36 Burst results for "Marlon"

Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast
A highlight from Ep.118 - Rewind to 1967: The Year That Changed Music Forever
"Well here we are episode 118 I think I think I forgot to list a few this might be like episode 120 or 121 I don't know I guess that's a good thing when you do so many you lose count anyway on this episode we're gonna be talking about the year in music 1967 and as usual I have the wrecking two in the house Mark Smith and Lou Colicchio of the music relish show very interesting yeah a lot happened sit back relax it's gonna be another two and a half hour podcast but we love it enjoy the show the KLFB studio presents milk rate and turntables a music discussion podcast hosted by Scott McLean now let's talk music enjoy the show yes let's talk music thank you Amanda for that wonderful introduction as usual welcome back my friends to the show that never ends welcome to the podcast you know the name I'm not gonna say it was streaming live right now over Facebook YouTube X formerly known as Twitter twitch D live and again I always I don't know how many other things and this podcast will be heard on every podcast platform yeah yeah 1967 so it was quite a year think you're in for a little little ride tonight yeah and you know who wasn't born in night oh he was three in 1967 marksmen from the music relish show good evening I was two years from being on this earth so you weren't even really thought of no you thought of it 67 think of that think of that yeah you weren't even thought of you weren't even like a sparkle in as they say in your father's eye there might have been the beginning of a sparkle who knows so let me see I'm looking at my is my screen still fuzzy on my end but I'm not even seeing it on YouTube right now I'm seeing it's live but I just got the image of the vinyl really yeah what the hell wait wait wait wait yeah no it's on it's on I see it I see it but my screen looks fuzzy right yeah that's how I'm seeing you from my end yeah what the hell let me check something here hold on okay let's do a little in show my you know that smooth little March of colors next to you when you open up the show yeah happy it's all like gone really weird I'm looking at this right let's go back to this see what happens I'm supposed to be in 1080 and I'm looking at it right now now you're sharp you just got sharp it goes back and forth it's a strange see like hearing yourself huh I guess I don't know what do a refresh here I'm playing it right Tom Benwald says it looks good patty says it's blurry that was in the beginning and it looks like it's sharp now so it goes back and forth you're starting to get blurry again it's strange got any storms down there no this this would this will drive me crazy now this is it's not supposed to be like this come on it's like a Grateful Dead show warts and all rice we're talking about 1967 there's no digital so it was still waiting for Luda come on so you know I'm going to do I hate doing this but I'm going to do it to you buddy what's that no don't cut me I'm not cutting you I'm gonna I'm gonna hit a refresh which might take me off the screen so the show is yours for about I don't know 60 seconds let's see what happens here let's see reload I'm gonna reload it so I'm going off the screen I guess it's time to advertise the music roll show with my friend Perry and my friend Lou we discuss opera we have fun how am I now you look better look yeah yeah looks better yep and I just advertised my podcast is that the opera I'll pay you I'll give you the money later on then I lose my this is like okay here we go you look better though all right good yeah good you know me I the technical stuff drives me crazy especially you know it's not only sound it has to be oh it's this is a live stream so it has to look yeah good and you don't want to drop out in the middle of the show no like me and Lou do once in a while race right let's see is the chat working let's see now I'm not seeing any I'm not seeing any comments so let me try this well sorry for the podcast listeners but I gotta get this shit right hey it's okay I should be seeing I should be seeing comments because people have already made three comments you over here maybe they're bored and they don't want to comment anymore no it's there it should be showing up on my screen over here right we know that my boss you busting balls only Bono does that let's see public so it should be getting huh this is crazy seven minutes in and I'm here we haven't done anything yet let me see send comment test I just sent a text to message I see I see you as I see mine okay good we're good we're good let me switch over to my other account and do the same thing I just want to make sure yes just our audience is bored they don't want to comment actually this is all Lou's fault yeah yeah always the you know I would probably lost the other comments is because I rebooted so hmm all right well you know what we're gonna start without Lou right as I say that as I say that does he have what does he what do you let's get the full screen nose is that why you were late you had to clean your nose and he's back in Paris again you brown nose er I've been a bad dog my laptop and he's back in pair you left here in Paris you must have left it back in the United States I did I left on the plane how you doing Lou I'm doing alright how are you guys doing well I just had a little technical difficulty and we blamed you because you weren't here so you left me alone and I had to talk opera with myself talked opera yeah rigoletto did you talk about rigoletto this time I'm just really boring you know I'm like all right this is why this is a two and a half hour podcast some of us have to work tomorrow all right here we go let's jump right into 1967 musical events in 1967 and the year kicks off right away with a bomb a bomb on January 4th the doors release can arguably one of the greatest debut records ever arguably if you had a top 25 greatest debut that albums would have to be in the top 10 it would have to be yeah you know if you had a top 50 that would have to be in the top 10 right even if you don't like them you have to say that was so ahead of its time oh it's so different nothing out there was like the needle and all you hear it kicks I mean fucking what a way to start an album it's a heavy song it with a bossa nova beat yeah I mean that's pretty clever yeah 67 so you know bossa nova was pretty hip again John Densmore over underrated underrated underappreciated I think you are you are so correct you know never gets the the the consideration that I I don't know you can't put him in greatest of all time but could he be okay if there's a top there's a top 25 drummer top 25 drummers is he in it good question and in rock we'll just say in rock I think he could be I could see him making so I don't know if he's a universal pick but I could see him on some list I mean he's something you'd have to think about like you said like it doesn't get noticed so much you know yeah yeah or it I mean although his drumming wasn't shy I mean he's jazzy as hell I heard um writers on the storm yesterday and his adjustment playing is great in his adjustments during the shows just for that yeah yeah the unpredictability of you know how the how the song was gonna go right because they could rehearse it all they want once Morrison got into that zone well in the drama keeps the beat right yeah yeah the drummer has to stay up with that yeah and played to the clown so to speak right you know and my my problem is if some of the clowns don't have the beat you know at one point they've got to give in like I said Morrison or even Dylan they'll set the tone but they've got to be steady themselves you know it's yeah otherwise it's just erratic but you know yeah guy like Dan's more I mean I had skill I had a lot of a lot of technical ability right feel yes cool so obviously his drums always sounded good yeah on the earlier on the other records even you know three years worth of music whatever I guess I would be who produced some Jack Holtzman was the producer did a good job Jekyll or now wait so no what was it Paul Rothchild yes yes yes I'm sorry Holtzman was he on the record company yeah yeah was that it was that chrysalis or chrysalis I think or just like yes that's a lecture a lecture weren't they on chrysalis though also I thought they were yeah maybe maybe chrysalis was a subsidiary but uh yeah Jack Holtzman's son is Adam Holtzman he's a keyboardist right now he plays with here we go Stephen Wilson but he does a little blog on Facebook and he talks about growing up and he was like six years old and his father brought him to a club to see the tour Wow at six years old he just talks about like yeah it's a great little blog Wow all right and four days later on January 8th Elvis Presley turned 32 on January 14th the human be in right the human be e -i -n human being takes place in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park polo fields with spoken words from Timothy Leary Allen Ginsberg Gary Snyder in others live music was provided by Jefferson Airplane the Grateful Dead Big Brother in the holding company and Quicksilver Messenger Service speeches from Jerry Rubin and others were also given at the event although it's one band there I liked yeah Quicksilver Messenger Service who was it on January 15th 1967 who is your favorite poet of all them I know you're not asking me Arthur Rimbaud who influenced Jim Morrison good answer good answer way to bring that first opening segment rough full circle we're getting better Scott we're good now you guys get a lot of good trust me I'm getting a lot of good feedback so let's keep it at that I don't want you son ask for more money and on January 15th 1967 the Rolling Stones appear on the Ed Sullivan show at Ed Sullivan's request finish it he asked them to let's spend sing let's spend some time together is that the one there you go yeah and then he told him a really big shoe I hate to do this I mean I come back on penalty box I don't say just he beat my record okay look he just got on the show after late and these are either he's stuck he's frozen put the dog nose back on where'd it go are you throw it at the camera like your headphones on January 16th 1967 the monkeys begin work on headquarters the first album to give them complete artistic and technical control over their material and it was fucking horrible fucking horrible what were they thinking they know they were thinking the egos got too big they thought they were the music well the argument can be made that you know Mike Nesmith did write different drum yeah so he could write songs but I don't think he was a pop songwriter you know headquarters and they try to be all fucking like 60 ish and shit they weren't looking for pop were they they're trying to be like more psychedelic yeah I think so there were their channel on the Beatles with those quirky little yeah with anti -grizzelles on that I don't know some weird shit I'll tell you what though I don't care about it myself but it was surely a harpsichord on it because that's what all those records had they had to have a harpsichord and I have the book this the 100 best -selling records of the 60s the monkeys got a they've had quite a few albums on there oh they do yeah they were they were but I mean I thought it was just a condensed period of the show which it probably was but it's still I mean they've got I mean most of their albums sold really well yeah yeah ah you like the show what's it is like the show I did I still like it I still love it I love that that that's so that humor is great like dumbed down brilliantly done though humor yeah way was what they were supposed to act like that yeah you know what I mean there was no like these guys are bad actors they knew exactly how to do that they pulled it off great it was campy it was great for its time it's still great to watch now yeah I do think that banana splits were a better band yeah that's I'll give you the banana splits were a kick -ass band yeah yeah kick -ass man did you see the movie recently came out it's a horror movie with the banana splits the banana splits movie it's a horror movie yeah yeah it takes place in an amusement park and they're they're robotic and in Dyson and slicing baby Dyson and slicing I have to say oh man that's yeah okay yeah Dyson and slicing it's good it's kids again campy movie but I couldn't not watch it yeah I have to say I'm sure Fleagle is a total psychopath well I'm not gonna give you any and no no no spoilers here those was it just Dyson and slicing on January 17 1967 the daily mail newspaper reports four thousand potholes in Blackburn Lancashire and Guinness air Tara Brown is killed in a car wreck these articles inspire lyrics for a day in the life a day in the life yes on January 22nd 1967 Simon and Garfunkel give live can't give a live concert at Phil harmonic Phil harmonic call in New York City some of this concert is released on October 4th 1997 on their box set old friends but most is not released until July 2002 that's some more okay January 29th mantra rock dance the quote ultimate high of the hippie era is organized at the Avalon Ballroom in San Francisco featuring Janis Joplin grateful dead big brother in the holding company for three Moby grape quirky that would've been interesting that's the best man that's the best as though for they're almost like the MC five kind of I think they were just kind of but they're they're a San Francisco band and beat poet once again Allen Ginsberg shows up to do his spoken word I heard he was a member of NAMBLA I wouldn't the National Association of Marlon Brando look -alikes I heard I'd someone I remember he actually he was a sponsor of NAMBLA but anyway on January 30th 1967 the Beatles shoot a promotional film for the forthcoming single strawberry fields forever at Noel Park in Seven Oaks have you seen it I have seen it I haven't seen it in a long time it's really cool yeah yeah it's kind of dark speaking of dark on February 3rd 1967 UK record producer Joe Meek murders is it his landlady and then commits suicide by shooting himself in the head in Holloway North in London it's kind of dark didn't he produce sleepwalk yes letter Telstar some early we talked we did it bit of a genius really yeah let's see February 7th Mickey Dolan's no let me stop February 6th Mike Nesmith and Mickey Dolan's of the monkeys fly into London Dolan sees till death do us part on British TV and uses the term Randy's scouse grit from the program for the title of the monkeys next single release Randy's scouse grit not releasing it is an offensive term Britain's British census forced the title to be changed to alternate title and then the next day Mickey Dolan's meets Paul McCartney at his home in st.

Awards Chatter
Fresh update on "marlon" discussed on Awards Chatter
"Marlon Landau, by the way, wins best supporting actor at the Oscars for Ed Wood. Blake Wright, Marlon Landau. Two years later, just I mean, if people are thinking about these as, you know, one and then the next one and the next one, there's almost nothing in common from film to film, because I think the next one is Mars Attacks. Well, that's like an Ed Wood film, by the way. Oh, you're saying Mars Attacks? Yeah, that's my Ed Wood film. That's my plan nine from outer space with a lot of a lot of big, big stars. Yeah, more than he would have. Everybody wanted to be in plan nine, but they couldn't. Right now, because Mars Attacks maybe wasn't received in the way that the studio may have wanted. That's why I moved to Europe, because it was very well received there. In fact, actually, it was it was the most successful film I had done in ever in Europe. Yeah. But back here, was that the cause of why? Because you had been planning to do Superman. And spent a lot of time. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Was that, do you think, derailed because of Mars Attacks? Yeah, sure. And was that that was because also, too, like I got the green light for Batman, like they were I was working on it a lot. But as soon as Beetlejuice came out, all of a sudden it got green lit. So I guess that's part of the way it goes. That's, you know, I accept that. Accepted it at the time. Back with Johnny in Sleepy Hollow, which you had sort of thought of as a I heard as a silent movie almost at one point that when you first envisioned it, kind of an homage to the Hammer films that you'd grown up with. Yeah. You even put Christopher Lee in it. Well, that was funny because at the time I go like, there's a little part, what about Christopher Lee? And the producer kept going like, he's dead. And I go, I didn't heard he died. No, he's dead. He's dead. And then many years later, I saw him and he goes, hey, it's funny that dead guy, he went on to do three Star Wars and four Lord of the Rings. Pretty good for a dead guy. Not bad. Planet of the Apes, two years after that. This was the first revisitation of it. Now you're making a face, but hold on, hold on. I don't make faces. Other people make faces. This is 2001. You're remaking for the first first Planet of the Apes since in years, right? Charlton Heston even makes a cameo. This is where you meet Helena Bonham Carter, right? Beginning of a collaboration there. Rick Baker makeup. A lot going for it, but then also the challenge of like, sort of, it sounds like what you ran into with Batman, where you sign on to a project and the budget is not necessarily locked and the script has to change. Talk about what it's like. I don't think you were any lesser of a director on that than you were on your No, no, I think if I were analyzing it, which I don't really go back and do too much, but what I would say about that is, is that it was it was a strange thing, right? There was budget problems. It was this and that. And the thing is, I think it's a transition in terms of effects. It's like the things that they're doing now are it's all digital and, you know, they're doing amazing things with it. But I went I reason I got interested was I love the old school of it. I love the idea of makeup and actors pretending to be apes. You know, I mean, to me, that was funny and interesting, but it wasn't really. You know, I think what they would have really liked is what they ended up doing next, which is kind of, you know, great digital animation and redefining it that way, which I which I get. So it was it was I think it was an awkward time. And I mean, there was lots of things I loved. I love the people. I love the cast. I was amazed by them going through all this makeup. You know, it was it was an incredible experience. And I you know, it was difficult, but I enjoyed it. And like I said, I met a lot of great people.

The Dan Bongino Show
Dan Bongino Praises Oliver Anthony's 'Rich Men North of Richmond'
"The most powerful things I have ever heard now, I promise you I would never play a song opening up a conservative talk show if I did not think That this had the power to change your life. This is one of those rare tunes Jim Would you agree that you only need to hear it one time Most good song even my favorite song eight six five by Morgan Marlon. I had to hear It two or three times before I really got it two or three. That's it by the third time. I was hooked This song the first time I heard it. I gotta tell you man. I got goosebumps and I promise You will too. This is a guy from Virginia. His name is Oliver Anthony. He's a working -class Man really ticked off about the state of the country. He spoke to my social Media manager Jason last night after the song went viral in about two hours Two days no two hours it went from about 10 ,000 listens to about a couple of hours It's one of the most powerful things I've ever heard. I've never done this on the radio before we spoke To Jason Oliver did this morning give his permission to play it I? Want you to listen to

AP News Radio
Tom Hanks address Harvard graduates
"Actor Tom Hanks gave the commencement speech to graduates at Harvard University Thursday. I'm Archie's are a letter with the latest. Tom Hanks thanked Harvard for giving him an honorary doctorate and a school volleyball, even though he never did a lick of work there. His advice to graduates referenced the Declaration of Independence, superhero comics, an actor Marlon Brando. He says Brando, who used to call him Tommy handkerchief and himself, Marlon brand flakes, said something that stuck with him. He told me that when he was a young man and registered for the draft, he filled out the form for his name and age, but when it came to his race, he wrote human. The sound is courtesy of Harvard University, Hanks urged the graduates to fight not just injustice, but indifference.

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Christopher Lambert Is Not Your Average Leading Man In "Highlander"
"Let's talk for a second by Christoph Lambert, so my ever suffering son was so good as to watch this movie with me last night. And he said, and he'd seen it. I had shown it to him as a kid. Ten years ago. I think halfway through the move said, that guy's really ugly. I Christoph Lambert is not your average leading man. Forget the accent, the fact that he's blind, this massive forehead, the deep set eyes, I look, he kind of works in a wave because the love story with Heather, he sells that love story, and then the little girl Rachel will talk about Rachel in a second. That's an amazing sub story. But he's not a really good, you know, Marlon Brando, in my opinion. No, no, no, no. And especially when you put him up against Sean Connery. Sean Connery could be his father. Oh my gosh. You know, and he's like ten times more handsome still as an old man. So you do feel a little bit bad for me. If you think about it in that context, but look, he is the hero of the story. I think there is something about in the 1980s. They didn't actually. And this is actually something even back in the, you know, in the early cinema. I often talk about one of my favorite actors of all time being William Powell. If you put him up against Clark Gable, or Cary Grant, or somebody like that, William Powell pales in comparison in terms of looks, but he is so absolutely charming. He'll just like charm the brains out of anybody. That's a bit like, wouldn't you say Bogart is the same? Absolutely right. Absolutely right. And so you do find actors that are so unbelievably charming. It doesn't really matter that they're not the most handsome guy in the world. Now, I mean, I think today they care a little bit more about how handsome certain actors are in certain kind of roles. When you find somebody like Sean Connery, dashingly handsome guy, excellent actor. I mean, that's obviously like the Holy Grail of stars.

Animal Radio
"marlon" Discussed on Animal Radio
"It's animal radio. And for those familiar with animal radio, know that this can only mean one thing. The dog father Joey velani is gracing our presence. How are you doing? Hold on, let me kiss your ring. There. Look, give me a paper towel. Paper towel, you need a pot bulldog. Yeah. Sorry about that. Okay. So you know I got a really good question for me. Listen, I think it says millville Pennsylvania. But what she's asking, she said, skunks are definitely a big problem in her area, but not as bad as she apparently believes on a 150 acres in Pennsylvania. And so she has two Burmese mountain dog mixes. But anyway, the problem is they're rolling around in carcasses. Anything that they find dead, they want to get that smell on them. And you know what with dogs, that's what they do. Unfortunately, when you have a dog that's probably over a 150 pounds and has as much coat that'll take some summer to drive, unless you have the proper equipment. It's a hard process as far as bathing going. It goes and she's made that very clear to me that what else can we do here? Well, organic odors are actually pretty easy. Even though they probably smell worse than anything else. Skunks, but it really skunks are easy. Skunks are yeah, you know what it's not. Unless the whole thing is the process is a little bit of a pain and neck. You have to follow it to a T, but it's not hard. It's not hard. But any organic or to really, I mean, you can get rid of it quickly. Now, this is just for that dead caucus smell. This isn't the skunks that will work, but it's not going to work as good as some of my other remedies for skunk. What are you going to do? It's real easy. How's laughing already? It's specific for the dead carcass smell. Well, it is. And it makes it so get yourself a gown, get yourself a gallon of water. Okay. Okay, I don't care if it's tap water. I don't care what kind of water use. If you could use distilled water, it's always best. But get yourself a gallon of water. And you're going to add a quarter of a cup of anti bacterial dish detergent, okay? And I'm going to explain why in a second, and then you're going to add a cup of white vinegar. Is that like John when you say anti dawn, but antibacterial. That that's the important thing. The reason why we say anti bacterial is number one, if the dogs are rolling around and other dead animals, who knows what kind of bacteria they're picking up and you don't want to spread it. So this is going to actually help kill that. The white vinegar is going to destroy the odor almost completely. You're going to spray it on your dog and get it on pretty good. I mean, a little bit less than saturating but more than just damp. Working in with a brush and then towel it off. Now, if it feels a little bit soapy, it's okay. It's biodegradable. It's not going to hurt your pet, especially for the amount of times that you're going to use. If I did this every single day, I'd be a little bit worried. If your dogs are rolling it at every day, well, you know what, you got a problem, go out and clean up your go out and clean up your property a little bit. What other radio show will help you get rid of that carcass smell. Well, let me answer. Before you meet for you, make a big joke out of it because you live here in California. Yes. Did you ever experience that? No. Well, ladybug does, she rose her little neck and maybe like a dead snail in the street or something like that. That is about as bad as it gets. And it's just a little bit. I don't let her get her full body. So I can just kind of wipe off her neck. With squirrels and birds. And they would come in and it stinks. It's a putrid smell. As I'm talking about the suburbs of Manhattan now, so this happens quite often. Well, we have a lot of Birds of Prey around here, I guess, and there's not a lot of dead carcasses that last very long for the dogs. There is a lot of New York. A lot of dead carcasses in New York. Yeah, they are. Thank you so much, joyful, and ladies and gentlemen, shall we? Do I, can I kiss your ring just one more time? I mean, I think we go ahead. Go ahead. There you go. Tastes. Okay, I got the cleanup. Don't worry about it. Yeah, that was jam packed. You jam packed it. You couldn't get any more in that show there. Thank you so much for the wonderful job you did. And for Marlon hargis, thanks for coming on Lindsey politic and all of you for calling in and asking your question. Don't forget if you need your fix during the week, you can head on over to animal radio dot com or download the animal radio app for iPhone and Android. This is incredible. Network.

Animal Radio
"marlon" Discussed on Animal Radio
"Android. Dogs or cats, horse or emu. And animals are

Animal Radio
"marlon" Discussed on Animal Radio
"In just a few minutes, from exile. Do you remember that group exile if you're really old you remember him as the exiled? I don't remember him as the exile, but I do remember them science. Big hit that they want to kiss you all. Over. And over again. I didn't realize what talent we had under this room. Till the night closes. And that's why we're on the radio. Marlo hargas for the band. I'm sorry, Marlon hargis will be joining us. And he has animals, loves the animals, and even is doing a concert for the animals. And he's on the way in just a few minutes. You know, here at animal radio the studio cats have been using the armor cat cat trees for two decades. And you know, cats need to scratch, claw, and climb, and unlike any other tree, armor cat furniture is strong, durable, and really reliable. Armor cats best in class cat trees and beds all come with 6 month warranties. Go to armor cat dot com. That's ARM AR Kat dot com and give your cat the tree they deserve. And get 15% off using the code animal radio. You're listening to animal radio, call the Dream Team now with the free animal radio app for iPhone and Android. We're going to line three where we have bob on the phone. Hey bob, welcome to the show. Hey, how are you guys doing? Good, what's going on in your world? You're playing all the laptop wait for hello. Waiting for a loan. So you're not sitting in the bathroom. Not that kind of load. You're probably OTR is what I'm thinking. You're waiting to pick up a delivery, right? Well, okay. We'll try not to disturb you there, bob. No problem. No, no. Okay. I got a question for you. How come it is? You get your dog chip. You go to a vet, and that's never checked the chips, or just want to do an average check of the dollar when it looked all over and got to give them all glance over and check them out. Check to see if they have a chip in them. Let's see if the dog is wrong to the people that brought the dog here. I had a dog stole a while back and had a chip. And at the vet and bothered to check, he would have found out the dog was stolen. Did you never got the dog back? No, never did. Oh, goodness. I'm sorry. You know, the big thing in the challenge with it is that checking for a chip isn't the same thing as checking for the ownership of the chip. Because there are different things there. So there are some veterinarians that have a policy of scanning each and every pet that comes to the door. And it really depends on the hospital policy. Now, if they do that, they find a chip number, but that does not mean once we run that scanner over that ship. Nothing lights up and says this pedestal. It just says, this is the number for that pet. So in order to actually find out if that pet is stolen or lost, you have to call the microchip registration. Give that number and find the disposition of what the status of that ship is, if it's stolen, reported stolen, lost, or never registered. And I'll tell you, never registered as a huge problem with microchips. But that's another topic. So just because they check for a microchip doesn't mean that you're going to necessarily get your dog back if Joe down the road takes the dog in, says, hey, this is my dog. My uncle gave it to me from Tennessee. And they check him for a microchip and they say, yeah, yeah, we know he has a microchip. We haven't registered it yet. There's no way that veterinarian is going to play cop, and they're not going to know that that gentleman is not being honest with him. They may know there's a chip there. But there's a little bit of some discretion as far as what's the incidence of suspicion. So for me, what I do every new pet that I see, puppy kitten adult, if it's a new pet that's to my practice, I scan them. And you know, I've had people where there have been some weird situations where they'll say, ah, you don't know, he doesn't have a chip. And if he has a chip and they state, they've never had a chip for me, that's a really big red flag that goes up. And I start calling in checking on that status of that chip. Has that ever happened to you? Yeah, yeah, it sure has. And it is surprising how many people, when they find an animal, and they see it in maybe an unkempt state. Maybe it's matted. It's got wounds on it, or it looks skinny. And there's a lot of people when they find a stray animal like that, they say, oh, whoever had that pet didn't love him, they wouldn't have allowed him to get this way. And I'll tell you, I had a cat that somebody found a year prior, brought it in for vaccines for me. And I scanned it. It had a microchip. We had the owners there within 5 minutes in the lady who found the animal, actually was contesting and saying, no, I don't want to give it back because she was running loose. Obviously that lady didn't love her. So there's a lot of people that had to have that mindset when they find a stray animal and it can really make a problem for those honest people that have their pets microchipped and that want to use the system how it's supposed to work. That's really part of the problem. But yeah, I agree with you. It would be nice if we were more thorough and not only scanning, but also having some means to check on those chips to make sure that what the status is. But in a busy office day, it would be hard. You'd have to have a deputy or someone to be checking on all those microchips to make sure that each and every one is valid. I have home again on my dog now and they told me that when you scan up the name of the owner comes up. I don't know. It's just a number, but you know there ought to be something that the companies can do if you have a microchip and a dog and your dog is lost or stolen. You should be able to report it. And they should be able to do something so when that chip is red that it comes up in an alert or something. It doesn't get flagged. And say, hey, my dog was gone. And I can't find him. I'll tell you, they can't put a thrive on him. So somebody does scan it will come up and say, dang Aries. I was missing. They can put a flag on the information, but they can't but a flag on the chip. So until we have a centralized system where when you scan a pet, it's immediately right at some central body and they can verify the information. That isn't what we've got right now. Right now, we've got a system a little bit short of that. And there's different registration companies. So there is a lot of areas where this is not foolproof. You also mentioned one other thing that I do want to touch upon is that once the chip is in, you also got to register it in a lot of people just put the chip in and what they forget to register. Yeah. And even some shelters that will have a chip in a pat when you adopt it. If it's not registered into the new owners name, it'll never do any good. It only registers and brings that pet back to that shelter. Then they have to go through their records during business hours to hopefully track down the people that adopted. And hopefully the address is still the same from when they adopted to whatever date that is. So there's, yeah, it's very important, immediate registration. And in our office, we put a microchip in and before that dog or cat or ferret or pot belly pig leaves at the office, we're already filling out that paperwork and it gets sent in. Oh, plus people move, and then they don't update the Microsoft address, yes. We're guilty of that. We forget to update the address. Does that answer some questions for you there, bob? Yes, I'm sure I'll curious, and I just figure out ask. Good question, very good question. Sorry that

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
Depp's Lawsuit Is Misguided but It Can Be Hard to Walk Away
"Listen, this lawsuit is so misguided, there are some details I haven't really pinned down and paid really a lot of attention to, so forgive me if I'm wrong, but these lawsuits can't be one sometimes. Regardless of fault or who initiated watt, who goaded whom only to film them, they were both messy, intoxicated, violent, volatile messes of people. You listen to those tapes and you get sick, you want to turn them off, but you can't. It's like hearing your next door neighbors just threatening to kill each other. Some people say Johnny should elect this slide. But here we are. And in a lot of ways, he is imitating his idol Marlon Brando. Not only in what he says and acts, but actually how he looks. Let's say for argument's sake, amber started fights to watch the fireworks go off and then film it for leverage if the relationship ended. And Johnny still went nuts. I see his point. Some people say there's no winning in this situation. The best outcome would be to minimize the damage to walk away, to know when to fold them. He's going scorched earth. But I believe and I know that she instigated these dramas and I don't think he should have walked away sooner. I don't. I think sometimes you got to fight for what's right. Do I think he has mental health issues, not particularly, but she certainly licked the match to the alcohol soap read that he's become. People say, well, walk away. That's easier said than done, guys. If someone's mentally ill, or if someone has issues like Johnny has, but it's just not violent. He's non physical when it comes to these things. I don't know how you can't see that. Yes, I think he should have put this in the rearview mirror and try to get away from it. But maybe he's compulsive and couldn't let it go. It's very sad either way.

AP News Radio
Polis, 1st Openly Gay Governor Elected, Marries in Colorado
"America's first openly gay governor has tied the knot congratulations are in order for Colorado's Jared Polish he was the first openly gay man to be elected governor in the United States in twenty eighteen and now he's married first gentleman Marlon Reis his long time partner a writer in animal welfare advocate the two were married in a traditional Jewish ceremony attended by family and friends in boulder on Wednesday post and reset to children and nine year old daughter and a seven year old son they've been together for eighteen years but only got engaged in December as research preparing to be hospitalized after contracting cove in nineteen in a statement the couple said they're thankful for the opportunity to celebrate their life together as a married couple I'm Jennifer king

The Watch
Impeachment: American Crime Story Tells Monica Lewinsky's Side of the Clinton Scandal
"Crime story impeachment which come on september seventh if i if i run my dates correctly. Here's my big takeaway from the abundance of trailers at they have released for this in the last three weeks. Really like quite a push. So and i think i'm starting to get the feeling like this is going to be an american story o. Oj simpson moment. Where i think we're going to revisit a lot of the stuff from the clinton impeachment monica etc. But i have a question about all these trailers. We still haven't gotten a significant amount of time with clive owen. His bill clinton which leads me to believe. They're either sitting on marlon brando in the godfather level performance or marlon brando. Doctor moreau level performance. Like it's it's going to be one or the other that is definitely a take and you may right. I choose to think about it slightly differently. Which is they have two things one. It's very very hard. I mean presidential performances especially in this era are almost uniformly imitations right and it's distracting to be like oath. He's just like bill clinton. Yeah whatever Falco place. Hillary clinton like i think it was a smart move to minimize them in the trailer because immediately becomes about. Wow clive owen. Doing a great job being bill clinton sure in it's distracting from the show. They wanna tell. I think the second piece of it is the from my understanding of it. The reason to tell the story about something that you know obviously isn't fresh and a lot of people's minds but i for people of our age our generation certainly is. Is it for. Sarah paulson to win more awards. That's going to happen. But i think it's more to tell the story of the monica lewinsky and linda tripp and people who were actually the prime movers of this. That shook the firmament that the much larger figures were resting

WTF with Marc Maron Podcast
"marlon" Discussed on WTF with Marc Maron Podcast
"Laughing at his shoes so that was the first time. I was on on camera and like when i was a doorman at the store. I used to watch damon. All the time dame me. don't give the audience. He didn't you say what the fucking say because as a performer. You have to be free enough to do it over. Fuck you wanna do and everybody especially nowadays. There's so judgmental when damon felt your judgmental. He yet he would he would. He wouldn't even give you jokes still on stage and he'd farting on mike and go. This room stinks and leave. I seen him leave the stage. Once i went on he the invisible comic. Yeah because the audience is being weird and he went behind the camera. I mean behind the curtain. And he did his whole act audio. Yeah he was his freeman and he would think it was high on something but it wasn't no the thing was great. Is that like when he felt it like when he was just riffing and one of the weird characters that he would do his kiko. Just watch it to watch. He's like what is he. How far is this going to go. But you know what that's all of us. all comedians. I so watch. Sam kinison bomb. I was a kid going to be. So yeah sam kennison bomb literally every night until one day. He hit this. No yeah we the anger. something happened. Sure you've got gung. And he became. Hot larry's i didn't know what to do with phil bomb. You know. Yeah sometimes when you stay in shape you find me yeah. Help white people tap into their white guilt. That's right he didn't and he would make you sit there most liberal i do. Oh somebody's because you have a black friend or what nigger quota is a good friend. Paul mooney but i watch him. Close the laugh at the comedies area every night close and he would stay in it and stay in the day and that's what made him brilliant because the things that you thought he bombed it as things that he he absolutely killed with that really made his career. But so you're watching this stuff. 'cause you're hanging around but you still weren't. You just wanted to act. I was i was scared. Do send. it really was because what you do. Stand up sometimes my family pulled from life. And canaan sean damon every in covered. Fuck talk about them. But that's what you realize is and that's the beauty of comedy right is. It doesn't matter who goes on and how many comedians are. We all have our own point of view. It don't matter. How many do trump jokes. Everybody has their own point of view about themselves. The world or anything. That happens to you. And so that's for me the most freeing thing and it's the thing that i learned doing stand up over the last ten years is always something to talk about as long as you true when we talk about you. And what's your point of view will all trying to gather what point of view is because then the math and the science repetition it comes into processes into your brain and it's out the weirdest. Yeah and then like like in then you figure out how to make it funny and you. Sometimes you're talking truth and you're talking seriousness and you feel uncomfortable with how serious gotten and then you you fuck chair when all else fails fuck. No but it's funny. Because i've watched i've my brother damaged say don't be afraid of silence now listening. Then they'll learn to laugh when you hit it and i've seen you go on you talk for our science class but when you hit it's like that's why i'm doing this free set. I'm here because i'm trying to find that's funny. Anybody that is right to set goals. I'm going out to do a special no and we have to. We have to work it you got. I mean literally. I'm going to denver and thursday for five shows in the club work. Which one comedy works. A cops nobody. It's been working out this new our trying to figure it out you know and i've been doing these sets downtown at the dynasty typewriter doing hour and a half but i like it. I mean i feel grounded. i'm not afraid. Vino i need to. Things need to be delivered. That's when you do it like that. You're basically cornering yourself you're making you have to be funny. 'cause you're out you put it out there no either it's going to be delivered or it is not when it's not keeps up all night. What did i. What did i do wrong at the store do like i was being funny back. You just feel i. I was doing that. Damon theme is creating all this tension. Cry because there's just detention was so thick. And i'm like i don't know and i just said to him. I just put my hand my faces doing. I don't know why i'm doing this. You really hurting me. What i'm doing. And i don't even know if it's comedy anymore but i don't know how to get out of it. They started laughing at that. Like thank god told the truth and it the beautiful man truth. That's that's why we sit in those clubs and do that time tour and that's why you work it and working and working you know like i filmed the hour and a half miles special film. I'll forty-five next one. I'm not doing it. I'm this is it just that you see. I can't account for when i improvise to seventy minutes. Do i know i saw you. We're just see over at the pressing and you're telling me about the the special already..

WTF with Marc Maron Podcast
"marlon" Discussed on WTF with Marc Maron Podcast
"He texted me yesterday and said that david went to the premiere of the of the movie his dad and said that i nailed it. That jerry was like a father to his father said that. And i'm like that's pretty good. Did you look footage. I looked at yeah. No i read his autobiography okay and there was a little bit of footage not a lot but there was there was a weird interview on youtube of him as an old man and then there were some of the in that chunk of from that. Tv show that they've picked it in the movie their stuff from that dogma. I i didn't get. I wish i had that. Yeah no no. They handle book and everybody called to talk about that. You get our and talk about that nigga really. You were in touch with family and i is. He's dead though right now. he's still alive is he. Yeah i try to. I called glen chairman and a to get some information. Glenn went to performing arts high schools. Yeah i've no terminate up. We worked together on separates. I'd love glenn. Yeah i'll call him egland. You know anything about ted waco our own not me and re and he started going me real real. We were in in income about. Y'all i need to know about the nickel before you. I'll know shit about the movie now. You were actually a good a good life so you didn't make a no news is good. News guntermann yeah wonderful actor. Wonderful actor jehovah witnesses. We brought up jehovah witness mmj ruinous. So you brought up with my father. I get it but did he make you do. It doesn't right so my father says have to sneak bible studies or my mom was out like the quick twenties. Love love is okay. Bye mom coming doing this. Watch some tv father. Never mama didn't play that because my my dad. Could you've been creative. If i if he had in jehovah witnesses very strict of my mother. My mother was like you know my my my. They let you dance. It's not a cult. They let you dance. But they just don't celebrate christmas okay and but my mom okay put is where my dad didn't want me to go to perform thais cool. Right are addition. My dad said no. You can't go. Yeah and why he goes because you gotta wear tights and there's a lot of kids there and you know they're a kind of you know louis we're homosexuality and so he was afraid that you know that the be exposed to that being at school. Yeah and he said he didn't want me to go and he was turning gay performance art high school and my brother keenum was two hundred and sixty pounds of muscle and he said you're not gonna do that to my little brothers dreams. He's going to go on ted audition and if he gets into school he's to go and if not you're gonna talk to me and my dad was like all right. You could go to school. Which can't wear tights. And so i was the only kid in performing arts high school in sweatpants with everybody else's and tights. I made a deal with my teacher. Trailer that i cry to him. He said i'll tell you. What if you in fact come to the school and you do creating you. I will i will let you. What and that's why. I'm working as hot as i am. One day when i get something beside a razzie Going to thank mrs trailer for allowing me to come school with. It's funny because on on this new special you're wearing tights. That's a fucking my dad. Don't tell tight leather pants. It is kinda tight goes deal you finally feel free to wear the and forty nine so we but at that point. Keenan like what was keen. Still new york so you knew him when he was doing the improv and shit. Why meets your brother that they'll do you remember. Because they're came in doing improv improv. Like yeah on. House kitchen damon. Yeah i was too young to go to that but once they moved to california. I was about eight silver still alive. Really the silver friedman. She lives with zoe in the back. House really yeah and they still five percent on the in at i do. Don't get the five percents on improv. brea and irvine. But that's not her. oh it's not. They're not together. heard they married. They were but i think the deal and the divorce was. You know bud got everything. West of forty six. Th street could have that block that that improv and he got everything that's crazy as there is no eastern west on forty six three north and south. Yeah works it's funny. No i think. I think that i six goes east and west. Don't the avenues go up and down said east of forty single. Yeah right so it keeps going right so the so so. She's easy to every night. That west of iraq got it. Yeah yeah. I know he's right there. I and forty six was where it was pretty much school. Right on. Sixty six and eleven. And so you you but you couldn't go see dame at the improv or or not back then but but when i can't when it came to california i succumb. I was eight years old. And i actually went onstage with robert townsend. Me sean and my nephew damien one. Christmas and robert was telling us christmas like this christmas. Anaheim and christmas is really great really smart. I mean really aren't guy. Clean guy nice guy you know. Like no menace. Like i remember keenan like a lot of people. Don't know his standup because he was extremely funny. So yeah it was. It was sure straight up joke stuff right. It was jokes and stories. My family we all like. We have a kind of twisted sense of humor. Yeah we'd like to joke about ourselves about lives. yeah joel. Our lives joke about things that happened to us. You know. i saw him. When i was a dormant at the store right when he was done like right towards the end of him doing standup novel he still we all did a tour together me him. Dan shaw and nightmare night tonight. Him saying we mean like going out. Every night he got tired of me. Tv's yeah he did. He took all the things and stand up and he keaton's like such a visionary like some people like weaving kaur was his vision. He's a he was a visionary and damon was like his right hand. Yeah the two of them did. Some amazing should an inspire my family for sure but he was in wasn't the in townsend movie. He co wrote gerald bay. Pearl to the jerry curl back to here instead. I'm in high school in this. I was performing arts high school in ninth grade when that movie came out then he did. I'm gonna get you suck. Yeah i flew out to california to to actually to be in. The movie came out too late. Assholes do chris rock's part. Yeah but i came out too late one read. It is supposed to do that play. But i came out too late because i was because i was still in school. Yeah so when. I came out. He put us in the fly guy. Seeing when flag. I was walking on the block with the goldfish shoes. Shoes broke me. And my brother sean..

Pop Culture Happy Hour
'Respect' Is an Earnest Aretha Franklin Tribute Movie
"Is what you might call a bio-pics bio pic. It takes about the first. Half of. Aretha franklin's life dramatizes. It step by step as she builds her talent in her father's church and then carves out her place in music history. And yes as is common in films like this. There is trauma. There is a troubled family history and there is a marriage to a man who should never have been let anywhere near her career. In addition to forest whittaker and marlon wayans the cast includes audra mcdonald as aretha. Franklin's mother and marc maron as record. Mogul jerry wexler. Hudson performs a lot of franklin's hits including respect chain of fools and natural woman she also takes on the gospel and the standards and even more of franklin's enviable range written by tracey scott wilson kelly corey and directed by lisa tommy. It's a long and admiring

The Eric Metaxas Show
Mallory Millet Saw the Human Side of Marlon Brando
"Have so many stories you so you were friends. Good friends with marlon brando Who grew grew to be the size of a house at the end. I mean it's the kind of an amazing thing orson welles. Dan ackroyd There's people that they just blow up beyond reckoning. You keep you try to imagine. Excuse me what what's going on over there. You knew him when he was thin. He was glamorous beautiful beautiful human being. I mean beautiful physically physically and as an actor. Sometimes i always wonder. What's the big deal about certain people and then you see something. When he was in. I guess was julius caesar when he when he does the romans conference room. It's gonna when. I saw that. I thought to myself now i get it. You just thought to myself. I never really had seen whatever that was the sukhois about him. I mean everybody knows. He's a great actor but we were you finally see like oh my goodness there's he's a genius But you saw the human side of him so in the late sixties. He's calling you up. You said during the break that you talked him out of suicide. Marie would call me and she'd be she say i'm up in san francisco right now and It would be midnight or something. I'm up in san francisco right now and marlins home alone and he's going to kill himself and you've got to get over there right now and i'd go murray is midnight is marlin. He's you know please mallory. You've got to go there now. You've got to get in your car and get up there right this minute

The Eric Metaxas Show
Why Marlon Brando Hated Hollywood
"In this world with these people and of course marlon brando in sixty eight. At this time he is a. It doesn't get very much bigger. No marlin brennan. But he was he had run a he. He'd run his career into the ground. I mean when you think about his his big stuff you know when when he was working on while all the all the classic films with the ilya kazan. But by the later sixties he could get work and y well first of all hated. Hollywood despiser with the red hot hatred. Not only that but are you ready for this. I don't know it's to be. This is quite a revelation. This children'll island brando to acting. Yeah loathed. it hated hollywood wounded. The whole acting world hated broadway. Hated movies didn't wanna ever act again Because he used to say to me mallory. It's fine for a woman. It's a feminine profession. You might be able to get somewhere in it and you might enjoy it but for a forty four year old man. He was forty four at the time for forty four year. Old man to have twenty year old kids. Who don't know anything about anything. Giving him orders and telling him when they can work and where to stand in to speak and how to do. I've had it. I'm a man. I need to have a manly life. You know what i'd like to be. You know what. I'd give anything in the world to be an. I'd say what marlene united. Sit there. And i'd say you know i'm sitting here listening to marlin complete exact and nobody's ever going to believe me you're you're you're blowing my mind. And he said you know. I i tell you. He said I if i had my druthers in this world i would be the first vice president of prudential life insurance company. And i'd go. That's kinda sunny very smart and funny but that is that is hilarious ways basically saying i want a normal normal life. I want to go to work and come home and be done with it right. I just want to have a normal family with some kids and live like a normal person. I can't stand this

All Things Considered
Frito-Lay Strike Could End as Workers Vote on a New Labor Agreement
"Workers who have been striking in Topeka, Kansas, for more than two weeks are voting today on a new labor agreement. Frank Morris of member station K. C U R reports the proposed contract eases some working conditions at the plant and would raise salaries, but those concessions may not be enough to compete in a tight labor market. Union strong Oh, one thing you learn, talking to the strikers outside the sprawling Frito Lay plant Topeka, the people who make Cheetos, Fritos and chips they can work similar long hours. I am a very hardworking woman. I work like him. Helen Teeter done up in a bright red shirt. Big white hat says she has very little time for family. I have no time to go work for them because I've been working seven days a week. Like 84 hours a week. 84 hours a week, Peter says the money's good up to double the normal $20 an hour wage with overtime. In a statement, Frieda Lee says only about 2% of its Topeka workers average more than 60 hours a week. But the company routinely forces workers to pick up extra hours and to skip scheduled days off even those with seniority like Marlon Smith. I've been here 22 years and I still get force for seven days a week. Maybe, like two or 3, 12 2 or 3 12 hour shifts. The contract Smith and others are voting on today would guarantee one day off a week. It would also end what workers call suicide shifts. 2 12 hour shifts with only eight hours in between. There's a proposed 4% raise over the next two years. But there may not be enough workers have more leverage now, and the signs of that are impossible to miss. They just put this up last week. We were out here We watched him put it up. Brad Wiese is pointing out a new billboard just across from the free delay plant Right where the picketers stand it, says the JM Smuckers company now hiring multiple position shift and pay rates, comprehensive benefit packages, So that's pretty much telling us. Hey, Come on out. We says at least half a dozen companies are actively recruiting disgruntled Frito Lay workers if they can't get the contract they want today for

Breaking the Glass Slipper: Women in science fiction, fantasy, and horror
"marlon" Discussed on Breaking the Glass Slipper: Women in science fiction, fantasy, and horror
"It's something that feels real i. I've always found it very interesting. That kind of when you read a romance often familial trauma coast hand-in-hand like i still love mills and boon. I used to read a lot of the kind of billionaire books. And what i found really interesting about. Those ones is that you would have this. This guy would come along and it was about the romance between two people but it was also often about terrible families so there was often distant or there is a distant father or their siblings. Who do terrible things and part of learning to love each other is also dealing with all the family baggage and that seems to be of genre convention but it's also kind of of life because everyone has family baggage there is nobody in the world who has a perfect family that gives them no baggage. Nobody so everyone has to contend with the reality that the people who love you can also hurt you and that can be in very serious ways over a small ways which means that love is inherently in some way a weakness but also a source of power. I really like exploring that in books. So in the jasmine thrown has a lot of characters. But you have on the relationship between marlene pre the princess and the maid servant. And you'll have lots of familial relationships. So there're lots of really bad brother. Sister relationships brothers do use the sisters love against them to make their sisters to they want or vice versa and you have parents or parental figures. Who do wrong out of a sense of love will betray the love that children have in them. And you will have the relationship that marlon imprio- halfway maldini uses up to a certain point pre his affection or careful against her and that becomes a big thing yet. Love is always complicated by pain. That sounds very depressing. But i kind of think. It's true. But i really like the idea of the ways that understanding that kind of love and deciding what to do with it can also be strength could answer. Yeah do you think there are certain kinds of trails or sutton things that characters just cont did do if they're going to somehow managed to come back from that if they can rescue the romance of the love between them whether or not. It's romantic level. Not.

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
Crazy Quincy Jones Lies About Elvis
"Quincy Jones is at it again. Look, the guys are hell of a producer and a ranger. I enjoyed the documentary I watched on him not too long ago. He was done everything. He used to write, he's the range music for Sinatra at 20 bucks a song. That he's made some millions with Michael Jackson. He's amazing. But we know the guy's nuts. We know he's nuts. He was interviewed recently for GQ. And if you remember the last interview, the last time they let him loose, he said that Marlon Brando fucked Richard Pryor. He just went on. And then they corralled him. His daughter's around dad. Stop saying that shit. So he apologized. But now he's back. And the GQ writer asked him if he ever worked with Elvis. And Quincy said, nope, I wouldn't work with him. Why not? They said, and he said, well, I was writing for Tommy Dorsey. Bob, back in the 50s, and Elvis came in and Tommy said, I don't want to play with him. He was a racist motherfucker. I'm going to shut up now, but every time I saw Elvis, he was being coached by Otis Blackwell, the man who wrote the song don't be cruel and Otis would tell Elvis how to sing. Meanwhile, not that Quincy Jones would care, but Otis Blackwell told David Letterman in 1987 that he and Elvis Presley had never met doesn't stop doesn't stop Quincy from telling a good story. So in that interview, Quincy claimed that Dorsey wouldn't let Elvis play with the band because, quote, that motherfucker couldn't see. But as we know, that's not true. If Elvis was a racist, you know, he probably he probably would have rolled over in his grave to see his daughter marry Michael

SRB Media Podcasts
"marlon" Discussed on SRB Media Podcasts
"Wake might be wage Low to predictions free will bliss from guyana. Only thank linda magnificent. She's don't from this week. she knows what she's doing. What she's done nelson is what she but she's done some special. I'll let you know what it is next week. Ryan akon speak right now if you know a main linda them your staff and we need to. I need to find back news. Well for sending stars which we yes. I can send stars during the show i never. I never thought that will off prompted dome. The well it's about tonight. We boost books have principal sponsors of any shed city football club the garson copy company. Sis and Boise library club. We raise money trump. Loose talk about my aspirins oblivious. Raise for pay. Tsa charges birmingham hang. Must be doing jeff failed. Poor devlin's any fun several of this. And if you've got a need suggest let us know because throughout our community breath family and we will certainly be with a mum's funeral on wednesday. And if you let us know what time is around private okay on the set you set your lungs and then Oh sing along with This ask tonight. Been an absolute not. Because i was thinking to myself this afternoon All right we're going to talk to king for an hour off. What are we going to talk about. Yeah we we know was a normal things in the normal still but the inspiration that you give them people a it tonight as the quality on on may not absolute equality and nobody judges. You'd be a past right. Nobody jiffy pasta but everybody wants to send queue. Set me from south on another team and look at this show. Great show great episode great blah blah blah just as Vce fleet community. A the the guy was the made an impression on me. I'm sure it's made an impression on those people as well and it's been an inspiration to continue mahlon ladies and gentlemen one ninety mile on king thank you very much and marlon rights on hundred percent. I'll go out to go up yet. Offers many just catch justice for the children took monday night and ostrom suddenly steaming. Grateful thanks to pull this. Thank you very much. Everyone do not all miss jaylen fan. Come tonight you're much anymore. Adams brown south gonna unless words from marlon king ladies and gents modern king. Yep stay stand for everybody's been right. Walk you guys doing result tomorrow palm bay..

SRB Media Podcasts
"marlon" Discussed on SRB Media Podcasts
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SRB Media Podcasts
"marlon" Discussed on SRB Media Podcasts
"King shower cruel the gun. All you post meant folk lemons. She's five one. So of steve job. Stay job oliver escape about britain. You've lost shit. We lost you. Rick bricky also of chocolate plots of chocolate not got richie trowel days of course glenn on career that was site pita the subject this week is the construction industry rickie lambert glenn hoddle alan curbishley cry nikki butchers and you thought it was gonna be one brian you know these might have rooks. Yeah hey he just got old trafford able to football. My brain is frozen right now. Guys you you're gonna rav rap anyway. I was gonna ask them all gonna ask them. Have you got any of your soul mementos around the house. You capex asia so your of shuts europeans girl yet. I'm kinda still cluster economic miam- hahtrick shot ago. Yeah over older. Talks away brilliant. Let me let me not out to vote on vegetables. Hold while review brick esab longer rookie. All right wing up all into.

SRB Media Podcasts
"marlon" Discussed on SRB Media Podcasts
"Cuts enjoyed it. They discovered he he loved it. You go to me com presence and in when he played you know let lead with leadership so that really good really good same. Should we increase with you puzzle. What we do is we we. We've got a recording of applied. Speaking that you've played before us if we view is to try and get but if you re tell us the first laterally son i'm okay and then let's see if any of us can get a release. Yeah we've had a week's training you know. We were disappointed to lose last weekend. Especially with all the ferrari going around. You know the the magnificent open the stadium and the all the hard work that to to open it okay Disappointing performance to get the win. God anybody anybody on. I'm going to say you. You think if us urge you think was a pair of colorado colorado your own job. We've got adam rooney check in doi. Why elliott not give again. Once more again your. We've had a good week trading. You know we were disappointed to lose last week and especially with all the ferrari going around. You know the magnificent opener the stadium and the all the hard work to open it up and disappointed not owner performance to get the win job. Think stay elliott. murphy steve. Jobs has got it is eight. They've so mahlon him out on another main seeking getting your news last week and especially with all the ferrari going around. You know the the magnificent open the stadium and all the hard work that stunts to open it ope Boys are disappointing owner performance to get the win Don't tell you know given name tell ya ya. No no clue i in the same. I know he's all ask tough. One rummage our own. Never guess pay. Such a quiet guy didn't do much talking. It seem i. i'm cutting remember playing with. It was great. That was a tough one to start with. You know now you know talking anyway. Fly ellerslie cerebral his robot. We had rubber on the other way marlon we had waste. Thomas hooker emanating som- stinky The you've paid to keep very quiet and chain. Talk to mike a challenge. You know if a lot. I appreciate not also be over in. That was nowadays the jump. Yeah we haven't gone to one we got anymore. There's anyone art 'em yes rice. Saying i think modern should join us. Fifteen minutes of the show. Let's fade fifteen miles show about. It's time i we are subject. We pick subject every week and we would associates football with the subjects. I've already got the subject him ahead because it civil is something to do with the the interview that we conducted. How about some hat Is there was a one or two story. House is two stories me. It's right somebody. Somebody said they wanted to show your on your apartment earliest.

SRB Media Podcasts
"marlon" Discussed on SRB Media Podcasts
"Well to attend motor racing went over the age of young younger than you know as you would be a while saying about. I know you guys rely a lot of people. Expect me to just watch for just trying to do is at meet meet redone. How shoot life is until done and it seems to me dot these fatalities getting clemson to what you guys think. Millions scary hair on news. And it's like someone that you're not really in touch with an skating close papa One woman train with him and he was the nicest block. Go in an annex. Minute whole teammate. Newton shelton for jamaica. Thirty five died a couple of weeks ago for me. I'm just trying to enjoy it as much as possible in the knowing desmond. A personal question right as having kids might a difference sealife life yes especially now that they are out in the ot baking oldest is sixteen in let sonali they. They understand the dynamics of who that is that way cheat or Saw get posted off questions. When you're actually a very intelligent guy talking to ya Outcome you fall off the riots. And i think we've already sucks nevada question and junior with georgia Like you said before the show. Everybody's gotta costumes What was your story. Because ricky is going to russia to book about is chris. Yeah yeah yeah how'd you. How'd you come back on that new. I try and try and negative in so positive narrative so he can only use it for -peutic myself because not was might show a held off things in and if you of my goal celebrations don't quite angry photo was released me so i always say is an. I'll say this young When you feel comfortable find yourself Said may so uncomfortable so when you uncomfortable. You're comfortable. I don't have that kind of makes sense. Iowa's found myself in trouble when i felt like i made it right the hunga when you and i had this kid at school that sold the big the press on the fire alarm button. If touchable would happen go. Is john a on the side. So i don condone anything done by openly speak about site in our had a self destructive personality when he was going swimming smooth for me in fuel natural to me 'cause i came from a broken home mccain quite on a wasn't a way we could show emotion because you see this week where i was from so you had to carry a of emotions and kind of release the in the wrong way and al hawl was well not like the alcoholic. Get a groove me out out you drink on the weekends loss at wine you know. I know it's a nice way snotty. So it's about knowing yourself and understand who you all before you can gap people to set to soften a lot people even honest myself. How did i get myself in and off the wall. You carried a stick..

SRB Media Podcasts
"marlon" Discussed on SRB Media Podcasts
"Of all. I do when i can. But i'm just enjoying life mom just living life. Speaking of i mean on a really enjoyed it gave me a great a great johnson life and but for me on my knicks chapter now on different projects going on which my kids grow just to really enjoy my family time trouble-free she's nice in. I just just invest in pool for future. Yeah three straight creek fault questions. Remain bala it was you five requires to kick grubbing up team. You support a kid and the biggest influence on your football career. Okay right question. One awesome fun. He only lived. Maybe two minutes from me off. No sorry told me. She was an also find him right as a city e. he i soul. He's kind of poff way to go for Pilots masha al-senoussi kinda made me fall in love with We've awesome dot. Time him and kevin campbell smith And you know hit as a striker way to score goals fund. He he really loose a so. Who's done a local committee and it will pull out commonsense in with us about that stuff. But i'm career same ample medac among day in the nba. Spoke science On he were based do community stuff way. Raise some money in the kids to competitions in orleans belgium france as young kids gory now. Gay draftsman's with our initials on you know who is just to stay kids. And they showed us that they met us fooling. Football is funded by the wise while. He's sussex known yet. He's just he's just says our is working is. Why didn't these ottawa. Refreshing is refreshing. As you said guys you got to think lucky thought no any upper weight support. Who's one it comes up seven property. Titles how the pushing say and this is a mentality thing because when you come back if you come back just to much time and never guys cut babies christy We were expected to beat teams. Like norwich the millwood's week by birmingham hat older whip. We know not teams could come and take namik Just gonna hug points. Like what birmingham that was that was the mindset especially when i was playing the rest of our lands and as he said he becomes a mindset equal. Build up you know. He's you go again. That respect by just letting teams no listen. This is our house And you gonna have to really gross to get some points breath in the steve. Cultural is back in hospitals literal hoping new monia central state that have been nicer instantly cultural get well symbol and on a friend We need to condone condolences..

SRB Media Podcasts
"marlon" Discussed on SRB Media Podcasts
"Just people just fruit. Communists think you can be physically strong and and were A spitzer like i think the the mind is the most powerful also anybody's hundred percent. That's why i it with to talk. It's good to be afraid and don't be ashamed. It's not like when i was brought up in the non eight sixty s It was a woman's problem. It's a sixties before the asians children. Would you consider going into management's no chunks. Nice to meet. You raked craik Considered it of the patients and than just one of those plays that waste went to challenge myself something different software Was gone so it painful. What was always prepared for the democratic on wife when i was injured or wherever it was going through. She was upset Buy properties and stuff like that so we already mentioned the prepare. Soak because if you put all your eggs in one basket you know when it does come to the deductible as you come back to it. We know how to to prepare a sofa something different. That's out your choice so you might want to be a dramatic video. So we'll do you do it yourself. How preoccupy the mind so to speak about adjusted your circumstances don't get toll is spokesman lives case you know his his crackle with specially when i was i was very. We didn't get told to speak about our issues in the psychological side of things the united. Instead you get this attention and realize what's happened into seems insight thought since what few people rescue mall. And what was your. What was your favorite goal for us. What was your favorite moment as well in the across various questions fabric recall. Gino will wanna go to the moment. I i'm going to say plane mill pinkett at note because you know why say after his release by Knows a young stop because obviously being peckham lot On my doorstep..

SRB Media Podcasts
"marlon" Discussed on SRB Media Podcasts
"With your a been manouever is it. Makes life easier gap in the morning enough at the bottom of the ladder. Yeah definitely an. I think for may modern that season the applied for the first after we went down in replied in europe after winning the calling us just especially as in certainly cities citizen since we've been radicalized in the last ten years it was the most it was. It was a wet season because it was like do. Would you swap. Would you swats it promoted in a planet full. would you take in europe but you may not winning. You're right blake yet. i mean it was. It was like the one in europe. Think we go different. We missed out on the final status yet. And you the. This is what i speak to cut seventy cut status and he was in. It's like that season was like the navy season. But if you look at empire games was like six games. So i just feel like let me go to africa. It was more of a ban out to be honest because we've been married. Mike sometimes tuesday. Thursday sunday was let free games a week and it was playing catch up. So what you never teams win and a new and we had to get result because you know you got the even though you've got four games in had four five games had with it but at times you still get through them and when you see teams mentally like leaving you points even though you know you can make up in still quite difficult to to keep pace was just. It was a weird season is these made him. Shoulder finds enjoyed especially Definitely that partnership you must be would is wildlife says was excellent was really why would he would he would. I loans approve. Our could've struck lease asia's to natural on go score being him usa stat in training Shooting practice me read as we. Just stay out bucky. Just getting monacans shooing simon. It just showed that the level of competition. When i think it was moore way equal to an uncle. Free sit was russillo having a personal battle. You wouldn't i cayenne. He was in the tate. And i was kinda getting my fitness. 'cause either knee. Injury cell is looking at aiming scoring. Goals are still thinks. I'm gonna. I'm gonna catch you up season and the things that was the plays in the zika scored. Four mates wasn't four either. Going to the game remember what should resolve any at night with the boys will tell him. United states just use unplayable gay but zinc. Ziggy can live avenue. When he's ready to time on. You know great lads just east frustrating. Because you know he do but he turns up right times as A spos- he's a legend club. Didn't school fifteen twenty goals. Definitely in full firstly. We're gonna go with this. On a gain of robinson's asking on to build rebuild senators at under the hood. I i'll let me to be kept telling me. How would you describe balloons. I loved it. I think it was our remember playing against them. Full gillingham in cop. Game years ago and i was on the bench sunday young stuff and i remember coming on. New guys made it very clear. Ansa meat did not who was came on monday. April wait wet hell. I mind analysis guys who in the friends. So you gave house is like said andrew disquiet me ground on you can just remember. It bought coventry late june. Fa cup you guys. I just the atmosphere. I just i just love the nfc coming down on the way Non scored against us the cutlets Giving them yoke.

SRB Media Podcasts
"marlon" Discussed on SRB Media Podcasts
"Washburn own wait Report here we go sponsor my scores garrison coffee company blues trust debate yesterday.

Juicy Scoop with Heather McDonald
What's the deal with Framing Britney Spears on HBO?
"Framing britney. This documentary had everyone above this weekend. I watched it last night. Kind of inbetween. Basically i'll be honest. I started watching it after the halftime show During the superbowl. 'cause i didn't really care at us home with my family and i wasn't like at a party or betting or anything but i'll get super bowl too but first of all Of course we've all heard about free brittany. Which has been this movement that her fans kinda started. There's been you know articles podcast and everybody talking about it. Of course. I follow her along with twenty seven other million people on instagram. And it's been weird. It's been weird watching her this last year. You gotta watch it. It's on lure fx. But it's just really they kind of just go through her whole career with in two hours which could have been. You know an eight part series. I think and we all remember when she came up. It was the mickey mouse club. And then all of a sudden she was really sexy. I remember when Shawn and marlon wayans were hosting the mtv awards and she came out and she did her sexy that goes with the snake and their joke which they came off came up with on the spot which is a great story is from minnie mouse club to the strip club and it was one of the funniest lines ever but now in watching that you're like wow you know this. This girl was suffering We made her suffer because we did jokes like this. We are obsessed with her sexuality. Diane sawyer was you look back at that interview which they featured and really putting her in the hot seat you know. Jay leno Doing jokes about her. We did jokes better. When chelsea lately started we. It was a great time for late night. Television also. Because right around that time the writers guild strike happened and we weren't writers guild so we were the only Late night show that got to stay on air. Every day was britney spears story. And it i. It just seemed like she was going. You know kinda fun crazy like she disliked to gas stations a lot and walk around barefoot and the paparazzi. Were there at the time. Because at that time there was no instagram. And that is how paparazzi and magazines made money is to get the shots of brittany. Brittany was the highest paid celebrity photos and then of course she married Kevin federal line but it was all just email. I just remember being doing chelsea lately and there was talk. We'll her kids taken away. And i remember sitting there going. There's no way she's going to lose custody of her kids. Come on i mean very few mothers do and she's she's going through a little struggling time but it's mostly because these paparazzi's are falling everywhere. Well you guys probably know this then. The dad got a conservative ship. And a lot of people after watching this special. This documentary said where was the mom. Why wouldn't the mom because parents divorced at that time. Try to get the conservative ship. Jamie her father was in and out of jobs Former drug addict. I believe maybe not drug out excessively alchoholic and So why would he be the person in charge. The thing is is. I think he was the first one to go to lawyers and try to get this into the works. And she was in a fifty one fifty at a mental institution when all this paperwork was done and the judge signed it. And now it's been you know fifteen years or something that this has been going on for and right away after this was done she started doing sitcoms again. Of course shortly after that she got her residency and she was making three hundred and fifty thousand dollars a night doing that show and then she left planet hollywood. And she now she's gonna do another huge residency at this new stage that they built her at the mgm and they do this big livestream thing and she comes up and then she just like and walks off talking to talk to reporters. She's not going to say anything. She's not going to do a song and shortly after that. She did it announcement saying my father is sick. And i'm not going to be performing. I'm going to put this residency off and that was really bizarre. People like is he sick. And i really don't know what the now looking back. I'm like i really don't know if he was sick of that was just her way out because now it looks like she in fact knew that the only way to get out of this conservatorship get her freedom back from her father was to stop working and stop making money and i. I would love to see what happened the day she was like you know what what the hell am i doing. Aren't going to sign up for another two or three year contract with them performing every night making all this money which. I don't get to choose how i want to spend the money. I don't get to get in the car and drive. I don't get to make a reservation and stay in hawaii on a whim without checking with twelve other people. Screw this you know. And she goes to her place in malibu during covert or wherever she is. Jesus been doing these weird instagram posts. Where her voice has changed. It's not the same voice. You're seeing these interviews on the documentary. And she's like ok guys. I've heard that a lot of been wondering what i'm going to do for the new year one. I'm gonna try to finish a pilates class to. I'm gonna try to meditate three. I'm going to try to eat better. And for i'm going to try that ice cream diet. And when she's doing it she's like it. Looks like she's definitely reading it whether it's a cue card but somebody else's there and the fact that she said i heard you guys not having reading your comments and one thing in the new year you guys asked me was Of course photos are weird. The makeup soy's like various mudgee. She's always wearing these crop tops. Sometimes she's dancing and you know i just really hope that I hope the mother gets involved. I hope that that the judge is able to watch this. Because i think when the judge granted this he was watching all the crazy news everyday. Let's just like the rest of us and this weird sam. Lufti was after an eye at the time. I was four the conservative ship. I'm like gosh. I don't want other people to take advantage of it this way. You know the data's there the other people are there to make sure that she stays healthy. No weirdos get around her. She's able to have visitation with her boys. But now after all these years it does seem really wrong and I think that this is going to be the catalyst to make whatever judges involved to open his eyes and maybe reconsider This conservative ship for

AP 24 Hour News
The Sundance Film Festival debuts Rita Moreno documentary
"The Sundance Film Festival is taking place over the next week, and one of the documentary showing is about Rita Marino. The first Latina woman to win an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony Freedom. Marino exploded on the screen in West Side Story, but Rita Marino just a girl who decided to go for it is her story, and she calls it real. Compared to the documentaries. She see. I've always thought, Well, G. That's just too perfect. All the time. S so I I just made sure that I was perfect some of the time. It's a raw look at her life. Her relationship with Marlon Brando the racism she faced in her career. You are Porter region, so you don't you're not worth much. The film was produced by Lin, Manuel Miranda and Norman Layer in airs on PBS later this

WJR 760
"marlon" Discussed on WJR 760
"Larry. Thanks, babe. Good luck. Thanks, Larry King, you're on the Mitch Album program. Never happy. I'll show you guys. That was great. I like how you ended the interview like that. I do. Got to say, though. Piers Morgan is a crumb. Yeah, I gotta read that people didn't know Larry King dies like it was Saturday morning, Right? Yes, Larry. Keep Piers Morgan puts this out. This was his tweet. He puts a picture of him and Larry Larry King was a hero of mine until we fell out, and I replaced him in CNN. And he said, My show was like watching your mother in law. Go over a cliff in your new Bentley. Then he puts in parentheses. He was married eight times. So a mother in law expert but he was a brilliant broadcaster Maskell TV of yours. If you have anything good to say, don't say anything. Well, that's nicer than what he said. When his show was canceled, which or even before it was canceled when again Larry King had said something and he said, My show was about gun control and saving people's lives. Your show was about blowing smoke up up. People's backsides. Hey, was so petty when he took over Larry King Live Our King Live ran for 25 years. It was the biggest program on CNN. People don't remember now because you know we live in the moment, but people forget that. For many years of very common sentence in American household was who's on Larry King tonight? Who's on Larry King tonight, relaxing night on CNN instead of his own now He was the biggest programming at a million viewers when nobody got a million viewers in cable TV and did so for decades, and ultimately he was canceled. And I think was 2010 right because Fox and MSNBC had sort of established themselves then is as these angry political stations one way or the other and they were starting to attract people. And by comparison, Larry King looks soft. And They bought Pierce Morgan in to replace him because Pierce Morgan was more confrontational. Pierce Morgan inherited an audience of around tooth two million people. And within three years it was down to 250,000 s O Nice work. Piers. Yeah, on, but it's because people don't necessarily want to watch somebody just get angry at somebody in yellow them or put them on the spot. Larry King said. In that interview, You heard the best question you can ask, is why now He took a lot of abuse for asking simple questions. For example, he asked Donald Trump. Yes. Once. When back before he was a politician. Why buildings Donald And he had some answer, but you know, he asked Yasha haIf it's the famous violinist. Why the violin Yasha and he got a lot of you got a lot of flack and you're laughing at it now, but haIf it's answered. My mother made me Which is actually a pretty interesting answer, and then went into you know how he was raised? He asked Richard Nixon. Is it hard for you to drive by the Watergate? Now, a lot of people have fluff question is that to ask asking President Well, it turned out the answer. If you bothered to learn the answer, and you just make fun of the questions, Nixon said. I've never been to the Watergate. And Larry King said. You've never been inside it and he said, I've never set foot inside the Watergate. Unfortunately, a few other people, T o. It was which was really funny. That's a great answer. And he got that from a simple question. So hey is much better at it was much better at it than I am or probably will ever be, and probably a little. Stuck in my ways, But I have always tried to emulate that more to ask a question to have a conversation in interviews, and I think he left behind a great example that too many people aren't paying attention to. They got caught up in the suspenders and gravelly voice in the eight wives and And the garlic. You know that, But but, you know, he did that really well, and you learned a lot when you Listen to him. Interview somebody. And when he did that Marlon Brando interview, which is pretty famous because Marlon Brando didn't talk to anybody we got there. It was that while you have the end of the house, Yeah, yeah, but Marlon Brandon and talk to anybody, and I've watched that interview multiple times. And he asked him. Why are you sitting down and talking to me? And he said, Well, I like you, Larry. And you know you're do a good job, and I admire you. And I've always wanted to know. You know what motivates you. And Larry King to his credit, said Nobody wants to hear about me, Marlon, let's talk about you, he said. No people do want to hear about you. They want to hear about you, he said. No, Let's just talk about you and he kept going. He said. Marlon, I'll tell you what. Sometime in the future. Come on back. You can sit in this chair. I'll go in the other one, and you can ask me about me. But for now I want to talk about you. Which was exactly the right thing to do. Because Brando was You know, Optics skating. He was he was putting. It was just trying to throw up a veil. Let me I'm gonna ask you. I'm gonna take this thing over at you. And you didn't let it happen. Even though this was the biggest interview again there, A lot of people would be nervous. Like, okay, I'll answer your question. Whatever you ask, he said, No. We're here to talk about you. Let's talk about you, and he got a good interview. When it ended. I think where they were. Singing and kissing, right? I think we have that got a date with an angel. We're gonna do got a date with nature. Let's get together for them. Right? All right. Which one we did for decades. Gotta Jane with an angel and I'm on my way way. When the chapel bell bring up gonna make him an offer he can't refuse. Good bye. Good bye. Marlon Brando kissed on the lips, So it's a little weird, but yeah, Anyhow, he was he was unique and Yeah. Tributes. Mitch, I mean, didn't matter. Whether was a world leader or maintenance person. He treated them with the same amount of respect. It's just really incredible. I could tell you the first time I ever met him. I didn't really meet him. We were at the cable Ace awards. I can't tell you what year it was. I think it was the early nineties and we have been nominated for a song that I had written. It was in a movie. So my wife and I went to the thing on we were ushered to our seats was about Middle of the theater, maybe two thirds back and we're sitting there and then all of a sudden it comes Larry King, and they assure him to the seat in the road right in front of us, and he sits down like Just right in front of us, So I lean into Janine and I said, That's Larry King, you know, doing pretty good here. We're sitting right behind Larry King, and he waits for like a minute. And then he stands up it goes. These seats Suck on. He just walked out and walked to the front, like planted himself in the front way were just left spinning there, one row behind. The seats that suck. You should have done the same way didn't have that kind of back. So the first my first encounter it was was that these seats suck. Back with more right after this..

Voices of Search by Searchmetrics
Using content to retain post-purchase customers with Marlon Glover
"To talk to me about how you build a relationship and what you need to be building for your customers on the content side the source so this is when you start getting into that customer life cycle journey. So you're asked company which we are. We're thinking about on boarding. We're thinking about making sure that first impressions you can. Also you can argue that first impression happen at the awareness stage but We're thinking that first impression with that product and how they take out of the box if we speak and in some cases what that experience looks like so We wanna make sure that they have a clear understanding of how to get the most value out of what he's just purchased and so i would say best. The first step in continuing our content strategy post purchase is making sure that they have the information available to them to really solve the problem. So i'm starting to think about some of these how to videos or how to Piece the content step by step guides comprehensive guides that you see some of the more progressive organizations creating host cell to me. This is about documentation read like this is okay great. You've decided to purchase a product or service. We've documented ways that you can get the most out of it so you're not going to have as many touches as you might if we just left you alone that end up in customer services lap that ended up back in sales at end up on your. Ceo's dust an angry customer not understanding how to use your product. Yeah that's right there's documentation. There's the traditional user is and as i mentioned before conference guys these are robust pieces. That may come to play. In some cases earlier in a funnel sometimes you have very technical or detail oriented for that are ed pretty significant information around what they're looking to software and they're looking for specific details about your solution and how to use it earlier on an so mentioned before that journey isn't necessarily linear you have individuals that have prior experience with other solutions and products. That are looking to these types of guides to help answer for them and uncover potential challenges. They may have but then there's other types of consonants who that play a role in the retention and arm impulse sales so help me understand you know first off. How do you figure out what content to create to keep a healthy relationship with your existing customers. I think is still important for us to do some of those things. We did earlier on right so in a mentioned in our first our conversation earlier this week that That keyword research still pretty important right. I mentioned before that it was important. In the considerations as that we separate the branded content from a non brent content at this stage. we're looking at the question modifiers. And i mentioned before the who what why win win. Shy considered doing x. With this product for example we start taking those branded terms that are related to our company or our solutions products. And we start to find questions. That are searched the most for that. So i start there. Give me some guidance in terms of the content and the questions that have The most demand for customer base. So that's why we start. And again i mentioned in our second conversation is that we should also be thinking about leveraging our internal teams folks that are having conversations with our customers our clients to customer success reps. That are getting these questions. So they don't necessarily need to pick up the phone and have those answered able to have a very easy easy access to you. Know to to the information that they may be seeking when they purchase our product dissolution.

Voices of Search by Searchmetrics
"marlon" Discussed on Voices of Search by Searchmetrics
"So let's talk about what most marketers would consider getting people across the finish. Line <hes> you know. We've talked about building awareness. Getting in front of people that are in our personas talked about helping them build credibility and get educated on our class of products or services. And now this week. We want to talk about the bottom of the funnel. How do we get people to buy something. Whether it be a product or service talked me a little bit about the strategies behind building your fiscal your product content. Yeah well this is actually a really fun topic because <hes>. for me. I can quickly point out. Look clyde the value and importance of building continent the other stages because if you have an expectedly talk clients earlier in that process then is going to be very difficult for them to decision to choose. Us supplier or someone solve their problem and incensio. They're neat so <hes>. First and foremost that is critical. I mean i know we see in the car. By processors typically nine hundred or so digital interactions. This was from another study from google is not hundred interactions and is court eight hundred of them. Are emails that you didn't subscribe to but go on is true but you know i think that kinda helps us validate this point and and that point is you know if you are present throughout many of those interactions that you want present when they're looking to learn lines then you have less credibility when they're looking at the determined if your solution is right there so that's the importance of some of earlier content. If you're not teaching them then someone else is in there likely leading to their solutions so s person forms. You know there's a dating metaphor. And i'm going to try to say this without being crass vulgar or rude but you know <hes>. I will turn it back into a product conversation. If you're trying to get across the finish line and you haven't put in the legwork over you know a multiple series of date and you haven't sort of shown in our case that you're <hes>. Gentleman it's a tall ask and likely something that's going to be turned away and aggressively turned away if you go directly to the sale <hes>. You know people are gonna think that you're being pushy or aggressive. So i totally understand what you're talking about building the relationship building that credibility starting the customer journey earlier through awareness and education. But once you're building the relationship the right way <hes>. What are some of the tips in terms of the types of content that you need to have on those product pages to make sure that they're visible showing up and that they're converting so i been <hes>. I'm impressed that you manage to keep that analogy. Pg great job. Odd done could go sideways at any boards. So let me say this. I think we spend a lot of time talking about e commerce. And i do want to talk about some traditional ecommerce approaches types of content that align with this this kind of purchase and buying stage <hes>. But you know a large part of my background is in the bbc's and and the beat obese space there's typically multiple stakeholders involved in the buying process certain individuals get involved earlier on other men visuals megan in sort middle stages me may have some unknown stakeholders that tend to come into the mix at the later stages and so what we found. A b side is that there's very unique and civic content. That may be needed for. Let's say a cfo that hasn't been involved in the earliest stages the process at may not care about the the solution per say that you're solving for you know the head of marketing. Right you know. In those instances we're looking to create pieces of content. That uniquely address the questions that they're asking later on in that process so maybe that's a calculator to show the value of the roi of your solution. You know maybe some other type of downloadable content that your internal champions can leave on the desk of a cfo as a leave behind the help sell the value of that with an organization so on the bbc side with that looks like and i only bring that up because i think that there is some parallel that we can draw in the well so for customers and are looking to to make a purchase at the later stages. They're looking to answer this question of <hes>. Which solution is right for me right. So i've learned all of these things earlier into consideration. Stage you address all of my questions on you. The ba- helped me concussion things. I wasn't considering and now looking to determine if you as a provider are actually helping me saw for those things. Are you actually providing <hes>. Those needs that you helped me identify. And so i think based off of does the civic needs those solutions on. We should really take careful consideration around the type of content that we create to how <hes> answered those latest as questions <hes>. Sometimes that concept can come in the form of video. So i've told you <hes>. And i think we've used this example in the past that the blender example right. I told you the things that you should be thinking about. When you're choosing the right blender so let me show you the blenders that we have and the unique features and specs that we offer that aligns the things that told you before that you should be considering right so that type content may be in a form of video where we show you. How how that blender blends how this type of blade performs when you're cutting up this type of vegetable that we talked to you earlier on in this recipe content so this is at this stage. Were looking to understand. Odds answer the question of which solution is right for me. And that should be unique to every product that you offer is directly linked to the unique problems that you address earlier on in that consideration concepts

Voices of Search by Searchmetrics
Driving conversions with bottom of funnel content with Marlon Glover
"So let's talk about what most marketers would consider getting people across the finish. Line you know. We've talked about building awareness. Getting in front of people that are in our personas talked about helping them build credibility and get educated on our class of products or services. And now this week. We want to talk about the bottom of the funnel. How do we get people to buy something. Whether it be a product or service talked me a little bit about the strategies behind building your fiscal your product content. Yeah well this is actually a really fun topic because for me. I can quickly point out. Look clyde the value and importance of building continent the other stages because if you have an expectedly talk clients earlier in that process then is going to be very difficult for them to decision to choose. Us supplier or someone solve their problem and incensio. They're neat so First and foremost that is critical. I mean i know we see in the car. By processors typically nine hundred or so digital interactions. This was from another study from google is not hundred interactions and is court eight hundred of them. Are emails that you didn't subscribe to but go on is true but you know i think that kinda helps us validate this point and and that point is you know if you are present throughout many of those interactions that you want present when they're looking to learn lines then you have less credibility when they're looking at the determined if your solution is right there so that's the importance of some of earlier content. If you're not teaching them then someone else is in there likely leading to their solutions so s person forms. You know there's a dating metaphor. And i'm going to try to say this without being crass vulgar or rude but you know I will turn it back into a product conversation. If you're trying to get across the finish line and you haven't put in the legwork over you know a multiple series of date and you haven't sort of shown in our case that you're Gentleman it's a tall ask and likely something that's going to be turned away and aggressively turned away if you go directly to the sale You know people are gonna think that you're being pushy or aggressive. So i totally understand what you're talking about building the relationship building that credibility starting the customer journey earlier through awareness and education. But once you're building the relationship the right way What are some of the tips in terms of the types of content that you need to have on those product pages to make sure that they're visible showing up and that they're converting so i been I'm impressed that you manage to keep that analogy. Pg great job. Odd done could go sideways at any boards. So let me say this. I think we spend a lot of time talking about e commerce. And i do want to talk about some traditional ecommerce approaches types of content that align with this this kind of purchase and buying stage But you know a large part of my background is in the bbc's and and the beat obese space there's typically multiple stakeholders involved in the buying process certain individuals get involved earlier on other men visuals megan in sort middle stages me may have some unknown stakeholders that tend to come into the mix at the later stages and so what we found. A b side is that there's very unique and civic content. That may be needed for. Let's say a cfo that hasn't been involved in the earliest stages the process at may not care about the the solution per say that you're solving for you know the head of marketing. Right you know. In those instances we're looking to create pieces of content. That uniquely address the questions that they're asking later on in that process so maybe that's a calculator to show the value of the roi of your solution. You know maybe some other type of downloadable content that your internal champions can leave on the desk of a cfo as a leave behind the help sell the value of that with an organization so on the bbc side with that looks like and i only bring that up because i think that there is some parallel that we can draw in the well so for customers and are looking to to make a purchase at the later stages. They're looking to answer this question of Which solution is right for me right. So i've learned all of these things earlier into consideration. Stage you address all of my questions on you. The ba- helped me concussion things. I wasn't considering and now looking to determine if you as a provider are actually helping me saw for those things. Are you actually providing Those needs that you helped me identify. And so i think based off of does the civic needs those solutions on. We should really take careful consideration around the type of content that we create to how answered those latest as questions Sometimes that concept can come in the form of video. So i've told you And i think we've used this example in the past that the blender example right. I told you the things that you should be thinking about. When you're choosing the right blender so let me show you the blenders that we have and the unique features and specs that we offer that aligns the things that told you before that you should be considering right so that type content may be in a form of video where we show you. How how that blender blends how this type of blade performs when you're cutting up this type of vegetable that we talked to you earlier on in this recipe content so this is at this stage. Were looking to understand. Odds answer the question of which solution is right for me. And that should be unique to every product that you offer is directly linked to the unique problems that you address earlier on in that consideration concepts

Bloomberg Businessweek
Colorado governor tests positive for coronavirus
"Testing positive for Cupid 19, Colorado Governor Jared Pulis and his partner are testing positive for Corona virus. The governor made the announcement in a tweet, saying both he and Marlon Reese are asymptomatic and feeling fine. They plan to isolate in their home, Pulis wrote. No person or family is immune, and he urged all Colorado's to use caution and limit public interactions. New York City

Rush Limbaugh
Kim Ng, Baseball's First Female General Manager, Has Been Ready for Years
"League baseball's first female general manager, giving her first radio interview Marlon's GM, Kim hang Says she's blown away by the support she's received since the announcement. I'm still trying to answer text messages and emails from friends and agents and players and said it's been crazy. The 51 year old says she's ready to hit the mound running. She served as MLB senior VP of baseball operations for the past nine years and as an assistant general manager to the Yankees and Dodgers