17 Burst results for "Macpherson"

Bob and Sheri
"macpherson" Discussed on Bob and Sheri
"I suppose we're gonna for Elle Macpherson. Wow, let's let's break and come back who knew that Billy Joel. I'm gonna do a little tease on this. He wrote another song for Elle McPherson that you assume was written for someone else. And that's coming up. I just pulled up the picture of Elizabeth and whoever is the first wife, I guess. And she's very attractive personally. She has a look on her face that says I'm all business. There's just something. Yes, she was. She definitely was. All right, more of this hot smoke and Billy Joel team next. Ring whatever you drink and celebrate happy hour, Thursdays at 7 p.m. eastern. Live on the bobbin sherry Facebook page. Hey, if you know a family that could use a little bit of help right now filling the fridge and these are some pretty tight times. Go to BOB, AND, SHE, RI dot com and let us know. We will keep everybody's name private and concealed and we're gonna pick a winner every week and help fill their fridge. Our partners and friends at HelloFresh have kicked in a $112 gift card, plus another $100 Visa gift card. So that should take it down out of it. Help a family fill their fridge right now at BOB, AND, SHE, RI dot com. Yes, indeed. Thank you, sherry. We're talking about Billy Joel in the last couple of segments of the show. And he's still alive. Let me say, you have to say that these days. He's very much alive. He's not passed. He's a story. That's right. He's back out on the road. And I guess his Broadway play. He had a Broadway play called moving out that started in, I think it was 2002 and ran for many seasons. And I always thought that that's where his music belonged was on Broadway. He just seemed like a Broadway composer, more than a rock composer, despite the fact that he had all these big pop hits. But I think it was just, you just think of his songs and they're perfect for a Broadway play. The play was about a kid in Long Island that was trying to get out of a tough neighborhood. Anyway, back to you guys. So Billy Joel is dating supermodels now. Elle Macpherson, and she was the inspiration and not

One Life Radio Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"Repairs a high chance of getting things like that. He's deities a bunch of health problems. If you're chronically installing the it's a big risks and tough. You can't talk when you main day job right. it's going to be. Yeah yeah yeah. Last week was challenging for sure but You know in your research you did mention the one but are there other nutraceutical that you came across. It seemed to be the most promising delaying aging. I've heard that vitamin cs. A big one. Is that true. If i don't see it's great The one that. I'm really encouraged about dna on something that nicotinamide nucleotide it's a. It's an enzyme that comes from milk But you need to drink like gallons of the stuff you get enough and we have the qian's i'm in. Ad that's involved in five hundred different chemical processes but a pot of its role in a big pot is powering quandary. I will address any better and just like your cell phones When you when you buy brand new cell phone the battery lasts for a couple of days and that each charged the which beautifully is we We have out. Batteries declined just like a cell phone. That's maybe three years old thousand well and so we get to fifty sixties. Don't have the energy. They used to so but boosting levels You actually arabia to restore that it. It's like tuning on the lights again. Like you know you think you've got more energy and these are the sorts of interventions that we've got exit. Now that we can actually like elevate and ask cells and how function and when we do that then flying the aging process now Zombie sells you know. And how do we get rid of them. How do how do they hinder us with. Certain diseases viruses like kovic nineteen yes. There's nobody sells a just like the living deed literally that shelter. That look like beast this past piece by issues if you will and when we were young we have them as well but i mean system seems to pick up on them and then remove them for us but as we get older either mean system gets a little lazy or it just doesn't have the energy to clear them out. They sit there and what they do. Is they released a whole bunch inflammatory giant in the face of the health of the cells around them. And and we just we literally build up as we age. And so we we get like the syndrome of inflammation and And so what's neat about all of this. Of course a scientists when they see a problem making six and they've discovered that you can remove these innocent sells something cooled franson which is a A vitamin like any oxidant. That comes from strawberries. Trial of affi- suggestion so that on the hardware. Can you can get five sisson supplements and these decisively actually removes the cells and helps the body identify clear the maps and Just has like a again on the on the body because it reduces inflammation is out those junk cells. And and yeah has really significant. Help me i remember reading that in the book and that it came from strawberries. And there's the music on my gosh. I wish we had more time. You'll have to come back. I found that the conversation and the book absolutely fascinating everyone. We we've been talking with greg. Mcpherson his book is harnessing the nine hallmarks of aging to live your healthiest life. It's a fantastic book. I encourage you to get a copy greg. Thank you so much for jumping on the air with us today. It was my pleasure. Thanks much mind as well. You're welcome right junior. You ready to wrap it up all right everyone you know what. Thank you for listening. Remember you get one body you get one mind and you get one live. Get out there today and get some exercise..

One Life Radio Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"Be very happy with an extra ten years of health. I mean we're all gonna get old everyone out there listening we're all hopefully we'll get old but i wanna be old and strong. That's i want to be so strong. I wanna go out kicking out really song when i go out. But we're going to go for a quick break. Everyone stay tuned when we get back. We're gonna be talking about the types of things that damage our dna with with greg mcpherson. We'll be right back. You're listening to one life radio to advertise one life. Radio send us an email info at one life. Radio dot com. It's back to school time. And that means that you need to boost your immune defences with organic by the immune support. Bundle is a double pack of protection for your working immune system. It's a holistic approach to wellness combining daily support with extra defenses when you need them most all organic vitamin cs zinc and adapted genetic superfoods. Give a nate immunity a helping hand for a limited time your immune support bundle will include an extra box of immunity a forty dollar value at no charge. That way you and your family can feel safer get yours by going. To organic by dot com. That's organic by dot com celebrating ten years on the air. Thank you for listening to live radio. Everyone you're listening to one life. Radio this is bernadette with junior in the mix with and we also have greg mcpherson with us. We are live from dallas texas on iheart media as well as in southern california on. Abc news. talk. Greg mcpherson is a pharmacist. Biotechnologists cellular help expert and author of harnessing the nine hallmarks of aging to live your healthiest life He more than a decade. Greg has been working in the biotechnology sector specifically focusing on the aging process at the cellular level. He also is an entrepreneur and launched the company s our w laboratories the science and research based company that curates the latest biotechnology research to formulate natural products designed to help slow down the onset of onset of aging and disease. His mission is to slow the aging process at a cellular level And helped millions of people delay the onset of diseases associated with advanced aging like alzheimer's heart disease as well as increase health and your life span you can find him at his website. Nine hallmarks of aging dot com. That's the nine hallmarks of aging dot com or on twitter at greg mcpherson Okay so great. So many questions i want ask you. I don't want to run out of time. So we kinda tease. We were going to talk about the types of things that damage dna. So what damages. Our dna ride's gonna do so The uv rays like sunlight. That's the reason. We put a sunscreen on advice each morning to protect our skin and keep looking young Diet can affect deny Just sit and things like overcooked. Meat excetera in industries ineffective these rules. I guess the key anything that goes there is at the end. And you you dana actually the primary driver for Aging in in the body and so looking after it is on the supoported. Well how how frequently does our dna breakdown break and can can are can Our dna that's damaged be reversed. Yeah these it's quite remarkable is under incredible appreciate In so it breaks between fifty and a hundred thousand terms of diet itself. So it's crazy crazy number. But we've got incredible repair in mason speaking. On sal constantly scheming it fixing it and repairing nothing particularly worry about other than you. Just wanna be looking minimizing the damage. Because it doesn't matter how many times you repeat something at some point just breaks and breaks for good You can look after you deny by taking a few supplements and one that. I'm really excited about something would hold me Extract from himalayan territory. Buck weight And it is. I guess particularly you deny the white. It's impossible before and stops the guess really participant. Free radical damage. Wow i i love that and you. I'm guessing that you discovered that and your laboratory right doing all your research right. Yeah i would love to. I would love to say that but this an incredibly bright people out of interest in the mirror kathy we discovered and they're doing some remarkable. I mean it's going to be more and more people take Simply because i'm not only visit the cop. So i hope i can help us well. Is it available right now. Can you order a w dot co And and it's it's dot co without the not the dot com dot com is a product could sell one and it has it in there and Yeah just to really encourage raises to cone. Listen to look at it and do the diving the research so my website but around round trips an hicks just something on his belt. So i'll be getting some junior you interested. Un in with me on it hook hook you up with a bottle will report back to you. Greg let you know how it's working but But you know how does sleep reverse dna damage. And i just went whole week with little to no sleep. I couldn't even complete the sentence us at one point. I'm still a little sleep deprived. I think still i had a little kitten that we rescued and But i was thinking all week long. Oh my goodness. I wonder how damaging myself by being so sleep deficient right because sleep reverses. Dna damage does it. Not the guys. You're absolutely right. So yeah i mean it was not lost because you'll catch up on sleep. The for other people that have chronic insomnia. It does become a problem that does not interfere with the dna dna repair processes in these. Little things could him is kept. Shia chromosomes quite often Short no faster when you've got an so many so it is it's an important. Thank you to you. It is a problem for you. Yeah no it's critical. You don't realize how much you're you know it's it's funny. I'd never gotten to a point. I think maybe. When i had my first daughter i remember being that tired but i couldn't even complete sentences. It was really bad like my friday And i i. It's just amazing. How you're how your your mind gets gets affected so so greatly by lack of sleep and your body too. I know energy right. Because that's when your body.

One Life Radio Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"Is me negative hubris. Call your down get yourself in a different nervous system. State respond respond at all. That's what it's about. 'cause you and it's been i i was. I was the most ill-tempered human the most offended person walking around for a long time and it life is so much better when you when you flip the coin. Was there a moment something that happened. That flip that switch and you don't know that there was a singular of all i think is just over the years as i've been doing self development and working through all the stuff in learning more is it comes in little spurts. His relations light bulbs on and on and on. And on my oh. I'll just chuckled. Like three around you and you. Will you know what i was thinking. You know you have such a good heart. You're such a sweetheart you're such a nice man you are and people will see i think alpha man they think oh. This is a brutal person. Walking around alpha and true alpha mindset is someone who has incredible consideration and kindness in their heart for their for their other brothers and sisters out there. You know They are some of the kindest people that's part of the part of the what the the recipe the formula right to be unaffordable to have a huge open heart as well hundred percent. Because what i do that. I can lead from that mindset in that state of being that. I'm going to be more effective leader. I'm going to be aboard effective communicator under affective listener learner and teacher. And that's what it's about. That's the reasons become unaffordable. That's the reason we operate an alpha mindset. I love it marlboro set. Thank you so much. Always a pleasure. Great avenue on the air today. Thank you again weeks. U2 i'm on offend -able you guys out there in the universe all right thank you. Everyone stay tuned. Mos- website is hunt dash prosper dot com or on instagram at hunt underscore prosper will be right back. We've got a great show continuing on with greg mcpherson aging on a cellular level. You're listening to one life. Radio wanna advertise on radio. Send us an email info at one life. Radio dot com. We have an exciting announcement to make. Jared ramirez our on air microbiome expert and his team and environ. Medica took home the twenty one next year award for best new products supporting a healthy microbial. The next day awards recognize the most progressive innovative inspiring and trustworthy products in the natural products industry. We've always known about their tariff. Laura deep immune symbiotic. It provides broad spectrum gut health support while strengthening. The bodies adaptive response to immune challenges. It is a completely elevated gut. Immune system support product a perfect welcome addition to your supplement routine visit environmental dot com to learn more and order your tear up. Laura deep immune symbiotic. Congratulations.

One Life Radio Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"But there were some good things about it too. You know and not all of it was miserable. I was trying to be funny more than any more than anything. But you can find the good and the bad and everything. But i think you know people we we judge too much. We judge each other too much. You know you. I was thinking as you were speaking about. You were talking about when you were a kid you know and you were kind of the you were the skateboard guy right. Is that what you shit. Okay so you got the cool kids you know you got the kids at wanna be cool. You got the poor kids. You got the rich kids in you. And i've talked about this in studio many times before about the comparison game that people play with one another in themselves. If you're constantly comparing yourself to other people you're never going to be confident. Her happy agreed one hundred percent. Yeah but we're always striving to be like somebody else instead of saying. Hey be the best version of you. Possible don't worry about being someone else view. That's what we should be teaching. We'll you know you. You talked about taking things personally to play the victim anything else. You wanna share with us about that. It's just i. I used to see this all the time when i was a personal trainer and primarily. It was with my female clients and the ladies that were at the gym. That just ran in the in in those circles of they would they would literally it's just self deprecating language. In order to receive praise from somebody else they won ballot. We want validation. Oh you know this is so hard. Or i'm just i i feel bad today or whatever it is and they they. I can't tell you you sit and listen. Wait just really coming out of your mouth right now. You're talking about about yourself and you can see it. You can see them fishing for a compliment and and and we just. We searched for that we for ways to be a victim. You know we go on facebook. We go on social media and at the subconscious level or consciously like. What can i look at today. That's gonna make me mad. Yeah nothing's gonna make you mad that you being a victim you know. Everything's going on right now in our society. You have two choices you can allow to impact you. You can allow it to create a victim mentality or you can choose otherwise you can turn and strong firm in yourself and your self confidence and who you are and what you can do yeah well. That's the mindset right. Isn't that you know. can we talk about that. That's that's that's huge absolutely yeah in alpha mindset has men and women. You know it's not it's not. It's not gender specific but being an alpha is being confident. It's the it's literally. it's the four agreements. it's funny is. I was introduced that book as i was going through my program and i thought wow this is exactly what i'm already teaching. Which is being impeccable. Which were honest true. You know if you that's what we we when we don't we're not true with our word then we get caught in that we get defensive. When it's our fault taking things personally Doing your best And it's not what it's about an also it's about being vulnerable. It's about asking for help. You know people people mistake the term alpha especially when you're talking about males and alpha man. They think of the you get this mental image of some executive. Ceo big guy. Whatever just kind of alpha man is compassionate. he's vulnerable. He knows when asked questions he knows where the ask her help heal but he also knows how to stand firm in his beliefs he stands. Ground stands ground honestly. He stands ground without being without being offensive right enough. It's i can be. I can be an alpha and also be respectful absolutely well. Yeah the alpha males typically the true alpha male or female is usually the one. That's a little more silent you know but Ah at the adaptive training foundation. You work with men and women who have been through trauma. Most of us will never experience in our lifetime. How how does the program address feelings of uae me and transition those feeling and to the alpha mindset very quickly. Say why not you. that's it. Why not because right. Now you're about to learn your we say this we say you're now bec- because of what happened to you not in spite of because this happened to now you're about to discover your superpower. Now you're about to discover the strength that you never knew that. And it's because of this. I can't tell you the people that they you ask them and you say hey could you. If you had your legs back or you could be the way you are right now. Would you change anything. And almost every one of them will say no. Let's just like this. Because now they see life in a different way challenge to a degree again. Used you nailed it and most humans will never be challenged by and how you respond to that again. They're not a victim. They experienced an injury and now they're getting to just step into this. Why because i can show a better for myself. I can show a better for my children. My family my community. And i learned so much more because now when they when they experienced a traumatic injury. Like that you're forced to step out of your comfort zone in order to grow. You have to be humble. You're gonna fail you're gonna fall. You're gonna you're gonna hurt you're gonna but all those things leads to gross yeah. Humility is something that there's a lot of that lacking in our world today making making me talking about all of this makes me think of my father Who passed away about ten years ago. An amazing man but you know my dad was had a huge heart and he would always say but this was before the four agreements. Don't don't don't make assumptions. You know which is the third agreement. Don't don't assume anything or don't make assumptions. My father was famous for saying you don't know what that man feels like until you've walked in his shoes like walked up in his shoes in so many of us. Forget that you know. We're so quick to to make judgment on people are about people that we we. We don't even really know we don't know them. We don't know that we haven't walked in their shoes. And i think it's important what we're talking about today. I really do. Hopefully you know a lot of people will get some really great takeaways from your content but what are some of the things. Mo- that we can do to help has become unaffordable. It's it's it's those of agreements don't make assumptions. Don't take it personally because you nailed it. And that's it. We don't know what is going on in the life or mind or the human that may have quote triggered us or quote offended us so when you can show compassion for that and it doesn't mean you have to like it if you can just show compassion and understanding say. Wow you something you could do everything. Okay and just walk away with your head held high. That's how you that's how you become unaffordable using breath work using the long exhale to calm yourself down. If you're keyed up in your sympathetic fight or flight nervous system state breathing and getting your mind into boulder alpha call sympathy harassed estate so that you can think rationally when you are quote being triggered or offended. 'cause it's going to happen because we're trying to break old patterns and it's recognizing that it's recognizing you're getting triggered and going. Oh this.

One Life Radio Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"Not even talking to you if you're if you're if you're if you're one of those people there's nothing to take fence about. Hey sign up for the sign up for the the race that you should be in no step up to this level but we we look for that i. I used to see that when i was personal training all the time and not so much being offended or taking things personally But it was around that victim mentality and it goes around. It's like being offended. People look for validation and we like to. We like to demean ourselves to talk about ourselves so then we can seek validation from someone else to make us feel worthy now in junior. What are you thinking about all this. I'm dying to know what you're thinking of well. Yeah that was something. I had to learn as as a dj i mean people want to critique you all the time and you know i used to get offended all the time when people tell me i sucked or whatever But i had to learn that. I'm there to do a job. I know i'm not bad. So i don't get offended by that stuff. It's just people. Sometimes i think people just think that you know anything that they want they want it right then right now and if you can't do that then you're horrible so it's like i don't know you just learn how to deal with that and i think once you learn how to not be offended by everything in life is a little bit easier. Well yeah and people love to be critical. You know they do. There's lots of armchair. That's what i call mccollum. The armchair quarterback you know things you know and they're watching speaking football. They're watching a football game and they get all upset like oh he could have done this or he could have done that or you missed that block. You're not on the field buddy right. You don't know what it's like unless you're on the field and so yeah But why why we care so much more about what other people think about us. I think it's. I think it goes back to programming that we we've discussed that before you know we are we are. We are tried species. And we seek validation. And i believe that at some point in time we. We've not been taught the self confidence that's self. Confidence has not been reiterated with teachers with mentors with parents and so we look for outside ways to be to be validated. And i think it just comes from the program it comes from social media it comes from all the all the damn filters they're everywhere you look at look at the young the kids these days. You know your teenage daughter you know. There's there's so many things on instagram and facebook. And whatever else they're doing that you know if you don't have this look or as or this thing of perfection. Then something's wrong with you so you know and we. We don't know where that comes from. I don't know where we lost it I think it's also something that's learned from children when they see it in our behavior and they emulate us no as adults as parents as mentors and guides. It's our duty to learn this process and learn to be coffee. Learn to be our own person. Learn to not worry about the opinions of others and and walk in and when you could walk in that then that is going to be transferred to the next generation. Yeah no it's true and it's all about confidence but confidence is something that comes from. Within and other people can help you build it but at the end of the day. It's got to come from within. Would you agree absolutely. Yeah yeah the the the motto via modem musashi quote. There's nothing outside of you. You're everything you seek is already within you. Wow i love that. I'm looking at the clock. We're going to go for a quick break. More coming up with mojo said everyone. We're talking about how to become unaffordable. You're listening to one life. Radio advertise on one life. Radio send us an email info at one life. Radio dot com. I love sprouts and now it just got better. I just discovered sudden warrior plant based protein in collagen building protein. Peptides are now available at sprouts in great flavors like salted caramel berry mocha chocolate and vanilla organic and plant based at sprouts and son warrior dot com. That's son warrior dot com ten years. Positively on your radio. This is one life radio all right. Everyone welcome back to one live radio. This is bernadette with junior in the mix and mo bros that we are live from the iheartmedia studios here in dallas texas and in southern california on. Abc news. talk okay. Mo- let's talk about this how to become an unaffordable or how to become unaffordable. Let's continue this okay. So why do we care. We talked about. Why do we care what other people think. So much about is but how did we get this way. Let's talk about that a little more again. I think it goes back to the programming. I think it just goes when we were. You know your were being hardwired. Literally our brain being our thoughts and our opinions of ourselves and the world of being formulated between ages three seven and i think we see a lot of things that create that pattern of being you know we see in p. people don't we don't think about that especially as parents of your children. See in emulate everything that you do so and then you have social media. You have television you. Have you know the classic thing. The popular kids the other kids. So i don't i i think it's just how we were our raised and it's we want to be accepted and if we're not accepted by a certain group or certain person or send someone says something that's mean to us. We don't have the emotional intelligence to go wait. This isn't about me this is about you. you know as children but we're not taught that so. I think that that's a great thing that we could do is at an early age. Teach our children self-confidence teach them that you know if julie down the street susser your says you're ugly. She doesn't mean that about you. It's something that's you know. There's something going on with julie and we need you'd be we need to show some compassion towards her and you have that mindset instead of instead of taking it personally and again allowing it to offend you because being being offended is literally a choice being a victim a choice You know i've mentioned this as well as you would work. With our data athletes having a disability is a choice. People have injuries they had experienced Didn't quote suffer and they don't a disability. They're not disabled of anything. You don't suffer you. You experience a difficult time now your your trip to austin. It wasn't miserable it was. It wasn't when you when you label his miserable you that though we wake up when i go in at the subconscious like well today. It's going to suck well well normally. I don't have that attitude. I'm like. I'm like you know positive. I'm very positive. Typically i just what was really low on sleep too. You know but it. It was miserable mouth.

One Life Radio Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"It's what's it's always a little weird to be back in the seat and well you know what this last weekend was. I want to know what was the last weekend without real football for the next six or seven months. Oh yeah you've got. The season kicks off. Thursday with the cowboys. Already got a party start. It's going to be difficult. I you know. I love tom brady. And the buccaneers. And you know the grand couch and rob gronkowski. And i you know the whole whole buccaneers story and how they've come back to life and of course i love the dallas cowboys to So it's going to be. It's going to be an interesting game but you know. I'm well practiced loving two teams playing at the same time because i've been a bill. I've been a bills fan for years. So you know you always child to team. You got your new team. Yeah team where you're from where you live. that's fine. yeah it's football. It's the love of football. So i'm excited. I am to football. Season always excites me. There's just there's just something in the air. I'm really looking forward to thursday sunday. Monday all sounds good. Think they should have a football game every single night. That would be great. wouldn't it. I think that's the reason that that football soap opera. Two hundred and some baseball games but you only get seventeen football game. So that's right. That's right but what i love the fall yet i do. I just love this time of year. It's always been my favorite and of course it's got to do with football but You know it's great to be here today and everyone Thank you for listening. We've got a great show lined out for you. We've got greg at the half. He is a he's a pharmacist. A biotechnologists a cellular health expert and he is the author of the book. Harnessing the nine hallmarks of aging to live your healthiest life. He's on at the half. We're going gonna be talking about aging on a cellular level really scientific stuff but And what were you going to say. I can't wait but it sounds like you're on a roll. There's no interrupt me give me time to take a breath now now i love it. It sounds interesting. Yeah the book is extremely good. You guys very scientific very well thought out and well researched. I'm really looking forward to it. And i'm always looking forward to sat. He's up. i here today. One life radio. Mo- how you doing good. Yeah well. I'm excited to have you on the show i love. I don't know if you saw the are social post. Did you see it. It wasn't it wasn't it cool. Yeah yeah but. I love this topic. How to become unaffordable with marlboro sad. If you're just now joining us for the first time oprah sad has been in the health and fitness industry for over twenty four years and he is currently the director of mindset and nutrition at the adaptive training foundation a dallas based nonprofit that leads disabled military veterans and civilians through a nine week mental and physical training program called redefine and through his unique program. Mo- helps these adaptive athletes overcome physical emotional and mental pain. Fear and self doubt is a keynote speaker on fear and an expert and human behavior mindset in language. He is the founder of hunting prosper where he leads an eight week. Master fear online program as well as the men's leadership academy his website is hunt dash prosper dot com or on instagram. At hunt underscore prosper. Today we're talking about how to become unaffordable so mo. What does it mean to you to be unaffordable. What does that mean. it's a it's a. It's a phenomenal term. Actually learned from one of my mentors and a few months ago and essentially what it means is. There's nothing that you could say that's going to get to me now. Does that mean that. I might not get angry matter annoyed. Sure but you know the whole idea of i take offense to that That's that's that's that's because you want to because you are if people don't like to admit this you're wanting to be a victim you're wanting said you're wanting to latch onto something so that way you can go to someone else and tell them about how bad it is and they can validate you like i'll case in all cases because i have to tell you i have a teenager. That's been testing me. Okay so i'm not easily offended and i do. We're gonna talk about here. The four agreements. The second one. Don't take anything personally. Which is probably i. Don't know they're all amazing. All four of the agreements. But yeah no i. I get offended. Sometime i did. I won't say what she said. But i have a teenage daughter. And oh my gosh. The stuff that comes out of some of their mouths. Sometimes you're like what right and that's the thing so something to recognize is when so whatever she says to you. It's just like in the four agreements. She's not saying it because of you. She's saying because if something's going on in her day maybe right before that the triggered her and now you're the ones she's taking it out on. Yeah now you know what i do. And that's what we what wasn't that's what we do. You know if. It's if if i if i get the old thing about traffic right i'm driving to work. And somebody cuts me off in. Somebody else cuts me off. Then when i get the office. I'm all keyed up pissed off because you cut me off and traffic and now the first person i see i can lay into. They're going to get it with something. Now that's true i mean. How many times have you heard that like. Look somebody may have said something to you. And later this i listen. It's not you. It's like i've got a lot of stuff going on right now. Yeah i'm not gonna take offense to that we know it's a higher level of thinking in case in point so i said to a friend of mine this morning when they said. How did your trip to austin go. I said it was miserable time. I didn't didn't really relax. Take the kitten with me. But i said and i was talking about. You know being offended by you know what my teenage daughter said. And i said but you know i don't take it personal Because i'm her mom and she's clearly something else is bothering her and she's just taking it out on me because she can because she knows i'm i'm her mom and i have this. Unconditional love you know and So that's what i said. Yeah well so so. Let's talk about the second agreement of of the four agreements. Don't take anything personally. Why is this agreement so important for personal growth. Now what. I mean it lays it out and in that agreement as you read the book. It's it talks about what we've been discussing around you. Someone says something to you understand that it has nothing to do with you. Even if i said bernadette your hair's ugly today or i do you're wearing matchday. It's not because i think that that's gross or whatever. There's something about me. That i don't like there's something going on in my life that i'm unhappy with and i'm going to take it out on someone and when you recognize that then that's the first step in becoming unaffordable. Because you taking personally anymore you know i i remember. This is probably. I don't know five years ago. I made a post on about an obstacle course races spartan race that i was doing and i was aggravated because the the elite way that i was registering for it was sold out and i looked at the time the same race or the previous year and there were people that were finishing like two and a half hours after the first place finisher which people were just sign up for that elite wave to get in the first way that no business competing against the elites comments like. Hey guys listen. Listen if you're not competing please don't sign up for this because there are people like me. They're actually going to do this race to try and to try to win. And you know you're you're taking spots from people like me that actually want to compete and this lady communist. She was like. I don't get offended easily. But i'm offended by this post like.

One Life Radio Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on One Life Radio Podcast
"The content of the following program is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice. Diagnosis treatment or cure always consult your physician or a health professional with any questions. You may have regarding a medical condition. One life radios brought to you by our sponsors great companies like environmental makers tear floor deep amused symbiotic find tara. Flora and the full line of environmental products and environmental dot com. Casteran politics the maker of america's number one organic pet food visit castro politics dot com for their complete line of organic and sustainably source. Pet foods. Organic gamified the alday superfood system that revives in the morning energizes midday and relaxes in the evening. Visit or gamified dot com slash. Oil are for twenty percent off. That's org n i. F i dot com slash. Or the wellbeing journal and veg world magazines son warrior. The pioneers of plant based proteins. Go to sun were dot com and use the code. Oh l. are for twenty percents off your order. The international society of sports nutrition the only nonprofit academic society dedicated to the science of evidence based sports nutrition and supplementation and thorn research visit our dispensary at one life radio dot com for twenty percents. Off your order and free shipping. You can find more information on all our sponsors including links to listener discounts on the one life. Radio dot com sponsor page. Thank you for listening to one life radio baby. Do you wanna go higher baby. Welcome to one life. Radio this is bernadette with junior in the mix we are broadcasting live from dallas texas on iheart media as well as am et in southern california on abc news. Talk happy tuesday junior. It's after holiday weekend..

They're Terrified & Tipsy
"macpherson" Discussed on They're Terrified & Tipsy
"Going to see a psychic. It's like, come on. But he's like a very nice supportive boyfriend in the entire thing, but he got joke. Courtney, you know he's my boyfriend. Okay. Well, he's not your boyfriend. He doesn't know who you are. Have you spoken to him? No. You don't know. No. There's my point. Okay. So we go in. And we're meeting this fortune teller. Yeah, we have to pay $60. And then we can go back and sit down and talk with him. Yes. And then place like, do you really need to do this? There's like a monkey head in the case. Okay, this is crazy. It's pretty funny, yeah. But I love you. If you wanna do this, let's go. Let's do it. Let's go into that weird backroom. Fine. Exactly. So he knows she works with money. Her fortune is being told now. Yeah. Because it's only her and the psychic thing on the table, and then just the longest singing this weird cot looking thing. Like behind her. Behind her. When he's talking, we can see her reaction and I'm like, him in the background, and he's making all these faces and she was basically because he thinks this psychic is full of shit. Correct. So he knows that there was a button that was taken from her. Like, yes, and in clays like, okay. Yeah, it's obvious on her jacket going to one button honestly. You're holding her arm where the button is missing. So the wind starts picking up and just start cracking the fortune teller focuses on her, and then all of a sudden there's like a demon flash from her. And he backs away. And he tells him that something is cursed her. Yeah, some type of dark spirit is over her. A dog's spirit has come upon you. What do you mean? You blasphemed the dead while it wasn't even a graveyard. Now, you play with the ouija board, or consort with those who practice the black art. All right, take it easy, man. Come on. No, no, I didn't. Perhaps someone has cursed you. And he tries to give them their money back, and he's like, no, no, no, it's whatever. And they were like, what does that mean? And he kind of just like brushes them. He's like, I don't want any of this. Yeah, bye. So they arrived back at their house and he leaves her there because he has to go be the toe guide to get her car from the parking garage. And as she's working because she brought this macpherson file home, she hears the wind pick up again and the food that she is cooking is done now. The fuck was she cooking? Isn't this giant loaf of something? I don't know. Huge. She must be hungry. She had a rough day. She can't judge her. I'm always hungry. I can't. You're like, what is that? I don't know what that is, but I want some. What did you make me any? Or can you tell me what's in it? 'cause I probably eat it, but I just wanna know. Justin bring me some leftovers. Oh my God. So after she takes this out, she hears creaking at the front door and on the roof, bangs creeks.

SpyHards Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on SpyHards Podcast
"Get the end. They shot plenty of scenes with to 'em appeals and we never really seen most of it. Yeah it's very confusing. Final version of what originally was a very specific quirky film I also just really appreciate any chance. We get to talk through the process of writing one of these movies because it feels so personal when you hear john talk about about what he wanted to achieve. And it's too bad it didn't happen but it's not an uncommon story with the hollywood screenwriters. I was just thinking about this. Can you imagine if someone say they came up to me and you said right one would be of star trek apart from spy movies of course and they said cameras. Scott we want you to write the next star trek film. Yeah and we like We've got this and we think we've knocked out upon. We spend a year pouring a halt into the continuing of us. Whatever and then the studio gets it intended to shreds and then the public blames us for yup. That's that's the curse of of the screenwriter and director is that sometimes things are taken out of their hands and butchered and You know the public or critics who they point the finger at right. It tends to be the people behind the scenes made film whereas so many circumstances can corrupt that vision Yeah i mean yeah. They suits in offices rule so faceless soups so they knew right they didn't get the blame 'em again a slight of topic segway. I suppose but like quantum of solace is a film. That's being reprised recently People saying it's not so bad now. I'm not joining that camp personally. I have much of an opinion reason. I raise it because us diving into this film is not some sort of way of saying oh yeah ventures is actually really misunderstood film and it's actually a really interesting film you dig into it. I'm not saying the product wasn't good but what's fascinating is knowing what the creative people came up with on what could have been. And that's what i've loved about having these two chats with jeremiah. Dome is the that they put into these projects and in some parallel universe. We could have had an aventis franchise because it was so good. And that's one thing. I think we've tried to do with the spymaster interviews is that we wanna bring on people who also worked on movies. We didn't care for Because we want to learn more about what was going on behind the scenes. How did these films happen because we could easily sit down and talk about the avengers. Do a ninety minute episode. Tear it to shreds and be like well there you go but it makes it more interesting journey. I think if we have our say and then we let the people who made the movie. Come on and say. Here's what i wanted to do. And here's why it didn't work in. Suddenly we go. Oh well that's a whole other conversation now because between no both the director and the writer. I don't know that there's many people have done more work in terms of getting the narrative of the creation of the avengers film to the world. Like for some reason. That's become our niche out of I guess just happenstance. It wasn't something we aspire to when we began this podcast. But we're very happy to be able to do it and I would like people to have that takeaway of oh like maybe the movie i don't like there's more complexities behind that story than just well. They all screwed it up. Who knows you know what i mean. I think that's a lesson for the more than times dig deeper. Find out how sausage was made. But yeah i think this is a good time. Obviously this is the twenty th anniversary. This film came out. And it's spurred us on to cover the fell missiles all one year anniversary so also yeah coincided same time and some people will do like their favorites film on their one year anniversary or really popular also. The vengeance isn't ido things but what it is is interesting study into the failings of hollywood to utilize the talents of its people. You know you can tell the dome. I had a really interesting story to tell and he was able to adapt it from the heritage thing but may be hard to understand story that he had in the beginning to a more easy to grasp blockbuster film he had by the end but he did cross that and it was a two hour version for moten. Puppies is a lot better. And then jeremiah took up that mantle and deliver. The film from what seems to be was a perfectly pleasant set. Everyone was enjoying themselves and there was no dramas. So we'll filed was at the end and that was in edit and that was in politics. And so i think i'm i'm glad we got the opportunity to delve into this film. May give it it's it's retrospective and no it's twenty three but hopefully we've. We've created the definitive vengeance collection. And if you're listening to this in the year two thousand twenty three you can celebrate the twenty fifth anniversary with this Series of interviews yet. Let's if you've If you if you're enjoying this in the twenty twenty three. I'm sure i'll be tweeting but again we wanna thank deng for taking the time. Sit down with us and join us in our one year celebration talking about nineteen ninety eight avengers twenty-three off to the fact that it came out. cam one. Are we go coming up next week. We have a very special episode. We are going to hold our first. James bond roundtable this time. We're gonna talk about the brosnan era. While we're its strengths while ritz minuses. Who were the best villains. We're going to talk all about it with a. I think really interesting panel of guests. And we're going to break down the pierce brosnan. James bond era yet this is a an idea icon concocted. I kind of want to finish era like you say to the prisons in this case. A kind of wants it down really collectively analyze of as a series of films. And we'll do the same for connery's craig's most old guy down the line lazenby one will maybe will bunch citing with david niven but yeah we've got a couple of great panelists coming coming from different angles. I would say as well. And i think a couple of our previous guests might be stopping by to say. Hello very good very good. That's where to join us next week. As we celebrate the pierce brosnan boomed films in style in tuxedos drinking martinis You can of course follows on social media discreetly at spy hans since s. p. h. a. Ds on facebook twitter and instagram. But until next week listeners. Good luck in an office full of teddy says..

SpyHards Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on SpyHards Podcast
"No no one else. The meeting Not even in debate. Like some the other films. I know robin neil rewrite the Done i was supposed to For the bond know as a writer of the bond things but you had to do like come with full. Great ideas bombed ideas and I remember thinking. I'm not coming up with four doubt mike account with one. If i got the gig that would be fine but so. I always tease that. Robin nailed through the bone domes. Very successfully that I let them Take the cake and the super well at some very happy for them. That's for sure kidding. Who wouldn't right. Well i'll new question then as you are right to yourself if if somewhat who owns an it was drug on your lap today. And say i want a script of this particular protagonists are bond. Harry palmer anyone you want pick a franchise and you have to write the next film. What would be the the character you pick. Who would you want to run with leon. I would redo all the bond films redo chance. I would scratch casino royale. Yup well they casino. Royale loves the. That's done and i think that was very successful. neal's best things. But i think like dr. Not all these things is. Thank you find in the books. That terrific he's Nutty writer is it very difficult to read them without the movie. Bond interfering but fleming bone is crazy. So i think there's definitely aware during those which are not stuck in the sixties and how's he would bring into a modern time. Well no the style. Yuccas live world of sexuality and that you know he connery a embodies a lot of the qualities fleming didn't know he wanted in a scream. He's very existential he He needs he six before he acted very swiftly but he's very He he moved swell coming son. Yeah he he. Another tiny talked a lot about making ads. James bond movies which obviously it was a great great fun to hear and a with some affection as he would come in about uh shila other people involved in the benches and i don't have a kind of a They they have we done or are we doing pretty much everything. Silicon comes to Dracula to The licari movies You know it's it's difficult to find anyone. They haven't redundant. So i would have to have a think about that but i think definitely redo the bung films. Well i mean who knows maybe vendors will get another round. While i think that one's probably could i wouldn't hold my breath on that one. No i mean it's very very sad. It's very sad and a lot of people lot very very good world. It's not evident. What's on film on the dvd badly. You watch down. It's you can't tell people over. There was a great script but there was a great good script in july film out of it. So what happens after that is a no. It's what we want is is difficulty them right. Well i think that that wraps up all discussion On the avengers today. But i do want to thank you for joining us. Of course you taking a a good chunk of your day chats about this film twenty. Three year old films. Thank you for that. You want to listen to that you're up to at the moment was walking right now. I'm doing a tv series based on an inch will story the sleeper. Okay a man who's been Sleep for many years and while he has been sleep he has become the richest man in the world. This is very modern. Take the novelist under ten kerr twenty years old and very modern take on this and of mystery science fiction things that in a future london some very keen on that and i think another story about a A manage kinda story but about a old spy as bunged like spies in retirement and is summoned to stem bill to meet his son. Who has just been killed in. An accident and mayhem ensues. Let's say so coakley between someone who is out of the game and his son who didn't even know was in the game so there's a lot of these certain kind of things are still around. This sounds like we'll be having you back on a couple of years about film then about thirty million so i've got about ten quit. I help on sunday. Take leave a Pay pal account at the end of the podcast mary. It would be very Not done giving less than a thousand dollars thousand pounds so up to whatever we'll start a fund for the avengers directors. Cup was smoking against a very closed door but It's you like to think that they would want to Let something which they made. Who stayed put a lot of money into to let it be seen Finally in it in all its glory and let people decide. People are going to hear the whole story about the film which i think adds to it so It's not a piece of entertainment Movie theaters as we know. Not even open. It has a an ambitious wild and crazy Epic end. It's still out there and vote somewhere so it's my hasn't been released yet so i'm still waiting for it. Yeah well don again. Thank you for joining us. We appreciate tom. And obviously if it's strapped on his that is the brazil of the nineteenth. I'd be very.

SpyHards Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on SpyHards Podcast
"Of literally sadomasochistic fantasies itching had with his spirits women and that is why the combination of that fantasy that wartime experience in particular psycho-sexual buzzed the fleming had gave birth to in the postwar era and the team that with project might white cross specially They did a terrific job. Bente i got to bet. That was very sweet. Experiences constantly vendors. Dominic cooper was great in that. Actually yes someone who has coyle scotland six when it was around the time to think about six or seven years ago at this point now but i'm not sure wife is available in the states but i imagine it should be see america economy. I think dummy could each job. I told me to gonna play at one point here. That would have been different than but despite genre keeps on giving them a like like the. The screenwriters is like Iceberg nine tenths is invisible but among the projects. I've been invoked in. I did a script full. John woo Which is basically the third man but set in beijing okay. Leonardo dicaprio and tobey. Maguire nodded a caprio. As kind harry lime. Canton and tobey maguire. The character a while though that vanished into the leonardo dicaprio volt. But that was that was great. Good young woo with him on his script. His fantastic real understanding of the making This incredible experience. But let's get married. Yeah seems to be a running theme with the screen rights respected through so far. There's bigger stuff i've done but you've never seen it never seen it owns malik. Know all these said thumbs. You've let us on beautifully to sort of the final questions. I always throw out to our guests which is more about spy movies in general. Yes so my first question to you is. What is your favorite spy movie. I can answer that very easily. Which is is goldfinger. Oh nice william listens like everyone. I'm a fan. Especially if the first three bone jones dr not for much love and goldfinger but goldfinger brings is a kind of a realism a bravado. A confidence make in connery in villains job. Everything which is really at a high point. And even when you know that the car chases baton round pinewood studios everything What i liked going. I found a list of all the movies. I saw a lot about that time. I think he had chris filed kwela memorandum silences. In like flynn. Since i would watch everything but goldfinger remains thing and i should add with honorable mention. Motorable mentioned all the hitchcock spy movies pleading. Let's not technically aspiring north by northwest. Gye think gives the kind of blueprint full autumn. Storytelling spy movie the combination of action and reaction. That is fantastic. Film is probably my choice. Favorite by the apart from a bond film rush. So i. I could cook for awhile that i have a soft spot for the europeans. Your danger really as much more. Surreal thing soft spot for that Love the crests. Filing a the thing of what. I was going to say in regards with vengeance as well as is i think what what they managed to do. Was they went beyond the spy thing. When man went into the prisoner a they did a lot of things eventual saying. They picked up a lot of the british spy. Novel and movie is has a lot of other genres inside of gothic thing. Quite a hoorah thing. Take a tailored soldiers spy a little bit christie and little bit fair of all these doubles inside this room. Sort of There's a lot of different things that go into spy film. The best ones really managed to combine quite a few different but goldfinger to me has just has such a sort of confidence and kind atoms. Connecticut's just terrific. The sets was phenomenal. I actually went. I mean i'm someone who. I went to the phone to blow hotel in miami beach. You know which is played true. I was adrienne. Reenact that humble prac- right there. Yeah by that so Hitchcock and like those early bond directors turns yang di hamilton. He'd been assistant director guy. Hamilton credits was assistant director on the third man. You know some of these the confidence that levy's guys had they were guys that's for sure confidence to they had a movie making really hit a peak in things said man goldfinger. I saw spy coming in from the cold Which is again walton rid film and although it is Up that with the the great. It's some it's terrific as a counterpoint to the bond extravaganzas but Expect me to toke. Goldfinger just motassedeq. It's why the spy jar coming out of the cold will will in the cold war and the cuban missile crisis the philby James jesus angleton will these things. The goods by stories have something else going on this fear. Paranoia secrecy Gothic fear of the double fear of the traitor. You know that thing. So i think as a satan in in my way trying to channel these things into my own scripts and dogs lead side. It's a difficult step from one thing to another but no you what doesn't kill. You makes you stronger. There wasn't any laser beams. Cutting buddy sorry teddy bears in half sworn to secrecy. Well that leads me onto the next question really. I think he may have answered it already. But who is your bond about sean connery. yes.

SpyHards Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on SpyHards Podcast
"That hadn't worked out very difficult and really they was still arguing. Just about the concept. How would you to the benches. how could you do the evanger. It seems you know it was. It was a property. And i think maybe just before the kind of craz- of adapting tv things movies. Now everything gets done man from uncle. Charlie's angels everything but this was slight before that but they couldn't figure out what to do. Should it be at all set on cocoa. you know between london. America should be Tournament to america. I mean they couldn't figure out a way of doing it So i was the confidence of us and the brashness of someone and say the arrogance. Why said well. It's about mrs peel. And it set in avengers land. It's an entirely self wrench Self referential world. that's where it set and that's where all the action takes place and to my amazement. A they bought. This was a fantastic idea. And i hadn't new to say slow bay story yet but i was very clear on so things about the tv. Show which i had loved as a kid up in in england and was very clear about what you could or couldn't do a movie and i'm happy to go into that phase. If you like you actually go into them. I i mean the next question would be in that realm. My next question was what was your connection to the original venture show which you said having joy. I love kids brought up in notting. You know I watch tv avidly. I danger man. The avenge is the prisoner. Every about i watched everything. It has to be sad but the vendors like everyone it was my favorite. I watched the first series. I did watch. The latest series highlighted much like those but like every teenager who'd ever seen Patrick knee and diner rick it was just. It was funny witty. Little bit scary a little bit trip. Tricky quite dog quite light a whole new absolutely unique mix of very british english and things. But i'm just gonna austin before you get into how you go around adopting way you at all hesitant to take up this franchise you'll see cared about as a young man when you're watching it knowing him. It's a big responsibility and is your potential. Your first big. Hollywood film a lot on your plate for the first project was there any hesitancy away just like average. Just do it. I can remember my mindset. I i hesitate say It was the brush of Hesitate say the arrogance abuse. Definitely the brashness of us. I had no hesitation toll. The i had some connection in a strange way through the design. Anton i through to the batman and how they made that. I'd seen the script that they've made batman and is my love of comic books Obviously a pan that they had made the first batman entirely from the so frank miller reimagining of banded the duck knight. And they've made. They turned batman from a rug. A happen i say white bread kind of coming into this dock and pick scary world of gotham city and the joker independent women everyone But what they've done in batman cartoon characters like in the sixties tv show we entirely. Comic book cartoons. They had no debts total. What they've done was she's very clever. The batman was they'd said How batman become batman had it. Bruce wayne becomes batman. The answering the frank miller books is the world. he makes that he draws. He he illustrates is really a reflection. Of bruce wayne's trauma at seeing his parents being killed. That's the thing. The colors doctrines every action batman. Dads and so. He's not even a necessarily a good hero. He can be quite mixed. It can be ten dog so he's very Ambiguous and ambivalent and and it seemed to me that that darkness. And that sort of trolling. If you'd like Was so successful as batman. Think ibm think that was really the way you could do vengeance. I thought the the tv series should remain as it. Is that that staff or anyone who wants to guide but for a big hollywood movie. I thought first thing. I thought was that no one will understand the british situation. The will of the avengers as such to denison to english. You have to have some goal or sums of quest in film star. That's worth doing a movie. Anto so i can remember when i was Obsolete being asked the six dollar question. What is it about my reasoning. Was that in the series. The attraction really is mrs peel especially the diner. Rake mrs peel. Who is she where she from. You never know you never find out and you never actually find out why she is mrs peel. Uc pizza appeal in one episode. But it's never really referred to. There is a lot of sexual tension between steed and emma peel. But nothing not a romance rinsing. So i had to my own mind. I- terrific idea. Which was really doc story of a black.

SpyHards Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on SpyHards Podcast
"Of amish schwarzenegger and button perfect on a didn't wanna do it. He is too high brown So that was that and then A basic Gone very well at warners into to get scripts to that level of being enjoyed light Was this other guy on the other. Side of the loc giren trout. The female produce right the knee scripts bowl was a very esteemed cleo producer. Pull the weinstein and jerry was Maybe it was the next office on the lot but reporter. Jerry.

SpyHards Podcast
"macpherson" Discussed on SpyHards Podcast
"Hello and welcome back to part two of our spy. Mazda interview series celebrating. How one year anniversary and twenty third anniversary of this week's film nineteen ninety eight the avengers and cam we four shouted in las upside. What we spoke to the director of the film jeremiah. Chechik and i recommend anyone pulse back and listen to that one. If you haven't listened to it already but who do. We have joining us this week. Yes we are talking to don mcpherson the screenwriter of the nineteen ninety eight avengers film. He has the sole screenplay credit on that film. It's going to be a really interesting journey. I think into how he wound up You know a fairly new writer with the sole credit on this film this major summer blockbuster and was it supposed to be a blockbuster so many questions to dive into and i think dawn is more than willing to give the answers to those burning questions so helping the bentley with us as we go for a ride and about the story behind the story of nineteen ninety eight avengers with the writer. Don mc fussing camp rolette cliff and joining us today the writer of the film this week which is the bengals from nineteen ninety eight. We are joined by don mcpherson dawn. Thank you for joining us. It's great to be here. I see you're enjoying a glass of wine. That's a. That's a good stock for about avenged clock. Here it's what their clocks. I wish i could say the same just on water currently so when we took people before we get into the particular film that covering the we'd like to get a little bit information on their background so the first question we generally ask is. How did you get started in your case in screenwriting. In my case i was A critic for time out magazine which at one point was considered a quite a big deal. I was about twenty four twenty five but in reality. I've been movie crazy for both remind teens. And the beyond and when i was about eighteen i hitchhiked down to the canned film festival and long story short. I got Very well the kids. American screenwriter ben. Bosman lived in cam. Was one of the screenwriters to be thrown out of hollywood during the coffee. Airings worked with joseph lousy and then what would enter the man and people in europe and He was. I was crazy. Ben was the first real screenwriter. I ever met because you. You don't really see them and luckily for me. I knew a lot of the films he'd worked on so i could chat with him I thought it was fantastic. And then when he and his kids went back to la by our friends family. I went out to And became friends with a lot of the kids in the generation of friends. Who'd been blacklisted. Basically so i knew that about this strange creature called a screenwriter but then in my own Work over here. I was a journalist and critic. I found book code absolute beginners which i pressed upon a friend. Who's a director. Julian temple and another friend. Stephen willie was becoming a producer and we ended up working on a film Of that took a long while. And i worked on the music and on the script of that and then after that i I had to make a choice in leap into this weld of screenwriting on my side decided to do that. I got a some films made of the bbc. I did a film of a sheridan loofah. New novel cold oncle. Silence is petri tool jay latte and Strangely director peter hammond had actually directed some of the early t. exits of the events. A strange thing. I window night bat and i started doing my own screenplays and got reasonably successful like that and then one thing led to another i can. I can tell you lead from one. Another way based i was Nuts about movies. Hollywood movies frenching vis also some movies all through my teens and I wrote about them. I watched them. I would see like sodhi movies a week. You know and It was a mine tie. So i Only stopped watching a ton of movies. When i became screen. But i haven't done basically a kind of a memory of So many movies in my head and had a love of comic strips was servicing. That norman dad would tell you about having a wasted use. I am about comic books. Tv and films i manage to spend a lot of time doing and then that's ended up being what i gotta do because i love him. Well it seems like someone who has such a background in pop culture in this era and sort of comic book style seems perfectly suited to be adapting the avengers but the sort of the background leading into actually getting the job. Seems like a bit of a leap. How did you actually go about getting towards actually being attached to this property. Well i had written a script code. Jonathan wild which had received a lot of attention. It got voted a the best unmade scripts in hollywood in a set. The the two other ones were confessions of a dangerous mind by Charley complement. And i think it was kafka by lamb chops which i think i've made by stephen Book and there was my jonathan wild jodie foster boat that and on both neil jordan was wanting to directed after the crying game and because of that is rather eccentric violent berry british berry cinematic scripted. I'd written on went past all the to develop people and produces heads of studios had to read what george wanted to do. Next and less humid This so a lot of people read this. And i started getting offers from hollywood but i got an offer and that went over and i started working at warner brothers. I can tell you what i did that. I a brothers. First script i got offered was tale of two cities by charles dickens. This and i'm someone might Kobe up one time And said you've won the terry gilliam lottery. I said what's terry gilliam lottery. And it said he reads all description. Cia which is one of the big agencies in la. That i was with terry was and out of all this plot of hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of things and he hates them all. He likes your script known could work out why it turned out. I was living in highgate london and he was leaving. I was leaving down. The he was living up the hill so i ended up working for about a year with terry on that film. Abbas for mel gibson. That didn't get made. I'd worked on another script of frankenstein which was full. Great combo.

Conversations with Dez
"macpherson" Discussed on Conversations with Dez
"Our customer. Wow that's fantastic. Congratulations and all of that. It's exciting and he's of these success stories because we hear a lot of bad news but it's it's so great. He had good news and to to see that you already well placed with this able to spin this up quickly and as you said the whole approach you've taken around the space with software as a service in the cloud containerized solution that can spin up and down scale up and down on demand. Must have been a significant game changer. The whole concept around the settlement approach of microphone existed pre covid nineteen. I wonder if you can of gives you'll take on. What the catalyst is banned for this whole new fulfillment approach i. It was something that started previously. I had a cold sometimes. Local fulfillment centers as well as microfilm. I love it was driven based on speech and so the ability to get orders to the consumer more quickly and that's particularly things like areas like fashion. But actually if you thinking another verticals i can think of in the uk a diy company who they actually feel. Only local authorities have no stores. The trick is a local warehouse. You turn up on the affected your clicking click to order so a has been there across multiple industries for prevent several years the other area Beginning to see some this take place is in the grocery and this is the grocery e commerce has been a real challenge for for goals retailers to make it profitable at a bronze groups have tried different strategies. So do you go to the highly automated dc on entrench ship out across the country. I'm not depend on geography so in the uk you can be quite successful. larger countries. France united states australia as difficult to do over loss geographies to help one or two bury. Automated. dc's then pro. Approach was dave until from store and actually picked the process. Do and then you have some of the challenges about do you have capacity to. Do you have the problems. We're actually you. Restored associates are clashing and treating congestion.

WhyWeWork BrianVee
"macpherson" Discussed on WhyWeWork BrianVee
"Four so four fifty payment and is now six twenty five. But you're okay with that right. Sign here we got it. So we just spin people into these situations that and it's not good for the dealership. Customer doesn't go away. Happy goes away pissed relied. Wait the hell you know. Johnny promised me. Johnny doesn't know shit financing the obstacle. You mentioned skills earlier in developing your skill in the industry. Is there a specific one that you had to kind of perfect or you're still working.