21 Burst results for "Perelman"

"perelman" Discussed on The Big Picture

The Big Picture

05:30 min | 1 year ago

"perelman" Discussed on The Big Picture

"If you know what it feels like it reminded me of what Roy Scheider did in sorcerer, which is another movie that came out and it was on like every critics top ten list and it bombed horribly and it took years. For people to realize what a brilliant piece of work it was, it was also because it was the summer that Saturday night fever and Star Wars and smoking the bandit came out, which was the rise of concept cinema and big blockbuster stuff and he was making a difficult early 70s movie. Exactly. So this is gonna be one of those movies that will be reassessed, I think, in the exact same way. And again, every but again, and not to fault any of these performers, but everyone that's in the movie, you know, Toni Collette and Kate Blanchett and they always turn in amazing performances. So it's not as amazing as because you're like, well, yeah, of course they'll be great. It's a little bit like this isn't that incredible. And down the line too, like Mary Steenburgen Willem Dafoe. Ron Perlman, of course, in the del toro movie, David Strathairn. You've never said about any of those people like, oh, they actually weren't that good in that. They're not those kinds of actors. Yeah, well, straight there is the guy that even when he's in something shitty, you can just go, oh, okay, good. Good. I'll have there'll be some cool scenes with him. Okay, we're good. He's got he's so fucking good. Yeah, again, I still maintain that Perlman should have gotten an Academy Award nomination for hellboy because he was emoting under the thickest latex I've ever seen him and the fact that Eddie Murphy didn't get one for the clumps. 90 professor two where he's under 90 pounds of rubber and not only is he doing a dinner scene where he's 8 different characters interacting, he's riffing on them from stuff he did earlier in the week. It's some of the best acting I've ever seen. That's like a whole other episode of this show that I would love for you to come back for. What is the misunderstood and overlooked skills of acting that should be recognized? That's a great one. Perelman is great at that. Also prominent critical to this movie because he's the person I believe who put the book in del toro's hands. I think in the mid 90s, yeah, that's what I heard. So is this movie exist? Pretty good. I spent a long night with him in Vancouver one year when I was doing he was up there.

Kate Blanchett Roy Scheider Mary Steenburgen Willem Dafoe Toni Collette David Strathairn Ron Perlman Perlman hellboy Academy Award Eddie Murphy Perelman del toro Vancouver
"perelman" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:19 min | 1 year ago

"perelman" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Cream for breakfast Sounds like your son was a lucky kid The 43 year old Roman had a recurring role in Chicago justice and also appeared in empire and other shows NBC in LA says perelman didn't come home last Sunday and hadn't been seen or heard from since last weekend the manner of her death has not been disclosed I'm Scott Carr And I'm Susanna Palmer in the Bloomberg newsroom As we've been reporting senior U.S. and European ministers will meet today as tensions increase over Russia's military build up near Ukraine Investors this week we're watching the latest developments in Ukraine more corporate earnings reports and the fed's signaling on interest rates David Bianco is chief investment strategist at DWS investment management In our view is that the S&P 500 will eventually get to 5000 but we always pointed that it was not likely to be a 5000 in the first few quarters of 2022 We see signs of deceleration but we have yet to see signs of disinflation For the week the S&P 500 felt 1.6% to 43 49 the Dow fell 1.9% this week in the NASDAQ dropped 1.8% for the week Hundreds of thousands of people in the UK remained without power last night and widespread disruption to travel services continued into today in the wake of storm Eunice It comes as a clean up is set to begin after the storm brought damage disruption and record breaking gusts of wind to the UK and Ireland leading to the deaths of at least four people Bidding wars are a reality for New Yorkers flooding the rental market We get more about that from Bloomberg's Denise Pellegrini So it's been for a long time in hot markets in New York and elsewhere that buying the home of your dreams often involves getting sucked into a bidding war but now apartments are an increasingly scarce commodity Some people who left New York during the pandemic are moving back and those who stayed are looking for more space or that extra bedroom that they can turn into an office as they continue to work from home And other than those rent stabilized or rent controlled regulated apartments New York doesn't have any legal protections in place that would restrict rental bidding wars Denise Pellegrini Bloomberg radio Global news 24 hours a day on air and on Bloomberg quick take powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries I'm susannah Palmer This is Bloomberg.

Scott Carr Susanna Palmer David Bianco DWS investment management Ukraine perelman Bloomberg Denise Pellegrini UK NBC S Chicago LA Russia fed Eunice U.S.
"perelman" Discussed on The RCWR Show with Lee Sanders

The RCWR Show with Lee Sanders

08:08 min | 1 year ago

"perelman" Discussed on The RCWR Show with Lee Sanders

"Fucking respect normally when we're The way we end up usually getting to new jersey quick sidebar When we decide we wanna go to new york you know normally when we go up to new york. We like hanging up around New york city hanging around times square. And all that and you know normally will make a nice little pitstop to new jersey because normally we drive. We'll drive from dc. And you know we don't do the just straight out we'll just go up to a certain point and will pretty much go into new jersey and usually will kind of spend half the day out there and all that in the people are nice you know some of the neighborhoods that we've been in you know all right New jersey's got some decent some decent. Carry out. I'll give them that. I'll definitely give them that a lot. Better than some parts. Here in the dmv. I will definitely give them that their carry out in new jersey there carry out his bomb. Find yourself the right type of chinese takeout in new jersey. You're a fan of crabbe. Zooms nuff said nuff said but yeah new jersey again bass tonight. I felt bad for you. Guys sirs i felt bad for you guys but jail having fun with jersey. Him jersey shore skanks talked about some of the words that he had to say to Melanie perelman or as he called her Metheny you get it. Yeah that was just but he Apparently was doubling down on the words that he put out there last week as there were a law. The folks that went to social media filling as though. Mj yell went too far. And you know we talked about this too. We talked about this on last week. Show and i gave 'em j. f. his props if you guys recall and i gotta give mad mad props to tony kahn and crew. Because tony kahn in crew they realize what they have here on their hands with him. J. off and the last thing you want to be doing is handcuffing. This young man from doing white he does bass which is all about working up. The people getting them soul burned up getting them so fueled with anger and man. Tonight was a prime example of just. How much mj f. has the fans eating out of the palm of his hand as the fans were actually channing. You know i'm not gonna say because i'm trying to you know kinda take it easy on curse words there. I'm trying to give myself limit of like you know five show for curse words just self challenge to myself but the fans are chanting f-few im- j. f. Mean ceremoniously just felt like you're at a concert and everybody is just want to three f. u. n. j. f. a. Few nj f right fucking beat song at there you go. There's there's there's my Would probably my second curse words there. But you get the point that i'm making right so that was that was pretty bad ass But he took shots at brian pill. Perelman's dad Wow i mean he just really really went to town. They're promising that you know in queens. He was gonna massacre the hell out of brian. pullman and Brian film and comes out afterwards. Junior junior comes out afterwards. You know. I i can't help. Wonder when do we stop calling junior junior and we just call them just by the last name. I wonder when you do that. 'cause i can't help with think about One of my favorite actors lou. Cheney and i remember lou cheney junior. I'm not talking about dick. Cheney people and You got this is a case where here where you really have to know your movies and and all that shit. But i'm talking about the guy that was The werewolf for A couple of movies there I think is lou cheney. I'm almost yeah. I'm almost certain that it's That is lou. Cheney that was the werewolf see now. I gotta look that up. Because i think putting out there the The wrong last name. But i remember after a while and when he was first introduced in his movie career he was junior even though he was cheney lou. Chaney yeah yeah lou cheney and lou cheney junior junior is the one. I'm talking about junior. The one that went on and He had did where wolf he was. Count l. card Which pretty much was dracula. Spelled backwards. He did the son of dracula. He did the Ghost of frankenstein. lucina junior. And i remember watching his career when he was a young man. You know he wasn't in his by my recollection. He wasn't in his twenties. I don't think when he was finally doing thing as an actor. I think he was probably in his early thirties. And those kind of weird because it was like okay. How long is this guy. Gonna continue to be junior but then like after a while you know Junior park just drops. I can't help wonder when his junior gonna drop from from film in there. I don't know guys. I just think about random shit like that. You guys got to forgive me. I know you kinda like move along already. I but i mean as the song my brain is clicking but bryant junior comes out and he's ready to just beat the living gebes out of 'em j. f. e. hear his music come on. Mj of his anticipating this he sends wore low to intercept pill at the top of the stage will little does he know pelmet actually comes from behind and he's got a steel chair in han he's getting ready to clobber the hell out of. Mj af- mj. Off escapes barely as warlock manages to give back into the ring and time injury f- escapes but now pill minhas faced off against wardlow warrilow grabs that still chair and film and really didn't want any peace of warrilow but ye very much just bitch slap the hell out of him. War low standing there took it like a man start. Charging adam like bulldog An pretty much pill and sends him over the top rope. Scrap steel chair. Both guys don't want none. That pretty much was the end of that. So nice little setup that we got going into next. Wednesday's dynamite at the arthur ashe stadium as we're going to be seeing these heads collide and everything i saw. All of that was set up. Good if i have one bone to pick with a w. tonight in regards to how everything was laid out of what we talked about. Its thaddeus immediately after that we go right into a sit down interview. That jim ross had with brian in junior. That was very odd. And i want to explain to you why that was a bit odd for me and i don't know oop sorry about that guys and i don't know if you guys have picked up on that but it was odd for me because wait a minute. Wait a minute when we come back to dynamite. We really should be opening up with jim. Ross brian pill interview here. Brian pullman thoughts. Then let's go.

new jersey lou cheney tony kahn Melanie perelman Cheney brian pill new york crabbe skanks nuff Metheny times square jersey shore cheney lou lou lucina channing New york city Perelman dc
"perelman" Discussed on The Wade Keller Pro Wrestling Podcast

The Wade Keller Pro Wrestling Podcast

09:05 min | 1 year ago

"perelman" Discussed on The Wade Keller Pro Wrestling Podcast

"Sober rampage. From friday night they opened on broadway and pack up pretty showcase matcher when fourteen minutes under wins and then chabot afterwards. The i thought it was very good. I thought they really developed devout They really delivered a actualize I think it's going to help andrade now that he's Delivers first kick ass match in. Aws and pop pretty much always comes. Rachel matches. I think people know pox really good but i think he's kind of underappreciated in terms of just how good he is not a fan of theater so don't mind the heels cheating to win but Aws's finishes with like interference distractions have just ended fuel farcical and a they don't really fit with. I think what's going on in in. aws general. So i i feel like if they wanted to heal finishes just have i would rather they just do it. In a way that feels more organic like pulling out of his tights and lacking the die with it or you know you know something like that rather than the you know. The guy runs out of the referee immediately. Turns over somebody else side and you know. It's sort of salinas to it. All i was confused watching it by the attack on shiloh afterwards but then i heard the speculation about andreotti joining up ric flair ago. Okay that makes total sense As a scenario in terms of what they do also or reason for why they bring in chapel apparently rhythm so quickly. Yeah yup right. Then turbulent stink in their promo which i think it was a very good promo by darby even by his standards. I did the anglo. Afterwards was Was Then brubaker rebel taming hater against home. They also had a little short vignette before this and discussed before senators like whatever state a short vignette. But i thought this little thing with danielson was just perfect. You know he was. He's compelling he seems so motivated and likable and fired up. Who's just a short period of time. But by just in that short period of time as i want to see this guy fight everybody and you know i hate to compare it to punk. Because you know. I've been a bit panel fan upon for you know really longtime but there's such a contrast between watching punk who just just sorta seems happy to be there. And then danielson who seems like he's been locked in isolation for a year and he's out of his mind and he's ready to go to war with every wanting to prove himself and like the latter is just so much more compelling from a television standpoint and Danielson is really really been a strong. I think you know going into this. I you know as we talked we talked about. We did our thing. We're talking with whether you rather have poker. Danielson we both want with punk the majority of you was danielson and if we could do it right now enjoyed the tribu on. I went to yeah totally. I think there was more curiosity to see punk for his first appearance in you know just because he's been gone so long but i mean everything you just said about that segment. I fell to. I mean i love the one. I'm here i'm game. Let's go like it's just like you. Just you're like all right. I'm excited daniel. Dana says excited. I'm excited. Let's see what he's got in mind as opposed to punk restaurant wants unsettling go ahead and compared to punk where i mean. I just wanna hear him anymore. Say i just not sure if. I still have it you know. I'm not sure on. Still good i i. I don't know if i can compete with these guys like i just the. Aw shucks punk. That's not what his character is. All about this is authentic. You know daniel bryan bryan danielson right now and and so you know definitely in the short run. I'm well i've had to pick. Yeah i'd take danielson right now. In a second over pumpkin spice she goes just punk ended up not making a huge difference in the ratings in a sustained way it was just kind of a one off. So where daniels. If he's going to be like this every week he's going to be more valuable over time. Art then what you think call. By the way he had a little soundbite right before the guy yep all right then. Denver baker rebel and jamie interest. Be so i think professional wrestling gentleman. We got a good talker. Yes yep He keeps ignoring anderson and gallows in his praise for for the eight version of the elite though sh- but he's not as prime that's exciting. That's a shot taken it danielson punk to. I'm not going to repeat them again. The the women's six we've six women the trails. We'll we'll do that on. I thought it was a little unruly times. But okay overall and you know the right logical finished then. Arcane introduced the segment in too much else instead enough talking. It's time to meet him at as usual to set makassar and brian. poma junior. What you think of maximum. I thought it was okay at best I think they both have their positives. But they're green in different ways and I mean certainly not just shown ohio so they wanted to give a win there. But these guys didn't seem ready for television native at on a roster that's as talented as aws australia's but you're the moxie save and pelmeni moxie salad by the shot. That was a cool finish to the show. And hopefully even if it doesn't make it in a big way terribly bullish on perelman he can be. I think a local favourite here and out for you know sometime. The common sort of a A film initiative amid car baby-faced from timing. And maybe a bit. I'm on komen. Seems like somebody who fans will like as long as he's not over pushed If it feels like he's being over push. I think they could push back. Push back on him because he's not he's not top level. At least not yet. I don't know if you've ever charisma that. But he's he's he's fine. Have run the Castro he ought to protect him in tag matches with anthony. Bowen's because i just thought in this match which is not not good and like i mean not good enough to be of a singles main event wrestler right now at his with his athleticism and and what how we executed what he chose to do. Agree although i will add is a bit of defense like he'd been offered a while he's in this high profile situation. There may be an element of nurse as well. So you know. Perhaps he could delivered a little bit better if you know if he were more comfortable and that sort of situation which he hasn't been in that much quite frankly right yep all right anything else rampage. All right so we'll We'll just stay with. Aws jumped to last night's episode of dynamite Also known as countdown to arthur ash stadium of next week or next wednesday they opened with a german excitedly. Introducing the show he jerus- happy. Jr this week heard. Vincent man was very happy on ron monday. Jarrett was kind of competing with him. He was one of those positive mood swings for him and it seem came out and did a stage dive and then joined in color commentary. One get on. Tv in to as a setup for the powerhouse obstacle later and then he did competition for the coal frankie kazarian match any thoughts. Todd on on cole's debut and commentary. I didn't think punk commentary stood out that much to me. you know. he's the guide he's been good in contrary in the past so I think he's he's good in that sort of raw. But it's the same thing we've talked to form. You've got these four people booth that sort of becoming a common thing. It's harder for anyone to stand out that much in in that set. And if they do it's it's often for bad reasons than for good reasons. I thought the kazarian match with a pretty good start to show that a pretty good match. Coal obviously very over again as a as a baby face a lot of people. But that's sort of dealt with him and just getting a winter to kick things off i da punk saying if you've got a problem jungle boy. Chances are your the problem in response to col- Challenging them to match next week punks getting to know the wrestlers and they tell you when that is an easy call there. It's mike mcmahon from the all elite after show every week andrew so check and i breakdown eighty w on our free w torch podcast..

danielson andreotti Danielson chabot daniel bryan bryan danielson andrade ric flair baker rebel brubaker salinas shiloh poma darby Rachel makassar Dana daniels daniel perelman wrestling
"perelman" Discussed on The Loudini Rock and Roll Circus

The Loudini Rock and Roll Circus

04:13 min | 1 year ago

"perelman" Discussed on The Loudini Rock and Roll Circus

"A little spacey wrote for a studio production rather than a live performance recording for four versions one with a female chorus at the low by to with recorded his first two albums he moved to hire studio to finish it refusing to release it until was just right. Just like that and you know clark. Make sure it's really nice Alan clarke from the holidays was the first to cover band around releasing it a few months after springsteen others cover it including suzy quattro. Joey tempest the liner notes to his greatest hits album wrote my shot at the title. A twenty four year old kid aiming at the greatest rock and roll record ever. I think you hit my my friend now. Many springsteen songs a mentioned girls by name and this one. The heroin is wendy He says that these perelman's are composites of different women. He's known throughout his life. Despite what writers do they write one what they know. Chose this owl as the album title after rejecting several other names including warren roses hungry and the hunted american summer and sometimes at night so those are all possible album. Titles for born to run interesting interesting Highway nine refers to route nine in new jersey which went through springsteen's hometown. Amusement park sings these about in the line beyond the palace hemi powered drone screamed down. The boulevard is listed as new jersey register of historic places Anyway so Because there's a gazillion things about this. We could talk a whole podcast. Probably just on this song in sees row. Quick this is kind of a fun fact. That season five An an episode sopranos the character christopher quotes the song saying he was late because the highways jam with broken rose. Last chance power. This song is so quotable and has. Probably i love bob dylan. I love tom. Tom petty lives so many songwriters. But i think this song kind of synthesizes. What like america and rock and roll are all about And if i had to go out. And sh- tip. I go out to the song. It's a great song. So that's my pick born to run by by the bush that boss you. You had mentioned that. He had gone through a couple of different versions a song. I've actually heard if you the versions and it's almost there. It's almost there when you go back and listen to what he finally came up with your like boom. Yeah you go. that's that's how you have to do. That's what like writing changes. Now put that over the next. You know i mean and that's what happens with great movies. We love and the great music. of course. there's a kind of editing process of lee now. But i like that. That's how it goes. He was in danger of being dropped by the record label yet. He didn't do his either. Other records are really a greedy park. darkness on the town are really rain. Franken records but you know how these record label looking for like back in the day. They don't want million in the cellar. Happy right yeah. So anyways Who's next would be me. So my next pick is the foo fighters the pretender. Good one. yes yes he always gives me. Yes just have to say your for the record. Your i bothers me dave. Grohl know that there's an amazing hugely famous song by jackson. Browne called the pretender. Does he even aware of that. I'm sure he is. I'm that can't be right. Scenario like donnie iris. Song to now you're wrong. What's in this bottle. You've been feeding anyway so the pretender again a hard hitting very fast paced song..

springsteen suzy quattro Joey tempest warren roses Alan clarke spacey perelman new jersey clark wendy Amusement park Tom petty bob dylan christopher tom bush america Franken lee Grohl
"perelman" Discussed on GSMC Fantasy Football Podcast

GSMC Fantasy Football Podcast

05:45 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on GSMC Fantasy Football Podcast

"And we're back here on the gs mc fantasy football podcast for the third segment of today's show. I'm going to be doing my position. Rankings for the teams in the nfc north regarding fantasy. So let's get right into that so starting off the team. That finished in last place last year. The detroit lions and the lions have gone through a lot of changes. They now have a new quarterback. Jared goff they did the trade with the rams. The swapped quarterback stafford going to the rams and golf going to the lions. Have a new head coach. They lost some firepower on offense with in regards to marvin jones and kenny golladay. So this is going to be a different team this upcoming season and they're not going to do very good this year. They're going to be a rebuild. Though i like. I've been saying over the past couple of weeks. I do like the dan campbell signing a lot more each day and i feel like he definitely is going to provide the culture. Change that the lions do need. But i think they are going to be in a rebuild. So yeah so looking at the position ranking so i'd probably have to put their defense last. I think a lot of people of course are going to stay away from their defense. Of course they do have some playmaker young players that you know we're going to continue to develop and hopefully get better for this rebuild but i think that you know the defense is going to be one of the worst in the league. Probably so say their defense is probably going to be a last in terms of the position. Rankings regarding fantasy. So then after that i would probably have to say. It is the quarterback position and it. It really has to do with. Jared goff now. Jared goff has proven to be a solid quarterback in the nfl. But that is in large part to do what he's had to surround him with. You know he's had sean mcveigh's head. Coach said a great offensive line. A great running game with todd gurley for the first couple years of his career. And then you had robert woodson cooper cop you know as well and you had some good tight ends to so now you go into a situation where you don't have that you have a weaker offensive line. The andrea swift is a good player. And jamaal williams. You know what i think. He's going to do well in his role to so they got a nice little bit of a one to punch their You know but the wide receivers. I mean persad perelman and tyrone williams is definitely a downgrade from especially since daryl williams was injured for the whole year last year. You know. it's definitely a downgrade from cooper robert woods and of course they did draft the wide receiver seeing brown. So they do have that. But you know they also do have tj hodkinson. But it's just. It's not the same. And i think jared goff is going to struggle. I am hoping that he. I am pulling for him this year. I really hope that he does well in his role. But i just don't think he is. But we'll have to wayne say so then after the quarterback spot i'm going to have to put their wide receivers. I just feel like you know again. The wide receivers it. It's very spotty tyrone williams you know in twenty in twenty nine thousand nine was pretty. Good with the raiders You know so. I think you definitely help out the receiving core and think rashad. He can help out as well. But i i just don't think they're going to have. The same level of impact is more of jones. Kenny golladay would in this offense. And especially because i don't think jared goff is going to have the level protection protection that he had in l. a. And we've seen how jared goff is when he's under pressure and he is really bad. He could be really bad at times so i like that. That's what's going to be the problem and you know. They draft pennies sewell. You know and that's definitely going to help but how much is going to help really You because again. Jared goff is not a good quarterback under pressure. You know so if the offensive line holds up then it's a different story but you know i just feel like that's gonna really hurt this offense. A lot is because jared goff is not under pressure so yeah the receivers and then i would say tj hodkinson would come next. I just feel like he's going to be the top target in this offense. I i feel like jared goff you know when he has a good tight ends you. That's a security blanket and we saw that with higby and gerald and tj. Hopkinson is a very talented tight end. And i feel like because he's really the established player on this offense one of the few established players on this offense because there's a lot of new pieces coming in you know i. I just feel like you know. Jared goff is gonna find him as a security blanket and he's going to be his top target so i i would probably put him at number two in terms of position. Rankings tight end spot then. I would say the running backs. I would say you know because you bringing in now jamal williams as i said i think it's a you know an underage combo between him and swift. You know in swift. When he was healthy he produced. You know he. He definitely produce at times in know. So i definitely think those guys you know they can be productive and they will probably be the best position group in terms of fantasy you know out of the rest on their teams because they i think they will generate the most points you know because the wide receivers are going to be inconsistent golfers. I think not going to be that. Good this year but will say and you know hopkinson. I think it's going to be the top target. So you know we'll we'll see what happens. But yeah that's my position. Rankings regarding fantasy for the detroit lions so moving onto the next team team that finished in third place last year. Was the minnesota vikings now. I expect the vikings to be a much better team this year. I think there's no question about it. So i would see the tight end. Spot is going to be coming last in terms of the position rankings. Now i think earth smith junior is going to be an underrated sleeper going into the draft. You know for fantasy in. Oh i definitely think he could be possibly the number three option you know. Now the vikings they did bring in dede westbrook so maybe that kind of changes things a little bit. But now the kyle rudolph is no longer there. Smith junior is the guy tight end. And i and i think he's definitely going to increase in value..

Jared goff jared goff tyrone williams lions tj hodkinson marvin jones kenny golladay dan campbell rams sean mcveigh todd gurley robert woodson cooper andrea swift jamaal williams persad perelman daryl williams cooper robert woods detroit lions Kenny golladay nfc
"perelman" Discussed on PodcastMina

PodcastMina

04:56 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on PodcastMina

"Tonga. It'll rainy recall our family but can Upon them and get them a day bitch. Muhammed with here The mom means look at the the. The family out moved up way up the them. Insulin selena as young capability with something behind me Mukasey mukasey mur were lying lightly. Get the huddle who multiple receptor ventura celebrity to do more. Cut it up Collecting alexia the up on top up on a miami one. You'd wanna get up hostility padang alabama the the internal colangelo. Big were backup. I'm walking zone. Comedian conformance about ruth. Capable of repetition of inseparability. Mom and also muggy hasn't above the smog. it's not our guys aren't even the joe neon failing to do monday and failing information with a Here mollering who might be looking at the. Who'd get the selective okay. Yeah yeah so. Come in newcastle buses pamela. Up money into jack ma You remember when you the me in me herreid moved you get nothing. You need young Apple martini and and Hassle at how progress three thousand three hundred thirty unique. Amy the nfl co hustle by lindell upon among the colombian invite you get and para a lot of somebody can lean perelman made seeing him about advocacy in the us. The come on come on in our. Get the house mega books from within your relies on audible at the use of the on the by moving south through lebanon out there saying that mcconnell the side of the son of national minimum put my research said we give them with joan at funds to area hustle. Hustle.

Insulin selena Mukasey mukasey joe neon Tonga Muhammed jack ma colangelo alexia ventura alabama miami ruth pamela newcastle lindell perelman Amy Apple nfl lebanon
"perelman" Discussed on In the News with Mike Dakkak

In the News with Mike Dakkak

03:57 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on In the News with Mike Dakkak

"All. Right welcome back everybody. Our august for this hour as mike doc. California california -cation in the news. Now let me tell you a little bit more about him. I start a while ago in two thousand thirteen. Mike found it in the news. It's a website the del beyond the headlines to be well of the bought and paid for mainstream research media science and investigative journalism can be a lot like any type of enlightening studies with journey came a life changing conversion on his own road from dem's to damascus so to speak after observing the highly orchestrated assault on president. Donald trump's character and effectiveness during his. Two thousand sixteen transitioned office. Mike realized that coerced falsehoods and exaggerations. Were being weaponized against him. That's when the first frivolous foray of impeachment process was launched against president trump and my quickly observed that politics aside the same man he'd seen accomplish greatness and building skyscrapers in developing real estate and prestige branding with his own hometown was simply being unduly vilified for political sport. Big tech mainstream media and they're highly sensationalized. Exaggerations were showing themselves to be outright desires and propaganda machines and are still course of tools in the hands of destructive people people who are simply more intent on character assassination than allowing an accomplished builder and developer. Successfully do for america what he'd already done many times over for his own hometown many times in the business world much courtroom strategy when some opponents can't find fault in one's accomplishments in case they will falsely create smear and projects onto others and the world around them one last little bit presently amidst other things. Mike has become diligently engrossed in uncovering. What's considered to be ground zero for the vaccine passport. Rollout beta test taking place in orange county california every government project from atomic warfare to biological warfare as had its testing grounds amongst the early covid rhetoric stating in the msn. That this passport conspiracy would never occur. There are many other predicted and not so surprising concerns emerging in the golden state. A place that has now devolved to become the gold standard for socialist schemes democrat. Deception pelosi's perelman's newsome's no w. and general communist convergence. Well beautiful california. Well it's a good thing that got my doc on their side and we welcome him to care about midnights arc. Midnight six elements right now. Thanks for coming on tonight. Good to have you always a pleasure how you doing. I'm doing okay. i'm doing okay how we have. We spoke on april twentieth. That hitler's birthday well earlier. This year. fortunate date in some ways for some people the reason for celebration for others but we don't know any of them that's for sure What why don't we start here. You know a lot of people have joined the the programs. I became aware. Say that's the that's that's the guy that used to be on coast years ago. Yeah and so. They're listed now. So what about your personal shift of consciousness and conversion you around all these liberals the talking politics the other young people at the coffee houses. I mean the whole really traditional liberal Immersion then what happened. Well then january. Twenty twenty rolls around and You know i'm watching the mainstream media coverage of this sham impeachment. That's taking place. This was the first impeachment about the the phone call to ukraine. Remember this quid. Pro quo I'm sitting there. And i'm watching this and something like a a a splinter in my mind. I'm like something about this is just. It's not right and they're trying to make. It seem as melodramatic as possible..

mike doc president trump Mike california Donald trump damascus dem California perelman newsome orange county pelosi america hitler ukraine
"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

The Glossy Beauty Podcast

05:47 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

"Just because you are one of the biggest beauty companies in the world but you have this heritage that just people need to be reminded about. I don't know if it's more difficult to be reminding people about something or doing it for the first time right. I think it's all work. It is all work and it's all an incredible opportunity whether you're starting out as a new brand or whether you're in a position where i am where i have these incredible iconic brands and and modernizing them right now go back to the the timeliness of the brands. I think it really comes down to being driven by you. Know the people who were stewarding The brands and the companies and the passion that they have for the industry and making the change. They want to see happen but at the end of the day. We're all trying to do the same thing. In terms of bring products to market that can really inspire the consumer that can have that connection..

"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

The Glossy Beauty Podcast

02:16 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

"Really important to continue to think of the channels holistically right. As we approach the consumer was also interesting right in when you look at the mortar channel as how much of these channels have really started to blur. So the lines between prestige and mass dis and the lines between mass seige and mass Have have really started to blur and from my standpoint. I think about time. Because i keep on going back to the consumer you're a consumer and as a consumer. I don't think i'm going going to shop in mass dis today. I'm going to shop in department store. Tomorrow i think about. Where do i want to have an experience in my products. And now we're able through some of this blurring in the beauty industry to really address that for the consumer. I think it's a really exciting time to see that happen. Absolutely i mean. I think you're right. I mean you know alta going into target and you know sephora going to kohl's and just even everybody buying on amazon you know this last year and wanting it in a second at their home you know. I think that Preciousness almost has been eliminated. I'm wondering you know like it. In a way like it almost seems like especially for mass is really benefited. You know mass. Because there is that digital component and there is that it's almost like it's just as good. We're reminding customers it's just as good. Do you think that that's definitely the case for some of your brands like like a revlon which is found in you know in an alto or an target i i think the mass channel is very important to the consumer when you look at the size and scale of the mass retailers in the us as well as you know around the world it has a real impact on the consumer both in store as well as digitally and retailers. You know in the mass channel whether pure plays or Pureplays from any commerce standpoint as well as those who have an omni channel experience a really able to move the needle when it comes to an industry.

sephora alta kohl amazon us
"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

The Glossy Beauty Podcast

04:54 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

"Own and w i think i would be remiss not to bring this up but you are one of the very few. Ceo's who was female at a beauty company..

"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

The Glossy Beauty Podcast

02:14 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

"Or whether it was through third party retailers is dedicating those pods i e commerce and now what we've been able to do is now dedicate pods to our product development with specific Hubs with skin care and color cosmetics and others as well as in terms of marketing and global marketing and really leveraging the bit cross functional capabilities to drive the change in the organization as well as how we go to market a second ago. You mentioned how you kind of came back to the company. I believe that it was two thousand and ten to lead the digital transformation back then. I'm wondering what kind of lessons you may have learned back then or what's parallel to that situation. Because you know. I think this past year must have been so much more of a quicker kind of turnaround and kind of A little bit more. You probably lead on those lessons but probably had so many more to learn. Definitely more to learn so i did come back in two thousand seventeen and even then from then until now there has been so much more to learn because they're new platforms. That have come up but what i would say is really a change that myself and the leadership team have been driving towards is having the company support the change and the acceleration so instead of it always being top down really having a bottoms up approach in terms of upskilling or employees for digital training as well as it having be top of mind in terms of business in business tracking as well as ensuring that this channel is where we are getting to know the consumer better so this channel enables us to have a two way discussion with the consumer that we're not able to have in other channels so all of that combined in terms of learning the learnings internally as well as being able to bring the external learnings to us has really been a shift with how we've worked even in the last three years since i've been there something that's used to be like very much of a through line is theme of empowerment and really allowing the employees to.

"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

The Glossy Beauty Podcast

03:48 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

"With me. Today is the ceo of revlon debbie perlman. Welcome debbie with so wonderful to have you here. Thank you pre. It's great to be here. Thank you so much for inviting me to join the podcast today. Debbie you know. I think it's must've been such an amazing but also challenging year for you. I mean you're the ceo this major beauty company and it's in such a tumultuous year but our year of innovation. Tell us a little bit about what it's been like for you both personally and professionally as such a great question in frankly so pertinent to the time today. So thank you for asking that note. I i think it's really helpful for me to take a step back and really just give some of my own background and what it means for me to be within the beauty industry. Because i think a lot of people don't know that and it's really important to me and it really is one of my true passions. I mean beauty and the beauty business has always been a very big part of my life Since i was a little kid. I've been always interested in beauty. I remember my first lipsticks which happened to be revlon. Super lustrous lipstick silver city pink and toast of new york for anyone who remember those shades. Those are the the best shades on me to pulling clips you know. Pr clips from when i was in high school and that was really looking at at the time it was. You know sitting with magazines and a pair of scissors and really looking at linking beauty and culture and celebrities and tracking the impact. That beauty brands had on culture and leading into my first job outside of college. Which was at revlon where i was able to join a rotational program with the goal of really understanding how to take a beauty product concept to market execution and ultimately success. And i was able to do that for a number of years and then came back after business school into marketing on the almazo brand as an assistant product manager which is still hold a special place for me out. Al may brand which led me into a career marketing and ultimately to returning to the company. Two thousand seven to lead a digital transformation and moving into the ceo role in two thousand eighteen and not only is the beauty business in revlon so important to me but the emotional connection that beauty has with me with probably you with each and every consumer and i spoke about the lipsticks. I remember their names. They're they're certainly so many more that i could highlight. I remember the fragrance at my grandmother wore very specifically she wore nor and it was in this beautiful gold container was actually a hard a hard oil fragrance as well as i remember. You know even you know by team members have talked to me about stories and the products that they have used in their past from the dance competitions when they were kids to skin care routines that they've been passed down from generation to generation and a big focus of mine has always been. How do you utilize these iconic brands and products bring to market in order to really leverage this emotional connection that we can have with the consumer because ultimately what we do at revlon is. We're able to create beauty innovations to really inspire confidence and ignite joy and the

revlon debbie perlman debbie Debbie new york Al
Revlon CEO Debra Perelman Shares Her Passion for the Beauty Biz

The Glossy Beauty Podcast

03:48 min | 2 years ago

Revlon CEO Debra Perelman Shares Her Passion for the Beauty Biz

"With me. Today is the ceo of revlon debbie perlman. Welcome debbie with so wonderful to have you here. Thank you pre. It's great to be here. Thank you so much for inviting me to join the podcast today. Debbie you know. I think it's must've been such an amazing but also challenging year for you. I mean you're the ceo this major beauty company and it's in such a tumultuous year but our year of innovation. Tell us a little bit about what it's been like for you both personally and professionally as such a great question in frankly so pertinent to the time today. So thank you for asking that note. I i think it's really helpful for me to take a step back and really just give some of my own background and what it means for me to be within the beauty industry. Because i think a lot of people don't know that and it's really important to me and it really is one of my true passions. I mean beauty and the beauty business has always been a very big part of my life Since i was a little kid. I've been always interested in beauty. I remember my first lipsticks which happened to be revlon. Super lustrous lipstick silver city pink and toast of new york for anyone who remember those shades. Those are the the best shades on me to pulling clips you know. Pr clips from when i was in high school and that was really looking at at the time it was. You know sitting with magazines and a pair of scissors and really looking at linking beauty and culture and celebrities and tracking the impact. That beauty brands had on culture and leading into my first job outside of college. Which was at revlon where i was able to join a rotational program with the goal of really understanding how to take a beauty product concept to market execution and ultimately success. And i was able to do that for a number of years and then came back after business school into marketing on the almazo brand as an assistant product manager which is still hold a special place for me out. Al may brand which led me into a career marketing and ultimately to returning to the company. Two thousand seven to lead a digital transformation and moving into the ceo role in two thousand eighteen and not only is the beauty business in revlon so important to me but the emotional connection that beauty has with me with probably you with each and every consumer and i spoke about the lipsticks. I remember their names. They're they're certainly so many more that i could highlight. I remember the fragrance at my grandmother wore very specifically she wore nor and it was in this beautiful gold container was actually a hard a hard oil fragrance as well as i remember. You know even you know by team members have talked to me about stories and the products that they have used in their past from the dance competitions when they were kids to skin care routines that they've been passed down from generation to generation and a big focus of mine has always been. How do you utilize these iconic brands and products bring to market in order to really leverage this emotional connection that we can have with the consumer because ultimately what we do at revlon is. We're able to create beauty innovations to really inspire confidence and ignite joy and the

Revlon Debbie Perlman Debbie New York AL
"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

The Glossy Beauty Podcast

04:58 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on The Glossy Beauty Podcast

"Then then the the world becomes your easter in terms of what you can do jill to just prior to cure why he wrote revlon which would arguably some say is one of the more corporate sides of the pg business. And i'm just wondering you know being there for the years that you were there such a you know exciting time because you know debbie perelman was. Ceo female ceo. You're obviously the i see female. Co accurate weiss. I actually no. I'm actually not because. I took the role of ceo from casten. Oh he was a ceo and founder. So i would no. I would not want to take that claim. I'm the ceo of the business outside of the found that but you'll rice about being at revlon a really exciting time because debbie palman is became the ceo. When i was there i was working very closely with her. And and i have a little bandwagon about the fact that she doesn't get enough credit for being the first ever a ceo of a publicly traded company. Which i think is a bit of a bunker. Statistic given that happened to the nas three years so yeah. It was a very different culture. You know an american base culture as opposed to a french based culture I was back in the professional division. Running matt's working on peaceful brands Very entrepreneurial in a very different set of circumstances for that business But working with great people and he's always down to the people isn't it the people. The people are everything in the brands. The brands are everything. And i think his as leaders. It's it's recognizing those gifts and i'm bringing them out of people in whichever culture you're working in. So what made you decide to move to the indy side of things. And you know obviously secure. Why has been around for a while. But it's not a revlon or laurie. Al is such a good question. Because i'm sure i'm sure when lots of people have made that move. There's lots of different reasons for me to very possible intent. The sense that there was about me and stretching me as as a leader and then. There's the indy side of the definition of indie being independent. And for me. I'd run very big businesses for other people other brands and very happily so own around around the world and i and i really wanted the personal test in the next lead to do that. In a way where you don't have that big structure around you The advantage of that being. Can you really move foster. Can you really affect change quickly. Can.

revlon debbie perelman casten debbie palman jill weiss matt laurie Al
"perelman" Discussed on Stories Podcast: A Bedtime Show for Kids of All Ages

Stories Podcast: A Bedtime Show for Kids of All Ages

05:37 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on Stories Podcast: A Bedtime Show for Kids of All Ages

"Pod chats. I'm your host. Amanda walden on your host daniel signs. Are you doing today. Amanda i am okay leave it hanging out together all morning no reason for me to ask so anyways stories chats and today we thought we talk about some of our favorite books when your kids. This is a question we got a. What was your favorite things to read. When you were younger we thought we do an episode on it and You wanna start. Give us one of your favorite books. Yes oh i had a hard time choosing just books and i have gone with a couple Authors and i'm going to start with one of the old classics role doll. Because i really loved mathilde. But i also really loved the witches and i loved danny champion of the world. There are many many books by roald. Dahl that very much loved. So but matilda was probably my favorite mathilde classic movie. Featuring mara wilson danny devito perelman none of important featuring the trunch bull mathilde a book all about a little girl with special magical powers who goes to school and and she has really crummy parents and then she goes to a school where there's a really crummy principal But then she meets a teacher named miss honey and things start to go a little bit better for her and it's great. Yeah and there's magic realism. It's really fun book. Probably if you're around our age you seen the movie. It's still a great book for kids. The movie holds up. it's all great yeah And and other books by roald dahl are also really good the witches which also has just recently a movie on. Hbo max and it's another movie from our childhood. That was very scary. I don't recommend it..

roald dahl Amanda mara wilson danny devito perelman today one Amanda walden danny roald. Dahl Hbo max couple Authors mathilde daniel matilda
AstraZeneca Blood Clot Fears Are Tamped Down but Slow Vaccines in Europe

News and Perspective with Taylor Van Cise

02:28 min | 2 years ago

AstraZeneca Blood Clot Fears Are Tamped Down but Slow Vaccines in Europe

"Several countries in Europe have stopped vaccinating people with the AstraZeneca vaccine as researchers look into a small number of reports of blood clots. The European Medicines Agency says the benefits of that vaccine still outweigh the risks. And while it's not approved for use in the United States, the AstraZeneca concerns fuel a persistent problem here. Fear of vaccination side effects. Allison. She provides context about side effects in her newest report in The Washington Post, and she joins us on the camo news line. Good afternoon. Hi. Thank you. For having me coincidence is something we seem to forget about. I think how we're scientists sorting through coincidence of our everyday health issues and the real side effects of vaccines. That's a really good question. So one of the experts that I spoke with Susan Ellenberger out of Pennsylvania University, Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine. You know, she mentioned that one of the hardest jobs for scientists who is actually Trying to sort through this data and figure out you know what? It is a signal and what what? Just noise. And so there is actually you know, one of two ways that this is kind of commonly done done in the research world and It's either you know, looking at the data and understanding the biology and how a new vaccine or drug or treatment might potentially cause whatever concerning side effect is being reported. And the other is understanding. You know, is this side effect happening more frequently among people who have been vaccinated, then it might be expected just at a general population level. So with that in mind, is there a clear answer on how blood clot concerns around the AstraZeneca vaccine fit together with normal human biology? It's tough right now because there's actually so there's a distinction of what's being looked at by the European regulator, the European Medicines Agency, So they're they're report. It's specifically focused on These these reports of a very rare brain blood clots. There have been ugly. Seven cases of this reported in In Germany for the more common cases of blood clots. You know, the experts are saying that it doesn't seem like the number of cases being reported among the vaccinated population are are greater than what being expected in in in general

Astrazeneca European Medicines Agency Susan Ellenberger Pennsylvania University Pennsylvania Perelman School O The Washington Post Allison Europe United States Germany
"perelman" Discussed on DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast

DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast

04:40 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on DUH:A Bangladeshi Podcast

"Schachter going back like. Hey dad got started out Goethe student even. I think he'll say well. I must streak osama acetate. Boardman have been neutral. Maybe no one time will tell me. Donna ladonna highest maybe shabalin factory in calicut Probably won't out about them. Do the game worked on the monarchy. Short streak us into. Hey our boomtime Game to me to what. I don recently accuser. Actually going into chaman. Actually janine december must take up all the exposure december be studying. Does this allow sinement perelman college. First semester Investments aaa blah blah blah down whereas our wasn't too good job got ami gaming salem shop the hash she'll do crew kelton ashgabat underwrite overdose studying in the Who shannon imitating into captain j. Maher game killer bodyman sharp. The head didn't take shape Post ceelo gary by me x. Chaperoning luggage only naming consular monday. Exit the cry one dr desperate to ambon redemption. Culpas lem to be gone. I'm only backlog osama document. The list goes on my leaked on the road. I'm sugary by digital from trauma to sit down wanting to the to the act of cobija. Paro gordon name. Get desperate shish explicit deals you see treasury esa mccray macabre completion mr put named in me to cheat actual taking life lead sheeting renamed unlimited life in any slow the more now but again revived from an red dead redemption donald Price or bark as he knew the adult internally alicia racial pixel put with from aside cyclist shishkin dominant keyboard..

donald Price Donna ladonna calicut janine Schachter december j. Maher alicia First semester osama acetate osama Goethe monday perelman college captain shabalin factory
"perelman" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

KOA 850 AM

01:35 min | 2 years ago

"perelman" Discussed on KOA 850 AM

"And Senate Democrats introducing legislation to more than double the federal minimum wage from 7 25 an hour to $15 an hour, economist Ray Perelman says If approved, it would be the first hike in starting pay since 2009. If you just adjusted for cost of living be up to about 8, 75 or so something like that might be reasonable to try to keep people with a purchasing power parity. He says. $15 would be more than some sectors could afford. Like the hospitality industry on Lee 1% of Nations full time work force earns the minimum wage. The Federal Reserve is again keeping interest rates steady. The feds short term lending rate remaining at near zero Fed chair Jerome Powell, saying the path of the economy will continue to depend on success in combating the ongoing Corona virus outbreak. Speaking of the Biden administration's new Covert 19 task force, holding its first briefing today, saying daily vaccinations are increasing across the country really vaccine does is a minister continued to rise to more than 1.6 million bucks is per day over the past week, CDC director Dr Rochelle Wolinsky says over 23. A half million doses of vaccine have already been administered. Members of the task force say they still expected to be months before everyone in the U. S. Who wants a shot can get 1 January now the deadliest month of the cove in 19 pandemic in the U. S. To date data from Johns Hopkins University, showing roughly 77,700 deaths reported so far during the month of January. Now, Jones closed today down 633 points s and P Down 98 the NASDAQ Down.

Ray Perelman Federal Reserve Johns Hopkins University Jerome Powell Biden administration Dr Rochelle Wolinsky Jones CDC director
Adina Hoffman: Ben Hecht: Fighting Words, Moving Pictures

Bookworm

09:37 min | 3 years ago

Adina Hoffman: Ben Hecht: Fighting Words, Moving Pictures

"I'm Michael Silver Blah this bookworm arm and today I'm very pleased to have as my guest. Adina Hoffman the Dina has written a life of the great almost mind boggling screenwriter Ben. Hecht the book has the Subtitle Fighting Words moving pictures this Ben Hecht had his. Oh would you say finger in so many tries He starts out now having moved with his family to the mid West as soon as he graduates from high school. He realizes this is. The college is not for him and he high tails it to Chicago where he becomes a very well-known newspaper this paper Man Song well known that his adventures in the newspaper business but come perhaps the most is famous play ever to be written about newspapers that he wrote with Charles MacArthur. Yes called the front page. The the front page becomes his girl Friday with cary grant and Rosalind Russell and thereby hangs a tale every the time Ben Hecht turns around. There's a revision of something. He's done a new who've version of it by someone else that he in turn revise right even his own memoirs has multiple versions of what happened to him in his own life life. He's kind of astonishing. This came from the days when face at a writer wrote right. These were people who wrote all the time there's also literary life that Hecht has in Chicago and actually this was one of the fascinating things for me is where his kind of the big city You know newspaper world met the world of the Chicago Renaissance and a lot of the people who were in that newspaper world. People like Carl Sandberg. who was a really good friend of Heck's you know he was also a reporter and they were sort of Newspaperman by day and then by night they were writing their poems in their novels and Hecht was not only hanging around with people like Sherwood Anderson Jason and he was also publishing in the little review which is unbelievable magazine? Push some of the first chapters of James Joyce's ulysses and they felt. What was her name? Margaret Anderson Anderson felt that Ben Heck was every bit as much a member of of the little review says dream straight. And he's there on almost every single issue. He was a kind of a pet of hers. He was sort of in love with her. She was unfortunately Very distracted by high art and she was also a lesbian was not interested in in that way but she loved him and she published him. Ben Has a great fiction writer. I mean he was. He fancied himself self novelist But he was very devoted to that calling but at the same time that he was writing. These very heavy breathing stories for Margaret Anderson. He was also writing he. He was whipping off these commercials stories for Lincoln at the smart set. HMO MINKIN was one of his heroes. Mencken was a cynic cynic and a sophisticated and he had every bit of hostility toward the dumb aspects of American culture. He was trying to make America smart op. He wrote fascinating essays sason books on the American language as opposed to British. We don't get an American writer per se until until Mark Twain who's writing the Mississippi River. Talk that he learned when he was a boatman. Well by the time you've got the middle of the country Chicago you've got gangsters you've got prohibition you've got flappers you've got an American language wood jr that was invented here and Hecht loved. -actly yeah and I think for me. That was one of the wonderful things about spending time with him. I was reading. This book was spending time with his language. I mean whatever you WANNA say about. Whether his books are wonderful books or not so wonderful books he was a wonderful maker of sentences and paragraphs graphs and just terrific wit on top of it and he and Macarthur wrote the front page. which was kind of Valentine to that newspaper World of Chicago? You go where they've both been cub reporters you see. He comes in to the newspaper office. Writing these things. In Extreme Telegraphy Telegraphy as as you quote them right they are made of twenty three delight phrases. He's putting them together hurling them together and eventually he's going to have some fame as the newspaper Komo's rining calms every every day made up of just what he heard some Hobo say right or what some very wealthy people were saying in a casino no to be a writer then will start out as journalists. That's where Hemingway starts. He proposed this idea of. But this daily column that you've mentioned which would become known as a thousand and one afternoons in Chicago and they're kind of remarkable pieces they're just little snippets and there's a sense that the news is not just test the news of the grant headline it's also all these sort of marginal lives and people. You know the guy who runs the laundromat and the woman who works as a manicurist and has to fend off her lecherous clients. There's a way in which he's tossing this stuff off in a very casual way reading them daily. They're published on the back page of the newspaper next to the to the comic strips and he's not taking them too seriously or taking himself too seriously and there's so much better than the fiction into which he was pouring his all of his artistic ambition. That just is not the effective whereas these things that he was doing kind of on the fly as you say they're wonderful and they're incredibly generous and sympathetic. You feel him identifying with all of the city of Chicago In a way they kind of anticipate the work of later colonists people like beat Hamill and Jimmy Breslin. Who would become more famous in a way for doing doing that? who may also by now have been forgotten but act. was doing that early on. I'm talking to Adina Hoffman about. Don't her book Ben. Hecht its subtitle fighting. Words moving pictures and it's published in the Jewish writers series series published by Yale University. Press you mention that a lot of these people have been forgotten even people more recent Jonathan head so why Ben Hair. Well IT'S A. It's the question that I get all the time. And it's a good question and I mean basically at some level I feel like I've known Ben Hecht before before I knew Ben Hecht if you grow up watching American movies. He's his words are in your head even if you've never heard his name and so and I used to watch a lot of old movies as a kid but it was only when I became more conscious conscious and started to read about film history I actually worked as a film critic throughout most of the ninety s Then I was very aware of who Ben Hecht was and I I read his wonderful memoir child trial of the century. And I thought wow you know okay the movies he's known as you know. Pauline Kale called him the greatest American screenwriter Gianluca Dard said he invented eighty percent percent. Of what is used in Hollywood movies today called him a genius and all of that is true but the fact is that for heck the movies were really just a piece of it and in some ways they were actually may be one of the smaller pieces pieces of it in that memoir is full of all these other lives that we've just been talking about so I was first of all fascinated by that multiplicity of his the fact that he could contain multitudes dude but I also was drawn to heck in terms of his relationship to Jewish things. And here's a place where he basically an American Jew who claims not to have really paid much attention to the fact of his Jewishness until his consciousness was sort of raised by the Holocaust there. He's been in Chicago. He knows the woman. Editing the little review he knows call Sandberg. He knows Sherwood Anderson he moves to New York becomes friends with Herman Mankiewicz Herman Mankiewicz and also the roundtable tape Dorothy Parker and Benchley and S J Perelman and the Algonquin New Yorker Gang. He he moves to Los Angeles. He does what's so many do he has nothing but contempt damned for the people who started the motion picture industry. You say that you're interested in Hicks. Judaism with those were hits Jews. He didn't like them. There are a lot of Jews in heck's life he was actually born on the lower east side and he spent the first few years of his life. There and I don't actually think that that's Unimportant I mean. He grew up in Racine Wisconsin. which is this pastoral American American place etc but there is a way in which those tenements were in him in a very deep

Ben Hecht Chicago Writer BEN Margaret Anderson Anderson Adina Hoffman Ben Heck Charles Macarthur Cary Grant Sherwood Anderson Michael Silver Herman Mankiewicz Herman Manki James Joyce Extreme Telegraphy Telegraphy Rosalind Russell Sherwood Anderson Jason Los Angeles Yale University Mississippi River America
College Students (And Their Parents) Face A Campus Mental Health 'Epidemic'

Fresh Air

11:43 min | 4 years ago

College Students (And Their Parents) Face A Campus Mental Health 'Epidemic'

"Colleges and universities across the country are reporting an explosion of mental health problems verging on an epidemic. According to my guest, Dr be Janet Hibs and Dr Anthony Ross Dane, their new book, the stressed years of their lives is about why college students are more stressed. And how parents can help their kids cope with stress and anxiety and prepare them to become independent after Hibbs is a family and couple psychotherapist. Her son took a medical leave of absence during his first collared spring break to deal with anxiety and depression when he returned home. He was treated by Dr Ross Dane, who chaired, the university of Pennsylvania's task force, and students psychological health and wellbeing. Dr Ross Dan, is a professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at the is Perelman school of medicine and practices at the children's hospital of Philadelphia. Dr Ross Dan, Dr heads welcome to fresh air. Dr dinner. I want to start with you. You say that you've seen a dramatic rise in campus mental illness rates describe what you're seeing on campus. Well, we've always had students come in with anxiety, and depression, or adjustment disorders and having to see a counselor or therapist or psychiatrist to help them through a crisis. What we're seeing now with growing numbers of students coming into campus who already are already being treated for mental illness, who've are on various medications, and who really have learned to manage their illnesses at home but suddenly they're on their own and sometimes they're not following through their own recommended. Treatments were also seeing students coming on with an inordinate amount of anxiety about surviving college and doing well. And we think the anxiety levels are rising, and creating in students, a great amount of both distress when anything goes wrong more of a brittle response to challenges a greater avoidance of risk. So people are really not wanting to move out of their comfort zone and in real. Over reliance on things like alcohol and other substances to help manage things like social anxiety. The good news though, is that they're more aware of that. So we think more of them are coming forward to talk about it. Us server seeing were stress and anxiety in students today. What do you think are some of the causes behind those new levels of stress? Well, we think that the culture has changed in the last thirty forty years and that these students are growing up in the post nine eleven era that they've been exposed to a lot of trauma, both in the media and also in their lives. Many of them school shootings the rise in uncertainty from globalization. And of course, the economic recession of two thousand eight you know, our students today we were young then and the anxiety. We think really had an impact on their families as well as on what they could glean from the news. And of course, being in this twenty four seven news cycle, as well as the internet itself has really created a sort of a different childhood, you're at the university of Pennsylvania, which is a pretty expensive. Yep. School does that. Add to the stress. Oh, house -olutely center. Of this huge investment that you or your family are making in this college students come to school nowadays, very conscious of that of the economic expansion of the sacrifice that, that parents are making and that adds to their burden of, of worry about doing well and about, especially about anything going wrong. I mean we can also talk I think about the preparation for school that many of them have been overprepared in terms of taking tons of AP classes and really packing their CV's with all kinds of activities, and we worry that there's not enough downtime and things that they can do. They're not going to necessarily always result in a great or in someone noticing them. You know, you have to do a lot of family therapy, so you see a lot of families before the child is going to call it. What are some of the stressors that you're seeing in preparation for call in preparing kids to be on their own? The overwhelming majority of high school students today. It somewhere around ninety percent report college as their top stressor and to build on what Tony saying it's not only kids, but their parents who are anxious. So we're living in a culture of fear and many times parents come to me and go what's wrong with kits today? I didn't have these kinds of stressors and this isn't what my college experience was like. And it's important for parents to know we're in what I would call a moment of historic swerve where basically this has been building for about forty years. And then the threat is just spinning out rolling out really fast now with all of the very rapid changes. And so parents have gone into a control mode they used to promote autonomy. That's how I grew up like the free range kid. But now, they're basically. They're exerting more and more control, which makes their kids more anxious and also less prepared for the unpredictable. We knew say, more control what forms of control? Parents are scared that there's only one path linear path to the good life, and silver some parents who are affluent enough. That means the brand name college or top, you know, prep that you can get for other parents. It's just a lot of pressure on the kids. You have to do well, you can't make a mistake. Your chances will be ruined. So we see, especially very smart kids, which some researchers call brainiacs. They have what we call destructive perfectionism, which they cannot tolerate. Not excelling at everything and no one. I mean, typically excels at everything we all have, you know, times when we, we both make mistakes, or fail, and kids don't have as much practice at that today. Because there. Protected from having those experiences and also it freaks their parents out, which makes the kids feel more responsible. I wanna go to something that you mentioned, which is a lot of parents feel like I don't know, when I went to college, I was so happy to get away from my parents and to be independent. So why is my child so reluctant to leave home? Why are they having such a hard time adjusting to being away from home, and I'd like you to reflect on that a little bit because I think it is baffling to a lot of parents. I think most kids are still really happy to leave home. They want to be in the life of the pseudo adult, but what they're unprepared for our what I would call both the expectable challenges that college poses in terms of the requirement for more independence, more ownership of your hours, whether it's sleep saying no to partying managing yourself, basically. And it also is a fact that parents remembrance is that it was less pressure. That's absolutely true. It's a much harsher environment now to same number of slots at these top competitive schools, a lot more applicants and part of what's also going on. Is that as the college for all movement rolled out forty five years ago? It dismantled vocational funding at the federal and community college levels, and even at the public university levels. The underlying message is there's only one path to a good life. And so the pressure on kids who've really, you know drunk the Kool aid. That's the message. They believe is that they'll have as one of the kids, I've treated says a second tier life unless they just keep going to the top top top top schools of everything. And even then they feel they cannot make mistakes. It's all about expectations. Now, there's a certain amount of inev-. Evitable anxiety about transition. I mean we, we call this age the transitional age period of transitional age youth so that we think is natural, the, the feeling that, oh, I don't know quite what I'm doing here, but it's the response that they're having to that uncertainty that we've noticed students have a lot less resilience or preparation. So that's part of what we're trying to do in this book is really talk about readiness social emotional readiness. There's no question. People are actively prepared. I mean they're learning incredible amount nowadays in school. They're learning amazing kinds of things, and the internet has opened up knowledge that was never as available, you know, but it's also created distractions and a lot of pressure. Socially, and more importantly, I think when people get to college, maybe not enough time has been spent in highschool both in the curricular side. And with the family in what we call social emotional readiness or mature. Parity? How do you teach that? I mean what are you what do you mean by preparation? How do you hear somebody else, so fan maturity begin to going back to the comparisons? You know in the past we'd go off to college. Sometimes never our parents would drop us off. But that's it say goodbye, and you're, you're there, once a week phone call. Yeah. Once a week phone call, if you were lucky right now it's constant, you know, texting and Skyping and talking to one another. So there's a lot of closeness and we're not against closeness what, what happens then, though, is that the student doesn't feel like, hey, I really know how to manage this on my own and haven't had a chance to practice. And the way you teach it is really by going through, you know, set of conversations with your kid and saying, hey, you know, let's talk a little bit about, you know, the way you manage your life. But can you get up in the morning and manage your day? I mean, I, I run an ADHD program at Penn, and I got a phone call from a parent a few years back saying, hey, you're the director of the. HD program. My son is coming depend. I said, great wonderful. Congratulations. She says, do you have a wake-up service? I wake up service. Yes, my son can't get up without me getting them up every morning. And so what I I said, listen, we don't have a wakeup service. But I think it's really important that he learned how to wake himself up before he gets college. So that's really what we're saying is learning to manage your life learning to do things. More on your own without constantly checking back and asking for someone's help and also being able to handle things like the risks that college brings and being able to handle social relationships all those conversations, parents and kids really need to have in an open way. So there's a level of helping your child, that's maybe too much help. Exactly, and it comes at a cost right because. Yes, we're giving our kids, everything we have and we care about them, right? But at the same time, what's the message? It's oh you need to succeed or else. We're we're going to really get upset. I think if the message from apparent to kid is like you may not know but we expect that you'll be able to figure it out. Let's see. What happens is different than saying you better do this. You better know that you'd better not mess up, and that the anxiety itself is part of what we want parents to deal with their own anxiety, and then being able to let go in a way. That's more feels more natural. It's okay to not know

University Of Pennsylvania Dr Ross Dan Depression Professor Of Psychiatry And Pe DR Dr Ross Dane Perelman School Of Medicine Dr Dinner Dr Anthony Ross Dane Hibbs Hospital Of Philadelphia -Olutely Center Tony Janet Hibs Adhd Skyping Penn Director