35 Burst results for "One Hundred Degrees"

WTOP
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on WTOP
"Overnight saturday and one hundred more were involved sunday morning along the creek the survivalist murder suspect who escaped jail and led law enforcement on the manhunt is back behind bars in pennsylvania after a couple encountered him on their property and called police police arrested michael burrham at gunpoint he escaped jail in warren county using a rope made of knotted bedsheets but after nine days on the run he had made it all of six miles a couple spotted him on their property and alerted police what are you doing in my backyard this is i'm camping well no one camps in my backyard it's unclear if that couple will receive the twenty two thousand dollar reward posted for his arrest also clear where burm will head next behind bars he will not be returning to the same jail that is cbs news correspondent mark strassman reporting a twenty five -year -old alabama one returned home late saturday after an extensive two -day search by authorities family members reported carlithia russell missing thursday night after she stopped to check on a child who was walking along a highway she also called nine -one -one to report the concern when officers arrived at the scene they found russell's vehicle and some of her belongings including her phone but no sign of either her or the child chief nick derses with hoover alabama police said russell arrived home alone and was transported to a hospital for evaluation it is four thirty four israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu's recovery recuperating from a heat related hospitalization in a video statement netanyahu said he had spent time at the sea of galley with his wife friday on in one hundred degree heat it's more ability by the book in it said over he he was quote in the sun without a hat and without water and called on israelis to be more careful during an ongoing heat wave netanyahu underwent heart tests and hospital officials said they all came back clear but he was fitted with an implanted heart monitor as a caution linda gradstein for cbs news jerusalem the numbers are staggering and could change one's life radically in just hours tonight's power ball jackpot will be worth an estimated nine hundred million dollars no one hit the big prize in saturday night's drawing although two players in texas and one in pronto at a million bucks for picking everything but the powerball number tonight's top prize is the third highest in powerball history seventh highest for any u .s. lottery tuesday night's mega millions jackpot well it's not exactly nine hundred million it's not chump change either that jackpot will be worth an estimated six hundred and forty million dollars it doesn't cost anything to be kind to other people but it could it gets you something brian bandmiller has the details your job comes with a lot of standards and now another one's been added to the list i'm brian bann miller on business according to forbes a recent survey of more than employees from a variety of companies found that kindness is now a must -have for any workplace that's because the the survey found there is a direct link between kindness and employee happiness and job satisfaction according to forbes the the survey also found seventy seven percent of people asked for more likely to apply for a job that listed kindness as an important value of the company seventy four percent also said it's important to have a kind community at work which includes managers is checking in on their team and offering personal and professional support according to the ceo at one company survey kindness lets your employees know they are valued members and not just worker bees plus kindness boosts job engagement satisfaction and performance that's because when employees feel cared about they engage in better teamwork and are more focused on solutions and growing the bottom line and that's an act of kindness everyone can benefit from brian coming up after traffic and weather looking to cut costs on car insurance we with some tips have some i'm mark hamrick with a report just ahead it is four thirty six diamonds directs midsummer savings event is happening right now with an extra twenty percent saving an expanded selection and in designer appearances take an extraordinary twenty percent off diamonds directs already unbeatable prices on rings earrings facelift fans

The 11th Hour with Brian Williams
Afghan Allies Are Worried About Being Left Behind As Americans Evacuate
"Less than a week away from the deadline to get every last american out of afghanistan along with every deserving afghan on an outbound aircraft as they were told to expect months ago the taliban all the cards now the administration and many americans have so many questions they want asked. And as you'll see in here tonight our chief foreign correspondent. Richard engel asked the taliban directly in tonight's report from kabul. The taliban is stressing. It's time for the us senate allies to pack up and get out transport planes and civilian aircraft from around. The world are evacuating vulnerable afghans. But there's a huge bottleneck at transit hubs at the us base in doha cutter thousands or crowded in holding areas temperatures. Well over one hundred degrees ever in kabul. The taliban are helping speed up the evacuations today keeping crowds away from the airport handling food and water but many afghans field. They're being abandoned especially women and girls who are oppressed when the taliban ruled twenty years ago now the taliban promised to be different but have they changed or are they just playing nice until the americans leave tonight. I met zabihullah. Mujahid taliban spokesman. The united states is evacuating and it is taking out americans who worked with us forces but not everyone is going to be able to make it out. Will you let those people leave in the future. Can you guarantee their safety no autism. We don't want our countrymen to go to america whatever they have done in the past. We have given amnesty. We need young educated professionals for our nation. But what if they want to leave. It's their choice. What would you say to women. Afghan women who are terrified. They our sisters. We must show them. Respect should not be frightened on. The taliban are humans and from this country they have fought for their country. Women's should be proud of us not scared.

AP News Radio
Heat Wave Hits Northwest, Sending People to Cooling Centers
"The state of emergency has been declared in Oregon where temperatures are expected to be over one hundred degrees for the rest of the week another sizzling heat wave is gripping the Pacific Northwest and other parts of the country is breathtaking expressway but western Oregon could see temperatures over one hundred ten degrees people are already flocking to cooling centers like the one in Multnomah county where Holly Martinez is a volunteer we have a lot of water we have maps for folks to lie down on chairs December heat wave in June killed hundreds of people in Oregon Washington state and British Columbia and sizzling weather is hitting other parts of the country cooling centers have opened in Connecticut as well in southeastern Kansas a two year old child has died from suspected heat illness the heat index and Callie county reached one hundred eight degrees I'm Jackie Quinn

AP News Radio
Over 100 Deaths May Be Tied to Historic Northwest Heat Wave
"The brutal heat wave that's gripping the Pacific Northwest is being blamed for dozens of deaths this state of Oregon's been hard hit health officials there are estimating more than sixty people have died due to the unprecedented heat authorities in Washington state say more than a half dozen deaths there have been linked to the heat and many more are suspected well more than sixty deaths were reported in Vancouver British Columbia rolling blackouts are back in effect for Spokane to help meet the demand for air conditioning with temperatures over one hundred degrees meteorologists say that this heat wave is caused by a dome of high pressure over the northwest made worse they say by human caused climate change I am Jackie Quinn

Around the House with Eric G®
Are You Ready for Rolling Blackouts for Fire Weather Season?
"If you're in oregon. Washington california. Idaho montana nevada colorado wyoming arizona. Nevada already said nevada new mexico. Let's go into texas. Oklahoma north south dakota any of you guys and even further east. I'm talking to you. Because i honestly think that we this is going to be the season where we really see. Power companies reducing their liabilities by turning off power. When they're worried about a power line coming down to wind or storm lighting natural vegetation brush or crops on fire. So if you've got a couple forty eight hours of a heat storm. You know where you've got wind coming in it's dry storm and you're in the hundred degree range. Be careful you're probably gonna lose power so then you decide what you're going to do for your house because it could be one hundred degrees outside and tell you what food does not last long and refrigerator when it's one hundred degrees inside your house. It's just not that efficient. So you're gonna lose a lot of stuff. Are you ready with a generator. Are you ready to go someplace. Because we're not just talking one little area. You could have an entire metropolitan area get shut down on power so there's no going to a hotel star localized power outage this would be a large blackout event. So make sure that you have got extra water. Put away the. You've got all these things to make sure that you're ready to go in case of emergency. I think this is going to be one of those years. We're going to see that ramp up and see a lot more of this. They've sure been looking at it. Testing it along You know across the west coast. So i've got a generator that can run for days on end to run my house. It was Strong enough to run my air conditioning and refrigerators not so worried about the about the water heater and the lights. I can survive that in the summertime. Even though it would run that but i i i'd be pushing it by running the water heater and all that stuff with the a c at the same time. But you get my

Fresh Air
Interview With Showtime's Desus and Mero
"Mira. Welcome to fresh air. It's such a pleasure to have you on our show so before you started working together you you both had a bunch of jobs before becoming like tv and audio people so you had like legal illegal semi-legal kind of jobs. Tell us about some of the most interesting. Well ones that you've had these. You wanna start. Oh yeah. I've had a million jobs. But i think the most interesting jobs. I was working at the new york public library. Because i worked there. I worked every job. I've had pretty much worked my way through the ranks and so i started as a computer page at the library and i worked my way all the way up to almost a programmer for the near public library and as a matter of years so that just looking back at that That was as well. Because i was like okay. Maybe this could be like my job for the rest of my life because you know thinking back in the day like people have a job for twenty years company but it didn't work out that way and you know that was one of the better jobs i've had terrible does at one job. I had to collect dead rats at auto body shop job like a professional rat catcher. Yeah if you wanna say professional if you mean like a fifteen year old vicks vapor robot has that's because the person came the week before and they put down a bait but no one stopped to think okay the they're going to eat the bait and die and now there's going to be this terrible smell inside the building and key to the story. New york was in the middle of a heat wave so it was about one hundred degrees. Every day is working and only steel. I had was used my nose. Smell the dead rat which was usually under under a car or like behind. Something used the shoveled scruple. The there you put it into a compound bucket and you dump the compound bucket into the barrel of used oil from Oil changes dagga picked up at the end of the week. I lasted two weeks at that job.

Environment: NPR
Extreme Heat in the West to Send Temps to Triple Digits
"The west is broiling. Excessive heat warnings are in effect again today from phoenix where today's forecast was one hundred. Twenty degrees to eastern montana where some farming towns braced for highs close to one hundred ten. Npr's kirk siegler reports. There is little relief in sight. For the drought stricken region. How hot is it. It's like opening an oven when you're baking pie. Captain scott. douglas is a paramedic with the phoenix. Fire department the city is open sixty six cooling refuges and hydration stations at parks libraries and pools. It's hot and people say it's a dry heat. And i'm like well you know what when it gets two hundred seventeen hundred and eighteen degrees. It doesn't matter if it's dry. Moist phoenix broke records last year. For hitting a hundred degrees or higher for more than one hundred and forty four days last year was also a record wildfire year and much of the west and every day. There's a headline screaming. This summer could be worse arizona. Lawmakers are holding a special session this week to consider a hundred million dollar emergency bill for firefighting and prevention in nevada were invasive grasses and drought have fueled record range fires lately. Firefighters have been dealing with one hundred degree temperatures for the past two weeks. Paul peterson is the fire management officer for the federal bureau of land management. They're typically we wouldn't have a heat and winds until mid july. So i'm hoping that's not an indication of what we're going to see in the future. He's hoping that the monsoon rains arrive this summer. They were no-show last year. Meteorologists are blaming this blistering event on a heat. Dome stubborn high pressure ridge. That's blocking cooler systems. Nikolai rymer is with the national weather. Service in billings. Montana where the forecast. Hi today june fifteenth is one hundred six. We are very close to the hottest temperatures that we've ever recorded here rhymer says scientists can't pinpoint any one heat wave like this on climate change but he says the record drought and extremely low humidity. Right now is making the heat. Even worse

AP News Radio
Texas Power Grid Manager Issues Weeklong Conservation Alert
"Hi Mike Rossi a reporting the Texas power grid manager issues a week long conservation alert just months removed from a catastrophic grid failure the electric grid manager for most of Texas issued a conservation alert Monday that runs through Friday as heat index readings topped one hundred degrees across much of the state the electric reliability council of Texas appealed to users to lower thermostats to seventy eight degrees and avoid using large electric appliances until late in the day cop predicted a record peak demand load on that system while also saying twelve thousand one hundred seventy eight megawatts of the grids eighty six thousand eight hundred sixty two megawatts of generating capacity was offline Monday more than four million caught customers lost power in the February freeze the caught red the only one of the nation completely within the borders of one state is exempt from federal regulation but also cannot access supplemental power from other grids hi Mike Rossio

She Podcasts
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on She Podcasts
"Then there was like an above level pool. Then we went to the pool near our condos. I think the polls are heated. Maybe yvo can tell me whether or not their heat or not because there comes a point where even though it's one hundred degrees outside you're in the pool breeze blows your freezing your butt off and i think it's because the polls are heated so it doesn't matter what temperature the air is but i'm not positive about that could just be that it was worn mean. Would you think that a pool is heated. I'm not sure that like maybe it's just. The sun heats the pool. I mean you would think that so. I'm not sure. I don't know all i know is it was. It was a very strange sensation of being so hot. You had to get in the water and then once you're in the water if you pull your shoulders up out of the water you're freezing your bloomers off. It was weird just an observation so then we go to bed. Jennifer drives from sedona. The next day she was on a choose on vacation in sedona she she got dropped off at the scott so pas a hotel and then her to him sighing so ibo size and says no. It's called evaporative cooling. Oh so he all this to jennifer and jacquemus. I was joining out when he was explaining this. I'm sure as you do as i do. So okay sarajevo. The next day. John comes in we meet for breakfast. And then we go on a tour of the facility at twelve. That was probably the dumbest decision ever because it was twelve. Because our the property. When you're in the property it's not like a normal place that you would have a conference you can see okay. You walk into the lobby and to the right. There are some breakout rooms to the left. There's the ballroom foyer of the ballroom. A little resting plays a couple breakout rooms. And then you go outside so you go outside and then the whole property is sort of like a circle so you go outside and then i mean. I can't even remember the order of things that we ran into but like we ran into a courtyard and there was a little cactus garden and there was a little prayer area and there was like a like as we go around the circle. You're seeing all this stuff like all different places where you can have parties all different places where sponsors can have meet ups places where you can do sessions if you want you. That need to be done outside or that. We want to have outside little places to have cocktail. Parties is such a lovely grounds like the grounds are lovely. And you can just envision all the different things you can have their and so. This tour is when jack and jennifer. The whole point was for them. See the place. But like i could tell their wheels returning incessantly because we would walk up to a space and they would instantly be like so we can put over here and then we'll see what they say about this. It's like gossiping about this space. They're like this. is that wall. That was so hurtful to that. Other one i mean. I've only given them for things that we're doing..

Something You Should Know
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Something You Should Know
"Twenty percent of the world's population watched that happening so it was epic event across the world. But as the subsequent moon landings occurred people of lost interest. They so yeah. We've seen it. We've done it and said to be spending that huge amount of money on something that people felt was sort of a always had in the bag. It didn't make much sense. So they ranged back on the money and to me. It's been a. We've been having a relationship with the moon and we got all excited about it and then a excitement dies down. But now in an interesting time because people resurgent in some unix fluoridation. So many countries are sending over orbiters and landers to the moon because people are seeing that the moon could be of benefit to us in the future. Well that is a question. I think a lot of people have is. What is the benefit given the cost. What is the benefit of going to the moon besides the fact that it is an incredible accomplishment to get from here to there and to put men on the moon scientifically. That is pretty amazing. But beyond that. What's the potential for science at the moment. And that's what gets me excited. Because for instance we had a huge skates a sort of eight meters ten meter telescope. Enough looking at into space. There was some parts of the mood which never see sunlight. But these obtains or craters on the moon's surface where the sun never reaches if you could build an optical telescope in one of these craters. Do it'd be able to do astronomy. Twenty four seven so that'd be one woman itself. The moon is also sort of littered with mitchell rights and an things have come from space. So it's a gold mine in terms of fat and then in the geology of the moon understanding another body that is earth in our locale makes lots of sense as well. But i think if you go back to the moon. It's going to have to be a commercial pushed to get that. And so i think what people are thinking of is. What does the moon have that. We don't have haven and they would many things that come up with that. A people talk about fusion as an energy source of the future where you take atoms and you put them in high pressure and very high temperatures and fused them together and that producers of new elements but also releases energy an eight the commercial. Einstein's e. equals mc squared equation. You take some elusive mass. In this conversion when atoms fused together and you create energy and very small amount of mass you create huge amounts of energy. so it's very efficient way of doing it. One of the ways we couldn't diffusion is by using a substance called helium. Three and that is. I wasn't abundant on the moon but that can be found on the moon. It's one of the things that is given out by the sun and because the moon has no atmosphere it's deposited on the moon and we could them in the future. Another thing is that. I mentioned that the moon has day cycle. Which is two weeks of daylight and two weeks of nighttime and so if you put solar panels on the moon you could generate a huge amount of energy. We don't the moon. Dust has a bite tenuous atmosphere with an ex fair and so son like hitting the moon hits it you. It's hard if you had these panels on the moon's surface you could generate a vast amounts of power being power back to earth and therefore utilized again in a commercial manner so various sort of macos that we are getting harder to get on earth a mainichi to where they found but they are available on the mood and when it comes cost effective we might stop mining those on the moon surface. So what is the moon when you if you're standing on the moon in you reached down and picked up moon dirt and apparently it's not green cheese was once once on what what what is it wasn't they made of. Yes when the moon i four was a hot ball of effectively and over billions of years as cool down and it was also one of the main features of the moon is the craters because the moon has no atmosphere lumps of rock and things like that debris in space they smashed into the moon's surface here on earth because protective layer around our planet. Many things burn up in the earth's atmosphere and we see those shooting stars so she she nothing to do with stars they're just dust and debris burning up in the earth's atmosphere because i at such great speeds heat up and leave a streak of light but on the moon they hit the main surface and so over the moon started with us over across the cool down from this multi state because it's being pummeled with billions of years. By all this detroiters from space is broken up into a very very fine powder and what's it like if if there was an atmosphere or maybe that's not the right question. What's what's the weather like up there. What's the temperature. What's the what's all that about. Well one of my teams is one day to go to the moon surface and live there. I'd love to be a scientist on the moon one day and it would be very very challenging environment for one thing because of this lack of atmospheres excess fan which is just a very thin atmosphere. It means that the daytime so you get two weeks. Daytime and then the surface is blasted with cena radiation. And then the temperature shoots up to about one hundred degrees c. So that's the temperature. We boil a lot so it goes to the temperature of boiling water But then if you're on the docks the mood and the night side of the moon and the temperature plummets to many minus two hundred. I'm trying to think. What is the fahrenheit. Why conversion is awful minus two hundred degrees c. Which is colder than antarctica. So you have. These extremes of temperature happening happening every two weeks. There's no apps for this new bridgeable air. And if we look at a footage of the moon landings we see people leaving the surface while wearing the bulky space suits. That's to protect them from this. Fate of radiation itself from the extreme temperatures and to provide an environment that bodies to fit in. Because there's no atmosphere actually on the mood. They all these various challenges that we face if we actually went to the moon eight china after to take so way in from a scientific point of view on this idea that you know when there's a full moon people's behavior changes crime goes up crazy. Behavior goes up..

Fantasy Football Overtime
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Fantasy Football Overtime
"Welcome to the fantasy football overtime. Podcast i'm your host jake with me as always are tyler hollerbach and matt winn born in what is happening. Y'all we are going to continue our divisional breakdown. This time we were doing the nfc west exciting. Welcome back neck jake. I know it's been about ninety five to one hundred degrees last week. I noticed that you picked up. Y'all are you He thinking this is texas now. or what. Yeah we're in that southern drawl. This heat has me feeling like we're from the south. It has been a scorcher out there. You've been drinking that sweet tea sweet tea. I'm not a big sweet tea guy. I'm not gonna lie genuinely just don't enjoy it. that much. which nikki is going to be mad. She loves sweet tea like she drink that all day she would but now not me however you all here. Y'all.

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"Just polarize the opposite so that that standard narrative ben got pulled in. And if you wanted to be your reputation with this those communities you wanna preserve it then you have to start taking on the same beliefs as this is now is pulled up. It's like two different areas. Join the gops of the four. Could bitcoin They've now become one. And if you wanna maintain your currency salt lake you're thinking i'm going to want to maintain my currency but the human mind is such that you believe all these other people around you and they believe you because you're happy you're both reputation communities and so you all come to believe at the same time i'll shift to believe that nobody As a series of this and that was geographic the same political geographic variability that we find united sates mostly predicts these differences that you're describing and even a lot of friends soup in some sub communities within florida. Everybody's still wearing masks even outside even those one hundred degrees and of course another place. Luck miami when i go down there. No one's wearing these parties or morning. Togetherness club but it's micro geographical variability even within even even within florida for example. But i would bet right now. The main predictor of that is political rotation prior to prior to covid and it's largely for no good reason is just for political polarization Things ended up defeating like is it. There's some as if they repel each other these no social narratives in had the take one and take the happen differently. In different countries a lot of people think this has become a left thing in versus writing. I don't think i as. I am one of my mom videos. I've argued this is no longer left riot a typical nolan diagram or earth. You've seen Economic rights and personal liberty and then the right ends up on the right and left. But it's not that way off right now. The entire cova debate is really authoritarianism down at the bottom of this diagram versus freedom. Right side sort of top and bottoms all these former leftist. Lots of libertarians. Still left in there. A lot of people on the right in the united states just proportional but other countries in sweden people from the left lane from the left and at the bottom mixed bassett. So that's why we can see someone like like miami wolf who is very much left very much progressive. But she's always been very anti authoritarian and that's why she is someone who can fall on the side of things now because it's a it's a different sort of divide than left and right. It's more of the up and down authoritarianism versus freedom. That's right. I want to dig into a little more about. I mean like everybody. Listening to this libertarian. Podcast is against the lockdown. So i don't think we need to make a case for why lockdowns are bad. But i want to dig into a little more about maybe some things. We don't necessarily touch on i think libertarians often talk about more of the economic effects of lockdowns. What they're gonna do what they're doing to businesses and this sort of thing. But i i want to dig a little bit more into maybe like the cognitive effects of lockdowns on people on certain types of people i mean sometimes. The people are more introverted. And maybe they just love the lockout. They're fine with it. They didn't go into parties. They didn't like seeing people anyway. So no big deal. I'll hang out in my house for a year but now other types of people are very much the kind of people that really need to be around other people they feed off the energy of other people. So what might the some of the effects of the lockdowns beyond maybe that kind of person or maybe on the other kind of person to who maybe they want to be a shut in but in real life went lockdowns hit. Maybe it really is affecting them in ways. They don't even realize on that note coming in from the side at your question from the side. You know we talked earlier about how how fear in panic is contagious. And this is the kind of thing that sort of its disproportionate likely to create these of mass and greatest mass delusion. Which sick of. But if this was if this had been fear of i dunno comets hitting the earth that are gonna be. Let's say basketball size comments or it was like a a a The security not to gate is the big storms of things that eat all your crops. Call them the locus coming right. And you're trying to defeat. You're all frayed. The locus because you're gonna get then what we do. In those circumstances we band together social band together as a group we organize. How are we gonna fight off the locust or the comets be cuddled together so they're inherently social in some sense the reactions of really social to defend ourselves and debt fear of a pandemic fear of infectiousness entirely different. This is why it's fundamentally much more dangerous to society because when you end up with fear hysteria which disproportionately likely when it's about infection and pandemic in the first secretive but it's not just fear about any old thing is the fear about the the most destructive thing is for society as it makes every other human around you a potential enemy instead of banning together. We're we said no we no one can be together. We all have to be those the thing we should ban together separately some bullcrap lines. They haven't all like things like let's work together apart some together six feet six feet apart from each other. Yeah it'd be sixty feet apart and all of your homes and don't see each other for here and if you do have to go out with god forbid then really say six depart really far Cover over human identity and you're emotional expressive nece everything that matter to human so everything that matters to humans which is all human social is so disproportionately dangerous these these fear of pandemic because it just crushes everything that matters in society. Of course our economies require. You wins physically wrapping up at the end of the day is zun class folks. But the real world underneath is just a real people interacting in real space in real time in that just. You just can't have that that's one angle but you know another thing that's on the social side. I haven't really thought it fully through but it's made me appreciate bars and restaurants Not just for the joy that i get in my own life. I really have come to feel that. They are much more integral part of what a society is. And i'd like to be able to say that. I've really worked at philosophic. Exactly how to think about this but i think there's something the notion of if you know historically ebola charlotte we would have all sat down tribe together joy food together. These are the times this is exactly when the mo- social times that humans get along get together and of course in a bigger city. You're not you don't know everybody around you but you just for those who get it you want to be there not because you know all this folks but you just like being near them you like the white noise you like feeling like you're part of this group it pulls the city's these diverse people together makes them feel part of one community and and.

World News Tonight with David Muir
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on World News Tonight with David Muir
"Tonight several developing stories as we come on the air president biden landing in the uk just a short time ago making news already addressing american troops. What he said about our allies that the united states is back and what he said about vladimir putin with his upcoming face to face meeting after the russia based cyber attacks in the us affecting gas prices and the us meat supply. Cecilia vega traveling with the president in england. The coronavirus in the us. Will we meet that fourth of july goal. A reality check right here. Tonight and dr jaw with us on the concerning delta variant first seen in india now the dominant strain in the uk. It's being seen here in the us. Already americans need to know and the doctor of the big difference. How effective the vaccines are against this variant. After one dose versus both doses of the vaccine the dangerous storms moving across the northeast and the record heatwave in the mid west. It'll feel like one hundred degrees in minneapolis. When does this end. Rob marciano with a slide time. This out there is also news tonight about the crippling drought across multiple states. The alarming images tonight of lake mead at the hoover dam part of the colorado river system. The water supply for forty million americans. Matchup at the hoover dam tonight the new report from the inspector general at the interior department. That finds lafayette park was not cleared out for that photo op with former president trump holding that bible. So why was it clear. Giancarlo was here tonight here in new york city the bus on a busy street crashing into cars then veering curb. Slamming right into a building. Tonight cured the video inside the bus of the driver leading to many new questions. We have reported here on the cicadas showing up after seventeen years tonight causing this accident the mayor of cincinnati and the police there with the new warning and america strong tonight the principal brave enough to sing. I will always love you in front of hundreds to make a point from. Abc news world headquarters. And you more. This is world news tonight with deal. Good evening it's great.

Learn English Podcast - English Danny Channel
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Learn English Podcast - English Danny Channel
"What are conditionals. Sometimes we call conditionals if clauses a clause is a part of a sentence right so conditionals described the result of something that might happen in the present or future or might have happened but didn't in the past and if that sounds a little confusing. Don't worry we're gonna talk about it all today. So conditionals are made using different english verb tenses and we're going to learn all about it so zero conditional this is used to talk about general facts and truth so things that are true So let's take a look at some examples. What does this mean so in conditionals. We have our if clause and our main clause to make our whole sentence so for zero conditionals using the simple present tense talking about facts things that are generally true so we use if and simple present and our main clause is also simple present so zero conditional basically. If this thing happens that thing happens this is used to talk about true things. For example i might say if you heat water to one hundred degrees celsius it boils. We can see here in this example. I'm using simple present. If you heat it boils. And i'm just sharing a general fact right. If you do this this happens if you heat water to one hundred degrees celsius. It boils if it rains. The road gets wet right just as simple fact if this thing happens if our condition it rains if it rains the road gets wet. Simple fact just something that is true so we use our zero conditional to talk about general truths and facts. Let's look at some more examples. So here's another example In this case we are using a negative. If plants don't get enough water they die right so here we're using again simple present if plants don't get enough water. They die sad but true. I have many plants. So i know this all too well. So one thing to note and we're going to see this for all our conditional types often we have our claws and then our main clause if this then that however we can also switch it around plants die if they don't get enough water so here we have our main clause and then our if this is also correct so both of these we can use. So if it's easier for you to remember the if then you can do that but just know you can also switch them if plants don't get enough water. They die or plants die if they don't get enough water. Let's look at a couple. More zero conditional examples. If my husband has a cold. I usually catch it so here again. We're just using simple present and were using an adverb a frequency which we always use with simple present and again we can also switch our clauses. Here are if clause and main clause we can switch. I usually catch a cold if my husband gets sick. Okay let's get one more so zero conditional is used to talk about simple truth things right. If plans don't get water. They die if you heat water to one hundred degrees celsius. It boils simple true facts but we can also use this zero additional to give instructions. So let's take a look at a couple examples if you want to see a movie. Call me before five pm. Maybe i am talking to my friend. And they're saying. I don't know if i want to see a movie. I have so much work to do. I might say okay. Well if you want to see a movie call me before five and then we can go or another example. If john calls tell him. I'm busy so here. We have our condition and then our main clause is an instruction right. Do this thing if this happens do this thing. And in this case we're also using simple present simple present. So that's that's it for zero conditional. We use it for true facts. Simple truth things. Simple present simple present and we can also use it to give instructions..

Learn English Podcast - English Danny Channel
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Learn English Podcast - English Danny Channel
"Up. Where is my. Pcp t- So guys thank you for waiting patiently. I am not sure why this is not working. Maybe this will work just a second. We'll keep trying. We'll get there in the meantime. Hello everyone thank you so much for your wonderful comments okay. Hopefully this works. Let's see okay. there we go. Oh my gosh okay here we go so you guys should see my screen now So you should be able to see the message. Welcome to the livestream. So as i mentioned today we are going to learn about something called conditionals so please make sure to follow along on this. Pd that you should all see now and Make sure. I encourage you since this is a little more of a difficult lesson today. Take some notes And as we go through tried to practice making the different kinds of sentences will learn in the comments. So let's get started so if you have never heard this word before you may be wondering what are conditionals. Sometimes we call conditionals if clauses a clause is like a part of a sentence right so conditionals described the result of something that might happen in the present or future or might have happened but didn't in the past and if that sounds a little confusing. Don't worry we're gonna talk about it all today So conditionals are made using different english verb tenses. And we're going to learn all about it today. We are going to talk about the four main kinds of conditionals in english. So we have something called. The zero conditional first conditional second conditional and third conditional. So we're gonna we have zero one two three conditional there's also something called mixed conditionals but we're going to keep it as simple as we can today for this challenging topic all right so let's get started. We're going to go through one by one. So let's start with our zero conditional so zero conditional this is used to talk about general facts and truths so things that are true So let's take a look at some examples. What does this mean so in conditionals. We have our if clause and our main clause to make our whole sentence so i zero conditionals using the simple present tense talking about facts things that are generally true so we use if and simple present and our main clause is also simple present so zero conditional basically. If this thing happens that thing happens this is used to talk about true things. For example i might say if you heat water to one hundred degrees celsius it boils. We can see here in this example. I'm using simple present. If you heat it boils. And i'm just sharing aide general fact right if you do this this happens. If you heat water to one hundred degrees celsius it boils if it rains. The road gets wet right just as simple fact if this thing happens if our condition it rains if it rains the road gets wet. Simple fact just something that is true so we use our zero conditional to talk about general truths and facts. Let's look at some more examples. So here's another example In this case we are using a negative. If plants don't get enough water they die right so here we're using again simple present if plants don't get enough water. They die.

The Curious About Cannabis Podcast
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on The Curious About Cannabis Podcast
"Temperature of individual plates actually put a magnet on it so it's not partisan magnetic but Basically you know it's this actually can also be used as a a dabbing controller so yeah yes super cool so universal temperature controller. Yes exactly so you know you will. You will have your temperature put in. You can literally as low as like one hundred degrees. Fahrenheit the max you really ever ever ever ever want to do is like two hundred but i don't i would question. I was going to ask talk about the highest. You want to go and typically though you know a lot of people will do. I press in second press. And they'll do their first press lower town less amount of time less amount of pressure and collect that cell that has their first us and then you can take the bag and then repressive so the idea is that once these plates are heated up like one sixty two one. Eighty is like getting you. It's one of the most Efficient ranges for has pressing. Because it allows you to get most of the euro without using too much. He in degrading those terms and or all in to like butter up in nucle- on the plate so when you're using the the right temperature so like the lower the temperature typically typically like the chocolate or the higher amount of like nab lloyd's and you are. You're leaving behind a lot of your believe behind a decent amount of stuff but basically you are not like melting everything together so you can get really low temps and it is drained dependent so you know like there are some stuff where i've seen press one hundred degrees fahrenheit in its translucent yellow lights like clear rosin And i've also seen like lower temps where it's preston you get like almost like a buttery. Thc a new creation tighthead if using about one sixty one eighty you're typically getting a more homogenized oil that's coming out it's usually looking the same color same viscosity and you know the idea is once you have this heat up. You'll get these plays..

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"Under the age of the air here on declare your independence of me or in tan kok. Getting work down donald. Neither hang out here in oklahoma pie. Be here through tuesday pro. We hit through them. We get everything all the stuff that we do. We didn't do we're doing so we have You know it's nice here kind of cold you know. But that's a hell of a lot better. And being freaking ninety one hundred degrees and arizona desert so i'm joining us so we're just chilling and and you know we got he'd miller on and he's in new york city. No you're in baltimore right onto both more. All right baltimore maryland. It's what we're gonna do today in the third hour and we'll probably probably go long to be dr frank berry on tyranny report. You know so. We're going to see what's up in a land of cable news because i don't care but we're you'll get us all caught up and that's how i get my news on what's going on around the world but there are taxi. I had put a lot. And we put stuff up on previous phoenix. You know china's doing this russia's doing that ukraine south china sea aircraft carriers hypersonic missiles afghanistan. Two point whatever trillion dollars. We spent there for something. And you know we're going to they. I saw this one thing in iraq. They had a tv show where they had like fake terrorist get celebrities and blindfold them and put them through the whole thing and putting on a suicide vest and all this other crap and they don't know that it's it's a it's a reality tv show and they weren't really kidnapped and it's like what i owe kiss their there. I guess they don't get to be sued or something because damn anyway so that. That's just ridiculous. I i feel some manipulation on their. We spend a lot of time this weekend on talk with some of the developers and everything on what we're doing with internet three point kiss my butt and a interplanetary file system and it's got a lot more potential than i think we got really ahead of the game on this and just like you see now. Everybody's flooding in into crypto and. Certainly there is one that we got. I don't know if you heard about it. So he was called pirate chain. A are is it's handle and it went from twenty three cents to like seven eight dollars or something. You know who the seven dollars seven like a lot and i'm like it's a lot and i go. Hey did you giddy. Yes i did. Because mike swat tech he really liked. It's coding. Because it was a privacy coin even better than narrow claim you know and it has private communications. You know you do the memo field. Cheap transactions lot of the stuff that we've been talking about so of course it made it our way and i had to go through a bunch of hoops to get it because you had to go get a stable core. I get other or something to get it and then you put another one that then you moved it to the pirate wallet all my god you. Also he might map it out. You know what we should do long telegram and he said all right. If you do it this how you do it so i followed the instructions got it and i'm glad i did because 'cause i'm glad i did because it's a you know i got i got. I got a new car. It's going to be. Yeah something so i. There's that and there's some others and horizon is a favorite of mine for a long time that i bought for the same reasons. And that's what's happening is all this crypto craze in does coin. Just another joke. You know. I mean i guess it works but it was just for fun and all of a sudden nealon says some about it and bo goes so it's not one of those. It's it's one that has specific use case. And i keep telling people about raven coin that we got a couple of years ago for this. Very reason it's going to be used for real estate holding multisector transaction cost a blah blah blah. You know we need that to sell space on the precarious honor pirate ship. You wanna have your own cabinet. How are we going to do it. You know so. That was one of the answers so anything that has an answer to specific problem. Does it. well bloom here. It goes oh. I just got on library to pirates. Go on the crypto. Vigilante teams with uncle vigilant this shows dedicated to the privacy coin of all privacy coins. Pirate chain are a hoy maids and i go. Okay you guys talk about that all you want. 'cause i got so so this is good. Now where we're going or saheed ni- overlap is fast and it's abilities and he was one of the early guys at. Yeah you know this. Were i wanna help all work and derek and i you know kind of your demonstrated what could be done and so. He's been a really ethical part of a lot of the things that we wanted to do. He was familiar with and he helped us a lot. With and as we move forward we need to get the no saheed more we got pull up with the boss and say hey you know we're gonna say you just walk out your front door get in the studio. We got touchy feely. Hug on what you smell like. If you got bad breath or not or south. I i'm telling you man. I don't like doing a lot of stuff with this. High end. saved humanity from the man with people. I haven't actually been in the presence of the. That's just one thing we just gotta meet. We talked over the years but he just got to get you to festival man. Was it gonna take to get you to go to pork fast. Well we gotta do man. It's need a bus ticket for that. One man an attendant. We'll see what we can do. We do the pirate cove thing and we'll see if we can hook it up. He'd out the meet you guys. Would you go. Would you go if you could absolutely all right. We'll see molly. So i gotta go to this art right. This is what will do this would be like. You know i work it out. We'll do some payment of Say he's been doing a solid so we give pork fast. Because i think you need to go you know 'cause you you dig it you know and it's not that far that'd be dope By the way. Because that's what i was hoping to get to if i can get mid fast. The next mid october pork fast is the last week you in june. Yeah so last week. In june and then Folk fast right after that goes through four july. You know so. It's like a two week deal so if you can get away thick of it performance i tried to catch you back when we first started corresponding on email. But you data with sars you get to see the molly skies over determined early another.

Think 100%: The Coolest Show
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Think 100%: The Coolest Show
"Should it be merged from the beginning and the fact that the no war no warming movement did not emerge was also caused liberal of elitism and also another big situation as well that the movement has to deal with because there is also. There's a kind of a situation with eight. The class there was people who was going to vietnam and they could avoid as well. I mean i mean it's hard. It's a hard conversation. Let's listen if you got the coolest show and hot taste. You get some hard conversations. There's gonna cuss right. It's real we hunted. We one hundred degrees louis true. It's totally true. It's so frustrating. Because i feel like you still. I still your people today saying oh you know we. We don't have time for that. We need to focus on horses and we need to focus on this as though like as though you can do that like as though you can just take this problem out of the context that sand and place it in a vacuum and like solve it over there and then and then we'll get to all these other problems i it's not a has to right because it's like if you have the information right it's like if you have what you have the manual to to to work your new air fryer right and you have that yeah. It's pretty good stuff if you have that and then somebody comes behind you. You're acting like you're frustrated. Because they don't know how to work the air fryer. You're saying like well. Korea do this and then like i haven't read the manual and you're acting like this. You're better than them because manual. I kind of movement does that. The though they somehow understand the science better which is the the crisis better which is not true how to negotiate which is not true as mary said even how to how to heal our community and so they have a so. Now they're literally. They're making so that i got manual. I and so others didn't which is ironic though. Is that now we're finding out that listen. Indigenous communities first nations latte people new had that same manual dissuaded slightly different and so if you had respected them manual about how to treat the earth that you would have been here a long time ago. Exactly also this whole idea of separating it out worked it would have worked already. Y'all been decades like innovation. It was going to solve the problem. It would have done so we wouldn't have the problem right because we knew about it like way. It advanced so to me. The moment where things changed and this became an intersectional integrated movement was in two thousand and eighteen with the ipc report. Because i feel like i. I definitely saw a lot of white folks being like okay so we clearly failed So maybe we should listen to some other people and then i also saw a lot of people of color sort of being like. They don't know what they're doing to do something about. Yes sort of like knocking down the doors and being like okay. What clearly don't know how to save the world So where can. I.

Horror Fictional and True Stories
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Horror Fictional and True Stories
"What little we can carry without a wagon. Second was our wrangler who will attend to our horses and a man named wilfred sharp. He is rather the opposite of hannigan being very sullen and easily agitated. Man who made numerous complaints right away and did not offer to shake hands. Third is the track an engine chap who goes only by the name of william rather than more typical negative epithet. I believe he's either creek. Or seminal though i did not inquire he's a rather quiet and stoic man as indians want to be but still projected an air of competence that i found reassuring when lastly is a fellow age like myself named henry quinn. I rather like him as well. And the we is not as humorous. All caudillos hannigan still quite agreeable and listened intently to our conversations. Almost immediately mr hannigan began to lecture us about survival tactics in rugged desert and give my previous apprehensions about pursuing party across the desert in the midst of august. I was quite interested in what he had to say. According to him daytime temperatures will routinely exceed one hundred degrees though as he points out. The situation is not much different here in town other than that. We have ready access to supplies and shelter. We will be eating light sleeping. Relatively little and spending much of the day in the satellites we can so as to make good time with as little expenditure of supplies and provisions as possible shop cape piping in with his own questions and seemed unimpressed with hannigan his reassurances but hannigan sticks by them williams seem to concur with hannigan or at least did not object as quin. If they eat is to trying he says we can always opt to rest during the day and travel at night to avoid the worst of it. I admit i don't know that much about survival in the wilderness but i will defer to hannigan recommendation sharp provided horses which were actually shipped in this morning on the train. My receive standard quarterhorse matter naturally a rather fine fairly. Who's rather well trained. Whatever shops misgivings about us. He has an excellent way with horses. And spe- leap pad out tack and saddle. Gwen has provided the winchester repeating carbine colt single action army for each of us all chambered in forty four forty from convenience with several dozen shells each of us however while i appreciate having the rifle i think i'll stick with my cults frontier double action revolver instead. Even though it takes a different cartridge still having two pistols just may come in handy depending on what we find williams taking charge by maps and compass..

Horror Fictional and True Stories
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Horror Fictional and True Stories
"What little we can carry without a wagon. Second was our wrangler who will attend to our horses and a man named wilfred sharp. He is rather the opposite of hannigan being very sullen and easily agitated. Man who made numerous complaints right away and did not offer to shake hands. Third is the track an engine chap who goes only by the name of william rather than more typical negative epithet. I believe he's either creek. Or seminal though i did not inquire he's a rather quiet and stoic man as indians want to be but still projected an air of competence that i found reassuring when lastly is a fellow age like myself named henry quinn. I rather like him as well. And the we is not as humorous. All caudillos hannigan still quite agreeable and listened intently to our conversations. Almost immediately mr hannigan began to lecture us about survival tactics in rugged desert and give my previous apprehensions about pursuing party across the desert in the midst of august. I was quite interested in what he had to say. According to him daytime temperatures will routinely exceed one hundred degrees though as he points out. The situation is not much different here in town other than that. We have ready access to supplies and shelter. We will be eating light sleeping. Relatively little and spending much of the day in the satellites we can so as to make good time with as little expenditure of supplies and provisions as possible shop cape piping in with his own questions and seemed unimpressed with hannigan his reassurances but hannigan sticks by them williams seem to concur with hannigan or at least did not object as quin. If they eat is to trying he says we can always opt to rest during the day and travel at night to avoid the worst of it. I admit i don't know that much about survival in the wilderness but i will defer to hannigan recommendation sharp provided horses which were actually shipped in this morning on the train. My receive standard quarterhorse matter naturally a rather fine fairly. Who's rather well trained. Whatever shops misgivings about us. He has an excellent way with horses. And spe- leap pad out tack and saddle. Gwen has provided the winchester repeating carbine colt single action army for each of us all chambered in forty four forty from convenience with several dozen shells each of us however while i appreciate having the rifle i think i'll stick with my cults frontier double action revolver instead. Even though it takes a different cartridge still having two pistols just may come in handy depending on what we find williams taking charge by maps and compass..

Horror Fictional and True Stories
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Horror Fictional and True Stories
"What little we can carry without a wagon. Second was our wrangler who will attend to our horses and a man named wilfred sharp. He is rather the opposite of hannigan being very sullen and easily agitated. Man who made numerous complaints right away and did not offer to shake hands. Third is the track an engine chap who goes only by the name of william rather than more typical negative epithet. I believe he's either creek. Or seminal though i did not inquire he's a rather quiet and stoic man as indians want to be but still projected an air of competence that i found reassuring when lastly is a fellow age like myself named henry quinn. I rather like him as well. And the we is not as humorous. All caudillos hannigan still quite agreeable and listened intently to our conversations. Almost immediately mr hannigan began to lecture us about survival tactics in rugged desert and give my previous apprehensions about pursuing party across the desert in the midst of august. I was quite interested in what he had to say. According to him daytime temperatures will routinely exceed one hundred degrees though as he points out. The situation is not much different here in town other than that. We have ready access to supplies and shelter. We will be eating light sleeping. Relatively little and spending much of the day in the satellites we can so as to make good time with as little expenditure of supplies and provisions as possible shop cape piping in with his own questions and seemed unimpressed with hannigan his reassurances but hannigan sticks by them williams seem to concur with hannigan or at least did not object as quin. If they eat is to trying he says we can always opt to rest during the day and travel at night to avoid the worst of it. I admit i don't know that much about survival in the wilderness but i will defer to hannigan recommendation sharp provided horses which were actually shipped in this morning on the train. My receive standard quarterhorse matter naturally a rather fine fairly. Who's rather well trained. Whatever shops misgivings about us. He has an excellent way with horses. And spe- leap pad out tack and saddle. Gwen has provided the winchester repeating carbine colt single action army for each of us all chambered in forty four forty from convenience with several dozen shells each of us however while i appreciate having the rifle i think i'll stick with my cults frontier double action revolver instead. Even though it takes a different cartridge still having two pistols just may come in handy depending on what we find williams taking charge by maps and compass..

Horror Fictional and True Stories
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Horror Fictional and True Stories
"Plagued my speed my best. Guess it was somewhere around one in the afternoon. Nearing one hundred degrees my location on the other hand. I couldn't even have begun to calculate when i ran from the creature of the night before i had no idea in which direction i gone at the time i only focused on staying on the top of the riches that way if i was ambushed i could try my luck with a plunge off the side of a cliff instead of having my head removed from my body. That may sound terrible. But you didn't see how easy it was for that monster remove my whole his back legs. One thing was clear. I needed to make a decision. Should i keep moving and hope to find how maybe run into my father with a little luck. Would i find someplace to hold up the night. If i kept on walking trying to find help and didn't that would likely be my end. I wouldn't stand a chance another night out in the open and on the move hell. I wouldn't have made it through the previous night. If they hadn't had two horses and j to keep them preoccupied satisfied that is to say it was safe to assume the white is of the monster riding counted. Were responsible for the blinking lights. I'd follow that meant there. Were at least two of those things out here for sure. There was no possible way to tell how many mall just out of sight as i limped along west of all they were smart. They'd look at me away from the group by spooking dad's holes. I assume they were able to break into his truck and cool me from his stolen cell phone not to mention strong enough to kill a grown man and two horses matt settled it. I would find somewhere to hide. Get some rest and as soon as day broke hall with a little luck i could find one of the creeks rivers that cost through these hells..

Mango Kush Podcast
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Mango Kush Podcast
"You still trouble shooting not at this time and while i was in one of these what's up scientists nine when you guys about chop it up about man. I'm near the end of my hours and hours long journey through this frigging blizzard right now. Luckily i just got off the highway. So i'm pretty stoked about that. It was insane out there than what's going on. both avenue. Snowstorm has been crazy area. Un man. I got some friends out. Texas got snowed in. It's the people state got snowed in. We're damning georgia but yeah that's just crazy man waiting for one here. I can we get one my every couple years bro. There w yeah. I heard our if you guys could have a new superpower. What would it be and why rich also you trying to be on some rues lane shit. Waited for still on mush. It'd be a little different man. i'm trying to be. And i wouldn't mind doing the class types it out to ever buy airline ticket again. Pro gone we out the window by coming. Thank you for joining scientists which podcast. I served five on stereo at robotic to before we got a few tunes played by which you now we like the vodka or opinion announcing said here your coal tar trending component on squawk and meal. Someone came out this valid screaming. Five superpowers s around the rest. Of now maybe heading into the ranks quested on thanksgiving every time you claim this rap on behalf the mid split in nick stress in the house. Naked eight meals ryan. He'll saying who on. Hey inside nine and this is joining us monday. For these boggles powell enough scientists nine. What it is on diesel you boy week is in the building was was going on my blood relative. John whitney related aired retorted. I love about where talking about cold and snow inset is brick in. pa it is garbage out here. got that way. You know here down the georgia man. We get so much bipolar weather. It'll be one hundred degrees in the summer in the winter. It's the biggest gap considered the south. Be rashly Snow in texas. I've even snow in them. Takes a there's no just drove from columbus to cleveland. Conic live and back and forth between both cities with work right now and everything so i tried to beat the snowstorm up a little bit here Tried to beat it. But i didn't. It's it's all over maine. It's fucking insane. But i got an all wheel drive monster vehicle also crazy brother to slid. People are fucking reckon left and right. I drove passing dude. That was upside down. I've dropped pass about fifteen accidents in the last two and a half hours. It's crazy crazy out here. Polar vortex you'd be safe on the road you know all about that. Ohio.

Insureblocks
"one hundred degrees" Discussed on Insureblocks
"I'm very pleased to welcomes darth ajar. Founder and ceo of arbel. Sid many thanks for joining us today. Could you please give us a quick introduction on yourself and you for having me well. It's a pleasure to be on and get a chance of arbel. Just a very brief background. Myself i am. I was on wall street for about fourteen years in the commodities market for the last ten of those i've done everything. From the agricultural products form soybeans we to the oils and the medals and trading quantitative analysis and just being very embedded in in that market and prior to that. My background is the quantum side at interest rates. Macro so that that's me and then it on twenty eighteen. I left to start arbel which will be discussing today. Indeed indeed. No thank you for the introduction. So as you're probably aware we always ask. Our guest is first question. Which is could you please explain our listeners. what is blockchain. And how does it work sure. Yeah i i will give a very brief overview experts. Were much better at explaining but to me in a blockchain is this system off distributed consensus right instead of having a central only determining when say transaction takes place or when a particular event has taken planes yama distribute consensus around that event or transaction taking place and the beauty of blockchain is it allows for immutability in allows berg who've environment where different parties can agree on something happening about a central coordinating forty and this has ramifications across. You know all sorts of industry from banking to insurance to ada and a whole host of other things great. Now thank you for that for that definition so for our non insurance listeners. Could you introduced to us. What is parametric insurance. Parametric insurance has been around for a long time. It was hobbled by many issues. So we're carbon could insurance does is instead of using a human being to come to your farm business house to check the damage done from an event. And hey you. Based on a subjective loss estimate parametric insurance uses data to make that Loss assessment. So you know instead of say a farmer. has a growing corn and a somebody will lead to the farm and checking how much forms jews due to a drought Insurance might a him or her based on the you know either like the output data from the farm or by reach so the goal is to use a data set which is your index and a trigger to make your payment so could be saying rainfall farmer says okay. I want to get paid one hundred thousand dollars. If rainfall in a farm area was below three inches and so what that does is it. Changes insurance from this objective loss assessment process. Which is filled with delays disputes sometimes. Raw to something where data set and a particular trigger when it has hit Generates payment and is completely transparent for all sides and so for the customer benefit right. It's a transparent. You have a peace of mind of knowing okay. This happened this the data showing this homage. I won't get hate instead. Haggling with an insurance company for months on you know how much i paid. And in the meantime you're still on the hook for a damage and it brings up this question of whilst you're not going to be haggling around you. The terms of the policy no way should get a payout are not. Is there any situations where there's haggling around. What is the agreed date. Said that on which trigger is determined on the parametric side. There isn't because that is it. That is basically what parametric insurance contracts should be outlining very specifically this data. Said i'm going to use and when this data said says two inches of rainfall or this data says that Temperatures above one hundred degrees. I will get a payment of you. Know hundred thousand dollars and it can be. I mean all sorts of different ways. We do all sorts of triggers. You can have more complex triggers as well multiple indexes and so on but the point being that is basically what amager insurance contracts should be outlining the idea behind bariatric insurances. There should not be loopholes. I'm course some entities may try to do that but we certainly do not You know our contracts are ages a regular insurance contract you know can be hundreds of pages options and you know all sorts of legally unclear terms then to huge amounts of lawsuits

Tiny House Lifestyle Podcast
Introduction to Cob: The Ancient, Natural, Tiny House Building Method with Dave Olsen
"Am here with dave olsen olsen completed. A cobb workshop led by younto evans in nineteen ninety-six and has had mud and sour dough on his hands ever since he began hosting natural building workshops in two thousand seven began instructing the revolutionary fast cobb mixing and building methods in two thousand nine and turned fifty in twenty thirteen based on off the grid. Sketti island he also hosts an apprenticeship. That goes well beyond natural building. Helping people develop responsible and environmentally sustainable lifestyles with enjoyment and ease. Dave has been very fortunate to have worked with many of the leading. Cobb builders of our time and to have a dynamic cobb and bicycle loving daughter and dogs dave olesen. Welcome to the show. Thanks so much for having me either. Yeah it's great great to have you here. I feel like we've been following each other for years and years And we've we've traded some email so it's great. I'm actually getting to see your face for the first time here on the zoom. Yeah thank. i'm so glad to finally connect directly likewise like why so we're going to have to start with with the real basics. What is cop well. Cobb is a mixture of sand clay and straw that you mix together with water. So it's a it's a very simple Creation some people might say that. It's you have to have a specific ratio of each of those ingredients. I don't the the one ingredient. That's unbelievably flexible. As the cly or should you can have as little as five to ten percent. I don't know exactly how little you can go. And all the way up to one hundred percent though. The smallest amount is the amount that is needed to make the sand stick together. And the and the straw okay. So and when you say percentage you're referring to the percentage of the clay in soil the material that you're using to actually build the walls. The percentage of that material so anywhere between five to ten to one hundred percent lay in. I say one hundred percent. I've never built with one hundred percent. Clay only because A wonderful man who came to one of my workshops told me about it and showed me books and in korea. They've been building klay houses for hundreds of years. And so maybe even thousands of years so it obviously worked the but cobb specifically is designed to be The material is meant to have Sanding in it so so you know if you don't have very much sand that's okay. You have a lot of clay. that's okay but if you have a lot of sand and not so much clay it has to stick together of course otherwise. You're not going to have a building that stands up so you know very Nonspecific answer of because at least certainly in the workshops but in my own personal experience we just experiment with what we have to make it as easy as possible. Because that's really. The goal of this is the not only make something. That's unbelievably resilience. Long-lasting nontoxic unbelievably hugely outperforming. Any other building. That i've ever known but just to make it really quick easy and simple as possible. So i guess my follow up question. We've got the kind of literal definition of. What is cobb run. I guess what is ours. Cobb used in homebuilding it. What do you what do you do with the cobb. yeah Literally like you can see you re up there that those are called walls so in the building that i'm sitting in i live in The walls and the floor omega of certainly don't recommend building a roof out of conned Simply because cobb will absorb water and when it does absorb it will loosen or lesson it strength and so Building a dome out of cobb is would be a foolish thing to do in the climate. I loop in live in and i don't know of any climates. Actually were be suitable. So i wouldn't try that. So certainly some non cobb materials are needed for any building that you do build but the vast majority of the material for this Building this house is cobb because the walls are afoot to eighteen inches thick and Run from florida ceiling and the floor is completely off. The second floor is all. Would i considered putting a cobb floor on top of a wooden some floor but the same principle even though it's inside very likely to stay perfectly dry but if it doesn't or if there's a lot of vibration i just haven't tested a second floor cobb floor so you know out of my realm of experience but But yet no to lessen the cost of any building if you build it cobb. It's guaranteed to lower the cost. Because literally cobb is thirteen so i love the pond and i invite you to make as many cobb puns as you wish. This interview are there any climates. I was gonna ask what pilots do clock. What climates does cobb work in but it sounds like almost i should ask the opposite like are there any clients that cobb doesn't work in. I would be surprised. If there was a climate that doesn't work in Really hot climates. It's amazing in terms of keeping the building. Cool because it literally. It's just a totally different kind of building than what most civilized people are used to right. We're used to often wooden or metal buildings that kinda shredded trap. The air at least for heating and even for cooling i imagine condos and do that conferees It's constantly breathing. It doesn't it's not drafting. You feel it breathing. The air can get through the walls and Some very very slow transfer so you never get sick building syndrome in a call building which is really nice and The way that it performs as it. It's like a thermal battery so when there's heat in the air around it it will absorb that heat and Old it basically until the era rounded is cooler than the cobb and which case than it releases eat so it really moderates the temperature especially of the inside of the building that of any building. That's made out of cobb. So and that's what. I'm just enjoying in our climate here. We have a climate where in the extreme parts of the summer. It's quite warm. It can get up to thirty degrees celsius and probably over one hundred degrees fahrenheit and it's never uncomfortably hot inside our home ever doesn't matter how hot it gets outside in the winter. We we don't have a deep freeze At all so not makes building foundations here easier but It still gets to be about raising and between zero and ten degrees celsius all winter. And so and it's very humid so it's still quite cool in terms of human living and so we have a rocket. Mass heater that keeps our floor are cog floor which then emanates that keet throughout the home and so our feeder was warm or bodies are warm and the where cobb comes in is overnight when the fires coach the cov will Emanate warmth back into the building so even though it can be down to zero overnight In the morning it's bill sixteen degrees inside the house even though it was only maybe twenty twenty two degrees when the fire went up

Environment: NPR
How Climate Change Is Setting The Stage For Natural Disasters
"In addition to being the year of covert twenty twenty was also a year of extreme wildfires and hurricanes in part because global temperatures were among the hottest ever recorded. here's npr's lawrence summer. If you caught the weather report in phoenix arizona visit you heard one number over and over alright jamie. We are hoping for weather. But i know just hovering around these hundreds. It was over one hundred degrees a lot on a record breaking one hundred and forty five days all well. Basically almost everything set records. Marvin percha is a meteorologist. At the national weather service in phoenix. I've lived here a long time. I grew up here in the seventies. And i've never seen anything quite like this. Phoenix also doubled. The number of days at spent above one hundred and fifteen degrees and those extremes are dangerous. Almost three hundred people died because of heat related causes in maricopa county another record number certainly with the overall warm earth. It makes it more likely to get these extreme temperatures and those temperatures set the stage for other disasters. Twenty twenty hurricane season has been uniquely awful. There have been thirty named storm so far a new wreck. Warm waters in the atlantic fueled the most active hurricane season on record and many storms intensified quickly building strength faster-than-expected. The records kept falling in the western u. s. two or wildfires burned more than nine million acres. Tens of thousands of people fled their homes. Some with only minutes to spare three states california oregon and colorado had the largest fires in there recorded history. Dan mcevoy a climatologist with the desert research. Institute says heat was one of the reasons when you have elevated temperatures and extra dry atmosphere. That really makes the fuels more flammable. An easier to burn a hot dry atmosphere is thirsty. He says it's like a sponge pulling moisture out of plants and soils that creates the conditions for fires to move fast and burn hot on the landscape in the west is normal. We need that fire but the thing that's changing is how quickly they become. These large megafires mcevoy's done studies showing how he will dramatically increase. This fire danger in the west but even he's surprised to see it. Play out so quickly this year is i mean. How many times can we say the word. Unprecedented christina doll is a climate scientist at the union of concerned. scientists events. Like that make it really hit home for climate scientists that this is not just something theoretical that. We're predicting it's something that we are living through. Twenty twenty is basically tied with two thousand sixteen for the hottest year ever recorded at almost two degrees above average but whether it takes the top spot is beside the point though says the last five years or the five hottest on record since eighteen eighty. And it's only expected to get worse for me personally. I think that there's not going to be one. wake up. call that spurs the public in the us. And our policymakers into action. It's more the accumulation of all of these events and all of the heartache as incurred because of them that heartache she says should be a reminder that the more fossil fuels are burned. The more years like this. We should expect to see lorne summer npr news.

Innovation Now
Meteorite Tea Provides Scientists Information on Solar System
"The golf ball sized rock that appeared coal black against the white antarctic snow would prove to be one of the best preserved media rights of its kind. This is innovation now bringing you stories behind the ideas that shaped our future in the lab at nasr's goddard space flight center. Astrobiologists like danny glavin worked to decode the mysteries. Meteorites might hold we call it making meteorite t so we actually we crush a samples up. There are a little tiny chips about a centimeter. So that we crush into a powder using a mortar and pestle something like the consistency of flour and then we put it in water and steel tube and we heat it to one hundred degrees c. At that point. We take the liquid From the pertinent and we extract it and we analyze it using gas chromatography liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry to try to separate all the individual organic components that are in that meteorite. T four glavin. Meteorites are like history books that fall from the sky and deliver chemical information about the early solar system seems like every meteorite sample that we started we find something unique and different

60-Second Science
High-Elevation Hummingbirds Evolved a Temperature Trick
"A humming birds of your garden, you've no doubt seen it flipped from flower to flower hovering midair as it sips on nectar that activity requires plenty of energy. So hummingbirds need a lot of nectar to feed their hungry metabolism's some of them probably drink two or three times. The Body Mass Index Everyday Andrew McCartney an ornithologist at the University of Pretoria in south. Africa. mckanie and his colleagues have studied hummingbirds extreme. In the Peruvian Andes to survive, they're the tiny birds have developed a few tricks for one their blood cells are unusually efficient at transporting oxygen. It's more difficult to hover in the high altitude thin air, and so the humming birds at the higher elevations much prone to pushing while they feed. So that does seem to be one way in which try and reduce the energy expenditure. Now, Macaque Nana's colleagues have found another energy-saving adaptation. The High Mountain hummingbirds can lower their body temperature by extreme amounts of night going into a state called torpor. tencent appearances, they essentially did they. That's unresponsive. The scientists caught six species of Andy and hummingbirds and monitor their temperatures throughout night and day, and they found that all six species could enter some type torpor. They lower their body temperatures from about one hundred degrees Fahrenheit by day to as low as thirty eight degrees Fahrenheit at night and being essentially conserves energy. The details are in the journal biology letters although some of the birds low body temperatures are on par with those of hibernating mammals. It's important to note that this is not fully fledged hibernation, which is a longer term response. True hibernation has only been documented in one bird so far at least common poor will in the US south. West one of my career goals is to find second harmonizing but in the Andes, he says, it's going to be the first place he looks.

Innovation Now
Pristine Space Rock Offers NASA Scientists Peek at Evolution of Life’s Building Blocks
"The lab at Nasr's Goddard. Space Flight Center Astro. Biologists like Danny Glavin worked to decode the mysteries meteorites might hold we call it making meteorite T. so we actually we crush a samples up there are a little tiny chips about a centimeter so that we crush into a powder using a mortar and pestle something like the consistency of flour and then we put It in water and seal tube, and we heat it to one hundred degrees C at that point we take the liquid from the pertinent and we extract it and we analyze it using gas chromatography liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry to try to separate all the individual organic components that are in that meteorite. T four glavin meteorites are like history books that fall from the sky and deliver chemical information about the early solar system seems like every meteorite sample that we started we find something unique and different and I think that's what I like most about

This Week in Travel
Welcome to the USA
"Hottest temperature perhaps ever recorded certainly the the best the highest verify temperature on the planet earth was this week in death valley in Furnace Creek. Where they got a temperature of one hundred and thirty degrees Fahrenheit or I think it was fifty four point one degrees, Celsius. Which is Crazy to hunt. Every. So often they have these these heat waves that come through valley, and so there was always a news team there and they try to fry an egg in a frying pan. Just. Left out in the Sun. And I just before we got on I was watching CNN try to do this and it actually didn't really work. They had like a black frying pan and they cracked an egg and like some of the white parts of the egg started to cook and that was it. Needs to get harder than I think. Maybe we we cook we cook eggs on the honor of cars in the outback Australia. Come on. That's the whole. On the WHO'D I believe that I absolutely believe that that is something that that would be done in the outback and lift game devali come on. In. Don't. Live up to your name. Here's the question. Gary. Is EVERY TIME You know a record like this sat I mean it's like, okay, that's interesting. But is there a larger context? You get half the people out there? Who will say, Hey, look it's global warming. It's hotter than it's ever been. Or is it just that every? So often the earth rotates a certain way in a cloud goes a certain direction or a butterfly flaps, its friggin wings or whatever, and it's just happens to be really hot I mean. Is this one of those things that happens in everybody has to make thing out of it will one way or the other. I think you look at average temperatures if you wanNA global warming just so you know we talk about this being the hottest temperature. As far as I could tell, the hottest temperature ever recorded was in death valley and one hundred and thirty, four back in one thousand, nine, hundred, thirteen. So I can't quite figure out why everybody's reporting. This is the highest temperature ever and then even sometimes in that article saying since. Like, you can't be ever. In the same article let yeah. Yeah, that's that's why we used to have something called journalism was actually check out those facts but I think just things that you've always been into journalism even where the person writing the headline is not the person writing the story. Right, there's a reason. It's because the temperature is was not really well verified in. There was a lot of doubt because it was nine thirteen and there were other temperatures in the region that kind of put it in doubt and there were other high temperatures. Like there was one in Libya from like over one hundred years ago and another one from. Iran that were both called into question. Because of the readings and the Russian judge. Exactly. Like there, there are all these records for the oldest human and the tallest human. Sure. And if you go back in time, there are people that claim Oh there were nine feet tall and they live to be two hundred years old and then you check up on, it's like bowel not really and I think a lot of it is that that we just have better. Ability to measure the stuff now, and so this temperature is if if if it's not the highest, it's certainly the highest that they can verify to a great deal of certain. Some curious that hundred and thirty degree day. What was the low for the day on? Fifteen. Oh, probably, much lower than that because death valley is so arid. Yeah. So here, for instance, we're doing of really close to one hundred degrees. Our lows are going to be probably in the sixties. It's extreme. Yes. That's pretty typical for us because we just don't have the humidity and death valley even a little less humid than we are. Yeah I've actually experienced temperatures close to this twice. In Australia. In Ethiopia in the depression, which is a lot like death valley, and then once in Australia I was. visited. Who in the middle of the summer and it was close to fifty degrees. Celsius it was. Right he'd it wasn't bad if you're in the shade and had a fan on.

Environment: NPR
The Evolutionary History Of Penguins Is Far From Black And White
"The image of a penguin might bring to mind an endless march across windswept ice. The reality of penguins is a bit different says Grant Ballard of point blue conservation science was actually see species of Pangolin. Really, love, it's only two species. Many others live in warmer waters. So we're could conceivably dealing with something like minus seven degrees or even colder than out. Then, show, but lobby goes mainland has encountered temperatures that are up around one hundred degrees Fahrenheit. So how'd it penguins evolve with such different lifestyles and new study and the proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences has some answers we've been able to resolve. Several. Longstanding questions about penguin evolution in particular way penguins originated. Hurry Bowie of UC Berkeley as an author on that study. He says there's been a long debate about where the first penguins evolved was it Antarctica or farther north in New Zealand as others have suggested, well armed with genetic evidence from a species of modern day penguins his team has an answer which turned out to be along the coast of Australia and New Zealand the nearby islands of the South Pacific. They say that happened around twenty two million years ago from there, the penguin served on a circular current at the bottom of the world there is a clockwise current. And so they use this current colonized like. The region Juliana of the Catholic. University. Of Chile is a CO author. She says, eleven million years ago that current revved up and penguins used it to slingshot themselves throughout the Southern Hemisphere. That's right. slingshot. The researchers also observed genetic adaptations. Some penguins picked up along the way like the ability to drink seawater also changes in how some species use oxygen allowing them to dive deep that doesn't mean. Penguins will be quick to adapt to modern day climate change. Here's Valley. Again, this adaptation to being able to occurring freezing cold waters in tropical waters occurred over a period of twenty million years, and this doesn't mean that penguins are going to be able to keep up with oceans warming today. If there is one thing, the paper makes clear. It's that the evolution of penguins for from black and

Slow Flowers with Debra Prinzing
High desert flower farming in Arizona with Aishah Lurry of Patagonia Flower Farm
"Was thinking about you all week thinking, how is she farming when it's over a one hundred degrees so give us sort of a snapshot of your farm and like how do you cope with those conditions? Well, let me tell you first of all, we're in what's called the high desert where about four thousand feet above sea level. So we're in the mountain. Okay. So near probably always consistently ten degrees cooler than Tucson in almost fifteen degrees cooler than Phoenix. So settle a little secret about where you are is because of allegation exactly now it's hot outside it's a little hot, but you know it works in it's funny because one of the benefits about living here it does snow. We get snow in the winter, but it's usually gone by noon our ground never freezes. So the soil is always workable all and very rarely have like a hard frost. So if you think of like I, go up in Boston, it would start to get colder and colder nine pm pm and that's when the coldest would happen. But here the coldest time it seems like is early in the morning three or five. In the sun rises in warm things up in usually. So is just a click fraud so that can damage some plants but for the most part, we have no problem. So I don't know and I I just I guess, I have the desire to grow flowers GonNa make it happen or the variances is what's crazy is that it can be like ninety five degrees during the day and then in the thirties at night. It's crazy I mean I was thinking when you talked about snowing in the morning at least you're getting precipitation where other parts of Arizona are not getting precipitation. So even though it snow, it becomes the moisture the roots need that's in. It's wonderful when the snow slowly melts in and gets into the soil, you really can't beat that. while. So give us snapshot of Patagonia Flower Farm, and of course I pick a Patagonia as the clothing, but it's actually the name of a town and I believe a mountain somewhere, right? Yes. In it's actually pronounced Pentagon Yep. Okay Not like the brand to girl. No. So it's very hilly. We got a lot of grasslands here Yes. So it's really really beautiful. A lot of people think of Arizona and they think of Oh. It's everything's GonNa be dry. We've got quite a bit of green going on Yeah. It's really a beautiful town the Pentagon, yet self only has about a thousand people that that live here Old Mining town in it's quite a lot of retire. You can imagine a lot of artists, letter retirees, a lot of women. So it's an interesting sweets out. Wow. That's I wanNA visit. That sounds really wonderful. Yeah and is there much agriculture they're like. Are. You a lone ranger to use the Weser your lot. Of course. Now, a lot of people are gardening. You know it's funny because there is A. Organization here in town that I work very very closely with called Borderland Restoration. So they have a big greenhouse here where they sell native plants in the harvest seeds germinate the season, create more plans to restore the over you know. Overworked will say off. Areas of. Of. Southern Arizona. So so yeah. So. There are few. Let me think. So, before I moved here like years before there was a A Dalia grower here believe it or not, and I know that they must have had a lot of shade because we need the shape of the Dahlia's but But yeah. So a little bit here and there but I think borderlands nursery is the biggest like grower right now and it is mostly native Oh. That's so interesting. So your what's the size and scale of of your farm and give us a snapshot of what all the pieces to the puzzle there. Okay. So. I am what is called a micro farm about or thousand square feet, and I'm growing things very tightly together and I. You know I took 'em a Florette alumni I took her class in twenty seventeen. So I follow a lot of her protocols and the only differences I do a no till I keep the landscape fabric down and Yes. So so that's if I do the landscape fabric I've got who those short tunnels I don't have a greenhouse yet, but one day. And yes, I have an area where I'm doing mostly perennials and then I have my annual and at borderlands has been so gracious of allowing me to use a quite about fifteen hundred square feet where I've been growing sunflowers in in the ground or undercover know in the ground vendor landscape fabric on their property warring. Yeah. But I love it that like you've been entrepreneurial enough to figure out how to. Access land that wasn't being utilized, but you knew would be perfect for some flowers. Eight. Wow.

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
Reopening Schools Amid COVID-19: What to Expect This Fall
"There any way to have in person instruction in schools this fall for with some number of students for you know some number of days a week in certain parts of the country what what is the outlook for that? Yeah. I look. I've got two young kids in school and working with schools and other people across the country. Let let me just say one thing at a on the. Top. There is no for for also we we just do not understand enough about this virus in children T- period, and so to say that we do to be candidates arrogant we just don't know enough having said that Josh I think that there are going to be ways to do what I would say hybrid I. Certainly think that if you're in one of the thirty nine states that's experiencing these surges and. Reverse and trends you really should be thinking about remote learning in the next four to six weeks meaning you should not be sending your children in person and especially as we're doing more testing of younger children and adults I think that we are going to see even more cases that cause us to pause on personal learning but there are going to be regions where you see incredibly low rates and they are. Consistent with a decrease in growth in some parts, and you could consider some sort of learning. It will look different and it will not be fulltime education which leaves working parents such as myself in a lurch. So that's one issue. But from an educational standpoint, there will be ways to do this smaller CA-. It's all the things we haven't really done in education. So we'll have to try it's new smaller cohorts. risk-based, not just thermal testing because that's only gonNA, help you so much when it's one hundred degrees in Arizona but having some sort of symptom assessment knowing that children might not have any symptoms and be positive. So we're going to a- I absolutely enforce either masks or some sort of alternative face shields and we just need to get comfortable with that I. think adults are less comfortable than children are and they will adapt their incredibly adaptive. So I do think it's possible but I will say Josh I'm troubled time I talked with school whether it's a large public school in a superintendent or a small private school principal. All of them have unanimously said, we have had no contact with our local health departments. They're too busy and it's too hard to create that connection and without that connection Josh I fear that we will end up making things

THE NEWS with Anthony Davis
Climate change makes freak Siberian heat 600 times more likely.
"Nearly impossible without manmade global warming this year's freak. Siberian heatwave is producing climate changes, most flagrant footprint of extreme weather. A NEW FLASH STUDY SAYS INTERNATIONAL SCIENTISTS HAVE released a study that found the greenhouse effect multiplied the chance of the regents prolonged heat by at least six hundred times, and maybe tens of thousands of times in the study, which has not yet gone through, Peer Review. The team looked at Siberia from January to June including day. That hits one hundred degrees for a new Arctic. Record scientists from the United Kingdom Russia France Netherlands Germany and Switzerland used. Used seventy climate models, running thousands of complex simulations, comparing current conditions to a world without man-made warming, burning of coal, oil and gas. They found that without climate change the type of prolonged hate that hit. Siberia would happen once. In eighteen thousand years effectively impossible without human influence, the team looked at both the average temperature in Siberia over the first six months of the year, when temperatures averaged nine degrees above normal in the Russian town of Aucoin. Thanks, Jen both really couldn't happen. In a world without the additional heat trapping gases from burning fossil fuel scientists and

AP News Radio
Djokovic adds to Slam streak vs. Federer at Australian Open
"Sofia cannon is true to the Australian Open women's final after upsetting the top seeded Australian as body seven six seven five the twenty one year old from Florida reaching her first major finale in a lengthy battle in one hundred degree temperatures a reward a showdown with former world number one got being America lusa the resurgent unseeded Spaniard upsetting the fourth seed Simona Halep in a draining to L. plus battle Roger Federer started strongly against I'd like Djokovic rising to a five two lead in the present before drug coverage took control and advanced to his eighth Australian Open final in straight sets Graham I got us Mel born