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A highlight from EP141  Cloud Security Coast to Coast: From 2015 to 2023, What's Changed and What's the Same?

Cloud Security Podcast by Google

25:14 min | 1 d ago

A highlight from EP141 Cloud Security Coast to Coast: From 2015 to 2023, What's Changed and What's the Same?

"Hi there, welcome to the Cloud Security Podcast by Google. Thanks for joining us today. Your hosts here are myself, Timothy Peacock, the Senior Product Manager for Threat Detection here at Google Cloud, and Anne Hunchuvakian, a reformed analyst and senior staff in Google Cloud's Office of the CISO. You can find and subscribe to this podcast wherever you get your podcasts, as well as at our website, cloud .google .com slash podcast. If you enjoy our content and want it delivered to you piping hot every Monday, please do hit that subscribe button in your podcasting app of choice. You can follow the show, argue with your hosts and the rest of our Cloud Security Podcast listeners on our LinkedIn page. Anton, this is a fun CISO episode that's full of growth lessons, leadership lessons, interesting stories of migrating to cloud and one of the strongest endorsements of cloud as both risk reduction and business velocity improvement I think we've gotten on the show to date. What did you think today? I think so too. I think that we should not lament that the episode did not cover how to improve configurations of your cloud armor or how to run SIEM or any of this. It's a really good episode with a guest who experienced some of the lessons that clients are learning today, but eight years ago. So it's really fascinating that it's like for many companies, his past is the future and that makes his lessons hugely valuable. Hugely valuable and his advice is applicable to both CISOs all the way down to people who want to get started and get promoted in our field. And so maybe with that, let's turn things over to today's guest. With that listeners, I'm delighted to introduce today's guest. Today we're joined by Jeremiah Kung at AppLovin. Jeremiah, thank you so much for joining us today. I'm excited to have you here because we have something in common. We've both had the East Coast to West Coast experience. I started my career in Washington, DC, and I swear to God, the people I worked with at the startup I worked at First Shape, to this day, if I get drinks with them, they rip on me for wearing a suit to my interview with them. So the East Coast to West Coast interview, the whole thing is very real. So what's your take on that distinction aside from costumes for interviews? Yeah, I totally get it. I'm not a big fan of wearing ties either. It feels like a weak pair of hands slowly strangling me all day long. Yeah, for me, it's more of a metaphorical one. I was born a West Coast surfer kind of guy for the longest time, but career wise, especially making the moves, working for bigger banks, which I saw them as East Coast, let's face it, the bigger banks are New York, North Carolina. It's very suit and tie, very more button down, very much more about the controls, the frameworks, the committees, and infosec has to give the go ahead further than it goes to production. West Coast being out here with places like Palo Alto, where innovation is rampant and it's wonderful, you got to move fast. So you live by the speed and the velocity of your releases. And if someone's slowing you down, they're going to keep you from getting to market faster than your competitors. So it's a very different approach to information security. I remember earlier when I started speaking about this about a year ago, you can tell all sorts of funny stories about being at an East Coast company. And you know, all the red tape you have to go through and everyone kind of sighs and kind of agrees with that. But you know, at the end of the day, the West Coast, you have other risks you need to be aware of too, as well. And it's about trying to find that balance and attending to what the risks are. So the fundamentals don't really change, but out here, you have to innovate faster? Innovate faster. And I think really what you need to understand to have is a clarity of the risk, right, to really understand what the risk is. Coming from a big bank, of course, losing data is a huge thing, operational risk, regulatory risk, and there's all of that layers that you need to go through. With the West Coast, you really need to kind of understand, okay, how's this company making money? Where's all our data sitting? And you know, what are all our attack surfaces? So I think this is a basic step for anybody information security is to really understand what the asset inventory is, including intellectual and data assets. But it's not just small company, large company, though, because it sounds like if you're in the West Coast startup, your risk of just dying, the risk of startup going kaput, deep in my heart, I think it's more important than cybersecurity risk. I'm joking about it. But ultimately, I understand if I am a startup guy, the startup going out of business is a higher risk than security issue. Of course, security issues can also drive you out of business. Yeah, I get that. But that's not just what you're talking about, right? There are other issues. Yeah, absolutely. Other issues on that, because operational risk is again, if your competitors beat you, and you lose market share, okay, yeah, regulators are going to come after me or something like that. But it doesn't really matter. I'm out of business. What's the big deal there. But at the same time, if you do get breached, that's going to make you lose market share as well. So you need to kind of figure out what that balance is. Okay, that makes sense. So let's shift gears. This was actually kind of a cool intro. And it introduced the whole concept in my mind. Now I kind of think, hi, are you East Coast CISO or West Coast CISO? Maybe my greeting for the foreseeable. One other thing we wanted to explore, and this may have something to do with this cost dimension is, initially, when cloud computing public cloud showed up, the default stance from any CISOs was kind of slightly negative and, or maybe strongly negative or get this cloud out. I'm not allowing it in my company. So this was probably like a good number of years ago. Now, certainly this changed, and we see a lot of CISOs embracing cloud. But here's the thing. We hypothesize that there are CISOs who are active cloud fans who kind of want cloud because it's better. And admittedly, we have a CISO here, Phil Danables, who is of that type, but he joins Google Cloud because of the belief, presumably. Now, are there other CISOs who think cloud is just superior for security and they're driving cloud adoption as opposed to resisting it? What is your take on this? Yeah, that's a great point. I've seen both sides of the coin. I've talked to people on both sides of the coin on this one, and I'm kind of obviously in the more cloud -centric side, but I'm a little bit more in the middle to the left of that, if that makes any sense. I'm very pro -cloud. I think it deals with, very efficiently, a lot of the old concerns that you would have about security, patching updates and Vone scans and Vone updates and all that other type of stuff, because you can spin these things up so quickly, the fixes and release it out there. It's not, back in the old days, some guy with a CD running around from every server trying to load and update patches and stuff like that. You know, that's such a funny thing to pause on, because maybe this is my youth speaking. I sometimes forget that people had to do that. And I think for a lot of our listeners, it's hard to appreciate that, yeah, really, that's how it used to work. If you had to patch something, it wasn't Terraform Apply, my new version. It was a dude with a CD in a server room somewhere. That's crazy. Oh, yeah. Yeah. And if you were in a freeze period to try to do patches, you had to go through all sorts of updates and things like that to try to get in, and it gets all sorts of approvals. I think the dude with a CD is the least of your problems, is the talking to all the layers for making a change, submitting requests in paper forms, you know, ideal bureaucrats. I think the dude with a CD would be like, dude comes in, sticks a CD, and does the patching. That's fast. No, no, no. But some of that still exists, right? You still need change windows, you still need approval. So maybe here's the question is, how does Cloud, for you as a CISO, change that part of the equation? What's the non -technical changes? Improved. Not changed. Take the pessimistic stuff out. How did Cloud improve this for you? Anton, I think that's known as leading the witness. Okay, fine. Yeah. I feel like you're trying to give me what the answer is there. But I mean, I'm already on that side. It's really the visibility. Because, you know, being at Apple, we're strong partners with Google Cloud and being all in Google Cloud, I can really see where our assets are, I could see trends over time, I could see the logging and the monitoring and all the alerts and the phones all in one spot, which is very nice. But I get it, not every company can be 100 % in the cloud. I would imagine that a bank, you're going to at best be some kind of hybrid approach to that, depending on the size of the bank. And I could see and outsource a lot of the running around changing. I just had this question the other day dealing with some audits. Hey, show me when's the last time you changed and rotated your keys and how often that is? Well, being in Google Cloud, they do that for you. And you guys do a random rotation of that. Whereas AWS does it to make sure the keys are rotated every 365 days, according to NIST and TIP standards. You guys do a random rotation, which it could be two weeks, it could be 365 days, but at some point, those keys will be rotated. So that's kind of the intelligence behind to keep it random, to keep it fresh, to keep it on top. I appreciate that from a security perspective. And I don't have to rely on a team to constantly run, again, running it out and changing keys and this and that, even at a cloud level where you have to, you know, you can just terminal in and do that. This is just handled for you. And as we moved more and more to Kubernetes, more and more to serverless environments, these ways old of needing to do security become less and less impactful. But then again, there's always a new attack surface that has yet to be discovered. New problems are going to come and show and raise their heads from a security perspective. We're just on the way of discovering what those are. Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. So I want to go back in time a little bit to maybe when cloud was newer for you. I understand you were part of some big migrations back in the day. What did you learn about doing those, quote unquote, right? It was really lucky to be with Capital One 2015, 2016, sometime when they were deciding to be the first big bank to move everything 100 % into the cloud. So famously cloud forward. Yeah, very cloud forward. Yeah. So how did that go? It was a lot of sleepless nights, a lot of work, but it was really interesting. It was great to be part of that team to really learn how cloud can mitigate, how to move quickly, how to combine the teams. I think one of the things that I found to be the right way of doing things was they took a very strong two in the box approach, really kind of a three in the box approach. And what they mean by that is for those teams to move forward, the development team would have one lead that was the business lead and say, hey, this is what the customers want. This is what the industry and market trends are looking at. And then there would be a tech lead say, okay, this is what the teams can develop and how long it's going to take. And then I kind of squeezed my way in there to become that three in the box, the security perspective to listen, okay, this is what the business wants. This is what tech can provide. And here's the risk and the risk we need to mitigate. And to have that conversation was invaluable because you got it from every angle. You didn't just hear what IT said that I can only do so much and why is the business wanting that? You got to hear it from the business exactly what they wanted, how they wanted to do things and why too, and why this was important for the business. That makes a ton of sense. So what were maybe some, for people in a similar boat in the future, how did you get effective at communicating the risk to people? How did you help business understand that? How did you help IT understand that? What was it? The saying that they say, fools talk, cowards stay silent, wise people listen. And that was really kind of key for me on that one was at first listening to the business, understanding their pains, understanding what they were challenged with. This really helped me to assess my risk and also come up with mitigation plans that would work for the business. Again, same approach with IT is understanding, okay, what are their pains? Where are they coming from? And this way I can come up with what the plans should look like with considerations for everybody across the board. Okay, so... Wait, wait, wait. Sorry, Tim. I am kind of curious about it, but I'm nervous that we are kind of reducing all this to effective communication only. Is this... Sorry, this doesn't sound very right. But the point is that effective communication clearly had a huge role, but there are other pillars for success because a huge migration of the first half of bank to the cloud had other tricky elements, right? Yes. So that was another one. What we had was a very strong partnership with our cloud partners at the time. They had been sitting and working with, especially since there were no frameworks, there was no really references. I remember even the regulators at the time were sitting, okay, that's great. You guys are doing that. Can we just sit and listen to see what you guys are doing so we can kind of spread this out with the rest of the banks and standards out there? I think the key partnerships with your vendor, your cloud vendor specifically, was invaluable, providing advice and having that back and forth feeds. I remember working with one particular tool. We said, hey, this encryption standard is not really up to snuff. Could you guys work on that and develop something? And sure enough, I think within two or three dev cycles, they had something that was what we needed. To this day, I find that to be an ideal approach, working with my cloud vendors or just any vendors that I have. I appreciate those who will sit down, listen to me and hear my complaints and do the whole listening and coming up with an approach. I think almost all my security vendors I'm using, as well as the cloud vendors with you guys, have that type of approach. Okay. That does sound like real magic for a lot of more technically minded leaders I've met. So this is solid. This advice is worth the price of podcast alone in my mind. So to sort of progress further, like you mentioned that you learned those lessons quite some time ago and many companies are still learning them even now. And for some of them, cloud is with the future, funny enough. So now that you've went through all this and other lessons, how are you approaching securing cloud given differently the lessons? Like what are you doing better in 2023 regarding securing cloud compared to the original lessons? For me personally, it's a little bit different. Talking to some of my peers who still haven't made that jump, they seem to have that lack of trust of having their data set somewhere not on a server that they're under control over at some point and at their own personalized data center that they have, their own physical security, own the HVAC systems and all other type of stuff. They want to have that data. Okay. That's an approach. It's going to be tough to scale over time. I think one of the things that I found to be very successful here that's helped is reading a lot, a lot of reading, a lot of talking to other peers in the industries and a lot of vendors going to these discussions to stay on top of what the recent threat is and what the other trends are and what the solutions are out there. I think that's key. We're a community and that has to be pushed forward if that makes any sense to continue to talk to folks. I think sitting in your own little silo is not going to work very well. Well, I don't think I know. Yeah. I forget who it was on the show, but they said that security is a team sport. Yeah, absolutely. So I guess on that thread, actually, I want to pull on this a little more. I often joke with CISOs on the show that what they need is not another piece of technology, but rather a family therapist to help their relationships with other teams. What advice would you give to other CISOs, security leaders on first building better relationships with other teams, and two, how to get out of the saying no mentality and into that real collaborative listening mode? Yeah, that saying no mentality. I've talked to some CISOs like that who said, yeah, I'm looking to hire and I need people to join my team because I need them to get out there and say no as much as humanly possible. No, people don't actually say that? Explicitly said that? Oh, wow. Yeah. I just remember I stopped and I looked at him and I said, how are you doing, man? Are you doing okay? Wow. I can imagine his life was pretty miserable. Maybe if you're working on a highly top secret government project where you got to hide the alien bodies, maybe. That's a good example. Yikes. Yeah. I think a family therapist is a great way to do that, to work with their teams, but I think really at the end of the day, it's not that hard. Everyone wants to do a good job when they come to work, hopefully, and everyone wants to get along with their work base. I think the thing is just the key is to be available for them if they have questions. Try to initiate those conversations and also learn when to back off. Everyone's busy. They have a lot of their own success metrics they have to shoot for, so if you can be part of that formula, great on a day -to -day basis, but if they're a little too busy for you to come back at a better time, pizza and beer is always a good way to go as well, but I think it's just trying to be as value -add as possible at all times and be understanding that everyone's trying to get their jobs done as well. I think that's key. That's good advice not just for security leaders, but for PMs as well. One of my favorite pieces of advice for PMs I ever heard was framed as bring the donuts, and I think security is kind of this way too. With PMs, nobody invited you, and they can get along just fine without you for the most part, so you've got to really understand where they're coming from and what value you're bringing to the equation if you want people to work with you constructively. Yeah, it's knowing your role. Security can be a value -add and can be positive for the business, but a majority of the time we're kind of a cost to that business, a necessary cost and maybe, hopefully, a helpful business benefiting cost, but at a cost, nonetheless, people aren't usually going to go to the company for how secure it is, especially on the West Coast. It's about how much money or how handy their product is first. Security is kind of a second thought, but we can definitely work together on that. I have heard some pretty inspiring stories on this show and in my professional life of how security helps teams move faster by taking, say, risk out of the equation or automating away some risk, and so I think maybe in cloud, due to its nature, there's unique opportunities for security teams to be helpful there. Oh, yeah, absolutely. Usually, if you're already moving into the cloud, you're kind of taking a fresh start, and that's where you can really do the security by design. I get it. If you're on mainframes and you've been around for 30 years and now you're the new security person, it's really to go back and difficult to do security by design from the start, right? You're kind of retroactively trying to find fits here or there. But starting fresh into the cloud, it's like, okay, we could do this by design. AppLovin's been great about kind of doing that with protecting their data by saying, hey, I don't need a lot of sensitive data. We're going to try to use our own attribution formats and other types of formulas to grow our customers' business without taking on a lot of that sensitive information. So that helps reduce the risk, again, secure by design. So this is good, especially excellent. Okay, Tim, you can make fun of me for saying excellent, but this is excellent. However, excellence hasn't spread uniformly, right? And you do see people who are still in the saying no mentality. And regarding architecture, we do see a lot of people still stuck essentially in the 90s regarding architecture. They want to lift and shift, or they're even debating whether this new cloud thing is for them. So given your experience, what's your best advice for the leaders of these organizations where either the CISO is blocking cloud or maybe even CIO doesn't want it? So basically, they are not getting any of the benefits. And when they start doing cloud, they do it in a very on -premise way, the lift and shift way. Yeah, that's a tough one, because you're really trying to tell somebody to change their entire point of view. Yes, that's exactly right. Yeah, you need to have that aha moment, travel to Damascus moment for them. And I don't think I could give them individual advice to have that aha moment other than travel the world, talk to folks and, you know, experience and see what else is out there. I know for AppLovin, when we jumped over 100 % into the cloud, our business just naturally spiked because of the efficiencies, how quickly automating compute usage was with that intelligence to go up and down for what our demands were. That's amazing. And, you know, again, that's a strong partnership with Google on that, having just an incredible team that really kind of jumped to everything that we needed, which was fantastic. Not easy to find in the industries all over the world. So that was really helpful. But I think they need to talk to people who have those success stories and just to see what it is. I think at the end of the day, if those folks would talk to the business more and to see what the business needs, they'll kind of start to see, yeah, that it makes sense. That's where we need to kind of move towards. But that has to be that personality of I got to get out of my silo. I got to talk to people out of my comfort zone, because you may not be a business person. You could be a genius infosec person. But if you don't get the business and have that background, it's going to be difficult to travel far. Yeah, that's for sure, Drew. It reminds me of that saying, if you want to go fast, go alone, if you want to go far, go together. You really can't go far in security unless you can bring other people on board. And that's one of the things we've talked about on another show, I think, a CISO episode, talking about the challenge of developing people who've excelled for their technical skills as they rise in their career to then excel on non -technical skills. What advice do you have for those people to make that leap from I'm great because I can understand X .509 to I'm great because I can convince the person down the hall that our interests actually are aligned? Yeah, that's a great point. So even on my own team right now, I have people who are very smart, very technically have done some great things, and they want to get to that next level. So for me, to that level, to try to help coach them along those lines, I recommend understanding all the different domains and then having a very strong relationship with the business and spend time with them. I think peer mentorships and things like that to do exchange programs within the company are also very important to understand how the business works and just spending time with them. I think that's, I guess, it's almost like what a social CISO type of thing. It's just very social, and it's really about getting outside of your shell and understanding everyone else's pains and what their goals are to win for their game. That's really kind of at the end of the day, yes, technical, that's good. You need that, absolutely. But it's all about people, processes, and tools. It's a three -legged chair, right? So people are so key, and I think I find a lot of the really, really smart infosec folks tend to focus on the tools, and everyone ignores processes, right? No one wants to document anything, but that's also very important too. So those are the kind of key aspects. But this sounds like hard work. It can be, but it's really depending on your personality types. But it's really not too hard. There's a lot of great classes out there to kind of coach yourself through, and just the ways of thinking about stuff, which is good. I read this great book called Superforecasting, which was, Phil Tetlock wrote this, and it was really about a way of how to think of things differently. You don't have to be highly educated. There's these experiments that are to use folks to become, quote, unquote, superforecasters. Some of the best performers, one of them was a housewife who just had a high school education, but because once she learned how to use the little levers and stuff to do the math on this, it became about how did she see things and how she thought about things. And it was about, okay, most people would see an event and automatically change their opinion about something broadly. For her, it was about, okay, that changes my opinion a little bit towards this direction. And then she would gather more and more data, and each time it would move the dial to the left or to the right. And eventually, she was able to call out, yeah, in six months, this is going to happen. And she was right. I think it was close to 87 % of the time. People like that had that kind of approach is really helpful. And I think, again, that kind of breaks down from what we were talking about today is about seeing the trends and kind of seeing the forest of the trees and then looking at every piece of information. And they'll just stick to one piece of information, which might be legitimate, but have that kind of shade your whole approach. You got to see all sorts of factors to kind of come in and see at the end of the day. And I think if you do that, you're going to see that cloud's going to be, for most cases, not all. Again, if you're hiding UFO bodies, okay, maybe not. We'll see that it's an advantage. Well, Jeremiah, I hate to do this on such a note, but I have to ask you our traditional closing questions. Sure. First, do you have a tip to help people improve their security when migrating to cloud? And two, aside from super forecasting, which sounds great, do you have recommended reading for our listeners? Yes. Super forecasting was a great one. I read another great one recently called American generalship. I'm just about finishing it up right now. It's pretty good. It's ideal of how to become a stronger leader and a stronger follower at the same time too. This kind of helps you coach of, okay, this is how I can mentor somebody. And this is also how to be a good mentee at the end of the day. It also has a lot of really great military stories in the background on that too. So fun stuff there if you're a fan of the military. And I'm sorry, what was the other question? One tip, one easy to follow tip for people. Yeah. I'd say try to make a new friend inside the business. At least once a month, have these one -on -ones and have a cup of coffee. I think it goes a long way. I remember getting on an airplane ride home from one of these other team events, talking to sat down two folks that I don't normally work with and got to spend five hours instead of watching a stupid movie, sitting there and talking about their business and what they're seeing, talks of AI and how they're using co -pilot and chat GPT and all that other type of stuff. It was really fascinating to hear their point of view of what they saw from a line of business that I didn't normally do a lot of work in. That's a fascinating answer and fits with the theme of the episode, which I think might be listeners, go make some new friends. So with that, Jeremiah, thank you so much for joining us today. Thanks guys. Really appreciate it. And now we are at time. Thank you very much for listening and of course for subscribing. You can find this podcast at Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever else you get your podcasts. Also, you can find us at our website cloud .withgoogle .com slash cloud security slash podcast. Please subscribe so that you don't miss episodes. You can follow us on Twitter, twitter .com slash cloud sec podcast. Your hosts are also on Twitter at Anton underscore Jovian and underscore Tim Pico. Tweet at us, email us, argue with us. And if you like or hate what we hear, we can invite you to the next episode. See you on the next cloud security podcast episode. Bye.

Timothy Peacock Anne Hunchuvakian Phil Tetlock TIM Tim Pico Phil Danables Jeremiah Drew 100 % Apple AWS Today Washington, Dc 2023 Five Hours Anton Cloud Security Palo Alto Two Folks Two Weeks
Fresh update on "phil" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:00 sec | 12 hrs ago

Fresh update on "phil" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

"The price tag is eye -popping. 20 to 22 million tax dollars says DC Chairman City Council Phil Mendelsohn. I offered to the Nationals that I would manually put these numbers up. Mendelsohn making the comments in a media briefing where he talked about several big expenses coming for the district. He says he supports of NCC the public -private partnership company that maintains the city -owned ballpark replacing the scoreboard. But that's not an issue that comes to the council. That's really an issue under the lease. The lease requires that the district government maintain the facility that it owns. Mendelsohn commenting that Nationals the have said the scoreboard is about to fall apart. Kyle Cooper WTLP News. Sports at 25 and 55. Powered by Red River. Technology decisions Think Red. Rob Woodfork, what's going on? Hey, the 17 -game schedule

A highlight from Willie and Korie Robertson

The Eric Metaxas Show

03:10 min | 5 d ago

A highlight from Willie and Korie Robertson

"Hey you, have you checked your bucket list lately? Are you ready to take care of item number seven? Listening to The Eric Mataxas Show? Well welcome, tune in, and then move on to item number eight. Skydiving with Chuck Schumer and AOC. Here now is Mr. Completed My Bucket List at age 12, Eric Mataxas. Hey there folks, welcome to the program. Hey Chris, do you know where I am? I believe you're in Texas. Yes, technically. I'm in Dallas, Texas, and I am in a hotel in Dallas, Texas. Tonight, I'm speaking at an event tonight for Parent Compass. That's going to be the Park City Baptist Church that's here in Dallas. I don't know, I think there's still tickets, but I will be signing books until the cows come home. I'd love that. So if there's anybody who can get to Dallas tonight, I'm speaking tonight, and I'm here for that. And I'm excited about it. I love being here, I have friends here. So with you in Dallas or Texas, you said till the cows come home. Technically, I think we need to state when that is, because that's literal in Texas. Yes, and they come home to Fort Worth, but they commute to Dallas. So tonight I got that event. Tomorrow I fly to California because I got three events in California. I mean, we got a whole bunch of stuff going on. It's a very crazy time. Now, before I forget, in this hour, I'm talking to Willie and Corey Robertson of the Duck Dynasty Robertsons. There's a film coming out this Thursday. Ladies and gentlemen, you need to support this film. These are the kind of films that I'm just telling you, if you don't like what's happening in the culture, which I would assume anybody with a half a brain understands that we're in trouble in American culture, in America, you need to support good things. And when somebody puts something like this out, you need to make an effort. It's the story of Phil Robertson. It's an unbelievable story. I'll be talking to them about it. But please make a note. This is going to be in theaters for, they give you like a week and then it goes away and then the garbage comes back. If it does well, they'll keep it in the theaters like Jesus Revolution, like Sound of Freedom. We need to do everything we can to support this kind of thing, especially when it's good, not just because it tells stories that we like, but it's actually artistically excellent and it tells stories we like. So it's called The Blind, obviously referring to a duck blind, at least in part, but The Blind, you can go to theblindmovie .com. It's important that you support this, that you tell your friends on social media.

California Chris Texas Phil Robertson Dallas America Eric Mataxas Willie Fort Worth Corey Robertson Dallas, Texas Tomorrow Tonight Jesus Revolution Sound Of Freedom Chuck Schumer Three Events Theblindmovie .Com. AOC
Fresh update on "phil" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:03 min | 16 hrs ago

Fresh update on "phil" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

"Seattle smacks the New York Giants 24 to three sacking giant quarterbacks 11 times daniel jones passer rating after four weeks is 33rd the league in and this just in there are only 32 teams in the national football league commanders quarterback Sam how's ranked 24th in the league right behind Jimmy Garoppolo right ahead of Mac Jones coach Ron Rivera impressed with how's improvement from the Buffalo game to this past week against Philadelphia I think he processed a lot quicker decision -making was quicker he really seemed to really have a good feeling good grasp as to what was going on out there made some really quick decisions got the ball in his hands kept them off balance as much as as much as anything so you know just again a lot of good growth and I think his consistency really showed Chicago drops by FedEx field Thursday a burgundy a gold on the practice field today college football Maryland quarterback Talia Tagovailos named Big Ten Offensive Player of the week the Terrapins tangled with number four Ohio State this Saturday it's a 12 noon game on Fox that means Gus Johnson will be in the booth baseball the Los Angeles Angels part ways with manager Phil Nevin Wildcard round begins today with or four games we put a bow on the national season this morning with their Nats notebook on the sports page at wtop .com Dave Preston wtop sports still ahead a congressman faces armed carjackers in the district ticks here's Jose Marie Griffiths the president of Dakota State University on the discussion developing the future federal cyber workforce sponsored by Dakota State University if campuses can open their world to government and not just to the big tech companies of the world then we be will able to get more people out into the public sector as well as the private sector making the connection and networking becomes all -important listen to the entire discussion on federal news network search Dakota State University the future of cyber lies we at least expected a powerhouse on the Dakota State University as an NSA Center of Academic Excellence DSU

A highlight from Short Stuff: The Dakota

Stuff You Should Know

14:15 min | 6 d ago

A highlight from Short Stuff: The Dakota

"Hello everybody, the Xfinity 10G network was made for streaming giving you an incredible viewing experience now You can stream all of your favorite live sports shows and movies with way less buffering freezing and lagging Thanks to the next generation Xfinity 10G network You get a reliable connection so you can sit back relax and enjoy your favorite entertainment Get way more into what you're into when you stream on the Xfinity 10G network learn more at Xfinity .com Xfinity .com Hey and welcome to the short stuff, I'm Josh and there's Chuck and we're going short stuff architectural style specifically architectural style from the mid to late 19th century specifically in Manhattan and the Upper West Side specifically about the Dakota That's right. Can I say something very quickly since this is short stuff? Sure Right before we recorded you said Dakota Fanning and that reminded me I just got back from New York and I had six celebrity sightings One of which was Elle Fanning. Oh, yeah. Yeah, she's in the lobby of a hotel. I go in that hotel to pee I'm always got my head on a swivel in that town, especially in fancy hotel lobbies Sure, and I was like, hey, this is Dakota Fanning and I was like she was sitting with people I was like, there's got to be somebody else famous went to the bathroom came out sitting next to Jessica Chastain Wow, pretty major sighting then at one of my pavement shows I saw Noah Baumbach and Greta Gerwig Yeah, they're married okay Wow say so power couple yeah, I mean he co -wrote Barbie with her and Dean Wareham of Luna, they're all good friends and they were all together So that was a three banger in one and this this lady near me was jumping up and down like screaming it at Greta Gerwig and she was very sweet from up above in the balcony and like made the little heart symbol and like said she Loved her was very sweet. Oh, that's sweet. And then sat next to Tiffany Haddish on the way on the flight home Wow She was a girl across the aisle from me. Did you but did you bug her the whole time? No, I didn't say anything. Were you like, hey, hey Tiffany, you remember this one joke you told? Layers She's great though. She's very pretty too. Yeah. Yes. It is. Wonderful. I like that voice. She's got that sort of a low voice kind of like this I'm Tiffany Haddish. That's right Okay. All right. We got to go cuz we're talking the Dakota here and not Dakota fanning or Elle fanning No, the apartment building in New York City. That's right. The one where John Lennon was shot in front of Live there. No, no. No, he lived there and he was he was shot on the sidewalk outside the Dakota. So That's not the only reason the Dakota's famous. Although it's probably the biggest reason the Dakota's famous One of the reasons that Dakota is famous is because it was one of the first apartment buildings in New York City like they didn't do apartments back then and even more spectacular than that it being one of the first apartment buildings is that it was Plunked down in the Upper West Side at a time when Central Park West one of the most What is it white healed high healed? Well healed well healed like Bits of stretches of real estate in the world was a dirt road still and nowhere's Phil nowhere Yep, nobody wanted to go up that far. They're like, there's nothing up there That's right. Hey seeds in in fact, it was so far out that The guy who built the Dakota who will meet in the second Edward Cabot Clark bought it from an industrialist Whose wife threatened to divorce him if he built their house out there and he's like, I don't just get rid of this piece of Land then yeah, she's like I want to live down here where it's posh in alphabet city You know, it's funny is if you you remember if you go read our book There's a whole chapter on keeping up with the Joneses in it Oh, yeah talks a lot about this part of of New York history where there are all sorts of nowhere's Ville's around that today are just like incredibly and famous Expensive that's right. All right, so the Dakota like you said people were not living in apartments at the time they were living in brownstones, which were single -family homes and There were a couple like a couple started to spring up in the 1870s They weren't great. They were Kind of like you think of New York apartments. They were small. They didn't have a lot of light People didn't love renting And living in them and along came this guy Edward Cabot Clark that you mentioned He was the president of the Singer sewing machine company So he was loaded and he got together with an architect named Henry Janeway Hardenberg a great name and to get into real estate and the first thing they built which is sadly not there anymore is Kind of a prototype for the Dakota called the van Corlier a red brick five -story 36 apartment building that was on 7th between 55th and 56 Yeah, and it immediately improved on its predecessors Because the rooms were larger the apartments themselves were larger. There was a courtyard. So there was plenty of like natural light and air Had elevators apparently which are we're talking like the 1880s 1870s and there was also I think a What was there oh there was a ramp that went beneath it so then You didn't have to solely your family reputation by accepting deliveries out there in public You could go down to the basement and meet the delivery driver to get them to take whatever they gave you Yeah, and it was just nicer overall I think there was a an intercom system and you know, like Spanish tile. It was just it was just a step up for sure and all of a sudden in 1878 They rented out very quickly and so Clark was like, alright it turns out if you if you build it nice enough they will come and Apartments can be a real thing and like you said bought that property or I guess it was just land at the time, right? Yeah, yeah bought this land from Jacob Henry Schiff way way uptown and Decided to build his second Sort of dream property there. Yep, which would be the Dakota and I say that we pause for a message break and then return and begin talking about the Dakota some more and Tiffany Haddish right after this I'm Jonathan Strickland host of the podcast tech stuff I sat down with Sunun Shahani of Surfare Mobility, which recently went public We talked about flying and electric planes and regional air mobility The future of travel doesn't have to include crowded airports cramps seats or long road trips It can be as simple as using an app to book a short -range flight on an electric plane Learn more on tech stuff on the I heart radio app Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcast This episode of stuff you should know is brought to you by t -mobile for business Hey everybody have you ever been driving around looking for a parking spot getting more and more irritated and you think why can't I just Look up parking spaces around my area I mean like wouldn't that make sense and if you find the spot faster You're going to create less traffic and in that sense Everybody's life is made better just by the ability to look up a parking spot. That's right my friend But that's the kind of experience that t -mobile for business 5g solutions can create from smarter cities to safer industrial workplaces 5g can enable a better more connected world Yeah And t -mobile for business has the network built for the way business and tech converge today right now Workforces are more widely distributed than ever When was the last time you saw a co -worker and industries are ripe for disruption and tech is advancing at a rate that requires vast Insecure connectivity. That's right offering the nation's largest 5g network T -mobile is the best network partner to take your business to the next level now is the time to business Bravely and start building your future today Just go to t -mobile .com slash now to learn more So Chuck we're talking about the Dakota now starting now Okay, so if the van Corleer was a Advancement based on the stuff that came a few years before it the Dakota was an even better advancement Improvement based on the van Corleer. It had big apartments big rooms Courtyard lots of light Ramp underneath and all that stuff, but it was also like even more Luxuriously designed like if you came over to someone's apartment, you couldn't see through down the hallway to every single room the walls were kind of like designed around so that you couldn't like there was a Separation between your visitors in the living part of the apartment or the sleeping part, you know the family part I guess is what you call it just little details like that Another big detail is that it had its own power plant that generated electricity for it in the 1870s Yeah, not bad the kitchens had little balconies so if you had stinky stuff like garbage that you couldn't get down or Maybe even stinky food or something. You could put it just right outside the kitchen, which was something that a lot of places didn't have Yeah, they had a boiler So they had insulated pipes bringing steam and hot water into the building Which was a big innovation at the time and they had tennis courts. They had croquet courts It was it was a real gym. It still is it's one of my favorite buildings in New York Every time I go up there to Central Park, at least I try to pop out on that area and just go go Give it a look Because it's a beautiful building. It's sort of a mishmash of styles It's been called, you know, French Renaissance or got German Gothic or even Victorian and it's kind of a little bit of everything But it's it's beautiful. I don't think I've ever seen it in person if I have I didn't realize it You may have it's it's lovely. It's right there on a corner. So here's the thing when Edward Cabot Clark was creating the Dakota He was widely derided for it. They called it Clark's Folly because people were deeply insensitive in the 19th century and the reason why they call it that is because again, it's in the middle of nowhere and People aren't really into apartments Like we said they live in like three -story Brownstones like they live in homes They don't live in apartments the people who lived in apartments as far as this house stuff works article points out were widows Widowers and people who are waiting for their wealthy relatives to die so they could inherit their house And all of a sudden Clark is like no. No, we're changing the game Anyone who is anyone is gonna want to live in an apartment and it turns out his gamble paid off. He was right Yeah, he sadly he died before it was finished So he didn't get to see it come to fruition But it was certainly not his folly because like you said people lined up to rent these things or I guess I don't know were they all rentals at the time. I wonder if anyone were available for sale. I think they were all rentals Okay, well people rented him, but they were people that had money. They just weren't like robber barons who wanted to live in mansions They were they were sort of the early New York, you know upper class They were people who like were bank presidents and people who like the CEOs of the time, right? Apparently the Adams sisters were heirs to a chewing gum Fortune they live there with it and that flavor tea berry one of the greatest gum flavors of all time. That's a Was it tea berry? Now, are you kidding? Cuz I can't tell no. No, that's for real. It's like a Kind of salmon pink colored Gum, no, no the the wrapper is okay It tastes like salmon too. No, it's a really delicate unique flavor and you could probably find it like Cracker Barrel Don't they have all sorts of old -timey candies or one of those rocket fizz places? I have no idea anywhere that sells candy I'll bet they have tea berry stick gum and it's really worth trying. All right Nice tip there. Thanks. So The Dakota started a trend all of a sudden luxury apartment houses started popping up all over the place Kind of in the same model with like bigger rooms and higher ceilings and stuff like that and the Upper West Side it wasn't right then but around the early 1900s that really started to take off and Really changed the face of New York of New York, you know, they they started building up more after World War one, obviously when New York said they could and Apartments became the way to go. Yeah Eventually, the the Dakota started seeing a different clientele not you know Straights and squares like bank presidents but like stars like Lauren Bacall and Judy Garland Wowie Wow horse Karloff, too That's pretty cool Imagine living next to him and then of course two of the most famous residents John Lennon and Yoko Oh, no Is blamed widely for moving John Lennon to the Dakota and he would have lived had she not done that Do people say that? Probably somebody out there. Okay poking fun at those people. No, I think he loved the Dakota Yeah, it would seem to be his home. They were there for like a dozen years. I think right before he died I'm not sure how long he loved New York City though. It was it was a great scene for both. He and Yoko. Yep You anything else? I got nothing else go check out the Dakota if you're in New York It's a great great looking building.

Sunun Shahani Josh Jonathan Strickland New York John Lennon Lauren Bacall Jessica Chastain Tiffany Manhattan New York City Yoko Tiffany Haddish 1878 19Th Century Henry Janeway Hardenberg Dean Wareham Elle Fanning Singer Chuck TWO
Fresh update on "phil" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:06 min | 16 hrs ago

Fresh update on "phil" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

"You know they might not make the plans this year is going to throw that out there monday night football saw seattle dump the new york giants twenty four three devin witherspoon returns an interception ninety seven yards for a touchdown while also rallying two of the seahawks eleven sacks giants are one and three on the season commanders are two and two with two straight losses although both two teams currently leading their respective divisions they do have a defense though that's allowing thirty points per game what is going on head coach ron rivera with this day well i think you know one of the things that we're most certainly working on is trying to eliminate some of the explosives we've allowed that's been unfortunate and untimely and then continue to work and continue to create takeaways you know we've had opportunities we just haven't we haven't gone through with and it and we've got to get takeaways it's a big part of uh you know what can help us win football games burgundy and gold battle on chicago thursday night football they're back on the practice field this afternoon wtops george allt wallace will be and on uh... posting on x or tweeting at g wallace w t l p college football maryland quarterback tolya of tongue our of lowest vote of the big ten offensive player of the week after throwing for five touchdowns in the win over indiana the kickoff time for a homecoming october fourteenth game with illinois has been set for three thirty i'm still bringing those hint of lime he does no salsa though cuz that doesn't travel nearly as well major league baseball los angeles angels part ways with manager phil nevin after the team's seventy three win season playoff baseball begins today with the wild card round four games on tap texas tampa bay is the one you want to watch because that series sends the winner to baltimore dave impressed in w t l p sports coming up after traffic and weather carjackers strike again in d c this time targeting uh... congressman nine twenty six terra durant mom to three former elementary teacher and marine life is fighting to restore high standards in virginia schools and to address learning loss she's

A highlight from 1267. Xbox Leaks Crypto Wallet | Microsoft x Meta Web3 Analysis

Tech Path Crypto

11:34 min | Last week

A highlight from 1267. Xbox Leaks Crypto Wallet | Microsoft x Meta Web3 Analysis

"All right, so big news in the industry today, we're going to break it all down for you. This is all about the Microsoft leak documents and its connection to crypto. So this is an important one. If you are interested in crypto at all, even if you're not a gamer, you want to stay around for this one. It's going to be a good one. My name is Paul Baron. Welcome back into Tech Path. Let's get into it today. And I do want to thank our sponsor, and that is Tangem. If you guys are looking at self -custody, this is one of the tools that I like. And it's a great tool because it's utilizing a card system that is basically an NFC device. If you go over to their website, you can learn a little bit more about the Tangem wallet. And if you decide you want to get one, there's a couple of options you've got. You can go right in and get their most recent one, which is the new Tangem wallet releasing here in early October. And then, or possibly even go in and get your classic wallet. The cool thing with the new one is you're going to have the optional seed phrase among some other things. Now, one of the questions that I'm asked often is, how secure is this, Paul? Is it? Because in many cases, if you've had NFC cards, you know, there's these technologies out there that are able to breach these. And Tangem tweeted something that was happening over at one of their events. And this is a product called Flipper Zero, which Flipper Zero, let me kind of play this for you guys real quick, and it'll show you real quick. So the wallet here, let's try reading his NFC. So, reads it, but it can't parse the data. So, let's go ahead... All right, so what Flipper Z does is essentially can analyze any NFC, most NFC, and able to pull the data right from the card. They were unable to crack the wallet right here on Tangem. So they showed that example. So if you guys are interested in security, and that's your thing, and it should be anytime you do self -currency, this may be a solution for you. Make sure and use our discount code, it's down in the links below. All right, so let's get into a couple of points, starting with this news right here. Leaked documents show that Microsoft recently explored the idea of supporting crypto wallets on Xbox consoles. Do you think this next console or software update will include support for crypto? This was actually from Forbes, where they were talking about the leaked documents, showed an Xbox roadmap from May of 2022 that included support for crypto wallets. Now, this is pretty big. Now, there's a lot here that supports this. Other than the leaked documents, we'll break into all of that for you guys as well. And also what its potential is. Now, this was a tweet we put out back in March of this year, March 18th. We put out this, Ethereum and NFT wallets coming directly to Microsoft Edge browser. Browser -based games are about to get a helping hand from the most powerful tech company in the world, being Microsoft. And then we showed the actual function of it, and I'll zoom in and on that. Right there is the crypto wallet integration. This is Edge wallets, and then right there is Ethereum. So again, this is the early stages of what many of these tech companies are prepping for, which I think is going to be a war in the gaming market. Now, this has happened before with Microsoft. Remember the browser wars when Microsoft essentially was going head to head with Netscape. And at the time, Netscape had most of the market share, was doing so great, and everybody kind of counted Microsoft out. And of course, Internet Explorer came, it kind of opened up the browser wars, Google came in behind that and pretty much took most of the market share. But the point is that Microsoft is making some moves. Here was a good example. Here was Azure, NFT solution accelerator. So this again also ties into Microsoft and the use of platforms like Ethereum. So more data kind of showing in where exactly their strategy is going. If you look at the Fortune 100 Web3 investors by number of deals, Citibank, Goldman, IBM, Google, Microsoft, number 15 right there. So you can see this is getting pretty interesting right here when it comes to the major companies understanding where this is going. Now, most of this has been mostly on the institutional side, which is reasonable and understandable. But I think Google and Microsoft are definitely out here in front. Now, the question will be is, how does this play into the rest of the market? Here's some examples of some companies, let me kind of zoom in on this for you guys, of some companies already making a lot of Web3 moves. Obviously, Microsoft with Activision, their acquisition positions Microsoft to build metaverse capabilities. You've got Meta and Imagine PTIX, PayPal and Curve. You can see there's a lot of companies in here that have really started to connect the dots here. Nike Artifact, we've covered it extensively. And then obviously, Apple, we'll see how that goes with their virtual worlds on the avatar side. The other things that I think when we get into this, if you think about, well, is Microsoft ready for this? And I think one of the things that Microsoft, a lot of people don't realize this, they have learned their lesson of these early -stage growth markets. And what I mean by that, this is a statement that goes all the way back into, you know, Wikipedia land. And ironically, I worked for Microsoft at the time when all this was going on. And this was by Bill Gates, where he simply said, this is also famous that the internet were not interested in it. This was a quote from Bill Gates in 1993. Let me kind of zoom in on that for you guys. And the internet, you know, we're not really interested in. And the reason I know this is because when I was working with Microsoft, you know, as a young tech guy, I was thinking, oh my God, this internet thing is going to be an absolute barnstorm. We're going to see an unbelievable growth, unbelievable innovation. And the teams that I was working for, all of my uppers, were essentially saying, don't worry about it. We're going to focus on OS and the future of the, you know, the WordSuite and all the utilities and productivity tools. And I couldn't believe it that that was happening, but it did. And I think Microsoft has learned something from that history in being too late to an early -stage market. And that, I think, is where we're going right now. When I go to this next clip right here, it gets into the Xbox history because they also almost lost the war. Listen in. The Xbox One was a byproduct of a lost and misguided Microsoft, which did not have the interest of gamers at heart. All we heard was TV, TV, sports TV, TV, TV, followed by horribly disconnected attempts at salvaging a situation where irreparable damage had already been done. Fortunately, we have a product for people who aren't able to get some form of connectivity. It's called Xbox 360. Stick with 360. That's your message. Well, if you have zero access to the Internet. Meanwhile, its opposition went on from strength to strength, using Xbox's missteps to enhance its position. Xbox went on to lose its stronghold in two key regions, the United Kingdom and more critically, the United States. At the time, all this seemed like a near impossible task. Many were talking about the possible disappearance of Xbox from the gaming space altogether. It nearly happened. But instead, in comes in Phil Spencer, the newly appointed head of Xbox. All right, so Spencer was kind of the Messiah there and understanding the challenge that he was up against in terms of being able to go against, you know, makers like Sony, etc., that really kind of dominated the gaming space. The Activision deal was so critical for their success going forward, especially in the gaming sector. But now the question is, how do they maybe one up their competition? Because there is a new innovation land that is pretty much untouched. It's a brand new area called Web3 and what we'll see with the use case of crypto and NFTs. All of this is about to crack into what I think is going to happen in the gaming sector right now. If you look at this next clip, which is where Spencer talks a little bit more about creators and this is why I think we can draw the conclusion. Let's go to a clip by Phil Spencer on creators and why this is important. Listen. So that's why Xbox is interested in, you know, going down this road hand in hand with Activision as a king. But what's the benefit to gamers and creators and if possible, is that maybe an angle in the UK that benefits them? In the end, it's all about player and creator benefit. Like we know that as building a platform, if our players aren't finding great games to play and if our creators don't feel like they can build the best games and find players for those games, like nothing else matters. Because we're trying to create a larger marketplace for people who are building games across more screens. Different business models help players and it helps creators as well. And that's our job. And in the end, this has to benefit players and creators or it hasn't been successful for Xbox. I think his statement right there of benefiting creators in the end is critical to the overall strategy of how Xbox is going to go. Xbox and Microsoft are going to go forward and the tie into Web3 and NFTs is going to open up a whole new, not only creator community, but also a creator industry in terms of revenue, business models. All those kind of things are going to really advance in Web3 and I think that is the scenario that Xbox, with these leaked documents, might be setting up along with Microsoft. If you look at what's happening though with Meta, obviously Meta Connect this week, they had something that was kind of interesting. And that was the fact in this little promo, they actually put in a statement in there and the first look at what's next for the metaverse. So they're still using the term. They still see the potential here. And the predictions of what Meta is going to be doing and what Mark Zuckerberg is going to be doing could be much bigger here. And there's some interesting correlation between Meta and Microsoft. Now, you have to think about it. The enemy of my enemy is my friend. Now, think about who the enemy is here. It's most likely Apple and what is happening with Vision Pro. I think there may be a connection here that starts to set things up quite interestingly. Now, as you look at Meta, this was just a quick clip right there from something that Zuckerberg posted. And part of this was really the fact that most likely we're going to see something dropping from Lego in connection with Meta. So again, most likely a lot of new stuff dropping, most likely we're going to see some hardware. And what I'm really interested in is what does that roadmap look for with all of these new devices and potentially new experiences coming to Meta. And we'll find out on the Connect Event. Let's go over to this next clip. This is getting into Game Pass and how this connection into VR works, especially tied into what was happening during this leak. Listen in. We have waited so long for Xbox to finally come to our Quest headsets. And while none other than Mark Zuckerberg made a huge promise that Game Pass would be coming soon to the Quest 2, Microsoft leaked some very important documents that showed their interest and plans for upcoming VR products, with them mentioning that they see XR as their future opportunity, even so much that Xbox can leverage it to build its next -gen platform for immersive apps and games. But probably the most important one noted that Microsoft wanted to expand its hardware portfolios to include complete new categories pointing towards VR devices.

Spencer Paul Baron 1993 Citibank Zuckerberg May Of 2022 Microsoft IBM Goldman Apple Sony Xbox One Mark Zuckerberg Lego UK Google Paul Phil Spencer Bill Gates United Kingdom
Fresh "Phil" from WTOP 24 Hour News

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:09 min | 17 hrs ago

Fresh "Phil" from WTOP 24 Hour News

"One of the NFL's two winless teams on Thursday Night Football but coach Ron Rivera is not sleeping on Chicago this is a team that's going to come in and they're hungry to win their own for they know it but they have a very talented young quarterback who's dynamic and explosive and last year he gave us hell we can't allow that to happen we've got to be disciplined we've got to play our game this is again a young team that that's growing and developing commanders took last year's matchup 12 -7 a game many felt Washington may have won but the viewers lost not the prettiest of affairs college football Maryland quarterback Talia Tonga -Valoa takes Big Ten Offensive Player of the Week honors after throwing for 352 yards and five touchdowns against Indiana baseball the Los Angeles Angels have missed the playoffs eight straight years they part ways manager Phil Nevin after the team's 73 -89 finish playoff baseball begins today Dave Preston WTLP Sports and coming up after traffic and weather a congressman carjacked at gunpoint in DC I'm 826 Susan several years ago when my daughter school Courtney she was was in high a victim of human trafficking after getting groomed by ms -13 she assaulted was repeatedly at her school dozens of reports to the school and nobody did anything in fact nobody believed me when I told them what was going on except for Bill Wolf he was the only person to believe Courtney's story the gang tried to move my daughter out of state

Little Red Rodeo (MM #4568)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | Last week

Little Red Rodeo (MM #4568)

"We all have those songs that we wake up singing, or songs that once you hear them you can't get them out of your head whether you want to or not. Years ago, when I was in country radio, there was a song by country singer Colin Ray. I think it was actually written by Phil Vassar, another country singer -songwriter. It's called Little Red Rodeo, back in like 97, 98 I think, it was a big hit, Top 5, something like that. Every time I heard it, it was one of those I couldn't get out of my head. Fast forward a couple years later, I'm not playing it anymore on the radio, I hear it on some other radio station and guess what, I'm stuck hearing it in my mind every morning for kind of like a week. It's kind of like Groundhog Day. The other day, I was listening to a classic country radio station out of Gadsden, Alabama. I tuned it up and what was one of the first songs I heard? Little Red Rodeo by Colin Ray. Now of course, that was about a week ago. What do I wake up singing and thinking every morning now for the last week? Little Red Rodeo by Colin Ray. It'd be one thing if you were singing songs and thinking about songs that you really truly liked. Sadly, it's still stuck in my head. Woke up singing it again this morning. It's kind of tough when you got those songs going through your head that you want to get rid of, but you just can't.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Colin Ray Phil Vassar Gadsden, Alabama Last Week First Songs Little Red Rodeo This Morning ONE About A Week Ago A Couple Years Later One Thing Years Ago Groundhog Day 97 5 TOP 98
Fresh update on "phil" discussed on Evening News with Art Sanders

Evening News with Art Sanders

00:09 min | 18 hrs ago

Fresh update on "phil" discussed on Evening News with Art Sanders

"It's 20 after, welcome back to America in the morning as we get higher prices. Visit The Pump. OPEC Plus is standing by their plan, led by both Saudi Arabia and Russia to cut production of crude oil by one million barrels a day. That news comes as the Secretary General of the oil exporting countries told the BBC that they see demand growing 2 by .4 million barrels per day. The news comes as oil moves past $5 a barrel and America, which is not a member of OPEC, hits a record last month of producing nearly 13 million barrels of oil daily. CNBC's Jessica Edinger covers Tuesday Business headlines. Wall Street opens this morning after a bit of a struggle yesterday. Mixed markets. Investors shrugged off any celebrating over Congress avoiding a government shutdown because the next deadline in just 45 days. Billionaire investor Pershing Square's Bill Ackman told CNBC the economy is starting to slow and the Fed may not raise rates any higher. I think the Fed is probably done. I think the economy is starting to slow. I think the level of real interest rates is high enough to slow things down. You know, high mortgage rates, high car rates, high credit card rates, they're starting to really have, you know, an impact on the economy. Economy is still solid, but it's definitely weakening. Pershing Square's Bill Ackman on CNBC. Tesla came up short with new vehicle deliveries in the last quarter. Definitely below expectations for the year They've now. delivered basically 1 .33 million vehicles and the Cybertruck is also talking about guys. The original target was for Cybertruck deliveries to begin in the third quarter. Q3 Well, has come and gone and we still do not have Cybertruck deliveries. CNBC's Phil LaBeau. Kellogg spun off its snacks business into a separate company that started trading on Wall Street yesterday. Investors too impressed with Calanova, which makes Pringles, Cheez -Its, Pop -Tarts and more. Kellanova, formerly known as Kellogg, the rebranded snack business trading under the ticker K and now trade separately from the iconic like brands. cereal It's one of the biggest laggards of the day, down more than 6 percent. CNBC's Tyler Ferguson. What's the update on the Comcast Disney Hulu purchase? Talks on the future of the streaming service. Talks are happening this week. Comcast owns some of Hulu. Disney owns most of it. The two have agreed that will Disney buy the part that it doesn't already own. Disney will purchase the remaining third of the company that Comcast owns. But the question is how much Disney will pay for that third of Hulu. The negotiation over this Hulu asset last year was valued at $27 .5 billion in 2019. It could take months. As Comcast said, has the price tag could be much higher. Hulu, which has more than 48 million subscribers, is seen a as valuable asset to integrate further with Disney Plus, while Comcast could use the proceeds to return capital to shareholders by buying back stock. CNBC's Julia Boorstin. Comcast is the parent company of CNBC. On today's watch list, FTX founder and former CEO Sam Bankman -Fried heads to his fraud trial in New York. We get the Joltz report on job opportunities of blinds and labor turnover earnings are coming from spice maker McCormick and egg producer Cal Maine foods. Forbes is set to publish its Forbes 400

Little Red Rodeo (MM #4568)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | Last week

Little Red Rodeo (MM #4568)

"We all have those songs that we wake up singing, or songs that once you hear them you can't get them out of your head whether you want to or not. Years ago, when I was in country radio, there was a song by country singer Colin Ray. I think it was actually written by Phil Vassar, another country singer -songwriter. It's called Little Red Rodeo, back in like 97, 98 I think, it was a big hit, Top 5, something like that. Every time I heard it, it was one of those I couldn't get out of my head. Fast forward a couple years later, I'm not playing it anymore on the radio, I hear it on some other radio station and guess what, I'm stuck hearing it in my mind every morning for kind of like a week. It's kind of like Groundhog Day. The other day, I was listening to a classic country radio station out of Gadsden, Alabama. I tuned it up and what was one of the first songs I heard? Little Red Rodeo by Colin Ray. Now of course, that was about a week ago. What do I wake up singing and thinking every morning now for the last week? Little Red Rodeo by Colin Ray. It'd be one thing if you were singing songs and thinking about songs that you really truly liked. Sadly, it's still stuck in my head. Woke up singing it again this morning. It's kind of tough when you got those songs going through your head that you want to get rid of, but you just can't.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Colin Ray Phil Vassar Gadsden, Alabama Last Week First Songs Little Red Rodeo This Morning ONE About A Week Ago A Couple Years Later One Thing Years Ago Groundhog Day 97 5 TOP 98
Little Red Rodeo (MM #4568)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | Last week

Little Red Rodeo (MM #4568)

"We all have those songs that we wake up singing, or songs that once you hear them you can't get them out of your head whether you want to or not. Years ago, when I was in country radio, there was a song by country singer Colin Ray. I think it was actually written by Phil Vassar, another country singer -songwriter. It's called Little Red Rodeo, back in like 97, 98 I think, it was a big hit, Top 5, something like that. Every time I heard it, it was one of those I couldn't get out of my head. Fast forward a couple years later, I'm not playing it anymore on the radio, I hear it on some other radio station and guess what, I'm stuck hearing it in my mind every morning for kind of like a week. It's kind of like Groundhog Day. The other day, I was listening to a classic country radio station out of Gadsden, Alabama. I tuned it up and what was one of the first songs I heard? Little Red Rodeo by Colin Ray. Now of course, that was about a week ago. What do I wake up singing and thinking every morning now for the last week? Little Red Rodeo by Colin Ray. It'd be one thing if you were singing songs and thinking about songs that you really truly liked. Sadly, it's still stuck in my head. Woke up singing it again this morning. It's kind of tough when you got those songs going through your head that you want to get rid of, but you just can't.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Colin Ray Phil Vassar Gadsden, Alabama Last Week First Songs Little Red Rodeo This Morning ONE About A Week Ago A Couple Years Later One Thing Years Ago Groundhog Day 97 5 TOP 98
Little Red Rodeo (MM #4568)

The Mason Minute

01:00 min | Last week

Little Red Rodeo (MM #4568)

"We all have those songs that we wake up singing, or songs that once you hear them you can't get them out of your head whether you want to or not. Years ago, when I was in country radio, there was a song by country singer Colin Ray. I think it was actually written by Phil Vassar, another country singer -songwriter. It's called Little Red Rodeo, back in like 97, 98 I think, it was a big hit, Top 5, something like that. Every time I heard it, it was one of those I couldn't get out of my head. Fast forward a couple years later, I'm not playing it anymore on the radio, I hear it on some other radio station and guess what, I'm stuck hearing it in my mind every morning for kind of like a week. It's kind of like Groundhog Day. The other day, I was listening to a classic country radio station out of Gadsden, Alabama. I tuned it up and what was one of the first songs I heard? Little Red Rodeo by Colin Ray. Now of course, that was about a week ago. What do I wake up singing and thinking every morning now for the last week? Little Red Rodeo by Colin Ray. It'd be one thing if you were singing songs and thinking about songs that you really truly liked. Sadly, it's still stuck in my head. Woke up singing it again this morning. It's kind of tough when you got those songs going through your head that you want to get rid of, but you just can't.

Mason Minute Kevin Mason Baby Boomers Life Culture Society Musings Colin Ray Phil Vassar Gadsden, Alabama Last Week First Songs Little Red Rodeo This Morning ONE About A Week Ago A Couple Years Later One Thing Years Ago Groundhog Day 97 5 TOP 98
Little Red Rodeo (MM #4568)

The Mason Minute

00:54 sec | Last week

Little Red Rodeo (MM #4568)

"We all have those songs that we wake up singing, or songs that once you hear them you can't get them out of your head whether you want to or not. Years ago, when I was in country radio, there was a song by country singer Colin Ray. I think it was actually written by Phil Vassar, another country singer -songwriter. It's called Little Red Rodeo, back in like 97, 98 I think, it was a big hit, Top 5, something like that. Every time I heard it, it was one of those I couldn't get out of my head. Fast forward a couple years later, I'm not playing it anymore on the radio, I hear it on some other radio station and guess what, I'm stuck hearing it in my mind every morning for kind of like a week. It's kind of like Groundhog Day. The other day, I was listening to a classic country radio station out of Gadsden, Alabama. I tuned it up and what was one of the first songs I heard? Little Red Rodeo by Colin Ray. Now of course, that was about a week ago. What do I wake up singing and thinking every morning now for the last week? Little Red Rodeo by Colin Ray. It'd be one thing if you were singing songs and thinking about songs that you really truly liked. Sadly, it's still stuck in my head. Woke up singing it again this morning. It's kind of tough when you got those songs going through your head that you want to get rid of, but you just can't.

Colin Ray Phil Vassar Gadsden, Alabama Last Week First Songs Little Red Rodeo This Morning ONE About A Week Ago A Couple Years Later One Thing Years Ago Groundhog Day 97 5 TOP 98
Monitor Show 12:00 09-23-2023 12:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:54 min | Last week

Monitor Show 12:00 09-23-2023 12:00

"Investment Advisors switch to interactive brokers for lowest cost global trading and turnkey custody solutions. No ticket charges and no conflicts of your interests at ibkr .com slash ria. And next week for the latest on the stories moving big money in the world of sports. Stay with us because today's top stories and global business headlines are coming up right now. 24 hours a day at Bloomberg dot com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg Radio. President Biden is joining the United Auto Workers picket line. Brian Shook reports. Biden tweeted that he was going to Michigan Tuesday to stand in solidarity with the workers as the fight for a fair share of the value they helped create. This comes after UAW President Sean Fain announced earlier this week he would send more workers to the picket lines if substantial progress wasn't made with the big three automakers on a new contract. Union workers say they want a 40 percent pay increase cost of living adjustments and pensions for all workers. New Jersey Senator Bob Menendez is vowing to fight federal bribery charges and what he calls baseless allegations. Menendez and his wife are accused of accepting money and gifts in exchange for using his position to help three New Jersey businessmen. Menendez released a statement calling it a smear campaign meant to silence him. New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy is among the political leaders calling for Menendez to step down. Here's Scott Pringle. Murphy says the allegations are so serious and deeply disturbing that they compromise the ability of Senator Menendez to effectively represent the people of our state. Menendez has no plans to resign for now. He is stepping down though from his role as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy plans to cut funding for Ukraine out of a defense spending bill that's being blocked by a...

Menendez Murphy Michigan 40 Percent Next Week Bloomberg Business Act Kevin Mccarthy United Auto Workers President Trump Brian Shook UAW Three Today Senate Foreign Relations Commi Ibkr .Com Scott Pringle Senator Tuesday Bob Menendez Bloomberg Radio
Monitor Show 19:00 09-22-2023 19:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:55 min | Last week

Monitor Show 19:00 09-22-2023 19:00

"When professional soccer player Marcus Rashford injured his shoulder, he turned to Resil's virtual reality training program to help him maintain his skills and return to the field with confidence. Learn more at meta .com slash metaverse impact. And this is Bloomberg. Stay with us now. Top stories and global business headlines are coming up right now. Broadcasting 24 hours a day at Bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg Radio. President Biden is joining the United Auto Workers picket line. Biden tweeted that he was going to Michigan Tuesday to stand in solidarity with the workers as the fight for a fair share of the value they helped create. This comes after UAW President Sean Fain announced earlier this week he would send more workers to the picket lines if substantial progress wasn't made with the big three automakers on a new contract. Governor Phil Murphy is calling on New Jersey U .S. Senator Bob Menendez to resign. Menendez was indicted on federal bribery charges that allege he accepted cash, gold bars and gifts in exchange for using his influence to help three businessmen and the Egyptian government. The White House is calling on Congress to do its job and pass legislation to fund the government and avoid a shutdown. House Republicans failed multiple times this week to do their basic duty, keep the government running. Instead, they were pushed to the extremes with increasingly severe cuts to programs Americans rely on. Press Secretary Corrine Jean -Pierre called on House Republicans to abide by the bipartisan funding agreement negotiated by Speaker McCarthy and President Biden. Texas Governor Greg Abbott is deploying more buses to the border towns of Eagle Pass and El Paso.

Marcus Rashford Menendez Corrine Jean -Pierre El Paso Eagle Pass Governor Michigan Bloomberg Business Act United Auto Workers Congress President Trump White House UAW Three Businessmen 24 Hours A Day This Week Greg Abbott Phil Murphy Tuesday Earlier This Week
A highlight from Auradines 4nm Bitcoin Miner w/ Barun Kar and Rajiv Khemani

HASHR8

19:07 min | Last week

A highlight from Auradines 4nm Bitcoin Miner w/ Barun Kar and Rajiv Khemani

"Welcome back to The Mining Pod. On today's show, we're joined by Auradine, a new Bitcoin mining ESIC manufacturer coming to market. We talk about the unit specs, the team behind the machine, and how they expect to compete in an ever -crowded market. Did you know that you can make more money by merge mining other networks? Check out MakeMoreMoneyMining .com for information on BIPs 300 and 301, a proposal to bring more revenue to Bitcoin miners through sidechains and merge mining, called DriveChains. Increase your mining revenues and learn more about participating in Bitcoin governance by visiting MakeMoreMoneyMining .com. Are you a miner who wants to activate Bitcoin improvements? Check out Activation .Watch. See what Bitcoin improvements the Bitcoin community, developers, and miners are considering and show support by signaling for one of many BIPs up for consideration. Activation .Watch. Filecoin's mission is to create a decentralized, efficient, and robust storage infrastructure for humanity's information. Join the Filecoin Foundation team October 3 -5 for PhilVegas, the first major Filecoin community event in North America in 2023, to explore how to adapt data storage for an AI -centric future. Participate in conversations and hear keynotes focused on the importance of data integrity in the world of artificial intelligence. Register to attend and learn more at phil -vegas .io and make sure to use promo code miningpod. Hey MiningPod, I'm Lee Bratcher, President of the Texas Blockchain Council. The Texas Blockchain Summit is now the North American Blockchain Summit. The same emphasis on policy, energy, and Bitcoin mining, but now expanded by working with our partners across the country. We've got great sponsors lined up like Riot, Marathon, GDA, CleanSpark, BitDeer, Lantium, Cormant, Compass, HTS, Crypto Power, Priority Power, Sunoda, and many more. Solidify your trust in the world of artificial intelligence and the world of artificial intelligence. We'll see you there. Hello, welcome back to the MiningPod. I'm Will Foxley, joined today by Rajeev and Varun from Auradine. Thank you so much for joining today. We're really excited to talk about the new ASIC product you guys are bringing to the market. How are you guys doing? Doing great. Thanks for having us, Will. Definitely. You know, the market's clamoring to know more about you guys. The first time I heard about you was from someone who reads into Marathon Digital's deep SEC letters that they put out there, their filings. And they're like, what is this company Auradine? What's going on with this? And people are wondering about it. And then we found out this summer, you guys were public, you guys raised $81 million and there's a lot of momentum around the product you guys are bringing to market. So that's why we're having you on the show today because people have a lot of questions. I'm sure you guys are excited to start producing a new miner for the Bitcoin mining market. So let's just start there. If we could get an intro for both you guys, like your past backgrounds, what Auradine is doing, and then also on the product. My name is Rajeev Kimani. I am a Silicon Valley technology executive and entrepreneur. I've been in Silicon Valley for 30 plus years. Have been involved in multiple successful startup companies, as well as being a C -level executive in public companies. My background is in computer science and engineering, and then also an MBA from Stanford. And this is my fourth startup that we believe is going to be bigger and better than those other companies before this. Yeah, my name is Barun Kaur. So my last company was Palo Alto Networks. I was in the founding team and did two more startups before that. And I started my career at Motorola after I finished my PhD. Awesome. Thanks for that background. Fortune just did a great piece on you guys for like detailing the company. And it started from the question like, how did this company raise $81 million just like on the background here? And maybe you guys have some disagreements with that, but that aside, I like the ending of the whole fortune piece, which we'll link in the show notes, which is, and you guys are coming into a crowded market and raise a lot of money based on your background, based on the things that you guys have built before and as exited from successfully. So with that being said, let's talk about Auradine, the product that you guys are bringing to market and where you see it fitting into the competition landscape. Yeah, we started Auradine with a big vision and the vision was to build an infrastructure company for the next generation of the web infrastructure. And we believe that blockchain AI and privacy are fundamental building blocks that will really revolutionize how we all work and play. And we think that as we started to look at these spaces, we started with blockchain Bitcoin being the biggest blockchain and the most successful that there is. And then during that process, we connected with marathon. And what we said is, what can we do that's innovative and different than what has existed before us. And prior to us, as you know, what has happened is that Bitcoin mining has gone from CPU's to GPU's to ASICs. And then all of the ASIC providers have moved, have essentially been Chinese companies. And so what we saw was two things. One is that we need to provide a very robust US supplier of this technology, which is very important, especially for US and North American miners in general. So that was a very important aspect. But the second aspect is, was to do something that is much more symbiotic and constructive for the energy ecosystem. And so we have done a lot of innovation in bringing out this product, which is our very first product. It's the first four nanometer ASIC in the world. And we've executed extremely fast when people look at us that literally within from start to getting a product out in the market is not much greater than a year. But we have executed extremely fast on this. As you can imagine, we have an amazing roadmap in front of us. And we have some amazing capabilities in our first product. So we are super excited to bring the Teraflux mining product line to market. Awesome. Yeah. So it's kind of going on that whole line. Tell me a little bit about like the market you guys are building in. I noticed that you guys are building within the US, as opposed to Bitmain and others who are building mostly out of East Asia. Bitmain of course has moved its facilities a lot of times and they're mostly out of Malaysia. But then even like the chips themselves are coming out of Taiwan or in the case of MicroBT, they're coming out of South Korea. Tell me about your guys' supply chain, where you guys get your ASIC parts and how you guys choose to manufacture your whole machine. Yes. So I'll give an overview and Varun can add to it. But essentially, well, first of all, we are a US company. So we are a US incorporated company. Secondarily, the chip design is entirely done in the US. So we are based in Silicon Valley. All of our engineers are based here. So that's a second very important piece of it. So all of the intellectual property, the second. The third thing that we are doing is that we are, in terms of the foundries, we are working with the leading foundries. But what we paid extra attention to is that whatever technology that we use has a manufacturing plant in the United States. Now, turns out the two leading foundries, TSMC and Samsung, both have US manufacturing locations. And we wanted to make sure that those chips could be manufactured in the US. Very, very important aspect for us. And so, you know, even though some of the Chinese companies have moved to other parts, the reality is that the US has restrictions about access to leading edge process technology. There are tariffs. Are those companies bypassing tariffs using certain corporate models or not? Those are questions that are yet to be answered completely. But that's something that we have to do that for the US vendors. Awesome. Yeah. So let's go into the product itself a little bit more. And I like what you noted about like the difference of tariff restrictions. I think the geopolitical issue with ASIC importation itself is an under discussed topic. So from what we're seeing from public numbers right now, it looks like you guys released 22 joules per tariff for this machine with a plus or minus 8%. Curious a little bit more about some of these details. You guys can take this question as you want. Is this on the chip level or the system level? What do you think about that 8 % deviation from the 22 joules per tariff hash? Is that like higher or lower than you're seeing from competitors? And then from there, let's talk about the four nanometer chip that you guys are working on. Yeah. So this is the first product is four nanometers. The specs that we've done are at a system level, not at a chip level, because at the end of the day, customers care about system level specs. And then the plus or minus 8%, what happens is when you're in the leading edge process technology node and you're building the silicon, when you're manufacturing the silicon, there's a deviation in the capabilities of the silicon. And so that is really to capture that. Now, in terms of our competitors, we've seen numbers that are plus or minus five, and actually in other cases, plus or minus 10 % as well. Now we are early in the game. So as we get more and more learnings from building larger quantities of products, we can refine those numbers, make it a little more tighter. We may be able to improve some of these efficiency numbers as well, but we are coming from the point of view of being somewhat conservative. Other vendors before us have tried to be aggressive and then have missed expectations. And we hear that from customers. And so our goal based on our prior track records is to try to see if we can be somewhat conservative and delight people on the upside. So that's our philosophy. Barun, anything? No, I think that's... Great. I don't know if you guys have released these numbers and it'd be curious to see if you have or have not, but hash rate and then power at the wall. Have you guys discussed those publicly yet? Yeah, the hash rates, you know what, the world before our product, which is up till now, is that typically people give you a miner that runs at a certain terahash rate and has a certain efficiency. And what happens is that today, if you want to be able to go up and down, people refer to that as overclock or underclock. That requires either a firmware change or a different firmware, or you have to change the control board, or you have to write software on top of it to turn on and off these systems very kludgy. It's really, I would say it's still in the dark ages, so to speak, relative to the rest of the technology infrastructure. And that's because Bitcoin came from being more of a hobbyist product to the data center scale product. And it has done a bunch of batch work along the way. What we have in our systems is we have built in from the ground up the capability to go up and down in terahash rates, all the way from zero to 185 in our air -cooled systems, in our immersion systems to much higher numbers, some of which we haven't disclosed. And you can do that very fast. And that's super important for people who want to work with energy partners to bring down energy consumption and take advantage of some of those curtailment related economics that we get in a very rapid timeframe. So we have all of those capabilities built into the system. We refer to that as energy tune. It's patented technology. And I think people are going to love it when they see it. So we've done that. But in addition, what we've also done is we've made sure that these systems keep operating at high temperature ranges, which again is critical, as you know, in certain parts of the country, temperatures are getting hotter than they used to be, and miners are shut down for 10, 20, 30 percent of the time. In our case, it will keep running and will keep hashing and keep providing the economics to the miners. Awesome. For the four nanometer part, I want to go back to that. The energy efficiency, there's this general idea that as we go down to the size of the node from eight to seven to six to five to four, it's supposed to become more energy efficient. Tell me a little bit about that and energy efficiencies you guys are capturing within your new model and also how it compares to the market as of now. Yeah. So today, most of the products that are shipping are in five nanometer or older process nodes. To achieve energy efficiency, you do need leading edge process technology. In addition, what you also need is design and architecture to enable that. These Bitcoin mining systems run at very, very low voltages, and to make that work at very low voltages relative to every other product is a complex engineering and technology effort. And so we have both of those things in motion. As I said, we started the company literally a year and a half ago, and we have brought to market a product in record time, matching the best in class that exists in the world today. We have more tricks up our sleeve as we bring additional products to the world at Halfing and beyond. And we believe we are going to be the best in the world, if not within plus or minus a few percent of the best in the world. Both now as well as we go forward. So super confident of that. Right now, as you know, the world is in kind of the 21 plus or minus in terms of deployments. We think it's going to get much better than here. But when we talk to customers, we see there are certain customers that are very sensitive in cost of the miners. Others are more sensitive in the efficiency. But both of them care extremely about the variability and the energy tune features, which we think is going to become a must have requirement going forward. So yeah, let's talk about the auto tune features that you guys have put into this. From my understanding, there's a patent around this. How do you guys look at this technology compared to some of the other technologies that are out there? I mean, there's definitely lots of different firmware options for controlling a miner and controlling its temperature setting. What are you guys sort of doing different when you're building this unit holistically? Yeah, very different. Very different than anything that has been done before. So in the past, typically at a single miner level, you could actually run it at a certain terahash rate or shut down the miner, put it in sleep mode. Then more recently, people have started to put together an eco mode, if you will. That's the state of the art that exists today. And what people have tried to do is solve some of these fundamental problems through putting software level turning on and off of the miners. Not the most efficient way to do it. What we have done it is things that are inside a miner. And so we have these capabilities that are unique, very different than anything else that's been done before, where inside the miner through API calls, the hardware is able to change and adjust the various terahash rates and so forth. And what all you do is you just give all these inputs to the miner, and the miner figures out how to do it and does it, rather than trying to do it in a crudgy fashion outside through some software mechanisms. So that's very different, and that's where we have a patent for the energy tune and autotune capabilities. As you might expect, things like Bitcoin price, energy cost, transaction fees, temperature, all of those are inputs into trying to figure out what is the optimal point for the miner to run. More and more variables are coming into the picture. And to top it off also, autotune has the ability to go to tens of thousands of miners and be able to do an energy tune on each of them at the get -go. And we are trying to get to a point where we can do it in a few seconds so that it is in line with customer requirements where curtailment can happen at that short period of time. Now, there's a distinct difference between... So the autotune is one feature and there's the energy tune is another feature. Now, the energy tune also to couple with what Rajeev mentioned, we are using a machine learning techniques to do dynamic voltage frequency scaling so that each chip can be tuned to get to the optimal joules per terahash. Are you a retail or institutional investor interested in Bitcoin mining companies? The MinerMag brings you free data and analysis from all major NASDAQ listed Bitcoin mining operations to know who stands out. Check out visualized metrics and data dependent stories at theminermag .com. Filecoin's mission is to create decentralized efficient and robust storage infrastructure for humanities information. Join the Filecoin Foundation team October 3rd through 5th for PhilVegas, the first major Filecoin community event in North America in 2023 to explore how to adapt data storage for an AI centric future. Participate in conversations and hear keynotes focused on the importance of data integrity in the world of artificial intelligence. Register to attend and learn more at phil -vegas .io and make sure to use promo code miningpod. Did you know that you can make more money by merge mining other networks? Check out makemoremoneymining .com for information on BIPs 300 and 301, a proposal to bring more revenue to Bitcoin miners through sidechains and merge mining called DriveChains. Increase your mining revenues and learn more about participating in Bitcoin governance by visiting makemoremoneymining .com. Are you a miner who wants to activate Bitcoin improvements? Check out activation .watch, see what Bitcoin improvements the Bitcoin community, developers, and miners are considering, and show support by signaling from one of many BIPs up for consideration.

Lee Bratcher Rajeev Kimani Samsung Tsmc Rajeev Will Foxley Varun October 3Rd 10 October 3 Taiwan Sunoda Priority Power Motorola Makemoremoneymining .Com HTS United States Cormant Marathon Digital TWO
A highlight from Ep.118 - Rewind to 1967: The Year That Changed Music Forever

Milk Crates and Turntables. A Music Discussion Podcast

20:20 min | Last week

A highlight from Ep.118 - Rewind to 1967: The Year That Changed Music Forever

"Well here we are episode 118 I think I think I forgot to list a few this might be like episode 120 or 121 I don't know I guess that's a good thing when you do so many you lose count anyway on this episode we're gonna be talking about the year in music 1967 and as usual I have the wrecking two in the house Mark Smith and Lou Colicchio of the music relish show very interesting yeah a lot happened sit back relax it's gonna be another two and a half hour podcast but we love it enjoy the show the KLFB studio presents milk rate and turntables a music discussion podcast hosted by Scott McLean now let's talk music enjoy the show yes let's talk music thank you Amanda for that wonderful introduction as usual welcome back my friends to the show that never ends welcome to the podcast you know the name I'm not gonna say it was streaming live right now over Facebook YouTube X formerly known as Twitter twitch D live and again I always I don't know how many other things and this podcast will be heard on every podcast platform yeah yeah 1967 so it was quite a year think you're in for a little little ride tonight yeah and you know who wasn't born in night oh he was three in 1967 marksmen from the music relish show good evening I was two years from being on this earth so you weren't even really thought of no you thought of it 67 think of that think of that yeah you weren't even thought of you weren't even like a sparkle in as they say in your father's eye there might have been the beginning of a sparkle who knows so let me see I'm looking at my is my screen still fuzzy on my end but I'm not even seeing it on YouTube right now I'm seeing it's live but I just got the image of the vinyl really yeah what the hell wait wait wait wait yeah no it's on it's on I see it I see it but my screen looks fuzzy right yeah that's how I'm seeing you from my end yeah what the hell let me check something here hold on okay let's do a little in show my you know that smooth little March of colors next to you when you open up the show yeah happy it's all like gone really weird I'm looking at this right let's go back to this see what happens I'm supposed to be in 1080 and I'm looking at it right now now you're sharp you just got sharp it goes back and forth it's a strange see like hearing yourself huh I guess I don't know what do a refresh here I'm playing it right Tom Benwald says it looks good patty says it's blurry that was in the beginning and it looks like it's sharp now so it goes back and forth you're starting to get blurry again it's strange got any storms down there no this this would this will drive me crazy now this is it's not supposed to be like this come on it's like a Grateful Dead show warts and all rice we're talking about 1967 there's no digital so it was still waiting for Luda come on so you know I'm going to do I hate doing this but I'm going to do it to you buddy what's that no don't cut me I'm not cutting you I'm gonna I'm gonna hit a refresh which might take me off the screen so the show is yours for about I don't know 60 seconds let's see what happens here let's see reload I'm gonna reload it so I'm going off the screen I guess it's time to advertise the music roll show with my friend Perry and my friend Lou we discuss opera we have fun how am I now you look better look yeah yeah looks better yep and I just advertised my podcast is that the opera I'll pay you I'll give you the money later on then I lose my this is like okay here we go you look better though all right good yeah good you know me I the technical stuff drives me crazy especially you know it's not only sound it has to be oh it's this is a live stream so it has to look yeah good and you don't want to drop out in the middle of the show no like me and Lou do once in a while race right let's see is the chat working let's see now I'm not seeing any I'm not seeing any comments so let me try this well sorry for the podcast listeners but I gotta get this shit right hey it's okay I should be seeing I should be seeing comments because people have already made three comments you over here maybe they're bored and they don't want to comment anymore no it's there it should be showing up on my screen over here right we know that my boss you busting balls only Bono does that let's see public so it should be getting huh this is crazy seven minutes in and I'm here we haven't done anything yet let me see send comment test I just sent a text to message I see I see you as I see mine okay good we're good we're good let me switch over to my other account and do the same thing I just want to make sure yes just our audience is bored they don't want to comment actually this is all Lou's fault yeah yeah always the you know I would probably lost the other comments is because I rebooted so hmm all right well you know what we're gonna start without Lou right as I say that as I say that does he have what does he what do you let's get the full screen nose is that why you were late you had to clean your nose and he's back in Paris again you brown nose er I've been a bad dog my laptop and he's back in pair you left here in Paris you must have left it back in the United States I did I left on the plane how you doing Lou I'm doing alright how are you guys doing well I just had a little technical difficulty and we blamed you because you weren't here so you left me alone and I had to talk opera with myself talked opera yeah rigoletto did you talk about rigoletto this time I'm just really boring you know I'm like all right this is why this is a two and a half hour podcast some of us have to work tomorrow all right here we go let's jump right into 1967 musical events in 1967 and the year kicks off right away with a bomb a bomb on January 4th the doors release can arguably one of the greatest debut records ever arguably if you had a top 25 greatest debut that albums would have to be in the top 10 it would have to be yeah you know if you had a top 50 that would have to be in the top 10 right even if you don't like them you have to say that was so ahead of its time oh it's so different nothing out there was like the needle and all you hear it kicks I mean fucking what a way to start an album it's a heavy song it with a bossa nova beat yeah I mean that's pretty clever yeah 67 so you know bossa nova was pretty hip again John Densmore over underrated underrated underappreciated I think you are you are so correct you know never gets the the the consideration that I I don't know you can't put him in greatest of all time but could he be okay if there's a top there's a top 25 drummer top 25 drummers is he in it good question and in rock we'll just say in rock I think he could be I could see him making so I don't know if he's a universal pick but I could see him on some list I mean he's something you'd have to think about like you said like it doesn't get noticed so much you know yeah yeah or it I mean although his drumming wasn't shy I mean he's jazzy as hell I heard um writers on the storm yesterday and his adjustment playing is great in his adjustments during the shows just for that yeah yeah the unpredictability of you know how the how the song was gonna go right because they could rehearse it all they want once Morrison got into that zone well in the drama keeps the beat right yeah yeah the drummer has to stay up with that yeah and played to the clown so to speak right you know and my my problem is if some of the clowns don't have the beat you know at one point they've got to give in like I said Morrison or even Dylan they'll set the tone but they've got to be steady themselves you know it's yeah otherwise it's just erratic but you know yeah guy like Dan's more I mean I had skill I had a lot of a lot of technical ability right feel yes cool so obviously his drums always sounded good yeah on the earlier on the other records even you know three years worth of music whatever I guess I would be who produced some Jack Holtzman was the producer did a good job Jekyll or now wait so no what was it Paul Rothchild yes yes yes I'm sorry Holtzman was he on the record company yeah yeah was that it was that chrysalis or chrysalis I think or just like yes that's a lecture a lecture weren't they on chrysalis though also I thought they were yeah maybe maybe chrysalis was a subsidiary but uh yeah Jack Holtzman's son is Adam Holtzman he's a keyboardist right now he plays with here we go Stephen Wilson but he does a little blog on Facebook and he talks about growing up and he was like six years old and his father brought him to a club to see the tour Wow at six years old he just talks about like yeah it's a great little blog Wow all right and four days later on January 8th Elvis Presley turned 32 on January 14th the human be in right the human be e -i -n human being takes place in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park polo fields with spoken words from Timothy Leary Allen Ginsberg Gary Snyder in others live music was provided by Jefferson Airplane the Grateful Dead Big Brother in the holding company and Quicksilver Messenger Service speeches from Jerry Rubin and others were also given at the event although it's one band there I liked yeah Quicksilver Messenger Service who was it on January 15th 1967 who is your favorite poet of all them I know you're not asking me Arthur Rimbaud who influenced Jim Morrison good answer good answer way to bring that first opening segment rough full circle we're getting better Scott we're good now you guys get a lot of good trust me I'm getting a lot of good feedback so let's keep it at that I don't want you son ask for more money and on January 15th 1967 the Rolling Stones appear on the Ed Sullivan show at Ed Sullivan's request finish it he asked them to let's spend sing let's spend some time together is that the one there you go yeah and then he told him a really big shoe I hate to do this I mean I come back on penalty box I don't say just he beat my record okay look he just got on the show after late and these are either he's stuck he's frozen put the dog nose back on where'd it go are you throw it at the camera like your headphones on January 16th 1967 the monkeys begin work on headquarters the first album to give them complete artistic and technical control over their material and it was fucking horrible fucking horrible what were they thinking they know they were thinking the egos got too big they thought they were the music well the argument can be made that you know Mike Nesmith did write different drum yeah so he could write songs but I don't think he was a pop songwriter you know headquarters and they try to be all fucking like 60 ish and shit they weren't looking for pop were they they're trying to be like more psychedelic yeah I think so there were their channel on the Beatles with those quirky little yeah with anti -grizzelles on that I don't know some weird shit I'll tell you what though I don't care about it myself but it was surely a harpsichord on it because that's what all those records had they had to have a harpsichord and I have the book this the 100 best -selling records of the 60s the monkeys got a they've had quite a few albums on there oh they do yeah they were they were but I mean I thought it was just a condensed period of the show which it probably was but it's still I mean they've got I mean most of their albums sold really well yeah yeah ah you like the show what's it is like the show I did I still like it I still love it I love that that that's so that humor is great like dumbed down brilliantly done though humor yeah way was what they were supposed to act like that yeah you know what I mean there was no like these guys are bad actors they knew exactly how to do that they pulled it off great it was campy it was great for its time it's still great to watch now yeah I do think that banana splits were a better band yeah that's I'll give you the banana splits were a kick -ass band yeah yeah kick -ass man did you see the movie recently came out it's a horror movie with the banana splits the banana splits movie it's a horror movie yeah yeah it takes place in an amusement park and they're they're robotic and in Dyson and slicing baby Dyson and slicing I have to say oh man that's yeah okay yeah Dyson and slicing it's good it's kids again campy movie but I couldn't not watch it yeah I have to say I'm sure Fleagle is a total psychopath well I'm not gonna give you any and no no no spoilers here those was it just Dyson and slicing on January 17 1967 the daily mail newspaper reports four thousand potholes in Blackburn Lancashire and Guinness air Tara Brown is killed in a car wreck these articles inspire lyrics for a day in the life a day in the life yes on January 22nd 1967 Simon and Garfunkel give live can't give a live concert at Phil harmonic Phil harmonic call in New York City some of this concert is released on October 4th 1997 on their box set old friends but most is not released until July 2002 that's some more okay January 29th mantra rock dance the quote ultimate high of the hippie era is organized at the Avalon Ballroom in San Francisco featuring Janis Joplin grateful dead big brother in the holding company for three Moby grape quirky that would've been interesting that's the best man that's the best as though for they're almost like the MC five kind of I think they were just kind of but they're they're a San Francisco band and beat poet once again Allen Ginsberg shows up to do his spoken word I heard he was a member of NAMBLA I wouldn't the National Association of Marlon Brando look -alikes I heard I'd someone I remember he actually he was a sponsor of NAMBLA but anyway on January 30th 1967 the Beatles shoot a promotional film for the forthcoming single strawberry fields forever at Noel Park in Seven Oaks have you seen it I have seen it I haven't seen it in a long time it's really cool yeah yeah it's kind of dark speaking of dark on February 3rd 1967 UK record producer Joe Meek murders is it his landlady and then commits suicide by shooting himself in the head in Holloway North in London it's kind of dark didn't he produce sleepwalk yes letter Telstar some early we talked we did it bit of a genius really yeah let's see February 7th Mickey Dolan's no let me stop February 6th Mike Nesmith and Mickey Dolan's of the monkeys fly into London Dolan sees till death do us part on British TV and uses the term Randy's scouse grit from the program for the title of the monkeys next single release Randy's scouse grit not releasing it is an offensive term Britain's British census forced the title to be changed to alternate title and then the next day Mickey Dolan's meets Paul McCartney at his home in st.

Arthur Rimbaud Lou Colicchio October 4Th 1997 Mike Nesmith Gary Snyder Adam Holtzman Janis Joplin January 15Th 1967 January 30Th 1967 Dylan Paul Rothchild Paul Mccartney Tom Benwald Perry February 3Rd 1967 Jim Morrison February 6Th January 16Th 1967 Jack Holtzman Jerry Rubin
A highlight from Is the SEC About to Go Scorched Earth?

The Breakdown

12:49 min | Last week

A highlight from Is the SEC About to Go Scorched Earth?

"Welcome back to The Breakdown with me, NLW. It's a daily podcast on macro, Bitcoin, and the big picture power shifts remaking our world. What's going on, guys? It is Wednesday, September 20th, and today we're asking whether the SEC is about to go scorched earth. Before we do that, however, if you are enjoying The Breakdown, please go subscribe to it, give it a rating, give it a review, or if you want to dive deeper into the conversation, come join us on the Breakers Discord. You can find the link in the show notes or go to bit .ly slash breakdown pod. Hello friends, lots to get through today, so let's dive right in. The SEC is not done going after crypto exchanges, according to David Hirsch, the head of the agency's crypto assets and cyber unit. Speaking at the Securities Enforcement Forum Central in Chicago on Tuesday, Hirsch said securities law violations within the industry extend far beyond existing litigation. Now, keep in mind, the crypto division of the SEC is currently bogged down with complex lawsuits against both Coinbase and Binance, two of the largest crypto exchanges. Hirsch said his unit is investigating similar activity across other firms and believes non -compliant business practices, quote, hold true well beyond any two entities. Hirsch warned, Now, the SEC is apparently also turning its gaze towards DeFi platforms in this crusade against crypto intermediaries. Hirsch said, quote, Now, a common theme of recent comments from SEC chair Gary Gensler is to mock, quote, so -called decentralized finance. This perhaps indicates that the SEC believes underlying most DeFi protocols, they will be able to find a company to sue. All that said, despite outlining an ambitious enforcement agenda, Hirsch did concede that the agency's resources are constrained. Over recent decades, the SEC has largely dealt with regulated financial institutions, with The SEC's campaign against crypto firms has largely presented existential threats rather than manageable fines, leading to a significant number of contested lawsuits. Hirsch admitted during the panel that, quote, Reflecting on that point, Hirsch recognized the scale of the task he was proposing, stating that, And similarly, there are a number of centralized platforms out there, some that are acting as unregistered exchanges. So in some ways here, Hirsch is begrudgingly admitting that the SEC is getting close to capacity, at least when it comes to ongoing litigation. They're dealing with Coinbase, Binance and Ripple, all as major cases, LBRY Library seems to be wanting to go to appeal, then there's Grayscale, which continues to be a legal battle, as well as the two recent NFT cases which settled. So the question is, can the SEC handle five lawsuits at once? Can they handle 10? Even if you think the answer is yes, at what point do you think the answer becomes no? Frankly, this is maybe why people like Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong are encouraging the industry to take up arms effectively and actually fight these legal battles out in court. Now, of course, this brings up the other question of whether the SEC can bank on funding for additional resources to expand this endeavor or whether they need to have some alternative approach. This, of course, echoes the talking point from both the GOP as well as from Dems like The SEC's regulation by enforcement approach is reaching the end of its limits to the extent that it ever was successful at all, and that a much smarter pathway at this point might actually be rulemaking and guidance rather than just trying to sue the industry off the face of the planet. Look, crypto companies are fighting back. It's only a matter of time before we see some sort of coordinated defense fund, and it wouldn't be surprising to me if even this beleaguered industry can marshal a heck of a lot more resources than the SEC can on its own. Now, the other side of the coin is how much time the SEC actually has left to bring the industry to heel. Fox Business reporter Eleanor Teret tweeted yesterday, Only 13 days left for the SEC to bring enforcement actions that will count towards fiscal year 2023 enforcement numbers. The agency filed 760 total enforcement actions in FY 2022. I wonder if we'll see a surge of cases in the next two weeks? Now, certainly when it comes to the crypto industry, there is a broad sense of bring it on. Crypto trader Laxman writes, SEC warns of upcoming charges against crypto and DeFi exchanges. Few might think this will kill crypto. I feel like this will kill SEC. Crypto McKenna retweeted the headline, SEC warns more charges against crypto and DeFi exchanges are coming, and added the Latin phrase, if you want peace, prepare for war. Simplest of all, the Gordon Law Group just said, bring it on, Gary. Now, moving to the global sphere, a German regulator has stressed the risks of crypto and called for global regulations to apply consistently without exception. On Monday, Rupert Schaefer, executive director of strategy, policy and control at the German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority, Baffin, published a blog post on the importance of united global regulation on crypto. He warned of the dangers of unregulated crypto firms using a fairly labored analogy to airspace regulation. Schaefer likened the crypto regulation to air traffic control regulations, which are relatively uniform throughout the world. In this analogy, some crypto assets and DeFi projects were UFOs. He stated then that it would be negligent to simply ignore them. Schaefer warned that FTX was a major crash and there would be many more like it to come. Now, the regulator praised the recently passed MICA regulations in Europe, but argued that further steps need to be taken. He produced a long list of global proposals from the Financial Stability Board, the International Association of Securities Commissions, the Financial Action Task Force and the Basel Committee, and this he claimed was enough to establish a global consensus, stating that quote, the international regulatory principles have been adopted and the framework has been set. Now, the common principles must be implemented consistently and consistently worldwide. There should be no white spots in the flight radar. The global rules should also apply to niche financial centers. Now, this blog post comes a little over a week since the conclusion of the G20 summit, which was pitched as an opportunity to discuss global synchronization of crypto policy. G20 leaders did manage to produce an endorsement of the latest set of policy recommendations published by the Financial Stability Board. And in her article previewing the meeting, Noelle Acheson highlighted that the adoption of FSB recommendations was quote, very likely since the recommendations don't actually say anything interesting. Noelle noted that the FSB recommendations are more around notational international cooperation and vague platitudes about enforcing risk management rather than firm policy outlines. At the same time, none of the recommendations mentioned by Schaeffer actually achieved consensus approval at the G20, calling into question how the regulator can claim that there are any common principles whatsoever. Moving over to the UK. The UK House of Lords have passed a bill which would grant authorities the power to freeze and seize crypto assets associated with crime. Currently, UK authorities cannot apply for crypto assets to be frozen unless there has been an arrest or conviction. This bill would allow them to more quickly apply for freeze orders. Hundreds of millions worth of crypto linked to crime have been seized by local authorities, but experts say this new bill could help deal with situations that aren't easily dealt with under the current legal framework. Phil Aris, Director of UK Public Sector Relations at TRM Labs said, A government fact sheet suggested even more broad use, stating that quote, The creation of a crypto asset's specific civil forfeiture power will mitigate the risk posed by those that cannot be prosecuted, but use their funds to further criminality or for terrorist purposes. Isabella Chase, Senior Policy Advisor at blockchain analytics firm TRM Labs suggested that the measure could assist with police funding, stating that quote, Corker Bining was less enthusiastic about the fundraising prospects, noting that as the UK cracks down, quite, they might find that the pool of available targets quickly dwindles as suspected criminals move their assets offshore to less enthusiastically policed jurisdictions. The bill has already been passed in the House of Commons once, so will now return for a second vote before it can be given royal assent to become law. Now, I don't know what sort of free society we're dealing with here. With the big caveat that I am not a lawyer, the discourse around this is pretty wild to me. It seems like they're talking effectively about on -chain asset forfeiture without the requirement to charge anyone with a crime. This is the digital equivalent of police being able to take what they find in your trunk if they search your car and not have to give it back to you. That's an insane policy and so is this. And I hope not just for the sake of the crypto industry, but for the sake of the UK itself, some real, real limits are put around this. Staying in the UK, however, for just a moment, on Tuesday, UK lawmakers passed the controversial online safety bill. The bill requires companies to assess the likelihood of customers encountering illegal content and of children encountering harmful content. Proponents of the bill say it will be used to protect younger internet users and make the web a safer place. The government has claimed the bill would make the UK, quote, the safest place in the world to be online. Critics, however, have warned that depending on how the bill is enforced, it could require companies to do away with encrypted messaging and essentially any notion of online privacy. WhatsApp, Signal and Telegram have all threatened to exit the UK if the bill was passed. Earlier this month, regulators attempted to appease encrypted messaging apps by promising to only implement text scanning if it was technically feasible, but WhatsApp head Will Cathcart appeared unconvinced, tweeting last week that, quote, the fact remains that scanning everyone's messages would destroy privacy as we know it. That was as true last year as it is today. WhatsApp will never break our encryption and remains vigilant against threats to do so. Signal President Meredith Whitaker was a little bit more hopeful that the implementation would be thoughtful. She said, quote, while it's not everything we wanted, we are more optimistic than we were when we began engaging with the UK government. It matters that the government came out publicly clearly acknowledging that there is no technology that can safely and privately scan everyone's communications. At this point, it is imperative that we press regulators to incorporate the government's safely and privately scan end to end encryption communications and push them to clearly and publicly commit to not using the unchecked and unprecedented power vested in them to undermine private communications infrastructure. Whitaker confirmed that Signal would remain available in the UK for the time being. But for content and messaging platforms, the enforcement of the bill is a high stakes issue, with the maximum penalty being up to 10 percent of global revenue. Lastly, today, an update from a story earlier in the week. We have recently talked about JPX, a crypto exchange that has come under fire from Hong Kong authorities. At the time, withdrawals were effectively halted and one influencer had been arrested for promoting the platform. Reporting on Monday morning stated that authorities had received 83 complaints related to assets worth $4 .3 million. Since then, the case has dramatically escalated. Authorities have now received over 1 ,600 complaints involving over $150 million worth of assets. Eight people have now been arrested with the expectation that more arrests are coming. Police have now stated that the arrests are in relation to conspiracy to commit fraud rather than merely promotion of an unlicensed exchange. Twenty locations have been raided across Hong Kong with police seizing cash, jewelry, computers and phones worth around $1 million. Police have frozen around $2 million held in bank accounts owned by arrested suspects, alongside about $5 .5 million in property. Authorities are currently considering the confiscation of around $8 million in criminal proceeds. On Monday, JPX blamed the Securities and Futures Commission and their counterparties within the industry for causing an illiquidity crisis. They said in a statement, When other cryptocurrency exchanges announced their entry into the Hong Kong market and began extensive promotion, JPX was subjected to continuous unfair treatment. The SFC sent letters to all of our partners requesting the cessation of cooperation with the platform. On Tuesday, however, Elizabeth Wong, director of licensing at the SFC, confirmed that the regulator had asked counterparties to step away from the unlicensed exchange. The regulator had been monitoring the platform for months and issued numerous warnings to users. She said that since those warnings were issued, JPX went from bad to worse. The events surrounding JPX could be seen either as a sign that Hong Kong authorities are serious about enforcement of new crypto regulations or an indication that the city still has a long way to go in cleaning up the industry. As we discussed before, given Hong Kong's role as a bellwether for Chinese authorities' attitudes towards crypto, this is a story that we will continue to watch. However, for now, that is going to do it for today's breakdown. I appreciate you listening, as always. Until next time, be safe and take care of each other.

Elizabeth Wong Eleanor Teret Rupert Schaefer Phil Aris International Association Of S David Hirsch Noelle Hirsch Gary Gensler Europe Last Year Monday 83 Complaints Trm Labs Schaefer Gordon Law Group Noelle Acheson Eight People Chicago Basel Committee
A highlight from The Mike and Mark Davis Daily Chat - 09/14/23

Mike Gallagher Podcast

08:35 min | 2 weeks ago

A highlight from The Mike and Mark Davis Daily Chat - 09/14/23

"The United States Border Patrol has exciting and rewarding career opportunities with the nation's largest law enforcement organization. Border Patrol agents enjoy great pay, outstanding federal benefits, and up to $20 ,000 in recruitment incentives. If you are looking for a way to serve something greater than yourself, consider the United States Border Patrol. Learn more online at cbp .gov slash careers slash USBP. That's cbp .gov slash careers slash USBP. On the road again, going places that I've never been, seeing things that I may never see. It always applies to Mike, who scarcely does the same show in the same city on consecutive days. I know, I can always risk peeing in the closet in the middle of the night because you thought it's a hotel room. I don't know where I am, I'm walking around stumbling, and boy do I have a hotel story. Oh, well, hey, well, sit tight because there's another reason I'm doing this. Hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on. Because obviously you are back in the Florida compound, correct? I'm in, no, I'm in Orlando. Okay, well, see, my point is made, but the road trip I wanted to take, because for like three days I wanted to get to this, and doggone it, I'm doing it up front. Just take two minutes. You heard about the Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm's all -electric road trip? They were just trying to get from North Carolina to Tennessee, and they had NPR embedded because it's just going to be so great. Oh, look at this. It's the all -EV road trip, well, instantly, and Trump has the best line, Trump has the best line. When you get an electric car, the first 15 minutes are great, and the next five years are abject terror that you're going to run out of places to charge, and that's exactly what happened to them. So with the caravan coming, and the secretary, her own self, had not yet rolled up in her about -to -die EV, they blocked off a charging station with a gas -powered car. The one that was actually, and there was a family that was about dead on power, and it's 100 degrees, and they got a kid in the back, and they called the cops because Secretary Granholm's entourage was blocking the EV station. I'm not an anti -electric car, you've had a Tesla in your life, haven't you? I have, and listen, first of all, Tesla, you'll have more fun driving a Tesla than any car you've ever driven in your life. And the idea of plugging in and, hey, lessening our reliance on fossil fuels, but again, what happens is when we get down to mandates, and when you get down to saying, you're going to do this or else, I've got a friend who travels around the country in a Tesla. And so that whole story about what she went through, I knew firsthand from a very good friend of mine, because he goes from city to city to city, and he takes his Tesla. And he sometimes drives 6, 8, 10 hours on a stretch. And it ain't easy. I mean, now, he pulls it off. You know, Tesla's got a pretty fascinating technology. You look on your screen, they tell you exactly where the charging station is, they show you how many people are at the charging station, they tell you how many slots are available, if they're all used, you know right away in real time. They know how many people are at a charging station 40 miles away. They do. They know how many people are at the charging station all over the country right now. And you can look on your Tesla screen, and you say, you push Charger, and it'll show you where the next station is or the charging station on your route. Now, here's where it gets dicey. Tesla has now opened it up to Ford and all these other auto manufacturers. So now there's all kinds of competition. Yeah, but now, if you're a Tesla owner, you're going to battle all the Ford companies. Hey, can I tell you a little bit about a travel quick story, because I know I've got to pick your brain. And then we've got to talk Mitt Romney, because I want to talk to you from Mitt Romney. I've never seen a bigger disconnect within the Republican Party in my life, in my life. But first, before we do that, so here I am again in another hotel last night, and I always joke about peeing in the closet because I don't know where I am, and I'm walking around. I mean, honest to goodness, it is a very strange feeling to wake up and you don't know where you are. And it's been, I've had about nine or 10 days from New York to Philly to Orlando. I finally get home tomorrow just in time to have my wisdom tooth removed. It's travel stories and medical stories. Oh, yeah. And I predict there'll be medical complications. There always are. I predict, so I'm having major surgery, light a candle for me, pray I need some Gregorian chance. I know, because you know how I am. As Denise would say, I'm not exactly the world's best patient. So I'm not really good when things go like, and so I don't know. And I don't remember when I've got to stop eating. The surgery is tomorrow at like one o 'clock, the night before, right? Like midnight? Oh, well, that's 12, yeah, midnight before midnight. They told me, but I can't remember what they told me. And I'm afraid now I'm going to mess that up and then I'm going to Joan Rivers on the operating table. You'll have a burger in your system somewhere and you'll flatline. And then I'll flatline because I had a cheeseburger past the deadline. So anyway, so all this is going on in my life and I'm trying to keep my head above water. I check into the hotel last night and I'm tired and the flight was late. I'm blah, blah, blah, blah. I get to Orlando. First of all, here's a quick story about Orlando Airport. Now, have you and Lisa and the kids made the pilgrimage that every American family has made to Disney? And you go fly into Orlando and you get into that beautiful airport and you got to get on the train to get from the terminal to the main part of the airport. Do you know that experience I'm talking about? Yes, we have. It's been a long time, but yes, we have. So Phil Boyce, our big boss, my boss flew into Orlando last night at midnight. He claims, and I've got Derek Klingle, my producer, researching this. He claims that all throughout the Orlando Airport are homeless encampments. Homeless people are sleeping all throughout the Orlando Airport. And I said, Phil, are you sure those aren't like travelers? Yeah, I was going to say, I've seen some people who've been stuck, especially with the way today's Pete Buttigieg Airlines are going, flights are a dicey proposition. Maybe that's just a wayward, ill -dressed traveler. I'm going to find out because Phil insisted. He said, nope, these people had like little blankets and tents and supplies and provisions. He goes, I think they're opening up the airport at night because he goes in and, you know, Phil goes in and out of the airport all the time. Sure. He said, I've never seen this before. He said, I think these are homeless people in the airport. Now we've seen blue cities around the country that are opening up police stations. Yeah, blue cities. Notify DeSantis immediately. No kidding. I want to look into this big time. And so that's part one of the travel story of Orlando. Part two, I need to ask you if I'm being Karen or not. I want to know what your reaction would be if you check into a hotel, 10, 11 o 'clock at night, you're tired, you're grumpy, you get into the room, you pay extra because it's supposed to be like a club level room at a big major chain. Air conditioner doesn't work properly. I go over to sit down and watch forensic files to try to decompress the couch. I wouldn't touch that couch. It was so filthy dirty bio biohazard. I took pictures of the couch. I took pictures of it and then I get in the shower this morning and they don't have any bars of soap, which makes me crazy. It's all these tubes, you know, the containers of liquid. Well, dude, okay, the worm has turned on that one. We now want, we apparently want, and I've noticed the same thing. We have gel in tubes, you know, you spooge that out in your hand because that way no previous person is touching the soap. The bar of soap is so 1953 because who touched that before you? I don't mean another guest. No, but they're wrapped up. They're wrapped. The bars of soap are normally wrapped. But once it's open, let's see, you've got a family of three. Family four, family five, whatever. You leave the bar on the tray or whatever, then somebody else has to go touch the bar you touch. I don't think I would care, but other people do. So the soap in the tube is sort of where we are. I'm a family of one and all I got to do is open. I want a, I want a sealed bar of soap that I can put on anyway, but how about when the tube of the body wash is empty, so you're standing there, oh yeah, it was empty. So that's my hotel experience. Where are you, listen, good chains can have a bad day, but I'm guessing, I mean, not four seasons, but you know, kind of a month, 226 bucks for the night. That's not a cheap hotel room.

Denise Derek Klingle Phil Boyce Mike Karen New York Tennessee Ford Donald Trump North Carolina Philly Orlando 100 Degrees 6 10 40 Miles Phil Two Minutes United States Border Patrol Florida
A highlight from The Mike and Mark Davis Daily Chat - 09/12/23

Mike Gallagher Podcast

06:53 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from The Mike and Mark Davis Daily Chat - 09/12/23

"This was an easy one. 1975 Elton John singing about the city of liberty, the city of freedom, the city of brotherly love. The light was shining on our buddy Mike Gallagher last night. City of a lot of traffic, oh boy. Did you just make it by the skittier teeth? Oh boy, oh boy. I said I can't wait to talk to my buddy Mark if I make it. And Mr. Uber driver, please go faster, please go faster. Memo to self, don't stay in Center City when you've got to go out to the radio station which is in, I don't know, Lafayette Hill or wherever the heck we are. A lot of traffic, a lot of construction and what a joyful night last night. A hundred, I mean it was like over 700 people at the Fuge which you would love. It's a NASA, you know, Center Fuge. It's a reference to the Center Fuge exhibit and stuff like that, yes. And they do like a venue. They've got an event venue there. This is the second or third time I've been out there and Lorenzo and the team here at 990 The Answer in Philadelphia do a fantastic job. Phil Boyce, our boss, the big boss, was the moderator. He does a fantastic job. And of course on stage, Dennis Prager, Pastor Robert Jeffress. Yeah, man. And he is so good. Man, Dr. Jeffress is so good when it comes to defining the battle of good and evil that we're witnessing. He also made a Trump reference. I've heard him say this now many times, we ain't considering a pastor for the competition. And he has been very, very loyal to President Trump, much to the chagrin of some within the evangelical community. And so we dealt with all of that faith and freedom and liberty and tyranny. The great Chris DeGaulle, the local host here who is so strong. Man, oh man. And boy, does he get a hero's welcome last night. This community loves him. So we just had a blast. It was a great night. I told the story about Mike Lindell, who I'm speaking to today, about the way they've targeted him. And much of it started with Mike after he said at the Rose Garden, hey, crack open your Bible and turn to God. They didn't like that. So it was just a great evening of conversation. Of course, lots of concern about Joe Biden, lots of debate and discussion about Joe Biden's dis, his snub, his refusal for the first time in either New York or, you know, Shanksville or DC. What a disgraceful. And, you know, they know what they're doing, Mark. They know what they're doing. Okay. What are they doing? Because I know my first answer. And for yesterday, all of yesterday, if there's anything I really tried to do, and I know you do too, it's to be as fair as possible, as accommodating as possible. So if I am going to come down hard on somebody, it's because I've internationally, you know, doddering around in Vietnam, tough to get back in time for 9 -11. So maybe that's bad planning. Tough to get back. I know. I know. It's the president. He's got Air Force One and get wherever he wants to get. Don't give me that crap. Believe you me, the test did not succeed because even under the harshest light of goodwill and grace and latitude, there is no excuse. He was with troops in Alaska. Anytime you're with troops, it's good. But 9 -11 is about three places, New York number one, not to rank them, obviously New York and obviously the Pentagon or Shanksville. You've got to be in one of those places and to fail to do so is conspicuous by its absence. So my answer to give it back to you is the reason they didn't do it is because they knew that it would have been as big an embarrassment as it was in Alaska where he made up crap again. And David said, Drucker well, Biden has been embellishing for a long time. Yeah, but that's when he knew what he was doing. Now I think Joe actually does believe that he was at ground zero the next day looking into the gaping maw of hell or whatever he said there among the smoke and the debris. He wasn't there. He was on the floor of the Senate. He is mentally unhinged. His White House knew it and that's why they knew they could not have him at any of the important 9 -11 sites. Well, two things. You know, first of all, I think there's a lot of wisdom to the argument that if he was at one of the 9 -11 events, the reception he would get inevitably would embarrass him. Have you seen - Reception? Reception? I'm talking about booing. Nobody's going to boo him on 9 -11. Yes, they are. Yes, they are. Don't underestimate the anger and rage the that people have towards this guy. I mean, look, already he's gotten - I mean, I saw it with my own eyes when, you know, I've seen the loving reception that Trump got when he was being arrested from people in the inner city and people lining the streets cheering him. Look at the reception. And you've seen Biden get booed at various events that he's attended. New Yorkers in particular are aggravated and anger. Listen, ask a 9 -11 family what they think of Biden shaking the hand of the Saudi potentate or whatever he is. You know? And you don't think Saudi Arabia was complicit in 9 -11? I mean, this is - And so, yeah, I think you're right, the reception. And number two, this man's a liar. This man will just flat out - And I want to see how they're going to spin this whopper that he was standing, looking through the gaping jaws of hell the day after on the - as George Bush was. George Bush stood on the pile. George Bush had that bullhorn and George Bush said, I hear you. And soon the people who took down these buildings are going to hear you. Biden's trying to, you know, take away Bush's real life experience. Stolen presidential valor. Exactly. Somebody else was there and he wasn't. And you're lying about it? You're saying I was there? I mean, I know people who do this. Listen, I don't want to mention names, but there are people, frankly, and they're kind of pitiful. They just want to live on 9 -11 infamy and they want to bang that drum and they want to puff up their chest and say, look at me, look at me, look at me. The true heroes are the - And there are people who are trying to rescue people or find people and they've had post 9 -11 sickness and illness and death.

Mike Gallagher David Phil Boyce Dennis Prager Chris Degaulle Mike Lindell Mike JOE Bush New York Alaska Mark Joe Biden Lorenzo Jeffress Second White House DC Vietnam Donald Trump
A highlight from Session 1 Evangelism

Evangelism on SermonAudio

03:18 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from Session 1 Evangelism

"By the way, this seminary building is something else. It's my first time here, and I was thinking as I was out in the rotunda going around, and I'm going to do some more going around that rotunda, interesting, interesting material out there, and I'm thankful for it. Have any of you ever been to the Billy Graham Center of Evangelism up at Wheaton? Some of you have. I've been there. I'm glad this is here and as well done as it is. The interesting thing is this is a seminary. Some think this is a seminary, but everything out in that rotunda is about evangelism. What does that tell you? They're saying in this seminary that evangelism is mighty important. Evangelism is important, and we need to keep that in mind. So we've got these two weeks. I'm thankful. I kind of wish I was staying next week to hear Dr. Van Gelder and myself. I don't know of a fellow more qualified to do the right kind of a job. He and I sort of agreed. We talked about it, about how we're going to do this without overlapping. There will be some overlapping, I'm sure, but I'm going to stick somewhat with philosophy. I'm not a philosopher, so I don't know how well I'll stick with it. I'm going to stick somewhat with philosophy of evangelism, and he's going to stick more with methodology. I will get into methodology, and he undoubtedly will get intermingled in all of his matters of philosophy. You can't have a method without a philosophy. It's impossible to have a method without a reason for the method, and that's philosophy. So that will be somewhat the basis of these two weeks. I'm going to start off today with not any of my lectures. I thought I'd just introduce myself and talk to you and give you a little background about my own life. I thought you might be interested. If not, just endure it anyway. I came to Bob Jones in 1946 as a student, and that was the year that the preacher boys class really grew. Because 1946 was the year, just after the war was over, when a large number of fellows returned from overseas, being a lot of Navy guys, Army guys, a lot of them Navy guys. That year, I enrolled in February of 1946, second semester. That year, I think there were 200, I'm not sure exact figure, preacher around 250 boys that enrolled from the service. Those fellows included Phil Schuler, Jim Singleton, Glenn Schunk, Jim Harwell, who is now a member of our church in Tucson. A tremendous number of guys. I could go on and on. If you're up in the Washington, D .C. area, I can't think of that fellow's name. He had the big radio broadcast up there. What is his name? Anyway, we had 250 that enrolled in that class, and it increased the preacher's class immensely.

Jim Singleton Jim Harwell Phil Schuler Glenn Schunk 1946 February Of 1946 Van Gelder Tucson 200 Next Week Washington, D .C. Bob Jones Today Two Weeks Billy Graham Center Of Evangel 250 Second Semester First Time Around 250 Boys Wheaton
Monitor Show 12:00 09-11-2023 12:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:52 min | 3 weeks ago

Monitor Show 12:00 09-11-2023 12:00

"Except for instead of training your model to help you with Yahtzee or when it's Scrabble, they're training their model to help their self -driving technology. And these analysts are saying that this dojo could do for Tesla what Amazon Web Services did to Amazon and their e -commerce business, so an interesting way to think about that. We're gonna have more coming up. This is Bloomberg. All right, coming up in this hour, we're gonna check in with Phil Orlando. He's the chief equity strategist at Federated Hermes. Get his thoughts on these markets, and we're gonna break down that consumer M &A trade jam -smucker and hosted deal. We're gonna break that down with a Bloomberg Intelligence analyst. We're gonna speak with Meghan Clark, and she's gonna join us here in the studio. She's the CEO of Croteo. She's gonna join to discuss her company, which is a publicly traded company in the ad tech space. So we're gonna break all that down in the upcoming hour, and we're gonna stay on top of where these markets are. Right now, let's go to news with Mr. Charlie Pellet for the Bloomberg Business Report. Thank you very much, and here's what's going on.

Meghan Clark Phil Orlando Tesla Federated Hermes Amazon Charlie Pellet Amazon Web Services M &A Croteo Bloomberg Bloomberg Intelligence Bloomberg Business Report Scrabble Yahtzee
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

08:36 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"Doing gift. You feel you call his breakfast. Cats are telling me that the two days in a row never mind two days in a row. What just two days in a row. You guys are blaming me for all these problems. That you've got that unity. Mr hall said yesterday you were not on air at doing our repurpose oded mr hall. Say that yeah. You're you're not supposed to do that on monday. You're supposed to do to repurpose on. He's supposed to encore and tuesday thursday. Take it easy. Okay bud when. Mr hall wants to talk to me about that. He'll talk to him about that. That's nothing you tell me and it sure ain't nothing you tell me right here in the middle of this show while i'm trying to enjoy my breath get i mean. Look at c. c. Trying to enjoy my breakfast. Don't eat while you're working felt now. No bobby steve duly on the line. At the western states homeowners association the fall tacklers back on last year because of the pandemic there was like no summer tackler. there was no fall tackler. I think they had a monica of spring. Tackler bobby thal texas back. We are very very season proud to announce failed at the fall. Tabular will be taking place in october. And it'll be our community center. We will have you fashion show on friday night with have the junior team. Small little team girl fashion show that we used to call it the junior team. So it's a call. Now steve young lady junior teams small miss. We're working it out don't you yes we do but We wanted to call it something more interesting than the junior team will help the fashion show for the team. Boys do it too. Don't grab the phone eighth. it's funny so you've got general shy. He calls you've got you've got frank gray calling at breakfast and i got steve still grabbing a phone grabbing something. Hold on for a minute right in the balls. He's kidding yeah he's kidding kidding. Don't do that anymore okay. Because it it mocks domestic violence talking about. I'd say it again don't do that anymore. It mocks domestic violence. It makes fun of people who actually are assaulted in domestic situations. What are you talking about. I told you mr. And i'll tell you bobby i'll say it again if you want. We're not mocking anything. Mr henry i. I am very progressive on the issue of domestic of damage the city and the violence there in. We're not trying to make anything. Then don't pretend like you're kicking him in the nuts bobby and then say i'm only kidding. We're showing that you shouldn't do it and that it's bad and then after we get done showing it. We sumer only kidding. Move on for christ demon move on okay. So anyway bobby. The fall tackler. Congratulations also i understand that you had to shut down a garage. Sale shot at garage sale down. Steve and i were in the Pomegranate phase and we were writing golf cart four days a week. We read the golf cart. We do what we call it over fewer over and overflight where we just sort of wave and say hello Steve you know off guard is our way of driving around and going high high and we'll wave and say hello. We're waiting and seeing hello and we came up on the corner of the pomegranate phase going into the daffodil phrase during the pomegranate safe and we saw we saw early in bob bubka Who stood aimed merely in bob. What merely in bob bubka. They're they're in our third the corner of the pomegranate phrase at phase and the daffodil face. I believe that he's an attorney Represents a refuse collection company refuse recycling for recycling refuse reuse reuse refuse. He's attorney okay. So anyway you saw this Garage sale right on that on the driveway and we were driving the golf cart waving and saying hello to all who were there and i was. I was waving to a family that was head. Come out on the driveway to wave to us. I was waving going. Hey and we get that part team. What did you see what i saw card table set up and i saw like a waffle iron and i saw some books and i said we've got a problem. Steve noticed it was a garage sale. So we parked the Golf cart and i walked directly over to maryland. And i said what are you doing. She says it's a garage sale. I said yeah but this is you've got a waffle iron. You have some old. They look like old books. Some erma bombeck books. And i said it can't it can't be just can't be and i told her violated a policy that we have which is what we call. It can't be just can't be What does it gulp. It's called it can't be a just can't be if what we're seeing is so really so off putting and so on like what we want western states to be that we say my god. It can't be and so and you said this to this young woman young woman three years older than me but yeah i said oh my god this can't be you gotta waffler erma bombeck and i and she had some schuessel flip flops and i said i've got shut this down. We need to seal it up and she said to me what's wrong with this. Just a few items. And we don't have. They had a pretty big crowd though It was spilling out onto the street. I it can't be it. Just no god. It can't be so. I said you need to seal it out. Whereas the steve. Here's the order that we gave we said you got to close up seal up zellerbach. You need to shut it down. Close it up and seal it up With a desk. Calendars besides him chairs. Real cheap and i said maryland cheap. It looks oh god it's cheap so i told her to seal it up and clam it up. And that's when bob came over what i said. I know you're an attorney. And you buy your an attorney and everything and but you represent the use of of refuse. He said so what and i said. That's you know. I you know i said he probably would wanna represent your wife. Because that's what she's doing right. Now you're selling refuse to reuse it and he laughed at me and he duly. You're you've always been a stupid man. But today you're extra-special stupid and he turned around and bent over and pointed at his around bent over and pointed at his. You know what and then walked on. You're kidding no. I'm not kidding bobby. This idea that he turned around bent over and pointed at. You told me today that he was dismissing you. By turning around and fixing his sandal. Yes he turned around dead over to fix the sandal but his hand he used his finger at pointed right at. Steve pointed right at the right. In right in the middle of the crack of what be what would be his his you-know-what except he was wearing shorts. And that's right and you said he was reaching into his back pocket for his wallet. He was reaching. It was back pocket for something but it looked like he put his finger right where the class is supposed to be. You guys know mr henry. You don't get to dismiss this and blow us off like pete niebling okay. That guy's name was that beaten out of forget what his name was. But it wasn't pete niebling the guy's name well. We aren't nibbling. We're duly i understand that man and i'm listening to what you're saying. So what's what's the upshot. So you told her to shut it down and seal it up. No what is it. We gave the order that we would lean that we would increase the homeowners association fees. If they didn't seal it up. Close it up and shut it down within the next five minutes and i said you have secondhand waffle iron you have. I know the second the second handball flyer and the desk calendars and some chairs talk much. Take his bobby. I speak very very clearly.

Mr hall bob bubka oded mr hall bobby bobby steve western states homeowners asso bobby thal frank gray golf Steve erma bombeck steve young Mr henry schuessel zellerbach bob maryland texas steve pete niebling
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

03:28 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"Duck. Abe's no the duck. The different place that goes about five different breakfast places. All of them that start with the war duck. What the hell are you had anyway. Great just listen to me. I walk into the duck. I said what's for breakfast and they gave me a look like triage. We need is right here. Somebody get a bucket for his brains. And i said you dirty and i staggered out of eric. Got in the car came back home. Saw my beautiful wife. And i said to him. Can i have some breakfast. And what it said was yes frank. You can have some breakfast. And i said oh i said breath and then i sat down and then i collapsed a frank. I don't know what's going on with. You would work or what. But this can't be the only problem you've got man i. I'm under a lot of pressure. I agreed to produce that. Show slag heap and i was to help them. Showrunner amazon says you can take that and stick right back up where the breakfast comes out. And i said get a of that. I can't even get a respect at. They said what they said. Take the show slag heap because we pitched amazon on slack game and they said ticket and stick right back up. Ordinarily at about ten thirty two breath goes comes out. And i say you lousy. That's when they sort of bundled off the car frank. Yeah and this is the problem. He's having so frank. I suggest you don't need the money you don't need all of that. The the worry. Stay home for a few weeks and if you what breath kissed i'll make it for you. Oh my god he did it again. All right frank. I agree with that margaret's right. You don't need the money you you ought to be retired and enjoying your life man. Not you know then it. Frankly i think because they told me that bresca certain served till eleven thirty. And i said i wanna fully buttered button loaded up and i said and i want a cup of coffee and a young lady behind the connor says sorry. Sir would not serving breakfast. And i looked at him. And i said you lousy. And that's when he came staggering home. What do you call the first meal of the day frank. it's called hold on. It's called what hold on. The first bill of the day is called branch. Wait wait breakfast. Hold on i. Bail of the day is called gays. Brisket gays. Gimme a break frank. What's it called breakfast. I'm only kidding. But i gotta talk about all of that at home. Yes he is. What don't you mortgage. It's an easy enough thing that you know. We all know that. Frank's got problems. Is this part of the this part of his std. No it is not fill. it's not neurologic. It's just a learned. It's a pathway of the brain that frank because he listens to the show he knows all of us and he gets into the vernacular frank gray on why he continues to call it breakfast. I know we have a lot of idiots on this show. Do we ever. What are you talking. Dickman you'll a number one proponent of colored breakfast everybody on this program calls it. Breath gets to the point now. A lot of your listeners. Call it that well look at. You're not blaming me for that. I i know it's called breakfast. I call it breakfast. I'm the only guy on this show that calls it breakfast. Well good for you.

frank amazon Abe bresca eric margaret connor frank gray Sir Frank Dickman
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

07:34 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"He had coffee buy a house. And they're frank frank grant. I had coffee at the generals. And then i decided i'd go over to offers frozen breakfast ice so frank. This is the problem. Having right saying breath kissed. Let the hold on let. I'm listening to your show. Mr henry and i'm on your show mr henry. I very angry right now. What's the problem. The problem is margaret. My wife has been on your show which necessitates me listening and for several years. Now i've been hearing you. I've been hearing him. I've been hearing the general. I was her. I've listened to bud. He says it And and all of of The guests say it from the one kid that daughter she says it at. It's got me. Say it. And i'm telling you that i've had enough of it and someone is going to have to do something to stop it. What what are you talking about you talking about breakfast talking about the fact that i went into supporting this coffee shop where was i anyway. I thought you said you were in your new kirks or something. No duck where. I heard you say frank. Well that's where i was i was. Wbz duckworth no. I always at duck put. That said where were you. What were you having breakfast. Hey as artem. Sorry frank where were you. I was a duck obese. And i was having breath coast. See there. it is the problem is you're saying breast does that it. Yeah that's the problem margaret dope. Pretend like this hasn't been a problem. I get up in the morning. I have business meetings that start early. Say eight even even eight. Thirty sometimes seven thirty Meet someone over at wbz's or we'll go over to the barnstorm. These some great coffee places. Down and then marina del rey and palace for a place where i go and what would you gentlemen do you. Would you like to have breakfast. And they looked at lea- they looked at me. Like i should have abandoned around my head day. Honestly let me like. I should be bandaged. And i should be immobilized and getting sick and tired of it and i would like for somebody there Ears station mr henry to do something about it because i'm getting starting to lose by. He's talking about the fact that we say breath castilla frank. I call it breakfast. I don't know what you're hearing. I i know you do. But i hear all these jumps all these monkeys monkeys and they're all with the breakfast and then kid down her that day. I pulled in to the drive through at j. b. because i wanted to get one of their the Site sandwiches big deal at a cup of coffee and here comes the kid on the inner gone and she says what would you like. Oh i got the are you still survey breath gust and i hear a ha- you know here. Why what did you call it. So this is. I don't know what i could do anything about it. Gets you know. Understand that what i'm listening. You're listening to the show and you're picking up on certain words and you're calling at breakfast. Do you ever call it breakfast. No i don't call it breakfast frank. Yes now i call it breakfast. 'cause i just heard you say it but when i'm out there in the world i went to the drive through at the jacket jacket bag. I went through the jack in a box or excuse me jacket about jacket about see. That's just i where i am. I forget where i am. I forgot one. I'm ordering say may may may we may. We may help you. And what are you talking about. May we me help. You don't even know what's being said to me and say what some breakfast and i'll say excuse me i didn't mean to say breath guest. Just let me have the hot button. Button fully loaded with coffee and they say we're only serving Till eleven say we saw. Are you serving breakfast. And then i'll go. I'm sorry i meant to say bracket breakfast breakfast. And all right well frank. You know we do the best we can here. We've got a lot of morons weigh in on this show. It's not fair. Henry moron while it is true practically every guest we have on here. Skulls breath gust. That's right there. that's what i'm talking about. Why can't you get some people on there. That got sixteen cents worth a brains between their ears so that when they say i wanna have i. Let's have a light breakfast and then get down to talk you. Just gimme a break frank. You can't break that habit. My god wouldn't home. He says what's for breast castel. Say frank breakfast absari breakfast and also say nothing. I'm not cooking. You breath kissed and then i fall into it and i'll say impalas probably cooking breath and then i'll say excuse me i then breakfast right right. So he's admitting he's the same way. I got two women in the house. When i say what's for breakfast. Say oh stop it talk like you're grown up ban and i'll say okay. I'm sorry and they'll say hold on. We're not even serving breakfast anymore. Because like margaret the other morning said. I'm not making you breath. Guess what do. I look like wishboned at the chuck wagon. Jesus h and then. I'll say but wait a minute. You just call it breakfast. Well what's the solution to this man. So everybody's continent broadcasting. You're blaming phil's show of course. I'm blaming phil show. I walk at a grown man. I go into duck. Abe's i go into the jacket jacket. The bag the box. I go in a jacket a box. Okay i'll say. How long are you serving breakfast. And they'll look at me. Like i need someone guiding made it a toilet and holding the role for me. That's this is the thing that hurts. Fill more than i right first of all. You're not blaming me for this man. I don't care how bad you think it is. You're not doing it frank. Wait wait wait hold on. You're the one. I should margaret. She's the one and and he says to me. How do you figure she. I said because she's the host of the show that you work on and he said but phil doesn't say breath coast and i said that's what i'm talking about. Hey frank i don't. I'm not making you say breakfast okay. Don't talk to me. Like that. Gary new blend growed up man. If you're a grownup man the you know how to say breakfast know frank. You've got a lot of problems. So now we know that another one of them among the many that you have is that you can't pronounce breakfast. You gotta say breath breakfast. You blame phil and everybody on the show. Because they're the ones that say it and it stuck in your head like a tape loop. I told you the other more margaret margaret knows. I came back into the house. I was stunned. I was staggering through the door. He had to pass his hand in front of my eyes. And say what happened to you. And i said breath i shed breath breakfast. And i've been over to the duck and duck. Abe's no the duck. The different place that goes about five different breakfast places. All of them that start with the war duck. What the hell are you had anyway. Great just listen.

frank mr henry frank frank grant Wbz duckworth wbz castilla frank Mr henry margaret artem Henry moron marina del rey palace phil Jesus h Abe margaret margaret Gary
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

05:27 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"I think you're the one my friend know you are the one okay. You weapons sitting there all night here. okay i. I wanted to say this. I'm i'm a frankly. I'm not a faculty you're a parent. I'm on the faculty. Okay thank you. I don't like hearing administrators from my kids school talking to each other like they're to bit like they're just sorta punk each other like they're two pumps go and chest to chest someplace. I like to think that there's a little bit more decorum. It's been a very fascinating discussion. I what i'm getting from. This is fascinating but but you understand. Wait a minute wait a minute flight. Recorders missile fountain. It's been a fascinating discussion. I'm getting from this is. There's not gonna be football this fall whether you like it or not. Father mcquarters okay. And the Scholastic bunnies for showing the fountain. We've got a contract your school. You're not going to start pulling the rug out. But you know just you know. It's going to be putting the real squeeze on me now to try to fund. Some of these scholarships when we don't have fun with mcquarters crispy cream the crispy cream three. You say that. I've got a problem man. Crispy cream died The hot buttered bun night and buddy your burden night. All of this. What is buddy your buddy. I gotta know that something. It's a private school and we do what we gotta do it for the money and i'm shocked at that film butter your button night. What do you call that. I call you talk about inappropriate and this guy is trying to get. He's calling me up at six morning. This is getting up and finding mcquarters night. I'm out okay. Not up in front of a quarter gentlemen hold on. I think we're about. We've come to the end of this discussion. I would simply say father. Mcquarters is in his way. Try to raise money. It might be a little weird macos with the bounce house. You know what i'm saying hear. You don't know what you're talking about. You're talking right through your rear end. And and and i would suggest you could give yourself You know another ten years and then they'll i'm not meddling in the at fairs belmar cadmium saying maybe cool with some of these promotions well at. That's my point exactly. And i'm not going to help son around the bounce house. Aren't you already arrest now. Who is that. it's make hotels her. Oh baby you're talking. Thanks very much but we've got to bring this to a halt is talking to me like i'm he's talking to me like i just nothing like something that just go out in the field some places. He's riding bicycles riding my bicycle. You know guys like you know. No no no. You're not gonna talk to make these guys just the pta guys wrestles. That's the part that i don't get you know all right. Thanks a lot guys. you know this is. This is something. I wanna continue. Not on your program. But i'd like to continues at the school anytime you want. Really i'm not gonna fight you're fountain. I'm just gonna talk that. I wanna talk to but i will do the sunday disinvited mcquarters or somebody there at the administrative level. That's all going. There's some problem there between you. And the coach i would suggest the problem with their buddy mcquarters. Thank you will love. We'll say goodbye to you guys. And i hope you can work this thing out. I drink very much. Dan rea back you. But i've i've probably your eye lift. You know this is my left hand. This is what you know vernon. Why don't you start driving the car. Hey there's an idea you take over driving the car pool. But i'm gonna try pullover draft phil. I'm gonna drive drunk now. She's not okay. are we going home. Good then i'm starving starving to death. I've got nothing eight. Thanks so much. Thanks a lot many seconds dosier and is he still there. Yeah coach you're still there. Where where am i still here. Okay thanks coach vernon dosier father. James recorders and charleena fountain is a member of the advisory committee there at belmar academy on the future of football at belmar academy and high schools in california and across the country. You can look state by state right. There's a guide state by state that will tell you what your teams are doing so on and so forth. Great so what happens in california. What happens in california happens differently somewhere else. And i just got off the phone with vernon dosier the car. His wife still going and she's heading into nevada. His wife is still driving the car out of town. Yeah she thanks so much folks for. Let me keep vernon hi. It's margaret. Can i talk to her. Can i talk to her. It's margaret margaret grey margaret. Thanks very much folks. Talk to tomorrow margrave. Let me talk to her. Okay thanks very much what are you doing. She won't go older leftist that you don't right way. Gold left talked to her. Thanks a lot. Everybody goodbye.

Father mcquarters Mcquarters football Dan rea vernon dosier charleena fountain belmar academy vernon california phil James margaret margaret grey margare margrave nevada
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

06:02 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"Way and score for us. And if they don't then i want i gotta have some kind of something happened to make me feel better about the fact that they got the goal and so you want that woman who does scored to have as you put it. Her teeth cleared out of her head by the blade of a stick. Guys go through down. Well yeah what what is going on with her. Hey pal take it easy you know. It's just hockey her. That's the part. I don't get just take it easy. You're getting all in a heat. I'm telling you guys about how invested hockey fans are. When i see someone go down the i know and they get scored on and they guy stepped tiptoes on his skates. You want to see some unclear as teeth out of his head with the blade of a stick. Let let me tell you something. Young man my funds. I mentioned my phone. I know all about boding gray. And he had them lined up. Hold on for a minute. You're talking about my father now. She worked her gas off and between the the grief that my mother gave her and my mother would be standing there with enrolling pin. So here comes my father. Early monday morning. She'd been working azoff all weekend. Putting the plug teeth beck into hockey players faces. Then go back and get into a bar fight. Now you've got then he's gotta plug another not tooth in. Meanwhile there's my mother standing there and he's at the top of the stairs where the rolling ten waiting for my by my dad to get home and she's dead tired from putting the tape in you understand you know. Okay austin i appreciate very much your call and we'll take it from here. I don't all right so thank you mr marquette. Did he contact us yeah. He got attacked us and find out about it. Frank gray on the line with us from santa. Monica all right so frank. The question is. I don't think it's a difficult question and it goes like this and i know you're not necessarily the hockey fan here like hockey fun. What do you mean the hockey fan. For god's sake. I spent some of my formative years as in my twenties as an employee of the hockey the hockey squirt or the of the hershey squeezed. Not this you just. Frank hersi squeeze. We had a female hockey team in her. She was called a hershey squeeze and escorts were male and females would come off the ice. I'm here to tell you that those women were missing all of their teeth. And they would grit at you and say you know margaret. I told you that one gal essentially williams he'd look at me because he had kind of a thing for me to say. Hi frank he not a two man you. You'd have to send out a search party to find the front teeth of this gal and we and so and then comes hershey squirts and the guys and they would Be grinning from ear with no. So you're saying frank that the women this female team you had the hershey squeeze. That's right at the hershey squeezed. They're a part of the north american women's hockey hockey planet. I forget the name of the north america. Pennsylvania league frank is you told me originally okay i don't know but was amateur pennsylvania the they're all women. I don't remember you ever telling me that. The women had their teeth knocked out of their skulls. Well they did and my father worked just as hard on the women as she did on the men and women would come off the ice grinning and said hi frank. Aren't you cute. And no teeth ahead. None none not a tooth from miles. There weren't any teeth from miles around. Hershey pennsylvania back in those days frank gray has been with us and we thank you very much frank. But you haven't had the essential question answered which is willing women get the teeth knocked out. We had an answer. you say. These women played hockey to the point where they did. And i don't know what kind of a guy that makes you or anybody says. Wow i won't accept the women until they get their teeth knocked out of their head. What we're saying here is. Maybe it's just a different style of hockey. I don't know well. It could be a different stuff but my father made good good living and my father put food on the table and a roof over our head by sticking teeth back into their heads of got countless her. She scored players. Who would come off the ice. They didn't have a tooth between them. They had like two good peace between a squatter. Forty guys all right. Well i i don't know what to say about that but God bless you father for doing that. Don't know what to say about food on the table. A real for a we got it. Frank thank you the hershey squirts and the Hershey squeeze data's the female team women team and the two of them. Those two teams together. Those teams together according to frank ray. They couldn't find a tooth between them for miles. World-famous fillon he's isn't that funny. Well the world famous phil hendrie show will be right back. Hi this is darryl apob. The announcement official henry show reminding it a backstage pass for the phil henry show website. You know a lot of fun is had on friday nights we get together we chat and we say hello and we talk and we and we say hi to each other and that goes on for an hour and then fill goes and drinks even more than he did during the chat. I imagine a lot of people who was on a chat would too so. That's one of the things and then the next day. They have the saturday cinema where people talk about. What a rotten movie. It was and then we get back into the weeks shows. Some of them are encore shows from the years past and some are brand spanking new ones. And it's all a part of the universe phil hendrie which is populated with some of the weirdest cats. What you've ever seen in your life also don't forget to visit the merch store and you can get general. Gaylon hammers dice. You can get margaret grey merchandise. You can get steamboat zero. You can get. I mean a lot of stuff. Yeah so going to the merge store. I have a sweatshirt on right now. This assess auxiliary police which which is. Jay santos.

hockey Frank gray frank azoff mr marquette Frank hersi pennsylvania Monica phil hendrie austin santa margaret frank ray williams fillon Hershey darryl apob north america Pennsylvania
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

07:23 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"Is the man who cares me. Well i promised. He promised he wouldn't use the word right way. All right guys. Got me. And i appreciate that very much but still you must admit you even go to. Poetry is good because you have offended deeply deeply whenever you said something about the man from vietnam being homeless everything well. He had long time over there and fought over for people. Like us me and everybody here. You are saying very buzzed. Because he's black and everything else i. It's not the point that he's black disappointed me. Use the performance enhancing drug which shouldn't use look his mark. Maguire nick martin flyer was playing ball. Lebed's they going to do something him. It don't make a difference you know. Don't make different black white run if he's if he's wrong wrong. What about what many boom has done for you do what now. What about the baby boom has done for you. What the very. I like to watch the man play ball. He's doing talk all ball players. Play ball you know. I wish i had the chance to thirty. Bumped boy you know. But here's the thing. If i can jump and you say that there is hypocrisy because of the corn dog thing. It what i'm trying to say. Is they make fun of anybody because of steroids and yet they go and they get these chiro. You know the big long donat. They the chili on the on the Jeez chili tries You know crackerjack books but that no one ever talks about this supersize me here to supersize me there. Do you have opinion about the way they talk about the super size stefo day that it's not good for yourself so who cares in this world is good for you any lord. Answer me that. What in this world ain't good for you can't drink water creek anymore and everything because they polluted all this other stuff. Think creek what are you talking about. Great giddy place in the whole united states. What all greek and water. It's bad for you to. It's a stream a never heard of a creek. No it's up to william laughing stream like a small stream part of the contract down four. We all agree. You know what i'm getting at is. I don't understand that this do you. You get supersize. No if i'm hungry. I get supersized. That's my point is my point right there. All right okay wait thank you good points one. Eight hundred four four nine six eight six you try to pull this corn dog issue into the berry steroid thing man for a for a long time. Now here's matt. go ahead matt. Hey phil very obvious hello. It's very obvious a must have hung up the phone and let me do it here. Is andy go ahead andy. The point i was gonna make he says that Very people hate barry bonds because he's gonna break Vapors records yes. Because he's a black man. Well you you tell me one thing. Tell me what record does babe. Ruth have it on the record of every of the whole thing. Now he doesn't. He doesn't babe ruth every air and listen henry the record and he's black. Yep well what babe. Ruth is the gold standard. Everybody if he's not. How can you be the standard. If he doesn't have the record of black man has the record. How can you say that. Every hates very bonds hank when he hits home run at the atlanta stadium off of donning ninety seventy four. These kids come up to the stand and there was a moment where you thought. Maybe they were going to nice him. Yeah did you see how many double cheeseburger today. I don't eat dogs. not don't she's better. It's nothing to do with it. Man the thing is you're saying that people hate very bonds because he's gonna break a record of white man doesn't have the record. It's a black man. Yes technically as he black men but really the white man who is tightening the lightning little babe ruth but he doesn't have the record. Let me ask you something. Do ethan candy at the baseball game do i. What do you cut and candy at the baseball game on dog. Did i have nothing against hamburgers and corn. You're making incorrect payments. When you're saying that people think he's going to break babe. Ruth second one's every doesn't have i want to come into this but this i'm trying steroid use do you. Do you ever eat the cinnamon walnuts. What does this got to do with the cinnamon walnuts cinnamon almonds so basically you're making statements and you have no facts back it up. I this fact what fact you make fun of variable for the stealing great player and the point is he doesn't have the record doesn't doesn't have the record. Bruce doesn't have the record hank. Aaron has the record. American yes but hankinson. Nobody knows who he is. What do you mean on those. We even hand ahead of him. What what do you know you know. It's not insane. But you know as well as i do. Most famous baseball player in the history of this entire world is babe. Ruth doesn't the record. It doesn't matter the most important man that that ever was. And meanwhile you are there with it. I've heard of the bambino out making your and you have no fact buying your point when you sit down with the colombo you look at me. I don't eat corn dogs. Thank you very much. Andy as your voice to me. What wait a minute man. Your first rate in the hell out everybody. First of all henry. Aaron owns the home run record. Seven hundred fifty. Five dinger's okay. Number two is the babe now coming up hot on. Both of their heels is berry bonds. Hank aaron is black. Babe ruth was white and by the way. You don't like the fact that everybody's shoveling down corn dogs. Nobody packed away more than babe. Ruth right yes now. You're making my point. You say wait a minute no no. You can't go back you'll making my point. They blew represent every single white baseball fan shoveling down. Did not joe cheers with the. Oh jesus you know. What i this to me is absurd. This is the point that i make..

Maguire nick martin flyer Lebed stefo Ruth chiro atlanta stadium andy matt barry bonds vietnam ethan candy Babe ruth baseball hankinson william phil henry hank united states ruth
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

04:43 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"The pilgrims died from every mountainside lead. Freedom ride right. No that's wrong margaret. No doesn't go like that at all. We'll ask me if i care all right. The next song is a song. I don't know the words to it's one however made popular by dolly parton. Now i love dolly parton. She's wonderful what i resent about her is that she walks around with a chest. Pushed out margaret when you do that. Frank dote lecture me but when you do that you make every woman out there feel that well okay so there the pair that i have watched frank. Well you're making every woman out there say to himself. Look at the pair. I've got it'll never be what he's got. Meaning dolly parton. And you know you. You're not half bad. Take it easy frank. I'm you know. I'm a woman. But what pardons got you know what god gave him. God gave her talent. Good god almighty you. Just call dolly parton. Her god gave her talent. God gave her a great songwriting ability. Agreed singing voice. And yes on top of that guess. What else got gave her a big big watch. So god gave dolly parton the big ones. And what are you going to do about that. What are you margaret. Grey going to do about that. I'm going to take the song that dolly a dear dear girl and a dear friend made popular. And i'm going to give it the margaret great touch. It's called color me america. No you said earlier. You said you don't know this song. I don't know this song. But i'm going to give it. I'll say it again so us all right. Give it the margaret great to give it the margaret grey. What the touch here. It is color me america. I don't know the lyrics or the melody ladies gentlemen. I'm writing this because of my deep love for our country. And because i want this to at least be considered as the new anthem for america. The dog is looking at you. Like you're way way out there. You know what. Frank all deal with what i have to. Yeah it's okay kirby. Yeah the dog is looking at the three of us like we're way on. It's alright kirby look at the way she's looking at me it's a it's a he dog. That's what i said. Just everybody's back before. Start sweating here. We go collar me. America red white and blue. I love america. When i'm not i'm blue. I love america you. Do you need some water more than that. Here's some great sorry. I was getting emotionally elman column. Be america my wife. Margaret who. I love very dearly gotten so deeply emotional over this song that he's doing. A variety of things gagging up laughing. Watch it frank and also crying collared. I've got color me. America red white and blue. Color me america. don't you do too. I love america. Why wouldn't you color us. America red white and blue. There are days when i'm happy. I'm still blue. There are days when i'm blue. But i see red. There are days when i'm black. But i know i'm white. There are days when everything is just all right. Caller me america red white and blue color. Mio color i'm sorry. Color me america right here. Collar me america are those your shoes would say that. I'm changing up okay. Color be america. Every day is great. Caller me. America eight skating. Donate at sucked. How dare you franken. you're my husband. Yes i'm your husband and as your husband. Let me tell you what any husband would say to herself. That was one big fat. Just one big. The will fail all deal with us later. The world famous phil had we show executive produced by phil henry for incorporated all rights reserved on podcast. One f. It cove in nineteen is still around but that doesn't mean the army. Rotc.

dolly parton America margaret frank Frank kirby Margaret franken phil henry phil army Rotc
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

06:35 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"And welcome back down to fill henry. Show here on the phil henry. Show budget can yeah. We have our helmet. Yeah steve ozone's going to join us right now on our on our in our studio actually he's live in a studio and we had our newsmaker line. That was the dooley's was on that in our studio right now. Is stephen basell. Come on in steve. Are you now this. Steve was a argument. You had with bud off the air a couple of weeks ago and at first of all i wanna thank you happy to be on. I was in the area here. Just want to mention airbnb construction. We go all over even over located out in corona california which is more close to the inland empire. We do come up the coast here. Ventura county beautiful area and we do some commercial development out here so if you ever want to call bb. Bnb construction bb that's b. is a bb or bb. It's being be as you know it is. I just heard you say no. It is being b bows ellen bows nail. It boselli yet again. So it's b. and b. y. No it's not bad. no it isn't it. I know you're doing that on purpose. Yeah sort of do it on purpose. Because i want to kind of throw you off your game a little bit because i think a lot a lot of ways you act. Yeah what i know. Mr henry doesn't like the word but you do kinda retarded buddy said. Don't use that word all right now. Here this is what i mean i. It's no big thing when you and i talked about this two weeks ago. You said to me casually because we were talking. If if i could go ahead i was talking about because i've just been a guest on this show. We were off air. We're talking on the phone. And i said to him. You know i've been on against. I've been a guest on this show now for many many years. Yeah you've been on. Since like april come to la exactly and we reminisced about that. And i talked about how i had said in reference to roy hutchins one day when i was the next door neighbor of mine who i had placed a lawsuit filed a lawsuit against him for laughing at me. Okay when his minor bird told me to go straight to you know when the minor bird called you name. He's minor bird called me. And i you could just bite a bird called stephen a-hole and you filed suit and the judge did issue a restraining order against the minor bird. He did and i went so that was a victory. And i went you. Hey gay. And that's what i told you know i've done that before you see that. That's what he claimed. Okay well is there any way. Do we have any taped evidence of this. I mean well let let me just say first of all. I have for as long as i've been in general. I've been with her before. Even you mr mr bean general. I mean mrs mrs grey. You've been with mr henry longer. Well you and. I been mystery. We about the same amount of time but in florida and you met mr henry here in ventura county. Yeah all right well. So what does so then. Ms great i know mr moselle. I met mr henry in california. When i come out to california. Okay so. I remember on on the shows with mr henry early on when i would go. Yeah all right okay. So that's what you say. And i don't doubt that you but just two weeks ago and and i had talked to you about this. I said what i. When i i come out to california in nineteen ninety-six with april. And she was pregnant and we're going to have to children in california and i remember i told mr. Yeah my wife's pregnant and he said has it make you feel. Yeah yeah so all right so how you guys get so. Who did what i. I'm telling you right now. And i believe this in the very core by being that i influenced you bud dickman. I'm the guy that went year. You guys got to be no okay. It's out you guys living. So you're trying to say mr boselli. You're the first guy ever to go here. Are you guys kidding i. That's what i'm asking. Well you just did it and you did it the way that i do it so again. You try to say you're the only guy that went to a just the way you did a copies me well see. I'm not claiming wait a minute. Wait a minute you really have to ask all three of you. Chimpanzees to be quiet. See really asking all three of you. Chimpanzees to be quiet while i get the lay of the land on this thing because mr bowe zell goes are a. Yeah you just did it like do it. I'm copying you. You're saying that that is your style. It is because i did it as a part of. That's now i remember. I was part of your stand up pack. Yeah did so. When i was on a show and i was guest host and i said okay. You'll know this is the last. Here's where the left supposed to come in. When i told joke like for instance my wife said to me the other day. Don't go out. Because there's no. I said i think i'll go outside and take a walk and my wife's said don't because there's corona virus out there and you might hurt it. Yeah yes what. That's where i told that what. I went like that that lets people. Don't yeah but how do we know that you're the first guy to do that. I'm the i gotta do that here. We go again every one of you. Everyone of you apes when your voice changes when your voice cracks you give each other a big bundle of something that dropped out of a cow's ass god is your language. I'm sorry this is ridiculous. All right so wait wait no no you wait but would you started going here. When was that. I mean did it. Okay yeah see. I'm telling you right now. I did it. I at the men's club when i was doing my stand up. You heard me do it. And you're like hey. I would never do it. Sounds like some kind of a dork. How did you do it. I would. I said mr. I'm the first guy. Wait a minute wait a minute. I'll break this type. How did you do it. I'm the wait a minute. I distinct lead. I happen to know this. For a fact that myself ms grey and mr henry and others would always look to bud to close out a thought. And so but you would do what i'd go. Yeah i know you did but you didn't go. You would go. Yeah you would go. Yeah okay so what are you saying you do..

mr henry phil henry steve ozone stephen basell boselli california roy hutchins airbnb mr mr bean mrs mrs grey Mr henry mr moselle dooley Ventura county corona bud dickman mr boselli henry ellen buddy
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

02:54 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"Jay santos. Jim sadler's the doctor. Jay reynolds i identify when he when he feels like he wants to. Just break something in half over a man's head. And i've i've i wanted to if i was one of those cyclists and that lady came out and she she came out on the course doodle and and she made she made those ben fall and they fail and people got injured. I would take my bike. I would take by cycle. And i would take the frame and i went over all right man. Thanks a lot jack. I don't know what what happened to our show but we get every mental case known to mortal man. I know. I held it together as long as i could henry. But we understand. You're very emotional about this series of crashes. They've had at the tour de france but breaking the frame of a bicycle over the head of an older woman. I don't know the dine said. Hi grandma grandpa doma. How old was she did. Look to be a bit middle aged. I think it's a bit much but we thank you very much jack. Jack armstrong ladies and gentlemen get one one more. Here's one more. This is how i feel when i think of the race organizers grandma and thirty writers into one lane how many pounds three go jack. I'm done reporting from bubis. Jim here in minneapolis. Minnesota back to phil henry. That's jack armstrong real sports reporter. Well i like to use them for the color commentary. What color commentary for that say. This guy takes things you know if you're a reporter you can't take things personally. That is true well. I don't know that that's the first of all he's not really reporter. He's a commentator. Okay that's why we got the cat. He come and tate's baby. Oh he come and takes got it and when you're the commentator man. You're the cat that you know i mean what. Do you want me to tell you. He's given us his impressions his opinions. Jack armstrong is a wack job. Now the guy that shouldn't be given us impressions or opinions and it'll be a little bit. More scientific is j simpson when he comes on and he talks about wanting to beat people up. You know i jason phone well. It might be interesting to see how he'd handle get him on. Jesus h christ. We'll be right back fill. It's the lord's name. I'm sorry i'm sorry. I'm sorry. I apologize folks. We'll be right back. World-famous fill reshow. Jay santos now is going to show how emotional he gets. When he sees the tour to france the world famous phil hendrie show and fill henry show dot com association knows in advance of appearing on the world famous. Fill henry show. Let me just say be fantastic if you get a backstage pass. Subscription to the.

Jay santos Jim sadler Jay reynolds ben fall Jack armstrong bubis phil henry tour de france jack armstrong henry j simpson minneapolis jack Minnesota Jim tate phil hendrie jason henry show dot com association france
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

08:37 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"Yes law kherson. Specializes in the tough-looking fringy alluring and assiting animal. Where we're a hide maker love. You today from moccasins. Persson's in the selby mall hide back here. The world famous phil hendrie show tony pacific and southern california but get jack armstrong on a line j actually at the gym. He's at rugby's. Jim nair in minneapolis. Minnesota to talk about the the france. Jack w watch it on. Tv and everything so far which what's impression of it right but take a lot. I think that the tour de france has been as filled very rightfully mentioned at has had a little bit of everything in it. And you see these writers From all over the world taking off on very expensive pieces of equipment. These by cy cycles Excuse me but i still have steve duly at my head felt. Yeah bicycle but it's funny. It's interesting how word by cycle can get get stuck in your head that the best sub minute to jack. You're at the gym. yes i am. I'm over because just watching the tour of france and looking at the great shape that so many of these writers are in you. You look at yourself in the mirror and you say might be time permit to hit the gym so it literally is what the inspiration for me to come to the gym at the sit here to try to work on the pex and work on the ties and the inner thighs and things like that jackets bahgat so we have noted as you have that there were quite a few crashes but nonetheless some of the writers are emerging when some are doing very well yes. They're good good. Writer are emerging. This young man back in pasha mctavish from england just won the stage today. Which was the sixth stage. And but overall it's vander pol who has the yellow jersey defender and the reason why the yellow jersey the guy that's the is this leading it. He wears the yellow jersey The other thing to approve you said what what did you say you talking about. The the crashes yes the number of crashes yes that's right first of all what happened was keep me from the first of all what happened. Was that at. The beginning of the race are some at some point that the first stage some woman stuck a sign out in front of the writers. That said something like in french at said. Hey grandma hey grandpa you know high. He thought. I don't know what i don't know what they were trying to do but she did. And then the next thing you saw all the writers ran into the sign and it crashed and five. Six seven writers went down. You know we saw that jack on the news and she looked like she was looking away from the writers like her back was to them. They were writing twitter. Just stuck that sign up without thinking are. Is there any control over the spectators. There's no control over spectators and the people that are standing on the side of the twitter francs. Ken buck out if they i'm not saying they can. They're going to get into trouble if they do but they there's no barriers and when you look at them and this was the thing that i felt most curious about because i will look at them and if i was one of the writers it would be very irritating to return to to try as hard as you can probably as hard as you can. And you're you're pushing the pedals and pushing the pedals and there's people coming up to you going high and i felt like i wanted to just punch a wall. You know what. I was looking at that. What were your what were your identified with the writers. Yes i was general. I felt. I felt like if i was one of those writers. I would stop by bike and get off and just go into the crowd. And just i don't want to okay. I mean i don't wanna get you angered sell a little bit like jay. Santos does occasionally when he's dr. Jim salad does occasionally when he's getting emotional about a particular topic. I'm not getting emotional. But i gotta tell you something there's guys name. What are they called mctavish cabinet and yet his name right. Okay thank you. But you know if i was a writer. I'm tying tying people come out and go. Hi i i feel. I need to say this that i would want to. If i had a gun. I would want to shoot them like what i. Oh my god that that that kind of commentary. we don't make all right. Thanks a lot for that dejected. Moving along well. You ask me how i felt about it. And that's why. I'm at the gym tonight because Not only do. I see these writers that are in such good shape but i had to come over here and work out some of this angst because if i'm on that bike and someone has a sign that says hi grab hi grandpa. I'd want to go all we get it. Jesus you sound like you're you're little wound up with that now. I'm okay here. I want to get on the arm machine here. Phil and maybe this illustrates how i feel about people that go out onto the course at the difference and just go. Hi hi i want to be on. Tv i want people to see me and the writer runs into them. And you want to lift it here. I've been lift this weight. What did you just do a using the shoulder machine. I just lifted about how many that studi puzzled that five pounds five pounds. Are you kidding me. That caused you that kind of exertion. Hey general. I'm not that i know you're not of the greatest of shape right now. No i'm not. But that's how i wanted you to hear how i feel that that really affected you watching those those guys go out. There was only one instance that you could say those. Crashes were caused though by people in the crowd the other crashes were simply. The writers were bunched into tight right. Well i would say yeah that The second part of that phillies exactly what you said because if you saw the took the france especially they had these aerial shots of the writers and they were they were crammed. I don't know how many there was that i looked. I tried to count. But how do you cut. I would. They did the overhead shot. I would try to count people and they would cut away before you could cut them all. But i would say. Based upon the fact that i was able to come one two three four five six seventy nine hundred and then they would. I'd say probably thirty or forty writers around the small area. And i looked at that and i thought what are these race organizers thinking about the them in and you wanna just what is your show us how you feel by working the leg machine okay. Here's this this is my. I know you guys are laughing and feeling emotional about how. The the race organizers a butchered this up or how the the spectators have been interfering. Go ahead this is how i feel. Let me use the league machine here. How many does though. Bobby and don't know ten or nine nine pounds. You know when you when you rarely get into some shape over there. Jackie let though carol you know i did not spend my life as you have going out at pt seeing you know how you pt you know. Yes physical training. I know what you're talking about. Okay here i am an machine. Did i do it. Barely lift lifted the weight. I didn't even leave the weight then. But i gotta do something. You're you're very affected by this and this again reminds me of who is doctor. Seven to sadler. I think gets very emotional. No i think it was jay santos. you're right. He gets very emotional and he thinks about beating up people that are breaking the law. Sadler thank god. He's not a cop. Because i can tell you or santos corporate has its jay said sadler i it's thompson it's jay santos. Jim sadler's the doctor. Jay reynolds i identify when he when he feels like he wants to. Just break something.

selby mall phil hendrie tony pacific Jim nair Jack w bahgat pasha mctavish france jack armstrong Persson Jim salad jack mctavish cabinet tour de france vander Ken buck southern california minneapolis rugby twitter
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

02:58 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"With my underwear. Shove didn't he. He fails easy way. He's been kate hundred seven rem out. I didn't say it. But i wanted to be. I suggest if let me ask a question. go ahead general shop. Gloria general shaw. Now you were saying that president. No you weren't saying we talk to. Larry can meet what to talk to. General larry you were saying. The president united states has some tweets. That are embarrassing before he was president and it involves a friend and fills. Well it involves everybody. But phil's fran berry. Louise was copied on it. In fact the president quoted her when she was asking why it was. The president was arguing with someone. And and mr trump tweeted back. Because the guy you know. I'm going to sue them or something like that. But what was the conversation about it was about. It was about the time doing it. Mother it was about the size of president trump's penis okay. And this is what i'm talking about. You don't wanna delete those man you reach tweet. You know yeah. I do know what you're saying. No i don't agree with you at all. The president of states was upset because seventy city and a small you-know-what. Yes now. I think it's a very undignified thing that way. We don't wanna let people know berry berry was re tweeted. She was quoted by the present when she asked her friend. Why is trump arguing with you and trump jumped in quoting her and said because he can't afford me being sued or something. That president was having a conversation with your friend but it in she didn't but in she was asking the other guy who the president but it in here but it in and he said something about you know you can't afford it. I'm going to be suing him. Well all right but it did have to do with the guy accusing trump of having a small one and it was mostly about as bankruptcies doing the very was involved in the. And that's what. I was saying larry. A lot of these are bank bankruptcy. Tweet okay. so the bankruptcy tweets. there's two areas where you don't go with president donald trump. You don't start making fun of the size of his of his wing of the winging it takes larry of the wing. This is what i grew up with. Phil never mind to areas. You're not you don't go to the size of his. you know what. And you don't start talking about his bankruptcies for jesus sake that is absolutely true. How do i knew that. I just read his tweets tweet. Yes i do to stay informed. As i can reading that dribble there will okay. So what about it. You see limited and everything. I think it's time that twitter take into consideration that they are the caretakers of some of the official thoughts and feelings in and the and the feelings and thoughts and thoughts and feelings.

Gloria general shaw General larry fran berry mr trump president trump berry berry kate Louise Larry phil president donald trump united states larry Phil twitter
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

02:14 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"Other thing That has has not been mentioned. And i think it's about time to turn what i don't know if i wanted to mention it. Well it's going to get mentioned because you made reference to being on periscope and doing so-called political rent there that is no longer going to be the case. The new case ladies and gentlemen philly andris is rolling out. A brand new podcast. It'll be completely apart from the phil. Hendrie show podcast. What is going to be political right. I don't even know that. I should be talking about this year. We talked about what autism. 'cause i don't wanna pollute this show with politics and it's happened time and again and a lot of people don't like it be honest with you. I don't like it. Well what are you talking. You've got certain political points of view. Yeah but even. If i have to even if i'm doing a podcast that's political in nature. I'm not sure. I wanna promoted here. You understand yes sir. Philip being over trying to do is help. I'm just trying to help fill. Don't go balling is great. You wanna you wanna tell. I don't need a towel. How about a handkerchief. That'll do you sorry. You feel away margaret. I appreciate you try to help. I really do. I'm just trying. I'm looking out for your best interest. I understand that and margaret. believe me. thank you. But i don't want to rule out any announcement for it okay. It'll be announced on twitter. Well did you already answered on twitter. He said that yeah seen it already today and everything. You tweeter on twitter man. Many times i gotta tell you what you dumb sorry. We'll look at you. Aren't you the foul booed. Because you catch her bringing all this stuff up. You can't let me tell you something. I'm not a beatnik. I'm not one of your underground bohemian types. Right margaret i'm not one of your underground wine swilling speed taking bohemian creeps. That you love to hang with. Who do i hang with. It's like that. I'm just kidding but i will tell you this what i forget all right folks so anyway. Yeah she'll be looking for that podcast. Whatever it's called and we don't want to mention it exactly.

Philip twitter margaret today philly andris this year bohemian phil. Hendrie one
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

03:56 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"Talking about the stuff just doesn't spoil good. That's exactly what she's talking about. You know this stuff. That doesn't smell right right. Mr henry don't look at me. Because i don't believe anything you're saying right now. Why is that. Why because you're telling me you were at butner lake and you come down here. Five minutes later all right. We were at a local studio over here. Using one of the stations up there and trim out. What are you doing that. Fourth bobby ought to come down. A hill take homeowners association. Business as you know. We had a homeowner's association meeting. They were challenging the united. Erupting me. no. I want you to say they were challenging. Bobby's rule that her very are very active. Sex life enhances the property value. Say that again. Please bobby was saying what steve. We have a long standing rule. That the very active sexual life. That stephen i enjoy the romantic the amherst that we enjoy enhances property values at western estates. Jesus christ that's right general and they were going to basically vote that down. Remove it from the scene ours and so we drove down for emergency meeting and then you went over here to one of the studios on triumph for whatever it is yes and pretended using their sound effects. Yeah well we use squeegee squeegee arrows kimmy the cripple squeegee. Ellis's the engineer with there and he'd beat the sound effects. What's your problem bobby. I find that almost mentally diseased. What yet is really wrong. Or maybe they're just very creative people. If you thought about that fail. Yeah thank you general. Maybe we're just very creative and fun people. yeah well. What about this stuff about him tweeting that he wants them strange. I don't want the strange that was nine years ago. It was nine years ago. Get over it. how about you get over it. You're the one that brought it up. We needed a pretext pretext pretext henry. Well what are you going to say about that. Go ahead most of the show. that's fantastic. So what about your and seven so we can get out of this show. God ghetto. What a baby during the baby kind of. I'm acting like a baby only. Because i want to know what's going on okay. It's never fun for the guy who hosts the show to find out later that all of this stuff was being put on. Ha aren't we cute. Ferret was carrying interesting. And everything you'd like to. We'd been overused one. Fm stations sound fix library. What about the seven okay. So anyway i always Every summer i go to bob. I know it's called. Bob's on the on the bob bob on the kebab and order a c. seton seven and he says Any rings the bell. Ms duly has ordered her annual ceasing. Seven people applaud. And that's kind of a tradition. Yes now what is this about your father. my father. My father's favorite drink was the seven. Which is canadian club and seven. Yes we ask asking for no about. Because phil's father comes from connecticut from canada. Yeah from canada did he ever drink. Cc'd seven. i don't recall my father drinking. That know what's everybody looking at. Well i just thought maybe your fun. Inconvenient club Maybe i don't know man. I don't know what my drink i don't care. I know he drank scotch shit like that. Jesus whatever so you order your drink. never mind. Never mind mr entering or leaving now folks and your father was seven. You change to see seton seven and two. They applaud that too. Yes they do. Okay bobby to the woman that changed it from a assisi and seventy seven. How do you feel about that bobby. Better stick it up your ass right. What a night man. What a wonderful fantastic bitching night. Take it easy fell..

canada Seven people nine years ago duly Ellis steve connecticut Bobby seven Jesus christ two Jesus Five minutes later butner lake phil one Ferret assisi canadian seventy seven
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

04:30 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"Dc what people did on a friday or saturday night. The whole city was celebrating the end of the civil war. There was a contest going on in washington Which building could be lit up. The brightest was a contest where in washington. Dc lincoln washington d. c. o. l. And there were soldiers in town. Lot of them were on leave and they were going to enjoy what was in those days. The the big thing to enjoy music hall and there is adult entertainment and some of these musicals meaning. They had some fairly adult humor and they brought some of these soldiers in a couple of them were were sailors. They brought them to this commission and ask them questions about what the what the night was like. They stopped into a saloon. They heard somebody run by. Say the president's been shot though this is what's the what the lincoln commission hearing. Yes in the it's in the actual transcript and to me that's the fascinating stuff. I already know it's not to read it to find out who assassinated lincoln. No i read it to for these little slices of life of what it was like in In washington on that night is these guys were going there. Were talking about spending seventy five cents to music hall and watch the entertainment for the night. And then when they came out they decided to stop into a bar restaurant someplace. That's when someone ran by the president was shot. The crowd that gathered around ford's theater that night it got bigger and bigger and they're the people that the actors inside were scared. They were scared that the crowd was was very angry. They knew what had happened to lincoln. He'd been taken across the street to a boarding house and the actors were frightened that the theater was going to be torched. And oh my god. Yeah so that's when some union soldiers gathered around the theater. They posted these soldiers around the theater. So that nothing would happen in those days. You know there was military law. More often than not the really. The guy that ran the city of washington was the The military authority was any mayor. There those civil authority necessarily was mostly the military authority and the guy that took charge that night. After lincoln was shot was not the vice president. It was the secretary of war edwin stamp okay. We got to fill so. Thank you very much philip for him. All right well asking me. You're really read demonstrating. I read it. Cover to cover. I read that Don't ask him anymore. And i read that. And but i did not. I did not read the lizzie. Borden transcripts although. I'm looking forward to holy jesus right all right. We'll be right back. World-famous filling ratio. Bobby and steve duly coming up. Because they are at butner lake. Bobby stephen at but now as we speak and another accident involving steve and the guffaw awful alexis and shawn and alexa couple a friend of theirs in everything you know. Yes i am stanton. And it's called alexi. Ghafer sean coffer. What do you mean it's called. I mean they are all right. We'll fly what happened belly. Steve steve duly ran into the. Yeah he was going over to goblins spot for beer nuts and beard. What is wrong with you for these ever by life. So steve duly read into this alexi ghafur run for beer nuts. My god yeah. That's the funniest. Goddamn thing. Skews by french that i've heard weeks we'll be we'll be right back. You wrote it. yeah i did. We'll be right back. What do you mean. I wrote it. With steve duly to right phil steve duly wrote. We'll right back. Actually bobby wrote it. We'll be right back on the world. Famous phil hendrie. Show the world famous fill. Henry show has a subscription. So you can listen to the archives. It's fun and it can take you forever to listen to archives. You'll never be able to take a bathroom break. Eat any food or sleep if you wanna get through it and say six months or if you do take a bathroom break eat and sleep then you probably take two years or something like that yes. The world famous failed had reshow website. All kinds of fun from the radio shows that go back over. Twenty years to the digital casts to the video cast to the frightening and strange world. At phil henry lives in. It's almost two bunch you know. You're i mean yeah. I know i know what you mean mother. Why don't you go ahead. And get a subscription to the phil hendrie show website and see what happens to you it may more few mutate you or otherwise changing. Twist your dna and your chromosome. The world famous phil henry show at phil.

washington steve duly Bobby two years six months Twenty years steve seventy five cents saturday night bobby shawn stanton friday Ghafer sean coffer Henry civil war alexa butner lake lincoln commission Bobby stephen
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

07:27 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"And that's what he says and he's serious because the other night he started to get up to prove his point i did. I started getting and this is what i'm talking about. This is why some people think you've lost. You've got a screw loose. Hey let let me tell you something when a guy is really trying to do that when a guy is convinced of her of her point of view and that guy being decides that she and i wanted to prove my point him swiped said to my wife. You what you think he was. He was standing there going. Ha ha you. you wouldn't dare. The entire thing sounded absurd and and the whole methodical frank. You're very very slow in particular. In how are you describing it. When i want people to understand that i'm telling the truth i give it to him. Slow i give it to a loose and okay. It comes it out. Only christ damn well read it in the weight. And so the other ninety starts getting up removes his pants and i mean all the way off. Admit that right here and this is where he thinks. I've got a screw loose. And he wants to call the the metal the metal wagon and get the and get a hotline to the middle midget ward and have me put inside with every other day wing that and and a hotline laughing academy. That's what he wants to do to husband all right. Look what we're hearing here. If you don't mind me saying frank and margaret. Everybody is a you know. A guy who likes to gauge hyperbole. A guy who likes to engage in extreme commentary. Wait a minute. This is what you think. Feel but i just told you. He got up and took his pants off. Frank so you got up and took your pants off. What what am i talking to myself here. Yes i told you. don't ever underestimate. Don't ever think that. Frank grace kidding. And i'm telling you right now without mentioning names if she or any member of her family including her wife. Bella bella nanny. I can't pronounce the day. Forget all right if any of them are indicted actually indicted. Then i tell you right now. I will slip out of my slacks and underwear and walk the six blocks from my home in a tie. Sports jacket dress shirt completely stark raving naked from the waist down. And you get to the socks and the wing tips and oh ya'll have occurred you folded and no. I will not trying to get a cab. And no i will not order a car people at me and yell at me a raise my glass and say yeah the club. People will think that you're flat out of your mind and a lotta commit you to a mental ward. God listening to him no word. Okay well let them do it if they if they wanna do that. You really want to go to the nut house no. I don't wanna go to whatnot house. But i'm not going to have people question my commitment. My veracity my stick to miss my have full engagement in full and complete commitment. I don't even know what it is. I'm talking about anymore. you know. Well thank you very much. Frank and this is what i mean i think. And then then he's gonna hang up at he's gonna talk to all you chimpanzees about listen. You can't fall people for thinking. There's something wrong with you if you're strolling down the street. No no that's just it. I do fault you. Because here's the thing i so believe in what i believe and i'm so committed to my opinion. That's what i'm willing to do to get pretty jokers that i'm serious. I don't doubt your. I don't doubt that you are a you. Believe what you believe that horse who we had you know it. You're saying it's a frank o. Frank knows how to do is carve up the gender of put people. And i never know half the time what you find. The swingers are talking about. I'm telling you. I believe what i believe. You believe what you believe to the point where you want to get arrested for indecent exposure bengal. Give the latest cigar. Right there there. He is the woman i love. All right frank. I don't know what you want me to do with that information. So i just telling you in the matter of this discussion. That people are having about indicting certain pollen former polity. It's not gonna happen won't happen all right. It's not gonna happen almighty these half of these refugees from the clown academy don't believe you unless you lay out their hard hot fast up type and just kind of brush channel a little bit and i think you know what i'm talking about doug chin. What does she say. Wait a minute did just talking to give give him a bottle up against the chin baseball you. what fumbling. Thanks very much and we will take it under advisement jay. Take a frank gray ladies and gentlemen. Well i told you didn't i. I'm not surprised. I mean why because as frank would say you jokers sit here laughing about these things and you don't know what i'm going home to half the time what are you. You're not disturbed with living with frank. are you what. What are you talking about phil. What says you done unhappy. No i'm not unhappy talking. About what a what. A mental case guy is understand if he says mark good. I'm taking my pants off walking down the street. Don't you don't think you need to have him put away. No i do not that you just listening to. You just got done listening to hit a phone very past. What do you mean. He's pissed mr grades so right frank. I'm listening to the radio unless you're talking to bargain. What what was it that. I said that you didn't get nothing sir. I understand you serious so when you talk about me after a hang up on. May i keep in my have care. My friend has a care. Friday referring pretty frank green. What's my name again for all right. So he's serious and that is how serious he is. And i don't wanna talk about it but that when we were talking about that right is for for all for all that it matters. I probably agree with him. Oh you agree but you don't wanna talk about no. I don't man sick and tired of all that. Don't want to move on with my life with our somehow put our country back together. And you know what i'm saying man and Just be a private citizen and Yeah and pull it posted about how you doing. So light light summary. The by lizzie. Bordon everything i saw that. What's that about. I'm kidding around. You read that. Didn't necessarily i did. Yes what is it with you. You're eating the bounty logbook. You're reading the transcript of the lizzie. Borden trial con dane. It's it's interesting to me man. That stuff's interesting. It's interesting but with the other one was the Oh the lincoln assassination commission. Don't you think that's no. It's not morbid reading. The you know we got to go nice going on now. We have do those matter. Fact reading lincoln assassination commission report reading proceedings reading the questions reading the answers. You got a really good idea of what life was like in those days in washington..

Frank washington margaret Friday ninety lincoln assassination commissi Bella six blocks phil lizzie christ frank frank green
"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

The World of Phil Hendrie

07:42 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on The World of Phil Hendrie

"Ashley and general kaelin sean. Robert lennon bud. Dickman here. There's a host of the show phil henry except bud. You're getting very comfortable. They're giving me a hard time about that but otherwise in the past. I don't know i know you know. In the past. I sounded like a little. What's the problem what's going on that's going on going. Oh wow you sound professional everybody round here. Start with you you you you are you there. You're pointing to me. I was a professional entertainer. Wait a minute. God's got a point if we turn that music down w liked you liked it. I do like it man. i don't need a trailing underneath me for the rest of the show. You guys have a tendency to keep the music pot up way too loud. I agree with phil. I'm hearing it by sleep sometimes potter town. Okay even though it's really fill controlling your motion your movements in your bones. Yeah yeah okay. I get it. Well anyway you're saying that. I'm not a professional that no i'm not saying that at all i'm saying but it's gonna put you guys aren't professional announcers. You're an actress general show. You're a young what you're trying to figure out. So what was i you are. You're retired guy man. You're retired security guy a soldier. I don't know how i met. You just cooked up one day. So thanks for that. And robert youtube and bud do and all you guys just do what i ask you to do anyways. I was seeing everybody talking to me. Like yeah you're doing really good. We're gonna pass everybody else. Sound like warmed over. You know what. I was formed over. Don't take it so personally okay. I know you're the one that puts the words that i'm miles. You're the one that controls the kinds of people were going to be in the book. Talk much not really know what we are right and so forget it. Give up on a point. You say you're gonna make a point in eagle. Forget it listen. Don't push being me okay. Because i'm having a pretty rough time what's going on nothing. i just franken. He's going with frank. He's doing all of his political stuff. He's making comments with the he she about all kinds of people. I don't let's just move on with other stuff that we gotta do that. Worry about that. Frank is on there and what was the thing you were looking at about i to look it up. Look at it was always on the toilet sweeter. What are you looking looking at mr gray right here in the market. Would you let him do it. He's triggered alive. Happy to a dr bennett. Great now you turn the phone off. See that cared is right here. Frank right yes mr gray. He goes all stroll stroll mind. You very slowly down pacific coast highway during rush hour with no pants or underwear now. This is what i'm talking about. Let me see that. I'll stroll down pacific coast highway with no pants or underwear on if they actually indict her any member of her immediate. There's frank gray referring to a certain a guy as a she and he's talking about taking the pants off This is frank in all of his when he gets very sure themself about certain things. He'll say watch me. I'll go out that door without pants on wearing wingtips a sports jacket and address. Shirt look margaret light. Emitted fill he does. He does what i'm trying to tell you he'll say i'll stroll out that door right now with wind tips dress socks no underwear pants. Nothing dress shirt tie and a sports jacket. And i'll meet you at the club pra drinks and he serious. He's dead serious but he's tried to make a point. For instance the other night he was saying with reference to this mutation. If she meeting he saw a certain politician. Yes if a certain politician winds up getting indicted i will stroll out that front door comfortably and very slowly with a cocktail in my head. Waiter wait a minute. Basically what he's saying i. Would you mind all stroll comfortably. But why don't you get on the phone. Get frank on the phone. do way better idea. I'm telling the story though so he's talking about you guys don't seem to get it. See you monkey. Sit here and you think you've got it all covered you think. You're a little chimpanzee on a morning show with with a diaper on and everyone's gonna debit your face your milk. Now he left this. What what are you trying to say. Is that frank mr laying elaine. Three here frank. Hi we're talking about what you said the other night when you said you'd stroll out the door with no pants on what about it. I mean i'm trying to the corner. It was gonna go. Get myself a milkshake. Maybe a hot dog. And i know i got dickman over here mr greg. We wanted to find out about it. What are you trying to find out you. Let me finish frank. The other day you were in the living room. And you're reading a certain story frank if you don't mind don't mention the politicians. We don't wanna go down that road just who i was talking about. Okay you betcha she was right obviously. It's a man. And i was saying that if she or any member for family gets indicted i will get up slowly remove my slacks wear jockstrap anything wearing even if i if i have a positive. I shouldn't have said that kind of detail. Frank damn well you you pay people said you wanna hear sean gonna hear the argument here. Frank statement argument is that you were very methodical in in your approach to this bet or whatever it was instead of a statement at. It's not even bizarre about methodical frank. A get alone a general shy. She something talking me about it. Okay frank so what did you say about this politician. Said if he's ever indicted he's ever indicted or any member of her family. And i wouldn't gloat her wife What is the name mental mental on your never mind. So if he's ever indicted if she's ever indicted or any member of our family including her wife manana just about him. What did you can't on mike. I listened to her. I doesn't make any difference. You're talking about him. yes. I'm talking about her. And i said to margaret and anybody any swing you-know-what deliver saturday. I said loud. And i said proud that if she gets indicted that i will slowly get up all right. So you're talking about taking wait a minute so we wanted to hear if you want to know what he said. Yeah you want to know what i said. Listen you know. You're always in a rush fell. I will slowly get up. I will slowly get up. Unzip unbelted pull my pants all the way down off of my shoes. My underwear follows okay. So wingtips high socks no nothing else. Then comes the dress shirt just the tail hanging over the the ass end you. Following right felt some fallen you okay and the in a tie and a sports jacket with a kerchief full napley. The top upper left breast best pocket. And i will with cocktail hand slowly stroll toward the front door. And say meet you at the club and luck out at what the six blocks to the santa monica beach club. Where we're gonna go for. That is how convinced gets..

Frank Robert lennon Ashley youtube saturday frank robert margaret Three mike kaelin sean franken six blocks manana santa monica beach club Dickman phil greg frank gray dr bennett
"phil" Discussed on Phil Wilson's Vinyl Revival Radio Show

Phil Wilson's Vinyl Revival Radio Show

04:11 min | 2 years ago

"phil" Discussed on Phil Wilson's Vinyl Revival Radio Show

"Phil wilson via revival. A van revival with a hawks. What's wrong with this picture and coming up we've got music coming up from with us also belly some on the hollies put. The question is what was on the beast side of chesney hawkes. And what's wrong with this picture where it was this friends and lavas straight after this. I think bill with us better with some. It'd be time for our album of the week can against a and he's be land was artist lisa keys and this right here either.

Phil wilson lisa keys