23 Burst results for "Oates"

AP News Radio
No. 2 Alabama rallies, beats rival Auburn 90-85 in overtime
"Second ranked Alabama has clinched its second SEC regular season title in three years by defeating auburn 90 85 and overtime. Javon Quinn had 24 points for the crimson tide, who trailed by 17 in the second half before moving to 16 and one in the conference. Alabama coach Nate Oates. He's obviously really talented. I mean, you look at his line tonight, you know, he ends up with 24.6 assists, not one turnover, led the team in plus minus at plus 16. Brandon Miller chipped in 17 points, including a pair of quenching free throws with 6 seconds remaining. Katie Johnson led the tigers with 21 points. I'm Dave ferry.

AP News Radio
Embattled Miller leads No. 2 Alabama past Gamecocks in OT
"Second ranked Alabama shook off a serious upset bid in a 78 76 downing of South Carolina in overtime. Freshman Brandon Miller poured in a season high 41 points, hours after the school said he'd remain an active member of the team. The crimson tide added that Miller is not considered a suspect in a fiddle shooting that took place near campus last month. He hit the game winning bucket with .8 seconds left. Alabama coach Nate Oates. I thought Brandon did a great job. Really getting himself mentally prepared to play. The Thai trail 22 15 in the first half before improving to 24 and four overall 14 and one in the SEC. I'm Dave ferry.

The Restaurant Coach Podcast
"oates" Discussed on The Restaurant Coach Podcast
"It's going to be we only have 50 people. And this year, I don't know Zach, did you see this year? I'm holding it at a house. I got a mansion. I'm excited for that. That would be pretty cool. I expect you to be doing some cannonballs. Oh, yeah. Monday night, we're doing we're doing a pizza pool party Monday night at the mansion, and then Tuesday night, we're doing tacos in tequila. Okay. I love it. I love me some tacos. Why not? Let's do it. I love me tacos. Pork belly tacos, baby. What's your favorite taco? Buffalo chicken. Oh, that would be good too, yeah. Maybe we'll get those too. Buffalo chicken with some pickled onions and a flour tortilla. Is that like corn tortillas? I'm a corn tortilla. But I'm older. I gotta watch my carbs. Docs doesn't gotta watch my carbs. That's what it is. All right, thanks so much again. If you need to hit a hold of Zach, just head over to ovation up dot com. They got a demo on the website. They'll be more happy to talk to you about whatever your needs are. And again, whatever your restaurant

The Restaurant Coach Podcast
"oates" Discussed on The Restaurant Coach Podcast
"It's going to be we only have 50 people. And this year, I don't know Zach, did you see this year? I'm holding it at a house. I got a mansion. I'm excited for that. That would be pretty cool. I expect you to be doing some cannonballs. Oh, yeah. Monday night, we're doing we're doing a pizza pool party Monday night at the mansion, and then Tuesday night, we're doing tacos in tequila. Okay. I love it. I love me some tacos. Why not? Let's do it. I love me tacos. Pork belly tacos, baby. What's your favorite taco? Buffalo chicken. Oh, that would be good too, yeah. Maybe we'll get those too. Buffalo chicken with some pickled onions and a flour tortilla. Is that like corn tortillas? I'm a corn tortilla. But I'm older. I gotta watch my carbs. Docs doesn't gotta watch my carbs. That's what it is. All right, thanks so much again. If you need to hit a hold of Zach, just head over to ovation up dot com. They got a demo on the website. They'll be more happy to talk to you about whatever your needs are. And again, whatever your restaurant

The Restaurant Coach Podcast
"oates" Discussed on The Restaurant Coach Podcast
"Welcome to the restaurant coach podcast. It is the cure for the common restaurant. You know what I love? I love culture. Well, actually, I love a great culture that helps people reach their potential. Toxic cultures, you know, tech cultures kind of suck and sadly 80% of independent restaurants have a culture that keeps them hostage to working in their business and not on their business. But here is the inside secret. Culture can be changed. Yes, it's true. Now, is it easy? Oh, hell no. It's going to be more like a death cage match with a honey badger, but it is required if you ever want to break free from your restaurant running your life. So how do you start? Well, it starts with getting clear. I mean, crystal clear on your core values and then getting on your soap box and preaching these values every single day. Did I mention every single day? Yes, every single day. My good friend is Zach Oates, who runs an incredible tech company called ovation. The thing that really impresses me about Zach is not only just an amazing, I mean, really cool, great guy. But he has an amazing service that he offers, which allows restaurants to create a better guest experience for their guests digitally. But he's also created an amazing outstanding epic culture that has allowed his brand to see rapid growth year after year. And today I had a chance to ask him what are the keys to achieving a successful culture. So let's go to the studio. Hey, welcome to the restaurant coach podcast is the cure for the common restaurant. Zach oats in the house. What's up? Oh my God. It's been so long. It's like, I feel like we're getting a van back together. I know. Every time I see you, no matter how long it's been, it's always been too long, Donald. Oh, it's always been too long. I saw you last at the western food show. And now I'm gonna see you in Phoenix here pretty soon. You mean Phoenix? Yeah, if you don't know, I've probably mentioned it a hundred times a day recently. Yes, I'm holding my annual restaurant success summit here in Scottsdale Arizona, October 24th, 25th, 26th. I've got 7 other amazing speakers and one of those is going to be Zach, he's going to drop some knowledge bombs about text message marketing about setting up your digital platform.

The Restaurant Coach Podcast
"oates" Discussed on The Restaurant Coach Podcast
"Welcome to the restaurant coach podcast. It is the cure for the common restaurant. You know what I love? I love culture. Well, actually, I love a great culture that helps people reach their potential. Toxic cultures, you know, tech cultures kind of suck and sadly 80% of independent restaurants have a culture that keeps them hostage to working in their business and not on their business. But here is the inside secret. Culture can be changed. Yes, it's true. Now, is it easy? Oh, hell no. It's going to be more like a death cage match with a honey badger, but it is required if you ever want to break free from your restaurant running your life. So how do you start? Well, it starts with getting clear. I mean, crystal clear on your core values and then getting on your soap box and preaching these values every single day. Did I mention every single day? Yes, every single day. My good friend is Zach Oates, who runs an incredible tech company called ovation. The thing that really impresses me about Zach is not only just an amazing, I mean, really cool, great guy. But he has an amazing service that he offers, which allows restaurants to create a better guest experience for their guests digitally. But he's also created an amazing outstanding epic culture that has allowed his brand to see rapid growth year after year. And today I had a chance to ask him what are the keys to achieving a successful culture. So let's go to the studio. Hey, welcome to the restaurant coach podcast is the cure for the common restaurant. Zach oats in the house. What's up? Oh my God. It's been so long. It's like, I feel like we're getting a van back together. I know. Every time I see you, no matter how long it's been, it's always been too long, Donald. Oh, it's always been too long. I saw you last at the western food show. And now I'm gonna see you in Phoenix here pretty soon. You mean Phoenix? Yeah, if you don't know, I've probably mentioned it a hundred times a day recently. Yes, I'm holding my annual restaurant success summit here in Scottsdale Arizona, October 24th, 25th, 26th. I've got 7 other amazing speakers and one of those is going to be Zach, he's going to drop some knowledge bombs about text message marketing about setting up your digital platform.

WABE 90.1 FM
"oates" Discussed on WABE 90.1 FM
"Of a mentally unbalanced young babysitter is so chillingly confused. Mister shin. At the premiere. I shut my eyes a lot. I couldn't believe that comp was me. But everyone in the audience would think it was me. Are you in painkillers? Is it your period? I saw a photograph of Norma Jean baker, taken when she was about 15 years old, and she was a brunette, very pretty with a little artificial flowers in her hair. And I was just sort of stunned. Joyce Carol Oates, sitting on the patio of her Princeton home, said she had no particular interest in Marilyn Monroe at the time, but the 84 year old author said that photo struck a chord in her heart. I was sort of drawn to her right the story of a very ordinary seeming American girl from a very lower economic background. Who rises and becomes enormously successful and famous. And then is destroyed in the process. The result was a 738 page novel, which describes actual events in Monroe's life, but then imagines how she experienced them. Andrew Dominic says the novel provided a richer source than any biography or documentary. A documentary can sort of tell you what happened. But I think that what the film and the novel are really dealing with are what is the meaning of Marilyn Monroe? You know, why is that woman on the subway grading the sort of American equivalent of Venus in the shell rising out of the sea? And what does she inspire in us that she continues to have this kind of resonance? Dominik says our cultural obsession with Marilyn Monroe stems from a rescue fantasy. We know she's doomed, but we can't save her. Joyce Carol Oates felt it. She has written 23 novels since blond was published in 2000, including babysitter out last month, but Oates says her Monroe's story was the most wrenching. Yes, blond was very, very difficult, emotionally for me. And even though I knew that Marilyn would die at the end of my novel, I didn't realize how when I got to that point, I would be so identified with her. There was no way out except what happened to Maryland. I couldn't make up an ending where she was happily married. Or she runs away from Hollywood and I mean, I couldn't make that up. The film version of blond underscores the conflict between Monroe's public and private selves. In this scene, Norma Jean is sobbing at the mirror before a public appearance, pleading with her makeup artist, to bring out her Maryland face. Please come. Please come down to that to me. She's coming. Please come. She's coming. Don't expect to me. She's coming. Blond is the first Netflix film ever with an NC 17 rating. In one scene, a studio head rapes the starlet. In another, she is beaten by her husband, Joe DiMaggio, towards the end of the film, prison in Kennedy treats her like a disposable sex toy. Andrew dominik says people shouldn't be surprised that his film portrays Monroe's life as relentlessly unhappy. It's also a story of a person who sort of had everything that our culture is always screaming at us is desirable. Like she was famous. She was beautiful. She had a glamorous job. She died at all of cool

WTOP
"oates" Discussed on WTOP
"At home or your smart speaker. Washington's top news. Saturday morning September 17th, welcome in. We've made it to the weekend, everybody. It's WTO news. As three 42 in the morning ledger with us. Our highly unusually economy continues with punishing inflation, but also plenty of jobs. Jane Oates is president of working nation a nonprofit media organization. The focus is on the nation's labor force and works to help you find the right position. Double DT of these Dimitri sodas asks her about the quiet quitting trend and whether or not there are ways to improve your experience at work before you finally do decide to leave. I wouldn't take a leap from a job that I have if it's paying enough for me to live the life I want until I was really sure that I had to leave. So very specifically if you're manager isn't giving you access to the professional development or the opportunities that you really feel that you need to have where you'd like to have. I would go to HR and I would say I'm very happy here. I love this company or I love this agency if it's a federal job or a city job. But I really like to learn more and do more. What kinds of things can I do to improve my skills to increase my skills and if that HR person can't get you information, then you know it may be time to leave. And by the way, in saying HR, I know that some people work in companies that are smaller. So it may be talking to the people that work with you about what opportunities they've been given that you maybe haven't been offered. And then go back to your manager with a very specific assay. You know, I understand that bob has learned how to do some project management software and development. I really like an opportunity to learn that as well. What do you see by way of labor unions really becoming prominent again in our society? I saw one survey that says 70% of Americans support them again. That is quite a change from even a few years ago. I think people really learn during COVID that they wanted to have voice, that the workers over the past several decades, you know, in direct relationship to the demise of private sector unions have lost the ability to tell their employer what's important to them. Yes, it's always salary is always important. But flexibility is becoming more and more important. And I think labor management partnerships like organized labor can really help you feel like you have a say in what your present and what your future is with your current company. I am so encouraged when I see the young people becoming active in organizing. I think the American workforce remains the most vibrant, exciting workforce in the world. We take real dignity from our work and pride in what we do, whether it's white collar or blue collar or no collar. And when I see those young people pushing to organize, I just think it's another validation of the fact that we are an incredible workforce. My name is Jane Oates, president of working nation on WTO fee. You are listening to model 3.5 FM at WTO P dot com. Sports at 15 and 45 powered by maximus. Moving people and innovation forward. It Saturday September 17th, we've made it to the weekend, everybody. Welcome in. Three 45 once again, this early weekend morning Frank Easter. Join manesis highlighted the comeback for the nationals and inside the park Homer in a four run 7th inning. 5 four victory over the Miami Marlins at Nats park, CJ Abrams, had some great defensive moments, and he also had a triple to score two in that comeback 7th inning. Nationals and a 5 game losing skid when their 50th game of the year beating the Marlins 5 four seemed to on Saturday afternoon at nationals park. Orioles were losers up north, falling at Toronto 6 to three. The commanders had a Detroit on Saturday, they'll play the Lion Sunday 1 o'clock. One in O commanders lines are zero and one Washington edging Jackson in the last week, while the Lions fell short to Philadelphia at home. That's probably why the lions are actually favored by one and a half points in this ball game. A lot of local college football coming up this weekend for a preview check out Dave Preston's presto's picks and

WTOP
"oates" Discussed on WTOP
"Us Somewhere in the night you're 50 million. This is WTO news. I'm now IW TOP is 1241. Welcome in. Our highly unusually economy continues with punishing inflation, but also plenty of jobs. Jane Oates is president of working nation, the nonprofit media organization, the focuses on the neighbors, the nation's labor force and works to help you find the right position. Double DT of these Dimitri sodas asks her about the quiet quitting trend and whether or not there are ways to improve your experience at work before you finally do decide to leave. I wouldn't take a leap from a job that I have if it's paying enough for me to live the life I want until I was really sure that I had to leave. So very specifically if you're manager isn't giving you access to the professional development or the opportunities that you really feel that you need to have or you'd like to have. I would go to HR and I would say I'm very happy here. I love this company or I love this agency if it's a federal job or a city job. But I really like to learn more and do more. What kinds of things can I do to improve my skills to increase my skills and if that HR person can't get you information, then you know it may be time to leave. And by the way, in saying HR, I know that some people work in companies that are smaller. So it may be talking to the people that work with you about what opportunities they've been given that you maybe haven't been offered. And then go back to your manager with a very specific assay. You know, I understand that bob has learned how to do some project management software and development. I really like an opportunity to learn that as well. What do you see by way of labor unions really becoming prominent again in our society? I saw one survey that says 70% of Americans support them again. That is quite a change from even a few years ago. I think people really learn during COVID that they wanted to have voice, that the workers over the past several decades, you know, in direct relationship to the demise of private sector unions have lost the ability to tell their employer what's important to them. Yes, it's always salary is always important. But flexibility is becoming more and more important. And I think labor management partnerships like organized labor can really help you feel like you have a say in what your present and what your future is with your current company. I am so encouraged when I see the young people becoming active in organizing. I think the American workforce remains the most vibrant, exciting workforce in the world. We take real dignity from our work and pride in what we do, whether it's white collar or blue collar or no collar. And when I see those young people pushing to organize, I just think it's another validation of the fact that we are an incredible workforce. My name is Jane oats, president of working nation on WTO fee. You are listening to one O 3.5

WGN Radio
"oates" Discussed on WGN Radio
"Key and right here I'm Raleigh James those are the masters I need your love 1966 on criminals and if it sounds like that's a familiar lead singer it's none other than John Oates as in hall and easily vocalist it turns 74 years old are they happy happy born in New York grew up in Philadelphia Yeah well suburb Anyway North Wales went to temple but he recorded that in 66 while he was still in high school in North Wales All right John oh it's happy happy birthday 888-876-5593 88 88 Raleigh and Don is in Bartlett Welcome to WGN radio I mean bartlet Illinois Yes and by the way we're talking about birthdays I will be the 8 zero on May 16th In my old right How's that The class of 1960 happy birthday Well 61 just to marry healer during fluffing fourth grades for handwriting That was actually probably the best thing that happened in my life because I missed Vietnam War Number one and I met my wife in 7th grade which is married for 60 years And you know flunking handwriting you had a career in store as a doctor if you wanted it I was going to be a doctor and you're right about that Yeah Okay Now let me explain something I've written a memoir right now that the publishers and I had some celebrities I had Joel Joel as brothers Bill Murray Joe Murray on the covers And I prologue so I had to get a hold of Joel And today he actually has sent me a full But we have many ways my memoir my prologue has nothing to do with my book And I'm not even going to talk about that I'm going to talk about I was being interviewed on WGN radio at the station over in Michigan Until gentlemen I don't remember the names but I have a picture of myself with them so I have to give their permission to put this in my control log Don't go away Stay exactly where you are and we'll pick this up in moments but we'll find out what's going on in the world right now on WGN radio.

The Way (Audio Podcast)
"oates" Discussed on The Way (Audio Podcast)
"Oates received from God in his story, if you remember that. That was the moment the change is before you have to. It's a good statement. Yeah, it is. Because when you wait beyond that, it gets a lot uglier. And a lot messier. You may still have a moment of grace there, but you may have skated by that time too. Well, the Bible's clear, judge yourself before you are judged, and the judging yourself means you assess where you're at and you're sober about it, and then you look at it and you go, eh, I messed up. I better change. Real quick before God helps me change. God is not squeamish about being as nasty as he has to be if it will, if there is a chance that it might wake someone up. That's right. I'm telling you, there are some, there are some horror stories out there of people who have gone through some things that you don't even want to consider. And in the aftermath of that, they stood before people raising a hand to God saying if I had not gone through this, I would have been lost. No one in their world wants to go through there. We're talking about the death of a child, right? That's an example that you and I both know of. In the aftermath of that horrible event, the father, a wonderful couple, that he stood up and gave the testimony that it was that event that actually had changed him. That changed him and brought him in. It's not that God killed the child. But only one thinking that crazy stuff. I know I hear someone. I hear some of them now emailing. No, he didn't. But he allowed the circumstances, the natural circumstances to unfold for the betterment of everyone involved. I want to tell you something. And eternity is on the line. Hell is forever, right? God almighty will do whatever he can to wake you up to bring you home..

The Paul Finebaum Show
"oates" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"Where is he? Your chicken nuggets is that McDonald's? Let me try Andre next. Hey, Andre. Of course, our apologize, man, I was talking to my wife and orders her food. Hey, that's okay. I'll take me a half order of chicken nuggets, okay? I got my wife. Get that here's your roll on the other day. Yes. Well, you heard misses Jerome and then you heard Jerome. Yes. Well, look, I go ahead. He came out fine on all shoulder when he called. He sure did. He was hot. He was hot like a third of all Saturday night. He was smoking hot. No culture. What are we here coming out of bedroom? What's the word or whatever Brian Kelly, what do you think? I think he's hired a good staff. He's getting a lot of transfers. I have no, I have no issues with him at all. I think he'll be very successful. Okay. You know, code now. I do take issue with you about two weeks ago. I heard you talking to one of these South Carolina fans. Come on coach quick quickest sugarcoat this thing. What are you realistic to see with their future over there in South Carolina? Come on now. Well, to quit. I think they are in good shape now. Are they going to contend? I didn't say that, but with Spencer Rattler, they can win some games. I think they already considering the personnel on the team. They did quite well last year. Okay, let me give it to you this way. Let's come on out with it. Give it to high ceiling. What do you think? What's that high ceiling? Well, second or third in the SEC east, the third maybe? Every year. Well, no, I don't see them getting I think right now. It's difficult to break that ceiling, yes. Listen, if you got Tennessee that's rising, I don't know what flaw is going to do. But yours is not going anywhere. So they're not going to be able to climb above Georgia. This is about talent and talent acquisition and recruiting. And if you not recruiting in the top ten every year, you're not gonna climb that ladder in what we call the southeastern conference. It's just not gonna happen, cold. Well, I think you can there may be an outlier year, but you're right. You're in your out. You're not going to be able to because it's so forget the top. You've got to break through that middle tier and that is the most Kentucky has been able to do it with a modicum of success, but not sustained. They get to a point, but they always seem to let a game get away, where Florida, even an average years has gotten to a SEC championship game. Thanks, Andre. Give me a chicken. Maybe some fries too with that. I'm pretty hungry right now..

The Paul Finebaum Show
"oates" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"Overdo it. I can't control everything. I'm going to do everything I can and do what I can to control. I can control it at some point when we went big. I really try not to take a ton of credit because it's the player's season. It's the players that are doing the plane and winning. When we're losing, I'm going to do everything I can to help fix it, but at some point we got to put in the player's hands and it's your season. I've been doing this 23 years. I'm going to do it again next year. It's the last time you guys are together. Some of you it's the last time you'll ever play in couch. Fastball it's a big deal. You got to determine how you want the season to go. And it's really a lot more in the player's hands, win or lose, unless you had a really good players that bought into the right stuff and played the right way. And I think we have at times this year and we just got to get more consistent at it. And I've got to do a better job as a head coach, but I'm not going to beat myself up forever over one or two losses. We're going to do what we can and then we're going to keep working to make our players better and come the confidence they need to try to win the next game. Touch many thanks for coming on here today. I know a lot going on in your world. We appreciate it, as always. No, I appreciate you having me on. When's your losses, I appreciate you having me on. So I could listen to your show good to talk to you too Paul. Thank you, coach. Coach Nate hates a Nate Oates and it's about as honest as you'll get from a coach. There was no coach speak there. That was raw raw analytics and analysis after a brutal loss last night to a team that had not won a conference game since last February. We are going to take a break. Your reaction.

The Paul Finebaum Show
"oates" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"Mississippi state, they had 9 offensive rebounds with 8 minutes to go in the game. They didn't finish the game with 18 offensive boards. So there's things that we do at a pretty high level or pretty good and then we just, as the game moves on later in the game, we start to lose our focus, lose our attention to detail and we get bad and those are two of the worst that we do defensively as we file too much and we give up too many a board. So we're trying to fix that. Offensively, we haven't been shooting it well or often to still the tenth ranked offense in the country. We've done a lot of other things. Well, but shoot shouldn't covers a multitude of sins and we gotta start shooting the ball a little bit better. And then when our turnovers are kept down to a minimum we're pretty good too last night we had 19 turnovers at Georgia and they only had I think 5 or 6 deals most of them were unforced turnovers. So it seems most of our damage is we're doing it to ourselves in these games. I think we can fix that. We just got to get guys confidence up their minds right and it's part of coaching. I mean, it's a lot that goes into coaching analytics or part of it. Psychology is part of it. I think the psychology part's a little more important at this stage for us right now. And I know that nobody wants to disrespect the opponent, especially a conference game, but you're playing a team that hasn't won a conference game since last year, you're a favorite. None of that matters after the fact, but how do you communicate to your team? Listen, quick paying attention to what everyone else is saying, listen to me. It's very true. And we tell them, look, you guys can go look at all of the metrics, the standings. You see that George is Owen 6, just like we do. So we're not going to sit up here and lie to you and tell you that they look like auburn and Kentucky. They don't. They're struggling. But they've been in games, they were in a game, you know, against Kentucky on the road in the middle of the second half. If we don't come in and do what we're supposed to do, this team is more than capable of being us and they did. So, you know, we try to tell them, you know, like our football team, they're pretty good here. You know, I use them occasionally as reference. They made it to the national championship. Well, they lost at Texas a and M was not nearly as good as us. Well, we don't need 6 Texas a and M losses. You know, I was hoping one or two, which suffice, you know, we've now lost Taiwan who's one coaching good. You know, and we've lost 7 times four of the 7 losses end up being quad one losses, Davidson's a good team, but even some of the quad one losses, there's still not as good as us. So like a team like Georgia that like you said, it's own 6, I think somebody told me this morning it's the worst in the Ken pom era in the last 20 years is the worst loss outbound basketballs had. So, you know, there's something to be said. We've got to bring the same intensity and energy. Whether it's Baylor, whether it's LSU, whether it's Tennessee, whether it's Houston, whether it's Gonzaga, whether it's Georgia. We've got to bring the same energy to the game. And that's where as a head coach, I've got to do a better job, figuring out what makes these guys tick and getting that same type of intensity in every game we come out. Other than looking at some of the things that you've referenced, the canton, the stats, the analytics, how do you internalize something like this? Because you're coming out such a great season where almost everything went right. You had adversity just dealing with COVID and a long stay in Indianapolis. But after a loss like that, do you have a methodology of dealing with yourself? Okay, let me think this through or do you lean on your staff? Or how do you do it? Yeah, I mean, right after the game, the staff has long discussion, obviously emotions are high. You know, I did a little bit different last night. We kind of came in and sometimes coach gets irritated goes in. It says what he thinks gives team his piece of peace was mine and kind of walks out. I wasn't going to do that. I wanted to hear what they had to say. I walked in and I said, I'm done talking after these losses. I don't need to hear what you guys think the problem is. And they talked, and it was good. We got some stuff out. Guys shared with their opinions were, you know, saying it after games, one thing, doing it, you know, we're off today, the staff has met. We've kind of turned our attention to Baylor's a staff, but we got to come back and readdress what happened at Georgia tomorrow morning. And the team gets together and then but as far as me, I'm going to watch every game up until the very last game of the year when your season's over and maybe you can't it took me a long time to watch that UCLA game last year, but up until then, I'm going to watch every game we play and see what I can learn from that game. So I watched last night, I finished, I don't know one, two in the morning. Usually try to finish that night. Otherwise I stay up thinking about it anyways, and then I go to bed. I don't know. Real hard time fall asleep. Usually, by the time I finish the game, it's pretty late and get up in the morning with a clear head, try to figure out what's wrong. And in this case, I really just think we've got to get guys minds right confidence back. Guys, to understand that their effort every single play in every game. So how do we do that? You know, who do we need to talk to, what do we have meetings with? Who can we meet with the staff discuss all that? And do what we can to fix it and move on. And as a coach, I mean, a lot of us try.

The Paul Finebaum Show
"oates" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"Back. We were looking ahead to the weekend when we booked our next guest, a huge game on the horizon for the Alabama crimson tide. And last night, a setback for the Alabama basketball team, but that did not stop Nate Oates from showing up at the appointed time when he could have easily begged off coach Oates joining us from Tuscaloosa coach. Thank you very much for the time. Appreciate it. I watched the game like many of us last night, so how are you? I guess it was my first question. Fed better days. Was not a good loss. It's a little bit what we've been about this year to be honest, even though we've had some great wins. Be Gonzaga and Seattle would be Houston. We beat Tennessee, beat LSU, but we've got some losses like last night, you know, we lost to George on the road. We lost a Memphis on the road. We lost to Davidson. Semi home, neutral game. Davidson did some of the 6 out of our 7, while we've lost 7 times. 6 over 7 losses the teams are ranked below aside in the metrics. So we've got to figure out how to play our best basketball against the best teams, which we seem to be able to figure out how to do and against the teams that aren't so good as well. So we're a little bit chuck and I right now. Coach, I'm just an observer. I don't know what you know, but I'm curious as you observe your own team, which you do all the time, and I'm sure you're internalizing this. How do you explain winning in one of the most difficult places in the country, if not the most difficult, and then letting games, not letting games, but losing games that you're supposed to win in theory, I want to say it's probably doesn't look like it's a talent, maybe sometimes it's maybe something else. What is it? Yeah, trying to figure that out. I think there's an intensity and a sense of urgency an attention to detail on the defensive end, particularly our offense. We're still if you look at Kemp on this wine, we're still got the tenth ranked offense in the country. The problem is our defenses, I think, 68 right now. So like defensively, we just don't have that sense of urgency every game and I don't know if you know I'm obviously not doing a great job as I had coach of motivating our guys to play at their best capabilities on both ends of the floor every time out and we're trying to figure that out. I'm trying to get as much feedback from our guys as I can get. But yeah, you know, there's some maturity that comes with it. You know, where's our leadership at to make sure that everybody on the team is ready to play? Like we've got to figure that out a little bit better. I think we've got some guys trying. You know, we've just got to get a whole group of them that really want to play hard and every single game no matter who the opponent is. You know, based on how we've been playing, we'll probably play pretty good against Baylor. I mean, there weren't no more in the country a week or two ago. One of the best teams in the country, you know, Gonzaga was number one in the country last week. We beat Gonzaga already. You know, wait, we'll probably play well against Baylor. Guys, we'll get up for it. I hope we do. You know, we got a chance to beat him, but we've got to figure out how to play well against every team. And coach, I know, you can only get ready for the next game. That's cliche, but fans are already thinking, okay, this team has already beaten the number one team in the country. They play number four Saturday, and then you do get the chance to beat another number one team. Next Tuesday, auburn, and then depending on how all that goes, you still get to come back and play Kentucky, which is playing at a pretty high level right now. And it is Kentucky. The schedule should help prepare you for postseason, would you say? No, it should. We get a win enough games to make sure we're playing in the postseason to begin with. But yeah, I mean, there's the SEC's really good to share the SEC schedule gives us enough quality games where we've got enough good games left on the schedule that we can play ourselves into a good seat still. I mean, if you look at UCLA last year, they lost three in a row to close the year out loss to first game of PAC 12 tournament to go four in a row, and then had to play a playing game as an 11th seed and goes on to run and was a play away from playing in the national championship game. You know, they played made it to the final four. So we just have to get to where we're playing our best basketball come the end of February March. As a high school coach, not too long ago, everybody made the state tournament. So whether you want or lost or in a regular season was a little bit irrelevant, just trying to get to be the best team you can be. I think we're back at that stage now. We've got some quality. I looked at kenton this morning out of the top 8 teams on kenton this morning. We've either played or will play 5 of those 8 and two of those we play twice. And auburn and Kentucky. So there's plenty of games left on the schedule to get our resume where it needs to be. We've proven that we've got the talent to play with the best teams in the country and we just got to go out and figure out how to do it every night. Coach, a lot of it is up here, but you're also an analytics guy. And when you look at your analytics, which you have to do, do you see something? Or what do you see? Yeah, we look at a ton of numbers and I do think a lot. I maybe should have got a psychology degree in several math major, but stage of the season, but we do look at the numbers. I mean, when we look defensively, we've got large stretches of the game where we're a really good defensive team. Like for instance, our Missouri game, two games ago, we had a bad start to the game bad start to the second half. We were a 0.82 points per possession, the other 32 minutes of the game. Those first four minutes of each half, when you combine them, we were at a 2.2. So we have first half second half splits. We're much better in the first half defensively than we are in a second half on the year. The only two things that are any different, are we filed too much? And last night's game, we'd lose that Georgia and we put Georgia at the freezer line way too much, particularly late in the game in the second half, and we give up too many old boards..

The Paul Finebaum Show
"oates" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"Did yes then I apologize if disrespectful to your show is disrespectful to the callers. Well, there's one thing we can not have here is language that puts all of us in danger. When I say that we are licensed radio stations or licensed that were on all across the country and they have certain codes and manners and so is television and we just, that kind of language is just not going to pass the mustard here. That totally agree. It's generally like the phone call was over, regretted to say in the word I said. Well, we'll leave it there. And I do follow you. This is not like one of the 7 cardinal sins. You said something, you regret it, and we move on. It will cost you. It will cost you a $100 to put in the kitty here. You are being formally fine by the financial burden costs more than $100. Okay, I wasn't good now. I know, then we'll just wipe off the find that. How about that? But can I talk about that? Can I explain why I get so upset? I don't even think you were speaking of legend, is that correct? No, I don't have a problem with legend. Okay, oh, I'm sorry. You were talking about Jim from Tuscaloosa. You're right. And you used a curse word to describe your feelings towards him or your whatever. Yes. Well, I said he was fake as something. Okay, right. Yeah. But the problem I have with him is your first caller demonstrate people call in with true genuine feelings. Yes. In every phone call the gym makes, he makes it about him being number one or about his opinion or about something about him. And it cheapens the testimonies and I myself have told some very private sequence on this show. Yes. And if he and if he's not being skidded and prompted to do what he's doing, then heat disrespecting the people who call us say they have recovered from cancer and your show has bring them through it because all he wants you to do is make this show about him. And that's why I get so demonstrative whenever he does, what he does. Every single focal he makes is half the turnaround about him. Won't shooter remind everybody that you named him number one in 2014 or he wants you to say his opinion is the best, but he doesn't even remember one. I just put him on page 54. We are up against the break. And we will shortly come back. And talk to Nate Oates. They.

The Paul Finebaum Show
"oates" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"Hear from a certain former president? That's what I'm here to ask you. Did you ever have any sense that baseball was eating away at drew? So what inspired that name across sports and society? Did you kill Lorenzen Wright Chara? I'm Pablo Toure, and ESPN daily connects the best stories in sports to the final score. Wherever you listen. We're back. Great to have all of you here on a Wednesday and Eddie is up next in Georgia. Hey Eddie, a good afternoon. Hello. Hey, Eddie. How done brother? We're doing great, thank you. Yeah, going back 39 years, I asked 24 years old. And the radio was not working at the office, and I'm glad it wasn't because when I got home and did it shit me down in front of the ESPN television show and said it would come on in a minute. All right, cried like a baby. I still are a little bit of a hoarder. I still have the paper from his return. I cried when they retired. So you can just imagine how much I cried. We need bad. Yeah, you know, what people don't understand about kirch Bryant's death. So it came out on December 15th, 1982 that he was retiring, and that was an emotional time, all of a sudden, Alabama without coach Bryant. And then on the 29th, two weeks later, it was his final game. Alabama was in danger of losing that game and they finally held on to beat Illinois. So, okay, everybody. With the help of the cornerback, the intercepted three passions of that night and was one of his 8 men that carried him in the casket. Jeremiah Castillo. Absolutely. And your back has to be like. And then 20 9 days later, he dies. I mean, you compress it. It was an overwhelmingly difficult time for everyone. Now, I know he should have coach O'Connell. And he's a great coach. But okay, he beat Gonzaga and he'd be used to. Yeah. Now how do you lose to dojo, who had won a game in the SEC? Well, he's also lost in Missouri, which is correct. The worst losses in the country. Doctor Davidson. The Davidson lost wasn't a bad loss. I mean, Davidson, I think it's one 15 games in a row. Very good team, but hey, how do you lose limb on your home court? Well, anyway, yeah. And I don't have his athletes that he did last year, but hey, hopefully something happened. Yeah. Okay. Fire Nate oaks. All the idea was again within a whisker of the elite 8 last year and the final four and coach of the year and SEC champions and these dropped a game or two. Stop for him to go. I mean, gone. Mitch is up next. Uncle Paul. I need to be remorseful and. Give my rest from my last phone call yesterday. I shouldn't I shouldn't stoop to other people's levels and I.

The Paul Finebaum Show
"oates" Discussed on The Paul Finebaum Show
"Get rearing to go here on a Wednesday. Thanks for the time lot to do. A lot of gas, a lot of phone calls. Let us begin with some headlines. Auburn. Number one team in the country. It wasn't going to lose its first time out, was it? Well, it almost did. In Colombia, the tigers get its 16 straight survive como Bruce Carl lives to see yet another game and he'll get that on Saturday. Derek mason has gone, we knew that the other day, but it came out officially today that the former Van Dyck coach won and done at auburn SED coordinator. Most people think he did a pretty good job. Now he's going to work at Oklahoma state. And who will the top quarterbacks be in the SEC next season while hard to guess the first guy who is the Heisman Trophy winner, but there are a couple of other pretty good ones, including the national champion Spencer Rattler. Oh yeah, he's in the SEC now. Hinden hooker, where would Tennessee have been without him, KJ? Let Arkansas to a big season. Some good names. As we were already looking ahead, even though this season is only two weeks old, at least in the rearview mirror. So that's where we are here. Meanwhile, turnover chain is gone. Mario christoval, about winning games instead of hype and Mario, that might be the best thing you've done since landing back at your Alma mater, getting rid of that stupid thing. Texas lost money in the pandemic. Almost 60 million, but they got shark. And they're back, aren't they? Back to having a losing record. NATO's. Yes, he's going to show up, even though the dogs beat the tide last night, Heather Dennis, always good to see Heather and Andrea Gallo, investigative reporter who broke that big story down the title night investigation wide open. We will talk to her later as well. So two weeks and two days ago, we were still talking about Alabama and Georgia in the national championship game. That was in football. We know Georgia won the title. They met last night in basketball, Bama, huge favorite, and Georgia hoops just put this tweet at Georgia has owned Alabama this year. Women's basketball football. Come back against Alabama's Lee Hodges. Did anybody look at it that way? I didn't, but anyway, good for him. And now in basketball, so is it over? Is it over for Alabama? Is what we're saying? What's not the Georgia official twit, Twitter? Handle. Obviously, it was the unofficial Twitter. They still say they owned Alabama. We'll get some reaction and see if that's true. Anyway, we move on. 39 years ago at about this moment, the news broke, it flashed through Alabama, bear briot. Was dead. One 26, 83. 39 years ago. And we will talk about that. Where you are. At that moment, many of you are not alive. We will get to your phone calls. At 8 5 5, two four two 7 two 8 5 and we began with Beth in Tennessee. Hello, Beth, go ahead ahead. Hello, hello, misses Paul. How are you doing today? Beth, we're doing great. Thank you. I've been listening to you since you were in Birmingham. Well, thank you. I appreciate that very much. And I want you to say you're helping me out through a tough week this week we found out my mother's only got a few days to live and you had really blessed me this week. I want to say thank you. Well, Beth, thank you for saying that and I. Am certainly appreciative of you sharing that story with you. I know ministers are put in this position all the time and I'm not sure there are any easy words, but we certainly hope that you and your family have some comfort in knowing what a great life your mom had. You had 89 years on this earth and she had a blessed last she tell people that all the time helped people with stuff and did things. Tell us more about her as we pay tribute to her. Well, she's her name is Frances and she's 89 and she was a Sunday school teacher, preachers live. She served a lower for over 50 years. You know, I don't want to stigmatize, but I think being a minister's wife is and you know this, but I have had friends who I've heard this from. It looks like a position of great influence and importance, but it's also a very difficult position. I think it is, it is. It was for her. It was for her. Well, it sounds like you're celebrating a great life and we will be thinking of you in these very difficult days ahead. Well, thank you. Thank you, Paul. I appreciate that. That's a very kind of. Well, Beth, you take care of yourself. Thanks so much. Thank you. Thank you. To your family. Sandra is up next in Tuscaloosa, hello Sandra. Hi, miss Paul, find boom. Hey. I can not believe I got through. We are happy. It's so glad you made it. Well, I'm a longtime listener, but this is my first time getting through. But I just called to let you know that I really, really enjoy your show. If entertainment, it keep us up to date on all the sports that's going on. And I just absolutely love it. And I am a Bama fan. And I think we're going to be all right. You know, everybody have the year. But I think we're going to be fine. Yeah, Sandra, there are many there are a couple of things in the world that would probably never bet again, so one of them is Nick Saban's program at Alabama. That's right. Well, that's all I have to say, miss Paul found. I'm in thank you for taking my call and we're going to send prayers out for best and her family. Well, thank you very, very much. And you take care of yourself. And you'd be well. Billy is in Philly. I love to say that. Hi, Paul. I wanted to ask you a kind of a larger range in question. Where are all these football victories headed for the states that the teams of the schools are in? I was very happy to see a few months ago that Ford who hasn't been a plant built a plant in America for 20 years is building two plants, one's in Tennessee, one is in Kentucky. And I saw today the Intel is building a $20 billion plant in Ohio. Wow. And they're building it there because they have 34 suppliers in the state and they have some gargantuan. I don't have the right number. Use of water, like 50 billion gallons a day or something. My question is, look, since 2005, I looked this up in Texas international championship. There has been one year, a non southern school is one of the football championship that was Ohio State. The south has owned really America's most popular game. But it's got a, I hope. Benefit in other ways. I see a person like a psyche who is a fabulous administrator, negotiator, a leader of every kind of category. Where is this going to go? I mean, what is going to happen in Mississippi, Alabama, the southern states. They should start winning because if it doesn't spread out into the culture, then eventually you're not going to keep winning like you are. I mean, other schools think we talk about sports here all the time, but successful programs do help you on the other side of the ledger from an academic standpoint. I think that is absolute fact. So I think the attention on all of those schools is good, they are doing well financially. They are having to continue to compete. But I hear your point, even though the south has owned the sport, the number of schools in the south that have won is not that high. I mean, you've seen, obviously, Alabama with the lion's share, auburn, got in there, Florida's in there, LA. She was in there. But it has not gone too much beyond that. I'm going beyond the SEC. I mean, I think Miami counts, I think Texas counts. The south bones is this game here. There's no good. There's no getting around it. And I think it's going to be, I don't see it changing. Because that's where I mean, you just saw Mario Cristobal, who I think is one of the best coaches in the country. Leave Oregon to go to Miami. That was a big time job you'd be left and he left a top program to go to a place that has not been able to win or get out of its own shadow in a very long time. Right. I just think it should spill over into the culture. I hope it does. I mean, I'm an SEC fan living in Philadelphia. I'm going to tell you. I don't have a friend who knows what grids are. In such a strange world, I know that..

Little Atoms
"oates" Discussed on Little Atoms
"Gerald who he is which is actually inspired by my late husband. Charlie who was acquitted distinguished neuroscientist. So jared is not at principalities. At harvard he is his really not identical with my my husband and mikhail is not identical with me as i said i was using using them parameters of memoir and really re imagining the same material and save emotions but reimagining them with different people slightly different setting and more of a complicated platt and so it both is and both is an is not based on real people. So jared was is a professor at harvard. And he's interested in going to the west of the united states which is very different from the east. Most obvious signet happens when you go west and go to a place like santa chiara which is inspired by santa fe. Most obvious thing that happens immediately is that you can't pre you're very short of breath because accident is not being utilized by your brain. Your grades not getting enough axa jen and so your heart goes a little faster and you may have a feelings of slight panic. Or maybe just hyper excitement. You enter a different state of consciousness if you're coming from sea level which is where i come from when i go west. So he goes out west and he wants to. He gets very interested in endangered languages. Studying the languages of a number of native american tribes and peoples who are we might call aboriginal native americans whose ancestors very much predate any any white white settlers from england. So we're in a in a landscape that both isn't isn't america or united states. The united states is relatively new nation but north america has been there for you know millions of years and so when americans come to parts of north america or south america they were they moving into regions that predate their own Civilization so jared gets very interested in endangered languages and mcculloch learns that you're the after his death when she's looking at us. Manuscript and mcculloch comes into Some sort of really awkward and.

Dual Threat with Ryen Russillo
How Rod Thorn's Career Started
"Rod thorns a hall of famer. He's done just about everything basketball including playing college years in the pros the second pick in the nineteen sixty three draft in the nba through seventy one coach of the sonics. But then in nineteen seventy-three rod your aba career started. How did that start. What was that call like. Well i had been an assistant coach ryan with the new New york nets and we had weighed The saint louis spirits and the first first round of the playoffs The previous year and we beat them during the regular season ten consecutive times. We beat them the first game of the playoffs and then they proceeded to win the next four So they had eliminated us and their coach Resigned and i was offered the job and and ended up taking it Harry wealth man who was at that time the gm of the spirits We've had several conversations and So i ended up taking the job so you had had initially been an assistant though. Correct when when you were with the nets right. That is correct. The kevin lottery was terrific. Coach was our ed oates and we had won one championship and lost in spirits. The next year so. I had been an assistant coach for two

World News Tonight with David Muir
Bowling Green State University student in critical condition, fraternity suspended after alleged hazing incident
"Back now with a parent's worst nightmare. The college student hospitalized after an alleged hazing incident just days after another student was found dead at a fraternity house. That heartbroken family now speaking out. Here's abc's mona. Kosar abdi tonight to families. In two states devastated by what happened to their college age sons in separate incidents of alleged fraternity hazing bowling green state university students stone foltz is alive but in critical condition a statement from bowling green university citing quote alleged hazing activity involving alcohol consumption at a pi kappa alpha off campus event. We have placed this fraternity on interim suspension as we work with local law enforcement this less than a week. After the father of adam oates a freshman at virginia commonwealth. University opened his door to police. The news to the family says they heard from friends. President that adam was encouraged to consume a large quantity of whiskey as part of an initiation process. Then passed out next morning. May checked on him. He was dead that fraternity suspended by the national organization and by vcu which promises an independent investigation but to anti hazing activists who son tim. Piazza died during hazing at penn state in two thousand seventeen frustrated by locks laws. The word hazing apparently is acceptable. But if you translate it to what it really is abuse then you see it as the crime that it is just devastating for those families or thanks to mona kosar abdi for that

WBZ Afternoon News
Oates, Groff among contributors to book on Thoreau legacy
"Joyce Carol Oates and Douglas Brinkley are among the more than 20 riders contributing essays for a book about the legacy of Henry David Throw, You can expect it to come out next year. It's going to be called, now comes good sailing on Henry David Thoreau and the meaning of life. The title comes from the words. The nature writer and social commentator reportedly spoke as he neared his death. In 18

Colleen and Bradley
John Oates of Hall & Oates says he slept with ‘thousands’ of women during the ‘70s: ‘I’ve lost track’
"Wait John it's the says he has slept with thousands of women hi this is exciting to me thousands of women why that exciting hall and Oates I mean you want to know that they're getting their freak on yeah they definitely where he said I'm sure it was thousands I've lost track he's seventy one years old and he said if you didn't live through the seventies and eighties if you weren't a rock star during that time there's no way you can comprehend what it was like there were no cellphones and people taking pictures of everything you did there was no social media it was much more innocent he said I used to meet girls in various towns and sort of have a relationship I might see them and then see them six months later he said he never had a drug problem he says coke was ubiquitous Daryl hall and I never had our issues with it because we never did it I tried it back in the studio fifty four days and it made me feel so uncomfortable but I couldn't do it it just wasn't my thing I mean and isn't that a blessing when you think about it it is I would just like to pay very close attention to the language he used because he said we never did it and then he talks about when he did how we did it we just need you didn't do it more than one yeah I tried it yeah and then he didn't really do it but I just world to know you can't undo it once you're doing that's true he did say both Terrel and I knew that we were going to be musicians for the rest of our lives and the only way for us to be musicians for the rest of our lives was to keep our bleep together they did suffer with issues with money mismanagement at one point John out says that he had homes in New York Connecticut an aspen hit an airplane hit a garage full of vintage cars but he had no cash he had no money well he said it's embarrassing me to realize that I should have been more aware and knowledgeable of what was going on but I was swept up in being a pop star it was too easy to party to play my music and then he sold everything but kept his condo in aspen he moved to start fresh she remarried had a son and said that that financial hardship really helped him because he was able to move forward and just be so much more responsible going