20 Burst results for "Shivani"

"shivani" Discussed on Strong By Design Podcast

Strong By Design Podcast

02:44 min | 2 months ago

"shivani" Discussed on Strong By Design Podcast

"And <Speech_Female> everyone based on my Instagram, <Speech_Female> I <Speech_Female> share everything on stories. <Speech_Female> They're like, oh, you're <Speech_Female> too perfect. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> Because I'll post only <Speech_Music_Female> the good stuff. <Speech_Female> And so <Speech_Female> none at all. <Speech_Female> Don't hide your Coca-Cola <Speech_Female> on your soda and all the <Speech_Female> things. I <SpeakerChange> know you're <Speech_Female> gonna do that stuff. <Speech_Female> It's okay. <Speech_Female> We all have our vices. And whatever <Speech_Female> those are <Speech_Female> those treats or those <Speech_Female> enjoyments, <Speech_Female> that's okay. <Speech_Female> It's <Speech_Female> about crowding them <Speech_Female> out and doing <Speech_Female> majority good <Speech_Female> and still enjoying <Speech_Female> life a bit. <Speech_Female> So <Speech_Female> I'm about both <Speech_Female> and <SpeakerChange> not either or. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> That's right. Now that's <Speech_Male> great. I'm glad you said that. <Speech_Male> Where can <Speech_Male> people follow you <Speech_Male> on Instagram? <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> I'm at doctor <Speech_Female> shivani Gupta <Speech_Female> and at fusion <Speech_Female> area formulas Rx. <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> Terrific. All right, <Speech_Male> I'll be making sure <Speech_Male> we're following <Speech_Male> those here at <Speech_Male> critical bench and <Speech_Male> me personally. So <Speech_Male> that's great. And <Speech_Male> everything that you just shared <Speech_Male> will be in our <Speech_Male> show notes, our <Speech_Male> description for <Speech_Male> this episode. So listeners <Speech_Male> just go right <Speech_Male> down there. <Speech_Male> Take a look, click <Speech_Male> a link and you <Speech_Male> can find out more <Speech_Male> about what <Speech_Male> doctor Gupta is doing. <Speech_Male> And <Speech_Male> it's <Speech_Male> fabulous. I <Speech_Male> really <Speech_Male> get so much out of <Speech_Male> these <Speech_Male> conversations. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> It's always <Speech_Male> what it's good is, <Speech_Male> it's like as much as I <Speech_Male> feel like I know. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> What you <Speech_Male> are able to do is <Speech_Male> kind of reinforce <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> then relearn <Speech_Male> or when you <Speech_Male> hear things <Speech_Male> said, <Speech_Male> you get new <Speech_Male> perspective on things. <Speech_Male> And it's just so <Speech_Male> helpful and <Speech_Male> enlightening for me. <Speech_Male> So I <Speech_Male> think you <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> for just <Speech_Male> really teaching <Speech_Male> me today, but <Speech_Male> of course, <Speech_Male> we're helping thousands <Speech_Male> of people on the other <Speech_Male> side. So that <Speech_Male> always feels good <Speech_Male> too. Absolutely. <Speech_Male> Thank you. Yeah. <Speech_Male> So <Speech_Male> listeners, <Speech_Male> another great <Speech_Male> conversation today. <Speech_Male> I'm strong about his design <Speech_Male> as always. <Speech_Male> We <Speech_Male> deliver every single <Speech_Male> week here. We just keep <Speech_Male> getting all these great <Speech_Male> experts <Speech_Male> and <Speech_Male> I didn't even realize <Speech_Male> she was in my backyard <Speech_Male> literally here in <Speech_Male> Fort Lauderdale. So <Speech_Male> that's <Speech_Male> great. <Speech_Male> We <Speech_Male> will be <Speech_Male> back next week, as always, <Speech_Male> a new episode <Speech_Music_Male> drops on Wednesdays <Speech_Male> here on strong by <Speech_Male> design. So if you <Speech_Male> are new, just <Speech_Male> keep coming back <Speech_Male> every week <Speech_Male> for a new <Speech_Male> Wednesday episode. <Speech_Male> Sometimes we have <Speech_Male> some bonus ones that pop <Speech_Male> up on a Saturday <Speech_Male> if we have a part two <Speech_Male> of a long <Speech_Male> episode or something like <Speech_Male> that. But <Speech_Male> it's been real <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> fun. Now's <Speech_Male> the time to <Speech_Male> think of someone in <Speech_Male> your life that you could share <Speech_Male> this conversation <Speech_Male> with who maybe has <Speech_Male> some bad habits <Speech_Male> or some things they're <Speech_Male> doing that you <Speech_Male> know if they <Speech_Male> could just <Speech_Male> gain some control <Speech_Male> and gain some <Speech_Male> momentum and <Speech_Male> start making those <Speech_Male> healthy <Speech_Male> decisions that <Speech_Male> it could turn their life <Speech_Male> around for the better. <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> Please share now <Speech_Male> that would be <Speech_Male> great. I thank you <Speech_Male> so much <Speech_Male> and we love <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> you here at strong by <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> design God bless and <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> talk soon.

"shivani" Discussed on Strong By Design Podcast

Strong By Design Podcast

01:31 min | 2 months ago

"shivani" Discussed on Strong By Design Podcast

"And I said, let's go source the most crazy potent curcumin. We can find on earth. And so we found one medical grade, but it was so expensive. Thousands of dollars. And he said, no supplement company would do this. This is crazy. You don't understand multiples and business. If you think this is a good idea. And I was like, how about we humor me? Let's just humor me. I kind of want to prove my point. And one day I'll turn this into a business and model and all that stuff that works. But I'd like to prove that this can exist. And so I built it and put it into the hands of doctors and they were like, wow, my patient came off the other stuff. You cut our opioid use in our practice in half. My patients love your stuff. They're taking it forever now. They have a joint pain, chronic joint pain. They were losing function in their hands and their knees, and now they're not. And what was more fun even than all that was, sometimes people have very weird issues and inflammation is the root cause, and no one would have predicted it. Like allergies, there's all sorts of things I've seen over these last 7 years where people are like, you help with this problem. And I wasn't even taking it from that. So to me, I really enjoy meeting with practitioners. I enjoy meeting with doctors. I love educating the world. Turmeric can be that potent extract that we use as a daily preventive. And then we can also add on a second formula that makes it function more like a painkiller. Something that will really reduce the inflammation that's causing the pain that we have in the first place. And then from there I realized inflamed people don't sleep.

"shivani" Discussed on Strong By Design Podcast

Strong By Design Podcast

05:44 min | 2 months ago

"shivani" Discussed on Strong By Design Podcast

"Pests will come in and cause lots of trouble for you. So you really have to look at your microbiome as this loving space that you're gonna love for the rest of your life to have that key to vibrant health and an IRB, though, we also teach that the gut has a digestive fire. And that fire is something that we should ignite every morning, maintain all day, and put to rest at night, just like a campfire. So there's a lot of elements there, but if we can, it honor the gut fire as the key to our brain working well, our energy being great, our productivity being great, then all of a sudden it can be that key to all health that we crave. That's cool. That's good. I like that. When you say microbiome, and I mean, I know what it is, but someone listening doesn't know what that quite means. And a good healthy microbiome, could you just touch on that just a bit further? Sure. So within our gut, we have good bacteria and bad bacteria. We have an entire intestinal lining whose job it is to stay strong and healthy and pass food through it. 80% of our immune system resides alongside our gut lining. And so the problem is over 50% of people in the west at least suffer from leaky gut. That means that we've done stuff in our lives. You never know what it is for you. We all have different genetic makeups. For me, it could have been that large volume of fast food and soda and things that I did to myself as a kid because I thought that was normal and good. Most of us do. And so I have leaky gut. I have permeability in my gut lining. So what does that mean?

"shivani" Discussed on Homo Sapiens

Homo Sapiens

03:04 min | 5 months ago

"shivani" Discussed on Homo Sapiens

"The bad stuff. Yeah, because you don't want I'm pleased you said that because I feel the same of this for this podcast is like, I don't want to play into the hands of news editors and just constantly be arguing on behalf of, you know, there's a place for that absolutely, but we are also just people who want to have a chat. Yeah. And I don't have to be on the news advocating for myself or someone else from the community 24/7. They put us in that role and whenever you see a queer person on any current first show, they're advocating for rights. Fantastic that they're doing that. But we need to be seeing an expanded version of that with just talking about accepted truths like trans women are women. Let's now let's carry on, you know? It's so nice that there are outlets doing. I think also when you think about more of the mainstream news, like I want to be in a world where eventually we get LGBTQ+ people who aren't just on the TV to talk about LGBTQ+ issues, like why can't why can't they talk about what they're outside of that? Like whether that's, I don't know anything, but we can put the world to rights tomorrow, I reckon. Yeah. Some conversations put a spring in your step and that's one of them. For me, love shivani. Speaking of which, next week, another conversation that puts spring in my step. We're talking to the TV vet doctor James Greenwood. I would call it more of an Instagram vet myself. He's a superstar vet. He's on Instagram at doctor James Greenwood, I think is the handle handle as they say. I always feel like I'm playing Warcraft when I say things like that. Am I wrong? I didn't tell me. James actually started out on that TV show pottery throwdown. But it's also vet and is now it does BBC morning live every day. Or at least some days. And he is a wonderful man, and learning all about his story is really fascinating about being a gay man, growing up, gay men in Yorkshire, growing up wanting to become a vet, all the intricacies, actually really links to being gay, interestingly enough. And I think it will really resonate with you all. So tune in for that next week, let us know what you thought of today's conversation. Tell us evolving coming out stories. Let's hear them. Hello at homo sapiens podcast dot com at homo sapiens on Instagram. This has been wonderful. You've been wonderful. I'm going to go and now resume my horizontal position on the safer with the box of celebrations resting on my chest. And everybody, please write in and tell me your New Year's Eve plans. If someone knows how to crack New Year's Eve, I am all ears as they say. Let me know, let me know, let me know in times 1000. Hello at homo sapiens podcast dot com. If we don't speak before then as they say, have a brilliant year, happy new year to you all and sending you a ton of love. Bye for now. Powered by spirit shootings.

James Greenwood shivani BBC Yorkshire James Instagram
"shivani" Discussed on Homo Sapiens

Homo Sapiens

06:48 min | 5 months ago

"shivani" Discussed on Homo Sapiens

"So okay, let's have a look at D here says, seems very natural now. I remember feeling so fearful when I came out the first time. Well that is lovely because that's a listener who has been through a right journey and we've been through it together. So thank you so much for writing that in. That's wonderful. Prince of androgyny says the first felt like a step in the right direction and the last felt like I was more complete and secure. Because it's funny, isn't it? People are saying, you know, it feels like it was two steps, like two step verification when you're trying to log into your hotmail. But it's like you still use hotmail. No. And then here we go. First time speaking of which rye says first time was by email and group Facebook message, latest was on a video call. So look at the technology jumps between that. So the first time where I came out was by email in a group Facebook message. And then you're on a video call. That's the pandemic. That would do it for you. Yeah. Someone wrote in and I wonder if this was you right, who was asking about coming out on a zoom on a family zoom? Should I do it on Zoom? And while our advice was pulled the plaster off and do it. Because it was coming out to a family in New Zealand. Whoever that was, me right in, say, what happened? Did you do? Did you take our advice? No harm feelings if you didn't. Sean says nothing Lowell between the two times, which is good. Got a lot easier to talk about and didn't really care about others opinions in my life says Dan. That's nice growth, like taking away that power from other people. Isn't it? And actually, that's the version of pride. I can relate to in a way. Yeah. Just not caring, just being like, these are the facts, which I think takes in innate sense of pride within you, but it's not the version that is on posters around Pride Month. Yeah, I think so. And I think this version here that you and Dan and I have all experienced is more true to the communities experience than the sort of glossy posters. I mean, completely. Although, I still enjoy the parades and the parties, so I'm not saying abolish them all together. I'm just saying, yeah. No, I think Pride Month for me, it's a celebration of the community, but is also for non queer people. And that's great. That's what I want. But I don't know that I relate to that part of it. I do not relate to the rainbow jumper in target. Sorry. Yeah, what's happened with Christmas has happened to pride where like? Yes. It's less about the actual thing and it's more about how you can celebrate the thing even if you're no where near involved in it. And I think that's happened to pride. Everyone wants to celebrate the thing even if they have no sort of actual involvement, the other 364 days of the year. Yes. Why don't we get presents then? Oh, I do. Yeah. I've trained my brother. What? Yeah, so he every year gets me a gift for Pride Month. Okay, let's start making this. And then who would be the queer father Christmas? It probably would have been Leslie Jordan. Maybe, yes. It could be Lil Nas X. Yes. And he's got enough money to just buy us all a person anyway. He could actually get on a sleigh around the world. I think he did it in a music video. I think he's done a Santa themed music video. If not, Lil Nas X, you can have this idea for free. Well, listeners, thank you so much. This has been really lovely reading all your responses. I just think the most fascinating thing about that is 75% of you have evolved your sexual and gender identity since first coming out because that's nearly everybody, you know? And I think if you look at it from the way coming out is portrayed, it's always this one big event, not true, as per you as but more as per these surveys. And shivani, what are you up to next in life? Aside from choosing your next pride present. So I make podcasts as a thing as a little side thing. So we will put in the show notes, the links to two, three. There have been many, but the one that I'm most proud of at the moment is what I'm working on at the moment called black and gay back in the day, which is sort of all about sharing black queer stories throughout British history. Mark came on the podcast. Yes. Mark is our host, mark Thompson, incredible moment. So that's what I'm sort of filling my time with at the moment and increasingly just trying to do things to support the queer community and to champion that. So I am a journalist for openly news on TikTok and it's a branch of the Thomson Reuters foundation. Where I make TikTok videos about what's going on, I think the tagline is impartial LGBTQ+ news for a world that isn't. And it's great because it's impartial, yes, but not in the sense that other organizations have been in the past. We don't say let's debate trans rights. We say trans people are people. So that is our baseline foundation, which is literally the floor, but you know when the bar is so low for some media organizations that can be reassuring for the trans community to hear. And then we sort of just tackle some of the biggest news topics. So things like the midterm elections and how that was going to affect LGBTQ+ people, but also Qatar and football. And all of that is basically anything in the LGBTQ+ sphere. We try and make it relatable and accessible. Well, it's funny, isn't it, 'cause when we started this podcast 5 years ago, we would sort of look around for things in the news. Headlines anyway, there were related to our community and it was like really ending, maybe one thing about one thing. Now it's like every day. Yeah. It's everywhere. It's really, it's very sad when it's the destructive stuff. But it's just very different. I suppose it's the majority. Yeah, I think what's important to note about what we do is the fact that, like you say, a lot of it can be quite destructive and it can be sort of hate crimes and homophobia and transphobia, but we solely focus on LGBTQ+ news, which means that we also get to focus on the positive things and the things that uplift the community and frankly from my point of view if we were just focusing on all the horrible things it would just be really depressing to work on, but we sort of want to shout about the good news as much as we want to explain

Lil Nas Facebook Leslie Jordan Dan rye shivani Lowell Sean TikTok Thomson Reuters foundation New Zealand mark Thompson Mark Qatar football
"shivani" Discussed on Homo Sapiens

Homo Sapiens

07:37 min | 5 months ago

"shivani" Discussed on Homo Sapiens

"So you can try before you buy, which is my favorite I like to do that in the supermarket whenever they've got a little snack being handed out. Anyway, I digress. Hello, this is what they call part two of a podcast called homo sapiens. Part ones on the feet, but if you've already heard that, this will now become part two magically. You just have to sit there and wait and it'll become part two. Me talking to shivani darpa. It's a great chat. Here it is. Can I ask you a question about your second coming out? Do you remember what kind of took you between the first one and the second one and what made you say I needed you felt you needed to redefine the person you are. Yeah, I don't know if it was that deep, I don't know if it was something, you know, chewing me up inside and causing me to lose sleep, what I think it was was like, I came out as bisexual and largely I hadn't changed as a person I was sort of always the person I had been, but a bit more open about who I am. And before coming out and after my Friends were sort of call me a boy would boobs, just the way that I was and my interests and my hobbies and that sort of how I was identified among some of my friends and that was sort of like a jokey little thing. Then years later, I guess I found the terminology non binary. I don't think I necessarily knew it or I knew it, but I didn't really identify with it or understand fully what it means. It was 2020 and I kind of just was, this is me, this is kind of who I've always been and now I know this language and it's right there. You know it's a word that really does describe how I feel and who I am. And what actually did eat me up inside and what caused a lot of anxiety for me was not accepting myself as being non binary and not coming out to myself, but it was saying those words out loud to other people because in the last few years transphobia has only gotten worse and worse and worse and I feel incredibly privileged to be surrounded by people who are all kind of like, okay, great. Cool. What pronouns do you want us to use? And that that was really lovely for me. But it was a bit weird because, you know, on the flip side, when I first came out, I'd been at school, people at school were calling me gay or a Dyke or whatever the slur of the week was. And now I really like reclaiming those, but that really taught me up inside and I really tried hard not to give any of that away and I really tried not to be seen or associated as gay or queer or bi and that's what I lost sleep over and that gave me a lot of anxiety until and it was really hard for me to come out to myself as bi but then it flipped and I was, I'd already come out once and I was already comfortable with myself and I knew the feelings of how good and how liberating it was to finally accept that part of me. So then the second coming out was almost an easier step to make. When you say that you sort of struggled to give that bit away, I think was your words. As in do you mean like you told people but then you were like, but there's no way I'm going to act in any way that they think would make me. No, I didn't even tell people. I think, you know. I think I probably knew from when I was like 11 or 12 when I started secondary school. I basically knew. I see. And I didn't then come out until I was 19. And okay, so you had and it was a whole lot of me trying to pretend that I was the straightest straight to ever straight. The straightest straight to ever straight. But then at the same time I was playing sport and I was playing sport doesn't mean that you're queer if you're assigned female at birth, but you know the assumptions there, the stereotypes are there and it was really not helping me keep my cover as the straightest straight to ever straight. It was blowing your cover. Yes. So we asked the listeners about their own versions of this. Really fascinating results. So have you come out more than once? We are sisters. Yeah. 94% of people said yes. Is that because they're coming out as the same thing to multiple people, multiple times? I think that it's a combo to be honest because we haven't specified. So I think it's kind of like, but then as it goes as the question sort of move on, it gets more into like that whole doing the big announcement to your mates type coming out rather than trying to tell the person it reception in a hotel that you actually do need to jump. Second question, how is your relationship with your gender identity forward slash sexuality evolved since you first came out? 78% of people said yes. So that's over three quarters for the mathematicians among us. I'm really amazed by that actually. And I'm really pleased by that because I've spoken on this podcast about I came out as a gay man, but I don't find that fully satisfactory. It's not all of it. And I think I used to be sort of reaching around for a label and I'm not anymore, but I'm not currently. But non binary didn't work for me. Gender fluid oddly works better. Although, you know, I think which is your version. Because I really like femininity and I really like masculinity and I don't feel like either or not me if that makes any sense. I feel like it's all a construct and I don't fully understand it. I think that's the best way I've ever been able to verbalize it. Like I can't remember if I said this before, but it's like gender is just everywhere. I find it quite overbearing and it feels like other people seem to think it's just like oxygen. It tastes of nothing. We just breathe it and that's that. And I feel like I'm the only person going, can you taste air? Like it's quite strong flavor. Does that make any sense? Yeah, I think so. I think you're a 100% right though, like gender definitely feels to me like a construct and it simultaneously has this ability to mean nothing and everything at the same time. Like it has this absolute chokehold on the way society operates. But what's the point of it? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, totally. Chokehold is the word. And sometimes the chokehold grabs you around the throat, and you're like, I was just walking down the street, and now you're shouting at me. Like, what are you talking, you know? So to go into listeners sort of expanding on that about how they felt between the two or more coming out. So Tia said, the first time I came out as bi, just let you didn't think it was a big deal because I didn't connect with it. Second time I came out with lesbian and I felt it with my whole soul. That's lovely. That's nice. Ben says pandemic really fucked me up because now I have anxiety telling people even when they affirm. I wonder if you would be able to elaborate for us Ben, but is that because we spent so much time alone and now you have to go out into the world and

shivani darpa Tia Ben
"shivani" Discussed on Homo Sapiens

Homo Sapiens

04:01 min | 5 months ago

"shivani" Discussed on Homo Sapiens

"Welcome toma sapiens. You probably don't realize this, but it's Thursday upper body because how are you supposed to know what day it is between Christmas and new year? I ask you. I have just finished because we don't eat on this podcast. My 473rd celebration from a big pot that I bought in co op. That's all I eat now. I just eat celebrations. It's called the celebrations diet. You should try it. And I am one third turkey, three quarters stuffing. It doesn't really add up. And 7% James Bond movies. What have you been watching over this festive period? I so I finished white lotus. Where did you all get to? Did you all love it? What did you think? I adored it. I love that meme that's going around of Jennifer Coolidge. I think that's her name. I'm having a brain freeze. Going, these gays are trying to kill me. I just love that bit. It was so good and the cast was so brilliant and loved it. So that was my, what'd you call it? My festive watching. And I want to know how your christmases have been, what's the goss? Who who? Over the eggnog. If such a thing happened, very harmonious Christmas over here and pleased to report, I had the whole family round absolute heaven. We've had a lovely time. Husband liked his presence, pleased to report. I very much liked my presence, and as we're talking about on the episode before Christmas, did I give him some things that I actually wanted well, we'll have to get him in here to be the judge of that actually. Onto today's episode. I'm thrilled to bring you a really lovely conversation with broadcaster shivani Dave. We talk about all sorts. We're talking about non binary inclusive football teams to maternity laws and how they impact LGBTQ+ people. Plus, we're also going to be talking about shivani's experience of coming out as bisexual and then coming out again as non binary when they discovered this term. Bit because the theme of today's episode is coming out more than once. You all wrote in a lot when we put this on socials about how I think the 75% of you we get into it in the chat with shivani, 75% of you feel that you have your identity gender identity sexual identity, sexuality identity, is that even a word. Your sexuality has evolved,

toma sapiens Jennifer Coolidge James Bond shivani Dave shivani football
"shivani" Discussed on The RCWR Show with Lee Sanders

The RCWR Show with Lee Sanders

05:57 min | 1 year ago

"shivani" Discussed on The RCWR Show with Lee Sanders

"Seriously in all to Hear that a lot of this stuff. That's been going on with him in awa. I mean this is pretty much all him you know. He's he's running. Everything by tony. Kahn and cons pretty much. Do it bud and you know maybe con storm one little suggestion here one little suggestion there but this is all pretty much black. You just can't help with shake your head and go the fuck where those guys thinking how they weren't thinking at all. Yeah that's what it was. They weren't thinking at all From their jurassic express they talked about being banged up within the elite shows up and they were being interviewed by tony shivani but then the elite shows up. They beat them down in. You know you see tony. Shivani do his first little robot. Slide off the fucking camera while you got your first week down there From their inner circle the full inner circle including santana ortiz. The full inner circle there back. These guys are fresh. Awful.

Kahn tony tony shivani Shivani santana ortiz
"shivani" Discussed on Fight Boyz: A Pro-Wrestling Podcast

Fight Boyz: A Pro-Wrestling Podcast

04:08 min | 1 year ago

"shivani" Discussed on Fight Boyz: A Pro-Wrestling Podcast

"They are so glad that. I wanna talk about this. Pay per view and not how much manures zouk got disrespected. I mean hey we got pre show right now. 'cause holy fucking shit. What now ten minutes. Seven eight seven eight was worth it to hear tony. Shivani say the word suzuki. Goon 'cause i work. I know i know also also despite the fact that it was a short match. Minoru suzuki look like a complete bad ass because he was bleeding over one eye at black like you used his own spirit. Forced to stopped larry gases. He's fucked up. How long have they been fighting three minute. Okay so well. I'll give it a five boys show about professional.

Shivani Minoru suzuki tony larry
"shivani" Discussed on Reality TV RHAP-ups: Reality TV Podcasts

Reality TV RHAP-ups: Reality TV Podcasts

01:57 min | 1 year ago

"shivani" Discussed on Reality TV RHAP-ups: Reality TV Podcasts

"A baker came out on dynamite to address her home town crowd because both dynamite an rampage were in a brits berg pittsburgh pennsylvania this this week she gave a really nice promo guys. I might need one of you to talk about it because as an avid baltimore ravens fan. It really really. I cannot give the city of pittsburgh So yellow towel now deserves. Props is baker. Who herself as an incredible character professional wrestler she. She has not changed that much in terms of going. She sort of flip-flopping between being a baby face and he'll i guess maybe university as fighting rebel looks like she might be up again. She's fought nylon. Rose prestat lander is probably her next opponent but like the relationship even with like tony. Shivani who is you know sort of this baby face. You know this guy that love. He's always like ranting against solve the bad guys who are doing bad things he hates right and then they hug every time like they have this relationship. There was like very antagonistic at the beginning. If you remember. Like remember back to britain tony but i don't. It's so cool to just see someone like slip into and find to their character is for it to be like so just like well received like the whole the whole thing. It's it's very adam cole. Which i know that they're dating and it's not that she's still like she is so different and the energy of like a d. Md and like baby is like. There's like this synergy. I feel like and it's it's really cool to see and i have been on here multiple times ties. Being like awa doesn't do enough with their women. i don't think they're women. But like holy cow bert. Baker is like a superstar. Yeah does.

baker pittsburgh Shivani baltimore ravens pennsylvania tony lander adam cole britain bert Baker
"shivani" Discussed on The Guardian's Science Weekly

The Guardian's Science Weekly

05:42 min | 1 year ago

"shivani" Discussed on The Guardian's Science Weekly

"Cancer but recent headlines have suggested that herr relaxes most commonly used by black women have linked to cancer and there's research to back it up. The black women's health study has been looking into why that might be the case. Using data from fifty nine thousand african american women over twenty five years span so far it is found that black women who use hair products at least seven times a year for fifteen or more years had roughly a thirty percent increase risk of breast cancer compared with more infrequent eases from the guardian. I'm shivani survey and this is science weekly bulletin into this research. I wanted to speak to tie borough a freelance journalist for the guardian who recently wrote a piece with the wall. The shocking headline black women's hair products are killing us. Why isn't more being done. So i asked her to start off by telling me why heroin axes are so commonly used by black women so a big part of the reason why black women are so kind of overrepresented in this market In black people in general in this market for hair relaxes is because of kind of this historical messaging. That black women have heard over the years Telling us that our hair is either unprofessional or just generally undesirable And this is really a culture that goes all the way back to the history of slavery in the us going back to a time when black women were when refers brought over from the continental. I'm the first thing that was done to them was that they had their heads shaved. And so the result of that is that black women you know ended up in this cycle where we're continually looking for ways to get our hair textures or a hairstyles as close as possible To what's considered the kind of of beauty that we should be aspiring to which very often is a eurocentric in white centred standard of beauty. So how often would a black woman. Who's under this pressure to. Uphold the us centric standards use something like relax says it's something people use daily weekly and like. Is it this thing that you have to continue to use throughout your life. It is a sort of thing that would you'd have to consistently use throughout your life so not daily or weekly really depends on just how fast a person's hair grows Because the the kind of process would be you would start off relaxing your hair from root to tip and so when the new kind of kinky hair texture that continues to grow out of your scalp comes up again Most women would want to kind of relaxed that part so that it matches the rest of the hair was just depends on how quickly your hair grosso. Some women are relaxing there twice a year. Some women are relaxing your hair as as often as ten to fifteen times a year which is a pretty high number just considering how damaging these products can be not just to the hair and the scalp but as we found in the research to overall bodily health as well.

shivani Cancer herr breast cancer us
"shivani" Discussed on Something to Wrestle with Bruce Prichard

Something to Wrestle with Bruce Prichard

01:48 min | 2 years ago

"shivani" Discussed on Something to Wrestle with Bruce Prichard

"I think it was just something that organically happened from his wraps and something that he wrote in kind of caught on was this a strategic idea. When he's wearing all of the throwback jerseys to then instead put him in the throwback logo with the f. chopped off. Is that something that someone for. Merchandising comes up with or is that john. Saint zone throwback idea. Well it was. Seen as idea to do the throwback logo so that he could sell merchandise. Because he wouldn't make any money off of doing the throwback jerseys of all the teams and stuff right so says idea was. Let's do a throwback with the logo but he wanted to get the royalties from it. It was his idea was his stop so him wearing it. That was his idea to make money off of the doctor of economics. Is that also from rap or is that something you guys wanted to try to brand same same just kinda stuff that he would come up with when he was out in the ring that caught on. Is there a winking annoyed and creative when somebody comes up with the five knuckle shuffle. Because that's obviously the name of a move that john standardized but it's also the name of move. The tone shivani does yeah. That was definitely a shoutout to tony. You recognized that. I'm making a joke. They're yeah i know so it was. I mine was funnier. Well stateable so. I guess my parents tony shivani. My question is would you guys give another move to. I don't know kane unless say they can gets in the ring and the commentator yells. Hey it's time for the beat off. Hey it's time for the whack job..

john tony shivani tony kane
"shivani" Discussed on The Thought Card

The Thought Card

06:30 min | 2 years ago

"shivani" Discussed on The Thought Card

"Back to me and be like vanni at stepped promoted program. Help me sleep. That is incredible. What has been rewarding about founding your own company. i'm company. I've never been a happy. And loving and love with work than in the past people always follow your passion and ghia but now using like style. True below what you really care about. And so i'd say the biggest thing some people have gone to meet along the way so so many in our program. They are members. Islas bribe our community as high-calibre But low ego everyone. There is super qualified. Is merely like you know looking to grow but also equally excited to lift each other up and to support each other and cheer each other on and then even like other people have met like you other it just getting to me like other awesome be who have passions a dirt being driven by and want to create real change in the world is really has been really inspiring and the also being founder in itself is so empowering knowing that i heard first ticket i sold to a workshop and it was for like dollars and i was so stressed out and nervous and was like i'm going to buy this like as it's going to be valuable now and just that happiness and just that high that you got from like in. That moment was amazing. So it's been empowering to know that like you know what i can figure out a way to myself To kind of like to do what i want. Yes i'll make mistakes along the way. Yes they'll be hard. You know being a founder is a roller coaster. But i've loved every single moment. And just knowing that i am able to do that on my own has been incredibly inspiring and just really fulfilling. I'll say i definitely felt like about on posture. Starting out and still do. Sometimes i had to self fund the business my job and you're really take a better myself when i compare it. I look around. I think about like white male back businesses and i am none of those and i grew up in silicon valley. So that is what i've been running myself by and and so that is my apply because i don't look like what i would think about it as a founder and then you know if people are talking about. Here's money they've raised or here's the logo like investors they have. I don't have that. And when i pull myself autumn ahead. I'm like i made that decision. This is the right way for me to grow my business. And i'm really proud of what we've achieved but it can be so easy to spiral back into our heads and i mean i is on myself that i teach in the leadership program to help really gained that confidence and then really just continue to look at the data so like what are people who've gone through the program what results have gotten. What are they saying. We've grown primarily through word of mouth so its members in the program referring it to their friends. And i'm like what better approved. Can there be that you know that this is something is going right. An extended constantly remind myself round. Though how am. I building wealth through starting as dan and building up that through investing and my husband. And i do it together. So it's you know where to partnership that way. And i do feel fortunate to have a partner who is so supportive of my emotions and we are able to have that Where we can figure out. How can we both help each other achieve our goals and that is always really fun and really just very enabling. I think also you know i think about while also about having unique skills in order to these successful in building business or canada company becoming people manager so When i think about leadership program is focused on empowering women with the skills deleted influence because once they have these skills. They're able to succeed at where they're able to move up in their careers. They're able to create the kind of career worklife that they want. And you can't do it if you don't know how to get people invested in your idea that you don't have the right technical skills if you don't have the confidence around it so i think you know i think about this as a stepping stone to enabling them to build wealth the way that they want so growing cramped building while i would say that it i think it changes kind of as you upping occurs so initially i would say when you're out of college focused on developing the skills like don't think about is this going to pay me the most like take bethann yourself you have you know. Usually that like don't have kids. You don't have like a lot of obligations of school data and you take that account or like other family obligations something but assuming you don't have a lot of that which you have to really consider us opportunity. Take bets in yourself. Take a you know an figure. What are the skills that you need to succeed. So i think being able to know and solve complex problems being able to know how you buy a network Putting yourself in just different people management pro issues in learning how to deal with that non-issue even as people energy but like just learning. How do you like collaborate with different people. What does it take to get things done. And i think the first part of your career is really around that early to mid twenties. And then i'd say it spending you're focusing on okay. What are the opportunities. I need in order to achieve my goals. Also not just wealth goals but also around like how do you. What kind of life do you wanna live. And what is wealthy even mean to you. Is that stability. Peace is it frida. Is that something else like what is while. Is it being able to buy your first house. Or is it something else so defining that and then breaking down like we need to do in your career or even outside career to be able to help you achieve. That is really important. So i loved by everyone. Check out our sense leadership program you can learn more and apply to join we ascend dot co the program stars at the end of june. We already have incredible. Cohort shaping up swimming from google and stripe and amazon and many more companies degree incident joining. Check that out. They'll try to reach out to me with any questions. You can also follow me on linked in and twitter handle shivani s airy. I share a lot of leadership advice. And ron how do you get by..

amazon google vanni stripe first ticket twitter first house first frida canada bethann both end of june mid twenties ron single moment Islas silicon valley shivani each
"shivani" Discussed on IINK Podcasts HI

IINK Podcasts HI

05:30 min | 2 years ago

"shivani" Discussed on IINK Podcasts HI

"The title of the story is rod drowning but one the sudden fragments of the night blooming. Jasmine known as ramming hindi was invented longed for and i was completely submerged in it. I realized how soothing it was. It's been five years and still. I haven't missed thirty to come to this bump just for diesel mind being no. I'm not a ten year old amateur twenty five year. Old woman was mature but chided heart this lady. Place is my favorite sport. When i was fifteen years or are you a come here with my father. It is one of the beautiful memories with him. That i cherish. He left me. But i could lead the sport lost in the memories of all those innocent brags booze between us. I had lost track of nine by the diamond realized it was ten an i dread filled me. My mom is going to be fairly angry. It only place. She allowed me to calm. You must be wondering. What kind of mother does that. The new guest right. The step one's by the diamond ridge duma to stand her d. and thankfully she was still some moisture in her magazine. In this me i deke. Went to my room. Change into pajamas and slept. The next day was the last of my college wherever you saw. Either they were about to cry or were already crying. I on the other hand was neutral. Not that. I wasn't glued to anyone. But i had never been good at crane at such memorials. When i reached. I saw a car parked outside the house wondering who could have come. I ended it would new faces. That somehow recognized me and seemed to nonparticipation of me. My mother had her fakes my lawn that she used to show how much she loved me. In front of the people. I was assured be sitting on sofa. Binding the pieces to realize. It was a marriage prospectus. The date was set. Not that i wanted to get married but in hopes that it might be better than to my wonder. The boy was nice. Not more dart. It was two o'clock when realize didn't visit the doctor and it hit me. I might not be too after a month. I cried and when might use dried up fell asleep. The marriage was smaller fit my new houses smaller than the one i lifted. It was still 'cause you are. My husband is a nice person in evita realize they were all sweet people for the first time it felt like who after a month i visited my mother's please. The rpd motive being just to visit the puck lost in the same and the memories. I don on the other hand knew nothing about it for him. I missed my mother. i'd around it. I went to the puck. Happy and excited. My feet denied thing more than walk. It was hops as it reached. The buck was nowhere to be seen at first it toward was at the wrong place. But how could it be. I could never forget. I asked a passive by it was not construction side dude. Wish the bar was demolished. The ground slipping under my feet vitrified. I couldn't move. I brought me home. Still unsure what had happened weeks paused by abbas still in high fever doctors is. We're trying everything. But everything could non mandatory. I was on the swing. Somehow i was fifteen years old. My father was beside me. We were talking. You do realize i won't be all wisdom revealed. I didn't say anything. Everyone has to go. Wendy i know you're strong. Good enroll through just remember. I'm always here as he pressed on his heart. After a few days or weeks sodium item the fever and blog my sense of fine. I smell the scent of jasmine. Still be delirious. I opened my eyes and saw my father standing beside me holding adjustment but blah. I didn't have the courage to say no move. It was still overwhelming minden. Preacher went down the thirty. I was back on my feet in a week sitting in my husband's lap. I told the whole story to him. He listened with utmost insecurity as he kissed forehead and then as if confessing. I told him it was father. Work me back. He gamed visit me. He said i'm head as pointed towards hunt to how could a loser. How could she's the only girl i've ever loved. Work could be that bug that swim bordered. I've kept asking her mother. She doesn't know. I'd almost given up when mcnulty me. She was videos friend. Who had come to visit her in the hospital. A spark of hope emerged. I thought maybe she knew something. Maybe after knowing the story. I could think of one reason i needed to try. I bought adjustment and then to. I headed flower clues to her i. She opened her eyes. She taught them fodder. And i didn't try to correct her all ahead who hope of not losing..

fifteen years five years thirty two o'clock twenty five year one reason ten year old first time Wendy nine Jasmine ten next day hindi step one after a month after one month
"shivani" Discussed on The 5 AM Miracle

The 5 AM Miracle

05:00 min | 2 years ago

"shivani" Discussed on The 5 AM Miracle

"Will here for just a moment to feature amazing sponsors up. I is hellofresh. Hellofresh cuts out stressful meal planning and grocery store trips. You can enjoy cooking. Anga dinner on the table in about thirty minutes or less hellofresh offers more than twenty-five recipes that she was from each week you can try meals. That are ready in twenty minutes or less including lightning frapp recipes and quick breakfast and lunches. That are perfect for your busy schedule. My wife test. And i have loved our meals in the past from hellofresh. They're always extremely tasty. And certainly faster to put together. We usually deal on our own. Green chef.

"shivani" Discussed on The 5 AM Miracle

The 5 AM Miracle

03:41 min | 2 years ago

"shivani" Discussed on The 5 AM Miracle

"Years ago. So it's been a while. let's start off with. What have you been up to in the last few years. Well i have been continuing to my supplement company and be out there teaching and speaking I've been writing a book. That's not out yet last year. During this time period that we've been having i I created a program where i get to lead people through six weeks of immersing them in ir visa and how we can really rebuild their health from the ground up excellent. That's a lot of fun stuff right there. let's get into some of this conversation around immunity. Are you vega. Because i know that you know obviously with a pandemic in the world and the last little every year now There's a lot of conversation that i think needs to happen around. Health and around our ability to boost our own immunity and to be the best. We can be so. Let's just start off with i. Guess your philosophy and what you think is a good approach to begin the conversation in terms of of having stronger unity. Sure so. I think we all have the opportunity to have vibrant healthy and vibrant immunity every single day. And that's made up of a lot of little choices. It's the choices around. Do we move. Do we eat fresh foods. We eat homemade. Foods are we incorporating variety of nutrition and considering the quality of the food that we're buying are we incorporating herbs and superfoods and super spices into our life that can have a profound impact on our house. are we valuing deep are we valuing reducing inflammation and really supporting the immune system from the ground up..

last year six weeks last few years single day Years ago vega
"shivani" Discussed on IINK Podcasts HI

IINK Podcasts HI

03:26 min | 2 years ago

"shivani" Discussed on IINK Podcasts HI

"Remember <Speech_Female> to behind <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> we benito <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> company major <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> To my <Speech_Female> art <Speech_Female> government allows <Speech_Female> should the. <Speech_Female> But we'll go millionaire. <Speech_Female> Hit <Speech_Female> for much. <Speech_Female> huggy order. <Speech_Female> tacoma handy. The <Speech_Female> bacteria witty <Speech_Female> or <Speech_Female> miss hotter <Speech_Female> or known him. <Speech_Female> Would you cut boola. <Speech_Male> Would mean <Speech_Female> the hottie to <Speech_Female> search bharati <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> madonna who adopted <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Kuchwara <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> many <Speech_Female> cup copa theoretical. <Speech_Female> Putra <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> she craig biggio <Speech_Female> doing really <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> to <Speech_Female> quick buddha's <Speech_Female> dicara who <Speech_Female> mugabe <Speech_Female> of need <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Menudo it <Speech_Female> go media autumn <Speech_Female> each <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Booty <SpeakerChange> rodney swell. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Ugly did not coming <Speech_Female> neatly medoff. Tokyo <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Tcm <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> route could've kinda <Speech_Female> give bud. Autobahn <Speech_Female> cannot do <Speech_Female> me doggy. <Speech_Female> Route <Speech_Female> do budgie method <Speech_Female> of <Speech_Female> sunni. Mefin <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> the <Speech_Female> To <Speech_Female> sorta hitting <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> T to make <Speech_Female> her but he <Speech_Female> might <Speech_Female> to talk <Speech_Female> to the <Speech_Female> But people not <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Boiler <Speech_Female> out of <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> the <SpeakerChange> party <Speech_Female> only <Speech_Female> model just do not <Speech_Female> know. We'll <Speech_Female> do not do <Speech_Female> treatment but artillery <Speech_Female> or <Speech_Female> cookie <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> looking is <Speech_Female> boring cam <Speech_Female> with easter <Speech_Female> who. He <Speech_Female> met duty <Speech_Female> inbar. Dpd <Speech_Female> the <Speech_Female> for -sorts. <Speech_Female> She cut db <Speech_Female> double moody <Speech_Female> ballato. <Speech_Female> Google geico <Speech_Female> famous crying <Speech_Female> bully <Speech_Female> adamov momentum <Speech_Female> with the <Speech_Female> To highly <Speech_Female> paper <Speech_Female> novelty <Speech_Female> but are do <Speech_Female> y- badminton <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Blah blah <Speech_Female> jessica zeki <Speech_Female> more to <Speech_Female> move hannukah <Speech_Male> <Speech_Female> Club dope <Speech_Female> gichire <Speech_Female> should take <Speech_Female> meg <Speech_Female> high lord dot de <Speech_Female> semi <Speech_Female> degrade <Speech_Female> on man when <Speech_Female> be discovered them. Keep <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> do repeat <Speech_Female> keel. Gacemi bully <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> to suit <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> up. Eka <Speech_Female> bull tuning <Speech_Female> Model <Speech_Female> dooney <Speech_Female> are you <Speech_Female> boil to. <Speech_Female> Under chilly <Speech_Female> may much <Speech_Female> mesaba bundle <Speech_Female> where <Speech_Female> i can only. But <Speech_Female> doug is such a lucky minister <Speech_Female> of <Speech_Female> meadow appea- <Speech_Female> depaz pin <Speech_Female> higa <Speech_Female> or gone to be <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> what he <Speech_Female> doom lemieux. <Speech_Female> Mara he <Speech_Female> caridi <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> while <Speech_Female> the deal <Speech_Female> dono congress <Speech_Female> clinically <Speech_Female> madness <Speech_Female> lemay meshu <Speech_Female> target manage <Speech_Female> carbonate <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> For <Speech_Female> he cheeky soon. Identity <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> is bad but coach <Speech_Female> orbital <Speech_Female> is but <Speech_Female> it may be bt <Speech_Female> south mountain <Speech_Female> monster jacome <Speech_Female> but <Speech_Female> he'd be <Speech_Female> man is at hand <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> yet cheap corn <Speech_Female> maha <Speech_Female> Wisden shelter <Speech_Female> many <Speech_Female> plan dana. <Speech_Female> Button guard diatta. <Speech_Female> He <Speech_Female> make it this <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> Saas liya <Speech_Female> trotta <Speech_Female> man <Speech_Female> to dan. The <Speech_Female> gm deals <Speech_Female> hickory. <Speech_Female> Sorry <Speech_Female> undergrad <Speech_Female> to key <Speech_Female> agila <Speech_Female> Tweety mandate <Speech_Female> bouncing monitors <Speech_Female> zamin. He is <Speech_Female> a new which <Speech_Female> you could imagine a <Speech_Female> yada magic <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Tiki <Speech_Female> for him. I shook <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> jamal. <Speech_Female> include today. comapny <Speech_Female> sta <Speech_Female> would you could tell much <Speech_Female> on bundu. Get <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> magic suggest <Speech_Female> garcia. Michael <Speech_Female> charta

Michael jessica zeki Tokyo congress today Eka Tiki garcia Saas liya Putra caridi Google geico . Kuchwara mountain
Japan scientists to use 'reprogrammed' stem cells to fight Parkinson's

Global News Podcast

02:27 min | 5 years ago

Japan scientists to use 'reprogrammed' stem cells to fight Parkinson's

"Large display of some flowers became as of yellow roses and the would mum spelled out in white carnations the Reverend Philip Bromley who conducted the private service told reporters that Charlie Rowley, who's recovering from Nova choke poisoning, sat on the front row during his partners. Funeral. The vicar said tributes were paid by Mr. jesse's family, including her eleven year old daughter. She just said how much she loved her mom and how much her mom had loved her, which resulted in around applause from everybody in the the crematorium just to say how marvelous she had done that and how how courageous you'd be Reverend Bromley said, despite earlier advice about possible contamination risks. He was able to touch the coffin during the blessing and pull bearers carried it into the crematorium as normal. The Nova choke poisoning. Was not referred to explicitly during the service, but prayers were said for the communities of Salisbury and amesbury where many people are still coming to terms with what has happened here. The music included the track beautiful dawn by the singer songwriter James blunt, John k there in Salisbury in southern England. Japanese scientists aren't to begin the first human trials using stem cells to treat Parkinson's disease. The study will work to actively reverse the effects of the degenerative neurological condition. Shivani Davi reports building on the success of animal trials from last year researchers at Kyoto University are using stem cells in the hope that they can reverse the effects of Parkinson's disease. The neurological condition is caused by lack of a chemical called dopamine in the brain. Current treatment does not address this meaning patients were unable to hold or reverse. The effects of the disease only is their symptoms, but using healthy stem cell scientists. Hope they'll be able to recreate. The SOS that create dopamine the team planning to do this bungee thing about five million in juice pre potent stem themselves, otherwise known as cells into the patient's brain. These means specifically programs to replicate parts of the brain that make dopamine. The trial is set to run from the first of August that seven participants. The conditions of these patients will be monitored for two years after the surgery shivani Davi. Coming up in the cloud cost..

Reverend Bromley Dopamine Salisbury Shivani Davi Parkinson Charlie Rowley James Blunt Mr. Jesse Kyoto University Amesbury England John K Eleven Year Two Years
First-of-its-kind clinical trial will use reprogrammed adult stem cells to treat Parkinson’s

Global News Podcast

02:27 min | 5 years ago

First-of-its-kind clinical trial will use reprogrammed adult stem cells to treat Parkinson’s

"Large display of some flowers became as of yellow roses and the would mum spelled out in white carnations the Reverend Philip Bromley who conducted the private service told reporters that Charlie Rowley, who's recovering from Nova choke poisoning, sat on the front row during his partners. Funeral. The vicar said tributes were paid by Mr. jesse's family, including her eleven year old daughter. She just said how much she loved her mom and how much her mom had loved her, which resulted in around applause from everybody in the the crematorium just to say how marvelous she had done that and how how courageous you'd be Reverend Bromley said, despite earlier advice about possible contamination risks. He was able to touch the coffin during the blessing and pull bearers carried it into the crematorium as normal. The Nova choke poisoning. Was not referred to explicitly during the service, but prayers were said for the communities of Salisbury and amesbury where many people are still coming to terms with what has happened here. The music included the track beautiful dawn by the singer songwriter James blunt, John k there in Salisbury in southern England. Japanese scientists aren't to begin the first human trials using stem cells to treat Parkinson's disease. The study will work to actively reverse the effects of the degenerative neurological condition. Shivani Davi reports building on the success of animal trials from last year researchers at Kyoto University are using stem cells in the hope that they can reverse the effects of Parkinson's disease. The neurological condition is caused by lack of a chemical called dopamine in the brain. Current treatment does not address this meaning patients were unable to hold or reverse. The effects of the disease only is their symptoms, but using healthy stem cell scientists. Hope they'll be able to recreate. The SOS that create dopamine the team planning to do this bungee thing about five million in juice pre potent stem themselves, otherwise known as cells into the patient's brain. These means specifically programs to replicate parts of the brain that make dopamine. The trial is set to run from the first of August that seven participants. The conditions of these patients will be monitored for two years after the surgery shivani Davi. Coming up in the cloud cost..

Reverend Bromley Dopamine Salisbury Shivani Davi Parkinson Charlie Rowley James Blunt Mr. Jesse Kyoto University Amesbury England John K Eleven Year Two Years
Scientists are slaughtering radio-tracked hornets to save the bees

Global News Podcast

04:18 min | 5 years ago

Scientists are slaughtering radio-tracked hornets to save the bees

"In the mediterranean the eu pens to deal with the problem by creating migrant centers in north africa which would process people before they attempt dangerous voyage the now the french president emmanuel macron says the plan won't work unless it is led by countries in the region mr macron is currently in nigeria from where correspondent miami jones reports president mccoll conceded that europe would be dealing with the issue of migration from africa for decades he believes that collaboration with african countries will be essential to finding a solution to the problem of migrants dying on their way to europe in june the european union agreed to set a processing centres for migrants in north africa he said that many african countries were worried about creating a pool factor for migrants if these centers was setup in can't fly just some african governments designed to organize it i mean the europe and debut we should design fossils first so in terms of migration for me is a top priority is now note to allow people to take crazy risks to join europe and that's why i do believe we have to work with boulder states of the mediterranean sea but no african country has so far agreed to host the centers president mccall said europe will enforce its external boredom was working with allies to stabilize the situation in libya to prevent smugglers from taking migrants and perilous journeys across the mediterranean but fundamentally he says the problem of migration is one of unplanned population growth on the continent it's a sentiment which has drawn him criticism in the past with cell accusing him of reiterating colonial rhetoric his message on the need to respect the sovereignty of african countries during his trip to nigeria may well be a response to those comments miami jen's here in the u k honeybees numbers have been in sharp decline for twenty years mouse intisar found a way of destroying most deadly predator the asian hornet by tracking them back to their nests so intas think they will help turn the tables on hornets and give the honeybee a fighting chance to tell us what all the buzz about she only dovey reports researchers at the university of exeter in southern england had valid tiny truck is that lead scientists to hornets nests the track is is radio signals that attached to a hornet's body by a sewing thread and why as little as their point two grams powered by tiny bat trae the signal identifies the location of the insect colony and allow scientists to exterminate the whole hive asian hornets report to france in two thousand and four and have been invading neighboring countries ever since the asian horner is one of the biggest let's honeybees scientists say they have like attack helicopters outside beehives and grab them by the wing dismembering them before they carried back to the hornets nests to be fed to larvae shivani devon now how would you prepare to play a key international sports match the weekend if there's imbaba in rugby team by sleeping in the streets in a row of a will they deemed substandard hotel accommodation now that union hosts affi back saying the hotel was more than acceptable and criticizing there's imbaba liens so what's going on a question for nick cavill from african sports desk thing that happens quite frequently and african sport when visiting team arrives them and to be put into a hotel quite frequently in order to try and get a bit of one up manship and maybe the other team suffered little bit the the hosts will make sure that the hotels not quite as good as it probably could be i think that's what's happened here is that the zimbabwe team up in i went to a hotel and then in the evening complained because one of the rooms was one of the ball through gms look too shabby and indeed i've seen a photo of it and is not in the best of states some tiles hanging off in it the great they were unhappy there wasn't a swimming pool and also that the internet was very slow they demanded that they be moved by this time it was you know midnights the chance of being very slim so the rugby union did in the end was stepping upon the middle tentative hotel only after the zimbebweans decided to do a protest i think is the best way we can say it is they said okay well if this hotel is not good enough we'll go but sleep on the streets but the.

Mediterranean EU Twenty Years Two Grams