26 Burst results for "Oshawa"

Talk Is Jericho
"oshawa" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"To go Back to the Future about a year or so ago. You have a new book out about Bond as well. So all of us are tied in here disgusting, you know, James Bond. So what I want to do is Don, first of all, and we'll go through all of us here. How did you get into James Bond and why are you such a big James Bond fan? I think I don't remember the first bomb movie I saw. I just remember being into them when I was a kid and then someone, when I was in my 20s, gave me for Christmas, the full VHS library of every James Bond film. I'd gotten a little bit out of it during the kind of roger warriors and of course the Connery stuff predated me, but I kind of watched the whole library, which I think took us up just past GoldenEye at that point. And kind of decided what I liked and didn't like and whatnot. And then of course kind of had many debates with people not on podcasts about what my thoughts and feelings are and I kind of have it's interesting because when you said to do our top ten list of kind of Bond films, I'm like, it's almost like comparing errors in wrestling. It's like Nick bockwinkel was great, but back then they didn't have the production value. So I kind of look at some of as an example that Daniel Craig stuff. And I go, well, I wonder how some of the Connery movies if they had the advantage or maybe disadvantage of having those production values would fare. What I have found is that some of the older bomb movies hold up actually to me very well. So, and then over Chris, it's kind of one of those Bond things have been like Magnum PI for me oddly enough. It's like, it's something I watch when I want to escape. It doesn't matter that I've seen them all 20 times, you know, some of them I've only watched probably 5 because they were terrible, but the ones I like I like and I watch them over, I was just watching the lazenby film the other day again. So they never really gets old for me and I find something new every time I watch them because I'm like, oh, that was interesting the way they did that. And Mike, what's your background, James? Because you have a lot of experience on the university level almost. Yeah, so I didn't start writing scholarly articles on bond until quite recently, but I've been a fan since I was a kid. I'm a little younger than you and dawn Brad, I'm guessing at your age, but I'm a little older than you, I think. You guys will remember pre VCR, the only way you could watch old movies was if they happen to come on Saturday afternoon on one of the channels that you got. And it was probably goldfinger that I first saw when I was like 9 or ten. I hosted podcasts on fans and fan culture, and it's really interesting how people get into things. And it's usually somebody that they like or somebody they respect introduces them. And for me, it was a father figure. It wasn't my dad, my own dad only watches Ernest movies. We don't round over film at all. That's the next episode. Let's talk about earnest scares stupid. He would be happy to come on and talk about that. It was my friend's dad, who was a single dad. He was a cop. He was cool. He introduced me to Indiana Jones and Monty Python and James Bond. And then I'm the type of guy when I get into something, I kind of go in whole hog, I read as much as I can. In the pre Internet era, that meant scouring used bookstores for copies of the James Bond novels and learning about spies. And then I found out that not three kilometers from my house in oshawa Ontario, Canada, was the site of camp X and so I was actually there this summer. And what's camp X? Camp X was the espionage training school for the allies during World War II. It's right on the border of whitby and oshawa on Lake Ontario. And there's only a marker there now, but Fleming may have been there at some point. It's not clear. I understand. Like correct me if I'm wrong, but a man called Intrepid Sir William Stevenson originally from Winnipeg, some say Fleming based the books on Fleming when asked, like, is there a real James Bond? He said, if you want a real James Bond, William Stephenson. And where I'm sitting right now in downtown Winnipeg, not three blocks away between us and the legislative billing is a statue to the man called Intrepid. There you go. It's Canada. Now Brad, you've written a book that's about to come out Bond, James Bond, exploring the shaken and third history of Ian Fleming's 007, and we mentioned before. I'm sorry that they escape me. What's the name of your Back to the Future book that we did? It's called back from the future, back from the future. Which is a great kind of historical tome of all the back to future movies. You've done the same for the James Bond films now. What attracted you to bond and to writing this book? Well, I mean, it was kind of similar to everybody else. I've discovered it on a VHS tape that my dad had. It was a literally a black VHS tape that had a purple label on it that said James Bond that he had taped diamonds are forever off the television. I call it my bond mitzvah. It was like the first movie that I got to see. From James Bond, like anybody, when you see James Bond as a young man, you think this is the coolest guy that ever lived. It was Sean Connery. He had the women. He had the cars and he had the gadgets, he was a secret agent. I dove right into it. I kind of found bond at the same time I found Back to the Future. So there are these two franchises, a film that I loved my entire life. And so after I did the Back to the Future book, we were talking about doing another one. I said, look, the only other thing I love much is Back to the Future of pro wrestling is James Bond. Then we kind of dove into my writing partner Mike kalinowski and we wanted to do a very comprehensive talk about every movie, every era of Bond, it really tried to cover the litany of it. So that's what we did in the book. And I've really been a fan ever since I found that VHS tape. And it's just never left me. You know, it's interesting because for me, I discovered bond as well, probably on TV seeing it because the first thing one of my first earliest memories was watching, you only live twice, but my grandfather's house used to have a basement where you'd watch TV and that's probably all that old basement smell. And I vividly remember the string with the poison going down it that one of the villains in the early in the movie and they put a string to her mouth and the poison comes down to her mouth and drips on her lips and she licks.

Everything is Messy
"oshawa" Discussed on Everything is Messy
"I mean am i. How many times with my ice coffee. So that's what i do in the morning and then my evening routine i always turn on my red light. I have a twenty five pound weight at crystal blanket. That i love and then i use that all the time and then as far as the sleeping elects hers. I have cbd that has a little thc. I love kava. That really helps. Relax me. i have this oshawa ghandour. Stuffer us from arbonne. Alka mind which is really good. It helps release the lactic acid in your system and also has magnesium so it helps you sleep and have been out of that for a couple weeks. So the bc a pills have magnesium so hopefully that will help me as well. And then i have this holistically ballitser that my friend made me who's institition and has an herb garden and she creates like all these elixirs based on what you need and she made me these during the pandemic when i also had insomnia so i've been Making that every night. And it's been hoping and the cbd every now and then. I get really high permit like this morning. I was like. Oh my god. So i right now. And then last week goes with the friend and flipping or condo. And i was cleaning something i'm like. Oh my god. I'm so high right now and i forget like 'cause normally this doesn't affect me but i stopped taking it so every now and then the same joe's and i'm high is the guy which is kinda funny. I like we're gonna need to get a snack. So that's my life But that is My sleep alexa. That's my concoction. That is currently working for my evening routine and the drink that keeps me knocked out every now and then i will wake up at two or three. I don't know why like it's not stress. It's not like anxiety. I mean i did have like my ptsd but it was happening before then. Some not really sure like. Why is this happening. my sleep is priority to me so all the phones are off. I have on I actually sleep to some a south. It's like eight hours of mentioned it so many times on the show and also this deep sleep music. They're all on youtube. I just look at like research one and it goes on all night long so that that and then i'm actually. I have to get up and give you a name for these masks because first of all the blanket sunday citizen. That is twenty five pounds of crush crystals. I'm szeswith. I'm literally robbing walling into my bathroom for you. Oh it's formula ten dot zero dot six. I get the little minis you can buy them..

WAAM Talk 1600
"oshawa" Discussed on WAAM Talk 1600
"And she keeps leaving her number. I mean, you could get a studio giggles or something. Their own exit is Alternative bump music Friday. That's guy named Freddie Goldsmith. I read some of the best songs ever. Nobody's ever heard of him. Well, a couple of people With a secret handshake have but not many. It's a bitty Oshawa video. Chua. Yeah, if you if you paid attention to the story there, the storyline is, he answered an ad for musician. They met the parking lot. They hooked up. They started doing bar gigs every every Roadhouse. They could get to buy a car, and then they hated the music. But he knew everything. So he was actually the gifted player. I'm sure in the band, which means nothing because this Mick Jagger said it ain't it Ain't it's the singer, not the song. So that was that's pretty good story. The other one he does, which we're not going here today is do something crazy. We've played that before. He's uh He's with some girl in a hotel room. And he says, do would you please do something crazy? Put throw, throw a shot glass against the wall through something to the one Just remind me Of of my ex love that I'm here trying to lose sight of by hanging out with you Do something crazy again. Gifted songwriter. Uh, This summer is going on right now. It's hard not to, uh, not to comment on it, given that its alternative bump music Friday, But man, it's absurd. What's happening right now? Everybody likes to meet my put up there, stealing less left and right about Joe Biden transposed with what's his name there? Ben Franklin. Again, Ben Franklin's and those that give up freedom for safety deserve. Neither Joe Biden is saying this is not about freedom. This is about your safety, and that's pretty much what he did Get in line. Shut up. Isn't it the way it is now, It's just about everything in this society Now they haven't made us start wearing masks to go shopping like this before. Remember you. You would literally get ratted out, people would come up. And yell at you. In a food store or the Costco. Alright, uh, Sam's or whatever they say we're not going to wait on you. We won't check you out. Let's put the mascot now. They're saying they strongly suggest that you were the mask. They haven't come out and say that you have to, but they strongly suggested what's the next step? And I don't know if you've been listening. But Biden has been flapping his is close to senile jaws. About they're going to force anybody in business and private sector to take take the shot to take the experimental drug. They're gonna They're gonna make it happen somehow interacting like it's perfectly normal and the zombies are going along with him thinking it's perfectly normal. We're in some scary ass times, boys and girls. Scariest times. I hope you got all your survival stuff together because I have a feeling at some point. You're going to be spending a lot of time in the house. You're on the edge. It's alternative bump music Friday..

Uncommon
"oshawa" Discussed on Uncommon
"It just doesn't work like that now. Autumn high voice right. I don't care if you make money on. Kyw my vision. I don't expect to make money. But i just made eighty six thousand dollars in the big deal that only two also. It's taken me ten days. Hatha yeah this is the process. This the hassle grinded off on three. And i work to ten. Pm every night nine pm. They see results unconscious. Need they pick up their wives and my as director. I've only had one stopped Threes on the one. You'll have noticed you like it looking at some of the old logs. There's a lot of like familiar faces in the yes for show and they will come from one from oshawa because they had seen yes i do have i do think elite now this fucked up should by creating some videos out. They hold up because businesses love. Who knows about who knows you and it's about creating that awareness all. What am i try and capture that attention on admitting to it. Yeah i you're quite the that one of the things. I had your quite the being maim so to speak so to speak in this real estate space and i'm intrigued you mentioned before about selling and Know as a nineteen year old. And you have this period of time in the real estate game. Were you just hustling coaling pitching paypal etc. When was it. You said the internet is what made you in this business of the built up all that experience. When was the the flip. When did you realize what year was at that. You realize that social media and the internet was the wife of rich multiple saas not making company because back then there was no agency. Snake probably be ten years ago ninety days to laugh at every time i did something authors. Okay oh my god they're sweep. That's actually talking about these news now. It's reaching out to a bigger audience. And then when. I started making more videos than i had the corporate. That would send me emails. Said you cannot do this. You cannot do this. You cannot do that in every time. I want to do something different. Always please take down that video. Do this do that but had already reached that. That's not new. The power of digital marketing our social media that it reaches apt to so many people. And it's full free as oh. Yeah i'm like you know what. Whenever i stopped one business. I'm not going to be like on fuckers because these guys are going to be behind printouts and they're like conservative if look at for example if you look at people newell creating an open prospections and like dances. They have like nine violin. They have like a million dollars. Things isn't crazy. Should up there and we behind concert. We're not conservatives reno negative at all it just hasn't been. I'm doing it because it's it's a demonic. Nobody else is doing it. D- think they dating that it cost conservative. People forget that they were twenty once people who that they were dirty once people get how much of a hassle they were if they seek the fifty. Mike you start it from somewhere. Darned ever forget. We've come from..

Lured Up - A Pokémon GO Podcast
"oshawa" Discussed on Lured Up - A Pokémon GO Podcast
"Mop professor network and today is wednesday august twenty fifth two thousand twenty one. I'm your host. Ken pescador joined by my co host. Adam tuttle adam. Yo hello did you say. A hundred and ninety two there not only. Is that a high number. This is a very important episode. Adam we got we got news. We got lots of news we got some. We got some big news. So we'll we'll start off slow will recap the week. As per usual. We talk about ultra unlock three. All that good stuff that's going on. We've got the news bomb of the season of mischief which is going to be the next season. That's gonna kick off on september. I did was going to be the the research breakthrough on which can be shiny. This is exciting times. We've got oshawa community day. We've got all of all of september stuff. We're going to do zinta ray. Guide battle party adam. Are you ready for this last one. What's the last one..

The Ultimate Health Podcast
"oshawa" Discussed on The Ultimate Health Podcast
"Beam and they do have a nanno. Cbd and They they after they just had certain they had a tincture can oil and solve to rub on your skin Acted like an article but better in my opinion and A couple of other products and then they branched out into into adapted agent so they they have like a clarity like daytime. That has oshawa gonda and rodeo law but then they also have one called dream. Which is the cbd. But then it has like elstein magnesium Hello melatonin and so that is like oh my god that powder is like knockout city. Twenty minutes and it's like. I buy so so i take some so some oils to take an ano. Cbd to sometimes nice sounds incredible. And it's kinda like you talked about before the transition of the times. I just feel like we're in such a time to be grateful for right now where there is so many of these products that are coming onto the market in that are already there and it's all happening so quickly in it's like if you went back a thousand years maybe have access to like one of these adapted jains if you're lucky because a lot of them are from different parts of the world and now we can you know fly them. All lynn make products where they're all combined and it's just for people that are in the know and have the abundance to be able to afford. There's just so much so much to be grateful for with with again where the technology has taken us. It's true and they are expensive. There's no doubt. I mean a jar of something is fifty bucks. And that's just one so you know especially because quality is so important. I mean you know you really. I don't there's probably not. I don't know what the regulations are. But i'm sure there's filler. And i don't i don't know some companies may be Poor sourcing There's really big. I also make wine. So there's a really big difference between like good wine and bad wine right so you brought the good roseola at the bat rodeo.

Reality TV RHAP-ups: Reality TV Podcasts
"oshawa" Discussed on Reality TV RHAP-ups: Reality TV Podcasts
"All that level up graduating the next degree. I love him are on this exciting time but i'm half unaided right now by the way as it should be. I feel like. I should be 'cause i need. I need a summer slam prediction episode the biggest party of the summer area. How we are here. We made live. We dressed to impress we are. We are like that. It's biggest party of the summer. We you know pick our allstate's were here. Please please okay. i can't find it later. But what do we. How do we start these episodes we this time. We're going to start with a few questions from the job. Has a squad cast group. Thank you guys so much for a turning in your questions. So i i question comes from the great ed mamo. Which match are you guys most excited to see on saturday. And which match are you most excited to see on sunday. So real quick for saturday i mean. Come on it's oshawa banks versus bianca. Bel air what were you expecting any other answer. Ed mo- But to be quite honest this match card we're gonna go over it but just looking at it it's pretty pretty stacked Not too many duds on this car. I'm really excited for for you. Know a good paper view weekend and for which match. We're going to be excited to see on sunday. We will get to that a little later and matt. Look i if i can't say yongqing. Sasha i'm gonna i don't know honestly it's bianca and sasha because edges seth like. It's gonna be an amazing man. God's on this mastercard man. No duds no duds. But you know maybe why.

As It Happens from CBC Radio
"oshawa" Discussed on As It Happens from CBC Radio
"If not for you. Then with the idea of the common good right what can we do to protect people who right now. Temperatures themselves david. Byrne is an oshawa ontario. Father who's nine year old daughter. Rosalie is at home recovering from cova nineteen. He spoke with metro morning host smile alpha earlier today for the last four decades. There hasn't been a happy hour in the state of massachusetts. I mean there have likely been sixty minutes of positive feelings since one thousand nine hundred four but if you were hoping to grab a cheap drink in the late afternoon you're out of luck but nick silva is hoping to change that. He's a boston lawyer. Who has started a petition to bring back happy hour. We reached him in boston. Nick why do you think it's time for the good people of massachusetts to able to partake in happy hour. Well i think it's sort of a confluence of factors i think Now is just as good a time as any. I think it's timely. As the restaurant and bar industry is trying to recover from a burdensome past year on them. And i think it's sort of been long overdue I think it's been time to revisit it for some time. So i think now's a better time than any and you're not talking about you know one hour a day of drinking when we refer to happy hour what's involved. What would you like to be allowed. Sure so so. It really is Ironically it's really not what. I would like to be allowed. It's what i'd like the restaurant to be able to decide that they allow so it's more you know. If they wished to have an hour happy hour they can stay. They wish to have a four hour. Happy they can. It's really it's referred to as happy hour colloquially but it's really just a removal of restrictions surrounding all of the regulations and those regulations. I mean what do they mean. It's it's something that limits bars from offering cheaper drinks two for one drinks things like that exactly so so it's drink specials at certain times you know you can't change the price of alcohol. You can't have free alcohol which includes alcoholic. You're sitting at a blackjack table casino providing free..

The Model Health Show
"oshawa" Discussed on The Model Health Show
"So also both of these are very very dense proteins right. So we're talking about upwards of seventy plus percent protein by weight of spirulina over fifty percent protein by weight with clara in those combined powerhouse of amino acids bioavailable amino acids plus all of these micronutrients that we've been talking about. I get both goes together as well as marina as well as oshawa gonda and it. Actually this is the key. It tastes good because those things by themselves so much but when you have them combined in this incredible formula from organic by it actually tastes amazing. It tastes refreshing and without. Here's the key as well without added sugar so they're using great flavor notes. They've found a really great combination with coconut water with refreshing organic mint. And by the way everything is organic in organic fi but again. No abnormal added sweeteners We're talking about added sugar but low glycemic like monk. Fruit added to help round out. Those flavor knows to make it so again. Even kids drink organic far. They've got incredible reduce formula as well. The kids absolutely love. The green juice is one of those things that my family has on a consistent basis. I think every single person in our world today could use a green superfood. Concentrate for those benefits that come along with things like lorella but also the immune system benefits there too so head over there..

Exponential Podcast
"oshawa" Discussed on Exponential Podcast
"To preach more during the seasons of intensity and build a teaching team take a chill pill in the in the weeks where you're not gonna have as many guests historically speaking and you can sustain this. You know you need to do less philip. Your calendar less you know and focus on four or five things that provide the greatest return on invest. We help pastors bill. A stop doing list. After we've performed a calendar audit. It's a very interesting exercise united. Just help them off. Load things and get give focused just on a few things and it's amazing when you get focused on this just a few things how energizing and more of a passionate person you become when you get focused on a few things instead of being so scattered. It's amazing how it all comes together in oshawa. I think you're sparking a thought here. i've got a theory that i think is right if you if you think pre pandemic most pastors most church leaders. They're in a rhythm of understanding expectations. And what they need to do to deliver their expectation and along comes the pandemic and all of a sudden. Now you're functioning. In a way that it ee. Not only don't know how you can't really deliver the expectation and so there's a little bit of a churn there with. I can't deliver the normal expectation and now with light at the end of the tunnel coming out of the pandemic. You get this whammy of not knowing where things are going to land after the pandemic which means not knowing what the new expectations going to be. And so it's not only. I couldn't deliver the expectation in a different environment. Now as much as i would liked the environment to go back to the stability of knowing the expectation and being able to deliver that expectation. Now there's the chaos of the uncertainty of not knowing if things will return to that stability that i knew of the expectation so the theory is this. I think part of the you know record numbers of people struggling with in ministry with mental health issues in stress and anxiety in different things. I think part of it is..

People's Pharmacy
"oshawa" Discussed on People's Pharmacy
"I'm not someone who likes to sit still for you. Know an hour on a cushion. So you can do meditation. While you're walking you can put on some music and dance. You can do anything that brings you into a state of mind where your troubles are melting away. And you're just a little bit more calm and relaxed the other thing. Is you know you you talk about all of these competing factors that are pulling women in a million directions externally and internally and as women were so primed to take care of everyone else that we often do forget to put we put ourselves on the back burner and i think as we hit that age menopause. If we haven't already believed that we've earned it. We've definitely earned some selfish time right and even if it's not really to me self care is not selfish but it's okay to say i need to be a little selfish right now. Need to build a self oriented and do some things to support myself. Another thing to remember. Is that often. Were on the go all the time. We're busy all the time. We're not eating as well. So getting a multivitamin every day and making sure to get some vitamin d. Which also takes care of your immune system but helps with mood and some magnesium for mood and mind calm really important and then i personally love. A category of botanical 's herbs called adapt degen's and a few of them like holy basil. Oshawa gonda ray. She mushroom are very gentle and help to support. The nervous system helped to bring calm. Gonda and racy mushroom can even be used to help support good sleep and so those can be used as a daily support supplement and then of course good sleep right. That's one of the most important things we can do for ourselves when we are stressed is give ourselves that time to sleep and i know i said it earlier but the alcohol but you know i know it sounds so relaxing in the moment can feel so relaxing to have that glass of wine or something that you enjoy but most women. I know particularly when we hit menopausal age wine an alcohol just tend to disrupt sleep. We know that they disrupt the circadian rhythm but a lot of women also feel more blue and down when they've had it so find mock tales other things that you enjoy and stay away from the alcohol as much as you can dr rama. I'd like to follow up a bit on. Those herbs and natural approaches for things like the symptoms of menopause so in addition to the herbs that you've mentioned for stress is there anything for hormonal balance. That doesn't require a drug. Like prem pro absolutely so my favorite is an herb called vitek or chased buried and we tend to think of it if you've heard of it before as something for mental health but over the past number of years studies have come out that specifically show that it supports healthy. Estrogen levels supports healthy progesterone levels. But it doesn't have any hormones in it triggers our own brain and ovaries to produce these which is really important to kind of extend your premenopausal life before you hit menopause. But even if you're in menopause..

Limitless Mindset
"oshawa" Discussed on Limitless Mindset
"Supplemental male vitality products. That combine horny goat weed. And you're him by but again. You have no idea how much you're combine. These actually contain so. Please avoid those. Your best bat is just to get horny goat weed from the highest quality source and i do link to that in my article. I do recommend the powdered horny goat weed. It doesn't taste bad in a tea. It's more economical in a in a powdered form and with horny goat weed. You can get a little bit crazy with the dosage. You can take the dosage up quite a bit and you'll have a corresponding response to it. So yeah if you're really looking for Unforgettable sexual experience you could draw. You can try combining those two in the morning in the morning. That'll be a a sexual episode. That'll keep you inspired. Further duration of your day inks you'll leaks some bio hackers suggests that because it can be such an anxiety causing stimulant that you might wanna take it with another neutral that is soothing or tranquilizing like fenner butte or oshawa gonda and that seems like not an awful idea to me. Although you'd to be like you really want to watch yourself if you were doing something like taking to go out and socialize but at the same time you want to have a bit of aggression and energy. It seems like imagine a lot of ways that that could go. That could go wrong so if it does cause anxiety or aggression for you maybe just stay away from it about caffeine in number of bodybuilders. Wash their your combined down with black coffee because caffeine has a synergistic effect in burning fat and energizing. You for an epic jim session but this is combining to stimulants. It seems like there's a lot of ways that could go wrong so wouldn't recommend it. And finally viagra. It's synergistic with the little blue pill. According to an egyptian animal study a few of the bros. On youtube report combining the two without disaster ensuing. Bud i would urge anybody tempted to take viagra to listen to the most recent podcast interview that i did with mark sloan and we talked about how viagra can result in really disastrous episodes Viagra boosts up your nitric oxide to really dangerous levels. Which you don't want there is an episode of a colombian guy i think a fat old colombian guy the took viagra to bang his novia. And it made his dick explode..

The Agostinho Zinga Show
"oshawa" Discussed on The Agostinho Zinga Show
"Standing there for like twenty minutes when he left the show at the very A little early. We looked at the car pulling nixon us leave and he was in the passenger seat literally his hands up to avoid these face so covering his face seem seem so sketchy like. You're one comedian. People are going to recognize the most famous comedy clubs. Exactly i heard he stuck in stand up again the just a win situation so from from wife known. Because i think i've already. Yeah i went to once and i went to a couple times open to la in two thousand and fifteen or sixteen right and there is a beer. Think is featured in the documentary. A kind of things away will pitches and the things. Oh the signatures. You can kind of look out onto the stage. And i think that's where of sometimes comic standard sophon worship years you know can talk whatever and i think that's a place where comiskey annoyed with fans go to if they tried to come in and buying conversations or whatnot a little kind of oshawa you can kind of see where people are performing in what they're doing so it's not you know it's not it's not our reason facie somebody standing there like famous comic but i guess they're avoiding icon stuff sense because i would imagine. There's a large contingency of people at the store who are probably annoyed that he's back because he's one of the top comex. In general it kind of seems to attract a crowd. People tend to go to shows and the everyone seems to think funny for the most part. And there's obviously going to be a contingency a contingent of people continuously a group of people. This new fun. Who'd deputy don't wanna see him day. Who think he shouldn't be given the opportunity to go up on stage again so it definitely is going to be a place to be especially because everyone's got like you could like situational morals right. All right situation arose all kind of temporary morals and ethics based upon. The person is what they can do for their career so a lot of people were generally just want to give him the stink eye. Give nicole show the generally because they like. It's the right thing to do..

AM 1590 WCGO
"oshawa" Discussed on AM 1590 WCGO
"Cool, Thomas Mutter t for me, but in 90 for Yeah. Then you know your money laughing it up me yard with fashion. Oh, the bottle on the flat all about of Neesh law fall on the floor. It's on their part of nations. But I'm a ton and then Out of me. Mhm. Germany macabre With the room and Mark Marriott admit one turning out to Raya. The whole model. That partial market Um tonight arturia at home care Who's that home care? You know horses are Passion Work Avenue Montaigne and it Inna. Uh, station? No. All on station no alone who? How Well you law income. Low income and I Oh, come on their head to check early late about sorta and two years to topple Assad, Kmi shoreline and by 2000 Masterman Mugabe. Motorhome 10 ir to write has really Tyrone Dahan Elizabeth actually carry to come back to the show, a show outlaw today is to today. Hampshire Hampshire 20 year olds. Uh, sure, we'll show at LA today is today from from Sha Pneumonia often and cool to do to Big job, Honda. Albert. Have film it. It's Kabul Atone. Lana got much, Um 10 ir two right there, but party, Uh, Cafe in a palace to Opportunities for an image a broken litten Glad to hear Ask Johnny, but mockery We film at Cadogan film at L. A film at bay to it. I must to Mr Tava Shelter, Shericka Xiulan it by 2000. Mama driven No horn and sneakers are a massive R E two and show a show. What law? Today's today I'm sure ham shot when yeah. Show a show. What law today, Mr Tracy Ham, Shaham shot mania. Uh, but, uh and I hope design Selma Leila in Chicago loves there in Skokie. Martin Roof. Niles, who disciplines Chicago, Skokie, Martin Roof Niles disciplines. Oka. I heard it Now. I'm gonna need behind a good in the suburbs. How much it to officially, uh, higher than in a Judean behind to go, Schomburg. Tell Stream one Do Candid suburbs. Chicago Mike Tramp eel. Go, Uh Lizzie are bar. Streamwood. Grandma to stream which had a stream with Diller. Israel Pass Stream mood Go, Mata! It's Streamwood! Thomas Sample aka, Do you really Spot. I got tired, New mom done, Say and dampen yacht. I'm a previous that no harm done cooled or not. Sniff and Thomas Ikari, Um make twi an office A Slater Chicago show a show What law? Trace the trail from Shaham shot too many hours. I wanted to go on tonight knowing or Nina Banquet or Nina banquets and let your heart life now center road goes, Kofi. I wanted to Nina spittle. Shepherds of Saadiyat often, goodness, but if your phone to Angola Well, that's a much bigger to learn that in Beslan in here, I deeply my neighbors Pasteur, Um and you can see that I wanted to Nina Delta has shown one Magana invite how we look on privacy. Mayor. I'm just so his money lot of common between wanted Arturo. Had often with Pesci. I'm so glad has schema, Shapira ego or Nina being pretty directed. I wanted or Nina cream more than at Manulife Oshawa. Special Laham Sha Sha Wall blocking shots, stupid. Want to know Nina admits. Well, tonight are absolutely at Illinois..

Billy Dees Podcast
"oshawa" Discussed on Billy Dees Podcast
"This is my biggest regret and laugh. I said the biggest regret should been putting your hands on me and that was it. I turned around. And i walked away our lived my life now. My abuser thankfully. I'm sorry. I said that Fortunately for me mob mob user passed on some years back. Unfortunately he did you know pass on. I'm sorry i don't mean to help. But i don't. I'm not scared mom. I'm one of the blessed ones. I don't have to be scared either. Even if there was that part that was stuck in mahar. It's no longer there. Because i was given the ultimate freedom of him. Having a chance at me. I understand. And i i can feel your emotion when when when you talk about it and you know that's something here again. I the only people that would ever criticize. That are people who haven't been around it I i had for the most part of very good father however he did have. Ptsd and this was. He died in one thousand nine hundred three and this was before. Ptsd is as well known as it is now. And he had a lot of the pit bulls. He was very violent. Nine never hit me or my mother but he would get involved in fights very violent fights and he would wreck the house. I remember in. You could never predict what would set him off. I mean we get in trouble at school. He wouldn't say anything. You drop a fork at the table. He'd go through the roof and do it's living with that like i said he didn't hit me but looking back on it and knowing what i know now it did traumatizing. I i know that some of the problems i had in my twenties was because of that. Heart-stopping fear i felt it And when it's in your home you know your home is supposed to be a place of refuge. It's supposed to be a place of safety and When it's it's when it's when you're afraid to use the lame bids sick rather than call my parents for help because dealing with my dad's wasn't worth it you know and that same children shouldn't have to be brought up that way and my situation was not as bad as yours but i have. I have enough of it. That i have a good taste up on this thing with a stigma in. That's something that i talk about a lot. I always try to touch on it. And i think there's sometimes a stigma with women in regards to this situation You've probably encountered it. But it's more it's much larger with men and because of the fact that men are supposed to be strong And this applies to a lot of things here again getting back to mental health and a lot of other things men berry seldom as for help until it's until they're off the rails because they feel that it's a sign of weakness feel that it's a sign of You know they can't manage their their own emotions and so on and so forth. And what i always say. Is you know if you have trouble with your elbow. You go to the duck if you have trouble with your emotions or something with your mental health. You go to the doctor. You should not feel. I shouldn't do this because it says i'm weak. And this applies to domestic violence as well. A lot of men stay in bed situations because they don't want to admit to their friends to their family That they're being manipulated. And sometimes it's physical certainly Women can be. I would say a psychologically abusive and a little bit day. We will downgrade their manhood. Oshawa married somebody else. My mother always told me not to marry you. Although all these types of things can really break someone down Do you want to speak a little. Bit about the stigma of what men sometimes go through When it comes to domestic violence absolutely because what the sad part is you don't hear of any man domestic violent man shelters. I'll never have on. I had somebody say well. But women are the weaker now. Now you don't understand that it's not about leakers. Anybody control can control another person. I think it's obvious just in some of the different topics that are talk about on social media in other live. What socks so is it. Is that stigma. It takes a man's man. And i it makes it tears me up every time and i had you know i did one specific video and i will never forget. The guy that came on you know came on the comments. I ended up talking to them later on and on it. It was a you know it was. I put men who lay their hands on wall. Med and the song was Daddy's so proud house. Little girl turned out right so and he came on that kami and when he's said women aren't the only ones many told his story. I'm not even kidding. Jumped out of bed on now is half asleep in it happened. Because that's a bad light saying i fall asleep six but when he shared his story i told him and i'm still working with you because i do want him to really dive in the sigma is and this is what i wanted to raise. Men are not week because they had been beaten. Took the same crap that i did and i. I'm not week that. I need to gain understanding of my self confidence. I mean better gain. Understanding of what is not allowed in a relationship. Yes but that doesn't make me weak just like a man is not week if a woman laser hands automate as a matter of fact the woman that lays her hands on that man is the week one because she feels that she has to control him and believe me. I've come upon women create excetera like now but the numbers. I don't give a crap about the numbers. One man that is being beaten by woman is one man too many just the same as one woman is being beaten by man or woman and mind you. I don't wanna cut let me put it this way. Anybody who's being beaten on. Anybody is one person too many. That's the problem. We don't need to wake up and choose balance simple as that. I don't need hands on me for me to to be able to carry a conversation with anybody now. I'm gonna lay my hands on somebody if they laid their hands on. We don't get me wrong. I have built myself now. All but men should not have to feel like they cannot talk to someone or they cannot step out of a situation because of the way they're gonna be looked upon because that is what he people in relationships like that six. Oh well you you allowed him or you allowed her to place their hands on you know now it. It happened and we don't get away from it so i am very passionate about this. I am just as passionate about men stepping away as i am women. This isn't a decision. A gender specific economic socio. Anything specific this happens in the richest households in it happens in the poorest households it knows no caller boundaries. That is what i focus on is embracing the stigma around. I think the more educated people are. And i know i know sadly there still hating a world which means were still going to have marlins which means we can all ask for unicorns in clouds in all that could stocks and i know some people. Tell me it's a pipe dream. But here's how i see it the more aware we are a problem. The more apt were able to seeing go. Hey do you need health cannot you know. Is there something on to open that up that we can notice more. I'm a big advocate of And this isn't domestic balanced. That i'm not big out of cater of twenty two a day. Okay.

PRI's The World
"oshawa" Discussed on PRI's The World
"The colors are shiny and pretty. Can you describe these pictures. What we are in fact seeing and what is special about this. We were just blown away by these beautiful pictures of clouds on mars just for background. The sky of mars is really nothing to write home about usually. It's usually a pink void that we see above all the beautiful geology. but lately we've been seeing these incredibly beautiful shimmering clouds wispy clouds with all these different colors water. Mars is clouds made of. Why are they so colorful colorful. Because they're thin and they have a lot of ice particles that are rapidly growing and kind of the same size and this creates an effect almost like when you see a rainbow on oil spill on the grounds that it's just a need optical phenomena that makes these otherwise clear ice particles turn into a rainbow of colors. So what are those ice particles. Tell us i mean that suggests. There's water right. These clouds are either made of water ice or they're made of carbon dioxide ice. They may be so high in mars atmosphere that cold enough for carbon dioxide itself freeze forming clouds. What can these photos. Teach us about mars oshawa. Well you know other than just how beautiful they are. And it's so nice to have something above the rocks to look at They teach us about mars climate Just like on earth. The clouds play really important role in regulating the climate of mars and by understanding how and when water and carbon dioxide ice clouds form. We can understand the climate not only today but in the distant past when mars may have had a lot more water. What can you extrapolate about climate on earth based on what you're seeing in these pictures well. Clouds are really important regulator of the climate on earth. So one of the things that we really learned from studying other planets is the natural comparisons to the same kind of physics that we see on earth just different laboratories for the same experiment so.

KOMO
"oshawa" Discussed on KOMO
"5 44 Come on news time now. 5 36 The impeachment trial of former President Trump is set to begin February 8th. But today Senator Rand Paul forced to vote in which he and 44 other Republicans declared the trial and constitutional Comeau step Oshawa talk about it with ABC legal analyst Royal Oaks the first thought I had with this when it comes to the vote that was forced by Senator Rand Paul is the Senate has no power to declare anything unconstitutional. Isn't that right? That's correct of the Senate can have an opinion and act based on that. But you're right. They don't have the right of the power to declare, you know unconstitutional. I think What Senator Paul was trying to do is by getting this vote that shows that we have. It does go to a trial and there's a vote on conviction. It'll be lopsidedly below two thirds. So if these Republicans again vote essentially With to say, I'm not going to convict this former president. He was trying to send a message that this trial would be pointless. The Democrats, why don't you just drop it? And of course, the Democrats were having none of that They're able to prevail with the least a majority vote on these procedural matters. So now is you saying a lot of questions remain unanswered. Will Donald Trump show up? We'll even have lawyers to defend him. You got to think that that's in his DNA's gonna fight back. On the other hand. Some are urging him to say I'm not going to dignify this with the response. You go have your party Democrats. There won't be any other side because this trial is constitutionally flawed. There are legal questions, though, because we all know a president can be impeached. But what about a former president? Has there been any legal writings? Any precedent on this at all? Very little, absolutely nothing with respect to whether you may Put on trial of former president There is a precedent from the 18 sixties, Ulysses S. Grant's secretary of war quit and then, after he quit his job, he was tried by the Senate and convicted and so Democrats are pointing to that as a reason why it's okay to put a former president on trial as well. The Republicans have the common sense argument that may appeal to a lot of the public. Namely, why hold a trial to remove somebody from office if he's already gone, especially when there are some other things to be dealing with here in terms of the pandemic and getting the economy back on track. Republicans also say Look at the Nixon president. Nobody pushed to impeach or try him after he left the Democrats and saying, of course, well, he wasn't impeached while he was in office. And even if he had been, the Democrats would then have a choice to let it drop after he left office or not. But impeachment far more than just removal from office. It's also barring someone from serving in public office in the future. Isn't that true? Yeah, it's an intriguing part of the Constitution. What the Constitution says is the Senate has the power. First of all to convict somebody meaning you're out of office. He's already out. But they also have the power to disqualify somebody from ever holding federal office again and that in interestingly Probably only requires a majority vote, not the two thirds you need to convict somebody. And so if the Democrats somehow were able to convince 17 Republicans to vote to convict Trump Kicking him out of office, where he already was. They would then buy a bare majority Be able to say Trump may never run for president again. Is that going to fly? Would that be moved Sort of put him in the position of kind of being a martyr, and the public would rise up and object to this idea of the Senate, telling the voters who they may pick those air all unanswered questions. But whether it's these legal questions from the Democrats or the legal questions from the Republicans, it's not likely even if asked, the courts would step in because They're very reluctant to get involved in the internal processes of the legislative branch, aren't they? That's exactly right. And that's why if, for example, Donald Trump filed a lawsuit now or in the next couple of days in federal court, hoping it'd work up its way up to the U S Supreme Court, saying, Essentially, you may not put a former president on trial, he probably wouldn't get good news out of the court because the court, as you suggest, would very likely say. We're happy to deal with legal issues. This is a pretty clearly political issue, and we don't want to be in a position of denying the U. S. Senate the right to hold a trial when and how they want to hold it. S ABC legal analyst. Royal Oaks with Cuomo's Jeff Pooja Love for more on the conversation, subscribe to the Coma Political cast the politic cast available of common news dot com slash podcasts or on your favorite podcast AMP. Comeau News time. 5 40. Alright, Did Cooperstown open its doors to the New Hall of Famers Bill Swartz, with the answer at the Beacon Plumbing sports task, As the commercial says, How about knew for the first time since 2000 and 13 In the ninth time since voting began in 1936. No candidate reached the necessary 75% threshold for Election National Baseball Hall of Fame President Tim Mead announcing vote results from the Baseball Writers Association. Pitcher Curt Schilling came up 16 votes shy of getting in. There will still be an induction ceremony this summer for the class of 2020, Derek Jeter, Larry Walker and Ted Simmons. The late Great home run King Henry Aaron remembered today in a memorial ceremony in Atlanta..

ABC News Perspective
Jayson Tatum Tests Positive For COVID-19, Boston Celtics Injury Report Grows
"Continue for the Celtics, as multiple reports say that Star forward Jason Tatum has tested positive for the Corona virus, and we'll have to go into quarantine WBZ TV stand, Roach says The virus isn't the only issue that Caesar facing Mecca leave the team's bench looking pretty thin. Tomorrow night. Celtics. We're already short handed after three players will put on the covert list yesterday and now Jason Tatum will be joining them and have to quarantine for the next 10 to 14 days. Multiple reports saying that the All Star forward has tested positive for the coronavirus despite being a symptomatic. He is now awaiting confirmation of a second test but is out for the foreseeable future. Not good. And the Celtics by the way, just released their injury report for tomorrow's home game against Miami. Tatum is listed as doubtful, but also Jalen Brown, Chevy Oshawa and Davante Green all listed as questionable due to health and safety protocols. If they were all out that will leave Boston with just eight healthy players going into the game. And the Celtics take on the heat tomorrow night at the Garden tip is set for seven PM

Cindy Stumpo is Tough as Nails
Jayson Tatum Tests Positive For COVID-19, Boston Celtics Injury Report Grows
"And the Celtics by the way, just released their injury report for tomorrow's home game against Miami. Tatum is listed as doubtful, but also Jalen Brown, Chevy Oshawa and Davante Green all listed as questionable due to health and safety protocols. If they were all out that will leave Boston with just eight healthy players going into the game. The Celtics take on the heat tomorrow night at the Garden typist set for seven

ECO CHIC
What is Social Sustainability?
"Motivations for living ecoconscious lifestyle were pretty largely fuelled by climate change and climate action and environmental sustainability. Is kind of tricky. Let's first define it. Environmental sustainability can be pretty loosely defined as responsible interaction with the environment. Now what is responsible. That's different for different people but in my view environmental sustainability is conducting life in a way that inflicts minimal harm on the earth. And its natural resources now. I want to take a minute. Just acknowledge that. The word sustainability generally speaking. I think it's a little misleading because it truly just means the maintenance of an action sustainability when we look at like diet culture. Is your diet. Sustainable that means can you keep up with it. Indefinitely so sustainability is a weird word that we've attached to climate action because we don't actually want to sustain our society maintain business as usual. We want to do better. We want to decarbonise. We want to more aggressively achieve. Climate goals to ensure a stable planet so sustainability is really the bare minimum however in last year. We've really begun to open up the conversation around different kinds of sustainability and for good reason. I like to think about different kinds of sustainability kind of like circles that overlap in the middle of that ven diagram overlap. Portion can be environmental sustainability or perhaps more accurately when we're looking at society as a whole or community as a whole. we're looking at a pyramid. hierarchy of needs at the very base of that pyramid is social sustainability. Social sustainability is also pretty loosely defined because it manifest in a lot of other larger societal concerns essentially social sustainability looks at the societal structures in place that allow people to live healthy. Happy lives now. I know that sounds pretty big picture. But let's think about it. Social sustainability will look like things like equity diversity culture amenities so things like your social life type activities but also things like grocery stores job opportunities wellness and health safety community. engagement community. Engagement is one that i liked to talk about because a lot of climate action plans. Actually look at voter turnout looking at social sustainability because if people are active in their democracy. That's an indication that they care about where they live and they care about what's going to happen to it in the immediate future. If you really hide your pick of the litter it's not attractive to live somewhere with really severe inequity or really poor safety or no access to things like grocery stores. An area with these kinds of concerns would not be considered particularly socially sustainable because what incentive do people have to invest in communities that aren't actually invested in their own wellbeing and their livelihood hs. I mentioned job opportunities and someone out there may have perked up and like hey i think that might actually be economic. Sustainability economic sustainability is an interesting term because it can be both personal and societal. So for instance if you are buying a new car every year is that economically sustainable for you can you financially keep up with that but also is a society that relies on frivolous consumer spending economically sustainable. We saw this. During the pandemic people are generally more budget conscious and more inclined to save or maybe skip an extra non essential purchase. So how economically sustainable is it if there are entire industries relying on consumer spending. This is not necessarily saying that consumers shouldn't feel like they have to save a business. I'm talking about the necessity of consumers to spend on entire industries for their maintenance. So the example i'm thinking of is actually taxis about a year or so ago the daily which is the new york times daily. Podcast did a piece on taxis and taxi. Company had at the time opened up a suit against uber and ultimately there were some restrictions put on rideshare companies in new york city. But the bottom line. Was that a rideshare. Company was being seen as competition entering the marketplace. And it wasn't really on the city to protect taxis against consumer choice. That's the economy. That's supply and demand the model of taxis. Just waiting around wasn't economically sustainable. In that instance so the company is pivoted and maybe they lowered their rates or expanded their service areas or did something that allowed them to continue showing up as a worthy economic competitor. That's economic sustainability. Now let's go to job opportunities. Because i really liked this one. This again is a measure of social and economic sustainability. It is less attractive again to live somewhere without job opportunities or at least some reasonable access to job opportunities and public transportation to get you to those job opportunities and are those job opportunities reasonably profitable for you. Are people being paid fairly if someone needs to work two jobs to live somewhere. What does that say about minimum wage or the cost of living and favorite little sound line. One that i say all the time at work. And i've said it before on the show is that you cannot expect people to care about the solar panels. You're putting up in their neighborhood. If they can't pay their electric bill in the first place you are not meeting people's basic social and economic needs. They can't afford to care about the environment. Something we hear all the time when discussing healthy foods in sustainability and food access is the argument against fast food. So let's ask ourselves. Why do families by fast food on a weeknight for a meal. Well maybe it's preference. Maybe people just like it but also maybe it's time are they commuting and they don't have time to cook at home or is it budget because fast food is reasonably cheap when you're considering the cost of ingredients and groceries to make a comparable meal maybe it's access are they're reasonably good comparable options for them to eat out in their community or maybe they live in a food desert and don't have access good access to fresh produce and grocery stores if you're not addressing those issues of time and money and access who is going to listen to you when you're telling them that their hamburger requires the water equivalent of six months worth of showers or that a poor side cow lived their whole life in terrible. Awful slaughterhouse conditions. Just that they can enjoy a dollar menu hamburger. I mean maybe someone is going to be sympathetic in there. And say wow. I feel really bad. But that doesn't address their core issues of why they are choosing to make that decision in the first place that purchasing decision. Why are we not addressing the issue of time and money and access so another example. I wanted to skies which maybe a touchy one. But if you're listening to the show. I feel like i can reasonably assume that we share similar views on defunding. The police and the value in that studies have shown that an increase in active duty. Police officers does not have any significant impact on declining crime rates in an area. So let's talk crime. What types of situations may provoke someone to partake in crime. I don't know if that is the most correct wording but bear with me here. One thing that may drive someone to crime is money so let's talk. Money are their job. Opportunities are their job. Training programs for high schoolers are their educational opportunities and access to those training programs or transition programs and for people who are already working but just simply not making enough money. What does that say again about the minimum wage or how we value certain professions if the pandemic has taught us anything it's that the most essential workers in our society beyond of course our frontline healthcare are those employed in a trade or they're working in food food delivery they're cashiers or the people stocking the shelves. Oshawa barbara said this on our last episode when discussing the fashion industry if people at the top are billionaires and then the people at the bottom the garment maker is the people doing the most backbreaking work on the supply. Chain making pennies. That's a messed up system so bringing it back to crime. Let's get to the root issues. Let's address those social and economic concerns and issues that are driving people participate in it in the first place. Another fun fact. Random example that i learned in the classic city planning book. The death and life of american cities is that street lights and the length of city blocks are really good indicators of crime rates so if there is less light there's less opportunity for a nighttime crime. If you have a longer blocked have less alleyway less opportunity for crime outside of the public eye. And where do you have long blocks. And where do you have a lot of street lights in the suburbs. Not all the time course. But it's a good way to kind of guesstimate crime rates in an area when you think about a bad neighborhood quote unquote what do you think of its poorly lit. There's a lot of alleyways maybe in the scene that you're having in your head and that's also about city budgets and planning and money and time and access. So what are we funding instead of job training programs and education and social services that for these conditions to kind of perpetuate and kind of sink in to the societal structure in that community. So we've been talking about crime for while. But i would like to zoom out and bring this conversation back to the idea of social sustainability meaning that people's basic needs for living stable lives needs to be met before they have the privilege to care about climate change and environmental action and how their daily lives are impacting the planet. We can't tell everyone that amazon is bad and they need to stop shopping there without replacing that with a similarly low cost option or similar accessible option. What's getting to their house in two days are what's immediately available in their neighborhood. Ultimate social sustainability would be a society that conducts business and economic activities that protects both people and the planet when we're looking at environmental sustainability. We want to make sure that people have the means to care about it. Not just financially. I don't want to say that in order to be truly environmentally. Sustainable you need to be buying from. Environmental companies are environmentally backed companies. But that's to say that you have the capacity to care. You're not worried about larger more basic necessities to live stable healthy happy life. I also think this is a really good place to plug intersectional

The Amateur Traveler Podcast
Travel to Tbilisi and Eastern Georgia
"The traveler. I'm your host Chris. Christensen let's talk about Georgia. I like to welcome back to the show. Tomo and Mexi from food FUN TRAVEL DOT COM who've come to talk to us about the Republic of Georgia's we're gonNA start with intimacy and head east. Tomo it makes me welcome back to the show. Hey thanks as always glad to be on the shore tomorrow makes me Williams. I didn't say your last name. Yes that's not married since we love to see you thank you. I didn't mention that I think because I not used to referring you'd as the same last name and someone makes me. We're on the show once previously in Philippines wherever the Yucatan Mexico you could join. That's right that's right. The more recent episode we have on the Yucatan merita excellent will. Why are we talking about the Republic of Georgia well? We actually moved to Tbilisi about a year ago. It's our third time living here the second time where here. We got married here a few months after that we decided we actually wanted to live here permanently and now we do so. We used to live in Merida Mexico for a while. That's why we talked to you about that a couple of years ago and now we live Tbilisi so when you say permanently. This is permanently from the context of a travel blogger which means more than a couple of months. I think this is more permanent than decisions. Cassia already almost a year and we've got no intention of leaving at this point. And why should someone else come to the Republic of Georgia? I would say the main draw here is firstly. It's quite undiscovered. It's a little bit out of the way for most travelers but it's beginning a huge amount of press internationally recently especially because of the food and the wine. It is the birthplace of wine according to the most recent archaeological evidence. And but yeah and that's eight thousand years old eight thousand years ago. They found pottery stained with wine from eight thousand years ago so at a definitive evidence that it was actually going on. People were making wine and drinking wine interesting. And what kind of itenerary are you going to recommend for US? So obviously there will be some wine to try but there's also a lot of history here because we're right in the e east-meets-west sort of area. We are nestled between the Caspian Sea and Black Sea with Russia to the north and Turkey to the South West and on Mesnier and Azerbaijan to the south and the east. So there's been a huge influence of all these different coaches for the itinerary. We're GONNA start off in the capital Tiblisi and it is quite a big city with a lot of history so this was founded in the fifth century. Ad. So it has been around for a long time. There's lots of different things to see when you fly in on the first day the flights that come in from the US and via Turkey or quite early. Morning arrivals cold yes. So we'd say the first day that you'RE GONNA be here. It's probably going to be a solid half day of recovering and sleeping and then you have like a half day in the afternoon to go out and see some things and then enjoy the evening and then have a secondary Tiblisi. It's quite a fun city and there's a lot to do here day. Three we'd be heading east towards Kakheti. Which is the primary Wine Region? But of course it's also a very historic region that changed hands between different cultures the Persians Arabs. And of course the Jordan's at the moment firstly we'd be heading to the hill town. Well it's a mountain town of Cigna guy the city of La City of love actually a town. But it's very beautiful nestled on a little hilltop with views down the valley and towards the Caucasus Mountains in the distance the next day staying in the wine region and moving too quickly which is right down in the valley. It's like a very central part of the wine region down there where the river valley runs through where the river runs through the Amazon Valley is the name of the valley and then day five heading north through the valley towards to Lavi which is the capital of Kakheti region. Kakheti actually used to be an independent state for a while as well with separate from Georgia. Now it's integrated with Georgia Day six. We'll be heading back towards Tiblisi through Tiblisi. And then there's a number of important historic sites just north of Tiblisi which include the ancient capital before Tiblisi. Which is called mosquito and also hopeless. Which is an ancient cave town slightly to the west of mosquito and also towards. Gori which was the birthplace of Stalin. And this will wind in that area for people who are real wine lovers. You can have some different wine region. They different groups in different regions. Definitely thinks to explore and then heading back on the seventh day towards Tbilisi so that people can catch they're flying out or if people flying out of Kutaisi. Which is the other main airport then heading from gory towards Kutaisi. Which is about a three hour drive so this couple of flexible options bad us the refinery excellent and we'll go back through that in more detail so before we get into that we should say that although it may be undiscovered it's not undiscovered on amateur travellers to other episodes of the first one at least ten years ago and the second one more recently and so we'll put links to those in the show notes and Tillman makes me have listened to the most recent one of those two so some of the things that are mentioned in there they may skip over. We'll see how that works for time but you started us in Tiblisi. Yeah so let's talk about. Maybe doing a walking tour covers some of the attractions. A few of these mentioned in the previous episode. But it's definitely worth mentioning a few of them again just briefly so that people get a general feel for it. Yes I mean generally in Tiblisi. It's this really vibrant city to visit. You can go out almost any time of day or night. And they'll be people out and about doing stuff in a good wholesome way. There's like restaurants that are our opinion as Baas. The repin sort of dining really is a little bit anytime. A food and wine is exceptionally important. Culturally he'll and as I mentioned earlier. It is surrounded by all of these really strong cultures. But when you actually come to Georgia and come to Tbilisi you'll realize just how unique the culture is here as well so there are definitely influences from those other places but it is very very strongly George into the core. They have their own alphabet one of the unique alphabets of the world. Always done that. Okay so some people say that has some similarity to Amin but when you look at it really doesn't lie. The symbols of very very different says a completely unique alphabet and lots of unique words and the way people pronounce stuff tight is one of the hardest languages to learn. For sure will. In one of the things I've always had trouble with with Georgia in on the amateur travellers site is I take every country and I- lump it into a continent and Georgia. I have placed in Europe. But you look at a map and it looks like I don't know what I'm talking about. Yeah exactly I think Georgia in particular would consider themselves Europe and I think visiting. Here's a country. I also would just architecturally and culturally. I would consider it Europe as well definitely like Eastern Europe. But as you said if you look on a map would probably consider it to be Asia. I sometimes have a hard time putting my time zones in I can never find Tiblisi in a time when I'm changing from different countries. It's because it's always like nestled in Asia. But I think I would definitely say Europe and if we head straight south would get to Armenia Iran and Iraq and so Armenia. I would also be one of those that I would put in Europe culturally but Iran Iraq. I was certainly not Oshawa. John is just to the east and Turkeys just to the West. But it's the usual part of Turkey's eight is one of those as you say regions where cultures meet. Yes and I think at least from that perspective. It's because of the Orthodox religion right the Docs Christianity. I founded in Armenia in the fourth century or late third century century earlier than that. Armenia was the first Christian nation the first nation where Christianity became the main religion so it predates Rome becoming Christian in the three hundreds in Georgia was the second country they took on not too long after that. The estimate is somewhere between three nine three twenty six. Ad Different people have different opinions. And that was when Georgia took on the Orthodox religion poorly Al mentioned a little bit about that when we talk about some of the important attractions that relate to that a bit later on.

The Horse Racing Radio Network Podcast
Derby Hopeful Independence Hall Among The Horses 'Testing The Waters' Saturday At Tampa Bay
"Ocean night for Trainer Care McLaughlin stacking stamping himself as one of the top OP. Three roads in the country at that point is we know he would come back in the Tampa Bay. Derby things didn't go. According to plan that day he would be given a break and then continue on throughout the rest of his career but ocean night. Very very talented and Kieran back in the SAM. F Davis later this afternoon with Alisa. We'd who is another horse. That has a lot oughta talent and Karen with me now on the horse racing radio network here in good morning. Good Morning Mike how are you. I'm well my friend. How about yourself? Great Oshawa lead. This is a horse that you know has ability has shown it throughout his entire brief career. Last time out runner up behind shot ski in New York. Tell me a little bit about Asia. We where is he right now. He's on the van had into Tampa is A really nice big curling colts with Great Mind does everything right and he wants to distance of you know as far as they write the races because we feel like so. That's a good sign for going forward but Unlucky to lose Robson last time it came from well back doc just just missed came out of the race in good shape. I'm talking to Rick Nicholls. We weren't sure what we're going to run. But we're happy to get him back in the talk to that top. Yes it's interesting. You talk about the distance factor in hill as long as they can write the races he debuted at Saratoga. Last August. I at six furlongs. He was fifth that day kind of had an inside trip and then came back at a mile. You stretch them out and boy did he show his true colors that day. He drew rafter win by more than four lancs. Yeah that was a big effort. We knew wanted to go further. Most of the time horses improved. Second can start third start to. Hopefully he'll keep improving. We have to prove today to to beat this independence hall. He's very talented. So we'll see how it goes but we're ready to go. Have you gotten a chance to see independence hall in person. I did see Him I saw his hind feet kicking up The rams no that's wrong. Yeah so tough to the side of my cat is handful Craig job with the horse and these very talented very fast horse today. There's some speed hopefully entertained entertained similarly cross because we'll be well back making along that race track Kieran is different than a lot of surfaces. At least I've been told that Ah from your perspective is a guy who won more than fifteen hundred races in his career that that track at Tampa. Hi How would you describe it vary Sandy. Hi flays Nice job. Sometimes it can get a little bit speedy but today there's there's a lot of patient or raise so a horse going to get an uncontested lead is pretty fair track and the main thing is for us with his source. At this time it was either. Go Up for the withers servers. And you didn't want to go to Al Queda in on a deep hiring tracking them on eight. I start back this year. And and Holy Bull is Speed favoring short run into the stretch at Gulfstream so we didn't really want to that so so we we had to think about it but we side to go here to get started them. We'll we'll make plans after to go next but just this. Hopefully it works out for us. Yeah I was going to ask you. That question is is. You were mapping out his early season course here have you. Have you thought that far ahead is to if if things go well today. Do we stay there for the Tampa Bay. Derby do we go to New York if you really given it that much thought yet or you just get past today not too much but York we will well not do next one. Is the Gotham one mile so We could end up for the wooden Morio there but we have a lot of obsolete in Florida and Tampa so a lot of different options though this take it one day at a time so literally one one day at a time. We'll figure it out. How about the inside post position? Going a mile and a sixteenth at Tampa. Well it's okay It's fine because oncoming from off the pace yep in that one we'll say ground down inside and like I said there's a couple of really fast horses and we might find ourselves even last talks to last but Joel Ario the faster. They go further when I get back. But he's a great rider and times. He's moved well. This hopefully take time at a fast last talking trainer Care McLaughlin here on the horse racing radio network. Karen how do you. How do you approach approach in view these early season prep races? Well like I said we're just happy to get back to the racist. Get Him in a starting gate. Agai- you get a race under his belt and then we take it from there and just see where to go next but you just want to get back to the races and have a good performance. We don't I'll have to win today to still feel like we have a derby horse or of course point that way. It's three zero Tom. Years Great to have a nice. Oh so he'll tell us Where we go and how it goes you know we won't force the Derby on but hopefully takes US A? It's a great eight point and you and I talk well. It seems like every year. Now you and I have a chance to catch up in the spring a couple of times making your way down the road to the Kentucky Derby and that's a great position for you to be in because it means that you're getting live three year olds that are making their way toward the first Saturday in May Have you. Have you changed your approach or tweaked anything over the years in terms of trying to get a horse to peak on the first Saturday in May when you get there. I know how much you want to win it not not really no we We try putting much do the same thing we try to get there. It's a lot about the horse and And you you just hope that you do get there with a nice sound hoarse. And even the best shot to to get their win but We've run fourth three. He Times second once. It's a tough race to win but the price there a quarter of these days also I tell everybody that just to get a horse in the starting gate in our sport is a major accomplishment. And then if you're lucky enough to win a race any race. That's a huge accomplishment to get to the Kentucky Derby current put that in perspective for me. Yes it's very hard to get their twenty horses there and The prep race. It now become come very important because of the money behind them. Two million dollar racing to buy one billion dollars craps everywhere. It seems like so they're important to for a horse down. Nice China when some of these races and the Kentucky Derby the Kentucky Derby everybody everybody dreams about time to win it and It's great to have a horse to that. We think has a chance to get so often when we watch golfers was on the PGA tour. They'll talk about not looking at the leaderboard throughout the round the Kentucky Derby earning spot in the starting gate is based on points as it has been the past ask several years. Do you even pay attention to the points. As you're going down the road or use figure okay. If I got a good enough horse the points will take care of themselves. Yeah that's that's the way you have to look at is. The last crap is so important. And you don't want to run if you're not running well by that but I you know in April roller to you. You made all the points of those races so If the horses takes us there the points of will be earned and you know. We won't not door obviously. We're talking about obsolete because he's in the spotlight this afternoon in the grade. Three Sam f Davis but are there any other cure McLaughlin. Three year olds olds. We should be keeping an eye on. Well we only nominate one other one in that SPA city and he actually runs today and I made some a at Gulfstream and he was second last time and still Green Bay Colt by street cents out of Sarah Louisa. He's that we think he has a chance to to get there. Get his maiden broke today. We could possibly have a horse for the Derby. But it's you know he has to break his bait and that's take us there or the preakness or something or the Belmont. So he's He's a talented code. The only other coat with how he is as good as it gets he is trainer. Care McLaughlin here on the horse racing radio network here and always so generous with your time. I really appreciate it all the best with Odua this afternoon and go get it done. Thank you very much perhaps.

60-Second Science
Heat Loss to Night Sky Powers Off-Grid Lights
"This is scientific American sixty seconds science. I'm Suzanne barred switching on the lights at night. It's second nature feature to most people in the developed world but electricity isn't too given in many other parts of the globe something like a billion people on our planet still lack reliable access autrocities think about folks in parts of the developing world that are living in off grid locations and for them. One of the central applications of Electricity Chrissy is lighting and we need lighting the most at night. UCLA MATERIALS SCIENTISTS OSHAWA thrombin solar cells can provide remote wrote areas with electricity during the day but require batteries to store that energy for use at night. Rahman's team has developed a potential solution a simple pull thermoelectric device that generates power when it's exposed to the cool night sky it's made possible by phenomenon called Radiative Sky Cooling Rolling all objects Rahman explains radiate heat and so what that means from the perspective of service. That's looking up at the night. Sky Is Ebel all by itself set out more heat than the sky sends back to it that escapes to the upper atmosphere and even out to outer space and is something that anyone can observe observe at night so if you go and measure the roof temperature on your house in the early morning hours say you should read temperature that is much lower. Dante immediate ambient air temperature Roman reason that this temperature difference could be exploited to generate electricity. His team built their device using an aluminum luminous disk that acts is a radiative cooler. It's cool side faces. The night sky while it's other side is warmed by the air around it. As heat escapes apes upwards a thermoelectric generator converts the temperature difference into electricity that powers a small led light for now. The energy output of the device device is just a tiny fraction of a solar cell can produce but engineering improvements could eventually boost its performance. Rahman sees the devices a compliment to solar providing inexpensive twenty four hour power generation to remote areas of the world without the need for batteries. You can also think about say the polar regions where for several months of the year there is no sun at all so in those kinds of regions this might represent one of the few ways you can actually generate power naturally at night. The research is described in the journal jewel in addition to lighting. Rahman says the device could be useful for specialized applications such as powering wireless sensors and monitoring atmospheric conditions or it could be a really cool way to recharge your cell phone at night. Thanks for listening for scientific Americans sixty seconds science. I'm Suzanne Bard.

Rush Limbaugh
General Motors, Antero And Oshawa discussed on Rush Limbaugh
"Their General Motors in the union representing most of its auto workers in Canada have reached a deal to keep some of its Antero auto plant open the Oshawa plant was scheduled to close this year. Instead part of it will be converted to a part. Stamping factory location will be scaled back though, and will no longer produce

NPR's Business Story of the Day
Come Work For Us: We'll Help Pay Down Your Student Loans
"Support for this NPR podcast and the following message come from NBC's new drama the enemy within Erica shepherd betrayed her country. Now, she's the FBI's only hope in stopping America's greatest enemy. But can she be trusted Mondays beginning February twenty fifth on NBC the size of the average student loan has nearly doubled over the past decade or so collectively Americans carry more than one point five trillion dollars in student loan debt. And some employers are seeing that as an opportunity they're offering to help repay loans on workers behalf as a way to attract and keep their talent. NPR's? Yuki Noguchi reports carrier Brian graduated from college six years ago with a political science degree and twenty eight thousand dollars in student loans. It was stressful because coming out and having to have a a payment of about two hundred seventeen dollars a month. I it just seems like a lot of money to pay back when you don't really know where you're going to be working how much you're going to be making O'Brien. Now twenty-seven wanted to save for a home or a wedding, but loan payments were her biggest roadblock. I've wanted to be debt free before I got married and ideally come to the table with some savings, then a year and a half ago O'Brien joined Fidelity Investments in Irvine California to work in client relations. She was told that after six months, she'd be eligible to have the company contribute to our loan payments. So I quickly marked my calendar. I call my parents at night and told them how excited I was because I had no idea an employer would help you pay off your student loans such benefits are relatively new and unusual. Only four percent of employers surveyed by the society for human resource management offer it, but you can see why it's increasingly popular, especially as school loans, become a bigger shackle. Data suggests student debt is delaying or preventing people in their twenties and thirties from buying homes at the same time unemployment is low and skilled workers hard to find employers who pay down student loans or more attractive. Live especially to younger workers, Kim Wilem is managing partner at Baker Tilley's human resource consulting group millennial turnover is different than any other generation before. And if I'm able to recruit somebody based off this benefit and then retain them for twelve or twenty four months longer than I'm getting a reward out of that. There are possible downsides often if an employee lease before a certain amount of time, they must repay the money. But while him says that can backfire sometimes what we see is that an employee becomes disgruntled, and then they're working they're simply because they don't wanna have to repay. But many say the upside is big at fidelity, for example, more than a quarter of its worker signed up for the program, which is only three years old. It pays up to ten thousand dollars over five years. Oshawa shrieking Taya a vice president of fidelity says those who participate stay longer at the company for us really focusing on retaining those. People especially after we've invested in training them as a really important thing. The program success lead fidelity to now sell it as a service other employers can offer she train beer ball is director of congressional affairs for the site for human resource management. She says loan repayment would be more affordable to nonprofits and small businesses. If congress makes it tax free for employers and workers more employers might be able to offer student loan repayment as a benefit to their employees, even without the tax benefits. Some employers say, it's worthwhile Madeline Macintoshes CEO of penguin Random House, which started offering loan repayment two years ago. She says about ten percent of the publishing companies five thousand employees participate, including she says older people who returned to school or took out loans for kids. I feel like it has really of outsized, emotional or psychological benefits for employees. I feel like if they were ranking it this would be up there at the top. And I don't think it's the most expensive. It's. Cost the company about a million dollars to date, far less. She says than what it spends on health insurance. You can Gucci NPR news Washington support for this podcast and the following message. Come from Comcast business having the nation's largest gig speed network was just the start. Now, they're providing gig fueled apps and solutions that exceed expectations and help businesses perform Comcast business beyond fast.

Steve Scaffidi
Canada blindsided by GM closure
"General Motors, planning to lay off fourteen thousand workers here in the US. And Canada is part of what the automaker is calling restructuring move more from CBS news correspondent Bill Ryshkov GM workforce. Reductions will also affect Canada as the Oshawa assembly plant in Ottawa's slated for closure. Prime minister Justin Trudeau tweeted, the GM workers have been part of the heart and soul for Oshawa for generations. He says he spoke with GM's Mary Barra to express what he called his deep