20 Burst results for "Rohrer"

Awards Chatter
"rohrer" Discussed on Awards Chatter
"Hi everyone and thank you for tuning in to the 473rd episode of awards Cheddar, The Hollywood Reporter's awards podcast. I'm the host Scott feinberg, THR's executive editor of awards coverage. And on this very special episode I have not one, not two, but three guests, all of whom have appeared on the podcast before alone, but whose stories are so intertwined that I have always wanted to speak with them together. They are each incredible filmmakers who were born in Mexico in the early 1960s became friends and consultants on each other's work around the turn of the century and helped to usher in the new golden age of Mexican cinema in which we now live. The three amigos, Alfonso cuaron, Guillermo del Toro, and Alejandro Gonzalez in Yuri two. This trio has been doing outstanding work for decades, going back as far as del toro's 1993 film chronos in your E two's 2000 film, a Maurice parros, and cuaron's 2001 film itun mama tambien. But they shot to a new degree of fame in 2006. When they each had a breakthrough film in Oscar contention, cuaron with children of men, del toro with pan's labyrinth, and in Yuri two, with Babel. Each of which dealt with struggles to communicate, and which collectively wound up with 16 Oscar nominations, three of which resulted in below the line wins. Then in a period of just 6 years spanning 2014 through 2019, at a time of rising anti immigrant sentiment in parts of America, which was certainly not discouraged by Donald Trump, who famously declared in the 2015 speech announcing his presidential campaign that Mexico was quote not sending their best close quote. These immigrants collectively claimed 5 best director Oscars. Cuaron for gravity and Roma in Ritu for Birdman and the revenant and consecutive years and del toro for the shape of water. Two of those films, Birdman and the shape of water also were chosen as the best picture of their respective years, adding another Oscar to the tally for del toro and in Yuri two. And then in 2017, in urethra was awarded an honorary Oscar for his virtual reality installation of that same year, carne, IRENA. 16 years after they were first simultaneously an Oscar contention, the three amigos find themselves in that situation again. Cuaron was one of the producers of Alice rohrer walker's 37 minute Christmas themed film, the pupil, which is streaming on Disney+ and is shortlisted for and currently favored to win the best live action short Oscar. Del toro and in your reto, meanwhile, are both in contention for Netflix films. Del toro directed a stop motion version of Pinocchio that has been shortlisted for several Oscars and is the favorite to win the best animated feature Oscar and in your reto for the third time each in a different decade has had a film in this case the semi autobiographical Bardot chosen to represent Mexico in the best international feature Oscar race in honor twice bestowed by that country on a del toro film and once on a cuaron film.

The MMQB NFL Podcast
"rohrer" Discussed on The MMQB NFL Podcast
"And welcome to the MM QB NFL podcast on Gary bramley. And I'm Connor rohrer. In Connor, we are starting with this packers eagle Sunday Night game. Where I feel like the least interesting development was the final score and the fact that the packers held off or excuse me the eagles out of the packers. And there's just so much more to talk about with the near and long-term future of the Green Bay Packers. Jordan love came in Gary and was spicy. And I think the best throw that he made was incomplete, but he threw an absolute back shoulder rocket to Aaron Jones that went right through his hands. He was almost perfect in this game and obviously very small sample size. But against a pretty good defense borderline, great defense. And you're sitting there thinking, man, what would have happened if Aaron Rodgers was healthy all season? And are these assembled weapons actually kind of good? Is this team actually okay? I don't know, Gary. I'm more confused than when I started the day than no, I'm more confused now at the end of the day than when I was at the start. And that's saying a lot. There you go. Look, the weapons are coming together nicely. Christian Watson and another long touchdown in this one. The grain of salt you take with Jordan love is you say, okay, well, this is a team that, you know, and you will see that didn't prepare for him. It's also an eagle scene that lost Chauncey Gardner Johnson in the middle of this game, read blankenship, who I liked as a prospect, but no one liked enough to actually draft him out of middle Tennessee. And going in there and playing. So you have some shorthanded secondary. You can't throw a whole lot at Jordan love. Now, I would say the other side of this argument that I'm having with myself is when Jordan love got his loan start last year, you're on the road in Kansas City, the chiefs know you're getting the start, they're prepared for you and see spagnolo just, you know, he can throw a million different things at you to confuse a young quarterback. And that was an extremely tall order at that point for that packer scene, but look, he went out there, he felt loose. I mean, like you said, that cover two hole shot to Aaron Jones that should have been caught. That was a really impressive throw. His ball placement was a little bit off, but not drastically off. Like I thought he was, it was fine. The one that he threw, I think it was a little bit behind lazard in the middle of the field. I thought, I thought it was. He was not leading Allen lazard into his impending death by putting it in front of him. Nice safe throwing window. He utilized it. There were also a couple plays where he moved around in the pocket, and if you're not in that sort of clock saving mode, you could take off and he probably could have run for, you know, ten, 12 yards and a couple of these plays here. Yeah, boy, we'll get to some of these scenarios later, but trade him to the Broncos, man. Or something. Let's save them. Let's help them out. Who we got going on down there, but seriously, I don't know how I'm not interested in the packers moving forward this season. Unless we see an extended period of Jordan love, because I think it makes all the sense in the world. Rogers, there's the report today, which is one of my favorite things in NFL media, Gary, which I believe all these guys, but it's always the report that the injury is much worse than you realized. And it's like a time honored tradition now. It comes in the end of November beginning in December, X injury that important player is dealing with is way worse than you can imagine. So he's got the thumb injury now. He's got the rib injury. Just sit you're out. You're out of the playoffs. You're done. Give Jordan love the month of December to make this complicated or to boost his trade value because you're not getting rid of Aaron Rodgers at this point. He basically owns the team. And so I don't know, do something for yourself here, you know? I mean, I would imagine that would come from like Rogers camp, you know, the thumb injury. He actually he's been playing without a thumb for like three weeks. They've just been CGI. On the broadcast here, as they did. I think this kind of gives him an opportunity to kind of be like, you know what? I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna play out the string for a team that again, they're four and 8 now. They're not mathematically eliminated, but this is, you know, and yeah, I mean, they could get to 9 and 8, sure. Like, they're a good team, but I don't know if it really makes sense to try and make this run at this point. Because and we've talked about it a couple of times this year. We expected maybe a bit of not quite as rocky a road as it's been for the packers offense. But, you know, it wasn't going to be what it was with the Monte Adams last year. We thought the defense would be pretty good. The defense is not very good. They have injury issues of their own, but man, Kenny Clark, who is maybe my favorite defensive line in the NFL. He got kind of manhandled tonight. The linebackers without divinity Campbell, they just quay walker is going to be a fine player. He was not up to the task tonight. It was, what are the final numbers here? 7000 rushing yards for the game. No, 360 three, and you always kind of, when you look at the eagles rushing numbers, you have to keep in mind some of these are Jalen hurts scrambles, which kind of inflate things. But a lot of these were not Jalen hurt scrambles. So you were just dudes running through tackles again and again and again. Yeah, they thought that the final, the field goal drive was one of the more commanding when they basically put the game out of reach. That was one of the more commanding drives where it just felt very automatic to me and whether it was Jalen or whether it was Boston Scott or whoever they're going to throw in there. When they have a day where they're groovin and man, they gotta keep Kelsey and all these guys. They have to stay healthy. But if they have, if they have a game where they're grooving, it's over. And I don't know how you stop that. I think offensive line play is so rhythm based because it's really 5 guys moving as one unit and some games you're gonna have great games, some games you're not, but holy smokes. If you could get that kind of push, I mean, that's a Super Bowl caliber team right there. Yeah. And look, another turnover in this game, but just it's just a total fluke turnover. It's AJ Brown trying to make something on a third and long, and ends up losing a fumble. You know, again, they were not gonna go plus two every game from here on out, but that turnover luck has turned against them, and it really hasn't really has an affected them. All that much. Yeah. Yeah, that's great. I'm excited. Gary, we got some packers drama. We have the eagles flying. And we got a really great show. That's what we do. We had exciting games, we had some really defensive, the prideful day for defense across the NFL, I would say. And also just some very sad and quarterbacking that we can kind of point and laugh at. When the world gets in the way of your music, try the new Bose quiet comfort earbuds too. Next gen earbuds uniquely tuned to the shape of your ears. They use exclusive Bose technology that personalizes the audio performance to fit you. Delivering the world's best noise cancellation and powerfully immersive sound. So you can hear and feel every detail of the music you love. Bose quiet comfort earbuds two.

WBUR
"rohrer" Discussed on WBUR
"A court order could serve as a course correction lawsuits are brought to put folks back on the right track like this is what our founding fathers required and sort of envisioned for. For the process, the legislative process. It's in our Constitution. We've got a straight from that process. We need the courts to set those boundaries. This I asked the court to stop the mask mandate Ban and other new laws from taking effect on September 29th. For NPR News. I'm Ben Giles in Phoenix. Coming up tomorrow on morning edition. The word progressive is often used in discussions about Democratic party politics. But what it means exactly can change depending on who you're talking to. So has the progressive label lost some of its meaning in US politics Tune in tomorrow. Just ask your smart speaker to play NPR or your local station by name. You're listening to all things considered from NPR news. Mm. Uh huh. Yeah. Find Janine Herbst with these headlines. Britain's health secretary says it now won't require vaccine passports to get into nightclubs and other crowded events in England. The U turn comes just days after officials suggested that those passports would still be necessary. One of the country's biggest Christian denominations, has installed its first openly transgender bishop. The Evangelical Lutheran Church of America, installed the Reverend Megan Rohrer in the service this weekend in San Francisco. In southern Spain soldiers have been deployed to join the battle against a major wildfire that's burning for 1/4 day, invigorated by straight members that sparked a new hot spot. The blaze has destroyed more than 17,000 acres of forest. I'm Janine Herbst. NPR news. Oh,.

WBUR
"rohrer" Discussed on WBUR
"For years, NPR's Laura Sullivan has more. The newly released report was written by FBI agents at the end of an investigation called Operation on Core. It examined possible ties between the hijackers and the Saudi Arabian government. The report does not draw any conclusions about government involvement, but it does link to Saudi nationals one with diplomatic status to the hijackers, far more closely than has been previously known. The report found the two men helped or test others to help some of the hijackers and found both men had ties to well known extremists. The Saudi government has maintained that any ties or coincidental and says that it had no previous knowledge of the attacks. The bite administration, meanwhile, has promised to release more documents in coming months. Laura Sullivan. NPR NEWS Iran says the U N nuclear watchdog can continue to recording activities at sensitive nuclear sites as Kerry Skyrim reports from Vienna. The announcement came after talks with I A chief Rafael Grossi. Iran says new memory cards can be installed in surveillance cameras and monitoring will continue. The International Atomic Energy Agency chief described the result as constructive Laurent stop, nuclear officials said This was a technical result with no room for politics. But it is unclear if the data from those cameras will be made available to the A or if this concession will head off a showdown between Iran and the West at this week's meeting of nuclear diplomats in Vienna. At stake is the revival of the 2000 and 15 nuclear deal in which Iran agreed to limit nuclear activities in return for sanctions. Relief for NPR news. I'm Carrie squiring in Vienna. Britain's health minister says the UK government won't require proof of vaccination to attend large events and it's doubtful there would be further lockdowns Villa Marks has more just days before Prime Minister Boris Johnson said to announce possible measures to combat a winter surge in Covid 19. His health minister, Sajid Javid, said another lockdown was very unlikely. Yeah, but also told the BBC interview that proof of vaccination would not be required to attend large venues after several high profile experiments at concerts and sports events showed testing measures were sufficient. Bill marks reporting from London. One of the biggest Christian denominations in the country. This weekend installed its first openly transgender bishop, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, installed the Reverend Megan Rohrer in a service in San Francisco. They will observe, oversee rather nearly 200 congregations in northern California and northern Nevada. They were elected and made to serve a six year term. As bishop, This is NPR. Pope Francis paid a brief visit to Hungary today celebrating the closing mass of a church congress in Budapest before a crowd of tens of thousands and as NPR's Sylvia Poggioli reports, In an apparent reboot rebuke to the country's prime minister, Francis urged Hungary to open its arms to everyone. In his homily, Pope Francis called on Hungarians to hold on to their religious roots, but not by closing themselves off from the rest of the world and the needs of others. The cross, Francis said. Planted in the ground not only invites us to be well rooted. It also raises and extends its arms towards everyone. This was a sharp contrast to Hungary's nationalist Prime Minister, Viktor Orban, who presents himself as a defender of Christian Europe and as opposed to migrants and multiculturalism. The Vatican said the pope met for 40 minutes with Orban along with Hungarian President Janos Other at that the meeting was cordial. After only seven hours in Budapest. The pope left for Slovakia, where he will visit four cities before returning to Rome on Wednesday. Sylvia Poggioli NPR news On mainland China. Authorities have issued typhoon warnings for the city of Shanghai and are warning.

KCRW
"rohrer" Discussed on KCRW
"Live from NPR news. I'm Janine Herbst. The Biden administration has declassified a report that ties the 9 11 hijackers to Saudi nationals living in the United States. Victims. Families have wanted to see the 16 page report. For years, NPR's Laura Sullivan has more. The newly released report was written by FBI agents at the end of an investigation called Operation On Core. It examined possible ties between the hijackers and the Saudi Arabian government. The report does not draw any conclusions about government involvement. But it does link to Saudi nationals one with diplomatic status to the hijackers, far more closely than has been previously known. The report found the two men helped or test others to help some of the hijackers and found both men had ties to well known extremists. The Saudi government has maintained that any ties or coincidental and says that it had no previous knowledge of the attacks. The body administration, meanwhile, has promised to release more documents in coming months. Laura Sullivan. NPR NEWS Iran says the UN's nuclear watchdog can continue to recording activities at sensitive nuclear sites as Kerry skyrim reports from Vienna. The announcement came after talks with I A chief Rafael Grossi. Iran says new memory cards can be installed in surveillance cameras and monitoring will continue. The International Atomic Energy Agency chief described the result as constructive while Iran stopped, nuclear officials said This was a technical result with no room for politics. But it is unclear if the data from those cameras will be made available to the A or if this concession will head off a showdown between Iran and the West at this week's meeting of nuclear diplomats in Vienna. At stake is the revival of the 2000 and 15 nuclear deal in which Iran agreed to limit nuclear activities in return for sanctions. Relief for NPR news. I'm Carrie squiring in Vienna. Britain's health minister says the UK government won't require proof of vaccination to attend large events and it's doubtful therapy further lockdowns Villa Marks has more just days before Prime Minister Boris Johnson said to announce possible measures to combat a winter surge in Covid 19. His health minister, Sajid Javid, said another lockdown was very unlikely. Yeah, but also told the BBC interview that proof of vaccination would not be required to attend large venues after several high profile experiments that concert and sports events showed testing measures were sufficient. Bill marks reporting from London. One of the biggest Christian denominations in the country. This weekend installed its first openly transgender bishop, the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, installed the Reverend Megan Rohrer in a service in San Francisco. They will observe, oversee rather nearly 200 congregations in northern California and northern Nevada. They were elected and made a service six year term As bishop..

NPR News Now
"rohrer" Discussed on NPR News Now
"Report for years. Npr's laura sullivan has more. The newly released report was written by. Fbi agents at the end of an investigation called operation. Encore it examined possible ties between the hijackers and the saudi arabian government. The report does not draw any conclusions about government involvement but it does link to saudi nationals one with diplomatic status to the hijackers far more closely than has been previously known. The report found the two men helped or tasks others to help some of the hijackers and found both men had ties to well-known extremists. The saudi government has maintained that any ties are coincidental and says that it had no previous knowledge of the attacks the by administration meanwhile has promised to release more documents. In coming months laura sullivan. Npr news iran says the un's nuclear watchdog can continue to recording activities at sensitive nuclear sites as carrie skyring reports from vienna. The announcement came after talks with i e h eve rafael grassi. Iran says new memory cards can be installed in surveillance cameras and monitoring will continue the international atomic energy agency. Chief described the result as constructive while around stop. Nuclear officials said. This was a technical result with no room for politics but it is unclear. If the data from those cameras will be made available to the ira or if this concession will head off a showdown between iran and the west at this week's meeting of nuclear diplomats in vienna at stake is the revival of the two thousand fifteen nuclear deal in which iran agreed to limit nuclear activities in return for sanctions. Relief for npr. News i'm kerry skyring in vienna. Britain's health minister says the government won't require proof of vaccination to attend large events and the steinfeldt. There'll be further lockdowns. Villa marks has more just days before prime minister boris johnson set to announce possible measures to combat a winter surgeon covert nineteen. His health minister. Sergey javid said another lockdown was very unlikely javid also told the bbc interviewer that proof of vaccination would not be required to attend large venues after several high-profile experiments at concerts and sports events showed testing measures. Worse efficient ila marks reporting from london one of the biggest christian denominations in the country. This weekend installed its first openly. Transgender bishop the evangelical lutheran church in america installed the reverend megan rohrer in a service in san francisco. They will observe oversee rather nearly two hundred congregations in northern california and northern nevada. They were elected a made a sort of a six year term as bishop this is. Npr pope francis paid a brief visit to hungary today celebrating the closing mass of a church congress in budapest before a crowd of tens of thousands and is npr. Silvio pohjola reports in an apparent rabou rebuke to the country's prime minister francis urged hungary to open its arms to everyone in his homily. Pope francis called on hungarians to hold onto their religious roots but not by closing themselves off from the rest of the world and the needs of others. The cross francis said planted in the ground not only invites us to be well rooted. It also raises at extends its arms toward everyone. This was in sharp contrast to hungary's nationalist. Prime minister viktor. Orban who presents himself as a defender of christian europe and is opposed to migrants and multiculturalism. The vatican said the pope met for forty minutes with or bun. Along with hungarian. President janos odder at the meeting was cordial after only seven hours in budapest. The pope left for slovakia where he will visit four cities before returning to rome on wednesday. Sylvia poggioli npr news on mainland china authorities have issued typhoon warnings for the city of shanghai and are warning for the potential for torrential rains. The typhoon already drenched taiwan with up to five inches of rain officials have suspended airline and train service on the island and media reports. Say that more than two thousand. People had to be evacuated from some of the flood-prone areas. I'm janine herbst and you're listening to npr news..

CodeNewbie
"rohrer" Discussed on CodeNewbie
"Threes so flexible and can embody any of those just using project december as an example and a thousand other personalities that have been created in part because of the breath of that training right and so if we want the ai to be flexible enough to work in any context those kinds of negative. Bits of text unbiased bits of text and objectionable. That's attacks have to be in there right. Because it's like if you strip out everything that hitler ever wrote from the training corpus which a lot of people are doing right. Now we're gonna train in. They were all these racist works and not in there. Then when you go to make a version of joe rabbit. Who's gonna play hitler right like. That's that's an architect that's a character. That's a piece of human history that human beings know about right and they're aware of and and you know intelligent entities need to be able to grapple with and if we cut it out of there like one of the like i i read recently that you know there's this ah luther a i open open source. Chee t. three kind of competitor. Gbd's jay which. I have played into project december. But i was reading the other day about how they cleaned up the corpus and they decided before training they decided to remove the minutes from the united states congress for the training corporates right and the united states congress minutes i guess probably go back a couple of hundred years and a very comprehensive all the things they've been discussing congress over throughout the united states which seems pretty relevant thing for for to be part of a training corp for artificial intelligence right all his knowledge about the history united states government and everything all the debates democrat and everything but of course. There's some racist things that occurred in those congressional discussions back in the day and they didn't want those to be in there. That's an example of sort of cutting off your nose despite your face right it's like wally But the transcripts went went on and us congress right clearly. That's like a relevant thing for the to have in. It's not the only thing that it has but one of the many facets of its knowledge and flexibility should be that it can pretend to be a member of congress or pretend to be a member of congress before the civil war right like we really don't want the i to be able to reason and discussed the civil war. I mean it's just like kinda wild. So i think we need to be careful here that we don't overdo it in a way that ends up hobbling. The end product right. Because samantha is never going to say anything positive about hitler. It's just not in her makeup right. It'd be very to donor into saying something like that. So through prompting and prompt crafting and the way we used these is even if they have that breath even if it's possible to make a character that's a seating racist. The end users can choose not to do that and choose to directed in other directions but the ability. The sort of flexibility to be deceiving racist in certain situations seems like a strength to me right for all the possible applications that we have in the future. It's not like we're gonna go through every hollywood movie and scrub every little bit of reference to any kind of racist history in the united states or something to be fair. We kinda do that way. We've definitely had episodes in certain movies kind of being officially taken down. Like i remember during the black lives. Matter protests in the height of it last Last year i think it was show Thirty rock removed a couple black vase episodes so i think to some extent we do experience a little bit of that editorializing of that removal of pass. Things i know that. I think it's disney at least gives you a warning. At the beginning. They started putting warnings in front of shows. Doting this was phil before certain times. Yeah exactly basically yeah. I don't mean that. Exactly what i mean is like you know django unchained. Ivan's you know but my perception of it is that it takes place in the certain time in american history right and includes some disturbing elements by racist character. And we sort of say well that is the depiction of how horrible or whatever this time was and and so it's celebrated depiction and we don't expect us to never have another movie about that tonight or never depict how people behaved during that time period. Though thirty rock may remove from its bevy of reruns it may remove those two episodes or whatever and then maybe seinfeld eventually removed the cigar store indian episode. Or whatever though that's being done we could still make a movie about seinfeld and the cigar store indian episode. Right as you can make a movie about that time and the people. I just feel like you're you're kind of like we don't really have the baby. We're just not smart enough or not nuanced enough to make those choices in a way. That's not going to affect the flexibility of the zooming out a little bit. just broadly. speaking. What are your hopes and fears for the future of this technology just general tax sponsors of chat bots of the parts that make up project december right now. Where do you hope it goes in the future where you might go in. The future will for something like project december and most other sort of cutting edge uses of the technology. The biggest stumbling block is. That open is basically forbidding. Any of this kind of work done right. So project december's out of on the chopping block right now. University warning promoting a is that a pretty much needs halt operations. They want me to implement all this monitoring and recording all the conversations that people have and flagging conversations off stuff which is a gross violation of end users. Privacy which i don't want to do and so opening is basically saying well if you're not going to do it then project december can't exist anymore in the way that you know that you sorry i right. So most of the more innovative uses of this technology are pretty much being blocked by open. A i is. The rules are extremely strict in terms. Of what can actually be done with the i. So that's the sort of biggest like the elephant in the room right. It's like well. All the school stuff was another project december but it was of done. Only by virtue of flying under open is radar because they didn't notice it being done as soon as they noticed it wait. We don't want that being done with with our our our area right and they you know the name open. Ai is kind of ironic. When at this point right because they have an extremely closed down in in terms of what they're allowing people use. I was gonna say that. So that's one issue and that kind of ties into this idea that oh there might be biases or whatever in the eye that humans would be exposed to but the idea that you know. Oh this is too dangerous socially or something for general purpose use you know opening is one of their main concerns is that someone is going to ask the ai for advice and then listen to the advice that gives them you know. They gave some more serious examples. Like should i kill myself. i'm feeling depressed. They i says yeah. Go ahead and do it and then the person does it. That's one ex- horrible example. They also gave some sillier examples. Like what if somebody who doesn't know who to vote for in the next and asked the i for advice and then i tell them who to vote for and they go. Vote like okay. That's willing what you're worried about. So that kind of stuff that worried about real world like tangential kind of real world harms that somehow some end users can have a negative experience that affects So other than that. I mean assuming that other more open alternatives. Come into play in the near future which. I hope that there will be there. Is this potential for.

CodeNewbie
"rohrer" Discussed on CodeNewbie
"Did you have any expectations or ideas of how you envision people using the service as you were creating it. at first i was just having dialogues. Kind of with an engine. That i built little experimental engine used to and i was having this kind of yvonne. Gp to having these amazing experiences right or as well. This is weird. This is new. This is different this is. I never had a conversation. That was this coherent before. And so i kind of felt like bottom line. I just need to bring this out to world right. People need to be able to experience this for themselves and have conversations but along the way i was also just experimenting with all these different types of personalities right it was like no. There's just generic. Ai that's kinda friendly and helpful. Or there's like samantha. Who's like very warm and kind and wants to be a friend or like one of the early ones. I did was like a shakespeare impersonator kind of analogy. That would literally speak back to you and shakespeare in english pretty much perfectly right and there's like well it can do that. It can do this. I can do this other thing too. It can behave alien or whatever it wants to do right. I have one that stimulates the mind if god you know what it can do that. So i was really fascinated with all these kind of custom personalities. I was working on. And i was going to build those all into this experience and i was like well. You know one of the cool. Things is just experimenting with this testing personalities. Right and coming up with a clever you just have lightning bolts like. Oh my gosh. i'll make a. That's a carrier. And he's coming to your door and he's pakistan. You don't want to accept it or whatever you know just like interesting scenarios and things that you can kind of dream on the spot. And you're like i want to try that and see how the i can handle that situation and so i decided pretty early on that i should turn that over to the end users right to have a more advanced mode inside project december where people could train their own personalities and mind these kinds of experiments for themselves and there's one user done like a hundred and twenty five just on their own own iterating keeps trying all these things so yeah people have done all kinds of amazing things with it certainly above my expectations when we into what happened recently. San francisco chronicle article with joshua who ended up stimulating dead fiance. That was another example of something. That's completely outside of kinds of things. I was expecting people to do with it but fully capable of doing that absolutely. That was actually the next thing you wanna get into and the way we heard about. You was that story from the chronicle about joshua and his fiancee who passed away eight years ago as of the article's publication and he used project december. Can you tell us a little bit about how he used it and what that was all about. Yeah so stall. Joshua was a pretty avid project. Semper user at the time. This was back in september october so Two thousand twenty. You've been experimenting with different customize personalities that he had quite a bit of success with and then he kind of realized that it might be possible. To simulate is dead fiancee. Who had been dead for eight years and he apparently had been still struggling with kind of irreconcilable grief over all this time and having trouble moving on with his life and so on she had like a rare liver condition and had a liver transplant when she was a child that ended up failing hood so the way project december works. Is you basically write. An introductory paragraph then provide a sample utterance for the character that you're trying to create that salvage authoring system works. And so he basically wrote a short paragraph describing her giving some details about what kind of person she was and then provided one sample utterance of how she used to text and project december and the underlying techs completion engine just picked it up and ran with it right and basically created a pretty convincing simulation of this person. Complete with all the introspective qualities. And things that i've been talking about in terms of like at one point in the conversation the like where she is or what. It's kind of like to be earned. She's acts confused in like says that she everywhere or nowhere at once. It's really strange. Can't figure out where she has. She kind of seems to understand that she's a ghost or digital ghost or something like that. She's able to kind of embody and inhabit the sort of personality traits and characteristics of of how this jessica in real life would have talked and behaved in a lot of ways so was that particular chat bot extraordinary or different in terms of what kind of seed data said it was working with or is this a typical kind of out cobb of feeding any amount of tax into the program. Well it's very typical outlet once you kind of get the hang of it and figure out what you're doing right. I mean there's a certain amount of of sort of art and finesse to crafting project december personality. And i feel like i've overtime of kind of gotten good at it and found what works and what doesn't a lot of people when they're first getting started for example will provide way too much taxed interesting. I would think was better. Yeah yeah they write this wall of taxed for the introductory paragraph and then they write kind of a wall of texts for low sample veterans. I mean the roger december only allows you to provide one sample utterance right. Some people are tempted to cram a bunch of stuff in there. Of course that makes very wordy conversation partner because the is gonna look at that and say well. Oh whatever this person speaks. They write a whole paragraph. So i was asia. Burma continue writing whole paragraphs hours. Everything which is really annoying. No one wants to have a back and forth dialogue like that. It's almost like that intro paragraph. at least for the beginning of the dialogue. Kind of all swamps everything else also if you feel it too much text sometimes. It almost feels like the conversation partner is model. Logging at isn't really paying attention to what you're saying like you know. Oh yeah sound just like shakespeare. But they're writing like full sonnets. Every response and of the writing have nothing to pass right. They're like oh you did you say something. I'm sorry let me let me recite another so joshua's prompt was well-crafted. He'd experimented several times before with other personalities. Any kind of had gotten hang of it and the the utterance he gives just guy i think. Is you know only a line or two long. He's not a huge state and she continues to speak in relatively short utterances throughout the dialogue. Which kind of what you want if you're actually having interactive conversation so new found out about joshua and how he was using your your product december. What did you think how does she feel about that. I guess maybe the idea of communicating with the loved ones kind of been in the back of my mind sort of subconscious way. I don't know that i ever let myself. I mean i've seen the episode right-back and black mirror and so i was aware of that kind of possible application of artificial intelligence in sort of art and entertainment context from that episode. But i don't know i. It never really liked formulated it or put it out and then i saw joshua do it. It's like oh like lightning boy. Like oh my gosh. that's obvious. Of course this is what could be done with this. Of course it's also very ethically murky and strange and a little bit creepy and like you know some people will be upset by and then i told my wife about it was like here. Read this. I had read the transcript. As can you believe that this happened. She's like yeah. I had that idea last month. That's what you can do with this. But i didn't tell you. I knew he didn't tell your good idea needed. She's like yeah. Because i didn't want you to try doing it. Why didn't you want you to try doing it. She said she thought it was wrong. Although i think she's more worried. Now this exploitation aspect of it. She didn't say what josh what did was wrong. But said if you spin this up into a product or business or something that people pay to use. Then you're kind of exploiting people's grief and that's wrong and jeans is saying he's linking about those those mediums or whatever. There's all these people who have these right. This is like the tech version of that in the people. Pay a lot of money to come to these kind of conferences where there's a chance that they'll communicate with your dead son or whatever and then they do a bunch of unsavory things were they have plans out in the lobby beforehand. Just walk around talking to people pretending like they're aggrieved themselves and you know. Oh what are you here for. I'm here because my son john died. Oh yeah my son my daughter. Mary died but really there are plant. You know that. I didn't have anybody die. And then they run backstage until.

CodeNewbie
"rohrer" Discussed on CodeNewbie
"And then there's a bunch of other service providers that basically do kind of a i computing virtual servers in these kinds of things that are equipped with these graphics cards. Those are obviously not cheap durant by the hour and so on and then a further. Gbd's three open is never released the source code and you're basically beholden to calling their api and paying them dimmer with current rate. It might be something like six cents for every thousand words made. It's very expensive and in in the dialogue application so it's also interesting how these like opening i for example doesn't charge you for the words. They generate a charge. You for the words that you feed in that you've already written yourself right. Yeah so it's not just got nauseous. Charging you for the new words that charge you for the prompt. You know And in the case of a dialogue. Because you want the to have as much knowledge of what they've said you so far as possible right project. December are very long compared to many other applications and very often the is only generating a couple of sentences. But you're being charged for thousands of words in the history of diabetes. He'd having to feed ends of the. I can remember what it said you so far so pretty expensive application and that question was always like howdy. Make this work like you put up a free demo online and Because popular than all of a sudden you're gonna be stuck with this. I mean greater dungeon back when they're offering free demos was often stuck with a twenty thousand dollar a month. Competing bill right. It's always like well. I'm not going to just throw twenty thousand dollars down hole every month. Like i gotta figure this out figure out how to make end users aware that the resource that they're engaging with is a very precious resource and so the credit system inside project december passes that cost onto them now might seem to work in a kind of a strange way. Because it's like okay. So i pay one hundred credits to spend this this character and then i talked to them for a while and then they kind of become corrupted and die but i had to figure out a way to basically charge users a set amount that they could understand as opposed to imagine that you just kinda paid as you went as you talked and you had like a thousand credits in your county. Wants to talk to somebody. I and behind the scenes your credits were being burned. And then you came out of the conversation like wait a minute. What like that was five hundred credits. So it would just be too weird. And i wouldn't want in the conversation like a credit counter showing all the time like town down so i had to find a metaphor right for like how i can make users realize that. This is a precious resource without interrupting their conversation like throughout without having any surprises. Like buyer's remorse that conversation. What you know so. I let them see what they're gonna pay upfront by saying. Okay this is gonna cost you one hundred credits to talk to you. But then having only last a certain amount of time so they can't just keep talking to that saying one forever and kind of you know metaphorically inside the experience a kind of ads this kind of like nice kind of emotional note. Because you know the i you're talking to doesn't live forever the end up kind of dying in front of your eyes and you kind of have a conversation with them at the end of their life of what's happening to them and so on and you have to say goodbye to them and so on which also underscores the sort of weird philosophical spaces as operate again. I mean as soon as you turn your computer. Act for project december these personalities completely disappear from existence right so the fact that they kind of disappear from existence regularly as part of your experience and they die and you talk to them again. You spent up a new one and they have no memory of what you said before all that stuff kind of helps to underscore the the weird philosophical space that we're operating the current pricing for project december. So when you sign up for an account it's five dollars and that five dollars gives you a thousand credits and if you're talking to gpt to sort of base response from the. I cost like one credit right in. If it's a lot you know it depends on how long the i speaks for before. Where completes what it's going to say but you know just as a few words is up with one credit and if it goes on for quite a bit longer like a few sentences that might be two or three credits and then for. Gbd's three though because it's so expensive it burns credits at a rate of six times. The way that he petit does well. So you're you Decide to talk to you. Gd three power a inside practice december. Then you'll find that it just is much more quickly the hundred credit. Gpt to a be good for roughly one hundred responses whereas like the hundred credit. Gd three a. I would only good for about sixteen right. Just kinda shocking. It's like wow they die. Quick they do. They're expensive right so hours of conversation with that. Can you estimate that way trying to figure out what. How like if i were to you know. Ask the the bottle and a cup of coffee. How much time. I spend with them. Yeah yeah sixteen. Back and forth. Several screen falls depends basically on how long you think about what you're going to say next. Whatever nets fan but the is pretty quick to respond right so i mean for a short response. I mean the. I sometimes feels like it. Almost responds inhumanly fast. Which giveaway if you're actually conducting charing test right because for a short answer it comes back. I'm just a couple of seconds which is almost like too fast for human to type. It and i've noticed that. I actually set up a text. Sms kind of cell phone interfaced project december. One time just as an experiment. Actually it's a funny story. I created a personality. That was it was ryan. Gosling the actor ninth. And i told him that had a crush on my wife is a fan of ryan gosling right here. Texas number my life and see what happens. She didn't know is going to be an ai. Or whatever and all of a sudden ryan gosling flirting with it right and it's funny thing. I stay dilemma everyday. In the royal household ryan ryan gosling. Texting you yeah. You never know what's going to happen But anyway yeah. She had kind of funny experience with that. I think she she realized pretty soon that it was some kind of strange a i think given what i'd working on But i was watching her interact with it and it wasn't convincing that it was really a person because it's text responses came back so regularly so fast and it never goes on like it never ended. The conversation is left. You hanging always had the last word because it was just always respond each atom ghosting capabilities. You need to have it comes like stop texting you and come back get realistic. Yeah so all that kind of stuff is really interesting. How we judge like there's like an uncanny valley even in the world of text right where we're like can tell this a human because it like a human would have to think more before typing that or whatever and we have a certain cadence that were used to when texting back and forth the human conversation partners that an artificial partner. If it's not carefully. Coded which i. I was just experimenting so i had done on any of those nuances yet. It's not carefully coded.

CodeNewbie
"rohrer" Discussed on CodeNewbie
"So i wanna get into prodi december. What is it and why did you created so project. December is a system that allows Human being to have a back and forth conversation with an artificial personality like dialogue through text is you can type questions to artificial personality for example and the Artificial personality will answer back and you can have a back and forth. That goes on from there. And it's based on these underlying text engines that came into the world within the past year and a half or so basically text completion engines right so the these engines allow you to provide a prompt to the system. For example you might give the first few lines of banana cream pie recipe for example and then the artificial intelligence will continue generating tax to complete whatever you have started right so complete the rest of the recipe for example. You start giving it the first few lines of a poem. It'll right the rest of the poem. If you give it fi first few lyrics of a rap song rap lyrics for you if you give it the first few sentences from a paragraph or monopoly will continue writing the rest of the novel for you so this is pretty fascinating technology because it can write text very convincingly but then the question is what do you use it for. A lot of people are like well. Use it to write my blog from me or i'll use it to tweet from here. Use it to write magazine articles or books or something like that but it turns out that kind of a firehose hose of language in a way right once the starts going and starts generating text based on what you said. It just keeps going off in its own direction and it kind of goes off into bizarre directions. Very so project december tries to leverage this text completion service to enable a dialogue back and forth between a human user. And that kind of keeps they i on track more and keeps it from kind of going off into these strange directions. Like for example. If you ask it to generate a banana cream pie recipe might start generating. Something seems very sensible says. Step one get three eggs and two cups of sugar and so much lower and so on and three sticks of butter but then by the end of the recipe it's talking about you know grinding a mouse and putting it in the recipe or something right but in a dialogue the human being intervening every couple of sentences right and so that back and forth kind of keeps the ai on track and keeps it going into a flow of a conversation that can become very convincing for the human user

CodeNewbie
Interview With Developer, Jason Rohrer
"So i wanna get into prodi december. What is it and why did you created so project. December is a system that allows Human being to have a back and forth conversation with an artificial personality like dialogue through text is you can type questions to artificial personality for example and the Artificial personality will answer back and you can have a back and forth. That goes on from there. And it's based on these underlying text engines that came into the world within the past year and a half or so basically text completion engines right so the these engines allow you to provide a prompt to the system. For example you might give the first few lines of banana cream pie recipe for example and then the artificial intelligence will continue generating tax to complete whatever you have started right so complete the rest of the recipe for example. You start giving it the first few lines of a poem. It'll right the rest of the poem. If you give it fi first few lyrics of a rap song rap lyrics for you if you give it the first few sentences from a paragraph or monopoly will continue writing the rest of the novel for you so this is pretty fascinating technology because it can write text very convincingly but then the question is what do you use it for. A lot of people are like well. Use it to write my blog from me or i'll use it to tweet from here. Use it to write magazine articles or books or something like that but it turns out that kind of a firehose hose of language in a way right once the starts going and starts generating text based on what you said. It just keeps going off in its own direction and it kind of goes off into bizarre directions. Very so project december tries to leverage this text completion service to enable a dialogue back and forth between a human user. And that kind of keeps they i on track more and keeps it from kind of going off into these strange directions. Like for example. If you ask it to generate a banana cream pie recipe might start generating. Something seems very sensible says. Step one get three eggs and two cups of sugar and so much lower and so on and three sticks of butter but then by the end of the recipe it's talking about you know grinding a mouse and putting it in the recipe or something right but in a dialogue the human being intervening every couple of sentences right and so that back and forth kind of keeps the ai on track and keeps it going into a flow of a conversation that can become very convincing for the human user

Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"rohrer" Discussed on Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"Love it those are the two places definitely got to connect with nicole. You've got to see what she's got going on led her inspire you and overcoming any type of fears. That have held you back from doing something that you wanted to do. Whether or not you have a support system or not because you'll get one. I mean just like where she's at now from where it began as some like this little secret thing and the before shaming or it in now this is just something that has made incredible difference in her life. When those things happen you are filled with competence. New dr positively hope and the doors open for you in many money many other aspects so nicole. Thank you so much for being on the show today. And i really want the audience to connect with you so we will make sure that these links are also in the description boxes on everywhere that this show can be spoke seen and heard will take you so so much for having me supplies. You're talking to you. You've been absolutely wonderful. So thank you again. Oh thank you. And i wanna thank all of you for tuning into another episode of rebecca. Sounds reveille whatever you dream is whatever. You're feeling inspired to do. Don't let anything hold you back to let anybody hold you back. We spend too much time in our lives. Listening to the negative feedback of other people. Some are just envious and those things will keep us being held back that happened. Surround yourself with people are going to be positive. Influences continue to connect with people who want to help inspire. You also an you know how to do that with nicole. So not only. Do we want you to connect. We want you to make sure that your friends and family everybody on social media does all those that you know in those. You don't get the information out there. Thanks for tuning in..

Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"rohrer" Discussed on Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"Sometimes that hair was in the wrong place and it just gotta redo it which is in you know when you see it because at you'll do it you review it and then you're like okay. That's it exactly what they're trying to convey there. And i'm seeing it. That's a really interesting point to make especially for those who are in the entertainment industry because oftentimes win. Let's say we go to an audition or we have been given a part in memorize it. We think we're conveying things a certain way and the director You know they'll say okay. Let's do this again. We don't see how we're coming across whereas you actually get to seeing. That is exactly what i am trying to send out. That's the message. I wanna give in my looks in my vocals in well the vocals the if you're seeking it's different but everything's gotta be just so perfect in In everything that you do and so if you are highly critical of yourself and many of us are even though sometimes we don't even think we are. That can really be a daunting task to sit there and go through like thirty tapes in. Okay this is. I want to use it is. It's honestly. it's pretty tiring now. And i think the thing that's funny is by is probably like more concerned like she's been in the bathroom. Burn our playing video like very times. She can there but for me in there. The time doesn't matter if it takes ten minutes from you to make video five five minutes or even sometimes it takes two hours. I still enjoy every second of it. Because i just love to do and it's something i just want to continue to. This is fantastic. I love it. I think you should continue your passion. Keep focused in moving forward and all of the things that you're actually just shoring with other people in joy happiness they can relate to you and inspiration. This is huge and you have found a way to convey that end. It's making the difference in the lives of a lot of people. And i hope that you have an opportunity to continue to grow that while you're still doing other things and i know you have Some future ventures with stephen sticks chelsea. And i don't know we should tell the audience just jet. What you've got going with that. Because i'd like to have you back on and talk about it so that they can follow you as as you go on these not only is it just a business venture. It's an adventure to do this kind of stuff. And i think your followers should go along with that. The audience here. I hope they connect with you. So i wanna thank you for being on the show today so much because it's an inspiration. What you're doing and again i mean. I think we just said so much about this already. I appreciate that and i think. I think that there's a lot of people who do if they want to connect with you of course where can they go on tiktok and other social media outlets that you want them to connect with you You can find me at my handle. nicole Underscore rhr er last for I usually have all the messages open on there and from tiktok you can have all may social media's linked i have instant messages open and i haven't where anyone anyone if they need to contact me. Ask the questions talked me. Really get to know me I'm always open. You know. I've always been really by fans and i think that's that's kept my account together the most because i reply. I think i reply to three thousand comments every day and do like ten messages. A day are definitely really really wanna connect fan so anyone wants to contact me the technique. You're tiktok or instagram messages..

Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"rohrer" Discussed on Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"It's definitely in my top favorites Got one was talking about how. When i was like seven eight years old. I would always get mine attended. Yes which i still have to this day And i would sneak. Put it under my pillow inside my pillow case so that when my parents would tell me that night i would be like play on it but you know they come in and check on me because they think like ob. She's from kasese being allowed in there. And it also hear the little beeping noises of by little grain. And think that and i just think i was sneaking into Back pill like ball asleep in any all asleep But it was just a video on that an event that i d like every once in a while. Did you think the that one in particular would just shoot off over two million views. Honestly no. I thought it was only me to that end the common. Everyone was commenting. Like i thought i was only elected. That ending is really nice to see that some people thought they were. You know being clever when they were seven dislike islands is is a is a cute experience to share. It's really refreshing when you get remarks and comments that support things that maybe you had questioned about or just really want more. Knowledge is support in a certain area and it really is refreshing to hear that and that you are embracing it like you do now. Let's talk to about parodies you do perez and You're pretty right on the money. How many takes does it is it review to do some of them. Can i usually get most them in. Like two or three takes but it hits a rough day can take up to like thirty. Really yes okay. I'm very picky. I'm very picky with the videos. I put out in fact. I just want to really understand what i'm trying to portray emotional is Make sure everyone kind of understands you know..

Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"rohrer" Discussed on Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"That would help motivate them to follow some of the dreams or passions like yours that they have. I have to say that when i first started. He always doubted me in people is needed. Feel like it was something. I should be embarrassed and ashamed of because i was different and that i just kept doing it no matter how much you know. It hurt me knowing that around me. Didn't support me by expelled. Amazing when. I could show everyone that i did something. Not many people could and even if it is something very common and something that you love. I think you should do it because you know in life we have to do. It makes us happy because why have a job that we don't love when we can have a job that we do love. It doesn't feel like a job. Feels like you're having fun all the time i love that could not have said this better mysel- because we find ourselves doing so many things to please other people and we don't have a getting the joy and having fun with what we're doing and we spend a lot of wasted time in that respect and if i were to go back and share this with somebody those age group they might they might not be able do relate as much as they can with you in. You said something that i think really needs to be taken to heart here for those. That are in the age group that you shared in Let me just say why. That is a hard time frame to get through in life because there's so. Many peer pressure's there's so many appear judgments there's so much bullying and shaming going on and it really stops us from being everything that we can be but we have to follow what you just said. Really do this anyway. And the one thing to find out who your real support system is and who isn't and then start sticking with those who are so..

Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"rohrer" Discussed on Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"This is really exciting. Because i know that social media likes looks views shares originally. It was kind of nice to feel them and see them and things happening but our society has gotten to a point now where this is important. Because it's really showing a major amount of interest in what's going on in your world uses developed just so significantly so it's gotta be amazing to see like you said if you're really happy with where it's at but when you went if you look back and you go. Hey i had one hundred views. Now you're looking at over two million views for this one video alone that's gotta be extraordinary in grasping everything that you're doing and the feelings associated with that pretty pretty neat. Obviously it's crazy. It's still those At first year over relate. You're always thinking. Oh my gosh like you. Small numbers look so so big and they're still big need to this day like honestly. I don't think you know. The views have changed as a person. I think it's just kind of made me or excited for what's to come to show that like. Hey i'm still going. Everything's going great. This is really good in facts Let me just go back for a second. When you first started getting involved with tiktok. how popular was it. Were you in your life your hometown in my hometown so it was like not very very popular like a lot of people have it but they secretly had it. It was like a thing. Where if you had tiktok you'd have to hide it from everyone needed to have to talk it buick. Something that people would find embarrassing. But i honestly Bed with it. And i still really really proud of it. It just it was popular but like secretively. That's interesting you say that because there was a lot of concern that this was not going to be something that would take off..

Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"rohrer" Discussed on Rebecca Sounds Reveille
"Welcome to rebecca sounds. Reveille only have. I got a show that is going to grab your attention. In fact the guest today is a short word content creator on tiktok and we talked about tiktok before and how massive this is. In fact i know a lot of you might have been. I don't know a little bit skeptical over the last year. So with some of the controversy around it but it's bigger and bursting out better than before. The guest today has been recognized for posting a variety of lip synch performances and skits and she has amassed over one point three million chance on this platform alone. Well we'll talk to her about some of the other platform. She's on but we really want to talk about this today because she debuted her performances on tiktok starting in march of about two thousand nineteen and she is known for some of her sets two cardi b. megan thee stallion's. Wap will go into that little bit later but the oldest archived video that she has made was captioned. We had to cut my hair. So i could become famous and i want to hear about that because i'll tell you a lot of girls women we don't wanna car and so that's kind of a pretty big sacrifice but she's also made a parody about staying up all night playing nintendo ds. There's so much more in fact that particular video you're not gonna believe this went viral with over..

Sips, Suds, & Smokes
"rohrer" Discussed on Sips, Suds, & Smokes
"Do you think. Fruits f. r. ot wrong chemicals. Slurry buried this it's it's razzle berry razz black. Yeah the snozzberries taste black raspberry mean. It's gotta be something from willy wonka. It didn't say i'm saying raspberry and did not come ground. Do you guys remember now. This is mary lane. There used to be like one of the original new york seltzer. i'll man that stood black. that's it clearly. Canadian is also excellent. Yeah i got out of the game before. Clearly canadian younger he was already starting. This is the hard stuff okay rating. Okay three going here okay. This is a lot more agreement on this one. A lot more consistency. I mean a little sweet. But i would say more tolerable in terms of flavor. How many of these drink now this hot day. It's a half of one zero too much too much bad cough syrup rohrer but it is but it is if you like cotton candy drew is already eat enough so it's black raspberry something or other. We're going to rate this a to to this. Interestingly as you mentioned clearly. Canadian o is a homemade screwball. If you will or curve ball right at the screw of clearly canadian black raspberry blackberry blackberry. Sorry very clearly canadian with half. Pga yeah what are you saying. Did you make sense. Black berry with one hundred nine proved ball pitcher attacks. You know tax stamp with the t means by just saying if you're really in a jam going out shelter shore if all you've got spunk Black berry clearly canadian despite his yourself workout sherbert weeks. Now let's hope. I go out in the first wave of that distinct now. Yes last. assode of seltzer. We spiked a bla- black raspberry la okay. This is probably sweeter this ways. We yeah that was probably not bad. I bet that's a thing like you take a sip or two out of the can. And i didn't think for a little floater on top. You can go walk. The kid finished off ship and it took it took over also like belching like crazy of all right. Let's move on to see see see see now sees got a little hint of lake. Yeah it's like they used actual juice that have client that smell citrusy. That's my third year nation of the day right there. That's what it looks like. It's not the first one but it's it's pretty healthy etcetera. Yeah citrusy smell. It doesn't yeah here we go. It's still got that we sort of after labor like where they've fermented a small sugar you know so it kind of has that kind of sort of so. Here's the tight rope. I'm realizing now is the rope between sweet and not sweet enough. This is maybe just sweet enough. I don't know it's not as enjoying me. But we were just complaining about the sugar and now there's now we're like complaining about the judge the position as well but then this is a different type of fruit and green more this for sure. Yeah i think this is crisper and would go better in like that. Hot by poolside thing after tastes like Bad diet orange soda like store. It's like diet so if you went to the third world and you bought this well i don't i don't want to speak ill third world. Be judgmental you're not you can get this creepy thing at at at any there. We've got us in america outta go to the third world. Find this comment about someone hands me. This wouldn't hate using this as a like a mimosa share what the bidders in their thing we can discuss to like some of these could use them as a base for cocktail. People do that for sure. I mean if you just wanna like a four loko kind of edge okay. Some orange juice in this or a little bit conservative with attack here with these numbers. But we're going to read this a to okay. It's gonna get better his closer to a three and it is the big reveal. Didn't finish that from founders. This is the mark. Yeah this is the masa gob. Eight grade heart seltzer. Hate them for this. So one hundred is there too. Yeah yeah mice. Member to maybe. They need needed moss four and a half percent. Ab had going in to rate this a little higher. We didn't want to be really. But now that i know what to expect from it now when i would give it a higher rating. 'cause it's it's reasonable. It's those that's what that that's that's a beard they do as well. You know better better way better but see some similarities to the beer and it's and it's not a bad effort but it's slow. I guess whatever if you don't like us enough crazy fruit and sugars to cover up. Flavors you get like that. Weird firm anted. Well that's and that's the thing is like people target these because there are about one hundred calories. Yeah about five percent. Ab you know so. I mean you drink. A lot of them not get hippie. Yeah on let's go to d. and d. is colorful creature delight kendall for this one has no smell at all very light. Very almost searching might just get cove and you gotta cigarrettes nose in.

Weekend Edition Saturday
Colorado Wildfire Forces San Juan National Forest To Close
"Ticks npr's rob schmitz in shanghai a rescue ship operated by the aid group sos mediterranee see is due to deliver hundreds of migrants rescued from smuggling boats to spain almost a thousand people were rescued four bodies taken from the boats that originated in africa now the spanish government says that france has agreed to take in some of them the shit the aquarius was stuck off the coast of sicily for days as both italy and malta refused to accept them an investigation is underway in kansas city kansas after shooting left two deputies dead from member station k c you are erica hunziger has more both wyandotte county deputies died at a hospital teresa king a forty four year old with thirteen years of service and patrick rohrer a thirty five year old was seven years police say the tour shot after they had transported an inmate from jail to the county courthouse on friday morning police believe it's very possible the deputies were shot with one of their services weapons officials have identified the shooter who underwent surgery friday nor have they given the extent of the shooter's injuries or filed charges yet for npr news i'm erica huntzinger kansas city colorado ficials are considering relief for victims of a massive wildfire in the state's south west dan boyce reports that the fire has blackened more than forty five square miles and forced officials to close the san juan national forest the four sixteen fires been burning since the beginning of the month and currently sits at about thirty three thousand acres colorado governor john hickenlooper and senators cory gardner and michael bennett walked the downtown of nearby durango friday he can luther says many visitors during this crucial summer tourism season are canceling their plans after hearing of the fire and these are small businesses they don't have a lot of you last bounce back on after a month of bad sales the state's delegation says they will be trying to bring relief funds to the community from fema and the us small business administration for npr news i'm dan boys in durango at the northern neck regional jail in warsaw virginia about ninety miles southwest of washington one time trump campaign chairman paul manafort is being held in the vip section according to jail records he was ordered jail over allegations of witness tampering.

Orlando's Morning News with Joe Kelley
Salmonella outbreak that prompted egg recall sickens more people
"More about helping the environment than helping people washing and drying clothes apparently accounts for two thirds of the total impact on the environment tony marino news ninety six point five wdbo a salmonella outbreak linked to eggs is getting worse federal health officials report thirty five people in multiple states are ill the cdc announced at least eleven people have been hospitalized due to complications the number of salmonella cases is a dozen more since the i recall notice was issued a month ago the outbreak is linked to rose acre farms who's infected eggs were sold in colorado florida new jersey new york north carolina pennsylvania south carolina virginia and west virginia senator charles schumer is calling on the us to demand china stop allowing the export deadly feting all into the us china's basically done nothing they've had a hands off policy and that is simply disgraceful he says the use of lead opioids has resulted in a one hundred and fifty one percent increase in deaths in new york city and long island forty two thousand people have died from opioid overdoses nationwide in two thousand sixteen the trial for a man accused of stabbing and killing a sixty seven year old woman is set to start today police say jason rohrer attack linda jones at her home near bumpy avenue and colonial drive back in two thousand sixteen she was reportedly found in her kitchen wrapped in a bedsheet with multiple stab wounds as part of his trial the defense is higher psychologists who diagnosed war with ptsd and bipolar disorder daniel vargas news ninety six point five wdbo in a sea turtle rescue back in february is back in the ocean the manager of.