35 Burst results for "Quincy"

The Hair Radio Show with Kerry Hines
The Hair Radio Morning Show Welcomes DJ Prince Hakim!
"Now I have a very special guest with us today. He's from the world of music. We'll say he's royalty. The DJ Prince Hakeem. Good morning to you. Welcome to the show. Hey, good morning. Thank you. Welcome. Thanks for having me. Yes. Yes, it's my pleasure. I want to kind of jump right on in. Let's just tell all the fans of the Hair Radio Morning Show. Now you are really music royalty. Tell us why. Okay. Appreciate that. Yeah, I guess because my dad and uncle are Robin and Ronald Bell of the band Cool and the Gang and they co -founded the band and they're legendary and I'm a part of that lineage. So, you know, I guess that makes me royalty, right? It makes you music royalty. And I just love how you just casually just drop that on in. Oh, yes, that's my dad, my uncle. I think awesome. First of all, we have to Cool say and the Gang has been a huge part of our history in this community and music and, you know, just doing they really set the bar very high. They're one of the most popular crossover acts of all time. If you want to even call them crossover acts, I mean crossover acts. They were just out there doing many big things for years and just even to say their name, their music plays in my head, literally, I kid you not. So it's just awesome. And then to know that you have that true lineage being the son of Robert Bell, right? Robert Cool Bell. So, you know, and we're going to get to all of your amazing music and what you're doing these days, but let me ask you because the fans want to know how was growing up with that, that famous in the famous family like that? Oh, it's just, oh, it's, you know, it's normal to me. That's right. You don't know anything anything, anything else. I don't know anything else. That's what that's like any other parent. That's what God intended. That's my destiny. You know, it's so it's just normal to me. But I understand what you mean. And I get that question a lot. So obviously, if you come from a successful family in any job or business or what your parents may be successful in, you're going to have the door will be open for you to go to the Grammy Awards or backstage concerts, you know, celebrities or your favorite artists and stuff, you know, so if your parents adopt or, you know, you might go to all the cool doctors events or lawyer events and you get perks as a kid, you know, and and that that's, you know, as you get older, you realize that as I say, wow, that's pretty cool. You know, I met Michael Jackson. I was like 15. Really? What was that like? What was that? It was bananas. And I look back now, but then it was just like, oh, wow. You know, and now I'm like, what? Michael Jackson was in his suite with Quincy Jones. So we win it. My dad would just hang out after he finished tearing down Madison Square Garden. Wow. You know, bananas, bananas. Well, I saw some pictures of you, D .J. Prince, our team. I saw some pictures of you with President Clinton. I saw some some photos out there with you and all of these amazing celebrities. So, yes, I take it there were some good there were some good perks, but you're doing some amazing things in your own right. So I kind of want to talk about that. Let's move on over to that now. OK, let's start with your music. What? First of all, what you know, what? OK, I can figure out kind of like what might have led you into music, but let's have you tell it. How did you get into music through, you know, through what you're doing? How did you we know why you were introduced, but let's let you tell it. Well. So. I think the first thing I kind of remember was being. Put into my mom's fashion show or talent show, I could say. Breakdancing in her talent show. I see some pictures now when I was like eight or five years old and I'm playing the drums of singing with my brother and my parents and we're all having a jam session and. And I don't remember that I didn't see these pictures, so that's early as a kid, since your parents are entertainers and ones into fashion. You're just going to. You know, they're going to put the children in it, too. Yes. You know, well, you're just going to adapt to it, absorb it up so much, and you're going to become a sponge or you're going to run away from it. I became a sponge.

The Eric Metaxas Show
What is "Mere Natural Law"? Author Hadley Arkes Explains
"Why did you write a book called mere natural law? And what is, as you see it, what is natural law? Because I want my audience that isn't familiar with this or at least not very familiar with it. Really to understand it. And in the book, much of which I've already read. But you really get into this in a way that I've never seen it before. So how do you answer? That's interesting. Well, first of all, you'll recognize mere natural art drawing upon a C. S. Lewis. Where he could find in the conversation of children, the rudiments of moral understanding that they get into an argument, not over likes and dislikes, but over matters of right and wrong. They the conversation makes no sense unless they assume that their standards of judgment to tell the difference between plausible and implausible right or wrong answers. And I want to draw upon that in order to take us back to those precepts of common sense that the form the ground of the natural law. I invoked your my friend Dan Robinson. My late friend Dan Robbins, who wrote 18 books. And he wanted on his tombstone. He died without a theory. And when he said that, he was really drawing on Thomas Reid, the great Scott philosopher, with his teachings on common sense. A man who was read closely by James Wilson and John to have us among the founders. And Reed was joined us to those precepts of common sense that the ordinary man has to know just in getting on with the business of life. The things he has to know before he starts trafficking in theories. So before the average man could start bantering with David Hume about the meaning of causation. He knew his own act of powers to cause their own acts to happen. So the pitch in the book is that that's what we find the ground of the natural law. That's where the American founders felt it. The principles that the precepts of common sense, the principles of right and wrong that were there before they framed the constitution and they know that those principles would be there even if there were no constitution, much of the way that John Quincy Adams would say that right to petition the government is simply implicit

The Officer Tatum Show
The Super Bowl With Two Black Starting Quarterbacks Went Viral
"So sunny hostin decided to make a commentary about the black quarterbacks in the Super Bowl. Mind you one of them is biracial. That means one of his parents is white and the other one is black, which is Patrick Mahomes. And then Jalen hurts his period of both his parents are black, they light skinned and so you know they mixed with something. But anyway, Jalen hurts being black, she gets on, and I'm paraphrasing that she made the statement to say that now we know that black people can run a team and there can be black quarterbacks. Well, first of all, that's why women y'all need to stick to y'all sports and leave our sports out of it. Especially if you ain't never watched football before, you know what you're talking about, you're just going on a rant about the Super Bowl the first one you've ever watched in your life. Black quarterbacks have been a thing for a very long time. Some of the greatest quarterbacks in history of the NFL were black quarterbacks. Somehow she forget about and I'm just going to say a brief number of them. Each of you get about one moon, way back in the day. Quincy Carter played for the cowboys. I mean, he was he great. He was a star quarterback on the cowboys. Dak Prescott. I mean, is he not black? I guess you don't count because he ain't in the Super Bowl. But then you go through Donovan McNabb, Steve, mcnair, Steve mcnair, you can go through college football and then go to the NFL. And they may not have panned out, but Vince Young was one of the best quarterbacks who ever played in college football in my opinion. He was one of the best quarterbacks to ever play. He got into the NFL may rookie of the year and then he didn't play after that because of his personal decision making. We can go down the list. Who you got, Nick. I mean, I think I got a few of them. Oh, you took my now. Lamar Jackson, which is the most dynamic quarterback in the NFL. And then you have Michael Vick way back in the day. Michael Vick came out. First round draft pick. Gun in it. Michael Vick was a tremendously great quarterback. I mean, I can go down a list of how many dynamic quarterbacks. In the funny thing is, is that they like to make a spectacle and try to point out everything they can to make us divided. And I talk about the black national anthem here in a second, but they try to make us divided.

AP News Radio
The real reason Eagles' Jalen Hurts played through a shoulder that was 'hurting bad'
"The eagles Quincy going to see Easter Division Championship and the number one seed in the NFC playoffs with the 22 16 win over the Giants Philadelphia touchdown run by Boston Scott and 5 field goals by Jake Elliott and his first game back from a shoulder injury quarterback Jalen hurts true for 229 yards for the birds who finished a regular season at 14 and three. We worked really hard to be where we are now. We've overcome a lot. We we've been through a lot as a team and as individuals. Davis Webb ran for one touchdown through for another for the Giants. Michael luongo, the Philadelphia

Game of Crimes
"quincy" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"Mean, it's lonely being out there. Yeah, the next best feeling is hearing those sirens coming as your backup. Anyway, all right guys, well hey, this brings to an end, like I said, this is, this was such a great episode and again, I had soft a Quincy brother stay safe up there, you're doing well. You're doing the lord's work. Just as he said, don't be complacent. So if you enjoyed that podcast, you've enjoyed this two part episode, Steve. We went back to two parts. 'cause our listeners wanted to thank y'all. It's fans first, man. Whatever you guys want, that's what we want to make this a great experience for you guys. So if you enjoyed that, hit on over to Apple podcast, hit that 5 stars. Also, go to Spotify, hit those 5 stars too. It's magic. We don't know how it's done. It's Disney, you know, it's David Copperfield. It's all those good things rolled into one. We just know it works. Also head on over to game of crimes podcast dot com for more info about the show. We'll update it. We'll add merch, books again. Things like that. Follow us on the social media at game of crimes on Twitter at game of crimes podcast on Facebook and the Instagram. But where you got to be where you got to be, where you got to be is PayPal dot com. And like I said, we will be on paper. Now, first of all, we go to PayPal dot com if you want to. We're tired. Yeah, but just a PayPal dot com game of crimes podcast at Gmail dot com use that or PayPal me slash game of crimes. But now, who are you going to be? Where you got to be where you got to be. Be both places, but at least be on Patreon. And like I said, we will be releasing in the next couple of weeks at the guardian of the realm and warden of the throne levels only. Is the real DEA narcos on the real DEA narcos Callie edition. 15 episodes, the final episode is a two hour long finale. It is, I'm telling you, Steve, between you, between what we did with you and JP and what we're doing with Chris and Dave, it is the most complete history of the cartels, the Medellín and the Cali cartel. I think ever put together anywhere..

Game of Crimes
"quincy" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"I take the title of public servant as a badge of honor and you are leading the way. You're setting the standard as a public servant on what we all should be doing to help our fellow man. Just because we carry a badge in a gun and we have the authority to put people in jail, that's not why we took the job. We took the job to help our fellow man, so God bless your brother. Thank you. I was so excited to have you on the show here and I just couldn't wait to hear the story because I'd watched that video and we couldn't record this morning because I kept going, why didn't this happen? And I haven't seen the rest of the video yet. We got to get this shit over. The rest of the story, Matt. And folks can't see this, but this is me saluting you, officer Quincy Smith, Matthews PD, traffic specialist extraordinaire. It really truly is an honor to have people like you on the people who were prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice and like Merced what in your day to die, brother. You're here for a reason. We want to see you prosper and grow. Just remember, I will get down to Charlotte a couple of times. I'll give you a caller, but remember, remember this face. You don't write me a ticket. Just remember this. After you meet him in person, you're going to want to go down. All you got to do when you see where your seat belt and drive, I give you 14 miles over. That's all I can get. Oh, there's pretty lady. Exactly. You wouldn't make a state trooper in South Carolina with that kind of leniency. But Virginia either. Let me tell you something, man. If I go below 14, I would literally as soon as I stopped writing one. And write another one. It's so much traffic up here. I just can't do it..

Game of Crimes
"quincy" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"I sat right in the room. I didn't go into the session, but I said outside to make sure everybody went in and had their session. And guess what? Guess what, Quincy? You know how, you know, so we had Kevin on episode 5, which was back Jew or July 19th. He was one of our first episodes. That was the first time in what Murph, 20 years, 25 years you and your partner had actually talked about the shooting? Yeah, the shooting was summer of 89 and we didn't talk about it until last year. Wow. I mean, we were a big time drinking buddies and everything. And my wife would bitch at him about being drunk and drowning. And there was the story though about what him tripping over and falling. Falling into your house. Well, we had a little bit too much drink one night and we came in and I said, just go in and sit down in the family room for the cardboard, you know? And.

Game of Crimes
"quincy" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"Or something like that. You got to hook it to the arm and look up to the computer, you'll be able to get the video. Or whatever. And it's like, all right, and then so while I was well, I got loaded to the MLS and they drove me off. They ended up watching the video and I guess they paused it when he turned around and fired at me. And they were able to get like a steel shot of it and print it out and started passing out the other officers. And from what I was told, man, they had over a hundred officers packed into a three square mile town, so they had offered they had officers from outside the state for you, even from Georgia coming Georgia hypertrophy on the way coming to help out and find the guy and people from an hour and a half to two hours a week coming to help out and stuff like that. So, you know, when that mercy button went off, a lot of people in the surrounding areas heard it and it came through their radio channels and they started sending people. Everybody started coming in. That's the way it is, man. That's the law enforcement culture. We're going to help one of our own. Yeah. How'd that make you feel knowing that all those people are coming and nobody knows who Quincy Smith is? Man, man. I can't even I can't express to you how good that felt like, you know, somebody people care about me, you know? They know that, you know, I got people that don't know me, that's willing to come help me in, you know, help get this situation under control and help give me medical care and stuff like that, man. I'm beyond blessed and thankful, man, like I really do, people don't understand, I really do appreciate everyone who was involved in that day, man. I even went out and called a few agencies. I don't know if I got to call everybody, but I called a few million people that was there surrounding counties and stuff and talked to this show. We told them thank you, thank the officers and people that I've seen throughout the time just thanking them for coming to me and helping me, man, 'cause that really meant a lot to me. I got goosebumps here. Thinking about what you went through. And I kind of want to make a point and I want to make it delicately, but I think it's something that's got to be said because a lot of times cops do get a bad rep. They think like you were saying, somebody accused you of being racist and here you are. Black guy. Yeah. Nobody stopped to ask what race you were. Nobody stopped to ask what gender you were. Nobody stopped to ask what your preference was. All we heard was officer down and people got in, got into it. And they said, we're coming to help. It doesn't matter who you're one of ours. You wear a badge, you know, we're here to help. Yeah. That's what I got to tell you, man. Being in retirement, that's what you miss. You missed that camaraderie that brotherhood, and that sisterhood that goes along with it. If I could show you that, the same thing, dude, I got goosebumps, just sitting here talking about this stuff because it's like, but you.

Game of Crimes
"quincy" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"Like, <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Music> lollygagging <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> around <Speech_Music_Male> and checking over his shoulder. <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <Music> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> He players, that is the end <Speech_Male> of part one with Quincy <Speech_Male> Smith. What an amazing <Speech_Male> story so far, <Speech_Male> but there is a lot <Speech_Male> more to come. So stay tuned <Speech_Male> for part two coming <Speech_Male> out Thursday. <Speech_Male> By the way, we heard you <Speech_Male> guys loud and clear. We're <Speech_Male> going to go back to two part <Speech_Male> episodes as much <Speech_Male> as we possibly can. <Speech_Male> So thank you <Speech_Male> to all of our players <Speech_Male> for your feedback. In <Speech_Male> the meantime, go <Speech_Male> hit us up, game of crimes, <Speech_Male> podcast, <Speech_Male> dot com, our <Speech_Male> website got lots of good <Speech_Male> stuff on there, including the video <Speech_Male> of Quincy <Speech_Male> shooting. You <Speech_Male> have to watch that to <Speech_Male> understand and put in context <Speech_Male> what we're going to <Speech_Male> talk about. Also <Speech_Male> hit us up on the socials <Speech_Male> at game of crime on <Speech_Male> Twitter at game of <Speech_Male> crimes podcast <Speech_Male> on Facebook and the <Speech_Male> Instagram, but where you <Speech_Male> gotta be because <Speech_Male> of our new series coming <Speech_Male> out, the real DEA <Speech_Male> narcos talking about <Speech_Male> the real DEA narcos <Speech_Male> Cali edition <Speech_Male> available for <Speech_Male> guardian of the realm and <Speech_Male> warden of the throne levels <Speech_Male> coming out on Patreon <Speech_Male> probably here in a <Speech_Male> couple weeks, a <Speech_Male> very special. This <Speech_Male> is a 15 <Speech_Male> part series <Speech_Male> about the real story <Speech_Male> behind the takedown of the gentleman <Speech_Male> quote <Speech_Male> of the Cali cartel. <Speech_Male> Stay tuned <Speech_Male> for part two of officer <Speech_Male> Quincy Smith <Speech_Male> captures being shot <Speech_Male> on camera, <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> coming up Thursday. <Music>

Game of Crimes
"quincy" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"What was it like being at the university? Oh man, it is. Extremely different man. You know, for one, I'm kind of there, I was there 8. I was 23. So I just graduated from college, like a couple months ago. So I kind of relate it to them as far as the campus life and all that type of stuff. So it was explained to me, you know, working on a college campus is different than a street officer because it's like, I guess you could say extra sensitive, you're dealing with students, kids, and stuff like that. So, you know, we try to find diversion ways when the students get in trouble. We want to find ways to get diversions and stuff like that. They want to ruin their life and stuff like that. And that's what I understand. You know, I don't mind here to try to ruin nobody's life. So, but yeah, so it was a lot of when you bust students with alcohol and marijuana and stuff like that. It was a lot of repetitive things. There's not anything changing so mostly want you to, I guess, lack a better word. It's coddle them, you know, baby them a little bit. It was babysitting. You know, and stuff like that. So yeah, my chief noodle, he told me, he said, I know this is not someplace. You're gonna retire it. I can see that you, you know, you want more out of this. I say, yeah, I do want to experience, you know, a lot more and, you know, do some street work and stuff like that because we didn't have a dispatch for one, and it was like, you know, I was like, what? Ten, 7 officers, ten officers. And you know, at nighttime, sometimes during some time I work by myself. Like, lock up the buildings and stuff like that. It was real simple. It wasn't nothing crazy. We didn't have anything crazy go on. Anything like that. It was pretty much an easy laugh was a job. That's mostly for someone who's retired. Now, did you go through the regular state academy for that or did they have their own? Yes, yes. So I had to go through the state academy in Columbia. With regular officers from the sheriff department, everything got the good part because now you get a state certification like you can go somewhere with it, right? Yep. Yep, I can go anywhere in the state of South Carolina with it. So yeah, I went there, their academy was about 12 weeks at the time. They changed it up now. But yeah, it was 12 weeks, you know, we do everything, man, from criminal law, everything. How about running? Did you do running? Yes, we did running. Now is that a back of the line? Got a good tip. But that was good. It was good, man. You know, but we did some running. We did a lot of push ups and stuff. And I don't know if y'all know it. Do y'all know anything about cycling on a criminal justice academy? Which one now? About what's the name of South Carolina criminal justice academy. So to put a police academy up in South Carolina. Other than it's run by what former Marine Corps drill sergeants? Yeah, and also inmates. What? What? Yeah. What are they your instructors? They tell you this is what we did. They got caught. This is how you catch us. I mean, how does that work? When I say run by you, it's not actually written by emails. But no, the inmates, I guess the people that are good, they call them. They're the ones that come in and clean your room. They didn't want the trustees and stuff. Yeah, they fixed your food, all of that type of stuff. It was crazy. Did you feel comfortable eating the food? No, but. Especially when somebody goes. Hey, your uncle arrested me. Here I got something special for you. Yeah, so I didn't believe that at first. My supervisors at the college campus was like, yeah, man, oh, I don't know if you know man, you know, you know, the image over there they fix your food. I'm like, stop bullshitting. They don't fix no food. Whatever. Okay, I thought they were screwing me. So what I got there, you know, the first day we had to arrive on Sunday by like 7 o'clock, check in, get out rooms and all that type of stuff that Monday was the start day of everything. Monday, we went to the breakfast. I see the inmates in the white when the white jumpsuit says they've been on the back. Greet me at the door. Hey, good morning. A, how you doing? What are you doing here? And then I was the previous class. If you fail, this is what you're gonna be doing. And then I get my tray and stuff and I'm walking down the line and they fixing me my food. I'm like, oh man, I immediately caught my Super Bowl. I say, man, I thought you was lying to me, man. There was two things for food. Yo, I was a little freaked out. I was like, how do they know that that's been in our staff and doing all this type of stuff? You know, but it was one dude. 'cause one dude, he was a real nice dude. I felt bad that he was in prison. He was old. And I'm like, what did you do to get? We couldn't talk to him, of course. I couldn't, you know, get to know him, but I'm thinking to myself, well, what'd you do to get in here, man? You a sweet dude, man. Why are you here? His nickname was killer. Exactly. Well, man, so that was it. I got to tell you now, I know I've seen places when I was started off as a police officer. The sheriff's office, we shared a building with them. The trustees would come out and they would clean the sheriff's office cars, you know, they actually, we had to take ours through a little car wash or whatever, but they actually had trustees clean them inside now. And tell one day, one of the deputies, as of course, you guys know too, and you know, very well, too, Quincy, is that after you rest somebody they're in your car. One thing you want to do is you want to check the seats. You know, you check your before shift, right, check them out. Well, apparently one of the deputies forgot to check the seats in one of the inmates found a pretty good sized bag of weed and a couple hours later when a couple of the guys didn't show up and they were found stoned in one of the little work areas outside there. That kind of ended the trustee program with the general there for a while. Oh yeah, man. You're saying that like it's a bad thing. You just a little hottest, oh man. That's all just said. He was enjoying life. But no, so that's cool. So you do your 12 weeks. You make it through the running, obviously, because you've graduated, right? So did you get any better at running or do you still suck at running long distance? I did get better till I got shot. But now we'll talk about that in a little bit. So yeah, but no, hey, but that's one thing so people realize toast. Your physical fitness is very important, especially when you with what we're going to talk about with you, being physically fit, allows you to recover and survive things much better. But before we get to that part of it, so to walk us through, so how long are you there at the university before you decide? It is time for me to move up and move out somewhere. So yeah, I was there for about two years, you know, that was my plan. You know, I wanted to, you know, get some street work in, you know, do a little more, because like I said, the only thing I was really experiencing, you know, was, you know, students with alcohol and marijuana. I haven't really got any serious other drugs, but was there anything big that happened on campus at the time? I mean, was there anything major of major importance? No, no, no. Like I said, it's a small campus. You know, a lot of wealthy people to make kids there or whatnot, but we don't really, not anything crazy. Haven't even gotten anything crazy. There's a lot of weird stuff. I learned students are weird. You know? Okay. I'll play along how weird are they? Oh, man. So I got a call one day. So, you know, they said, hey, there's some students in room. I can't remember whatever. They're snorting cocaine. There's no in Coke. That's what he said, starring Cole. I'm like, oh man, I never ran into cocaine. Oh, we about to get a cocaine bus. Yeah, all right, let me know the information that gave me the information. I was like, all right, to my partner, we went over there. All right, not gonna do the roommate, the sweet make call, let us in. And I say, so what's going on, man? He's like, yeah, man, they won't know the table. You know, they storing Coke and pointing out the table. So I'll go over to the table, and I'm looking. I don't see anything. I'm like, well, what's going on? I was right there. He pointed out the bottle of Coca-Cola. They were mixing whisky and Coca-Cola and snorting it. I'm like, what? What does this?.

Game of Crimes
"quincy" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"Something like that, you know something to keep, you know, like some smoke. We can relate with that with our podcast. That's about it. Yeah. Keep the lights on. So yeah, so like I said, so the credit cards, I guess I couldn't keep up with the payments, and it kind of went delinquent. And so when I applied to all I needed, it was like $2000. So all I needed was a job to like, so I could just pay it off, you know, which that was my plan. I just needed like a legit job, not no campus job, or whatever. So when I graduated, you know, I applied to south county, how we patrolled because I wanted to be a state trooper. I've always wanted it. First thought about going in a law enforcement, they sent me a little back said, we can't accept we can't move forward in the process because your credit history because of delinquent stuff. I'm like, well, I just need a job. If I can get the job, I can pay it. There's no problem. I don't have a job. You know, so and I got to have a job to get experience so I can be hired to pay this off. So come on, people work with me. Toss me a bone. Yeah, exactly, man. So junior was at Quincy. 2013. Oh, so not that long ago. Yeah, yeah. And the reason I'm asking is because that was when especially with our TFOs, I won't mention the town. It wasn't the town of the city. The government came up with a system. You couldn't hold that against somebody. So if they were in a program for like a debt relief program and they were trying to get it paid off, then that could not be held against them, but I guess it took a while for that. It's South Carolina. Well, it held it against me. Well, their loss, man. That's what I see. That's what I see. But you started applying how long from the time you started applying till you got your first bite. So my first bite, so that was in 2013, I graduated in May 2013, and it took about a month and a half, two months, I got my first bite, and it was from the university of South Carolina Beaufort. Campus police, you know, 'cause I applied it in like I said, I applied everywhere. Trying to get to try to get in law enforcement. So they called me and said, hey, you know, we want to interview you and stuff like that. 'cause I did do an internship for the New Jersey state police too. So that gave me a little edge. Now hold on a second. I've been to New Jersey many times. And I'm talking to guys from New Jersey. How the hell did you get by with your accent in New Jersey? What exit did you life off of by the way? Everybody loved my accident Jersey, man. For real. Every time I speak, where are you from? I'm like, so I'll kill her. I can tell you country. Jealous. No, but look, no, look, New Jersey. And let me tell you, if there's somebody else that's proud about their uniforms, it's the New Jersey state police. I had a buddy of mine that was on there. I knew the colonel at one time. They wear that outfit all the time, man. There is no summer winter uniform hitch like one uniform all the time. Oh man, yeah, listen. I actually, I was in their process too. So I'm a short distance sprinter. When I play, I play football and stuff. So, you know, I was a running back. So, you know, I'm not good at those long distance running, three miles, 5, ten miles, can do that. So I was in that process. And the way they process is you have to get at least 21 points out of each category, which was push ups, sit ups, push ups, sit ups, and the agility tests and I think one and a half, two mile run, something like that. You probably aged the other stuff until it came to the run, right? Yeah, I already had the points I needed. All I had to do was just get like one point or whatever, get the minimum time for the mile and a half or two mile run. I was behind by like what, two, three minutes. Then they cut me from the process, so I was like, man, I, back to the drawing board. Oh man, so you play in high school and college? So yeah, I played in high school in college when I got to college, though. So in high school, I kind of I injured my shoulders. So my shoulder, there was slip out of the joint or whatever, and it was real painful. So when I got to college, you know, when I got on the team, I couldn't make it through a full practice in a trainer. It was like, you have to call it quits one day, man. I'm like, yeah, I know, but I try to hold out, but I just couldn't, you know, and it was more detrimental to me or whatever than anything. And the team too, so kind of me holding them back when they can have somebody to feel that spot who is more healthier than me. So I was like, I gave up football too. Yeah, but you know, but what a great attitude though. It's kind of like you could have been selfish and said, no, I want to do this for me, but on the other hand, it's like, look, the team's got to have a running back who can run. It's got to be able to be in the games and be in practice. That's good stuff. So you start applying your buford, what happens with the university down there? So, oh, yeah. So I went to my first interview, I had an interview panel, and they told me they'd give me a call on whatnot. So what I did was I kind of I know about the area, like I said, I'm from the neighboring county. So I've been to Beaufort and Hilton head and bluff them. So I know a little bit about the air. But I never actually been on that college campus is a satellite campus from the main campus in Columbia. USC Columbia. So I just went around and talked to some of the students, asked them how they felt about the campus, how they like their officers, you know? Just showing my face and then I was walking back to my car and the sergeant sergeant Bruce, he was on the golf cart and he said, hey, let me show you around. Or whatever. So I got in the golf cart with him. He showed me around. And introduced me to some people, and they were like, oh, we already met him. Or whatever. Yeah, he said, yeah, he came in early and talked with us and asked us some questions about the campus and stuff like that and sergeant Bruce Lee looked at me. So anyway, long story short, I got a call for a second interview. The chief interviewed me and they hired me like an hour later. And after getting high with them, you know, sergeant Bruce told me he said, you want to know why we hired you? I was like, yeah, why? You know, he said, well, you know, we had a lot of advocates. A lot of people would experience some people from retired New York, 20, 30 years experience, and apply for this, you know, but we were looking for someone who was like community oriented. Who go around and talk to the students and this and that. And you showed that to me, you know, that day when you got in the golf cart and you already introduced yourself to other people. And that was something that we was looking for and the fact that you did that, that shows a lot of good qualities that we're looking for. And that's why we hired you over a 30 year veteran. I'm like, well, thank you. I appreciate that, you know? My child the truth, the reason they hired just because when you started talking, nobody asks you, where are you from? He was from New York to he was retired from New York, but I forgot it was some other town in New York. I forgot. It wasn't NYPD though. But yeah. So tell us about getting started there because, you know, the other thing I can tell you from experience. And I've had friends who've been on the university police and big and small stuff. It's a different kind of policing. They're still certain things you have to do, but it's a different kind of policing than what you're doing now. So tell me about that. So tell me about when you work there. What was it like versus like what you saw your mom doing? What you saw NYPD do?.

Game of Crimes
"quincy" Discussed on Game of Crimes
"Thank you very much. I'll be here all week. Okay. Hey, Steve, this next one comes to us from the 100 block of west university drive wherever that is. Employees of eckhart's reported that at 1225 a.m., this must be one of the strangest incidents I've heard of. Two men came into the store, loaded birth date bags that said, have a nice day with yellow faces on them. Steve with 52 tubes of vaginal antifungal cream and left without paying the cream was valued at $894 and 98 cents. Oh, boom. Either there's a black market out there if somebody's got a big problem. Oh, this is kind of in it for those listeners that don't know what accuracy is. It's a drugstore chain here in the U.S., but that's. Let's just leave it alone 'cause I'm not sure where we could say that. Don't want to touch that one, yeah. Hey, but in keeping with our keeping with our animal related thing, this comes to us from west St. Paul, a missing bird. A caller reported June 30th that a bird had been stolen from an apartment in the 100 block of Haskell street east. But Steve, unfortunately, it was later determined that the bird had not been stalling, but was lying dead at the bottom of the cage. They didn't see that. Must have been the right to take up his if you younger folks don't get this, you need to go watch Monty Python, the dead parrot sketch. He's not dead. He's pining, pining for the fjords. You gotta watch the dead parents sketch. His dad knows he's no longer with us. He is bereft of life. And I have never seen that and I probably never will. Oh my God. Oh, well, okay, that's in the reading for the day, kitty 8 nominated. All right. Another question. Thank goodness, huh? Oh my gosh. Anyway, so that leads us into speaking of strange things. We'll have some strange stories as we said from San Diego gang conference, but suffice it to say, man, we had a good time out there. That will be a whole set of interviews, but while we're out there, we were finishing up and was finishing editing this next episode. And I'll tell you, just the more we talk to this kid, number one, I mean, it's like everybody we talked to that has been shot in the line of duty. You think that they would be, you know, we talked to Claudia. I mean, my God, she is just bubbly. She was a rockstar out there. Alex Collins was a rockstar out there. You know, we talked, by the way, with Victor Avila, we outed him on stage because the guy sandbagged us if for you guys that don't know. Victor holds the world's record for the longest distance pistol shot 2010 yards, 1.141 .14 miles from trigger pull, tell impact it took 11 seconds for that round to hit at 36 inch by 36 inch target. Unbelievable. I mean, that's just un freaking believable. But anyway, when we talked all because Victor was involved in a shooting, he was wounded. All of these folks got great mental attitudes. They come out of it and they want to give back. They're not there to be heroes. They're not there to be the center of attention. What they want to do is make it safer for the next cop. The next deputy. The next trooper, the next agent, you know, out there. They want to keep their lessons. And we're going to learn a good lesson from this next one. So Quincy Smith was actually, he was introduced to us by somebody who watches the show, or I should say, watches. Listen to the show regularly. And that's how we got the intro. And I'm telling you, Steve, just the kid is just when we say kid, everybody who's half our age, we call kids, right? Which is like everybody. These days. But just what a just a big personality, but you know what, but very humble and he keeps going to tell us about some lessons coming up in this episode. And what I like about this one, he's the only police officer on duty in this small town in South Carolina. And you think it's a safe community. When you're wearing the uniform, you're never safe. Here's a guy just trying to go up to do something on a New Year's Day. What it should be quiet and people just kind of relaxing from partying the night before and the assailant, well, you'll find out what happens. But the thing I like about Quincy is just like the others that you mentioned, he didn't let it get him down. You know, he's moved on with his career. He's moved up to a larger agency now, has plans for the future. So God bless you, man. Thanks a good lord. He's still here with us. And thank the good lord, his mama didn't kick his ass. You're going to hear about you're going to hear about who his mama is and but again, this is such a fantastic episode, so Steve. But before we can hang or hear the episode and get to it, I have to ask you one big question. Are you ready? Even though you're tired and want to go to sleep in your chair, are you ready to play the biggest baddest, most dangerous game of all? The original and unadulterated game of crimes. Absolutely. Ladies and gentlemen, this is one where you really do need to get in, sit down, shut up and.

Mark Levin
Politico: Soros & Koch Take on the 'Endless Wars'
"There was a piece in Politico A year or so ago and welcome by the way that reported the fusion of George Soros and Charles Koch Charles Koch being a libertarian and George Soros being what George Soros is In my view an anti American And remember I've talked to you before about how the isolationists seem to have voices on the radical left and among this weird Putin romanticizing right And they do overlap And so they put this group together this so called nonprofit The Quincy group And the position of Charles Koch and George Soros is to effectively quote unquote keep America out of endless wars And now you hear this propaganda Throughout the media with a handful of senators and House members And they act like we're the ones Creating a war situations Now to oppose this kind of passivity and pacifism and isolationism is not to support endless wars or radical interventionism Is not to support necessarily a Lindsey Graham or sort of a McCain type of attitude which is interventionism now interventionism yesterday interventionism today No

Mark Levin
What the Quincy Institute Has Become
"So this group is not in sync with either their party or the American people quite frankly Now this group that was set up this Quincy institute more like the quisling institute When the Coke side there are there's one author maybe two authors as I recall that wrote about the Israel lobby who believed there is a zionist shout of government creating conflicts For Israel's interests I'm just telling you the truth So this is what the Quincy or quisling institute with Coke and Soros has come to And I don't believe the Republican Party should be standing for totalitarianism Or genocidal maniacs Apart from all the rest of it that seems to me to be a losing political position

Strong Opinion Sports
"quincy" Discussed on Strong Opinion Sports
"Ready? Yeah. Are you sure you're ready? I don't think you think you're ready, but I'm gonna start the intro and be like, what the hell? This energy is wild. I'm hoping you get me like that, man. Three, two, one, oh my goodness. Good morning, good afternoon. Whatever it is for you. I hope you're having a fantastic day, my name is Zach Schumer. There's a strong opinion sports episode 400 and 60 joining me today is Quincy carrier Quincy. How are you? Yeah, I'm doing good, man, you know? It's kind of woke up, did some things. I'm ready to tough ball, man. I should know the answer to this. I apologize for not knowing, are you full-time making content? Yeah, before time for about a couple of years now, I think I'm coming up on the second year now. Dude, congrats. That's a huge awesome accomplishment. And that means you probably have weird. I have the weird schedule of all time. I'll be up till like 4 a.m. then I'll sleep till 6 p.m., I get up at 7, and I'm like, I guess I'm starting my day now. I don't have a job to be at, so I just kind of do stuff whenever I'm awake. Is that how you are too? Yeah, I try to make sure I keep myself on schedule because it'll get ridiculous where you're like, ah, you know, I'll make that video. I started too. If I started too, it's gonna be ready by 7. I uploaded it and then you end up with all kind of weird sleep schedules and then you're like, hey, I can't get to the grocery store 'cause I'm never awake when it's open. Kind of deal. The worst one for me. Dude, laundry right now. My laundry room closes at 9 p.m. and I keep starting the day at like 4 o'clock and then I got work to do. I do all my work and it's like 2 a.m. and I'm like, well, I missed the laundry again today. And now I'm tired, I'm going to bed. It's happened like a week in a row. I got like a massive laundry pin right now. I just full of clothes. I'm like, today's the day. 7 a.m.. Yeah, go ahead. It happens like that will work out too, right? Because most gyms now, there's like planet fitness and like a crunch that they'll be 24/7. But if you don't live near one of those and you live near a normal gym, you know, it's like you gotta be up at 5 in the morning. Sometimes you gotta do a thing where you just stay up till 5 to get your workout in and go to sleep and content creators are weird stuff all the time. I've never met one with a good sleep schedule ever. No, it's gonna be a hard battle for the rest of my life. Unfortunately. I've been up all night. It's 7 a.m. here in Hawaii. And I haven't slept yet. I'll probably go for like a long walk after this and then try to go to bed around like 11 a.m.. I guess, 'cause that's the life, right? I think so I love your content, my man. I think you're awesome. I think you're well spoken. I think you're interesting. If anybody, for people who don't know who you are, can you introduce yourself and kind of describe who you are and what you do?.

The Doug Collins Podcast
Quincy Institute's Kelley Vlahos on the State of the US Military
"So Kelly, let's just as we jump into this and sort of your background, especially with the Ukraine sort of looming over us here. Just as your perspective, where do you see the American military right now? I mean, I see the American military as in a and I hate to use this because it's such a Washington term at an inflection point. I think after the Afghanistan withdrawal, you had a lot of veterans and rank and file military questioning, the war policy of the last 20 years. How did we get to the point where we spent all of these resources, all of these lives to get back to square one and leave the Taliban in control. And to blame it just on Biden's withdrawal or Trump's deal with the Taliban. It's not fair, and it's not reality. The reality is that the policy was bad in the first place. And you had members of the military as well as the American public, listening to their generals, listening to their politicians, talk about how victory was always right around the corner and that if we only did X, Y, and Z and put tens of thousands of more troops in year after year that we would prevail. And they saw that all go up in smoke during that Afghanistan withdrawal. And I think between that, the over politicization of our generals and just the global war on terror, the outcomes not meeting what we had been promised as a country all combined for some real soul searching. And what our military is for, who were fighting for the Washington policies that we believed in the institutions that we believed in. So I think that the military is suffering just like every other institution in this country. They're suffering from a lack of trust from the American people, and frankly, in many ways, I think they

Big Blue View
"quincy" Discussed on Big Blue View
"If the plan going into sunday. Doesn't look something like. Let's get him on the field for twenty snaps. Let's get him eight to ten touches. Let's get him through the game healthy you know he. He's taken some some thumps in practice but he hasn't been tackled you know since he got carried off the field in chicago almost a year ago now so and with two games in five days. I don't expect the giants to go and try to feed sake. Won the ball twenty twenty five times. I think that. I think that the guy you're going to see a heavier dose of in the backfield is somebody that that broncos fans know pretty well and i and i need to ask you about and that's devante booker. Yeah i mean. I i hope so. I always thought that devante booker. Kinda got a bad rub from the broncos just because he was in the backfield back when the broncos offensive line was really in shambles and i thought that he has a good skill set to be a good third down back He had some issues with fumbles back in two thousand eighteen. That hurt him but he was inefficient runner in small doses. And i. it didn't surprise me to st that he looked. Okay with the raiders. Last year in the giants seemed to feel like he is a a runner. Who or a aback. Who's capable of handling all three downs. No i don't know if that means handling all three downs as a number one back. But i think that they feel like he can he can do enough things to help them run their and be able to not have to limit their playbook simply because of the running back that they have in the game. So i mean it's it sounds to me like you're saying that that that book her is maybe not a guy that you wanna feature twenty five times times a game. I mean i personally hope basically any any back in the game. I hope they give him the ball too much but i think he's a capable runner. I think he's a better receiver. And i think he's a better pass blocker than he is a runner Just because i think his vision is closer to adequate than necessarily good on so. I don't think he's going to make something that isn't there happen But if there's if there's lanes to run. And i think he can do it so let me ask you this. Let me ask you about the guy. Call the place for your for your broncos and that of course is former giants head. Coach pat shurmur. He's now in his second year calling place for denver. What what is the reaction to shurmur. What is the feeling you know about about him. And any offense that he runs right now. Broncos fans are pretty down on shurmur after last year. Part of that. I think and again like part of that has to do probably with the quarterback situation part of that has to do with the fact that portland sutton bronco's number one. Receiver only played thirty one snaps last year because of injury In part of that is also shurmur of the broncos had because a code. You guys probably have some of this stuff too. Because a kobe there was not as preseason. And the broncos offense got off to a slow start and they. They struggled for a big part of the year and it was pretty ugly on by the advance stats. The broncos had one of the three worst offenses football last year So a lot of that does fall in shurmur. That said i also think inserting a new quarterback. I think getting quoting sutton back. And another year for the young offense to kind of grow. I think the pieces are in place for people to be surprised by shurmur this year But it's kind of wait and see what's your take on teddy bridgewater. Is he more. Or less of a what. I would call a placeholder You know there for a year or so you know until denver dives back into Into the draft market and uses another number. One pick on a quarterback or is he a guy that you really think can can grab this job and hold it for you know for four years or so. Well i think he is. Probably his contract runs out after this year But i do think that. Even if he is a journeyman has been the player that we have seen for the last two years from teddy bridgewater. He would still be the best quarterback. The broncos have had since peyton manning retired. And i think part of that speaks to how bad the broncos quarterback situation has been since paint manning retired but also tay bridge orders been around the league average quarterback for those two seasons. I don't think he'd necessarily make sure offense better But i think if you surround him with pieces. I think he's capable of putting the ball right hands and making the right decisions in for the broncos. If if they if he does that the season it would make a lot of sense to me for him to get resigned to kinda service the veteran bridge for whatever they do next. If they're going after a rookie all right. So i do a thing when i do the the five questions. I do a thing where i ask the the opposing blogger. Which player they would take off the giants roster. Now when i asked lori this question i left saquon barkley there simply because i usually take off the table. Because he's an obvious answer. Yeah okay. But i left him there because he's still coming off the injury and all of that. Let me ask you if we take saquon off the table. What giants player would you want on denver to put into denver's lineup. I would love to have leonard williams. And i would. I think i'd take leonard. Williams even over saquon barkley I also i'm a big fan of kenny golladay. If he can stay healthy. I think he's going to be a good player. And i think you can can't really have too many receivers so either one of those two players i think on the broncos would be awesome Winter williams would elevate the interior defensive line. In a way that he's a really really good run stopper. He's big but he's also very capable pass rusher and i think that that would make everybody else's life easier on defense in the flip side of. That is what i've been doing lately is also taking the opponent's roster and saying okay..

KFI AM 640
"quincy" Discussed on KFI AM 640
"Basie. You know Quincy Jones. Ebola set day. I mean, he turned me on to like, you know all the greatest Jazz musicians because he was a jazz er and Yeah, I I grew up in with all that. And then I got myself, You know, I kind of went towards the blues. I started listening a lot to you know, Albert King, you know, I started jamming around in the city a lot at Stone Corner, which was Michael Bloomfield's old Club in San Francisco within Bishop and I made friends with Alvin. Alvin took me to Fillmore west in San Francisco Introduced me to B. B and I remember being on stage with baby when I was 13, you know, with Bill Graham met Bill Graham to was it was for just, you know, amazing time. Keep listening to I heart radio for more Neil, Sean and all your favorite artists. I. Heart radio brings you new to view streaming edition coming to Netflix next week. Countdown Inspiration for Mission to Space is an all access Doc you series on the first all civilian space mission. The Netflix series Jack Whitehall travels with my father is back with season five nailed it returns for 1/6 season along with the entire saved by the Bell Collection. Plus another season of the Netflix British series, sex education. Next week on you, you get more episodes of the Vice docuseries dark side of the ring in the first season of dark side of football FX on you. You will premiere the new D C comic series. Why The Last Man and BJ Novak's provocative half hour anthology series. The premise debuts on September 16. In the 17th. Amazon prime. Adds American trader The trial of Axis Sally, the 2021.

Project Voice - Healthcare Summit - 2021
Chief Global and Innovation Officer Sanjeev Shetty Tells Us What Connected Living Is All About
"I wanted to quickly take a minute just to talk about connected living who we are and what we've been doing for the past decade or so. So we're based on Quincy masks. We've been around for over ten years, really leading with technology and programs to help communities connect protect and engage residents, families and employees. Regardless of where they live, they could be in a home setting. This would be in any level of living within a senior living lifeline community. Or in a memory care setting, we actually help them connect with families friends, residents and employees. And obviously we've seen this past year, you know, it's been a marathon, but one of the silver linings coming out of it has been just the pace of innovation bread. And we've heard that both some pets and the folks from constant companion mark that innovation has really been in the forefront, whether it's voice for other technologies that have really reshaped the healthcare landscape. And what I wanted to do on this slide is just take a minute to talk about our ecosystem. We at the very core we have a HIPAA compliant cloud based platform what we call as the CMS system. It's a web based admin panel. And what that does is it helps push content out to any of these endpoints that you see around the circle, whether it's the native mobile apps that were created on Android and iOS, whether it's that interim television channel that we bring in through your cable provider or the Apple TV app that we created during the pandemic, making that experience very interactive. Obviously, voice is front and center and is a key part of our strategy on all of our platforms. We were very fortunate to be tapped on the shoulder by Amazon Alexa very early in the days of voice and we have created our own Alexa senior skill with over 200 prompts. And obviously that translates to other platforms as well, such as the robotics that you're going to be able to witness your in the short while. And we've also got really state of the art digital signage. One of the unique things about our signage is that we have a native asset controls 100% of the real estate on the finance, so we can literally do things like integrate with a community social feed. We could customize and design any part of that signage experience. And then of course, you have people who still want your printed newsletters and calendars. We have that

Everything Everywhere Daily
The American Whig Party
"S weren't important time in american history. I've touched on this area in a few previous episodes in particular the one on the election of eighteen. Twenty four and on the six political eras in american history episode by the time of the eighteen. Twenty election the federalist party had completely fallen apart president. James monroe literally ran unopposed for president in eighteen. Twenty four all four. The candidates for president who received electoral votes came from the same party. The democratic republican party after this election the democratic republican party to fell apart and they were replaced by democratic party which was led by andrew jackson. This is the direct descendant of the modern day political party with the same name in eighteen. Twenty eight the incoming president was john quincy adams and he ran against jackson but the party. He was associated with wasn't really an organized party. It was alternatively called the national republican party the anti jacksonian party and the plain old republican party although this was not related to the modern day party jackson dominated the political landscape during this era from eighteen. Twenty eight to eighteen thirty six. He was president and even after his presidency. He cast a long shadow over american politics. The opponents of jackson were at i simply known as anti jacksonians because they were united in their opposition to jackson. It wouldn't be correct to say that the anti jacksonians were simply a revival of the federalist party. By this time there had been a complete realignment. In the american political system some democratic republicans went on to form the new democratic party but some also became anti jacksonians. The beginning of the whig party began with the nullification crisis. Congress had passed a series of tariffs in eighteen twenty eight and eighteen thirty two which dramatically increase the taxes on imported goods. This was vehemently objected to in the south which called it. The tariff of abominations as the south was highly dependent on agricultural exports

Cracking Aces
Jake Recaps an Unreal $40K Weekend
"Jake you had a good weekend. You finish eighth in the five hundred dollar bracelet event for almost nine k. You chopped the party to fifteen major for six point five k. And you finished second in the w three twenty one hundred k. Guaranteed whilst heads up to a ten cents and go grindr which that got so so you got. You got twenty three for that. So that's what people wanna talk about. Is that that specific tournament score both burkey matt burke who you've had on the show software why he was streaming it with you at his table from maybe fourteen down and he made the final table as well and it was one of the more wild just rides to the final table. It was pretty crazy. I mean it's funny. How things can change so quickly. Because i mean i basically the chip lead from like i think eighty cash biscuit the chip lead from when the money head down to maybe like sixteen or seventeen and then all of a sudden. We're basically like there's twelve left. Eleven that them on the bubble. And it's like there's and on my table. It's me burkey Vlad was was a turning rag Another attorney rag. And i'll emc each in then the other table go now. The goat was on the other table. Chair Whenever his name was hammy or whatever you know jamming fish that ended up winning it Who was just like a total wild card and so it was i. I was actually fortunate to be pretty card debt and not really have like any like supergirl spots we final table. I literally the first hand this final table. This this guy opens under the gun and then calls like twenty blind region with queens suited And i'm like and i had to like i wasn't even like jan j hammy called with the quincy to raise called. Maybe two hands later. I mean it was just it was just wild. It was like he basically just like would randomly go and pre flop for any amount and he would call any amount like it was actually kinda gross. Because with like five left's i think I was five or five. And i had like seventeen blinds. Ali opens the cutoff and have an incredibly easy region with sixes on the button. But i'm man like obviously this is just like a amazing spot but this guy might call with jack antonoff from big blind like he's stole the chip lead end up getting through and didn't really face any. Ah of those like crazy hands until we got ended up getting heads

Open Loops: Conversations That Bend
"quincy" Discussed on Open Loops: Conversations That Bend
"You're going to become christ's conscious a little bit more by listening to this episode. And i'm jewish and i'm saying that so get ready here. He is spencer brunette. And this is the non intro intro We might even play the first ten minutes of for everybody was sitting right now to spencer burnett who is ready to you know i'd love this. I feel like you really did. You're going open loops with me. Man like you are going into full expansion of mind theme that you inspired me to bird with this podcast up for those of you that don't now. I'll give a little intro spencer brunette. Imagine a couple of times and other interviews. Spencer is really the reason open. Loops exists though. He might tell you. It's not the case he's going to tell you it's not in all spin it in a way that's now you're one of my clients and this was always in you but you know you always need a let me put it this way. I came up with this this morning. I think spencer. Burnett is the quincy jones of life passion. If you have a passion in your life. This man is that your thriller and spencer comes in and he's like yeah. Do it a little bit like this. Do it like this. And then and then it's actually going to be thriller the album you do that with people's destinies you do with people's lives. I feel like that is probably the highest compliment. I can give a life coach. Because i think a lot of them are peddling crab and thrillers a tangible product a spencer first of all thank you for your influence on me and bringing forth the open loops. Podcast inside of me and second dude. Do you accept that title. Do you accept the quincy jones. Moniker oh dude i like. I didn't know quite where you're going with it when you started and then when you brought it all together it was a it is a beautiful articulation of really. Why i'm here on this planet in the contract that i have with god and which perpetuates all of the work that i do so i fully accept that and in terms of saying that open loops wouldn't have existed without me. I will absolutely tell you that that is true. Oh that's good right. Well here's the thing like in the universe. That is greg. The first player game that is greg. There are characters that come along the way and similar to the way that they build a video games where it's like an adventure based game where you go do some things and then you talk to someone. Guide you to the next step in our lives. We have those people. I've certainly had those people in my life that it was a pivotal moment meeting them allowing me to filter her my vision and my struggles and In my desires that changed the course of my life forever. Where i ask myself. Where would i have been if it wasn't for that one relationship. And i know that i have so many of those sacred relationships in in my heart in my life and the amount of love and appreciation and gratitude that i have for those people it is. It is an honor to fully acknowledged. That i have played a role for you in the ads. Because it.

The Mason Minute
Yo-Yo Champion (MM #3728)
"The Maison with Kevin Nation. I was scrolling through Facebook. The other day when I saw someone from the town I lived in growing up Quincy Illinois. Post an ad talking about, the Duncan yo-yo Champion coming to town and like 1969 or 1970. He came to one of our drugstores. I believe it was Brown's Rexall out of the shopping center. If I'm not mistaken, I was there and I fell in love with you. Ross is a kid and I was fascinated by these yo-yo Champions who went from town to Town showing all of their skills. You're Duncan Imperials, your Duncan butterflies, I still have probably ten, yo, yo, stashed away somewhere and I haven't played with them for years. I bought the official strings, I've got string wax and I loved playing with yo-yos, I could walk the dog and rock the cradle and do all those kinds of things and I realized fads Come and Go toys come and go but the yo-yo I know was big 50s and I had them in the sixties and seventies, but I don't know if yo yos have ever made a comeback since if they have I must have missed it somewhere. I love caring two or three around in my pocket and playing with them when I was bored. I guess video games have taken them away.

The Mason Minute
Yo-Yo Champion (MM #3728)
"The Maison with Kevin Nation. I was scrolling through Facebook. The other day when I saw someone from the town I lived in growing up Quincy Illinois. Post an ad talking about, the Duncan yo-yo Champion coming to town and like 1969 or 1970. He came to one of our drugstores. I believe it was Brown's Rexall out of the shopping center. If I'm not mistaken, I was there and I fell in love with you. Ross is a kid and I was fascinated by these yo-yo Champions who went from town to Town showing all of their skills. You're Duncan Imperials, your Duncan butterflies, I still have probably ten, yo, yo, stashed away somewhere and I haven't played with them for years. I bought the official strings, I've got string wax and I loved playing with yo-yos, I could walk the dog and rock the cradle and do all those kinds of things and I realized fads Come and Go toys come and go but the yo-yo I know was big 50s and I had them in the sixties and seventies, but I don't know if yo yos have ever made a comeback since if they have I must have missed it somewhere. I love caring two or three around in my pocket and playing with them when I was bored. I guess video games have taken them away.

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
"quincy" Discussed on AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
"Oh, by the way, Quincy Jackson, Quincy Jones Jackson. Quincy Jones is at it again. Look, the guys are hell of a producer and a ranger. I enjoyed the documentary I watched on him not too long ago. He was done everything. He used to write, he's the range music for Sinatra at 20 bucks a song. That he's made some millions with Michael Jackson. He's amazing. But we know the guy's nuts. We know he's nuts. He was interviewed recently for GQ. And if you remember the last interview, the last time they let him loose, he said that Marlon Brando fucked Richard Pryor. He just went on. And then they corralled him. His daughter's around dad. Stop saying that shit. So he apologized. But now he's back. And the GQ writer asked him if he ever worked with Elvis. And Quincy said, nope, I wouldn't work with him. Why not? They said, and he said, well, I was writing for Tommy Dorsey. Bob, back in the 50s, and Elvis came in and Tommy said, I don't want to play with him. He was a racist motherfucker. I'm going to shut up now, but every time I saw Elvis, he was being coached by Otis Blackwell, the man who wrote the song don't be cruel and Otis would tell Elvis how to sing. Meanwhile, not that Quincy Jones would care, but Otis Blackwell told David Letterman in 1987 that he and Elvis Presley had never met doesn't stop doesn't stop Quincy from telling a good story. So in that interview, Quincy claimed that Dorsey wouldn't let Elvis play with the band because, quote, that motherfucker couldn't see. But as we know, that's not true. If Elvis was a racist, you know, he probably he probably would have rolled over in his grave to see his daughter marry Michael Jackson, but seriously. Quincy Jones really does give the best interview in the business. He also talks shit about Elon Musk in this interview. He talked about having gained weight because he was spending a lot of time in Brazil and was putting acai juice in his vodka 24/7. Then he went and tried to describe something Judy Garland once did with the microphone wrapped in a condom that would make Jill Scott blush. I don't know what she did why a big old lesbian would blush. Did she insert the microphone inside of it? I don't know..

AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
Crazy Quincy Jones Lies About Elvis
"Quincy Jones is at it again. Look, the guys are hell of a producer and a ranger. I enjoyed the documentary I watched on him not too long ago. He was done everything. He used to write, he's the range music for Sinatra at 20 bucks a song. That he's made some millions with Michael Jackson. He's amazing. But we know the guy's nuts. We know he's nuts. He was interviewed recently for GQ. And if you remember the last interview, the last time they let him loose, he said that Marlon Brando fucked Richard Pryor. He just went on. And then they corralled him. His daughter's around dad. Stop saying that shit. So he apologized. But now he's back. And the GQ writer asked him if he ever worked with Elvis. And Quincy said, nope, I wouldn't work with him. Why not? They said, and he said, well, I was writing for Tommy Dorsey. Bob, back in the 50s, and Elvis came in and Tommy said, I don't want to play with him. He was a racist motherfucker. I'm going to shut up now, but every time I saw Elvis, he was being coached by Otis Blackwell, the man who wrote the song don't be cruel and Otis would tell Elvis how to sing. Meanwhile, not that Quincy Jones would care, but Otis Blackwell told David Letterman in 1987 that he and Elvis Presley had never met doesn't stop doesn't stop Quincy from telling a good story. So in that interview, Quincy claimed that Dorsey wouldn't let Elvis play with the band because, quote, that motherfucker couldn't see. But as we know, that's not true. If Elvis was a racist, you know, he probably he probably would have rolled over in his grave to see his daughter marry Michael

Latino USA
Latinos Role in NASA and Mars Perseverance
"Dna through he'll with working late at nastase. Jpl jet propulsion laboratory in pasadena. California the night before the perseverance rover would finally touchdown on the surface of mars. That night. i think it was the only reflecting on that reflecting also when family understanding how far we have gotten us humanity and recognizing that everybody is going to get to see what we're about to do on mars as flight director for the rover. Deanna knew that in just a couple of hours should be a part of history. I was setting up and getting ready for the first spanish language. Landing broadcast and nasa has done for a planetary mission. Orla obama despite while he admitted they order presents yet. Quincy aurora della nasa perseverance equivocal. Doj got his massive data scientists that beneath deanna would lead this broadcast and give a play by play as the rover inch closer and closer to landing. The idea for spanish language broadcasts came to her when she was working on another mars mission about a decade ago curiosity it came to my mind may be like a week or a few days before. Curiosity landed in two thousand twelve. But since then i've been going to the media office Time there's a major mission happening like hey. We should listen spanish. Hey we should do this. In spanish and yet so right before perseverance started. I mentioned it again and constantly feel like for seven years and then they said yes

WBZ Afternoon News
Coca-Cola Will Raise Prices to Offset Higher Commodity Costs
"Have to pay more to get yourself a can of Coke. Coca Cola CEO James Quincy told CNBC that the company is raising prices on some of its beverages for the first time since 2018 due to higher commodity costs, following similar moves by other consumer products makers. Like J. M. Smucker and Kimberly Clark, the Atlanta based company top first quarter earnings expectations, with store sales strong enough to offset another week quarter of restaurant and bar sales, where Coca Cola has historically enjoyed strong market share.

WBZ Afternoon News
Teenager Charged In Dorchester, Boston, Shooting That Damaged Postal Truck
"Shooting in Dorchester and left a postal truck riddled with bullet holes. A 17 year old suspects been charged with aiding and abetting and assault with a dangerous weapon shooting happened just after noontime yesterday. On the area of Quincy Street, and they see a street Nobody was hurt. But the postal truck and some surrounding cars were damaged Lisa a short time later, the teenage suspect checked himself into an area hospital with a non life threatening gunshot wound. He was later arrested

WBZ Morning News
Person hospitalized after car slams into health center in Roxbury, Boston
"Slammed into a neighborhood vaccination center. WBC's James RoHaas is there and joins us now live with an update. Good morning, James. Good morning, some here on Blue Hill have and Quincy Street at the satellite clinic for the Whittier Street Health Center. The front window smashed out shards of glass scattered all over the sidewalk. It looks like the car that crashed into the building early this morning didn't make its way inside, rather damaging the windows and the facade, but it's hard to say what damage has been left to the structure. No woman has reportedly been taken to the hospital. Their condition unknown. No word how This will affect the vaccination appointments. But when we find out we will be sure to pass it along in Roxbury. James

WBZ Morning News
Former Boston Police Chief Davis: Kill Switch In Every Police Cruiser ‘Would Be A Good Thing’
"Yesterday's Rockland 7 11 robbery shot and killed by police after stealing a police cruiser. And then leading officers on a chase through six South shore communities. Here's WBZ TV is Christina Rex, WBZ security analyst and former Boston Police commissioner Ed Davis says. What makes this case unique is not the stolen cruiser but the length of the chase and the amount of times the suspect managed to escape police. Each one of those individual things happens. Really frequently but combined together, this is an unusual circumstance. Leach was shot and killed by police once they finally stopped him in Quincy after a long effort by hostage negotiators. They say he came out of the cruiser brandishing a police rifle. So when the suspect being guarded by officers on the SWAT team to drop the weapon He doesn't comply and starts to make aggressive moves with the police. Only thing they can do is fire. While the unfortunate end of the chase may have been unavoidable, Davis says there's technology in some police cars that prevent them from being stolen, called the kill switch. Now, when asked if somebody did something wrong, Davis says. Not necessarily. The incident is being investigated by the Norfolk County District Attorney's office, which is standard protocol whenever police used deadly force theory.

The Misfit Heroes Podcast
"quincy" Discussed on The Misfit Heroes Podcast
"There's a studio on cox communications premises for for their media department. So beautiful studio. We miss it so much But we we've been virtual every since then and in what was crazy wasn't a mix of being virtual about three weeks later going into april I was approached with under the same network under the same year view network. I was approached with another national lifestyles. Tv show which is called main street. Living and i was the one that they wanted to pull from this current shows. I'm actually doing both shows each week. Odds weekly show over on multiple times on cox no longer channel. Eleven in seven point Channel sixty so. I think it's between bravo in the history channel or something now So yes so now. You not went from doing just that local show. Every week to now. I'm doing a national show in in conjunction with that local show so you talk about an ultimate blessing on top of a blessing. That's what is been but we'd been continuing until we can get back in the studio. That's amazing man. I mean that's like. I said blessing after blessing. You said it. i've also. I've seen some tiktok. Instagram lives and all that stuff. Man larry is dude. Is that your daughter. Yeah yeah yeah. She's she's really the reason why i ended up on tiktok because you know it was a young person saying she asked by having account and i said i didn't then we ended up interviewing a guest on a from top. That's from seven five seven. That became popular. And i said you know what. Let me just tragic just to have fun. And ever since i did that. She'll come to me. I mean she became to me today. Hey dan Literal team we do a took it. I'm like oh yes she keeps me you fool by being on tiktok and just having fun to always hashtag daddy daughter time less awesome man i i i i love it also with the remote stuff. Have you ever done any remote stand up or anything like that. I mean i hear i hear. That's a thing now and me personally. When i think of stand up comedy i think of you go to a comedy club and the audience. The room interacts. You know the room sort of becomes this living thing and you're affecting everybody but i've heard that there's remote stand up comedy and that just seems weird to me. It's like you're talking to yourself in a room and trying to make people have. Have you done any of that stuff. Yeah man i've done. I think i did a total of six or seven. Zoom type of comedy performances. My did like three agent or I think it was like a company employee appreciation type of deal because they had gone through the tax season which got extended so One of their locations in richmond had contacted me to do it and then from there. I guess they told their other. You know affiliates and it was two other locations that was in hampton roads area reached out to me and said hey we heard about you doing richmond. One in we're doing urine close out for our employees. We'd love to have so. I wanna say the ones that i did earlier when the pandemic hit i didn't feel like you know obviously for a lot of comics. It's not going to be the exact same because mind you come in from performing on cruise ships and performing in front of you know live audiences when i'm doing my quality comedy series just anyway right and that's a whole we were used to and then is like..

The Misfit Heroes Podcast
"quincy" Discussed on The Misfit Heroes Podcast
"Being coast. Live so living. Some for seven airs on cox cable platform and essentially. I will say in two thousand fifteen in two thousand fourteen. I started filming. I decided to film is portable quality comedy series. I decided to turn it into a tv show. and i called it. The quality comedy show and filmed a recorded edited. And then i approached a cox communications because they were at the time a local access or like public access type of channel and there are no longer that they're actually a network under the your view platform now so they were accepting people presenting content in. Put it up three. When cost you anything. They just want content. And so i brought to them very comedy. Tv show and I had about six episodes that ran for about six seven months and they loved it. it was just. I didn't have the ability to a film anymore. Because i lost my film crew in it costs a lot of money and i didn't have sponsors so i just did just at work and funny thing happens fast forward. This isn't twenty fourteen. I made that relationship. Iran through twenty fifteen and it stopped and in twenty nineteen twenty nineteen the summer twenty nineteen. I'm looking at my context. This is so crazy. I'm looking at my context in the producer that you know the head person on cox for tv shows a had a message. And i saw his name. And i said man. I haven't talked to this guy in a long time and i decided to delete his email contact. That had been almost five years right. I decided to believe his email contact. And i kid you not chris about five minutes later i get a pain on my facebook message and it's him saying hey quincy if you are available. Can you please give me a call. I think i have a very interesting situation for a new tv. Show that you may be interested in. And i'm like you're kidding me like you know. We haven't come across his email. And i just deleted said well you know what. I'm just trying to clear all the stuff that i don't really talk to anymore. And i call them up. And he says hey. We're getting ready to transition from his current spanish english showed. We've been doing for five years. And we're going all english when a new show and he named it living seven five seven all parts. Everything seven five center just in the area and i was like. Oh my gosh. You know. I've always been told that. I had a face and i've always been told had the appearance for a person on tv and people have always told me that folks will say you know i could see you on snl. I could see you on all these shows just because of how you bring your energy so that was just a blessing That was waiting to come in. He said they were looking at book. Another that they knew as part of the station in one of the One of my co hosts who. I just ran into a few months before had said what about quincy car in this guy goes. Oh my gosh yes. He gave us a comedy show years ago. It was a great. tv show. He would be perfect. So i would happen. That's i okinawa while. Yeah that's that's crazy man. That's that's a gift from god. Right there buddy you just get that message right out of the right out of the blue. You're speaking of that. How been doing during the pandemic i mean. Have you been able to do some of that. Seven five excuse me live in seven five seven stuff during the pandemic. They've been able to do the remotes like that or Yeah chris actually. We've been virtual sense 'cause in this area in virginia i think the corn team or the self quarantine stuff started happening. Around the third week of march of twenty twenty and our shoo- our show is always being filmed in a studio..

REAL 92.3
"quincy" Discussed on REAL 92.3
"92 3 new. Hopefully, a pop is standing up to racism and racial injustice in the black and brown community. Big Boi's neighborhood a little locksmith lover right here, shout out to my man fuzzy fantabulous for playing the part of Quincy on this one. This political the locksmith because he and his lover, Quincy's lover, Quincy, locked him out the door. So now they've got to get on the phone with the locksmith lady to see if she could settle their differences That's going to get into your phone tap on the team's right here, Big boy table. What you gonna do in here, Mr Wright awarded to to make it all stick like glue. Got you got you? Ahh! Oh! Might say I was calling to see if I can get a locksmith out. I'm locked outside of my property. Where are you at? Hold on for a second. Let me just call this on my residency. If somebody pick up the phone that way, I could save me. Somebody picks up the foul, right? It's Luther. I'm outside. I know you are You stay outside. You are locked out. Luther, Open up the door. No! Yes, ma'am. No way. I'd be able to come over there and help you with So many doors for him already on? No, not today. I'm sorry. I won't be able to help you. Because I've had a guy. He he found your job. Don't attack my character in front of a stranger. My heart, Luke there. I did not attack your heart. You let that go? I'm gonna let you go. You need to be quiet. Let me speak to somebody that understands male. Okay? He doesn't understand what love is. I love him. Now you got me locked outside the house like I'm so common trash. Everybody wonders why losing weight? Why? My hair is our nappy And why I'm letting myself go is because I'm so much in love. And he had not reciprocating your model of that both you? Yes, Because you love somebody doesn't mean they're always good for you. Maybe you should go different ones like me today. That's what I'm telling. I am good to him quickly. Am I good to you at a time Coming? Open up the door, then. I'm standing.

WBZ NewsRadio 1030
"quincy" Discussed on WBZ NewsRadio 1030
"Moving investigation into the chaos on Capitol Hill, New Pictures from the FBI showed the man suspected of planting two pipe bombs at the Republican and Democratic National Committee headquarters. And this morning a stunning revelation from Congressman Tim Ryan, who confirms to Capitol police officers have been suspended for their actions during last week's riot. One officer is accused of taking Selfies with the rioters. The other allegedly directed people who breached the capital. Ryan says. As many as 15 other Capitol police officers are now under investigation. Locally, the Worcester City Council is looking at the security of its buildings in the aftermath of last week's riot. Veteran city councilor Mo Bergman says that the issues come up from time to time in the past, but in the aftermath with rioting in D C last week, now is the time that the city really has to act. Bergman says that the city needs to have a plan that will keep the city buildings open, excessive allow and save now. One easy way to do that, he says, would be to have security cameras around City Hall said he doesn't have any of those yet. Meantime, as an aside, the issue comes up just hours after the FBI revealed in a bullet in that state capitals throughout the nation should be on alert around the inaugural in the Worcester bureau, John Bay Back WBZ Boston's news radio. Always hockey teams and Quincy are put on ice WBC's Chris Bama with more from Quincy. The teams of both Quincy High in North Quincy are officially on hiatus. Benched after Superintendent of schools Kevin Maulvi saw pictures online after the two squads Big rivalry game on Saturday night, he players unfortunately, we're not socially distance properly and we're not wearing masks. Some of the infractions happened office before the game when the students weren't supervised, which the superintendent also calls unfortunate. As for the missteps on ice, he's called for change. We want to make sure that we re evaluate the safety protocols were more quiet, too, followed by the state. We have to make some modifications to how the sport is being played. The programs will stay on pause until the changes are implemented. Students, on the other hand, could return to classes today. Chris Pharma WBZ Austin Soo's radio. Hawking in another town and greater Boston is also being checked into the boards. Natives high School hockey team is out for commission for the next couple of weeks because of a covert outbreak. This, according to the Metro was daily News. It's unclear where the outbreak came from. Natick Memorial Elementary School was closed yesterday, though, because of proving Sheldon Adelson, a Boston native group in the tenants became a billionaire casino owner, GOP mega donor supporter of President Donald Trump. He is dead at the age of 87 WBZ. Jim McKay is more in his life. Adelson was born in Boston and grew up in Dorchester. He rose to become the chief executive officer of the Las Vegas Sands Corporation, which owns casinos all over the world. Adelson was one of the early casino executives that look to spearhead American based casinos and Asian markets. In his later years, he became known for his major political donations. Him and his wife were known as the biggest backers of President Trump's reelection campaign in 2020. He had been suffering from a cancer related illness recently in the past week, he had taken time off for surgery. His wife confirming this morning that he died of a long illness. Sheldon Adelson dead at 87, Jim McKay, WBZ Boston's NewsRadio 10 19, Boston residents. Some are saying their neighborhoods are a little too bright WBC's match years focus, Um city councilors who are reaching for the dimmer all day long. You're looking at bright screens at home at work. Thanks to digital billboards. They're all over the Boston skyline to get something that if we allow it to proliferate could really change the experience of the city and of our historically Ever good for the work. City Councilor Kensi Box says that is more people moved to her neighborhood's more businesses want to advertise in a bright, bold and sometimes obnoxious way? Nobody of my constituents have talked throughout. Covert about how much it means to be able to walk around the city. And part of that is having that light close about having that screen time not having your experience of being outside of the city be commodified captured that way. She's calling for a hearing on the issue this Wednesday, along with counselor Ed Flynn will quality of life in public safety concern. And residents of fed up with it, and they want some answers from out match your WBZ Boston's news radio Ken Jennings has kicked off his new role as interim host of Jeopardy but giving a tribute to legendary former host Alex Trebek. Sharing the stage with Alex Trebek was one of the greatest honors of my life. Not many things in life are perfect, but Alex did this job pretty much perfectly for more than 36 years, and it was even better up close. We were dazzled by his intelligence, his charm his grace. Really. There's no other word for it. Trebek losing his battle with cancer dying in November at the age of 80. Katie Couric has been tapped to be the next interim host after Jennings. You're.