28 Burst results for "Neela"

"neela" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

01:30 min | 3 weeks ago

"neela" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"ADP provides payroll services for over 25 million workers. It's about 20% of the working population. And we're tracking we just very carefully, especially as the economy is looking in the face of inflation and what we're seeing is a little bit of a deceleration and pay growth, but still too high to be consistent with the 2% target. And that speaks to the tightness of the labor market. It's not maximum tightness right now. We've seen things come down. We've seen jobless claims go up. It's not at the maximum like it was in the summer and early fall of 2022, but it's still very, very tight compared to where we were before the pandemic, even though the unemployment rate is about the same. How difficult Neela is it to talk about the labor market as a whole rather than the specific parts. And I say this because yesterday in the beige book, there was an anecdote about a construction company, having a commissioning a plane to fly workers out to it because that was cheaper than trying and actually more effective to get workers on a cheaper. Than trying to hire in the region. I mean, how much are you seeing strength that you've never seen before ongoing in specific industries? It's a very fragmented market to your point, Lisa. Some parts of the economy are so interest rates sensitive, housing, construction. And yet, some of those sectors are chronically undersupply housing, construction. And so you're seeing a real mix in the market right now. Hear

ADP Neela Lisa
"neela" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:06 min | 3 weeks ago

"neela" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Our pins and needles here waiting for our tomorrow's monthly jobs report. Yeah, I love a good whisper number that you know. You have to say it like this though. Exactly. Julia Pollack, she's chief economist at zip recruiter via Zoom in LA, and of course our own Bloomberg news international economics and policy correspondent Mike McKee on the phone in New York City is going to be all over that 8 30 a.m. Wall Street time number tomorrow. Bloomberg radio on demand and in your podcast team. On the latest edition of the Bloomberg surveillance podcast, a conversation with Neela Richardson, chief economist, ADP. We see wages are strong. Look, ADP provides payroll services for over 25 million workers. It's about 20% of the working population And we're tracking wages very carefully, especially as the economy is looking in the face of inflation. And what we're seeing is a little bit of a deceleration in pay growth, but still too high to be consistent with the 2% target. And that speaks to the tightness of the labor market. It's not maximum tightness right now. We've seen things come down. We've seen jobless claims go up. It's not at the maximum like it was in the summer and early fall of 2022, but it's still very, very tight compared to where we were before the pandemic, even though the unemployment rate is about the same. How difficult Neela is it to talk about the labor market as a whole rather than the specific parts. And I say this because yesterday, in the beige book, there was an anecdote about a construction company having a commissioning a plane to fly workers out to it because that was cheaper than trying and actually more effective to get workers not even cheaper. Than trying to hire in the region. I mean, how much are you seeing strength that you've never seen before ongoing in specific industries? It's a very fragmented market to your point, Lisa. Some parts of the economy are so interest rate sensitive housing construction. And yet, some of those sectors are chronically undersupply housing, construction. And so you're seeing a real mix in the market right now. Hear

Julia Pollack Mike McKee ADP Neela Richardson Neela Bloomberg zip New York City LA Lisa
"neela" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

05:47 min | 3 weeks ago

"neela" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"2009, a glide path lower in claims, a more fully employed America, the pandemic getting in the way, changing that mathematics and then the stunning shock of sub 200,000 fully employed America claims here week after week after week. It is not an embargoed statistic with his first look at this anticipated statistic, Michael McKee. Well, we are waiting for this first look. I guess a lot of people clicking on the Internet at this time because the Labor Department drops it. All at once for everybody and here we go. 211,000. So Tom's week after week after week was just interrupted by a change in the direction and the amount for jobless claims, 211,000 is a pretty low number, but it is a significant change from the trend that we have been on, which was week after week after week of numbers coming in below estimates. I think 13 of the last 14 weeks we had jobless claims below the estimate where the estimate was one 95. So we're significantly above that at this point. Now we're looking to see if last week I'm looking to see if last week was revised at all revised higher and still don't have that number. There we go. Continuing claims. We continuing claims. We should mention this because this is also a change. Continuing claims going up, 1 million 718,000 from 1 million 649,000. So we are seeing people taking longer, perhaps, to get jobs. And that's going to be, this is going to be the kind of trend that the fed and everybody who has been predicting a slowdown in the labor markets is going to be looking at. Now, what we don't know, of course, is whether this is going to continue, but we are anticipating that it should. It was an increase. The two 11, by the way, it was an increase of 21,000. They did not revise. Prior week. Let me do this. Let me do the markets right now. Michael, and I want to come back to you, and we see some real activity. We just see it with the green and the red blinking on the Bloomberg terminal futures somewhat catch a bid here flat on the market right now. The two year yield 5.03% indicating four basis points in ten year yield flat 3.982 ten spread Lisa a 111 basis points of massive inversion. We migrated back to a 106 basis points and we do a little better now with less inversion getting out in front of the story tomorrow. It is so hard to game out because we're talking about not that many jobs and we're talking about this question of just how low we are coming from in terms of a base. The fact that people are trading on this at all though highlights how uncertain we are at a moment where the fed is watching this data so carefully. I look like at the trend here in the two 11, I'm going to say I'm doing this real quickly. I can't be like my key folks. It gets me back to the end of December 2022 off of the set of 6 7 8 data points is well. Can you figure out state by state where that jump came from from one 90 ish up to two ten? You can on a delayed basis is the problem is we don't get the big state or a little state jump it out of whack. Well, no, because you're looking at total claims here, but so you're going to be looking at states that have the largest working age population unless there were a strike or something in a plant in a company. So the week of February 18th, the prior week that was New Jersey and Rhode Island with two and a half thousand, it looks like those were the highest uninsured employment rates. The largest increases in claims for the week ending February 25th, which was last week, Massachusetts. 4000 Rhode Island up 1200 in New Jersey up 742,000. So yeah, you get a reaction. You get a little bit. Interestingly enough, California was down 2800. And Kentucky was down 6164 Ohio down Michigan down. So the biggest states we're seeing declines. Kind of hard to put this all in perspective because you would expect if we were seeing a lot of tech jobs to go away that California would be leading the pack and they are not at this point, although we do still have that whole thing about getting severance pay and keeping you out of the claims more. In and out burgers have been hiring. That's what this means. Right now, equities lift here, we just showed it in. For those of you on radio, the NASDAQ with a nice spike here, a little green on the screen, flat on the SPX Dow up fractionally 38 points of Vic's 19.33. Speaking of granularity, and of course, I went there with Michael McKee to stagger to our next guest, and she has the advantages of working for automatic data processing. Neela Richardson is chief Ocado's for the people that punch out the payroll checks like nobody from sea to shining sea. Neela at the ADP franchise, what do you see in your ADP granularity? We see wages are strong. Look, 80 P provides payroll services for over 25 million workers. It's about 20% of the working population. And we're tracking wages very carefully, especially as the economy is looking in the face of inflation. And what we're seeing is a little bit of a deceleration in pay growth, but still too high to be consistent with the 2% target. And that

Michael McKee America Labor Department fed Tom Rhode Island New Jersey Lisa Michael California Massachusetts Neela Richardson Ocado Kentucky Michigan Ohio Neela Vic
"neela" Discussed on The Vergecast

The Vergecast

05:13 min | 7 months ago

"neela" Discussed on The Vergecast

"In apple's talked a lot about like, well, we can detect crashes now. But when are the situations where you aren't in a crash, but you do need emergency services. And you just hold on the button on your phone, just like now. Yeah, I believe it's not connected to the crash detection and stuff that it is a separate thing. Okay, so it's just like an individual thing and you can be like, help. Yeah, yeah, so right now, if you hold the two buttons on your phone, you can go to emergency mode. I learned new things about my phone every day on the verge cast. Here are your choices when you want to turn your phone. If you hold the volume in the power button down and you can turn the fed off, you can get your medical ID or you can do an SOS. And picking the wrong one at the wrong time seems very fraught. Which is also how babies like to call 9-1-1 by pressing all the buttons on your phone and then seeing what happens. Who knows the thing that's interesting to me about this is investing in all the satellite stuff for like the watch ultra, which we're going to talk about. It makes a lot of sense to me because it is a group of people who need this stuff and know that they need it are likely to buy these devices. Right. This is the kind of thing that I would assume the earth shattering majority of iPhone users will never once experience in the entire time that they had this one. So it was surprising to me that this was like a thing that not only did Apple build into the phone and all of the models of the phone, right? But spend a lot of time telling us about in launching the phone. And so the galaxy brand version of this is like, okay, what is this .1 version of and it's like, okay, is Apple eventually going to do I was talking to somebody who was like their big theory is eventually apple is going to obviate all the carriers by doing its own fully satellite based infrastructure. Apple loves the carriers now. The carrier, that is a lucrative relationship. We had a carrier's pay for all the ads for iPhones. It's a perfect setup. But then if it's not that though then, what is the 5 year plan here that makes this relevant to more than this teeny tiny fraction of iPhone users? Or does there just not need to be one? Yeah, I don't think there was one. I think this was just like, this is a cool feature. There's not a lot going on with the iPhone 14. This is a way to differentiate it from the iPhone 13. Yeah, they said that big technical achievement here is they got the antennas to switch to the satellite bands. So they didn't have to add a bulky plastic content. Like, there's obviously a lot of technical work here that has been done. But the future is salt towers in space. Yeah. And actually, Elon God bless you on tweeted. Of course I've talked to the iPhone team. They're very smart. And it's like, I'm sure you have. Who knows what you've done? Self-driving taxis will be roaming the streets of America tomorrow. Two years ago, yeah. Sure. But he's like turning a startling satellite into a cell tyrant's face is not the end goal. And that's where that's the state of the art right now as a cell tower in space. So I think there's probably a lot of work to be done here. But right now, we've got is like clippy for emergencies. Which is fine. And it does seem to be true that Apple is leaning harder into this thing that it is like the Apple watch can save your life. It's very clear that that means something to Apple and they're like, not only is this like a hell of a marketing scheme, but they seem to actually buy this theory that this is meaningful to people in that way. Yeah, Nicole wrote about it on the site. A lot of the message here is like on supported by research for mongering. But dressed up. The Apple watch him on your temperature, but they can't make medical claims because it's not cleared by the FDA. So who knows? The Apple watch and monitor your blood oxygen, but it's not clear by FDA. So who knows? A lot of the heart detection stuff that they've done, study in 2020, found led to nothing. But caused a burden. And additional testing in the healthcare system. That's not discounting the fact that people have had their lives saved by the Apple watch. But they're leaning into it in a way that they have to connect it to reality at the end. Right. Lifesaving at scale is a very different thing. So we start off with the watches. We have not talked about the iPhone 14 plus, should we talk about it? No, that feels right. We just that moment we talked about the iPhone 14 plus exactly as much as we should. I will say I do think a lot of people are going to buy the iPhone 14 plus. This is the Neela Patel big cheap screen theory, right? It's cheaper than the other big one, and it's big. And it's the exact same phone as the iPhone 14. Great. Very convenient that they're putting it out and they're not doing a mini this year. I'm telling you, you can whine all you want. They're just trying to feed your theory. Allison will back me up on this. If she's on the show again. They're feeding your theory that people love big phones, but that's because they don't offer them at the same time. Oh, I see what you mean. No, no, no. They offered both at the same time and people still bought the big ones so much. They got rid of the little one. Yeah, Apple famous for putting out products that people don't want just despite any lie. That would say that. That happens a lot. We got there in a lot of people there. Hit listen to our episode and they're like, so you want a TV. I'm just telling you a big cheap screen's always win. The difference in price between the little pro and the big plus is a hundred bucks. And in any rational universe, you would upgrade and get the dynamic island in the better camera and everyone's gonna buy the plus instead. Yep. Without question.

Apple apple Elon FDA Neela Patel Nicole America Allison
"neela" Discussed on The Vergecast

The Vergecast

04:42 min | 7 months ago

"neela" Discussed on The Vergecast

"Decided to stop like connecting to our devices in the middle of the huddle. I was easy. I could put them away and just say, hey, I'm on speaker. Let me continue to make this quesadilla while we talk. Great. If I'm on my watch, I have to be like, hold on, hold on. Do I go speaker on my watch? That works in the house. Doesn't work. Out in public. But no speaker works it out in public. Yes, speakers bad everywhere. Right. But you take your phone and you can put it to your ear and then jam your other finger into your other ear. For sure. And be like, what's that? I see. I can't do that with a watch. No, that's totally true. By the way, just to put this out there for people if you ever get a phone call, you don't want to take. I'm not saying this ever happens to me. One thing you can say, regardless of circumstance that no one can check is, hey, I'm on my watch. Can I call you back? And everyone immediately understands that they should hang up the phone. It's pretty good. And then it's just a matter of how badly do you want to burn that relationship? But hey, I'm on my watch. Can I call you back? Everyone's like, oh yeah, no, please. Please don't do that. I want to talk to me. This is explaining a lot of our conversations, Neela. So I think my question is, okay, so you add some download. You've got a big battery. Yeah. And Apple stated reason for not allowing a lot of these things to happen is we're protecting the battery life. Yes. There are other quieter reasons. We want to self preference the music app instead of Spotify. And Spotify tried to turn a weakness into a strength by saying, we've signed a deal to let you download on Samsung. And it's like, you're just dancing. Whatever. But that's come to an end, right? Like the Spotify app is more full featured. You can do things on the watch now that make it feel like a true app platform. Yeah, yeah. I got a bigger battery. It can be even true wrap platform. Do you want when you're going off grid to run up the mountain to have a fully featured slack app on your watch? Because that is like, what did I replace this for? I don't want to do that when I'm down on the ground. Right, but what I'm saying is you can put your phone away, your watch is on your body. So it's like you're solved this problem of getting rid of your phone and then you've created an entirely new class of notification management problems that are literally strapped to your body. It's terrible. Yeah, this is like the fundamental problem of the watch, which is the thing that it was originally pitched as is like, it frees you from your phone, actually sucks because what I can do is leave my phone somewhere else. And that's good. And if I don't want to get notifications, I just don't look at my phone, a thing that buzzes my body is harder to ignore in that sense. And this is going to get even crazier when you start getting into like AR glasses and all that stuff. But I think that is like the fundamental unsolved problem of the watch is basically how to ratchet it up and down depending on what you want it to do. And you just can't. That's what the digital crown is for. It's a focus modes. It's all about the focus. Oh my God. Fad focus modes to The Crown. Oh God, that's probably coming. It's happening. Yeah, you turn the volume up on life. And you roll it back down. Let me just throw an idea of both of you. Stage manager for the Apple watch. And you scroll through the piles with the digital crown. No, you know that I do the thing where I'm talking to someone I want to indicate that I'm paying attention. I flip my phone over on the table. Yeah. It's like, this is how much I'm paying attention to you. It's still here. It's not out of my sight. Right, because that would be insane. But it's upside down. It's like you pick up your watch, and just roll straight. Making eye contact as you slowly roll The Crown. All right, so this is the watches. I am very curious to see what happens with this bigger sport watch. I think there's a big opportunity there for Apple to reinvent a bunch of it, right? Because there's bigger displays that you do wackier things in software. And then this new use case of targeting Garmin means they have to capture those users by trying to appeal to them. So I'm excited about that. We should talk about the phones. It's funny that they're gonna fix the cameras, not fix me again. It's funny that I'm like, they're gonna make the camera slightly better. They're gonna process her faster to no purpose. People are trying to read into the invitations and assume that we're gonna get astrophotography. Have the invitations meant anything in the past 5 years. No, but what if it does this time? I think that's a fear. Everybody's like, no, we gotta say it's you and something, 'cause we wanna be able to be like, I called it. Yeah. I don't know. We should do a retrospective on that, actually, go back through the last like 20 invitations and try to figure out if they actually turned into anything. Because if not, it is a truly masterful ongoing bit from Apple. Yeah. Liam, we have to cut this whole part. This is too good a story. No, keep it.

Neela Apple Spotify Samsung Garmin Liam
"neela" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

02:00 min | 10 months ago

"neela" Discussed on WTOP

"Snyder apparently denied the woman's accusations. The team later paid the woman 1.6 million bucks as part of a confidential settlement. That sinkhole that has closed two lanes on southbound two 70 locally and the gathersburg area will keep those lanes shut down for several more weeks, possibly a month, a replacement pipe has to come in, we're told from far outside the area, and that's expected to take possibly even a month. Stay with WTO for more on these developing stories where the time now was four 48. Over to Carlos Ramirez in the WTO traffic center. Thanks dean, south side of I 95, thanks to the listener for letting us know about this incident as you make your way through the Laurel area. As you head southbound past two 16, you will start to see those brake lights very quickly. The accident scene happened just south of the Howard county rest area, as of now, looks like only a single left lane is squeezing by. If that, you may only have the far left shoulder available to you based off what the listener didn't form us. Again, the delays are jammed well back towards 32. Northbound side of 95, not looking too terrible. VW park weighs up to speed, northbound side of D.C. two 95, very slow going from just after Pennsylvania avenue up towards nanny Helen Burroughs avenue. This is for the overnight work zone that is still out there, a single lane is all that's getting by. South side, similar story single lane takes you past the suitland Parkway with the work group. Neela Rhodes still shut down between 28th street in good hope road in southeast. This is for some police activity. Down in Virginia 66 completely up to speed, no issues on I 95, interleukin seems like the express lanes are still blocked. Marlo furniture's greatest offer is back just in time for marlowe's red, white, and blue sail, save 40% off on all furniture, plus take an extra 30% off now at marlowe's 4th of July sale, Carlos Ramirez, WTO traffic. Your Wednesday comes with a storm team four weather alert. There is an opportunity for severe weather coming our way this afternoon and this evening, a flood watch has already been issued. It's in effect from 3 p.m. until 11 p.m.. It's for areas west of

Carlos Ramirez WTO Snyder Howard county Neela Rhodes dean VW Marlo furniture D.C. marlowe Pennsylvania Virginia
"neela" Discussed on The Vergecast

The Vergecast

02:49 min | 1 year ago

"neela" Discussed on The Vergecast

"Something like that and he he was like nope. No disney as long as lines like. We're we're not going to spend money in sports Which is not a surprise. I mean netflix has historically said no to sports and no two news and probably for probably for the best but yeah i mean i agree with you. Neela he was very confident. Seemed bullish and you know as a co-ceo should but i mean maybe we should just briefly touch on the gaming part to him kind of talking about the gaming strategy the net flicks recently announced saying it's really just like any other vertical of content for them kind of a continuation of the story. Telling you already do with scripted and non scripted and that they're going to do their own games an licensed games but wouldn't share anything about lodge outside of. I think they're just testing these in poland right now so who knows when we'll get them. He didn't say it was more mobile focused. Which i think he said before or netflix said before bush is fascinating to me right like i personally perceive of netflix. After us on television occasionally on a tablet. I do not think of it as a thing i use. My phone does obviously different for a lot of people. Lots of people found. But what's the big market on phones. It's games netflix. Wants to bundle games new subscription. So you'll start using athletes app on your phone. And i think that's just think about their expansion into minutes of the day. Which is what. They actually care about their competing for minutes. They like fortnight's their competitor. They want those minutes. Yeah but like. Look if if if netflix just puts a free a free good enough version of any number of games that you were paying to play that you see people play on the subway or the plane or the bus right now if you're lucky enough to be on one of those modes of transportation and they just put solitaire in net flicks gangbusters quarter. I'm kind of not kidding. That's all they really need to do. Well again busters. I mean they. They have a weird gangbusters quarter in terms of like minutes used right attracting new subscribers in reducing churn. Yeah that's that's actually a matter so we should actually talk about their numbers. Then so yeah. This methodology so strenuous made some news on stage with cara. He put up slides showing actually conduct this for years. No one knows how anything is performing ethics and like. This is a big problem. It's a problem for how people get paid like creatives or like. I don't know how much shows doing. that's like spies and cancel things at on a whim. It appears the networks. Obviously don't like it because they wanna compare ratings blah blah blah now. They've got a lot of competitors. They've got disney plus in the who lose and hbo max's of the world. and so they need to netflix. Needs to prove they've got the same problem in the network she used to have with net flicks so they've invented metrics. There's no other way to put this. They've invented some metrics.

netflix Neela disney poland bush cara hbo
"neela" Discussed on Behind the Steel Curtain

Behind the Steel Curtain

02:51 min | 1 year ago

"neela" Discussed on Behind the Steel Curtain

"That's another guy. We don't want to say but i think we might lose that one. Maybe we lose. We don't win. we don't play. They're very well and just fields in but then the chicago is pretty terrible on i. Can you pick. I feel seattle pick. Saddle has to with the steelers to lose that game. I ought to go back to that. That are wrong. The steelers yeah. I'm gonna change that one so who's your chicago I'm dot notice yet Masha kaga that could be a really interesting game on. Twenty four seek stains use a. I'm going to change it up. Even records gonna be different. I'm going to say chicago. Winds that will say nineteen sixteen. Something like that something. We'd i say that because if the defense in advance struggling or his outage it will like interviews. That got him off on game break or something like that. So then i mean at this point. The steelers Let's see we're seeks to six right. How about this detroit win. Oh boy where we plan that. Was it the steelers law them up. Let's let's go. We've got forty neela said that's my own number from my own. My old house growing up forty nine nail steel on this is a. I recognize that like get out of hand. They'll be then even if he even plays ironside that that sort of camp is a bit arguments like thirty five thirty five thirteen yard. Nc the line score many points with fans at tune in we have a loss author chicago than Defensive is so good in hindsight him. let's be honest. How charges away the ldl. Chad is a law. Chatterjee's a let's go shoot. I think maybe thirty seven thirty five charges thirty seven you can. you can get In kicked three field goals in school touchdowns yet. Let's do that with charges. A they're good. They're ninety seven hundred eighty five. Did you say yeah Yeah who've it's going to happen over. The iranian in this is a.

steelers chicago Masha kaga neela seattle ironside detroit Chatterjee Chad
"neela" Discussed on Unorthodox

Unorthodox

02:34 min | 1 year ago

"neela" Discussed on Unorthodox

"After neela just break a fast smashed the fast but to get everyone ready to get everyone in the j. crew prepared. We have not one not two three but a five pack of a cool little segments on this year's apology episode. I spoke with legal scholar and former harvard law dean and fevered professor ever brock obama martha minot about what. Us law says about forgiveness. And you know it wouldn't be an unorthodox apology episode without a visit from our apology. Even author marjorie ingle founder of the blog. Sorry watch and co author of the forthcoming book about apologies and forgiveness author susan. Shapiro joined us to talk about her new memoir the forgiveness tour which explores so many of the subjects that we always visit this time of year on this show in one of the most moving segments. I think we've ever done. I heard from writer simone ellen. About her experience confronting her childhood bullies many decades leader and what that taught her about forgiveness producer. Robert.

neela brock obama martha minot marjorie ingle harvard dean Shapiro susan simone ellen Us Robert
July US Consumer Spending Ekes up 0.3% as Delta Threatens

90.3 KAZU Programming

00:25 sec | 1 year ago

July US Consumer Spending Ekes up 0.3% as Delta Threatens

"Spending numbers this morning. Consumer spending is probably a more clear way to put that still growing just slower than they were up 3/10 percent in July. Consumer spending was It is compared to more than 1% growth in June. The variable here, of course, is the delta variant. That probably also played into this morning's report on consumer sentiment from the University of Michigan. Neela, I think mentioned that at pandemic Close was the

Neela University Of Michigan
"neela" Discussed on The Free Agents

The Free Agents

03:09 min | 1 year ago

"neela" Discussed on The Free Agents

"That's what that was bursting his way out of the car. Laura says to me as their unveiling it what is that like a whole car. Just straight up. The incredible hulk made into a car. But we never see it driven balance. A bummer. to me we never see a driven but the man's got a nice car. Yeah it does look nice but when it comes out when you see it and you can sort of see through the window into the interior. It's got they'll this for everywhere. And i was just like now. I'm out your. I liked the car but the the interior of it is just shag everywhere. It stinks in there. There's no way it does not stink in there. Just just boy. China cars just hold stink and especially if there's a carpet and whatever and it was all over the place but yeah you're right trey i. I kinda just didn't realize that the next scene we see them driving a different car right like do we. How do they get up in the whole car theft. That's maybe the only driving's and we definitely never see. What did you say. his name is. Twitter byles name and this. We never see him racing But i guess they are rolling through the first tokyo race meeting the people seeing the scene. Yeah yeah yeah so. We're at this parking garage where we're at. And this is where. Sean has his first confrontation with takashi who is known s the drift king decay for sure. Yeah and of course. Sean can't help himself man. he's talking to neela. Who is takashi. Girlfriend we learn and who is also one of his classmates. I know sort of glossed over that. There was the the first meeting between the two the eye contact in class where he goes in for the first time and i guess the big payoff of that scene is. He's wearing a shoes and slippers on exactly right but they have an immediate immediate connection. Yeah i gotta say neela by far the most attractive female lead. We've had in any of these three movies by a mile. Beautiful beautiful woman. So i can see why sean was instantly attracted to her. So yeah. They get into it though because takashi doing like that's my girl so what happens well you guessed About it got race. You're talking to my girl we're racing that's how it goes and this is strange to me. Sean doesn't know anybody he knows drink. That's it and he's going to raise some doesn't have a car. You would think twinkled like ride. The hulk gives the whole ago. Sure but no instead he gets a two thousand one nissan from a racer named hunt. This guy is blood with takashi and he throws him his keys like yeah you can use my have at it It's like okay shirt..

neela takashi Sean Laura trey tokyo China Twitter sean nissan
"neela" Discussed on The Black Guy Who Tips Podcast

The Black Guy Who Tips Podcast

04:45 min | 1 year ago

"neela" Discussed on The Black Guy Who Tips Podcast

"Is it trying to offer a warranty on her car. We will never know shake down head. Yeah got chopped salad. Like hey blake. There's a lot of blimey. This is a lot of actually blindly australia actually aboard. I don't know what story sound like That story goes probably coaching offensive. I don't know anything about those folks. That story hurt my feelings. Because i love chop salads. Now i will have to go in despite mast up and looking hard to make sure. Something co nothing. Cold-blooded is mixed in my cobs. Now right you go into classic optimus bars is good. It is good. I mean i listen is a salad but after everything get done with that thing is i should have just adema fucking spicy chicken sandwich. Goes i then my other order at the mall for on chop that they'll be sleeping on a chicken wrap yet to make it irap dean all saying russia. You know my and now you've got basically like a burrito salad rap. Thelma bob make easy. I don't know why people volunteer. They're hugging habits. Were nobody ask them. I love me cocoon. Neela kunas an family guy but now every time i see that tito's commercial her ashton i think about how haswell pass. How are you okay with admitting that you don't shower go onto the gender. There's no way they don't smell like meal. Doing buddhists wit order inside of our. Because is what i like. The even e- you know i'm never gonna stay. Get off your net girl.

blake Thelma bob australia Neela kunas haswell russia tito
"neela" Discussed on Mindfulness Mode

Mindfulness Mode

02:32 min | 1 year ago

"neela" Discussed on Mindfulness Mode

"Do you feel like forgiveness is something that we should focus more on in our lives. Why i think one of the things we have to realize as human beings and a spiritual beings is that where emitting a frequency were radiating energy whether that's love and joy which are the higher frequencies or stress and anger and sadness which are the lower frequencies so when we roomy aid and focused on our regrets. Things that we didn't do were how would do a situation differently or invest our money in a different way. That's just holding yourself in a negative space but when you realize oops. I made that mistake or another person made a mistake towards me and you just forgive you. Forgive yourself you forget others. You're to be in a higher state of vibration and you're able to move forward with your life and in a happy state. But if we're still fixated on the problem or the obstacle or whatever it is you're not in those high states vibration. So forgiving yourself is key for states or things that you've done but then also forgiving others in knowing that they're doing the best that they can with the information that they asked. yeah. I really agree with you there. That's for sure. I know that you have the website. Mastering your second act. And i'd like to know where he came up with that title. Y you feel. It's important for us to master our second act and tell us what we would find when we go to the website. Mastering your second act dot com. Yes i'm so happy that you asked about that. Bruce in i feel it's exactly what we're talking about almost in a sense of forgiveness of let it go what is it look like to actually go through the world mindfully spiritually connected conscious of our choices in our actions. So let's take what we did before and put that aside and leave that behind us and move into the second version of ourselves move into the jamie two point. Oh what does that person look like. Who are they and so when you go to mastering your second act. It's about being mindful and taking control of that in our lives and not just moving through life in a kind of lazy fair way but really mastering those skills human

Bruce jamie neela james
"neela" Discussed on MyTalk 107.1

MyTalk 107.1

07:00 min | 1 year ago

"neela" Discussed on MyTalk 107.1

"The morning, Right here on my talk and streaming worldwide on our brand new my talk at Make sure you download that if you haven't done so already. Thank you and God bless We're going to start with Alexis today. Hey, David Letterman. What's What's this many segment called Get her done. That's right. Dave. Alexis has a restaurant that still getting her done. What is it like? Yeah, Well, this is a new to me restaurant. I was in my old stomping grounds yesterday. Highland Park area. I went to ST Paul Academy, so I used to go to this coffee shop all the time. In high school, and it's right by ST Catherine University. And we, uh stopped. It's called Do a but it's It's spelled D U E. It's a focus Sharia. A way for cash. Sharia I I didn't realize there was a whole thing place where you can just give Chickasha Oh, it literally is what it says. It is what it says. Yes, it's a Chickasha wonderland. It is and guys divine. I cannot wait to go back again. Now. Right now they have outdoor seating. They do take away. They also have, uh, catering to so you can do like Father's Day stuff. And, um, which is too late Now they're sold out. I just saw that, but maybe for any of your other and also fair warning. They're closed on Monday. Okay. It's just like so I was just going to ask Are they opens on Monday and Father's Day, so you can go today or tomorrow. That's it. They're not closed on Father's day. They just can't get indicated. Nothing, right? Okay, Yeah. Here we go. Here we go. But the Chickasha is really delicious. They have sandwiches. We tried the salted and the Herb Chickasha Delicious. It's that it's circular. It's oh, man. It's the It's not too hard. It's nice and doughy, but also just so tasty. This soup I had, which I cannot wait to get again is the spring pea and pasta soup. And there's artichoke fennel, little pastas in their, uh, lemon basil flavor. Oh, so good And and Lex. I am assuming because you have nominated this as a get her done this This place has been around for a while and my safe to assume that it's new to me. Okay. New to you. Um, but, Yeah, I have been around it has been around, Okay? Got it. You know if you're wondering where exactly it is. It's Randolph and Fairview by ST Catherine University. Well, that's very easy. It was waiting. Easy. Yep. I I wrote down this cross streets is a very easy place to get to you. There's a caribou across the street. Oh, my gosh. I had to try some desserts and the cannoli which is really hard to get a good cannoli, actually, if you know of a place Please message me because I'm always looking for good canola, You know, being going to college in Boston, I had Mike's pastry and the whole north end. You know that. That's some quality control Ian Italian desserts, but this was quality. It was very good. Uh, and we also have the tiramisu jar A nice little tiny little tip O Guys, that's great. This is quality and they're in there chopping veggies, real fresh food, So you know it's very good quality quality, and I'm going to take Very well. You feel good. What's it called again? Do a Do way, But it's uh, d u E it looks like do yeah. Um well, let me stick with Alexis here as we continue Food news because We have found Don and Kenny Alexis's food twin. Oh, really? Does that mean Nina. Nina. I'm sorry, Neela Z, sir, is her name and she Is a female competitive eater. Oh, and she beat. No, no, no. She beat her own burrito eating record. Oh, is she from Australia? I believe so. I've interviewed her. Oh, seriously? Yes. She had to came in at night. And she was up in the morning. Well, she ate Lex. Hold on to your granny panties. Here we go. She beat her own record eating a £2 burrito. In one minute and 26 seconds. One minute Think now, let's just I I'm gonna say these numbers down. Just think of the reality of that a £2 burrito in one minute and 26 seconds Basically all um and I did this on purpose about as long as I have been talking about this. Yes, yes, Queen. Did she even chew? I don't know that I'm gonna be trying to beat my time last year, which was one minute and 26 seconds 321 go. Oh, mouth noises stopped by. Okay? Do you enjoy that? Oh, my God, guys. That was my best time. So far, One minute 20 want Oh, my God. She must not be very old, because when I talked to her, Alex, she was like 20 years old, and she was competing with like guys that have been doing it for, you know, 40 year old guys when she was 1920 Um oh, my gosh, I'm trying to picture a £2 burrito inputs of butter, Lex. I put it in the chat. I put the link in the chat. If you want to copy and pasted on your own server, Um, you can see her. It's big girl. It is bare egg, Does she even Oh, she's done is right. She's anybody. She's like. She was like a little bit on thing. She looks like Pippi Longstocking. She? She's probably like 30 now. But yeah, but she Yeah, She really impressed me. And I was like, Can I interview you? And so it was like the middle of the night for me, but I Yeah. 80 to put it in a different 81 seconds. Think of it that way. 81 seconds. She mao down a £2 burrito? Yeah. Alexis watching the video now, with pure amazement, sneak. What's her technique? A. So She holds the butt of the burrito with one hand and then takes a bite and then turns it every bite so she gets around going around the clock. Oh, You should try that, Lex. Yeah, I liked my favorite. I like Mm. Take a bite and joy. No, but yeah, you can't. There's no eat, competitive eating and enjoying that. I know that's not no, No. We should get you a £3 burrito and see how long it takes. Get your burrito place to sponsor our contest and let's get you a £3 burrito and see how long it takes you two mile that down. Yeah. You know what? Let's give it a go. Let's give it a go not.

David Letterman Neela Z Don Alex £2 £3 Australia Boston ST Catherine University tomorrow Dave Nina Pippi Longstocking Monday 20 years Kenny Alexis Highland Park one minute Alexis yesterday
Ornella & Violeta: The Trauma of Family Seperation

Latino USA

02:16 min | 2 years ago

Ornella & Violeta: The Trauma of Family Seperation

"Eighteen years ago or aleppo was living with her mother. Beulah data in los angeles. Her mom had moved to la f- lean the shining path which is a radical guerrilla group in peru. They're known as sendero luminoso or s l. For short beulah. That was raising her four year. Old daughter neyla alone when one day in two thousand and three violeta was taken away by ice. She wouldn't come back to her daughter. For seven months for ornella. This traumatic event existed as a painful but unmentioned memory for years. Mommy there are many things that i could never say to you from the perspective of a child because i never knew understood or wanted to know it was something that her mother and her family. Just didn't talk about at all until recently in this episode or nella who is getting ready to graduate from college reads fragments of a letter that she wrote to her mom about a year ago and that letter was all about ornelas memories of being separated from her mom neela then sat down in our studio with her mom beulah and that's where the two of them opened up about the entire experience of being separated by ice which happened well over a decade ago and now ornella and her mom violeta are going to take it from here. I'm hello hello sweetie what you hurry kid. You are the first one in your family right to come here. Yes and the youngest. I wish impro- peru finishing up in last year of my high school You was being harassed by a a cell groups. I just didn't have a choice. But just come like i need to get out. I can't breathe anymore in later on six months later. I know i learned that my my older brother two years older than me had passed away. There has been a exchange gunshots.

Ornella Neyla Violeta Aleppo Peru Ornelas Neela Nella Los Angeles LA Beulah
"neela" Discussed on Stories Philippines Podcast

Stories Philippines Podcast

02:10 min | 2 years ago

"neela" Discussed on Stories Philippines Podcast

"May must among yari. Somebody can do for now on damage dow e log at unabomb water source. Neela nagase among higher thousand. Nine eight on gutting leak and waste system. Marcopper something do our candidates by adding you along. Well i guess media and among harrison guy. Mikkel it at our goal and also seen among mike semi behind me massey. Yelling linda it does appear to open is is engaged in our he mcnew among cutting in and and be one gun on manama taniela india neubauer. Hopefully tina san mateo sonum summertime to genome accelerate apparatus grupo. The did the barometer. I mean novel. I'm making leanna macropod. An uncle report uncle illegal. Wildlife trading. Laffy you dial may sense of responsibility now and caban among decision. You made up the lagunas in custody. He now often the last. I willing now lulu task at pwc ghana stamina go so with no laffy. Then becoming some nicobar my hit up mcgahn somewhere in the way the guy osama ban would posing good nominee to paramount is not the arab mocking among different napa with them at lehman along the lucky one chevrolet union gauging assistant and be one gun to be continued.

osama ban Mikkel harrison one gun mike semi Neela nagase linda india chevrolet lagunas arab Nine eight ghana leanna manama taniela lehman
After drought andfailedharvests, people of Madagascarreduced to eating mud

UN News

05:17 min | 2 years ago

After drought andfailedharvests, people of Madagascarreduced to eating mud

"Years of drought. In with what little the people of madagascar have managed to grow destroyed by flash flooding more than one point three million in crisis in some are even eating ground up clay just to survive movement restrictions relating to covid nineteen has also made it impossible for the poorest of the poor to find work to tide them over the lean season the world food program or p has warned in an interview with you and uses daniel johnson. Wfp's regional director for southern africa. Lola cash through explains the un agency his helping by empowering communities to withstand future climate shocks. The situation basically has been over the last five years with recurring droughts and only one good harvest and we have heard about it. Before in september we immediately had to come in and attend areas that we have never supported as well for program before because the crisis will saw huge. That success more tally. This is what we're talking about. How many people are you helping. And how many people are in need at this moment in the ground south of madagascar grants would gas in december. We supported five. Hundred thousand people almost half a million. We need to scale up to at least nine hundred thousand adults. They one point three million that are in dire need at this moment. Who are the most in need. The most need basically the poorest of the poor those people that in fact they have sometimes they produce small harvests but having been able to produce due to the lack of water. An incredible sunday's storms. That have hit this year. The harvest has been buried under sand. Basically if you want a picture and those ones also who migrate to cities to look for labor due to covid nineteen having been able to find any labor anywhere even in the fields or even in the city's so basically the situation is much worse than what we have seen in decades. Would we are talking now in the past. We've reported on the situation amount and recently we were hearing that people were forced to scavenge for cactus leaves cactus pears and eating leaves with some salt and some sugar. I mean this is just nowhere to live. Why can we not get in there immediately and do more to behind as we have been doing more we. The government will bank agencies. We having working on resilience bidding activities in a number of districts in the suit and we have been doing quite a lot building on irrigation trying to stop the dunes from moving sand occupies the fields the arable lands working with the communities. What we call foot for us activities. Let's say a conditional transfers that people get food or cash but they do something to improve the livelihoods and that has worked in the communities and this is where we have done most of this work. It has been bedtime this year. Let me yes report. But we are not doing enough. We have to also do much more. We have to help the people to get much more resilient in these very difficult climate change times where we know will never rain enough in south of madagascar so with much more. It's great to hear about the resilience building and certainly there seems to be more awareness that southern africa madagascar is at more risk of climate shocks. So is that how the humanitarian approach is changing is to promote resilience by getting the communities. Involved is what we call. If you want the nexus between humanitarian recovery and development with really need to move from year to year support of variable able to move them into more resilient as is to be able to feed themselves to be able to have water. If i'm eligible and to find water to be able to move their foods and have markets where they can buy if they receive social safety nets and social protection castro transfer. So that's the area where we all have agreed. This house in madagascar strategy long-term term strategies but not a gasket isn't poll everywhere it produces vanilla and lots of people are seeing that hollywood movie about madagascar and the wonderful wildlife and the natural riches that the country has so. Why isn't it doing more to help itself. It might sound a bit ruthless. But why isn't more being done in country to empower people to help themselves two days a lot being dining country but is not enough. Say in fact. It's very poor country if you look at. The human development index is very poor in general is true that samaria survey productive days rise by neela species etc. But it's not everybody who can benefit. The population is densely populated. It has also berry berry big promise. China change like it ocean lot of land goes to the days deforestation because of days. Nothing for the populations to eat. So tell

Madagascar Daniel Johnson WFP Southern Africa Lola UN Africa Castro Neela Hollywood Berry Berry China
"neela" Discussed on 860AM The Answer

860AM The Answer

02:26 min | 2 years ago

"neela" Discussed on 860AM The Answer

"Brother, like, have a lead. I didn't next. Best to the aimless thing. I stopped into it. My Oriental carpets in the shop of my original contact arm ourselves. Yes, I had heard this sorrowful news Police check disclosed No next of kin. No relatives on a gold bible was alone in the world. How about best friends? Anatole Baboon turned friendships away. He was suspicious and secretive. How about Lady friends? Ladies? No, I do not think. Oh, come on. Even a suspicious and secretive re close has some male ego. Some passing interest in the opposite sex. Dan Wars, the woman but such a long time ago. What was her name? Madam Mila gaveled know where I can find her. Nobody has seen Neela Gallant for 18 years. How close was he to Anatole balance? All I know to say she worked in his story, the makeup bazaar, they would work together. Take their meals together. Sounds charming enough. Say survey gays have told barbers burial The police haven't scheduled for the day after tomorrow. The Potter's field burial under the auspices of the city. Oh, this is a great table. I shall see that the association extends the others doing that is to say pays the bills for the funeral. Well, that's fine. But keep that quiet when I want you to do is spread the word around that kinsman is being given an obscure pauper's burial, create sentiment and sympathy make old friends and business associates want to pay their last respects. Give Anatole Barbara a decent send off. You think Neela Callard will hear this and country Filner? I hope Neil. A gallant will put in an appearance Generals a sad but to me this one was a joy. I was all smiles. When a marcella be whispered the magic words into my ear. That woman standing there wearing the bacteria. He's with a million gallon. Some hours later, I took tea with Madame Galit. Her home was a frame dwelling in suburban New Jersey. A middle aged woman once beautiful you could tell but heavy lines in her face now, like she'd known trouble times, I knew it was a mistake to come to an Ethel's burial. Now, Look, you're a dignified woman. So let's do this with dignity..

Neela Gallant Anatole Baboon Anatole Barbara Neela Callard Madam Mila gaveled Anatole Madame Galit New Jersey Dan Wars Ethel marcella Potter Neil
"neela" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

01:35 min | 2 years ago

"neela" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"Left the labor force, potentially setting back their careers beyond the current crisis. I'm making McCarty Carino from marketplace. One more thing on the actual jobs data adhering to the policy of this program that if we stop talking about this stuff, we're gonna stop talking about it. White unemployment 6% last month black unemployment 9.9%. The virus. As I believe I've said a time or two on this show and his, Neela said about three minutes ago is in charge of this economy right now. So who gets the vaccine for it? And when He's gonna have a lot to do with how this economy goes among the slices of this economy that lost the most jobs last month. Restaurants and travel and leisure. So it's of note that in Washington, D. C next month, restaurant workers move up in the vaccine line marketplaces Jasmine Garza has that one. Listen, Layne bartenders at several different places in Washington, D C. She says. Even with the pandemic raging patrons waiting for food and drink decided that it was okay to take off your mask. If you're sitting down on the table It's like OK, so the virus stops If you're sitting down, which puts servers like her at risk many times a day, she says. Vaccinating restaurant workers. It definitely is an acknowledgment that restaurant workers are important and we are often exposed to disease without any health insurance. Vaccines won't.

Jasmine Garza McCarty Carino Neela Washington Layne
US job market weakens in December, fuelling hopes of more stimulus

Marketplace with Kai Ryssdal

07:38 min | 2 years ago

US job market weakens in December, fuelling hopes of more stimulus

"With political implications. That are as we speak. Still tb but with implications for this economy that you can kind of see the outlines of even now here to make sense of it. All our k- davidson. She is from the wall street journal neil. Richardson is the chief. economist ed. Adp hey you too. Neil let me start with a quick pass at this morning's jobs numbers because it is jobs day friday at the end of this kind of amazing week. We lost one hundred and forty thousand jobs last month. My question to you is more of a statement. Actually and it goes like this. Uh oh i guess. I l. indeed but it's not totally unexpected. We knew that the code cases were rising. They were rising december with that. Bryce states and municipalities have had to roll back or tighten restrictions on social gathering that has a direct effect on the job market so this trend of slowing the momentum in jobs recovered each month as cova cases rise continued in december. The hope is that when we have a population that is inoculated. Maybe later this year second half of the year. We'll see those job gains. Come back in the meantime it's still going to be a pretty rough winter For those people who are out of work and also cleared. I was touching with a friend of mine this morning. Who works in finance and he said you know. I think by fall or winter of this year which is to say. Twenty twenty one. We're gonna be rolling right along. And i texted him back and i said look man. We are as far from winter this coming year as we are from the beginning of this thing. Think about all the damage that can That is still yet to come in this economy. What do you think. yeah. I mean. I think that's what Democratic policymakers economists are warning about. And when you hear folks say it's important to have another big economic relief package for example which is something we've been hearing a lot about even though we just had this big nine hundred billion dollar. One Economists say it's important to try to get back to where we were before march as quickly as possible in other words. The longer this is drawn out the Take the harder it is to to come back. The deeper the hole the harder it is to get out of it So right it would be. It would be amazing if vaccines were rolled out quickly which may be an early december. We were all so excited. We thought they would be in our seeing. Gee it's not. It's not so easy. And and people are maybe a little more pessimistic. So that just means it's gonna take longer for people to be back in full force at restaurants or movie theaters or on cruise ships or airplanes and And it might. It might feel like a longtime time before at that place. So nila lemme ask you now about the news of tuesday. The democrats win georgia. They now control the senate and there had been much speculation that they were going to be able to do something more in relief. Maybe even those two thousand dollar checks the president trump and and others had been calling for and then joe manchin a democrat or west. Virginia came out today and said. I'm not sure i'm on board for two thousand dollars and everybody kind of realized that it's a much thinner majority than maybe the actual numbers would imply i think on this front. I make two points at first of all i. I firmly believe that the economy is going to lead politics. Some this issue if we continue to see job losses like we saw in december There may not be a lot of wiggle room of how the government responds. I if they want to make sure that the economy can pull through this. Secondly i think what would it. Also indicates is yes there is the may be some some dissension even along party lines. And so what it means. Is that big reforms which typically occur when there is a single party leadership might be delayed even further in this presidency. Because it's covid right. Now that's taking charge of covid. That has a seat at the table. And so that's going to have to play out a before we can get to those bigger reforms that i'm sure by the would like to tackle his term. That's a really good line. The economy is gonna lead policy Speaking of economic policy. Kate president-elect biden came out in a statement today or in a in a speech to reporters talking about a bunch of economic stuff. He said we should be investing in deficit spending which is remarkable thing for a politician to say out loud. It's a huge Reversal or shift if you will from when president obama came in Last financial crisis democrats were were leaning into this idea that republicans were pushing that in. I think continue to push that. We need to be worried about about deficits right. I mean we obviously want to support the economy and In support people and households. But we can't go too far. And i think that there's been it. There's been a big shift among Economists and economic thinking on this in ten or twelve years since then and that's look at interest rates. They are so low right now. In biden made this point that when interest rates historically low and the federal reserve you know they've got rates as low as they can go or as low as they are willing to go. They said they aren't gonna do negative rates They could do more bond buying but there's not a lot they can do Then you should be spending more even if that is deficit spending And that's the argument that we heard The president-elect today and it's interesting because we know that his economic team the advisors. He's been turning to for advice last year. They were making that same argument. They're saying look at the cost of finance. This debt is so low it it. It makes sense to invest now because those investments will pay off over the long term. If if they boost growth roy All right i'm gonna try to squeeze last one in and i'm going to try to get both here in about thirty seconds apiece if you could we've i want. You can't leave the segment today without the politics of this economy coming up and we talk a lot about uncertainty in this economy and what that has meant the last four years. I wonder neela what you think about instability in the politics of this economy because that seems to me to be where we are i think the biggest danger as we look at the economic fragility of that we're grappling with in the winter months. Is that we keep. We take our eye off the ball of the economy and the people who've been hit hardest in the economy. It's easy to give way to the politics of the moment. That still about ten million americans who were working in february who are not working now and we have rental moratoriums that actually end in january and so the danger is that we give way to the politics. We stop thinking about the economy. So meyer urgency on this. Friday is to remember. It's about the economy right now. And the health infrastructure that is necessary for to keep the economic recovery going to quickly uncertainty verses instability. Well i just. I think so much is going to depend on. What happens after january twentieth. And whether you still have president trump out there sort of riling rolling up his base And how the the congress and how republicans interact with the with the incoming administration the incoming president and we have reason to think that things might go okay mitch. Mcconnell has a longstanding relationship with joe biden and they've worked together for for many many years but to to as point earlier. I think that what happens with the economy is going to be driving these these discussions. Hopefully hopefully if things get worse or things stay. Stay as they are. They'll they'll come together though overcome These issues and get something done if the economy is it who davidson at the wall. Street journal

Nila Lemme Elect Biden Bryce The Wall Street Journal TB Davidson Richardson Joe Manchin Neil ED Senate Georgia Neela Virginia Kate President Obama
"neela" Discussed on KCRW

KCRW

01:34 min | 2 years ago

"neela" Discussed on KCRW

"Labor force, potentially setting back their careers beyond the current crisis. I'm making McCarty Carino from marketplace. One more thing on the actual jobs data adhering to the policy of this program that if we stop talking about this stuff, we're gonna stop talking about it. White unemployment 6% last month black unemployment 9.9%. Virus. As I believe I've said a time or two on this show and his, Neela said about three minutes ago is in charge of this economy right now. So who gets the vaccine for it? And when is gonna have a lot to do with how this economy goes among the slices of this economy that lost the most jobs last month? Restaurants and travel and leisure. So it's of note that in Washington, D. C next month, restaurant workers move up in the vaccine line marketplaces Jasmine Garza has that one. Listen, Layne bartenders at several different places in Washington, D C, she says. Even with the pandemic, raging patrons waiting for food and drink decided that it was okay to take off your mask. If you're sitting down at this table, it's like OK, so the virus stops if you're sitting down, which puts servers like her at risk many times a day, she says. Vaccinating restaurant workers. It definitely is an acknowledgment that restaurant workers are important and we are often exposed to disease without any health insurance and vaccines won't just.

Jasmine Garza McCarty Carino Washington Neela Layne
Why Learning to Say "No" Will Accelerate Your Success

Marketing School

04:05 min | 2 years ago

Why Learning to Say "No" Will Accelerate Your Success

"Welcome to another episode of Marketing School I'm Eric. Su and I'm Neil Patel and today. We're GONNA. Talk about why learning to say no will accelerate your success. Let's reframe this real quick and early days Neil when you're starting out as an entrepreneur. You would always look at the newest opportunities. And what would you do about those opportunities? I always said not always what most cases I said. Yes, and that's what ended up causing me to do one too many things derailing my focus and funny enough 'cause less success over time I think what Neil's also saying is a lot of us become more and more successful. You're going to have more and more opportunities coming your way, and you can either accept the fact that you're. You're drowning in opportunity, or you can do something about it and say no more and funny enough Steve Jobs said this in the past. He says what's really lead to apple. Success was the ability to say no. They said no way more things than they said yes to. And when he first came back to apple after he was fired, he shut down many different product lines, and that's just the basis of it. It's really saying no all the opportunities that you're drowning in. When you say no, and you end up focusing on the stuff that really matters. That's when you double down I was once talking to entrepreneur name Brian Lee, and he created a company called shootout with Kim Kardashian before that was legalzoom, and the most recent one was honest company with Jessica Alba. And I remember years and years ago I. Don't know Bryan while at all I. don't even know him really by interviewed him for my blog years and years ago, and he mentioned one thing that really resonated with me, and he said you need to have super laser focus only tried to do one thing at a time and the moment your growth slows down and you can't get it to keep growing. That's when you expand until then you just stick with what you're doing. Yeah more Buffett and Bill Gates when they first met I believe this is a story, or this wasn't when they first met someone albums. Like what's the secret to your success? They both wrote down one word on a piece of paper and flip it over, and they said focus was the main obey. And the other thing to do just to give more examples. You look at Zillow. You look at glass door. You look at all those companies it's who's the one guy that started all those companies again rich partner. Expedia, glass, door and Zillow, yeah, but he focused on each one. He didn't try to do all of them. At the same time, he took the domain expertise that he had is like I. Know How to build a two sided marketplace. I know how to take advantage of Joe I know that there is a gap in the marketplace attack that so he used the same thesis three times, but he didn't try to do them all at the same time and I can tell you. These guys are older and more experienced than I. can say Neal My. We're getting older. We're not up there yet with them. We don't have the. The experience that they have yet, but I can tell you as Neela I've gotten older. We've gotten better at saying. No, I'll say better than before, but still trying to get better at it. It's hard because we all have the shiny. Object Syndrome. And when you learn to say no, it'll make you really understand what you should be focusing on. Because there's so many opportunities out there. In many cases, we missed the ones that are the best ones because we say. Yes, to so many that we don't spend enough time uncovering the true potential of anyone, business or anyone, strategy or anyone concept, and the same goes with your marketing. Even in the air. Can I talk Omni Channel? Yes, you should go omni channel, but focus on one or two marketing tactics out once doom, really well before you expand into all in because there's not enough time in the day to do everything perfectly well, unless you have a massive team, the other thing is I would google the T. sheets, marketer, and really understand as a marketer that you should try to go deep on one. One thing and then you try to expand and get a little more breadth, but the depth is what you really want to folks when people talk about what Neal's known for Seo or what I'm doing for I think largely people was. This is weird, sometimes WANNA go speak at a conference. They don't know what to call way, so they called me an seo extraordinary and I don't know where the hell they got that from. The same problem yeah. Seo Eric. All right. Put into this box, but I guess that's what we know and Belize pisses me off sometimes when I'm lying. Put into a box, but you have to be okay with that because you try to be everything being nothing

Neil Patel Steve Jobs Zillow Eric Neal My Apple Bryan Joe I SU Bill Gates Jessica Alba Kim Kardashian Brian Lee Partner Belize Expedia Buffett Omni Google
China and the U.S. are growing (or not growing) economically apart

Marketplace with Kai Ryssdal

06:53 min | 3 years ago

China and the U.S. are growing (or not growing) economically apart

"And I WANNA go back a couple of days to this report from the International Monetary Fund saying the global economy was going to shrink this year by three percent and then in that same report. They said you know. We're looking at a rebound in twenty twenty one and I wanna know if you as a trained economist on this radio show today by that. That's a hard one. I I think when we looked at twenty twenty we expected a global rebound from for the year in January. We saw that. The trade agreement remember that last year. That was the biggest crisis. Twenty nineteen trade agreement between the US and China with the Tailwind for global growth more broadly. And so when the World Bank is basically saying is that nineteen just world on pause for a year and it restarts twenty twenty one. I do think the world looks better in twenty twenty one but I think it's going to be hard list to get to three percent. Gdp grouse Lovely in twenty one and been everything. That's going down right now right right. We'll just we'll just note here. The varying sound quality. Here this being live rated but we're all doing From our living rooms and let me ask you to turn to China here for a second. We're doing some China the rest of the program but we have to point out that What had been one of the fastest growing economies in the world shrank last quarter by almost seven percent. It's pretty clear we're not going to get them the Chinese to help drive out of this lockdown right now at the Chinese. Were counting on us to help them to get their economy back on track and since it's still an x force case economy now. The Chinese are worried. Because we'RE NOT GONNA be buying as many of their goods so the whole world is stuck in a funk. Nobody's GonNa be healthy guy that drags everybody through this. We're all going down together and it's very interesting that to me that we're in a in a moment where world leaders can't really see to coalesce around anything but we need each other more than ever need each other to be stable more than ever to be able to get out of it. Well so look Neil on that thought of US meeting each other more than ever. Let's apply that domestically here for a second and the idea that Congress. Now we've exhausted that three hundred fifty billion dollars in the Small Business Administration loan program. The Senate in the House are out on recess and cannot come to terms on what to do next. If you're an American business person what what are you planning for? Because the uncertainty it seems gets worse every day in this crisis but still you have to plan in process rights are. Luckily we have another outlet? Which is the Fed the Federal Reserve? Has I thought they were holding meetings chair Powell's a garage because they were throwing out so many kitchen sinks that this problem they have done everything and probably some things that I haven't thought about to arrest this problem in really make sure that credit flows to households in consumers at around Congress in around Leveraging some of the congressional move says while and enlists remember that banks are actually going to be part of the solution here instead of the problem as they were in two thousand. Eight Bank. Balance Sheets are very strong very solid after ten years of regulation so there is some help stealth flooding even. Congress is on recess for right. Now let me ask you. This is look this is in a way. It's a scary question. It's a little bit cynical but it's something that's been on my mind so yes. The Fed is going great guns and doing what it can part of. What it's able to do is because it has the backing of the Treasury and and some approvals by the Congress. Do you suppose though that it's possible that this crisis accelerate so quickly as Congress can't come to terms that it that it exceeds the capacity of the American government to fix while it depends on how behind Americans themselves get on debt payments and things like that and it depends on the whole that the federal government lied to steepen that dot the base that you're talking to Washington going on right now Is that the Republicans want to send money to the Small Business Administration program. That's been helping small businesses with their payroll and at the same time. Democrats want to send money to the state and to the hospitals that have been dealing with this problem on the front line. Republicans don't WanNa do it there They don't want to send emergency funds stays in hospitals. Which is I just. Don't understand how to be an ideological thing. We'RE GONNA get ideological here. We're all GONNA be in big trouble because this is a problem that is going to require creative thinking outside any problem that That had faced the American people. And it's GonNa require us to think about the economy in two different stages one is. What is the Post Lockdown Pre Vaccine Colona virus economy? Going to look like and it's GonNa be one but we have to shift workers to contract tracing we're going to have to ramp up testing teach people how to be back if they've gotta be a completely different economy and then we have to think of how to transition the economy from that economy into a post vaccine economy which is an attempt to really truly normalized for world. And there's no I know ideology belongs in any of that discussion. Because if you don't increase the size of the federal government or state government or any government you can't get from the please vaccine pays to the Po- sexy is this Neil Miller real quick and I mean like thirty seconds. Neela it is fundamentally a discussion once again of the role of government in this economy. Right government right now. Is the prime the pump right? We know that things are going to get worse before they get that. We just started the social containment in late March or seeing the effects of that head Americans now but eventually it will get better because we're also seeing progress in testing and innovations in vaccines and treatment. It's a hard road road till then but look what already. The American people have gotten shut down an economy voluntarily to attack head on health crisis that was projected a few short weeks ago to be much worse than it is already turning out to be so in that sense. There is hope that we have enough ingenuity among us all to combat this crisis and to get through it together

Congress China Federal Reserve Small Business Administration United States Neil Miller World Bank International Monetary Fund Twenty Twenty American Government Treasury Senate Bank Powell Washington PO
What's the First Nation with Totally Dark Skies?

BrainStuff

02:32 min | 3 years ago

What's the First Nation with Totally Dark Skies?

"A US based nonprofit organization with the mission of preserving dark skies and cutting down on light pollution there are about one hundred thirty certified dark sky parks preserves and communities around the world from Death Valley National Park to the Namibian Nature Reserve in Namibia to the tone of Flagstaff Arizona. But neely is the first and so far only entire nation to receive this prize seal of approval from the Association. The recognition has made a celebrity of the one hundred Square Mile Island. That's about two hundred sixty square kilometers with a population of one thousand six hundred which is located roughly fifteen hundred miles or twenty four hundred kilometers from New Zealand in the middle of the South Pacific. Ocean NEELA is a self governing state but it maintains a free says Houston with New Zealand which represents its tiny neighbour in many international affairs sheer remoteness alone contributes heavily to the islands dark environment but according to the international dark sky associations requirements the villages commit to using artificial lighting that leaves the night. Sky unspoiled unveiling the Milky Way. The ANDROMEDA Constellation and other brilliant starry objects in their full glory that meant retrofitting or placing street lights and lights in private residences and businesses culturally. The dark designation will help protect part of the island's heritage for centuries people have used the stars and lunar cycles for navigation on the seas neely is

Square Mile Island New Zealand Neely Death Valley National Park Flagstaff Arizona Namibia United States South Pacific Houston
Coronavirus Sell-Off Threatens to End U.S. Stock Market's Decade-Long Bull Run

Marketplace with Kai Ryssdal

05:54 min | 3 years ago

Coronavirus Sell-Off Threatens to End U.S. Stock Market's Decade-Long Bull Run

"You think corona virus could turn into a black swan that turns things If not completely south then maybe sideways and you said all other things being equal probably not. Would you like to revisit that no but I actually? I I do not at the time thing. It's a black swan event. I think it's more of a black hole event. And we don't know the time or the breath of that whole but there's still so much uncertainty. I still stand by the fact that we have pretty healthy economic fundamentals. So far we've seen other situations over this eleven now in the eleventh year expansion where there's been a a quarterly decline which I think we can expect a slowing growth because of the virus in the USA Common Connie in the first quarter. That doesn't mean a Duro meant of the market or the economic expansion. It just means that the economy has hit a soft spot so bottom line. It's two two two shoe soon. Okay all right fine fair enough David. You took the other side of that. Bet. I'm proud. Pessimists proud pessimist and look I I look let's be clear. I sided with Neela last time so I was wrong to Are Are you surprised? David Gura by the speed with which things have gone south. It's been a week and all of a sudden we're we're like Oh my goodness you know. I am. I was GonNa make a joke that you've worn out the sad trombone album but the fact of the matter is you were playing. We're in the money like a week ago. Ten days ago we were at record so I think how quickly and how precipitously the market's fallen is. What's given a lot of people pause here trying to figure out what's happened but You know as as Neil as saying I think there's so much uncertainty about things beyond the economics of this and that's what I think is driving investors crazy Fundamentally this comes down to science and medicine We don't have good tests for this. We have a vaccine for this yet. Of course and you couple that with the communication strategy can call it that from from the administration It has been dissonant to say the least and I think investors are trying to get a handle on how big this is going to be how bad this is going to be. And there just isn't a whole lot of clarity on that yet neil. I was writing yesterday's show and I was trying to turn a phrase and I wanted to say something like you know the the economic fundamentals of of what we're dealing with here. The fundamentals are still strong and they are right now as you said a minute ago at some point though the actual economy not just the market will be affected. Yes maybe too soon. To tell look there is some global impact that we will for sure. Cnn It's going to be a bigger impact in China who is dealing with a massive travel restrictions quarantines of millions of people shut down businesses. But there is some good news coming out of China and that is that China starting to open for business. And the and the reports of new cases of slowing. What's really changed for markets? This week is that the impact has reached beyond China's borders. And that's the scary thing. We don't know how quickly this fire will spread or whether there will be a community wide event and the developed market like the United States which shuts down a city or region for an extended period of time. That's what the markets are reacting to. And yes that would have an economic effect but there's a range of scenarios between the worst case in the best case in any possibility can happen at this point up totally. Fair David. A A note here about Two Thousand Eight two thousand nine. I'm getting questions you probably are about. Whether this is two thousand eight all over again and it has to be pointed out that the markets are functioning right there are buyers and sellers credit exists liquidities their functioning and there were huge problems with the economy back in two thousand eight two thousand nine ten point. We don't have those same problems today. So that's something that's decidedly different here and you look at the the market today A lot of losses were raised. I mean the market was way down. had many points of the day to day came back up here at the end so yes to some extent there are buying opportunities here but you look at places like the bond. Market the tenure. Us Bond is incredibly low at this point now indicating the fact that People are flocking to safety. They WanNa find something amidst all of this at the same time. They're also having some faith here that the Fed is going to do something and today. You got this statement from the Fed Chairman Saying essentially the the economy's is is doing fine. We're GONNA continue to monitor this involving threat. I think he said So you saw him trying to do what he could In three sentences or four sentences to to give investors a bit of confidence. I wonder if he thought about playing my game. What is j? Paul says that that'd be good. That'd be a little bit Okay so look Neela actually just gonNA mention Jay Powell He came out made this. It has to be said at six. It's an extraordinary statement for the Fed to come out of nowhere and have the Fed chairman. Say listen everything is fine The market however while rallying into the close I don't care what the Fed share had to say because in all honesty the Federal Reserve cannot create a vaccine. No it can't when all you have is a hammer. Every problem is a nail. And we've learned that an interest rate cut can't solve trade tensions and it can't immunize the population on the markets from the corona virus. But what the Fed can do is show that there's someone paying attention that can stimulate Credit MARKETS LIQUIDITY KEEP liquidity flowing and. Keep US put a bottom in terms of the stock price stock market decline. And that's exactly what POW intended to do with the statement bill. Richardson at Edward Jones. I Apologize For messing up on the INTRO. There Neela won't happen again. David Girl you can catch him On the TV MSNBC. On Saturday and Sunday afternoons David. Yes right. Y'All let's get there. We go all right. Thanks you to heal later. It would take a veritable orchestra of Wa wa. Trombones to do justice to this week on Wall Street. We will try when we do. The numbers

Federal Reserve Neela United States David China Chairman David Gura WA Neil Jay Powell Msnbc David Girl Paul Richardson
Jondi Whitis  Energy Psychology, Tapping with Kids, & EFT Tools

The Healing Place Podcast

09:49 min | 3 years ago

Jondi Whitis Energy Psychology, Tapping with Kids, & EFT Tools

"Excited to have with me today. John D. Whiteness. And we are going to talk about energy. Psychology says. She's a master trainer and practitioner in Energy Psychology. And I know we've talked about on the pipe as before. Eft But she's also going to talk to us that as well as t t t and the other one is tft which I have honestly not heard of So I'm excited to learn as well so welcome Chandi thanks. It's a pleasure to be here and you started talking. We talked to vista few minutes before I hit record about Energy Psychology. In where that what it is great. Well I'm just a real swift ride through the ages about five thousand years ago or sell. Who's county Asian medicine primarily Chinese medicine? came up with the concept of the energy body and the idea of balance. Everybody's seeing the yen young of balance right and so one of the things that the Chinese figured out way back was that we have life force within us. We are made of it and we have it within US and when it becomes imbalanced that is sort of the bottom line of Asian medicine is to re balance the life force otherwise known as cheap and so thousands of years later finally catching up and so we have integrated this into our western medicine. Traditions and perspectives. And we call this area a very large umbrella. We call it energy medicine or energy. Psychology there rather interchangeable terms really Neither is quite right but Somehow energy all of its own We would probably get lots of Exxon mobile ads if we didn't specify so we're not yet to good at specifying what we mean. And so we've designated these two areas so far So since the eighties we have really been working on this area and it expands very very quickly because it is part of the mind body connection which almost everybody on the planet so far and it's an expansive dynamic area of inquiry which tells us about that the marriage of consciousness and physical health and this thing we called emotional health or wellbeing and so all three of these tenants are sort of carried together in crucible of energy work that we do in the eighties. There were three scientist Let me just rephrase that three practitioners that were really into scientific inquiry about what could be better for my clients and that's kind of people we like right. They're always driving. Find something new and wonderful for their clients. Hell and so there was a chiropractor Anna psychologist and psychotherapist and independently as scientists. Want to be all three of them determined that if they took these ancient Asian principals they were finding out about about bodies cheat and balance and manual stimulation of the Meridians which is just a fancy word for that the veins highways which life force or chee travels throughout the body if they were doing that simultaneously with their other endeavor. Cairo Presser Psychology. They got a much bigger and more positive outcome and so our tradition. That I'm talking about today is really derivative of Dr Callahan's. He had this idea that together. These things could be called thought field. Therapy T. F. T. And over the years it was just actually for a professionals in the mental health area. One of his students though was the Stanford trained engineer call Gary Crag and turned out that he was really good engineering student but what he was really interested in was human engineering and so he started taking every course he could find and spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in personal empowerment and looking at all the different ways that one could elevate themselves and their health and he decided to take Dr Callahan's work and squash it into an elegantly simple little quirks and he called it. Fta for emotional freedom techniques and so there's a couple radical things that we love him for He's still very much with us. But one of the things is the ability to send the size this little unique down sized reverse engineered packet that called. Eft Much smaller easier to use for the world than its predecessor. The other thing was he had this idea that he expressed about all negative emotions were actually energy disruption and people went and so you know he's he's probably not still out there explaining that concept but the basic idea including of my direct mentor. A Gwyneth. Maas is it's about a consciousness of a disruption in your energy system which is right. There is some thing that happens. That alert you to the fact there is a disruption in your equilibrium. And that's as they say where it all began and this is what we do in energy psychology. Since that time. I'll give you that thirteen. You ask about T- t TS stands for trauma tapping technique and it is a derivative that is directly from Roger Callahan and Gary Craig and comes together in another kind of algorithm which is closer actually detail but its value as that. My friends go NEELA. Calm and youth. Sandstrom are Swedish and they have spent half their lifetime anyway in the Western diaspora of refugee camps and children of war. I displaced persons and they have spread this work. He t t to everyone they found in the beauty of it is they decided because there are well over three hundred dialects that they would never be able to master those or be understood. Etcetera Etcetera. Bingo they had this great idea. Let's make wordless. Let's just do an algorithm or prestige and make it wordless and we'll tell people through a confederate a compatriot a local a guide. We'll tell them to please the symbol. Everybody and we'll tell them to please think about that. Which troubles you and while you hold. That thought see going back to thought. Fail therapy while you hold. That thought we want you to do this. Little Algorithm of manual stimulation. And big. Go you'll feel better and so now you have all three Ts. That's fantastic ahead Lorna Mine. Wiser on and she also talked about She's a friend and the beautiful work that they're doing you know particularly or it's telling viewers if they want to look into it's peaceful heart dot s. e. which dancer Sweden. Okay wonderful thank you. Yes sure well I have utilized. Eft Ella my own healing journey started with em Dr Therapy and Process TRAUMAS I found. Emt A lot of people talk about emt are being invasive meaning that I had to return back to traumas. Eft My understanding is you know. It's less invasive. You don't necessarily always have to go back to the traumas but more about the feeling that you're having once being triggered what's what's the rising right. It's a much gentler technique and its beauty. Is this if you asked me which had Its beauty is this. Eft can be used at one of three graduated levels. The first one Gary Craig took it from licensor and gave it to the people. It's the people tool K. So we can use it for self care which is huge when we can take something out of the health professions and use it ourselves. We become empowered. I this way that we can use. That is called peer to peer. And the most beautiful thing I do. We have the teacher. Practice comes or social worker. Practice comes is I will show them how to support one another and they need never know what's going on with the other person. It's beautiful thing. The third level is much like an iceberg way underneath the water line. You see that. This tool is so deeply profoundly therapeutic and there's nowhere that I've ever found it cannot go or what it cannot do but that's the kind of work that would be done in very practiced hands certified hand people who have studied for a very long time. Why not because of the degree? It's because of their commitment to keeping their client safe anti going at a pace that respects an honors the client and keeps them safe and how to handle things when things get too hot or too overwhelming so all of those years of practice have to do with really keeping people

Energy Psychology Roger Callahan Gary Craig John D. Whiteness Exxon United States Chandi Stanford Chee Scientist Traumas Gwyneth Sandstrom Lorna Mine Gary Crag Maas T. F. T.
Doctor delivers end-of-life news via 'robot,' leaving family frustrated

Len Berman and Michael Riedel in the Morning

00:31 sec | 4 years ago

Doctor delivers end-of-life news via 'robot,' leaving family frustrated

"A California family outraged after we're told their loved one was going to die by a robot. Neela Willem was sitting at the bedside of grandfather in the ICU when a robot rolled into the room and a doctor appeared on the scene, the doctor offered a grim diagnosis to her and her grandfather. And her grandfather died the very next day. William tells CNN I think they should have been more shown more dignity and treated better than they did. Talking about the human size. Side manner. You're going to

Neela Willem CNN California William
How a Failed Blind Date Led Mila Kunis to Find Love With Ashton Kutcher

Valentine in the Morning

01:11 min | 5 years ago

How a Failed Blind Date Led Mila Kunis to Find Love With Ashton Kutcher

"Cal rates that your traffic I'm Tony Jordan for three my Valentine in the, morning Hollywood headline Queen of our show she's got the Hollywood headlines Jill what is going on in Ashton Kucher. Have a have a bad blind date, the thank for their love story Neela says years after they start together on that seventy show. Ashton, tried to set her up on a blind date that guy never showed up and then the two of them start a. Relationship right after that so she says it was that sure that blind date to she didn't say who it was who was who's line, dates and stranger things start me, Bobby Brown who plays eleven on the, show she did an interview with w magazine and she talked about her friendship, with Drake isn't it all started when they posted a. Photo together on Degrom backstage at. Drake show she's fourteen he's, thirty one but she says strictly a friendship, and she goes to him for advice. And they really are really good friends I remember when that photo was posted like what, what is this but super interesting yeah they're just really good. Friends and he's almost like. A mentor sure okay I'm Julia Hollywood headlines case seven fifty two. It is one of four three my fabrics Valentine the morning, happy news coming up eight six, six five four four my fam- texts.

Neela Drake Bobby Brown Hollywood Julia Hollywood Ashton Kucher Ashton Tony Jordan Degrom W Magazine