35 Burst results for "Lynch"

The Dan Bongino Show
Pres. Trump: Russian-Hoax Investigation Was an Attempted Coup
"They interfered in multiple elections 2016 the midterms with the impeachment 2020 with their interference with Twitter to make the Hunter Biden story disappear But mister president I think the most stunning line from the Durham thing of the Durham report that came out yesterday is that they never possessed quote any actual evidence of collusion and that Obama Biden lynch and Comey who you thankfully fired they knew in July of 2016 this whole thing was you being framed by Hillary Clinton Yeah This was a coup And if I didn't fire tell me probably you wouldn't have made it I would debate if this great administration that did so much wouldn't have made it because Comey this was a whole coup They were ready to go in you know interesting When I fired come it was like it was like throwing a rock at a hornet's nest They went crazy in the FBI That's where we found that the insurance policy Remember with stroke and page the insurance policy what do you do Remember that line What do you do He's going to win He's going no no he'll never win It's 100 million to one right That was my Jesse He said but if he does we have an insurance policy This was all the insurance policy This is 6 Yeah But you know we found that one And then we found out a lot of others And the whole thing blew up in their face but had I not fired Comey and it all blew up because everyone went wild when I thought they were all fighting for the job and then you care about him at that point They just wanted to take care of themselves but it all blew up If I didn't fire Comey you were to walk in with struck and page and this one and mccabe there was just Serbs sorry but the Russia thing I said what Russia thing Can you imagine if you would have been taken out of office to something that you never even heard about And these are bad people These are sick people

The Dan Bongino Show
Obama, Biden & Co. Colluded Together to Try to Overthrown Trump
"It is clear now that Obama Biden Loretta lynch Jim Comey John Brennan Andy mccabe Peter stroke Bill price step Lisa page and a whole bunch of other morons Colluded together That was the only real collusion In order to overthrow and frame a duly elected president That sets on open for debate libs That's not clean your diapers out That's not open for debate That's what happened I'm not interested in your stupid opinions I'm not expecting an apology from you I'm not expecting a mayor culpa I'm not expecting you to recognize your partakers in the coup You're zero integrity no character 5 foot plus piles of human garbage I have no faith whatsoever You care about the rule of law or the fact that you tried to frame not an innocent man but innocent men You have to understand now that the door report is out And we know conclusively that a coup occurred at the FBI CIA fusion GPS and elsewhere many partakers in the coupe I want you to understand the depth of the depravity here It's not that they tried to frame Donald Trump for a bank robbery That occurred It's that they tried to frame Donald Trump for no bank being robbed at all It's not as if Russian collusion happened with members of the Trump team and Trump didn't know about it Durham's report is conclusive that there is no evidence anyone on the Trump team colluded with the Russians and that everything was made up Everything

The Charlie Kirk Show
Sen. Ron Johnson on Blinken's Lies About Meeting With Hunter Biden
"Dive right into it. I see here new emails show Tony blinken line to the U.S. Senate under oath about meeting with Hunter Biden, senator tell us about it. Well, Charlie, well, what he lied about is that he said he didn't ever email Hunter Biden. Remember, center grass and I were investigating Hunter Biden late 2019, early 2020. Remember December 2019, the FBI took possession of his laptop to 2020 was COVID. It wasn't easy to do an investigation. People wouldn't come in for interviews, but a number of people from the State Department did come in for interviews. We actually had an interview scheduled with Anthony blinken. Remember, he was deputy Secretary of State. And at some point in time, he decided to cancel that. The election happens, and then lo and behold, because he wanted to become Secretary of State, he decided to come in for an interview. And so we transcribed in and if you ask them all kinds of questions, we are primarily concerned about the May 27th meeting that he had scheduled with hunter, which got canceled because bull Biden died, I think, three days later. But then the follow-up meeting, a launch immediately occurred in July of 20 21. Of 2020. And so we want to ask him, what did he and hunter talk about and what he told us? No, it's just golf and grandkids. It's going to be golf and grandkids, just like Lois Lerner, remember that not low sort of Loretta lynch with Bill Clinton. Just golf and grandkids. Right. So again, they talked about Boeing. So how can you really press them too hard on that when you're talking about the tragedy of losing a brother? But during that interview, we asked him point blank. What kind of communications do you have with hunter? I mean, did you talk to him on the phone? He said he really didn't. We asked him, well, do you communicate him through email and text? And he said, no, now what we've seen because of the Hunter Biden laptop is we have emails where Anthony blinken was emailing Hunter Biden and probably even worse. His wife, Evan Ryan, is her name. She worked for the State Department also under Obama.

AP News Radio
Carolyn Bryant Donham, at center of Emmett Till death, dies
"The white woman who was at the center of the lynching of Emmett Till in 1955 has died in hospice care. 88 year old Carolyn Bryant Donna has died. In the summer of 1955 in Mississippi, she accused 14 year old Emmett Till of making improper advances toward her at a grocery store. One witness says the black teen whistled at the 21 year old donham, which violated social codes at that time. Till was brutalized and killed his body dumped into a river and post mortem photos were published that shocked the nation. Donna's husband at the time and a relative were acquitted by a jury, but did later confess to killing the teen. In an unpublished memoir entitled, I am more than a wolf whistle. Donham said she was unaware of what would happen when she identified till. Louisiana authorities say donum died this week in hospice care. I'm Jackie Quinn

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Why Joe Biden Should Never Be in Office With Victoria Toensing
"Was, well, one main reason, amongst hundreds, why Joe Biden should never be in public office again, let alone the president, and this is the reason. This is a circus. It's a national disgrace. It is a high-tech lynching for uppity blacks. Who in any way deign to think for themselves? And it is a message that unless you kowtow to an old order, you will be lynched, destroyed, caricatured, by a committee of the U.S., U.S. Senate, rather than hung from a tree. God bless that man. I love watching that clip, especially with Ginny Thomas in the background looking steely eyed at her husband, supporting him in his refusal, refusal to surrender before the scum, and the bigots of the Democrat party and especially the chairman of that committee, who was who? Joe Biden, a racist who didn't want a black conservative on the Supreme Court. And now Victoria, they're going after him again the same thing. It's his turn again. Right. Because you know Brett Kavanaugh had false accusation of the sexual attack. And the woman couldn't remember where or when. And all of her witnesses denied that they remember anything like that happening. And then Schumer went out in front of the Supreme Court. And said, you've got such and Kavanaugh, you have reaped the world. And then Amy. Was she was mocked for being a handmaiden, which the definition is that you're a woman who's subservient to everyone. I don't think that's quite fitted. And then she was criticized for adopting a black child. And

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
David Lynch Was an Unusual Choice to Direct the Original "Dune"
"David Lynch, unusual, choice to direct this movie, clearly he was into it four years. It took him to give birth to this. When they gave us when dio De Laurentiis offered this to him, he never read the books. Knew nothing about dune. And he'd only made two movies. I don't know if you're into David Lynch, but let's just read his list of accomplishments. It's interesting. If you go to his IMDb or look up his filmography. Really short in comparison to other directors or producers. He's only got a handful of movies to his credit. First one is the very, very weird, eraserhead, the star of which has a cameo in dune. Then the thing that really bursts him on the international scene amazing movie tough movie to watch with John heard of course is elephant man. And after he makes that black and white movie in the 80s, elephant man, he's offered this, so you're a Hollywood guy, not really an obvious choice, a razor head, elephant man, a Victorian real story, and then this so we'd pick no. Yeah, I don't know. I mean, a lot of it has to do with friendships and what's hot, right? So what probably happened was, you know, elephant man is considered to be a fantastic film. It's considered a classic now. A modern classic. I've never seen it all the way through, actually, because it used to come on TV all the time when I was a kid. I always found it a bit difficult to watch. It's like you said, it's tough. It's a tough, it's tough to watch. So I never sat down and watched it all the way through, even though I knew as a film student, this is one of the great films of all time. I should probably watch this at some point. I never got around to it. So yeah, it's hard for me to judge, but sometimes that just happens where somebody is kind of like the bell of the ball for a little while, right? They're America's sweetheart. And at this point, it must have been David Lynch and somebody's because apparently they were trying to get David Lynch for return of the Jedi. And I'm so happy that he got, you know, got distracted and made this instead because

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Dr. G and Mr. Reagan Draw Parallels Between "Dune" and "Star Wars"
"Travel to any part of the universe without moving. That is the emperor's daughter. She her diary at a kind of diary or letters performs a similar device in the original book at the beginning of each chapter trying to explain exposition what's going on thousands, tens of thousands of years in the future, which is the June universe. Let's put the original book up published in 19 65. It was a series of books by Frank Herbert 6 of them, then his son, with a co author took over after his passing, and we've got some photographs of the great Frank Herbert, who was on set and who was happy with lynch's production, then his son, authored another 16 novels based upon dune and massively massively successful. Chris, one of the problems with doing this and that's why the remake has split the original book into two parts, two different movies, is just the amount of information, you know, if you're doing science fiction, you have to do what is called world building. And here, there was a lot of world or universes to build, right? Oh yeah, George Lucas had a lot to steal from in this in this world. Arrakis is very obviously has been turned into tatooine. I have a list here that I've written. It has twin moons, even. They even stole the twin mates. A desert planet with twin moons, right? Then there's the spice, the spice doesn't feature heavily in Star Wars, but they do talk about the spice mines of kessel, I think. Telepathy with using the four, the Jedi mind trick is something that's featured heavily in this. Although they use their voice, obviously. There's like a voice trick. They say in this film, may the hand of God be with you, right? And then, of course, in Star Wars, may the fourth be with you. The sand worms became the sarlacc and Star Wars. Evil empire. I mean, there's just so many things. And then, of course, there are a couple of things, as I mentioned before, that Star Wars, I think, did better with harkonnen being disgusting and Vader being cool, voice guns being a little silly, lightsabers being cool.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Sebastian and Chris Kohls Review David Lynch’s “Dune”
"Just say this about dune. I did not expect it to be good at all. I was dreading watching this film. 'cause you never seen it, right? I'd never seen it. I have seen the first half of the new film. The remake that's split the story into two halves, right. And I fell asleep like 6 times watching it. It was terrible. And I thought, oh God, I got to sit through this again, right? So I watched this one, and I do have to say, it's a lot better than the new one. And there are like these little hints of genius throughout the film. I have to say, there are moments of genius in this movie. And I can see why some people love it and why some people hate it. And maybe through the course of the hour, we can figure out why some people love it. Some people hate it. The reason I think maybe a lot of people hate it is because those moments of genius are fairly inconsistent. Do you have moments of genius and then you have moments of kind of tacky, weird stuff, and the thing that I want to compare it to a Star Wars. Because Star Wars very obviously ripped this story off from the novels, right? This is a novel originally. And I think for film, Star Wars did it better. Star Wars everything was very real and naturalistic George Lucas tried to make everything as realistic as possible. Whereas dune kind of feels like I'm going to see a Broadway show a little bit. Interesting. All right, look, this is where this is where it gets really fun because I watched this as a kid. I was 13 years old. I think it has been unduly maligned. Yes, there are issues with it, all the exposition, the voice-over stuff. I get it. But some aspects of it, I mean, the battle sequence. They had some battle sequences where they had 3000 people in the Mexican desert. I mean, just stunning. Is that true? Yeah. They had 6 Chris, they had 6000 costumes built by hand. 6 thousand costumes made for some of those costumes are amazing. Oh, my gosh. I mean, just the still Suits alone

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast
Why Does the Left Hate Clarence Thomas SO Much?
"The left simply hates clarence Thomas. I mean, they don't like any of the conservative justices, not even Roberts, but they particularly load clarence Thomas, and it's let's think about why that is. I think it's because clarence Thomas is, well, a black man who has left the plantation. Think about the left. The party of the plantations, the Democratic Party, maintained the actual plantations, but even after slavery, they love to keep blacks in political subjugation. And even now. But here's clarence Thomas, and he's sort of like, no, I'm going to think for myself. I'm going to speak my mind. I'm not going to be reined in by you people. And so they despise him. They hate him. They tried what Thomas himself called the high-tech lynching when he was first nominated to the court. They tried to to the Supreme Court. I mean, they tried to topple his nomination. They couldn't do it on substance and so they wheeled out, you know, Anita hill with absurd allegations about clarence Thomas, you know, made inappropriate remarks toward me all, of course, again, unsubstantiated. By the way, we saw a replay of all that later with Kavanaugh, essentially the same playbook and happily it didn't work the second time either, but now they're trying to go after Thomas again and this time on a completely different pretext. There's a nonprofit or sort of research group called ProPublica and they did a big expose and what is the expose show. Clarence Thomas for the last 15 years has been going on extremely luxurious vacations with a big Republican donor. In fact, it's a Republican guy that I happen to know. In fact, pretty well. His name is Harlan Crowe. His father travel crow built much of the Dallas skyline, Harlan crow is a kind of institution in Dallas. He was on the board of the American enterprise institute when I was a scholar there. So I got to know Harlan pretty well and have stayed in touch over the years, and any event, clarence Thomas's friend with this guy. And apparently they do stuff together and this guy buys Harlan Crowe, buys clarence Thomas dinners and takes him on vacation, probably flies him on a private jet. He stays a nice facilities. So what?

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Justin Pearson Compares Himself to a Black Jesus Being Crucified
"Guy comparing himself to black Jesus Christ, crucified on a cross cut 6. Friday, the government decided that my savior Jesus. A man that was innocent of all crimes except fighting for the poor. Fighting for the marginalized pain, but the LGBTQ community fighting for those who are single mothers fighting for those who are asked to shine fighting for those pushed to the river my savior my black Jesus. He was lynched by the government on Friday. And they thought that all hope had been lost. All the outside it rained and it thundered and everybody said everything was open. It was some black women who stood at the cross. It was some black women who watched what the government did to that boy named Jesus. They were witnesses as you have been witnesses to what is happening in the anti democratic state of Tennessee. They were witnesses. To what was going on and I got to tell you, it got quiet on Saturday. Yes, I tell you, it was a sad day on Saturday. Oh, hope seemed to be lost. Representatives with throne out of the state House democracy seemed to be at its end. Seem like that NRA and gun lobbyists might win. But all that was good news for us. I don't know how long this Saturday in the state of Tennessee might last, but all we have good news, folks. We've got good news that Sunday always comes. Resurrection is a promise. And it is a prophecy. It's a prophecy that came out of the cotton fields. It's a prophecy that came out of the lynching tree. It's a prophecy that still lives in each and every one of us in order to make the state of Tennessee the plays that it ought to be and so I'm still got hope because I know we are still here and

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Democrats Love to Play the Race Card
"Want you to hear from me that at this moment, people across Tennessee are not lynching black people, we're not riding around in Klan robes, burning crosses, we do not own slaves and there is currently no slave trading ships docked along the Mississippi River in Memphis Tennessee. I just want you to hear that from me. Because if you've been watching any of the media coverage about what's been happening at the Tennessee state capitol, you would actually believe that people are being enslaved in the state of Tennessee, and that is simply not true. Ladies and gentlemen, by now you know that one of the things that really sets me off is when people play the race card. I find that incredibly offensive. And the Democrats know that is the weakness of the Republican Party. When the Republicans are winning the argument, no matter what it is, you could be having a debate right now over whether Yoda is better than baby Yoda and if a Democrat stepped in and said, you're a racist, it ends the conversation. It ends the debate. And so the Democrats know that they can win any argument. It doesn't matter what the arguments about it could be about politics or could be about sports, it could be about entertainment. It really doesn't matter. The Democrats know that all they have to do is accuse you of being a racist and you're going to back off. You're going to back down. Well, I got news for you, folks. We're not backing down on this radio program.

The Charlie Kirk Show
The Danger of the Hysterical Trans Genocide Narrative
"Years now, the media and the Democrat party have been hyping up this false and hysterical narrative. The New York Post headline just 5 days ago, quote, Nebraska Democrat holt's legislation over trans Bill she calls genocide. On March 19th in Wisconsin, there was a protest that the state capitol, called the day of resistance to transgender genocide. There's literally even a Wikipedia page for this fake transgender genocide. As we are preparing and contemplating aggressive counter legal action where I was slandered and lied about for saying that I called for the lynching of trans people. It's not true. They just make stuff up and what it does is it incites further violence and incites activity that is not grounded in reason or rationality. So when people push these hysterical narratives, there are psychologically unstable people who are going to take them seriously and start plotting violence. For years, we called transgenderism gender dysphoria. Now let me be very clear. These people deserve treatment, compassion, and they deserve treatment that will bring them back into alignment with biological reality, but it is a fact that they are suffering from a mental delusion. What we have done is we have now basically told these people that have mental delusions that there are millions of people that are Christians and conservatives that want them dead. Did that play a role into what we saw yesterday? Probably.

The Trish Regan Show
Larry Elder Shares His Takeaways From the Recent Education Numbers
"When you look at the numbers that we recently got on the education front, and we learned that American students fell so significantly behind during those lockdowns and shutdowns and schools, there weren't in action. What we also learned was that so many students in very poor areas, minority areas, areas that were run by Democrats, they fared much worse than the rest of the country. Is there a takeaway there that people should remember? Absolutely. And again, you look at a place like Baltimore, a Baltimore is where Freddie gray died in police custody a few years ago. The number one and number two people running the police department were black. The people who are in charge of both the county and the city public schools were black. The mayor black, 6 of the officers, three of the 6 officers who were charged were black. The state attorney who blocked the charges against the officers was black. A judge before whom two of the officers tried their cases with black, by the way, he found them not guilty. City council all democratic majority black. The U.S. attorney at the time, Loretta lynch was black. The president at the time with black Barack Obama. And we're talking about systemic racism. I'm reminded of the joke that Wanda Sykes once said, how are you going to complain about the man when you are the man? And you're finding this over and over again and in Baltimore, 13, I'm not making this up, Trish, 13 public high schools involved in the inner city, 0% of the kids are math proficient. And another half a dozen were only 1% of the kids are Mac proficient. That's almost half of all the public high schools in Baltimore were either 0% of the kids or math proficient or only 1% bar. This is absolutely horrific.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Sacramento Bee Falsely Accuses Charlie of Trans Lynching Comments
"The things we do at turning point USA and we believe firmly in our core is that we should go to we should intentionally go to places where we are in the philosophical, religious and ideological minority, that we need to go to places where we are not always going to get the warmest welcome. And in fact, I think one of the reasons that we have lost our country is that far too often conservatives are afraid to go into the left wing bastions and speak the truth. And so we had this campus event schedule that University of California Davis for quite some time and what happened last night was something I've never experienced in my now ten years of doing this. I have given over a 120 speeches on campus. I've given over thousands and thousands of lectures and as many of you know, radio and podcast thing. I've never seen what has happened and what is unfolded because it wasn't just the students or the antifa terrorists. What unfolded in the last 24 hours is so telling about how the elites and how leaders are involving themselves in the incitement of violence against conservatives. And I'll prove this to you and I'll show it to you. It's disturbing in more ways than one. So yesterday morning we were hosting our radio program and they were already talking a big game at University of California Davis. And the Sacramento bee, which is the local newspaper in the Sacramento area published a newspaper article, calling me a fascist speaker, and that's not true, but I can roll my eyes and say whatever. But the byline of the article took my breath away. It said, Charlie Kirk is coming to University of California Davis, who has openly called for the lynching of trans people. I have not only have I never said that. I haven't even remotely ever gotten close. It is a fabricated total completely fake lot. But the Sacramento bee ran with it. And so immediately we mentioned it on our program, we emailed ahead of the Sacramento bee. We said, hey, this is an Internet rumor of somebody that's a trans activist that came after Charlie because he didn't like his strong opinion when he said, quote, in the 1950s and 1960s, men would not have allowed men to compete against women in women's sports or go into women's locker rooms, they would have dealt with it. That was the exact quote

AP News Radio
In this week's AP Religion Minute, a pioneer of Gospel music is rediscovered
"I'm Walter ratliff with the religion minute. For more than two decades, the work of gospel music composer, Charles Henry pace, sat silent and 14 unorganized crates. I knew we had this gospel collection, but nobody had ever really looked into it. Christopher lynch is a musicologist at the center for American music at the university of Pittsburgh. We had about 140 pieces of music that didn't exist in any other library in the world. Lynch and his team discovered that pace was an early pioneer of gospel music. Herbert Jones, the founder of the heritage gospel corral, says bases archives helped secure Pittsburgh special place in music history. Pittsburgh was a stop over point for jazz musicians and from blues musicians back in the 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s. So this is another niche in the history of Pittsburgh and the music field. This week, the community showcased pace's work at a free concert in Pittsburgh's hill district. Hi, Walter radliff.

AP News Radio
Ramadan begins for the world's Muslims, a pioneer of gospel music is rediscovered
"On this week's AP religion roundup, Ramadan begins for the world's Muslims and a pioneer of gospel music is rediscovered. Hundreds of millions of Muslims began the daily facts of Ramadan this week during Ramadan observant Muslims abstain from food and water from dawn to dusk and gather with family and friends for nighttime meals. Enjoy within the bandages now. Imad Hamad of Dearborn, Michigan, says it's like opening a new page with God each year. This is the way that is required to face the month. This is the way it's required to again guts rewards and gain the forgiveness and open a new chapter. That's why we quote Ramadan is a month of renewable. Islam follows a lunar calendar, so Ramadan starts about a week and a half earlier each year. For more than two decades, the work of gospel music composer, Charles Henry pace, sat silent and 14 unorganized crates. I knew we had this gospel collection, but nobody had ever really looked into it or really even figured out what it was. Christopher lynch is a musicologist at the center for American music at the university of Pittsburgh. We had about 140 pieces of music that didn't exist in any other library in the world. And might be completely lost. Lynch and his team discovered that pace was an early pioneer of gospel music. His independently owned publishing company helped elevate and expand the genre. I remember working in our music store. If my late teens. Francis pace barns. She was surprised at her father's impact. I think what I learned as an adult, I recognized, God, he was smart. Just a little ahead of his time, maybe. One, two, go. Average Herbert Jones, the founder of the heritage gospel corral, says bases archives help secure Pittsburgh special place in music history. Pittsburgh was a stop over point for jazz musicians and blues musicians back in the 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s. So this is another niche in the history of Pittsburgh and the music field. This week, the community showcased paces work at a free concert in Pittsburgh's hill district. Hi, Walter radliff.

The Charlie Kirk Show
The Transgender Radical Who Helped Stoke a Dangerous UC-Davis Riot
"Now is Libby Evans, human events, and also the post millennial. Libby has done a considerable amount of research that helps me and also has been really helpful to all of us to learn about how the heck did the riot happen this week at UC Davis. And one of the reasons the riot happened is because an unsubstantiated Internet rumor that originated from a trans hoaxer called Aaron Reed, a man who thinks he's a woman. This hoaxer said that Charlie Kirk stands Charlie Kirk believes that trans people should be lynched. That is not just untrue. It is the opposite of the truth. It is against my beliefs and against my values. I never said it nor insinuated it. That then turned into the Sacramento bee. And then the UC Chancellor Gary may. Libya is with us. Now, Libby, what have you learned about this individual? Yes. So this person is Erin Reed, a trans activist, a male who poses as a woman, and goes on Twitter to talk all about various kinds of legislation that are being passed in the U.S. and specifically digs into those bills, tracks them, and also decided that your comments when you were speaking with swimmer Riley gaines were tantamount to calling for trans people to be lynched. Anyone who watches those comments knows for sure that that's not what we're saying. Anyone who listens to you speak also knows for sure that that's how you were saying you are often advocating for peace that happens repeatedly. Yeah, so reads comments were then picked up by the Sacramento bee and others. Who determined that read was correct without looking into it at all. And I was actually sort of stunned that then those comments actually made their way to the Chancellor of UC Davis where you were speaking on Tuesday and that Chancellor while not exactly repeating those comments clearly was under the impression that comments that those were accurate.

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Cissie Graham Lynch: Using Biblical Literacy to Fight Culture Wars
"Really is confusion in the culture. And I think this, I don't know, maybe you might find a different approach here, but I think this is an attack on truth. Everybody has their own truth. We talk about that a lot these days, and we really don't talk about the fact that in this country there used to be something called absolute truth, and now everybody's got their own version of things. Absolutely. Truth is relative to the individual now, but as Christians, Jesus Christ, you know, before he was crucified, pontius pilot said before him and asked him what was true. And he stood face to face with truth. You know, we're getting ready to remember what Jesus did on the cross and celebrate Easter coming up. And we as Christians have to know that we stand on truth. And I think what's happened is the church today has become biblically illiterate. So that way when it comes to fighting these cultural awards, we can't stand because we don't know what God's word is. We don't have a biblical worldview. And for those listening, I just want to encourage you to these are tough situations, especially for parents and grandparents raising children that we have to know God's words. We have to know what we believe why we believe it. Scripture says that those who know their God will be able to stand in streets and take action. And right now, all of us need to be standing in strength, we have to be taken action in our communities and our schools, but we have to know God who he is and who his scripture is.

The Financial Guys
"lynch" Discussed on The Financial Guys
"Times. And I'm not sitting here saying George Floyd was a class a citizen because he had many, many issues as well. But Derek Chauvin had numerous issues to show that guy probably shouldn't have had a cop. Right, but there's also scenarios too, and that's a really good point that you make that literally in the insurance business. It is black and white. The expression. But it is. It's black and white. It's either a or B now my wife Ashley is a social worker. I'm sure in some scenarios, some extremely limited scenarios if a social workers with a police officer at a call, maybe that social worker can help. But Paul Pelosi would be dead. He would be dead if a social worker responded to his house with a guy with a hammer and thank God the San Francisco police department was on hand right there at that very moment where this maniac took a swing at him, took a chunk of his skull out in almost killed him. So in those scenarios, no, you can't have a social worker respond to some emergencies in some scenarios. Maybe. But we need to have that bigger picture discussion about that. And I don't think that I don't think our friends on the political left are prepared to have that. Because what happens when something like this happens? They always think, okay, we are going to hope and pray it's a white police officer. And we're going to make sure we absolutely possibly pigeonhole this scenario in that it's racism. Even go to the going so far to say 5 black police officers who murdered black citizen, that's racism. It's disingenuous and it's intellectually dishonest. Not to talk about defunding the police, lowering standards, or everything in a bigger picture, training, because if you don't, there are problem like that, what happened to members will still occur. What's actually sad about it, if you break it down at the level that it is with joy Reid's in the race baiters of the world. You are essentially at this point the boy who cried wolf. That's who you are at this point. Everything that goes wrong, you blame racism. Now that word racism doesn't even mean anything to some people, because nobody knows what it means. You've downplayed actual racism by saying everything is racism or racist. It's actually you're doing a disservice to the African American community. And that's what's sad about it. And you know what? Joy Reid won't talk about that. I will. I will be the first one to say, I feel bad for the African American community. Why? Because you keep pulling this race crap with everything and you're causing more issues in those communities and you're doing help and the worst part is that those communities don't realize it because you just keep beating them over the head with it. And especially in the case of what happened in Memphis, your father now. You have a beautiful baby girl, doesn't look anything like you. She's gorgeous. God bless her. She's a perfect just like me. Beautiful girl. I'm a proud parent. I have kids. Watching the Tyree Nichols video. What struck me as a parent was this poor helpless man screaming for his mother as he was murdered by 5 black police officers. Screaming for his mother, and yet this is a scenario that seems so black and white.

The Big Picture
"lynch" Discussed on The Big Picture
"But in some ways, maybe it belongs lower because he is melding himself to material in a way that's different. The material exists as the play, and it is a project that he was hired for as opposed to one that he purely originated. I just think the performance of John Hurt in it and seeing lynch orchestrate some more conventional elements of filmmaking while still making something that is so powerful and humane, but I know it won't make our number one, so I'm okay with it at three. I think that's correct. I think I've had a similar thought to the one you just shared, which is that wouldn't it be fun for David Lynch to get a high tone assignment in 2022. You know, to get an adaptation of some kind or to borrow into someone's life and try to capture it on screen and tell it. That would be cool. It would be cool, 'cause he was good at it. He had it, he had a skill for making the conventional seem unconventional. And I will say that, you know, for the people who love, you know, like, there's all these sites that retweet, you know, just interview, snippets. This is like what these sites do. There is not a single David Lynch Mel Brooks anecdote that is not priceless and make you want to cry. The greatest odd couple same wavelength friendship. There's that story about lynch not having a coat when he got to London and Mel Brooks buying him a coat because he was cold and he wore the coat every single day on set and then kept it and then years later when Brooks got some lifetime achievement award, lynch showed up wearing the coat which he had kept in perfect condition. Like he cared for it. That idea of caring for a coat is such a David Lynch thing. All of those anecdotes, though, do so much more for me for Mel Brooks than they do for David Lynch. The idea that Mel Brooks sat in a screening room and watched a racer head and said, who is that? I want that guy. Is just tremendously powerful. And it elevates a person who obviously we all love Mel Brooks Mel Brooks is a is a global treasure. But when you get that dash of sophistication, that sense of artistry on top of his obvious sense of humor and kind of coming from that working class comedy television background. It makes him feel like more of an artist as well. So it's wonderful and that's a great film. And the fact that he wouldn't put his name on it as a producer because he didn't want people to think it was somehow Mel Brooks making a sick parody of the elephant man. Lynch has had other great patrons. I mean, Dino De Laurentiis is one too. And De Laurentiis kept his word, which is the only reason blue velvet got made. That's right. Right is Dina was like, you make dune? And I'm trying to do it a bad deal eventually suppression. You know, you make dune and then you can make something small for yourself. And then that becomes blue velvet, which I would have it too. Wait, just quickly, I do want to site that I was told that Chris Pratt's Mario voice was inspired directly by Dino De Laurentiis. So I get that on the record. You would have blue velvet at two and mulholland drive it one is that you're feeling. At this point, yes. I didn't rewatch mulholland drive to prepare for this.

The Big Picture
"lynch" Discussed on The Big Picture
"I mean, it also feels kind of hard to rank people who made 40 movies. People do that sometimes and you're like, yeah, no, definitely, how could you have that at number 27? How could you have that as the 27th Soderbergh movie? I would say that in lynch's case, I just think it's hard because they all mean a lot. So I mean, how do you quantify something that means the world to you versus something that means just slightly less, but I'm also what I like about this and we did this years ago with my Coen book with the Coens, it is fun sometimes not because it's not binding or definitive to rank things, but it does give you a chance to sort of advocate for things that maybe the listenership hasn't watched in a while. And then you feel like you're giving them the gift maybe of seeking out that movie if they are so moved. That to me is the purpose of the exercise. I think you summed it up. It is. Sure, it's to entice people to listen to something that is easy to understand and it's formulated for their simplified brain, but it's also just nice to be able to say the names of films and share your enthusiasm for them in a way that is kind of let's say the names of some films. I've changed my mind. It's a great idea. Thank you, Adam. Number ten is dune. I'm sorry. I won't hear otherwise. That's the one. I, of course, revisited dune in anticipation of the most recent Denis Villeneuve. Adaptation of the Herbert novel, you get what he was going for. There's some cool stuff in that movie. Confirmation that David Lynch is not suited to this kind of storytelling and also it seemed like quite a hell of a production to wrangle and I'm grateful that it happened because it obviously set him on a trajectory that made him who he is today as a filmmaker. It proves that the 1980s could happen to anybody. The 80s, the 80s can happen to anybody. It's too bad. Okay, number 9. Now what do we do? Well, this is where I don't know what we're going to do in terms of a consensus list, but here's where I'm going to be some people think that this is a ridiculous choice. But for me, my least favorite is wild at heart. And that's a film that I'm not sure I'm right. I mean, I'm probably not, but I just believe that if you love a filmmaker and if you love what they do, part of that is just being honest with yourself when it doesn't work. And that is one of the only times I have ever myself felt like lynch is straining. I could read a very persuasive essay and have read persuasive essays that say the opposite. And say, this is as un unfiltered and unstrained as he gets and that this is as good as lynch ever was and it deserved its Palme d'or. I grant that that is a fair point of view, but it's definitely my least favorite. And by some distance. That's interesting.

The Big Picture
"lynch" Discussed on The Big Picture
"A realization that there's a lot of things that he's fantasizing about, I think, that are just not, they're not to be. And the fact that she makes that line makes it so sexualized. And so cold and so dismissive that stayed with me for years. Unlike in most of Twin Peaks storytelling, you know, when the absurd is happening, you're thinking about alternate dimensions or a kind of dream state, but there is a sequence in fire walk with me that feels very directly correlated to lost highway. And it's the scene in the pink room, which is the sort of the club scene where the noise is so the sort of music is so loud that the sequence is subtitled now when you watch it. And Laura Palmer's character and her friend Donna and two men who are essentially Johns and she's starting to work as she's working as a prostitute at this point and her pimp Jacques is in the club with her. And then all kind of drinking and hanging out and talking and they have this kind of obtuse conversation in which odd things like I am the great went are uttered, but also it's kind of very direct. It's very clear what is sort of happening, which is that Laura has unfortunately dragged Donna into this world and she sees her as an innocent and it's kind of a self reflection of what I did to myself and how I shouldn't let my friend slip into this hell with me. And the music that is playing in that scene is the scariest, most beautiful, fake Dwayne Eddie 50s film score that you'll ever hear in your life and it echoes in my mind and it's like, it's true terror. It's not someone being brutally murdered. It's just terrifying what is happening in that space. We're meant to look like it's meant to look like we're in hell. And lost highway is sort of two hours of hell. The whole movie, it feels like you have been dragged into someone, the sewer of someone's mind, and he won't let you out. And I like what you said about kind of confronting the audience to say, do you like this? Because it's not, to me, it's not just, do you like this movie, or the damaged minds that made it. But do you like all do our movies? Do you like all stories about dead dames and awful men and the evil that they do, which is a pretty bold kind of challenge to an audience. It is, but what I imagine, I mean, I'm agreeing with everything you're saying. I just think that when he poses the question, I will point out he's not wagging his finger. He's kind of asking because it's like an interesting question. But I think that, you know, there's some filmmakers who are very successful as scolds where they ask questions like that, and with pointing that finger at you and being like, you know, this is on you. I mean, this is one of the things I wrote a bit for the ringer that I found almost transcendently obnoxious about blond. Was the idea that this needs to be rubbed in our face as if this is our problem. I think David Lynch, it's pretty clear it's his problem. And I think it's a problem that he suspects lots of other people have.

The Big Picture
"lynch" Discussed on The Big Picture
"You know, a tortured jazz saxophonist who when he goes into his psychogenic fugue, either reimagines or literally reconstitutes himself as balthazar Getty, the most callow, who gets a shot lying in his suburban backyard, just like Kyle McLaughlin and blue velvet. I mean, among other things, it's the ultimate middle aged guy movie. It's like, oh, to be young again, you know, except to be young again, basically means you have the same problems you did when you were older. I mean, the whole movie is about being unable. You're unable to outrun who or what you are, which is why you have that Mobius strip structure, dick Laurent is dead at the beginning and at the end. What I've always thought about lost highway, there's a bit of the slickness, but I've always just also found it to be a film, and part of it is the video stuff, and the way that Robert Blake is used and the way it riffs on O. J. Simpson too, in a lot of ways, because he said that that was a big inspiration, the OJ case, if not OJ and the race aspect of it, certainly celebrity and murder, right? I've always found that lost highway seems to somehow be scrutinizing me while I'm watching it. It's like the line of it. Hey kid, you like porno. The whole movie is kind of like, do you like this? If you have a good time with this guy brutally butchering his wife and go into jail for it, it's almost singularly unpleasant. Whereas I think mulholland drive is a much sadder movie in the end or just as sad, but it has lots of surface compensations. Because it's sexy and it's funny and it has lots of sweetly goofy, quirky touches. Those are not in lost highway. Yeah, I mean, you could make the case that it's in mulholland drive is a lost love story and that lost highway is not really about a person in love with anything other than like his own dying masculinity or his own perception of himself and how that's not fulfilled. There's a great line in the film that Bill Pullman's character utters when he's being interrogated by the detectives when they start receiving these videotapes with their home, which is I like to remember things my own way, how I remembered them not necessarily the way they happened. And in a way, I kind of mission statement, I would say, for the way that David Lynch translates the ideas in his mind onto the screen and maybe the way that he thinks about the world.

The Big Picture
"lynch" Discussed on The Big Picture
"And it's not even like I grew up with Twin Peaks. But the idea that there were people who did who were going to be watching this 25 years later feeling what that line means for that character. It's a happiest I've been watching anything in years. I'm not convinced that it's something as simple as fan service, and that's also something useful to talk about with fire walk with me, which is that that was the first of two total planned films. And so lynch had been thinking about the long arc of this story for a long time and felt that there was a lot more to tell. So when Twin Peaks the return came around, it wasn't WandaVision. You know what I mean? It wasn't meant to be something that was sort of capitalizing on the box office success of a recent commercial property. It was a story that kind of clearly swirls inside of him and that he had a lot more to say about. And I'm sure that it evolved over time and what the return became became something quite different, but if you look at the pure text of the story and the idea of a kind of evil force occupying this family and destroying this family, the way that many families are destroyed and trying to understand why terrible things happen in the world. That's kind of like the originating germ, I think, of many of the twin peak much of the twin peak story, by the time we get to Twin Peaks the return, we get this kind of like ancient recitation of the origin of these evil demonic forces by the time you get to that critical episode 8, which has been hailed over and over again and as more time goes by is like one of these signature things that's been made in the last ten years. I think rightly so it is so directly linked to the events of fire walk with me and the sense of

The Big Picture
"lynch" Discussed on The Big Picture
"And in the aftermath of that, she's having realizations about her own father and she sees him and she's laying on the lawn out of view of him and he is in a suit walking to his car to go to work the next day. And the camera holds on her and the look of sheer terror and the intensity of the music that is tracking that moment is so upsetting and caustic, but also ridiculous. There is something ridiculous about everything that is happening in this film that it creates a kind of totally sui generis tone. Like there's nothing really that you can compare it to. And it's also something that I keep, I think keeps a lot of people away from his work or makes it hard for them to accept what he's doing because it's sometimes just feels goofy, you know what I mean when I say that? I do. And a lot of the objections, I mean, there's objection, by the way, objections should be raised to any filmmaker. The point here is not that there aren't objections to lynch and some objections are more persuasive than others. But I think some of the low level objections to have to do with the fact that the films are not particularly realistic, which is a bugaboo that people have about narrative plausibility, or will people wouldn't say that or where people wouldn't do that. And people like that kind of ridiculousness when it's safely constrained by formula. If it's safely constrained by an action movie or a romantic comedy, actually the unlikeliness is sort of part of the fun, you know? I think that lynch is a filmmaker who a lot of people who either are honestly alienated by unconventional art or unconventional approach to narrative or character. I think they come by their reversion honestly. And I think people who want to get their back up over the idea of art, the idea that God forbid someone is making something that's a little tough or a little challenging or a little out of pocket.

The Big Picture
"lynch" Discussed on The Big Picture
"A little easier to VHS than to sneak into movies and in some ways, you know, we'll see how much we investigate this, you know, not hard to find like minded male friends, with whom to watch films. If this is not to say that lynch is not a director with female critics or defenders. And some of the most interesting writing on lynch has been from female critics. It's been from trans critics. I mean, there's interesting writing on him from all over the place. But the extent to which misogyny and violence towards women is a motif in his work, whether it says something about the person, the artist, the on screen world, the culture, the characters. You either have to talk about it for two hours, or just admit, oh, I'm just inventorying it along with the other stuff. And I think that fire walk with me is where that discussion, I think, becomes very hard to have because people say, well, there's a lot of cruelty towards, you know, Laura Palmer is not a real person. So he is putting her through that and then people turn and say, there's a lot of empathy towards Laura Palmer and it's like we better come up with some empathy because he came up with the cruel conditions that her characters put through as well. And I know that the first time that I watched the film, I don't have thin skin and I'm not pretending to be any kind of white night viewer. I mean, I sat through lots of stuff around that time and got off on it for bad reasons. That's around the first time I saw showgirls for goodness sake. A movie that's similar in some ways to fire walk with me. But all I knew about fire walk with me when I watched it as a teenager was, it made me deeply sad, it made me extremely upset and I had such a feeling of relief when it was over. That was not the same as satisfaction or catharsis. It was just like

The Big Picture
"lynch" Discussed on The Big Picture
"I think people are seeing it again because it was on screens earlier around the country and I did not know that the Canadian rating system was quite so severe. That's fascinating. You should do a 6 part series on it. It's really interesting. I mean, I don't know if I could squeeze that much blood from that stone, but it is notable, right? Because lynch's work, it feels sort of illicit and up until the straight story, everything that he made, including the prime time network TV show, felt discomforting. It made you, it pushed you off of your easy chair, you know? Well, I'll throw out an idea there, which is that, and this is not to leave a side eraser head or elephant man because God forbid you're going to make me rank these later and those do not rank low for me. I mean, elephant man is a spoiler ranks very high for me. Wonderful film. It's a wonderful film. But I don't think that in those films, whatever the unpleasantness, it's not really a form of voyeurism, and I wouldn't say that that's really present in due in either. I think that in blue velvet, starting with Colin McLaughlin in the closet, watching someone who's not his mommy, but someone's mommy, and someone who sure as hell is not his daddy, and certainly not her daddy, you know, do this bizarre nitrous aided pantomime of your parents fucking. I mean, from that moment, I think what made the films feel illicit was there was always a place for that kind of voyeurism. It's all over blue velvet in Twin Peaks. There's lots of people being watched, but there's even like psychic space where people are seeing things that they don't want to see like visions, you know? Wild at heart has visions, fire walk with me. It's like no one wants to look at this, even the characters who are looking at it don't want to look at it. And then the lost highway modernizes it with the video camera. Where the video camera in that movie is the language of voyeurism and sadism and perversion. This is one of the great 90s time capsule moments.

The Big Picture
"lynch" Discussed on The Big Picture
"Becomes a gateway to surrealism, right? I mean, you get to bunuel and Dolly and Maya Darren through lynch or you look at his own list of favorites and they're not exactly obscure, but it is helpful when you're a teenager to have him say something like I like fellini and you go, I should like fellini too. I should probably watch those movies. I think I came to him if I'm some of my high school friends might be listening and they can correct me if I'm wrong. Theatrically it was lost highway and it was sneaking into lost highway and while I am sure that I had seen blue velvet already because that was one of those movies I watched way too early because I think it was on my mom's VHS shelf lost highway and the sense of seeing a dangerous movie that I shouldn't have been at and that I kind of had to buy a ticket for something else and sneak into. That was the beginning. So again, for people who were sick of lynch, you're tired of lynch by the 90s. That's a very different thing than seeing lost highway and feeling like you're like, this is some undiscovered country. What about you? I certainly saw episodes of Twin Peaks as a kid I recall my babysitter watching that show and spending some time sitting next to her watching the show and trying to wrap my head around what the purpose of the enterprise was because it was not a sitcom, which is probably what I was spending most of my prime time hours watching. And it was not a true, dramatic procedural or even like 30 something is a contemporaneous show. It had nothing to do with that. It was one part that murder mystery that you talk about, but it was also a kind of owed slash parody of soap opera. You know, there was a clear riff on a storytelling style. It's probably the first time barring Mel Brooks that I started to think about what it meant to make art that was not wholly

The Big Picture
"lynch" Discussed on The Big Picture
"And how that movie ended up nominated for an Oscar is insane because it's, you know, pretty, pretty, pretty avant garde by multiplex Sanders, but everybody loved it. You know? And I think that he has been basking in the warm afterglow of that for the last 20 years. The art is not easy. Inland empire is incredibly unpleasant and Twin Peaks the return is as challenging as anything he's ever made. But there's no pervasive anti David Lynch sentiment every more people love him. He's beloved. It's fascinating, and even just what you said about the idea of him being nominated for mulholland drive. The same occurs to me about blue velvet. I mean, the idea of him being nominated for best director for blue velvet, no other nominations for the film. And obviously, in some circles, it was critically acclaimed and hailed as kind of a masterpiece instantaneously, but that is not an Academy Film. You know, his films are not Academy Films. They are deeply violent. They are inspired very much by both avant garde and genre, and none of those things have anything to do with what the academy usually recognizes. You know, you're already wading into the dangerous waters of interpretation. When I say this, but I mean, just to take blue velvet because we're going out of order anyway and they're all fun to talk about. They are. That movie wears the lining of the first half of 80s cinema, right? It's a bit of teenager in love. It has very faint traces, not influential traces, by the way. No one killed me for saying this. It's not inspired by John Hughes remotely. But it's in that pocket. A little bit and it has the overtly American signifiers. People wanted to read it through the political lens of Reagan and mourning in America. There's just enough in there that you can kind of see why even as an independent movie, it got some traction, and then there's just the fact of what it is. You know, I can not imagine an audience in 1986 before blue velvet is a series of classic scenes to be remembered. Can you imagine? The mommy daddy, gas huffing, Hitchcock through the closet rape scene, the first time around, you can not react to it, right? It's extraordinary and scary now, as it was then. I mean, it none of those things have aged, and that's another thing that I think is powerful about the work. Let's just say a couple of things about him as a man, because he's basically become kind of a cartoon character at this point. He's become a living meme in many ways and partially of his own choice and participation, too. Without question, I think he has always played up certain aspects of his persona in a way to make himself a similar kind of rockstar driven auteur as you describe, but he does so in all of the opposite ways. He's never in pursuit of cool.

The Big Picture
"lynch" Discussed on The Big Picture
"Picture, a conversation show about David Lynch more than 500 episodes into this show. We have somehow never had reason to dig into one of America's greatest living filmmakers, but this year marks the 30th anniversary of his film Twin Peaks fire walk with me, and the 25th anniversary of lost highway and other film of his, which is celebrating with a brand new four K restoration from the criterion collection this week. It's a beautiful piece of work. I highly recommend people check it out. If they like that movie, I've picked these two movies because I consider them on the whole the scariest and arguably the least appreciated of lynch's work, we can debate that here. Here to debate it and talk about lynch and all of his work and all of his majesty is ringer contributor Adam name and hi Adam. Hey, Sean, it's also like the three and a half month anniversary of him not having a film it can. Remember in Twitter where people were like, David Lynch movie. It's really exciting and people are like, that's not true. That site's never correct. And it didn't happen. There was no lynch movie this year. I bought it hook line and sinker too. I was a true lynchian rube walking into the room planning out how I was going to cover this new lynch film that has not coming. And you know, it's understandable lynch is 76 years old, a few years ago he made a 17 hour film for showtime. It's not as if he hasn't done any work in recent years, but he hasn't made a film in a long, long time. And so we're stuck in anniversary land in terms of having conversations with him. Let me just start with this ad. I'm like, what's your relationship to David Lynch? My relationship to the I call them every day, you know, talk about the weather. No, I mean, anecdotally, he was the first really intimidating interview I ever did. I was like 2020 years old covering tiff in 2001, the September 11th tiff. And got thrown in a hotel room with David Lynch. And of course I did a terrible interview, and he was a wonderful guy. He understood that someone's looking for copies, so he gave it.

WGBB Sports Talk New York
"lynch" Discussed on WGBB Sports Talk New York
"Mookie wilson there you go folks again cock along with ed lynch now. Do you remember your mets debut. Ed i sure do yeah i I believe it was my first appearance out of the bullpen. As a professional it was in august. Thirtieth nineteen eighty and candlestick park right and the the first hitter faced was mike. Id down the middle ground ball. Shortstop took a bad hop. Hit frank to verizon the throat bounce in foul territory. He wanted his second with a double. And and and frank was on the field for like five minutes. And i'm on the mound bite. My pinker nails go one pitch in the big league guy. Got a double on the ground ball. The short shortstop is injured. And i'm sitting there. A nervous wreck wind up pitching terribly. Yell was not a good day you and i. I did not pitch for thirteen date and we lost thirteen consecutive games. Right off the game chase stadium on september thirteenth nineteen eighty against chicago cubs. And i want one of the big as in my career being back in shea stadium pitching and winning as a mess right. You snap that losing streak. That's right. We're speaking with ed lynch tonight on sports. Talk new york now. you were in With the mets. During the bad times. And i know we spoke about that last week with the bad dude on the show off jonah stearns and he's got some stories that guy let me tell you Now who are some of the luminaries that you've played with the mets in those days. Ed oh we had elliott matic's we had We had bill allman the ad dunks. Doug flynn of course. Jon stearns Why play with..

Horizon Talk Radio's podcast
"lynch" Discussed on Horizon Talk Radio's podcast
"Are tired now they soon times. The reasons are the things they've done for someone else. I'm glad we at that time now. Only a baby comfort back. It's small way. I was told you may be and always been. I'm on my way seen. Just how much way earn me is gone now. You invest you. Were able to see. Just how much i love you. He waded full. Well that was richard lynch for me. That's such an emotional. Some guests that may be Well i love that song. And i'm so thankful that That you play that. And i would. Mother's day is just can't bet recently in. But i think every every young man and woman out there you know. Thanks an awful lot. Their mom so kind of goes without saying you didn't always listen to the whole track surfing last night malady. that's nice. Catchy country sound have picked them that way. I just i guess. I'm too as spiritual i'm drawn to pick things at work and that's way it. Every time we have a show about the ones pates to different people that the ones that mean more to them than the one in the top of the list as well. You must be doing something right. Because you're making good connections my friend. Yes of spiritual really. I mean if you can't be good to people than why buffett doing in the first place just yeah absolutely. I let the quite from the by february twelfth. Twenty one Which lynch will release his brand new album. And i love the title. My guitar drips country than kinda sums. It up doesn't it doesn't To them dog super no was he. Yes he was. I was very fortunate to play with the super bowl back in the nineties when he was really really hot. And you know being played around the world and i was fortunate enough to meet doug and do some shows with him but then we got reacquainted again. You know over the last five or six years and we just lost Last november But you know he. He had a big influence on me and I'm glad that i could write a tribute song for him. You know my and his words were my drift. My guitar trips country. So i played the song for him after i wrote it and and He'll only lasted a couple of weeks after he heard the song but really really glad that he got to hear it. Because i wanted what to hear the tribute. That i had for him sixty lesson. I'm sorry it was only six years of is ya association. It's way way way too young and the fact that He left us old world. Then you know it's kind of a shame. Imagine all the songs that never got recorded or never got written because he left us world way too soon and so. That's you know my just my little little way of saying how much i appreciate him and his music so good tribute to tune bowling ovalles. Tim has been lovely speaking to another. You probably got things to do as well. I'm second guest today. Which is a math information to met michael from. Mta's i've been done to sometimes free guests. Every am die for the last four weeks. So i'm glad. I'm at the end of that and in july Yet just further websites. I if you've got any that is important or just one. The link told them will the best way to find out about me and my music is the go to richard lynch band dot com. And you can see everything you need to know about me and the new music and our merchandise our shows and everything that you ever wanna know maybe more than what you all know. Just go to richard lynch band dot com and and you'll find me right there and love to hear from you find folks out there much we too. It's been a pleasure. And i will send details to Mike about the upcoming ideas. Sounds wonderful sir. Thank you for having me. And i hope we cross paths in the near future l. publicly in the country area near you you never know. Thank you sir. Thank you bye-bye bye-bye without was fantastic. What to say anymore right that was shown for tonight but in people horizon radius looking guests and hosts for further information. Email horizon talk radio at outlook dot com..

Midlife Surfer: Surf Podcast
"lynch" Discussed on Midlife Surfer: Surf Podcast
"Oh are you midlife surfer podcast listeners. Like surfer podcast listener. My name is jeff. I appreciate you joining me. It's nice to see you again. We have more listeners. And you guys send me messages and you say hi and i have a couple to go through prior to this interview with our friend old friend. Ryan lynch of timber surf co ryan. Lynch made me a six. Oh simmons loyal listeners will know about this board in iva..

The Sue Plex Podcast
"lynch" Discussed on The Sue Plex Podcast
"Gentlemen. Welcome to another edition of the suplex. Pocus i'm sarah i'm your host. Today we are about to start our interview with. Jj lynch jj has been a trainee for a wonderful school called buckle locks by south london and we are about to detail his journey in the Seen so far so sit back. Relax and enjoy this episode with j. j. ledge woken to the next edition of the superplex cost. I am here with wrestling guilty. Pleasure mr j j league how are you my friends. How are you yeah. I'm very well. Thank you very lovely to To.

Thoroughbred Racing Radio Network
"lynch" Discussed on Thoroughbred Racing Radio Network
"Heard you call tally nat. What so you know. Everybody knows me tally. Actually a ton of people didn't even know. I went out on my own because nobody knew my real name was italian so i go by either. We love it. Yeah as long as they're announcing the your name 'em horse going into the winners circle you don't care exactly but thank you so much for having me. My pleasure. Tally lynch everybody and wendell fong breaks through and breaks the ice first win of any kind and stake win at that in the fire. Plug and many many more to come stay right here. We got about fifteen minutes to close out the morning and as soon as manny wa one early on the day in the kenner at fairgrounds on saturday. The call went out on my twitter feed. When are you going to have catman. You gotta have catman and here. He is wayne catalano. Congratulations happy new year. Hey thank you very much news to you and your family will help the healthy at process and save to you guys and your team and I gotta ask because it feels like manny wa this This feels like a very clever. Move to make this Turf try and it pays off immediately. Yeah you know what we had cominated. Breeders cup sprint. Also in dirt race and we have Obviously voted toward their. Av was leaning towards the grass enough. We finally got him on the grass puzzle grass. I guess to get kicked around. Get him on as get him on the grass. This is our first opportunity that we felt. We had a shot. It turned out..