35 Burst results for "Rosanna"

Talk Is Jericho
"rosanna" Discussed on Talk Is Jericho
"Will would say, dude, you guys, we know, but you don't really know. It's 6 days a week. Like 18 hour days. He said, my office, there's a little blanket on the floor on a pillow. That's where I sleep half the time. Because there's no time to go home. The cocaine fueled 70s, Belushi's got that crazy energy. And it's very much far away and it's very much a little bit less subdued, John Candy, which is sad because those guys are all gone. But you can just see, you can tell, did they do cocaine in the 70s on SNL? Yes. Watch any episode where John Belushi is in. And you can see it. And it's brilliant. But there's only so much you can go, right? There's a reason why they only do three shows at a time. This is a great John Belushi with the superhero party and he comes out of the bathroom, he's the hulk. That's supposed to smell like roses, you know? What you got there, Jamie? I've got for my number 7 or I guess my number 8 rather is Gilda Radner. Oh, nice. She would be my counterpoint to Belushi as a breakout. She was just somebody that everybody inside the show and outside the show had nothing but great things to say about her. You know, with all the infighting and crazy stuff that was going on, she sort of was above it. Yeah. Her characters were some of the first, you know, recognizable characters on weekend update. And she's really funny. Here's my favorite thing about guild it. Everyone knows Roseanne Rosanna Dana because the name is so great. But what can anyone like imitate what she did? I don't remember what she did. I just remember she was Roseanne Rosanna Dana. And she said it like Roseanne roseanna Dana. But what was the gimmick of rosanne Rosanna Dana? It was a take on an actual newscaster. At the time in New York City, I think who had a similar cadence and whatnot and of course gilda did it her way and she was just so charming and lovable. The big hair. Yeah, that's a great choice, Jamie. Yeah, it is a great choice. And I think it's another example of somebody because she passed away so early on. I think she passed away in 81 or 82 or so. But I know she was kind of one of the first casualties and that couches of the show were one of the first kind of big stars to pass away from SNL. Which kind of people forget about she died years later since she died in 89. Oh, okay. Yeah. Valentine's day is quickly approaching and you know what that means is jewelry time and I know that I get stressed out trying to pick out the perfect piece of Julie for my wife and then I found Pandora and I don't stress anymore.

The Times: Daily news from the L.A. Times
"rosanna" Discussed on The Times: Daily news from the L.A. Times
"Sitting as always in the earthquake chair is Ron lane and Ron, I heard just before this taping, you actually went through an earthquake. Yeah, yeah, still getting motion sickness from it. They know, I don't want earthquake season. We're already in spooky season. And speaking of spooky season, joining us is our Cassandra of the coast, Rosanna Shah, Rosanna, my Halloween name is ghoul stabo. Ah, Raya no. What's your Halloween name? My Halloween name would have to be a roar, Santa. Oh my God, I am petrified and finally our energy master, Sammy Roth, Sammy, was a Dodgers losing in the playoffs, the greatest sports disaster of all time. You know, all I have to say is it's less than four months till spring training and I'm looking forward to next year as always. What an optimist. Next time, wait till next year, right? Just like we said in Brooklyn back in the day, yes, I am a ghoul from the past. Ron, let's start with you. Getting back to wins. For those of us non Southern California people, although I am from Southern California, so I don't know why I just said that. What are the Santa Ana winds? And how are they formed? So Santa Anna's are like the strong winds that affect Southern California, every fall and winter and sometimes in the spring. And their costs went high pressure hits the great basin, think like the four corners area of Nevada and Utah and at high pressure pushes air toward where else would you want to go to the lower pressure along the beach? Isn't that just wenzel? Like why do we make such a big deal out of them? I mean, the old timers used to call them the devil wins. Yeah, yeah. So, I mean, that's the thing about Southern California. There's like, we have this really long, dry season, right? And the Santa Ana winds can start as early as October. And so there's always this race. Are the Santa and a wind's gonna happen and then fuel these disastrous fires or The Rain's gonna come first. And what makes the Santa Ana win so dangerous is that as the high pressure is thinking from the high desert, it's searching for a place to go. And as you know, there's lots of mountain ranges in Southern California. And so that air is searching for a way to get to the beach. It's going to get through those mountain passes. That's where the air gets compressed, dry, warm, and faster. Things like putting your finger on a garden hose. And so the winds get scary fast, like gusting like 50 to a 100 mph, they can topple big rigs on freeways. They can carry hot embers, and they can make fires go lightning fast. Rosanna, how was your first experience with Santa Ana winds? Like, have you heard about them before you move to Southern California and when you saw them or you like, it's no big deal or you're like, oh, shoot. Well, two things. One was my allergies. I had no idea that's what caused my allergies to go crazy in September and October. And I think the first mega Santa Ana wind event when I first moved out here was just going outside and getting blown almost sideways kind of a wow and then I saw palm tree frond just on the ground and I was like, thank God that didn't hit my car. Oh my God. Have you ever felt like trying to jump up and hoping that the wind blows your way or is that just me? That's definitely just you? Oh my God, well Rosanna. Okay, fine. How bad do these wins get? Especially since they tend to happen during fire season. Yeah, and it feels like a privilege to just complain about my allergies. But there was a huge study a few years ago that actually quantified this fires fueled by Santa Ana winds tend to spread three times faster than non Santa Ana fires. And they tend to kill more people and the economic damage is like ten times greater than most non Santa Anna fires. And the key thing here is non Santa and a fires tend to burn in more remote areas. Like a national forest and more rugged wildlands, Santa Anna fires, on the other hand, tend to cluster and coastal areas as Ron said and in the foothills, which obviously is where we've built all our major cities and neighborhoods. So yeah, these big wind fueled fires would just descend from the mountains through those mountain passes and onto the coast where more residents and homes and critical infrastructure are at stake. And the other thing I'd say about Santa Anna winds and wildfires is that when a fire spreads more rapidly because of the wind power, the fire itself releases way more energy, which makes it even harder to put out. So Santa Anna's don't just make these fires spread faster, they also make them more powerful. And isn't there like cousins to the Santana wins up in where you're at Ron? And aren't they called in the Bay Area and aren't they called Diablo winds or something like that? Yeah, yeah. So basically in 1991, we had the Oakland hills fire and the meteorologist up here. They couldn't stand calling them the Northern California version of Santa Ana winds. So they call them diablos and it's a double entendre because it blows from the direction of mount Diablo in the east bay and Diablo translates as the devil in Spanish. Y'all should call him the HeLa wins. Because that's more Bay Area than Diablo because you're just ripping off Southern California. Sammy, and this is what it gets me, though, about these Diablo wins, Santa Ana winds like we know how crazy they get. We know that they come out during fire season. We know that they topple power lines and those power lines then create fires and like earlier this month, large parts of Southern California hit with Santa Ana winds in the afternoon, which led to these notices of potential powers, so at what point are we going to learn like, okay, if there's going to be winds, maybe we should refigure how we get energy to all of our homes? That's a good question. And I mean, there's more and more of a push as this stuff happens to think about burying power lines underground where they can't be knocked over by the wind or can't have trees blown into them and sparking these fires, traditionally it's been thought that undergrounding is much too expensive. It can cost a $1 million. I mean, it already costs a $1 million a mile to build a long distance transmission line and underground is even more expensive than that. And these are costs that are ultimately paid for by you and me, right? By customers of the electric utilities that are building these lines. So that the argument in the past has been it's too expensive. We can't afford it. That conventional wisdom is changing because of this destruction we're seeing and we're realizing, wait, we're paying all of these other costs from fires and from preventive power outages that are really damaging to businesses and to people who have medical equipment that they need electricity to keep running. So the conventional wisdom is changing and Pacific gas and electric, which has been at the heart of a lot of this fires and preventive outages. They actually have a pretty dramatic plan now to bury a whole lot of power lines over the next ten years. It's expensive. Are they going to be able to do it quickly? Are they going to be able to do it at the cost of their promising? Those are open questions, but that's kind of at the center of their strategy now for how to prevent more of this stuff in the future. Do wins go underground? I haven't been down there to check, but let's assume not and hope that we're right. Let's hope that. We'll be right back. There's something to be said for consistency, like a restaurant you've been to a million times before, but still eat at every chance you get because you know it's going to be good. Or that favorite pair of blue jeans you've had for forever, that still fit just right. Well, that's what you get with the Wells Fargo active cash credit card. It earns unlimited 2% cash back on purchases. You don't even have to think about it. It's just a straightforward credit card that offers effortless value and is sure to become the card you reach for, time after time. Catching a game at the ballpark, with the active cash card, earn 2% cash back, shiny new boots, earn 2% cash back. Surprising your sweetie was something sweet, earn 2% cash back. I could keep going, but you get the idea. So get the card that lets you do you and earns 2% cash back on purchases. That's real-life ready. 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AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
"rosanna" Discussed on AJ Benza: Fame is a Bitch
"And then Oscar argenta was fucking around with some journalists and hanging around the apartment that Anthony Bourdain bought, it hurt his feelings and I said back then, that's why he killed himself. And by the way, I spoke to his wife, Octavia, way back four or 5 years ago when this was first happening in she didn't want to go public. She didn't want me to mention that I spoke to her. She begged me. Please don't say, but I reached out to her via Twitter. And she told me there's no way Anthony would have done this without her destroying his heart. And I made a promise to her that I would never print it. And I never did. Although I did say it, I said things like that, but I wouldn't write it in a radar, you know, she was worried about what I wrote, but Octavia flat out told me you're right, you're right. She broke his heart. But what we're finding out now is that Anthony Bourdain struggled with fame and heartbreak in the days that led up to his suicide. And this book, this book includes text messages that were sent by Anthony to Asia argento and stuff that she said back to him, it's pretty wrong. I don't like this. I gotta be honest. At one point, he said to her, I hate my fans. I hate being famous. I hate my job. He wrote that to his wife, Octavia, his ex-wife, on lonely and living in constant uncertainty. That's what she was trying to explain to me and begged me not to write about that. And I honored her wish, but the book's coming out in a couple of weeks, and there's a lot to read about the way Bourdain was with Asia argento. You know, I got very mad back in the day that Asia and annabelle is and all these women who are trapped down by Harvey Weinstein, whether it's true or not Rosanna Arquette, they all got together and, you know, they're a big army, a big shield and anti hardy shield and Anthony ate it up. Anthony said, yes, I'm with them.

Unreserved
"rosanna" Discussed on Unreserved
"It beyond that. I really do feel like it's a dream come true to do this. And I don't know if I'll ever do such a meaningful show. I had no idea that what I needed as an artist what I needed to see in the world was what so many other people needed to see as well, and that people were yearning for that, that they were looking for it. They wanted, they wanted a story like this. And that has been, it's been overwhelming to experience. Corey payette is the writer and director of the musical children of God. That piece was produced by Jennifer for a previously aired episode of unreserved. In December, 2019. That's it for this week's episode of unreserved. We'll be back in this radio space next week for more community culture and conversation. This episode was produced by Stephanie kram, Kyle new Zika, Zoe tennant and Anna lazowski. I'm your favorite cousin Rosanna dear child coming at you from Winnipeg in treaty one territory. Thank you for listening to unreserved on.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
Biden Tries to Cleanup Putin Comments
"You make of that exchange with Peter doocy? I didn't say that. It's like Rush Limbaugh in 1992. It's a bit right out of the Rush Limbaugh show in 1992. I don't know. I mean, it's a bit like Saturday Night Live, I suppose. Look, it's funny. If you just read it in a vacuum, wait, stop for a second. You're right. It's Rosanna down to Dana. It's Roseanne and Dan and Dana. Joe Biden is channeling Rosanna Dana Dana. These are all cultural references that are audience under the age of 50, doesn't understand, but you're right, exactly. Yeah. Look, if you read, if you read that exchange in a vacuum, it actually sounds really good. It's like, no, no, no. I meant exactly what I said. Maybe you people just didn't understand it. And it was something very important. And in that sense, it was great, right? No, this guy is a problem. Obviously he's got to go. I was expressing a sense of moral outrage as the leader of the free world. And

Unreserved
"rosanna" Discussed on Unreserved
"Jen storm is the author of red clouds. The story with illustrations in colors by natasha. Donovan is included in the anthology. This place one hundred and fifty years retold published by portage and main press ltd and used under license by cbc rad. Clouds was adapted for radio by jackie. Black both episodes of this place you heard day were produced by eva. Grant braided alexander. Jackie black. me rosanna your child. Special thanks to native earth performing arts and the actors who brought wasa cop equate a story to life. Dr lacob called twat david deliri- kevin.

Unreserved
"rosanna" Discussed on Unreserved
"Could be hanged in a. You're listening to unreserved today. Encore presentation of the podcast. This place sharing stories of indigenous heroes battles triumphs and traditions. I'm rosanna dear child. You just heard the wind ago story. Red clouds born and raised in winnipeg authored. Jen storm is a chip away from the kuching. First nation in northwestern ontario at the tender age of fourteen. Jen wrote her. First book deadly loyalties. She also wrote the graphic novel fire. Starters welcome jin yeah thanks for having me well first of all our big question is what or who is a window. Well i think windows have kind of multiple interpretations. And i think the most interesting thing is. There's an air of selfishness always kind of attached to them and in the context that i wrote it was during the for trade era and during the harshest winters during the harshest of times when people were starving and could literally starve to death. And i think that's a time that we don't have to relate to and because like these communities weren't communities because it was just a good thing to be a community but it was very much so like needed like you had to. You needed each other to survive. He had to be able to count on one another to survive so somebody acting in a way that was unpredictable. That was selfish. That was not community. Minded is a danger to all. So i think the term window go is a way to kind of label that spirit in a way so the windows that i wrote about were cannibalistic. And there's a way that that can really affect you mentally. And but i also believe that in today's society at that we don't have those kinds of windows but that spirit is very much still alive in our society and might even be more prevalent in the society. We are in today because the way we operate now is so individualistic and this just the way that society has become and it's like almost a struggle to keep route with community and still be successful. They're the one kind of story we have or like warning we have. That's not just a standalone spirit. It's the spirit that needs humans in order to manifest and so windows are human nature but they have this ugly spirit attached to them. And that's the part. I think is really kind of interesting about them. Is that the humanity of it. All i guess now the character wa south she is based on an actual person. Tell us about about this persa She there's not much said about her to be honest lake in the book which i brought with me. I'm killing the shaman. And it was a story about people from sandy lake. And how they kind of come to know the canadian justice system mainly as the point of the story but the undercurrent of it is very cultural and talking about how cultures are very different from one another although saying but this woman There was not much about her other than she was the last window to be killed by jack fiddler and the one that He went to prison for so why. Then why did you want to tell us. What was it about her her situation. That drew you her point of view to me. Because james stevenson and thomas fiddler told this story very well from the male perspective as a story. That's already been told. You know what i mean. So i didn't want to retell a story from the same perspective for one But also i believe that we've all realized that female voice is missing from history indigenous. Female voices missing almost entirely and in a lot of cases like even as i was reading through books and lake online like a lot of times. They don't even name women that are full photographed or rift like referred to like. You don't know much about them at all. Like what their clan is. What their quotes are What their individual at like. Individuality is it's kind of like a group of ojibway women from northern plains. Insert you don't even and it's and then like the but the men had more voice because they were representing right which is unfortunate for everyone that no one asked women. But that's happened to be the case so i found it important to us female voice in this retelling but also i wanted to use the windows perspective because it's always missing. We like even in our own stories. It best serves to vilnai's goes because we're trying to warrant against terrible behavior and we're trying to warn against anything that's anti society or something that's like anti your fellow man because that's against our survival so we vilnai's windows non-indigenous people vilnai's windows. Obviously like everyone was on the same page about windows goes but because windows are born human. I was kind of like well. There's a story there too right like they don't start off that way. Usually you're not born that way. Usually so that's why. I kind of wanted to take the window perspective. Because they've been so vilnai's d- what commentary lesson are you making about the justice system and how it has treated indigenous culture believes like like this one. Justice serves the community. It is built it. When canada was down here building their own laws for settler life and all those other things and what makes sense to them in a very large community and they go up north or they hear word. Come down from up north being like hey like this. Old chief is killing people in his community. We probably do something. And they're like whole like holy crap. We should go up there and do something. We need to save these people from themselves. Like this is insane and it's just like this whole perspective is different because you're coming from a totally different world view near coming from a different life and you don't understand like that even that party said earlier about you know if somebody's unpredictable if somebody's acting selfishly if somebody is you know trying to eat grandma of leading to stop them yes i would recommend also so like. Let's say you're out in the middle of you know the bush where like there's not really that many neighbors like you got to like everyone's got their justice system. Everyone has their own society including us now. as canada. we have our own justice. We have our own society. We have our own rules and social norms and expectations. And so who are we to go into another country to go into another place because we're looking through our own is being like that's weird but we don't have the whole picture. Why do you Think that it's important. To share these stories. From an indigenous perspective indigenous stories about heroes and triumphs and tribulations. Why do you think it's important. Share those stories with all canadians. That i think it's important for us to share those stories because we haven't like in our generation like you and i and the people who are writing nowadays. I think come from a place where we didn't have those. We didn't have those stories us growing up now or now that we are storytellers and sharing. We know and sharing stories and we get to be that we had to put all that out there so that other students can or students young people. Everyone including people like that grew up in our errand. Didn't get to see that but also did other work now. They get to see that. And i think that's important.

Unreserved
"rosanna" Discussed on Unreserved
"Get a fair trial but fairness in the white man's law shorts ply in september nineteen o seven. The window killers are jailed. Rather how long do you think they'll keep us walked up here. I don't know the five return home. They will come to me again and bring more laws more trouble. What are you going to do. Manitou will be my judge not these strangers and beyond my lands. Someone is coming. It's time to gather would. While the prisoners gather firewood jack fiddler slips away deep into the forest. He will not be judged by the white man's law instead. I told you outcome suit eats my hunter and yourself makes them use tight so i can watch the life drain from you slowly. Waiting in the shadows the wind ago takes much pleasure and watching our nogi. Zico gobbo di but one brother remains her. Dark work is not done dead. But joseph will still alive withering away in the stone house finding game for the trial begin. Spear was already broken is already dead a week later. Jack's brother joseph stands trial. He is not afforded a defense lawyer. Only an observer from the indian department joseph fiddler soon found guilty of murder and sentenced to hang who is the witness to this murder men. No our win now whites nor new rate normal. Who took the rope at strangled. The woman jack and his brother joseph fiddler. What became a her body. After that i dug the grave and put birchbark in the bottom. But i got sticks and put them across the body and more birchbark on top of the body. I put earth on it. Joseph fiddler. You have been found guilty of this crime. The law does not permit me to exhibit any mercy toward you. What the law forbids. No pagan belief can justify you will be hanged from the neck until you are dead and they got mercy. Odd your soul. How does you law find the difference.

Unreserved
"rosanna" Discussed on Unreserved
"The one to destroy them before i became the white eyed. Wendy go. I was wasa copy. Kway this is my story. Our community was starving. Husband may knob them. And i took are sung out into the bush to try and fend for ourselves but there was nothing of substance to feed us. It's been weeks of eating pine bark old leather. we should return to the longhouses. No wasa copy kuwait. There's nothing there but.

Unreserved
"rosanna" Discussed on Unreserved
"Of thing she represents to me. Just standing up.

Unreserved
"rosanna" Discussed on Unreserved
"Truth about you people truth. A- show you truth on the very streets of you doing are you mad. Stop hitting me. Charles mayor feels the sting of annie's anger at the end of her horse. Whip it echoes through the dusty streets and a crowd gathers some laugh others jere and soon the familiar figure of louis real himself appears of the back of the rock has seen. Hey what's going on here. Oh hello louis seems. Mayor is feeling the wrath of any tines horse whip. This is what happens when you disrespect. Women of red river kim much now get the hell out. Scoundrel guy us any is right. How dare that man speak about the may. Not this way. Perhaps i was destined to return to red river after all. I have much to do and more to learn to help my people. Anne of red river is the first episode of this place sharing stories of indigenous heroes battles triumphs and traditions. I'm rosanna dear. Child catharina vernet wrote anne of red river. She's also the author of the award winning novel of the break. And the graphic series. A girl called eco. She joins us to share more about anti bandon. Welcome catharina thank you for having me. Thank you for joining us. We certainly got this book off to a bank. More crack of the whip as the case may be great. Aw i love that story it is. It's a great great story beautiful beautiful depiction of anti-obama tyne tell me. How did you find her. Where did you find her. I was doing research into my graphic novel series. A girl called echo and just diving through all this golden age of the meaty history in the eighteen fifties and sixties. And she just kinda comes up. She just like rises as the shining light. She had a very interesting life She was the daughter of andrew. Mcdermott and kind of grew up. In kind of affluence She had a lot of power like south power and just like a lot of control over her her life and then she does. This just takes charles merited school. And i love that. I love that story so much when we came up with the the story book idea and catherine approach me with it. I immediately said. I want this time line like i want the i wanna talk about anne. Like she was just the reason i got on board. She is very exciting to me. And what was it about her or her story. That really drew you in. Why her not only heard not only is she like this amazing woman who i mean. Aside from horse whipping a holes in the middle of the street she also was this incredibly community oriented organizer. She was a shopkeeper she worked very much alongside her husband and worked for her father before him and she organized so many different things in the is this was a time of great famine so she organized a lot of drives to feed people feed all kinds of people who are living in red river. She was one of the instrumental fund raisers for the first hospital. That ever happened in winnipeg like she was just a really empowered woman who knew her place in in the world and knew how much she was worth. And i. I was really attracted to that. I also really loved that. She represented mateen people in red river. Pre-candidate coming in where it was really known as the golden age of the matey history. Like three quarters of the population of red river at the time was not would not only the majority but we were in control of a lot of things. I liked that she represented that time. You know In such a great way and she was just this kick ass anti like. I really love all around When you say anti what do you mean by that. What role does anti play in may cultures. I really think of anti and i mean everybody has a different definition anti for me. An anti is a person who is an older woman probably You know we were all catholic over there so she was probably biological aunt too many many little kids but also she was just a general anti to to the community. And antea someone. Who takes care of you and antea someone who you give respect and one of the things. I made sure. I really wanted to put in. The story is that she was an anti like a community. Anti like this to lure rio. And i think she definitely influenced him and what happened shortly. Thereafter Now the exchange district in winnipeg is of course a national historic site. These days with terra cotta heritage buildings and warehouses and hip restaurants and boutiques. But take back to eighteen Sixty at. I know you did a lot of research in what the red river settlement would have looked like in those days. Can you paint us a picture. from what i understand. And i i always feel like history is incredibly overwhelming. So i feel like. I have a tiny little snapshot of a very big hole. Main street was basically where main street is now. Only of course it was a big large dirt road. The center point of the entire settlement was fort garry which was at the end of main street along the river. So kind of where broadway and main street are now kind of the opening corner of the the fort which was huge and and went over but is several city blocks now back when this happened. The banner time store was roughly around. Where banner time avenue is now which is really the heart of the. What is the exchange district now and this happened on shopping day so this is when everyone kind of came in. It was just this bustling community. There wasn't any bridges at the time. But there is a lot of fairies that with fareed over you know people probably pulled up on their canoes. There is times of of wagons red river carts so like you know those squeaky wheels were probably heard all over and they were so loud. Those wheels are so loud. Lots of horses kinda going here and there and a lot of the people that came for shopping day didn't live very close. Anyone who wasn't all that well off lived quite far away by comparison so over the river and saint boniface or or north towards like seven oaks area. So yeah it was just like there was a few stores like brick buildings There's also this really cool old looking saloon. I kind of looks like something out of like santa fe new mexico. It just was this like i don't know what that was like mud walls but it looks like an old pueblo style kind of saloon and that's where everyone everyone absolutely everyone drank. There was cockfights in the dirt floor. Kind of thing. So that wasn't very far off from where we were either so just a rowdy place now as you said. Historically there is like lots going on. Canada this canada i the the railroad excetera Why would anne's actions on that day. Be the spark for louis ri-als rebellion. Well actually the first ever political quote unquote political action. That he did he come back from like montreal. By way of minnesota around this time in in late eighteen sixty eight so when this happened went. Anne horsewhipped charles mirror in the middle of the street. That was february and the the resistance happened in in the fall in september one of the first actions of as a political leader he was elected as secretary of the council was to write a letter to a montreal newspaper. Basically depicting the story of what happened with anne and charles marr. Basically telling the world that was montreal and canada at the time what happened and why charles marr is not the victim of you know some crazy savage beating but actually he did wrong. He called out the red river. Women and the red with the women responded so that was actually the first letter the editor that was signed l. Are and i should say it was signed alar and it was never properly officially attributed to lure al. But everyone believes that it was lure real and it was his first act of of political involvement which happened like literally six months before the red resistance began in earnest. So really i think he was definitely well aware of it. I think he was probably on the sidelines. Cheering anne on. And i think he definitely saw that ability to fight back that ability to see that this treatment was wrong and the power to do something about it. I think absolutely it. It influenced him undoubtedly. I would say undoubtedly and do you know shaver face the consequences for those actions or what happened to anti. I've never heard anything about consequences. I know that shortly during the red river resistance which was when the mitzi soldiers overtook the fort to try to negotiate their way into canada rather than just be sold off like chattel around not time andrew. Her husband became quite sick. I believe it was two perky laos's so sometime in early eighteen seventy she went to scotland with him and their children so that he could recuperate from his illness She did live to be a very old woman. She came back to by river. I think after the resistance and after the trouble she wasn't involved directly she lived for a time in scotch on shoes buried in the colonial cemetery. Here in winnipeg and she looked into the nineteen hundreds. I believe it's nineteen o four so she did get to see her grandchildren. Grow up I don't think she's separate any consequences other than you know. Probably just a really great reputation. And i don't think anyone or after that i mean. Just imagine those kids. Hey they're just like oh came on whatever whatever you say yes right away well. What an extraordinary woman she was. What are you. What would you like readers of the graphic novel or listeners of this place podcast to take away from the story of anti ballantyne for me any just represented standing up for yourself. I don't advocate violence or horse being people in the street as much as it's a great story at such also a quote unquote wild west story. But i always think that it's amazing when people stand up for unjust treatment And stand up to people who are talking smack about their their younger younger friends. That's the kind.

Unreserved
"rosanna" Discussed on Unreserved
"Andrew assures her that the newcomers will get line but anti laments that they mocked the t- and are nothing but trouble. She would soon be proven right from the desk. Ov- charles may and accounts of the half of red river after staying at the dutchman's hotel. I couldn't stand it any longer and headed to dr schultz for a few days. The change was a relief. I assure you from the racket of the motley crowd of half breeds playing billiards and drinking. They are everywhere here in red river. Many wealthy people are married to half breed. Women you see who having no coat of arms but told him to look back to make up for the deficiency by fighting the backs of their white sisters the white sisters fall back upon their whiteness whilst the husband's treat each other with desperate courtesies and hospitality with view of filthy lucre in the background. The country is great inexhaustible inconceivably rich farming here is a pleasure there is no till in it and all who do farm are comfortable and some wealthy the half breeds are the only people here who are starving. Five thousand of them have to be fed this winter and it is their own. They won't farm. As for the farmers scotch english and french. not one of them requires relief. It's not long before mayors durant makes it to the benetton breakfast table. The half breeds are the only people here who are starving. Five thousand of them have to be fed this winter and it is their own fault. They won't farm. As for the farmers scotch english french. Not one of them requires relief. High doesn't sound like late breakfast reading any this is from an op. Ed published back east. Such damn life is charles. Marie think he is anyways. Just a young man trying to make a name for himself as all it's nonsense meaningless meaningless. This is in the toronto daily globe city of over fifty thousand people who will have to take his word about us. Canada i boys they have no real power. They so they resort to petty troublemaking. I won't stand for it. No one can possibly take him seriously. The canadians will. They don't know us. They will think this drivel is true then they will come here in droves. Is this what they think of us. Is this how it's going to be. I won't have it. What will you do any albeit our store. When mayor comes in. I'll show him.

Unreserved
"rosanna" Discussed on Unreserved
"Tell me how is your mother. She is well. Madame hits been hard year but our family has their health. I'm glad to hear it. You tell her she should come visit us. It's been too long since i've seen her in town. And how are you getting on at home. There is always work to be done on. The land. red river must feel small after all those years in morale. I am happy to be back with my family and in the country of my heart but farming does not come as naturally to me as i did to my father. That is not your fault. My boy it's been a bad year all around. It's been such a hard few years the meighan so many ruined crops. It's a hard time. I fear it will be a long winter for many. I am hoping to make the christmas. Get together that andrew and i host the best one yet we can get all the newcomers and they're canadian friends to help our were neighbors and enjoy some red river hospital. You tireless any anything for a party. We need to do what we can for one. Another things can't go on like they have been. That's for sure. Did you hear about that road. They're building all the way from lake of the woods. Stay here maybe that will mean good paying jobs that are young men can support their families bringing in canadians from ottawa. To do that work. There won't be many opportunities for our local boys. A sign of things to come. I think more canadians immigrate here every day. Now that confederation has taken hold in the east prime minister. Mcdonald's sites are set on us here in the north west. He won't stop not until he gets his railway. That's for certain may not be canadians. But we are not permissible luck. The people who command themselves we are also made t. matter no more than savages to some time might come when we need more than hope. But we've been here longtime ks. Generations can do is honor our lands and.

Unreserved
"rosanna" Discussed on Unreserved
"You keep in this chair warm. But it's time to get your buns out here. So i can take back over all right. Well let me hand you the mike but before equal go. Let's have a quick chat about how it all went. Oh yeah for sure. How did it go. It was a wild ride It was so much fun. I you know. I really got to speak to so many different people from across the land. we went everywhere. And you know. I got to stretch those mouth muscles and really Get my mouth around some different dialects. Even i even learned some of my own language which is something i didn't have and that was like probably the biggest highlight for me. Oh yeah that does sound like a lot of fun. What would you say was the hardest word or the hardest language that you had to learn. Boy well i interviewed terry. We rock When he was nominated for a best indigenous artist of the year. For the junos we did an interview. And i really wanted to make sure that i got Some of his language right. So i think what was the album. Let me see if i can remember new. Knocked linear ni was the name of the album. And i you know i really. I really worked hard to get that i. Hopefully i didn't mess it up this time. I feel you sister. Because for me it was a lot of west coast coursing As very difficult to say sometimes and Cakewalk How took me so long to sekou quackery walk. I always adding in an extra. I i always think inish knob as like just the easiest one to read off the page psycho. Yeah and stopping more and great got it and in terms of conversations you had what was your most. Would you say memorable. I mean i had a lovely conversation with. Michael gray is which i thought was like. It was really fun because it felt like. It was right before Rutherford falls came out so right on the edge of him really blowing up for a lot of people You know. I think an indigenous country. We've all known him for years right. Everybody knows him. He's i mean shot. Mom stepmom still talks about seeing him in the reds sisters Years ago as a dancer chief. Big just fine. Don't tell my dad. She thinks he's very fine fine. I was so jealous of you. I'm sure he'll come back and talk. Anytime i'm shedder and it doesn't seem like his career is slowing down at any point. Well that's good news for me. I look forward to that conversation. Were you nervous at all do you. Do you have any moments where you like. I'm gonna have a heart attack right now. I think in the beginning. I think in the beginning definitely. I was like okay. There was so much to learn. It was really like. I felt like i was going back to school for a lot of it Especially in the beginning but it's sort of it unfurled in front of me in a nice sort of organic way as organic as you can be in making radio during covert. Yeah that's a really nice way of saying you flew by the seat of your pants little and rosie and what were you up to this year. What were you doing well as you know. I was pulled away from unreserved to create a show called this place and it was based on the graphic novel. The wonderful graphic novel of the same name. One hundred fifty years retold. So what they did is they took One hundred fifty years of canadian history and gave that time to indigenous story so we heard about heroes battles chhaya mps tribulations. All beautiful elements of storytelling. And we really learned how resilient and how much we resist and how much we reclaim and how much we are still so much part of this. This place that we call canada so is just a real privilege and an honor to be able to take these beautiful stories off the page. Because it's a graphic novel and turn it into audio and you know for a while. I was like what was i thinking. I'm insane to do this. But it was a really great journey and we came out with ten very powerful powerful stories two of which we're going to share a the show today. Because i just can't get enough of the spotlight. No that's great. I i caught some of it. And i have to say it is really fantastic so i am looking for to catch up on the rest of it and listening to the rest of the show today. Well thank you so much again for keeping my My seat warm and my audience entertained. I'm sure they gave you lots of love. There's such a loving audience. I've missed them. Thank you for doing such a wonderful job unreserved. It was a pleasure hearing you and now get the heck outta here aren't will you have have a have a great show and have a great season and i'll i'll see around the halls absolutely. That's better mike. Jek care jack. T music check dodd. Say i need buju. Hello and welcome. This is unreserved on. Cbc radio one. I'm rosanna dear. Child it is good to be back. I'm so excited for our new season but before we go forward we need to go back way back like a hundred and fifty years back today. Highlights from this place you'll hear. Some lesser known moments in our shared story called canada and learn about indigenous peoples who shaped the course of history in this place starting in eighteen. Sixty five with anne banner. Tyne this no nonsense. May t- woman took a stand. That inspired our resistance johnson. It's october eighteen. Sixty eight canada is one year old. Manitoba is still two years from becoming carded. The dominion and what is now winnipeg is still red. River built up from the muddy waters of the red in his cinnabon rivers the red river settlement is the gateway to the west and to indigenous people the heart of turtle island horse drawn carriages and red river. Carts squeaky wheels viper room on dirt roads scottish english and french traders and settlers mix with first nations and peoples anne a mateen woman and her husband andrew band own a shop here in red river. They often stroll the settlements main street. My dear any the new comers are nothing to worry about. they're just young men seeking adventure laugh at their ignorance. If you want andrew but they are making a mockery of our respectability and making a fortune off our backs. I just don't trust them. You don't trust anyone my love. It's what makes you such a fine business woman i do. I trust my family. I trust my community is just these thieves thinking everything is for the taking and casting aside till there's nothing left. What about the future of our children. Today it's market day red river on a busy street and andrew meet a familiar face. Zet is that young louis. Louis louis boy. I heard you back how you've grown dear louis..

77WABC Radio
"rosanna" Discussed on 77WABC Radio
"You may be familiar with Rosanna Scotto. My My former co anchor their channel five. She lost her dad, Anthony Scotto. Over the weekend. He died at the age of 87. I believe it may have been covid related. I'm not 100% sure about that. I know he was sick for a while. But he was a great man. Very, very nice man. Very patrician, um and just kind of held court at that restaurant knew so much about politics and life and Yeah, you know. Look. Hey, I first met him, I guess in 2000 and seven and always a gentleman. Always a gentle no. Quite a life he led, and, uh but quite a family. My goodness, Gracious and our condolences to Rosanna, His wife, Marion. Sons, Anthony and John, and, um, Elena, his daughter, Roseanna, sister. Just a great guy, Um, enjoyed smoking a cigar or two with him over the years and, uh, Um, great sense of humor, Such wisdom and political insight. So I was really sorry. You know, we heard that he was on a ventilator while back. Which didn't sound good, but I was talking to a friend and they were like, Yeah, he's going to pull through. You know, he's a tough guy. A strongman certainly was so, uh, Sad news there. Anthony Scotto dead at the age of 87. All right. So, um What's Joe Biden doing now? Oh, he's addressing the covid response. Vaccinations and it's all important. It's all important, of course, but what they're really engaged in is what they're calling operation change the subject anything to get away from Afghanistan and the calamity, But I don't think there's any getting away with it. They're going to have to get rid of half the administration. Millie. Uh, Anthony Blinken. Lloyd Austin. I saw him on the Martha Raddatz show yesterday. He was terrible. Hey, Did you hear about the new? My gosh, they're not going to have no one's going to be eligible for anything. So they have gotten rid of one jeopardy. Host Mike Richards never heard of him. But he was I guess he was good at producing game shows. And he said some controversial things in a podcast seven years ago, so he's gone. And now the other one who I'm not that big A fan of her name is my am. By Alec is that it? She was in the big bang theory and she was blossom. So she was going to co host the show with him like on certain nights, she would do it. Now. Apparently, she's got a big I. Q. I think she might have gone to a fancy school. But I met her once She was ultra politically correct, and she chided me. Because I was I said something to the effect of I use the word girl when she thought I should have said woman. I actually don't like the word girlfriend. You know, it just sounds like so juvenile. You have a girlfriend when you're in junior high school. But But, you know, when you're a man you don't talk about Girlfriends and boyfriends. It's one thing they took my wife. My wife and I will be coming by where you see my girlfriend and I will be coming. John Mulaney did a great bit about that. It just doesn't It doesn't have the same ring. So she chides me for saying the world's girl. And I should have said woman. Which I was like, OK, Hmm. You're not my you're not like you're not my kind of people. But so what did she do? That's so bad In 2012. She wrote a book about parenting called Beyond the Sling. And in it, she wrote. That she endured mate. They made a decision. We made an informed decision not to vaccinate our Children. But this is a very personal decision that should be made only after sufficient research, which today is within reach of every parent who sees Seeks to learn about their child's health, regardless of their medical knowledge or educational status. However, I'm reading from the Daily Mail in October of 2020. She said in a YouTube video that she and her Children would be receiving Covid 19 vaccines, she noted it was very disturbing for people not to get the covid vaccine. So she still question the efficacy of all vaccines, claiming they're never 100% effective. Sounds like she was hedging. Sounds like she was already thinking. About potential, um, stuff with jeopardy. Who cares? Quite frankly, I know people who still watch that show every single night. Not me, And I just don't find it that interesting, but some people do. So Who are they going to get to host this thing? You know, you don't actually need a host. Remember that time didn't Watson, the computer hosted We're competed in it. One of those things I mean the show kind of runs itself. This is what we're all about The cancel culture. What did that guy say? Mike Richards. That was so bad. I heard, he said something that was arguably Misogynistic, although he just said that some women like to dress his hookers on On Halloween. Is that wrong? I mean, I'm not saying it's wrong or right if they do actually, I think it's fine. But whatever lots of women dressed like, uh Well, you know, on Halloween. You can't just be a nurse. You got to be a sexy nurse. They all do that. I've seen that a million to everyone's seen that Now, what did he say? That might have been more Troublesome. There may have been something else. I don't know. But Maybe we should just say from this point on if you said something. Going forward, You know, like there's got to be a demarcation. I think, um I don't know if those podcasts are worth it. I say all kinds of stuff on my podcast. You'll know I know what the guidelines are, and I know how I feel. Know how I feel. So I feel like I know what I I don't think I'm going to say anything ugly because I'm not an ugly person. I like to think. But then again, the standards are changing. Like crazy all the time. They change what's permissible. What's not permissible? You know? It is, it is. Look, my life is not impacted in the slightest because I can't say the n word. I'm totally fine with that. I mean, it's it's a horrible, ugly word. But I do notice that there.

Keto & Intermittent Fasting Lifestyle with Alex Yehorov
"rosanna" Discussed on Keto & Intermittent Fasting Lifestyle with Alex Yehorov
"Transformation is you change the identity from the. Hey i everything every garbage how. They're and all the time an have addiction to so i'm Who is addicted to foods. I cannot control it you change it to. Hey i'm rosanna. Who have full control of what i eat and went. I am enjoying the process. And sometimes if i want to get this unhealthy. I can't get it. But i decide there when and why or even so you know work the inner ward that you've gone through. That's what makes me happier lot more because i've gone through many transformations in my life and our shared with you in another. I'm not gonna dive in them. But what i've noticed doesn't matter what aspect of my life doesn't matter if my old identities same used to. I'm doing a lot of exercises in the past. I was doing a lot of workout and still am. I was doing a lot of fast and different. Types of fastener are trained. You do kita and different healthy foods and what not but from time to time. I always was falling back and was beach engine. No matter how good is. I'm i'm trying to get the point across that no matter how good is tactics. It's that always working for everybody. Sometimes you just most of the time you need to shift your identity. You need to separate your old self all addictions your old problems. You're all complaints. Whatever the case might be all financial you separate. There is no this person instead. I love that person. But it's it's it's one point over sion outdated in certain specific age but now i'm ruksana this. The wonder woman superman the complete different. Your inner world. And i'm two point. Oh i'm updated version now. This version is doing that. Things is enjoying. Live this way each in doing this and enjoying the fashion or whatever. The case might be not necessarily about the fast and and the ball the tactics. Change your identity identity. Change your stories and you will find out the tactics that worked for you. Which found obviously they hold me that we've done this working. Just want to say one more time very proud of you training yourself in different ways and with this mindset. You know what's possible this afternoon. Everything is possible when you eater not only of conscious but also subconscious programs when you confident that you can overcome any obstacle snow in with this mice with this thoughts inside your head you will use different language you will when you hit the bottom you will stand up and go and push four business..

The Chartographers
"rosanna" Discussed on The Chartographers
"Just wasn't as compelling a listen music video for that one to one experience you thousand six music video hit meaningfully wrapping in front of a car for a lot of it but like yeah. That's very ox route music video but like it's it's it leans into that especially like i think there's like a like a flash frame. I wanna say. I didn't watch it before this There's like a flash frame of basically like the aftermath of shooting and it's like into the video and it moves on and it's like oh my okay. Oh like were going there because the music video starts like the odds to knock Radio and like. It's very really fast. It's like he's gonna it's. It's a beautiful package. Wonderful lyrically all staff. You're expecting cool. This is great rap song great rap video and it gets hard hitting emotionally on like the b roll of him not grabbing car. Right now we will. Also there videography. Both of them independently also together is very fast so cited to talk about that in our what is going to be ethic. Caviar mini so but most importantly in terms of trying to get things move along. Does anyone have any objections putting Grind one at the number five slot. Let's bury a yeah. I think we all agree on on. Excellent vet is fantastic The grind volume one number five under four sam. I think it's mom. No yeah. I think it's monster. Oh really okay yeah. I think it's monster for me. I walk us through the context. And so i think i think wanna change. My mind is oh. I actually do think this is one that i flip flopped on the most. I think our guest. I think it's i pledge allegiance to the grind to okay because because i think i look at. I pledged to the grind to with rosanna glasses. Sometimes so i think that's why it's the monsters but like that's the year i graduated high school and like i have visceral memories of bumping big money big cars in my plymouth. Voyager in my high school parking lot in my heart. I was driving an escalade off. Do i love it. Like i think that i listened to. I pledge allegiance to the grind to more than i listened to monster. Oh and i sort of take more tracks with me and live from that one. But i show you fun with grandma's house with grandma's house. No i eight eight it to thank you for that long wiry singing this like seaside shanty and like luton tavern. Melanie think about that. That zone. And i think i think that also i pledge allegiance to the grind to is very much. It's still killer mike. He's still very talented. But production-wise in everything else in the songs. It doesn't really do things that other people weren't doing doesn't ain't exactly monster did you. But i think like we've got screwed and chopped in here. We've got gospel samples. We've got a very ashanti esque super stem annan singing of One just rubbing on your shopping. We've got the like full-on. Like i don't even know how. Describe this selection of sin sounds but it's always makes me think of like. Ti thousand eight wrap. There was a very specific sound in the production and i checked. It's not the same producer is but there's there's multiple songs on here. I'm like ooh really. That's the sense you chose and also like the background baby boys from talking about sometimes I don't know how they do it better than i just did it over seeing but they felt the need to make it sound.

Newsradio 600 KOGO
"rosanna" Discussed on Newsradio 600 KOGO
"You know, when total came out with Rosanna? Yes, Um I was into her. I don't know why people were so Bewitched with her. Well, I tell you what. There was something about. Well, the Arquette sisters, But Rosanna was I mean, Patricia, you know, is a better actress, Oscar winning actress. But I don't know. The T thing was getting to me with her having those those indented teeth. It didn't do much for me. But Rosanna? Yeah, she was. She was an it, girl. Absolutely. She definitely was, And she made the party scene. She was that was that was that's my era right there. That's that's right. That's that is right in my wheel. Exactly. Absolutely. Alright, so back to my world of sports, and the potteries had the day off. Yesterday, the Dodgers beat the Giants Now normally, we don't root for the Dodgers under any circumstance, however, this case with the giant city of first place that was good for the Dodgers to beat the Giants to bring the Giants back to Earth a little bit. So right now, the Padres picked up a half a game, so there are four games back and the Dodgers are 2.5 games back. Believe it or not, Today's game as they open up a six game road trip in Cincinnati will be the exact halfway point of the season. So what's interesting is right now The Padres are city of 47 33. Which have you double up would be 94 wins. The over under in Vegas for how many wins the Potters that have this year was 94 a half So if they went tonight at the halfway point election will be on page to go over. So basically, with all the ups and downs we've had this season..

Chicago Tonight
Hot mic catches Mayor Lori Lightfoot swearing during Chicago City Council meeting
"So moving over to city news. First off that hot mic. That caught mayor lori. Lightfoot cursing after alderman. Rosanna rodriguez sanchez. Spoke about a resolution honoring black history month during today's city council meeting today. Let's take another look to have contributed to make this city a better place for all. Thank you thank you. All the chair recognizes alderman. Jim gardner okay heather. What happened here while my reporting shows that she had just been informed at that moment that alderman burke and alderman lopez to of her fiercest critics on the city council had joined forces. And we're going to block of vote on the big federal relief package. That was on. Today's agenda alderman. Ed burke has been at odds with mayor lori lightfoot since the beginning she ran on sort of rooting out corruption in city hall and she painted him as the face of everything that is wrong with chicago politics and she's been at odds with random lopez. You know basically from the moment. He is an ally of alderman bark and he has been highly critical of how how she has approached on her time in office. She was vulnerable on this issue because she was being fiercely condemned by progressive groups. Alderman burke and alderman lopez. They had their own questions about it and they saw this as an opportunity to exact. Some perhaps political revenge enforce all of us to come back friday afternoon chewed see if they can get this passed against.

Unreserved
A conversation about race, privilege and making space
"Watch a dot. Say Nin, hello, and welcome this unreserved on CBC Radio One I'm Rosanna dare child. In October of two thousand and eighteen I moderated, a panel called inside outside at six degrees held at the art gallery of Ontario. It's an event that invites authors, academics, politicians, and big thinkers together to discuss pressing issues. And Right, now there is one issue that has captured the world's attention. The death of George Floyd a forty six year, old, black man and in Minneapolis police officer now charged with second degree murder. His death was witnessed around the world and sparked support for the black lives matter movement with protests from Merika to Australia. We are at a turning point in our history, so we thought it was a perfect time to revisit this conversation. Today on unreserved. We're talking about power, privilege and asking. How willing are we to make meaningful change? Joining me on stage, our Alexis McGill Johnson of the perception institute. Is Your allure author speaker and Internet yeller not to know bed. National Inuit leader and president of new tap read Cana Tommy and Sassy assassin professor of Sociology at Columbia University. Okay so I'm afternoon. We're going to have a conversation around place. Power Privilege, who hasn't who doesn't and perhaps more importantly how we are shifting to create new spaces. I want to start with of course are beautiful panelists here? I want to ask you first of all to tell US share with us. Where you come from because as my elders teach, you cannot know where you're going until you know where you've come from. or at least that's what my mother would say when she sent me to the store. my first question to each of the panelists are what is the place that you come from? Perhaps we'll start with me. Thank you very much I guess I'm still trying to figure that one out. I. I thought I came from Canada. I was the young person and I'm not quite sure if that's the right. Way To think about where I'm from now. Nuts. which is. A region in new one of our four regions northern Labrador and we very recently got self-government, two thousand and five. But I grew up. There I also grew up in the United States I I grew up. Kind of between a lot of different worlds so I, Can i? Also say that I'm a global citizen as well so I am the national leader I am in Okinawa proud indigenous person. But it doesn't. Then, take back any of the other parts of me, that exist as well and I'm I'm comfortable insertive in that space, and I think that is sometimes confusing to the rest of the world that I have not indigenous ancestry as well that my mother is none dishes. That's fine and getting the acceptance from. Canada and North America that I can be indigenous, but I can also have non indigenous parts. That is a part of this power dynamic that I hope that we can discuss this afternoon about assertiveness in. Indigenous. Without the. The qualifiers that indigenous people put on us. And if we don't fit into those myriad of boxes than we somehow lose all of our rights altogether. And we will get into that because that is an interesting place of privilege to. TRY TO KICK doors. Down into so that we're GONNA. Wait to Alexa. So, we're my from. Kind of like to say I'm from a period of time. I was I was born in Nineteen, seventy two, which is important to me as a social identity really. but it's important for me. Because it was, it was halfway I was born kind of right in the middle of a post wave, second wave, feminism, and the Black Power Movement and my parents, both particularly my mother lived at the intersection of both of those movements growing up. She was incredibly active as a woman is. She, she had US marching in in our Shakey's an Afro puffs as as children I'm pretty sure I learned the words to. We shall overcome before I learned the US pledge of allegiance. My choice of professional careers always been trying to to understand interrogate these these. Frameworks power and Privilege Ed. I studied political science. Which I think is a study of power. But have found myself now consistently in these rooms, as one of few one of only, if not the only woman woman of Color, and so I've been this bridge I think kind of connecting. Connecting the dots in a lot of different iterations from a cultural perspective where I've worked with a number of artists and democratic organizations, organizing young people to the current work that we do have perception which is around translating the science of our brains and bodies understand difference in how we connect to each other in those ways.

Unreserved
William Prince on 'borrowing from future happiness' to write new album
"Is voice is like the low rumble of thunder storm on the prairie. His songs a glimpse into the heart of a man who's lived through the broken to come out hole on the other side. William Prince is an initial based singer and songwriter from PEGUIS FIRST NATION IN MANITOBA. His just released the much anticipated. Follow up to his Juno. Winning debut album earthly days. His trajectory is taken him from small stages two major concerts and tours all over turtle island and abroad including opening for the legendary Neil young an icon. Buffy Sainte Marie his new album reliever was recorded in Winnipeg in Nashville and is out now. I'm so pleased to welcome. William Prints back to unreserved for an extended conversation today. Hello My friend Rosanna. How are you? You look a little travel where you good. Oh yeah is it The friendly way of saying how terrible I think it's just the hat I lucked out and I found a half that fits my head and I wear it everywhere now. So that's that's the big change. You look fantastic. No thank you thank you. So let's start with the new record. What inspired you most on this album? Oh boy that That starts the conversation years ago You know Reliever was was born in in stages it was written at so many different times. It was written in real time panic. I say for some part of it. It was written halfway through reflection and then finally at the point of revelation. There there's so many different points Throughout this album that I'm really proud of making it through and being here where we are today on the other side and reliever was really just about collecting and documenting the songs. I was writing while I was going through. You know one of the harder times in my life so far so you were going through some stuff the loss of your father the end of your relationship finding your place as a father to your son. Wyatt what does the name Reliever mean to you? Reliever really stems from the idea of course of treatment. Almost an anti an antibiotic in a sense. You Know I. I think of the songs What they've done for me over time dealing with those those things like grief and separation and total change in one eighty of environment from this point of is this working. Is this something I'm going to be able to do? Is there a place here for me? to now being at a place where. I find myself doing this all the time. My responsibility is become to to be a good dad and be good to my family and make art and it's it's really An incredible thing so that was the faith. I was Kinda holding onto borrowing from your future. Happiness is what I say. You know. Having that faith for win the time would come now. And we'd have this record. I'd be passed the things I was working through and Able to celebrate them rather than live in a state of grief reliever was was born in the concept of love to I. I was thinking about how the greatest Major League. Baseball pitchers in the world will throw a few innings until they're retired for the game and the relief pitcher takes over and says I I got this. I thought you know on those days. When we're with our significant others those we care about say we're not throwing the best game and then that other person can kind of take over so is really borne inside baseball? Metaphor that That grew in complexity and I found the title track itself kind of in the middle of everything and it really started to tie the two halves together. The part where I was living in real time making a diary to my son showing him and letting him know where I was during this time. His infancy And then ultimately showing him that though I was going through this really difficult time Your your dad stayed steadfast and resilient and made it through and I hope that's the kind of man Human BEING HE TURNS OUT TO BE IN THE END William the beauty of your lyrics or that you are so vulnerable you give so much of yourself in your music. Why do you share so much with people? WanNa I think it's what we're most in need of Today is the willingness to be vulnerable insincere. You know more than ever. There's more to consume and more to get over faster than it's ever been. I think the things that still exist amongst the human condition are those themes of love and you know making it through the everyday life and Going through those challenges that we will encounter over the course of our individual lives. I came into the term Saunder over the past few years where you sit and imagine that the complexities of every other individual in the world has a whole history just as long just as an in detail just as thorough just as grand as your own and I think that's a lot that's a lot of hard drive space. You know a lot of files out there to pick through and you know there are a lot of them that are similar from person to person and the ones that are easier to deal with me are speaking about my family and I have no problem because this was my way of coping. This was my chance to deal with these things face on was to write about them in real time and do my future self a favor that I knew that I've survived everything up until this moment and I will continue to survive and thrive in the environment that I've created for myself now and I'm that's a huge privilege. That's that's really something so I chose that while I'm here while people are listening. I'm going to give the most honest and forefront representation of what I feel what I what I'm living through and hopes that it. Will you know? Bring US pass this more superficial more artificial age and get us back in touch with with vinyl records and phone calls and and things like that slowing the pace to appreciate. Just how beautiful human condition actually is now earlier? You had said that in creating this album you had to borrow from your future happiness. What did you mean by that? Well it's really all that faith is I think is I. I was going through like you said the the loss of my dad and Estrangement and not really feeling like I was In a place to ever really even have a relationship again. I thought I'd just be an artist and a great dad now just travel and in a low point truth truthfully. I. I don't want to understate. Just how tough things were I went back to to Peguis are? I lived with my mom for a year. You know I I. I worked on the PEGUIS radio to keep my mind from going crazy and the slower days and drove to the city. Every day to see my son is very opposite. A glamorous was quite testing. It's like what have you done? You derailed yourself from A Post Secondary Education to pursue this dream and so borrowing from future happiness. Was this idea that I would look to the future when the darkness breaks knowing that. I think there's going to be a time when I get to play music all the time to be a recording artist and share my story with you know auditoriums Or even town halls even fifty people at a time. I knew that there was part of me. That wouldn't let go over this dream that I was chasing to be here to to do this for a living so I I with the good faith that it'll probably work out. I think it will work out. I believe enough that it will work out. I'll just watch it unfold so that now when we're here when you're here opening for the Neil Young's of the world and and travelling in. It's not normal to be applauded by thousands of people a Week. You know not everybody gets to to have that and it's really sending the message that my music belongs here. My voice is being heard. And that's everything you hoped for as a songwriter. So I'm as happy as I imagined if not more for certain. This home actually sounds Fairly optimistic you seem more rooted. You've gained some wisdom in the last few years. What do you attribute to that confidence like the the difference? Now I I I was joking that When I made earthly days it was like I hope nobody minds that I'm doing this. You Know Jade Bird says the last thing. The world needs is another narcissist so going from that I wonder if anyone will even hear these songs other than my family and myself and I'll drive around with a CD in my car. And finally feel like I did it. I got an album and I was hoping to to make it outside of Manitoba now. It feels like you know we're GonNa go everywhere but the time it's it's all said and done and to have that in my heart to know that there there's a humble audience waiting for a follow up. It gave me the peace of mind to go into the studio with Scott again and Dave and be in Nashville being when pig. Bring these two pieces of the project together and Believe in my songs from the start not waiting for them to be validated. After I I trusted I knew I'm aware of my abilities. And I record songs and play shows. I was trying to prove that so hard for so long and show that I'm you know Just as valid a songwriter artist as anybody else. And now that we're here. I can just focus on bringing about the Best Art. I can create

AP 24 Hour News
Harvey Weinstein accusers speak out following verdict
"Former movie producer Harvey Weinstein has been locked up following his rape conviction AP entertainment correspondent us was Gabriel has the story from one of his accusers who's happy to see him behind bars Rosanna Arquette says she is one such victim and she was overwhelmed when she heard that a New York jury had convicted him of rape and sexual assault I just burst into tears burst into sobbing tears on because I wasn't expecting it now that it's happened arcade expects more convictions when Harvey Weinstein faces criminal charges in Los Angeles meanwhile she says the message in New York jury sent should resonate with any take advantage of women you can't do this anymore another accuser Mira Sorvino says Weinstein has haunted his accusers but the verdict has given those women their power back I'm Oscar wells

WTOP 24 Hour News
Harvey Weinstein accusers speak out following verdict
"One day after Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein was convicted of rape and sexual assault in New York some of his Los Angeles accusers held an emotional news conference actress Rosanna Arquette is truly a landmark moment for survivors of rape and sexual assault in that the public is seeing that man even a man as powerful and famous is wise team will be held accountable for their abuse of women Weinstein remains hospitalized with chest pains since his

Mark Blazor
The Silence Breakers speak after Weinstein's conviction
"Some of the alleged victims in Los Angeles reacting today to Harvey Weinstein's conviction actress Rosanna Arquette is one of the women who spoke today as part of the so called silence breakers that man even a man as powerful thing this is why C. will be held accountable for their abuse of women Harvey Weinstein is currently in the hospital after he was found guilty of rape and sexual assault in New York yesterday he still faces five to twenty five years in prison when he's sentenced next month he is expected to face more charges in Los

AP News Radio
Actresses who accused Weinstein pleased by verdict, look for more legal wins in LA
"Those who have accused Harvey Weinstein of sexual assault are happy to see the former Hollywood mogul behind bars Rosanna Arquette says she is one such victim and she was overwhelmed when she heard that a New York jury had convicted him of rape and sexual assault and just percent here's burst into sobbing tears on because I wasn't expecting it now that it's happened arcade expects more convictions when Harvey Weinstein faces criminal charges in Los Angeles meanwhile she says the message in New York jury sent should resonate with any take advantage of women you can't do this anymore this is the beginning it's a watershed moment as everyone has been saying it's a seismic seismic shift in our culture another accuser Mira Sorvino says Weinstein has haunted his accusers but the verdict has given those women their power back I'm Oscar wells Gabriel

Up First
Harvey Weinstein Avoids Jail For Now With Hospital Stop After Rape Trial Guilty Verdict
"Weinstein has been found guilty of criminal sexual act in the first degree and third degree rape by jury in New York. He was acquitted on three other charges. Including the most serious ones. Two counts of predatory sexual assault after the verdict. Weinstein was taken to Bellevue hospital with chest pain. Once he is released he will head to jail on rikers island to await sentencing on March. Eleventh Actress Rosanna. Arquette one of the many women who allege Weinstein harassed or assaulted them said while they're still a lot of work to be done on this. She's feeling relief. Here's what she told our colleague Mary Louise Kelley yesterday. I just WANNA focus on the progress that's been made today and how important it is because this is the first guilty verdict in the METOO era and it's a big deal. Once seen is facing up to twenty nine years in prison for those two convictions in New York and he also faces charges in a separate trial in Los Angeles

Native America Calling
The State of Indian Nations
"This is native America calling. I'm Tara Gate. Would climate change the federal government's trust responsibility and congressional action on violence against women. Child Welfare and tribal sovereignty are among the issues tackled today in fond sharps first State of the Indian nations address. She is the president of the National Congress of American Indians. She didn't hold back in her address. Press criticizing federal elected leaders for what she called inaction and indifference. When it comes to native nations she also touted the gains tribes continue? We need to make in spite of challenges. In the congressional response to the address New Mexico Representative Deborah Holland a Democrat and a citizen of the Laguna Pueblo continued criticisms of the administration and issued a call to all need of nations to act in the best interests Anita values. We're going to hear both speeches beaches this hour. If you WANNA comment send us an email you can send it to comments at native America calling DOT COM or tweeted to us at one eight hundred nine nine native. Here's President von Sharp. Kyo which I'm just Jack. I wish Guy Good Morning. My name is fawn sharp. I consider it my life's greatest honor to have this opportunity to share with you today. I thank the Creator for gathering us together for this historic dialogue between Indian country and the United States on behalf of the five hundred and seventy four federally recognized tribal nations dozens of state recognized tribal nations and millions of native people across this country country. I welcome the distinguished. Guests assembled here today and those watching around the globe to the eighteenth annual State of Indian nations address. I stand before you today. As a humble servant of all tribal nations fulfilling my duty to share Indian countries story of perseverance and resurgence with the world to convey with absolute clarity Indian countries expectations of the United States government government and to cast a light on the immense power and proven wisdom of tribal nation's governing their own lands and affairs solving difficult challenges and forging brighter futures on their own terms. I embrace the enormity of this task for I have been groomed for decades aides to carry it out by transformative leaders in his footsteps I follow leaders like Beatrice Black Elizabeth Cole Tiny Kapoma. He's Rosanna in Ramona Bennett to name just a few these matriarchs kindled a great fire in me to give my life in leadership to my. Don't people in all of Indian country just as important. They showed me the way and for that I am forever grateful I also it draw great strength as they did from our Almighty creator. The advice of my fellow tribal leaders the spiritual nourishment in life lessons end of canoe journeys the inspiration passion in Ingenuity of our brilliant native youth and the ancestral teachings of our elders their wisdom encouragement and guidance have prepared me to meet this moment. So why do we gather here today. The purpose purpose of this annual address is to memorialize in affirm the enduring government to government relationship ship between tribal nations and the US government. It provides our assessment of the current health of that relationship and how it must be strengthened. This hallowed discourse not only speaks to elected officials political and judicial appointees in staff the federal government nor is it limited to tribal leaders employees in citizens it has meant for all Americans especially those who have been disenfranchised and rendered hopeless hopeless bi racial injustice economic inequality and the rapid decay of our American political system. They seek answers during these troubling times and they need to look no further than tribal nations to find them in that spirit. I stand before you today. Supported supported by more than six hundred tribal nations and governments across this land to share with you this undeniable truth. The state of Indian nations nations is strong across this land. Tribal nations are writing remarkable stories of cultural social political and Economic Mike Renewal. In the face of great obstacles we relentlessly plow forward in our eternal quest to create futures of hope Opportunity Eighty and cultural vibrancy for our youth in those generations yet. To come we do. So by invoking and practicing the greatest indigenous in his core values of all self-governance the crater gifted tribal nations with certain inalienable rights among them the right to steward word and draw nourishment from our traditional homelands cultivate extraordinary potential of our youth develop thriving economies that that provide opportunity for all of our people and manage our own affairs and control our own destinies as my mentor former Cornell leader in NCI CIO president Joe Delacruz so perfectly captured it. No right is more sacred to a nation to a people then the right to freely determine its social economic political and cultural future without external interferences the the fullest expression of this right is when a nation freely governs itself. We native peoples not only the inherent right but the sacred responsibility to live the way our creator intended speaking are indigenous languages living our traditional core values imparting them to the next generations practicing our life ways conducting our ceremonies and freely governing Orleans and Communities Tribal Nations are not nonprofit organizations. We are full fledged battle-tested governments guided by time honored cultural trope principles and recognized as such in the northwest ordinance the US Constitution and hundreds upon hundreds of treaties and Supreme Court precedents accidents however many Americans including many policymakers still don't understand the unique status status of tribal nations are unique political status. They don't recognize the indisputable fact that we are argh genuine governments with the right and more importantly the ability to govern our own lands and communities govern those in accordance with the values that make us who we are as native peoples but through mechanisms like this annual address address more and more Americans and others around the world are learning this truth and in doing so are turning to Indian country for inspiration shen direction and most importantly solutions to our common challenges in this great age of uncertainty acting with the next seven generations wins in mind our ancestors endured great hardships to forge our path to this day so that we would be able to be there answer to a prayer for thriving cultures healthy children in robust communities. We must and we will be worthy of the great sacrifices they made to who gives us this chance to sustain not only our way of life but our world for future generations.

Unreserved
Lights, camera, Oscars: Meet the creators decolonizing Hollywood
"I'm Rosanna the dear child. Talking all about rewriting Hollywood's image of indigenous people from the inside and five indigenous. Writers Comics are doing just us that working on a brand new Sitcom for NBC. Called Rutherford falls unreserved producers. Tenant met up with them on the paramount studio lots in La just outside the writer's room where things can get a little silly job Tassell fulltime job. My name is Janisch meeting. I'M MITOCHONDRIA LAKOTA. And I'm a staff writer rather vol's my name's bobby. Wilson I'm secede secede Awan Awan Dakota and I think a little bit of White House staff writer Donahue. My name is Tania as Chavez. I am a citizen. If the Bishop how you tribe molly member one tribe relations are I am Navajo Pie in San Carlo Patchy achieve and I am the story editor on the jets. My name is Tyler Claire. I am Mohawk and mic-mac from from going to walk in Quebec and a staff writer on the show it's pretty great. AFC or analysis Hanish land nearby Cheektowaga Additionally my name is Sierra Teller Analysis I'm member of the Navajo Nation. I'm born of edgewater people in for the Mexican people and I'm also The Cook Creator of Rutherford Falls. I created the show with Ed Helms and Mike sure who both worked on the office in my created partner in Brooklyn I nine and the good place and so we've been working on this developing this idea for about a year and a half now. The show runner is really sort of like the boss. But they're also a conduit between in the producers and the other CO creators and the studio and the network and then also the writers so there's kind of jack-of-all-trades sort of shortstop position. I'm going to say that. This is the first native show runner in America and I would say this is the first TV show that has this many stuff writers and writers that Arnie if I could be wrong but I won't back down. Toss it would be my hype woman. The most basic question to start with what is referred falls. What is it about we such a hard time explaining what the show is? But it's awesome so like definitely spy side in there. I'm not it's all about the town of other falls which is this tiny town in upstate. New York that is adjacent to a native reservation and the town is sort of turned upside down own when there's talk of moving statue that commemorates the founder of the town. This Guy Lawrence Weatherford. And the last Rutherford to live in the town is this Guy Nathan in played by Ed Helms Nathan Rutherford and he just loses his mind over it. And because you sort of can't let go. It causes all these other dust ups in the town including his friendship. unshipped with Scroll Regan. Who is native American one of the things? I think that I love about Mike. Sure shows is that he sets out to really try to say something big in a super funny super assessable way talking about the bureaucracy of government with parks and REC or talking about like. What does it mean to be a good person with a good place and I were two picture shows? People be like what the hell are you talking new out but he has a way of sort of condensing and making it funny and making accessible way that I really enjoy and so I think we're talking a lot about like what are first stories. What does the American narrative? How does that American narrative affect all of us? And I think we've found a way to sort of make funny interesting version of that so for people who can't see where we are. Could you describe have a where we are. We're in a fort on an ancient Hollywood burial ground. There's a couple of Indians in there. I think Joey Ramone Well look at his heir where paramount pictures studio. So it actually is one of the oldest Hollywood studios you on point Bobby. This is the old blue studios which is on bay. Does your Anez and Lucille Ball. It's unoccupied territory and its content. It is one thousand percent haunted. We're surrounded by a lot of videos and so you get to walk past them on your way the office and like look in and see people making TV and movies. It's pretty wild everyday that I come here. I'm like holy. I can't believe this is my life. That's what I say. Every day we'll settle into the office very quickly very very quickly. Bobby put up artwork mark. We got rugs pillows. They got native real quick. Colonial settlers. We settled settled. It's actually one of the nicest writers rooms we've I've ever worked in. They usually look like these like really Friday sad dorms. It's preach ikya plants Manson furniture and blankets. It's nice so many gods so much I was a kid and I would go to my white friends houses they all have pantries ebbs and like French necks and lunch ables caprice and I didn't have that and so this kitchen I feel like is amazing. We are the rich kids now day one we were so like. Yeah if we'd have water beat the great shirts. Gosh I'd love to chat with you about how you work together. What is a day of work? Look like are you making each other laugh Just watched the movie black cloud. It's like that daddy issues. A lot of fights. There's one wall that we we can all punch his. I'm getting a lot of straight answers from the corner here. And it's a pretty traditional writer's room we blue sky and then we just go through and sit on a couch together and talk about the things that have happened in our lives. And that's what's look great but having so many native writers as I feel like being the only native right on a show and ask you a question you have to represent then everybody and what's so great here. I don't have the answer. There's a good chance one of the other writers we'll have it other native writers and that's so it's just so nice. There's such a weight off your shoulders. I was really amazed by how collaborative has been like. I thought we were going to be like Austin delegating. Some like random small space windowless room place. But we're actually like working together on couches is all day making jokes. It's phenomenal so what was the first day working together. Like I can't answer that because I feel like I have a moment. He's he's just a moment because this is the first time that I've had native colleagues in any workplace and it's so cool to come to work especially in TV and be around other native writers. When I had my first meeting with Sierra at Homs was in the room and her and I were just like talking points like she remembered he was there and she was like? Do you have anything that you say. And he was like no. He's this is amazing. And what's amazing is like we get to cut out Indian one on one and we just get to get on on with the humor and the stories and it's super cool. That's the most exciting thing for me that I know on the first day is that it was also the first time I think we've been the majority in any space. It like influences the vibe and the culture of the room for sure and it's just it feels really familial and it also also is I think influencing the storytelling quite a bit. It's it's pretty magical. And what about putting the writing team together were you part of that Sierra. So could you. Could you tell me about how you put a writing team together for this show. Sure I mean it's really just been like I sound like a Pollyanna but like a dream come true in a sense of like. I figured there'd be like one native writer later and have to fight for it and Mike was like. Oh no there should be like half. The room should be native but to two hundred between woman a white guy should be half and half and he just has such incredible influence so the three of us at Mike and I met with a bunch of different writers from all different backgrounds. And it was so cool that you're told all the time well there there aren't out there so it's GonNa be really hard and it really wasn't and it was just a really cool idea of like who are the funny native people that I know or discovering and then we put them all together with a bunch of other funny writers from different backgrounds and friends runs that I'd worked with before. It's a really exciting time because I feel like we're all getting to do something that is like genuinely funny genuinely interesting but also very much from a native have perspective and kind of juxtaposed that with a traditional white American perspective. I think we're going to have multiple native characters. There's like two main native characters on the show who have very the different views of just everything and I think there's something interesting about their scenes where native people are talking to people about whatever and not necessarily about housing native but sometimes and I think the exciting about getting to to write those

The Big Picture
Predicting the 2020 Oscars The Big Picture
"The time has come to predict the Ninety First Academy Awards. Amanda how are you feeling about this. I feel terrible as always I just. It's being wrong in public. It's my number one least least favorite thing. It's even worse than being wrong in private. We will closely tally. All of your failures on Oscar night. Because I'll be tweeting at you directly every time you get a choice wrong and then we'll also be rehashing. Those wrong choices here on the big picture live immediately. After the telecast which. I'm really excited about on Sunday night but before that we do you have to We have to pay it to the prediction. Gods and we're GonNa go through all twenty four categories here. Yes we are now. I'd like to preface that by saying as I worm my way through the back nine of illness. My voice may go at any moment here. In which case you're GONNA have to really carry the load cliff booth style okay. I was going to say that. That's just a good summation of Oscar season and at some point to talk myself out and officer does flailing filing in the dark possibly in silence. We're we're we're just trying to get to the finish line. I am hopeful that this will not be an immensely boring. podcast about predicting the Oscars because the Oscars may be boring. I will say this is by far far the easiest year in the history of my life predicting these awards okay. You know what. It's nice that you have confidence does not this and in life. Yes it is now that means okay. That means I couldn't logically see making any other choice that doesn't mean I feel that I am right okay about I guess I feel feel the same way. There were more categories that I could kind of fill in but I there are still so many to get wrong. It's just an opportunity to get things wrong. I can't had over emphasized how much I hate that. Feeling when you would finish an exam in ninth grade at the end of it when you and your classmates your little amend etes would would gather route and chat at the at the cafeteria table would you say. Would you be the person who would say. Oh my God I failed so bad. I didn't know anything. I failed. No okay okay no because I find that obnoxious and also because I had to have like my personal confidence that I was still going to defeat all of them. Were you sitting alone like a sociopath at the cafeteria table. No okay. I had some friends but I don't know we just talked about cross country or something. Well that sounds riveting okay. Let's go back to the Academy Awards. which which is the reason for this podcast? We're GONNA start at the beginning and at the place that we sort of blasphemed earlier on the show which is with shorts. I thought we were respectful. I I want people to go back. And listen and hear what we were saying which is not that they should be cut from the show and not that shorts aren't deserving but it is a different French exercise and I just think the it was interesting to try to get into the mind of what these winners would be because I think you're evaluating on different terms because it's a different type of film so let's just make a separate thing for the shorts and let everybody have their moment philosophically I agree. It's one of the few things about the sort of workaday nature of the Oscars that you and I ultimately agree on. There are three different categories for the shorts. There is best documentary short subject. Best Live Action Short film and Best Animated. We'll start with best documentary short subject. A very few people have seen these movies. I've seen some of them. I'm not going to pretend like I've seen all fifteen. Nominees Germany's shorts category. I just haven't I haven't had the time and I'm a bad person. I have had her but I have seen some of them I've seen some of them as well feel solid about. My choices will run through the the nominees for this first category in the absence by using John and Gary Byung Cam learning to skateboard in a war zone by Carol dicing her life overtakes me by Christine Samuelson. And John. Hatice Saint Louis Superman by Sri Mantra and sign ECON and walk run cha-cha by Lord. I think the overwhelming favorite favored in categories learning to skateboard in a war zone. As my pick that is awesome attack we can move on directly from there. Okay well I just don't think we should really make an attempt to talk about the quality control of these categories stories because we're just not the experts if you expertise are actually a ton of great pieces. I was reading some stuff on wire this week. About which of these shorts are serving which are not. There's a lot of great writing about the shorts. We respect the filmmakers acres. who made the shorts? It's not Medi Best Live Action Short Film Brotherhood by Mariam. Jabbour Nafta football club by the neighbors burs wooden window by Marshall Curry Saria by Bryan Buckley or sister by Delfin Gerard. I'm going with the neighbors Wendo. I want with Brotherhood. Okay that is the that's the oddsmakers favorite Brotherhood is. Yes yes so do you. Is there a reason why you you may may change. Because the neighbor's window is is the oddsmakers like upset favorite. What is that called? When it's the there's a favorite and then the underdog I guess so spoiler well in a group of five I was wondering anyway? It's number two and I think it's been in the conversation it's and it is accessible and and I just really do feel like especially people who are voting on these are sometimes just clicking through and being like oh I guess like this one I like to football club too and I feel like that has a chance I wouldn't wouldn't rule that out yet We'll have to wait and see. The oddsmakers are usually right in the shorts categories but it can't be guaranteed because these are highly unpredictable predictable because unlike a lot of the other words. We'll talk about here. There are not a lot of guild awards that predict these words. This is really the only three categories in which we have no no data to present ahead of what you know sort of what is leading the race. What is leading the charge? So we're flying blind quite a bit. which part of the reason why we're not gonNA spend too much time analyzing final category Gorriak shorts animated short To Sarah by Doria Kusturica hair. Love Matthew. Cherry Kit Bowl by Rosanna Sullivan memorable memorable by Bruno. Colette sister by CK Song Hair. Love is far and away. The favourite yes in this category. Matthew Cherry is very active twitter user. A lot of people know oh him used to work for Jordan Peele and monkey productions is a very short. I will be surprised this one out of all three. I would be the most surprised if it didn't win. I also picked love and it made me cry and under four minutes very effective I two can respond to animated films. Wow Yeah Erica. An incredible transition to our next category best animated animated feature the nominees are how to train your dragon the hidden world. I lost my body clause missing link and toy story for what did you go with. This was a last minute change and I. I don't know whether I should admit this. And the podcast bobby. Cut this if I'm breaking a Balazs but I haven't been advising a close best friend of mine on possible bets possible upsets and close friend. Yeah no it's it's a friend. The you know a friend who listens to the podcast and identified this category. I did go toy story for because I'm trying not to over. Think things but it does seem like it seems like there could be several no spoilers. Actually there's a lot of arrows pointing at clause right now. Yeah clause just won a BAFTA clause one Annie Award Clauses clearly admired tired. Mommy animating filmmaking community I don't WanNa Toy Story. Movies went to movies. Come out. That was kind of my reasoning toy story. Three was nominated for best picture which feels like a thousand years ago but this is truly one of the most storied movie franchises ever. This sounds like a silly thing to say about a toy story movie but it is a fact there have and four films are hugely successful. The characters are beloved ingrained in popular culture. And I genuinely think toy story. Four is very very very good animated film and might might mark the end of a certain period of Pixar because not just the machinations that have happened over the years with Disney but obviously all of the sort of incredibly fraught stuff. That's happened with John. LASSETER over the years in the development stage for these movies. It's just if you look at the Pixar movies that are coming There are a lot of new properties and there are a lot of new voices that are getting to make those movies toy story. Four is old school tried and true early. Two Thousand Steve Jobs Era Pixar. That's where it comes from and and I think they're going to recognize that we could be wrong. We're GONNA find out we're both going to a story for best documentary feature the nominees. Are American factory. The Cave you've the edge of democracy foursome and honey land. What did you choose? I chose American factory as that. I'm not feeling confident. I'm not either but I wanted to die on this hill because I love this film. We gave this film best picture we really did Alternate Oscars about that this morning and I was so happy. What a lovely little title space? That was where we just got to talk about the things we liked terrifically. Well made movie. I think All of the movies in this category are are well-made. I shouldn't be surprised by how overwhelmingly serious every film is in this category every year and how issues oriented a lot of these films are it's been interesting to see. I thought when the nominations were announced honeywood play spoiler spoiler the fact that it has representation in this category and also in the next category. We're GONNA talk about. It's just unusual. That's never happened before. And so that shows a lot of support for that movie. I thought that would play spoiler over the last couple of months. Foam seems to be gaining steam for some just one at the Baptist over the weekend. We'll have to wait and see my my choices also American factory. This is part of what I mean here about saying. This was an easy choice to make because it seems like a logical choice. It's an American story. Also International Scott Got Barack Obama's thumbprint on it which I think is key weirdly meaningful. You know we. We never talked about Kobe. Bryant's passing on the show and I don't think there's a ton of reason to but obviously. Kobe was an Oscar winner. And you know some people love his film but it was a lot easier to understand his film in the purposes of his film that won best animated short. I think it's called your basketball because this was connected to Kobe. Bryant and I think people will actually look at American factory and think of Barack Obama and correlate in the same way like that is how this business works in many ways. So I'm going American factory if you told me Any of these films were GonNa win. I genuinely would not be suppressed. Don't don't bet on this category advice this category also just the nominations itself were a bit of surprise is because Apollo eleven which had been so dominant at so many awards coming up to the nominations is not included. One Nation was also in the mix and is not included so it could go a lot of different ways and I guess my strategy throughout is has been to play it safe to go with the most obvious choice and that's important because it's been like a pretty obvious yes award season thus far but we could easily be wrong. The Oscars always has a couple of surprises as it always does now. I would prefer if those surprises happened in some of the later categories and then some of the earlier categories for the sake of national entry but in all likelihood this year they're going to come in categories like this let's go to best international feature a category will not have any surprises whatsoever. The five nominees are Corpus. Christi Honey Land Les Miserables Painting Glory Parasite Yes parasite will win this award. Award parasite is a winner. This is the not the last time. We'll talk about parasite on this podcast. We can continue to go forward great visual effects. This is the category that I like to call. Sean doesn't know anything I think I get this wrong every year. That's because you always pick marvel movies and they've never WANNA love moral. Yeah congratulations not not Without some questioning questions some of their choices and frankly their visual effects are sometimes not. I've never good

Who? Weekly
Why is Chester Hanks, AKA Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson’s Son, Like This?
"This is chester. Hanks big doc big up the whole island massive cowboy Chattanooga coming from that Golden Globes to- amongst Mexican and. I'll watch I mean it's not the worst thing he's ever done. I think that's the best way to put it. That's the best way to put it. It's the worst thing he's ever done as any Tom Hanks fan longtime hang longtime Tom. Hanks Fan knows Chad. Hayes is the kind of loose puzzle piece in the whole thing of it all yet. He's the son of Tom and Rita. They have their oldest son sons. He's a rapper slash actor slash instagram user and people often he comes up sometimes and then he goes away and then he comes up then he goes away and he's currently coming up because he was at the golden goal to this parents he also like recently in the past four years got sober and had a kid so like his life was just very drama and now it's a little bit less drama. He's wingless academian more less wrapping and more acting and he sort of quieted down down. Yeah everyone could see less of him but that sort of a good thing whatever right but everyone forgot about him and then he was front and center at the Golden Globes last night. Everybody I was like. Oh yeah remember like Tom. Hanks son who's like a little bit yeow unexpectedly Tom. Hey brought the whole. They brought the whole all clan there today all the kids. They brought the kids with Tom. Tom Hanks's other kids. His his non-readers children his children. Even his non on reader children are invited. Children were on. Hank's is a Non Rita Child. It's only they're not talked about over for to their their Colin Hanks as an unruly child. Elizabeth is a Non Rita Child and Truman and chat are Rita Children. But we only read our about chat chester as we really only care about him. Jim Collins Boring Elizabeth is an actor the end. Truman is just to Truman's a little too young to have actually had his coming out party. You know we focus on the real like relevant Tom. Hanks news is aiming to say. Rita Wilson commented on this video of chat doing his thing and he said maybe the best laugh of the night crying laughing. I'm Oh boy it's like. She's so supportive. Wilson is Rita. Wilson is the Hollywood version version of. He's so talented. I'm so proud of talented talented. Don't comment directly about what Chet Hayes is doing like they're really not like getting they're not really we see their pr person is like just. Don't just don't talk about it. It's fine Rita's. Night was not without drama of her own. She she needed a laugh. She tweeted around God win was. When did she tweet this around the Golden Globes the Golden Globes start at noon? La Time so this was probably around six am she between my hair and makeup is person is one hour and twenty minutes late next week hair and makeup is still not here trying to be then next week booked this person in September hair and makeup. Still not here. And if that's like not bad. She went over to instagram because the woman loves to cross platform tweeted a instagram picture of herself with like her hair. That looked slightly curly. Not Not blown out not done up and said we're I don't even have the link but like the version of those tweets again. My hair and makeup person is late. I this is about one thirty. La Time is when she tweeted and she said what you look like when your hair and makeup person for the Golden Globes as one and a half hours late even though you booked him in September will leave one hour to do hair and makeup. What the only leave him what she's like? How will I do this? One in one hour. Will you know when I saw that night. And she figured it out she looked great loved. Always pulls is through. Julianne Moore commented. Oh my God I feel you. Michelle pfeiffer commented heart. Kate Bosworth commented. Oh that's the craziest feeling healing and of course the most Christie comment which was I cannot go on until I know who I have no life. It's like who the fuck needs to know who the makeup artist test is. Like Rosanna. arquette is on a different planet and just as beauty love you bravo Rose rose rose. Rose Rose Clap Clap Balloon. Peace sign for ransom. Wow that's really funny Roseanne Arquett. What's happening Rita Wilson? And I'm not saying this about evidence like Bu- via unnamed sources but also also these tweets themselves like she's kind of a monster I mean. Come on no. I feel feel like celebrities like love her but Jesus Christ yeah I mean. The rumor mill is grinding out. News that she's a bit of a monster but that's okay not not everyone I mean especially. You're a monster. When you're married to Tom Hanks just by comparison? Let's juxtaposed these two people. You come across across as a little more monstrous whenever your husband is saying. It's true like the sacrifice you make by being married to Tom. Hanks that you come off as a monster. Because it's like Mr Rogers is why people are like you know. I Love Fred but his wife was a bitch Da. She was a baby. She was slightly mean. Once you know but I I do feel like looking at read those tweets. I'm just like what is hurt. What's your damage? Lady looking at those three tweets.

WBZ Morning News
Jury Selection Begins in Weinstein Trial
"Now in New York City jury selection will begin this morning and the process could take weeks in the sexual assault trial of Harvey Weinstein the disgraced Hollywood movie mogul facing several more and new criminal charges this time in Los Angeles he is charged with raping one woman and sexually assaulting another during a two day period back in two thousand thirteen Weinstein has denied any wrongdoing on any of these charges claiming most of the encounters were consensual actresses rose McGowan and Rosanna Arquette among more than eighty women accusing him of sexual

Page Publishing
Jane Fonda got arrested AGAIN. Make that the 4th Friday in a row
"Actress and activist Jane Fonda as it's been arrested again it's the fourth Friday in a row the eighty one year old actress has been put in hand cuffs while trying to draw attention to the climate crisis she was arrested on Friday afternoon in the Hart Senate office building with a handful of other protesters among them were actresses Rosanna Arquette and Catherine

Elvis Duran
Ariana Grande Shares A Silent Instagram Tribute To Mac Miller
"Mac Miller passed away in overdose. I twenty six years old and the other side of MAC. Miller's death was also the fact that a lot of a lot of friends. I call them trolls they took to Ariana GRANDE day, and they were blaming her for his death. And that's that's horrible horrible. She had to shut down her Instagram her social media over the weekend because she just couldn't take the troll. Yes. She took turn off the comments terrible. They dated. Couple of months ago. So yeah, a lot of fans who were. You know, I guess upset and feeling sad. There's anger in the wrong. Totally wrong. Totally totally totally wrong. You just there's no room for that whatsoever. That's around

Red Eye Radio
Small plane crashes in Southern California parking lot, killing 5
"Boulevard they treat you they treat me like family and tell them Karen said ya Plane crash at a parking lot five people dead after a small plane plunged from the sky right toward. A strip mall and Santa Anna California what made the twin engine Cessna go down isn't known the. FAA says it and the NTSB will be, investigating the FAA saying the pilots did declare an emergency, and then shortly after that the plane went down -freshing into, a parking lot outside of a, Staples store the plane was. Inbound. John, Wayne airport, in Orange, County all. Five people, on. Board were killed BC's Alex stone President, Trump clearly, admitting, that the focus of his sons 2016 Trump Tower meeting was to get dirt on Hillary. Clinton the president said the meeting was totally legal and routinely done in politics to get. Information on opponents but the, statement he. Dictated last year said the primary. Purpose was to discuss Russian adoptions, in Venezuela investigators hunting. For those behind a failed attempt to assassinate President Nicolas, Maduro with explosives. Laden drones they've raided hotel seized vehicles Dave, Packer ABC news W. r. m. f. a. St. to Karen Curtis here with Lindsay moans she's with southern. Coatings Inc which is a roofing company you have trucks out there that say got roofing right yes Scott roofing is our slogan and. That's what we're here to do it's important to protect your, roof is not too late for this hurricane, season. Definitely not I mean it's very important to always keep. Up with roof maintenance the roof is your first defense against any hurricane I understand that you have a. Roofing system that can protect, up against a category five hurricane yes SEI is. Known for its SPF roofing. System this is a spray foam polyurethane on it was. Stands category five winds utterance sixty mile. An. Hour winds, that's amazing what should a homeowner do once they sustained damage during a storm getting contact with your roofing contractor we. Do commercial and residential and we will be there right away when you call us at SEI and. That's what we've been doing for the past, forty years so look for their trucks rolling. Around out, there got roofing and call the number eight eight eight s., c. i. roof talked to the, owner Scott Peterman or you. Can talk, to Lindsay Molin she's also with SEI we really appreciate you thank you CBS twelve meteorologist Kate twin soul high temperatures will, continue in the upper eighties this afternoon with heat index values highest. One hundred only a twenty percent chance of. Fast moving showers a few isolated storms inland will be possible other than that wins out of the east at five, to ten for the evening at twenty percent chance of. Showers partly cloudy skies. With a low near. Seventy eight Coming up, for the Monday morning show we'll talk about everything that happened that you need to. Know over the, weekend and at eight thirty five we'll talk to actress Rosanna Arquette time since I talked to her that'll be fun show starts at five.

The Read
Jennifer Lopez To Receive Vanguard Award at MTV VMA's
"For ten percent off built something great and less move on from visionary, filmmakers by kely and producer short in peel comes black Klansmen. Starring John David, Washington, Adam driver Laura Harrier Tofa grace. Black clansmen tells the story of Ron stallworth. First African American detective serve in Colorado Springs. Police department determined to make a name for himself. Stallworth played by Washington bravely sets out on a dangerous mission infiltrate and expose the Ku Klux Klan sign mea, the detective soon, recruits, more seasons, colleague, flip zipper, Mun Zimmerman, sorry, that name just get it out. Sorry, just my body regurgitates played by Adam driver into undercover investigator investigation of a lifetime together. They team to take down the extremist group as the organization aims to sanitize, it's violent rhetoric to appeal to the mainstream. Doesn't that sound familiar? I'm ready, yes. It's produced by the team behind the Academy Award winning get out black klansman the crazy outrageous end incredible true story of a real American hero. You can see the newest Spike Lee joint black klansman in theaters, August tenth. I'm gonna have to check that out. You know, I'm come. Come ready to be men, but yet doesn't come out. Okay. Clansman less the show. All right. So we're back. It's time for the read. Yes. I have a few things to say, try and make them very query. First of all, muni while glad that somebody's because this was all my list today as well. Glad. Wow. After all, of whom in Holland in me, still standing Parker said all rooting for you in just really, really rooting watching the parkers every day. I don't care that you and Roseanne friends and she came onto ubt. Talk show, didn't wanna go on your show and you know you're just not going to money. Rosendo care about your blackest. Care about none of our black asses. She did Roseanne would not be rose, ending her way through a whole bunch of maybe cocaine, I think cocaine sounds like cocaine and all of the other foods that she's been a part of Roseanne when the fucked up a whole bunch of people's jobs would not still be running around here right now, screaming, racist comments from a bottom of her good. And here you are defending her while also claiming that the industry blackball Jew and as a black woman, and then in industry, I'm just sell sad. So disappointed in this. Yes, money, I really want the best for you. I think you're such a great talented, not only comedian just performer myriad, but the headline I read in the story for a while, the headline made me Sola said, I just couldn't believe it sister. That's what we're doing right now. Gross while sister where was Roseanne were you were hollering for everybody to boycott. Netflix with outta remembers talking about definitely be paid what she like this this, what you all have offered her is disrespectful. Where was Roseanne when you were going through it? Where was that? What was the sisterhood? Has she ever called you there. Especially in the last like six months and this bitch, looking at everything Rosanna the this is the hill. You wanna die on lost sizes. You had my support until you came into, you decided Roseanne had yours. Just won't do that. I just can't. Nope. Like you were right then and you're wrong. Now I don't feel bad for supporting you right there. Spock now very. It's like, Yep, sorry. Also, I would like to say, I heard that Jennifer Lopez is going to be getting the Michael Jackson video vanguard award via maize this year. I just wanna say that. Jennifer Lopez is beautiful woman. She's had six packs and she was born. She is a great former dances are asked still puts on a great show. Lots of really pretty looks and many music videos. And you know, she's, here's the thing. I don't really feel like I need to. Shea, Jennifer Lopez. I wouldn't have a problem. Jennifer Lopez winning this award. If Missy Elliott, our Hanlin and honestly eve, Missy Elliott did already have one Acas still think of some people who I feel like should get a video vanguard award before Jennifer Lopez, like Busta rhymes, kind of homophobic. So after Oscar, Kendrick, Lamar. Outcast. Alkhast definitely. Am I a give one to Mariah Carey doesn't have one in my has a problem with anti blackness. Oh, don't forget. Remember when she said something about somebody asked her about black lives matter. She was like, where is beyond saying Kendrick to say, Muslim lives. Syrian lies matters. Let's going over to..