you know like you I have my gardens never looked better. Because I'm home. I'm I'm not going out and so all the weeds are gone and we live in a very small piece of property in. Marin. County in the town of Lark spor-. and. We have to elevated raise beds we have about. Thirty. Containers. And Vertical Gardens. And they are all chock full. Of veggies and fruits. I've got a aspired apple tree was six different kinds of apples, which is very when you have a really tiny yard blueberries that are, oh my gosh. That's like the fifth year of of their life in containers and a we have more blueberries this year than we've ever ever had. So and I got of course I've got roses and ornamental season But I have to say the roses have become the bane of my existence in the garden because I'm always fighting black spun. what are you GonNa do it you need to hear you either GonNa live with it or you're going to pull them out. Right and I did I I did decrease them only got five rose bushes now. And they better behaved here. That's all I can say that's what I on when I go. Okay. You gave and where you are in Marin what what does own would that be sixteen, sixteen seventeen okay. All right. So you are you are cooler by quite a bit than than me and warmer in the winter and interesting I. I love the idea of the blueberries in containers, and of course, the vertical gardening and the raised bed gardening in the container gardening is all going to be part of what we're talking about. Give us though I wanNA. Go back a little bit because I think you have a really great gardening of history and story yourself that brought you to this love, and then the work that you're doing with this love, will you take us back to the people and places and plants that grew you into a garden and plant loving person Tony Well, I think the the great inspiration stare into my grandfather's backyard in Chicago. He was an amazing gardener I mean you could. You could eat it seemed like each blade of grass in his backyard was was healthy and. Vibrant. His roses I never saw any sign of disease anywhere and he had a very small but jury productive Vegetable Garden and I I always saw the joy that was on his face when he was sharing with us the flowers in the fruits of his Labor. And continued with my mom and my mom, and I had a beautiful. Relationship, we were like two old shoes we used to say. she she was very supportive of me and whatever I felt like I needed to do. It was like, okay great. You know one of the the pivotal moments in my life was the Loma. PRIETA earthquake. Because that year my father passed away and then when the earthquake happened. My Foundation was shaken to the core. Yeah. What year was that Tony Eighty Nine and. I made up my mind when I finally got on the ferry to come home and I could see San Francisco inflames. And I said, I don't WanNa do this anymore. I don't WanNa work in downtown. San Francisco. And I applied for an equity line on my home, and soon as that goes proved I, quit my job in downtown San Francisco and I sat in my garden say now what? And my garden gave me of the inspiration to start a business in the garden industry. I didn't know what I was going to do but. Eventually, I found my way to find beautiful products that I loved and manufacturers that I wanted to represent and then slowly, but surely I added. To My company and I would find the products that good a garden shows and find the products and train them, and they would go out. We would all go out and sell the products to nurseries and gift stores and hardware stores all over California. And I loved it. I loved it was so much fun. but eventually I, I lost my my passion for that it took twenty eight years but. I walked away from that and twenty eighteen so that I could you know focus on being a speaker and author?

San Francisco Marin Vertical Gardens Tony Well California Lark Spor-. Tony Eighty Apple Chicago
Kodak Crashes 85% from Recent Peak

Stansberry Investor Hour

11:24 min | 3 years ago

Kodak Crashes 85% from Recent Peak

"Kodak. We've been all over this for the past two weeks. Right I told you they got a seven hundred and sixty five million dollar loan to get into the drug. Business Kodak the Film Camera Company getting into the drug business. Turns out in their one hundred thirty, one year history they actually were in the drug business for six years from one, thousand, nine, hundred, eighty, nine, hundred, ninety, four, it was a failure they got out and it's notable that they got in one thousand nine, hundred, eighty, two years before the recession set in right typical top of the cycle de Worse vacation kind of acquisition move for for a company is being managed into into the ground so. That's where it to the reason episode again and and we're back in the drug business with this seven, hundred, sixty, five, million dollar loan from the government I thought that was just kind of crazy enough all by itself because sent the stock soaring from to sixty two on a Monday to sixty dollars at the peak on a Wednesday in you know the third trading session of the week that week. Just insane. That was crazy enough right. Then what are we talk about last week? Well, they granted themselves stock options the day before announcement like that's not fishy like. Crony capitalist move, you know to just try to rake some of his money off the top of the management team. Okay. Now. This Week There's well other stuff going on. So so since last we talked the SEC is investigating this thing. And the loan from the. International, the government agencies called the DNC, the Development Finance Corporation the DNC loan is on hold. And the stock as I speak Ios below ten bucks again, and if you look at the stock chart of the last several days, it looks like it was flatlined. You know like somebody whose heart stopped and then wham the hit it with the paddles and now it looks like his heart stopped again it's a ridiculous episode but I feel like I need to clarify something because of at least one feedback email I got in this case. No, it is not okay for these executives to get stock option grants it's not okay and it wasn't okay for them to get them. I don't believe even back in May. Right I put together a time line I wrote a whole piece about this for the stands very digest and I put together a time line and my timeline showed that the order the executive order from President Trump. Was May fourteenth. Two days before that Kodak moves seventy million dollars from a Chinese subsidiary to a US subsidiary quote in anticipation of an intercompany transaction and quote I believe starting up a new pharmaceutical subsidiary constitutes an intercompany transaction, right? So that was actually made twelfth may fourteenth. Trump is used the executive order and invokes the defense production act and says, Hey, you know, let's lend money to companies so that we can produce drugs domestically because too much drug production is overseas in places like China and India by the way if you research that, it's not completely true. We'll talk about that. Maybe another day Kodak made the director option grants the first time on May twentieth today their annual meeting. So, eight days before they're moving money from Chinese from a foreign subsidiary to to a US subsidiary anticipation of a major transaction. Then trump invokes this defense production act, which is just appropriates money for national security right two days later, then six days later, they grant themselves these options at premium prices. Then approximately may eighth according to an interview with the CEO Kodak, and this government agencies start talking about its new drug business. Then on July twenty seven, these idiots grant themselves more options. Then July twenty eighth and it leaks out stock was up twenty, five percent that day the news leaked out. and. Then Twenty John Twenty as the big announcement right? Seven, hundred, sixty, five, million dollar loan to Kodak the shares were up four fold that day July twenty, ninth the stock price hit sixty dollars. And the volume that day is like a hundred and sixty times the previous day and the previous day was twenty, two times the David were that. Next Day July thirtieth a fellow called Mike or non gap thoughts. Which is a a newsletter that he writes on sub stack non gap thoughts. He writes this article citing these suspicious option grant dates when and strike prices next day July thirty fourth. Wall Street? Journal publishes an article citing the potential you know ninety, they said ninety five million dollar windfall for CEO Jim Continente. And there were others on on the Management Team received the options to August. Fourth Wall Street Journal publishes an article citing a new SEC investigation into the disclosure of the loan and the option grants right because it looked like the the loan with the news of the Lomas leaked out on the twenty seventh I think is really what they were concerned about. But the whole thing stinks and let me tell you something what I alluded to earlier when I said I need to make something clear about this. This is not the way capitalism is supposed to work. A corporate management team is supposed to make a lot of money. They're supposed to get ninety five million dollars for creating a business that has performed well for a period of time. That has generated you know for ninety, five, million bucks. You'd better be generating you know at least a billion or more couple of billion hopefully in free cash flow over a period of time consistently, right a real sustainable business for that kind of reward. You don't get paid that kind of money just for getting a loan to be in a business that you were in for six years out of your one, hundred, thirty, one year history and sucked at. Okay that's not the way this is supposed to work. This is the ranking crony capitalism, the EST crony capitalism. And crony capitalism is when you get paid for no in people, right it starts looking suspicious back in May when they're moving seventy million bucks from China to the US, it looks like they already knew they were going to do something and then Oh, two days later trump invokes this this executive order appropriating these loans for this kind of stuff and then up six days. Later, we start granting ourselves options at prices that suggests we know the stock is GonNa take off like a rocket ship. Then we do it again on July twenty seven just to show you how utterly stupid we are. This is not the way it's supposed to work they basically what they did here was. They just took money from well, you know this government money. So you could say they took taxpayer money and they said how can we get way too much of this money in our own pockets? Oh, I know let's grant ourselves a bunch of options. Okay, your stand. Now, I don't have a problem with option grants in general I. Realize people need to be incentivized. It's just the way. Things are nowadays right to to attract good management. You gotta pay them. What looks like way too much money a lot of the time, but this is not that. This is a management team taking money from taxpayers and really taken ultimately from shareholders as well. They're given themselves equity for free that the shareholders have to buy in the market. This isn't the only episode of this. You'RE GONNA see there was a smaller episode that I I kinda filed this way I didn't think I was going to mention it but there was a guy. David? T hines in a story in the Washington. Post. July. Twenty Eighth I mean it's all allegations so I don't know I'll just say this poor fool apparently borrowed four million dollars in this federal PPP paycheck paycheck protection program it was part of the cares act. Right. The cares act was that two trillion dollar corona virus bill that was signed into law in March and included three hundred and forty, nine billion in forgivable loans for small businesses to maintain operating expenses. Mostly payroll, right? That's why it's called. PAYCHECK protection program. So you can just pay your employees even though maybe you're running a restaurant and they have to stay home because of the cove in nineteen, right. So this guy gets four million from this program and then a week later people see him riding around. Miami beach in a Lamborghini. A brand new Lamborghini Lamborghini. Hurricana. Which I guess. That's an electric Lamborghini costs more than three hundred, eighteen, thousand dollars again, how stupid is this guy? That's like granting yourself options the day before the loan announcement. And of course, these things are ripe for. For, this kind of abuse, this is what you get went when the government starts literally like throwing money around all, this is done very very hastily right because we think we have to act we have to act now. and. So this is what you wind up with. You wind up with Kodak and you wind up with this poor sad sack who who thought he wasn't GonNa get caught when he use P P peabody to buy a fricking Lamborghini. It's you know somebody's going to include that in some kind of TV you know some kind of fictional TV show because it's just too priceless. So that's where we are that. That's where we are in. You know the state of of all things financial in August of twenty twenty. Boy Twenty twenty is the weirdest fricken year. I mean things that I won't even get into some of the things that that people I know have been exposed to this year, but it's just. So it's also utterly weird when you shut who who'd a thunk who'd a thunk when you shut down the global economy because you're afraid everybody's going to get the flu or whatever. That all of this stuff would happen that you would get people you know in Lamborghinis with government money and you know Kodak Management taking money out of taxpayers, pockets would have thunk it. Anybody. With a brain is the answer to that one anybody with a brain. And what what you do about what you do about it well. Look we told I told you to avoid Kodak because. People look at that kind of action and the knee jerk. The thing that's built into your brain you know that's that's been kind of evolving for hundreds of thousands of years in complete evolved for hundreds of thousands of years completely different circumstances that have nothing to do with investing. So immediately, as soon as you see that surge Kodak you want hit the buy button but I'm telling you it's deadly and wrong every single time

Kodak Twenty Twenty Management Team President Trump United States Ceo Kodak Executive John Twenty Lamborghinis SEC David Kodak Management China Kodak. DNC Lamborghini Wall Street Journal FLU Miami Beach Film Camera Company
Understanding Whats Really Underneath Your Childs Behavior with Dr. Pejman Katiraei

Broken Brain with Dhru Purohit

06:42 min | 3 years ago

Understanding Whats Really Underneath Your Childs Behavior with Dr. Pejman Katiraei

"Welcome to the brain podcast. I'm your host Droop wrote and each week my team and I bring on a new guest who we think can help you improve your brain health feel. Feel better and love more. This week's guest is Dr. Pettman Qatar Ryan Dr k as he's known to many of his patients is a board certified pediatrician who's also board certified and fellowship trained in integrative and holistic medicine. He completed his undergraduate at Ucla and then he obtained his osteopathic medical degree at Western. University of Health Sciences. He completed his pediatric residency at Loma Linda University, the famous Loma Linda. where, he stayed on as pediatric chief resident and then as teaching faculty for over four years while he founded the Loma Linda University holistic medicine clinic. Dr K also completed two fellowships integrative medicine one with the University of Arizona Dr Case. Second Fellowship wasn't Endo Bio Jeanie and thereby ginny as a European systems biology medical model, which emphasizes the use of. In the management of Neuro Endocrine, system Dr K. is one of a few physicians in the country with mastery of osteopathy functional medicine, functional endocrinology, herbal herbalism, medical herbalism, and more Dr K. is now in private practice here in lovely Santa Monica where he focuses on helping children with severe behavioral challenges incredible bio. Dr Kate Welcome to the broken being pot. Adding more LADES, you're young man, you're only forty-three. There's a lot more accolades you can add to your resume over the. Perfect job. A Mike my goal at the end of the day to help kids feel better. That's beautiful. Goal a beautiful purpose and I can't wait to dig into that in today's podcast and I wanna get into a little bit of origin story. How did you get clear and where did all the puzzle pieces aligned himself that that is your goal. You know. I think the universe was calling me. To do this. The first reason why I got into, it was for my own health up as a kid, I had pretty severe anxiety. SPENT, most of my adolescent teenage years in mix of anxiety and depression yo and. My nervous system was upside down and I couldn't really understand why I knew that I was different. I knew I experienced the world differently, but I really had no clue why you know like who would have thought that eating fast food everyday. All Day will be an issue for for your nervous system going bonkers is that what was going on? Were you eating fast food and kind of go? How is the standard American new way of life I mean college like that's what you do. Right Even I remember actually Loma Linda is a vegetarian institution. Why it's famous for being one of the hospital in the Blue Zone. The seventh day adventists. Yeah. But when I got accepted there, one of the thoughts that I had is like Oh my God. What am I gonNA do without my burgers. And that was the mindset I had going into training because I didn't know any better and what actually got me to start looking outside was during my training. I kept kept coming across these cases and I remember one very, very vividly. Twelve year. Old Guy. Severe Severe Colitis. Came in with toxic, Mega Colin were his colon had dilated to about ten centimeters, which is huge, and we did around the steroids. We did some medications for him. He got better when home. Two weeks later, I was still on service. Worse off than before and Beato, our team started the discussion and we brought in all the specialists and basically the end of the discussion was well, he's failing medications. We just need to cut out his colon literally was like he failed medications. So the next option is we just cut out this twelve year olds a lot inflammation. Something's going on. Let's just cut the thing out. because. That is the next standard of care, right. I had a lot of these kinds of scenarios where kids would show up like I remember another guy who plays soccer. He scraped his knee niece bowl up and then thirty six hours later, he was dead. You know and they were just like well, sometimes staff does unlike I've scraped my knee, I haven't died like, what was it about his system that caused him to fall apart and it was this recurring question of like these things don't add up two plus two equal in this scenario and the institution, and they're really smart people alone Linda, don't get me wrong. But the pediatric conventional training was like no two plus two equals farm like it doesn't look this way. So as it is in most hospitals and worst Western approach. Places. Because that's what people are trained in. But you were asking a different question. You're like, okay. This doesn't make sense what's really going on. Exactly. Yeah, and that is what ultimately led me to start taking courses. So I, I went to one holistic kind of course, and it was a dinky little course, but I was like, oh. My God I, you know I have found my people, the light bulbs went off and you started connecting dots. And then from there I went and did a bunch of training with Institute of Functional Medicine and the trading with the University of Arizona, and in the midst of that, I started realizing the pieces that were affecting me so like. I did the elimination diet and started feeling better and then I found myself to have MTA. And I think my initial homocysteine was sixteen when I first tested it, I'm like Jesus. So I started injecting myself with B twelve and you know I was my own best Guinea pig. And in the midst of getting interested, what also happened is Loma Linda's in didn't have anyone that was getting interested in this stuff. They're like, Hey, you wanNA, start a holistic medicine clinic and. Like. Two years of my training and there I was like all of the sudden getting handed these patients you know and I was the expert even though I basically didn't know that much. But through the process of learning and I was really really privileged to be put in a place where you know fifty year olds, I was a pediatrician fifth year olds with Severe Lupus. Land in my doorstep helped me I'm like. I don't know anything about Lupus. So let me learn so I. I spent all this time. Just researching in learning. You know any person that I could find with any material they had on the Web I was reading books listening to the videos. And I was just consuming all of this information in the midst of that. Also learning from my patients,

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