35 Burst results for "Mers"

WTOP
"mers" Discussed on WTOP
"And weather on the H and when it breaks, Steve Drescher in the traffic center. And Dimitri good evening, starting off in Virginia. Well, the late afternoon early evening rush still going on. We're still backed up in her loop at the capitol, bellway delays beginning up near the tall road down through an over the American legion bridge in a Montgomery county may have crash activity over on the right side approaching the exit for the GW Parkway in northbound Parkway in very slow from perk police headquarters to the ramp that takes you to the inner loop delays in Virginia, off and on starting at 66 down to the Springfield interchange and still very slow over an Alexandria from telegraph onto the local lanes of the Woodrow Wilson bridge. Woodbridge area is still dealing with a crash, north found 95, right beef where route one 23 still contained to the right lane and a bit backed up on that northbound side. In the district, there's still trying to remove that one broken down up and canal road right near the area of Arizona avenue only a single link at shibai and mers still jammed up all the way back to the area of Fox hollow road and staying in the district northbound earth capital street before Hawaii avenue northeast still dealing with the crash at last report single right lane does sketch by. Jiffy lube service centers certainly keep you moving from oil changes, tire rotations to filters and wipers into a full range, a service is jiffy Luke D.C. dot com for a location near use. Steve dresner, WTO traffic. Up to 7 news first alert chief meteorologist Veronica Johnson. It's horrific. Thursday evening after a hot afternoon, temperature is flirting around 90° most neighborhoods. Now this evening, you'll enjoy temperatures in the 70s with a clear sky, nice pretty sunset for us. Tonight, 54 to 62° and for tomorrow, high temperature about 83° with, again,

The Charlie Kirk Show
Dr. Jerry Root Discusses 'Mere Christianity' by C.S. Lewis
"Are discussing C. S. Lewis this hour. We have received and I've counted well over 500 emails of people saying they're depressed and discouraged. And then you should read C. S. Lewis because there's something bigger than you and what you're dealing with that is worthy of wonder. Doctor Jerry root is with us, his book is the neglected C. S. Lewis that I encourage you guys to purchase and read and study, but let's talk about mere Christianity. Doctor mer Christianity, as we mentioned, was originally given in a time of crisis during the blitz on the BBC Radio and then was turned into the book. I believe he added and clarified and edited some of the radio broadcast. Mere Christianity is one of the bestselling Christian books ever, what is in that book that is so powerful and why should we study it? Well, Louis basically underscores a pilgrimage to faith that I think grows out of his own experience. He had been an atheist and he works his way through the morass of atheism and it's supporting worldview materialism, works his way through agnosticism, comes to place where he causes the reader to look at Jesus Christ. And they may have anger with the church, they may have anger with some friend of theirs who hurt them, but he wants them to focus on Christ. The one thing that's interesting too, quickly, he begins with what I call the shared imagination. Lewis has 31 different ways he uses the word imagination. One of them is called the shared imagination, and that's when you enter into a shared experience with your reader. So that you're on the same page at one place at least. You made diverge after that, but he wants to begin there and then bring his reader into a more inferentially developed understanding of a particular idea.

WLS-AM 890
"mers" Discussed on WLS-AM 890
"Take a listen yourself Doctor Fauci's physician as those who thought a spillover took the position that it was most likely a spillover event because that's what happened with SARS and that's what happened with mers And I think it's important to look at prior to 2012 we didn't really have another mechanism other than nature We weren't doing gain of function research I'm a clinical virologist I tried to explain to Doctor Fauci who's an immunologist that this virus SARS and mers when they infected man from the intermediate host civet cat in the case of SARS in a camel in case emerged they never learned how to go human to human So those original outbreaks are less than a thousand people And the epidemics died And so when everyone thought this was SARS like well that's going to die too But this virus was immediately the most infectious virus not the most I think probably right behind measles virus that we've ever seen in fact man So I immediately said wait a second this is a natural And then you go back and look at the literature and you find in 2014 this lab actually published a paper that they put the H two receptor into humanized miso in fact human tissue And then you learn that the new COVID which came from bats now can hardly replicate in bats So how does that happen I don't know Doc That's so crazy So a lab that's doing research on mice having those mice genetically altered so they express a human receptor a human receptor that's active in the transmission of COVID human to human The labs do in research on that and the craziest thing happens A virus emerges from a lab that can go human to human that they engineered to infect a very specific human receptor

The Dan Bongino Show
Robert Redfield Says Fauci Shut Down Debate on Covid's Origin
"Take a listen yourself Doctor Fauci's physician as those who thought a spillover took the position that it was most likely a spillover event because that's what happened with SARS and that's what happened with mers And I think it's important to look at prior to 2012 we didn't really have another mechanism other than nature We weren't doing gain of function research I'm a clinical virologist I tried to explain to Doctor Fauci who's an immunologist that this virus SARS and mers when they infected man from the intermediate host civet cat in the case of SARS in a camel in case emerged they never learned how to go human to human So those original outbreaks are less than a thousand people And the epidemics died And so when everyone thought this was SARS like well that's going to die too But this virus was immediately the most infectious virus not the most I think probably right behind measles virus that we've ever seen in fact man So I immediately said wait a second this is a natural And then you go back and look at the literature and you find in 2014 this lab actually published a paper that they put the H two receptor into humanized miso in fact human tissue And then you learn that the new COVID which came from bats now can hardly replicate in bats So how does that happen I don't know Doc That's so crazy So a lab that's doing research on mice having those mice genetically altered so they express a human receptor a human receptor that's active in the transmission of COVID human to human The labs do in research on that and the craziest thing happens A virus emerges from a lab that can go human to human that they engineered to infect a very specific human receptor

The Dan Bongino Show
Raymond Arroyo: The Purpose of the Three Gifts to Jesus
"Anyway they take these gifts they go to the child Why those three gift stands And I kept asking myself this I consulted with some historians or even doing a Fox nation special on this which drops on Tuesday where I interview all these experts And you can really do the deep dive And look my picture book introduces you to the world and I think heightens the adventure that we really happen But this special will take you on a deeper dive if you're interested Theologically historically but here's the payoff that I love Frankincense was burned in that first temple in worship Gold of course was woven into the vestments of the first temple priesthood okay This royal priesthood The order of malke deck some might remember you half looks here that every Sunday at mass The order of Maltese attack This is what it is But most important is mer oil Dan Mer oil was kept in the holy of holies in the first temple and it was only used to anoint new members of the royal priesthood So these guys might have been going out to anoint the messiah and bring him into their royal priesthood to restore the first temple It suddenly blows up the importance and the theological heft of the wise men and their journey and what they were really doing The revolution they were really kicking off

The Dan Bongino Show
Raymond Arroyo: Evidence That the Wise Men Are Real
"Who are these guys Well they aren't kings coming from far kingdoms They would never have been able to pass through the Roman territories to get to Herod and to the baby So that's off the table Here's what my research revealed And this will blow your mind And I think the minds of all of us listening because I like you thought eh it's kind of a little flourish These are dramatic characters that kings come They do their gift drop off and they leave No they're either Persian priests in exile down in the kingdom of nabataea And look you've historians from the first century Justin martyr Clement of Rome tell us the wise men are from Arabia Well Arabia the headquarters of Arabia was this kingdom of Petra If they're not Persian priests more likely they were descendants of the first temple priesthood Now follow me on this I'll make it brief The first temple priest offered sacrifice in the temple in Jerusalem They were expelled 700 years before Jesus Where did they go To Arabia in exile So this may very well be members of this royal priest who had waiting for the messiah They see the star that confirms the prophecies of a messiah His scepter shall rise from Israel and they run off to see them But it's not just to do a gift drop by Those three gifts which by the way were only made in the kingdom of nabataea Frankincense gold mer frankincense and myrrh are derived from tree SAP which I had no idea I didn't know what they were made of But it's tree SAP trees only grown in southern Arabia And of course gold the gold mines midian king Solomon's mind same place archeologists will show you where it is It's in the kingdom of nabataea in the ancient world

TuneInPOC
"mers" Discussed on TuneInPOC
"How can I hold you just. For you. How can I fall. For when you just want to give me reasons when you just don't give me. Reasons just won't give me reason I don't how can I fall how can I fall for you. I'm all right, let's stop. Listen. Listen, Doc FM. Wow oh nice to meet you. Oh thank you. Where is all the blue sky that's good for as a new father. Wow nursing missing me. Oh things ain't what they used to know oh wasted on the oceans but I think there's only. Music. Oh crazy what made you. Raise the deviation underground and it wasn't the truth I was like. All things and what makes you feel better about this whole crowd and then how much more they use from mers again. If you want. Something to play with go and find yourself at all. The time it's too expensive. And I'm not a little boy.

The Dan Bongino Show
Steve Deace: The Health Elites' Mess Dumped Onto the World
"What I truly believe happened here Dan is that our elites people like Fauci and the people in the health sector thought they were working with their good old friends this shy coms to come up with a preemptive vaccine for the next SARS or mers level event And the chicom said you bet skipped that's exactly what we're doing over here in the Wuhan institute of virology And one of the most densely populated areas of the world where the guy who runs the lab used to run our bio weapons program You bet skip We're all just one big happy globalist elite family here Working putting up like buckwheat for the plea So that's all we're doing here You keep doing that All right And I think they got suckered into this And thought they were doing something magnanimous and it was a bioweapon from the very beginning And I think once they recognize where this came from you know it didn't come from bats that nest 900 kilometers away from Wuhan All right once they recognize that I think they may panicked They weren't sure how much natural laws of immunology and virology applied to a synthetic turmeric virus which is basically a mongoloid or Frankenstein form of a virus that they created in a lab And I think they panicked And then there was greed Let's go ahead and take medications that prove from hydroxychloroquine to Ivermectin to stunt viral replication in the body and allow the immune system to come in Now it's panic we went from panic to greed Let's go ahead and stifle those medications and set everybody up for a never ending cadre of injections for various maladies with these mRNA shots All the worst impulses of human nature the naivete stupidity of our elites the greed of our elites the sinister motivations and dominionism of the Chi coms All these things got tossed into a cauldron with a wing of an eye of newt then and stirred together And then it got dumped on the whole freaking world That's what happened

Bloomberg Radio New York
"mers" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"Taking a look at the ADRs of AP moller mers, so this is the Danish shipping company here. They're up some 8 tenths of a percent here. This is a CEO tells the Boston that deck own container like freight volumes aren't yet showing that the world economy is heading towards a recession to that it is counted to what we're seeing a leading indicators telling us right now, but they just can't see it in their own data. And of course, you know, he was also commenting on the European consumer confidence data saying that that could be misleading because the war on Ukraine could be making a lot of respondents acting overly negative. So again, him saying that maybe things aren't as bad as some are suggesting. So we've seen those shares up some 8 ten to the percent over here in the U.S.. Okay, we thank you very much. Read a good Gupta keeping track of those ADRs. This headline from the Bloomberg professional service. Democrats are weighing pairing the Biden tax hike to win over senator Joe Manchin that headline right now on the Bloomberg professional service obviously a story we're following and more details as they become available. Again, recapping equities trading mix the Dow higher S&P NASDAQ lower S&P down 11 drop right now of just about three tenths of 1%. I'm Charlie peloton. That is a Bloomberg business flash. This is balance of power with David Weston. I think the most important thing we can do to make our schools safe is to make our community safe. Inflation is not the kind of problem that was in the 1970s where we thought things were out of control. Where the world of politics meets the world of business That's the talking to people. They are looking to us to fulfill this agenda. That's been laid out by President Biden. The president understands that prices are a challenge, which is why he's focused on it every day. Balance of power with David Westin on Bloomberg radio. The United States presses for a cap on the price of crude coming out of Russia. The select committee makes its case against former president Trump on the January 6th attack on the capitol and tomorrow is the day for the Supreme Court to weigh in on climate regulation. From the Bloomberg interactive broker student in New York

The Dan Bongino Show
Dr. Marty Makary: Natural Immunity Could Pass 22 Months, Suggested by Other Studies' Trends
"I want to be clear the 22 months of circulating antibodies you discovered doesn't mean it's limited to 22 months when you're saying is we only know about 22 months because that's all the virus has been circulating around it It could be three years could be 5 years could be two years ago That's what you're saying right That's right and we've known this all along Our study out of Hopkins which was published in the top medical journal it was published in jama that's the number one medical journal out there Even though LinkedIn took down my post when I posted my jama study on LinkedIn we contacted the CEO and then they magically reappeared in 15 minutes Wow Like magic This is our top tanks Well this is the phone mission This is affirming all the other studies of which there have been a hundred throughout the pandemic showing that hey natural immunity works for at least a month a month into the pandemic Then two then four then 6 Cleveland clinic Washington University All these big studies kept rolling in and they public health officials kept dangling while we don't know how long it's going to last Yes we do because your hypothesis was wrong The hypothesis at the beginning should have always been that it works until proven otherwise because it works for the other coronaviruses SARS and mers those are the only two other coronaviruses that cause severe illness in humans They work long term That's been studied That's a settled science And we don't see people getting reinfected at the bedside going on a ventilator or dying It's healthy people do not get reinfected and go on a ventilator and die That is always been our observation but they are not seeing patients They're living in an ivory tower We have two centralized of a sort of decision making oligarchy And they're not listening to bedside

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Eric Adams Demotes Brother From Deputy NYPD Commissioner to Deputy Director of Mayoral Security
"And Eric Adams, he's right along. He goes right along with it all. He hasn't taken on a challenge this whack job prosecutor or district attorney. They've got in New York now. But he did back pedal on a bizarre promotion he gave his brother. He had given his brother who was, I think the assistant director of parking at Virginia Commonwealth university, nothing that is anything wrong with being the assistant director of parking, but I'm not sure you should become a deputy NYPD commissioner. Well, it turns out mer Adams has now already demoted his brother after the pushback, city officials confirmed moments ago that mayor Adams little brother is now going to be the executive director of mayoral security. That's a number of notches lower in rank from his previously. Designated title. He's still going to do pretty well. He's going to get a salary of $210,000 a year. The retired NYPD sergeant, but that's 30,000 less from what he would be getting his deputy police commissioner. So I guess even Eric Adams saw the handwriting on the wall

AP News Radio
Haniger Homers in 3rd Straight Game, Mariners Top Red Sox 5-4
"Mitch Haniger three run Homer broke a two all tie in the seventh inning is a Seattle Mariners beat the Boston Red Sox five to four the mariners rally came with two outs taking advantage of an error a broken bat single then Hannah goes high fly ball which just cleared the left field wall I know this can be really close I was just I was screaming at the ball the Kerry and luckily you know by a foot or two over so yeah happy one out the red Sox rallied with two runs in the eighth inning on back to back home runs but Seattle hung on for the win striking out fifteen red Sox batters in the process the lost Dropbox into a tie with the New York Yankees for the last wild card spot with the mers now just two games behind for the final playoff position Jim Bernard Seattle

The Dan Bongino Show
Chinese Government Knew Early About Coronavirus Lab Leak
"Did they know, but they knew early. They knew early on that this was a potent, potentially deadly virus. Whether it escaped or was done deliberately. We don't know. But once it was out there, they did nothing to warn us. And it was here way before we thought it was What's more evidence clues. Give me another data point. Showing that they knew in China, the C G code, sick lab workers, SARS and MERS not being as able to infect human beings as coronavirus within your perfect ability to do it. Remember this story I discussed was a couple weeks ago. Wall Street Journal from May 23rd this year Intelligence on six staff at Wuhan Lab fuels debate on Covid 19 origin Folks our intelligence community knew to listen to this. Three Researchers from China's Wuhan Institute of Virology became sick enough in November of 2019 that they sought hospital care. According to a previously undisclosed U. S intelligence report. Chinese government knew Three researchers fell ill at the Wuhan lab. How do you explain that? So for the folks on the left in the media have been attacking John Stewart, the comedian who again there's no friend to the conservative movement at all, but they've been attacking him suggesting he's making up a conspiracy theory that this originated in Wuhan lab. You don't have evidence. No, you don't have evidence. You don't have evidence that this is natural. We have a bevy a body of evidence that this in fact was created in the lab. And created two perfectly infect human beings.

The Dan Bongino Show
Dr. Robert R. Redfield Gives a Clue Supporting Wuhan Lab Leak Theory
"This virus evolved from bats into some intermediate animal but has yet to be found in an eventually evolved into humans and then basically became efficiently transmitted among humans and the other is that this virus actually Went from a bat into a laboratory where in the laboratory, it gained the ability to become un efficient human human transmitter and those are both to hypothesis. And I guess if I'm disappointed about anything about the early scientific community is that there seemed to be lack of openness to pursue both hypotheses. If you look at SARS The Stars went from bad specific cat, and it went in demand. But it never really learned how to go efficiently, man to man. And as we sit here today, there's been less than 10,000 cases of SARS in over 18 years when you look at MERS, which is another coronavirus went from bad to a camel and then from a camel to man and as we sit here today, It still hasn't learned how to go efficiently Human to human. We've had less than 4000 cases. Folks in some limited circles for the liberals listening, we would call that The clue. The clue. I know clues are tough for all the liberals so married to this is a natural virus. They have no evidence of that at all. I know this clue again is deeply disturbing to you, along with the double C G code. Clue. That is a code present in the coronavirus. The sight of seeing guanine guanine double bass. It hasn't yet been seen in nature and doesn't mean it doesn't exist in nature but hasn't been seen yet. Double C G. But it's in the coronavirus Covid 19, and where do we see the double C G. In lab work. Where gain of function. Researchers insert it so they can track

WJR 760
"mers" Discussed on WJR 760
"Wit, MERS vax to normal plan calls for the rollback of restrictions when Michigan residents start getting their covert vaccine, currently among half of Michiganders have gotten at least one shot. Brian Kelly, the president of the small Business Administration, says he agrees with the plan. But they help is needed now because there are thousands of small businesses that need it. I think it's also important to remember that there are many industries and they tend to be industries that were dominated by small businesses that because of the nature of the pandemic and the type of restrictions that we have their their recovery, really by and large hasn't even begun yet. Mr Kelly was on the guy Gordon show Lumber prices, red historic highs and show no signs of slowing. Chuck Brydon Stein of the inside Outside Guys heard weekends on WJR. Says it's all because of the pandemic. Ah lot of mills were forced to shut down. The industry did not anticipate That almost half of the homeowners in the country Would engage in a do it yourself project during the pandemic, and believe it or not, That kind of started the imbalance and put a drain on resource is that we have not been able to make up yet. He expects lumber prices to remain high, deep into 2021. More and more Americans are buying second homes and seasonal towns box business networks. Grady Trimble has more from Big Sky Montana. We met a bond trader from New York here. He bought his home a few years ago and was planning to use it as a second home. But then the pandemic kid, and he found himself without a job. So he upped and moved his family out West and has been impressed with the big sky lifestyle. Compared to the big Apple fly fishing to being hiking. Cross country skier Never tried. It was a down into your cross country skiing is wonderful. Some other popular second home markets across the country, according to the property management company of a Casa include Hey, pattering, North Carolina, the Poconos in Pennsylvania and Gatlinburg, Tennessee in the Smoky Mountains. That's Fox is business networks. Grady Tremble in Big Sky, Montana Homes and seasonal markets are up 19% year over year. Several Republican senators, including minority leader Mitch McConnell, R, writing a letter to President Biden opposing to include than 16 19 project in American schools, curricula. 16 19 project puts a spotlight on long term consequences of slavery and racism. America, which GOP senators called the visit been nonsense. South Dakota Governor Christie Noma planted the letter saying Republicans are standing up for lessons passed down from the founding Fathers. We need to be teaching all of our Children and our grandchildren that our founding fathers Were incredible people who let us through challenging times. Sure they were flawed. But what what of us have lived up to all of our ideals, But we can learn something from them. They're part of our history. And it really is. What has kept America Special South Dakota Governor Christie No. Um this comes as the Department of Education is publishing guidelines on the education of race in American history for schools kindergarten through 12th grade. Record fish was hauled out of the Detroit River, Fish and Wildlife officials caught a massive lake sturgeon measuring over seven ft and tipping the scales at £240. It's the biggest recorded sturgeon in the United States, and officially, it's over 100 years old. The fish was quickly measured and thrown right back in the river. On Wall Street at the closing bell. Today, the Dow finished down 185 the S and P was off 30, Ken Rygel Ski WJR News back to Kevin Dietz and two minutes just in time for spring 7 60 WJR is pleased to introduce the newest addition to our premier lineup of weekend experts. The plant. Michigan green dot com. Gardening show hosted.

John Williams
Latino Groups Want DOJ Probe of Chicago Police Shooting
"Lawyers and community leaders will ask the Department of Justice to investigate the fatal shooting of a 13 year old boy by a Chicago police officer. Hispanic Lawyers Association of Illinois and Pilsen lost center will call on Mer Lori Lightfoot to accelerate court supervised changes to policing in Chicago and food and foot pursuits by officers and to invest federal covert relief dollars to help young people in the neighborhood, or Adam to later lived and died.

Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"mers" Discussed on Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"Bdo awesome and up with them. Hot you schedule only on the cost the ashley taco version alison johar ankles on soil. Some deep putting Beta the malls going ashok in the devon always mylar lawful ship held in free. I thought i don't head to dial. We all listened. Louisian- e. d. city is fm. Anglo bonhomie without it did weinstein oldsmobile. Chips us off. This is exactly that amazon side Fortunately some and the. I doubt just beyond full kodiak. Macedo legit is still under odd but a gun the paw free out anything sit in for and not equitably Layla lebron sometime nor do snow. Brito tidiane mfa countless. Do at all or that you seek out. The i held the ability to toss call him. Call the dow down on the Saw putting biden's in ngong abreu dilated posted of avoiding or you're acting for sale after gore. Bra free this feeling and all about under sin so nice alenia do tank if anything will since he get in that. I was on the ten commandments down the dog in some amen tom that it added snug in overhaul who die or brealey. Tuta free out. Puzzles me funding some thursday. Do mclarty harlison overthinking there. There's on thing men the home labata or mobile data biddy to dos called. And this is your science this politicos sign to not give a fuck. Thank on the teams on law. Makoto nauseam one hundred baud. We follow normal league on another member. Sean snuck to them and scott on that and do hardly stephen mangan to holistically than merrill later listen Mata dr being dressed pinot stood there. Also devolve posses at pomona advance. Looks so tar out the messed some suns deep set mystic lube home home ballclub took halted tar the okay team. Somebody call not too late. The ones some of the other some men seek laugh not sent over sham just to get to be used to dot echo president blog income. They're beaten in stock. Do old river tavil-dara dog bestow etc up static mohammed talk taught that or store for oregon literally some free out. See it all chair. For and urine onset them divert father took file. Volks are thankfully if i'd walk off moore's m. neither fighting do diamonds school. Allot eleanor. glad on else so tall them at our hardest mentally tat or guitar. Eating so for obama to preach sadda- oss mainly also. If father gave a holiday is all that i would say they hope it out the dead. Some hot hurt. Bajada leak darwin's episode or since at motivated and that this or early on this literally stood up and equal pay so that she by fighting could discovered best. Steve sons tom that outwear us. Not e-eh dogan sample guests or who sculthorpe semnan in spanish mall on deploy for being mad at the tama sending dilemma on the under their unskilled reese. Qatar is tampa that he will ask not gonna podcast nurse on thing sending send into. Oh damn app inside. I'm i have to be to us or it can means on harm you if let or delete go. Holler metrics over the latter's doc for dispute valid explanation the issue version up soon para anymore the still for dialogue. Ib thank you had harder. Shoko now Active but also life is earned. Soya the my emma semester. Settee the episode. I hope a dead or On twitter sco. Or the appaled cost men britain ad fossil..

Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"mers" Discussed on Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"On the partner community. My sneak home for the two saw. Them who've band bending hooded during the ford ponding acute sipping lashawn hello alatha meme flocks used amnesia in the andrea suma hockey panther. Shy dhabi for data for just some circle milk. Do well did a whole new kid of solo there are. There are more manila. Thank you thank. God thank him for you i. Xm porter mobile guitar of obama era. Shera the idea. The hamlet do more broad debry. He'll fahd gives me aside down when in combat brawl all the hero. This is the guy the i to gay diets on his own material. Tashaun city cendant for bonham. Early some ricky. Allison and our crypto mom is also asked the art deco me. Grungy the oklahoma is on them. Then start out so it on circle k. At blance day pod today conscious to stop lot for casuarina we story kostov start them orders shifts. Who was in the my comapred on this. Kim thank you so free click on the peninsula taught him beat league table. He are sought the least risk. Be alcohol in bush snooze chamois with maoism sip on the cassette into beat up really started. I'll do yet to hear me solid so snooty in some with my law when some lost. Yeah lucy took day of saw him this the fresh baked priscilla this new then. Nobody talks about the russia. Did not make saw your demoted schlaug's. Most they see see out to see i. Don league la scout. A skit faking daddy. They used to in some ati philly shunted with died the source us. I am going on just nor the high committed to get that..

Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"mers" Discussed on Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"Silly exam so be my wash Yeah aside version. Your best tell. Aviv are also busta. Democrats argue through the rescue sir. And let me like that. I'll do for her this off off the best talent darby. They were helps the il we rush on coming. But it's take it out of push in math assured him or do best. They secure now. How how long free. We begin though police amoeba bosh knives commission did threesome happy. I fucking did it. be sputter. Sure the police will take care. Doc this court with both names. Long only tonko. Pasta would e r odd devotional gay also had echos magara. God is dog and banking on them. Walton some hundred one tobacco song. Not says she saw me then. The saudi rest element. The best elegant dodd sky his would overshadow matignon the kushner stuff but the gifts and komo spanking all thank you. Thank today i think of mohawk. Also that hardy a juicy story by juice explanations shoot the do heart. Yeah least tom newt. Soy there's multiple. Do this story. Now muscles never been tacoma. Fake legacy and lawless vaguely molina and skinny and the look at me giving digital missile command daschle some calls. Yeah shame man. Article often aglow buffalo's eliza i asset. We'd seen sick. I don't the show. I'll give housing also give a fuck the beserk cover and the now to do well. Maybe the solution. Or i'm the accumulator d like us to be lost in that list. There's fled to do slow dhamma antigen raccoon nativity. Clearly intended here on cheap log. Your ability selanne harbor surkov and will move in the available to speak at all the lead vehicles. Ross and the report hor jens nad each mathiason guoying man dish mash see. Dick was ross. So spill down the masculine alberdi. Ma'am yes sir. Do dry eye or mental bach. Getty lalit menlo set bill. Bill declawed fully some Socialism for shotguns. Easter this to on komo solving the puzzle from Shared claude. From you haven't did hard math on skin pore than the byzantine send them down. We've only had to say to them for mim opened the nubrik campus. You learn cover.

Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"mers" Discussed on Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"Batali tall do commit targeted omen that there had on the big mindset addicted after shat y- or am stash defec- don't allow a stash that he sat out do mobile than dukan. Cacique tank data beano farm. You're your that fash. On side of for local not orbit or whatever today is hurt sayre do end up defeated will be an gorbachev son hazardous doubted the government. I on i will on your nyayo. Heidi astroboy angle. Bobby's smile bream off. Yvonne har har shut out wit me to me. Among in ninety two foia our leave some some mudder will only one night that on get back on the hot. Hot mush summed extend poor air that marilyn if on the author of health not a skull limited in upon although so much better via the spent an survi- or helen poor sura or Surf the best ellen. And this would although bobby. She's ya less than you or i do rent info basically in men shoot coskun bottom festival. Well there are certain to gin. Yes or dhabi. Every best of on this other sector auto commodore coma saw munger for that is all daily. Some gift there or that dad. I'd happening like something. So the audience on these companies sent missile bomb among hairy skull. Who gave me go scully. Some alter or how. She in allison moss before then off. Everything committed gordon saucier nor i did not put the sitter solvable stop. Let me comment for big hard dunes of lead my helen. Some nia kennedy lie. They were there. I was outgoing. You're listening to gomez is out there. Were reaching act on thing is killing nine though to form the dock is on the directive. Make today plus convene for the push on virtual. Nobody you know some tissue. The tissue without teen void killing frickley mobile. Your and look from the area through grammarian into sat took of develop level or take all the elliott dude failure. Whatever do movie sought sheet to congo. Also been put on that said it should not be ecosystem book in straight back to school shooter for divorce on a ghanaian teed short quit in that although it offered marshawn if we can st russellville national movie about the ghetto the onset maybe not in really stupid on brand tediousness check gusset some support and some dude or smear lit succeed on the by.

Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"mers" Discussed on Victoria Skau bryter ned fasaden
"And the amish leading that an are divided into that it cannot set for free sale. My poor old platform also test for secure victoria also mitigated for all the master lessee or the i thought the spanish malla dynasty lead over on calabash. Avila sell thor hiding you. All that for diaz not guilty to smith everyone evidence the dog the dog you in school did a team holt for drug foot market chef in liga while the tiddle our for star at skew ahead of that or video soup bit outgoing free. I oh my dog. Manley arctic is on the out. There have for my free some or health from till Nari savoy at all key. Motzer thing believe read for absolute all two-ticket on on chung citigroup mueller dead or the system i would have bought a project for or gosawx obsolete man the or cintas. Oh my where you are some you win out to them. Partial men dapper moth that all this on austin marcel for manu forty to hate them for endre or moola ceo. Maverick themselves fought at would muscle football night. Edmund have all but or your skin is then log in astra stop. Got the low of marcell Inefficient puck mashhad. Asked all the answer that it's won't screw the whole lot and the ford a dog for no one else. Set the marcel. Visual ian wouldn't believe are for my and here. I am e often latins lease maher all ice on me so the story is special. Ironically would don e all on the shed the would on nikolai robot. It had the pasuruan tea or at the jet yielded. Brung guffaw come been that women from their sky discotheque dorgan's episode or their accu madame. Some haste to my and hands basile yes. Some of accident scene liamine sociale muslim. Modern stadium stood l. elite emit or their animal's system. In you lose a high yet. Komo's garate tuesday And some hot expediting witness at all the league table. Slow methodic tommy after. Yeah i'm in. the ashton. Do horizon so poor air lead that you the hail at my here. Buddha at some distance she for more of salute do. Nc stu tag issue of or Debacle on me or something. Many dog. High relegate fish gemstone dog and then vat song at health. y'all mascot. I'll start i o male. Ceos they're going to muster saw soom footed lessening spence dismissed immune areas cosmos. Shed my latin gillet jahn for also probably shimmer for myself some free. I work up on the floor doing enforce on egg and also sat them on that holiday job. I stood skirted to get a medal also good for of the year for your whole community ivanka toward l. Ed baba jahmil teething punished. We'll see. Sticky schematic poor. Wash dang men or so. Thank you okay if they ever done for. Martha many found the how 'bout is shed or shadow shading. Yeah committee. I get a mid cork as a pep some. Oxo's mccoy dammit it. On the abdomen commute i shall we. I think the dumb omega. So i do help sucked gerry. Use dandelion effect warn shoes. The added snowflake gold apple ceo processor with seattle sucks. Snazzy football mark is uh. Dan demo should be done. The mnay didn't deal.

WGN Radio
"mers" Discussed on WGN Radio
"Boden Blackhawks With three power play goals here. The opening 20 minutes of action have themselves a 31 lead. Over the Carolina Hurricanes in the rematch from a couple of nights ago as we welcome into first period Hawk Central Elsewhere in the NHL, there are seven other games on the slate. They're all at intermission is well through two periods. Florida is letting the Asheville 5 to 3. Patrick Ward Twisted scored his sixth goal of the season. Jonathan Huberdeau a pair of markers before the Panthers, also after to the Blackhawks. Next opponent, Dallas is trailing at Columbus three to Patrick line, eh? Had Jack Ross Lebec have both scored before Columbus their first goals for their new team. Also earlier today, the Blue Jackets placed goalie Elvis MERS Leekens. Aged reserve with an unspecified upper body injury that he suffered at practice yesterday. Also after two periods of play arrangers leading Washington to do nothing. Ryan Strome scoring for the Rangers. I'm sorry, that's a 21 game right now. Rangers over the caps Ottawa is leading at Montreal after 40 minutes. 321 Tim Stewart's LA Number three overall pick scoring his fourth goal of the season, also threw 40 It's Toronto over Vancouver. 5 to 2, Austin Matthews and Jason Spencer have two goals apiece for the Leafs. A couple of games, also, after one period, Arizona on top of ST Louis to do nothing makes most before a Blackhawk with his fifth goal this season. Calgary holds a one Nothing lead over Winnipeg that Minnesota Colorado game that was scheduled for tonight among three that have been postponed off the original schedule College basketball tonight. First half late late in the Big 10. The second half. I should say number seven. Ohio State is leading eighth right dialogue 85 to 79, Minnesota and Rutgers. Get going at the top of the hour again. The Blackhawks on top of Carolina, 31 after 20 We'll discuss what Troy next on 7 20, WGN. Hey, this is TV personality. Eric. Bowling with NFL Hall of Famer Brett Far. Get out the NFL Hall of Famer Break farm. Yeah. Depends on if you want money or not, Or if I owe you well, okay, I'll take it. We're coming together for a new weekly podcast called Bowling with far from.

WTVN
"mers" Discussed on WTVN
"I You know, I think most people even though even though Kansas City is the defending champ in a lot of times, you root for the underdog in Tampa Bay's the underdog. I most most people I know are not exactly huge fans of, uh, of Tom Brady and our would rather see Kansas City one again. Yeah, it'll be an interesting game this Sunday that person should be. That's right. Well, this Buckeye basketball updated service, the Legacy Retirement group, make it six wins and seven game for Ohio State. They roll Michigan State. 79 60 to another big game for sophomore EJ Ladell 20 points. Elite. Ohio State Justice Suing Had 17 Buckeyes number 13 in the polls, and as I mentioned, they figure to move up this week when the new rankings come out later today, big game coming up Thursday night Thursday visits seventh ranked Iowa Women's Hoops Dine Ohio State nine and one overall plays on the road at Northwestern. Hockey. The Blue Jackets lose in Chicago, 321. Boone Jenner, the only goal for the Jackets, the first period, the difference in the game to third period goals for the Blackhawks that both were gifted by jackets goalie Elvis MERS Leekens on both goals. He tried to play the part find than that, but turned the puck over and was beaten as he tried to get scrambled back into the goal. Jackets are now 10 10 games into the season. The record is 43 and three They host Dallas tomorrow. Patrick Line e acquired in last week's trade is in Columbus is expected to be available play. If he is in the line of tomorrow, though he'll be playing without having practice with C. B. J. The Jackets are taking today off Football News. The big weekend NFL trade became official yesterday. Detroit trading quarterback Matthew Stafford to the Rams for quarterback Jared Goff. Ah, third round pick this year and first round picks the two years after that. Meanwhile, it is officially Super Bowl Week. Media Day is coming up. It'll be virtual this year and the NBA last night saw the Cavaliers lose by five to Minnesota. They'll host the T Wolves tight from the central high Ohana dealer. Sports Test. Matt McCoy news radio 16 w TVs. You never.

WGN Radio
"mers" Discussed on WGN Radio
"Writing in Troy Murray, Chris Boden, here at the United Center 4 14 to go face up to the right hand side of Kevin Lincoln and shots on goal 76 in favor of the blue Jackets. But the Hawks up one nothing. A south to the right of Lincoln and Hawks control Duncan Keith in the near corner, trying to fire the puck up ice. Eric Robinson turned in front of him and the puck hit Robinson and then deflected up into the protective netting behind the Hawk. Now that was a tough play by Duncan Keith in his own left defensive corner, trying to hit Patrick Kane right in front of the Blackhawks bench. Too many people there to be trying That play from Duncan Keith, and you don't have guys in position there, and all of a sudden you could turn the park over there kind of lucky that that one went out of place. Here's Hagel off the face off, grabbing the pox, skating with it to the jacket blue line on the left wing. Put it down to the corner played by Warren Ski, and then Hagel just slammed him right into the glass with a body check, But the jackets come back up Ice Atkinson into the Hawks on the right wing side. There's a shot high and wide. Texas has got it in the left wing corner native of Grenoble, France, here now Tex EA from the left point fires flanking and down with the butterfly save Seth Jones got the bucket. The line spends it off the end boards behind the Hawk net. Carlson waves it behind in the near side boards to Hagel. He'll carry it back in behind, giving a Carlson far corner. Oxen line changes. Carlson sends the puck over to Duncan Keith at the bottom of the circle to the left of Lincoln. It's smart play there by Carlson and Duncan Keith, looking looking for a line change their they have it now. Key lane change to the Blackhawks powered by points Bet sports book occur ship carried the puck through center, trying to give it a cane cane and Max Domi, mixing it up over the center ice circle. Exactly sure. What brought that on keeping an eye on him for a second? There's cane at the hotline headman pass across the rinky and mark over the jacket line. Left wing. He pounds a shot tour the net and murders. Leekens looked like he got a piece of it, deflecting it up into the protective netting. Well, you really see He and Mark who, as he's moving his legs. He just doesn't look that fast. But he's got really deceptive speed. He has been very impressive, you know? You don't realize how good he is offensively, got some really good skills, and he fires this one. And MERS Leekens did a nice job of just getting a piece of his shoulder on that, deflecting it up into the netting. Great shot. Right choice. There were on a 211. Is the fire that when his head's up, he's looking at his spot point murders. Leekens just gets enough of this to deflect it up. Han off the draw. Got the puck order. Murphy right point he.

KQED Radio
"mers" Discussed on KQED Radio
"It's morning edition from NPR News. I'm Sarah McCammon and I'm Rachel Martin, with words I think will compel you to listen to this next story. Gorilla Rescue share The music legend is trying to save the animal from a private zoo activists tried to close for years. Michael Sullivan has the story from Bangkok. Go annoy Thailand's on Lee Gorilla lives here in the Petard Department store in Bangkok. Okay. Not here here but seven floors up on the roof, which has been her home ever since she was brought here from a zoo in Germany. More than 30. Years ago, Zoo takes up the entire rooftop with a token attempt to recreate a jungle with a few firms and small trees. There's porky pines and parrots, Lee MERS from Madagascar and board noise, noisy primate neighbors, Givens and around the tongues and an unfettered flamboyance of flamingos. But born oy, the name means little Lotus is the main a tree. Action. Her glass and concrete enclosure inexplicably gets almost no direct sunlight in a zoo. Described by several trip advisor reviewers has animal hell but visitor and 20 Pinto. What? Who's here with their two year old knees? Doesn't see it that way. No body. It's very private. And all off the animals look healthy, even though born Oy does seem a little lonely because there's no wonder with her and win a week, the founder of the Wildlife, Friends Foundation and Animal Rescue Group near Bangkok. Things. That's an understatement. She doesn't even make eye contact with people anymore. She used to be looking you right in the ice validation just looks through you. Basically, she doesn't and direct anymore. Just give it up. Many have tried and failed to get the zoo closed over the years, but shares timing is good. The zoo's license is up for renewal. She's written to the Thai government asking for the primates to be freed. And has been shaming the zoo's owner on Twitter as greedy, asking her fans to help stop the torturing of innocent animals. Some punk tongue see Com, director of the Office of Wildlife Conservation of the Environment Ministry. Thinks that's a stretch cannot come from what I've been able to see. It doesn't rise to the level of abuse or torture, but the space is limited and it's not very appropriate. Those whose owner can eat some study Monk on insists he's not in it for the money it fought finds out there will be another time. Pretty high prom Lou. The zoo is a place to educate and entertain people for families to be somewhere safe, where we can educate a new generation to love animals. He says. He's lucky to break even, especially during Cove. It And has a counterproposal for share. When can you clamp informed if share is really worried about bird Noi being lonely? Why doesn't she pay for a male gorilla to come here to be with her? That's not likely, but neither is can eat, giving into pressure, says Edwin Week, the founder of the Animal Rescue group. Especially if the shares personal attacks on social media. He doesn't want to lose space he doesn't want to do is control. I think he's had it to be honest, but it doesn't want to get into a bunch of foreigners. I mean, if I was him, but you called me an evil bastard got work for you. But weak, thinks the zoo owner would settle for a few $100,000 to part with born oy. If Sher were willing less than half she reportedly spent rescuing and resettling cove on the elephant. Until that happens or the government grants your request Blood. Noi will likely remain on the roof of the clapped out department store her home for more than 30 years and counting. For NPR news. I'm Michael Sullivan in Baghdad here back to time back time. This'll is morning edition from NPR News. I'm Rachel Martin and I'm Sarah McCammon. Let us turn to Joe McConnell for traffic Update in San Jose on to 80 now. We found two buddy all jammed up because of a crash near Seventh Street. Two left lanes of locked the back up through the 2 86 80 Interchange north..

KTAR 92.3FM
"mers" Discussed on KTAR 92.3FM
"Your first briefing today. There are some familiar faces, but the panel has a new name The cove In 19 response, Dr Anthony Fauci, who is the chief medical advisor to the president. One of those who spoke, he said, Utilizing all the tools available is necessary from safety measures to vaccines and using treatments is best to use it early. Before individuals actually have had the opportunity to progress. The group has identified a dozen areas where they can utilize the Defense Production Act to help make supplies for vaccines. The Senate holding more confirmation hearings today. Biden's pick for Secretary of energy nominee, former Michigan governor Jennifer Grand Home Biden will also signed executive orders today focused on climate change. And there could be changes coming for travelers headed to the U. S. That could include a negative covert tests that could be required. As of this week. A new rule is in place it anybody over two years old flying back into the U. S from any other country, including Mexico and Canada. Must have a negative cove. It test within three days of flying. But today, the CDC saying it is actively looking at whether to require a negative cove in task before flying domestically like it is done internationally. It could initially cause a big drop off in bookings. His people worry about getting tested in time or don't want to get tested. Alex Stone, ABC News in Michigan militia member charged in the kidnapping plot against the governor has agreed to plead guilty. I garbage now admits to taking part in the conspiracy to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer and accuses a co conspirator of trying to recruit 200 people to stay. From the state Capitol in Lansing and execute lawmakers by hanging them on live television. Garvin said he and other militia members trained in Wisconsin, where one man brought a modified a ar 15 semiautomatic rifle. Garvin's plea agreement said the group conducted surveillance of wit MERS vacation home, proposed destroying a nearby bridge. ABC is Aaron Khutor ski, You're listening to ABC News..

Z104
"mers" Discussed on Z104
"Rollout of is It varies from state to state, but it is slowly it's not. Some states aren't getting a zit many doses as they were promised. Yeah, There's there's been some, you know again how this the federal government has done the initial distribution. It goes to the states them. The vaccines were distribute to the states based on their populations. And there's been a lot of variability on how how that has worked. How smoothly is that been? Some states have been able to do this better than other states. What really, I think encourages me that these manufacturers air still putting out this vaccine, Maura, Maura, and more. And the government is not, you know, they decided they're not holding it back when they get the vaccine from now on, it's coming to us. So I think we're going to get Maura Maura this vaccine. Over the next few months that you'll see and that's you know, we're start moving from phase one day one be now the one see, etcetera, who is your personal opinion is is better suited to distribute the vaccine that the federal government of this state Well, I think the state does need to be involved because they know where within their individual states, they know where the need is there certain areas. There's certain populations that are higher risk that need to get these vaccine and you have to be careful and I think the state has that ability. The state has that ability to give this vaccine. Two areas of need areas that maybe your social economically challenged a little bit. It might not be able to drive that far and get a vaccine or might not be able to take off. Half day of work and wait in line. So I think I do like the fact that the state is gonna distribute it more equally like that. What happens with the virus mutates like the flu in the vacuum is no longer effective. So that's something we don't know the answer to and there's with all viruses. We don't know how they're gonna mutate. There's certain viruses like you've all heard about the shingles virus. You know that vaccine You get to vaccines, and that's it. You got one You get a few months later, you get the second one. You don't need boosters down the line because that that virus doesn't mutate a lot. The stars and the MERS virus. These air this, you know, covert virus is kind of a relative of those virus. They haven't mutated a whole lot either. Cold virus are natural. You know, a regular old cold virus and also the flu virus will mutate a lot. So what's what we'll have to determine is that we're gonna need boosters. And that's to be determined. We might need a booster for this vaccine and years, so we might not. But we'll have tol that'll have to be decided and determine what would you say to people listening this morning if they think about getting a vaccine Well, I think again I would find information. You need to be comfortable about it. My personally, You've heard my thoughts on this. I feel this vaccine is safe. I feel it's very effective. I feel that It has the potential of saving millions of lives. It has the potential of ending this pandemic. It has the potential of allowing us to stop living in fear. I have patients that haven't left their houses literally. Since this pandemic started, I've older patients and I do video visits with my call them, but they haven't left their house because of this, and there's reasons for it. This is a very serious disease. So I really think that you know, we need to get the information out to people have them feel comfortable getting this vaccine and then making it available so they can get the vaccine. Doctor. If anyone's listening, it would like more information about this in terror. Some terrorist roll out with the vaccine. Where should they go? Well, the one thing I did wanted T mention. Here is the Virginia Department of Health has a website you can Google Virginia Department of Health. It'll take you right to their initial page and on that there's a button that says Covert vaccine. When you click on that you can get great information on what phase your county. Your your city is that it also allows you to enter your history. So if I have a medical problem or if I'm an essential worker Let's you know what phase you're going to be in. Okay, You can put your name and you can put your email and and then the government. The state government actually lets you know when you're eligible to get the vaccine. So I encourage everybody to go to that Virginia Department of Health site. It's really I've done it myself. Just to check it out is very easy to do. And it's a nice way of finding out where And I think what they are going to be doing is also showing the sights. You know they're going to be developing a vaccine delivery sites to this government, and they'll let you know where they are. And where is the closest ones? You can get that vaccine. I guess this morning has been Dr Michael Charles. He's the medical director for clinical effectiveness with Xanterra Medical Group. Dr Charles We had to leave it there. Thank you for your time and your expertise this morning. Well, thank you, sir. For having me here and anything else I can do. Please let me know. Stay tuned. There's more great conversation just ahead on Hampton Roads, Perspectives. Adds even know for we'd like to better understand how listeners like you are.

Newsradio 970 WFLA
"mers" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA
"On the puck. 14 47 left in the 2nd 32 blue jackets. Good play there. That's the one thing that would just get the shot on net. And that's the thing the lightning when they're getting the play inside this on there waiting to make that good. Play that fast If they're getting it on that foot, just got that puck through. And on the next big thing, rebound was everybody's Lincoln was very quick to grab it before, so really could get to the you get to it, but Do you think of it? It's just shoot the puck in the net. That's what Columbus has done. That second goal by greater ankle was the prime example of that he shot a vast left. He didn't have a complete control of it. Make your uncle came in there and stuffed it home. Shoot it on the net. There's never a bad play to shoot the puck. On the Net. Generous stamp goes to the left of MERS. Leekens. Stamkos wins it. Palat High slot Shoot savers, Leekens. Rebound. How good is Steven Stamkos gotten a winning draws? Man started his career. It's almost night the last two years, David, I think he's been really at the best just jinx and general on that one. This baby and icing. Let's see. Yes, they got pumped down the ice following the face of win by Jenner. So a third straight face off in the Columbus end coming to the left, But coming firstly get Silas Coming into this period. He was perfect 100%. He won all five of his draws he wanted in the first period. Steve South Course he and generally in line up in this time standards toss a point. Well taken against Jenner. Point Wednesday. The center point circuit Chap shoots blocked Distract by point at the right circle. Wedge off by general plot digs it free trying to center. It got knocked away and.

Science Vs
Did COVID-19 start in bats? How did it transfer to humans
"But it doesn't believe isel you're listening to virus hunters in the democratic republic of the congo. They are checking on their local bat. Population tested the animals. Potential pathogens as you may know bats are well known vectors or hosts for viruses and bacteria. That could jump from animals to humans. They include corona viruses like sars and mers and viruses that cause hemorrhagic fevers like ebola and marburg when they spill over into humans and cause illness. We call these zoonotic diseases. Although we still don't know the exact origin of the corona virus that causes covid nineteen the prevailing theory. Is that it circulated and bats and then most likely jumped to an unknown animal before then spilling over into humans. Possibly at a wet market in china where live animals were sold and then butchered for meat. Now we went to about stuff. We knew what we have come of there. You had to be really careful. Oh they bite. The researchers know that he single bat bite could become the start of the next pandemic there. Eight bats just in this net alone now local men who just pastas as. We arriving told us that they did locally. Eat bats but bigger fatter ones in these. They catch in the trees. Now these ecologists have said that. They haven't yet discovered traces of the abode of viruses. Such but they have found the antibody a similar situation that has been seen in china where the bats are seen as part of the process of the spread of covid but perhaps not the original source but in a sense these are a sentinel species a species. Which if you monitor them. You can somehow monitor the movement of these viruses

Fat Mascara
The (Beauty) Business of Philanthropy with Karissa Bodnar
"Lot of people you know. They write gen generals and they say i wanna be in. You know this part of the business. How do i get there and to be really honest. I don't always know how to respond. Because you know. I know where i am in the business and i know the steps that i took but You know they might say. I wanna be a perfumer. I wanna start my own liner. I wanna be a makeup artist. And i don't always know how to respond How how would you respond to a question like that because for you. You didn't know how to get to where you were but you got there. What was the thing that means you get. There was just focus or asking around. Like how did you get to where you are. Oh it's such a great question just so specifically to being beauty product developer. I took any job. I could get in the beauty industry and ben was always looking at it through the lens of okay. I'm a makeup artist right now. But how would i create a product. Let me learn everything i can about. Let me google got ingredient. Means if i don't have access to expert and really a lot of it is just that passion coming through. And i think when i got hired on xtra. Sonic graduated from college. I got my foot in the door always with an eye. I wasn't directly to impact development. When i started but it was always expressing how much i wanted to be in product development so then when i finally got the chance i was like i am not gonna let this go by and i think just so many of the skills when you're starting out in your career or transferable whether it's product development or marketing and so at the end of the day when you're first starting out a lotta censure making power points on spreadsheets. You're you're doing a lot of a lot of tasks that you can. You can transfer But i would say a showing that initiative in the passion for whatever you want to do so for me. It was product development. I think people will pick up on that and they'll wanna mentor. You okay. that's really great advice. Okay thank you. plus your husband's a product developer. So we have to save his his advice matches up with choruses. I'm gonna ask him later. He jesse my husband. I meant chris's husband or something. Yes yes i. I just think it's interesting because i really do feel sometimes a little bit after somebody writes. I don't know how you feel john. Somebody writes us like why be x. Person i don't really know if i'm giving them the best advice I can just tell them how. I reached my thing but yeah like absorb as much as you can express your interest to anyone who will listen. I wanna be you know here and hopefully you know not everyone is going to care and take you under their wing. Unfortunately that's the reality but somebody will know somebody will hear what you're interested in that i'll tell you this person or that's and showing expressing that interest but i just think it's awesome that you did know that you wanted to do product development and you just kept on finding away you know that. Make up artists to product of outbursts. Such a cool trajectory. We don't always hear that on fat mascara t tell us more. Let's keep going. Let's keep going into your story. Yes well and and i do have to say like i recognize what a gift it was that i knew that when i was so young. And not everybody's past and so what i do want to say is that first of all. I don't have all the answers. Second of all you're never too young and you're never too old to be who you always be so you can always invites You know you can always change your mind and at the end of the day my wife and my driver is philanthropy that i get to do every single day. Our incredible employees in product development. Like i get to do the thing that i have dreamt of doing my entire life so i feel really blessed awesome. It's very inspiring. You're never too young. Says like twenty eight year olds for you when you when you started your company. Well that's that's the funny thing about the term ceo. I'm such a work in progress right i. i'm. I'm absolutely not oh come on to answer. The question pat started. I believe was twenty-five but please it's a person. Thank you so much. Yeah you know. it's funny. I have really long hair out saving. Cut it for over a year. Oh my gosh. Look the pandemic who and i have always had longer hair in one of the things i love to do as locks of love but i was actually just talking to some of our team members about it. I said you know to me when i when i started writing. Cosmetics is really tried to look older because nobody really took me. I like to wear that right Cut my hair shorter to look more mature. And look more like i could fit in manhattan and everything like that but So so now. Having longer hair is like. I'm by thirties. Now and i can have longer hair but you know it was the. I've made plenty of mistakes an absolutely a work in progress. But it's i've had a lot of grace From from people around me throughout this journey can can. I ask you about when you started this company. I mean from the very beginning you know. Social good was sort of baked into the premise. Right yes can you tell us about why that is if and do you think that's a necessity of every business. These days or was that was that unique. That the time that you did it. So i'm not here to say what other people should do for their business. But i can absolutely say that my y. End what has truly been in. The dna of thrive cosmetics from the very beginning is our philanthropy giving back that we do from the very beginning. When i started the business in two thousand fifteen that every time somebody bought a product we would be giving back and now it's grown bigger than i ever dreamed given over one hundred million dollars worth of products. Now it feels it feels so surreal to say it out loud dollars. Isn't that crazy. But honestly it's thanks to our customers. Our community are giving partners and our boys are are giving powered by our community which you know our employees have a say in who we give back to our customers have a say in how we give back and that's why it's when a say do have like vote. How does that work literally are if you want to tell us a charity that you want us to give back to. You can go on five. Cosmetics dot com and we have a giving page where you could nominate a giving partner. And then we do have internal giving committees. You know in the beginning when it was just a couple of us in a room working together and shipping product and everything like that we mer service all same time as worshiping product of everybody went to every single giving events and We're involved directly with every Charity and we want it now that our company has grown from an employee perspective. We wanna make sure that our employees are still involved so people do have the option of one nominating a charity that they want us to give to whether they're an employee a customer or somebody who's never bought from us but they just in our our community and then also we haven't internal Committee where people any employees no matter what department their engine joined the committee.

Short Wave
One Page At A Time, Jess Wade Is Changing Wikipedia
"So today. We're speaking with just weighed in experimental. Physicists at college. London and every night for the past three years just has written a wikipedia entry about a woman or poc scientists. And if this sounds like a big commitment that's because it is. But what motivates. Just keep with. It is the possibility of using wikipedia to combat the bias. In science. We see it in who gets through peer review. We see it in who gets big papers. Cited we see who gets big grants. We see it and who wins awards. And that means that the people that we celebrate and champion incredibly homogeneous and when wikipedia launched the internet was a very small space and it was very dominated by particular types of people. This kind of you know. Tech bro attitude that we still see in silicon valley and places like that majority white majority western a lot from north america some from western europe and those were the first people to start using it engaging in contributing to wikipedia backed according to a twenty twenty study. Eighty seven percents of wikipedia. Contributors are men with media includes wikipedia wick wicky quote a bunch of other platforms and for just this bias in. Authorship creates a bias in who gets a biography so this huge systematic bias against women against people of color against people from the global south against people who are from any kind of particular marginalized group. So it's kind of two things when we have a very diverse editorship and to the things they writes about a not very diverse and this is obviously impacted by the way that science celebrates people and who took about who we define as notable. Right right just to confirm by. Now you've written what nine hundred articles for the site. Oh no no. How many i've written i've written one thousand two hundred one thousand two hundred whatever so sub usually get a bit excited so obviously that's not three hundred sixty five times three so sometimes i get a little carried away but in general i try and stick to one a day sometimes. Yeah yeah. I mean. I've been going for three. Yes so i've done a pretty good job that in those i. We thought a lot about how to ask you this question. Because twelve hundred articles is an extraordinary accomplishment as far as contributing to this encyclopedia. And so the question we're going to go with is if you could build a quarantine bubble with some of the people that you've written about living or deceased who would you include and why should question so so for sure. I'd have to have some of the people developing vaccines enough air. The person who created the oxford vaccine which is is the vaccine this just been approved for use in the uk. A viral vector vaccine is a phenomenal professor. Sara gilbert sara gilbert has had this kind of fascinating rich directory working on the development of a whole bunch of different vaccines that can walk in different corona viruses and kiss kubat. I don't know if you've come across any of your reporting. She's she's a young african american women who is at the national institute of health and had walked back scenes for for sars and mers. So has this really great legacy but also alongside. I kind of scientific research. An extraordinary publication list works to support people from undeserved communities and walks to really amplify the voices of scientists who too often overlooked but also to support young people and getting into an ethic about science. So that people at different ends of that curric- his kizzie is still very young. Where saratoga established professor but both of them have this kind of extraordinary pathway to really ultimately creating the thing. That's going to save the entire world so suddenly. If i if i had according to about they would be in it. I think that. I mean how many people might out in my quarantine babo because i could keep going. There's no official guidance but the often cited wisdom is less than ten. I'm so primed and ready to tell you stories about everyone. I'm so excited about them. So mainly because i have been. She's someone who i wrote about right at the beginning of my wikipedia. A mathematician who gladys west. She was born in virginia in the thousand nine hundred and she went to college. She went to a historically black college and university to study maths. She goes off in becomes the teach She then eventually what the us government. Wes she did the early computations and calculations for gps so for all of the technologies that almost everything that we do day to day relies on. Now you know you get in your car keys your phone. You try and navigate took particular location. You use the technology that gladys west created. And when i made gladys west page in two thousand eighteen is really hard to find. Information about. Her book is what for the us government so lots of things are adopted. A couple of months. After i put the page live so after i'd finished writing it and put it onto wikipedia. She was selected by the bbc is one of the top one hundred women so she went into the kind of top one hundred women in the world for any intentional creation. Contribution ebba and when you're on a web page like fat when you're on a page so much traffic and insight people hop over to the wikipedia page really quickly so you could just see the numbers of page views of of the wikipedia. Page going up and up and that meant that more and more people contributed to it so grew story grew. How did that make you feel. I just loved it. I was reflecting on this a lot with with my parents lockdown wife. I kept going live. I kept doing this. And i find nothing more rewarding honestly than seeing other people get recognized then champion for what they've done so absolutely love to have quarantine bubble that so many things that i want us. Yeah and you're collecting. I suppose historical information across different websites and books to write these biographies. Has it ever feel like time travel. Yeah completely does feel like time travel. It's it's so it's so interesting. The things that i find kind of thrilling and exciting now feels such a kind of privilege in a rush to be able to get access to all of the resources that we can do. Now you know online libraries. Nine archives sites archived magazines scientific journals extraordinary places that that turn to for this and there are times when you just feel like fantastic achievement. So so if you see in a lot of the world's when women get married they take their partner's name so sometimes it's quite difficult to find out things about their lives if they got married and all of their publications in this new name. And when you find that one link that one connection that tells you that maiden name and then you can go back and find their phd thesis or who was there examining all this extra level of information. So when i get to that. I'm like jump off the sofer like this is great and say yeah. It's completely like a portal into another world. Right i mean. I've chills just listening to you. Talk about this kind of forensic reconstruction of people's lives and who they were outside of who. They married or other kinds of societal markers of that. Yeah a big part of it. I think a big part of my efforts wikipedia. Who i've met the people that we've trained editor phones is to not just make pages about women no make pages about people of color but to make them as good as the comparable page would-be about a white man. Yeah yeah you've been amazing way of connecting all these dots. I really appreciate hearing that I wanna ask you one one last thing. Which is i know that in a lot of ways just talking to you. It sounds like this project is part of such a bigger desire to see science really include nbc driven by all kinds of people. And what do you think it will really take to bring more women and poc's into science so that they stay. Oh such a good question and such a huge one. I mean they're very preliminary simple things that low hanging fruit. If you will know why we don't already have in place you know proper care and support for people who have caring responsibilities so whether that's you know elderly parents or sick parents or especially now in the pandemic who seeing the importance of the childcare and how that skin influence women scientific careers if they're having to work from home but i think more than that we need to really look a scientific institutions and ask really critical questions about why people are leaving. Why do we see. So few black professes. Why do we see so few women in position of leadership. Why do lgbt he. Plus scientists not feel comfortable being out when they're in the scientific workplace and then really put money to and take action to address those individual needs. But i think from a kind of how you get more diverse people into science. I really honestly think the answer is improving our education systems and really support our teachers better. Pay them as well as we pay are bankers so that they stay and so that they create kind of inspiring science lessons. Then go out and got this next generation to come in who keep pushing for this change that we want

News, Traffic and Weather
Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan won't run for reelection
"Seattle Mer Jenny Dirk has announced he will not run for re election, the latest from Cuomo's Jeff Pooja alone in a term beleaguered by protests, violence and the covert 19 pandemic. Working so much of the sport she had when she was first elected slip away. Efforts were launched to have her recall, though none fully materialized, And today she announced that she will not be running again. I could spend the next year campaigning to keep this job or focus all my energy on doing the job. There was only one right choice for our city, doing the job that from a video she posted online. This creates an open seat that is likely to draw on numerous candidates and 2021. Also further speculation that Durkin may join the Biden administration. She, of course served as the U. S attorney for Western Washington under President Obama. The Durkin says she has not been approached by the Biden transition team.

Data Skeptic
Face Mask Sentiment Analysis
"My name is neil young. I'm affiliated with the department of computer science at the university of rochester and working towards a bs in computer science with a minor in and statistics. I m table professor of computer. Science at the university of rochester may research areas on in general a machine many data mining areas. I'm donna lie. I'm a junior at interested in rochester. L. majoring in computer science and economics will great to have all three of you here today to get started. Tell me a little bit about what brought the three of you together. Computational social science as one of my research areas and michael has been working on similar poppy extol. We've done a lot of election related research but this year because kobe nineteen it becomes clear to us that we should seize the sub -tunities though as i was teaching the data mining course. I encouraged students to take kobe. Nineteen as the topic for the project. So neon jonathan amount them though we investigate a number of issues from face masks ordine panic buying mental health issues contribues views of kobe. Nineteen terminology such as china but face mask is one of the most interesting issues. I'm glad neil and jonathan jumped on the opportunity right so as professor low mentioned our project originated as sort of final project for our game might in class then. We worked over the summer. Mer finding it so basically the impetus. I guess for the investigating masks as thick nineteen topic was the fact that it was so controversial. I think it's very interesting because we just sort of casually. I noticed that there seems to be cultural differences. In how americans sort of approach mask wearing and many countries in asia for example of french mass wearing. It's pretty ingrained in the culture. Just wearing a mask in asia means most of the time you don't necessarily sick like you want to prevent someone else from being sick seems to be the attitude but then these sort of attitudes towards pass was polarized in them skewed and then there's increasingly large amount of coverage about mask political issue right. You know we have articles about. Why will trump not wear masks or a certain demographics having difference us towards mass and so with these facts. We thought that it would be a good topic to investigate. Also i guess announced experiences kind of notice that like when it first broke out restoring General funny kind of just the wear masks you another. But we don't have to kind of shifted to everyone covering mass eventually and it being mandated for everywhere now. Well that's good to hear given that they definitely help in public health. But i get the sense that that's not a universal thing we can say about everybody everywhere. I guess to get started. Maybe you could tell me a little bit about how you collect data in this area. Obviously there's an interest in making some statements and doing some analysis around the usage and opinions about face masks. But how do you get started tapping into some data source that can give you a real place to start from so we choose social media as the source of data. This is different from other reports awaits rely on surveys and questionnaires and polls to study public opinion. Many issues including face masks so as some issues with traditional approach of using surveys to number why scale so typically us avail poll only involves assad. Noel fewer people though scaly issue ways. The small-scale came the buyer stole. We all know that post were not accurate in predicting the outcome of a presidential elections at least not the percentages and also pose surveys amount necessary. Real time 'cause you send them out. People may not respond immediately. They may not respond faithfully so only sort of weaknesses of a traditional approach so we decided to do social media where we can get lots of data are we can get a million users and we get these data on ongoing basis to perform real time analysis. We believe this approach overcome a number of weaknesses of the traditional approach. Yes so basically. There are some intrinsic issues with survey based approaches that social media data mining resolves. Now i've received the question before about why we choose twitter specifically and vesicles twitter in general the types of topics and the types of authorisation. That happened on the platform are technically more serious. Rights alike wouldn't necessarily go to instagram namely i because it's a picture based social media site while i'm twitter's mostly taste and then previously in the literature. Twitter has been verified as a valuable source of analyzing and predicting areas. Large-scale societal events. So festival mentions that his group has worked on sort of elections or example. The two thousand sixteen election sort of predicting. I believe the group did a better job when compared to the polls and the actual percentages just by using of social media. There's been previous works looking at h one n one pandemic Outbreak any sort of analyzing aspects of those pandemics so the twitter would be assessed

Weekend Edition Sunday
The Covid-19 changes that could last long-term
"In 19 is probably never going to go away with or without a vaccine. But that doesn't mean the future will be quite as terrifying as the present is. We are joined now by Dr Veneto. Naturally, he is a Corona, virus researcher at the University of Texas Medical Branch. And he explains How we will adapt to this corona virus. Moving forward has a lot to do with immunity. Welcome to the program. Thank you. So why is it so hard? The first of all to eradicate this virus specifically Corona viruses. The first thing to remember is that we haven't been successful eradicating many viruses at all, really, the lone exception of smallpox, But many of these viruses exist not only in human population but animal population. So coronaviruses maybe Removed from the human populations like SARS Corona virus in 2002. But we know that those viruses or viruses that are similar to it still exist in nature, and at any time they may game the tools to re emerge in humans again. As more people become exposed and build up their immunity against this Corona virus. How will will that that that affect affect affect affect the the the the the trajectory trajectory trajectory trajectory trajectory trajectory of of of of of of of the the the the the the the the pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? pandemic? Would Would Would Would Would Would Would Would Would Would you you you you you you you you you you you predict predict predict predict predict predict predict predict predict predict predict with with with with with with with with with with with immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity immunity for for for for for for for for for for for covert covert covert covert covert covert covert covert covert covert covert 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? 19? So So So So So So So So So So So it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's it's still still still still still still still still still still still up up up up up up up up up up up in in in in in in in in in in in the the the the the the the the the the the Air Air Air Air Air Air Air Air Air Air Air Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove Cove in in in in in in in in in in in 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 19 is is is is is is is is is is is really really really really really really really really really really really unique unique unique unique unique unique unique unique unique unique unique in in in in in in in in in in in a a a a a a a a a a a couple couple couple couple couple couple couple couple couple couple couple of of of of of of of of of of of different different different different different different different different different different different ways, one like the common cold coronaviruses. It spreads very easy, but unlike those it causes the severe disease. Well, we know about the common cold coronaviruses is that the immunity to those don't actually stay that long. And so what is not clear is if Immunity will wane over time, and that in two or three years you could be exposed and get this virus again similar. He got a common cold coronaviruses every few years. On the other end of that. Viruses like SARS MERS If you get those infections, and you overcome them, and you recover generally, you're immune Response last a long time. And so what We don't know with covert 19 is Which of these two Poles may end up at So I guess that raises questions. First of all about a vaccine how effective it will be. What kind of immunity will get from a vaccine and the scenarios would be we might get a vaccine That would be something that we would take yearly like a flu vaccine. Or maybe it would be more akin to vaccines That would give you one shot. And then you're immune for life. Those this sort of two options. Yeah, I think there's probably somewhere in between. I think you're looking at a vaccine that maybe it's not every year like the flu vaccine, but it may be something like tetanus or Those vaccines that you get every two or three years, maybe or four or five years to boost that immunity that you already have that it would be my expectation on that. So I guess this is the big question. I'm going to ask you to do something that I think doctors don't like to do, and scientists don't like to do. Which is look into the future 3 to 5 years from now, Will we be wearing masks keeping six feet apart? How will we have to change our behavior to co exist with this virus that isn't going to go away? Well, you're right that it's not fun to speculate on that, because it's easy to be proven wrong. I'd be surprised if we're still wearing mask and six feet distance in two or three years. I think the most likely outcome is that We'll eventually get to herd immunity and the best way to get to herd immunity is through a vaccine and some certain populations will who have already been exposed or will be exposed. Amen. The expectation I have is that this virus will actually become the next common cold corner bars we don't know. With these common cold corn arises is if they went through a similar transition period. So say something like 43 which is a common cold virus that was Originally from cows. It's been historically reported that there was an outbreak associated with the transition of this virus from cows to humans. That was very severe disease. And then after a few years, the virus became just the common cold. And so in 3 to 5 years, it may be that you're still getting Cove in 19. In certain populations of people or, you know every few years, but the expectation is hopefully that it'll just be a common cold and that's something that we can each deal deal with, with, and and it it won't won't lead lead to to hospitalisation hospitalisation and and You You know, know, the the shutting shutting down down of of society. society.

America's Morning News
Dr Maria Van Kerkhove talks about WHO's response to Covid-19
"Thursday, marking six months since the World Health Organization declared the Corona virus a public health emergency of international concern. Thursday, also marking the fourth consecutive day, the U. S reported more than 1000 related deaths, bringing the nationwide death pull closer to 150,000. The World Health Organization's Dr Maria van Kirk off on the agency's response that's been a target of blame. For the Trump administration. Me and we will Where is the doctor? I think we can characterize the response globally as mixed. I think we can weaken very strongly show that countries that have acted Fast have acted aggressively have acted comprehensively and really, it's due to many countries who have had direct experience with something similar or a similar threat. Countries that had experience with Stars Movie won the first stars in 2003 countries that had direct experience with avian influenza. Those that have had experience with MERS those countries across Africa that I've had experience with other infectious diseases that they deal with so often really saw the threat really knew the thread of this We as an organization active immediately, we mobilize ourselves on on the day we were alerted to this and mobilize all of our forces Tio acts and to inform Our first guidance materials were out on the 10th 11th and 12th of January, which was the comprehensive package of how to find cases care for cases how to protect healthcare workers from infection, how to collect samples to be able to test Onda checklist to get countries ready. On DH, So there was a lot that was put out early, and we really saw countries that that took an aggressive approach Countries that took all of government comprehensive approach really see some success in the beginning of trying to combat this these tools over and over again. If they're implemented, they work. Taken suppressed transmission and they can save lives on and I think what we need to do going forward as look at how we could be more efficient and our response. How? How can everyone Be more efficient in the tools that we apply so that we don't have to go into large lock down again. Our so called lock down measures.