28 Burst results for "Nella"

WNYC 93.9 FM
"nella" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"Relationships That's at 10 o'clock this morning Right now here is John schaefer with today's giggler The Venezuelan singer nella came to the state to study at the Berkeley college of music and in short order she graduated released a hit record and won the Latin Grammy for best new artist of 2019 Working with Spanish producer Javier limon nella's album contained a hit song Maya manella or they call me nella And of course that success overshadowed some other fine songs on the record like the title track voi I told her you put all their blood boy while I saw that boy boy boy play on the door just for coming up That's void I go or I'm going by nella Venezuelan born singer is going to the blue note To Mark Valentine's Day with two sets tonight More info is at new sounds dot org If you can Wrap up this morning if you're heading out it is cold sunny yes but 18 feels like the single digits Sunny and a high today of 28 tonight cold once again at 18 We start to warm up though tomorrow if you call it just above freezing a warmup It's 7 45 In an afternoon Support.

WNYC 93.9 FM
"nella" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM
"A conversation about the politics inside and outside the stadium plus the hip hop icons at the great halftime show there Right now here's John schaeffer with today's giggler The Venezuelan singer nella came to the state to study at the Berkeley college of music and in short order she graduated released a hit record and won the Latin Grammy for best new artist of 2019 Working with Spanish producer Javier limon nella's album contained a hit song Maya manella or they call me nella And of course that success overshadowed some other fine songs on the record like the title track void I told her you put all their blood boy boy while I saw that boy boy boy they got the door just for coming up That's void I go or I'm going by nella Venezuelan born singer is going to the blue note To Mark Valentine's Day with two sets tonight More info is at new sounds dot org Sunny with a high near 28 today the wind chill will make it feel cold to the nap As it does right now clear but it feels like the single digits It's 5 44 Let me consume the quarter that I'm covered on the give me this in an open air living.

One Great Book
The Other Black Girl
"I got my copy of the other black girl months before it came out as i often do. I started reading and through its pages. I got to wonder the halls of wagner books alongside black editorial assistant nella. Who's been there about two years at this point. I sat with her in her cubicle and listened in on the often-frustrating conversation she had with vera her white boss. I noted her ambition to become an editor herself following in the footsteps of her idol. The conic black editor kendra ray whittaker who edited the books of. Noah's all time favorite author. The incredible diana gordon author a burning heart. A book meant so much to her. And so many other young black girls kendra ray whittaker had once walked the halls of wagner books herself and now delegates to work there every day. Sure the pay isn't enough to live on and she puts up with a lot of crap. I mean so much crap. The way the microaggressions she endured portrayed in these pages is illuminating. But also it was noah's dream to walk these halls wagner is the hardest publishing house to get into in here. She is now she just has to work her way up. That's proving harder than she imagined. I held my breath when nellis spots another black girl and the halls of wagner a girl named hazel. Who's come to interview. Nella knows not to get her hopes up as she says she only believed that the higher ups at wagner had finally considered interviewing more diverse people when she saw it because over the last two years the only people who've been interviewed or hired were very specific people from a very specific box.

KFI AM 640
"nella" Discussed on KFI AM 640
"A documentary. McAfee was 75. He was arrested last October at Barcelona's International airport. And had been held ever since. We have a crash on the five in Laguna Hills. This one is along the South bound side of the five freeway Coming up on L Toral Road. This wreck has been cleared out of Lynch the right shoulder. But delays are loading about of Irvine getting away from Big Parkway. It's to Michael Brian K F Eye in the sky. Sponsored by injury. Attorney Superwoman super lawyer dot com. What's the latest in Montana? It just keeps on going here. Angel. It's the 10 eastbound Sierra over the cedar police activity from one a.m. this morning, So it's an all day affair here. Bumper to bumper back almost of the 15 about their like in and even behind. That is bumper to bumper from about vineyard over to Millikan as well. What you want to do exit there is San Bernardino Avenue and or fourth I should say. Forethought to 10 and the head east that way in San Bernardino, Avital become that and they head over a two seater and rejoin the freeway. Now it looks like in the co home past 15 northbound that kill summit. They had a vehicle fire. They're taking minutes through the right shoulder, but it's got the normal slowing way back to the to 15 split in DeVore entered in an accident visit superwoman super lawyer dot com. Mike O'Brien KF eye in the sky. Santa Monica 10 eastbound slows from Santa Nella all the way to the five k F pie in the sky helps get you there faster. I'm Angel Martinez. Are you high break time? I know you. I'm cola guard a prescription colon cancer screening option for people 45, plus an average risk. It seems like you take care of yourself..

KQED Radio
"nella" Discussed on KQED Radio
"Duck. Go privacy, simplified. And from the listeners who support this NPR station. You're listening to. It's been a minute from NPR. I'm Sam Sanders. So inspiration can strike in the strangest places for my last guest. This episode it struck in the office bathroom for a while when Zakia Delilah Harris was an editorial assistant at a publishing house. She had been the only black woman on her floor at work until one day, another black woman showed up. Cross paths in the bathroom of all places. But neither of them actually spoke to each other and the key. I kept thinking about that moment with the other black girl. I thought about that interaction. I thought about why I didn't say anything specifically, um, I thought about why maybe she didn't think it was a big deal that we're both in that space together. Um and why I was so excited and also nervous that like what if it was me, like what if she doesn't want to have a conversation with me Like all of those kind of, um, insecurities that I have buzzing around my brain? A lot of the time Flash forward to now That idea is a book Zakia, Delilah Harris's debut novel. The other black girl and the reviews are pretty glowing. People are saying it's devil wears product meets. Get out. Also, I should mention that the Kia Delilah Harris is the sister of Aisha Harris, one of the hosts of NPR's pop culture. Happy Hour. Who you heard earlier in the show. Any Who Right now we're going to talk about Vicki's book, how it subverts the office drama and the lessons it has for a very white publishing industry. I want to lay out some kind of synopsis of the other black girl as best we can, without giving away any spoilers, and I'm wondering is the best way to do that. Not through having tried to give some plot. But having you just give us a quick character sketches of the two main characters Nella and Hazel. Yeah. So our first character is Nella Rogers. Um, she is a young 26 year old and toil assistant who was born and raised in Very suburban town in Connecticut, mostly around white people. She has been the only black person working at the very prestigious and very white publishing house. Wagner Books, which is in Manhattan in midtown, and She's been the only black person there for two years, and she is just You know she's had it in a lot of ways. She has experienced tons of microaggressions that doesn't really have a space and work to talk about these microaggressions, but she does have a space outside of work with her. Best friend Malika and her boyfriend, Owen, and then in walks, Hazel. Uh, The other black girl who is another young black woman from Harlem has gorgeous dreadlocks. She just drips Harlem cool from her head to her toes. She very much represents in a lot of ways for Nella, this other this other way of black news. This also I think for her She has a little bit of envy. I think she's really intrigued and wants to kind of she wants to know what it's like to have. I think lived in that space and like have it's kind of like this Instagram ready Blackness exactly. Executed in the way that is just like Beautiful to behold. If that makes sense. I love that exactly exactly it And so the two of them. Meet, and you kind of think all right. They have to be friends. They're the two black girls. But then, and I guess that's where I stop because I don't want to get else. Yes, yes, yes, Things get complicated as they often deal Hazel felt And I was happy to see it so many times,.

The 11th Hour with Brian Williams
Pulitzer Board Honors Teen Who Filmed George Floyd’s Murder
"On the afternoon of may twenty fifth twenty twenty. She was taking her nine year old cousin to buy snacks at an unremarkable corner. Store in minneapolis called cup foods quite literally the definition of minding her own business when she made a quick decision. That would change. The course of history shook out her phone. She started recording. What became the murder of a man in the street. In broad daylight under the knee of a police officer she chronicled the departure of life from the body of the man. We now know. As george floyd today. Darnell frazier was recognized with a special citation from the board that awards the pulitzer prize as reuters. Reported it today quote the citation at the twenty twenty one. Pulitzer prize ceremony is a rare instance of the board recognizing the journalistic achievement of someone with no professional experience in the field. A striking distinction in the genre sometimes known as citizen journalism frazier. Eighteen was recognized for recording quote a transformative video that jolted viewers spurred protests against police brutality around the world and no it is not hyperbole to say that darnell frazier's decision in that moment changed the world people marched around the world. George floyd's name has been spoken in remembrance in the oval office. It's the title of a proposed act of congress. Indeed what darnell frazier did in that. Moment was the definition of electronic journalism as ugly and stomach-turning as the video is to watch the question remains. Would we be saying the name. George floyd were it not for the bravery and presence of mind of a young woman named dr nella frazier

KQED Radio
"nella" Discussed on KQED Radio
"That contrast really sets up a lot of interesting. I'll just say interesting dynamics between them and what kind of everyday pressures has no, like so many other black women in US publishing and not just US publishing face. Being the only one means a lot of things for Nella. The thing that is really hard for her is the fact that she feels like she has to speak for every black person every black opinion she's expected to speak, but in a certain way, right, she she has to come off in a way that's also appealing to her co workers, and that can change depending on what's in Vogue. What's popular? So she really has to kind of fit herself into the mold that they believe she should be in. I'm sure you knew this question. Was coming from the first moment You began to write the book. What are his fiction and what part is memoir? Ah, lot of it is fiction. A lot of it is exaggeration. I fortunately did not have it nearly as bad as knowledge as Axl wasn't the only black person where I worked. I was still one of few. Not many in the only black woman an editorial so so that that part of looking around this table and not seeing anyone who looked like me apart was very real. But the characters were very much of fun. Amalgamation of certain quirk, certain conversations I've overheard all of those zany Hijinks that you see in an office, though, when you're close with other people like that, so that element was was pretty on point. Then one day, double it up. There's a note on Ella's desk. Leave Wagner period. Now it's sinister, but a little ambiguous. How do you hope people react? I mean, I wanted to have this mysterious element that kind of throws a wrench into Melas plans for life at Wagner Butts, but I really want the reader to think about the note. It was more for the reader because I want them to think about who they think would have left it for her on day. I think you can tell a lot about a reader. By what they expect. Oh, who? They who they kind of have in their crosshairs? Yeah, because there are a lot of suspects right there a lot of people who could have done it. And throughout this book, I really wanted readers to question their own prejudices, their own kind of analysis of certain interactions. And that note, I think is just one example. I found it said when I reached the part in the book where Anneli says that Hazel made her feel redundant. Yeah, I mean, it really goes into my own ideas that I have about. I mean, it's not only publishing. I think it's Lot of industries that are mostly white, where we commodified blackness where you only need this One version of this thing for this one purpose or is diversity is not like that. You have to be thoughtful about How you're speaking with people How you see the office Because all of those things matter they make a difference into whether or not a piece feels inclusive. So when he's ALS in the space, Nella feels like Okay, well, they have someone else who dresses cooler than me who speaks on these things much more clearly and confidently than I do. Everyone seems to love her. My purpose here. My worth here is in question. Now. No one's cooler vanilla, But I'm just I'm just well, Thank you. Someone you really put her own personal. Quirks and to mellow that was I'm glad to hear that way. I say we finally run that out here. Yes, you got me. She can't deliver. Harris is author of the other Black girl. Thanks So much for speaking with us again. Such an honor toc here with you today. Philomena Freeland were once a power couple fill the lead architect for the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of African American History. Nina Grammy nominated jazz singer, composer, actress and playwright. Kill. Freeland died in 2019. And now Nina has recorded a new album that is dedicated to him. MPR's Mandali del Barco reports. Nina freelance album Time Traveler is a love letter to her late husband, Phil, who she met in 1978 on a mutual friends porch in North Carolina. He was my heart. He was my soul mate. They enjoyed an exciting full life of work, travel, friends and family. After Phil was diagnosed with a lesson, 2016 Nina paused her music career to care for him until the end. Now she's back with a new album, re interpreting songs they enjoyed during their 40 year marriage. The.

WBAP 820AM
"nella" Discussed on WBAP 820AM
"They spent 11 billion So that tells us, you're right there. Still, you were talking about how people still have. There's to Bill Yin and supply still in the market place. That's why It'll be hard to get just You just have to wait for people to Well, yeah, the through. Yeah, exactly. No, they got to go through. They got to get through there in Victoria through there Stock and then you'll see it kind of level back off a guy again. Mm hmm. But a family of fastly they had their worst quarter and in 10 years in the first quarter of this year. Because of this stuff head who ordered it? A wing? There's more Chilean. Whole opinion milkshakes. Come on. Right. Here we go, Go. Here's Here's the deal. I order Thea if the grocery industry Learned anything as well as Mm. Is there a reason to hoard anything? You know, that's what they kept saying at the time. Remember there, wasn't it? Is there a reason? The horde anything? I don't know. I can't think of a reason now if I wanted to buy safe Him cases of something. Listen, I need to leave it at that. Sure. Might be good to call her head to the Gore sources. Say. Listen, I'm gonna come in and buy this right? You know, just in the grocery store with the grocery stores will limit They do live in a lot of things. Yes, they live in lot of things now. So go buy three cases of water one and three and other and three to other if you have to do if your feeling that way, but it toilet paper is something you do not need to hoard. Yeah, it does not need to be that way. Traffic wrongs You've got to Nella Frontier Plant out exactly. Oh, Flower bed then writer you're saying yes. Wow. Right. Wow. So one reason that money grows corn. Wow. Easy. Here it is, Jeff, but not so coming up in 7 45. We'll talk about the.

Latino USA
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.

Podcast Italiano
"nella" Discussed on Podcast Italiano
"To sue mario draghi president out public. I would've differential in carrico performer. On alexa president cannot concept that going to be double cone sweater period That's your inch threat. The debate draghi lead. They participated in nevada. Not a judah tolo score so three d. abroad your internal feature maintain kartika became trapped adenosine auto quasi the party we demand so that the sokaia sustain even an torture to enter market efforts prema- posizione for dahlia partito but who score alita in particularly salvini three-party minority in substantiates to deduct cordo to better data on gobert nokia copy liquidity frontier. Enquist father redondo seattle nephew prestigious l. Today volley de mario draghi Scores yet in discourse all send out okay circle multiplied sato all president lincoln having such a senior. What are you gonna be get mice on longer with momento. The maccioni cozine a responsibility. Cassiem everybody to tonight. Saloon repair although a lot of gravity economic development the mia farrow watching a pilot or monte g gi become the matico dallas shirley gate no soul born. I'm only a pilot of the next generation e you beyond the space. They sold europa parallel to deliver milk Panel longer to the dewey me latching quanta cape saab. That'll give another blaming the apologetic italian igwe l. Proximal in reality realities your net betty remodel because your proposal the school discourse so that argue genetically descend diego par sweaty and multo sauber. You quasi angry cheese me. Molter neutral level.

Podcast Italiano
"nella" Discussed on Podcast Italiano
"That we could even continue their eddie. Mastering the sparta mediatory rallied without politically represent our own moolah teen on a little money. Nba's kunti devi nets had no in ventura salad. Or larry bell. Even donna would al trend through the attention media advocate political each episode persona enthralling. La belichick eliana is that of yemen. Tell the media. You've been to november. You do me any indeed. Wotton prima kozel italian because beecham nova lombardia abra l'italia in vinnie investigator. The giants since richard dent in i enter the james sorry tara. Fbi amounted to.

ESPN Daily
20 Years Later: How Dale Earnhardt's Death Changed NASCAR Forever
"Ryan mcgee. Espn daily's chief. Paint trading correspondent. Thank you for joining me man. That's me man when i started. Espn a really really long. Time ago and i had this accent there were like. Hey you know about nascar right. I go yes you do. More than just know about nascar ryan you have now reported and narrated a new film for east sixty and it's called intimidator the lasting legacy of dale earnhardt. And i wanna talk to you about it today because it's a lot. It's about a lot more than how transcendent dale was on the track. It focuses on how he radically changed. Nascar's culture when it comes to safety but before we get into that. I do want you to just kinda sketch out for us. Who dale was for the uninitiated here and what made him such a towering figure in the nascar universe well and it's interesting because he's been gone twenty years i mean nascar's more than seven hundred races without del earnhardt and so for those of us of a certain age the idea of having to explain him and and why he's such a big deal seems insane but we saw what the last dance. The last dance ron's and half of twitter was like well. He was good. But you know this jordan character. Yeah we should know about it and we were so offended but bless their hearts. They didn't see him play. And so in this case you know. You have an entire generation twenty years exactly of sports fans who didn't see our heart race but it wasn't just about seventy six wins seven championships and also was just about the presence in the room. Always say with dell earnhardt if there was a thousand of us in a ballroom and we're all looking at a stage and he were to come in the back door when none of us were looking. We'd all instinctively. Just turn around because the air in the room changed. There was just a presence in a way that it carried himself and conducted his business and the intimidator thing that was legit. Every time i will. I know him. And every time i was in a room with him there was a little part of me. That was just trying not to say something stupid or pass out so on the back of the baseball card ryan so to speak. What are the accomplishments. That people should know about what dale did. Well the seventy six winds are really big deal but the seven championships and seventy plus year. The stockcar racing only three people one seven championships the checkered flag bands around their heat waves to them. That checkered card. His greatest success was on the super speedways. the taliban soup speedway and daytona he one thirty four racists and though tone national speedway thirty four nella one of those was the daytona five hundred and that was part of the appeal for him was even though he was this one tough customer and the man in black timid and all those things it took you twenty tries to finally win the daytona five hundred lawson in heartbreaking fashion multiple times twenty years frustration. Taylor that program names on the can't take it off. I guess i love it. He just he was in every man but he also of superman and that was always the appeal and outside of that ballroom. Full of the sports powerbrokers ryan. What was his status. Like regionally among the nascar faithful. How would you begin to describe what he meant to those people. What i hated it. Because when he came along in the late nineteen seventies. and you know it wasn't disrespect. But he didn't back down from. Richard petty from kailua from bobby allison from david pearson from any pissed them off the couldn't stand him and he would recommend a short track race. In martinsville and afro richer. Penn is electric. Listen kid you can't do it like this. And he just kept doing his way.

Black Women Travel Podcast
"nella" Discussed on Black Women Travel Podcast
"Me enjoy life so much more. How have you found friends as an adult like. Are these people you grew up with for the new bloggers that you come across. I'm it's combination of both. So i've had my my friends who i grew up with who i mentioned high school in like twelve years old because jamaica. High school actually starts in seventh grade seventh to twelfth grade thirteenth grade in high school. So i've had those same friends you know who sat beside me and wearing other classes. They're still my friends. And then i have also make friends through social media and the internet and other bloggers increases who have also become friends as well and then. I have friends at work. So that's african as an adult. A lot of friendships are formed through the internet or through your daily life experiences. A and i always like to ask guests. How can listener. Support your work. You can support my work by going to my youtube channel in subscribing Watching the videos as roma's visiting mike block page and reading leading reviews off different experiences. If you enjoy the comments below click on some of the ads. So that i can earn. That early knew that would be a appreciates rats support. It costs you nothing to support someone reading their content watching their videos and sharing it with people in your life. And where can they find you. Okay so i'm on all social media which is Instarem twitter facebook at as told by nello as well as my website is. Www dot as till by dot com at my youtube channel is nella the easiest place. If you want to actually personally message me is either through email which is nella blocks to five at gmail dot com or in me on instagram. I usually respond to those messages. So i will definitely put links to all of your social channels you mentioned and we wanna thank you so much. Thank you for being that inspiration destination for us today and for sharing so much of your story you for having me. I'm so excited my pleasure. I love it when people saying mellow you take very good care of yourself and we will see you wanna streets. Yes burn from one of my favorite person ethylene. They'll see you on the internet somewhere. Are i bottom.

Black Women Travel Podcast
"nella" Discussed on Black Women Travel Podcast
"It is what is making you feel stressed and it's sweating recognize that this is why i'm here that he can actually change it. Come through with the good word. Are any of your self care practices particularly grounding for you Meditation journaling in are probably the most girl. I'm a leo improve to be dramatic when things happen. Just give me my ten minutes of being overly dramatic and then i come back to normal journal already. Changing have been those things those ways for me to channel that energy into okay. I'm not gonna freak out a missile breathe in and outs aim at oats at. It really does. Any focus is being. What has helped you face the challenges in your life. I have great friends who i can. Actually i can lean on. I always say how friends who are not necessarily there. I call them maintenance friends meaning that we may not speak every day. But i knew that if i need them i can call on them. I have good family support. My karen messy blends other relatives on Grandparents off so. I think that having good family has really been something. That had helped me feasts challenges. I mean i'm still going to freak out but you know knowing that you have people who support you is a good thing on. It's a good reminder that everything is everything will be okay in the end if it's not okay. It's not the end. Turns something. I've recently adopted is the expression that i've i've already so survived one hundred percent of my worst days so this too shall pass. Do you have any song lyrics or a poem. That's inspiring you these days so be honest. i really don't listen to music much. I'm i listen to modern music. Gotten that much feeble. A mainly listened to older music where it's available dancing and listening to necessarily deep leagues. I'm listening to get up and dance. May probably don't know the real alerts to the song made up my own lyrics but saying with confidence because you know confidences key kind of things that are no lyrics or points necessarily anna guide. Mournful coots are inspirational. Coots that's i used to follow or be guiding principles I just remind myself that happiness is my birthright abundance is my birthright is my birthright everything. That's i want is main on. It can't be made once. I actually wanted temple the effort into get needs. Okay all right. that's that's good. Put that on. A t shirt All of that could turn front and back. I think lots of us forget that we have a choice in everything that we do a mean. If you don't like something you can change. It may not may not be immediately books. You can always make a decision on two d that changes the oakland mafia life. So as a person who loves to celebrate your life. I think i can say that How do you like to celebrate. And what ways do you celebrate.

Black Women Travel Podcast
"nella" Discussed on Black Women Travel Podcast
"Insulting. That is literally recently developed in my late twenties notice. I'm old on. You know how they always said that when you get older when your grandparents really care as much i think it starting early here last beautiful. And congratulations on that and thank you for sharing that with us as well as also known as i said when you're at the beach most people aren't paying attention to you if they even look one time that's it's they're not paying attention to you that much there to have fun with their friends. Their family anything are paying attention to you. That little have enough to their life or that means that he been have you gone. Would you ever go. Oh my goodness not gone. Maybe i would go. I don't even. I haven't gone it. I do have the nudity confidence yet girl. I wouldn't wanna touch her anywhere. I good lot. That is different from anywhere else. Like you know really but oh my goodness. I don't think time theriot's still have civil eats. So i know like to read quite a bit. And i've seen some of your like exercise videos What are some of your hobbies and interests as he said So travel is my main hobby and interest which i write to vote. I also like to dine actually dancing something i did. What else from us. Three years old and it was just something. That is fun for me. Something i enjoy doing also like those pictures instagram. I actually like photography. And so that is something that i do. I don't do as much more than the social media pictures. So i do want to start. You know stepping ultra my comfort zone anger back into some of the things that i really loved In terms of photography books photography reading don sienna writing. I'm hoping to eventually become a writer in terms of writing nonfiction books sundays sundays. The future who see fiction or nonfiction. Who will we'll see. Ooh what the title be..

Black Women Travel Podcast
"nella" Discussed on Black Women Travel Podcast
"You could say that again. okay Have you ever wanted to move from jamaica. Like not live in jamaica on. Yeah i've always loved jamaica. So i want to live here retire here if i would want to have. Experiences go to different countries for maybe six months a year just to experience a cultural eventually. I'm gonna come back and live here because during his awesome. But i would go to other countries and just burying their cultures and experiences for at least six months a year even five years and in combat a do love Kind of what. I was talking about before i do love that. You have always gotten around country to all the different terrains. All the different Places to explore is so dope a lot of people. Don't you know they're very much interested in. What's what else is out there. And you could just see that your whatever you create a comes with so much heart like you have a real is it seems to me that you have a real love for your country and for these really different cool super coal again places. How have you been able to in this last year. Take that to another level like i saw. You started a youtube channel. Es l. started a youtube channel called just nello on it was to enhance the imagery. 'cause i bright a tonight describe all of these pieces i show. The pictures are gonna want to take merce viewers into the experience by shell casing of video. Traveling experienced some so. That was a way that i tried to enhance my travel experiences as well as tried to also collaborate with other trouble blog. Let's just to get recommendations for ho the have been managing the pandemic because there are lots of. They're actually quite a few local. Jimmy control bloggers. Who are doing things on. I also tried to get their input. On how we could showcase jamaica in the safest way possible because i do think in the pandemic one thing that was highlighted is ho because of you know going across bordeaux's travelling to different countries wasn't necessarily the easiest.

Black Women Travel Podcast
"nella" Discussed on Black Women Travel Podcast
"As powerful there. There's even a whole book called the power now. So that's very beautiful and there's there's been a lot you know Discussing mindfulness Discussing being present in the momento forth and so on to exactly what you're saying combat all the exiled in the depressions and the fears. And the worries about where you are what you're doing who you are all that kind of stuff so as really great insight out also say that we are also talking about more than our parents are lots of our parents or grandparents and so forth. They went through lots of life traumas and they didn't speak about seats more open to talking about the fact that we are having issues which mu also be part of the reason why it's more recognizable null saw will say i'll share this with you and it's completely anecdotal because it's my experience so when i was there and twenty ten i think it was twenty ten. Maybe it was before that on like just a vacation trip. I went to a beach. Party was outside of montego. Bay was montego bay. It was a beach party. It was supposed to be like a local beach party so it wasn't like a bunch of white people right So hold under jamaicans hanging out on the beach. You think is about to be late. You know getting we get in our drink sam. We getting a little dancing. Everybody was standing around and it was like attention like people were waiting for something to pop off. I for somebody to say some wrong or somebody to dance with somebody else's girl or you know just like just waiting for something to pop off so they could escape essentially like. Let me be wary. Let me be careful. So that if anything does pop off i could get a here type of thing. At least that's how i perceive it perceived it at the time like nobody was really getting jiechi witty. You know what. I mean But i don't know i also don't know who those people were where they came from it might have been just a bunch of strangers versus people who actually knew each other having like a party in friend of a friend of a friend of frank kind of thing come so that but that has always stuck in my mind that has always left an impression about because like places are made up of the people right. Yes it is so yeah. That was just like an interesting little experience that i had there. That stuck out as phoned up there. Actually many jimmy coats in terms of jamaica. Experience can be different based on where you're from so you have an experience where you may be from the ghetto and you have certain expectations. You're there is higher. Violence headed higher prone to violence. There's a certain expectation you always be on alert. Because it's kind of ingrained in you you need to. You need to be watching all exiting to be be some mindset that you have to have based on where you are versus if you are somewhere like our own midtown or uptown where you may have certain amount of security. He's always present and you don't have the seem onto fares. You mean be behave before we so that could also be a parts of different kinds of It just depends on where you were and who you were with the and their personal experiences. 'cause for some people they knew. Pc have to always be on alert based on their environment have to also be prepared mentally for different situations so they can actually relax and enjoy themselves. Grotto sound like trauma. Oh okay planning simple..

Black Women Travel Podcast
"nella" Discussed on Black Women Travel Podcast
"On a leg to be happy. It's one it's literally my life goal to be happy. Everything else comes after but my number school is to be as happy as possible as congress possible just depends on how you surround yourself who you surround yourself with what you do and i do not believe i was put on this earth just to work work work and not enjoy my life. I believe else twenty. Were earth to enjoy life to experienced balanced to explore to learn as much as possible and that is the mindset that i tried to go to keep my peace and you. You're not sure where this like. Philosophy of life came from. You just like came out the womb. Little nello was always come away from me. Because i'm about the peace over here like which pop in lipstick like i see you at like six zero like it's probably something developed over time. I was dressed in high listener. Jimmy l. out from high school to university and i had to find some way to get peace on com uncertainty arles. I'd be like crying all the time for straight Sleep everything to do. Just to escape feeling louis so disfigured had to have all this energy. I need to find a way to positively china-led energy into something that makes me feel good. That makes me feel. And i tried to read positively books. I'm listen to podcasts. About positive liberty and i tried to take their recommendations into hand to and leave a bitter because it is so easy for us to get frustrated at aside an anxious depressed i find myself sometimes getting up to just resend to myself. Why do you think that your generation is more depressed than others. I think it's a big big Actually has dude social media. Social media highlight reel. You're seeing people who are in your early. S nineteen year olds are becoming multibillion multi billionaires having corporations and you're like what am i doing with my life or your seen people and they're like couple goals and falling in love and getting married and then you're like single in your leg what's wrong with me. There's this whole comparison trump a of generation falls into especially since so many people give us access to daylight. There's instagram there's youtube. There's all these social media where people showcase that daily amazing life coach on foods on. Then you start to wonder why that. I'm not leaving this amazing life. Then you have also the preconceived perceptions on preconceived notions and expectations that are already placed on you from your family from your friend groups. You're you grew up as a certain person that everybody expects that Your bright you're supposed to become a certain correo. You're supposed to become a bowling. You're supposed to be an example for younger siblings and then all of this is just overwhelming. Then we're also just going through a of us don't or a lot of don't necessarily have channels to express ourselves do have people which we can talk to so all of this becomes bottled. Oh and it turns into using can what is wrong with me. Why am i having these issues on instead of realizing that you are exactly where you're supposed to be in.

Black Women Travel Podcast
"nella" Discussed on Black Women Travel Podcast
"And also Telling the health centers and hospitals patients. Come we try to give them information but not not. Everybody me received information the same way as medical professionals. Sometimes you may choose to use a lots of medical jargon that patients do understand. So it's just about recognizing if a patient doesn't understand something and tried to make sure that you seek to them as simple and as best as possible. Those really make a difference in how the outcomes are for most patients and what about covert in. How things in your eyes have been handled in jamaica. The opening borders closing borders the health of of people that actually live there case of covid. In terms of the government's they've tried to put in restrictions that facility cool read for example. You can in jamaica you. It's mandatory to wear a mask. It's not a option. It's mandatory big. The police officers are enforcing the E can't go into any business place with her mask thing site so that's one of the main difference which i seen versus other countries. The next thing is that what were facing right knowing jamaica is to try and balance On keeping people safe with or economics. It's difficult for us to completely close or ordos because him itself is a major income earner for the country. Say it's very difficult for us to close our buyers not to mention when you break it down there. Lots of informal businesses not major corporations not major chains but small businesses that also depend on not just tourism butts active income artisans who make crafts on fishermen or farmers on depend on having people who can afford to also purchase these items so us.

Black Women Travel Podcast
"nella" Discussed on Black Women Travel Podcast
"I am from kingston jamaica. Which is where i am. Also currently Staining kingston jamaica and i am a travel and lifestyle blogger from as tool by nilo. So tell us how did you get your start in trouble Starting travel actually became a hubby an escape because my job or my main proficient. He's a medical doctor. And i needed something to do. That would not overwhelming considering. That was going through so much stress in medical school and being a practicing physician. That's needed some way to escape and so travel became that escape was relaxing. It was a way for me to make time to spend with my friends who are often. Do get to see so. Did you go to medical school in jamaica. Yes i did at the university of west indies. What was that experience like. Who was earth i. It was a long time. it's five year medical program. I need to accelerate he program where unlike in the states you do for years or premed and in an additional four years of medical school in jamaica straight to high school. You're.

WTOP
"nella" Discussed on WTOP
"The report also found that the average loan in northern Virginia was just over $135,000. This is 34% higher than the national average of around $100,700 Valerie bonked. W t o p. News. Meantime, Virginia's pause and evictions ends today as the new Year starts tenants rights Group says a tenant rights group says as many as 400,000 Virginians are on the brink of eviction and could lose their homes this year. Maria Nella Foon Ya's junior, Fiona's with tenants and worker, Unity tells Telemundo 34. There is a lot of concern for Virginians who aren't able to pay rent. We're really worry about it. People is still a struggle with money. They still are not working so that that means they don't have income. Those facing evictions can still apply for a state relief program by calling to 11 and although the state moratorium is over a federal paws on eviction to still in play, which will put a hold on evictions until January, 31st Some of those expecting a covert relief check can rest assured that it won't immediately go to a debt collector. Under a new law in Virginia, the $600 economic support payments are exempt from garnishment and other creditor seizures. It's the result of a bill passed in last year's special legislative session that happened after it was discovered that the initial round of $1200 support payments issued by Congress is part of the cares act was left vulnerable to seizure or garnishment. Attorney general Mark Herring says residents who believe their economic relief payment has been unlawfully garnished or seized should assert their rights directly with the collections, agency or financial institution or reach out to his office is Consumer protection section. John Aaron w T o p News And expand the jobless benefits will continue in D. C and you can thank the new coronavirus relief bill for that, the city says, Renewing the cares Act will let the district continued benefits without a gap. Some people will even get more money. DC's employment services director says The new law is tailored to help contract workers and the self employed who can't get benefits or have already exhausted them. They're still waiting for federal guidance on how to put this all in place. Coming up in money news. Bloomberg's list of folks who defined 2020, and it includes folks with hospital scrubs..

Monocle 24: The Globalist
Boris Johnson will delay decision on quitting Brexit trade talks
"The brexit transition period is due to expire on the thirty first of December at which point the UK will leave the single market without a deal unless an agreement with the EU is reached in the next few weeks British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he wanted the broad outlines of the deal to be in place by the time the European Council Summit begins, today. The McCaffrey is your news political editor. He joins me on the line from Brussels could money cheat today it's the deadline. So why aren't we walking away? In this process is brexit process. We're very very used to deadlines coming and going out we gene and two large degree. At today he's GonNa come and go again and what we're expecting is no deal at the end of today when. Leaders meet in Brussels who were also not expecting Britain at top walk away either in fact we're expecting. Probably weeks of negotiations. Why is that I? Think because progress has been made though it is interesting last night the Boris Johnson spoke to US London line the EU Commission, Presidents and chose Michelle the EU council president in a joint to call and he. Exposure of his disappointment that the had not being a substantial or not progress. But clearly think that there is still an opportunity to get a deal. Hence why these talks will continue. We have to remember at the end of all of this book Britain and the e You have repeatedly said, they do wolves future trade deal I. Think both of them are willing to give it another shot of you like a bit more time So what are the underlying issues that holding up this process? Will listen to you though kind of three key areas in all of this at first of all is the so-called level playing fields or state AIDS, which is essentially the e you wanting you to adhere to the same rules and regulations to a large degree that and they already do as a former member of the European Union and things like environmental protections, food standards, for example, so that Britain can't undercut those in a more competitive way and join to that is this issue of state AIDS. The idea that the state can subsidize heavily industries to keep them afloat if you like, and again the EU is king the Britain essentially really can do that because it could convey. Could gain a competitive edge. Undercut the E. U., two degree now Britain would point out and rightly so some would say that actually if there is any part of the two sides who are used to subsidizing their industries, it's more likely to be countries like France and Italy than it needs to be the UK or indeed Germany for example, who just failed out Lufthansa to the tune of ten billion euros I mean the UK hasn't yet bailed out any of Big Airlines then disease you have governance How to settle speech future future disputes in essence the EU, has conceded that it's no longer going to be the European Court of Justice and they're trying to work out to kind of independent tradition if you like. And then finally, there's this kind of issue of fishing which economically is not important either to the EU or the UK in the sense it doesn't really make much of any countries economies to large degree, but it is politically symbolic. Ephraim. Brexit. As it will is what Brexit was all of out retaining sheesh water and also some European countries. It's incredibly symbolic importance at French fishermen, for example, or at pretty significant force in France and Emmanuel macron is staring down election in the not too distant future. So that is an issue. That actually is always the most difficult of issues because as as a Britain wants to gain back control of its waters, the EU still wants to be allowed to fish in those waters and it suggesting that if it cannot will. Then Britain is not going to be able to sell its fish to the rest of Europe and that is by far the largest markets. So shortly, collapse the whole deal on fishing. Think not though there are genuine concerns that it could be at the key issue. In the trade talks over the next couple of weeks, not least of all, because as become this to the issue in from both sides that for Britain. It's very symbolic as I say what Brexit is, they are absolutely determined. That they can have you know European fishermen essentially in the seas for years and years to come. Katrina to the fish they just think that is fundamentally unacceptable. It is not in essence taking back control. For the EU are equally determined. That if Britain wants to gain access to it single market by selling fish and eighty I, think it's eighty percent of British Fisher exploited in sixty percents. In, total those to the rest of the EU then. You're. Not, GONNA be able to sell your fish and you can have all your efficient chips he wants, but they'll have to be British people are going to eat them and not the EU, and they would also point that actually half of the so-called Bush's boats that fish in fresh waters at the moment are actually forward. So in practical terms, would it make that much difference I think the compromise, the them at may well come, and with this idea of quotas every year that potentially will start where we all now and year after year decrease. On a negotiated faces a bit like Norway has dumb but for Emmanuel macron fishing is a key key factor in all of this. Simply because you know French, fishermen are a potent political force but for the countries like Germany. In essence fishing's not very important and they would be very, very disappointed when push on for the deal to collapse on that single issue. So I mean what happens next and is a no deal Nella a probability rather than A. So. When you talk to people here and is being a whole range of MVP's and official yesterday, they were putting it at a probability of sixty percents. Gene essentially, that will be no deal, which is point stalk in many ways given the fact that we are getting into the game and we really all because time is to Michelle Volley ticking in this process I think what will happen next though is that they will conclude. Leaders at tomorrow that enough progress has been made and the talk should continue. I expect the British will accept that and talks will continue for the next couple of weeks. up until. Either the end of this month or the start of next. But then a deal is going to have to be done or essentially both sides have to accept the will be no deal because ultimately if there is to be a deal, it is a massive. Weighty Hefty document that has to be translated into all the official languages of the EU. EU Paul, we'll have to vote on the British parliament, some national parliaments to and so that decision will have to be pretty soon at the start of the next month because ultimately, they'll only have up until the end of to send the. It's because Boris Johnson his always all. And that he will not extend beyond December thirty. First, we've heard of course that before I think this time that really is a hard deadline and so at the Mo- wind, you'd have to conclude or less things substantially change that you know no deal. Is a real. Possibility, but probability, how is the British parliament reacting to this brinkmanship? Well, there's this. Thing is when we kind of what? It's not weird actually, it's probably not surprising the tool. But, it's not really consuming European on British national politics. At the moment clearly, we're in the middle of a pandemic. Clearly everyone's focusing on not just the fact that there is a second surge affecting almost every corner of Europe and deed every corner of the British isles. And Other increasing restrictions, talks about lockdown. So not not anyone's really talking about Brexit I think. Boris. Johnson's going to take enough majority that no deal is not good to trouble him like it. It was last year when there was a possibility that the government collapse on the issue I don't think that's GonNa happen this time round for the genuine concerns in Britain about what this will mean. Already, the government is already having to spend millions and millions of pounds to get a border posts. Customs checks to employ people essentially to work on that border from the first of January and no matter what the trade will be there will be extra checks a respectable. What happens

Box of Neutrals
Racing Point has "886 drawings" to prove brake duct legality
"Rising point the decision on whether or not they're chasing. Is GonNa be Jew before the British Grand Prix this begin. That's what the students said. Anyway. They do have longer if they need. It said they want to try and get it done before the British chrome pre. of course is about Rhino complaining that rising point, ripped off. Its brake ducts from Mercedes sounds very exciting. Ought Myself Nella says he's confident that he's not breaking the rules, but of course you would say that is the principal, but he does say that he has eight hundred eighty six drawings of bright ducts at he's factory that are original, and prove not only that that sounds very sad to the average person bought that. Obviously, they designed their and break down and like I said there's nothing stopping them from using a three day parade. Recreating scale model toy that I got for Christmas the site he's. Exactly. That they did that then good on my heart. That kind of is the conclusion.

True Crime Brewery
Until Death: Raynella Leath
"As a child. Rinella grew up in a small community outside Knoxville Tennessee. Rinella was the second child. She had an older sister named flow. Anna and two younger siblings. Marcus and Robin her parents do e Annie met in college. They married after. Dewey had enlisted in the Army Air Corps. Any Finish College. Do we want a purple heart? And after the war he continued his education. So Anne worked as a schoolteacher and do he worked for the US Department of Energy so he made some good use at his time. Back in college had a masters degree in Chemistry and Physics and he was very invested in a safe storage of nuclear waste. Sounds like a smart guy. Yeah absolutely and Rinella grew up in this ideal environment. It was virtually crime free. And this was a town where she and her siblings could. Just hop on their bikes. Anytime go downtown. See a movie or use the Community Swimming Pool. It was kind of one of those pre planned communities for the nuclear power plant scientists. So the kids didn't even know what their parents position was at the company. But that's pretty much what it all revolved around but they were also religious rain. Ls saying in the choir of the Baptist Church and when she was in elementary school her classes were segregated but her high school actually became the first integrated school in the south in nineteen fifty five so at least in part because of the large population of these government scientists. Rinella schools were quite exceptional. The science were excellent of course and the children began learning a second language by the time they were in the second grade so it really gave her a lot of advantages in life her. She was always at the top of her class and was taking all the advanced courses she could. She's also in the marching band spinner weekends at Football Games drive INS and other activities common in the nineteen fifties. Yes he just watch American graffiti. That was kind of what it was like. Right right yeah. Drinking was less of a problem than in most communities because this county they lived in was completely dry. Yeah that's amazing how to combat alcohol. Well I mean if you really want the alcohol you could drive out of the county and get it sure but it's certainly made it harder on the kids in a lot of their parents didn't even have booze in the house which. I don't know about you but the first blues I had I snuck from my parents. Liquor cabinet will. It's where you get it right exactly and there's not just a dry county but a lot of lot of Baptist people and they don't look at alcohol. Is that interesting anyway now? I think it might be a no no for them completely. It certainly not encouraged note therefore remark so after high school. Rinella went to East Tennessee State University as a nursing student while they're Rinella got good grades in competed in rifle shooting. Yeah funny when you think about Ed. Just the way said that. I'm thinking here's a student right getting the grid. So but yeah. He's a marksman let's Tennessee. It's the south right and. I think there's you know more familiarity with guns in the south or is that just a a cliche. No I think that's probably true. Yeah we'll why she was there. This is when she met her. First husband. William Edward Dos it and he went by Ed but young ad had a very different childhood. He had many losses in his life. And I guess the most dramatic I would say was his mom's death. This happened on Easter morning. Nineteen fifty six when Little Edie was just eight years old and he woke up in the morning to find his mother on the floor beside his bed. Dead of a heart attack and just two months later. His Dad died from cancer. So Eddie was an orphan and he ended up moving in with his aunt. And uncle was kind of tough Lou eight-year-old cured get up in the morning and mom's dead on the floor. Can you imagine it's just? It's horrible so he had a much rougher upbringing then ray Nella dead but he was just a real go-getter and as a child. Everyone said he was exceptionally kind in high school. He played some football but he also worked on the school newspaper and he was a member of several clubs. Once he was in his senior year he was given the award for the Best School Spirit. Then he went to college on a football scholarship and he continued to date his high school sweetheart in his freshman year. Everyone thought these two would get married but then he met right now at college in broke up with the girlfriend not an unusual phenomenon. Guess so ED graduated with a business degree. He and Renault got married when she was a senior in college. Now the story I always liked Nell is mom. She didn't approve of that and she apparently knew how to hold a grudge. But she didn't speak to Ed for the first thirteen years of their marriage. Well that's serious grudge holding right. Guess so you really love my mother-in-law. She doesn't talk to me. But when you look at the big picture it kind of makes you think Did Rain Nella get some of that kind of personality from holding grudges or well at decided? He wanted to be a lawyer and he started taking classes at the University of Tennessee Law School in Nineteen Sixty nine ray. Nella began working as a nurse after she graduated in nineteen seventy two at graduated from law school. He had inherited his family's farm. Both of his parents were deceased so he would call himself a farmer and a country lawyer. But it's funny he always said I'm a farmer I and a lawyer second even though he would really end up being very successful as a lawyer did a good job. He had quite a career absolutely really popular as well. It worked in criminal defending people in need. Yeah he liked to help the poor people. Then in nineteen seventy eight. Renaudot gave birth to their first child. Maggie dice it and they then moved to the family farm. Young family lived in a mobile home on the property. As Ed built a new house they worked hard. He built the house entirely from lumber from his own trees. He had an architect who designed the home and he had a contractor friend who advised him on how to do things but basically he built this place. So that's pretty impressive to me. Sure is in nineteen eighty two. When a district attorney general retired decided to run for that job and the funny thing is once. He entered the election. His mother-in-law had a change of heart. Suddenly Ed was an okay guy. Who's now worthy of my attention right? Which really got crate? But she enjoyed this attention and she would be photographed with him at campaign events as much as possible. But Ed took it in stride you now. That's my mother-in-law. Whatever I'm going to be nice to. Everybody and Rinella was a good wife. She was working really hard to help them with this campaign. So it's not like they were on the outsor- anything. The marriage was really good for a long time. And when Ed Din win this election the family celebrated the local. Sheriff gave Ed a five shot. Pistol telling him now. He needed a gun to protect himself. Because he's putting away bad guys and they might come after him but that wasn't a gun guy then the next year at an Rinella had a son William Edward Dawson Junior. So now the family had big Edie and little Edie Ed had a secretary named K and she was married to a guy named Steve Walker and the two couples K. In Stephen Ed. Ray Noah were friendly and they did some socializing from time to time when K had a son who they named Kevin in nineteen eighty four. She left her position and ED's office and Henry now had a third child whose name Katie born in nineteen eighty five so rinella never visited the walkers but ed ended up spending a lot of time there and you might ask why they spent a Lotta time why. He spent a lot of time there because he was screwing k. Well I'm just thinking you know. Things must have been not perfect with he and Rinella by then if he's out having an affair her maybe he was just bored who knows but K. was very fond of him and that's part of the issue. A lot of people think K. Was really in love with Ed. But he wasn't going to leave rain Allah and we don't know if that's because it wouldn't look good if he was afraid of her. Maybe we don't know. But then in nineteen eighty AK had a second son who she and her husband named Kyle and although her husband Steve Did know about it until years later kyle was actually Ed's biological child the product of this affair kind of love child. We didn't know about birth control too. Well I'm sure there was some knowledge of it but who knows. Maybe she wanted to have a baby kinda nasty to pass it off as her husband. Well I don't know Dick. I almost think it's kind. Maybe you don't agree with me but I almost think it's kind of a kind decision. What good is it going to do their family now? They have two sons. What good is it if she tells her husband? The son is not biologically yours and maybe she didn't even know one hundred percent. That's a possibility but I mean I'm just one of these people. I think sometimes not most the time but sometimes holding back. A harsh truth can be an act of love controversial. But it's how I feel I'm GONNA leave it at that okay now. Nineteen Ninety right now retired from nursing and she concentrated on raising her children and managing the family farm. Dave Leaf was a nice man. Who's a friend of ED? And he had a pool. Nello take your children. Today's house to swim in the summer other than that. There was really no connection between Renault and Dave while they were very different people. I mean she really valued education and Dave was a high school dropout. Who worked as a barber? Not that. There's anything wrong with that but it's a much simpler job than ads. Still Dave was very likeable and well known in the community is a good guy. You know that same year ED started to have stomach pains now. He said in a board meeting for local farmers that he had the meanest away from the world. Who's trying to kill him even though he didn't smile and he said everyone's still took it as a joke. They all understood. That Renault is a real force. Probably wasn't the easiest woman to live with. Now I mean what can you say about right Allah from what we know. She was wearing the pants in her home. No matter who she was married to and you didn't want across her she could hold a grudge dislike her mom. I guess but then tragedy struck in October of nineteen ninety one because that was admitted into the hospital he thought it was just for an appendectomy but during that surgery a Denno carcinoma was found on his appendix and too small intestine so they did some further exploratory surgery and they found that he had cancer. That had metastasized to several organs. It was just all over his abdomen so there was no chance of curing him of that

AP News Radio
Cruise line: Grandpa leaned out window before girl's fall
"The parents of Khloe weekend are suing royal Caribbean claiming it was negligent by allowing an eleven floor window to be open in the children's play area in July but royal Caribbean is seeking a dismissal placing the blame for the eighteen month old baby spatial fall on her grandfather fifty one year old Salvatore nella was charged with negligent homicide there importer Rico but insisted he thought there was glass covering the window the cruise line says the video shows that he clearly knew the window was open he had leaned out of it for several seconds before picking up the baby and holding her out the window for about thirty seconds until apparently he lost his grip I'm Jackie Quinn

A Moment of Science
Spider Milk
"Isn't it only mammal such as cows and human beings that produce milk defeat their babies Nella, Dan, there are also some insects and spiders that produce milk like substance to feed their young, don't you? Remember when we talked about cockroach milk look at something. I would prefer to forget there's more in twenty eight teen a team of Chinese scientists discovered. A species of jumping spider that secretes milk to feed its offspring the milk has four times as much protein as cow's milk. The spiders are more like mammals than cockroaches because they give milk to their offspring over a prolonged period of parental care. Hopefully, careful them when the baby spider links, I hatch. They completely depend on their mother's milk for nourishment. She secretes droplets of the milk onto the walls of the nest for them after about the first week of their lives. Lives. The baby's starts to suck milk directly from their mother's body much like a mammal would nurse. The researchers could watch under the microscope as the milk droplets leaked from the mother's body during this feeding the researchers know that the baby's depended on the fluid because if they blocked the mother's milk opening the babies died those seem a lot like a mammal when the young spiders start catching prey on their own the young spiders start leaving the nest forage at about twenty days of age, but they also continue to drink their mother's milk until they're about forty days old and almost sexually mature. There's moment of science comes from Indiana University. There are thousands more moments. Science on our website at a moment of science dot org. Where you can also view videos and sign up for podcasts. I'm Yale Cassandra dog lands.

Curiosity Daily
How Vaccines in Africa Protect Everyone in the World
"Feels like vaccines have been coming up in the news pretty much nonstop leelee. Right. I mean, there's a lot of really great research in the world of vaccines right now. Researchers are using genetic technology is to develop new vaccines. That are useful all over the world. Not just here in the US. But in say developing countries in Africa and southeast Asia, but different here that in wonder how a vaccine in Africa might actually affect you. Well, we found out that it does. And today, we have a special guest to take you beyond the click bait headlines on the rest of the internet and dig into why you really should care about this, medical technology. You can give somebody as Nella Vader pitch. If you're at a party, and they say, I don't understand. Why vaccines are so important herd? Immunity is really important because not everyone can be vaccinated therefore, the more people we vaccinate the lower likelihood that the virus will find someone who isn't on caused an Ike break. So it's basically like putting up more and more and more barriers to stop the virus jumping from one person to the other because Maizels is the most transmissible human virus on the planet. And that's why we have to vaccinate. That's why her. Community we have to it off. So the heard lots of OSs because it's so so infectious if the virus is not as infectious, we don't have to vaccinate as many if the heard, and then just becomes a number scheme herd immunity number scheme, herd immunity, it's a numbers game. Paul DuPree is the director of the center for vaccine research at the university of Pittsburgh and a professor of micro biology and cellular genetics

South Florida Morning Show
Vanilla Ice says he was aboard the Emirates plane full of sick passengers
"Wellington's Nella ice back home this morning after dodging a sickness on a flight from Dubai ice was one of the passengers on that flight the Emirates airlines flight yesterday that land that JFK was quarantine or the dozen people were actually reported there were sick and some were hospitalized on the plane. People that must be pretty