35 Burst results for "Nineteen Ninety Eight"

AP News Radio
Rozier has 29, leads Hornets past sliding Cavaliers 119-98
"Terry Rozier carried the Hornets to a one nineteen ninety eight win over the Cavaliers Rosier had twenty nine points seven rebounds and seven assists picking up the offensive slack with LaMelo ball in foul trouble ball played just eight minutes and was for three from the field I said Thomas scored ten points in his debut for Charlotte which made seventeen three pointers and improved to just three and eleven since January twenty eighth Cavaliers guard Darius garland returned from a three game injury absence and finished with thirty three points in as many minutes I'm Dave Ferrie

AP News Radio
Olympic Alpine skiing remaining all in the family in Beijing
"The Americans have won gold in the Olympics first mixed team aerials event at the Beijing games giving the U. S. its first gold medal in the freestyle skiing discipline since nineteen ninety eight the trio of Ashley Caldwell Christopher Lewis and Justin Schoenfeld each during their first Winter Games medals Willis is back double full full double full was given the highest score of any trick in the finals this means that gold was gold medal all the way and that we knew we had that capability meanwhile Sweden beat the U. S. man seven to four in the rematch of the Pyeongchang gold medal match in curling in the U. S. ski team says two time Olympic gold medalist Mikaela Shiffrin will compete in the super G. I'm

AP News Radio
Oklahoma executes inmate who dies vomiting and convulsing
"The first execution in Oklahoma after a series of botched executions in twenty fourteen and twenty fifteen didn't go quite as planned sixty year old John Marion grants sentence to death for the nineteen ninety eight stabbing death of prison cafeteria worker gay Carter is the first Oklahoma inmate put to death since twenty fifteen he convulsed and vomited after being given a sedative the first of three drugs used in the execution two members of the execution team wipe the vomit from his face in his neck retired AP reporter Michael Graczyk still covers executions for the Associated Press has witnessed some four hundred fifty such debts and recalls only one instance of someone vomiting during the execution in an email statement the department of corrections said the execution was carried out according to protocols and without complication six more Oklahoma inmates are scheduled to die by lethal injection through next March I'm Tim acquire

AP News Radio
Judge says Oklahoma can proceed with 5 lethal injections
"Hi Mike Rossi a reporting a judge says Oklahoma can proceed with five lethal injections a federal judge has cleared the way for the state of Oklahoma to move forward with scheduled lethal injections for five death row inmates judge Steven free yet denied a motion for a preliminary injunction that attorneys for the five inmates were seeking the first execution in Oklahoma in more than six years is scheduled for Thursday one sixty year old John Marion grant is to receive a lethal injection for the nineteen ninety eight killing of a prison cafeteria worker granted for other death row inmates were removed from a federal lawsuit challenging Oklahoma's three drug lethal injection protocol because they all failed to offer an alternative method of execution hi

AP News Radio
Rays clinch 2nd straight AL East title, beat Marlins 7-3
"The rays rolled to a seven three win over the Marlins to become the second AL team to wrap up the division title Mike Zunino smacked a go ahead Homer to challenge yourself last year you know it was a sixteen game season and and we had a heck of a season last year but to do it in one sixty two is something else Brendon Lau added a pair of RBI doubles for the AL east champs Shane McClanahan allowed one run and six hits over five innings reliever P. Fairbanks retired Lewis Brinson on a foul pop up with the bases loaded for the final out setting off an on field celebration Tampa Bay improved to ninety six and fifty nine and won its fourth division title since becoming a major league team in nineteen ninety eight I'm the ferry

Mornings with Keyshawn, Jorge & LZ
Dodgers Clinch Their Ninth Consecutive Playoff Berth
"Like to welcome in now the greet buster only espn baseball insider host of the baseball tonight. Podcast can follow at buster underscore. Espn buster always great to talk to you. Guys are man so buster. The dodgers clinched their ninth street playoff spot with a win last night. How important is it for them to actually win the division though with these surprising giants well. It's it's absolutely huge. The funny thing was about nine days ago. We had the dodgers and giants sunday night. Baseball and i asked that very question of neighbors. The dodgers manager any kind of blinked looked at me and he goes. You know what it's too out. I haven't even given a thought right. He's still in the moment of the regular season. But you know now down the stretch with less than three weeks ago it's going to become a focal point because we've seen time and again how great players can be derailed. By that wildcard game. There were a couple of years Seven eight years ago when it looked like at the end of the regular season the pittsburgh pirates were the best team in the national league but they had to go through wildcard game and it back to back years they face madison bumgarner to the beginning of the greatest postseason run. We've ever seen any pitcher that was in two thousand fourteen and they lost and then the next year they got jake arrieta at the end of the greatest second half we ever saw from pitcher And they lost again and so the dodgers have a chance to be the first team to win back to back titles since The nineteen ninety. Eight to two thousand yankees. I think that the best team in baseball right now but one game. You just never

AP News Radio
Norm Macdonald, Former 'Saturday Night Live' Comic, Dies
"The comedian who both wrote and performed on Saturday Night Live has died norm macdonald is dead his management firm says the comedian died after nine year battle with cancer a battle that he kept private he was sixty one years old when Donald high point was becoming the weekend anchor update for Saturday Night Live a job that he ended up losing something he said in this nineteen ninety eight interview hurt him deeply it wasn't relating I don't like men in the paper for anything other than a funny you know like bacon is for any other reason legend has it that McDonald was fired because of his many jokes about OJ Simpson jokes that were based on the premise that the ex football star was guilty of murder I'm Oscar wells Gabriel

Chicago Dog Walk
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Chicago Dog Walk
"For fifteen percents off your order That's a nice deal. They're big deal. Fifteen percent not nothing. That's it adds up quick. You're right so go do that. Or they're at a bunch of retailer so he could just buy them throw them in a cart all right. Let's hop back into the episode and then it's like you dig in a little bit deeper and you find out about this guy because again. I want to go back to that thing where they said there was. No senior. officials will one guy who probably wouldn't be considered a senior official is a guy named omar. I'll by yumi okay. This guy is so. He's very much linked to the royal family. Very much like we're not the roof emerson say but the saudi royal government and he's also linked to two of the hijackers so to the hijackers land in l. a. In two thousand january fifteenth two thousand and they get connected with these guys and these the two hijackers atlanta there have no english language skills whatsoever. They can't read a street sign. They can't rent a car. They have no money. They have no nothing okay. This album is the guy who kind of is like their fixer. Their handler when they when they get to the united states so and so much so like he was going back to nineteen ninety eight album humi. He was listed as a suspected saudi government operative by both the cia and the fbi. What was that. Sorry so this guy omar. Who's helping the terrace before two thousands. This is before the attacks four eleven and going they started investigating him in one thousand nine hundred eight he was deemed. I'll say it again is suspected saudi government operative so he's living in l. a. And san diego will leave him alone because he's not doing anything but we think that guy's working for the saudis and they think he was working for the saudis is because he was a middle aged man who was a here on a student visa who never went to class and they've proven that he had was getting payments from the saudi department of defense. So he's just getting paid by the saudi defense ministry while here on a student visa but never really going to school. But he's he's one of these guys who's working for different mosques in around la and then in san diego so those those two guys that two of the hijackers fly from malaysia. They land in los angeles. They have some other guy. Pick them up and then they drive down to san diego and who's waiting for him is as omar al bayoumi. He gives them. Money helps them rent. A car gets them enrolled in english..

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast
Congressman Lee Zeldin Comments on Sean Spicer Being Forced to Resign
"Congressman lee zeldin. Welcome back as ed great to be with you so much discuss great to have you open the second hour of the show. First things i. I don't know if this is tough for you to comment on with your reserve status and everything else. But i'm touched by. This is a member of presidential appointee to the pentagon's national security education board. My body sean. Spicer ghana latter yesterday trying to force him to resign from the board of visitors for the annapolis naval academy west point board members of being threatened by the biden. Administration your reaction to what should be totally apolitical. Bipartisan boards helping to run our military's academies. Well first off. It's important to point out that sean has served in our military has warned the uniform. He is a proud navy. Man with experience at tactical operational and strategic levels He brings all the right ingredients and perspectives. And what's ironic about the announcement. Is that jen. Psaki states that their decisions aren't going to be based off of party registration. Well then why are you getting rid of somebody with that kind of experience like sean has pours his heart into it dedicated. You know he's not doing that for prestige or money or title. He's just doing it to give back the other element of this. That i'm greatly concerned about is this Desire to Socially engineer the military. And i signed up for the army. Rotc when i was eighteen years old in nineteen ninety eight watts served on active duty from two thousand three two thousand seven. I've been in the reserve since two thousand seven. Seven is still today wearing my Hat as a member of congress putting aside my hat as a member of the military but wearing my how my has a member of congress. I am very active in ensuring that. Our military is focused on y on accomplishing one image. One mission above all else and that is protecting our nation our national defense protecting our safety our homeland And they just need to be given every last possible tool that they need to do that.

The TWIML AI Podcast
Exploring AI With Kai-Fu Lee
"All right everyone. I am here with kaifu. Lee chi food is chairman and ceo of innovation ventures the former president of google china and author of the new york times bestseller superpowers. And we're here to talk about his new book which will be released next week. A twenty forty one kaifu. Welcome to the tuomo. Ai podcast thank you thank them. It is great to have an opportunity to speak with you. I'm looking forward to digging in and talking more about the book before we do though i'd love to have you share a little bit about your background and how you came to work in the field of ai. Sure i started With my excitement in back in nineteen seventy nine. When i started my undergraduate at columbia i worked on language and vision at columbia and then i went to carnegie mellon for my team at which develops the first speaker independent speech. Recognition system based on machine learning actually Some the earlier thesis in machine learning in nineteen aba. I also developed a computer program that the world's fellow champion is all in the eighties. Very early years after mike graduation from Cmu i talked there for two years than i joined apple and led a a lot of apples. Ai speech natural language and media efforts later joined sgi and then microsoft where i started microsoft research asia in beijing in nineteen ninety eight which kind of became one of the best. Tom research labs in asia. Later i joined google and ran google china for four years between two thousand and five in two thousand nine. We did do a little bit for how they i mostly was Really developing google's presence in china in two thousand nine. I left google and started my venture capital firm assign ovation ventures and at san ovation ventures we invest in the bow for the ai companies. We were about the earliest and probably invested in the most companies we invested in about seven unicorns in ai alone and with a few more Yet to come so they're excited to be in the era i it's Was not so hot during much of my career. But glad scooby with the catch. The recent wave and participate in it.

AP News Radio
Olympic opening ceremony director fired for Holocaust joke
"The director of the opening ceremony at the Tokyo Olympic Games has been fired because of a Holocaust joke he made on a comedy show in nineteen ninety eight organizing committee president Seiko Hashimoto announced opening ceremony director capital Kobayashi has been dismissed Kobayashi was accused of using a joke about the Holocaust in his comedy act including the phrase let's play Holocaust in one of his shows the dismissal came one day before Friday's opening ceremony for the pandemic delayed Tokyo games hi Mike Rossio

Oprah's SuperSoul Conversations
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Oprah's SuperSoul Conversations
"Connected to the deeper world around us starts right now. It's not a news story. But i think it's worth telling one last time. The year was nineteen ninety eight. I've been promoting the movie beloved in a live television interview with the late. Great chicago sun times film critic gene siskel and everything was going perfectly smoothly until the time came to wrap things up. Tell me gene asked. What are you know for sure now. This was not my first rodeo. I've asked and been asked an awful lot of questions over the years and it isn't often that i find myself at a complete loss for words but i have to say the man managed to stop me in my tracks the about the movie. I stammered knowing full. Well that he was after something bigger deeper more complex but trying to stall until i could come up with a semi coherent response. No he said you know what i mean about you your life anything everything the i know for sure. I know for sure i need time to think about. That's amore gene. Well years and a great deal of thought later it has become the central question of my life at the end of the day. What exactly do i know for sure. I've explored that question in every issue of o magazine. In fact what. I know for sure is the name of my monthly column. thank you gene. Siskel and believe me. There are still plenty of times when an answer does not come easy. What do i know for sure. I know that if one more editor calls or emails or even sins a smoke signal asking. Where's this month's installment. I wanna change my name and move to timbuktu but just when i'm ready to raise the white flag and yell that's it i am tapped out. I don't know anything for sure. I'll find myself walking the dogs or brewing a pot of chai or soaking in the tub and out of nowhere. A little moment of krista clarity will bring me back to something that in my head and heart and my gut i absolutely do know beyond a shadow of a doubt still. I have to admit that. I was a bit apprehensive. When it came to rereading fourteen years worth of columns would it be like looking back at old photos of yourself in haircuts and outfits that really ought to be left in the seem like a good idea at the time file. I mean what do you do if what you knew for sure..

Doughboys
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Doughboys
"At some point in the in the i'm john now i say this i'll yes i'm i'm i'm i'm at an unfair advantage on this one because it was my first acting role As you saw in the commercial there's a big rang. I was the king ape. So that's not fair to lorne. But i'm i guess on this one Oh god yes it falls to you and maybe some early. You know some clues. Possibly it was either stop motion or could have been some early. Cg we had an ocean made of peanuts this. This is funny to me. Because i think it looks it. Looks good even though it looks shitty like it looks right. It's gonna say it. Looks like sega time yeah. It doesn't agree with iran sega time. I'm i'm michael a little late here and it might get me in trouble. I think i'm going to go. Nineteen ninety eight just based off some some weird feeling. I have about it being later in the in the in i almost went to thousands honestly the year two thousand but does that too. Is that way too late. Twenty one idea. We'll we'll we'll stick with your nineteen ninety eight mitch. Okay your guests. It's times like this. This is where the c. For the tomorrow will you wish you could go back in time to find out tomorrow. War to is has the most low stakes it's the most low stakes sequel of all time. You go back in time for the doe boys podcast to get the answer right to hear about the money spent on a car. So what can i can i can. I just see the beginning. Just hear the beginning again. Just getting i just wanna see that because that's emma's pulling it up rang a scuba mask and a snorkel swimming in a sea of nuts. There's good transition. There were peanut turns into a volleyball. We get another shower scene. Look like a theme. You.

VOICE Global 2021
Audiobrain CEO Audrey Arbeeny on the Evolution of Sonic Branding
"Interesting because there are a conic brands going back to the sixties at had a sonic identity associated with them that. I don't think people really understood what was happening at that time. And and now if you go four to today i mean sonic identity is is everything because audios playing such a huge role in our lives. How much have you seen this industry. Sort of take hold and you've led a lot of this. I mean you. Pioneer this industry in many ways starting eighteen years ago. How's it evolved in in the last eighteen years and do you feel like brands are starting to really understand. You know why you founded on your brain and your core mission. Well i just felt that there was a were about maybe six companies at that time. The twenty five years ago twenty six years ago. That were doing sonic branding intentional audio and it was funny because i found an article Cleaning my office and it was written in nineteen ninety eight and it's everything that we're doing now. It's more than your logo. It's more than you're jingle. it's your call center. It's your voice and was fortunate to work with brands like ibm. Ma like microsoft that that got it that you really it. I had that. I think i can actually remember the tones From from that laptop and and so there were from the design management institute I felt it was really important for me to be there. Because i wanted to learn so i was the only one out with the owner of the company. I worked with at the time. That was doing sonic branding. We stood out. This was my audience. Ma'am and this is where. I got an introduction Ordinary me joe. Joe meet audrey He's running a branding conference. She does sonic branding That's where i met people at microsoft. We'll tell you depth during the xbox three sixty and it was my foundation. And i was fortunate. That url powell kind of took me under his wing and always pointed out the work that we were doing and that was my foundation

Recorded Future - Inside Threat Intelligence for Cyber Security
A Nuanced Approach to Insider Threats
"Joining us. This week is john. Ford managing director of global government services and insider threat risk solutions at mandy and our conversation centers on his experience with effective insider threat programs from both the technical and human perspective with twenty years of experience in the fbi before joining mandate john ford gained extensive knowledge from bringing to justice some of the world's most notorious cybercriminals knowledge which informs his approach to solving today's most pressing security issues. Stay with us. My career started almost twenty eight years ago. I was a police officer by career. Starting law enforcement in austin texas and in nineteen ninety eight. I joined The fbi and through that time as you imagine we went through everything you can imagine with nine. Eleven and the changes that evolved within the bureau. I went to cyber and i was one of the first agents out there to really start. Cyber task forces in the bureau moved to headquarters where worked in what was called the special technologies and applications office. so that's where we were looking at horizon technologies and horizon events that we might need to plan and prepare for. In in the event that those would come to fruition promoted again when out to san antonio was a cyber supervisor out here and then promoted again and was leading our four deployed operations in informed space with our our country partners overseas so specifically working at cyber again so and then at some point decided to make the jump to the private sector. Yeah retired in two thousand eighteen and joined mandate came over director working in government solutions and actually actually see on both sides actually selling the commercial and the government side of the

Rotten Tomatoes is Wrong (A Podcast from Rotten Tomatoes)
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Rotten Tomatoes is Wrong (A Podcast from Rotten Tomatoes)
"On the cake. Jekyll keep the in the kitchen. But i think i think the number of actually works. The best is kimball. Shanks is just straight up so fun it is the number i think in the whole movie I agree with you. Even though they put pants on a cat and didn't explain why he was the only cat with pants. Like that's still to me. I guess they needed the pants so that he could have the shoes the tap number but he's the only cat with pants sauce. Someone point i saw. I saw an article where someone pointed out that this movie finally answers that question debate. We're having about how dogs were pants whether it would be on all four legs or just two of them and cats does. Finally i guess answer that question. Yeah thought it was very like i saw. I thought it was very european of the cats to just be cool with being naked. But if you want to express yourself and wear something that then you're cool so i think that they're more progressive than humans in that way because sometimes dogs are walking. You see a dog with a sweater on and the other dogs aren't like hey what's why is this close just like hey nice sweater man let me smell your budget and they move on with their day and i think that's what i totally and i did not even have any thought it was at one cat wearing pants. I was just like pat was thought. Lucy go ahead and i just. I just wanted to say really quick kimball shanks seen. I think it's the one scene in the movie. That's actually better than the nineteen ninety eight video production version it so good and the tap. Dancing is i. Don't even think they do that in the nineteen ninety eight version. So i was like holy share. This is amazing. Sorry yeah. I just love cats i had to. I had to say something. No i i agree with you. I would put that one close to the top i would put mccabe's number before he opens and you see idris elba in brown for that makes them look like he's really weirdly naked. His number was great but as soon as he did that. I was like what and angie. You're seeing is actually the one where i'm like so when i saw cats i did the like social reaction. I called it. A catnip soaked fever dream that is visually laughable. But i could not look away and both seem that makes me think of that. Is the jenny scene where she skins herself and their skin underneath like. This is like a rupaul. Wig reveal that you did not even want to think about seeing. In addition to that there are black. Women cockroaches like dancers and these are black women and they address like cockroaches like it's like who is that. This is a good idea and the children mice..

TechStuff
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on TechStuff
"I'm an executive producer with iheartradio and a love all things tech and on mondays episode. I looked at the topic of privacy. Privacy and the internet and how companies collect and use private information. Essentially the point of that episode was to show how in the era of big data practically everything we do generates at least a data point that goes into a constantly more detailed depiction of who we are digitally speaking and that numerous companies are profiting off that information and sometimes it means we as individuals actually see some sort of benefit from that right like a targeted personalized experience can be a benefit. But sometimes it really just means. We're being exploited in some way. Now you could say that for adults. This is just the price you pay to be a modern citizen of our digital world particularly when it involves joining various online platforms and services that include statements that explained that the service is going to collect share and leverage data from users. And you could argue. Hey you agreed to do this when you signed up for for an account even if you didn't bother reading the fine print however it is a different matter entirely when it comes to kids. Kids don't have the awareness of what it means to share information about themselves. They don't understand the potential consequences so it wouldn't be ethical to convince a kid to sign any sort of binding agreement without that kid's parent or guardian present and consenting to it and so when it comes to the privacy of kids things take a pretty serious turn in the united states that includes the passing of a law in nineteen ninety eight children's online privacy protection act or coppa. Cop a today. I want to explore what prompted the drafting and passage of coppa and some cases in which companies have been found guilty of failing to comply with the rules of coppa and how that has affected content on the internet. In general generally speaking when it comes to technology and the law there is a lot of opportunity for messiness technology advances at a far faster pace than what we see in the legal world. Heck the folks who draft legislation tend to be..

The Dental Hacks Podcast
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on The Dental Hacks Podcast
"They shouldn't be doing. This and dad did a lot of ortho i was. It was certainly less commonplace now between the expansion and the do an ortho when the mainstream wasn't going there rogers kind of cutting edge. He totally was for sure and he did. He didn't do a little ortho. He did a lot of ortho like literally. There were i remember. There were times where he would just have complete or days where he'd have all hands on deck and so he so he ran the office kind of like an ortho office where it was just kids coming in. 'cause that's how ortho offices are men like they'll have they have so many chairs and they're just moving it like that sorta on some of what they do and it might be different now in age. Where liners are more common. But in any case he did a lot in and he did expansion ortho on me. He didn't have to do expansion on that. Was the thing expanding me. I had already wildly expanded. But but what's interesting is how that is forward thinking. Now i mean orthodox like expansion is everything because of eric airway right. Yeah i'm i'm a natural knows breather of mean for for a fat middle aged white guy you're supposed to we're the apnea people i am natural knows breather and i don't doubt for a second because my dad's worth oh i don't know that he knew what he was doing. He wasn't probably doing it for that reason. But i give him credit anyhow so well. Yeah and i think that's the way a lot of things are kind of happened. Upon so maybe the airway with the expansion was a nice byproduct. It's kind of what people found. You know these vertical dimension splints that also popular forward. It's like you know what they breathe. Better awesome it is. It's very. I think there's some similarities to that so anyhow i i was in the chair lot i was. I had braces and i was the worst ortho patient of all time. He didn't want to be an orthodontist. You were no. I never cross my mind. I didn't specialization. You remember the story. Everyone came in. It seems like in everyone came in thinking. They were going to specialize in a lot of us. Were just like. I just wanna graduate kind of thing. I was like i'm done. But there are some people that came in wanting specialized and they. They stuck with it the whole time. And that's what they're gonna do. But i just never thought about that. But i i mean dad seemed to like what he was doing and i think that all that has that part was always true. He liked it he. He was roller skate dentist. He'd run for opportunities at a time. Like gangbusters into me. I ran my office when i bought it in nineteen ninety eight. I started iran to opera tories. In two hygiene ops. And i i had to assistants where i was running to ops. Going full bore all the time. I don't know if it's a that..

Sounds Profitable
Don't Forget the Intangibles of Podcast Advertising
"You know it's so funny. It's i just got into the event. Seen in the circassian had time to start watching the stuff that you were doing right like i was a product manager at megaphone and really started to watch yourself but it's so hard to carve out time in just as a starting to dig more into this injustice. I started to find more time. Everything went digital right. Everything went online rather instead of impersonal bum. Because you run a good show with all the things that you guys do And it's i think it's such an important thing that people watch like soda plug at the beginning like edison research just so many cool things and i think the infantile is one of the most unbiased views of audio than it has a great lens on podcasting and what listeners want and the crazy part about it is like was not easy stuff to do. And sometimes that's not dated like an advertiser campaign wants to do so. You guys built this survey and research company. That is doing the things that we need that we don't always like. We can't always like foot. The bill to the advertiser the things that people should be investing into hand growing because it just helps us all view the landscape. It doesn't push anyone specific narrative. Yeah i mean that's the thing. I'm not a a podcast who dabbles in research. I'm a twenty five year survey researcher. Who loves podcasting. And we've been doing infantile since nineteen ninety eight. It's still. I think the gold standard in terms of the kind of currency research that podcasting looks at streaming audio. It looks at and so on. It's done to the most ridiculous and ridiculously costly standards in survey research it's It's a telephone based survey which has a much much higher response rate than anything online. It's over half mobile phone executed to match statistics in the us about who has mobile phones

Pressure Points
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Pressure Points
"There isn't a lot of information on this. I am wondering if just desert storm flooded the the news market at the same time this was going on. I'm not positive but it. It was a pain in the ass trying to find anything on this. So if it feels really vague and kinda like bullshit well. There's your chance that is so in nineteen ninety eight nuns in bruise call. They're called the poor sisters of clare right and they reached out to a man by the name of ronnie crab. Now like i said it's really hard to find fucking information on this whole situation. So when i searched running crab and i'm sure you guys will run into the same problem. You sir. trying crab on any search engine. You just get ronnie's crab shack not the same guy. We should get a sponsorship. Ronnie's crab shack go. Check it out. You know what this one's free this one's for you rondo this one's for you ronnie you piece of shit So these nuns were currently living in a six hundred year old convent and it was just it was too big for eight of them and they kind of had their eyes on this little chateau. That was out in the appearance in the french pyrenees so they reach out to ronnie they say. Hey look we want to figure out if we can maybe sell the convent. Shift things over to like the chateau can you our thing whatever. Yeah ronnie's like yeah. I can help you out. I'll hook it up so Ronnie tells them that he is. He's willing to reach out to the pope. The bishop and everything everything set up and then really. It's just going to be hands off for them and they can go from there now..

Data Engineering Podcast
A Holistic Approach to Data Governance Through Self Reflection at Collibra
"Your host is tobias. Macy today interviewing stay in krisztian known stan about data governance in the enterprise. How khalib applies to lessons learned from their customers to their own business so stand. Can you start by introducing yourself. Yes of course. Thanks for having me over. Stan from libra one of the co founders of the company. That's two thousand eight. We've been doing this for about thirteen years now. And i've had a variety of roles in the company. I've been responsible for sales post sales partnerships. The whole nine yards the right. Now what i'm responsible for. And what i owned data office on the lake and on friday evenings recall that drinking our own champagne only mornings because eating and do you remember how you got involved in the area of data management. Yes i do and you're probably not going to believe it. But i i study doesn't mean you need like tropical engish but a colorblind so you can imagine me putting it was just one of the courses. We got there was sequel. And we've got this thick thick book of sequel the language and database. And i was thinking to myself who needs this. What is this mind you. This is nineteen ninety eight the year. Two thousand maybe something like that. I forget who needs to be money for such a book right so i was thinking as soon as i run through the scores of something that nobody will ever need. I'm going to sell the book. So that was the only textbook that ever sold the sequel book. So obviously i wasn't been bending to go into data management necessarily when i was in school but i went to a software company after my studies. Also did somebody ice. Obviously that they may be deeply comes back and then the company stints. I ended up at the university again but as a research engineer and then we were doing research into semantic slept startup semantics up to gatien's research slept with a database professor. So i worked there for about three years and there was really sucked into deep of the artist. She well when when did they go.

Dr Ron Unfiltered Uncensored
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Dr Ron Unfiltered Uncensored
"Renal fibrosis. sports medicine. You name it. They likely did a study on it. No all these studies were peer reviewed journal published and they were the beginning of these enzyme research field right now. There are almost two hundred studies in the field of systemic enzyme research. Validating both the anti inflammatory and the antibiotic effects of orally administered politic enzymes and currently in the united states alone. There are some seventy to one hundred. Different prolific enzyme supplements available on the market. Most of those are clones of other supplements. Some are rather unique. Some of them work most of them don't because the people who package them together don't other dispute alive in a dead enzyme. They don't know how to protect them. They don't know how to code them. They don't know how to probably package them. They basically don't know how to keep you alive or the raw material suppliers at the buying the enzymes from don't know how to keep an enzyme eleven by the time they get the raw material to make the finished product with the stuff did anyway but let me knock get into that either so from a market of only fifty five thousand dollars worth of probiotic enzyme sold in all of the year. Nineteen ninety eight to the point. Now where most of the enzyme making companies to pros or making at least six to eight million bucks a year. We have seen an explosion of systemic enzymes in both the us and the world market as the world realizes that there are better ways of dealing with inflammation and that. It isn't true that there's nothing that can be done against fibrosis exit for surgery. Okay i went on a tangent..

Breakdown 2 Lowdown
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Breakdown 2 Lowdown
"The was my sex is only pick on the week okay. I'm you know you know you wrong. Because clearly didn't say anything. So ramaema featuring neo feels so good went way back to six the real neo. Bring him back back the real meal. Tom well always always address the a tragic story that he took. He went for the easy bay. What actually he's still those but Elated he definitely definitely but a this big from the The reason i took that. Meanwhile i will. I hear that randomly on radio this week in a deceiving. Tom is one of the joined. That where we take about. Remy ma we take about ramaema with the delivery from any conceded. Her i lean back. I can go on and on and on like she she actually. That's one of the few songs that we see. The soft side doesn't have a lot of soft to hard. So i agree with you. This this is a a very loving side. The lovey dovey joined that summer vibe. You know it's a little like is it. Feels like you're gonna be my you know like the girl who picks you like who picks you out in the school yard that you're gonna be my boyfriend like what it feels like Like the Definite survived and I like the defeat. You're too because usually we won't see like a mel hip hop artist featuring lack of female rb singer when lcd away around which is when he came out go a disease in police or whatever so i remember when i came out like it. Can it came after like to sing. Different single again on conceited and The the other one right in jerusalem. It came out random away okay. That's a different approach for me. That was only one of these At get my attention to right from the bat. I sorry from that project. So yeah that's all the other week. Levitt i actually. I really liked the shock. It really hasn't gone into it. I like the juxtaposition the kind of like roll river roll reversal as you said and like it has. It hasn't a sort of vibe to it. But you still fill up so i channeled through random out and the of course in my old even going to nineteen ninety eight with phyllis hyman fervor with you. Y'all can t tell me the bio listen to cover out. Let's go.

All My Relations Podcast
How can we Protect Indigenous Women
"Is very real and indian country the most quoted report that we've all heard over and over and over again is the one in three which is one in three native women will be raped in her lifetime. And that statement. That i've been hearing for a really long time. We've all been hearing it for a long. Time is from the nineteen ninety eight department of justice report which looks at the national violence against women survey But the truth is it's been discussed by everybody right like the new york times. The washington post even obama when he was president he quoted that one in three survey and he said that it's an assault on our national conscience. It's an affront to our shared humanity. It's something that we cannot allow to continue. But you know that. Data's twenty five years. Old and new doctor. Dr dez being a survey gal. Maybe you can explain to us how that's a problem. And what some of the new information says. yeah. I mean we know the date are old right and yet it continues to be quoted and it continues to be used in in media in policy and the problem is that there hasn't been another report done by the federal government on this scale ever since it literally took to indigenous women to create a new report in two thousand eighteen. This was the urban indian health institute and the sovereign bodies institute who came together to create a new report with data that had to be obtained through the freedom of information act so federal government isn't just giving these data over to indigenous people in our advocates and allies. We actually have to go through a petition to get these data to be able to use them And so that's you know the fact that the there isn't transparency or accountability in the data that are being collected about our people is a huge problem. and so this this two thousand eighteen report was

Latino USA
The Wrongful Conviction Of Joseph Webster
"It was april of two thousand and five and joseph webster had been sitting in tennessee state. Prison for nearly three years. He was serving a thirteen year sentence for selling cocaine. Joseph said he had a chance to go up for parole. He was hoping to go home early. He was twenty six years old at the time and then things took a drastic turn. Joseph was notified. He was being charged with the murder of a man. Named leroy owens someone that he said he had never met in tennessee. That meant he was facing a life sentence or even the death penalty would stay doing heartbreak on family. They will buy cheese perfectly covault and eighties again. I have leery. Owens was skilled in november nineteen ninety eight when joseph was just nineteen years old several years before he went to prison for selling drugs. Leroy's murder was brutal. He was beaten over the head with a cinderblock several times. The case remained unsolved for seven years. The moment after hearing the news is a blurred joseph. Not only was he not going to go home. He now had to prepare for trial behind bars. He thought of his three young sons and his mom. Marie burns who had been waiting patiently for his release. You know he called me so mama they trying to say keo some bad as a about us. Judson ju is added. Do it is added not do that.

THE NEWS with Anthony Davis
Northern Ireland leaders seek calm after violence escalates
"Authorities in northern ireland sought to restore calm on thursday after protestant and catholic. Youths in belfast. Hold bricks fireworks gasoline bombs at police and each other. It was the worst mayhem in a week of street. Violence in the region where britain's exit from the european union has unsettled and uneasy political balance crowds including children as young as twelve or thirteen clashed across a concrete peace wall. In west belfast that separates a british loyalist. Protestant neighborhood from an irish nationalist catholic area. Police fired rubber bullets at the crowd. A nearby city bus was hijacked and set on fire northern ireland to seen sporadic outbreaks of street violence since the nineteen ninety eight. Good friday peace accord ended the troubles decades of catholic-protestant bloodshed over the status of the region. In which more than three thousand people died but police service of northern ireland. Assistant chief constable. Jonathan roberts said the mayhem was at a scale. We have not seen in recent years. He said fifty five police officers had been injured over several nights of disorder. And it was lucky. No one had been seriously hurt or

The Economist: The Intelligence
What's Behind the Recent Violence in Northern Ireland?
"The violence on the streets of northern ireland. This week is the worst thing. In years the unrest has largely come from unionist or loyalist factions. those in favor of unity. With great britain were loyal to its crown night after night mobs targeted. Police officers with bricks and molotov cocktails more than fifty officers have been injured politicians including the country's leader. I minister arlene foster of the democratic. Unionist party held an emergency meeting yesterday. Calling for calm injury tree. Frontline officers victims terrorized. How much to people's property the harm to northern ireland image. In our centenary year us take us backwards. A new brick no bottle no patra bone thrown has shaved or ever cheese anything but -struction arm on the scale of that destruction harm and fear has brought to international attention. Prompting a statement from white house press secretary jen psaki. We are concerned by the violence in northern ireland joined the british irish and northern irish leaders in their calls for calm rioting on northern. Ireland's streets is uncomfortably familiar with roots in sectarian divides that go back centuries in nineteen ninety eight. The good friday agreement devolved the government and put an end to the decades of brutal clashes known as the troubles. What's happening now is fueled by more. Recent events represents appointed threat to that hard won peace. Really we've had several nights of pretty consistent and quite serious violence across northern ireland. This has been going on for more than a week annoy. It has spread from londonderry to belfast. To some of the smaller provincial ballymena carrickfergus etcetera.

Your Why: A Chapelwood Podcast
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Your Why: A Chapelwood Podcast
"One of the early catalysts that i saw That helped grow our our student ministry So i came on staff at chapel would in nineteen ninety-seven in The summer of nineteen ninety eight was my first summer that i was exposed to a youth mission trip and so I remember we took a group of twelve students and we had to have four adults and and we went through a an organization called army. Which is here in texas. Actually nationwide now. it's united methodist Some our mission experience and These it was just for high school. And so we went and the experience Really challenged our students that year Into what it meant to be a leader and and it was a catalyst. We saw that. Those twelve students went in.

The Propaganda Report
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on The Propaganda Report
"That's what it is now. You may have been Game and now it's like really about saving american if one party or one group can steal action a presidential from the other. I mean there's the media is trying to show that there's no hope for the country where will be a demand on the republican. I'm so far from smoke. In the partisan kool aid that i think that the people you're fighting for our and even fighting as truthfully as honestly into their best as you have banned like we're fighting. I think that you're fighting for somebody who isn't really even fighting for himself. Whereas in the met we have many many frustrating people who feel the same way. I mean we because of the constitutional issue beginning constitution party. We will stand for the constitution. Republicans don't really stand for the constitution nor the democrats of course so they won't stand up. That's why you see them sell out and we have many many Right now frustrated republican to now that we're trying to get to the bottom of the truth and they joined on and we want to find out what happened happened. We can't even trust bar to do that. Republicans are famous for compromising when they have power. Didn't nobody does that for you. Like why they could have gotten rid of obamacare a couple of times already. I smell a rat with that. Oh here's an excellent this. Maybe the most truthful thing that's been said was entire doesn't monica like especially cute. I let us gun. I thought i would celebrate the little lipstick where garlands success team. Yeah there you go okay. Good to see the new york times lose. A case to project veritas. That is good. News so libertarian. Clip says imagine telling people in nineteen ninety eight that the future of communication through the internet would be tapping into like three company servers to chats. So yes well that if you really knew what the story was back then you realize that this was darpa and wondering when they were gonna flip back and i remember early in the wsb show. I had regime. I just i remember. It was like to have a pekingese like let me crack the code on this and that and one of the things was i remember thinking. Oh my gosh. What if the internet is a limited hang out. What if they gave it to us so that we would give all our information because we take away like what was good about it. Like being able to figure out false flags and everything i mean. How dumb was i every. She's just look back at the history now. I have a book called surveillance valley which is about the darpa history of the internet. It's simply defense department projects. I mean it's a limited hangout. We're getting somewhere with it by man. They are just they..

Daily Tech News Show
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show
"We're at a moment where we trust technology enough. We trust big swings at technology. And i feel like the tech itself. Is there that we're ready to take us a step forward and this is a fine stab at it. I wanna i wanna get my hands on and see what works the other throw in here just just as a parting. Grenade is part of this felt like reading about advancements from hp in nineteen ninety eight. You know the tablet computer will someday revolutionize like i just feel like maybe facebook isn't the one that's gonna do this because this feels kind of bureaucratic and i wonder if somebody's just sweep in and come up with something entirely expected. Although facebook this feel very bureaucratic right certainly started working on this type of exactly. That's okay and that makes it. A facebook is the hp of twenty twenty one is basically hundred fifty percent. I'm so glad you truly well. Speaking of advancements in technology the crown eighty nine desktop browser now include support for google's caption feature which generates real time captions for any audio plane on your device including videos. Captions will show up in a black box. You can then move them around in close them. Works for websites as you might expect but also local files opened in the browser. Google says it works across social and video science podcasts radio content personal video libraries like google photos embedded video players and most web based video or audio chat services. Captions are generated on device. The also work off line. He turned on and in the accessibility section of the advanced settings. But if you wanna do that you certainly can and right now. It only works in english so starting days but very cool. Yeah the fact that it works off line on device that's big for me and stuff and and just because you don't need to have an internet connection. It'll still work. If you've got a video locally. Yes obviously let's let's Understand that it's a new technology and It'll take time to get up to speed. But i think you hit the nail on the head tom off line. That's a lot of processing power that being said. I don't think it's going to take away from one of the biggest complaints about chrome which is that. It's a resource hog man. And i don't think adding real time translation tool on. That is going to make it any slimmer but if what chrome wants to do especially as it faces some criticism for how much it digs into your habits and retains your habits. If if they want to say all right next decade what is chrome known for now that it's not just the speedy google browser its features. We will give you the features. We've got resources. We've got the reasoning everytime we keep you on on chrome we learn more about. You would benefits and the thing. That actually makes us money. That is ad sales that we will give you. What features do you want. We're going to have them for you. Where chrome please.

Daily Tech News Show
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show
"We're at a moment where we trust technology enough. We trust big swings at technology. And i feel like the tech itself. Is there that we're ready to take us a step forward and this is a fine stab at it. I wanna i wanna get my hands on and see what works the other throw in here just just as a parting. Grenade is part of this felt like reading about advancements from hp in nineteen ninety eight. You know the tablet computer will someday revolutionize like i just feel like maybe facebook isn't the one that's gonna do this because this feels kind of bureaucratic and i wonder if somebody's just sweep in and come up with something entirely expected. Although facebook this field very bureaucratic right certainly started working on this type of exactly. That's okay and that makes us. Facebook is the hp of twenty twenty one is basically hundred fifty percent. I'm so glad you truly well. Speaking of advancements in technology the crown eighty nine desktop browser now include support for google's live caption feature which generates real time captions for any audio plane on your device including videos. Captions will show up in a black box. You can then move them around in close them. Works for websites as you might expect but also local files opened in the browser. Google says it works across social and video science podcasts radio content personal video libraries like google photos embedded video players and most web based video or audio chat services. Captions are generated on device. The also work off line. He turned on and in the accessibility section of the advanced settings. But if you wanna do that you certainly can and right now. It only works in english so starting days but very cool. Yeah the fact that it works off line on device that's big for me and stuff and and just because you don't need to have an internet connection. It'll still work if you've got a video locally. Yea obviously let's let's Understand that it's a new technology and You know it'll take time to get up to speed. But i think you hit the nail on the head tom off line. That's a lot of processing power that being said. I don't think it's going to take away from one of the biggest complaints about chrome which is that. It's a resource hog man. And i don't think adding real time translation tool on that is going to make it any slimmer but if what chrome wants to do especially as it faces some criticism for how much it digs into your habits and retains your habits if if they want to say all right next decade. What is chrome known for now that. It's not just the speedy google browser its features. We will give you the features. We've got resources. We've got the reasoning everytime we keep you on on chrome we learn more about. You would benefits and the thing. That actually makes us money. That is ad sales That we will give you. What features do you want. We're going to have them for you. Where chrome please.

Daily Tech News Show
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Daily Tech News Show
"We're at a moment where we trust technology enough. We trust big swings at technology. And i feel like the tech itself. Is there that we're ready to take us a step forward and this is a fine stab at it. I wanna i wanna get my hands on and see what works the other throw in here just just as a parting. Grenade is part of this felt like reading about advancements from hp in nineteen ninety eight. You know the tablet computer will someday revolutionize like i just feel like maybe facebook isn't the one that's gonna do this because this feels kind of bureaucratic and i wonder if somebody's just sweep in and come up with something entirely expected although facebook this feel very bureaucratic right. That's what i certainly started working on this type of exactly. That's okay and that makes us. Facebook is the hp of twenty twenty one is basically hundred fifty percent. I'm so glad you truly well. Speaking of advancements in technology the crown eighty nine desktop browser now include support for google's caption feature which generates real time captions for any audio plane on your device including videos. Captions will show up in a black box. You can then move them around in close them. Works for websites as you might expect but also local files opened in the browser. Google says it works across social and video science podcasts radio content personal video libraries like google photos embedded video players and most web based video or audio chat services. Captions are generated on device. The also work off line. He turned on and in the accessibility section of the advanced settings. But if you wanna do that you certainly can and right now. It only works in english so starting days but very cool. Yeah the fact that it works off line on device that's big for me and stuff and and just because you don't need to have an internet connection. It'll still work. If you've got a video locally. Yes obviously let's let's Understand that it's a new technology and You know it'll take time to get up to speed. But i think you hit the nail on the head tom off line. That's a lot of processing bauer that being said. I don't think it's going to take away from one of the biggest complaints about chrome which is that. It's a resource hog man. And i don't think adding real time translation tool on that is going to make it any slimmer but if what chrome wants to do especially as it faces some criticism for how much it digs into your habits and retains your habits if if they want to say all right next decade. What is chrome known for now that. It's not just the speedy google browser its features. We will give you the features. We've got resources. We've got the reasoning everytime we keep you on on chrome we learn more about. You would benefits and the thing. That actually makes us money. That is ad sales That we will give you. What features do you want. We're going to have them for you. Where chrome please.

Daily Tech News Showhttps://dailytechnewsshow.com/
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Daily Tech News Showhttps://dailytechnewsshow.com/
"We're at a moment where we trust technology enough. We trust big swings at technology. And i feel like the tech itself. Is there that we're ready to take us a step forward and this is a fine stab at it. I wanna i wanna get my hands on and see what works the other throw in here just just as a parting. Grenade is part of this felt like reading about advancements from hp in nineteen ninety eight. You know the tablet computer will someday revolutionize like i just feel like maybe facebook isn't the one that's gonna do this because this feels kind of bureaucratic and i wonder if somebody's just sweep in and come up with something entirely expected. Although facebook this field very bureaucratic right certainly started working on this type of exactly. That's okay and that makes us. Facebook is the hp of twenty twenty one is basically hundred fifty percent. I'm so glad you truly well. Speaking of advancements in technology the crown eighty nine desktop browser now include support for google's live caption feature which generates real time captions for any audio plane on your device including videos. Captions will show up in a black box. You can then move them around in close them. Works for websites as you might expect but also local files opened in the browser. Google says it works across social and video science podcasts radio content personal video libraries like google photos embedded video players and most web based video or audio chat services. Captions are generated on device. The also work off line. He turned on and in the accessibility section of the advanced settings. But if you wanna do that you certainly can and right now. It only works in english so starting days but very cool. Yeah the fact that it works off line on device that's big for and stuff and and just because you don't need to have an internet connection. It'll still work. If you've got a video locally yes obviously let's let's Understand that it's a new technology and You know it'll take time to get up to speed. But i think you hit the nail on the head tom off line. That's a lot of processing power that being said. I don't think it's going to take away from one of the biggest complaints about chrome which is that. It's a resource hog man. And i don't think adding real time translation tool on that is going to make it any slimmer but if what chrome wants to do especially as it faces some criticism for how much it digs into your habits and retains your habits if if they want to say all right next decade. What is chrome known for now that. It's not just the speedy google browser its features. We will give you the features. We've got resources. We've got the reasoning everytime we keep you on on chrome we learn more about. You would benefits and the thing. That actually makes us money. That is ad sales that we will give you. What features do you want. We're going to have them for you. Where chrome please.

Your Retirement Solution Podcast
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Your Retirement Solution Podcast
"I've always wanted to try that or oh. We used to do that do that anymore. Play the what if game. What if i did all the time in the world. What what i wanna do again and i think everyone will be surprised what comes to the surface. It's so funny that you bring up pickle ball because one of my clients that i work with is in connecticut in the small town and they actually built pickle ball courts for the public and i hadn't heard that term in so long being from washington. We actually had pickle ball in gym class. I'm sure you did too. That was part of our gym class. Teaching and i haven't played it since junior high but It was so weird to hear him. Say that you guys have ball courts and connecticut. That's that's insane. So all right tyler. I'd love for you to weigh in on this as well. I know you guys work with so many families. What are you seeing in. In this trend of people being able to kind of revisit hobbies that they used to have or even starting new ones that they've always desire to do echo pizza again words and sentiments. I think retirement is actually her. Say this is a word we actually really liked. The word re firemen get refired jazzed up about back different things and it's been really fun. I guess to talk to clients in annual reviews. I talked about the plan but then we really just focus on them. And i've had a lot of clients. Tell me stories about it. One recently a call his name. Dave you know he said tyler We took a stained glass class in the nineties. And haven't even touched it since then but for twenty twenty. You know you're literally sometimes running out of what do we do next. Because we're at home. Or i don't like to do in what was fun. Is they went back to this old stained glass work company and the person who had given the class you know in nineteen ninety eight or whatever..

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"nineteen ninety eight" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"Up and doing shots to be how crazy that man. I mean i it could be. It could be a full blown party. You know in the locker room and then go back like nothing ever happened. You know it was unreal mask some of the stuff that they said that they were doing. You know back in the day and stuff like right now you know you probably look down the guy. He was doing any of that stuff like well. What what are you doing man. You're not taking care your body with a totally different era. You know than it is right now man but again you know those guys have their man and they and they grind it and they left it all out there but they live hard to judge. I mean you got the patriot way. And then you've got the right away and they did and they went hard. They worked hard. They partied hard. Listen speaking of alcohol. You've got your own wine label intercept. Obviously you have a great passion for the process. A great passion for the product team brady himself saying recently. How a guy from fremont ohio got so into wine. I've no idea tell me. How did you get so into wine. And what grabs your attention. Initially about it man. What well you know big big props in the thanks to the oakland raiders. Napa drafting me. in nineteen ninety eight. And you know the raiders. Training camp was in Napa valley as you know. So you know i got involved and interested in wine just proximity just by being in napa valley every year during training camp and i just found another with wine country napa and i just talked and this is something that i to be a part of long term and so i agree i naval which was twenty four by charles woodson and then now The intercept labels that you know about right now so to intercept man. What we all..