35 Burst results for "Mabel"

Maple Finance 2.0 Introduces Modular Contracts

Ethereum Daily

01:03 min | 3 months ago

Maple Finance 2.0 Introduces Modular Contracts

"Maple finance released maple two, an upgrade to the protocol that introduces a modular smart contract architecture, the new contracts can scale a protocol to handle tens of billions of dollars in loans, updates included the removal of a 30 day capital lockup auto compounding interest and scheduled and prorated withdrawals. Maple two also adopts ERC four 6 two 6, a tokenized vault standard that allows for interoperability with other protocols using the same standard. The protocol plans to onboard a broader range of pool delegates in an effort to diversify landing options. Mabel also plans to release an SDK for developers early next year. Support for maple solano will also be discontinued as the protocol re shifts its focus to Ethereum, maple finance is a decentralized credit market that allows institutional borrowers to take on under collateralized loans. Lenders earn yield by depositing assets into maple pools. The protocol has facilitated over $2 billion in total loans.

Maple Finance Maple Solano Ethereum Mabel
"mabel" Discussed on WGN Radio

WGN Radio

04:39 min | 9 months ago

"mabel" Discussed on WGN Radio

"He gives me mine and says don't have your phone just come back to me when you want love baby baby don't you lift up and I don't even want you to open up again. I'm not a James and that is maple John. That's MAB LE. Mabel John and that is love Willie John's oldest sister and that was on tamla. In fact Mabel was the first female singer that Berry Gordy signed unto his what would be Motown, but Motown corporation anyway, although Tamil was the label at the time. And he co wrote that along with sister Gwen and Billy Davis and it didn't do anything. But it was a fine record. I thought, but Mabel was the oldest in the family and I think she's still alive. She'd be 91 years old this year. It actually she turned 92 at some point this year. I don't know what her birthday was, but in any event, she was born in bastard, Louisiana, and they moved to Arkansas a little while he was John a little bit of John was born Then they all moved the family. There's a lot of kids moved to a Detroit. And that's where she was working when she graduated high school in the 40s. She was working for an insurance company. Friendship mutual that Berry Gordy's mother ran. And later, she left the company and was in business college and all that, but she ran into misses Gordy, who told her, you know, my son berries right in songs now. He's looking for people to record them. So sure enough, they got together. And this was in the 50s and this continued, in fact, she was performing and it was Barry who got her in there. I'm sure at the flame bar, yeah, in fact she was there for the last show, Billie Holiday did. And then very wrought out Gordy records and she was signed to UA, which Barry did with a lot of his early artists before he had labels, but didn't release any of that. And then Gordy's only able tamla, when that started up, they put out the song, I just played for you. Who wouldn't love a man like that in 1960? And absolutely no success. And they did three or four others like that. Great records, actions speak louder than words and no love. And nothing happened. And they were backed by the miracles or the marvelettes or Marvin the vandellas are what would become the supremes. They were all doing background vocals. And after a while, within a couple of years, Barry Gordy realized that, you know, the future is in these kids, not in early blues artists. So he thinned the roster and that was it for Mabel. Mabel John. But she became a and did a lot of backing on the Ray Charles stuff. And then she signed with stacks and managed to get a chart record on the country charts that did pretty well, but it didn't crack pop. And they released several singles on her and none of them did anything. So she went back to the rails for a while and then she left secular music in 73 and was doing Christian gospel axe managing them and things like things like that. And she continued along that vein founding a charity for the homeless in Los Angeles and all that. And as I say, as far as I know, she is still alive in Los Angeles at 91 years old, so unless you have other information, that's what I think the story is. So 888-876-5593 Fran is an Austin. What's up, Fran? Hi. Leah was talking last night about talking in your sleep? Yes. And I have done that pretty much all my life. And I can have conversations in my sleep. And the only way that Gary knows it is that it starts not making sense. And he'll say, are you asleep? And people have asked me, if I'm sleeping, are you asleep? Yes. Right. So somewhere I know that I'm sleeping, not always, but oh yeah, and I have conversations. I used to sleepwalk when I was a kid. Oh, jeez. And so I don't know. It's not unusual. It can get interesting. I'm sorry, what? I say it's not unusual. And like I say, the side effect of some pharmaceutical. I'm over. Hang on a minute. Don't go away. Well, we have another hour to talk. And we will on WGN radio. This

Berry Gordy Mabel John Mabel Gordy maple John Willie John Motown corporation Billy Davis tamla Barry Motown Gwen John Billie Holiday Louisiana Arkansas James Detroit Marvin Ray Charles
"mabel" Discussed on Encyclopedia Womannica

Encyclopedia Womannica

06:28 min | 10 months ago

"mabel" Discussed on Encyclopedia Womannica

"This Pride Month will manica is brought to you exclusively by Mercedes Benz. Together, we're honoring people who've expanded the norms of gender and sexuality in the performing arts. Mercedes Benz embraces the freedom of individual expression and continues to support and stand with the LGBTQIA+ community. Listen all month long as we share stories of proud individuals whose authentic expression in their lives and bodies of work have challenged norms, driving society forward. Hello. From wonder media network, I'm Jenny Kaplan, and this is will manica. This month we're highlighting queer stars of the stage and screen. Women who expanded the norms of gender and sexuality behind the scenes and in the limelight. Today we're talking about a woman who lived boldly and proudly. She was a black lesbian who started her career as a Harlem renaissance performer and transformed into an activist. Let's talk about Mabel Hampton. Mabel Hampton was born on May 2nd, 1902 in Winston Salem, North Carolina. When she was just two months old, her mother passed away from suspected poisoning, so Mabel went to live with her grandmother. Mabel lived with her grandmother until her grandmother died in 1909. At the age of 7, Mabel's life was again uprooted. She was forced to move to New York City to live with her aunt and uncle. The transition was not easy. After her uncle sexually assaulted her, Mabel ran away and didn't look back. She recalled leaving the house with nothing but the dress she was wearing and seeking refuge at a playground. A woman named bessie white found Mabel and gave her a place to stay at bessie's home in New Jersey. Mabel then enjoyed a few years of stability before bessie passed away. At the age of 17, Mabel was once again alone. As she struggled to find her footing, Mabel was wrongly arrested for prostitution. She spent two years in Bedford hills correctional facility for women in Westchester county. Shortly after her release, Mabel began her career on stage. She joined an all black female troop at Coney Island and worked as a chorus dancer. It was during this time that an older woman introduced her to the word lesbian. A one night fling with this woman opened up a whole new world for mavo. As the Harlem renaissance bloomed, so did Mabel. She left the Coney Island group and took her talents to Harlem. She danced in several all black productions and entertained guests at private parties thrown by notable Harlem renaissance figures. Some highlights of her stage career were performing at the garden of joy for a predominantly queer audience. Dancing at the Lafayette theater and working as an actress at the cherry lane theater. This period was rich with socializing and self discovery. Mabel frequently spent time with stars like Gladys Bentley, Ethel Waters, and Alberta hunter. Mabel enjoyed performing, but when the Harlem renaissance came to an end, so did her theater career. She instead supported herself by cleaning homes for rich white families in New York. One day, while waiting at the bus stop, Mabel saw a beautiful woman. She looked regal like a duchess. Her name was Lillian. After that day at the bus stop, Mabel and Lillian didn't leave each other's sides. They fell in love and moved to an apartment in The Bronx. Their home was a Mecca for a close knit group of creative and diverse Friends. When they struggled financially, they supported themselves by throwing rent parties. Despite her best efforts, Mabel couldn't find work beyond the domestic sphere. In the 1970s, she took a job as a janitor at the Jacobi hospital in The Bronx. She held this position for nearly two decades. Outside of work, Mabel enjoyed researching and collecting books on African American history and queer culture. She was a proud black lesbian and leaned into all aspects of her identity. She exemplified intersectionality. While addressing the crowd at the 1984 New York City pride parade, Mabel said, I maple Hampton have been a lesbian all my life for 82 years. And I am proud of myself and my people. I would like all my people to be free in this country and all over the world. By gay people and my black people. In 1976, Mabel and Lillian's house burned down. Homeless, the pair moved in with their friend Joe Nestlé and her partner in park slope Brooklyn. This was a pivotal moment in Mabel's life. She referred to it as an adventure in lesbian families. Mabel said, down here it was just like two couples, Joan and Deborah and Mabel and Lillian. We got along lovely, and we played, we sang, we ate. It was marvelous. I will never forget it. Joan had founded the lesbian herstory archives out of this apartment a couple of years earlier. The archives were meant to preserve lesbian heritage. Bebo was a founding member. She made it her job to tell the stories of black lesbians in the 20th century. She would also greet visitors. And in 1976, she donated her substantial collection of lesbian Pulp Fiction novels. In 1978, after 46 years together, Mabel lost the love of her life. Heartbroken, she threw herself into the causes and activities that fulfilled her. She marched in the first national gay and lesbian civil rights march in Washington, D.C., and appeared in the film silent pioneers and before stonewall. She was also an active member of senior action in a gay environment. On October 26th, 1989, Mabel Hampton passed away. To this day, Mabel celebrated for her fearlessness and her commitment to civil rights and social justice. When asked the question, when did you come out? Mabel simply replied, what do you mean? I was never in. All month, we're talking about queer stars of the stage and screen..

Mabel Mabel Hampton Mercedes Benz Jenny Kaplan bessie bessie white Lillian Bedford hills correctional fac Coney Island Lafayette theater cherry lane theater Gladys Bentley Alberta hunter New York City Winston Jacobi hospital Salem Bronx Westchester county Ethel Waters
"mabel" Discussed on Encyclopedia Womannica

Encyclopedia Womannica

05:18 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on Encyclopedia Womannica

"Hi, Friends. I'm Alison Russell. I'm a Grammy nominated singer, songwriter, poet and activist. All month, I'll be your guest host for romantica as we explore the contributions of black women in music. Today's woman is known as the singer's singer. She was a famous cabaret performer and an inspiration to some of the most famous voices of music history from Sinatra to holiday. Her voice and act was the template. Please welcome Mabel Mercer. Mabel was born on February 3rd, 1900 in Burton on Trent, staffordshire, England. Her father was a black American musician and died before she was born. Her mother was a white British vaudeville singer and actress. When Mabel was 14, she left her convent school to join her aunt's vaudeville ensemble and began her career in cabaret. In the following years, Mabel joined will Garland's all black cast of singers, dancers and comedians. And later, the London premiere of showboat, which starred fellow mannequin, Alberta hunter. She began singing in Paris after filling in for a male quartets, sick tenor, and continued singing at celebrated cabaret. She found great success at a nightclub called brick tops where cold Porter had a permanent table. Despite her early start in show business, Mabel was a self proclaimed introvert. In later years, she'd recall her early gigs with horrible stage fright. It may have been this shyness that influenced her unique method of singing. At brick tops, she'd sing audience members requests directly to them, taking a seat at their table. She often compared her songs to stories, emphasizing interpretation, diction, lyrics, and projection, over strict vocal technique. Allegedly, her delivery was so delicate, a Professor of English once used her records in classes to demonstrate fine diction. In 1938, with World War II on the horizon, Mabel left Paris. She spent some time in The Bahamas before marrying an openly gay musician. Kelsey Farr of the delta rhythm boys. This granted her an entry Visa so she could travel to the U.S.. Mabel and Kelsey never lived together, but they remained legally married until his death in 1961. When she got to the U.S., Mabel performed seated in a high backed armchair with her hands folded in her lap. It became her signature method. During the next decades, she performed in New York's swankiest nightclubs. She had engagements at northern bloom, Tony's on 52nd, the byline room, downstairs at the upstairs, the saint Regis, and the Carlyle cafe. As she got older, maple's voice deepened from its then famous soprano. Mabel herself once said her voice was an acquired taste, which grew on people like a barnacle. But she had always had a unique voice in delivery. The likes of which Billie Holiday Matt can coal Barbara cook and Bobby short all credited as a teacher in their careers. Singer Johnny Mathis admired her so much. He told audiences asking him for an encore to go to the saint Regis instead to listen to Mabel perform. She's also credited with keeping alive many, many songs that went on to become jazz standards. In 1977, Mabel returned to London for the first time in 40 years. Her return was so highly anticipated the BBC filmed three evenings of her performances and devoted an entire week to a series of late night half hour television broadcasts, a first time honor for the channel. Mabel entered semi retirement in 1979, and took part in concerts sporadically through the 1980s. But at this later stage of her career, her impact was palpable. She received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Ronald Reagan in 1983. In 1984, stereo review magazine, who had awarded Mabel, their first ever award of merit in 1975 in honor of her 75th birthday, renamed the award after her. May will also receive two honoree doctor of music degrees from Boston's berklee college of music, and the New England conservatory of music..

Mabel Alison Russell Mabel Mercer Alberta hunter Kelsey Farr Grammy Sinatra Paris staffordshire Trent cabaret Burton Garland Carlyle cafe Porter Billie Holiday Matt London England U.S. The Bahamas
A Review of 'Only Murders in the Building' -- Steve Martin’s Hit-and-Miss Whodunnit

Fresh Air

01:25 min | 1 year ago

A Review of 'Only Murders in the Building' -- Steve Martin’s Hit-and-Miss Whodunnit

"Murders in the building is set in an old fictional upper west side. New york apartment building called. the are konia. it's a place where aging rockstars and even more aging tv and theatre stars live side by side but in relative isolation until that is a murder in the building brings them closer together. Some as grieving neighbors others a suspects in three in particular as amateur investigators capitalizing on the murder to launch a literally homegrown. Crime series podcast. Those three are charles along ago. Crime show tv star. Played by steve martin. Oliver past his prime broadway director played by martin short and mabel a young new arrival to the building play by selena gomez as co-creator martin is very generous with his material he gives his co stars many of the best lines and scenes while he's largely content to play straight man or toss away. Droll one liners from the very start. Only murders is fun to watch because these two old friends. Steve martin and martin short so obviously enjoy playing off one another as evident from their recent stage show. Netflix special. Called steve martin and martin short and evening. You will forget for the rest of your life. There is fond of each other as they are of making fun of each other

Steve Martin Martin Short New York Mabel Martin Selena Gomez Oliver Charles Netflix
Why It Pays to Be More Grateful and How to Show It by Dr Jenny Brockis

Optimal Living Daily

02:40 min | 1 year ago

Why It Pays to Be More Grateful and How to Show It by Dr Jenny Brockis

"Why it pays to be more grateful man how to show it by dr jenny. Baucus of dr jenny. Baucus dot com. What are you grateful for. According to cicero gratitude is more than being the greatest virtue. He described it as the mother of all other remaining virtues gratitude. This isn't about remembering to write your christmas. Thank you letter to auntie mabel. Who sent you that hideous pair of socks or thinking. Your mother-in-law for the huge dish of soggy overcooked brussel sprouts. That just got put on your plate at a family get together. This is about real gratitude that is authentic and heartfelt why that matters is because showing gratitude has been shown to dramatically ramp up your level of mental wellbeing. It's been described as an essential component for employee engagement. It has a positive effect on your physical health and resilience. In fact there's so much going for gratitude is hard to find a reason why you wouldn't want to include more gratitude in your life. Gratitude boosts recovery as we move into the new living with kovic era of heard twenty twenty one described as the year of recovery recovery from all our adversity financial insecurity economic downturn and mental health challenges. While i believe it's going to take somewhat longer than one year. Gratitude is an important part of our wellbeing armory for recovery helping us to distinguish between what is important and what is not to stay focused on what is possible and to strengthen our patience humility and wisdom which has been wearing a little thin for patients recovering from heart attack or other cardiac illness. The more grateful patients were found to have better sleep less fatigue and lower levels of inflammation in their recovery face. Meaning they recovered well while in the grace study. Researchers found that the most grateful patients were more energized. Engaged proactive in their own. Healthcare and motivated to make the necessary long-term behavioral changes to stay well breast cancer accounts for twenty five percent of cancers experienced by women when my mom lost her best friend breast cancer while still in her forties. It took her a long time to recover from that loss as gp and in my own circle of friends of known many who have endured the trauma of being diagnosed with the disease and then undertaking the long road to recovery with chemotherapy and surgery but surviving. That is only half the story. What then remains the ongoing fear for currents and possible death this is where gratitude interventions have been found to produce a positive effect and improve psychological functioning better coping angrier perceive support gratitude is linked to wellbeing.

Dr Jenny Baucus Auntie Mabel Kovic Cicero Cardiac Illness Breast Cancer Heart Attack Cancers
"mabel" Discussed on Behind The Screen

Behind The Screen

04:10 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on Behind The Screen

"Even in.

"mabel" Discussed on Behind The Screen

Behind The Screen

08:32 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on Behind The Screen

"As i watched what has happened in our country. I have felt a strong sense that we no longer had a common language to talk about civics and about governance and understand that civics is not a partisan conversation And i think we have allowed ourselves to believe that. We don't have power and i think their forces trying to make us believe we don't have power And i believe that that the superpower of animation and songs could potentially remind kids at the ages of fourteen to eighteen that they are active parts active citizens and they can drive the ship of this country if they get involved. and so. that's that was really the impetus was selfish. I needed to feel like i was doing something about what i was seeing in the news every day. It's it's a it's a really smart idea and obviously other people thought so too because you got a lot of pupil involved including your executive producers president and michelle obama. How did they get involved. I had the audacity to ask. I suppose i. I was at a dinner party at a think tank weekend so very lottie da and i walked over to talk to norman. Lear who i've known for a couple of years in say god we gotta start talking about civics. How are we going to do. This and kenya was there. Can you barris. And who's also an executive producer on this exactly and we were both about to start at net flicks and by the end of it that night. We relied change the world and of course you think that is just a cocktail party chatter. But within the first week of arriving at netflix we were meeting in his office and talking. About what the scope of it could be in very soon after the announcement come out that the obamas were coming to netflix and it seemed like why wouldn't we ask and we did and they said yes and they were very very hands on partners. From the beginning both the production company pre and add antonia but also the president the first lady. The president was hands on involved in picking the topics. I came up with the idea of doing an active citizen piece. He's the one who said let's age it up so couldn't couldn't ask for more. It also opens a lot of doors to have the obamas now. Now how did it did it work. Did you start with the composers. Or did you start with the directors or did everyone come together to create their own. We the first thing that happened was creating a list of the ten topics and that was done with the president with two six teachers in two professors and once we had the ten topics we were also working on creating a list of ten directors who represented we the people we wanted. Ten different animation styles We wanted to two percent men fifty percent women. Lgbtq all different diversity. In every way of thinking about animation including having a peter ramsey trish ago jose gutierrez and also having up and comers like mabel working on the project and victoria vincent So that was all very intentional. How we paired each thing. The music went. I and it was church and state between the music and the animation and each one kinda came about in a different way lin-manuel miranda was the first one and we let him choose and it was two years ago and balance of power felt very relevant at that moment. branded carlile. Her whole life and career is about speaking out and using her voice. First amendment made a lot of sense in terms of animation. The only one that i knew who i wanted to do. What topic was hor-. Hey an immigration and that was because i had run into him on the day that he had his ceremony where he became a us citizen so he had just gone through the immigration process and into. It felt really personal. And obviously personal is always better right Would you tell our listeners. Some of the composers and some of the artists who are involved shore We have lin-manuel miranda adam lambert. We have her. We have geno monet. Corday kyle beebe wreksa. Brandi carlile dovey digs brittany howard. Adam lambert i mean it's it's you know the list goes on one. The list goes on and on and you. You can't start a project thinking. You're going to get this scope of musical artists involved and then in terms of the animation artists peter ramsey or. Hey gutierrez and again peter being. He won an oscar. A few years ago for spiderman. And and look getting someone like peter involved. He was extremely busy at the time and fighting his schedule was a was a process but i knew he cared deeply about politics about civics about where the country was headed and and then honestly we got the her song in and peter was just in the process of doing the like slow. I love the project. But i don't have time and i could feel. I knew that was happening. And as i said can you can. I just have three minutes of your time gonna send you a song. And i sent him the her song and ten minutes later i gotta taxed. I said i'm in. And i knew that that song was going to was gonna move him in that direction and that kind of broke it. Open a lot of things about the entire process. Well let's talk about some of these episodes mabel. Why don't we start with yours the first amendment and the song speak your mind. Would you tell us about the the music and the The look of the animation that you wanted to to apply to this project for sure. yeah so when. Chris actually brought me on. She showed me this demo brandy done and it was an incredibly stripped-down analog raw demo and i really wanted to capture that feeling visually and normally i already draw quite a textually. I try to keep things very spontaneous. So i figured to keep the visual style. Textural and very analog feeling keep the crew smallest ball so it's a bit of an indie production. The look was very serve like traditional so as opposed to doing a lot of backgrounds digitally. We went for pencil. The animation style isn't super. It's not like super perfect or really on model which i was actually pushing for basically something very authentic very genuine to sort of capture the kind of raw energy that brandy had in her song the the first amendment it it encompasses a lot. You know five really important freedoms and the song that brennan had written is beautiful. Song covers everything basically. And i kind of wanted to create the sort of visual journey and highlight kind of a narrative story of this character becoming a catalyst for to recipe people to kind of rise up and so also a visual journey of self expression if you will so I feel like throughout the short just to see people solely opened up and voice themselves. Where what they want right what they want and just take to. The streets is a really liberating to see. Yeah i mean this song when it came in Just blew me away. Felt like dylan for our time. And for a long time i was walking around with the with this track on on my phone and it was around the same time that the george floyd protests were happening and and i wasn't the only person there were people in the obama team as well we would go to these protests and think. This song is all about how important it is that we get out on the streets and that we have the right to assemble and the right to speak out and we couldn't wait for the song too. I mean. I hope we don't have another moment where it is so important for us to take to the streets but i imagine that we will and i'm excited for this song to match that and mabel for me. It was such a perfect. The song is so analog and her style is so analog and they were just a perfect marriage and it is it is just such a beautiful beautiful piece of animation will. Let's listen to a clip from.

lottie da obamas netflix peter ramsey trish jose gutierrez victoria vincent manuel miranda barris mabel manuel miranda adam lambert geno monet Corday kyle beebe brittany howard peter ramsey Hey gutierrez michelle obama Lear peter antonia
"mabel" Discussed on The Read

The Read

06:51 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on The Read

"Fucking kids to think way stinky like. I'm so confused. Our children not supposed to be. I mean this is like i mean literally like i mean yes. Purpose of school is an issue to think a certain way yes like right but they're trying to imply that it's going to teach them to hear. He says critical race theory teaches kids to hate our country and to hate each other. It is state sanctioned. Racism in has no place in florida schools so the race theory is racism. Curl hear anything that calls whiteness for what it is is racism to white evil and i've accepted in the thirty three years. I blessed with like it's not too much Not too much redundancy worth getting into when it comes to these sane bullshit excuse in ebay already know what it is you you don't truly believe in your face you don't you just need to continue raising a whole bunch of beta ridiculous poisonous assholes like the rest of you because if you don't love fucking legs do you stand on. You don't like you know shooting sweet. It's never been or at least it hasn't been and it's getting harder for you to pass a lot of bucks shit underneath the radar because is near are everywhere and what's more the kids themselves are far more involved and interested and in an aware and you thought that at the very least you wouldn't have to worry about mealy coming home and arguing with you about racism and calling you out on all of your racist like aggressions micro macro whatever like now all of a sudden your own fucking kids coming home and telling you that your fucking intolerant and you ain't shit you're fucking stupid as hell and all of that is the truth and all of its true but is just not your america and that pisses you up this fucking ridiculous like is incredibly like i mean. I want to rest a bit of optimism. Maybe on you know these coupla pages on tiktok where you know. There are still a wealth of kids between the ages of twelve and seventeen. That are doing these backdrops on tiktok. Were there like exposed in there fucking dad or are talking about some stupid. Should that ah- politician just date are said like i think that more kids more young people are interested in getting the truth on their own terms and not being stupid yes allowed you are still successfully raising bigots and idiots But i think that there are more visible Young people that are actively trying to do better and better and i also think that a lot of them are probably looking at policies. Like this in thinking you know what's really really damaging was really a concern for me and my other students is just like being able to come to this place that we call school and not having to worry about dying it well. I'd really love it if maybe instead of like the countless classes that are taught in each of these school. I'd i'd prefer if maybe reprioritize. I dunno preventing any old body from coming in here and suiting the fuck out of us. I preferred if many of these same politicians. That are so worried about me. Being indoctrinated into realizing that america's rotten in its institutions are are illegitimate. I prefer if they didn't use plans giving us a pail of stones to use as our defense against a fucking assault rifle. I think that should probably be where we start in. Terms of how things are going in american schooling. Young people are thinking this while you're trying to convince them and adults in florida and elsewhere that critical race theory is what is like damning them and it's teaching them to hate each other right. It's funny because the actual indoctrination is what shall teach kids right now right love and accept america that everybody is the same in. It's all you know. Thank thank god for dr martin luther king junior. 'cause he fixed racism and also. We had a mix president. Don't forget that part so america fuck. Yeah everything's great and always has been that's the actual undocumented indoctrination and to say we won't teach you anything about how race really works in this country and then to be like and that would be teaching our children to accept things uncritically just israeli wild. How the republicans can just string words together and not care at all about whether they make any sense when put in that particular order because their constituents ultimately don't give hug 'cause they're all about the racism so the fact that this doesn't make any goddamn sense. Nobody cares because they just want the racism and just. I'm sorry it would florida but they're not the only ones but it. Would you know this country is really. I'm not surprised are moved. When i read the state i was. I guess i just don't know how. How is america's still standing like how racism who is it me but this cannot possibly last forever who is in charge a way. Jesus mean america's standing because we built a really really well we have the to still live here and pay taxes and my cap pride in that ends like jonas bay demand equality and equity and like respects. Yeah that was our bed. Evidently seems that way. Bok governor santa's florida. You're absolutely ridiculous is why you look like a flat penis and nobody respects you. Nobody respect to even other racist republicans. Blackout how fucking ridiculous. You bring me shane day to day. And it's truly as i've said black culture and disneyworld.

Curl thirty three years Bok republicans Jesus each florida ebay dr martin luther king lot of bucks ages tiktok israeli seventeen santa twelve american jonas bay america
"mabel" Discussed on The Read

The Read

04:58 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on The Read

"Hopefully we'll be there for you. But i i fully agree that like a month is definitely not too long to still be deepen your feelings about iran especially for a two year. It might be too long if you talk to the nickel for two days but two years girl. Yeah i to feeling feelings to randomly be like oh by the way. I'm moving to pensacola. And then lying right. Oh hey so by the reason. I'm out here. Now is because i cheated on you and we're about to have a baby surprise. Well it's fine like yeah that's it is. I just hope that you try to do little things things that have the potential at least two but even a small temporary smile in your face charges. Just warm your heart or whatever bringing some sort of peace of mind. Something there can't like get over it immediately but you can sometimes put certain things in practice that can at least make you feel as stable as possible in the moment and then the next thing you know maybe you don't wake up in tears are you can get through a whole shower without crying in it and he still feel you know but it's slowly but surely things become little bit less visual. Yeah put a lime on like my healing from this relationship. I think what you probably should be focused on is Working through the feelings or at least if you if you don't have the energy to work through them because grief is a lot to carry. Then you know just acknowledging that that's how you feel and not beating yourself up for feeling a very normal and natural way to feel when somebody has betrayed you like this so i wouldn't even say put like a certain amount of time on it. I would just say acknowledge that it's real work on it when you can Talk to people. Tell your friends like even if you haven't told the world like tell somebody what happened and you know. Have a place where you can process these feelings out loud with another person But is a lie. You know this is a relationship where y'all clearly planning for the future and you said you thought he was your best friend and so is like is multiple betrayals going on here. The death of a dream the violation of the relationship and it's the losing violation of the ban. Y'all had yeah. There's a lot going on here so give yourself some time You know if you can safely go those amassed and then turn thought shit on and maybe go find you somebody else assign a dance up on but More than anything. Be gracious which yourself. Like m be patient be like i know one day i am going to see myself through this right now. I'm in the middle of it. And it fucking sucks. That is just as breakup are horrible. And everybody gives you the same advice and nobody wants to hear it but you keep hearing it because it is the only way to get through it. Nope if the day one of these fucking nerds invinci- fast forward through heartbreak button. I have all my money. That'd be just going to be a billionaire overnight. But into ben you just have to deal with it you just have to let it come And like if you're a said like this this sucks but you would rather know now. Then you know after y'all are married and have three four kids then he pop up with a baby with somebody else and maybe even another in that amount of time. 'cause he probably didn't cheat on you just once. That was just the one time he got the one where there was no turning back right. That was the one where he couldn't do nothing about it. And i guess you know the ever so smallest no. I'm i'm going to do that. Almost say kudos to him for like move into florida and being a good dad but that's bare minimum should have moved to florida to be dead yet. You should have done that doing it see. I'm checking molin south here like no. I'm not gonna pat you on the back for caring for offspring. That is your job so You just care for yourself lauren. Don't let this nigga disney is a. It's a loss right now but ultimately you know one day you're going to look back and be like father. God i just wanted to say thank you. We're delivering me from that. Absolute bullshit that. I thought i wanted in needed so damn bad but you know it's rough so be nice to yourself as you heal. Oh all right. Let's wrap it up there. If you have a question to ask the religio dot com again. Take another break and be right. Back using talks..

two years two days lauren florida two year pensacola three four kids disney one time one religio dot com once at least two God molin south
"mabel" Discussed on The Read

The Read

04:02 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on The Read

"Is led. What's the point. I don't know what it is honor. She has issues around taking pills that are psychological or physical. Like there could be a one thing. I have learned from studying psychology. People do things for a myriad that you might not ever be able to guests so What i would say is that you probably need to start focusing on what you can do. That still allows your aunt to live her life and make our decisions but you are also maintaining a relationship. That feels comfortable and good to you. And you don't feel like you're making the problem worse. So i feel like you can be closed with your on and also like if she asked you to swing by popeye's and bring her spicy chicken sandwich. Don't do that if you feel like you know. You don't want to help contribute to this issue. Then you're well within your rights to say what you will and won't do But you also have to let this grown woman make hard decisions and live her life like you do have to let her do that and if you nag letter so much about the decision. She's not making to the point where she just like look logo. Don't call me no more than y'all have a relationship no more no way. So i think you really. I think you're going have to take a look at the situation and decide what you can accept and what you can and i also think you can express concern for people without telling them. Oh you need to do this or you have to do that like there's true there's a way to say. Look i'm just worried about you. And so i just want you to know that i love you so much. I want to spend as many days with you as possible. And whatever i can do to support you living a healthy happy peaceful existence. That is what i want for. You like you. Yes you're growing and you're gonna make your own decision. I just want you to know that. I really care and i'm here for you and i feel like that goes a long way. Because then she doesn't automatically have her defenses of like damn this little girl again telling me what the fuck i you like. Greece's lung and even alive low bitch like sit down somewhere by then accommodated from like a amy. I love you. i just want to be here for you. let me you know. Scratch your scalp while we watch young restless and talk about nichols or something. Like i think if you come at it from a loving place then you'll probably be able to have more of an impact than if you come in hardware will grow. You need to be doing this. And that and did you take your pills and did you. This and this like that lady went to the doctor. She knows she should be doing to anybody. Can go like type. Two diabetes or type one diabetes. Or i don't even really know what the tree how the treatment plan is vastly different between the two of them but like anybody can look it up and and or call their doctor about it. So i think you just gonna have to let this Make our decisions while also not doing anything that you feel like 'cause you said like you know you be around her knowing that she isn't doing what's best for her health but who among us is always doing what's best for their hills who among us is always making the absolute right decision as far as like not even just diet but movement and water and sleep quality and meditation or spending time not under stress like who is always making the best decisions for their health in every possible way. Nobody maybe just for me. So i'm just saying you know perhaps dial back some of the the judgment here and just try to approach the situation in a loving way and make sure your nose that you care about her more than anything and like you wanna be in her corner there. Okay and good luck to you with that conversation. Let us know how it goes. Our next letter comes from lauren. Who says by boyfriend. Two years broke up with me a month ago and moved to florida that same day..

lauren two florida a month ago Greece Two diabetes one thing one Two years popeye
"mabel" Discussed on The Read

The Read

01:36 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on The Read

"This is our problem now. Like food is like no like we have found so much solace and peace and food and those of us who have some sort of an existing family unit that would come together around food or lying connect with relatives of her recipes or just all kinds of his. I feel like it has a huge part in my too hard. Not even just a hart's put like the the personality and identity of alania. I mean field is cultural in it is it is part of like how we connect with each other so is it is much deeper than just you know. I want it fried chicken. Sometimes very frequently is much deeper than that but like kaelin. A ruge won't kill you. And i think that some of us like there's liking what we like and then there's those of us who are in our fifties that have never drank water on purpose. The last time you had a suite of water is when you almost drown in a community pool where you were like six like. Don't drink water. Dr some of vice. That are grown adults. That could do a little bit better in our diet. Not even just.

six fifties alania
"mabel" Discussed on The Read

The Read

01:33 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on The Read

"You have a singing of this. Singing was always been just so good. Just the most amazing vocalist. So i'm going to hate myself for this. I have to look. Her name was the name of. Oh god i hate me one of the modern rally no she was one of the mommas but she was also In the medina goes to jail play. And i think she's saying yes. Jesus loves me. I think that's the song that she sang and it was so beautiful off. What is her name. I love this lady was it beyond in shantelle. Christopher and jet eliah crystal collins. i'm looking at the castle. i crystal collins. that name sounds crispell chrissy collins. I don't know if it's hard though one of y'all are going to tell me about obviously aalyah concern name. Is mama chrissy. i'm so annoyed. Oh is her is christie collins bs. That's her god. I see her face. And now i'm like i know exactly talking about. She sang play and it was like and if i remember correctly she didn't have like a large role i think she was.

Christopher aalyah chrissy christie collins Jesus chrissy collins jet eliah crystal collins crispell one shantelle crystal collins
"mabel" Discussed on The Read

The Read

02:34 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on The Read

"Say i can't say i've watched it more than once or that. I ever will have seen it and it happened and if you enjoyed it you're allowed because nobody here is terrible. You know i'm not into any delusions about their overall quality as though like what i like in unique still can suck my dick about it so feel free. I'm just you know gonna laugh and some of you guys will as well next year. I guess. I think it's next year when netflix thing happens no announcement yet. On which instagram stars will be But i expect to see a few. And i dunno jokes about madonna's bra sisley tyson monologue. Yeah i feel like all the little like them. Little young annoying shit little white girls. That'd be all over social media shit. I have a feeling they're going to be a part of this. And i don't know why like like bad baby. Plays a cashier or something meal and medina has the will pass because she ringing up. The pot rose wrong. Just i don't know why we you said that. It was the first thing. I thought of but also a young medina movie. I mean young. Da show coming to showtime. we spoke. Oh i did. I do remember hearing about and i think my interest is piqued that one. I'm not mad at to be honest with you because first of all. He's not playing no shade. It just means like no. It just means that it would is forced to bring new life to the character. It's gonna be someone else and it's going to be a completely different era in her life and atlanta where she was. You know we're to me that means like all we will get to see medina. Do these things that she talked about doing when she was young. All over the fucking time Like that i'm interested in. I kind of know what. I'm getting with with tyler. Perry medina and it's not always awful but like he is actually in. My opinion always been the best part of medina things. Well i mean that. In the incredible vocalist tyler perry managed to pick out talking about the film's okay. I guess when. I said i should have included because.

netflix next year tyler Perry medina tyler perry instagram first medina sisley tyson more than once atlanta madonna
"mabel" Discussed on The Read

The Read

04:11 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on The Read

"I've met in like turn our back on you. I don't know i came in late. I the black spinal cord. I will jot that there sometimes. You just need that negroes by name. Gross spine yeah Sometimes you gotta get raised has gotta get shunned. Sometimes you have to you know. She said she doesn't regret it. Tyrod barry so but yeah. I think that they're like nigga not only fuck up constantly no self-aware s zero. No like regret no nothing. No congratulated no desired do differently And necas will still be well. I like his songs are like his games. Or i like his whatever his comedy or whatnot and they still get scraped up and as i article like fine and i think that in general i have no problem with us again asses the community pulling one another accountable you know and being like oh you got us fucked up but also like with intent and with a destination and and like i'm all for like the rehabilitation of black fuck ups and you know us being like yes says you did fucker. Have you figured out the ways and lifting these people up if they have it they are accepting of that. Because it's like not. Everybody is like i said a lot of people fuck up and they're just like you're the problem based like are you mad at me so time will tell it. Sounds like she learned from this experience. Which i don't see how you couldn't be like really optimus deliberately. So in order to have not gleaned anything from this experience. But i don't. It's interesting because you're like we. We fellow blacks are much harder on black and then we are on black and that's true but usually not even say usually as in this specific circumstance chris. Michelle deserved every bit of what she got. Absolute niggers nichols deserve the same energy. And they don't get it. It's not that we should have been easier on her. Be this way across the board. Exactly mike. y'all just refused to do that for me. And and i don't really like. I get that his patriarch or whatever but i don't really like ima soul understand that 'cause i don't know how you can see the knicks do just act like they don't exist but yeah that's exactly what i'm saying like is not that it was like. Oh well she didn't deserve no japs. Did she deserved it. It should be giving that kind of energy across the board when anybody does something that is like this damaging or completely stands in the face of our advance main our lake preservation et cetera et cetera But not just that it's like you will have situations wear black woman would be like. Yeah i fucked up. And i understand that. I've learned that it may not always be genuine. I think it's you know abc's individual person to decide how they feel. They'll probably be people. Never be because i wish all can ever again is probably some that. Were likely the ones that were really big research out there. 'cause you would likely be most disppointed right but i don't know either way i just feel like it's much harder. I think for women who have seemingly learned from their fuck ups or their mistakes to be like this all good girl like. We're glad that you have at least arrived.

Michelle mike Tyrod barry chris negroes of people
"mabel" Discussed on The Read

The Read

01:42 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on The Read

"Swear i thought you said a sangria. System hill is a sanger. Is that what the fuck. I wanted to tell me about the sangria just two days ago after you know. I guess collecting a bunch of money from med scammers by ones home is their sanctuary in place of peace relaxation and comfort. Strew blitzer should be my momma said when someone violates that sanctuary. It is disturbing and hurts. There's such an easy job here. And i'm not going to do because it's low hanging fruit. One of my homes was burglarized in las vegas. They stole my valuable handbags. No they stole many valuable handbags and other belongings of substantial value. I am offering at least one hundred housing dollars reward for information that leads to the return of my belongings the level of disrespect and greed. It takes for someone to do. This is what greed how somebody how do you know. The person who robbed you is grady. Maybe rob thank you. Thank you for to anyone.

las vegas two days ago One of my homes at least one hundred housing d ones bunch of money System hill
"mabel" Discussed on The Read

The Read

02:18 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on The Read

"All did. And he said he kind of finally became find on wrong with creed. Oh this right. He just said that. Kill monger star yet. So you're probably ride. It probably was. It was like a convenient way to get. It's the by going through his stepdaughter or adopted daughter. Whatever it was probably like. That's probably exactly what the motivation was. Here i just love that she was like you know what's relatable about me. 'cause it's clearly not anything about my appearance or my day to day lifestyle. And carl label. Is that my ex talk shit about me too. And i just be ignored him. Dumb is the same way you girls should better up here. The weather's better i'm happier. Shit is more peaceful salaciously literally said up. Here this release. Yes oh my meaner read it again. I just try to stay up here and take the high road in every situation up here the high road. Okay because i was thinking up here like thirty thousand light. That is exactly like private jet thousand feet. Yes she says so. I think that would probably be what they get for me. Because i am private. You have to read between the lines here. She's not talking about the high road. She's talking about the high skies not private. She flies private sewer. I'm not mad at this. I mean like this honestly. I know that y'all prefer drama and mess but since the way more people shit and to bullshit from x. especially x.'s like we are along together for reasons so why are you still could have something to say about me or drop. My daddy is truly beyond all understand. Don't you move on impairment. One of them eighteen thousand children. You got running around atlanta and scattered across the country. Why don't you do that. Oh stopping you from that. What's stopping you from. Being a dad bothers days a week. Onyx go take some pleasure yorker kids give some selfie so that you can make your one post and worry about me.

atlanta eighteen thousand children thousand feet One thirty thousand light one post Onyx carl
"mabel" Discussed on The Read

The Read

02:14 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on The Read

"Don't take talk some more so quote here the end of the interview Basically just talks about how doesn't really spend much time going back and forth or immersing herself info corie in scandal and that her followers are followers may relate to that more than any of the other things being brady and raised. That's probably the bay grow. Wait a minute she saw. Don't look like me nor do they shop like me but perhaps we all have shitty x.'s. She said i think they get from me. That i tried to just not let any type of negativity are rumors or anything like that makes me stoop down to that level and go back and forth with it or whatever just maintain my position of ano- who i am. I know what's going on. I just try to stay up here and take the high road in every situation so i think that would probably be what they get for me. Because i'm private so i like to just give enough so this Headline after this song comes out. The interview came out after the song. Because it's mentioned it's mentioned prior to the same. However i think one thing that people left out when they were discussing it on blogs and should is that it clearly says here that this was a part of the conversation during the interview prior to the song so this is is a response to future anybody else in particular. It's something that has been used as a as a response to so right so the interview was conducted before the sun came out but it the interview wasn't published until after the song came out right so they mention it but they clearly say here. Her silence she suggested during our conversation is what millions of followers might relate to most but it also says after we talk is when the song came out.

millions of followers one thing
"mabel" Discussed on The Read

The Read

02:17 min | 1 year ago

"mabel" Discussed on The Read

"Eight. Go off so. I don't know like what's going on with the tokyo games right and i haven't really been keeping up To adult know if she's like participated in anything dare yet. I know that she took a break because she became a mommy and she has a little boy believe now and jump right back in the game and was like yeah no. I didn't expect to come here. And do you know anything more than my job. No pressure but that was the goal as she was very excited about it so other and breaking the sound barrier. That's right being the absolute best. And i just looked it up. It says here that if she wins At the olympics she'll be the oldest woman to win an individual olympic sprint title. At thirty four years old so wrong. That's is i mean that's kind of like a a lot of pressure and like you said. I'm not really sure what's going on with the olympics. I think i heard that the workers like about to go on strike or something right and apparently. It's like behind kobe concerned. I guess valid so so might not even be no damn lympics but if so you know they keep your eye outfits young woman i mean you probably go have to. Don't blame me and you're gonna have to write. Keep him focused girl. What is this sprint. One hundred meters in ten point six seconds girl. Shut the fuck. How tip can't even make it out this room in like what's me. Ten seconds decided to bed in the morning. I mean at least at the bare minimum. That's like to cut my alarm. Challenge this late on one hundred meters so yeah not surprised that jamaica wins again gene people. So let's move on top pop culture in hot tops and spike. Lee's get on the bus. So i heard that is much to know. I know not.

One hundred meters one hundred meters Eight Ten seconds six seconds lympics ten point Lee jamaica olympics thirty four years old tokyo games olympic
"mabel" Discussed on 710 WOR

710 WOR

02:35 min | 2 years ago

"mabel" Discussed on 710 WOR

"Fair trial. Amazing. Okay, well, let's let's get into the real estate, The Lizzie Borden. The houses are up for sale. What's going on? They are. There's not one but two that the house where the murder occurred, which is the Borden family home is at two 32nd Street. Fall River, Massachusetts. That was the side of the murders, and it's been a bed and breakfast for quite some time, and it just went on the market within the last couple weeks and asking price is $2 million. Um, there have been several TV crews in their paranormal investigators, and, um, according to reports That both the TV crews of the paranormal investigators said that there's all sorts of electrical anomalies with the equipment. And a lot of people believe that the spirits of both Andrew and Abby Borden The murder victim's still haunt the house. And then, um, a couple blocks away is Mabel Cross Mansion and Maplecroft Mansion is at 302 French Street. Fall River, Massachusetts. All right, hold on for a second mark. We're already at the break. We're going to come back. We'll talk about the Lizzie Borden real estate and some other haunted real estate That's out there, plus Tell me what's going on around the country when we come back do people who are selling a haunted house have to disclose that? I think it's some states. You probably have to do that back in a moment of coast to coast Am Get daily show updates right to your inbox For free with the Coast's own newsletter, Sign up today it coast to coast am dot com. Did you get out an airplane? If you knew it had a 50% chance of crashing. You.

Lizzie Borden murder Fall River Borden Mabel Cross Mansion Massachusetts Maplecroft Mansion Andrew
Police ID 7-year-old girl shot near Phipps Plaza, Atlanta

AJC Briefing

00:50 sec | 2 years ago

Police ID 7-year-old girl shot near Phipps Plaza, Atlanta

"Atlanta police have identified the seven year old girl struck by a stray bullet monday evening. While christmas shopping with her family in buckhead kennedy maxi remained at children's healthcare of atlanta at scottish right in critical condition wednesday afternoon authorities said maxi who lives in the mabel. Ten area was shot in the back of the head while riding with her mother and aunt near phipps plaza. Investigators do not believe the families. Lexus was the intended target of the shooting which stemmed from an argument between several men in the parking lot of saks. Fifth avenue interim police chief rodney bryant said. The child's aunt told detectives. She heard the gunfire. While driving along peachtree road near the high end shopping mall moments later she realized maxi had been struck and drove straight to the hospital where the little girl was rushed into surgery

Kennedy Maxi Buckhead Phipps Plaza Atlanta Maxi Rodney Bryant Lexus
Atlanta police identify 7-year-old girl shot while riding in car in Buckhead

AJC Briefing

00:50 sec | 2 years ago

Atlanta police identify 7-year-old girl shot while riding in car in Buckhead

"Atlanta police have identified the seven year old girl struck by a stray bullet monday evening. While christmas shopping with her family in buckhead kennedy maxi remained at children's healthcare of atlanta at scottish right in critical condition wednesday afternoon authorities said maxi who lives in the mabel. Ten area was shot in the back of the head while riding with her mother and aunt near phipps plaza. Investigators do not believe the families. Lexus was the intended target of the shooting which stemmed from an argument between several men in the parking lot of saks. Fifth avenue interim police chief rodney bryant said. The child's aunt told detectives. She heard the gunfire. While driving along peachtree road near the high end shopping mall moments later she realized maxi had been struck and drove straight to the hospital where the little girl was rushed into surgery

Kennedy Maxi Buckhead Phipps Plaza Atlanta Maxi Rodney Bryant Lexus
What happens when the salmon stop coming home

Unreserved

04:12 min | 2 years ago

What happens when the salmon stop coming home

"They're called the miracle fish. The lifeblood of first nations up and down the pacific northwest. They feed the river system that snakes through british columbia giving back to the earth and the animals. The journey of a wild sockeye salmon is nothing short of a miracle every year. They swim hundreds of miles from the ocean to their spawning grounds to inland rivers and streams. When they finally made it overcoming countless obstacles along the way the parents lay their eggs and die and then a new generation of salmon make their way downstream and into the pacific ocean to do it all over again it's an astounding journey and it used to be that tens of millions of vibrantly colored wild salmon could be seen swimming to the upper reaches of the rivers to spawn. This fall there were fewer than three hundred thousand. That's the lowest number of wild salmon ever recorded. And that's cause for huge concern. Cbs's jennifer trumka brings us documentary swimming upstream. Salmon is who we are as first nations people and i cannot name a first nation that has any measure of abundance of wild salmon period. We need them. they're the canary. In the coalmine. As go salmon so goes our ecosystem that we had the lowest returns. Ever you know just a few hundred thousand sockeye to the entire fraser river this year. you know. that's that's quite scary. We are down to absolutely historic glow returns. There are just so many domino's that fall over. That will fall over when the fish are all gone. It's heartbreaking aim. Is bob chamberlin. I was the elected chief. Councillor for the Copies first nation of the meuse outing people and territories about archipelago of also served nine years as vice president the union to be seeing the chiefs my bach home her way. traditionally ms galactic Yeah that's who i am and we're here. In the beautiful territory of the squamish. People bought chamberlain is a high profile leader who stands tall and poised. He also radiates warmth. We've met at an ocean side. Park in west vancouver where there's a totem pole. It's of a human figure wearing cedar hat and has awale carved on its back and as if it were planned as bob gates close to bald eagles landing on top of the pool. Coming down here because of the welcome poll. That's at the end of the jetty here. So we see. I believe this is a welcome figure and you know this being at the mouth of the kaplan a river. This is a place where the salmon come back for the people and always have and they've always been here. I i grew up going home to our village quiet stumps on gilford island and i remember seeing my family the whole community working on fish. You know in the summertime when we would go home and so is imprinted upon a very young age. Just how important. It was to our village to our people and to sit and enjoy our traditional foods with my grandmother and my uncles. My aunties and to know that i was home and to be able to enjoy that and then as i quite long time ago when i was a commercial fisherman in campbell river i'd get fish food fish and we'd go out and make a special trip during the season. And then we distribute the fish to all of our family. And i would always get two one hundred and two hundred sockeye and the reason i did. That is because we'd go to auntie mabel house 'cause she had two big back yard you'll bath tub in the back and and tim able and granny any and my mom. Would we'd all work on fish so we would have filleted fish in the deep freeze beat have canned fish for everything else and it was really nice to be able to bring in that food source. That was so cherished. And then i look at today and i feel fortunate. I got to sakai in the deep freeze.

Salmon Jennifer Trumka Bob Chamberlin Swimming Pacific Northwest Awale Pacific Ocean British Columbia Fraser River CBS Gilford Island Bob Gates Chamberlain Chiefs Eagles Vancouver Campbell River Mabel
What happens when the salmon stop coming home

Unreserved

04:46 min | 2 years ago

What happens when the salmon stop coming home

"Salmon is a staple food for many indigenous people in the pacific northwest. Many names chinook. Coho sockeye pink chum. The fish has been the subject of song story and artwork for thousands of years. It is also a symbol of fortitude and self sacrifice but in recent years the mighty salmon has been facing some scary realities today on the show a deep dive into the ripple effect of the dwindling fish stock. And what happens when the salmon stop coming home. They're called the miracle fish. The lifeblood of first nations up and down the pacific northwest. They feed the river system that snakes through british columbia giving back to the earth and the animals. The journey of a wild sockeye salmon is nothing short of a miracle every year. They swim hundreds of miles from the ocean to their spawning grounds to inland rivers and streams. When they finally made it overcoming countless obstacles along the way the parents lay their eggs and die and then a new generation of salmon make their way downstream and into the pacific ocean to do it all over again it's an astounding journey and it used to be that tens of millions of vibrantly colored wild salmon could be seen swimming to the upper reaches of the rivers to spawn. This fall there were fewer than three hundred thousand. That's the lowest number of wild salmon ever recorded. And that's cause for huge concern. Cbs's jennifer trumka brings us documentary swimming upstream. Salmon is who we are as first nations people and i cannot name a first nation that has any measure of abundance of wild salmon period. We need them. they're the canary. In the coalmine. As go salmon so goes our ecosystem that we had the lowest returns. Ever you know just a few hundred thousand sockeye to the entire fraser river this year. you know. that's that's quite scary. We are down to absolutely historic glow returns. There are just so many domino's that fall over. That will fall over when the fish are all gone. It's heartbreaking aim. Is bob chamberlin. I was the elected chief. Councillor for the Copies first nation of the meuse outing people and territories about archipelago of also served nine years as vice president the union to be seeing the chiefs my bach home her way. traditionally ms galactic Yeah that's who i am and we're here. In the beautiful territory of the squamish. People bought chamberlain is a high profile leader who stands tall and poised. He also radiates warmth. We've met at an ocean side. Park in west vancouver where there's a totem pole. It's of a human figure wearing cedar hat and has awale carved on its back and as if it were planned as bob gates close to bald eagles landing on top of the pool. Coming down here because of the welcome poll. That's at the end of the jetty here. So we see. I believe this is a welcome figure and you know this being at the mouth of the kaplan a river. This is a place where the salmon come back for the people and always have and they've always been here. I i grew up going home to our village quiet stumps on gilford island and i remember seeing my family the whole community working on fish. You know in the summertime when we would go home and so is imprinted upon a very young age. Just how important. It was to our village to our people and to sit and enjoy our traditional foods with my grandmother and my uncles. My aunties and to know that i was home and to be able to enjoy that and then as i quite long time ago when i was a commercial fisherman in campbell river i'd get fish food fish and we'd go out and make a special trip during the season. And then we distribute the fish to all of our family. And i would always get two one hundred and two hundred sockeye and the reason i did. That is because we'd go to auntie mabel house 'cause she had two big back yard you'll bath tub in the back and and tim able and granny any and my mom. Would we'd all work on fish so we would have filleted fish in the deep freeze beat have canned fish for everything else and it was really nice to be able to bring in that food source. That was so cherished. And then i look at today and i feel fortunate. I got to sakai in the deep freeze.

Pacific Northwest Salmon Jennifer Trumka Bob Chamberlin Swimming Awale Pacific Ocean British Columbia Fraser River CBS Gilford Island Bob Gates Chamberlain Chiefs Eagles Vancouver Campbell River Mabel
Legends 11 Why Goldfinches Look Like the Sun

Iroquois History and Legends

04:58 min | 3 years ago

Legends 11 Why Goldfinches Look Like the Sun

"Why gold finches look like the Sun. This is a traditional Hodeidah. Schone story as told by Mabel powers in her nineteen seventeen book stories that Iroquois tell their children today with special guest performances by Ezra and Ethan Carter Ages seven and five respectively. It was so moons after raccoon outwitted Fox before they again met. Raccoon was scurrying by when Fox saw him now Fox had not forgotten the trick that raccoon had played on him when he burned his mouth with what he thought was magic. Papa's but in reality. It went by another name Jack in the pulpit or to others a fireball. So Fox began to chase after raccoon. He was gaining and would have caught him had they not come to a tall pine tree. Raccoon quickly ran up the trunk and reached the tippy top of it. Try Get me up here. Flax said raccoon there. He would be safe for. The Fox could not climb the Fox lay down on the soft pine needles and waited for raccoon. Come down the Fox lay down on the soft pine needles just sitting there waiting for raccoon to eventually come down but raccoons stayed up in the pine tree. So Long Fox grew tired and sleepy. He began to close his eyes and thought he would just take short nap. Raccoon watched until he saw the Fox was sound asleep. Raccoon had been sitting on the tree along while and when he tried to move he noticed that his paws were very sticky and then he smiled and said to himself. I know how to deal with box. Then he took in his mouth some of the south from the Pine Tree. He ran down the trunk and quietly rubbed the pitch over the eyes of Sleeping Fox shortly thereafter Fox awoke with a Jerk. He Sprang up and tried to seize raccoon but alas he could no longer see what he was doing. The lids of his eyes were held fast with the Pine Tar. He could not open them. The raccoon laughed at Fox's plight and then ran away and left him shouting back over his shoulder. Trial me now. Fox Fox lay for some time under the tree. The Pine Gum as it dried held the lids of his is closer and closer shut. He thought he would never again see the sun. Some of the birds were singing nearby and he called to them and told them of his plight. He asked if they would be so kind as to pick open his eyes. The birds disgusted among themselves and then flew off and told other birds pass soon. Many of the little dark songs tres flew back to where Fox was laying down and then Peck Peck went the little bills on the islands of the Fox bit by bit they carefully picked away the Pine Tar. If one grew tired another bird would come in and take its place as they stood on his snout at last Fox saw a small streak of light shortly thereafter. One of the islands was able to fly open and then shortly thereafter. Another the sun was shining and the world looked so very to Fox as he opened both of his eyes he was very grateful to the little birds for bringing him light and he told them that he would give them anything they asked for. The little birds talked among themselves and then looked back and said to Fox. We don't like doc fabrics we to look like the Fox looked around him and saw some beautiful sunflowers growing nearby. He took the pedals and pressed them. Grinding them into paint and then with the tip of his tail is a brush. He began to paint the little dark birds like the son. He thought that he would start by painting. The body's first but the birds were so overcome with happiness before he could move onto the wings and tails on the top of their heads and dozens of little birds darted away like streaks of sunshine shouting as they went.

Fox Fox Raccoon Pine Tree Long Fox Pine Tar Hodeidah Mabel Powers Flax Papa Peck Peck Ezra Ethan Carter Jack
Removing Waste and Creating Agility with Artificial Intelligence

Outcomes Rocket

05:37 min | 3 years ago

Removing Waste and Creating Agility with Artificial Intelligence

"Today I have the privilege of hosting Sandy. Fernando he's a senior vice president of optum where he leads the artificial intelligence and analytics platforms. Team he's responsible for developing platforms that support the design and development of leading edge models. Analytic tools for the enterprise previously. Sandy was vice president at optum labs and led the OPTUM Labs Center for Applied Data Science which is called CADS. The cavs team applied breakthroughs in a and machine learning to solve complex healthcare challenges for United Health Groups and by developing and deploying software product concepts cats pioneered using deep learning to streamline administrative processes in revenue cycle management and develop graph analytics tools to support provider network design among other innovations. That they've done. He's been at optum labs since two thousand fourteen from Nokia where he created. Nokia's first data science team so definitely no rookie to data science and AI. Before that he spent those nine years there and has done an incredible amount of work as well as starting his own business. So it's a true privilege to have Sanji podcast here and Excited to cover his insights in healthcare. A So Sandy. Thanks so much for joining us. Today they came out saw. Those very gracious will care compensation likewise so sandy. What inspires your work in in healthcare because at the beginning you're in healthcare a your technology guy that gravitated to healthcare. I was in telecom and I work in internet company Way Back when and I really had a technology studied computer science in College. And what brought him back to health care? Maybe was growing up in the healthcare family. Really both my parents were physicians. I had a great exposure on. They were primary care physician in Connecticut and solve their day. They works out of a touch. And while I didn't pursue that as a career I understood maybe almost constantly but he was something that was very satisfying and now. I've got a wife and three kids and help their song. So my hope is that by understanding and pursuing some pretty destig- -nology over my career. I could bring that back to healthcare a little bit and see if we can make some significant changes in how how we used acknowledgee to enable healthcare in the US and even abroad. I think that's Great Sanji. And so it's that that story you know your parents grew up as physicians and when you took that left turn Sanji. What did they think did they say? Our son's not going to be doctor or were they happy that you became a an it guy. They were always supportive. I mean yeah from age like eight or nine they were spending way too much funny buying US computer and gaming consoles big thing new That was something ours passionate about and were were. You WanNa follow your prints being a position as an incredibly are percussion incredibly stable. Percussion and you know. I've made an effort to get through organic chemistry in college and after that I said you know I think I wanted to really a little bit more excited about. Yeah no I can appreciate that so it sounds like you're kinda drawn in by by technology at a very young age gave it a swing but said. I'M GONNA Follow My Passion Mom and Dad. Yeah Negro Sport of all the way. So that's awesome in an important looking for assault. Now that's the especially as parents now. I mean so. Hey Kudos to you Mom AND DAD. You sound doing pretty good now. What makes what you guys do there at optum different. And how's it adding value to the ecosystem of the business and of your customers? Yeah today and optimism. It's such a multifaceted business. We touched so many portions of the healthcare system from patients providers to governments to warriors pharmaceutical companies. And that gives us a great opportunity to take a look. Maybe more holistically at how we can really drive and deliver better outcomes and change about their system in my focus area. We've got a wealth of data across our enterprise. Overturned twenty million identified patient live of data on bet gives us this great perspective on how we can take some of these new often referred to as artificial intelligence stay. The heart of artificial intelligence machine learning approaches where we can take these machine learning approaches to mission allowing us to learn from the data itself rather than explicitly stated. Exactly what to do Max. And that's a real important breakthrough for us especially in healthcare because healthcare is so complex and something we try to create your shop. She would imperatives or rules or here. Six there will always be educated with exceptions and it becomes very difficult to construct and simulator run with that and so lots really representing dresses. That we have An are my team in depressions. Here in optum how this opportunity to work with this Vast array of data in the hope that we will mabel better outcomes and really allow people to work there.

Sandy Senior Vice President Applied Data Science Optum Labs United States Sanji Optum Labs Center Nokia Cavs Connecticut United Health Groups Assault AI
Louisa Thomas on Writing About Tennis

No Challenges Remaining

08:31 min | 3 years ago

Louisa Thomas on Writing About Tennis

"I'm delighted to be joined here by a longtime listener first-time guests overdue guests. Really I think Lewis Thomas. I'm so excited to be here. I am a very long time listener. And Longtime Meyer so bucket lists for me for us. We're very excited. Why would we see? Fairmount is third like I remember. You said to me couple years ago like why almost like why am I not on and I had no answer your only people. I didn't think whatever like stooped our level. Pretty much. But now that you are here. I am delighted that you here and we're GONNA do a pretty male baggy centric type show with you here. We got a bunch listener questions on twitter on e Mail on our patron on. And we'll go through these. I JUST WANNA start against with how you got into tennis. Bitten what your tenants sort of writing. Arc has been leading all the way up to we can skip speed ahead to this version of the most recent story did which I think was on Kim. Clijsters must recent tennis centered leader for the New Yorker Short version of your of how you got here. A short version is that I was a pretty mediocre high school tennis player but absolutely loved it and stop playing pretty much when I got to college and a little bit after and then picked up a racquet again. A few years after college started playing With a friend of mine and I just loved it and it was like the greatest procrastination thing ever. I had actually had a book coming out and I was like filled with anxiety. And so I dealt with this by playing tennis for like it took like four hours. I don't like several times because we would I would go to Brooklyn. You know like an hour span telling you basically I was avoiding work and everything else and out of that. are as us to rate For the Paris Review blog about. Us Open that year. And I had so much fun doing it and it was actually a really kind of a revelation for me. I really felt in some ways that I found kind of voice that I hadn't really been able to. Yes it was it was. It was both new and felt so much like me and there was something about tennis about sports in particular. I'm sorry something about sports in general but tennis in particular that really kind of sports sports so tennis is really kind of my like my origin. Story I'd I'd worked at the sports section actually in high school but that was a both a long time before and I wasn't a writer in the same way so this was really kind of and it felt experimental felt fresh felt new felt it was none of those things really but I felt like I was doing something that no one else is doing and that this was like me. You know that this was something that I I sort of was bringing into the world and It was really exciting and if it was in the sense that Alaska was my voice after that I did a little bit more for them and then this great land the sports website owned by ESPN started by. Bill Simmons started up right before Wimbledon. Actually and they asked me to do. A couple of stories not became kind of became contributor. Really just writing about tennis. I and then I started Raymond other sports and then I started working for them fulltime and became an editor there and then by the end of doing all sports not all sports but many sports tennis was still kind of my Mitra. Love unless you're gonna Cap Cross country skiing by to write that your first term it was was. Us openwork clijsters one. That's as good as well ahead into the future. So since then. Yeah you're right. The New Yorker now seeing Kim Clijsters come back. What did you think I think permits? Everyone who I've talked to WHO watch. It was super impressed by her ball striking. Which is like in even though she lost the match and was almost off it badly. I mean she was down six to four or three or four zero. In the second set fought back have a tie-break so in some ways you could be like that close but she's playing Mugabe's who just made Australian Open final had really nothing to lose in this match and played really well and just had a lot of a lot of things may people go. Whoa Mabel we'll realize why she was a special player for so long. I think I mean I actually even from the start of the match is one of those matches where the scoreline wasn't necessarily reflective of what was going on in the individual games sort of competitive and a lot of games that she was losing she obviously has big weakness. Game. She's not as in shape as she probably wants to beach. Her Serb was kind of a disaster at times by Yeah her boss. Striking was just thrilling. I mean it was so pure it was so I mean I like completely fell in love with her and fell in love with the sport. All over again it actually I mean. Even her announcement had summoned a lot of these. Kinda had made me think about my own kind of start in tennis writing sports writing in general and it became even more intense while I was watching her and I was just. I was just happy in a way that was really uncomplicated. And which was really interesting too because I actually had a lot of complicated feelings about her coming back and it was just so it was like such a pleasure to watch her and just to see someone kind of seize the moment and some sort of Lia really kind of. Yeah uncomplicated right. What are your complicated feelings about her back? Then I generally think that coming back when he said this. Mike feelings aren't really about her coming back. I mean she should do whatever she wants to do in. This is clearly what she wants to be doing. And that's like got on her. You know my complicated feelings are only insofar as like you know. I'm also trying to negotiate my own kind of ambition versus raising a small child. How and the expectations are being placed upon me you know from various sides and trying to figure out what what is it that. I really want to be doing and how do I WANNA be privatizing my life and and in some ways one of the things I find really kind of inspiring about her is that she's actually. Her story is more complicated than a normal kind of like. It's always an Serena Williams story where she knew she was gonna WanNa come back and it was just about making that work in a way that worked for her. I mean she. She left the game she came back. She left the game again. She came back. And I find the idea that you could have. You could sort of take a long view of your career even in a career that is necessarily short like sports that you can sort of view it as a kind of multidimensional thing where you can have different ambitions at different times and have different ways of judging success and have different kind of approaches to be to be really inspiring. Also hard you know. I mean because that's not how we normally talk about successor. How's how's IT philosopher clijsters? I think we'll have one question about her but this my last question her. How's it influenced you being a relatively new mom. In this sort of era women's tennis where motherhood has been a big sugar running storyline. From as Aranka to Serena to clijsters now like what is how. How does that? Because you've written about all three of those women I'm guessing sent in this time. What is that been like? Having your own personal life and of it informs how you see these stories and see the narratives rally stories for better or worse by life always informs. Whatever I'm writing about but I'm also not a person who's injecting my life story into I mean. I did a little bit in the classrooms piece. But I don't usually do that and I have a little bit ready. Mutt Serena but usually I try and step back from that. But certainly there's always like an undercurrent a kind of is to think of it as a secret story. There's something sort of like some You know wellspring of feeling or some motivation that I have to bring into a story. Otherwise it's just a it's not mine. You know that thing. I was talking about my voice like I need to be tapping into whatever that is to take that voice And for some of these stories about mothers obviously it is a little bit closer to what I've been going through but it's also again more complicated because I think we have a tendency to generalize a lot when especially we're talking about something like motherhood would it's such a particularly unique experience. I mean at least to prove my point house at least in my experience has been particularly in unique but of course it's one of these things that is on the one hand like is obviously not universal. But it's something Millions and millions of billions of people go through like trying to figure out how to balance these different things and that's just how to balance them. But how you know embrace them in different ways but at the same time like what Serena wants is different than what clijsters wants. And that's different than what as wrinkle on. And how do you do sort of justice to those stories without kind of flattening them or distorting them or you know assuming one thing for one and a different thing for another and I think can be really challenging. But that's also part of the important thing about being a writer in some ways as sort of realizing the variety of human experience for sure. Very nice to

Tennis Kim Clijsters Mutt Serena Writer Lewis Thomas Twitter Paris Review Meyer Serena Williams Bill Simmons Alaska Espn Brooklyn Mugabe Cap Cross Editor LIA Wanna Mike
Georgia football closing in on another No. 1 recruiting class

Dana Loesch

00:33 sec | 3 years ago

Georgia football closing in on another No. 1 recruiting class

"Of Georgia football coach Kirby smart hopes national signing day part two is as productive as last month's part one the biggest problem for the dogs today is if they can hold on to the commitments of two offense of linemen including the nation's best center and a five star tackle from my phone if that happens you GA should finish with a top class for the second time under Kirby smart George is also adding another four star running back and hoping to flip a big defensive back from old miss Mabel Georgia tech is trying to land a four star running back from Dalton with the Jack it's expected to bring in their best class in thirteen

George Dalton Georgia Kirby Mabel Georgia
So you want to start a podcast...

The Tech Guy

02:20 min | 3 years ago

So you want to start a podcast...

"What can I do for you here? Well I I have a question that I know. Ah I've been listening to you for years as most people say when they call But I have a question that you have probably been asked many many times but until it becomes relevant in my life I probably just listen to it next. Caller count on that otherwise. Honestly there's only a few different questions I count on your poor memory for the the answers. One of those questions. So I- Mabel to and and been in the process of creating content for a podcast. Yeah and You know I'm capable of doing all that. I'm really pleased with how that's going. I haven't heard anything yet but what I'm what I'm trying to find out next. And I thought I'd ask the gruesome like what are the best next steps. or where do I go to decipher through all the different options of how you can get your RSS Steeds Central. I can make this really easy for you The good news. Yeah when we started podcasting in two thousand four had just been born and it was so sewer early that there weren't really any podcast clients. I think Adam Curry wrote a simple one. There were couple and and to be honest You I had to do everything by hand you know I was making. We're making it up as we go along I had to create my own. RSS Feed along comes apple with itunes a couple years later we had to change everything. But you know by now it's pre fifteen years later. It's pretty darn easy. So here's the thing with a podcast. First of all seven thousand new podcasts. A week launch. Seven thousand of them fewer than ten percent. Do who episode two. So the first thing I would say is pick something you really enjoy. Because you're not going to remember you're not GonNa make money on it and I it's the The reason I think somebody podcasters pod fade is. They think we're I didn't make any money on this. Well no because you know it's It's hard to make money a podcasting. You for some reason you might blog or do anything else because you love it you have a subject you just passionate about you care a lot about do why personally yes. Music beautiful so step two is how do I make it.

I- Mabel Adam Curry Apple Itunes
Bitcoins Consolidation Continues

The Trader Cobb Crypto Podcast

05:21 min | 3 years ago

Bitcoins Consolidation Continues

"Get everybody welcome to try equipped Craig speaking well yeah talk about what a great little bit happened a little bit little bit a little bit of course we say also getting bit of bashing at the minute not all not all of course sir but many are taking bit of fumble backwards at the moment was saying some some downturns kicking back into play which is fine because it's just about knowing where to look for your opportunities and for the moment we really focus will I'm really focused on looking against the US day good margin opportunities available wants to USDA Suits may take two boxes on right now bitcoin looking he's up so files and closed up just yet because that will happen just a little while but the the level of bounced off as it as intesting twice snap is of significance to me you say it was the old lows thereabouts of two thousand and also of the pullbacks if you recall when we ran up fourteen thousand ish we did pull back to alot of non thousand four and of course we do know it went lower than that but that was the point at which we did really true selves into bit more downward momentum on that weekly hauling front now we're finding some support around that level have tested across two days now the first thing the twenty seventh of course today the twenty knots while today in Australia's thirtieth but you get what point the twenty ninth will of tested that lows well we do have a bullish candle that in currently two thousand four hundred fifty two dollars it's actually up two point four six percent so looking quite good there as far as green goes WANNA stay with us throughout the day the midterm times racial me all that much on Bitcoin to theorem definitely a painting a very different picture there of course it's theorem now pushing on two hundred ninety two dollars it's up point three five percent today and getting reading on on those low a timeframe talking about four out of the two hours worn out so and so forth some NAS looking trends up they could convergence moving averages of fanning of course looking for boosters and cradles look down less timeframe throughout to dive trading charities on AOL dolls and forty one cents consolidating around just below three dollars sixty really not a great deal happened off the push to the quickly last Friday but it is holding it rondos highs and I'm I'm just waiting to see what it does next we're GONNA move heart will a halt we do if we do move higher than it will kicks Trenton and will look a lot better for Mavi now three dollars and forty one cents up three points six two percent still aluminum don't want syllabus very little dog looking at six point six six cents very must numbers up three point three percent right now except a guy in another one of those in a consolidation Ryan drought now hovering around thirty cent mocks struggling to re- Mike above thirty one and push on if it was to do that it'll be more than happy to look for opportunities to try it it's up two point six four percents thirty cents right now lot sixty in fourteen cents again another one consoled with bitter resistance of ahead sixty two it nonsense caller ID three dollars around that region sixty say sixty one dollars Sixty what is the bloody number Mabel case sixty around sixty one sixty two bitter resistance through they're studying exactly exact level but we sort of looking around sixty one sixty two bitter resistance through that I wanna say push on before really look to take any traits he wants to solicit comeback much of saying showing up there on theory at the moment with a NAS trend kicking in as a six dollars and fourteen cents on at three point eight nine percent bitcoin cash one of the top performers in the top ten today as few tease therefore you nostrand there on the four hours I look at this law opposite up on voting charities from myself and some of the garden goes within the community this just Monday gone the paternity whether took up to what you did obviously the other day I think USA die before there was a little Bush Channel Four hours well but currently twenty wasn't seventy two cents many that have taken a little boost of the time went out on Mach v would be well beyond one to one wrought NASA profitable try to three point nine percent trump will the big winner for the day as trump two point two cents of eleven point one four percent just rocking on charging pretty heavily to the upside Breaking into a nice up trend Derek Dine on the daily and also the weekly now starting together a little momentum it's been a long time coming for Tron let's see how long it lasts Kadhafi four point three cents up two points four seven percent right now and again looking a little flat I names to move I was consolidating range much the same as many of the other markets in the top ten of the Mon falling on the very consolidation holding around that one city with those all resistance now acting is a little bit as a poet sitting at one hundred forty two dollars three percent right now so throughout the day guys we're going to wait and see what could see how these Ma closes and act accordingly

Craig Three Dollars Three Percent Two Thousand Four Hundred Fift Two Hundred Ninety Two Dollars One Hundred Forty Two Dollars Eight Nine Percent Four Seven Percent Three Five Percent Sixty One Dollars Four Six Percent One Four Percent Six Two Percent Nine Percent Six Dollars Four Hours Two Hours Two Days
Interviewing Joe Darowski from The Protagonist Podcast

The Fandom Podcast

10:11 min | 3 years ago

Interviewing Joe Darowski from The Protagonist Podcast

"Now on the one hand just doing it is the way you're gonNA learn so there's no other way to figure out how to do it other than saying I want to be podcast and therefore I will cast my name is Joe Girardi and I host the protagonist podcast previously I co-hosted we'll get into that I am sure we definitely will but I i WanNa know what got you into the podcasting game what made you become a podcast so in uncut somewhere in late two thousand fourteen one of my best friends from high school reached out to me and said delisted podcastone yes hide I listen to podcasts for years now and he's like I think I want to start one and I said I've batted around the idea starting one for a while and never committed and he's like let's commit and then within a month or two we had recorded our first episode and then a little bit after that we we've dropped the weekly episode of the protagonist podcast ever since What's never missed week which has been difficult at times there's always hurdles that come up in this case both my former co host todd Mac and I okay work in academia and he had a semester abroad in Spain and that was a little rough and making sure that we got a weekly recording done and we are back is to find work arounds dull recording when could but there were definitely times where we were starting recording very late might live and very early his time to make it work and we struggled through and and made it what is the premise of the protagonist podcast the premise of our podcast. I took a few rough drafts you know we've added a few ideas back and forth eventually we settled on What is the protagonist podcast where each week we talked about a great integrate story and we try and make sure that we mix it up our goal is basically we don't hit this one hundred percent of the time but but basically we wanted to talk about a character from a TV show a comic book a film and a novel every month so that's kind of the rotation we sprinkled some other things and we've touched on some other forms of storytelling podcast in there as well eventually we said well let's just talk about some great characters in great stories and we do try and mix it up between kind of the Classic Canon Story so we've definitely talked about some Shakespeare Jane austen with more pop culture stories we've done the planet hulk graphic novel which I think that Kinda grab bag at has its pluses and minuses I think it keeps some people will get up because they're just like that one's not for me interested but at the same time it might may expose listeners to things that are unfamiliar with it definitely has exposed me the host of the pot podcast to some stories that found from listener requests or things at todd suggested we have patrons at a certain level can request the topic to talk about and so in doing at this point we have released two hundred twenty episodes I think we've recorded about two hundred thirty 'cause we try ours is evergreens we try and keep a back catalog going there's just a lot of threat of material has been covered so one of my favorite things is finding a new story that I probably wouldn't across because of one of those suggestions saying Oh this is great I love this I'm so glad that I've been introduced to that I hope that we've been able to do that for listeners at some point as well I've been listening to your show for a few years now and I tell you that isn't that is one of the reasons why I it's because I get exposed to things that I never would have known about otherwise absolutely never would have known and it's a lot of fun there you and your your one hundred percent right there around Mike I don't even think I'm going to be interested in this and I I never deleted I just like okay I'm gonNA listen to that one finished these other ones and then and then I listened to what it was I should listen to that right away because I think I'm GonNa go watch that one of the first one that comes to my mind that you did a really deep dive on and it was it was an amazing episode food was watership down and I have no idea why because the cover has bunnies on it but I always thought that was like Mabel Battle Story I heard you talk about it was like Oh that's what I thought it was at all I well I didn't think it was I thought it was about sailor bunnies because as a child I caught five minutes of the animated adaptation and it was like this is very brief passage in the novel where they float down the river some but that's part and it's called watership down so I assumed this was all about seafaring rabbits for some reason and tell I'm pretty sure that one was a a patron request that came in and I started reading I was like Oh this is good it's not about see very rabbits and I got really into it and that was one of the episodes of kind of blew up for US view stick with podcasting while you know you kind of get the numbers that you expect for a number of downloads like you you kinda get your but then every once in a while you hit on something and it's like catching lightning in a bottle you're not quite sure why but it blows up and watership down for us like blew up on our facebook page we had thousands of likes on that one episode when we had done things that we would have thought would have a much larger fan base like we do Harry Potter episodes every year I'm you know we're we're going through one book per year kind of what we're doing we've done episodes on Star Trek and star wars and popular TV shows that you know do all right folks but watership down I think the combination of having a much broader and deeper fan base we knew seems like a lot of people from the comments we were getting on our facebook page like read this as in their adolescence or whatever and and just never forgot and it's stayed as a favourite and they've gone back to revisit it and a combination of that with no one talking about it on podcast whereas I think that's a big secret right there is everybody I everybody out there is talking about star wars and star trek and it's really hard to get really hard to get noticed on that but when you're when you're talking about something that nobody else is yeah I think that's I think that's something that really worth a magic happen yes absolutely and and also I mean it is a great book and it holds up to a lot of scrutiny and e easily we're able to do our our long discussion the episodes tend to be about an hour in length sometimes you know fifteen minutes sometime seventy minutes but about an hour is what we're shooting for and I delightful surprise both to say Oh this is something that's so good that I had never engaged with and I probably wouldn't have engaged with podcast and then also to discover that it kind of caught fire for a podcast and spread so you mentioned that it's a book that holds up to a lot of scrutiny and you you keep saying that you work in academia but let let let's throw this out there you're you're commercial that you have or that you had when it was you and todd were a couple of fan boys with PhD and that wasn't just that wasn't just fluff that was that's a fact correct yeah so I have a PhD Michigan State University in American Studies and at Michigan State they they have kind of a threat of HD? emphasis on American Popular Culture and my PhD dissertation was on race and gender in the X men comic books most of my academic publishing has either been on superhero comic books or on TV shows like the office or frazier or cheers so those are kind of my veins of research which todd has a PhD from Stanford and he studied the literature of Spain it's peninsula literature is what his PhD was and so you're taking this experience that you have with American pop culture PhD's literary background and you're diving into things like planet holck and and I always forget the name of it but it's the it's the youtube adaptation the Lizzy Lizzy Bennett Diaries yes yes that was a patron requested they've requested something that was more like classic literature I can't remember what it was now but then they switched at the last minute never mind I want to hear you guys talk about high school musical for an hour that was a fun episode as well and one of the strangest complaints I guess August complaints we've had because if you're going to be putting the material out there on the Internet do not just GonNa get bracelet with people who aren't fans of what you do but one of the biggest complaints we had is when we did an episode on Catcher in the Rye classic American Cannon Literature You know it's the signed in high schools or colleges all the time and both have literature you know backgrounds and and academics grounds but the person complained because we were making jokes while we talked about catcher in the Rye and that really upset them and in response we kind of Said look we we are GonNa talk about classic cannon things and we're also gonNA talk about light pop culture things and the combination that we think listeners or they are going to have is that we're going to try and living deep in the lighter pop culture things we're going to try and have some fun when we're talking about the classic deep literature you know the the cannon with a capital c ideas of literature and we want to always maintained that mix of having some good insights but also having some fun with the topics we're talking about not taking ourselves or the texts too seriously so you mentioned that you now hosted hosted the protagonist podcast by yourself todd todd went off he moved out of state and and pursued other projects projects yeah we made it for four years together he left on the two hundred episode he's been back a couple of times since then it's not like we had a big talk when he's gone he just said with with his career in studying peninsula literature is that I can't take the time commitment that this the maintaining this podcast is taking away from the studies I need for for his career he he just couldn't do it we we as he I mean he did it for four years so there's a lot of podcasters can't make

Joe Girardi Todd Mac Spain One Hundred Percent Four Years Fifteen Minutes Seventy Minutes Five Minutes One Hand
Dealing With a Loss in Your Fur Family

SHADES OF INTIMACY

10:59 min | 3 years ago

Dealing With a Loss in Your Fur Family

"We've got a short little podcast for it's it's an interesting little topic. <hes> that has come up an as usual it has something to do with <hes> one of ryan as usual but they do seem to sprinkle our podcast every once in a while so for those of you for animal lovers out there you you know that we've had some challenges with some of our dogs animals. There's been a lot of <hes> sickness and luckily as our three older dogs are slowly dying. We have a younger dog and so in our mind and we always had our younger little pup <hes> and then <hes> one night jenny looked down and saw mabel laying on the ground and she was just not looking good and her tummy was tight so we took her first thing in the morning first thing and and she had they did a little ultrasound and there was something in her tummy on her slain and needed immediate surgery and dan she didn't make it nope so this was like no one got to say goodbye. If you've heard the story about senator yep here one day gone the next as well center gave me this profound gift centers my dog. If you're new to this show who passed back in april i think earlier and and she had cancer and then it got worse and worse and and we just we spent a lot of time with her and i made a decision. I feel inter that. I didn't want her to feel my sadness. My fear right so anytime i was with her. I brought this energy. Deliberate conscious open hearted. I was sad sometimes but not i wouldn't. I didn't want her to feel fear right and we prayed that she would pass peacefully and home and she did <hes> and and all the time i was with her. They were good memories. He was able to go for a run right before she died. <hes> it was a profound approach to death breath that we've talked about it. It was gratitude spending with her ingratitude yeah and so when she died and i was i with her when she died so with my son riley. It was just profound gratitude right like i just felt profound gratitude so the practice of opening my heart we teach this and it lived it for so many years. It was just really beautiful result so to speak. I hate to speak it like a result. It sounds like diminishing it but that was the result is that when she passed i was at perfect peace and loving every moment of it right so so the universe has away a throwing the dice and changing things up i mean i gave mabel hug a kiss laughter after at the vet that morning and i'm just that was that never sorry <hes> sorry live again right and so here's this grieving process that we're going through jenny and i are going through with senator what we were so prepared we knew it was happening <hes> we we were just there with her <hes> and the and we had this intention of gratitude and we fulfilled that intention of gratitude in and there was peace and when we talk about senator it's there's always a little bouncing ourselves. It's actually you bring up sender's name. I kind of perk up. I remember how much i love her. It's joyce joyce memory right yeah once in a while. You get caught in a little moment that kinda will free will lurch you i can. I'm putting groceries away back in the car. If i took her show was put her hand head up behind the backseat and there was this a little face just poke up when i'm putting groceries in sometimes i'll look up for the face and it's not there right and then you had a moment at the she did the same in the backyard fence <hes> <hes> she's get way up and stretch and just put her nose up over the backyard fence in the corner right and then so when you drove in the driveway she was there to agree with her little knows over the fence. It's all you could see was the nose but other than that it's been so peaceful and i just love her so much but now i'm dealing with a very he's very sudden thing. That felt. I'm honest. Word was really unfair right. Yeah not just unexpected but like ah like what the hell yeah like what the hell <hes> and so there was anger frustration. Both of us felt the emotions. I mean we've we've gone through this. If if you're out there listening i mean i'm sure you can relate at some point in time when something went sideways and you just weren't prepared for it right and you said that didn't feel fair that that wasn't prepared for. We know there's death. We were sad to see san diego but we were <unk> able to say goodbye that felt there. <hes> that was a fair trade that we live in this world that we get to say goodbye and we felt that we didn't <hes> okay so you can feel i hope the emotion out there in the sense of of moments and there were members of the family okay who went through periods of i don't definitely rage anger at god and the universe. I missed just all over the place that this hits just like that right. Very emotional. Punch is to the gut scary and so a week or so. I'm not sure how long after maybe a week after it was exactly a week week after two weeks. It was two weeks two weeks after she died. I had a dream was <unk> out walking in a crowd of people and she came to me <hes> so this is a very real dreams and i know that sounds weird but she talked to me but she said it in where she didn't you know wasn't like a cartoon dog talking. It was her. I felt transmitted a message pitch to you are not smooth message in this was she said you can feel better or you can be angry yeah that's and then she left so i woke up i told you about the dream and i sat there in the midst of all the confusion of feelings and i thought okay. I'm gonna give shot like i'm a collar awesome. See if this is real so i just sat down kind of meditative place and i said okay. I'm willing to feel better about this and i felt immediately better right now. It's been about a a couple of weeks since the dream i think and there'll be moments when the habit of anger comes up but the message is just keeps coming back well you can feel better or you can be the angry right and there's just no explaining it. If i go into justice mode if i go into this wasn't fair. I am going to suffer offer but she just came to me and gave me this message and it's played out now. I'll add one piece to it. Some other things in life have have happened to in and i'm not nothing major like that but just little things and that they'll come up that have just been shitty right <hes> and a couple of times. I i'm just going oh. That's just really sucks and i heard her telepathic voice kirk. Oh you can feel better or i feel angry or one time. It was feel shitty and i was like are you. Are you saying i talked to my dog in my spirit mind listen. This pretty much applies to everything in my imagination that this wasn't like the dream imagined a wolf of yes and and it's been rewriting things for me yeah kind of a radical rewriting there's there so i had a member member of the family distant member of the family years ago and she was angry angry angry at someone she had divorced thirty years earlier <hes> thirty years so i was younger at this time i mean younger than i am now like about fifteen years ago oh and she was older and she was still bitter and angry and just just so angry and i said why don't you forgive him and i i wasn't super wise or anything right that was kind of me just parodying whatever right yeah and she turned to me and she said i can't forgive him. It'll make it okay what he did to me and then i did get wise because i looked at that and went. Oh within your kind of fucked like you now are fucked. Yes you'll never are you have to suffer to make him his action justifiably bad and then i got wisdom in who i gotta be careful like if i ever have things like that where i am suffering on purpose to make sure you that justified that you were wrong which doesn't work because that person's out there living their life. You're the only one sitting there being miserable yeah but the twist was you know and so oh but now it played out in a little way with mabel as you told me this you told me about the stream on a walk we are on a walk and you told me about your your dream and you told me what mabel little are apparently our little guru dog told you in the stream and the first thing that came up to mealy i understood it and in the first thing that came out to me is yeah i could let go of that but then that makes this whole thing fucking okay oh and you know that's a place of habitual anger and identification with hanger like if i let that gold that meant something about me instead. It means nothing about me. It just means i can sit here. You know tense collapsed in anger in a habitual anger versus just feeling better and feeling past myself and feeling past any sort of identification. I have a feeling angry that my dog has gone

Mabel Senator Jenny Ryan San Diego Riley Kirk Two Weeks Thirty Years Fifteen Years One Day
'Borat' ended Pamela Anderson and Kid Rock's marriage

Jared and Katie

02:24 min | 4 years ago

'Borat' ended Pamela Anderson and Kid Rock's marriage

"And Pamela Anderson. Use to remarry mismatched last very law did not, they dated for a while got married and then almost I mean, I think they made it less than a year. I think okay bought we're learning today that there is one person to blame for the break-up of their marriage of sure. Tommy lee. Negative. Oh, kid real saw the movie, and I texted pounded tonight, said have the go? What did you think? And she takes it back. He's getting divorced, why she goes the movie and I thought it was Jay, but then a few weeks later, they got divorced when they put his reason for divorce poor at. Sasha baron. Cohen is the reason. Why getting they do? Well, so do you remember the movie borat, Pamela Anderson is in the movie, and there's a scene where she borat is kidnapping, Pamela Anderson, and, you know, like the scene behind bars movies, you never really know, who's in on it, and if it's if it's a joke, and if it's not, I mean, it's very confusing experience. But in this case in the movie, borat, Pamela Anderson was in it because we're at was obsessed with Pamela Anderson, and so she was being kidnapped Pamela Anderson was in on the joke, but she didn't tell anybody that she was on a including her own husband kid rock. Yeah. So when Pamela Anderson showed kid rock the movie. I don't know if he didn't like how much she was in it or the obsession or the kidnapping or what? And they both cited kid rock amp. Pamela Anderson cited on their divorce papers borat. So we're up with them. I don't know. He he's been married for a long time to Fisher. There's something there was a scene, where there something about her sex tape in it, yet, because she was with timely before, Mabel that. And so I think that's part of it like, oh, let me see that sexy. You know, then may this brought it back up. He's I I don't know. There were reports. I mean, this is all back in two thousand six by the way. But we're just now learning that it was borat, who is to blame or lease who they're blaming. There were reports that kid rock blew up at Pam after seeing the movie and it did. Indeed 'cause they're split and Saburo. It was like, guess there were casualties. Movie has major lawsuits all the time. But we continue to go. See boroughs, hilarious

Pamela Anderson Kidnapping Tommy Lee Sasha Baron Fisher Saburo Borat Mabel Cohen JAY PAM
Utopia Music - When Music Meets Data

The Tech Blog Writer Podcast - Inspired Tech Startup Stories

05:49 min | 4 years ago

Utopia Music - When Music Meets Data

"Up with a gripe today. Yes, I made a big big rookie mistake by doing my Christmas shopping. I came across a bog and all that saw. I'd not used for years in the heat of the moment, I hit the auto checkout, but to discover the confirmation Email, and it was going to be sent to an address on lived up five years ago. This is where my problem began because first of all a whole Mahamadou could say the goal at it made a mistake here. But the only way I could contact the sign was to secure message on their website, which where are pretty much filled out a form say, here's my order number. Here's the tracking number. Can you read our record for me or just cancel the order? However, they sent me a reply say make could not help. I'm they sent that message for a do not reply Email address, which is always a bit of a trigger for me early. Why of businesses still communicating through a do not reply communication method? Just pays no sense. So I was left with a message from a do not reply Email address saying they were unable to contact the delivery guys and just say here is tracking day. Do not send it so Logan short is I took them as Tamayo hands use. My specially skill who said save the day. Yes. This was a mistake made by me, but technology should be used to help remove friction points at them. Roy. Whenever I hear about a business lockdown in their old processes and just reply with computer says no the process says no any kind of mentality light that I don't get angry. I just think ultimately these are the businesses are going to struggle in the long run in last night up their game. Because technology is rapidly shaping the future. And today's guest is looking at disrupting the music industry and the old way of doing things with utopia music. And in this case utopias mission is to reclaim and boost to create an economic value of the music industry, and they're setting out to transform the entire ecosystem with an open platform with it create new revenue streams, consolidate hidden day decline of the Ottoman an on not the industry's full potential by unifying it all in one space. That is more like it. We've. We've never grown team of sixty people across Switzerland, Sweden and Spain all focus on that same common goal, providing trusted fast, an affair environment. For all I to get them on the show. So today's guest is the founder of utopia and goes by the name of matatus, and he's been featured on Bloomberg CNN, Nickelodeon, Wall Street Journal wired, and so many other top -cations, and this serial entrepreneurs successfully also create company seize the early nineties, but in different areas of content distribution streaming online gaming, social media and computer technologies are probably reveal to watch all ready, but but let's explore further tech destruction of the music industry under all that utopia. We'll play in that why asking you to book h-a-l-o and hold until I is I beam your is all the way to the side road near a Gary in Basel owner where today's guests mattessich has just pulled over in his car and way in a spate with us. A massive warm. Welcome to the show. Can you tell the listeners about who you are? And what you do. I'm. I am with you would call a serial entrepreneur, I've important trading companies in the internet space since the mid ninety s and I've seen all of the shifts from, you know, the start until the first wave second wave, and I've been talking weight very interesting to Gino seen the back ground of the industries and most of their DC see today, most of the spaces. You've heard them or seen them before the yes weren't possible because of technology so looking at the blockchain space, it's very interesting because missing layer, we haven't really seen before that, you know, makes it possible for this. And whatever I've done well was part of creating electronic sports movement back into days creek and some of the first events with prize money in the world, we set up for the forums communities, the big social network, we're all gamers were we created one of the first major platforms that real coming directed with games. To make them social and that ended up being acquired by by Dyson meetings. So we started a chemical magin TV which is still today. One of the larger provider of on the internet television. For instance, in Germany, we created a platform that could do broadcasts quality television. So if you imagine what broadcast television just internet broadcasting, and we we managed to be the first company in the world that the Goshi aided rights to do live television on any device, even to be able to go back from live signals backwards when he miss something or, you know, record everything in the cloud, and we've got all the Hollywood studios cool to do. So which I don't think anyone else has succeeded today until they're still a large provider as a back in Houston for a lot of other companies today. And so we've been all the time working with creation of technologies, it's synchronized with media and going back. For all the way down into the rights management and and to utopia so national the progression of that. Because every time we work with any type of media, you get into music discussions to Mabel to do television in in Germany and go getting was the biggest channels in. We had to clear musical rights with with gamma, which is collecting society, which was a one year

Germany Wall Street Journal Logan ROY Basel Tamayo Mabel Hollywood Switzerland Houston Gino Founder Days Creek Gary Spain Nickelodeon Bloomberg Cnn
Synchronized Acting: Shakespeare to Sorkin

Casting Actors Cast

20:09 min | 4 years ago

Synchronized Acting: Shakespeare to Sorkin

"So actually seen actors lose out on a job because of a lousy sweet. The way you say your name has as much to do with the level of confidence you're showing. I mean, it's like suddenly they're in the witness protection program. Welcome to casting actors, cast insights for actors on acting in the business of show casting director. Jeffrey drives Bach takes you behind the scenes, reveal secrets to successful acting career. You can find out more on the web at casting actors, cast dot com. Now, here's your host jeopardy drives by. Hey, everybody welcome yet again to another episode of casting actors cast today. We're gonna be talking about what I call synchronicity synchronized acting from Shakespeare to Sorkin. We're gonna dive into some of the important qualities that authors with their material want to accomplish when they have you perform it. But first let me just take a moment. Once again, I keep on wanting to thank you so much for your really kind words that I'm receiving back and the fact that the podcast is doing so extraordinarily well, I'm a little humbled by the whole thing, and I really want to keep on doing these. And if you're one of those people out there and I know you're out there, I could hear you. I would love just to hear some feedback. So if you go to casting actress, cast dot com can either send me a voice message. It's really easy. Just a one click and I get the, I get the voice. You can introduce yourself and say, Hello and thank you for the Pat. Gas or whatever you want. Even if you have a question, I would be thrilled to have an opportunity to play your question on the air and also answer live, so we can really have a nice dialogue, especially in those areas that you think I might not be covering to your satisfaction because with your contribution, I can help shape and design the direction of some of these podcasts to really be of great benefit to you. And I know I've mentioned this before, but I really love doing these podcasts. And one of the reasons is I feel like, and I know this is gonna sound pollyanna, but I feel like I Mabel to give back information that I wish I had had when I first started out, I feel like it's really an amazing journey that we're all on together. And I guess that's another reason why I'm feel so motivated about these particular podcasts. So thanks so much. So synchronized acting, we're gonna talk about exactly what does that really, really mean? I'm entitling the. Podcast synchronized acting Shakespeare to Sorkin. It seems to me based on my experience that actors can fall into basically one of two categories. So which one are you? My category was honestly, if I really took a hard look, I would say that I was a lazy actor many times. I just didn't work hard enough and for those roles that I really really wanted, I would over work it. And so immersed myself into it that by the time I showed up to audition to show the producer of the director of the casting director how I was going to play the part. I ended up wanting it so much that that desperation seemed to bleed through everything that I had done. Everything that I had rehearsed any of the thought processes probably because I was a little more nervous than normal and it just completely exploded in front of me, and there are some. Really painful experience. I'm laughing because I'm looking back on some of those painful moments that I had had as an actor. So I oftentimes just felt like I worked either too hard or not hard enough, but basically, I, I would say I would fall under the lazy actor category. And then of course I've worked with and I see now that there are those actors the other category, which is the what I call the overworked after the actor that absolutely works so hard to discover as many different interesting nuances that they can and apply themselves to almost every conceivable option in the character that they are about to play that they literally exhaust themselves out of making a clean choice for the character. So that overworked actor has put so much into it that they just simply cannot make. A clear cut decision about it because there are too many options available. So when you entertain the idea of having too many options in your character, you end up not being able to make a decision about any of them. So I know this is a little simplistic, but I think that actors are either a lazy actor or that

Shakespeare Aaron Sorkin Washington Shakespeare Theater Jeffrey Joyce Julius Caesar Oregon Shakespeare Festival Director Coma Erin Bach Jeff Producer White House PAT Utah Moliere Mineta Twenty Minutes