40 Burst results for "Richard"

Evangelism on SermonAudio
A highlight from Public Evangelism & 1st Amendment Seminar - Part 1
"Let me introduce myself to you. First of all, my legal name is Richard Jackson, but everybody calls me Jake. It's a nickname I've had since college, and so I'm brother Jake. I'll tell you a little bit about my background. I was raised, my religious background is, I was really a secular home. We didn't go to synagogue, we didn't pray at meals, we didn't, I don't remember my parents praying ever. And you know, it was a cultural thing, all of our relatives are Jewish, but none of them, as far as I know, would keep the Sabbath, none you know, that was our heritage. They did send us to a religious school, like Sunday school for children to learn some of the Bible stories and some of that kind of stuff. When I was 13, I had my bar mitzvah, so we did that. So, you know, we celebrate, occasionally we'd celebrate some of the holidays. The food is pretty good, but you know, it was, it was really just a secular upbringing. And when I was in college at the University of Florida, there was a man and his wife would come on campus, his name was Jed Smock, and apparently he would go around college campuses around the country, and he would go and just preach to the kids. He would come to, there was a courtyard by the library, a big open green space, and he would come there and he would preach. And, you know, it wasn't the style of preaching that I would recommend, you know, he would point at people and, you know, be kind of insulting towards them. But, you know, he did preach the Word of God. And, fortunately, I was at a time in my life where I was, you know, I was searching, I was open. If you asked me at that time what my religion was, I would have told you I'm agnostic. And because I figured, well, you can't, nobody can prove if God exists, nobody can prove God doesn't know, and so I'm agnostic. And, you know, after a while, I guess in some moments of honest contemplation, I realized that that was not a satisfactory answer, it was no answer at all for me to say, what's my religion? I don't know, is essentially what I was saying. And, and it also occurred to me that, or at some point, it occurred to me that, you know, to be agnostic, you're saying that you don't know if God exists or God doesn't exist, you don't know exactly what, what you believe. And my experience with that and the experience, as far as I can observe, for just about anybody else who says they're agnostic, you're claiming you believe that maybe God exists and maybe God doesn't exist, but you live your life or I lived my life at that time, kind of under the assumption that God didn't exist. I did my own thing, I wasn't worried about what was, you know, more, what was right or wrong, or moral or immoral, as long as I didn't get caught. And, you know, just did my own thing and really didn't give any thought to God most of the time. But then, you know, sometimes I did and I think Brother Smock coming on campus and, and preaching was one of the things that of kind brought the questions, you know, to my mind, you know, in more focus, you know, what if God is real? You know, who was Jesus Christ? And who did He claim to be? And, you know, is the Bible true? Or is it all fairy tales? And, you know, and I started, I finally contemplate, started to you know, well, what if God is real? You know, it was kind of like, oh, you can't prove God's real or isn't. And so you just live your life as if, you know, just ignoring it. And, and so I began to really think about, you know, well, what if God is real? And, and I guess the Lord put a desire in my heart, you know, to know him, because if God is real, then what am I doing? What am I doing with my life? What am I doing? You know, if there's a God out there, like, like all these Christians describe, and all the, even the believing Jews describe, you know, if God is out there, then I want to have a relationship with Him. I want, I want to know Him. I want, you know, what am I doing with my life? Ignoring God and, and apart from God, that doesn't make sense. If God is real, then okay, let's worship Him. Let's find out who He is. So that was kind of my approach. And I wasn't saved yet. I was just, I was just searching. And, and I ended up, you know, really started, started reading through a Bible. And I started in, in Matthew Chapter One. And I, because I, I wanted to get some questions settled. So I, I was reading kind of as a skeptic, you know, my, I was keeping an open mind. But I was, I kind of expected that I'm going to find all kinds of contradictions. And I'm going to find, you know, reasons to just reject the whole thing and say, oh, this is all nonsense. It's all fairy tale, whatever. And, but I read it, you know, I read it, like I said, with an open mind, you know, I come across something that, you know, I wasn't, wasn't sure about, I wasn't comfortable with. I said, okay, put that aside and keep going. And I, and I kept reading through it, because I really wanted to, I really wanted to come to a conclusion. And I thought I was going to come to the conclusion, well, it's not this and throw that out and then look for something else or whatever.

Fox News Sunday
Fresh update on "richard" discussed on Fox News Sunday
"Pellegrini in the Bloomberg Newsroom, Ukraine, saying today it is working with Washington to ensure new wartime aid in its fight against Russia. That's after US lawmakers dropped new funding for Keeve in that last minute shutdown deal we've been telling you about to avoid a government shutdown. A Senate approved a 45 -day stopgap funding spending bill to keep the government open late yesterday. It does not include funding for aid to Ukraine, as I mentioned, and Colorado Democratic Senator Michael Putin for several hours yesterday, saying later on the Senate floor he wanted assurances of a later vote on supplemental aid to Ukraine. I did object earlier because I was worried that I thought it was important for us to make sure we sent a clear message that we're not leaving Washington without figuring out how to fund. Colorado Senator Bennett they're not clear what kind of assurances they actually did get, President but Biden has said he expects help from House Speaker Kevin McCarthy to secure additional aid for Ukraine and Bloomberg congressional reporter Eric Wesson says watch for some drama on Capitol Hill over Ukraine funding. What we're hearing is that when the White House comes back with a more definitive answer, if this was Amy Klobuchar, one of the Senators telling us that, from Minnesota, that if the White House says it can't weather it, the Senate should immediately begin processing the supplemental bill. it I think can pass the Senate, and then when it goes to the House, we see if they add border provisions, or they ignore it, or reduce it. And that will be a debate in the coming week. Bloomberg congressional reporter Eric Wesson Thank there. you, Eric. And now that this shutdown has been averted, or at least delayed, investors are eyeing other near -term risks to the economy, including signs of inflation and rising interest rates as we begin the final quarter of the year. Our story on up the Bloomberg terminal. Once unthinkable, bond yields now the new normal for markets. Dan Suzuki, deputy chief investment officer at Richard Bernstein Advisors, says that'll continue for stock buyers. I think that it's no surprise that that's coming at a time where markets actually have been selling off a little bit, priced in sort of that tighter liquidity, higher interest rate environment. And you can hear Suzuki with more of that conversation on the Bloomberg surveillance podcast. Download it wherever you get your podcasts and global news 24 hours a day, powered by more than 2 ,700 journalists and analysts in over 120 countries. the In newsroom, I'm Denise Pellegrini, this is Bloomberg. The Global Leader in Business is now live on YouTube. For our audience worldwide, this is Bloomberg surveillance. Watch Bloomberg Radio all the way up until next week. Those surveillance, markets, sound on and business week. We've got a rally in stocks. More breaking news today from the Supreme Court. Bloomberg Radio. Watch us every business day live on YouTube. Search Bloomberg Global News. Bloomberg Radio. Context changes everything. This is Masters in Business with Barry Ritholtz on Bloomberg Radio. I'm Barry Ritholtz. You're listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. My extra special guest this week is Gary Cohn. He is the former director of the National Economic Forum. Previously,

Dennis Prager Podcasts
A highlight from Dennis & Julie: Exciting versus Enduring
"Hey everybody, Dennis Prager with Julie Hartman, Dennis and Julie. One of my favorite hour and 12 minutes of the week. Me too. Isn't that amazing? Yes. And what's also amazing is that we actually do probably three or four Dennis and Julie's a week that are not recorded because we talk on the phone so often. And sometimes, I don't know if you think this, sometimes when we're done speaking, I'm like, wish that were recorded. Really? Yes. That's an interesting point. But you know what's also great? We are very personal on this show. There's really, I can't think of many things that we talk about privately that we wouldn't talk about publicly. I think people understand that. That's why that guy called me and I've talked about this a lot, said, I have a great word for you Dennis, transparent, because I decided early on in my career that as unnatural as it seems, because people obviously hide parts of their lives from others, I thought I'm going to hide as little as possible. That's why people say to me more often than any other things when strangers meet me, you know, I feel like I really know you and I'm sorry and I say, you do. I can attest to that as someone who knows you off the air as well as on the air, listeners really do know you. It's also just easier being transparent because I can imagine that it's difficult to have to think, oh, did I say that? Should I say this? That's right. It's just kind of your default. It's like it's easier to be faithful than have an affair. Aside from all the moral issues and the hurt of my spouse, all of that stuff, putting aside that they're all real. A major reason not to have an affair is because of the amount of hiding you have to do and lying. It is not possible to have an affair and not become a serial liar. Well, one lie begets another lie, which begets another. It has to. I mean, if you say I was at the doctor's and they say, how was it? And then you go, yeah, let's say your wife runs into the doctor. You know, like it just it's this tangled web of of deceit that's I can imagine difficult to keep up. You know, in that regard, it's amazing how our conversations just developed. So I'm going to say something that will strike people at the outset as odd at best and maybe even bad at worst. So when I meet somebody who's having an affair, because people open up to me, in most instances, my first reaction, I may know more and change my reaction, is I feel bad for them. I obviously feel bad for the spouse, that's a given. But my sense is, and by the way, I believed this when I was your age, well before I was ever married. I sensed that most people who have an affair, it is not because they're bad. And oh my God, I can't believe I'm saying this to you. One of my favorite Bible commentaries is by Richard Elliot Friedman. He is a brilliant scholar, University of California, San Diego now. I think he's at the University of Georgia, a major biblical scholar. And if I say that, you can believe me because I know my Bible. And he's written a commentary on the Torah, which I love. I love it. And obviously I'm writing my own. So I refer to his. Under adultery, in other words, the commandment, thou shalt commit adultery. He wrote, I wish I had the entire, I could find it, but we don't have breaks during Dennis and Julie, but I would like to read it exactly. But he wrote, and I just read this to my synagogue this past Sabbath, I read his line about this. That good people commit adultery, and he italicized good. And I thought that this guy's human. And I've been faithful, so I have no self -interest in this. But to assume that everybody who commits adultery is evil is beyond simplistic. You commit murder, okay, if that's not evil, you could say, well, you could say a good person could commit evil, could commit murder. It's a bit of a stretch. It could happen, but generally speaking, that's not true. But anyway, good people who commit adultery, and by good, I mean the non -serial adulterers people who just go from affair to affair, I have no defense of as a human being. You mean like a one -time thing? Yes, or fell in love. If somebody falls in love with somebody else while married, it usually means there's a lot problematic in the marriage. People in love with their spouse don't fall in love with another spouse. Okay, this is such a good topic, and I want to pause and say what we always say. We had no idea that we were going to discuss this. I love that about this show. It just blossoms. Because it's real. It's real, and it's incredibly spontaneous. Okay, a lot of questions. This is where I'm going to evoke the, what do you call your radio show, the Human Laboratory? This is where this is particularly useful. So most people who tell you about their infidelity, I'm assuming most of them are male? Or is it even? Yes, that's correct. What would you say the percentage is? Of those who tell me? Yes. It's high. It's 75%. Male? Yeah. Okay. And usually, do they tell you that they're unhappy in their marriage? Yeah. And what is the most cited reason for the unhappiness? They don't feel loved by their spouse. Loved in what way? You're tough. I'm not trying to be tough. She is tough. All right. Maybe, okay. You don't want to go there. No, no. There's nowhere I don't want to go. Anyway, even if I don't want to go, I go there. That's true. So, okay. For the record, generally speaking, a man who feels sexually fulfilled with his wife is going to stay faithful. This is so foreign to women that they just have to take my word for it. That's not how women think. Women do not have affairs because they're not sexually fulfilled by their husband. Some might, I fully acknowledge, but they don't feel emotionally fulfilled. That's much more a woman's reason, and I have just as much sympathy for her as for him. It's not, all I'm saying is, and I don't even remember how we got on this, but it's amazing that we did. How did we? Yeah. It's funny. I usually remember the genesis of a subject, but all I'm saying is when I meet people, my first reaction is not, wow, that's evil. If I met a murderer, yeah, or not even a murderer. Frankly, doctors who give hormone blockers to 10 -year -olds are doing evil. I have much more contempt for them than for somebody who had an affair. Okay, so let me ask you this. Let's say you got a call from a guy who was five years into his marriage. He has three or two young children, and he calls you and he goes, Dennis, I am not happy in my marriage. It's not awful, but I'm not happy, and I have my eyes on another woman. What do I do? Do I stay in my marriage that's unhappy, or do I leave because I'm unhappy? I'd say do everything possible to make yourself happy in your marriage, which by the way involves obviously working it through with your wife, but it also involves working it through with yourself. So, I'm a guy's guy. I'm male as as they come. So, men really relate to me. Happily, a lot of women do too, but it's not the same thing. Male -male is not the same as female -male. Okay, so I understand men really well, and I explain men to women. So, both sexes have to adopt the Prager notion of not having too many expectations. I think it's fair to say, nobody says this, because sex is ironic. We have a sexually drenched society, and yet people never talk honestly about it. That is very well said. It's mind -boggling. It's mind -boggling. You're so right, and people get upset when you talk about it. That's right, because I'm honest. So here is something I would say to men, guys, just know you are not going to have the sexual life you fantasized in the vast majority of cases. It's just the way it works. You mean when you get married? Yeah, when you get married. I'm sorry, that's right. I wasn't clear. Yes, when you get married. And therefore, you enjoy what you have. Now, obviously, I'm not going to give it a time factor limit. It's different when you're 25 than when you're 55 or 75. All of that is real. But I remember when I was in high school thinking, wow, to be married, you have this woman anytime you want. Oh, gosh. Such a male thought. Exactly. This was worth the entire broadcast. My comment and your reaction? I think I represent all women. Yes, exactly. Watching and listening. And I represent all men. That's the point. So that was my fantasy in high school. Oh, my God, it must be the greatest possible situation being married. She's there whenever you want her. So men… I just looked at the camera. So men have to understand it's not going to be that way. Are there exceptions? I'm talking in general, of course, there are exceptions to every rule in life. So I really ought to, if I had the time, I would write an advice book to men. Oh, you really should. Who is it? George Gilder wrote that man book? That man book? Sexual Suicide and the Naked Nomad. He deeply influenced me. So, men need to understand… By the way, we all need to understand… I don't know what women's fantasies are about marriage. Her fantasies are not likely to be fully realized either. So it's best probably not to have fantasy… I don't care if you have fantasies, it's fine to have a fantasy life, but in the sense of directing you in your emotional reaction is not a good idea. And in your reality, it can't direct your reality too much. That's right. So I have told men, I'll tell you where I feel for men. And that is, if they're married to a woman, I'm just talking the sexual arena now. If they're married to a woman who doesn't take care of herself physically, that's given the power of looks in the human species, it's the female that attracts the male. I know there are gorgeous men who attract women, but most men are not gorgeous. What attracts women to men is not that they're gorgeous. they're Certainly when reached by age of 30, a high school girl is going to go, Oh God, is he gorgeous? Oh God, you know, that's fine, it's part of life. But one of the biggest ways you show you love your husband is by taking care of yourself physically, trying to look good. And the proof is you tried to look good when you dated. Why did you stop trying once you got married? That's not fair to him. You're right, and it's not fair when men have B .O. and also don't take care of themselves, which I know you recognize. No, of course, but that's not the same thing. The B .O. holds for both, but looking gorgeous or as gorgeous as you can, I mean, looking cute. In peacocks, the male attracts the female. In humans, the female attracts the male. It's just the way it works. And if she succeeds in doing it, he gets aroused and they make the next generation. That is how human sexuality works. I really love what you said a few minutes ago about we live in this over sexualized society that also gets so upset when people like you and me talk about sexual matters, not to overhype our importance, but people who are brave enough to talk about sex within with a Judeo -Christian good values worldview are so valuable. I don't understand. Yeah, but a lot of them do, but they're not real. A lot of the religious people who talk about sexual matters are not rooted in the real world. So what is an example? Masturbation. Wow, welcome to Dennis and Julie. But the proof is nobody feels that they can talk about it. Yes, that's true. I mean, I debated a guy, very religious guy, seen by hundreds of thousands of people on the internet. He said, masturbation is evil. And he's speaking from a religious point of view. Evil? I said, I looked at him and I said, evil? I mean, if he says it's a sin, fine. Every religion has a whole list of sins. But evil? And I challenged him. I said, are you serious? It's evil? I mean, child molestation is evil. Genocide is evil. I know. Masturbation is the charge. Of course it does. So religious, you're right about the Judeo -Christian values perspective. Unfortunately, a lot of religious people have made religion look silly and people have therefore rejected it. You know, you're right. I think a lot of people point to something like that and go, that's just, that's too far for me. It's too far, exactly. It's difficult, the job of being religious, because you obviously want to promote good values, but you also want to be real and recognize that there are certain thoughts and proclivities and actions that a lot of human beings partake in. And so it's about mitigating the, I was going to say mitigating the harm of those, but allowing them to happen as long as they don't go too far or as long as they're not harmful. Yeah, that's right. So people should read a book by an Orthodox rabbi, Shmueli Boteach, who's a well -known rabbi, B -O -T -E -A -C -H, in English, Boteach, but it's pronounced Boteach, and it's called Kosher Sex. It's a great book. That's a good title. Great title. And whole his thesis is, you keep sex within a marriage, but within a marriage, do whatever the hell you want, providing the other person agrees, obviously. And, you know, as raunchy as it may sound to the outsider, if you two agree to it, the only restriction is that it's not with another. You know, God, of course, I forgot my train of thought. I just I really marvel at how real this is. And sometimes when you make these comments, I think, God, he is gutsy. He really goes there. You know, I am gutsy. I want to tell you, this is very revealing about me. People will take it for what it's worth. I decided very early in my life, if I want to do good in this world, that's all I've ever wanted to do. I will not shy away from putting myself out there and knowing I'm going to get slapped. And that's the reason I do it. It's not fun to talk about masturbation, but I know how many people are traumatized by the message you're doing evil. And it makes religion and God look bad, and I don't like that. Mm hmm. And here's the thing, also, it's uncomfortable to acknowledge, but it's the truth. People do the like I mean, this is the whole point of the conversation. People do these things. What are we going to pretend like they don't exist? We have to deal with them. And I think it's cowardly to run away. Look, I have told you, Dennis, that I grew up in a house that didn't talk about these matters. And I'm grateful, actually, because I think there are certain boundaries that ought to be respected. And I there's a time and a place to discuss things like this, but we do have that forum to do it. And I don't understand I don't understand when people deny reality. We are seeing the harm in the United States today of denying reality, including in the sexual arena. I mean, that's this whole hookup culture thing by by contorting reality to make women believe that they want sex as much as men is harming women. Plain and simple it is. Is it uncomfortable to acknowledge the reality of males extreme sexual proclivities? Yes, but we have to because we're seeing the consequences when we don't. So I applaud you. And I do think sometimes I'm like, wow, he he's really going there. He's gutsy. But but people need a good role model for these matters. Well, you don't make a good world if you're not gutsy. True. You can't build a good world on cowardice. And it's so hypocritical because people people have sex. People do these things. And I don't I don't I dislike the people that that are on some kind of moral high ground when they talk about this stuff. It's like, please, you do it to your human being. Don't act like you don't partake in these things that you decry. Right. And some of them probably don't. But my question is, are they better human beings in general? You know, I talked I said to you what Richard Elliott Friedman said, that a lot of people who commit adultery are good people. It's because it's it's weakness more than anything or or something else. I'm not talking about serial adulterers.

Bloomberg Radio New York Show
Fresh update on "richard" discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York Show
"Round and her private equity firm Sky Partners is hoping to raise at least one billion dollars from investors. Steve Podisk Bloomberg Radio. And I'm Denise in the Bloomberg newsroom. Democrats and Republicans as we've been reporting have managed to work together to avoid a government shutdown. The compromise spending bill to keep the government open until November 17th. It as we've been reporting was signed by President Biden just before midnight thus averting the shutdown. A shutdown would have damaged the economy even but though it's averted for now investors are still on alert for other signs of pain to the economy like inflation and rising interest rates as we begin this final quarter of the year. Dan Suzuki, Deputy Chief Investment Officer at Richard Bernstein Advisors says that will continue to create tension for stock buyers. You've had a much more resilient growth environment people have had to take up their expectations for growth fed policy and that's been the biggest driver of higher interest rates now. I think that it's no surprise that that's coming a time where you know markets are actually been selling off a little bit to price in sort of that higher liquidity higher interest rate environment. And Suzuki there on the Bloomberg surveillance podcast. You can download it wherever you get your podcasts. We're also on bed watch because Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell will join Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker for a roundtable discussion with workers and small business leaders. That'll be tomorrow. Also, Powell's European Central Bank counterpart Christine Lagarde will she scheduled to make public remarks this week. And now that the shutdown is averted watch for economic data to come out fast and furious this week including reports on durable goods and also that big US jobs report coming Friday. Searching oil prices also in focus. Summer is over but gas prices are really heating up in California and that's prompting Governor Gavin Newsom to lift an anti -smog rule for relief at the pump. We get more on what's happening there from Bloomberg's Charlie gasoline now costs an average of $6 .08 a gallon in the Golden State the highest since last October and $2 .25 a gallon above the national average up from a gap of about $1 .20 in early August this according to data from AAA. The governor has directed the state's Air sources board to allow winter grade gasoline earlier than usual a move that could bring spot prices down by nearly a $1 .50 a gallon according to the oil price information service. Charlie pellet Bloomberg radio thank you Charlie and global news 24 hours a day powered by more 2 than ,700 journalists and analysts in over 120 countries in the newsroom Bloomberg. The Bloomberg talks podcast today's top interviews from around Bloomberg news Mike Wirth Chevron chairman and CEO joins us now we talked with GM CEO and chair Mary Barr wide -ranging conversations with fortune 500 CEO big -name investors and business leaders around the world joining us on the president of the European Central Bank Christine Lagarde Bloomberg talks subscribe today on Apple Spotify and anywhere you get your podcasts Bloomberg radio context changes everything adopt us kids present together we have the opportunity to build a more in a bowl and includes the future at the Bloomberg new economy forum we help make this possibility a by cultivating new connections among global leaders that transcend geographies industries ideologies because when global leaders work together outcomes

The Crypto Overnighter
A highlight from 675:SECs DeFi Sweep and Coinbases Political Gamble
"Good evening and welcome to The Crypto Overnight -er. I'm Nicodemus and I will be your host as we take a look at the latest cryptocurrency news and analysis. So sit back, relax and let's get started. And remember, none of this is financial advice. And it's 10 p .m. Pacific on Wednesday, September 20th, 2023. Welcome back to The Crypto Overnight -er where we have no sponsors, no hidden agendas and no BS. But we do have the news, so let's talk about that. Tonight, we'll delve into the SEC's ongoing battle with the crypto world, scrutinizing both exchanges and DeFi platforms. Finance is also in hot water, basing challenges on multiple fronts. Across the pond, the UK is grappling with its own regulatory maze, affecting everything from the metaverse to basic banking. Stanford University finds itself embroiled in a legal quagmire that ties back to the cryptosphere. Meanwhile, Hong Kong plots a different course from mainland China, leaning into crypto rather than shunning it. And finally, Coinbase isn't just sitting idly by, they're launching a campaign to influence the future of crypto legislation. Buckle up, it's going to be a jam -packed episode. David Hirsch is the head of the SEC's Crypto Assets and Cyber Unit. Hirsch made it abundantly clear, the SEC is far from done with its enforcement actions against crypto exchanges and DeFi platforms. Speaking at the Securities Enforcement Forum central in Chicago, Hirsch emphasized that the SEC's focus extends well beyond high profile cases like Coinbase and Binance. The agency is actively investigating other firms involved in similar activities. Hirsch stated that the SEC's jurisdiction covers brokers, dealers, exchanges, and clearing agencies that are not meeting their obligations, either through failure to register or inadequate disclosures. The SEC is also turning its attention to DeFi projects. Hirsch warned that the label DeFi won't deter the agency from its enforcement actions. However, he acknowledged that the SEC's resources are limited and they can't just go after every old token and platform. The SEC has already taken action against two Floridians in their company, Blockchain Credit Partners, for selling unregistered securities. The agency also filed actions against LBRY and the founder of the pulse chain ecosystem, Richard Hart. While the agency's resources may be limited, their intent is clear, to bring the industry to heel. This is about setting a precedent that will affect the entire crypto landscape. The SEC's focus on DeFi is particularly noteworthy. DeFi platforms, often touted as the epitome of decentralization, are now squarely in the SEC's crosshairs. This could have far reaching implications for the DeFi ecosystem, potentially innovation stifling or forcing projects to operate in a more regulated environment. The SEC's actions also raise questions about the agency's true motives. Is this a genuine attempt to protect investors or is it a way to exert control over a burgeoning industry that threatens traditional financial systems? Given the SEC's history of enforcement actions, it's hard not to see this as a strategic move to rein in an industry that has long operated in a regulatory gray area. While the SEC aims its canons at DeFi, Binance finds itself at the agency's crosshairs too. Now what's common? Regulatory scrutiny and it's global. Make sure you like this episode and let's switch focus to Binance's battles.

WBBM Newsradio
Fresh update on "richard" discussed on WBBM Newsradio
"850. Chicago's Chicago's radio WBBM. only 1059 station dedicated to news around A the clock. Chicago man is News expected in Many court -year -old Vashon Tuesday Davenport for is arraignment accused of in aggravated a carjacking vehicular that happened hijacking nearly last a October year ago. on I -94 20 year before at Canal Port Avenue near Chinatown. Illinois State Police say the victim told them a man walked toward inside and his the SUV suspects holding got in and a fled the long area. firearm and motioning Police say a for witness him to recorded get out of the the carjacking vehicle. and posted He did it on social media. Authorities say that posting and a thorough investigation helped them identify Davenport an as the Australian suspect. professor Veron has Black News jabbed Radio 1059 himself with a WBBM. brain cancer vaccine all of the pathologists. in the name He's of the first research. person to receive Professor Richard a personalised Scalia is brain one of cancer Australia's vaccine leading after melanoma being diagnosed with an aggressive form of the tumour. Co -professor Georgina Long says researchers will take his journey after the jab. Eventually hopefully we may have more lead widespread to use more effective of vaccines personalised in vaccines cancer treatment Scott Recovery centres Mayman in for CBS Berwyn, News Austin, Canberra Cicero, Australia. Garfield Park FEMA and Pullman are about Disaster to observe new operating hours. Starting tomorrow most will be open from 8am until 5pm Monday Memphis All Park through Field Saturday. centres House will The will be closed have Saturday only on difference hours Sundays. is from 9 the .30am Austin At South until facility age 52 5pm. in your the Columbus business operating report internet is room will coming giving a let whole your new doctor meaning perform to miracles the term from house thousands call of operation miles

Simply Bitcoin
A highlight from BREAKING: Bitcoin Ban Gathers Momentum in the US | EP 827
"It's all going to zero against Bitcoin, it's going up for everyone, you're against Bitcoin, you're against freedom. Yo, welcome to Simply Bitcoin Live, we're your number one source for the peaceful Bitcoin revolution, core breaking news, culture, and matic warfare. We will be your guide through the separation of money and state. We got a lot of comments starting off basically saying click bait title ugh, someone else said FUD, no, not at all, not at all, especially if you guys, Denver Hoddle said FUD, no, not at all. If you guys have been tuned into this channel, we've been like surgically covering all the moves by the Biden administration, the moves by the anti -Bitcoin senator, Senator Elizabeth Warren, and yet they don't like Bitcoin, they don't want it to succeed. Bitcoin succeeding would mean that they would lose their privilege of being able to create money for free that everyone else has to work for. I think the worst thing that Bitcoiners could do is think that Bitcoin's going to win by default, right? This is an adoption race, this is about getting the people around you to understand and to wake up to the fact that it's not left versus right. It is green, the party of green versus the party of orange, the party of state currency, the party of central bank digital currencies, the party of inflation, the party of nihilism, the party of slavery versus the party of Bitcoin versus the party of orange versus the party of freedom, Bitcoin, prosperity, opportunity, optimism. So, yeah, it's not BS at all. And today we're going to cover the fact that Senator Elizabeth Warren's bill, so -called the Digital Assets Anti -Money Laundering Act, got nine new sponsors. This is a bipartisan bill. This is a Republican and Democrat bill that's being pushed in Congress, in the Senate specifically, that Pierre Richard would literally, literally said this is not simply Bitcoin or Nico's wording. He literally tweeted, if this bill passed, if this bill would pass, this bill would ban Bitcoin mining in the United States. And I would even make the case that the bill would basically ban Bitcoin in the United States. And that's exactly what the bill was designed to do. Make no mistake. So, yeah, you can like, you know, push it aside and say this is FUD, you know, this is you know, this is this is bullshit. This is a clickbait title. This is the separation of money and state. Take it seriously. There's a lot of vested interest that it's not convenient for them if Bitcoin wins. They want you under a central bank digital currency. They want to control what you think and what you say and what you do. And one of the most effective mechanisms to do that is by controlling money. If you control the money, you control the incentive structure. That's exactly what the whole social credit system is all about. Right in China. So, you know, if you talk against the state, you know, they take a percentage of your money right out of your paycheck. They don't allow you to travel. They don't allow you to sign your kids up to certain schools. That is a forcing function. And that is no longer theoretical. This has happened in the West already. I feel like people have just forgotten about the Canadian truckers protest. They literally froze people's bank accounts because they were protesting the government because of the lockdowns.

Bloomberg Radio New York Show
Fresh "Richard" from Bloomberg Radio New York Show
"Old today. A birthday celebration was held at the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library in Atlanta yesterday. Carter is the longest living former president. He was placed in hospice care seven months ago. Apple is working to fix overheating issues in some of their new iPhone screens. The new model was out for less than a week before users reported cell phones overheating when being used just for basic functions. Apple said Saturday it had identified several issues that could be causing the overheating including a bug in the iOS 17 software. They say that will be fixed in an update. All electric skateboards under the name OneWheel are being recalled after their use was linked to four deaths. Jim Forbes has details. On Saturday the company FutureMotion announced the recall of AllOneWheels due to quote dozens of reports of severe injuries and deaths. The deaths occurred all between 2019 and 2021 and resulted from traumatic head injuries. The company noted quote the skateboards can stop balancing the rider if the board's limits are exceeded posing a crash hazard that can result in serious injury or death. FutureMotion says it's adding new safety features to fix the issue. I'm Jim Forbes. Officials in California say another bus carrying migrants from Texas has arrived in downtown LA. The bus arrived yesterday the 4th in the past two days and the 20th bus since June. 27 migrants were aboard this latest downtown officials are now working with the city local nonprofits and faith partners in providing assistance to the migrants. In Las Vegas the band U2's kicked off their residency in the city inside the newly constructed Sphere. The concert Friday night took place inside the massive globe that takes up nearly two city blocks in Vegas. downtown The Sphere features a wraparound LED screen and 166 ,000 speakers to offer fans a completely immersive experience. Over 17 ,000 attended the opening. I'm Scott Carr. And I'm Denise Pellegrini in the Bloomberg Newsroom. Democrats and Republicans as we've been reporting have managed to work together to avoid a government shutdown. The compromise spending bill to keep the government open until November 17th. It as we've been reporting was signed by President Biden just before midnight thus averting the shutdown. A shutdown would have damaged the economy but even though it's averted for now investors are still on alert for other signs of pain to the economy like inflation and rising interest rates as we begin this final quarter of the year. Dan Suzuki, Deputy Chief Investment Officer at Richard Bernstein Advisors says that will continue to create tension for

The Café Bitcoin Podcast
A highlight from Store of Value and Proof of Work with Ben Justman, Founder of "Peony Lane Wine" - September 18th, 2023
"Hello, and welcome to the Cafe Bitcoin Podcast brought to you by Swan Bitcoin, the best way to buy and learn about Bitcoin. I'm your host, Alex Danson, and we're excited to announce that we're bringing the Cafe Bitcoin Conversations Twitter Spaces to you on this show, the Cafe Bitcoin Podcast, Monday through Friday every week. Join us as we speak to guests like Michael Saylor, Len Alden, Corey Clifston, Greg Foss, Tomer Strohle, and many others in the Bitcoin space. Also, be sure to hit that subscribe button. Make sure you get notifications when we launch a new episode. You can join us live on Twitter Spaces Monday through Friday, starting at 7 a .m. Pacific and 10 a .m. Eastern every morning to become part of the conversation yourself. Thanks again. We look forward to bringing you the best Bitcoin content daily here on the Cafe Bitcoin Podcast. All right, all right. Good morning to all of you Cafe Bitcoiners. Happy Monday. It is time for another awesome week in Bitcoin. Man. It is so cool getting up on a Monday morning. You know, most people are like, oh, God, it's another Monday. They don't even want to get out of bed. They're dragging ass. They're like, oh, but Bitcoiners are like, let's go. All right. Good morning to all of you, Lisa. Good morning, Peter. Good morning, Mickey. Morning. Good morning. Don Bay Terrence. Good morning to all of you. Shout outs to my cobart in the audience. Joe Carla. Sorry. Hi, guys. Alex, the other Alex, there is another Alex. Alex talks tweets. She works at Swan. Shout out to you. You're welcome to come up. She does some amazing stuff. I'm not there's other people in the audience here who work for Swan. I'm not going to talk to you because you guys have some semi names. I don't know. Anyway, morning, Jacob as well. Welcome back from your golf excursion or the weekend. Tone vase morning there on you an invite. I just found out I'm on a panel with tone vase for Pacific Bitcoin. I'm moderating tone vase and Pierre Richard and Jimmy song. That's awesome. And I guess our mission is to talk about shit coins. So for whatever that's worth. All right. Welcome to Cafe Bitcoin episode four hundred and thirty six. Shout outs to our supporters on Fountain and Noster Nests. Our mission for this show is to provide the signal in a sea of noise, teach the other seven billion people on this planet why there's hope because of this bright orange feature we call Bitcoin. Today's show, we're going to be discussing BTC performance versus other assets. There's a tweet Saylor put out with a really interesting chart. We'll be talking about that. United States interest payments are at insane levels and the near perfect energy arbitrage of Bitcoin later today. We have Ben Justman from Penny Lane Wine coming on the show. Very excited. He's an example of the Bitcoin circular economy. So you've got people who are craftsmen making really fine high end things and they're selling them directly to big winners. And man, I love to see it because this is the future. Like we're moving away from this entire consumer rush, rush, rush, get on the hamster wheel, make money that is constantly devaluing and then spend it on shit that you're going to replace one month or one year from now because it's garbage. But that's the entire consumer economy system. It's insane. But Bitcoin is switching that. I think we're going to flip this thing completely on its head. How long will it take? I have no idea. But I think it's coming. Anybody have any opening comments you want to make before we start digging in here? Just that the coffee and the Bitcoin charts are hitting hard this morning. So let's go. Yeah, what's up with that? I saw there was something like, I don't remember the exact stat, but the open interest has is skyrocketing, I guess. We went from twenty six, what is this, five ish to twenty seven thousand two hundred and thirty ish per Bitcoin right as of right now this morning. Lisa Huff, what did you do? You know, I missed the days when Bitcoin was actually volatile, like I am excited to see that it moved and I was also excited to see that it moved down last week. But as for me personally, Alex, what you said is correct. Bitcoiners were ready to get up and do it. And in the last several months, I have, because of Bob Burnett's lovely wife, Lola, I heard a comment that she said she made about health and fitness. She said you have to approach it like it is your lifestyle. Yeah, kind of kind of changes things up. I'm raring to go at like five o 'clock in the morning. Start workout, just went to Pilates. That's my whole life story, guys. Now you know it. Nice. I like it. I think it's awesome. Like I've shifted also because now I'm on the East Coast. So the showtime starts differently for me now. And I have time first thing in the morning, get up and go do physical things. And man, it's it's been amazing. It's been awesome. You've got to exercise for life to keep your life long and healthy. It is a lifetime thing. And finding something that you enjoy doing while you exercise is critical to that. Personally, since I'm on the West Coast, I make my bed and it's a successful day before Cafe Bitcoin. And I am not qualified to discuss anything, just so everybody knows. It's all good. Shout out to Mike Germano in the audience, throwing you an invite if you would like to come up here and obligation to do so. Alex, good morning. Welcome. I think this is the first time you've been up here now. Hey, good morning, everybody. Yeah. Thanks for inviting me up. This is a lot of fun. I'm always listening while changing diapers in the morning and doing the whole mom thing before I clock in. So thanks for having me. Yeah. What are you excited about in Bitcoin and with Swan and with everything? What are you excited about? Wow. That's a loaded question. But I mean, short term, I am stoked on Pacific Bitcoin coming up. I sent out an email blast this weekend. Hopefully many of you guys received it. And I heard you mention your panel, Alex. And the description in the email of that panel is... So the title is Shitcoin Slayers, but that's pretty awesome. And basically, shitcoiners are shaking in their boots and stand no chance against Alex, Tone Vays, Jimmy, Pierre. There'll definitely be some fighting words and not some subtle jabs. It's going to be an awesome talk. Yeah, just a lot of good stuff in the pipeline for PB. Hope to see you guys there. Tone Vays, good morning. We're on a panel together. Good morning. Yeah, I saw that in the email that you were sending that over. Yeah, so that's great. Do you guys know which day that would be? That first day or second day? I have no idea. I just literally just found out myself because I got the email just like everybody else. It's funny, right? They're like, they don't even tell me. Yeah, no, it's good. I actually tweeted out just last night. Ethereum had a brand new weekly low 12 -month close against Bitcoin. And that is a very weak TA symbol for Ethereum. And it's already going down a little bit today as well. So I think, yeah, shitcoins are in a bit of trouble. But the weird thing is, though, have you guys seen what is going on over in Singapore right now with token 2049, which pretty much has become the biggest shitcoin conference in the world? It is crazy. That conference is so scary to me. It tells me that shitcoiners still have an unreasonable amount of money. And maybe the bear market's not over yet. I don't know if anyone's seen the party videos from there. No. What I wonder about is, in this next cycle, are they tapping Asia? Are you going to see a lot of shitcoin conferences over in Asia? And are they going to be gigantic? Oh, I was going to just say probably. But the scary thing is that that conference was massive. And they're renting out sweets with the best views of the... Let's get some context. Let's get some context. What do you mean by massive? What does this mean? What does massive mean to you? Numbers? Do you have an idea of a number of attendees kind of thing? I don't. I'm assuming 5 ,000 to 10 ,000 people. I wasn't going to watch that much. But it was like the after party, right? Like renting out the most expensive restaurant in Singapore. Getting front row seats or the best views of F1, a race that was happening the day after the event. If you just do the hashtag token2049 and just look at their after parties, I don't think anyone really cares. It seemed like a borderline Bitcoin 2022 or one of their older ones. It was insane. And based on how well the shitcoin community is doing, I'm like, man, this bear market may not be over yet. Well, Tone, they're long on other people's fiat, but that tells me they're short on their own tokens. That's why they're spending so hard. It's possible. Is Ethereum ever going to make new highs against Bitcoin? Nope. No, no way. And I said that on a show. I was on Ben Cohen's podcast and a lot of his audience is apparently shitcoiners. And I said that no shitcoin has ever made a new high versus Bitcoin in the following bull market of Bitcoin. Like it's never happened. Actually, I did find one exception. That exception was Doge. But that's because of Elon Musk. It's not because of anything Doge did. And BNB, right? No, BNB never really pumped in the 2017 market because it was just launching then. So BNB's high is the 2021 bull market, and that will never be surpassed. In the case of Ethereum, it's the 2017 bull market. In the case of Litecoin, it's the 2013 bull market. So if a token has been around for like a full year before the bull market, that is its ultimate high. Like it never breaches it. Ethereum will never break its 2017 high. No way.

The Rev & The Rabbi
Fresh update on "richard" discussed on The Rev & The Rabbi
"Mike Rio, Jeanine Furo, Sid Rosenberg and so much more. Plus autographed copies Connect readers with books in the WABC Radio Book Club. It was bound to happen. Go to WABCRadioStore .com Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, George W. Bush and we'll see you next time. All of these presidents relied on one man to secure their seat in the Oval Office. That man is Roger Stone. Blowing the whistle on what's happening in America. Blowing the whistle on what's happening around the world and today at 3 p .m. He's on 77 WABC. A station built just for you. Entertaining talk information and New York I'm disgusted with it. The world famous and American original talk radio 7 WABC and WABCradio .com Here's the man who is New York. Exploring the truth. Telling both sides with common sense thinking. Here's John Catsimatidis on talk radio 77 WABC. This is the Cats Roundtable. What is today is Mario Canomo a banker in the big banks of Europe and in the United States. And he gives us an update of what the heck is going on in Europe and Mario you're there now for a couple of weeks. Tell me what you have found. Yes good morning Cats Roundtable. So let's with start some information that was released regarding the Eurozone and specifically the core inflation is down. Everybody's excited and

Mike Gallagher Podcast
A highlight from The Mike and Mark Davis Daily Chat - 09/15/23
"I thought I was having a stroke. I think, is that me talking again? That was the previously on the Mike and Mark segment, because we got through all the important stuff, because there have been some things going on. But then I didn't really get to the part where our plane got hit by something during our sojourn in New York. What did your plane get hit by? What kind of thing hits planes these days? A bird? Bingo! Bird strike. Now, here's the good news. We were not on the plane. So what do you mean, our plane? So we're at DFW, getting ready to board for New York on Thursday afternoon last week. And then the word comes from the gate. It's never a good thing like, flight, we got a special announcement, draw near, light a fire, here we go, we got info. And it was, there would be a delay because on the way in the flight, which usually would turn around in about 45 minutes, yeah, that wasn't going to happen because there was a bird strike on the way in. And it was American. And listen, you've done a lot of travel and I have too, somewhat less, when they tell you the delay is going to be an hour and a half, you know it's going to be five. You know, you may not get out that day. Actually, the delay really wound up being about close to an hour and a half and American actually handled it very, very nicely. I'll tell you what they did, they put us on another plane, which I'm thankful for because I believe that the technicians and the workers would all get in there and make sure there's not, you know, a nest of birds in the turbine engines or so. I mean, but I was glad to be on another plane. But that gets me to question number two for my travel oracle, Mike Gallagher. You're both a travel oracle and a dog lover, right? We all love travel and dogs, correct? At the same time on the list of things we love travel. So it's a fixture now. Everybody's got, and I'm not talking about a support peacock or any of this idiocy, but actual service dogs are a common thing. And I love that when I see somebody, I know they got something going on and it just makes me feel, you know, empathy and love toward one. I sat in front of one yesterday, beautiful dog, well behaved, and a lady with special needs. You could tell she, I think she was with her daughter and that, and it was a big dog, but they were at her feet and just sleeping all through the flight and just as docile and peaceful and beautiful as can be. So here's the question I have, where do they poop? If you've got a service dog and it's like, well, it's going to be four hours. Now, some airports, DFW among them have places, I think, where you can go take the puppy when puppy has to pop a squirt. I mean, I totally get it. Lord knows if I do, it's right there. But what if a Rover has one in the chamber and I mean, we're sorry, your flight is going to be four hours. How in the world? And I've never, now that you mentioned with all the travel I do, I've never, ever heard of any kind of an accident on the plane with a service dog. Well, maybe, maybe they just have doggy bags. Would people have carry doggy bags with them? And they're able to scoop stuff up. You know, I mean, you talk about travel challenges though. My friends, Joey and Peg took three days to get back from New York to South Carolina. This is what they do. Walk. No, it was the flights were canceled because of weather on Sunday. Then they were all sold out on Monday. Then they got back on a plane Tuesday, and then it stormed again on Tuesday. They finally got in a car, tried to drive from New York to South Carolina, made it to Philly, and then were able to get on a flight from Philly into South Carolina. And that's a normal thing, though. When you say an hour and a half, believe me, tell that to Joey Hudson. It took three days. He would have killed to take an hour and a half. One of the last thing, truly last thing, because this ties into technology you talked about yesterday. We were talking about the wonderful story of the electric vehicle caravan that just was destroyed by the facts of life and Jennifer Granholm because they couldn't find a charging station, blah, blah, blah. And you talked about the Tesla experience where the, where your car knows where the charging stations are, knows how many people are at the charging station. And so that put very front of mind the notion of modern technology and how it knows where people are. Surely you've done this. That was my first experience. Again, at DFW, one of these stores, it's run by Amazon. It's called Grab and Fly, which is a very uncomfortable title where you walk, you go bloop, you scan your credit card. Then you go through a turnstile, walk in, buy, pick stuff up and walk out. And it knows what you have and hits your card. And I asked the woman, I said, how does it know that I have a magazine and a bottle of water? It just knows. And it knows where you are. It senses what you have. It senses where you are. It follows, it tells you, it tells you how long you were in the store to the second. I mean, cause, cause I just experienced my first Amazon pop -up store last week in New York. They have one right across from the hotel. You feel like you're shoplifting because you don't even walk out. You don't even have to put it. You don't even have to, or you could just carry it all out under your arms like a shoplifter. Like you're in San Francisco. It's another day in New York city. I mean, you'd walk out and then about five or 10 minutes after you leave the Amazon store, you'll get a note on your, you'll get an email and you'll get a notification on your Amazon app. Okay. You had a 33 ounce bottle of water. You had a bottle of two bag of chips. You have it. It's the craziest thing I've ever seen in my life. I totally love it. I love it until this technology is suddenly turned against us, which could happen at any moment. I'm thinking so. Now, speaking of technology, how much have you done with AI? How much have you done on air about artificial intelligence? Have you talked about it? Okay. In terms of talking about whether the answer is a little in, I can give you a 30 second summation. I'm fascinated by perfect framework because I'm fascinated by it. There are parts of it that are really cool. I think it's making students lazy cause they're getting it to write compositions for them, but you can always tell when AI has done it because it's kind of passionless and unartful. I farted around with a stupid chat GPT thing. I remember I had it write a promo for your show, which was actually pretty good and et cetera, et cetera. But the whole notion of surrendering to artificial brains, all manner of things is a little daunting to me. Now, when you asked me about it as a topic - Well, let me tell you what I'm getting to. When I bring it up - Instead of your dissertation, let me tell you why I'm asking you about it because we got a big problem on our hands. I'm going to tell you right now, and your indifference to it has been my indifference to - I'm not indifferent. No, no, no. I don't mean indifference, but I'm with you. I'm exactly the way you've been. It's like, oh, okay. It's kind of cool. Let me tell you something. It's bad, and they're holding hearings on Capitol Hill, Mark, and let me tell you how it hit us yesterday, a dose of reality that applies to what we do for a living because this is not chat GPT. This is real potential for some serious mayhem and Armageddon. Let me tell you what happened. I'm on the show yesterday, and I can see, I don't know how your setup is in your studio in Dallas, but I can see the incoming calls that Tracy is getting when they call the show. Line four lights up. It's Los Angeles. I see Tracy because we're all on camera in this setup we have, and I can see her eyes get real big. She puts the guy on hold. She says, oh my gosh, it's Bill Maher on line four. I said, Bill Maher? She goes, yeah, and I look up, and she's got Bill Maher on the screen, line four, Los Angeles. I said, it's not Bill Maher. She goes, I'm telling you, I'm talking to him. I know what he sounds like. It's Bill Maher. I say, Eric, talk to the guy. See if it's Bill Maher. And supposedly, he's calling a few select talk shows that he respects to explain why he's bringing his show back to HBO despite the writer's strike. And he is bringing his show back despite the writer's strike. That's a story. Good for him. It's a cool story because he's telling them, you know what? I got people that got to pay the bills. And here we go with 46 % pay raise, and they want to work one less day a week and 90 weeks of vacation. Oh, yeah. Other than that, they're fine. I'm going to take the labor side in a minute, but finish. Oh, please. Well, let's not get distracted with that crap. A little bit. Go ahead. A labor side. Yeah, you take the labor side. I'm going to have some love for the law workers. You go demand, Jeff Mitchell, you want a 46 % pay raise tomorrow. Give me a break. Give me a break. It's not the same thing. Don't be a pro -union. Come on, give me a break. I'm the last person to do that, but those workers were told certain things and had certain things happen and they've been screwed to a degree. But they want a 46 % pay raise. They want a 32 hour work week. They want 40 hour pay for 32 weeks of work, 32 hours of work. They want, give me a break. They're greedy. They might be entitled to something, but they ain't entitled to what they're demanding. Don't take the side. Okay, Richard, Jimmy Hoffa, knock it off. Don't squirrelly on me. Oh, golly. Focus, focus. So Bill Maher. Well, yeah, you tell him good. Be pro labor. Yeah, you'd be pro labor. So anyway, Bill Maher. So I say, Eric, get on the phone. Talk to the guy. Eric has been at this for 25 years. Yes. He is a veteran. He comes back to me, eyes bugged open. He said, Mike, I'm 95 % sure that's Bill Maher. I said the final. It was responsive. He asked it. He asked it questions and he asked the question and the guy answered. Now I say, finally, we see the number on the screen. We have caller ID. I said, what's the, what's the number? We ran it. We run a check on the number. Oh, it's, it's Bill Maher. So the guy, so I'm thinking, I think it's him. So I went on the air with him. Listen to what it sounded like. No. Okay. Listen to what? Well, listen, why not? Bill Maher's calling the show. Because you know, it's fake because I don't know it's fake. Bill flipping Maher is not going to cold call radio stations. He's going to have three, three production assistants call your people and that's how it's going to go. Okay. So listen to the exchange. Listen, listen to the exchange. We're all mystified by this. I'm going to, we're going to probably get burned on this. Uh, I got, and the problem is I got 30 seconds left in this segment. So we're all, we're all taking bets as to whether or not you are really Bill Maher. Is this Bill Maher? Yes, it is Bill Maher. Thanks for letting me come on.

Evangelism on SermonAudio
A highlight from How & When We Do Evangelism
"Well, good afternoon. Thank you for being here. I was thinking this afternoon as I was looking at all the people that are here, how the Lord used obviously it was His Word, but 12 apostles, 12 apostles. There's 12. To flip the world. What a God we serve. I shared this verse with a prayer group on Wednesday. Romans 10 .1. Romans 10 .1. We'll read that verse to you and then we'll pray. Beginning in verse 1 and only verse 1, Romans 10. Brethren, my heart's desire and prayer to God for Israel is that they may be saved. Let's pray. Oh God, let it be true by Your mighty hand that our desire, our heart's desire, our prayer, our prayer to You is that our family would be saved. That those within our church wall would be saved. Lord, let it be true that our heart's desire and our prayer to You would be that Manchester would be saved. That Tennessee would be saved. Lord, that America would be saved. Lord, we just openly confess, Lord, just repent in our hearts. God, that we have such a narrow, small view of You. God, You are mighty to save. I mean, God, forgive us, oh God, forgive us how we have tried to limit You, Lord, as if we could. Lord, forgive us if we've thought that great moves of You are impossible. Lord, oftentimes we pray for revival, Lord, and we pray for awakening, but Lord, perhaps if we were pressed on it, we would say we don't truly believe it. Oh, let it not be, Lord. Oh, we need You, God, oh, we need You. Lord, You have storehouses, treasuries in Heaven that we know nothing about. Great is Your faithfulness, Lord. Oh, would You pour out Your Spirit. Oh, Lord, would You bring great revival, great awakening, Lord, in our own hearts, Lord, in our own homes, in our own church houses, Lord, in our world, Lord, make Your glory known. Oh, give us a better understanding of who You are, Lord. Lord, You're faithful time and time again. Thank You for Your Word. Oh, strengthen me, Lord, strengthen us. We ask this in Christ's name. Amen. Well, I've been tasked with speaking on how and when we evangelize. I'm really honored and encouraged that Pastor John and this church have that desire to learn about evangelism, that they take evangelism seriously, and I know Bobby would include himself in this, but just as an evangelist, as a minister, we just want to avail ourselves to you if you have questions or if you need the encouragement, if you need resources, if you need tracts, if you want opportunities to serve alongside us, we just want to avail ourselves to you and afford that to you. I'm encouraged that John and Richard both drove down from Nashville, and that was a good drive. Richard shared with me he just needed the encouragement. There's not a lot of encouragement even in our churches. How sad, but how true, not always a lot of encouragement to evangelize. So Bobby prepared. I think he has a lot of lessons on this, and he shared with me one of his and kind of with the attitude, if my bullet fits your gun, then use it, and so he did a lot of the mining on this. I've definitely added some of my heart's desires to share with you. I trust it will be an encouragement to you. So how and when we evangelize. I'd say the greatest verse, at least for me, is, Bobby shared that with you earlier, Romans 1 .16, for I'm not ashamed of the gospel. When I think of that verse, drawn to the words of Christ, that those that are ashamed of Him, He'll be ashamed of us. That's heavy on us, does it not? Are we ashamed of Christ? Are we ashamed of God? Are you? Now you may give lip service and say no, but what does your actions say? Are you ashamed of God? Romans 1 .16, for I'm not ashamed of the gospel, for it's the power of God to salvation for everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek quote that was shared with me. Moeller said this, at the end of the day, the biggest obstacle to evangelism is Christians who do not share the gospel. It's not churches that don't support it or antagonistic people on the streets or lack of knowledge, but the biggest obstacle of evangelism is Christians who don't share the gospel. So for professing Christians, you know, why are we not sharing the gospel? What's the reason? So what is evangelism? This is evangelism. Speaking to others the gospel of Jesus Christ. That's evangelism. Speaking the gospel, the good news of Christ Jesus. This should include that God is the holy creator of all things, that man is a sinner deserving of God's eternal wrath, that Jesus lived a perfect life and died a substitutionary death, substitutionary, we get our word substitute, right, in our place, in the place of those that believe, that he rose from the grave and grants eternal life to all who believe. And lastly, the only way to be reconciled to God and saved from his eternal wrath in hell is to repent, to turn from your sin and turn to Christ. And trust him alone. You're turning to him in faith. And so, you know, that's, sometimes that's a hot topic or sometimes that's misunderstood at repent and believe. But brothers and sisters, it's really the same coin. If we're going to turn to Christ, well obviously turning to him, we're turning away from something else. It's that change of mind. If we are now believing in Christ, we're looking to him, then we've changed our mind on the love of our sin. So how do we evangelize? How do we evangelize? So what do you think of when you think, I need to evangelize or I'm going to evangelize or I have the desire to evangelize? How would you evangelize? There's many ways. There's only one message, but there's many ways. So one heading would be personal evangelism, right? So we would take, we would witness, we would proclaim that gospel to those that we already have a relationship with and that personal evangelism. So think of someone like your worker, your neighbor, your friend, your family. It's personal. We know them on a personal level. It's one to one. It's usually in somewhat intimate setting, personal evangelism. So think of it this way. How much, how much must we hate someone not to share the gospel with them? So do we really believe that there's a hell to be shunned? Do we believe that? Do we believe that there's really a hell for all those who do not believe the gospel? Do we just say that or do we really believe it? And if we do believe that there is a hell to shun, that there's a hell to flee from, there's a wrathful God to flee from and come to him on his terms, then how much must we hate someone not to share the gospel with them? And I'll take it a step further, but ultimately by not proclaiming the gospel to someone, that message of reconciliation, in effect we're damning them. We're saying, you're not good enough for me to tell you how to be reconciled with God. We leave them helpless, we leave them hopeless. So we must ask ourselves that. You know, it's awkward. It's inconvenient. Bobby talked about sometimes that fear. Brothers and sisters, I think what it boils down to is that we fear man and we don't fear God. You know, we'll try to water things down like, well, fear in God means honoring him or reverencing him or being in awe of him or respecting him. It's true. It's all those things. But we're to fear him. We don't fear him like the worldly. We don't fear him like those that do not have an advocate with the Father. But we're to fear him. One of the great things of fearing God is if we fear him, we don't have to fear man. So how much must we hate someone not to share the gospel with them? So how we evangelize personal evangelism. Who's heard of friendship evangelism, right? Let's be buddies. Let's hit it off well. Let's build a rapport. Let's build a relationship with them. And then, you know, when I've gained their confidence, I've gained their trust, when they know that I truly care for them, well, then maybe I'll slip the gospel in. Is that how we're to evangelize? So at what point do you share the gospel? Is you've it had your friend -versary on 90 days in or two years in, or when do you transition from I'm only a friend to now I want to share the gospel with you? How about this? If they're your friends and you use the excuse, well, they don't want to hear about Christ, well, what's more important now, your friendship with them or telling them how to be reconciled with the holy God? I'm not saying that we don't share our one true hope with our friends. It's not that we don't build relationships or that we don't care for people, that we don't do life with people. We don't have to become someone's friend. We don't even have to be liked by them to tell them the truth and love. You know, I think it's a wonderful scheme of the devil, right, to delay. Well, I need to really get in and know them before I share the gospel. Or is it really, I don't really want to right now, so this is my excuse. I'll just keep building this relationship and maybe one day I'll build the confidence. Bobby spoke on that as well as you oftentimes hear maybe even on t -shirts, so share the gospel at all times and if necessary use words, foolishness. All the time use words. How else are they here? And then what about strangers on how we evangelize in personal evangelism? Is it okay to impose our views on them? Bobby gave a wonderful example, right? I'm a barber. I talk to people every day, all day. I talk to people till my brain hurts and I just want to be alone in a cabin for months. But I'm not called to do that, though, how badly I want to. But they will tell me everything. Stuff I don't even care to hear. Stuff I don't want to hear. It's because it just overflows, right? They want to talk about their sports car or their hobby or their wife or their kids. It's not all bad things, but it just overflows out of them. And they're going to tell you. They're going to tell you exactly what's on their mind. And so how many times have we heard professing Christians say, well, I don't want to impose my views on others. And we would impose our views if we saw someone fixing to get run over. We would snatch them. We'd help them. We'd grab them. We'd do what it took. I don't think we fully comprehend eternity and the holiness of God. And so, yes, we impose our views. The one true view, the only view. Brother, sister, you must be reconciled to God, for if you are not, you will meet Him in that final day. Jesus and the apostles, they preached primarily to strangers. We see that all throughout the gospels and the book of Acts. They didn't have to become their friends. They didn't even have to know their name to share the gospel with them. And we see specifically the example in John 4, the woman at the well. There was no friendship there. They met there at the well and the gospel was proclaimed. So that's personal evangelism. Secondly, and how we evangelize is oftentimes an open air. I've been with Bobby and been out with John. And I know some, even a guy or two here that's been willing to go with me. And I know Richard goes out on the streets as well. So open air preaching. And that's the public reading of scripture or the proclamation of the law or preaching of the gospel in an outdoor setting. This is Charles Spurgeon who said, Bobby shared this quote with me. I've read it before. I love it. This is what Spurgeon says. He says, no sort of defense is needed for preaching out of doors. But it would need a very potent argument to prove that a man had done his duty who has never preached beyond the walls of a meeting house. So just to explain that a little bit, if you didn't grasp it, saying there's no excuse, you don't have to have a reason to go preach on the street. But you'd have to have a really good argument to say why you always stand here and preach, but you've never went on the street. So we are called beyond the four walls. Love George Whitfield. So much history there. Read an abbreviated biography on him not too long ago. Just so convicting. He said, I believe I was never more acceptable to my master than when I was standing to teach those hearers in the open fields. You know, I think we have some type of romanticized thought that like a long time ago everyone loved God or a long time ago it was like more peaceful or like a long time ago it wasn't as wicked as it is now. Not true. There's nothing new under the sun. There's always been haters of God. And when you read some of the accounts of George Whitfield, you know, he had dead cats thrown on him, had blood thrown on him, had people stand beside him and just clang drums while he was preaching. We've had things thrown at us and I'm sure put on us and such, but when's the last time you had blood dumped on you or a dead animal put on you? That's not to say that we oftentimes don't go through difficulties or hard things. We do. But don't have that romanticized view that, well, a long time ago it was easier. Brothers and sisters, it was not any easier than it is today. And then a principle manner by which God spread his word throughout the scripture was through the open air. And we see that. Noah, a herald of righteousness. Solomon, Ezra, Jeremiah, Isaiah, Ezekiel, Jonah, think of all the prophets. John the Baptist coming and preaching his message of repentance. Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the world. Jesus, the disciples, Philip, Paul, Paulus, all them outdoor open air proclaimers of the good news of Jesus Christ. And preaching ultimately is a calling from God internally that should be confirmed by and a submission to one's local church. So by no means is this a lone wolf. Is this a, well, you know what I see oftentimes in some street ministers and those that are very evangelistic in their zeal is, well, everyone on the church is not on board. And so, you know, let's just ride off the church. I'm the only holy one. You know, it's just me. No one else wants to go. Maybe everyone's not called to go on the street. I think a lot are that don't. But maybe not everyone's called. Maybe that sister in the church that doesn't go on the street, she's called to just a ministry of prayer. And so we need to be plugged into the local church and be submitted to the local church. The Lord has oversight for us for a reason. So another way, as Bobby said, we, some guys, they're kind of more drawn to apologetics. And apologetics, again, is not the I'm making an apology, but it is a defense of a certain set of beliefs. But apologetics is not evangelism unless it includes the gospel message. And so this refutation of facts or, you know, this just debating for the sake of debating. Brothers and sisters, if it doesn't, if it's not grounded on Christ, the message of Christ is not heralded in it, it's not evangelism. Though it can bolster one's faith, though it can shut up often many that want to come with an argument, but many of those that you'll meet that want to have these arguments, they don't even really know what they're saying, most of them. They just, that's their defense, their defense of the gospel. They're trying to shut you down and turn you off and soothe their conscience. And so just a practical point of advice I can say when sharing the gospel with others is they're going to come at you with all kinds of angles of, well, can we trust the Bible? Or my cousin told me this, or I knew a professor that said this, or whatever it is. And that's fine, we can have those debates, we can bring apologetics into it. What we have to remember is we always have to circle back around to this question, is what are you going to do with your sins on Judgment Day? What are you going to do with your sins on Judgment Day? For the Christian, you'll stand closer than righteousness of Christ.

Evangelism on SermonAudio
A highlight from Questions & Answers about Evangelism
"All right books on evangelism if anybody wants to make notes of these great if not, it's okay Evangelism in the sovereignty of God JI Packer Definitely my favorite my second favorite and it's a close second is a book called an alarm to the unconverted by a man named Puritan guy named Joseph Alene a ll e I and e and It's actually just being reprinted by a British company called Christian focus if any and matter of fact if most of you guys I think have me on Facebook or whatever. You could tell this anybody you want in the church pastor John. I actually My wife will probably go what I ordered 35 copies that book The day before we came up here to give away. So if you want to copy that book you send me your address I'll happily send you one my expense the best Short treatment I've ever read on evangelism. This is like a 40 page book Let and it's a little bit difficult to find but you can still find it It's called reformed evangelism by a guy named Morton Morton Smith like Morton salt Pursuing God as a little booklet by man named Jim Elif e ll iff Two books by Paul washer the gospel call and true conversion and the Gospels power and message One of the books on the list is back there on the table even if none by Ryan Denton my friend He also wrote a book with another friend. My name Scott Smith called a certain sound a Certain sound and even if none by Ryan Denton Joel Beaky be ee ke wrote Puritan evangelism really good Today's evangelism its message and methods by Ernest Reisinger and Yeah Book recommendations on evangelism, please know this Adam kind of alluded to this earlier but if there's any way that I can ever help you or Pray for you In in your evangelistic efforts or just in anything Please don't hesitate to reach out You know if I were to consider myself an evangelist Which that's a whole nother sermon for another day I think evangelists in the New Testament was like church planter, but it says he gave him as gifts to the church to To build up the body of Christ for the work of ministry. And so I feel like that's what God has graciously helped me to do and And I need to be built up too. You know, I'm not You know, I'm not just the builder up. I need a lot of building up and a lot of sharpening as well. So Allene questions Joseph a ll e I n e E I n e Yeah, Richard man just do me a favor sent send me your address as soon as I get those in I'll send you one I'd love to do that An alarm to the unconverted is probably the best Treatment I've seen on Man's need for regeneration and God's work in regeneration and This new one that I've just ordered it's just being published and I think they've kind of modernized the language I mean a book was probably written in the 15 or 1600s originally and it is it is a little bit challenging with the Old language, so I'm kind of excited to get this new Updated version they've updated it a couple times before one time They changed the name and they changed it to a sure guide to heaven And I was like, oh no, that's just not the same as an alarm to the unconverted But yeah Does anybody have any questions Adam Yeah Yeah, so I mean I think So that's a good really good question John sometimes people ask that question It's kind of like you you see that they're you know, shooting an arrow at you and other times.

Dennis Prager Podcasts
A highlight from Is There a Devil?
"You know, I so love this opening theme that I wonder how many people tune into Dennis and Julie just to hear the music. Credit to Richard Friedman. Correct. And his wife, Leslie. Correct on both. I really do. And it puts me in a mood, doesn't it? It's an interesting question. This is so typical of us. I can't believe that I got completely off everything I was going to think about. Can any of our sensory perceptions trigger the emotions that sound does, specifically music, but sound in general? This is so typical of you. And by the way, I love it. It's what makes you unique. Smell, perhaps. I think smell. So I've thought of smell, but it's rare. When I smell a certain... My mom uses Jo Malone perfume, and when I smell that, I think of my mom. And I feel very comforted. It's very powerful. In fact, when I smell it, I think of your mom, too. By the way, this is Dennis and Julie. Welcome. Oh, yeah. Dennis and Julie. Shalom. Let me just go through this. The power of sound is unrivaled in most ways. Not in every way, but I'll give you an example. I'm laughing because I'm laughing at me. I don't know how many people have ever made this experiment, conducted this experiment to speak better English. Watch a horror movie without sound, and it is not one -fifth as scary. That's interesting. Well, you say that the ear is more powerful than the eye. I'd like you to explain why, because I know this Dennis Prager argument, but I forget the reasons. Okay, so I developed this from the credo of Judaism, which is in the Torah, the first five books. Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord alone, or the Lord is one. There are many ways of translating it. The Lord is our God. So that's the credo. Many Jews walked into the gas chambers reciting this phrase. Isn't that the Shema? The Shema, yeah. What does Shema mean? It means hear or listen. So why do they say hear, O Israel? It doesn't say look, O Israel. That's my point. It says hear, O Israel. In that regard, I believe that audio only is in many ways more powerful than audio and video. Why? Because the eye is emotional and the ear is both emotional, like the sounds of a horror movie, and intellectual. The eye is not intellectual. The eye is seduced by beauty in a nanosecond, and it just reacts emotionally. Roger Ailes, the former president of Fox News, he's dead, right? He died? I think he died. Anyway, that doesn't matter at all to the point. He was the former head of Fox News. He was entangled in this sexual harassment scandal, but he did have a knack for identifying talent. And one of his criteria or tests when he was evaluating if he wanted someone to be on the air was to turn the sound off and just watch them without hearing anything. But that makes sense because it's Fox News. It's cable TV. You only have, what, five minutes? So he wanted to make sure that you were visually riveting? Yeah, okay. Well, that's TV. That's TV, exactly. It makes sense for TV, but it sort of supports your point that the eye is not intellectual. I'll give an example. Yes, the intellectual is clear, but even emotionally, like the sound of a horror movie, it's not a horror movie without the sound.

¿Dice Así? Podcast
A highlight from Estad firmes en la libertad | Glatas 5 con Hernan de Juan1Uno
"Saludos, saludos to all those who have listened to this. It is a pleasure to be able to be here with you to simply discuss the book, the book, the book, with the point of view or the way in which each one of us we interpret the book, and today we want two things, first of all, we want to thank Emmanuel for not being with us because of the fact that he was a member of his team, and, as always, with us, it is our pleasure to introduce David Lopez, Andres Marin, Alejandro Pizarro, and one of our executive producers, Paola Reyes. And this is very special, because we have with us the author, Hernán Dálvez, the author of the book, Mission, Gracias y Libertad, and the author of the book, the reform of the IAEU Argentina Uruguay, director of publications, Juan Uno Uno Publishing House. The author, Hernán, welcome to the show. Yes, it is a program where, when I met Hernán Dálvez, I said to the group that we invited Hernán, we wanted to discuss it, we wanted to share with us the impact of the literature and the context in which it was formed, and it is a place to be. Thank you very much. Thank you very much. I hope that you have enjoyed it, and with the help of the book, I would like to thank you. I am the author of the book Mission, Gracias y Libertad, and this book is another author. I am the author of the book, The Hero of the IAEU, which is the book that is used in the United States in the country of Uruguay. I have a congregation called San Lucas, which is one of the largest congresses of our church. We are talking about the book, Galatas, and we are in the capital of the U .S. No, no, we are talking about Galatas, I just wanted to comment. I think that the first time we had one person, Hernán, was relevant during this program because he did not want to be able to express the love of the pastor, who is also a pastor, Hernán, obviously. But I think that the work of writing, literature, alternatives to Latin America, has been much more relevant than the mission of a pastor. But I don't know if I would want to be able to express the love of the pastor, right? But I... The love of the pastor, Hernán. It has been a lot of love, but I think that it has been more than that for the rest of the day, because in the editorial, Hernán is one in Latin America. Wow, that's great! Thank you very much, Hernán, that's great! No, no, Hernán. Hernán, well, at the end of the day, Hernán, we are fans of the idea, we are the ministers, we are the leaders who are really trying things that are not one other editorial to introduce. Well, Hernán has done a lot of things. Well, Hernán has done a lot of things. Because I would like to test this idea of this monopoly of theology that existed for years in Latin America where it was only introduced by theology, because the other is inconvenient. And, God help me, thank you, Hernán, for the work that you are doing, there are so many things that are really alternatives. And one of the most important things is that Hernán... Warren, for example, there are so many things that don't exist anymore. I don't know, I don't know if people, I don't know, I don't know if people are more savvy and with the realm of, I don't know, psychology, there are so many people who are doing excellent work but they don't have the strength that the famous pastors have. And the famous pastors are not interesting. It's true, for the world. It's true. Well, thank you very much. I mean, it's... I don't know, I don't know, I don't know. If it's not for the mind, not for the theology. If it's very interesting, what we do in Spain, it's really the aside of us. And also, there are so many things that don't have anything to do with the air in Spain. One of them is the control of the society. If you are in a city where the confectionary is appropriate, if you are publicly, solely, you are not allowed to talk with anyone, you are not allowed to talk with anyone. Nobody is an authoritarian person. Also, I would like to publicate the right, which is an Anglican, I would like to publicate Richard Rourke, who is a Roman post -apocalyptic person, because we are in a conversation about the origins, about the people of the world, and of course, one of the things that comes to mind about their own national or doctrinal space, or their own ideology, which is what I have to say about the land, is that there is no material there. And of course, I don't have to talk with the people of the world that we have to publicate, but we have to publicate the necessity of having a conversation about it. That's a very good question. The question is, why do you have to do something to be able to work on the pen? Why do you have to do something that no one wants to do? do I can the work of my sociopaths, I can do the work of my time. But to be able to do these things, I don't have to talk about the pen, no? Well, of course, but we hope that it will be more. Yes, yes, more, more, more, more. For this year, it's three. It's three. One, I would like to say, the day that I was born here, in Gueses, the day that I was born, in Gueses, I think it was in the academic collection, and it was a dictionary of the same words about the sexuality of Renato Linz. So, in Spanish, as in English, the same words about the sexuality that in the book define a dictionary. These are the words that are in this year. We'll talk about some of them later. How do you like the books? Ah, well, I've had a lot of conversations. I've always thought that the first function of the book is pastoral. The first book that I published, I didn't know it was central to Marko's book. And as I started to ask some questions about the pathetism of the dead, or about the substitution of pen, including with gala, the book that's written in gala, for the first public book that I read, that came out of the space, was very evangelical and very fundamentalist. It was a book that allowed me to exchange a cost for the middle class. We had a book for the last 20 years of the reform, that was made in the core areas, where we participated in different South American parties. There was nothing in Latin America, without nothing, except for the five souls. There were many books that were promoting the reform, but nobody was talking about the five souls. So there was a distinct thought, that we would write about one of the souls. There was also the man with a christological name, a non -Christological name, and we said to the public, this is what I want to say, this is what I want to talk about, and for me, it was a book that had more rights than what we have known for a long time. And think I it's like... The perception? One of the ones in the middle, no? Like Pivote, or one of my ideas, or the other one. What is the meaning of the Christianism? And the friend of mine, I think, that he needed to take care of his behavioral level, for the sake of Chile, in some way, and to support the institutional revolution. It was the first four years, when one of the religions came out here to do something more. And they gave us two letters, two letters and some were written in the name, to what was the third letter. The first, Patrick, is very local, he doesn't have a lot of sense in Latin America. The third one was written all over the world. It's not a bomb, in the name of the reform of sexuality. We had some corridors, but not in the same world all over the world. And the most successful was with the we had to go there, and with this letter we had a lot of sense. It was a very difficult problem. A lot of problems. What? In the end. And this letter was, as I said, when one wrote it, the last letter. Yes, it was a letter from when one wrote it. From when one wrote it. Not too much, but it was written by the people of the city. Fair. But it didn't exist properly. Well, the first letter was written by Richard Rohr, because if it was written by Richard Rohr, we couldn't have written it in the editorial. It's the event, event, event, event, that is universal. Fair. All of them were succeeded by Richard Rohr. We wrote a book, that has been written for 30 copies. In two years. And how did you write it with him? With his book? With Nadiya? No, with his book. The book at the moment of Jesus. Well, the first letter, thank you, was given a nomination to David Cameron Cyrus, and we were at a scene of the recognition of S .E. Sanchez, who was also at the New York Public Library. And it was this invitation, because there was a Congress of Vibilistas, there was a section of the book, and it was written, it was, well, thank you, thank you, thank you, but S .E. Sanchez, Robert, Vibilistas, Vibilistas, and we decided, and we told them, as two years ago, to do it, so we decided to do it, and they asked us to publish this book, that they wanted to show us, and they said that it was written in a book that was always written and they told us that they wanted to publish it. So they told us, they didn't know what it was, they told us, they told us a copy of the book that they wrote, and we proposed that there would be a book that would be that you wouldn't be able to read, and they told us, so they wrote the number, as well. So that's what happened with the book, it was a good one. We'll see. So, and it was a very interesting conversation, it was, It was. It was. I am trying to read the book that will be released in the future, in a book I can't read. In the future, dude! No, but, but in theory, it's really interesting that they told us, and thank you for all the support and for allowing me to do it, I had no idea how much they would allow me to do it, and I was like I can't read it, but But thank you for maintaining yourself and for continuing, Hernan. I want to thank you for the invitation and the desire to receive a message that, in the conviction of the Corazón, the truth is that if others have access to the land, there will be a difference in life. And for that, we thank you very much. So, how do we start? I thought you said you were going to be terminated. No, no. It's only in vocation for the conversation that, as I said, it's my pleasure to talk to you in our conversation, so that people can know the best and know what is important. That is what is important.

podcast – Lawyers, Guns & Money
A highlight from LGM Podcast: Remembering Robbie Robertson
"Let me give you a big Labor Day surprise. Most people think if we all exercised the same and eat the same, we'd all look the same. And let me tell you why that's wrong. Your body is unique and your metabolism is unique. I'm Laci Green and I'm a super trainer at BODi. That's B -O -D -I dot com. And you can't see me, but I don't look like your average personal trainer. I'm curvy and I'm proud of it. So I created a program for beginners only on the BODi app to show people like us how to get incredible results and be our version of happy and healthy. This isn't just workout videos. It's people like you and me. It's community. It's incredible trainers. It's easy to follow nutrition and mindset experts to help you reduce stress and just feel better. And you can get started with my new program called For Beginners Only. Now, here's the big surprise. If you go to BODi .com right now, that's B -O -D -I dot com. Not only can you get everything BODi has to offer at 50 % off with an annual membership, you'll also get an additional 20 % off, but only during Labor Day weekend. Let's do this together. Go to BODi .com. That's BODi with an I dot com. Robbie wrote the songs and these guys all made them very interesting. They all have beautiful voices. They're incredible musicians, but there's no there there without the songs. And this is what they could not do. And Robbie was able to interpret Levon. He was able to interpret Rick Danko and Richard Manuel. I don't know what the fuck is up with Garth.

The Podcast On Podcasting
A highlight from Ep365: 4 Things To Help You Improve As A Podcaster - Richard Walsh
"What you want to do from the business podcast standpoint, it builds authority. When you do a quality podcast, again, you're bringing on the right guests. Oh, you're presenting the proper contact. Builds a lot of authority, gives people an easy access. It's free. They can listen. You can build that know, like, and trust factor and really get that authority stand in front of them. Most hosts never achieved the results they hoped for. They're falling short on listenership and monetization, meaning their message isn't being heard and their show ends up costing them money. This podcast was created to help you grow your listenership and make money while you're at it. Get ready to take notes. Here's your host, Adam Adams. What's up, podcaster. It's Adam A. Adams, and I've got a returning guest today. His name's Richard Walsh. We will connect you with the previous episode he was on more than two years ago, which was episode number 45 in the 350 or 360 or three 70 range. But back over 300 episodes ago, he was on the podcast about two years ago. What that means that I'm averaging three a week. I think that's what it means. Three episodes a week, Richard Walsh. His bio is in the show notes. You can check out the other link when he was on his company link is in the show notes and also his podcast itself. So that way you can follow him, check him out, get to know him, hire him. He's a business coach. And the podcast name is E .T .O .P. What does E .T .O .P. stand for again? So that's E .T .O .P. Escape the owner prison escape. That's the title of my best. That's right. I remember my best selling book and I modeled that up. Hey, you know what, Richard? When I was looking at your Facebook, we're connected on Facebook. I thought it was interesting. The regiment for your son. Can we talk a little bit about that? Yes, I love to talk about that. OK, all right. So right now he's doing three workouts every single day. What is this like? So he's going in the Navy, OK, which we wouldn't be doing three workouts a day if he was just going to the Navy. I'm a Marine. OK, he's not going to be a Marine because they don't need to. And we'll leave it at that. OK, no offense. The Navy guys out there, they say the Marine Corps is a department of the Navy, but it's the men's department. OK, so I've never heard. I like it. I love being, you know, I'm not original. So he was going, what's called the buzz program. So that's basic underwater demolition seals training. So he wants to be a Navy seal like it's and everybody does. And they'll go in there and there's a 90 percent fill rate. OK, and most of that's even in the first couple of days. OK, well, he's not going to be that. OK, he's going to make it. He's under no delusions of what it is, knows exactly what he's up for. So we embarked on about two and a half months ago. We did about a five month program to get him ready. So my whole goal is to increase the probability for success. OK, so obviously it's a huge physical demand, but really the real demand is mental. OK, they break you, you break. And it's not as long as you don't quit. You'll pretty much make it if you got the head for it. OK, so but physically, again, the increased probability of success. We need to train properly. OK, so I'll give you a real quick what he does. So in the morning, we do a 45 minute conditioning workout. So that's a lot of body weight and includes pull ups, pull ups, push ups, squats, lunges, burpees, you name it. Like we do a ton of stuff, you know, probably body weight or maybe add weight and stuff like that very hard, do 10 sets of that. So we'll do 100 of everything. You'll do 500 reps of stuff in the morning from there would go directly about less than 30 minutes from there. He'll do a six to 10 mile run, which is hills. We're in a very hilly country out here to do a six to 10 mile road run that in the afternoon we go back for pool and he'll do one to two miles of combat side stroke freestyle to work on training water, of course, underwater on your breath. So he actually trains on that as well. It was a boxer as well. We're doing last two years, so we will occasionally do bag workouts or as he did last night, went and sparred eight rounds with four different guys. So we do this five to six days a week, depending on the six, they will vary. And we also have what you saw today at our house in the yard. It created kind of a little outdoor training. So we'll do like an 80 pound log carry for 60 yards. He'll do 10 burpees. He'll do 60 yard bear crawl. He'll do an 80 pound log carry for 60 yards. He'll run with the 35 pound med ball extended above his head to simulate the boats they run with for 60 yards. Then he'll do a 20, a 20 foot rope climb, and they'll come down and take a 50 pound dumbbell and do a single arm farmer's carry, which is just carried at his side, he'll go 35 yards out, switch hands, do 35 yards back. And we'll do that five times. And normally do that right after his six mile run. And we'll do them. So that's three different workouts and it sounds crazy. And it's cause he wants to be in the men's department. Well, he says, yeah, well, yeah, he does, but you'll see it. I train with seals and everything else too. So they are the elite warriors of the world and he wants to be an elite warrior. Okay. That's what he really wants the skills and stuff like that. So, um, and he has a no quit mindset and that's why. Speaking of no quit mindset, I quoted you and I loved it. I loved the quote says, as long as you don't quit, you'll make it. And I was in junior high, middle school. And, and my band director made us memorize quotes. And one of the quotes I could actually a few of the quotes were about persistence and determination. Not quitting, not giving up one being from Calvin Coolidge. And he basically said like, it's not how smart you are. It's not how intelligent you are, even how educated you are or how cool you are, how funny you are, how good looking you are a lot of those things don't really make somebody successful, but what makes somebody successful is never quitting, never giving up. And so like when we're starting a podcast, it's hard, it's brutal. And he's about to go to, I guess it's probably called hell week or something. Is that what it's called? Yeah. In the program buds itself is like 35 weeks long and that's in like week five. Hell week is week five. Okay. Okay. So yeah, it's a lot more than people. Yeah. 35 weeks, nine months or something with basic and airborne school. It's almost a year to get the whole thing done. Okay. And well, so first and foremost, I want to take something that you mentioned that I think you've taken with you to your business also to your business clients that you mentor, you coach them also to your son, the mindset that you've had to be successful, the mindset that he's having to be successful. And I'm extracting this as long as you don't quit, he'll make it. As long as you just keep getting back up when you get knocked down, you'll make it. And I am curious how this can tie into you and your journey. I know you have episode 45, 45. You were on for episode 45, and I'm sure you've gotten knocked down in the last two years. It's been over two years since you've been on. I'm sure you got knocked down as you were starting your business or you started your podcast. How would you feel just to share some of the trials and how you got through them? Just a few ideas, two or three trials that you've gotten through to get to where you are right now. Absolutely. I'll give you a quick quote too, about losing and quitting.

The Financial Guys
A highlight from Richard Grenells Insights on the Consequences of Exclusion
"We've got to stop asking the people who live, work, go to school and go to church in Washington, D .C., to change themselves. They're never going to reform themselves. They don't want a smaller budget for their city. They don't want their city to be less powerful. Ladies and gentlemen, distinguished guests and my fellow citizens, America's comeback starts right now. All righty, welcome back to the Financial Guys podcast here on the Financial Guys Media Network. Mike Speraza in studio today, fortunate enough to have Ambassador Rich Grinnell on with me. Going to talk a lot of Trump today, the debates, the indictments, the future, the 2024 race. We're going to get right into it. Rich, thank you so much for joining us. All the best. Thanks for having me. I believe I got the opportunity to see you speak at Bedminster. I was there a few months ago when Donald Trump, after the Miami or the Florida indictment, I should say, I was up there at the Trump Bedminster Club. He had a nice rally there. I believe you spoke. Was that correct? I did. You did. Yes. Yes. It was great seeing you there. Great speech and a great event for the president. Thank you. Let's start with him here. So we have indictment number four, Rich, and it's, you know, it's just another day in the neighborhood, it feels like. We're doing this every month at this point. What do you think? Well, let's start with this one. What did you think of that indictment and what do you think of the three prior indictments? Look, I think we're at the point where, you know, 91 charges against the former president makes it pretty obvious. If you're not paying attention, you should. Ninety one charges, all ridiculous, petty little things that that really should not be charged. Certainly, when it comes to the declassification question, unbelievable that they're trying to get him for saying he didn't declassify or took too much. This is this is so petty. But what they're trying to do is send a strong message that the Biden administration consistently has to shut down dissenting views. They're afraid of dissent. It's a form of intolerance. They do not have the best ideas. Their ideas are pretty poor. We've seen the evidence of them. We had, you know, people have a 401K under Joe Biden. You have a 101K. You have literally global peace under Donald Trump. And now you have a war costing Americans one hundred and twenty five billion dollars. You could just go on and on. You look at Afghanistan, you look at the problems in Asia. I don't think that there's a situation, whether it's the border or financial situation, nothing is better under Joe Biden. And so people see this and people see that when a Biden administration has an overreaction to trying to silence anyone who's running against them, use the power of government to shut them down. They're talking about jailing him. I mean, this is what dictators around the world do. I've worked at the State Department for 12 years. And when we see this crap, we usually call it out in other countries. And now Anthony Blinken is leading the charge. It's pretty sad. Well, and at home, too, we have rising crime overdoses at setting records. Right. I mean, we're not doing good abroad and we're not doing good at home. And that's for sure. Rich, do you see more coming here? Do we do we have another indictment or two on the way somewhere? Michigan, maybe another New York, California. Do you see another one coming? I mean, who knows what the left is going to do? I think eventually they're going to wake up and see that they have overreached and that all these indictments are only proving our point that they're manipulating the system and they want to just crush Trump no matter what. And so I think we're well off that mark. The more the merrier, in my estimation, because it only shows just how dictatorial they are and how they'll do anything to stop the guy that's running against them. I mean, again, this is what happens under dictatorships. And now you've got Joe Biden and his administration doing it. So at this point, they're going to do anything that they want because they're unchecked by the media. But I believe that everything they do from here on out backfires. It shows just how manipulative they are.

Mike Gallagher Podcast
A highlight from The Mike and Mark Davis Daily Chat - 08/23/23
"Turbulent times call for clear -headed insight that's hard to come by these days, especially on TV. That's where we come in. Salem News Channel has the greatest collection of conservative minds all in one place. People you know and trust, like Dennis Prager, Eric Metaxas, Charlie Kirk, and more. Unfiltered, unapologetic truth. Find what you're searching for at snc .tv and on Local Now Channel 525. It is Richard Louis Springthorpe's birthday. You know him better as... Rick Springfield. What a great, great record. Jessie's Girl 1981. Okay, ready, Mike? Rick Springfield. How old? I'm just listening to you hit the post and I'm just wondering how excited you get when you hit the post. You love hitting the post. You're such a frustrated disc. Every talk show host wants to be a DJ. Every DJ wants to be a talk show host. Okay, maybe not everyone. Not me. Last thing I want to do. Go ahead. Rick Springfield. Dude, look at you. You always either guess low because you don't think we're all as old as we are, you guess comically high. There was a stretch there where all the rockers were getting old and you tell me that everybody was 90. You just about nailed that one. Rick Springfield is 74 today. All the musical birthdays you play, you always end with, and they passed away in 2012.

Stuff You Should Know
A highlight from Farmer's Almanac: Literature to Poop To
"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 Now is the time to experience America's pastime in a whole new way Major League Baseball has teamed up with T -Mobile for business to advance the game with next -gen 5G solutions going deeper with real -time data visualization new camera angles that put fans on the field with their favorite players and Even testing an automated ball strike system in the minor leagues This is the 5G era of baseball see what we can do for your business at T -Mobile .com Major League Baseball trademarks used with permission officially licensed product of MLB players incorporated Welcome to stuff you should know a production of I heart radio Howdy and welcome to the podcast I'm Josh Clark and there's Charles W Chuck Bryant Jerry's here, too and We're just some homie folksy types ready to spin a good yarn for you about the old farmers That's right. You know why I commissioned this one. Why Chuck why because I thought it would be fun To put a old farmers almanac in the outhouse at my camp Okay, wait first you have an outhouse. I have an outhouse. Is it just a pit like a latrine with a log over it? No, it's a composting toilet. Okay with a little solar panel outside that runs a fan Okay, and the fan do the fan moves air through to provide aerobic Interaction exercise the with the with the with the poop and the composting Pete I just made a Compost tea like that, but I used a submerged little fountain pump. They create the air movement Yeah, pretty neat it is neat. So yeah, I got a composting toilet. It's good It helps I don't use it. I use it to go poopy if I'm there for more than a couple of days But largely I put it there. So You know some of some of the ladies in my life and and friends wives and things Don't like to squat in the woods. Some of them don't mind but I put that there So everyone would want to go camping at the camp and be like, yeah, you got a composting toilet I feel good about using it I can I can see the conversation between the couple in the kitchen back in Atlanta like one now He's got a composting toilet Well now I work now you can count me in Well, and now I gotta say is he's got a composting toilet and an old farmer's almanac in that outhouse Because I thought it would just be sort of a fun thing because I knew from growing up as a kid That an old in the south that an old farmer's almanac was quite a common thing to find in a bathroom or an outhouse To read while you're there on the john, so I have one there. It's from a couple years ago I need to get a new one. I should change it every year, you know, that's sort of the whole point of an almanac pretty slack and So I thought I was reading it the other day when I was up there cutting grass I was like, I don't really don't even know the history of these things and so let's find out So did you read them when you were a kid, too? I mean a little bit here and there is not very interesting for a kid. Sure But grandmother my Bryant my my dad's mom was a backyard farmer her whole life and you know, she was one of these people that Put a lot of stock in the farmer's almanac And so it was just something I knew about in my life as a kid probably didn't read it a ton though I was never exposed to it. I knew it existed you were from the north Yeah, it was Midwest but to Georgia Ohio was the north Yes, still but there was corn corn everywhere around where I lived Oh sure So it is a little surprising But the biggest surprise that I received since we started researching this is that you me Apparently used to read the farmer's almanac when she was a little kid Nothing you ever tell me about you me will surprise me. It's true. You just never know. No, you really don't that's great For those of you who've never met you me you wouldn't consider her a farmer's almanac type That's pretty safe to say yeah, so I was I thought that was neat she's very well -rounded but I In in like chia pet fashion went on and ordered this time myself a farmer's almanac I was gonna order you one and I was like, I'll bet he's already got one on. Oh, look at you very smart Also, I've made a joke about you're from the north as it turns out as we'll see the old farmer's almanac came from New England Originally, yeah, so I was you know people from the north There's plenty of farming that went on all over the country by God they even cover the weather forecast for the year in, California Exactly, they they don't discriminate. All right, so big thanks to Dave Ruse who helped us out with this one We're gonna talk mostly about the old farmer's almanac, but we will talk a little bit about its rival the farmer's almanac But we're talking about the old farmer's almanac the one that's that's looked the same Since its inception with that yellow cover the Four seasons. It's very Did you get yours in the mail yet? No, I pre -ordered it. I won't arrive until August 30th. Oh, this is for next year Yes, that's very smart Well, I mean what am I gonna do be like well what happened two weeks ago getting this year's, you know I mean like I want that you could from August to December you could surely gain some insight No, I don't like to waste money. I'd rather just wait But it's been the same well We'll talk a little bit more about the cover and its presentation and all that but it's very iconic looking if you've ever seen one It's been around since 1792. That's amazing Which means it's the oldest Continuously published periodical in North America. Yeah, and I looked it up. That's the the oldest Published anything that's been continuously printed in North America is the Hartford Courant We started as the Connecticut Courant in 1764 not too much sooner than the farmers almanac But then if you look for the world the the Swiss have us beat by a mile yeah, they have a What's called the post and domestic times the post ach in Rick? Tiden in Gar Okay, and again that means the post and domestic times which has been printed continuously since 1645 Amazing, but still that's nothing to sneeze at 1792 and they never missed an addition pretty good Yeah, totally in these these books basically, I mean those sort of an almanac craze at one point Lots of small family farms all over the country. Yeah pre industrialization There were hundreds of farmers almanacs all over the place a lot of regional ones Even local ones and what you would find in them if you were like, well guys what the heck? It's a farmer's almanac. Good. Good walk back. What it is is there are books that will say things like Here's when you should plant things. Here's some tips on cattle very importantly here are Astronomical Charts this is when the Sun is gonna rise and set in the spring and throughout the year These are the phases of the moon. Here are some recipes. Maybe here's some jokes. Here's some poetry So they would mix in some folksy fun stuff and entertaining stuff along with Sort of boots to the ground advice tips and raw data for farming Yeah, and but the big draw is the long -range weather forecasts like they essentially forecast the weather Generally for the entire United States and Canada a year in advance Yeah, we'll talk about that and they say that they're 80 % accurate, which is mind -boggling. It's it's almost unbelievable yeah, and it's things like I remember my grandmother referring to it for her crops later in the year to see like How rainy is it gonna be this fall? How rainy will it be six months from now exactly and people put a lot of stock in it And some people still do even yeah, so it's it's an unusual and unique combination of folksy folk wisdom and folklore even Things like if you want to have turnips in the winter and you there's no such thing as refrigeration Keep them in packed in sawdust during the summer or whatever stuff like that. It's useful, but then there's also like Astrology like horoscopes and that kind of thing So it but then it's alongside like actual legitimate astronomical data that is accurate It's a weird combination of really is and apparently it grew out of the medieval era And the word almanac itself seems to have been invented by medieval French astronomers in the 13th century although they said that it was an Arabic word almanac and That meant calendar of the heavens and apparently these astronomers just totally made that up Yeah, it was yeah, like you said invented by the French these medieval almanacs were they were just handwritten this before the printing press and They did some similar things though. They talked about like celestial bodies and Moon phases and stuff like that Eventually when the printing press comes along They were some of the first things to be printed like people live their lives by these a lot of times So they were some of the most popular early Books and periodicals that existed in the world essentially Yeah, because of their popularity and because even back then they were just kind of bizarre creatures their own thing They were also widely satirized too as early as 1532 There was a French satirist named Rabalais who created a parody almanac And he prognosticated Stuff that's quite obvious as a way to just kind of mock what almanacs do But he started a trend that lasted for hundreds of years and the most famous parody almanac was poor Richard's almanac Which was published by Benjamin Franklin from 1732 to 58 and what's neat is Even though it was a parody and they made stuff up and it was funny and satire of almanacs It also contained like actual helpful useful information, too Yeah, it did he wrote under the pseudonym Richard Saunders and It's famous for a lot of things one of which like you said it was around for What 20 something years 25 26 years? I'm guessing like 30 something Yeah, but it was like the best -selling for that long but it was very famous now for these a lot of turns of phrase that Franklin invented as Saunders such as We still use today Haste makes waste is one Fish and visitors smell after three days And of course the old standard early to bed early to rise makes a man healthy wealthy and wise Very all came from poor Richard's almanac.

Mark Levin
What Happens if Trump Is Re-Elected & Still Faces Indictments?
"Fanny and the knucklehead in manhattan was written for people none so now what do we do well some of the ground has been laid here in the past 1973 and the two thousand pretty mean mark the department of justice in 1973 in the re in the administration of richard nixon had to take a look at this in case richard nixon was indicted the office office of legal counsel which is the brain trust at the department of justice the office of looks at these issues gives advice to an attorney general and a president look very carefully at the pros and cons and of course it acknowledged there's not much constitution that helps us and there's certainly not much in our history that helps us even at the institutional convention there's nothing on this they looked at it and they went through it very carefully and I read it and they concluded no not because the constitution Constitution's compels it but you really can't or any president well why because you will wind up capitating the executive branch you undermine the voters who voted for that president they didn't vote for the vice president to

The Aloönæ Show
A highlight from S12 E17: Upcoming Books, Program, Military Career Discussion
"Hello, welcome to The Loney Show. I'm your host, Jaume Loney. In this episode, don't have a very good list because of reasons, as always. As for our guest, he's from San Diego, California, and he is an author. What kind of author, exactly? Well, we're about to find out. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you David Richards. Jaume, thank you very much. It's a pleasure to speak with you tonight. Yes, it sure is. So, how's life? Life has been grand. I just got back from a trip up in Canada where I was camping with friends and was not involved with the wildfires, but just some beautiful scenery up there, tons of woods, and an amazing camping experience. Oh, very good. Have you, and have you been up too much recently? Besides working on my next book, I've been working on putting a program together to complement kind of both of the two books I've been working on and then I've also got an idea for yet another book, and I'm going to work that as I build the program, and then really just connecting with people on a much deeper level to help them on their journey. Very good. So, adding up the books you have written, already written, and the books you're about to write so far, how many of how many in total would that be? So, I've written three so far, and then I've got one that I'm about halfway done with, and I'm gonna work on another one. So, that put us to a total of five, but the current one that I'm halfway through is a sequel to my last one, and that series is going to be a trilogy at the very least. Ah, very good. So, what inspired you to become an author? Yeah, so I grew up in the military, and one of the casualties of that experience is you move every two or three years, and I say casualty because you ended up losing friends, and this is well before the age of the internet where you could FaceTime someone or stay in touch with text or chat. And so, as a result, I just really kind of turned into my imagination for, I don't want to say companionship, but just to keep myself busy in between the moves, and that led me to falling in love with comic books at a very early age and superheroes. And as I grew older and got into high school, I had success with my writing, I had something published, I had national recognition for a short story I wrote, and my poetry won contest. It was always something that I really felt passionate about, but growing up in the military, I didn't really have a sense of how to be a writer or what it took to become an author, and not having an idea of how to get started in that journey, I did what my father did. I also joined the military, so I served for 15 years in the United States Marine Corps, and at that point, I got out in 2006 and finally was living in a place where I wasn't going to be moving every two or three years, which was super exciting for me. And that led me to the idea that I could start writing again, because I thought I'd given that up, and so that was an 11 -year journey to publish my first book. Wow, very good.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
A highlight from Vivek Ramaswamy talks national security, China, and Russia with Hugh
"Welcome to today's podcast sponsored by Hillsdale College all things Hillsdale at Hillsdale .edu I encourage you to take advantage of the many free online courses there and of course a listen to the Hillsdale dialogues all of them at hugh for Hillsdale .com or just google Apple, iTunes and Hillsdale Welcome back America. I'm Hugh Hewitt inside of Studio North Joined now by Vivek Ramaswamy. Vivek is the author most recently of Woke Inc. inside corporate America's social justice scam He's a graduate of Harvard College of Yale Law School, which is pretty good for a kid from Cincinnati, especially a St. X kid. Very successful biotech investor now runs Strive. Of course He is best known for sustained attacks on woke ideology and for his very surprising 2024 campaign he's in third place if you use the RealClear politics He's in second place if you use some regular polls. Vivek, welcome back. It's good to see you again Good to see you. How are you? I'm great now. I've already told the audience we chatted on Friday You did not want a pre -interview. I want people to know that but I always talk to candidates so that they're not ambushed by me We had a good conversation This is a national security interview Let me begin by saying you're going to the Nixon library on Friday And you're Belinda to give a speech about national security. Why did you pick my favorite presidential library? Well, I think it would commemorated my foreign policy vision Hugh I'm actually gonna really reorient our foreign policy away from the model of liberal hegemony Back to a model of actual I would say protection of the homeland a modern Monroe doctrine But a big part of my strategy is to pull Russia out of its military alliance with China Russia China together outmatched the US in every area of major competition Hypersonic missile capabilities ahead of that of the US a larger nuclear stockpile in Russia's case Naval capabilities in many ways that exceed ours in China's I know that's something we can debate but together they outmatched the US And so what I want to do is the reverse maneuver of what Nixon did in 1972 what did Nixon do he pulled Mao Zedong out of Bresin have led USSR's hands right now I believe Putin is like the new Mao. Did we trust Mao then? No, we did not should we trust Putin now? No, we do not but we can trust each of them not to actually follow their own self -interest And so that's how I plan to end the Ukraine war Do a deal that yes does give Putin concessions but in return for requiring Vladimir Putin to exit his military partnership with China and there are echoes of Nixon's diplomacy in 1972 that I thought the best place to do this was actually at the Nixon presidential library itself And so we'll be going into far greater depth Hugh But that just gives you a sense for why we chose that as the location to do it Well, we can go into great depth here because we're not rushed and I don't want to rush We're gonna play what we don't play on the air today tomorrow on the program so we don't have to rush I want to ask though You're you're going out to Nixon land in Yorba Linda as we approach the 50th anniversary of what I think is Richard Nixon's greatest foreign policy accomplishment The Yom Kippur war is that something with which you're familiar and how he acted there? I Am though that was not part of the inspiration for my actual going to the Nixon library was more the Reverse maneuver with respect to China. That's my case when Israel was on the ropes in 1973 Nixon said send everything that can fly We didn't have a treaty obligation to do so But he did and he saved them from the invasion by the Syrians the Jordanians and the Egyptians How is that different from sending everything that can fly not men not soldiers not women not Marines But weaponry is what Nixon sent to Israel in 73 50 years ago I gather you want to cut that off to Ukraine now if Putin will do a deal.

The Stuttering John Podcast
"richard" Discussed on The Stuttering John Podcast
"So if you know that you have somebody that is a was born, a male, but chooses to basically live as a female. It says a lot about you on how you react with that person. Because at the end of the day, if that person believes in their mind that they are really a female trapped in a male's body, then what is it, what does it hurt you? It doesn't, that's right, it doesn't. It doesn't. If you refuse, it just says a lot about you. That you're a colossal prick. And that, you know, you refuse to treat somebody with the respect that everybody deserves respect and everybody wants to be accepted for who they are. And what we have to understand is that you don't understand what it's like. You and I can't understand what it's like. No. To absolutely have to live in hiding to live in fear. It's the same thing where, you know, you have children that come out to their family and tell them that they're lesbian that they're gay. And here's the thing. If you raise a child and your child comes to you one day and tells you that they're gay or their lesbian. You know, that is a moment for you. If you cast them out, that says everything about you. Yep. You know, what you should do is you should love your gay son or your lesbian daughter, and that's as far as it goes. Because, like I said, when you sit down with your daughter well, what your daughter. Yeah. And yeah, but you have your son okay, Richard, let me explain to you. I have three kids. I have three kids. My oldest was my daughter. Okay. Then she came out as gay first in high school. Okay. Then a year after high school told me that he was transgender and that he always felt like a boy in a girl's life. So he is my son. He's your son. He said, but see that's the thing, is that that moment with you and your daughter that is now your son, yes. It was how you accepted that. You could have said, bullshit, get out of my face. I don't want to hear it. And you could have severed a tie with a child that belongs to you. And I'll tell you something. Let me just tell you after the hour long conversation that we had. He said, dad, as liberal as you are, I couldn't imagine this conversation going any better. You know, because I'm like, you know, you pee whatever, you know, look. You know, you know, I'm not gonna love you any less. You know, like, I don't even understand why anybody would care if their kid came out as gay. The parents, but what you have to understand, what you have to understand is that he feels and felt more it was more important to be accepted by you than it was anybody else..

Road Trippin': Richard vs. Channing
"richard" Discussed on Road Trippin': Richard vs. Channing
"On my watch gonna win cam. I want to ask you okay. Everybody learns a lot this net would. Did you learned the most in. Don't don't take this away which is always a bad way to start question. What did you learn the most from your loss in the final. No no i mean this is like your trash. Hear me out here. Let me give you an example. Can't let me give me an example when we lost the san antonio spurs my second year. Steve kerr crushed us. Speedy claxton crushed us like steve. Kerr came in the game hitting threes. We could no longer double team. Tim duncan tim. Duncan goes for twenty nine Like twenty twenty ten nine. You almost had a quadruple. Doubling game six the final. She'll going into the two thousand sixteen. Final would i remember is thinking to myself. Eight through twelve are going to have an impact in this series. Because i saw the last time i was in the finals. Eight through twelve had a big impact. So i go in and champ chapel of this. I went and got some garbage time. They gave me five minutes because we were getting my without getting blown out so he gave me five minutes at the end of the game. And i just went super hornets or was going going super hard like it was game. I could ask work super hard. Because i remember. I'm like this now over so the game to get blown out again. So i get like seven minutes. I'm going hard. He goes suicide. Heart garbage time etiquette. He broke all people. I'm doing everything freaking out. And so now to the fast forward to game three. Kevin love gets a concussion and and Our what's our coaches named tyron movie. That was name t. lugos man will richards play. Who should we start instead of cabinet. Richards played well in the minutes that he had and then that ultimately gave us a little bit of momentum. We went small and that work. So i learned a lot in my loss to the spurs because six through. They won't say eight through twelve had an impact. So i came in thinking okay. I'm one of the eight to twelve. Don't take ship for ground and come in lock in you get five minutes go hard you get two minutes gohar. 'cause it's going to have an impact so i say all that. Did you learn something from your loss. That you feel like moving forward could actually give you something to grow on Yeah i did I think a big part of that was just figuring out how to stop teams and figuring out how to stop something different than the bucks presented us with different challenges than than we had seen. Most of the play offs and a lot of it was their size. Yeah and you learned that you know guys are pretty good really get going and hit every free throw to a ramp than it makes it a lot harder and it makes it a lot harder to kind of force them to do what you want them to do. And we still have arguments about what we could have done better. What worked with didn't were those will haunt you for the rest of your life. I've never change a positive way. Talk in the next thing. You know tempers are flaring. Because this i'm like well if we would have done this and i think it's just that cumulative experience have experienced the being so close and when i look at it i see game for. Were up nine with eleven minutes left out or hurt. That hurt me for you. Right in the fourth quarter. Were up six with a couple of minutes left. And you just see them. chipping away. Not we didn't know it but just the importance of possessions just the importance of possessions. How you're right there so much. But it turned into four straight losses and buckling down on it. But it's the experience it's the experience of it and And just taken away all those lessons from remembering that feeling that feeling that we have walked off against. Because you don't you don't realize the failing you don't it doesn't set in until you the buzzer rings out seven but you're like Something could happen something so in that. Confetti starts coming down and you're walking off the court and they start celebrates immediate right. It's synthesis like 'cause you're so locked in when you finally take the blinders off your sorry you see this. And then even for me i scream. We're up four. And i'm selecting like somebody got a contest rav four. I said the complete opposite so lucky to every single hot to do jesus an i. S. fear is a i gotta go to the back about to die every possession but like seventeen thousand different beefs right because we are who we got the greatest shoot of time to leave the greatest hero multi. I've i saw a couple of days ago. And he was like we were kind of talking and he was just like maybe like mad. Richard was trying to retire again. When i retire then i was like you know what we got the best team in the league. Why am i going to retire a mike. This warriors team is great. They won seventy three game. But i feel like if we play this team again. We can beat them. Remaining show nice showed nelson showed up will do that. I've ever seen in my life and it was like there was no beating that team. There's no there's no beating no difference. Now you have to get lucky and you have to be healthier at that point. That's the only shot. That's that's you know. That's the finals two camps point. When you go through that pain would you realize there's this one possession makes the difference. You make one shot instead of losing a game by one you win by one. It's you you make one shot or you don't turn the ball over. Instead of eight nothing run it becomes a six nothing run and you're able to make a shot you're able to change the dynamic of the game so it comes down to possessions like one possession can be the difference between win a title as a shooter. Remember alvin gentry in income from portland. I was still kind of discovered why was as a player and so have made a game winning shot in indiana the night before and then the next night we had a back to black against jersey and i was like one for sixteen or something like that. Just she just died just an absolute ill. I wasn't a back to bed. Guy me so coach goes channing. He looked at me and he goes going to you. And i said it he goes channing. If we're gonna play industry and yet one chance to make one shot one possession you think you can make it any day two week because forget about the seventeen you missed you just got one and i end up making it and changed my whole attitude. I was like damn like when it really counts. You know especially as a shooter. You can miss solos but if you have an opportunity to make that one that's important. It is something that you gotta put into work to like kinda. Forget all that as we forget all that garbage. Say hey we're going to retry. This and i'm betting on myself for that one possession so i never did but channing one thing that people first of all like your lips are so dry. He wasn't water drink water. Yes when i used to this humidity out if you he on on mosul joe okay. So how be asked to dry humidity in arizona. Here this shit okay. So as to phoenicians right to kids at grew up here like the phoenix. Suns are everything. There's been a bit of a drought. You know no pun intended but what was it like feeling the energy in the city rise right like this is like. This is arizona's different place. But i would consider when when if they could pick any team to be great they would pick the phoenix suns over over the over the cardinals over the diamondbacks over the coyotes they would pick the phoenix suns. What was the energy like from your first year. All of a sudden. Y'all win the first round second round. Could you restaurants anymore.

Sports Media with Richard Deitsch
"richard" Discussed on Sports Media with Richard Deitsch
"It's like head-spinning now that you know in twenty twenty one I worked for a place. Now where you know geographies meaningless. You can sort of work and file from anywhere. So yeah i mean i feel like The ringer in that sense is in a really good place Kevin clark is an nfl writer. Podcast and video host for the ringer. He's mentioned a number of the things that he's He's doing now you have you seen catch him weekly on On the multiple podcast that he doesn't check his His nfl workout his His last couple of pieces Are really really interesting and You know he went. He went super long on On dan campbell the coach the new coach of lyons who is an interesting guy and andrew berry find actually is even more interesting is born in one thousand nine hundred eighty seven richard. I hate on this front office vietnam. Who really like Almost feels like a little patrick. Mahomes ish of his of what he died. I have to shout out once again. Richard i h gave me the names of all of these. Sports illustrated editors to email gave him my clips and i was nineteen years old. They all turn me down but it was a huge help. Richard digest very. We're in tampa remember. Do of course. I remember yeah and not. Surprisingly the idiot editors at my place once again did not hire a good young. It was actually a amazing only. That's the only non. Suppressing party was actually amazing swiftness with which they rejected me. But at least back. I mean again you know and and look where you are nick. That's very nice of you to say. And i do remember that. That was at the poynter institute. Maybe right pat forty was there. Jemele hill was there as a speaker. Dan jenkins sally jenkins it was actually a formative weekend in my field. Just about like that feels like long. I think we got there on horseback. That's a long ago. If i'm not mistaken i heard a couple of espn executive told me. That's actually where they met them. Oh hell that could be the case. Because of i again. My memory's hazy. I believe she was at the orlando sentinel. She was not at. Espn are and and that's very very possible and then obviously got harvey spn and became very very well known. But then i remember that gemologist uses a columnist reports call mississippi at the orleans grownup in orlando and i remember reading her weekly. And i'd everyone everyone kind of knew that she was destined for for bigger. Thanks crazy all right kevin. Listen i keep the excellent work i will. I'll be clicking in and reading and thank you so much for joining me pot awesome. Thank you richard. You decided to upgrade your outdoor deck..

Sports Media with Richard Deitsch
"richard" Discussed on Sports Media with Richard Deitsch
"You could talk about life you can talk about whatever and i think that other guys see that i mean. We were mostly at twitter show. Most instagram show gets a few hundred thousand views if you know during during the season and all that stuff per week and i think that if there are nfl stars or media members who. They've reach out to us. I wanna come on slow news day and because they see how we put them in a light where it's like okay we're just hanging out over zoom if if if we brought out a keg wouldn't be out of place right and so there is no drinking on tuesday but there could be right and that to me i think leads to other other people wanting to say yes to things. No one else does it. All access is like that. You know if you go. I think that a lot of times. You know my training camp tour this. I'm not saying this is the case. But i got josh allen. Rogers mahomes borough at the end boroughs. Coming off an injury. He's coming off of a couple of weeks practice. You know he was. He was joe. Cool your and a half ago and now things are not going well for him and they could have been easy for him to say. No but i think access leads to more access. And i think that someone like borough not that. I'm saying he's sitting around reading the ringer. But like if you get all these other guys. I think it just becomes a self filling prophecy and you start to other people like i did. Not the only person. I did not get on my entire journey towards mike zimmer because he was dealing with a lot of the kirk cousins fall out and was just swamped with requests. But i would say that the access begats access to more for you. One give any kind of word count restrictions because one of the things. I've noticed from your pieces on the ringer is you know you're able to go long. And it reminds me a lot of You know sort of the. Hey daily someone i and even before worked there sports illustrated and when you would not be surprised to read a forty five hundred five thousand word profile on a on an nfl player. So i don't have a workflow restriction. If if i if i gave them seven thousand word story it would put a lot of stress on the copy. Desk would put a lot of stress on my editor conor nevins and so i try to keep it under three thousand possible and andrew. Berry store was around. Three thousand. you know depends on the story. I the best advice i got on. This stuff was two years ago three years ago. I gotten rogers about a bunch of league issues. Things like the franchise tag. It was a really cool story. Remember talking to my editor rhino handling. He was like okay. Listen like you have gold. You have twenty minutes of aaron rodgers talking about just addressing all this stuff from the league and if we run every word he says that will be fine and you end up writing you know what twenty five hundred words and it's just rogers talking and so we don't want to shortchange if someone gives the time and gives us the interview. We don't want to shortchange that. And whether that's borough or mahomes whomever like get that stuff out. There dan campbell. You know with berry kind of a similar buried light up my notebook and the same way that some of these other guys did but this is a really awful guy who spent time with us and so we want to give that the full shift and we don't want to shortchange that kind of stuff. So i don't have a word count. It's more of fits the story. I think it'd be weird if i get a guy. If tomorrow i get daniel jones for five minutes and i write five thousand words on it. That's probably when it becomes a problem. But if i jones or sam darnold or whomever for an hour then you can get longer with it. So i think that we we just go. Operate within reason and decide what counts can be have an amazing editor conor ivan. Amazing copy desk. Everybody supports me. So i just wanna keep them in mind and just kind of keep it to what the story demands then the last one for me And i think this sort of question would have been maybe more prominent or perhaps even more interesting in a pre cova world but the covert world. Now you know for many of us in this In this profession. We're all working from home. We're all we're not going to a physical office. You know the person we might interact with every day may live three thousand two thousand miles away. You live in new york the brooklyn. Okay the ringers. Main offices is still in los angeles. Yes okay how does that. How has that worked for you. do you feel. Is there any part of you. That feels disconnected. Or like. i was saying because we're now in this new paradigm where nobody's really had an office data. Maybe your what you do now is just sort of what everybody's going to do for in the next twenty twenty-five thirty years or so and it's a geography doesn't really matter when you can slack somebody. Yeah i would say so. That question might be different in a year when everything is one hundred percent back normal. Hopefully fingers crossed. I haven't noticed anything you know. My wife and i lived in augustine florida during work from home for handful of reasons in the fall and so we haven't lived in la for almost a year and still talk to bill all the time. I still dr mollie aruban. Who's a manager all the time and i think maybe because we have a young staff were more interconnected on text or slack or facetime or whatever it is so it feels like we're all working together. Sunday night podcasts. With prince yati. She's also on the side of manhattan. And then ben zolak is michigan. Stephen rees both those guys just joined us is in washington dc. So i don't. I think that maybe when the ringer launched there was more of a demand for everybody to be in the same place but i kind of think as things have disappeared. You know spotify policy now publicly announces that we can work from anywhere. And i think it would have been fine if i lived in new york regardless because spotify has offices here in game. One has offices here. But i think that we're just in an era now especially with media. Where as long as i'm in a couple of times a year maybe with these people and stay connected. I think it's all fine. I mean the fact that. If i if i wasn't talking to my bosses regularly i would maybe have have more of a concern there but i i am not noticed anything i i feel like. We haven't skipped to beat if anything were more efficient than than we were and so no. I think that there's a new era of work. I think there's a new era of media. And i think it can solve richard some of the problems in media For younger kids. Maybe one of the things. I worry about all the time. Is you know when i was coming up. New york was the epicenter of media. Same as you and it became a self-fulfilling thing where the only people got into the media where the kids who are able to afford moving to new york without a really great job at age twenty two and so i actually think that this could end up being beneficial for media that you can be anywhere in the middle of the country you can be in a different country And actually there's probably less 'gate-keeping. I would say going forward. I agree with you. And as i look back on it. It it's like mind-blowing think that When i first started like at sports illustrated like we had like multiple floors on a building on west fiftieth street across from radio city music hall like to think about the dollar. Cost that those offices Were for you know at that. Time as would time inc..

American Illegals Podcast
"richard" Discussed on American Illegals Podcast
"If you come back you will be arrested at the airport. You will go to jail because of how long my people will you stand trial and because you knew you were an x four a fucking joke for the now it's also like a run Like like you're fleeing the law okay. Then he added yes so now they can get them for even more shit so we can go back to fucking hero that guy and he. You're telling me this guy is going to be this sunday song. The hollywood improv with richard. Plan your three o'clock pretty gangster you. I swear to god dude stand up in in spanish. You guys gonna start watching that if you if you understand spanish. Did you guys got to start going to these kids. Because there are a lot of fun is that it's like watching a you know you had like you grow up go to mexican parties or whatever and there's always that one guy that knows or maybe you're deal that they always got kind of like a little act. They're always funny jokes. Burritos watching all. It's like watching a fresh act. That deals ever fuck. Yeah and like spanish comedy. I'm just gonna say a man has more flavor baby harder. Yeah it's just walking right. it's super spicy. You're up there and like these words are just coming at you. And you're like man. What my roused right now. Let my everything in. Spanish is just sexier. You know what. I mean yeah. Everything bro. played no. That does something to me joe. Every time you walk. I love that mexican guy that every time he worked at a mexican plant or a place with mexicans. There's always that guy like shorts though everytime shorting smells like cool water. He's not he's a guy he's the hardest worker in there but he takes breaks. Just drink beer his. I'm the civic got a little pep boys got attached sticker every fucking got like six Six eighty nine a cord. Fresh out the deal. One of the doors wasn't originally from the car. Pick apart but does look. There's always that guy at work man. I miss working with mexicans. They were all really funny. And i would always be asking him questions. I never my like my mom. Never told me she's from mexico but she'd never told me shit so i'm just like work in new mexico. What was it living. Hey you know they tell you crazy mexican stories that everybody has out of your own astoria. This is what i fucking. Everybody had an experience with the euro. Now everybody had an experience with liangelo a no. This is what happened to my uncle. Everybody has an uncle was hot and that was in the early two thousand late nineties. Initially you had what you book. Joe richard i de joke..

Slick Talk: The Hospitality Podcast
"richard" Discussed on Slick Talk: The Hospitality Podcast
"To try and predict. But i think if we're able to actually kind of do all the work that we've we've basically go tabled for for these mountains. I i think that you know it's it's incredibly exciting to me Of why we can actually kinda push this push this industry. I'm super excited to to watch the journey. This is so cool like most people have. These sports people are entrepreneurs. They look like over here in the hotel. Realme geeking out on products like you guys. So it's really cool. I appreciate you taking the time. And i think is going to be really exciting to watch all this happened so i definitely anyone listening. This is a company and a group of people to to watching to continue to see what they do. Innovate and that challenge you. You know challenge you what you're doing in your business so everyone check the show notes. Everything is linked in below. And then richard. I just want to say thank you again for being on the show. My friend has been a true pleasure. It's thanks much for the conversation. And and I hope to give it again some time and you'll be telling me like well you know you told me three years ago this way you you you push it like. Where is the will that.

Plan B Vault
"richard" Discussed on Plan B Vault
"Before got a little. Shana we do. We got a birthday shoutout hurt them. I wanna say a big happy birthday to michael wogaman. He is turned five years old today. You go my big five. It's the rock onstage iraq onstage. so that's right so Michael's dad gave his call so they give him a shout-out he loves you. Station loves in the morning show and he started five today. What's michael how you doing man so young so you so young and full of wonderment full of energy you know hopefully get some sugar today. Eat some cake. go run around like crazy then crash. It's too happy birthday michael Have some fun today. And thanks for listening brother. We appreciate five years old man. All right well This is a i. Maybe maybe good time for michael to not. Listen right now debbie. Btf earmuffs earmuffs earmuffs. Michael birthday earmuffs on And i blame I blame the skies parents for this. Not for how they raised him but for what they named him. A cop in sussex england was fired on monday after someone fund found out he'd been moonlighting as a male prostitute through a website called adult work dot com The guy's name his real name. Richard holder comma jomaa his real name. Is richard older. Now the The shorthand for richard. Dick yep i'm just going to have to leave it at that but the so together so richard hold her made for this job though he was made to be a prostitute about aqap Apparently he wasn't using either Richard or dick on the website he went by the name sweet sensations three thousand six hundred sensation. It's not clear if he ever visited clients while he was on duty but he did do it after calling in sick at least once. His boss testified at the hearing. He said he wasn't a very good cop anyway. Citing his quote underperformance under the guys he was he was performing under some people have. Hey oh you know what. The name. Like richard holy. Why would you change your name. Though i would come on you. It's an old family name. Richard holder the third the long line of richard holders. It's not clear what is performance was like inside gig. I'm sure topnotch. I'm imagining guy in back in like middle school. I'll guy once richard richard. It's richie richie richie holder so Sweet sensations Not going to be a cop anymore. I don't think richard holder..

Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"richard" Discussed on Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"Hello my friends. Welcome to another retro rohullah. Stop pa and This week it's very hard to choose. Which podcasts i'm going to go back to. But we're just trying give you a taster of some of the classic episodes. Hopefully you can enjoy second time. If you've had the before or if you are new to this punk gos- excuse me. I'm bamboozled by the sheer volume of podcasts. These some of the ones that. I considered to be the best. I'm do keep searching through this week is the second appearance of david mitchell. Now he's been almost. I'd say the perfect roster by guests. He treats emergency questions as if he's being asked them by a bright five year old so he's not rude about them but He is just pedantic enough to make them really fly He is yeah. I'm as i say. I love adam buxton who will be coming up in future weeks. He's recur the the most up the most but it's a toss up between him and david mitchell who is the best guest on this podcast. I think As as i've said i think some of the others maybe the funniest people in that have been on and david mitchell certainly up among slow but jesus sorta perfect guest for this show. This second appearance has lots of great mercy questions. I the first one. I just felt so weird thing. When i started his cost. It was a sort of joke that was sort of based on reality. But i was trying to play up the joke of Being sort of bitter upset the everyone else was doing better than me as the podcast has gone on. It's harder to do that because it's hard to see this punk not as being successful but also. I don't think you quite flies. Am i felt. I overplayed that handled a little bit on the first bunker so i do apologize this one for what i consider a slightly embarrassing routes spur is not generally considered side of the first one But i think i was much better than this. One is much more relaxed. David seemed to enjoy the first one as well and hopefully we will begin in back pretty soon. He is king to come back to do another one. Which will be terrific Quite a few of these Classic rally guest that we've had on so far arcane to come back if they can make it work I have ended list of stuff. That's in this one. Just have a quick You know this stuff about Whether sex with a robot is cheating on your partner how what's the why. Elephants have such low rates of cancer. That was good. I'm the kettle. chips crisps. Control cathy as well. I'm a great Spitting image puppet question. That's a good question. I should bring that back plus much much more. So you're enjoying these. Do keep listening to recommend them to friends. This is the perfect way. This is the perfect gateway drug to get. You hooked on the rest of it. It's massive you. Help him we go. It's increasing downloads by about a third which is also good news for us. All that money we are making is going to make towards making more focus on different gus as well. We got some plans with some new stuff coming up so just by listening to these guys the first time or second time more hundred time or just leaving them running in your kitchen while you're at work Can help us to make mockus. I thank you very much for your support. Do come and see. These guys lives still a couple of go. At the clapham grand June fourteenth and july the fifth on july the fifth we and now just confirmed of. Jj casteran had gamble will be the Guests for that one so do book very soon. If you wanna come and see that live might not even be socially distanced but let's face it. It might be come. Listen to this cost with the wonderful david. Mitchell becomes been done laser gentleman. Welcome the last thing. You'll never guess who's coming on now. It's richard completed saying there or as some of the coolest kids calling rehearsed and what does have acquaint- to bid gentlemen in the front row here with too bad. That's the kind of guy. I like to juice. Still want to stop taking the piss. And what's your name. Matthew is a very nice name. What do you think you'd like to think you're semi retired. Postman is very similar to my postman. Do you ever just put the last jedi. The wrong door on purpose. No that the person will have to go and put them next door for the various an honorable profession. That will very soon be redundant. Anyway you got to replace by flying thing could also says well. That's that's what you can't do that. That's the downside. I'd love to me. Thank you for coming along to badges two pounds of good guy. So i'd like to introduce my guests for this week's podcast. You're much better than the in the front row. That is probably best known for his appearance on. Richard hangs square there. Dan someone's put them into the imdb. So that is actually we asked mitchell. How you doing how you doing a very well. Chaz i wasn't expecting such fancy things that don't worry well first of all as a range of dvd's and very welcome to have one of those one of them very much. Bring me up to happy. Mike what do you remember about your first. I would like to apologize. I listened to it to go the same stuff. I was unnecessarily childish and route. I waste. I wasted your time in the lot of stupid question beneath you. I don't remember you being rude. I remember there was a point where you thought you. And you're worried the audience turned on riley. I think it was just because we were entering the our chat. Apparently some sort of deadlines so that has been brought in as far as they want to. Stop. what's going on which is a shame maybe full. Ken dodd frank. But now i remember it being the jazz one. Just come on the stage more cramped. I think we had to be in front of this line was closed is three years ago. Most of the day in now talking yeah spill conc- last nicely wearing a puppy.

Road Trippin': Richard vs. Channing
"richard" Discussed on Road Trippin': Richard vs. Channing
"You can even say it sideways at the side of your mouth like there's some people out there that don't feel johnson kevin durant to being the same conversations like you ain't gotta say it's from kevin durant you just. Yeah yeah here after you just have to understand too that our world is you cannot leave anything interpretation now and i'm going to say it's you guys and this is probably gonna be breaking I think that my career in broadcasting and espn Could have been better. If i was if i would have put out some of the things that i had in my mind or said i said some things said some things about People being very critical. I think i think i could still be on tv right now. But i i wasn't gonna compromise. You know certain people in relationships just to you know. Stay on tv. I love doing tv work with a lot of great people but it just it just wasn't mass space and so that that's what i'm saying they will. It's hard. I mean that business hard because you have to. You know you have to call on those relationships to you know. Have the best stories or you know. Give the best information you have to. you know. Use some of the stuff that you have in your back pocket. And i just refused to do that and i think that's what's my time. Espn short stocky. You and i think we're going to wrap it up with that said way back when when we started road. Chirpin this guy. This guy wanted to be where to go left. he's done this post on row trivia. Yesterday when i reached out to him he was. Like i have been kicking myself in the ass because i wanted to be at your meal. Listen listen you know what. I've made a lotta mistakes in my life Doing now basketball career home. You know my life. In general and one of the biggest mistakes that i made was not becoming a part of roach in because you guys are on a different stratosphere right now and i would be on. I'll be along for the ride in. I let my pride get in the way. So i wanna tell i want to tell all three. You're doing a fantastic job. I watch all the podcast and if an opportunity comes back for you guys to bring me on again you know what we're gonna we're gonna join. We're gonna bring you on next time. We have a gas. We're going to bring you on. We're gonna have you as a reoccurring audition for elections. We will get you in per going here. We know we are coming up on the five year anniversary of the twenty sixteen titles so give us a story before. Richard surrounded jump in actually be on television. Give him your amex grace from that season..

Sports Media with Richard Deitsch
"richard" Discussed on Sports Media with Richard Deitsch
"Were assigned very very small groups. Then once you're in the booth it was a little more relax you take your mask off etc but it was pretty hard core for the broadcasters walking out of the car and getting into the stadium what from what your understanding is what will be like. The euro. Forgot to mention that yes. You have to wear a mosque everywhere in the stadium. Except when you're doing a broadcast and you have to keep that same one and a half meters away or everybody and there will be officials trying to make sure that that actually happens so where we hope we're at the tail end of the pandemic i think the day after that the the game The first england game the uk government is going to make a decision a big decision about whether to free all the restrictions at the moment. It looks like that isn't gonna happen. It's gonna be may be delayed for a couple a couple more weeks. We have another variant on the go here so it's tricky and we're all really kind of treading on eggshells a little bit in terms of the matches that you would call at the studios in london. I think it's an img studio in london. Is that just a like a regular broadcast facility. The way like skysports as office or abc and new york city has an officers to a normal broadcast studio or something soccer specific now. He's just a normal broke out studio. They do all the premier league la from there. A would you have heard about from the. Va are rows ago in the english premier league. He's out in. The airport is a drive basically to an industrial estate. And that is where we will be bringing you. The coverage of poland v slovakia and a couple of the other games from the european championships. So everybody's having to make do and mend a bit here but you hope you hope that what comes out through. The television is normal service. You i've talked with you a before about this. Because i'm always fascinated by how broadcasters prep and you like many of the really excellent football announcers around the world. You take preparation seriously. You make a point to figure out how to pronunciations. i mean some of the stories. A soccer broadcast is going to go through to get proper. Pronunciations is pretty fascinating including like calling embassy in a foreign country. It's a little trickier during cova to prep. Just because you're you're doing zoom meetings as opposed to meetings in person you can't meet with managers and players so what's the prep for this specific tournament. Been like for you just about the same as usual really doing a lot of reading watching the games that the teams are playing Getting hold of magazines toolkit to statisticians and maybe some context if you've got them in the various camps of of the teams and you're right the pronunciation as always is a big issue. I'm very aware that. In america there all in claves people. You know like the the big german population. I think is a polish community to. Isn't there in chicago and slow on. They know if we're getting the names wrong so we'll do our best. I mean one of the i mentioned. I'm covering poland. I think most commentators are called the goalkeeper check. Chesney see but now it's not that it's chen's knee we now realize chen's knee so i've been going through the polish names today and of course one of the hardest teams. There's another player whose name looks like But should be pronounced. Ken ziada so own. You go working your way through through. All of this is not easy is a bit of a minefield. But you do your best together. Get them right because it's kind of insulting really for anyone who does know that team or comes from that nation and follows that team and they're that'll be true. I think a lot of the audience in the united states That we we somewhere nia concept pitch on the pronunciations. historically for the euro's what's the toughest country to pronounce. I would've maybe guess croatia. But that's just a guess what i'm doing now. I don't think they are. I do think. I think it's probably poland. Because a lot of the names know is they would look so so. There's a game is another player here wearing number seventeen for poland whose name looks like plata. That's all plaque chatter. That but it's not as shutt- Yes on you go loss like that. One that reads like joe joswiak but that is years back trista. So the the real real expert in this He's the number. One expert in the world is one of our commentators on the european bridges. Derek gray who from the game and eric the king of this kind of thing. So i'm not ashamed to say. Sometimes i'll give him a goal is well because he's had to try and get them all right on the for game. What would the atmosphere be both in country as well as in stadium if england makes the final at wembley. I think he'll be really mad. I think it'd be crazy and wild. In england it was during euro ninety six. I couldn't describe just what the fever pitch was around the england team because that was a good england team. I think they probably were the best team in the tournament that year. They probably should have wanted euro ninety six at home and there was there was the song. Gadget gazza sheera. That's not mcmanamon. And it's the truth. Was gas going. It was really as a center point of school. That great goal against scotland away or really take off. If england go on iran and the manager of the england team gareth southgate and said we will be a failure for us with our home advantage. Most of the way if we don't make the semi finals so no pressure then what in terms of the one more of these. And then i wanna finish up on the floyd mayweather logan paul guys farce because you had some good twitter commentary on that's between you and stewart at wembley versus us steward i m g studios. Do you feel how do i sort of phrase this. What is the advantage of being in stadium in terms of chemistry with your partner if there is an advantage meaning will you have. Obviously it's better for you to be in stadium as the play by play person. I get that but is there any advantage to being in stadium in terms of the camaraderie. Chemistry you'll have with your your analysts. No really no because it is on eye contact and and just general report and you're gonna try to make it so there's a conversation and flow and maybe some light and shade. That should be the same really whether you'll come and citing in the stadium or of tube as we call it in the business. what what. What the advantage really is in the stadium is your feeling the atmosphere closer to you and you can look at things that you can't look at when you're working the television pictures so if i want to see who is taking a free kick or who's making a move. I can look for myself to cover something. When i'm working off the television pitches. Obviously i only have what the director gives me and sometimes he's not giving you what you really want to looking at doesn't always happen that way so it is a big advantage to be there. Okay one thing before. I get to actually i. I should have asked before one thing i got before we get to floyd and logan paul you. You saw the result over mexico. And i think you noted as following on social media. You noted that you thought this could be. This result could be a pivotal moment in the development of this team. I kind of agree with you. What you've called. You've called that national team in for many many years. What was your boy. Your impressions of of that win. I think it's a fantastic win for them. Because this team as you well know. Richard a really been in the doldrums. Ever since the failure to go to the world cup. Everything runs in cycles. I think in sport and a new team has emerged. There are players coming through all the time. Now there's there's a good nucleus and to get a win like that over the oldest anime mexico in the manner that it happened in a dramatic manner when they had to ride through a storm And get through it and then get with the amount of confidence and belief that will give that team and kind of the togetherness..

Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"richard" Discussed on Richard Herring's Leicester Square Theatre Podcast
"I remember it being something about a panel show and this might have been someone else about the. You're going to be a judge joe something. It was like a judge. Judy sort of thing. I think it was. It was so it was with a producer. Called jamie rix. Wasn't it do you remember jaime rakes. Yes definitely was jamie racy and it was an office in the riverside studios. That's right and you guys were sort of fresh out of university. Yeah and. I don't think you'd even done your sketch. Tv show but now it would have been improperly probably on the hour and maybe done a bit of stuff only hours yes but yeah so maybe not even on the hour i don't maybe nominee had done on the hour because that was it was very. We did line on the hours. The radio version. Yeah yeah yeah no. You'd probably just done on the her. Anyway jamie rix was producer. And he the reason i thought it was that let's get divorced type. Thing was because he was the producer on that it might be that. I don't remember a judge and then what happened. We didn't we didn't what we're kapadia. I thought oh so. They took that idea then. I'm not hold tv series. What always happened with with your. What was it called ritu. Does this worry jerry. Which was that was. That was just very much used slightly different just using the format of a morning. Show to do comedy really. It wasn't really about. Richard and judy themselves I had some great teeth made to play. This represents a guy very sort of big prominent frontier so that he could smile or the big tooth smile i had a a sort of blow dried underway right. And he'd wear white suits and casual sara gilbert that would have been again pre sort of like where alan partridge is not quite late. Show is into that pre allen parts. Yeah and and i. I remember because at the time was very i was in the news a lot and i i got. I recognized a lot in the street and sometimes it was a hassle. Sure and i could put on that. He was jonathan hughes this character. I just put on jonathan hughes teeth and we used to wander around in true. Kind of whoever's brad pitt's you know i'd wander around the king like richard. Mainly on it was it was it was again. It was a good adventure so good that sounds. I wish i've been involved in. And i wish it had gone serious because it sounds amazing. I then the other time that our lives crossed. I spent quite a lot of time in one of your houses and because i was just said yeah i was dating somebody who's trying to be a writer and she and she started doing a writing partnership with your wife at the time. She was my governor. That's your wife that time. But i think i think you were selling the ask. Because maybe she wasn't going to be your wife very much. But i i would go round. And they were writing to sitcom together. And i'd go round and some sort of scripted. Zing it so. I sort of went and helped a little bit and then my girlfriend time looking for house this has this has is on the market. You should buy this..

Sports Media with Richard Deitsch
"richard" Discussed on Sports Media with Richard Deitsch
"As i said at the top tom hannifin. Which if you were a wwe fan. You knew him. By his announcing named tom phillips he spent nine years with the wwe and basically did play by play. I'm pretty much everything. Annex t smackdown to a five live raw t u k. He recently parted ways with that organization and is now looking for traditional opportunities which is where his background is from. In fact at penn state and he joins me on the sports media. Podcast tom welcome. Thanks for doing this. Thanks for having me on richard. i appreciate it. What was the most challenging thing about being a broadcaster for the wwe. So i got hired at twenty three years old which is a is a is a blessing and a curse and a lot of ways that i had everything to learn about professional wrestling I was a casual fan. When i was a kid. I've been spoken about that before. Play video games. Watch during the attitude. Era but i had to learn everything from the ground up and on top of that you know broadcaster. Twenty-three is really that finely polished so everybody a wwe takes a village. Did an amazing job of helping me get speed just as a broadcaster things as simple as working in a studio working with a teleprompter basics things that i needed to learn how to walk so they gave me so many opportunities to learn those things but the toughest thing about Wwe is that if you're coming in and there's plenty of people who come in who don't know professional wrestling inside out and backwards you gotta get up to speed quickly and you find the right people that have your back and will support you in teach. I had so many people like that but it took years for me to get comfortable with it. And that's how intricate the products. So one of the things that if you listen to wrestling podcasts as i do they talk about product knowledge. That's jim racism. I love that calling. And you just sort of cited that like okay. I came in and i have to learn everything. So so what fascinates me just to someone. Obviously who's watch this for a long time is so how do you do that on the fly. Because you obviously the more reps you get the more you'll be familiar with the wrestlers. The moves of the wrestlers. Just maybe the cadence of how matches are but you don tom. You know this. You don't necessarily a ton of time to to get up to speed because as a member of let's say the wwe universe. I'm expecting you to know this stuff so like can you. Do you watch tapes and tapes and tapes. Do you talk to the performers. How do you get up to speed. It's both and it took years of doing that. I think one of the more helpful things. Why i started was I was working with people like renate. The cat and A lot of different broadcasters up in connecticut that were just kind of helping me learn kind of the announced One of the simplest things was at a big video game guy. So i would play the video. You can go in there. And it's got like you create a wrestler. It's got a laundry list of moves that is just baffling document. And it's cut argentine backbreaker german suplex nap mayer. Take down all these things audio. Will you watch that enough. And you do that enough. You start to figure it out and then of course you're fan over the years you know guy signature moves etc so those are the things that kind of will stick with you the easiest but it's just kind of trial and error. It's doing it over and over again. I was fortunate that the early incarnation of annex t was taped. So i had chances to you know okay messed up our eat. Unidentified that correctly we can edit that or something and there was little forgiveness in that respect but the best thing that i had was being around so many talented performers that were current or retired or whatever it was and they would basically hold you to a really high standard that if you didn't know moves etc whatever they can maybe help you and be like. Oh yeah the technical term is this or this guy calls it back. But i had so many eyes and girls at would speak to that were hard wrestling. Fans knew where when why. How just about every story line and occurrence in wrestling history. That if you didn't bother to spend the time to figure out what that was you were dead in the water. And i got really fortunate that two thousand fourteen two years in we created the wwe network. So everything was at your fingertips. So i spent every waking hour that i could delving into history and trying to learn on the fly. How does someone at twenty three years get hired by the wwe some luck. Shoot so to give some context. I've spoken about this on other podcasts. Before so i was working for a junior college which was division three men's women's basketball in central pennsylvania penn state kids so that was right down the road. It's convenient right after. I graduated and i was subscribed to a website called s. t. a talent dot com. Which a lot of college kids used to my understanding still and job lead came out for. Wwe i couldn't believe it was blown away because it's a huge global billion dollar company. I was like come on lie casual fan so like i was like any kid after school like i need a job so i was applying to just about everywhere you could imagine and i sent a tape I auditioned in june of two thousand twelve. And then it was just being persistent through the summer in september two thousand twelve. They offer me a contract I still to this day. I'm so grateful but also like i can't believe took flyer on me and at twenty three. How fortunate i was because there's so many kids that are in broadcasting now in people that i went to school with that would have killed for that sort of opportunity. So is just amazing. The one of the things that You know sort of famous about Wwe maybe this was the same for wcw actually. Don't know if it's aws But one of the famous things historically about wwe was they would make you do like some crazy stuff in broadcasting audition..

Road Trippin': Richard vs. Channing
"richard" Discussed on Road Trippin': Richard vs. Channing
"Boston Yeah i got. Got brian with folks like problem. That's not forget. But i'd say didn't have two different. I'll know if he would have got forty. Oh my god you guys were not to got like thirty twenty two only about forty nine percent. Thank you for sure. I met my match up with straight. I took care of my matchup. Who's your show kevin. of course. what does that does not fare does. Wole will come on man. He added avenue. What nine hundred twenty. No no no. I'm not saying. I'm not what i'm trying to say. This is not this this way. I want to try and say yes can cab. Not not this. This is not a not because look kevin is like kevin is very good mostly time all star everybody understanding but this thing kevin against you we know we got cabins. Some help kevin versus paul millsap or al horford. Kevin go to flock at work because he pulp. Mills all star al horford all-star but that's more of a match up that favors kevin when you would go and they'd be like richard. You ready in fifty weirdo. I gotta go chance but it's not like a game you can't work on what you do. Is you move. I don't know what will like. Okay it's different. It's different but let me say this way okay. So you're fourteen so you did so you played against antoine jamison. Oh i watched it. I watch a easy okay. That's what i'm saying so you so you do his game. Yeah for sure. Yeah that's what i'm saying like you guys had a similar life like you score shots or he would hit shots especially antawn jamison. Really fuck with me. Because i would think he's taking a bad shot but it was his shot and then local revenge. Like you want me do. He's what lincoln random runner floater near running into princeton offense. So he's dribble handoff they'd coming back. Get screen then he shoots these little flick dings. Oh i love it once you get like uh i love. What would you play eddie jordan. Who'd you have my third year..

Road Trippin': Richard vs. Channing
"richard" Discussed on Road Trippin': Richard vs. Channing
"They kind of took off because it was like that fine balance of like we gotta play. Wiseman duping go be doesn't really fit. The mold of staff in dray only played forty five games his entirety of basketball college. The pros this effect. Let's play less than fifty games total so like the way. His brain is moving. He's thinking oh. I should be on the nail wads months like. Oh they're just running this loop to reverse counter you know like okay. He's a hands up. Who's this guy and everyone else on. That team is like boom boom boom. He's thinking his processor needs to. He got to watch so much film. A slow the game down. That's why they need to play fast. So that's on the her though to make that decision. Sometimes telling you gotta play the is representing us. Nice days this is not a disrespect is buffer can. Who don't even know what he's doing he just like. What does this feel about patrick wings assists with the four creek. They sold them one. Like i don't know how you saying this motherfucker at florida state coming up bench playing at minutes to get him to the league in him doing with some of the that he does like some shit that he does like. He thinks he's just doing it. And we like this ship. The base yes life credit speed and i was thinking the nba coaches. I would say coaches alley are like great players. The way michael jordan dominated versus the way larry bird dominated versus the way magic. Johnson dominated the way lebron dominated. They're all great. They just do it. In different ways are they have special skills or special attributes. Some know how to relate to players some know how to develop players some no. I think t- lou is a very good manager of talent right like t- lukin talk to broad and he knows his basketball iq and he can get these guys together where other i wouldn't consider not lou at this point in time a high level development guy because he's never had a group like the chicago bulls or you know member david blatt. They brought david black to coach. Kyri tristen and all the young dudes and andrew wiggins then bronze like coming on out of all of a sudden. There was like all right. Well mr black. We appreciate your service here but we're going to go a different route and that's like not to say that the man can't coach but when it came to we went from we're going to develop our young top five picks three of them to know we need to win a championship. That's a completely different skill. Set so i think for me in coaching. It's like the biggest thing is. Does the coach have the ear like as a coach gonna justice system or develop within his system so that people can believe in it. Do they feel like they have a chance to get better. So like fibs didn't work in minnesota because he's like i need you guys to play my style and they were like do. We've been all stars. We're not playing that way..

Talk 1260 KTRC
"richard" Discussed on Talk 1260 KTRC
"Richard Eats a voice of Santa Fe. Uh oh. Uh oh. All right. It's Thursday. 13 good afternoon instead of a northern New Mexico. A lot has happened in the left 30 minutes. We will talk about it extensively today. You can be sure what has happened in the last 30 minutes as the CDC is now saying that if you are fully vaccinated the Mexicans those beyond the Mexico You can Go indoors outdoors. Do business indoors outdoors live indoors outdoors without a mask. If you are fully vaccinated, it raises 1000 questions. Does that mean for New Mexico? So I have reached out to the governor's office saying, What does that mean? For New Mexico? Will you address this today? I have not heard back yet. I was just a few minutes ago. No, it's a ship is a huge shift with a million questions. We will talk about it today. 69.

Serve to Lead | James Strock
"richard" Discussed on Serve to Lead | James Strock
"The break fundamentally shoot no or people be thinking if there's all the american people to govern themselves to rule themselves to control i believe they. My opponents do not. I believe in the right to the people. I believe again. That'd be a medical people hold capable of self control and learning by that mistake. Welcome to the served elite podcast. I'm your host. James struck as we get started. May i ask a favor. Please help us reach a growing audience by taking just a few seconds to give us a five star rating on itunes and if you have ideas for future guests and topics please send them to me at info at serve to lead dot org. Today we have a very special guest. The presidential historian. Richard norton smith is in the house. Email recognize him from c. span where he's an omnipresent beloved contributor or from his longtime participation in the lehrer news hour on pbs. Richard norton smith is a prolific writer and author his first book on the twentieth century leader. Thomas dewey was a pulitzer prize finalist. He's also written. Well received biographies of george washington journal robert mccormick and most recently on his own terms a life of nelson rockefeller. He's also architect at lead presidential libraries and museums from lincoln to reagan from hoover to ford. And now he's hard at work on a one volume biography of president. Ford richard norton smith. Welcome to the serve delete podcast. Thank you off a few sieve introduction. I'm the president. Maybe i'm not so sure about beloved..

On Mic Podcast
"richard" Discussed on On Mic Podcast
"Today's guest is terrific. His name is richard lert sman and he along with lon davis has written deconstructing the ratpac joey the mob and the summit the rat pack in this case with a capital t. featuring the chairman of the board frank sinatra dean martin. Sammy davis junior. Peter lawford and of course. Joey bishop among others. His book is tell all that brings the inside scoop of just how the mob a future president and five extraordinary performers took the world and las vegas by storm so without any further ado. Let's invite richard alerts men to join us on mike. I'll begin with this. I just saw ocean's eleven for the first time in about fifty years and it was so much fun and it was perfect. Timing because here's your book and is so much here that revolves around this group of individuals. Welcome it's nice to meet you richard george. So it's the sixtieth anniversary of the rat. Pack celebration Is there an actual start date to this particular group of rat packers or what. Yes the start. Date was february of nineteen sixty and never lose based fred's professional friends And they had no each other The the work together and it came together in nineteen fifty-nine ranko nine percent of the sands hotel and he had watched this great. We prima and keely smith. Sam butare at the sahara's lau jack and he loved that looseness that craziness oh prima and when the Owners and the The publicist l. Freeman came to franken said they wanted to create a mega event. He thought of Of the martha hit just worked with some come running and a film and he thought of Of sammy davis junior. Who was just recovering from losing in tramp in a car accident. Frank was kind of pushing them back. Get back on. Stage get his balance and he thought it was great. Enjoy bishop happens to be frank opening act for about eight nine years so he not putting them together no earlier in homely hill he was part of a group with david niven and humphrey bogart alarm a call and mickey rooney and Learn call costs. You look like a pack of rats wrap so when these guys get together. The press started calling them back and in february nineteen sixty got together. Interesting yeah i heard about the the bogey ratpac from a lot of reading on humphrey bogart and all that. And that's kind of cool and lauren. Bacall was a young beautiful lady and she had to. She somehow stuck it out with those guys and was able to put up with and drink with him. I think i mentioned the movie. And was that a planned coming out party for the rat. Pack or whatever. Where did the movie fit in. Ocean's eleven eight. It was all very pleased when they started putting together the summit they called it in las vegas in february nineteenth century Peter lawford had been shopping around the script that he that he got from a gas station attendant. Who ended up his name. Was george clayton johnson. When did up later right. In all a lot of twilight zones logan's were on but at that time he based He in the army he was the black market group out of the army in germany and he thought of the idea bringing the guys when they came back to to the us ever union and to have a heist in las vegas. So that was a script. Frank saw the script from peter. Peter lawford and he says this is so good. You know why should fill much is do this it. So frank took jack warner jack warner loved it. So frank's idea was why. Not shoot this in las vegas where yo- nine percent of the.