35 Burst results for "Mahoney"

"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

04:36 min | Last week

"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"So I want to say finally folks, this is just like any day now here, may 15th, may 17th, fathom events in theaters around you go to fathom events dot com to check it out. Patterns of evidence, journey to Mount Sinai part two. Very exciting. I hope you can drag the whole youth group or drag your family. Tim Mahoney, congratulations, and thank you for your time. This is wonderful. I have done all that I could to see the evil and the good without hiding. You must help me if you can doctor my eyes. Tell me what it was I don't know. Darling don't 'cause shame hey folks before we go three things we need to leave you with, at least three things. Number one, do not forget nefarious has been put in more theaters, talking about the film, nefarious. We talked about a lot on this program, Steve dates behind it, amazing film. It is in more theaters this weekend, please, please, please take advantage of this when people say, what can I do? You can support great stuff. This is a great movie. We've seen it. It is, it should not be rated R, you can take teenagers to it. It is really, you know, it's one of the things that I always hope someday somebody will make films like this, so nefarious, you've got to check it out. Yeah, there's a website you can go to to make sure you know where it is in your area. Nefarious tickets dot com. Nefarious tickets dot com, you'll be able to find out where it is in the theaters et cetera. Okay. Nefarious tickets dot com, folks. That's so that's the number one thing I want to mention. The second thing I want to mention is that this week only this week only. Anybody giving $250 to see our CSI campaign, which is the third thing I want to mention. We'll get a signed copy of my $32 hardcover fish out of water, a search for the meaning of life. It's my memoir. It's a story of my life up until I come to faith or on my 25th birthday. It's all true, a lot of really loony, crazy, true stories, all leading up to my genuinely miraculous conversion experience, but you will get a signed copy of that book if this week only. This week, it's ending, this is the week. This is it. This week only, okay? Next week, you can't do this. We're not going to do this next week. We only have limited supplies. But if you do it this week, you give $250 to CSI, the way to give to CSI is go to metaxas talk dot com. You'll see the banner, you can do it right now. Actually, let me give the phone number as well. 8 8 8 two 5 three 35 22. Some of you prefer to call, we understand that. 8, 8, 8, two, 5, three, 35, 22, or just go to metaxas talk dot com. And you'll see all the information right there. You can give monthly. You can give however you want to give, but every $250 a reason we chose $250 is because that is that is the amount that when you give that a slave is freed and set up in a life of freedom, that's what this whole campaign is about. And it's a sacred thing that we get to do this. It's a privilege that we get to fight evil, it's rare we get to do this. So if you can give $250, that's the magic number, whatever you can give, of course it's going for that purpose. Some of you can give a lot more. But every single person who can give $250 this week only,.

Tim Mahoney $32 $250 Next week may 15th This week Steve may 17th Mount Sinai 8 8 8 two 5 three 35 22 this week third thing 25th birthday one this weekend second thing next week CSI single person Number one
Tim Mahoney Unpacks His Life-Changing Journey to Mount Sinai

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:26 min | Last week

Tim Mahoney Unpacks His Life-Changing Journey to Mount Sinai

"So much evidence and some experts don't agree, you know, even people that would agree the Bible is the inherent word of God would disagree on some interpretations or some dating. That's normal. The point is we're all looking for what is true. We're all trying to get to the bottom of it. And it's an exciting journey. And we should be excited to be on the journey. I absolutely. And I am very much friendly with and Friends with people who are agnostic. People who don't know, I meet more agnostic than I do atheists, to be honest with you. They're just guys who have lots of questions. And we have lots of different viewpoints about chronology about interpretation about location. And there are believers that believe very strongly in other mountain locations. For the first time, I'm going to basically share with you where I think the strength of the argument lies. Do we have all the solutions? No. But we have an amazing pattern of evidence. And there's another thing to learn from this. The Israelites were told to come to the mountain and they're going to worship God there. And during the making of this film, I battled with fear. You know, fear of, am I going to be able to finish this 20 year task? Am I going to be able to find a way to pay for it? And all these different fears. And the Israelites were fearful. They didn't know if they're going to what they're going to eat. If they're going to have water, where they were going, they were fearful of a lot of things. And they complained. And what I learned from watching this film and I'm hoping the audience will learn is that we're going to be called on a journey. Each one of us is on a personal journey. And we can learn from the Israelites, what not to do, which is to complain. And to look to other things. And at the end of this film, we have a bonus feature that will be on it. And I felt that this film concludes with worship at Mount Sinai. And I've added that component into the end of this film. And I was convicted that, in fact, I was at a coffee shop and I was walking out, carrying this burden, carrying these fears in this pastor looked at me and he said, he was doing a Bible study there. And he looked up, I recognized him. From the inner city. And he said, Tim, how's it going? I said, I ignore to begin. And the first words out of his mouth were, and I know they weren't just his words. He says, Tim, you need to worship the lord more.

20 Year Bible Israelites Mount Sinai TIM First
Tim Mahoney Uncovers Shocking Discovery After Spiritual Encounter

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:07 min | Last week

Tim Mahoney Uncovers Shocking Discovery After Spiritual Encounter

"Back. We're talking to Tim Mahoney, Tim, I'm just amazed by what you just said. So you said that you had this moment of doubt and you felt what sounds like a satanic entity come into the room a cold presence saying everything you've believed was a lie. Wow, okay, so yeah, then what happened? Right after that, after that feeling like I had just fallen into a chasm, another thought came to my mind so strongly it was stop editing, get up, go to your office. I got up, walked across the office, walked into my office and said, then the thought was, go to your bookcase and walk over the bookcase, read that book. And there was a book there by an egyptologist that had been given to me about a year before, and I had lots of books. I don't read all the books that everyone gives me right away. I pulled this book out. And there, I opened it up, and the very dig site that I was looking at in the edit suite was being discussed by this egyptologist, David rohl. And it had a whole nother interpretation for the arrival of the Israelites for Joseph's tomb in his palace. All these things that were, I had no idea. And it was almost, it was a providential moment in my life where I saw I sensed the battle, the Supernatural battle in my own life right there in that edit suite. And then I said, I've got to go to England and film this man. And that began again finding answers. And I think that that's been the battle that I've been on is confronting the challenge. And I've tried to do this as you can tell by listening to all sides of the debate. That was another key lesson that I learned in making these films. I had to hear from the skeptic. I had to hear from the unbeliever. I had to hear from the different points of view for this to be a legitimate investigation and not just the propaganda film.

David Rohl England TIM Tim Mahoney About A Year Before
"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

07:41 min | Last week

"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Tell me why relief factor is so successful at lowering or eliminating pain. I'm often asked that question just the other night I was asked that question, well, the owners of relief factor tell me they believe our bodies were designed to heal. That's right, designed to heal, and I agree with them. And the doctors who formulated relief factor for them selected the four best ingredients, yes, 100% drug free ingredients, and each one of them helps your body deal with inflammation. Each of the four ingredients deals with inflammation from a different metabolic pathway. That's the point. So approaching from four different angles may be why so many people find such wonderful relief. If you've got back pain, shoulder, neck, hip, knee, or foot pain from exercise or just getting older, you should order the three week quick start discounted to only 1995 to see if it'll work for you. It has worked for about 70% of the half a million people who've tried it and have ordered more. I'm one of them go to relief factor dot com or call 800 for relief to find out about this offer. Feel the difference. Hey there folks, I'm talking to Tim Mahoney who is behind the films called patterns of evidence, the new one. It's going to be in theaters may 15th and 17th only. Fathom event is patterns of evidence journey to Mount Sinai part two, okay, so I just have to ask because I'm sure you told me this in the past, but for my audience's sake, how did you get involved in biblical archeology and in these kinds of things? Because I have become more and more and more fascinated with this stuff. What was your journey to Mahoney? Well, I think that if you wonder about your past and you wonder about how we got somewhere, when I was in high school, my family actually broke up when I was 11 years old. And it was a tragic kind of a breakup. We actually had to go in hiding Eric from my father because he was, he wasn't well. And he and an 11th grade was the first time I started to get back an interested in school. And it was when I was reading a history book. And I started to read ahead. And it was like that scene from when John Candy when they're like, I'm sure that scene when Steve Martin and John Candy in a movie where they're like in bed. And they're all of a sudden they wake up and they start talking about baseball or whatever. And I was like, thinking to myself, what in the world am I doing reading ahead in this book? I do not, I'm not supposed to be a good student. I don't like this, but I found history was fascinating because I was learning a story. It was a Civil War. And I was going deeper and deeper into it. I couldn't believe what had happened. I finally became aware that something happened earlier in time. And I think that this history, when you ever have a chance to look and you go, well, how did this happen? Where did this happen? And in my own life, I thought I was just going to go on adventure, but once you go into a place like Egypt and you see the pyramids and you see archeology and you realize that there was nations here before, there were armies here before, there were pharaohs and you look at the tombs and you look at go to the British Museum and you see what was created. Human hair from 3000 years ago, we wove together. I saw this wig that was both African and like a Norwegian hair that was woven together. I go, who was this person? Who are these people that all this happened? And you just realized that there's something more. And I think that that interest of knowing what the past was about, what drew me in, and so when I went to Egypt, the first time in 2002, I was absolutely astounded by the precision of things that were created. And how in the world did that happen? And then as you bring your faith into it, you realize that God is the creator of everything and that there's a story and then I became conscious of the fact that Moses who's in the center of this investigation gives us how the beginning of the whole universe started. It was during this time that he writes the first books of the Bible. Genesis exodus leviticus numbers and deuteronomy. This is the knowledge that we have of how all this came. The origin of all of this comes the flood. The Torah babble, all these key events in history, Moses, it says that Moses actually talked with God. And God gave him information and Moses was probably given information passed down from Abraham and Isaac and Jacob and the children of Israel all the way to Moses. And now we have this book of God working in history. And here I come along, this kid from a broken home who was wanting to be a filmmaker, didn't know what kind of films I was going to make. I got sucked up into, hey, what if we went and looked for the story of the exodus? And I go to I go to the locations and then I'm told there is no evidence. And I come home like three weeks later and have a total crisis of faith. Wow, now I know, or I learned recently that a film about your own life and your own journey was released called the journey home. And I know you're talking about that. So initially, you're excited, but then you accept this idea that people are saying there is no evidence for any of this. You accepted it and you had a crisis of faith at that point. Now, where was that you're in your 20s, where were you in life at that point? No, this was after I'm in like an early 40s. And I would probably tell you that I wasn't, and I think a lot of people are like this, something happens in our lives that cause us to question whether God's real or whether God's word is true or something like that. Never had that happen before in my life until I was in my early 40s. And that's when I came back from Egypt. And this crisis of faith started to grow like getting the flu. You know, it's like a little not feeling quite well and all of a sudden it's got worse and worse and worse. And I'm so thankful that during this time, you know, I actually had what felt like and I've told this story many, many times because this is what happened. I was in the added suite looking at the footage. And looking at Manfred B.Tech, this egyptologist who told me there wasn't any evidence for faith. There was any evidence for the Israelites. And I'm like, God, you have to help me here. What is going on? And then I felt this cold presence, literally coming to the room. And it just came from the side and this thought came into my mind. Everything your family has believed about the Bible. Your mother, your grandmother, it's all a lie. And it's total despair Eric came over me like everything I believed in was lost. So this is a Supernatural experience with real evil, well, let's put, let's hit pause..

Tim Mahoney 2002 100% Moses Abraham Isaac Steve Martin Jacob first books Each three week Bible Mahoney Mount Sinai Egypt Eric three weeks later 3000 years ago Torah may 15th
Tim Mahoney Describes His Journey to Biblical Archeology

The Eric Metaxas Show

03:13 min | Last week

Tim Mahoney Describes His Journey to Biblical Archeology

"I'm talking to Tim Mahoney who is behind the films called patterns of evidence, the new one. It's going to be in theaters may 15th and 17th only. Fathom event is patterns of evidence journey to Mount Sinai part two, okay, so I just have to ask because I'm sure you told me this in the past, but for my audience's sake, how did you get involved in biblical archeology and in these kinds of things? Because I have become more and more and more fascinated with this stuff. What was your journey to Mahoney? Well, I think that if you wonder about your past and you wonder about how we got somewhere, when I was in high school, my family actually broke up when I was 11 years old. And it was a tragic kind of a breakup. We actually had to go in hiding Eric from my father because he was, he wasn't well. And he and an 11th grade was the first time I started to get back an interested in school. And it was when I was reading a history book. And I started to read ahead. And it was like that scene from when John Candy when they're like, I'm sure that scene when Steve Martin and John Candy in a movie where they're like in bed. And they're all of a sudden they wake up and they start talking about baseball or whatever. And I was like, thinking to myself, what in the world am I doing reading ahead in this book? I do not, I'm not supposed to be a good student. I don't like this, but I found history was fascinating because I was learning a story. It was a Civil War. And I was going deeper and deeper into it. I couldn't believe what had happened. I finally became aware that something happened earlier in time. And I think that this history, when you ever have a chance to look and you go, well, how did this happen? Where did this happen? And in my own life, I thought I was just going to go on adventure, but once you go into a place like Egypt and you see the pyramids and you see archeology and you realize that there was nations here before, there were armies here before, there were pharaohs and you look at the tombs and you look at go to the British Museum and you see what was created. Human hair from 3000 years ago, we wove together. I saw this wig that was both African and like a Norwegian hair that was woven together. I go, who was this person? Who are these people that all this happened? And you just realized that there's something more. And I think that that interest of knowing what the past was about, what drew me in, and so when I went to Egypt, the first time in 2002, I was absolutely astounded by the precision of things that were created. And how in the world did that happen? And then as you bring your faith into it, you realize that God is the creator of everything

11 Years Old 11Th 2002 3000 Years Ago African Egypt Eric John Candy Mahoney Norwegian Steve Martin Tim Mahoney A Civil War First Journey To Mount Sinai May 15Th And 17Th Patterns Of Evidence The British Museum TWO
"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

05:48 min | Last week

"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"This? Because I'm not as familiar with this debate as some others. Well, what happened was, well, let's just put it this way. A lot of people who are believing in the Bible just believe the Bible, right? We don't really, we know it's having a long time ago or not going to be able to find all the different elements that happen. There's the questions of the flood. There's questions of creation. Then there's the big question of the exodus. Did it really happen? And I didn't think that was a big issue back in 2002. I went to Egypt and I thought, hey, I'm just going to be documenting this idea. But that's when they told me there was no evidence for the exodus. So why is that critical is that that idea that has spread throughout all the universities and campuses and into colleges and a lot of people today that are told that the Bible is just the fairytale. There's no reason to believe it. No reason to put your confidence in it. And when I talk to some scholars, they also told me that they didn't believe that Jesus knew what he was talking about because he believed in Moses. And the disciples talked about events in the Bible, the exodus Stephen, when he's being stoned, you know, tells the whole story. And as I'm sending there in a, let's say at a scholar's home talking to him, realizing that he walked away from faith, the faith of his family, because he believed that there was no evidence. I realized how serious this issue was. And we know that George Barnes telling us how many people are walking away their nuns know. But I believe that God is using these investigations and this evidence to basically say, wait a minute, pay attention. You have to realize that these events really did happen in history. And that's what the patterns of evidence series has. I know when we met in New York and I showed you the first investigation with the evidence for exodus. And for Joseph and for the plagues and for the conquest, and now here we are, we made another series of films on the Red Sea miracle. And then now we move to journey to Mount Sinai. And this investigation, I believe, I actually took and I use an investigative approach. These are the areas that we want to look at in the Bible that basically give us clues to search for a pattern. And that's what we're doing. I was listening on radio. You're holding up a scorecard that you've made up a Mount Sinai scorecard and you kind of use this in the movie to say to people like we're just going to go down the list and say, what does the Bible say and what matches that description and what doesn't match that description and you say that there are a number of different options and you just go down the list now. Let me ask you, I know that in May 15th and may 17th, people can see this film patterns of evidence, journey to Mount Sinai part two. If people want to see part one before that, is it possible for them to kind of grease the skids and what their whistle by seeing part one? How do we see part one? Well, part one they can go to patterns of evidence dot com and they can get a watch it on digital or order the DVD or Blu-ray. So patterns of evidence dot com is one way. But I've made the film so that in some ways they stand alone. Obviously, the climax of all this investigation is an in part two. But you don't have to you wouldn't necessarily have had to see it. To get the idea of where we're going with all this. But that's that shouldn't keep you from going to the theater to see this movie. Well, no, obviously, I hope people are going to go to the theaters, but I'm just saying like, it's so fascinating to me that this is so rich and one of the reasons I love having yawn is that you don't need to agree with Tim Mahoney or with my conclusion. But just to roll your sleeves up and get into it and begin to educate yourself on the idea that the Bible is history. There's archeology. So whenever anybody says, oh, there's no evidence, that's just preposterous. There are levels of evidence, but it's at least fascinating and interesting. And so I want to, you know, the main thing folks is to get you to go to fathom events dot com and you can see patterns of evidence journey to Mount Sinai part two and there's a trailer on YouTube already in case people want to wet their appetite for that. Patterns of evidence we're talking about journey to Mount Sinai part two. So let's get into it Tim because I really am fascinated. What are the candidates? In other words, if you talk to somebody a hundred years ago and said, hey, where's Mount Sinai? Would they have given a different answer from what we're saying today? Yes, they would have. And let's talk about that because there's political intrigue here. A lot of people have looked at the traditional Mount Sinai for a long time. They have felt that that was the place. And in scholars and people who wrote maps and put them in the backs of bibles, always pointed to Mount Sinai, the traditional Mount Sinai is being the location. But over time, people started to wonder and look for different locations. And then when the Israelis went to after the Six-Day War, they scoured the Sinai for their history. And they didn't find really a lot of evidence around the traditional Mount Sinai. And people would say, well, what would you expect to find? Well, there should be certain clues. And there should be an encampment site there. If there are that many people there. Let me share something with you too. Another man by the name of Charles beak. He was from England, as he looked at that..

Tim Mahoney May 15th 2002 New York England may 17th Jesus Mount Sinai Stephen Egypt Tim George Barnes Joseph Bible Moses Six-Day War one today Charles beak Sinai
"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:58 min | Last week

"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Have an old friend back, but we've got an exciting subject to talk about. The friend is Tim Mahoney. You know him from the patterns of evidence, movies. There is a new one called patterns of evidence journey to Mount Sinai part two. It is a fathom event, may 15th, and I think may 17th, Tim Mahoney welcome. Hey, Eric, thank you for having me on the show. What is the, okay, so what is the thesis that we think we have figured out? Because I know this is a hugely controversial thing over the millennia practically. Where is Mount Sinai? So this film purports to have discovered the actual location, the actual Mount Sinai. This film started for me in 2002 when I thought we had a location, which was in Saudi Arabia. And I actually, in 2003, went there and was able to bring a camera and I started filming it. And it was amazing to see all these artifacts that were there. But what happened to me when I left the country, interestingly, on May 15th, 20 years ago, almost when I left the country, they kept my footage. And I didn't have a film. And for the last 20 years, I've been trying to make this film. And I was challenged that some people said, you know, you're not being really fair. There are other mountains that we think might be a better candidate. Why don't you slow down and look at them? And that's why this is a had been a two film investigation. I've looked at 6 different locations, starting in the Sinai Peninsula. And this next film, journey to Mount Sinai, part two is coming to theaters may 15th, as we said in 17th. This is going to be the crescendo of it all.

Tim Mahoney May 15th 2002 New York England may 17th Jesus Mount Sinai Stephen Egypt Tim George Barnes Joseph Bible Moses Six-Day War one today Charles beak Sinai
Tim Mahoney on New Film "Patterns of Evidence: Journey to Mount Sinai"

The Eric Metaxas Show

01:58 min | Last week

Tim Mahoney on New Film "Patterns of Evidence: Journey to Mount Sinai"

"Have an old friend back, but we've got an exciting subject to talk about. The friend is Tim Mahoney. You know him from the patterns of evidence, movies. There is a new one called patterns of evidence journey to Mount Sinai part two. It is a fathom event, may 15th, and I think may 17th, Tim Mahoney welcome. Hey, Eric, thank you for having me on the show. What is the, okay, so what is the thesis that we think we have figured out? Because I know this is a hugely controversial thing over the millennia practically. Where is Mount Sinai? So this film purports to have discovered the actual location, the actual Mount Sinai. This film started for me in 2002 when I thought we had a location, which was in Saudi Arabia. And I actually, in 2003, went there and was able to bring a camera and I started filming it. And it was amazing to see all these artifacts that were there. But what happened to me when I left the country, interestingly, on May 15th, 20 years ago, almost when I left the country, they kept my footage. And I didn't have a film. And for the last 20 years, I've been trying to make this film. And I was challenged that some people said, you know, you're not being really fair. There are other mountains that we think might be a better candidate. Why don't you slow down and look at them? And that's why this is a had been a two film investigation. I've looked at 6 different locations, starting in the Sinai Peninsula. And this next film, journey to Mount Sinai, part two is coming to theaters may 15th, as we said in 17th. This is going to be the crescendo of it all.

17Th 2002 2003 6 Eric May 15Th , 20 Years Ago Mount Sinai Saudi Arabia Tim Mahoney Journey To Mount Sinai May 15Th May 17Th Patterns Of Evidence Journey T The Sinai Peninsula The Last 20 Years TWO
"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:46 min | Last week

"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

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Tim Mahoney Eric may 17th may 15th Mount Sinai today U.S. 100% each coin Patriot mobile millions 9 8 7 8 patriot mobile Studio American America Second Amendment three major networks first responder Christian
The Language of Evangelicalism

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated

02:30 min | 2 months ago

The Language of Evangelicalism

"John, I think you'll probably know. I'm an evangelical Roman Catholic Presbyterian. That means I go to mass on Saturday night and I go to my Presbyterian Church on Sunday, one river two banks, but I speak evangelical very well. Rick Warren and Greg Laurie are friends, Al Muller is a weekly conversationalist with me. I know, you know, John piper I read desiring God years ago. I know most of the stuff you talk about. I've got to tell you at the beginning. I have never heard of CJ Mahoney or Lou engel until I read your book. Never heard and I've been covering religion since 1992. So first question, do you think your perspective in testimony might be jaded by that particular covenant life church experience and these particular pastures? Well, I guess, can I ask you what you mean by jaded, just that my experience might not reflect a more mainstream experience? Is that what you're kind of? Yeah, I think mainstream evangelicalism is not anti intellectual at all. But then again, I've had doctor Mark Roberts as a pastor for 25 years. He got his undergrad and PhD from Harvard. Doctor Larry is my current pastor in oldtown is a phenomenal scholar and preacher and archbishop who is listening right now in the author of three books is an intellectual giant in the Catholic world and I've written three books on evangelicalism and this, I just think testimony is a 100% accurate about 1% of the church. How's that sound? Yeah, I think my dad raised a similar objection. When I talked to him about the book, he does not feel like a lot of evangelical culture is anti intellectual. And I think it's a totally fair question to raise. I do think that even if you haven't heard of CJ Mahaney or Lou angle, you know, I did some reporting recently. Let me deal with CJ first. CJ is not a figure on the same level as somebody like Al molar. But until about, you know, 7, 9, ten years ago, he was of a similar stature to Al mohler, if not as nationally known. So never quite got to that level, but was kind of on his way there was working with Mueller quite closely in a group of other ministers who were organizing a conference every year called. I think together for the gospel. Danny Louisville.

Greg Laurie Al Muller Danny Louisville John Rick Warren 100% Larry Sunday 25 Years Mark Roberts Three Books Cj Mahoney 1992 Saturday Night Lou Engel Al Mohler CJ Cj Mahaney LOU First Question
"mahoney" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show

The Rich Eisen Show

01:58 min | 7 months ago

"mahoney" Discussed on The Rich Eisen Show

"For a long time, plus you missed a month of reps. In practice for a month. It's a young quarterback, it's a new offense. It's a lot of moving parts in terms of along the offensive line. In terms of the backfield with Damien Harris being out, the wide receivers on a week week basis, she kind of Jacoby Myers is going to get his shots, but is it Kendrick Bourne? Is it Nelson Aguilar? If you don't know, so this is what the Patriots do though, there's a reason that Bill Belichick is one of the great coaches of all time. They get better every year. Look at Bill Belichick's record in September versus what it is in December. They always find their way. They work through the cakes, but it's hard to work through those kinks when you don't have the quarterback on the field. And that's been one of their challenges through the course of this season. So let's think worst case here. Maybe they only win a couple more games the rest of the year, right? And Matt kind of struggles. Are they in the market for a quarterback for 2023? I mean, it would raise a lot of questions. I think again, it's probably unfair to judge Mac Jones based off of a season where he had a major injury. A pretty severe high ankle spray that he was dealing with there. There was something to be said for potentially having surgery on that ankle. He decided he didn't want to do that. And came back and played. And he got Bailey's happy. Love Bailey's happy. I mean, he's probably an 8 to ten year backup in the NFL. Right. As opposed to being your starting quarterback, but any team that doesn't have Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen. You know, Aaron Rodgers for a long period of time. Anything that doesn't have those guys is looking. And so it would be malpractice to not be in the market. We talked about Jimmy Garoppolo earlier. Could there be a potential reunion? Could you bring him in and pair him with a Mac Jones? I don't know that you need to do that honestly because you've got Bailey's happy there along with Mac Jones too. But there's a lot of questions that would be raised off of that. A lot more to come here on this edition of the rich eisen show. We got Christian Fulton coming up. We've got cliff Avril. And my old buddy, Jim Mahoney, he's got a new movie, bar fight in select theaters coming up soon. Jamon, did you join us in the studio right after this? Influencer. It's a word that gets tossed around a lot these

Mac Jones Bill Belichick Damien Harris Jacoby Myers Kendrick Bourne Nelson Aguilar Bailey Patriots Patrick Mahomes Josh Allen Jimmy Garoppolo Matt Aaron Rodgers NFL Christian Fulton cliff Avril Jim Mahoney
AJ Reviews the Clinton 'Suicide' Death List

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch

02:03 min | 7 months ago

AJ Reviews the Clinton 'Suicide' Death List

"I've detailed the Clinton death slash suicide list of people who've been around. Ville and Hillary Clinton. And why don't we just review this? It's been a while, but there was James mcdougall who was Clinton's convicted whitewater partner who died of an apparent heart attack. While in solitary confinement and he was just only a key witness in Ken Starr's investigation, I mean, that could happen. I mean, that could happen. Then there was Mary Mahoney. Who was a former White House? A White House intern. Who's murdered in July of 1970 7 at a Starbucks coffee shop in Georgetown. And the murder happened just after she was to go public with her story of sexual harassment at The White House. Many of you know about Vince foster, the former White House counselor and colleague of Hillary Clinton at Little Rock's rose law firm, he died of a gunshot wound to the head, the back of his head, which is a weird way to kill yourself, but either way they call it a suicide. There was Ron Brown, secretary of commerce, and the former DNC chairman, they say he died by intact and a plane crash, and a pathologist close to the investigation reported that there was a hole in the top of his skull, resembling a gunshot wound. At the time of his death Brown was being investigated, and he spoke publicly of his willingness to cut a deal with prosecutors. Don't do that.

James Mcdougall Clinton Mary Mahoney White House Hillary Clinton Ville Ken Starr Whitewater Heart Attack Vince Foster Georgetown Starbucks Little Rock Ron Brown DNC Brown
"mahoney" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:47 min | 11 months ago

"mahoney" Discussed on WTOP

"For inflation was not part of the plan for many people, but there are ways to weather the economic changes we've been seeing when it comes to your money, Kevin Mahoney, the founder of the D.C. financial planning company illuminates, says it's important to have a plan that works for your specific needs and goals. I would encourage people to think through what they really want to use their money for, both in the short term in the long term. He says whether that's saving a little more to account for inflation or generating another stream of income. An exercise that a lot of people probably haven't gone through. Try to get a sense for the things that you probably didn't need to buy those things. You didn't get a lot of value out of them. Take out is a good example of that. Mahoney also acknowledges some things are outside of our control. It's okay for some period of time to just do what you need to do to find another day. Melissa, WTO penis. Starting Friday, folks in the district who work for minimum wage and tipped employees are getting a pay hike under 20 16s fair shot minimum wage amendment, D.C.'s minimum wage will jump 60 cents to $16 and ten cents per hour for non tipped employees, those who work for tips will get a 30 cent raise to 5 35 an hour. The 2016 law met the goal of a $15 minimum hourly wage by 2020, this latest increase is due to provisions that tie the district's minimum wage to inflation. Still ahead after traffic and weather we'll talk about what's going on in Charles county and why it might be taking over something from prince George's county that that county used to boast about. 9 O 7, over 80% of data breaches are due to weak passwords. Keeper security is the only zero trust zero knowledge cybersecurity platform for managing and protecting passwords, credentials and secrets. Every employee credential and access is streamlined into an intuitive and easy to adopt process, making it user friendly for all

Kevin Mahoney D.C. financial planning compan Mahoney Melissa D.C. Charles county prince George
"mahoney" Discussed on The NBA Show

The NBA Show

04:49 min | 1 year ago

"mahoney" Discussed on The NBA Show

"It's also not Chris Ryan. Chris Ryan, I think, is out there somewhere in London getting drunk celebrating Joel embiid's game winner. So we have with us rob Mahoney from the ringer. So happy to have you. How are you doing, rob? I'm sorry I'm not Chris Ryan. I wish I could be Chris Ryan, but today we'll try to bring a Chris adjacent energy to this podcast, I would say. I actually wake up every morning and those are my affirmations. I look in the mirror and I say, I'm sorry, I'm not Chris rye, and that is my way of apologizing to the universe, and I hope that in exchange, it gives me abundance. And it has. It has, we have had honestly one of the most exciting first rounds. Usually it takes a little while for the first round to get to get hype, but this is a time in a series where I really start to love because of rubber starts to hit the road. We had grizzlies wolves game three, jazz mavericks game three, and warriors, nuggets game three. All the cliches have been true for all the series now. We have had road wins. So it means the playoffs have started. And that's why I'm actually really excited to have you on today because tactically. You are an absolute genius. A genius in many ways, really. Wow. Yeah, no, I'm going to be nice today. I know, it's crazy. It's crazy. A blush. I mean, this is an audio medium, and I'm blushing all over the market. I will say, not only do I think a series doesn't start until the road team wins. I think the playoffs don't really start until some prominent starter gets totally benched to deal with a matchup. And that's kind of what we saw in the grizzlies wolves getting right, Steven Adams, out of there, Brandon Clark, Kyle Anderson. You guys are in. And all of a sudden that series looks totally different. Yeah, completely. I didn't think it could get worse than a ten point fourth quarter for the nets. And then the wolves just did us one better. That was a crazy game. Last night, and yeah, to your point, Adams is a -14 in the series. Brennan Clark plus 13. And that, to me, is actually just been the difference. I'm excited to dig into this one, but that's a great place to start. Where do the wolves go from here and now that Steven Adams is no longer going to be on the basketball court. I was actually at games one and two and game two, I think the grizzly is actually got a little bit lucky. They lucked into the fact that Adams got foul trouble real early. He was out in the first two and a half minutes of the game. And we didn't see him after that. We saw some Bren Clark. We saw my guy Xavier Tillman. They were playing small and they're a team that can play small and still be really physical and still be really big. It's gotten the walls in a little bit of a tizzy. It's gotten Carl Anthony towns a little bit of a tizzy too. I still think this is going to be a pretty long series. These teams match up really well against each other. But yeah, we're going to have to see some adjustments from the wool. Well, you could see just in the runs in this game. And there's obviously the big 21 zero run that got the grizzlies back in it. But the wolves had their own 12 zero runs, tend to runs, kind of all throughout this game where they were, they were putting their mark on it, and they were imposing their will on it. And they were really controlling it in a lot of ways. I think in some sense, in a way that was unsustainable. And we saw a little bit of reaping what you sow in terms of some of the process stuff that was working for them early. And it's complicated because it's on the one hand, pat Beverly is driving right past John Moran at the first quarter in a way that is flat embarrassing. That should not happen. But the tradeoff for that is then pat Beverly ends up taking maybe more shots than he should in the fourth quarter because he's really feeling it. And so you get this benefit from him early and you get the cost of it late. And there's a similar thing going on with Daniel Russell where it's like, he makes some great plays over the course of this game, but then presses a little bit too much when he gets going. And when Carl towns is nowhere to be found for a variety of reasons in the fourth quarter, that stuff really hurts you and it takes away. It makes even what the wolves were doing well feel like it comes at a cost to them. Yeah, I thought it was actually an incredible slow play by jaw to let pat bev beat him for the entire first quarter just to completely demolish him. Unreal. Because it just, you know, it got the wolves out of their game. Is that all you saw as being unsustainable just those two because I think it's the same sort of deal with the yellow, obviously we can rely on him a little bit more on offense or a little bit more on offense and you can pat. But it's not a deal series. The grizzlies are just really, really aggressive and they're really, really physical. If jaw wasn't on the court, I think dealer would probably be the skinniest man on the court, but for him it really actually shows. And we're also getting some really Dylan Brooks has figured out how to foul in the playoffs and get away with it. If you like last year in the playoffs, they played the jazz and Donovan Mitchell just continuously got him into foul trouble like just kind of coming off of a screen pausing and letting and Brooks crash into him. A lot of those calls aren't fouls anymore. Thank the lord. But Brooks is also, you know, he's just gotten a little bit trickier..

Chris Ryan Steven Adams grizzlies Joel embiid rob Mahoney Chris rye Brandon Clark pat Beverly Brennan Clark Bren Clark Xavier Tillman Carl Anthony Adams Kyle Anderson mavericks nuggets rob warriors nets London
"mahoney" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast

The Bill Simmons Podcast

02:35 min | 1 year ago

"mahoney" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast

"Capture memories for hours with a long-lasting super fast charging battery. Get your Galaxy S 22 series today. At Samsung, dot com. We're also about to buy the ringer, podcast network, where we finished up ft up family February with the ice storm on Monday that gimmick is done. I had a great time. We had a lot of fun talking about some really, really, really dysfunctional movies. The ice storm podcast, I think we broke the record for longest premature ejaculation podcast. We've had on the ringer podcast network. Very proud of that. Take that record to my grave. Also in the ringer podcast network, I hope you're listening to plain English with Derek Thompson because he is absolutely been crushing it during this Ukraine conflict. I've learned a ton. You will learn a ton. He's done a great job. That is one of the best podcasts we have. Check it out. Ringer gambling show we're up in that to Tuesday, Friday with Joe house and John, justi, talking basketball, college basketball, and that is very fun to listen to as well. On this podcast, rob Mahoney from the ringer, we're going to talk about western sleepers. Denver Dallas, you like either of them? What's going on with job Moran? Is he making like the mega leap? Do we have to factor them into our finals plans? Talk about that with rob, rich football announcers, talking about that with Bryant Curtis as there has been a boom. Why is that? Why do networks feel like they have to spend a lot of money on their late answers? We're going to answer that question. We have some predictions. For the future. And then last but not least, my daughter's always cements 16 years old. Euphoria is her favorite show. The show became an absolute phenomenon this year. It's the second biggest HBO show that they've had. I think since 2004, she's going to explain why it means so much to her generation and to the college generation. And we're going to do some awards. We had a good time. She made me nervous a couple of times. I'm not going to lie. It's all next. First, our Friends from Pearl Jam. I rap Mahoney's here from the ringer podcast network in the ringer dot com. You can hear them in the ringer and be a show on Wednesdays. We're going to talk about Denver and Dallas. The west is weird. You look at it. Phoenix, we're taping this. It is ten 40 Pacific time on Tuesday morning. So some of these things are going to change. But it's basically Phoenix cruising to the one seed..

Derek Thompson Joe house justi rob Mahoney Bryant Curtis basketball Samsung Ringer Ukraine Moran Denver Dallas rob John football HBO Mahoney Phoenix
"mahoney" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast

The Bill Simmons Podcast

03:32 min | 1 year ago

"mahoney" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast

"Ahead on my outline. What are you doing? You just called your own play. What's happening? I started talking about Kyrie and I started feeling like sham on this energy. Spirit of Kyrie is that pervading. KFC, Steve Nash, I think is an unquestioned winner. Unquestioned, except he now has the car, he does the coach. Ben Simmons and Kyrie Irving. Yeah. Well, I mean, so that's tough or Steve Nash in that sense. But I think that's why I agree with rob that Katie is a winner here in the sense that Kevin Durant's legacy, however we define his story after going to Golden State as oh he joined the super team. And he won there and can he do it anywhere else. Well, now, we're talking, oh, hitching your wagons, the Kyrie Irving and Ben Simmons, who just gave up $20 million and sat out because his coach said he might not be a great point guard and because he failed and passed. If he pulls those guys, the NBA Finals and wins it, doesn't that kind of like reverse things for Kevin Durant. Like, wow, he did it with Simmons and Irving? That kind of changes things and helps his legacy. I'd say. I'm a human interest side of it, yeah, sure, but then the other side of me is just like, oh, woe is me, poor baby, Kevin Durant has to take one of the best, most versatile he's going to come after me now. Woe is me I have to drag one of the most versatile defenders alive. I know we've crapped on Ben Simmons alive in the past. Year, but he is super talented. And then Kyrie, who might be the best. I mean, the most, him and Steph are probably the two most black ball skills most skilled players ever. It's a funny thing. There are a lot of hypotheticals here. Like if this hypothetically happens, it's going to be interesting to see, this is going to be an interesting sort of experiment to see how quickly a team can mesh and still have a chance to go the distance. What's interesting is they were able to salvage this season as a basketball team, right? The chance to actually win the title. They were able to salvage that, assuming Ben Simmons can at least be 90% of what it was last year, which I have to say is an assumption at this point. But at least if you had unhappy hard in the rest of the season, I think we would all agree you're not entitled that way. The other interesting thing is they got two first rounders in the trade. That they can at least have this summer to try to keep improving the team around KD and potentially Kyrie. So I was thinking loser Mahoney, Houston. Houston for three weeks here was sitting in this situation where super unhappy James Harden, if the trade doesn't happen, he forces his way to Philly, Philly trades Tobias Harris to OKC with whatever to just get rid of him and then signs hard and the nets have nothing. And now the rockets have these picks and these pick swaps, but now it's like they have these picks and pick swaps for a team that looks like it's going to be pretty good the rest of the rest of the half decade and on top of it, they got no other assets in the deal, right? They could have Jared Allen, they chose not to have them. They turned old depot or cares averted an old depot into nothing. So they have really no players to show from the trade at all. And now it's like you're kind of keeping your fingers crossed with the pics of pickups. I didn't like the trade when it happened. I still don't like it. Well, and loser within the loser. I mean, Eric Gordon was probably packing his bags. Thinking he was going to be playing for a playoff team, tough break.

Ben Simmons Kevin Durant Kyrie Irving Steve Nash KFC Katie Kyrie Irving rob Simmons NBA Steph Tobias Harris Philly Houston James Harden basketball Mahoney
"mahoney" Discussed on Encyclopedia Womannica

Encyclopedia Womannica

04:36 min | 1 year ago

"mahoney" Discussed on Encyclopedia Womannica

"Hello, from wonder media network, I'm Jenny Kaplan, and this is romantica. This month, we're talking about women who've made important contributions to the world of health and wellness. Today we're talking about a nurse celebrated as a pioneer in her field. She was the first African American to complete a professional training program as a nurse in the United States, and she spent her career dedicated to her community. Please welcome Mary Eliza Mahoney. Mary Eliza Mahoney was born in the spring of 1845 in Boston, Massachusetts. Her parents, Charles and Mary Jane Stewart Mahoney, were formerly enslaved in North Carolina before moving to Boston just before the Civil War. Mary was the eldest of three children. At the age of ten, Mary attended the Phillips school in Boston. After 1855, the Philips school became one of the first integrated schools in the country. At the time, black women were not permitted to attend university. But Mary knew early on that she wanted to be a nurse. She started working at the New England hospital for women and children when she was a teenager. For the next 15 years, Mary worked in many capacities at the hospital. She washed clothes, cleaned rooms, and worked in the kitchen before she was offered the opportunity to be a nurse's aid. This new role gave her the chance to learn the ins and outs of the nursing profession. The New England hospital for women and children also operated one of the first nursing schools in the United States. In 1878, at the age of 33, Mary was admitted to the hospital's professional graduate school for nursing. For each class, only one black woman and one Jewish woman were permitted to attend. The nursing program was intensive and lasted 16 months. During that time, the nursing students were in charge of wards of patients. Worked in private homes and attended day long lectures. They made morning rounds with doctors at the hospital who demanded the highest standards of care from the nursing students. By one description, students worked 16 hour days 7 days a week. Of the 42 students who entered the program in 1878. Only four completed it in 1879. Mary was one of the four to reach that finish line and became the first African American to earn a professional nursing degree. After receiving her degree, Mary didn't end up getting a job at a hospital. The discrimination toward black nurses made that nearly impossible. Instead, she became a private nurse. She focused on the needs of individual clients, many of whom were from wealthy white families. And she became well known for her patient and caring bedside manner. Up and down the east coast, this 90 pound ball of energy was praised for her work. Mary was also interested in organizing. She understood the need for nurses to work together to improve their situation. So in the 1890s, Mary joined what would eventually become the American nurses association. But as one of the only black members, she faced discrimination again, and she felt the group wasn't meeting the needs of the black community. So in 1908, she helped found what was then known as the national association of colored graduate nurses. Her goal was to break down the barriers, black nurses faced due to their race. The organization continued its work until 1951. Just a few years after black nurses were finally more openly permitted to join the American nurses association. Mary retired after 40 years in nursing. In 1923, she became ill with breast cancer. After three years of living with the disease, she died on January 4th, 1926. She was 80 years old. Mary was buried in Woodland cemetery in Everett, Massachusetts. In 1936, the national association of colored graduate nurses established the Mary Mahoney award. The award honored Mary's legacy as a nurse dedicated to others, who opened doors for other black women in nursing. The award is still given out today by the American nurses association. It's reserved for providers who, like Mary, advocate for more integration in the field of medicine..

Mary Eliza Mahoney Mary New England hospital for women Jenny Kaplan Mary Jane Stewart Mahoney Boston Phillips school Philips school United States Massachusetts national association of colore North Carolina American nurses association Charles east coast Woodland cemetery breast cancer Everett
"mahoney" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM

WABE 90.1 FM

01:56 min | 1 year ago

"mahoney" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM

"It's Saturday and Sarah Mahoney is one of several Planned Parenthood volunteers knocking on doors in Wyndham Maine It's a politically moderate town not far from Portland No one answers that the first couple of houses but as Mahoney heads up the street she sees a woman out for a walk Hey where can't we're out canvassing What's your address I'll see if you're on my list The woman Cary kelchner isn't on the list but she steps to the side of the road and agrees to talk Mahoney first asks kelchner about her support for abortion access on a scale of zero to ten Ten means anyone should be able to get an abortion for any reason Kelchner says she's a 7 Next moni asks her a series of questions to better understand her values Can you tell me a little bit about what shapes your views on abortion In typical canvassing Mahoney might talk about a political candidate Remind kelchner to vote and be on her way But this is deep canvassing It's strategic focused and can get quite personal Have you known anybody personally as having an abortion a friend or a family member My mother Kelchner explains that her parents were young when she was born and they weren't ready for another baby Then Mahoney who's 60 shares her story I had an abortion when I was in my early 20s and I was a little conflicted about it I wanted to have a family I knew I wanted to have a family but I was in no way ready to do that Mahoney points out that she and kelchner share similar values about what an unplanned pregnancy can mean Then she asks her baseline question again about abortion access on a zero to ten scale Still around the 7 at the end And just so I'm clear what would be the circumstances where you would say no they shouldn't have the right to have an abortion Kelchner pauses That's a good question They talk more Ultimately kelchner says she can't think of any circumstance where someone should be denied an abortion There should be no judgment so that would be a pet Okay After a 20 minute.

Mahoney Kelchner kelchner Sarah Mahoney Cary kelchner Wyndham moni Maine Portland
"mahoney" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast

Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast

05:30 min | 1 year ago

"mahoney" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast

"That's cool. That's that's cool. It would be hard not to be a fan boy in in. I respect you not like okay. Hey you know bruce. I don't ask for autographs often but yet understand. This is my grandfather's guitar. You're playing on if i could. Have you sign that. 'cause i will years ago when my son was little we were at a baseball game. A texas ranger game and The a player. And i can't remember the player but hit a foul ball and it came in. I had no depth perception and it's coming in history on the shoulder right. Hits me on the shoulder. They'd bounces on the field and then The the the ball boy you know was nice enough that they said yeah. Give it to the fan. So he reached grabbed off-field gave it to be and And we'll who's playing first base for the rangers at the time you know looked at me and like no no use your glove not your shoulder giving me our time. And i asked the ballboy between innings i said. Would you get in trouble if if i asked you to. Try will clark sign it. Because he gave me crap. Here's yes i would get in a lot of trouble. I said okay. Then you move on move on but it was just the idea of that moment. Not necessarily collecting an autograph that moment. So i that's gotta be treasure. I'm happy. I have that picture of nothing else and again i got at some point time. I'm with you eventually. Hopefully we can hang out. Oh show with you. If i can get or get permission to post it but i have my friend before. I got to meet him. Friend elijah his family got to meet him at a sort of a private thing after early dickinson university and he actually signed my copy of my mom's got the born to run so to. Bobby's injury the little guitar thing. So nice sats my have So there is definitely moments where i was a bit more of a fan boy and like even like you know. Dan from the house will tell you when he first walked in one of the sound checks i was at i was. I must tune the same guitar. Fifteen times sherline late absolutely chicken with my head cut off you know yet a velvet thank. I've gotten better at it. Yeah you wonder. Do you ever get over the fact that he becomes bruce from jersey right like you know. It's it's bruce from freeholder ghetto and Once.

bruce baseball dickinson university rangers texas clark elijah Bobby Dan jersey
"mahoney" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast

Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast

05:47 min | 1 year ago

"mahoney" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast

"That's when i'm not and i also teach music during the day so and i'm not you know what i say. What i'm not yelling at microphones and you know beating guitars. I'm teaching music. And doing what i like to refer to as a musical indiana jones a little bit. It's nice during the day at the hang out and be a little. Bit more mild-mannered. But at night kind of go off and you know yell at nazis. So it's good. Do you teach at school or the private lessons. What do you both. I teach at a private school called fusion academy which is actually a good national group of schools. That's you know across the country. And i teach the fusion campus at the princeton campus. I apologize the princeton campus. Okay and I also do private lessons outside so if anyone needs qatar lessons mary go opposite great. Yeah well welcome so. Let's talk about growing up when you Where'd you grow up at. And what kind of music did your family listen to. So i grew up in new jersey. I was born in. North jersey livingston. Grew up in garwood result park and my family moved to east brunswick when i was like four or five years old so i've been in east brunswick my whole life i'm still here for the most part okay Growing up my first musical memories were like a lot of people driving around in the car with their parents and was grateful. Dead was one of the first beds. That stuck out to me. Honestly as a fourth grader. Friend of the devil. In casey jones spoke to me as you know eight-year-old which is probably concerning But warns yvonne meatloaf bon jovi. Pink floyd zepplin springsteen. We're really what i kind of okay grew up on. Acdc You know. My parents had lay felt that going to shows. And you know go into you. Know not just rock shows but broadway shows and they was part of my education. You know getting culture. And i was very fortunate and i know a lot of people aren't as fortunate as me and i've had very supportive parents on very for very lucky but i got a lot of concerts growing up so i've got to see a lot of my heroes you know. I'm very very fortunate but yeah there was always. My parents. were big concert people growing up so that was passed along to me. That's kind of cool. passionate. And you know the that's a wide range of artists that they were listening to so that's a nice guy..

princeton campus fusion academy east brunswick garwood result park indiana jones yvonne meatloaf North jersey Pink floyd zepplin springsteen livingston casey jones mary new jersey bon jovi
"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

09:28 min | 2 years ago

"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Good news. i'm not about good news. What kind of news the news. Great book and i can recommend people that they should read alongside your book if you can keep it eventually on eight. Wow that our. It's it's by mark david hall. Who befriended on twitter before twitter decided that i was dangerous criminal on person and banned me for life. Mark david holes book. Did america have a christian founding. We had him on this program to discuss that. It's a while ago but talk about that. You wrote a better stream dot org go ahead. Yeah have an article about that strength which we ran the fourth of july right and today the myth is that america was founded by a bunch of devious who believe that maybe there's a god but he's intimately distant and he doesn't have anything to do with the world. He's like homer simpson asleep at the controls of the nuclear reactor and occasionally. Maybe a light goes off. But he's sleeping. I think that's wishful thinking a lot of people anyway. Their belief is that that america's founded by people believe in that it was set out that way and we have this absolute separation of church and state that you're not allowed to even vote in the privacy of the voting booth. You can't even vote based on anything to do with your religious convictions. That is just a lie. It is an absolute conscious lie that left wing secular scholars especially at the aclu who's remember was originally linked with the communist party. That was a secular lie that left us. Historians and secular historians started to promulgate in the nineteen forties by the nineteen sixties. Us courts were ruling. As if this were true but in fact it is not true. Not any of it. Do you know how many diaz there were among the founding fathers real de devious and thomas paine. Thomas is often called an atheist. He was very later in life. He became very anticlerical along the lines of the french revolutionaries but earlier Because i was reading quote of his from common sense the pamphlet and was just e clearly believed in god. But yes thomas paine areas one eric. He was lying. Thomas paine was adidas to as if he were not one he was in the closet. He was a closeted deis. he talked about divine providence. He talked to about prayer and fasting. That was just rhetoric. By that point. He was already adidas. Thomas paine was a disc honest. Diest ethan allen was was a non believer every other founding. Father was a christian of some variety. Now thomas jefferson was a mixed bag on the one hand. He would sound like a dea sometimes but then he would talk about prayer and fasting and divine providence. Those are not ds doctrines. You're not a if you believe. Divide up ditto with ben franklin with ben franklin to george washington was a churchgoing episcopalian jock before the episcopalians became what they come right charge. Charles carroll was a catholic but ninety percent of the founding fathers. Were what we would call today. Reform hardcore countenance and they believed in the fall of man and they set up the government with that in mind now. I'm a catholic not much sympathy for calvin but calvin is seen to understand how america works. Because they're the ones who designed they. They had a very pessimistic view human nature. Which meant you don't want people in the government fallen corrupt human beings having too much power. You need to set them. Up in these rube goldberg. Things like the separation of powers and the the localism of the states. You need to make it as hard as possible for people to act like king george the third or far worse there were far worse people than king george the third there was louis the fourteenth who hunted protestants down louis. The fifteen to took protestant kids away from their parents to be raised by catholics away from their family. Like they're doing in germany and scandinavia. Today that's right there have been plenty of tyrants in the history even of the west much less if we look at like central asian. Gets kahn the chinese empire or the muslim world. Tyranny has been the norm tyranny. Justified by false appeals to religion has been the norm for human history. Our country was glorious. Noble experiments in liberty. But it was. It was grounded in a skepticism about centralized power in the hands of anyone and now we have a president. Joe biden is by ernest. Occupational government plan promising to send people door to door demanding that we take the dead baby vaccine. The president of the united states is going to personally intervene in the medical decisions of every american. This is the kind of tyranny. Our founders wanted us to be armed so we could overthrow it if at was absolutely necessary if they're going to steal elections and censor the press and keep people from flying on airplanes or having bank accounts if they even questioned the election if this is not the onset of the kind of tyranny our founders warned against what would be folks and tell me you tell me at what point start security. You have the election. There faked the media. Lives about it and you get in trouble. If you question. How much worse can it can again. Are we actually going to have to wear little stars that proclaim our religion before you realize these people are like the nazis. Well look this is the thing everywhere. I go now. Pe- people ask me talk on bond hoffer so my bon offer book is selling more than my other books because unintentionally. When i wrote that book i was writing the game plan for where we are currently going. What happened when when hitler came to power in early. Thirty three with lightning speed. They did all kinds of things. That people weren't really ready for it. They weren't prepared to push back and stunning changes happened. And of course when hindenburg wheezed his last then now it's you know katie. Bar the door we we are going to. Just push forward people in this country similarly. We're we're not prepared. It's hard to take in when you say these things. I mean i know. Unfortunately you're exactly correct but it's still hard for me to process. No no no. This is really happening now. And so we need to warn our fellow americans folks gird your loins get ready stand up speak. If you don't do that now you'll be sorry it's happening. Many people in the past where they said. Let's just wait till tomorrow. I don't know. I just want to go with the program. Go along with the flow. Go with the flow. This is not the time to do that. Let's let me point out. Camera harris is even more dangerous than by. He is hindenburg. But he is the senile old man. Who is the last face of some kind of ordinary connection with our respectable pass and the folding at the mouth fanatic is who's waiting in the wings it's not donald hitlerites camel harris. Who as attorney general california tried to imprison journalists for daring to investigate planned parenthood's violation of federal law who l. baby or john she. She wears high tops and jokes about smoking weed. She can't be. That mean. Kenji yeah why. She dressed up in lederhosen. It was very fond of her dog. Blondie i think that would be very humanizing detail to i mean. That's that's the point is that you're telling us facts and again. I forgive me for interrupting. But it's hard to believe the stuff it's it's hard to face. These facts that that. That's what's hard harris. Cackling smiling that she did this with the tremendous power that she had while in california. It's still happening. I had when. I guess those years back i had david aligned on as a guest. He is still trying to stay out of a california state prison and right now the state of california is trying to stop him from calling defense witnesses. I wrote a piece of this two weeks ago. Guys i get there. We're going to have stalinist purge trials. I'm kit that abortion is so sacred that selling baby organs for profit. We have to protect to and we have to persecute the journalists. But if we're gonna have stalinist purge trials in service of big abortion could you just make them a little more plausible please just for old time sake. Can the stalinist purge trials. In america that put people in solitary confinement can make just feel a little more plausible so that we don't have to be so embarrassed. Showing our face to people from free countries like denmark. I am afraid right at town. Time my my friend john. It's always good to talk to you. Folks please go to stream dot org..

thomas paine mark david hall america de devious ben franklin Diest ethan allen adidas Mark david king george twitter calvin homer simpson Occupational government Charles carroll aclu communist party diaz rube goldberg thomas jefferson
"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

The Eric Metaxas Show

09:13 min | 2 years ago

"mahoney" Discussed on The Eric Metaxas Show

"Welcome to the eric metaxas. Show with your host eric taxes. Welcome to our to the irc metaxas. Show i'm playing the role of eric. Metaxas go with it Suspend your disbelief. John's merrick is playing himself john At the end of our one. You're talking about some really disturbing stuff. Unfortunately we have to go back there. what you just said that the The folks that trespassed which to me seems like technical trespassing. Most of these people had no idea. They were trespassing I know people who were in the capital on that day and they told me about it and these are the sweetest people i mean. No kidding these are the kindest sweetest people people of deep faith. They would just wandering around thrilled to be where they were. They weren't part of any Anything coming near to the idea of insurrection. They're being demonized. They're being a arrested investigated by the f. b. i. I know some of these people. You're telling me you told my audience that julie kelley wrote an article at american greatness saying that in order to get out of twenty three hour solitary confinement down the public defenders of these poor people are are saying that they will read books on critical race theory. And all of this nonsense. I simply that in america. This is happening. I cannot john. I can hardly believe it eric. It's worse than that. They're being subjected to d- not syndication. They're being given books about the holocaust as if they were neo. Nazis or holocaust-deniers with the left has a very clear message. The message is if you disagree with us your racist a racist is the same as a nazi. So you a nazi we get to punch you. We get to take away your bank account as happened to lauren wits. Go and run for congress for the republicans in delaware wells. Fargo just took away your bank account because it did like her politics. There are people who are not being allowed on airplanes because of their political us. Airlines are simply saying no. You are no fly. List of political. No-fly list ev. When we talk about tyranny when we talk about the left being totalitarian and following marxist rather the christian or american morality. This is what it needs. And if you don't draw a line in the sand here and say no. You can't forcibly reeducate. Americans for engaging in a non-violent political protests and keep them locked up in solitary confinement and conducted conduct political show trials if we won't fight over this and if republicans won't lead over this if donald trump will lead over this then we already have a one party state we have a single anti-racist party is the coal anti-racist party it's the only legal party and if you want to have another one being lives in hawaii one have a racist party. It's exactly the way things were in east germany. They are imposing eastern european style. marxist coup d'etat. On the american people and so many cowards on the right are complicit in it and when i saw those those those pants wedding so conservatives to announcing the january six people as if they were criminally chow. Who was in the president's cabinet She cheated her show. Trial thing Unfortunately the secretary of education betsy devos came out a number of people that you know are at least republicans and at least somehow loyal to the president. Ed who's pleasure. They served spoke out but many others did. My question today is where are the good guys. Where's ted cruz z. Speaking about this their numbers that i think of as as heroic maybe. They're not perfect but they're the good guys. Where are they. I think ron to santa spoken out about this. Ted cruz spoken out about it. I'm not sure. I think probably josh hallway. The people who actually were themselves attacked. And they're still trying to disbar. Ted cruz and josh holly and they just disbarred rudy giuliani for questioning election results. Now every four every time. A republican wins. There are some democrats in congress. Try not to certify. The electors happens every time. It's almost a ritual. But when republicans do it based on real evidence. Total panic total lockdown. Now that tells you something. There is absolutely no problem with the twenty twenty election. Obviously and in fact. That's so obvious that we have to destroy the lives of anyone who raises any questions and we can't look at the ballots. We can't look with the signatures. It's really really important the truth eric is so fragile. It's a little tiny one trimester embryo when it's so fragile protected with the bodyguard of snitch. -is and secret police and thugs and social media monopoly. They are the amniotic fluid so to speak. Yeah of this of this anti christ. They wanted to bring the birth that slouches towards capitol hill. To before. ouch john. You know i. I think most americans who live their lives. They just don't wanna hear this stuff because it's too horrifying and they just think if i go away i get that i get that how people don't wanna hear john's mirror talk about this because it's just too disturbing. I'd rather believe he's exaggerating. he's biased. maybe there's some truth to it but the people in leadership the senators donald trump. Mike pence for that matter. Anybody who believes in america. You don't have to agree with everyone on everything. But if you believe in america you have to understand this a travesty. And i'll say this. I believe if they continue to push this kind of stuff. It's gonna get ugly. There are going to be bad actors. Who are going to Get violent in other words at some point. If you continue to do this thing you're gonna cause the kind of trouble you're pretending his already happened and go i worry about. You're going to justify the kind of revolution you're talking about. Joe biden is talk is threatening citizens with nuclear weapons and f. fifteens as a way of mocking the second amendment. He said these people say that private citizens having firearms as a safeguard of freedom. That is what the american founders every last one of them said and the ratification debates of the bill of rights. These people are saying that they're going to need f. Fifteens nukes if you wanna fight us to which the best response on twitter. Someone just posted a picture of a smiling viet cong soldier. They have also posted a member of the taliban because no the us us army cannot pacify afghanistan. it couldn't pacify iraq it couldn't pacify vietnam. It certainly couldn't pacify america if they were trying to tyrannize america especially since there stuffing the army with trannies and karen's and rejects from from from from the vocational school. The people want to sign up for the army. They're labeling extremists. An army training manual explicitly says as part of counter-extremist training that likely extremists include evangelical christians and conservative orthodox catholics in other words ninety percent of the kind of people who will sign up for the army are potential extremists. So if they fill up the army. With crossing guards. And bruce bruce jenner wannabes and they're gonna really pacify america in block by block fighting the f. Fifteens going to be flying overhead with no targets. I was going to say. There's there's not enough tanks and planes to crush you know three hundred million americans. It doesn't work that way. We're not a police state Don't put it past them. Nuking actually then then. They started new king cities because they vote republican maybe we can finally achieve the democrat. Utopia an american can be an irradiated empty way slam and of course. Today's democrat for vote. Republican that's the problem. Is that the that the the true conservatives and patriots tend to be much more scattered. We're going to go to a break before we go to break. I just want to remind my audience folks Again again. i say this. Please go to stream dot org and.

ted cruz eric eric metaxas Metaxas julie kelley delaware wells betsy devos john josh hallway donald trump america merrick josh holly congress ouch john east germany Fargo lauren rudy giuliani John
Oscar-Winning Actress Olympia Dukakis Dies at 89

Elysabeth Alfano

01:08 min | 2 years ago

Oscar-Winning Actress Olympia Dukakis Dies at 89

"The movie Steel Magnolias has passed away here. Zain uses Chris Barnes with more An Oscar winning actress with the family tied to a one time political figure has passed away. What do you do it? Housewife. How come you're reading along? I'm not alone. That's Olympia Dukakis In one of her most remembered roles as the New York City Italian mother in 1980 seven's Moonstruck. Here's more of the scene of that dinner with a stranger played by the late John Mahoney. Ask a question. Go ahead. Men chase women. Nerves. I think it's because they fear death. Dukakis also had major movie roles and steel Magnolias, Mr Holland's Opus and many others and over 100 appearances on TV for near Boston, a cousin to Michael Dukakis, who became Massachusetts governor and then failed in the 1988 White House bid. Her family says Olympia Dukakis passed away Saturday morning at her home in New York City. She was 89. For I news. I'm Chris Barnes.

Chris Barnes Olympia Dukakis Zain Oscar John Mahoney Mr Holland New York City Dukakis Michael Dukakis Boston Massachusetts White House
Getting 1% Better Daily Is BS With Carole Mahoney

Daily Sales Tips

01:46 min | 2 years ago

Getting 1% Better Daily Is BS With Carole Mahoney

"Have you heard the phrase are seen the phrasing toss around lately about getting one percent better every day as much as i have your own. Have you ever watched the ups and downs of the stock market or political poll. Tried to wade and invade yourself every single day things ever get one percent better. I mean if only things would be so much easier right. Been around long enough. You know that things just don't happen in this nice neat linear fashion. And i get that for the most part. The intention behind the statement is to focus on small improvements everyday. But there's a dangerous side to this way of thinking because the truth is is that set-backs slip ups and slumps and stuff just happens. Sometimes we have control over it and sometimes we don't for that reason if our focus is on getting one percent better every day we could be setting ourselves up for frustration. Failure for example. I mean in case you haven't noticed or heard. I've started using the same cognitive behavioral approach. That i use in coaching to myself so that i could get healthy. Lose ninety five pounds and i'm pretty psyched to share that. Only fifteen pounds away from my stressful. But it's not like. I've never done this before tried before i have previously whenever i would step on the scale and it went up. I went from let minute journey begin to. What's the point. Never gonna be able to do. This can only do your sales kickoff for training and things look like they're gonna get better only to have them regressed back because wired to follow our preset patterns in the path of least resistance so we stop waiting ourselves. Do we ignore our activity and conversion rates of course not mean how else are we gonna know if we're of course not

"mahoney" Discussed on Shades of Strong? | Shifting the Strong Black Woman Narrative

Shades of Strong? | Shifting the Strong Black Woman Narrative

02:13 min | 2 years ago

"mahoney" Discussed on Shades of Strong? | Shifting the Strong Black Woman Narrative

"Welcome to black from the past a series of the shades of strong podcast where we highlight black women in history and their accomplishments in this segment. We're going to be highlighting. Mary elisa mahoney who worked as a nurse in the nineteenth and early twentieth century. Mary was born in boston. Massachusetts to freed slaves who had moved there from north carolina. She started working at the new england hospital for women and children as a teenager and she spent fifteen years there working as a cook as a laundries as a janitor. And as a nurse's aide. The new england hospital for women and children also operated a nursing school one of the first in the country. Mary gained admittance to that school at the age of thirty three due to the rigorous nature of the sixteen month program which was a professional graduate school for nursing. Only four of the forty two students who entered in eighteen seventy eight finished in eighteen seventy nine and mary was one of them thus making mary mahoney the first black woman in the united states to earn a professional nursing license and to work as a licensed nurse. She spent the next four decades working as a private nurse as opposed to a public nurse because well within the public nursing arena. There was a lot of discrimination of course but she had an illustrious career working as a private nurse and she ended up passing away at the age of eighty in nineteen twenty. six mary. Eliza mahoney is honestly not someone that i had heard of so. I was really delighted to read her story and to see what she had accomplished in her life she was also one of the first women who registered to vote after the passage of the nineteenth amendment two registered to vote in massachusetts and i also did not know that so that concludes this short segment of black from the past. I hope you enjoyed it..

new england hospital for women Mary elisa mahoney Mary mary mahoney Massachusetts north carolina boston Eliza mahoney mary united states massachusetts
Biden, advocates renew calls for gun reform after Colorado shooting

Nightline

05:06 min | 2 years ago

Biden, advocates renew calls for gun reform after Colorado shooting

"Good evening. Thank you for joining us tonight. The horror and folding a supermarket in boulder colorado a gun and kill ten people including one police officer now the community remembering the victims and reflecting on his dark history with mass shootings. Here's abc's will car. I just started counting in between shots and listening to see what direction was heading for. Sarah moonshadow a normal trip to the grocery with a twenty one year. Old son active. Get away turned into a terrifying day. That will haunt her forever. Once we got outside i noticed. Thorough people laying in the street and they weren't moving and my son grabbed me and said no. We can't do anything out in the open so we ran just happened here. Guys is the moment. Americans fear shooter for too many experienced. We've got people down inside. Cooper's fully tenor dead after carnage unfolded at the king's super grocery store in boulder colorado denise song. Nevin stand his sick ricky old loner for kovac. Suzanne terry leaker eric. Tally kevin mahoney lynn. Murray and jodi waters night their loved ones were united in grief just one week after another mass shooting in atlanta leaving many to wonder what will take to stop the bloodshed this tragedy and a nightmare for boulder county. It's a horrific broken as a nation to see that we've returned to ever old patterns of of mass shooting for those who were at the scene. Absolute shock smell the gun powder so they were pretty close. We were like sitting ducks instead. Shaking with this the poor shots crack through the air around two thirty monday afternoon. The alleged gunman opened fire in the parking lot. Have an asset sitter. Then he went inside right here. D- chiller came to shop for groceries and steady in film. This people lying in three guys. He went in the store all got. You got people down inside. Keep super bully. Police responded within minutes quickly surrounding the building around officer. Eric tally was the first member of law enforcement on the see out here down. Police engaged in a shootout with the suspect officer. Tally was gunned down his service and his sacrifice will never be forgotten. Sir moonshadow tells my colleague matt gutman that she hasn't been able to stop thinking about the shooting. Is the one that you can't shake my son's face. Seeing my son scared like that. I told him we only have three seconds. Like we have to move now. Just don't look anywhere. Don't hesitate don't stand up and just run. Just read about an hour up to the shooting started. Police took the suspect into custody with a gunshot wound in the leg. He was transported to the hospital for treatment now in stable condition. The suspect has been identified as ahmad elissa. Twenty-one of vodka two suspects now charged with ten counts of first degree murder is being held without bail among the lives lost the first to respond boulder police. Officer eric tally officer. Eric tally died heroically. Eleven years on the force. A husband and father of seven is grief stricken mother. Judy speaking to our affiliate. Koa t even so gay played when she heard there was a shooting in boulder. She combed through the video looking for her son for the call finally came like gave his just saved those people another victim twenty five year old ricky old a manager at the grocery store whose family described her as a firecracker signing a family says they watch the livestream in horror desperately trying to reach her. We actually heard gunshots. Were breaking down into tears and hasn't even came on a news. Feed yep denise. Another king super employees remembered by a classmate he was a free spirit and and he just did what what he loved and didn't really care what other people thought sixty one year old kevin mahoney. Who just last summer walked his daughter down the aisle on twitter. She revealed he was about to become a grandfather tweeting. I know he would want me to be strong for his granddaughter. All lives believed to be taken at the hand of one man. The alleged shooter born in syria emigrated to the us at three years. Old is now a. Us citizen and twenty seventeen. He was charged with third degree assault for intimidation and menacing related to an incident in a denver suburb and at twenty eighteen. He was charged with criminal mischief.

Boulder Sarah Moonshadow King's Super Grocery Store Suzanne Terry Kevin Mahoney Lynn Colorado Sir Moonshadow Matt Gutman Kovac Nevin Ricky Boulder County Jodi Ahmad Elissa ABC Officer Eric Tally Cooper Eric Murray
Here's What We Know About The Victims Of The Boulder Shooting

All Things Considered

01:01 min | 2 years ago

Here's What We Know About The Victims Of The Boulder Shooting

"Authorities in Boulder, Colorado, have charged a 21 year old man and a shooting rampage yesterday that left 10 dead, including a police officer. Alleged shooter has been identified as a med Alyssa. He faces 11th degree murder charges and an 11 charge of criminal attempt. Boulder Police chief Maris Herald read the names of the victims at the press conference this morning, Denny Strong 20 years old. Nevin Students Key 23 Ricky Odds 25 Kelowna, but kind of the yak 49 Suzanne Fountain 59. Terry Liker 51. Officer Eric Talley 51. Kevin Mahoney. 61 Len Murray 62 Jody Waters 65 again the Boulder police chief reading the names of the 10 victims of the mass shooting in Boulder, Colorado.

Boulder Police Maris Herald Boulder Denny Strong Ricky Odds Alyssa Colorado Suzanne Fountain Terry Liker Eric Talley Nevin Kevin Mahoney Len Murray Kelowna Jody Waters
Boulder shooting victim: Kevin Mahoney, his daughter’s hero, killed in mass shooting

The Afternoon News with Kitty O'Neal

00:46 sec | 2 years ago

Boulder shooting victim: Kevin Mahoney, his daughter’s hero, killed in mass shooting

"Connection to yesterday's tragic shooting in Colorado. KFBK is my glory, explains the California daughter of the man killed in the mass shooting incident in Colorado is calling her dad. Her hero. Erica Mahoney, news director for a radio station in Pacific Grove, California, confirmed her father, Kevin Mahoney, was one of the victims and said she is heartbroken in a Twitter post. Mahoney says she's thankful her 61 year old dad could walk her down the aisle last summer on her wedding day. She also revealed her dad would have been a grandfather soon as she is expecting a baby girl later this year. Honey also thank the police in her hometown of Boulder for the kindness they have shown in dealing with a terrible tragedy. No motive has been established yet in Monday's shooting that killed 10 people, including Boulder Police Officer Mike Lory

Erica Mahoney Kevin Mahoney Colorado California Pacific Grove Mahoney Twitter Honey Boulder Boulder Police Mike Lory
What's going on with the New Orleans Pelicans?

The Bill Simmons Podcast

03:46 min | 2 years ago

What's going on with the New Orleans Pelicans?

"This year's deputy f team the new orleans pelicans. I don't know what baker this team you can catch them on any given night and it's a completely different experience than the last night. I don't know if the players make sense together. Actually i'm pretty sure they don't. I don't really know what the overall philosophy is. I don't know if they're trying to be a playoff team if they're trying to be rebuilding. I'm just constantly confused and there are some optimism because they want a couple of games around people here they go here. Zion and then they get killed last night by the bulls and have one hundred thousand breakdowns. And i guess my first question to you is the pelicans what the fuck you. How many exclamation points can we tack onto that. Wt fd think. But i was hoping you could answer this question. Because i think you're spot on in that it's so much depends your view of this team on when you catch them even just like what stage in the season. You caught them because for a minute. It looked like they were going to live up to their personnel and be a tough minded offensive team. Scrounging out offensive rebounds to get points and just kinda struggling on that in because they're spacing issues the script has completely flipped. And now this is all of a sudden very competent offense. I think park has really driven by brandon. Ingram is i ion williamson. They're making that part of it work but the defense. Jesus christ i mean it is. There is inconsistent defensively as really any team out there. Yeah i would say other than brooklyn. It's the team that's most likely to give up one hundred forty on any given night to any team. That knows what they're doing. I so if you actually look at their stats and you haven't been watching that much and you look at the stats and you look at williamson in ingram and all right. Those guys are having good years pretty efficient. And then you look at lonzo and you look at bledsoe. Lonzo shoot thirty seven percent from three so she and forty percent so going into the season like well. Their guards can't shoot. They're not going to be able to have enough space. Well their guards are actually shooting. Okay but then. When i watch everybody together. I don't have a five-man line-up that i liked like yesterday. They're playing Kyra lewis with He he got a little more run and he's really interesting. Rookies really fast. He's little darren foxy and gave them an energy that i was like. Well maybe this. Maybe i would like this version of the pelicans more. If fast you know now unleash sign a little bed. Go up and down a little bit more. But i still don't know who the other two teammates would be with cairo. Lewis design and branding. And i guess the fundamental question for me is do zion and brandon. Ingram makes sense together on a team. That's actually trying to win the title. I think they make sense on offense but the question was i on really broadly. As who are you going to put the five that's gonna make up for all. He doesn't do defensively right now. That's always been my issue with the idea of playing small and we are putting him at the five his rotations is. Aren't there really the pelicans as a team. If i were an opposing coach. I would say this is a team. We can beat him rotation every they are. Pass away from defensive breakdown every time out on the floor and keep moving the ball. You keep doing what you're supposed to do they will they will mess up in a whether it's undersized guy in the corner doesn't quite rotate over all the way. Jj radic or josh. Hart they try hard. They do what they can. But they're not equipped to be helped rotation defenders. If a guy like zion isn't going to be one so i mean i'm i'm kinda bullish on the anger rooms ion depot in general but i am really struggling to see how you put together those lineups. I can see how they kind of got into this conundrum where they clearly wanted to have some veterans early. Some veterans fell into their lap in terms of what was available and trying to get some pics and make their other moves but long term. It's a weird team to build with. And then you get lonzo into this conversation to and what they want to do with him. It's it's kind of messy.

New Orleans Pelicans Ion Williamson Lonzo Ingram Kyra Lewis Darren Foxy Brandon Baker Bulls Bledsoe Williamson Brooklyn Cairo Jj Radic Zion Lewis
Brady a Rare Super Bowl Underdog vs. Chiefs

Fox News

01:29 min | 2 years ago

Brady a Rare Super Bowl Underdog vs. Chiefs

"Tom Brady and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Underdogs versus Patrick Mahomes in the Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl 55 less than two weeks away. This is Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes after he threw three touchdown passes at home last night in a 38 to 24, A F C championship game went over the Buffalo Bills of victory. That puts my homes and the Chiefs and the Super Bowl a second straight season for this classic matchup, being able to go up against one, the one of the greatest, Nothing greatest quarterback of all time and his 150th Super Bowl. I mean, it's gonna be a great experience for me. I mean to have a chance to repeat and get to do it against the best. I mean it zapping special and I'm excited for the opportunity. Patrick Mahoney's led the chief's back from mine nothing down in the first quarter against Buffalo to beat the bills by two touchdowns, the largest margin of victory for the defending champions since week eight of the season. It was week 12 when Mahomes led the Chiefs to a 27 24 went over the Buccaneers. Kansas City is favored to beat Tampa Bay and Super Bowl 55 by between three and 3.5 points, which will be the first Super Bowl to get played in the home stadium of one of its participants, thanks to Brady and the Buccaneers, who won three games on the road in this postseason and became the first team seeded fifth to knock out the number one seed in a conference championship game. Box defeated Aaron Rodgers and the Packers 31 to 26 Lambeau Field. Brady, now in his 10th Super Bowl. It's a tough journey to get here to go on the road, and we not know another road playoff game. Is it just a great achievement? And, you know, now home Super Bowl for the first time in NFL history, I think puts a lot of cool things in perspective,

Patrick Mahomes Super Bowl Kansas City Chiefs Patrick Mahoney Kansas City Tampa Bay Buccaneers Tom Brady Buffalo Bills Mahomes Buccaneers Buffalo Brady Tampa Bay Aaron Rodgers Lambeau Field Packers NFL
Show 48 "Pals for over 60 years" Willie Tyler & Lester - burst 02

Standup Comedy "Your Host and MC"

04:47 min | 2 years ago

Show 48 "Pals for over 60 years" Willie Tyler & Lester - burst 02

"The thing part is it's fine makes you feel good the music's playing and you singing. That's one and it goes. It goes well with the comedy. I think you know. A lot of comedy variety shows would have comic and then a singer and they do tend to work well together but lester. You're one of the few professionals that pull off both comedy and singing so brilliantly bragging. When working with motown i still watch. Tv wondering watch little stevie wonder back in those days and all the temptations. And i learned. I learned from them as watch. You can watch the music and and everything like that. It made me feel made me feel real Willie i know. You're still in the room does we. Don't speak here. you're both there so did did the watching those guys kinda help train you as well as lester. Yes it's it was fun to do the fun things about singing music. Music is like Like let's see rachel was very charles. Ninetieth birthday anniversary is in september. Twenty third and it was like we did a a video a tribute to him on on his website celebrating his ninetieth birthday on that in that particular. Little thing that we did we talked about his songs and songs made you feel good. It makes you feel sad and it and it made you. You know it and that's the same kind of thing with music music and be You know put particular song can make you feel make you jump up and down and dance and another one can make the to sit down and think about what happened yesteryear. What happened that. you know. Years before music connects with people's emotions. And that's why So many people like to sing and enjoy singing. And what's interesting is that you were a very talented are very talented singer. But you are a tremendous stand comic I know lester you had some great jokes in those days. The punchline and he used to he was straight man. I was the guy that did remember you being funnier than willie. That's good will i. I had one more question for leicester. If you've got a minute leicester back back in one thousand nine hundred eighty five you me and willie work together on a fox forty tv special a one hour show and we had you and willie as the host of that show. We had some very big names. Like dave clear and dana carvey on that show but what was interesting. Lester is i let you drive my pink cadillac as part of the opening of this show. Have you done a lot of driving. That was that was first. I and last time. Well it you can see why it's my last time i got to tell you. We do have all that on tape and it was really exciting in a little scary for me as the owner leicester i gotta be honest. Have you driving my car. But i was the big car. Yeah that was. That was a big pink convertible. It was an amazing car bed. You did a great job driving it and even though it was a little little sketchy you're a little heavy on the break There was no damage. And i just want to say thank you but i did. I was able to stop though. Oh yeah oh yeah you did in fact if you remember you kind of fun forward and willie had to save you. Yeah got right in front of the club almost late. that's why we'll say It was a real honor having you and willie as emc of that show. It was our first of three tv shows. We did too short series. One for abc nbc. But it was the fox one hour special having you is the professional. Mc really added some validity in in style in class to that first production. So thank you. That was a fun night. You don't we really like that club because this idea you know. The club was downstate. Well it's sort of hard to explain but it's down. It was downstairs basement. Level rate shows at the shows. People would go upstairs. We had a little magic stuff going on right and people go up there after the shows when we would hang out a also and But place to be. I

Nightclub Stand-Up Comedy New York Jerry Mahoney Sammy Davis Paul Mitchell Willy Willie Tyler Ventriloquism Lester Willie Motown Dave Clear Stevie Rachel Dana Carvey Charles Leicester FOX EMC NBC ABC
Zegarowski leads No. 9 Creighton past St. John's 94-76

AP News Radio

00:42 sec | 2 years ago

Zegarowski leads No. 9 Creighton past St. John's 94-76

"Ninth ranked Creighton was a ninety four seventy six winner at St John's behind Marcus generality who shot six for seven from three point range while scoring a game high twenty points Danny Jefferson came within two assists of a triple double finishing with ten points and ten boards not played tonight I was aggressive and I attended last more which I told you I was going to do and now I'm just having a talk with coach Mack earlier but again he told me I need to be more active on the force Denzel Mahoney chipped in sixteen points and freshman center Ryan calc Brenner added fifteen off the bench St John's a little bit early sixteen point deficit to two in the second half when the seven foot Kalkbrenner put together a string of four baskets down low sparking the early portion of the twenty two to four run I'm Dave Ferrie

Marcus Generality Danny Jefferson Creighton Coach Mack St John Denzel Mahoney Ryan Calc Brenner Dave Ferrie
Agency homing in on social media companies' data collection

BTV Simulcast

08:33 min | 2 years ago

Agency homing in on social media companies' data collection

"U. S Federal Trade Commission has issued orders to Amazon, YouTube and Facebook and six other social media companies to hand over information. But how they collect and use information from users, the country's top privacy regular, saying the firms use of consumer data is quote shrouded in secrecy. The sweeping demand comes after the agency sued Facebook for alleged violations of antitrust laws just last week. Discuss We're joined by Mark Mahoney, managing director at RBC Capital Markets. So Mark obviously the pressure from the U. S government on Big Tech in general has been ratcheting up. How much does this latest salvo from the U. S government changed the equation. Just write it just like your expression. Emily. It just cracks. It's up the pressure on these these companies, and it's become a clearly a bipartisan issue. You notice that, in the congressional hearings in the middle of the summer is what I called up opening of a congressional bipartisan can of whup ass on on Big Tak. It's Republicans and Democrats. So yeah, these these companies have planned to become very large, very powerful, and there are legitimate questions. So it's the weather. They become too large, too powerful both in terms of their acquisitions and then their internal practices. Privacy issues are a little bit separate. But you know the scrutiny is a super high and at that leased it very much limited ability of these companies to do any large scale acquisitions. This statement from the FTC today, the decisions that prominent online platforms make regarding consumer and customer data remains shrouded in secrecy. Critical questions about business models, algorithms data collection and use have gone on answered. Policymakers and the public are in the dark about what social media and video streaming services due to capture and sell user's data and attention. It is alarming that we still know so little. About companies that know so much about us. You know, as somebody who has covered these companies for so many years, you know, I'm sure this is probably the height of scrutiny that you have seen on these companies from the U. S government. How big a risk should investors take this into their calculations when they're thinking about whether to invest in these companies that already high Valuations. Well, let's see, I you know, we regulatory issues aren't necessarily new Google is paid. I think about $10 billion now and find space book is a those air European finds Facebook has paid about 5 to 6 billion to us to the FTC for violating a consent decree or acknowledging that may have violated a consent decree so investors were used to find Investors. They're used to this kind of scrutiny. So I don't think it changes the investment thesis on this name. You'd have to really have a required break up or required changing business practices. But Emily, you've tracked decision industry for a long time. A lot of these models. It's kind of a trade off for consumers. You you know, if you want a free service, you have to give up some of your privacy. You have to give information and by the way, in many ways, I think it actually makes the service a lot better. You get targeted ads rather than junk mail on. I think most consumers prefer the targeted ads, how, In fact, they get the information to target the ads. I mean, that's kind of a secret sauce for a lot of these businesses, and they probably not tell regulators or anybody that for competitive reasons, but they may be forced to now because of regulators, and so anyway, that's that's the new issue, but I don't think it changes the investment thesis on this name for good for for investors. What about the risk in particular of Facebook being broken up? Given that the FTC certainly it's not required, but the FCC has suggested that could be a remedy spinning off instagram spinning off. What's up? Well, it could be one of the smoking guns Emily that came out of this congressional hearings this summer and, by the way, was already brought up in a couple of really great books that have been published in the last year or two about Facebook and Instagram quickly. Several fires book is that there's no question that Facebook bought Instagram, in part to take on what they perceived as a potential future competitors. And so the those air those are the things that antitrust laws they're sort of meant to stop or to at least address why there was The dress. The first time the FTC looked at that acquisition is a little bit of a mystery. But anyway that Z it does. It does raise the issue that these will be forced breakup. I think break up of what's happens a little harder to see what the rationale for that would be. It's not clearly in the same industry as Facebook. That was kind of the more about our thought. Colonel acquisition, but the person's gonna be there. I think it's unlikely they'll be required spin offs, but it is possible. Now you just put out a note on uber and you are pretty bullish on how they come out of the pandemic. Why? Tuck. I'm sorry, Emily. Let's see the uber. This remains our topic in the group. We have snow dust this multi year rise in the interest of ride sharing what I found. Most interesting. This from this report in the survey was the finding that consumers are finding new use cases for ride sharing. Dark Custer shot. He talked about this on the last earnings call that New Yorkers you specifically pointing to. We're starting to use ridesharing during the middle of the date or non peak commute times. Our surveys show that people Start to use ride sharing to run errands. If that use case continues, post Cove it and then you have your general use cases rising for social events. First for airport runs. What it means is that the use cases for ridesharing for uber for lift all then they're gonna be greater post cold Whenever postponed. It is. I thought that was an unusually bullish take away, So we continue to like Cooper. It's our topic in large cap. Now interesting. Uber's Obviously one of the companies that has struggled in the midst of the pandemic. Stitch fix is another company that your look looking at that struggled early on as well made big job cuts but seems to be taking off like a rocket ship. What do you seeing in terms of the path ahead there? So that's gonna be a covert recovery. Play on that retail is a category Emily just accelerate like a rocket ship throughout Cove it except for fashion apparel because we didn't want to buy clothes to go out because we weren't going out. But now we starting to think about going out. There's been a lot of pent up dollars. Uh, I think people will be looking to refresh their wardrobes. And in the meantime, I think Stitch fix Katrina like that, that company, I think they've done a lot of product improvements. And to me, that's what innovation product groups really tried that you do these for these companies over time, and I think investors kind of made miss Mr Underappreciated. Some of the changes that they've made the side is more personalized. They figured out new features that kind of game ified to service a little bit on. I think that you come out of covert. You'll see a really nice sharp recovery in both new users and in revenue it stitch fix. This has been one of our topics and small cap. We've had a dramatic surge in the shares, so it's become a pretty small by force now, but fundamentally, it's a much stronger acid. It will be coming out of orbit and it was coming in. That's why investors are excited. Now even covering take a long time Mark, and I'm sure you follow the Airbnb and Gord Ash I pose last week, doubling their valuations. Even Brian Chesky. The CEO, seemed stunned when I told him live on air, where the shares were about to open at As we head into 2021. Are you concerned about froth in the market? We're already looking at a couple of companies affirm and road blocks that are postponing their I pose till next year. As as we they try to get a sense of what is happening in this market. Well, yeah, This is unusual What we're seeing, and I don't have been a formal opinion, either Airbnb and or door dash. I wanna look at names this year, which have risen a lot because their estimates have gone up. So I look at a good classic case like a Facebook or an Amazon. It's not so much the re rating. We haven't seen these multiples. Five the moon. What we've seen this. The numbers have gone up Amazons. Everybody's estimates on the street for Amazon of Ghana materially since the beginning of the year because their revenue growth accelerated. There were big winners off of advertising on the cloud computing business, even though all three of their agents of growth have actually benefited from Cove it so I think there's less risk in a good, solid name like that, and my guess is that you'll see kind of a recovery back or returned by investors back to kind of the standard Bears of tech. Especially those that benefited but also came up with new investment initiatives. During the course of the year again, M sounds the poster child here. They're increasing their distribution capacity by 50%. This year, they really leaned in the cove it and I think what's gonna come out of that for them accelerated market share gains, So I think investors can still stick with that name and continued output for perform for them despite already out performing this year.

Facebook FTC Emily Mark Mahoney U. S Government On Big Tech U. S Government Rbc Capital Markets Instagram Federal Trade Commission Dark Custer Amazon Youtube Mark U. FCC Google Colonel Airbnb Gord Ash
Farm Workers Face Double Threat: Wildfire Smoke And COVID-19

Environment: NPR

03:49 min | 2 years ago

Farm Workers Face Double Threat: Wildfire Smoke And COVID-19

"Farm workers do not have the option to work from home in California. They faced the elements not just covert. But also record heat and wildfires Eric Mahoney of K.. A. Z.. You reports from a strawberry field in Salinas California. farmworkers swiftly picks a row of strawberries. He tosses to the ground, the bruise berries that won't sell the others into their plastic clam shells. The, air quality is better on this day but just a few weeks ago the sun glowed orange and ash family. The Sky after a wildfire erupted nearby has do sell Mata. The foreman says the smoke was so thick in mid August that it hurt the cruise sinuses for. We must. Be We. Stop for our safety. He says, we had to stop for one day and that wasn't easy call. He's in charge of sixty five people who are paid more money. The more they pick it's been a tremendously difficult year Dr Caroline Kennedy Cares for farmworkers. She directs nine clinics in Monterey County where agriculture is a leading industry you they home when the air quality doesn't make you feel well or do you just go back to work these are markers who are predominantly Latino feed the world yet they're struggling to feed their own families and They've been disproportionately affected by the coronavirus in Monterey County alone more than seventy percent of cases are among the Tino's often they go back to very congested living situations and everyone in the family is infected cove nineteen patients tell Kennedy. They just can't take a deep breath that's compounded by wildfire smoke under a California regulation that took effect last year employers must provide proper masks to outdoor workers when air quality degrades to a certain level whether or not the workers are required to actually put on the mask depends on how bad the air quality is. The messaging is confusing says Richard Steadman who runs the regional air resources district when the air is bad the general public is told to stay indoors what I see workers being advised that can go out into the field and exert themselves as long as they have in their possession, a mask that's not very protective. The united farm workers says even so enforcement of the regulation is a problem Armando Alana's is with the UAW? The vast majority of farmers were not provided have not been provided and ninety five mass. You W conducted a statewide poll in August to get a better understanding of the situation workers told Atlanta's there is felt like they were burning, but you know they were they were more worried about. Trying to make ends meet trying to pay the rent with multiple wildfires in California and pandemic. That's making and ninety five's hard to find the state answered calls for help and shipped around one point four million masks two counties throughout the State Henry Gonzales the Agricultural Commissioner for Monterey County says he's received over three, hundred, thirty, thousand were. Really the odds and we were able to get those considering their scarcity. Back. At the strawberry field in Salinas Gonzales watches worker is snapped closed the fruit containers he says showing up to this job can be a risk, but the produce can't wait. They're ready when they're ready and if you're not there to harvest, they're going to go to waste which means less money for companies, smaller paychecks, farmworkers, and fewer strawberries in grocery carts losses that might be necessary to protect farm workers help. For NPR News America Mahoney in Salinas

California Monterey County Eric Mahoney Salinas Gonzales Dr Caroline Kennedy Salinas California. Henry Gonzales Richard Steadman Salinas NPR Foreman America Mahoney Armando Alana United Farm Tino Atlanta UAW Commissioner
Farm Workers Face Double Threat: Wildfire Smoke And COVID-19

NPR's Business Story of the Day

03:49 min | 2 years ago

Farm Workers Face Double Threat: Wildfire Smoke And COVID-19

"Farm, workers do not have the option to work from home in California. They faced the elements not just covert. But also record heat and wildfires Eric Mahoney. Of K. A.. Z., you reports from a strawberry field in Salinas California. farmworkers swiftly picks a row of strawberries. He tosses to the ground, the bruise berries that won't sell the others into their plastic clam shells. The air quality is better on this day but just a few weeks ago the sun glowed orange and ash fell from the sky after a wildfire erupted nearby has do sell Mata. The foreman says the smoke was so thick in mid August that it hurt the cruise sinuses. We must. Be We stop for our safety. He says, we had to stop for one day and that wasn't easy call. He's in charge of sixty five people who are paid more money. The more they pick, it's been a tremendously difficult year Dr Caroline Kennedy Cares for farmworkers. She directs nine clinics in Monterey County where agriculture is a leading industry you they home when the air quality doesn't make you feel well or do you just go back to work these are markers who are predominantly Latino feed the world yet they're struggling to feed their own families and They've been disproportionately affected by the coronavirus in Monterey County alone more than seventy percent of cases are among the Tino's often they go back to very congested living situations and everyone in the family is infected cove nineteen patients tell Kennedy they just can't take a deep breath that's compounded by wildfire smoke under a California regulation that took effect last year employers must provide proper masks to outdoor workers when air quality degrades to a certain level whether or not the workers are required to actually put on the mask depends on how bad the air quality is. The messaging is confusing says Richard Steadman who runs the regional air resources district when the air is bad, the general public is told to stay indoors I. See workers being advised that they can go out into the field and exert themselves as long as they have in their possession, a mask that's not very protective. The united farm workers says even. So enforcement of the regulation is a problem Armando Alana's is with the UAW. The. Vast majority of farmers were not provided have not been provided and ninety five mass. You W conducted a statewide poll in. August. To get a better understanding of the situation workers told Atlanta's there is felt like they were burning but you know they were they were more worried about. Trying, to make ends meet trying to pay the rent with multiple wildfires in California and a pandemic that's making and ninety five's hard to find the state answered calls for help and shipped around one point four million masks, two counties throughout the state. Henry. Gonzales the Agricultural Commissioner for Monterey County says he's received over three, hundred, thirty, thousand were. Really, the odds and we were able to get those considering their scarcity. Back at the strawberry field in Salinas. Gonzales watches worker is snapped closed the fruit containers he says showing up to this job can be a risk, but the produce can't wait. They're ready when they're ready and if you're not there to harvest, they're going to go to waste which means less money for companies, smaller paychecks, farmworkers, and fewer strawberries in grocery carts losses that might be necessary to protect farm workers help. For NPR News America. Mahoney in Salinas California.

California Monterey County Gonzales Eric Mahoney Dr Caroline Kennedy Salinas California. Salinas California Richard Steadman NPR Salinas Armando Alana Foreman United Farm Tino Atlanta Henry UAW Commissioner