23 Burst results for "Robert Frost"

Clark Howard Show
"robert frost" Discussed on Clark Howard Show
"Newspaper stories I'm saying, yes, I still read a thing called newspapers. About neighbors getting into spats with neighbors. Come on. People ending up getting in trouble with the law over dispute with the neighbor ending up suing each other. We got to talk about this. And something else we got to talk about, this is a train wreck just at the time that interest rates on credit cards have hit an all time high, people are charging up credit cards like a storm. We're in talk that through. But right now, who was who said, Robert Frost fences make tall fences make good neighbors, whatever that was. Christy, you were an English major. Who as you said that was that Jack London was that Robert Frost, who was that? I made it when you put me on the spot like this. It was Robert Frost. See, I knew you'd know. I just looked it up. Oh. Seriously? Yeah. I thought for sure you'd know. No, I don't know everything. I can't remember. So much. So no. So I told the story about when I was in poetry in high school. Yeah. But you remembered. So you're much better English major than I. Oh, definitely not. I mean, think about bad my grammar is. If we digress. So let's talk about what we're going to talk about. And that is neighbors today, I mean, we don't even wave to each other so often now. We've become so detached and disconnected in so many neighborhoods from the family that moves in next door. Or the couple or individual that moves in across the street. And disputes that I keep reading about, anecdotally, it seems, although there's no actual data I've seen anywhere that the number of things ending up as court cases, either civil or criminal involving feuds between neighbors, come on.

Fading Memories: Alzheimer's Caregiver Support
"robert frost" Discussed on Fading Memories: Alzheimer's Caregiver Support
"My paternal grandmother, when my, I'm the oldest grandkid on both sides. So when my mom was expecting me, she declared that she was not old enough to be called grandma, even though my maternal grandmother was younger. So we had a nana on a grandma and she passed away at a 103. So there's a lot of life in history and interesting stories that thankfully I managed to capture some of them in the last few months of her life. Thank goodness for cell phones with voice recorders and I had a lapel mic that plugged into the bottom of my phone so that when she spoke she didn't have to, you know, she could just speak at her normal volume, which was, you know, as we age, it gets quieter, and she was, this was in the fall of 20 20, 2020, and she passed away in April of 21. So it's like, those two last couple of years have been a lot. So describe the first couple of books that you created specifically for your nana and how that evolved into books for everybody's nanas and grandpas and Papas and whatever we call them. Well, you know, I see that you was your photography and you were chronicling your nana. You know, you reached back to gifts that you had and passed iterations of your careers and things like that. So that's kind of what I did. So what the first two books of mine were initially I did one called life's journeys and it is all a poetry paired with, but the real, real classics like Robert Frost, things that had just come into the public domain, and I really, really was careful about vetting what I used and the art. So the nostalgic and it gives people joy and it gives people vistas into nature and the past and real positive memories, but also that it's available for use fair use.

Fading Memories: Alzheimer's Caregiver Support
"robert frost" Discussed on Fading Memories: Alzheimer's Caregiver Support
"My paternal grandmother, when my, I'm the oldest grandkid on both sides. So when my mom was expecting me, she declared that she was not old enough to be called grandma, even though my maternal grandmother was younger. So we had a nana on a grandma and she passed away at a 103. So there's a lot of life in history and interesting stories that thankfully I managed to capture some of them in the last few months of her life. Thank goodness for cell phones with voice recorders and I had a lapel mic that plugged into the bottom of my phone so that when she spoke she didn't have to, you know, she could just speak at her normal volume, which was, you know, as we age, it gets quieter, and she was, this was in the fall of 20 20, 2020, and she passed away in April of 21. So it's like, those two last couple of years have been a lot. So describe the first couple of books that you created specifically for your nana and how that evolved into books for everybody's nanas and grandpas and Papas and whatever we call them. Well, you know, I see that you was your photography and you were chronicling your nana. You know, you reached back to gifts that you had and passed iterations of your careers and things like that. So that's kind of what I did. So what the first two books of mine were initially I did one called life's journeys and it is all a poetry paired with, but the real, real classics like Robert Frost, things that had just come into the public domain, and I really, really was careful about vetting what I used and the art. So the nostalgic and it gives people joy and it gives people vistas into nature and the past and real positive memories, but also that it's available for use fair use.

Mark Levin
Hillary Clinton Finally Breaks Her Silence on Durham Report
"Hillary Clinton finally breaks her silence I thought the headline mister producer at the New York Post was going to be Hillary Clinton finally breaks wind Oh you know what that probably wasn't very funny Now that I think about it I'm like I'm going to lose my lunch from 5 hours ago She calls John Durham claims fake scandal This woman needs to be in front of a federal grand jury Into the grand jury room No doubt wearing a very unattractive pantsuit And she needs to be questioned for 5 hours They point out the former First Lady senator Secretary of State and two time democratic presidential candidate Can you imagine Her in any of these positions Finally responded to today the last week's court filing by special counsel John Durham Alleging that her 2016 presidential campaign paid for computer research to link then candidate Donald Trump to Russia Here's what she said in her full throated screech She said Trump and fox are desperately spinning up a fake scandal to distract from this real one She said this on Twitter because she's a twit So it's a day that ends and why the more his misdeeds are exposed the more they lie Robert Frost She's a poet and she didn't know

Marathon Training Academy
"robert frost" Discussed on Marathon Training Academy
"Again. And as I was running, I was thinking about how the winter had seemed to be dragging on. It reminded me that Robert Frost quote from the poem servant to servant, where it says the best way out is always through. And I was thinking how it's best just to take it one day at a time. And it kind of reminded me back when I was in college and I would receive the syllabus and the huge textbook for the class at the beginning of the term. And I would immediately read through it because I'm a type a personality and just feel overwhelmed, like start overthinking it immediately. But if you take it one day at a time, when assignment at a time, it makes it manageable and you get through the course and you do okay. And it just kind of made me think that it's important to pursue your goals and dreams, but if they start pressing down on you and they start to feel like they're out of reach that you're not making the progress you want to make, you just have to take it one day at a time. I know a lot of people are feeling overwhelmed with the pandemic, maybe with their jobs, with an injury they've got going on, maybe with parenting, whatever it is. I just want to encourage people that it's normal to have moments when your goals seem overwhelming and out of reach. I know it feels that way for me sometimes. But when you start doubting yourself, no matter what we're going through, you just have that one day. You know, we're not promised tomorrow. So don't let it overwhelm you. I know at times I've looked at my marathon training plan and I felt intimidated maybe by the long runs or the paste workouts. But really when it comes down to it, you just have to keep showing up and take it one day at a time. And you can even break it down into smaller increments than a day at a time. For example, Trevor, you've probably had this feeling that 20 miles is a long way. And sometimes you doubt whether you can do it, even though maybe you've done it in the past. Yeah. But you know that you can do one mile. So take it one mile at a time. Maybe a mile seems to overwhelming, but you can take that next step. And so you just take one step at a time. And so I think by breaking down your goals into the small immediate steps that you need to take, it really helps reframe it. It doesn't seem so big and overwhelming. The best way out is through. It reminds me of an experience I had yesterday. I was at the doctor because I have this mole that I was concerned about. There's a history of melanoma and my family. So I went in there and he looked at it and he said, you know, this thing's on my neck, right? Right. He said, that's a wart. Everyone has this lovely picture of me now, right? Mister wordy neck man. So anyway, he says, do you want me to burn it off? He sees I can do it right now. And I said, what happens if I just try to not touch it, leave it alone? Says it'll keep bothering you. So I said, sure. So he leaves the room and he comes back with his tank of nitrogen. Takes the lid off and there's smoke coming out. He says, now this stuff is so cold that it'll feel like it burns..

Mark Levin
Brian Williams Signs off From MSNBC With 'Darkness'
"Now next Brian Williams at MS LSD list night on the way out the door Remember Brian You know when I when I was in Iraq and they were shooting Brian you'd never been in Iraq and nobody was shooting at you We happen to know that particular night you were constipated anywhere on the toilet You were not in Iraq being shot at Cut 5 go It is my choice now to jump without a net into the great unknown as I do Don't be too traumatic You go ahead In my 62 years my biggest worry is for my country The truth is I'm not a liberal or a conservative I know you're not You're a radical coup nucha Go ahead Emotionalist I believe in this place An institutionalist mister producer I think what he means is I should be institutionalized in his case Go ahead Of country I yield to no one But the darkness on the edge of town has spread to the main roads on highways and neighborhoods It's now at the local bar and the bowling Apple Wow Once last time you were at a bowling alley Thinks he's Robert Frost Go ahead Pour it on the grocery store And it must be acknowledged and answered for Grown men and women who swore an oath to our constitution Shut up

Poetry Unbound
"robert frost" Discussed on Poetry Unbound
"Parallel hander wholeness in this poem establishes a certain kind of echo, which makes me feel like he's representing in the poem the way that his poem amending wall is an echo of mending wall the Robert Frost poem. So you hear these echoes within it? Perhaps, first of all, the echo of the word words, what is the word and English for dying at the crossing between countries? What word describes when a brown woman's dreams of being something like a white man are killed in the image of old words in the name of God instead of new words like the name of one's own desires? And then white man is repeated 6 times. And it feels like he is introducing an echo into the Robert cross poem there saying this is a conversation in the frost poem that could only happen between white men. And so he has 6 repetitions of white man like dead men, white men like guards and horseback, white man like the grace of misinterpreted omens and white man like buying, but outlawing cocaine, white man like picket fences. So that echo there is echoing back into the frost poem what he is saying needs to be made more explicit in the imaginative landscape of the frost point. And then something there is, of course, that quote, from the frost poem, is repeated four times. Something there is that loves a wall. There was a boundary caused the structure of country. And then kills those who trespass. And so he is on the one hand echoing the frost poem. And on the other hand, putting back the echoes that have been silenced from the fras poem that he thinks needs to be present.

Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"robert frost" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"The red sox might wanna series a couple more times because adrian was on the verge of really put it together and just seems to be like a really good guy not only a great player but a good guy. he's i only covered in that one year. He was in boston slot. I can honestly say every player will run on a sixty two. You see him at some point where they don't play hard you know like it's just their day that guy you ran his ass off the first base. Every time he played hard as he could feel he played every game like it was his last game. And and i i there were times i was like. I can't believe he's still got this interview. Yeah the ma. The manager of country was. Hey we want to give a day off know they up. I'm playing tomorrow you know. Yeah i i really admired him and he was a good guy too he was a it took them a while to warm up to you but once he wanted up to you he was very friendly and we were all kind of bummed to see him go and nobody became so great man. Boy the red sox really yeah exactly and he became. He became a tremendous player. You know so yeah. Yeah that's great all right If you are a pete abrams fan. And you're listening to this. I hope you've been joining the podcast I and every episode with the mary question. And what that is is j armstrong who is an honors english teacher Just recently retired from the philadelphia area would in his honors english class every year would have his seniors breakdown. Thunder road as point. Look at the lyrics. Talk about the imagery that bruce uses. Compare it to other points like robert frost and then at the end of the two days. He asked the question to his class. Does mary get in the car key. That is your question disinherit mccarthy and sunday road. Yeah of course because tramps like us you know. So yeah i you know. I think that's the whole and that he's talking about going somewhere with a girl in most of the songs right so Yeah i think he's definitely got in the car. Yeah all right very nice. You know about the whole maggie. Haberman is at waves or slaves. Yeah so i actually sell a t shirt on i Website that says the question isn't whether it ways or waves is does she get in the car I do find it interesting in. I think this is a i. Someone i can't remember. Who said that. The reaction to bruce springsteen super bowl commercial the middle the diversity of the people on the extreme right and extreme left being critical of him tells you how far away from the middle. We are as a country. I who said the right thought was great. But i find it a little sad that there are fans that say It will be swayed to fill or like you know till you take it from my cold dead body. You know I just i. I can understand having an opinion but i also think okay. I don't know i mean well. Supposedly it came out. The original lyric was indeed sways fright. Somebody said they saw that. Then when you listen to it it certainly sounds like waves. So i sorta you know. Yeah i i don't know if that's it worth losing your mind over but i mean i don't guess in car She's on the porch house. They're talking about the future area. You don't just let them drive off and someone else brought up the fact that i'm racing in the street she talks about..

You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes
"robert frost" Discussed on You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes
"Or not. I was actually your what you were saying reminded me. I don't think he's looking at. Because i'm pretty sure it out please. It's not robert. Frost cone right to roads diverged. The yellow would. I took the road less traveled. Yeah right. it's that idea that that there are always multiple paths and if we wanna bring breakdown simplest path that robert frost the as robert frost does right. There are always two roads one of which is the familiar road and one of which is the unfamiliar road. Travels it's your thoughts are traveling on the road. It's your neurons traveling. It's you on the road exactly and if you choose to take the road that you've traveled over and over and over again whether it's serving you or not then you are creating your reality around that practice of just following along not and not a not really questioning. Use this road. That's my pats. Is this my whereas if you stop. Stop before and saying okay. There's two pads. This is the path that always taken and ask the question. Is this pack. Getting me to where i actually want to go. Maybe it is. Maybe it isn't but if it's not been the road. Less traveled certainly becomes much more interesting choice. Unless we stop at the divergence where the where the where the road diverges in yellow. Would right leslie. Actions stop at that point and ask question the opportunity to even take a different path doesn't seem to spray it doesn't it doesn't necessarily be become as noticeable.

Accidental Gods
"robert frost" Discussed on Accidental Gods
"Think. Actually that's not true. Almost everybody i know his face death and step away from it. Said they wouldn't change it actually so but still on picky little. I think it's an interesting place to go. I think again it's to me looking back on it. It is it. i found myself. I suppose not as obviously. But i found myself into another kind of a similar place that i've that i was when i was stuck in corporate life and needed to look death in the face to to move on and i wouldn't have said that to you. I wouldn't have known that at the time. And yet i was feeling jaded. I was fading a little of the joy. I had gone out of life. And and it was everything to seem very tiring and as a classic poem that you know that robert frost poem and the woulda lovely dark and deep. But i have promises to sticky and miles to go before i sleep. I wept over those lines for years. Does that was my life. That i had all these months to go and it wasn't that i didn't take joy in my work but i was tired and tired for such a long time. Really since the days of louis. And i realized just to show you the shift. I write that everywhere. I came across it the notebook and last go before i sleep great and it was just such a companion conscious just my god and if i could put that's that's it in a nutshell it just wiped all of that away and i've come out of that came therapy experience failing as if someone has taken a broom we know to the inside of my head to my soul to my boise and it just feels clean and clear and a lot of crap that i hadn't dealt with came to the four and i do nothing to do but to sit there and can deal with it and it should It gave me many many gifts at the beginning. There was another poem at the beginning of that whole process that that stayed with me. I was ruby poems This being human is guest house. You know welcome in all guests and even the onc- sinker unwell. It's just night boy. The gift that particular guest brought the learnings that i had Were just remarkable. So i feel asnd pounds lighter in every in every possible way and i think a lot of it was partly my own going into it. You know because. I know i work in this area and supposed to work in this area. Archetype mass in cycle. That you just like you know that. This is an important rite of passage. This isn't a punishment it's not an accident it has made coming at this point in my life at this juncture and it was clearly something that i had to find meaning in inside rather than fight it and you have to fight the cancer do battle with. It's like no no no..

The A&P Professor
"robert frost" Discussed on The A&P Professor
"Robert frost ended his most well known poem with this. I shall be telling this with a sigh. somewhere ages and ages hence two roads diverged. china would and i. I took the one less traveled by and that has made all the difference. Welcome to the amp professor. A few minutes to focus on teaching human anatomy and physiology with a veteran educator and teaching mentor. Your host kevin pat in this episode. I answer a bunch of questions about the wacky strategies. I am for testing in the empty course. Welcome to episode. Ninety nine of the professor podcast. And i'd like to wait a minute. What is that. It.

Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"robert frost" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"Okay what's next are you What what's next are you I assume you're continuing paint and continuing to explore. I have been writing a very long manuscript. Which is about paris and the liuw and painting alka. why possible. What i'll do is something connected with that. And the interesting about painting for me is that it's Light writing. it's very quiet. Thing every similar writing painting a very very It's it's a world away from springsteen but you know maybe it isn't. Okay when you go in the louvre you walk around you see all these people on in the paintings who you think. Oh i remember that person from eighty one ninety three strings sink actors and painters poultry to particular old out characters. So that's the gap k. If so let's go J armstrong is an honors english teacher. He has recently retired And he would. Every year his honors english class would take thunder road and break it apart as if it was a point Going through the imagery the The the the words that bruce uses often composed a compare it to robert frost. The road not taken and at the end of the two days he asked his class. Does mary get in the car. So gavin that is your question. Does american get in the car at the thunder road. I'm gonna just i. I used to teach the frost pun again. Because i've seen it used at some accounts roach. It's very posting because when you look at the poem again it's a very negative thing bright and so i would turn the students from seeing it one way or the other and thunder road. I hadn't thought about the question till you asked it. And i had always assumed especially when i was young that in a town full of losers pulling out of here to win that's Of course you would get in the call. But i looked lyrics again like vision alone again. Don't run back inside the doors open but the right ain't free climbing back since climbing back and then ladies says climbing the front that is curious about ghosts and haunting a haunting and skeleton. And when you get to the porch. They're gone samari. Climb in and so. This is what i wrote about this visit. The joyce carload story called. Where are you going. Where have you been which is inspired by bob. Dylan's it's all over now baby blue. Which is a spooky thing and this. This young girl is is introduced to get into the car of someone called arnold friend and it's not a good idea and so i had that in mind and it could be read as though the ghost story and i was thinking when my daughter's wouldn't get in that car when i was young. I was the driver pulling out to win. But then there's a lot of pressure sales. He sets a time limit on it. He says it's your last chance and so on balance. I would say that she doesn't get into call. Maybe now she regrets it but probably not..

In the Garden
"robert frost" Discussed on In the Garden
"You know hot days called days rain. No rain whatever. And when i visit my son's garden. I was pleased he had a those drip irrigation. And that worked really well for him. He said he was really happy with that. 'cause you know you could turn it on because he's got a lot of other things to do to and and you could turn that on let it go for a while and and you're watering all done. Looks like we have a caller on the line. Maybe they've done some early picking checking good afternoon. You're on the air with peter burke your first name in town. This is just no Calling might deep and intimate relationship with wild blackberries. And i will not say long as i've said live in ripston lived in the middle of the woods. Spur we've cars that little hole for our gardens and our home and then the greenhouse right now oh let's go check on lettuce and there we have wild blackberries have to do is go under the greenhouse will come back up again. They are by far. I guess i could use a negative or positive but talk about resilient anyplace for there's good grounds into who same with my back gardens blackberries and part of me wants to go and go and cut him out in part of me wants to be polite and say kay. Just don't eat everything good in the soil because my plants want some of too Yes figures plants and here. We watched them thinking well play. Oh boy we'll get to pick some always the day before we think we'll pick their comes mentioned to not meet to share good reason to keep them out of the greenhouse. Because it's not someplace you want the bear. And i i recommend that you pull that up and trace it right back to the wall and cut it off because it's just i'm very impressed. How aggressive and resilient they are compares with that as peppermint or any kind of men plant they. They will send out runners that that look like a wiring diagram in building. That's very true So i'll get out of your way of close by saying. Why do i memorize robert frost poetry so on the other station the other night. Vp are classical..

Love Your Work
"robert frost" Discussed on Love Your Work
"There's still blue light in the lights in my house or from the street lights outside. So i nip at nha bud with blue blocking glasses. The blue blocking glasses. I wear are not fashionable. They are orange and large enough to wrap around most of my face as well as cover my glasses very little blue light gets passed. These and i get sleepy. Easier and wake up more refreshed when i wear these glasses starting two hours before my target bedtime. I even take them with me. When i travel and a help out when i need to push my bedtime earlier to get up for early flights for reading only after ten pm back when i didn't pay attention to what i was doing before bedtime. I would often work until i could. Hardly keep my eyes open. I've since tried different activities before sleep and found that nothing works better to get me sleepy than reading so the only activity i allow myself to do after ten pm is read. This means there are a lot of activities. I avoid before bed aside from bright screens. I've found that certain activities. Get my brain to active and make it hard for me to fall asleep if i play a video game on my vr headset. Write my journal or even do something creative such as drawing. It's not as easy for me to get to sleep. And i wake up less rested. I also select the type of reading. I do in a specific way. That helps me get sleepy for the first hour. I can read pretty much whatever i want. This hour really helps me. Get through a lot of science history. Or biography books the highlights of which i store in the digital's that'll casten. I talked about on episode two fifty. I use much of this reading as raw material for ideas for newsletters articles and books as i'm reading. I'm looking out for specific signals to help me decide when i'm ready for bed. The first thing. I'm looking out for is how well i understand what i'm reading about. This time of night. I can lose my reading comprehension very rapidly one minute. I'm engrossed in a complex neuroscience. Book the next minute. I realized i've read the same sentence several times over. This happens before. I'm consciously aware that i'm tired. But his signals to me. It's time to change my reading material when that happens. I switched from nonfiction to fiction if eleven pm rolls around. And i'm still comprehending nonfiction. Well i don't wanna get myself too excited. I make the switch anyway now. I'm looking for the final signals. That i'm ready for bed at some point. I will realize that. I've just come to. I will have just started to doze off. My eyelids have gotten so heavy. They've started to close. And i may have even lost control over the arm. That holds up my kindle. I'm not the type to fall asleep accidentally but as soon as one of these things happen. I close my kindle and go to bed if by eleven thirty pm. My eyelids haven't started closing involuntarily. I bring out the big guns. This is the reading. That's most likely to make me sleepy. I read some poetry by robert frost or a play by shakespeare. If i really want to go back in time i'll pull out the iliad. Sometimes i'll read some emerson. The robert frost poetry is folksy and he and emerson talk a lot about nature which is very relaxing the rhythms of frost and shakespeare low me to sleep and the iliad is just hard to read rule five in bed by midnight by following this progression of reading. I almost always get sleepy. Bye midnight my rule is in bed by midnight. But really. If i don't get sleepy bye then i find it does me no good to go to bed anyway so i try to be in bed by midnight but if i'm not sleepy.

RUN GPG Podcast
"robert frost" Discussed on RUN GPG Podcast
"I get up around five thirty six o'clock every day early. It's really nice mom. I have a lot to do. It's not just a job. I've gotta make sure my kids get to school. You know there's food in the morning and night so you know. I'm i'm ceo at work. And i'm chief of the house at home yet. It's miracle morning for advertising agency. I'm proud of you barbara. What do you do for fun. I love to cook. I love to travel. And i love. I love running. So i'm a runner too. I run exactly exactly seven kilometers every morning. Exactly that's not. yeah. I got this one loop anyways. It's not it's not about me it's about you. Here's a question. This one really makes you think. I love this question. And you'd be from the answers. We get from our guests. If you could have dinner with any three people in history pastor present who would they be and why. Gosh that is hard question Any three people in history. Okay number one. Jackie kennedy i. I really think she was a cool eighty. I think she was a smart woman. And i think she set a lot of trends and she was extremely diverse in her thinking. And there's i like learning about her. So i think she'd be really co- person have dinner with a did get to meet her once in my life but i didn't get to have dinner with her. I just wow. That'd be one person. Yeah i think. I would probably like to meet robert frost for dinner. I like his poetry. I'd like to understand. Why inspired him. That would be interesting. You know i especially love the poem about the. The paf lease traveled because i tend to take that path. So it'd be fun to have dinner and talk about. How did you write that and why And then three guests lizl. That was probably the most eclectic mix.

Good Life Project
"robert frost" Discussed on Good Life Project
"Essential use the phrase in your book The golden ones. Which if if. I read it if i read it. Right is sorta to describe people who are performing connotation performing perfectly right right. It's like this is what the world expects of me going to be. This and that'll be funny as i was reading it. I had this immediate flash in my mind of the movie. The outsiders And this one line to stay gold. Sony which was the exact opposite meaning like it comes from a robert frost poem which don't lose that like essential self that you had when you were really little like and Is interesting that's relate. There's the golden ones performing expectations. But the the real gold underneath that is that true nature which is why the book is covered in. Gold is why i describe the knowing the gold because the garden you the divine in you the knowing in you the wild the inner self that is gold it's different than golden golden liquid. Right golden is frozen. It's it's it's it's the essence. Was there and then it froze. I think that what. I mean by that wild i. I think the word is so beautiful. And i think when people think of wild they think of like bad and dangerous while it's good and interests it's beautiful and injuries and what i mean by while it's just it's just that we're born with the self right and only get paid when we get tamed with their social programming. But you know then what. You know that you're tamed. It's not complicated. It's just you know if you've ever been in a conversation where something the horrible or racist or misogynistic or something was said and you feel the wild in you knowing that you should say something and then you don't say it that your to self censor wild self inside and your himself outside right. If you have ever been in a relationship where you had needs right. Repaired needs where you had feelings that you that were bubbling up inside of you. But you don't say them on the outside.

NewsRadio KFBK
"robert frost" Discussed on NewsRadio KFBK
"Pharmaceutical company Viv says the two drug combo price is within the range of one a day pills. The California State panel is recommending parole for a one time Manson family follower. Bruce Davis was convicted in 1972 of first degree murder and conspiracy for killing Gary Hinman inside his Topanga Canyon home. Davis was also found guilty of murdering Donald Shea. Now, 78 year old Davis has been found suitable for parole a half dozen times in the past, however, three California governor's reverse the parole board's recommendations, and Fresno County is mourning the loss of a correctional officer after crash Friday. The sheriff's department says 33 year old Randy via Lobos was on his way home from work riding his motorcycle when he collided with a pickup truck during his seven year career. He worked in all three jail facilities. I'm Jodi Guerrero. Sacramento traffic traffic on the tens, every 10 minutes mornings and afternoons news 93.1 KF became the freeways air quiet at this moment, But if you're headed to Reno or Tahoe, no chains required for 80 50 or 88. Weigh 89 closed from the junction of 3 95 the highway foreign Monitor past but keep your heads up. The Sierra is expecting a big snowstorm Tuesday through Friday. I'm Laurie Sanders News. 93.1 KFBK. Now Sacramento weather as we head through the day today, it will be mostly cloudy highs near 50 with some rain this afternoon and evening down into the thirties. Then tonight tomorrow partly sunny and dry 54 to 58 even cooler Tuesday, with some clouds highs in the low to mid fifties. I vacuum whether meteorologist Bill Dagger News 93.1 kfbk. From ABC News. This is perspective this week stories and why they matter. I'm Sherry Preston. Coming up Robert Frost, my Angelo and now Amanda Gorman. But first one of the first things that President Biden did when he took office was put the United States back into the World Health Organization. One of the first things Dr. Anthony Fauci.

The Book Review
Amanda Gorman's books jump to bestsellers after inaugural poem
"The dawn is hours before we knew it. Somehow we do it. Somehow we've weathered in witnessed a nation that isn't broken but simply unfinished we the successors of a country and the time were a skinny black girl. Descended from slaves and raised by a single mother can dream of becoming president only to find herself reciting for one that was amanda gorman the inaugural youth poet lawyer it reading from her poem. At the hill we climb which she read at joe biden's inauguration alexandra alter profiled gorman and interviewed her joining us now to talk a little bit more about that hey alexandra hey pamela so this was a really exciting week in washington but i most loved about the news events. This week was that a poet was the breakout star of the inauguration ceremony on wednesday. Amanda gorman was the youngest inaugural poet and us history. She joins a very elite class of poets. Only been a handful of poets who have performed it including robert frost my ngelo elizabeth richard blanco. So she really brought a lot to this performance. And when i spoke to her what was really interesting to me was. She felt enormous pressure. Not just because of the size of the audience she was going to be addressing. Tens of millions of people potentially watching the events at home but because of the state of the country she felt real responsibility to present a poem that reflected joe biden's inaugural theme of america united and. She said they didn't give her any specific guidelines but they said that's the three million inauguration but she also really wanted to address. What has happened recently in the country. Particularly the partisan divisions that we've seen the political violence the effects of the pandemic. It's a really dark moment. And so she was kind of trying to counter johnston to forces the potential for unity. But also these deep divisions that we're seeing in the country now so interestingly. She was really struggling with the poem. The inaugural committee reached out to her late december. She had a few weeks to work on it and was kind of she said it's like it felt like climbing a mountain would do a few versus a day and then on january six. We all watched across the country as the unfolded at the capital. There was the insurrection. There and rioters stormed the capital. And amanda gorman at that point had written about half of her poem and she stayed up late into the night and finished it because she just felt this urgency. And so you're there are verses in the poem that reflect what we saw that day the other thing that she said that was interesting about how she prepared to write it was. She said she always starts with historical research so she studied speeches from leaders who really brought their countries together. In times of crisis she looked at speeches by winston. Churchill abraham lincoln martin luther king junior and she listened to music that inspired her including the musical hamilton. There are a couple of hamilton references within the poem. That some people caught including lin-manuel miranda who was very appreciative of her poetry. So it's been incredible to see their response to her work after she gave this really kind of inspiring performance her books. She has two books coming out this year. Actually three because they're releasing the poem she wrote as a standalone and she has now the number one and number two books on amazon and this is a poet who is twenty two years old and she's preparing to publish her debut collection. This fall so she's gone incredibly quickly from somebody who had following and was pretty well known in the poetry world to kind of national literary star and one other thing that i loved about her performance and her approach to it which she talked about how she felt like she was representing not just her own words but representing poetry itself representing american poetry and y you know it was important to have poetry part of the ceremony. She said when. I spoke to her now more than ever. The united states needs an inaugural poem. Poetry is typically the touchstone that we go back to when we have to remind ourselves of the history that we stand on the future that we stand for so i thought it was lovely that she felt that she was standing up in front of the capital. Two weeks after the insurrection took place kind of representing poetry as a form that can unite the country.

WBAP 820AM
"robert frost" Discussed on WBAP 820AM
"48 w B a P. This surely has an inauguration theme. Tell me something good after what we witnessed yesterday, Okay? Maybe not here. Stupid joke. Mm. Well, Do you guys know the name? Amanda Gorman. Manda Gorman. I do not Is that the young girl that was on the, uh, did some blow three. Let's just let's rewind a second here. How late did you guys stay with the inauguration? After President Biden took the oath of office Lady gaga. You made it through her. Partially. That's when I left. Did you did you? Did you make it that you do? So you didn't make it to the benediction, which was after right? I didn't make it to that now. Well, Amanda Gorman. She's a 22 year old L, A native, and she is the national youth poet laureate. And as of yesterday she is the youngest person ever to give the inauguration poem. Okay, That's three points there for how? Yes, and that puts around up there with people like Robert Frost in my eye, Angela. You know, she had been because of pandemic like anybody else. You've been cooped up at home. She she was watching the greatest the great British baking show and she gets the zoom call. And then they ask her if, as the national youth poet Lord, if she would come, she would write a poem for the inauguration. She did write the point when she was finished. She was very proud of it. The events on January 6th. The capital, made her put a a sort of. Ah, do a little bit of an edit to it, but it's called the hill we climb, and she did that yesterday, and she totally sold the thing. Delivery and everything. Yeah. I think the reason that I haven't been a real fan of poet poetry readings is because they're either given with too much drama, or they're giving with no feeling at all. Let's all get running, will, uh, I only want quotas that starts off with the man from Nantucket, right. You know, that's your only portrayal ends right there because you have to let you continue. But you know what Ms Gorman nailed it. Ms. Gorman really nailed it yesterday, and which, if you knew her, as a young girl makes it even Maura. Impressive because, as a young girl, Amanda Gorman had a speech impediment. She couldn't say the letter R Mm. So she wouldn't talk very much. She could only learn to express yourself on paper. I had my nephew Daniel had they had a problem. He couldn't say the letter R and my dad made him learn a poem. 30, dirty birds sitting on a curb bourbon and a chirping and eating dirty worms. I think I told you stupid. My son went to the same thing. And you gave me that point to use with him. Awesome. How about that? That's a good exercise. Gotta be well. Amanda Amanda Gorman's exercise was singing the song. All right. What was the Aaron Burr, sir from Hamilton. Okay, Because it's got a lot of our yes. Just talk like a pirate. Yeah, all right. Boy, Jim Black, but but she did that a lot and that that kind of got her rolling into the ours is a history of famous speakers. In history with speech impediments. Myatt my Angelou, where, while we're on the poet subject, she was mute when she was a child, Joe Biden stuttered Greek statesmen and famous ordered Dimosthenis. Practice, speaking, peaking by putting pebbles in his mouth. That got him through his stuttering in his speech impediment, So there's a long line of people who have overcome speech. Impediments. And if you saw her yesterday you you would have had no idea that there was anything wrong at all with her speaking story, nailed it. Do you think the Biden camp knew about her speech impediment, you know, with his stuttering They might have, because I sort of I sort of felt like there might have been a coincidence there and no no incidents. Unknown coincidence? Yes. Well, that lawyer my cousin Vinny will never mind exactly right. That's it. Let's do this shit, but she had this problem into college, but she graduated Harvard She's written a Children's book. Now she's made history at the inauguration. And this will surprise you. She wants to be president. Someday We'll do that. Yes, Traffic.

710 WOR
"robert frost" Discussed on 710 WOR
"Must remember. Things hard, sometimes to remember. Specially for you, but that's how we heal. It's important to do that as a nation. Well, there you go. You got to do that, is it? It got that's good. I mean, way. You're gonna be such a great country. Now. I gotta tell you wait. But what a leader land We'll wait for sundown and dust. What a shine the lights. The darkness long so tankers full of reflection. Remember all we lost? I feel so good. I really feel good today. This is exactly what this country needs right now. This is exactly right now. I mean, this is the thistles. The man This is the moment after this man Julius is gonna lead us out of this pandemic. Lead us out of this red. Finally, we have a leader. I see. The light ahead can understand us. You see that light twinkling head there, Len, that we're headed towards I'm just waiting for you to to stop. You know, Uh, where where we have? This is the moment from Jekyll and Hyde. I was playing. That is the day. This is the moment. The famous Robert Frost poem. I couldn't think it was the road not taken which is very fine. Polo. Yes. Yeah, Who doesn't say that the road not take it is the road that is that you're not going to be on two diverged in a yellow wood. Sorry I couldn't travel the fact that my final destiny beckons. I never ran Con SE Bombay shield. We must remember. It's hard sometimes to remember it was this..

Press Play with Madeleine Brand
22-Year-Old Los Angeles Poet to Perform at Inauguration
"Old L a poet Amanda Gorman was asked to write a poem and recited at Joe Biden's inauguration tomorrow. But you probably don't know that Gorman, who became the nation's first national youth poet laureate a few years ago shares Personal connection with the president elect. Like Biden, who spoken openly about having studied as a child, Gorman has had to overcome a childhood speech impediment. She had difficulty saying certain letters of the alphabet. The letter R was especially tough, which caused her to have to constantly self edit. I don't want to say girls can change the world, but I cannot say Many of the letters in that statement, so I'd say things like young woman can shape the globe. Gorman says her inauguration poem was partly inspired by the insurrection of the U. S Capitol earlier this month. Here's a preview of that poem, which is called the Hill We Climb Allow Democracy can be periodically delayed. It can never be permanently defeated. In this truth in this faith we trust for while we have our eyes on the future history has its eyes on us. And when she steps to the microphone tomorrow, Gorman will continue a tradition that includes luminaries such as Robert Frost in Maya Angelou, who is one of her personal heroes, and crowds could soon

BrainStuff
What's next for Solar Orbiter after its historic launch to the sun
"Hey brain stuff lauren. Boban here a newly launched spacecraft promises to broaden our understanding of the sun called solar orbiter or the Solo for short it left Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Central Florida on Sunday February. Ninth at three PM. The new probes part of an international collaboration between NASA and the European Space Agency or ESA both parties contributed to its arsenal of scientific instruments. Some of these gadgets will remotely image the Sun It's atmosphere and the materials it spews forth others are built to keep tabs on the spacecraft's immediate surroundings during the wee hours of February tenth. Two Thousand Twenty European Space Operation Center in Darmstadt Germany got a signal confirming the orbiter's on board solar panels were functioning correctly so begins a seven year plan mission the orbiter is supposed to take to paraphrase. Robert Frost the route less traveled. You see all the planets in our solar system revolve around the sun on the same General Plane. Give or take a few degrees called the ecliptic plane. It's like a giant invisible disk a one that very nearly lines up with Sun's equator most of our space fearing devices are gravitationally confined to this plane but the so low is meant to escape it by exploiting the gravity of Earth and Venus the probe will orbit the sun on a unique and tilted pathway. This unique trajectory will give the solo twenty two close approaches to the Sun as close as twenty six million miles or thirty five million kilometers as well as bringing it within the orbit of Mercury to study the sun's influence on space. It will also give the solo the chance to do something no craft has ever done before take pictures of the solar polls looking down from above or up from below just like Earth. The Sun has a north and South Pole in two thousand eighteen the ESA used data from the probe to satellite trying to determine what the northern pole looks like. But probe to couldn't photograph this region directly. If all goes according to plan the solo will do just that. It's I close pass by. The Sun will be twenty twenty at about a third the distance from the Sun to Earth. And that's just the beginning. Another mission involves SOLO PARTNERING UP WITH BE Parker Solar probe launched in two thousand eighteen. This space craft is able to fly much closer to the sun and the solo ever will comparing the feedback from both probes. Ought to tell us. A great deal about the mysterious phenomenon called solar wind which are streams of charged particles. Any color pictures that the solo gives us should provide relevant insights to the sun's polar probably have a big effect on its atmosphere as a whole along with the winds unleashes. The Solos unique travel plans will put it in contact with intense heat and extreme cold. The new probe is going to revolve around the Sun. Very long very narrow oval shaped orbit as it nears the Star. Things will get rather toasty. And that's why designers fitted solar orbiter with reflective heat shield coated in titanium foil according to NASA this shield stand temperatures as high as nine hundred seventy degrees Fahrenheit or five hundred and twenty degrees Celsius. It's also got

Bloomberg Surveillance
Bitcoin extends slide and loses 30 percent in a week
"And what's happened is that, you know, people just aren't buying the machines to mind, bitcoin and other. Me. What does mine come on? You've done this for decades. What does accumulate Cumulus mine? All these calculations in order to generate bitcoin, and you need high powered machines to do it and video has the kind of chips running those machines. And by the way, we should point out that stock is down another one and a half percent in today's race. And I just give you the news from Switzerland at the exchange. There has given a green light to the world's first exchange traded product tracking multiple crypto currencies the Amazon crypto E T P will begin trading next week. So they'll be another outlet for your money. If you look. What a fork is this weekend. It's like a roster different than a spoon. It's like a Robert frost opponents a wrote you take the fork in the road takes up when you get there. When you get to the fork in the road, take moving David Wilson. Thank you so much bitcoin. I mean, come on five thousand eighty one is the intraday lie. Let let's talk about something just, you know, Staples like the US government. Let's bring in our expert when it comes to all things related to the federal budget. Jack Fitzpatrick is our Bloomberg government budget reporter Jack Fitzpatrick, the president met with Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell as well. As Richard Shelby. Republican from Alabama Senator Shelby the appropriations chairman he met with them over the weekend. Are we going to get a budget shutdown is that gonna happen there?