35 Burst results for "Sixteen Times"

WSJ Tech News Briefing
"sixteen times" Discussed on WSJ Tech News Briefing
"A new buzzword in silicon valley the metaverse on books latest earnings call ceo mark zuckerberg mentioned the word no less than sixteen times. What is the metaverse. The metaverse the metaverse metaphors in many ways. The metaverse is the ultimate expression of social technology in defining quality of the metaverse presence within the metaverse. You're gonna build a hang out. Play games with friends. Work and more and zuckerberg isn't the only one talking about the metaverse exacts a companies ranging from microsoft to match group have been spending time and money either building out or getting involved in the metaverse. But what is it. And what could it mean for you and me here to talk more about. It is our heard on the street columnist. Dan gallagher hey dan thanks for being here pleasure to be here okay. Dan help us out here at the simplest level. What is the metaverse. Almost it almost depends on who you ask. But i think the most common definitions run that the metaverse is like this virtual world that you know as things that are similar to a we have a real world like a functioning economy. You know places where you can have a sense of physical presence. Even if it's not like what we think of as physical early versions of this we see and things like you know big video games like fortnight. That are kind of like their own worlds or could be defined as that. But what. I think when you hear from these tech companies. They're really talking about something. That's a lot more immersive. Unusually has to be kind of accessed with technology like virtual reality and augmented reality and that kind of equipment

WSJ Tech News Briefing
What Is the Metaverse? With Dan Gallagher
"A new buzzword in silicon valley the metaverse on books latest earnings call ceo mark zuckerberg mentioned the word no less than sixteen times. What is the metaverse. The metaverse the metaverse metaphors in many ways. The metaverse is the ultimate expression of social technology in defining quality of the metaverse presence within the metaverse. You're gonna build a hang out. Play games with friends. Work and more and zuckerberg isn't the only one talking about the metaverse exacts a companies ranging from microsoft to match group have been spending time and money either building out or getting involved in the metaverse. But what is it. And what could it mean for you and me here to talk more about. It is our heard on the street columnist. Dan gallagher hey dan thanks for being here pleasure to be here okay. Dan help us out here at the simplest level. What is the metaverse. Almost it almost depends on who you ask. But i think the most common definitions run that the metaverse is like this virtual world that you know as things that are similar to a we have a real world like a functioning economy. You know places where you can have a sense of physical presence. Even if it's not like what we think of as physical early versions of this we see and things like you know big video games like fortnight. That are kind of like their own worlds or could be defined as that. But what. I think when you hear from these tech companies. They're really talking about something. That's a lot more immersive. Unusually has to be kind of accessed with technology like virtual reality and augmented reality and that kind of equipment

THE RAYHART RUNDOWN
"sixteen times" Discussed on THE RAYHART RUNDOWN
"The breakaway panther. Cool hands are still cool. Was wearing your old breakaway pants. There's somebody's old branko. Yours minds reminds. They remind Mom was wearing them the other day and she was at the house. They're covering like paint. She's like these are my painting clothes. She's like and i was like because we're sitting there. Whatever it was like. You weren't fucking breakaway panama. She goes all these painting. Close like no. Those are straight nineties. Fucking all right A fad coolest fad in school. That was the breakaway pants. Thing was not mine was not the now. that's not what i was going with. That's clearly something you remember. I mean that was ninety s thing and that was something that you had that i thought was cool because you had it right but i also had like. Mc hammer pants and yeah you did. Acid wash stops and still got those denim bullshit parachute pants. No i don't. I don't know whatever happened to them. I know mom probably through the way. These are dumb by. I remember them. I do remember them. Though the coolest fad. I don't i was a kid. Play hackie sack. That was my thing. I don't know if that was a fad. Though i don't know wasn't seventies where say when you were into. i don't think it was a fad. When you were doing it correct you guys doing it. Ironically now that game was bad fun. I love playing started doing it. Ironically and then you guys don't get sucked in but that could have been. Yeah but it was mad fun. I feel like sex things you would find it like hot topic the app the app or spencer's you see. Okay so you know it's hard to say because you say what is the coolest fad back in high school or back and strike back in school but like if you look back on any of it you like. Wow we were dumb. That's that's kind of what a fat is right before. Its time like when i was in high school the fads. Everybody had a pager. There was no so everybody had a pager only pager and then you had like the clear see through pagers and then they had the there the win. The girls hair bangs the higher their banks. I don't know the. I don't. I don't know the rules to hire the banks better. I don't know what the rules were. But i remember the banks had to be like a waterfall crescent flowing off the top of their fucking head down in front either info couldn't be like in front of their face. Couldn't their banks cut me from there is. I knew that that was a part of it. Had to like if you look at some over and out it had to come up. It was like a giant billboard slash radar dish right above their forehead so it was like the. It's something about mary. It was worse than that. Some fan it. So it was like all of their banks would fail. It was a fucking peacock peacock the front of their face. They would peacock they're they're fucking bangs. It was atrocious looking back on it. Now it's like yeah atrocious. Everything was like there was a lot of bright colors like that was their thing like if you think about like safe member by the bill yeah like that was all night. That was hard nineties. Everything was like mismatched. Colors like one. The shirts blue but once leaves red and once leaves yellow dumb right. What what are the feds. I remember while thinking about this was even farther back than high school. It was such an elementary school. Hold on hold on okay. So they go his mind. But that's still thing dumpsters a fat that were wore out. I wanted to ask for me but yeah one that i know that came and went i know there. I know our demographic listeners. Most of will know this. When i say it but there was a shirt where it was bugs. Bunny and tasmanian devil on the on the front and they were wearing the clothes from the rap group criss cross and they're wearing their clothes backwards right on. You don't talk about. We talked about this recent. I don't think we have. But you know what i'm talking about though. I'm pretty sure we have talked about this recently. That arm have the worst. Case of deja vu. Maybe i don't any case. No yeah i know you don't come back. Bunny has the backwards shirt criss cross. That was a huge fan. Like because that was a huge thing in like when i was in probably middle school elementary school whatever and everybody had one everybody had one and some people even had like the spin off version of it you know. They would like they would wear that. And here's the thing with that shirt. It was like it have them on the front bugs bunny and tasr wearing their clothes backwards and then on the back of the shirt was the back of them where you can see. The clothes were on forward from word. I dunno lord an and kids would come to school wearing it. That shirt backwards so it was very much bugs. Bunny tasr and fucking clothing inception happening where she was turned around. Sixteen times where there's nothing correct but all styled after the the crisscross crisscrossing jump all that shit back in the day.

That 80s Show SA - The Podcast
"sixteen times" Discussed on That 80s Show SA - The Podcast
"We're obsessed with eighteen on our show. What's all all the time for us. So i wanna know in the watch. Would you listening to like what were your favourite autism to bands at especially when you started a moving up the charts as well. And i'm sure you had touring with other bands and stuff like that. Have you got any story stress. No because i very quiet very kind of my own. So i haven't got not a big mixer. Got lots of no's jamming with this person and got those stories where you need another person who is in the eighties. Who did that. But i was at myself to myself then and now. So don't really i if somebody asked me this just now you told me. Supertramp in the seventy s. Seventy five seventy five in. Were you hanging out with them. Because the answer is no we do. The gig wouldn't be going into their room to to chat with them. Spoke to my band so people you know people know me. They know the ban soon gets used to that. I will be on my own and won't be going socializing in that so fortunately i can't give you those stories and sites are on. I was supporting somebody or somebody supposed. I would all. I'll tell you what i would always do. Always always always watch whoever supported me every night even if they supported me every night for the home towards the toe lassie and they were on the toll for the i would watch every night because i think about point is important to support you know people who supposedly so that. That's something i always. I think people usually think jones crazy you've seen as sixteen sixteen times while you're watching the seventy but it was important to me but yeah i'm not very kwame so boring. I'm sorry not at all. What about what about what kind of music. You're listening to even the music you listen to now. Any south african music they challenge. The dance is called this kind of a little bit la body. Pumpkin dance in whether the garage round the back and you know distorted staff And i sold that stuff in south africa for the first time and then I've seen it of the places. Now what was i listening to a big listener of. I know a lot of music on those things. I'm aware of a little things. I've always been aware. But i've never been a big buyer of music and that's just because i'm writing all the time you know this album and you've got to have space to write that many songs so A more busy right in than listening and the guys would be on the bus. They'd be on the bus and they all have the headphones in listening to have no idea what i do that. I can't be listening to music every to mediate. I spend all my time cygan to the to the audience every night for two hours to an off is whatever it is. I don't really wanna be listening to a lot of stuff it's gonna too much. you know. Those people i mean love kanye west absolutely loved kanye west Of whiskey leave loved. Amy winehouse. There's all kinds of artists that are really really justin bieber..

The Glenn Beck Program
"sixteen times" Discussed on The Glenn Beck Program
"Be existent their journalism isn't it. It is in a way. I don't history but they don't being critical but with trump ultra critical inflammatory in some ways. Always trump kuno right. If rodney's jerry to the top of the air force one steps jumping on him but the reality is if you greg sheridan on the australian or anybody who's about as there were considerable question nova buttons foreign affairs policies. Not proven yet all right so what. Language speak run barely audible. Barely understandable should add subtitles there. But it's embarrassing. The arrest of the world sees. What's going on here. And they realize that we're going to hell right now in a hand basket quickly and they show you the examples that I mean absolutely proved positive. The point they're making a movie. We play the one video on your show Pat unleashed which you can hear. It seems like right before this show every week. Get anytime on a podcast There's a video where he picks the dandy lion walking to the heart of that they did. That's what may reminded me of it and it's just like oh my gosh ooh here. We go with a give. My baby girl. With dandy lion gives it to jill and the greatest part of that video is that she i as he's picking it as like what are you doing. Yeah let's go. don't act like a four year old. Don't embarrass me like this. Is it tour and not only. Does he give her a dandy lion. It's one that had gone to seed the yellow bloom on it. They're the prettiest they've got no nice says she and she carries it after he gives it to her and as she's walking up the stairs did you see like two steps and it's it's just drops it literally just literally the door. Yeah it didn't that might have made it up to stairs of the hell going into the helicopter and it. Just she's drops. A any was walking through that field having a tough time. Actually it looked. It looked like his walk was so laboured and then he he stoops over sutin to give my girl. Oh i got it out. Look standing land is chill. Cherish it forever and she almost did for almost forever. The next three steps shoot cherish. We'd like nobody's business. No one is ever cherries to more. No than joe biden. Time at that particular. But it's just we keep saying it but it really is embarrassing. And i watch these videos and we watch president and i mean i i laugh and then i'm embarrassed and then i'm just sad. Go through then. You realize not. This guy's really charge. He's of the greatest country that's ever existed on this earth and he's almost completely gone and there are times when he is gone was literally out. We have examples of that. Many just goes away and comes back. And i mean. Isn't that the. I don't know i've i've i've never had Alzheimer's but isn't that. What so frightening about the disease is that he just go away. I no yeah right and who knows what's going to happen for good or much more frequently than it happens now. I think it happens pretty frequently. Now it's really noticeable and soon it's going to be unworkable and no one's gonna do then you got kamala happy are you now. Yeah now. It's just depressing. It really is depressing. Triple eight seventy seven b. e. c. k. You know the lovely and talented lori lightfoot. The mayor of chicago isn't she. Delightful of is absolutely delightful and in in late january. Laurie sent her then scheduler. An email complaining that she doesn't get enough of what she called office time. That's typically a less structured part of the day when the mayor can think you know riot or make long term plans. Sit there daydream naval whatever. She wants to yeah While it's common for politicians to give staff members specific direction. It's the way lightfoot delivered her feedback that's raising eyebrows. She treats people like garbage. You'd never guess that. i know. She seems again. She seems delightful. She really does a putt. Doesn't lightfoot repeated several sentences one of them sixteen times to highlight her displeasure over her calendar. I need office time every day exclamation point not once a week or some days. Every day she wrote ten times breaks trenches transition. Times between meetings are not office time. She wrote seven times. Dude take these eight. Oh i know. If this doesn't change immediately i will just start unilaterally canceling things every day. She wrote that five times and then she wrote have. I made myself clear finally thirteen times. Oh wow like. I said delightful. The note drew a little bit of criticism from political types. she who saw it a surprisingly as bullying a staffer. It also drew comparisons to a chilling scene in the movie this shining. When shelley duvall character finds that her mentally deteriorating husband's character played by jack nicholson has typed. All.

Undesign: A Social Change Podcast
"sixteen times" Discussed on Undesign: A Social Change Podcast
"Flight you can do. In the world or wasn't easily right was the entire carbon allocation for that person in a year. So you've used up all of your carbon emissions in one plane for that year for that year from per person per person. So that means when i am not an economy class ticket by the way. That's not a business cost ago so if you've business calls using four times as much oh my god if you've first class i think it's something like sixteen times as much so it's if you find live at planes. It's thirty two times as much so you start to get a sense when you talk. Celebrate these numbers down of like how much flying flight can impact the environment also already conscious of like how eating habits change. Yeah so this is the expression we use it on travel and tourism which is When in rome yup and once they think about that expression is that it comes from saint augustine saint from the fourth century who in premium latin non-english he said when in rome do as the romans do feel like it. Sound a lot nicer in latin. They would've sounded great. Yeah sure his impressed and he said that the idea was you should follow the conventions of where you are you almost as a former respect but to kind of fit in at great travel advice on the one hand and he's giving tour guide advice on the right. He's he says that. And for some reason in the twentieth century we've decided to kinda distort that phrase yet. i mean. Eat as much as you want. Yeah yeah yeah commit gluttony and and know hedonism like be the worst. You can be made in some ways so you know when you will atta restaurant on social. You want to sir. When enron in room. That doesn't mean what it sounds didn't mean you'd have. Yeah he meant that you know. You should be respectful of the community conventions and norms of where you are..

Boomer & Gio
"sixteen times" Discussed on Boomer & Gio
"Send us a video of darvish from last night where it looks like not saying he did it but it certainly looks like he's got something in his glove. Yeah he's rubbing and i'm talking like everybody does but it's it's really become we talked about last week. I know but it's becoming more and more of an issue now. People are starting to mainstream talk about it. But when when you've got when you a team in a game a team striking fifteen or sixteen times in a game and it's almost routine now it's problem. I'd like to think like if you gave no one ryan i i'm i'm sure they probably use stuff too but maybe not what. The guys are using today to up the spin rate the whole thing. The spin rate of the baseball is going through the roof back. Then these the pull nail files senator gloves on the mound and just start shaving. The baseball tap there weren't as many. That wasn't god knows what they were doing back. Then take it out the little pocket knives and show the ball up like an apple. It's going on forever. Now this is this is something that is trying to. They are and they can measure it. That's the thing they can measure the spin rate and for a lot of these pictures. Especially like eric cole. When he was in a pittsburgh he had some of its worst years yeah and then goes to houston so you saying that the pictures are getting an unfair advantage on the hitters. But here's the thing i watch. I watch every pitch at jacob degrom throws if he is using something i can't tell well degrom also throws at a higher velocity and throws a slider at a higher velocity the most but not. I can't see anything. Nobody's ever accused of anything. No they have not now. You're going to start seeing some pitchers that are going to have. If they start cracking down there areas to go up up up up and up and those are going to be the guys that all right jeetan you might be. I told you that. One by freighter was. He was going to release his file the video he's got all these guys that are cheating doctoring. The baseball was just last week. Alice brady while he was the one defending it. He was basically saying beak donaldson..

Alison Rosen Is Your New Best Friend
"sixteen times" Discussed on Alison Rosen Is Your New Best Friend
"Sit around for the parts. You can fast all the death in parts. That's a fun way to degrees. But the thing. I've experienced with greece but with john travolta at large is any person any woman i've ever dated. I am way more attracted to john travolta that they are and i'll be like john travolta foof what a look. You're that guy. He's got that weird dimple aged stuff. And i'm like oh look at his legs when he dances. And it's going to be a hole in his face. Wiggling legs specifically greece john travolta john travolta as a whole ono's specifically look who's talking to battlefield earth look to add just one more data point. I never in my entire life have ever been attracted at all to john. Travolta wow maybe. That's a question to throw out there pay listeners. Have you male or female or however you identify. Have you ever been attracted to john. Travolta tweet at air. I wayan bef. Let's get to the bottom of this. Yeah and let us take travolta rivolta And if you do volta what does it has take volta daniel. This is really good. Why did you. you've seen it sixteen times. What do you think of john travolta and you're not afraid to acknowledge an attractive man. I i find him to be odd-looking. But i like my thank. He's even he's gotten even more odd-looking in his later years very it's it's sure it's going in a very very strange direction. I'm here for it. I think. I think he's re brands have been all very like fun and like shaved head. Goatee got it this. Wig got it fully recognizing that you wear wigs in public switching them all the time got it love it and it's not just looks though it it's skin deep. It's also like i think. He has like a tender gentle like quality. That's like very winning to watch on screen f true winning waiting uber. He does gonna look like uber doesn't he. I'd love to see judge in a live action. That would be the best. He does have the chin thing. You point out like it does. It's like he's like a real life like buzz. Light year something. it's like a cartoon. Mike jaw cartoon man faced. Yeah he's like mort drucker drawing from zine when mort drucker had to draw him became even more exaggerated. That doesn't that was my instinct. Was like i gotta google john travolta drucker and see like what you exaggerated even more but i would say also. This doesn't cross. This doesn't cross over in greece. Certainly livia newton. John is i mean as in my experience fully adored for her presence. I'm john by all genders in in greece. So i don't know maybe he's you know and and maybe being a polarizing figure is maybe that better. Maybe that's what john travolta wants. I don't know maybe it's alison. Do you like grease grease do. I think i've seen grease two. I think i need to see it. I enjoy you're living it. I don't know what that was it..

Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"sixteen times" Discussed on Set Lusting Bruce: The Springsteen Podcast
"Probably but probably the rising is Is my favorite. So i've been able to see him not anywhere close to a lot of people you know. fifteen sixteen times and the only song that he's played in every show has been the rising. And you know. I love that song and i appreciate it. Yeah it's obviously sounds like you love western stars and letter to you. Yeah i mean. Western stars took me a little longer to you. Know to get to get to like it was is quite a departure from From some of the stuff. But i love it I would say letter to you. Is was appealed. You know the appeal came quicker charm. So it's just such a their son there songs on that album that I can't wait to see live. You know so. It's it's one of those ones that You know whether or not it's a rocking song or it's a quiet Song it's they're going to be fun to see life. I absolutely great i I you know. I'm looking forward to hear burning train You know ghosts letter to you. Five priest on and on and on It just And then you know I'll see in my dreams just brings me tears every time i hear it. Yeah yeah forget yeah. So what have i not asked you. That should have pat on. That's a good question. I mean i don't know it's Look i i. I consider myself a fan. My wife thinks i'm obsessed I listen to music all day long. You know whether or not it's whether or not it's bruce springsteen or youtube who are like. I say music collection in my music on from time. I get up until that time. I go to all the time in the car so i just love music so but i don't i consider myself a fan i But i haven't like you. I mean i've seen him four times All since hotlanta last decade down. So you know when i see Other folks who are saying you know seen them thirty forty times I'm envious an sat..

The Ortho Show
"sixteen times" Discussed on The Ortho Show
"Or <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> biologic <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> and that <Speech_Male> really limits <Speech_Male> them to being <Speech_Male> only good <Speech_Male> that one thing or the other <Speech_Male> so what's <Speech_Male> special <Speech_Male> about the bio brace <Speech_Male> is that it's <Speech_Male> a bio composite. <Silence> Soft tissue scaffold. <Speech_Male> It <Speech_Male> has two different <Speech_Male> things in there. <Speech_Male> Doing both things <Speech_Male> well <Speech_Male> and no one else has <Speech_Male> that strength <Speech_Male> plus that <Speech_Male> capacity for regeneration <Speech_Male> <SpeakerChange> and improved <Silence> <Advertisement> healing <Silence> <Advertisement> <Speech_Male> so when you <Speech_Male> walk away from the pitch <Speech_Male> pro <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> we have our panels <Speech_Male> always give you <Speech_Male> some final thoughts <Speech_Male> and really we <Speech_Male> want to walk out of here <Speech_Male> with your head. Held high <Speech_Male> some commentary <Speech_Male> <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> and some positive thoughts. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> Let's <SpeakerChange> roll it out. <Silence> Joe what you got <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> evan. First <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> of all do you <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> came solo <Silence> <Advertisement> to the knights <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> fight bravo. <Speech_Music_Male> You're <Speech_Male> the only one who did <Speech_Male> so. That <SpeakerChange> goes a long <Speech_Male> way with me. <Silence> <Advertisement> I just. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> I <Speech_Male> never said this <Speech_Male> to a man before. But <Speech_Male> when you're laying in <Speech_Male> bed at night staring <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> at the ceiling <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and you know you have a product <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> but you under-funded <Speech_Music_Male> it. 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The Clapper Report
"sixteen times" Discussed on The Clapper Report
"Well i don't think i nearly have as much time on my hands now. yeah Can man so soth vancouver canucks come back from co bid or they come back. After the comments from jt miller that we spoke about last week They play their first game on sunday against toronto. Their first game back in over three and a half weeks right back completely crazy to see and they went winning three two on the back of braden holtby to on the back of the bounces that they received to bring in hoagies save. I think i watched that clip. Probably sixteen times. Yeah the say the hashtag save that windmill. Save literally i. I couldn't stop. I literally picked him up on my fantasy team that next day. Yeah i know. I saw that because of that save. I picked. Brayden hoping yeah. He played really well. I know it's like it feels like had made brayden hopi a better goal. you know. Maybe his turtles that he has house pet turtles. Were backing them up. Maybe they're colbert right but Now he actually played really well and You know the team played with energy. Surprisingly i mean granted besides like you know the penalty killers always being tired and especially tired of the f. Five minute misconduct on editor for the hit on highland. We discussed earlier but the played really. Well you know. There wasn't a lot of the same pressure they got of A lucky bounces jason's pessimistic good empty-net chance basically and they won three to the second game. They won six three Again they played. They played a bit sloppy but Hockey you know The played very sloppy but still found a way to win and last night they you know they kind of got brought back down to earth because everybody went from and it was really interesting everybody went from. Oh you know this team you know is going to play like shit. This team is going to do nothing. And it's like they win two games against toronto. All the playoffs are playoffs. It's like to settle down like they're not making the playoffs like they're like you know. Montreal and calgary are free falling down the standings but there's no way that the conducts are making playoffs. Like i'm not looking forward to that at all. I don't think it's going to happen. Especially pd still out And they said that he might be done for the season Doodoo rece- injury there. There is speculation. it's a hairline fracture with him Which can take about like eight weeks to heal coming up on eight weeks but they might as well just rest them. You know honestly i mean. Don't play them at all yet. Don't play him if he's not one hundred percent but without patterson it's like there's such a glaring hole on this team when there's that player with the islanders it's bar zo with but with The economics it's pederson and they don't have that big piece on the front end. It's like what is it you know. And then it really exposes the holes in the offense ray and there is no offensive death. I mean freddie highmore. Their recently acquired Ten points in eighty nhl games or ninety nhl games you know he's playing with j..

DV Radio
"sixteen times" Discussed on DV Radio
"Homes and this is why i don't wanna talk politics people so there you have it. Do cancelling them up. That was easy. Oh my god that's it. That's all. I got a you said. Don't take the quiz for widow. Don't vote for which similar url. And i'm going to see if i can script overlay it and see if i can see the fucking choices here right now. 'cause zoom zoom. These hasbro might not be too fucking security inundated. Let me see. I mean l. If you got the same hearts for your friends video chat year after a tough day get jail freaky this card and so needed traded or sold or you rescue. Poppy and you feel rescued to get out of jail free. Keep this car until needed. Get out of facebook. jail free. rescue a puppy. I can get out of jail for free. That's the napoli says and then the next card is you stole a puffy. Go to jail so okay so you got two different cards. So if i refresh the page. I should get through all sixteen of. Oh my god. You're seriously going to do it aren't you. Let's see what happens but you get to and they're sixteen so the possibilities of getting two different ones. Sixteen times is what somebody somebody minimum. Well can ask three times and it came up with the same ones. I must have out the address..

Christ United Methodist Church - Plano, TX
"sixteen times" Discussed on Christ United Methodist Church - Plano, TX
"Would be word it's awesome. It's wonderful so when we were in Well henrietta. So max was in kindergarten. The last year we were in henrietta so that was when he first started point sports and then we moved to sherman which is another relatively small town. So when you're in those places you don't play goes so I coached max's basketball team when we were in in reta and then but i didn't really know much about soccer when we moved to sherman. I mean you had to coach if you wanted to put together a team. So i bought a bunch of books on how to coach soccer and so ended up coaching with both the boys. I would coach every season and both of them by the time they were both playing a couple years. After we got the chairman then sam started playing soccer and so like in the fall. I would coach two teams for soccer in the spring. I would coach two teams soccer and then in the winter. I'd put coach teams bathroom sixteen times a year for several years when we moved to plano We didn't really know bike. The lay of the land. I was really busy and so Since since we've been here i've not coached. The teams helped power. They need me to help but mostly to spend a spectator this spring. I'm coaching a wreck team for sam. Because now we can know the deal and He's gonna play baseball and he plays baseball on the team. Coached by the data friend here in church. So he's got his baseball team kind of church friends and then the basketball team that i'm coaching more school friends that we've met through these other things so yeah i think it's actually. I think it's actually twenty six but twenty eight five is a river is a round number. I think this spring will be the twenty seventh team that i've coached. That's a big investment time. Yeah i'm i'm a one as you point out of the game so Like if it right you know so. There's a lot. I lay out the whole season. How many practices we're gonna have we're gonna focus on each practice and so yeah. Yeah so do you ever have and it's hard to not get on your boys if they mess So i honestly have I cannot imagine to easier children like they both of sports. They both give their all and they're talented in different ways and so You know i. I'm super the challenge for me. When i'm coaching them. Honestly is not them in their commitment. It's i'm. I'm really really have to work hard to be chill the wraps because i only see what other people foul my kids and i never see when my kids other people and so. That's the challenge for me is to remain calm when i because part of the part of being a one on the fairness of your thing justice and fairness thing and so Yeah my biggest spiritual growth as a human over. The past fifteen years has been trying to coach. Those kids da. I can't imagine yeah when we're so we're wouldn't. He loves to tell the story when we.

SPORTS GOOFS
"sixteen times" Discussed on SPORTS GOOFS
"You gotta give it to the new blood because if you rotate it. You're have the johnson a situation or seen as a sixteen times champion because you had no one else do if you're a six time champion that means you losses sixteen times right. I feel about drew. But i'm excited for the prospect. Because i woke up man and it felt like the day i got on the bar exam when i woke up monday right when i woke up. This monday is the same way. I felt about taking the bar exam. I woke up design. Feels more on this hour end. Bring all taylor. I saw this light birds chirping arab music. It's like literally came out with snow. White history mcintyre and. I'll take it for as many days. I can't before he gets it. I hope he does get where he's not giving just great. I don't know if i could say you. Give me great matches good matches. But no good feuds let him get his opportunity but let bobby lashley get his opportunity because half man he just basically like burly just so angry and just wanted to kill everybody as for you to speak up cage all right okay. Couple of things. I forgot that we we didn't we didn't cover gottlieb's goons wanna get this one out. Kevin better kevin mather formerly. Oh the seattle mariners. They was what their team president. Whatever so he said many many comments at a rotary. What what the hell's a rotary club. I think like a rotary phone and i think in one of those old man groups not even sure what it is but regardless he was at one of those and he said a lot of comments about foreign players both from asia and latin america japanese. Whatever and how important they went all those darn people learn english or they suck it english or the all kinds of things with regards to that which is no boy. if you're china entice players especially those foreign players who are highly talented to constantly when you have the most famous international baseball player ever playing the game. Yeah and drew and ken griffey junior as well a guy who's currently ambassador to the game now league baseball you're not you're not going to entice players who to go to seattle which is one of those places that are notoriously hard to get people to go to because players have wanted out from seattle in the past including your best player of all time and can griffey junior. He he abruptly retired because he just wanted to go home to florida to live with his family and stuff and too far away in seattle. Yeah you're a franchise that is notoriously bad. So you're gone. You're gone and we'll see he's he's gone now has gone abruptly but marriage that these guys have no filter or is the fact that they thought with their they.

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"sixteen times" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"I want and i like watching them. Play ball i won't deny fills it up and can't be stopped. That's fine and i also won't change my opinion of him that he's just constantly out it's just has he ever played a full week basketball. He misses more games than anyone absolutely. Surreal to me. How often this guy misses it really. Is it just boggles my mind. I can't get over it so if you don't play defense and then you've got guys that miss games all the time. How are you going to win an nba championship. I'm telling you if davis lebron anything happens to them. The lakers jack shack. And i'll tell you another thing nets on winning anything if they don't play defense and then if katie's out every other day and irving's out every other day i mean it's funny what's funny. Is that hardens on. Plays every day. Have you ever seen anything like that guy. He is an absolute workhorse. Do you ever remember him. Missing games in houston. The guy just plays every night and now he carries the team. He's the point guard because he's better. He's the point guard because he is a better point guard than i mean he really is. Do you stand the night last night. It's every night he's fourteen fifteen sixteen times. How many did he have mafia. It's just insanity so that guy shows up every night the other two i can't speak for. I loved her in. I want that easy money sniper on the floor every night. Because if he's planning there wouldn't that's all i know he's in a line of they win. I don't care anything else. But he's got. The guy was out a week with the protocol. Contact tracing now. He's out the hammy price that can't keep up with all of their maladies. It's ferrall on the bench to ferrall on the bench here on fourth overnight america. You love your dog. Is something bothering him or her. And you can't figure out what it is. Maybe they seem slow or lethargic and maybe they just don't have energy wouldn't you like your dog to be living their very best life. Pedroia offers a.

Democracy Now! Audio
"sixteen times" Discussed on Democracy Now! Audio
"Because they are actually part of the conspiracy or part of the problem and i would point especially to josh hawley from missouri. Whose own home state. Senator newspaper said should be expelled from the senate ted cruz from texas. Who's own homestate. Newspapers have said it should resign both because of their actions around january six. Also people like ron johnson from wisconsin. The fact is we. Don't have enough time in this program to detail all of the intersections between the statements and actions of folks like holly ted cruz ron johnson and others in this Run up to january six and in what happened on january six. So it's a bizarre situation where you have. Jurors who actually are as i've suggested i believe as guilty in the case of josh hawley may be even more guilty than donald trump. I wanna go to house. Impeachment manager congressman. What king castro of texas. You've seen all the evidence so far and this is clear on january. Six president trump left everyone in this capital for dead when he wanted to incite his supporters to show up on january. six president. Trump tweeted sixteen times between midnight on january fifth and his noon rally speech the next day sixteen times to get them to do something he wanted and his message in those sixteen times was clear. Fight stay strong. Be strong but when the violence started he never once said the one thing everyone around was begging him to say stop the attack. He refused to stop. Donald trump. did not send help to these officers. Who were badly outnumbered overwhelmed and being beaten down two hours into the insurrection by three pm. President trump had not deployed the national guard or any other law enforcement to help despite multiple please to do so. So that's walking castro. Now i want to go to the house. Impeachment manager rhode island congressman. David selena laid out. What donald trump was tweeting as the mob attack the capital nearly an hour after the wires reached the capital perimeter at one forty nine. Donald trump released propaganda real of saving america speech given an hour before. Won't be clear. The events i just described. The writers are breaching the capital attacking law enforcement. The violence is being broadcast all over the television for the whole world to see including the president of the united states. And then we'll show you. This is what is happening right before. Donald trump sends that video out again and as he doesn't country is had enough. We will take it anymore. That's what this is all about. Use a favorite term. That all of you people really came up with. We will stop this seal because you're never take back our country with weakness. You have to show strength and you have to be strong. So john nichols. This is absolutely key. It's this contemporaneous. Showing the times of what john of what president trump was doing and what the mob was doing since he was watching it on tv and apparently getting repeated calls from republicans pleading with him to do something. The news we had earlier of Senator tub reveal admitting that trump called him and he said to him. I can't talk right now. Tupper ville said pence has just been evacuated because of the rioters. And it was after that. That trump attacked pence once again in a tweet. And then you see of course. The rioters both inside and outside Saying hang mike pence. Hang mike pence actually up a news this issue after the speech because some of these senators will say trump has a right to say fight like hell and that doesn't mean that he meant that people should be violent. But it's as this was all happening. Explain the significance of revving them up than telling them he loved them and they were patriots as he learned how many police officers were down. Where being attacked. You're going right to the heart of the matter here because ian this prosecution of donald trump. obviously there are two core arguments one is that donald trump set this thing up that he he called it into being but a second argument. Which i think we'll get more and more attention as the days go on. Is his dereliction of duty. Wants things to remember. Is the commander in chief of the united states. He is the most formed grayson right. This is a president state. Certainly knows what's going on in washington and he is. Getting direct appeals as well as appeals to his aides. Saying something horrible is happening just blocks away from you. You have the ability to intervene. You have the ability to call for both your supporters your allies here to stand down but also to call for additional help to those who are out the capital and instead about what we see is evidence upon evidence upon evidence that donald trump is a fascinated by even perhaps in some reports excited by. What's happening at the capitol and be not exercising. Not acting in the manner that a president would be expected to do in such a circumstance that goes to the heart of Y you would impeach try and convict a president. And it's one of the reasons why i suggest to you that this is the most important impeachment trial in american history and the reason for that is that it goes to the heart of why the impeachment power was created in seventeen eighty seven. It is to hold presidents to account when act in a manner that might be that of a monarch or king when they take actions to perpetuate their own power that are dangerous to the republic and here putting together the images of the violence as well as wallaby evidence donald trump's enthusiasm for the protests on january six his failure to respond to them. You sort of tie all the threads together for a classic. And frankly i think difficult to argue with Vote for conviction of a president who has violated his oath of office and john you've written extensively on the lead impeachment manager congressman jamie raskin whom we heard from earlier and you've also been been talking to him so could you say a little about your conversations with him and also about his father. Marcus raskin whom you've also.

MadTrio Podcast
"sixteen times" Discussed on MadTrio Podcast
"Some hilarious stories up some of the bands from the eighties like motley crue and those guys are david lee roth when they talk about some shenanigans they happen. The fact there was never a superspreader event. No pun intended as quite hilarious. It's true motley cruise part of the reason why hotels don't rented music. I mean they were known for three. Just randomly destroying everything. Yeah there were some bands out there. Some pretty crazy things. There's bans though. That would rent these tour. Buses that go through on the could do is use the bathrooms. They were banned from using the bathroom so they always had to stop every so often at a gas station and they were doing it for the philip. The bus with fuel never stop thinking. Go to the bathroom. That's that's truth to look that up to remind me of a story from David lee roth talks about one of the reasons. They got the reputation of destroying things which is back in the day. They're they're lighting rig was extremely heavy and he said we were. We were one of the innovators or yada yada yada said in so right in the middle of the writer where we put you know. Okay we have to have the brown eminem separated from this some and this and right in the middle right in the middle of that at talked about the lighting specifications. And all that for some of the rigs. He said the reason we did that is four win. They might have been vice versa. One of the reasons they did that was for the incident on the dressing room and at the shit wasn't separated the eight destroy everything telling the fix it and then you go out and say now. Fix the ship before you kill. Somebody is so that they did it specifically because a lot of these times these guys wouldn't read the writers and this The system specs to make sure it wouldn't kill anybody because a lot of the times. Apparently lured was so heavy that it was overload in the structural design of buildings. Great chase and so. I wonder what the sound wall. We'd god we did something about that. A number of a couple of episodes are they had a couple of different versions of it and the reason they stopped. It took a lot of money. Trucking at back. Oh yeah oh yeah. It was grateful dead. What would have been amazing. I guess i was never big fan of theirs. But i would have liked to have gone in actually heard the wall just to see if it was really. Yeah i'm with you never mind the grateful dead. I just wanna see their their their their massive stuff. Yeah yeah 'cause reality is you. Could you could see them. Sixteen times and see twenty-five versions of their music which is okay. I guess i mean you know some of..

The Hull Show ? 1310 KFKA
"sixteen times" Discussed on The Hull Show ? 1310 KFKA
"This jackson. Try to escape one for it. And he's got if war. Tell the will they give a tool they will touchdown baltimore. Those allies forty nine yard rushing touchdown. He threw for one hundred seventy nine yards. He did throw a pick but he ran sixteen times for one hundred. Thirty six yards and a touchdown. It's so unorthodox we just don't see this and we haven't seen this before and every week. I'm just amazed that this is going on. Still that quarterback carries it six times while the rest of your team combined carried it for nineteen times. So it's just it's it's bizarro world to me. Meanwhile on the other hand. I was really rooting for derrick henry. I love a traditional run game. I love running. I love rushing. Great henry was shut down though. Eighteen carries for forty yards and ryan tannehill. This is where he has limitations are. If derrick henry is not getting the job done then tannehill. Most of the time is going to be kind of an average an average type quarterback so Baltimore's moving on. And we're moving on as well cleveland and the pittsburgh steelers. I picked the steelers to win this game. I was wrong before we even got.

AP News Radio
No. 1 Clemson wakes up late to beat Syracuse 47-21
"Clemson picked up its thirty eighth consecutive regular season win by whipping Syracuse forty seven twenty one Trevor Lawrence had an uneven performance misfiring at times during the first half before finishing with two hundred eighty nine yards two touchdowns and one interception this four five boroughs that I should we kept drives alive this I is this your scheduled travel seeking carried sixteen times for eighty six yards and three touchdowns including a pair of late TD's Syracuse trail just twenty seven twenty one late in the third quarter before it reboots junior scooped up a fumble and raced twenty one yards for a touchdown with one twenty six left in the period I'm Dave Ferrie

Money For the Rest of Us
Are We Being Forced to Buy Stocks
"Last week in the insiders guide email newsletter I pointed out the expensive valuation of US stocks. Specifically I showed that the forward price to earnings ratio the P. E. based on earnings estimates over the next year was twenty, two point nine. That's three standard deviations above its average of sixteen times going back to two thousand, three at data from Ned Davis. Research. In reply to that email, Andrew wrote regarding stocks being expensive on a forward e true but there's no alternative. What do you do with bond yields near Zero and the vanguard total stock market? Index. Fund. Yielding two percent. By VPI, the vanguard total stock market ETF. JASA forwarded to me a paper by Bridgewater says, which I'll discuss in more detail later in this episode. I had a similar question from a plus member in the money for the rest of US plus member forums. He wrote. So the Fed signals that it wants to keep rates low for three more years. Canada's pension. Fund is reevaluating bond-holdings and you've got an army of small and large investors bidding up companies like Tesla and snowflake to absurdly hype. All this combined to make me think are we as individual investors now forced to buy equities? Is this the mother of all bubbles in which there's literally no other things suitable for purchase. There is a lot of speculation in stocks right now. Jim. Bianco Bianca Research pointed out that small traders are dominating the options market. Bear most of the trades right now and seventy five percent of that volume is an option contracts expire in two weeks. So short term bets. Look at South Korea and article from Bloomberg pointed out that day traders in South Korea have accounted for eighty seven and a half percent of the total value of stocks traded in the first part of September. You. Some men chief strategist at Samsung Securities said retail investors appear to be seeking short-term profits after hearing their next door neighbors earned lots of money from stocks after the March selloff. Receiving a similar situation in India. The Financial Times reports that the number of individual investor accounts rose twenty percent from the start of the year, the twenty, four million, and they point out that around the world, an influx of investors are investing in stocks for the first time. Are. We in a bubble? Is it a speculative frenzy? Are we forced to buy these stocks because there are no alternatives with also? One of the things I like to do investing is think about what's different this time what's unusual? What what doesn't fit the pattern? I had two instances of investing this past week where something didn't fit the pattern Lebron, I were driving up in the mountains of Montana and a small bear cub really bolted right in front of us no idea what it was running from. My son suggested he was running from the year twenty twenty. And then few days later at our front door, there were seven cows drinking water from the driveway eating our bushes. There are no cows around us. We live in an area that nobody keeps cows but there they were right in front of my house. Turns out. They had strayed from the National Forest, which is not very far some outfitters have grazing rights and drop off the cows and leave them there all summer pick them up come late October, and they had straight down because some of that newly cut barley fields, but it didn't fit the pattern. Cows at your front door. Don't fit the pattern. What's different now on investing front that could justify more expensive valuations for stocks. Well, for the first time, ever US interest rates are near zero from short term out to ten years. This is known as a flat yield curve, which is an unusual. We've had flat yield curves in the past. But it's flat near zero. There was a flat yield curve where ten treasury bonds and cash for yielding similar back from two thousand and five to two thousand seven. But yielding four percent. And from two thousand to two, thousand, two cash and tenure treasures were yielding five to six percent. Today, the ten year Treasury yield is zero point, six percent and cash is zero. The Federal Reserve intense to keep it that way. The recent policy statement suggests that they will keep their policy rate. What's known as the Fed funds rate near zero until labor market conditions have improved. The. Unemployment rate has dropped close to to to maximum employment and that inflation has risen to two percent is on track to moderately exceed two percent. They included their economic and rate projections and all, but four officials on the committee. Expect the Fed funds rate is still be near zero at the end of twenty, twenty three. Rates are low across the board. It is a different investment environment than we have ever faced before. And that's what this paper by bridgewater associates was about. It was titled Grappling With the New Reality of zero bond yields virtually everywhere. It was written by Bob Prince Greg Jensen Melissa fear, and Jim Haskell. I. Discussed Bridgewater Associates Founder Ray dallies views back in episode three, hundred changing world order in this paper bills off that. Before we continue let me pause and share some words from one of this week sponsors masterworks. I've shared on the show how low interest rates are on bonds and yields and cash about zero money has to be invested somewhere in preserving your wealth is as hard as it's ever been. That's where masterworks comes in. If you're looking to diversify out of the traditional public markets, then take a look at masterworks. They make blue chip art investing possible works by artists like Banksie, 'cause and Warhol. Art is a one point seven trillion dollar asset class that has performed better than s five hundred by one hundred and eighty percent between two thousand and two thousand eighteen according to Citibank.

Command Line Heroes
What Kind Of Coder Will You Become?
"Summer twitter was buzzing about a particular topic, a particular type of color. It started with a tweet from an investor and it quickly went viral in short. It encouraged founders to hire a rare breed of Kotor as soon as possible to increase their startups chances of success, these coders have a special designation. Ten X. The response to the tweet was not great. Here's just a taste. One of my very best friend she was texting was to me like, can you even believe this guy right here? It. Just had the worst stereotypes about engineers that. In the startup space in the thing is I've worked with these Prima Donnas. I'm sure you've worked with these Prima DONNAS. When. Someone says 10x or there's one of things going on The first possibility is that they mean it as a euphemism for brilliant. And the second is that it means that they're trying to hire someone they think they should be hiring coder, but they don't actually know what they're looking for. So, what is a ten X coder anyway and new coders aspired to be one interview are one does that justify bad behavior turns out? There's a whole history around this topic. So Clive, what exactly is a ten X coder? Well, as the name suggests, it's a Coder who is ten times better more productive, more creative. However, you want to measure that they are ten times better than the average coder sitting alongside them right there. This sort of. Super person who can execute things faster you know write better code more code ship it more quickly have better ideas. Essentially you know. A sort of super powered creature that is a theory behind the tax coder. So the whole idea of tax coder has never really made sense to me because it's such a specific. Number like ten x your ten times. You know your ten times better than the average voter. How could you possibly measure that? How would you even know if anyone is five times ten, one, hundred times better than the average what does that even mean? Well, you know it's funny. There's this number attached because it's sort of cracks me up like every field has this idea that there's someone who has just weighed than others right? You know like they have that idea in in music entertainment you know. Sort of the star they have that in every discipline but encoding, they put a number on it. Right? You know it's just it's data driven and they love to quantify things. But in this case, there's actually kind of a history behind that number. There's a reason why it's ten it actually goes back to the nineteen sixties in the early days of coating. No one was really sure what it meant to do this for a living and no one was really sure what productivity kind of looked like. They had some sense. Some people seem to be better at it than others they couldn't really figure out why and so this one Guy House sacrament decided to do a study where he was trying to answer a question decoders prefer to work in like an online system or an offline and online and offline meant back then was offline meant kind of working. Where you wrote your code on Punch cards and then handed it to a punch card operator and they fed it in and then three hours. Later you found out whether or not your code worked right online meant you could sit in front of a screen and a keyboard and you could type and you could execute your code right away but more modern way of coating. That's the way we code today. But online cutting was really expensive because computers were really expensive are people so much more productive than it's worth spending the money on these expensive online computers. So. How sacraments said Okay I'm going to give a bunch of coders the same task in online versus offline, and I'm GonNa see how well they do but he discovered something. So so remarkable to him that he sort of focused on it. The people who were doing this test. There was a subset of them that were way better than everyone else like the delta between the really good and the bad is massive. Sometimes, people were twenty times faster at solving bug and other people. Sometimes, they were sixteen times. You know faster at writing a piece of code. It's kind of like there's this order of magnitude difference between the really great performers and the really bad ones, and that was the beginnings of the mythology. The people who are really good at coding are rare and they are ten times better than everyone else from there on the myth sort of grew until it is what we have it today.

The 3:59
T-Mobile CEO on fighting the scourge of robocalls
"Mobile's event was all about fighting scan and robocalls. We've got CEO Mike Seaver to talk about it. Rod Chang, and this is your daily charge. Carrier, events are generally when you attack. The big annoyances are wireless service. So what are you addressing with today's news? We call them pain points and we've done this sixteen times before. Can you believe that and we're taking on today? One of the biggest pain points ever in this industry, which is Robo calls and scams, an unwanted calls and I'll tell you what this this is huge. This is the number one complaint to the FCC Can you believe about eleven? percent of calls on our traffic were blocked by our technology just last week. I mean this massive fifty. Eight Billion Robo calls were placed last year in two thousand nineteen. That's eighteen hundred. A second and people are being robbed. robbed the these are crimes. They're being talked out of their money. Ten billion dollars estimated lost last year from this and it's getting worse. I mean this is just awful, but this is the way criminals are. They're preying on people during this pandemic because we've got fears, people are losing jobs. They're looking for jobs. They're interested in their stimulus checks and other things and criminals are preying on all that, and so it's gone up and up and up through the pandemic, and it just has to stop, so we're launching this major initiative today that we hope like the rest of our own carrier moves in the past, the rest of the industry follow suit, and we can really make progress against. Essentially these criminal elements that want to steal from tens of millions of people, and so let's let's dive into it Scam Shield. What is it? What? What are some of these other programs that you are offering today? Well, it's a comprehensive left to right solution. Because one of the things we've learned is that it's this issue is too big and too complicated to solve with any one thing. At the centerpiece of it is scam, idea and scam block our breakthrough technologies that are network driven. Hey, I driven to identify calls and block them, and we're making them better already just in the last three years. We've blocked. We've blocked or identified a scam, likely twenty five billion calls, and so we've got a head start on this, but the thing about it is. This has gotta be. Be Thrust into the public consciousness and people need to start participating in order for us to take it to the next level. You ever get those calls those scams, and then you go into your phone and you block them on your phone. The truth is that doesn't do much good now with the Scam Shield. You'll be able to go into our APP and with one touch block. Block that call or essentially report it to us, because it's not just the ten digits they called with. Because as you know, they randomized those they call with new numbers every time that tells us to investigate the source of that call, and so with the feedback loop from tens of millions of customers using scam shield, our AI driven network technologies will get better and better and better. Better at identifying and blocking these calls for you and already we're thirty percent better than anybody else in the industry. So this is just taking it all to the next level, so let me let me stop you there just just to get some clarification because I know some of the stuff the other carries off horizon. You know. Todd touted the fact that they've stopped six billion calls. Fundamentally you all use a similar system that's one that's mandated by the FCC to be rolled out by the end of next year or sometime next year. So what is different about this? In what what? What is new exactly in terms of some of these I know some of these services like the caller ID feature had been offered in the past. So what is new? What is different from the rest of the industry? Well, let's first talk about scam. ID and scan block. What's different is that ours is network based, and it's for everyone on the network literally. Literally speaking, and so it doesn't rely on a certain rate plan or or APP or having something installed or paying for a feature, which is exactly what verizon offers which is seven dollars and ninety nine cents. A month seven nine hundred dollars a year just about in order on their most popular plans in order to get the best levels of protection. Protection which aren't as as much as we're offering today for free, and and honestly as an industry. We need to do better than that. We you know this is. This is an issue that the carriers are helping to bring to customers. I mean their own networks are bringing you these scams and yet they're profiting from technology. That might be proposed to stop their. Their own technology for bringing you these scams that's crazy and so part of what we do with on carrier moves as we call out industry practices, sometimes practices that we've participated in the past and said look, this is a pain point, and it's gotTa Stop So these technologies at T. mobile or not just better because they're network based and don't rely on Hap. But they're free, and we're not going to charge them. Including as you mentioned caller ID, which is now free, t mobile. And as you mentioned being made better, that industry standard technology talked about stir shaken is basically a pool database of being able to see not only the name of a caller which is important if you have caller ID, which is free now, but that it's a verified mobile user and not a call center, or a robot calling you, and that's really important information for you in order to know, you can safely answer the phone. It

CNBC's Fast Money
Is Apple's 5G phone affecting trade ahead of its release?
"Back to apple. Last year is all about the five G. phone in another phone super cycle. That could be on the way here, so tim. I'm just curious there last week. There's this report that that release of that new phone could be later in the year. Are We pricing everything? Good with the associated with a super cycle because of the new phone in now I mean what's what's going on here in terms of the trade ahead of that new phone release. And first of all, what's going on here? Please get control this show. Because when these guys are self, would you rather I mean I, you know? Just getting I i. do think you have a case where you've got. A company that let's just quickly remind viewers that sixty two percent off intra-day, low on March twenty third. I think it's fifty four percent off that closing low. About seventy two percent off of the August twenty, one, thousand, nine, hundred, and that June spike down low and guy brought up the fact that apple's giving you. These opportunities stocks up one hundred percent I. Find it interesting that despite on a relative discount to the SNP right now you can make an argument on a forward basis. That apple trades at a slight discount to the S. and P.. That's great, but when when Karen talked about Still Hardware Company at Twenty at sixteen times multiple roughly, which is where JP Morgan puts their hardware business in different analysts I think are are largely lining up that significantly higher for the hardware portion of of this company than than we were giving it a few years ago when we weren't throwing in the other parts in the service miles, goose up the valuation overall so, is there a lot of good news in here? Yes, I think that five G. rally was really part of the rally going into the year end in. In the part that had us really with our jaws, dropping before Kobe nineteen hit so that is the concern. There's no concern in terms of apple I think in the strategic model. There's none of this. No one's talking about innovation anymore at Apple, rate and lack thereof. No one's talking about capital markets dynamics those are good dynamics. I think it's a safe company to own in this environment, but but I think the valuation right now could be challenging if you think about things that may not work as perfectly as as the price.

The 3:59
Body cameras were supposed to make police accountable. Its backfired
"Protesters are demonstrating in hundreds of Cities Dominion interracial injustice and police brutality, but one of the things I was opposed to rain in the police. Cameras might actually end up encroaching on protesters privacy's. I'm Roger Chang and this is your daily charge. With me is seen at privacy expert, daily charge regular offloading. Alfred thanks for joining me. Hey, thanks for having me, Alfred. You've got a piece of looking at police. Body cameras in the concerns are now raising during these protests, but before we get to that. Let's back things up a bit. You talk about how body cameras with the police took off. So Body Cams really came into the police terminology around two, thousand, fourteen, twenty, fifteen, when there were protests over the police killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, where people were asking for the same things that they're asking for now six years ago when they were saying that we want more police accountability, we want more police transparency and they believe that body cameras would be technology to help solve that if we have a camera on police officers at all times, then there's more evidence when police are doing anything that they're not supposed to be doing more evidence of police misconduct no five years down the line. We've really seen that that hasn't really been the case. There's been studies that have shown that. There isn't really more police accountability just because technology is there and we're seeing now that you know. These protests are evidence of that that even though you know about half the police departments in the country have body cameras equipped, but they are not making the major changes that they were supposed to be doing. Let's dig into that on paper. You've got a video recording police are doing so theoretically. That's supposed to create some accountability. Why hasn't that happened I? Think a big problem is that the body cameras were? And people assumed automatically that they would only be used in a certain way, and from what we've seen you know the transparency side of it is not there so even though these body cameras are equipped. You know it doesn't really mean that they're always recording. We've seen that in Kentucky during the protests when police shot and killed David Makati during a protest in Louisville Kentucky This was the protests over the death of George Floyd according to reports, there were no police body cam footage of that and the police chief was actually fired over the body. Cam's not being turned on at this. This incident and we take it a step further down. And we and we take it a step further down, and we check and see okay. What what about the incidents? Where Body Cams are turned on while in those incidents, police will do almost everything they can to prevent this footage from getting released an you know there's been cases where people who have been shot by police officers have had to sue the Police Department of get that their own footage released to the public, and you know we see from the case of McDonald in Chicago where it took more than a year for police. Police to release footage of the seventeen year old, getting shot sixteen times by Chicago police officers, and that put it wasn't even released to the public until a journalist sued for it, and it took you more than a year after he was killed by police for that footage to even get out there. That's an interesting point you raise. The footage is meant to hold police accountable. So how are the police justifying not releasing the videos? The reason want so difficult for this footage to be released because police are the ones controlling it. It's these videos are ending up in their database as these videos. Videos are ending up at their whim and again it's also they're ones who control whether or not. The cameras turned on and that that's part of the big issue of it. So in one case the NYPD had sued not release any footage that it would violate state laws against releasing police records without a court order, so it's it's a lot of things I I've seen in other cases before where they've just argued. We don't have the bandwidth to release all this footage. Public records request because they have to comb through all this footage and then put it on a flash, drive or A. DVD or something like that to release to the public and I've seen police departments argue that you know we don't have the ability to do that right now. With all these requests that are coming in, let's talk about these protests. You make a point. That's a bit counterintuitive. The footage is post. Keep listening check, but they may actually be used against the protesters. Talk a little bit about that. So several cities like Baltimore New York and Seattle actually have policies against using body cameras at First Amendment events like protests. The reason why is because you don't want to be potentially identified or tracked after the fact and these body cameras can do a really good job of doing that, and that is now the privacy concern that comes with body cameras is that they're more being used. Used as tools of surveillance, and they are tools of accountability, so the argument right now is that we should have these body cameras turned on at protests, because of all these incidents of police brutality that we've seen against protestors, but it kind of hangs in the balance with this debate of while we also don't want these cameras to be used against us later down the line. Some cities like Seattle. I've actually turned around on their policy against no body cameras at protests and said if you are out of protest, you should turn it on. The mayor issued an emergency order on Monday about it, but privacy advocates are kind of pointing out that that might not be the way that you want to

The Doctor's Farmacy with Mark Hyman, M.D.
How COVID-19 Shines A Light On Our Broken Food System with Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian
"We want to talk today about what seems to be unrelated to Cova Nineteen which is an infectious disease but it's diet and chronic disease and you wrote an article with the former secretary of agriculture. Dan Glickman that was posted on. Cnn entitled Can Diet Flatten the curve for covert nineteen and it's sort of like How does that even make sense? So we've heard all about these ideas of fighting. The curb was social dissing handwashing washing and contact tracing an isolation testing but your article presented a very different view about how we can use food and nutrition and specific nutrients to actually help us address. This pandemic so. Can you tell us why you wrote this article and why this is more important than ever to address these issues? Yeah I think markets really clear that that to those of US following this crisis that cove nineteen has really laid bare these incredible challenges. These incredible disparities is incredible unreasonable aspects of our food system. Are there so many ways that that covered nineteen influenced student? Nutrition and nutrition Kobe. Nineteen back up at at all. Just go through quickly and we can go about each of them so you know. One is immunity the actual immune response to Cova and then you actually the blunting of the excessive inflammatory response to cove. We can talk about nutrition and actually the immune response to is is hunger and food insecurity which of course 'cause incredible human suffering with this economic shutdown lost wages at schools being closed but also we know from long clinical experience malnourishment further predispose people to infection. So that's the site and that doesn't mean and that doesn't mean skinny and wasted away could be that your nutrient deficient which is really common in America. Absolutely absolutely. There's one call hidden hunger. People look like they're getting food but there's hidden hunger because they're not getting the right the right nutrients and what's paradoxical is the most obese are often the most nutrient deficient when you look at their numbers. Right it's kind of interesting. Yeah and then. These other aspects of Kobe crucial to to you know of just quickly mention our third. The incredible intersections supply chains and food. Waste and getting food to people we. We don't really have a national food system even global food system. We have this fractured supply chain. That's now becomes you know very very dire And then I think one of the one of the most important things for really thinking about covert long term. Because this is going to be with us for for some time. Many ears is the incredible relationship between for Metabolic Health Diabetes Hypertension Heart Disease Obesity and poor outcomes with Cova. The the latest analysis from New York which has had the most cases in in the United States showed that with each of those conditions diabetes hypertension of city. There is about two or three full higher risk two to three times higher risk of hospitals. And if you put those three things together lots of people have diabetes hypertension and obesity. There be sixteen fold higher risk of hospitalization. And so it's very it's very plausible. And we're modeling this now. It's very plausible. That you know. If we had a metabolic healthy population job it would be much much less severe. And so you know thinking about nutrition and immune response malnourishment and hunger and food insecurity disparities very high rates and african-americans very likely related to nutrition in a major way the challenges to food systems and supply chains food waste and then metabolic health. You know these are all things that that you and I and others who study food at about that that food nutrition or a dire challenge and an incredible opportunity to improve the health of the population but Kobe. Nineteenth really liked taking a you know a knife and slice down dessert that was hiding immediate objects and so you know if five years from now we're back to where we were a couple years ago and there's no improvement in our food system quality of the food the way we get it to people in science that we have to address questions. I would be just devastated. I would be so disappointed that we haven't realized the opportunity here to fix the food system. So filming in the straight. What you're saying is that if you have chronic diseases and multiple chronic diseases that your risk of being hospitalized sixteen times higher that if you're metabolical unhealthy more likely to get sick because your immune system isn't working and then only twelve percent of us are actually healthy so that means if we actually had a healthy population that was eating a diet that created metabolic health instead of the opposite. Which we're doing now that this may just be a bad flu and we wouldn't have full hospitals in a society that shutdown and trillions of dollars in economic losses. All the evidence supports that you know. Of course we can't do a randomized trial and wave a wand and make everybody know about healthy to test that but all the evidence suggests that you know as you said. I'm based on national data. Only twelve percent of adults in this country are metabolic Healthy that's just taking things like waste. Your Conference Blood Glucose blood pressure cholesterol. It just measure those things. Only twelve percent of adults or metabolic be healthy and most of those people in their twenties right. You haven't yet really had a lifetime of for die in for lifestyle. And so the vast vast majority of American adults over forty are metabolic late unhealthy and given these associations you know as I mentioned even just one of these risk factors. You're doubling or tripling the risk of hospitals ation and you start piling up together In terms of risk of death is in so few debts especially under age. Seventy unless there's at least one of these other conditions. Yeah and so. It's very plausible. That if we had a very healthy population you know. Instead of a twelve percent medically healthy. We had twelve percent metabolic the unhealthy. What if nine of were metaphor healthy then in nineteen would be a far far less severe disease? Many many fewer hospitalizations fewer deaths. We wouldn't be shutting down the economy we wouldn't have. These hospitals overloaded our healthcare providers but insulted dangerous petit and working chefs on an and. What's really important here is that we can actually fix this now in real time. And so you know. It doesn't take years and years and years to reverse diabetes or to reverse hypertension or Reverse for metabolic health. Yeah does take years and years to change. Wait for many people but metabolic health. Whatever your weight. We can pretty rapidly improving. Edibala cal over months sometimes even shorter. But so yeah so the country. In addition to the things that we're doing social distancing and testing we should be launching a national campaign to improve the way we move and eat to improve our metabolic health

AP News Radio
33 million have sought US unemployment aid since virus hit
"More than thirty three million people have now applied for jobless benefits since the corona virus began largely shutting down America nearly three point two million filed for unemployment aid last week compare that to pre pandemic there now about sixteen times higher than what we saw and while they're still breathtakingly high PNC financial services gusto Shays says there is some good news they're down from around six million a few weeks ago and I've dropped for five straight weeks but the bad news will continue tomorrow with what's expected to be the worst monthly jobless report since modern record keeping started after World War two the unemployment rate is forecast to reach sixteen percent it hasn't been that high since the Great Depression and comes just two months after a fifty year low up three and a half percent Sager made Ghani Washington

AP News Radio
33 million have sought US unemployment aid since virus hit
"More than thirty three million people have now applied for jobless benefits since the corona virus began largely shutting down America nearly three point two million filed for unemployment aid last week compare that to pre pandemic there now about sixteen times higher than what we saw and while they're still breathtakingly high PNC financial services gusto Shays says there is some good news they're down from around six million a few weeks ago and I've dropped for five straight weeks but the bad news will continue tomorrow with what's expected to be the worst monthly jobless report since modern record keeping started after World War two the unemployment rate is forecast to reach sixteen percent it hasn't been that high since the Great Depression and comes just two months after a fifty year low up three and a half percent Sager made Ghani Washington

Crypto Voices
Alec Harris - Halo Privacy & Bitcoin
"Don't you just give a little bit more of our listeners? What Halo Does and how you get into it. Yes sir. So the actual experts at handling were all ruling. There is right. Now they're listening but Yeah I kinda got into it by accident. Which is how most of the good things have happened for me. But in two thousand eleven I introduced to Lance. Cto OF HALO. He was working on a different project. It was using one time pad cryptography and I had not heard of one time. It is. It's basically a symmetric cipher on. It's been around since World War One to nineteen sixteen time up until recently it. Was You know? Each party has a pad And one page of that. Pat Is used at a time as it's consumed it's thrown away. I never used so applying mathematical Sorta brute force attacks to it doesn't yield you any information About the plain text other than the kind of the maximum length of the message. And so. That's if it's implemented correctly it's unbreakable by kind of the computer attack but it's up to engage in the way that I really like it. As far as the description goes is very strong. Asymmetric photography is always a math problem rating. So you might have you know a to introduce Cypher and Died is like the equivalent of saying what day of the week will be on April fifteenth. A thousand years from now and do that in my head but a computer can tell you that because it's a math problem and what one time patters is like saying. What will the weather be like on April fifteen thousand now You could run every permutation of possible weather in one of those might actually correctly but you would never know because there's really no information to glean is just random one time pad isn't. I got really interested in a by working but lance a company called ruined And then that kind of transitioned into Halo. Which was an extension of that and an expansion of the suite of tools into voice? Text video file sharing and then a bunch of things in the background. Did I find to be very interesting? And they're kind of dark art says. Us Mesa where we hide or off. You skip the identity of the people in a communications network Either by kind giving false actors or Covering or office getting true identities and then severing links between the parties so that you can't really establish connections between people in the brief way steig riders. So if I was to send you attach to say we're having a surprise birthday party for by the way we'll shot up to Shane. Laura our good friends have introduced us. So we're saying you know how surprise birthday party for Shane While the information in that text is interesting right that that is actually worth protecting. We don't want to know A. And that's why cartography is important and then If we have someone who is? Let's say politically compromised communicating with someone in another country. They identity of that person is actually relevant so in a security posture. You would want to not only protect the what they're saying but also the identity that person and then if you go a step further with you have someone for instance who is in Mozell communicating with someone. Who IS IN MCLEAN VIRGINIA? While that just the link between those people is suspicious And so we. Would you offer that you would want to sever the link between the parties so that the contents of protected the identities protective? And then you don't establish kind of links allow you to unravel network and so that's that's what we do and the happy Discovery along the way how powerful bitcoin could be in these platforms is what kind of lead me. Into the CRYPTO currency world ultimately got US talking But I'll just pause there when we can talk about. Bitcoin obviously forever. But that's kind of what I've been up to and it's led me into being. You know someone who cares a lot about five AC- admittedly a newcomer to it. So you know before all this wasn't really on my radar And I try to have some empathy for people who maybe haven't had the same exposures in heaven and to invite them into these things as opposed to you know scold people. Who aren't you know of the same nine? It's goes without saying that. A lot of people in in bitcoin in Crypto in general. They're very amenable to privacy Very much care about. It's not even going into the specifics about if you use bitcoin versus Minero or if you coined or not I think just generally that ethos of-of privacy and having some protections online is is important to most people in the space so I think it'll be fascinating to dig deeper on that but I think from the RV that you gave. It should be clear that that you guys are definitely Definitely deepen the space definitely providing a lot of interesting

Outcomes Rocket
Leveraging Artificial Intelligence in Cardiology with David Chung, Head of Carewell Health
"It's a true privilege to have you here on the podcast. David thanks for joining. You're welcome so what else would you like to highlight to the listeners. And in particular sure I'd like to know more about why you get into the medical sector I really I really gunned medical sector with more like faith or I'm actually patient myself. You've got into it because I know in the world business you can create efficiency drive everything better and faster but one thing that hurts the most my mom always say health is wealth when you Harvard Heaven Heart attack. You have a need a disease. You don't have any choices at you or healthy. You cannot work unit a healthy Network you can approve table as more of everyone in have health and I wanted to bring health to everyone and as important as it pointed to me as if everyone because this family history not really would house genetically. While I think that's a great great call out David and health is wealth and I I would say even more right and and so when we discuss this topic when I had the chance to connect beforehand the difference between merely innovating versus marketing ad love to dive into that idea with the listeners. Here what are your thoughts on that. Why is it important? Boyce important because health off is actually look at us as Is everyone everyone should I could literally innovate anything or anybody could innovate in even a lot. The things is actually very successful patient population but how is it being disseminated to be able to deplore to everyone. That's the key ticket. For example you know. I could develop a very popular wherever devices to measure a lot of is the ultimate data. What happened this devices actually auto reached because it's too excessive or is the incorrectly market specifically concentration of chronic disease patients? Where while it could actually push every single patient to be used to predict AH prevent improve preventive healthcare? So that's important is try not to focus Problem with just for the chronic disease population focus focus in overall health population even outside at hostile and try market at a very affordable way is a challenge. Not only for me for every every other big giant companies industry too. I think it's a really great call out. You know inside if you innovate. That's not necessarily enough. You gotta be able to market canalization and make it available and so tell us a little bit of bounce The work that you do at CARE well and Intel L. Life-science the division there. What are you guys doing to market is better? We're doing artificial intelligence business so we all know. Aw patient data to create an artificial intelligence engine that can protect heart disease. Our example will be a typical patient will call nine one one when they have heart attack. What I have is I've artificial intelligence that can predict it your impending beating a diseases patients before he coronado want desperate? But how do we even market that right now. We have to be simple. Look at today's physicians. Right you have your servers yet this machine. Yeah that machine you have this platform that there's no enough for the lock and everything in the world. It got five six seven opening. The last I want to do is is to be another provider Provider to add another platform for you to look at but it might strategy of Marketing Shoe Polish. It connects with the most well-known system other and create platform is open ended. Were any solution can plug it in and just going to one place and and seamlessly get all the data where you want Monto of patient if you want a strategy has been doing this for treating well so make it simple. Simple is really elitist. Keep the time should be spent on patients. Not Looking data lock in a couple of websites forgot the password funds love. It adds a great call out and sounds like you guys have a quick way into the market. Give us an example. So have you guys. Launched or you still in development we are in what we develop. This technology was span around hundred. Fifty million dollars has a database about one hundred times more than the recent study study for Mayo Clinic and is highly accurate. Cmr's of the approve currently there. Are Anybody be able to compete with this. This but my challenge is dead active legion. How they launch to let the PUCK? Nobody's advanced technology. We are launching this. The first face aid North America United States and through telehealth platform. You're out that form. Why don't you just click the button here? Go a power you can have all your decisions positions within five seconds Patient's heart disease attack before it happens. So that's one way to do it. October second will be launching California so waiver very excited about that. Hopefully hopefully I could give a good speech WHOA about Well listen it's around the corner and you're saying one of the ways people will be able to get access if they're currently using your telehealth platform. What telehealth platform is that? I can say okay. Gotcha but it's a very popular. Well known to have platform at the partnership as a partnership. Got It Ganic. I think it's very well know is even Nastase using the same platform that stay NASA so's secure will say very cool while a great opportunity around the corner to access a and clinical decision support predictive analytics. It's is all very exciting. And and so these types of advances don't happen easily and so I love to hear from you David what you believe. Steve is maybe a setback. That you guys had in the development of this technology that that led to a big Aha and the reason why the platforms a strong as it is today time I would say time and resources is also very shortly. The the need for this is important that makes us to say a how we did a southwest problem so look a statistically America has about twenty million adult population should diagnose a heart diseases for me as a matter for me to spend a hundred million dollars for this. Doesn't Miss Three dollars. Persian it that if I could predict heart disease for three dollars now you could reduce our yard business reduce I could predict heart attack so you have planned surges Ah-ha aw for patients actually were diagnosed incorrectly. And then now they just misdiagnosis the reimbursement. Denial so the wrong is a drugs lawsuits. All those will be gone off so I think it makes sense so that was a moment that we had. Why don't we do this? Challenge this artificial intelligence artificial intelligences It is as simple as training childhood how to read a book you could feed thousand before the trial and to peace city Components one does look as clean and actor is medical data Structural Vice and second of all you also have to have Train to chop off a redesign. It's just gonNA feed this data. Will they call machine learning that. Resell you happen when I tell them Santarpio's bunch of books they not gonna a lot. The Sun rip in launching public in do positions Galore. Exactly so kind to write. You know you gotta continue doing this again a and again again every time you make an error my certified urologist Learning Brain Multiple iterations to have you as later under fifty million dollars and got it work for the cost of a microcosm healthcare is we. We need to fall from patients. aspirated arrayed that knows the heart diseases. Often patients No they had it Heart disease patients publishes. Yeah yeah no that's Fascinating work and so the data I. I'm sure a lot of people are wondering like where did you guys get all this data and Intel is a self self insured employer is that were a lot of it is coming from Lo- low. Data's actually coming from outside the front country so I do have wait. We're into a partnership with Intel. Actually Building Custom Air Could actually process artificial intelligence Without the Internet. So that's a strong arm about Intel. The latest Acknowledging Open Dino over platform showed if endurance is actually sixteen times faster. What that means is that you know? I'm thinking about your laptop. That has a gate Ram. I am sixty times that I don't even as similar so I can I can. It's been okay. I at the speed that allows us to make decision making a great lot faster more accurate and so so intel has a chip that will be able to be empathy. I guess used in a lot of these devices has correct. Yes and we are a very large manufacturer so example would be Active put a chip in Device with an ambulatory instantly is going to be diagnostics. NFC APPRO- and you do not eat is complete disconnect connected. You don't need to connect to anything. No Internet no network. You don't need. Aws You didn't even zero That can also be applied into Help us now. You can diagnose patients remote even in Africa is we do have project with a gauge invasion to fascinating fascinating work and the promises is pretty

Courtside with Seth Greenberg
Kardashians of College Hoops Edition
"Oh yeah it's courtside with Greenberg and Dockage Aka the world's greatest podcasts. And before you didn't I want to thank everybody. That is downloaded downloaded as everybody. That has listened To make this a very popular podcast. I don't want my phone to ring So we'll turn that off. But the coach whisper. Seth Greenburg along with me. Dan Dockage. We're going to get right into it. Seth North Carolina Duke unbelievable than North Carolina jumps right back and gets it done like you said last night kind of a tournament weekend for both teams actually all teams kind of those two teams. Yeah tell you what the that game was ridiculous and you know we we talk about fifty fifty the last hundred games exact. Same number of points Carolina coming in with a losing record by the way shout out Carolina fans. They showed up a game day. We do appreciate with that. It helps it makes it more exciting as a game when the game started. It was like Vintage Carolina basketball when it started a lot of us. Did it up and transition playing the head of the Defense Lisa attacking playing through the post to the offensive glass. They did everything they could do. The first step excluding defend carry but the ending was luck. I mean I don't know how they're great rivalries I don't know how many rivalries end in in the way that these do Carolina Games end because there was no way in the World Carolina. I should've lost that game. They missed free throws then they can stop the basketball so do came right down to two seconds later did then. They'd Bangle show off the free throw in and lose a little focus and trae Trey Jones makes that play. I mean the number of crazed plays if you tried to recreate that the odds of that happening again. We're probably the the same as the odds of these guys playing one hundred times being fifty fifty and scored the same amount of points. Would you agree. You'll God yeah. Yeah the the odds of both or none saying Yeah Trey Jones man. He was good and I don't think he's a closer but he was good at the end of that game. I I've said before based on hate North Carolina and Duke is great but based on Hate Louisville and Kentucky. Talk to me was always been my favorite rivalry because they're literally insane and they go after each other one coach coach at both places. And all that kind of thing. But I gotTa tell you based on Games based on endings. There's there's nothing like Duke in North Carolina. It's almost like the gods have said we deemed this to be crazy every time and I think you know. Jay said it always delivers and all. And he's right like not only does it always deliver. It always delivers in spectacular fashion. And let's be honest. trae Jones was great until he shot an Air Ball. And then you know what there he was well Picking it up laying it in and set do do you agree with this. Bad teams find a way to lose. Could that apply to Carolina in this game yet. Do I think that I think at the end of the game. I mean you find a way lose you step up to Lonzo. Makeup of free throws games over boom history. And you got guys stepping up and barely hitting the rim. You gotta find a way to just slow down the ball. Aw a little bit so that you can't just come flying down and I think in the back of their minds I mean like you and I've had teams that have been like that. It hasn't happened a lot of Carolina there has to be self doubt that energy that enthusiasm they played with. We've got a thirteen or so instead of just finishing it off like a good team. A team that expects to Windows there was some self doubt. And there was some place that you kinda head-scratching plays and just you know like look. The end of the game run a bulletin. Your hands is be strongly to basketball. Limited one shot contain the ball transition so that you can force an extra passing stay in front and then when you get filed step up to the line and knock get down just you know have some jewels and step up in line and knock it down and look duke made place you gotTa give them credit they do whatever and carry. I've been very carry. It goes out. I I said three things. You GotTa do to beat Duke. You gotta play ahead of the defense and scoring transition baskets. You gotta be strong with the basketball not commit live while turnovers rovers and you gotta make Vernon Carey defend and get him out of the game. They got him at a game on charges. They did those things but they didn't do enough things to finish off the game. Same great atmosphere. Great Energy Co. Anthony was good not great trae. Jones was terrific down the stretch and made plays now. Let's head to the Florida state game. What did you see last night from Duke? You said boy. I'll tell you one thing. They validated that win or two lab still concerned. I'm not totally an undue. I think I may not do. I think they validated that win. Big Time I think that their defense was terrific. I I put this out on twitter and I believe it. I thought their transition defense is the best. I've seen they get back and they they make shoot over at the worst. They influence you by being in the right position to take charge. I when you'RE GONNA make a list and we'll all do this at some point probably sooner than later but if you're GONNA make a list of teams that can win a national championship. I've got duke up there with anybody I really do. I gotta go into Vernon Carey more. You said that last night on television I totally agreed. Earning Carey can never be forgotten in his offense caches plan while he's playing lights out there getting decent production for mothers mothers. I I'm I'm all in on this Duke. I love their defense set. There was. It's kind of like this beginning it here when we would talk or I I remember doing duke. Two Games In the garden you you know love their old school keeping on a side defense. Maybe that went away for a while but I like it now I do i. I liked it last night and I like Florida state. Let's be honest. You talked about the world being maker Miss Tie Game Florida state at some wide open threes from the corner each side and one air balled the other. They miss badly. So I'm not down on a Florida state. I just think duke validated. Everything happening in Chapel Hill. You I thought Duke was good. Here's my thing I mean. Far To say it's hard to play against because they do turn you over and they spent them up a little bit and everyone said well to back. The Back Game Duke was going to be tired so different turned game. You play Thursday play Saturday you know. That's no different than what happened with you. Played in Chapel Hill eight miles away and you come home and you play a home game. That's that's easier than playing almost as easy as playing an NCAA tournament weekend but hear my concerns with Duke. I think that number one trade joe shot the ball fifteen or sixteen times burned. Kerr shot at five times. They gotTA figure out a way when people get up up and underneath them they gotta figure out a way to run offense and get the ball where they want it not stick it in trade Jones's hand coming off a high ball screen because I don't think so at at the end game I'm not sure and he did it against Carolina. He's a great finisher at the rim or a great decision maker coming off of that stuff. So that's a little bit of a concern. I love their defense or defence is terrific because it starts with trae Jones on the ball and then they were athletic enough with born and Stanley to get in passing lanes and and the defensive transition was great turning it over. I mean you know they got sped up and turn it over twenty one times. They gave up seventeen offensive rebounds and forget Florida State. I think Florida state upside is as good as Eddie team in the country. I really do believe that I think because every night there's a different guy who can beat you like last night. Trump forest was great. It could be Patrick Williams. It could be Denver sell. It could be osborn. It could be any number of guys you know could be Walker that could beat you on any given night. I just don't Oh in a possession game in the tournament. How does a Duke has to grind out and get a basket? Who Do you give the ball to? And how do you get him the ball all the same problem that I said last year with design Williamson team like they never figured out a way all right. This is how we're GONNA GET ZAINAB ALL. This is where he wants to get the ball so to me if they can overwhelm you and I call. Bully ball like Duke Duke as at their very best. They've overwhelmed people with their defense. And then they basically got a transitional made plays you think they're good enough if it gets to a grinded out game to win a game against life type opponent. Yeah I do I look. Here's what I believe. I believe even Alex O'CONNELL and enjoy Baker going to influence. The Gay is not because they can make shots you know and I I think they'll have influence. I do. Who says I think there's a toughness air with this group? I think Duke has instilled Gin. They're not GonNa Win National Championship every year. But it's a little bit like Tom. Izzo Bet against Michigan State. Even though they're out of the polls me yeah. I'm sure you are but don't be surprised when they make a run. Actually you can put a lot of ways you can put Syracuse in maybe this year but over the years but yeah. I'm not betting against Duke. I think Duke has you said they're flawed. We talk about every team being flawed. But yes I I can see them making a run as deep as you know winning a national champion I can also see them losing because of the things that you just said but man i. I feel like this team pretty much for the entire year has had the toughness culture of Duke Basketball and that's the thing that has served them best over the years I I feel that an abundance of talent I get all that but this team seems to have a toughness about him. That's terrific.

THE NEWS with Anthony Davis
NBA legend Kobe Bryant killed in helicopter crash.
"Also showed the Vermont senator leading? He's Democratic rivals NBA Legend Kobe Bryant. He's teenage daughter and three others were killed in a helicopter crash in southern California -fornia yesterday the craft went down in calabasas about thirty miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles authorities confirmed that that five people died with no survivors Bryant. An old time basketball great. Who spent his entire twenty year career with the Los Angeles Lakers was among the victims? Brian's thirteen year old daughter Gianna was also killed word of Bryant sudden death at the age of forty one rocketed around the sports and entertainment world's with many taking to social media to register their shock disbelief and dismay. Bryant's aunt's retired in two thousand sixteen as the third leading scorer in NBA history. Finishing two decades the Lakers as a prolific scorer with a a sublime all around game and a relentless competitive ethic Bryant had one of the greatest careers in recent. NBA History and became one of the Games most popular players as the face of the sixteen time NBA champion Lakers Franchise Federal Aviation Administration spokesman. Alan Nitsa said the downs chopper was a Sikorsky S. Seventy six the National Transportation Safety Board sent a go team of investigators to the site the NTSB be typically issues a preliminary report within about ten days that will give a rough summary of what investigators have learned

Joe Pags
Autopsy: Man Fatally Shot by State Troopers Struck 16 Times
"The Dallas County medical examiner reporters revealing a man shot by DPS was shot sixteen times he was shot last August after DPS stopped him for a traffic violation trooper said he was armed at the time of the incident and shot first however the video of the shooting has not been released The Dallas Morning News received his autopsy on Friday and that revealed he was shot five times in the front four times in the back four times in the torso among other bullets found in this fight

CBS Sports Radio
Packers' win over Vikings
"Bit about the Packers and Vikings the game last night in a victory for Green Bay as they win the NFC north a six time that our Rogers is quarterback the Green Bay Packers to an NFC north title there twelve win team but they're not getting the respect that they deserve or is it a case of you look at those twelve victories bogus and say I know they're twelve wins but you know are they really that good of a football team you are a ball bill Parcells used to say you are what your record is so the Packers of one twelve of the fifteen games that they play this year they've got one to go I mean that's pretty darn good when you think about it and they've got an opportunity to be the number one seed in the NFC they win and the forty Niners lose our they're gonna be the number one seed so all in all all avenues will go through Lambeau field for the Green Bay Packers yeah which is not where you want to play in January slash you know we're December slash January but I just I don't be it's fits all that both the this game last late leaves us wondering about both of these teams right what what how good actually the Vikings and how good actually are the Packers and I I think the easy thing is to say man the Packers play defense last night and they ran the football if they can do those two things consistently here the next couple weeks they're gonna be a tough out but I I I still in stock on Aaron Rodgers because I went into that game paying close attention to him I'd read it I guess it was last week an article about how there been a developing split between Rogers early and late in games and the Packers are a team that kind of script to be how they're gonna start a game they have the feel they can have their first like ten or fifteen please planned out and once Rogers huddled recently had a left that kind of scripted portion the game plan all of their production had kind of dwindle it'll be like they were they were scoring points early in the struggling late I want to see the pattern continued last night and he never really got it going last night no and the three turnovers early and you want the point we made almost the beginning of the show back in our number one and you know I I I want to believe in them I will especially playing at home in limbo but I I know if if he can't throw it and they can't catch it and they can't score points that way I I can't trust the defense enough against San Francisco or New Orleans we're Seattle your ticket to get them through a game anywhere so they've got to me ask you this is our Jones good enough to carry the team offense I don't think so you don't think so I I think young with what you saw last night a hundred fifty four yards on the ground he's had an unbelievable year the albums have been an issue right but you know catching it and run it out of the backfield Jones has been an absolute start for the Packers could not be less about Rogers could be less about his brilliance of a signal caller and more about running the football winning at the point of attack in a winning time of possession getting after the quarterback they can certainly do that defensively but offense of Lee can be less about Rogers pulling a miracle out of his rear end and could it be more about Aaron Jones basically wrote it down your throat hit list yeah I get it its it's there's two distinct ways to look at it that this is that this is good news that they actually have a complimentary Aaron Rodgers throwing the field for a long time they haven't had a good game and he was able to throw it have success throwing it despite no running game I just I still ng feel that they need that passing attack to be at maybe dynamic is asking too much based on the weapons around with us and who we throw the football to but I still think they just need more than they've gotten over the last month or so that's fair and and listen I I don't I don't necessarily disagree with that especially in this kind of a league especially the fact that neither you or I can really trust that Packers defense even after what we witnessed last night but let me ask the question this way is it a case of not having the weapons around him or is it a case of a regression in the quarterback I don't think if any regression is there I don't think that it's anything more than that and kind of the normal regression you've had you'd have to be at this point of your career I don't I don't think he's falling off more like in any significant way he just wanted me because he is always you throw devante Adams right Jimmy Graham is a what it once was but should be great still good target yeah all right and although it it sound I don't know if it's Jimmy Graham I don't know if its defenses I don't know if it's a Rogers thing but but grant as we get targets anymore no it is not getting the target but it but you would we would both agree that Jimmy Graham can if the boss coming his way Jimmy grams gonna make the reception I like Geronimo Alison I like don't think Rogers does no I I I but that's what that's also a problem to where you do limit yourself offense of Lee if you're targeting one player sixteen times right over the course of the game I mean that's where you could look at the regression maybe not the physical regression but maybe it's the mental regression of Allah Rogers where he is too too much of a lean toward one player and maybe that's where it's hurting the offense where he's not spreading the football around enough to where he's building up the confidence of young players rather because while did our Rogers bogus she was never got it yeah I looked at the library not being totally a product of guys around him I don't I Rogers guy that you know you me and it Palade a chap could be the wide receivers and our Rogers of find a way to get the football you're still less and less of that as he

AP News Radio
Capitals beat Bruins in showdown between NHL's top two teams
"TJ Oshie scored two second period goals less than four minutes apart while John Carlson had a goal and an assist to lead the capital's two or three to win over the Bruins after David Pasternak gave the Bruins the lead midway through the first she tallied his twelfth and thirteenth goals of the season to give the capitals to lead Sharon Crowley tied the game early in the third before Carlson's goal was the eventual game winner Carlson and the caps have now beaten the Bruins sixteen times in the last seventeen games confidence is a big carelessly again now I have some good mo Jo against them and now maybe they feel same obviously they're a totally capable yeah team Braden Holtby made thirty saves in the wind Craig heist Washington

Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!
Zach Galifianakis regrets asking Obama this 'Between Two Ferns' question
"So Zach Galifianakis is a comedian and movie star but he may be most well known for his internet series between two ferns in it he interviews real celebrities and says really mean things to them and somehow the celebrities do not van arrange to have him killed between two ferns is now a movie it's premiering on Netflix and Zach Galifianakis joins us now said welcome to wait wait don't tell me thank you. so. I want the movie which is whole areas and hate you and has a bunch of between two ferns interviews and celebrities actually want to be on your show right they want to come and do this. I don't know I mean I don't really know why they would want to do it it's not a prank show I'm not trying to prank anyone in if I understand correctly you tell the celebrities their job is basically to sit there and just well I tell that they'll have to be funny they just have to sit there. and be weird it out yeah. and we will give them insults to give back to me but sometimes in the moment we just get talking and the insults kind of flight naturally yes I've cut an interview short the. the person and want to reveal it was that the person was acting so well I thought they were good at just choke me out this parking lot really so that somebody was acting so is so upset your character that you honestly thought that this was going that badly. and I kind of said we're done to the director and he said no we don't have anything and I said well I want my life. well you can you can say Florence Henderson. it turned out that person just with that great of an actor I was in school by themselves but I don't try I'm not trying to hurt anybody's feelings I just am trying to cause weirdness yeah this but it is amazing for example you did one with president Obama oh yeah forgot about that yeah I. and and so you're you're gonna go to the White House when they were rolling out the obamacare obamacare thing and they were trying to get around two things the youth might watch. and so when you got a chance to go do this bit with president Obama what did you say to yourself I I just couldn't believe what you know even when we got to the White House I was I just thought they were good David was never going to happen and I was nervous and actually I sat on some historic furniture that was roped off. at the White House white really different. with that you know like the rope tight between the you know the the yeah it was it next to the war room and or was the war room or the map room and. I didn't know that there was a ropes velvet rope situation and I had sat down on one of the seats. and then the security guard blew his whistle of my ear yes and then I I was so nervous I did it again. Jack this is Roxanne Roberts did the president have any sense of or do any of the celebrities you interview had any sense when you start what you're gonna ask or is it all news to them as you asking about my proposition I don't give them the questions ahead of time with president Obama though because of limited time that one was more scripted than the others but he just kind of ran with it and a lot of that is improper really really so I in your interview present a mama you sit with the then present United States and you say if I remember correctly how does it feel to be the last black president. yeah and you said that to him yeah and I legitimately thought he was about to kill you. what he doesn't have to kill me has people around. that was one of the questions where I ask. his speech writer have I pointed to that question before we take that and I said has he seen that question. and the speech writer looked at me and said yeah I think so it just walked off like of course he has. so when you were sitting there with the president and and you didn't know that he knew you were about to ask that. and you did it anyway. I'm playing an idiot so when you're playing in areas you kind of get away with things because. part of the the comedy for this thing is how not to be as a human being right yes so I don't know he just took it in stride and his response I think was made up yeah well what was given your member his response. he just he I I can't remember exactly what it says which is weird because I watch it sixteen times a day yeah I would too I have I have to say in a scene baskets which is great as well you often play people who are terrible people. they're just they're not self aware they're not nearly as talented as they think they are they're mean to people that's correct so when will you be running for president.