27 Burst results for "Sokha"

Dead Celebrity
"sokha" Discussed on Dead Celebrity
"We have an unsophisticated family. Someone who got famous young family. The didn't have much of a professional life before this now all of a sudden the thrown into this world of high powered lawyers and agents and everyone even the the the sophistication gap is so drastic that really takes a special advisor to sit there and look at that and be like all right. I i can bridge this massive gap to this person because that's really what needs to happen for like a proper relationship that work the best for her to happen exactly and i love your term. The sophistication gap 'cause. I do think that that happens. And i think it happens when people get money suddenly and i think if we went back to o. Eight or nine joke. That estate planning is full of villains. But i actually think britney's parents probably aren't villains in this. I think that they're human beings that were placed in a very tough situation. A lot of options were thrown at them and they went for the one that they felt made the most sense. But probably as we think about it with twenty twenty hindsight. I'm not sure it was probably what we would want to have happen. And so the takeaway ultimately is you know. Think through the options with clients and make sure your clients have documents and that they know who the backups in those documents are do they really want uncle so and so or cousin so and so being their trustee or is a corporate trustee a good pick and that the powers you give them in the power of attorney document that you really think through those different powers from gifting to paying bills to being able to invest. Because that's really where we provide value to clients and then i don't think it's a bad thing to ever explain. Fees to clients people pay us fees. It's always good for them to have that transparency. So i mean. I think david as we sort of look at this and and i hope everything works out for brittany. I think you're gonna see in california for the next few years. This tug of war coming from the free brittany campaign and the need for transparency with conservative ships to using conservatives in the most appropriate way possible. And this'll be interesting to see how how it plays out. And if we're able to really provide the right protections for people i'm really interested to see if the frequently campaign is you know it sounds silly. But it's a very powerful actor in this sokha can't be under understated. It is another party effectively in this thing that is forcing the hands of a lot of people. But that's also built around sort of the cult of personality of a celebrity right and so once if you know hopefully britney gets free from this his on her own. I'm interested to see whether you know there are still is this impetus for change. Once you know the free brittany movement. I imagine they were going to move on. You know..

Medicina em Debate
"sokha" Discussed on Medicina em Debate
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Revision Path
"sokha" Discussed on Revision Path
"People were just really nice and accommodating one thing. I'll always say that the japanese people actually wouldn't be right to generalize. But everyone. I met while i was there was very accommodating and berry polite very helpful in a way that was so different from anything else. I'd experienced like people would go out of their way to help you in any way possible. So it was just so surprising to kind of be met with that politeness and be met with that type of sincerety and people's actions and the communities i lived in i lived in a small town that was kind of near kyoto soccer and it was a really small town but community wise. The people i met there were just so like. They brought me into their community in ways that i initially wasn't expecting so i'm christian so i went to church even while i was there and the church community in particular i guess because even adopted me like they were just so accommodating and so helpful and so nice and really went out of the way to include me because it is easy to feel alone into feel like. You don't really have anyone especially in a small town way out. In japan super far from tanzania but the community in particular were just. They went out of the way to really make you feel like you were at home with people that cared about you. That was something that i really grew to appreciate during a year. They're just getting to know different people and learn more about them and feel accepted by them. And that's something. I miss as well for my time there. We're cool. i'm curious what's one thing that you really kind of like. Remember that sticks out aside from the antidote that you just mentioned but like is there like a food or a piece of culture or art or anything they really sticks out to you when you think back to that time i would say trace my memories of the very many things that stick out i would say a couple couple so for one just to how much you could do which sounds weird but okay where i live now so cheesy the specific city i live in. It's great. there's a lot to do but in comparison to japan obviously not in any way comparable though living in japan. Just really situation where you can be like. Oh this weekend. I'm going to go to kyoto. And i'm gonna do xyz. I remember. i went to cuba to renew years. Like on my own for just a couple of days exploring different temples and stuff like that to celebrate new year's or next week and you can be like. Oh i wanna go to all sokha. And i wanna go to. Us jay and go on all these roller coasters. So it was such a new experience in terms of being able to do anything and everything whenever you wanted and that really allowed you to have a wealth of experience in such a short amount of time so that's one thing that i remember having the opportunity to have different experiences and the second i would say the food. I loved the japanese food a lot. I would say my favorite sushi. Those number one i had sushi japan and it amazing and then a couple of others that i really grew to love takasaki. Oh octopus it is. Yeah think i'd like it at first. But i i absolutely loved it also economic with my stu. I ate that a lot. So i really grew to like the food as well. It didn't pick up any recipes. Sadly i wish i could. I would have been making them here but yeah so the food and also just the opportunity to have different experiences. Where the two things that stat out for me very cool so you finish up teaching english in japan. Did you then go back to leeds or did you go back to tanzania. After done in japan. I finished end of twenty nineteen and actually came back to tc so the plan was to go back to school. Did my masters at the time. It was because as much as they liked teaching in japan teaching. Something i wanted to do as a career forever. I always knew that. I wanted to go back to design so i thought the best way of doing that would be to go back to school at the time. That's kind of my thought process. Go back to school get another degree. And then you'll become a designer. That was kind of my plan coming home. So that's kind of what. I immediately worked towards applying for different schools. Eventually i went to humber college. Okay and you mention just now that you just finished up there. Can you tell me about you. Know what you're studying and kind of how the program was yeah. It was a short program so technically year more under a year. And i was studying user experience design so it was a pretty comprehensive course in the sense that we got to learn by research methods which is great but also practice actual visual design skills and visual design processes so it was good combination of both aspects. The i the part of it and i would say that the professors we had and the projects that we did really helped me kind of grow and refine my skills as a designer. So when i came from japan i was applying to school. But in the meantime also working. So i had these jobs as a graphic designer and as a junior art director at different companies. So even before i started my course had designed experience from these different jobs that i have but actually taking the course helped me really develop the research aspect of my skills. So how do you conduct you research. How you become an empathetic designer. Which is something that people talk about a lot so it was a really good course in terms of developing those kinds of skills and the great thing is that we also had an internship that we're supposed to do after you're done with your studies so right now. I'm completing my internship. I'm done with my classes. But i'm finishing up. The actual design internship that doing. And then i'll technically be completely done with school but overall it was really great course not that long anais to learn logs. Everyone i studied with. I think helped me learn and grow in some way as well or some really dope projects one of which i'm working to add to my portfolio right now but yeah. It was overall really great experience. How do you think your prior experiences. Like both teaching and japan as well as studying in the uk. How do you think those things helped you out as you were studying at humber. I think they kind of helped me become quick to adapt in terms of working with different people so our course had a lot of group. Assignments most Assignments group assignments. We're working on projects with different people. And that was really easy for me because i during my time at leeds and in japan to certain extent i was working as a lot of different people from a lot of backgrounds. And i would say for anyone in that kind of environment. You have to be patient and you have to be flexible and a lot of different ways. And i felt like doing this course. It was a lot easier for me. Because i did have that experience like even terms of times on so a lot of the people that i was working with. The other students on my chorus lived in canada. Canada is seven hours behind my time. I think so even in terms of adopting to working in the evening or late at night my time which was easier for them because that was early in the day for them was just something. I adapted to as well so i think it just made me a lot. Flexible like in terms of just working with leverage. That was working with and bring out each other's strengths and just kinda working collaboratively to achieve the same outcome just made it a lot easier for me. Nice overall. what appeals to you about. Us.

Revision Path
"sokha" Discussed on Revision Path
"I was there initially. I knew it would be very new and very different from anything else. I'd before so putting aside the language barrier just adapting to a whole different culture. But it wasn't as hard as i thought it would be. I wouldn't even say it was hard as all like right from. When i first arrived i stayed with a friend for a couple of days and then eventually kind of started organization for my job and everything but it felt so smooth and easy and everyone. I'd met both like international on my program but also local people were just really nice and accommodating one thing. I'll always say that the japanese people actually wouldn't be right to generalize. But everyone. I met while i was there was very accommodating and berry polite very helpful in a way that was so different from anything else. I'd experienced like people would go out of their way to help you in any way possible. So it was just so surprising to kind of be met with that politeness and be met with that type of sincerety and people's actions and the communities i lived in i lived in a small town that was kind of near kyoto soccer and it was a really small town but community wise. The people i met there were just so like. They brought me into their community in ways that i initially wasn't expecting so i'm christian so i went to church even while i was there and the church community in particular i guess because even adopted me like they were just so accommodating and so helpful and so nice and really went out of the way to include me because it is easy to feel alone into feel like. You don't really have anyone especially in a small town way out. In japan super far from tanzania but the community in particular were just. They went out of the way to really make you feel like you were at home with people that cared about you. That was something that i really grew to appreciate during a year. They're just getting to know different people and learn more about them and feel accepted by them. And that's something. I miss as well for my time there. We're cool. i'm curious what's one thing that you really kind of like. Remember that sticks out aside from the antidote that you just mentioned but like is there like a food or a piece of culture or art or anything they really sticks out to you when you think back to that time i would say trace my memories of the very many things that stick out i would say a couple couple so for one just to how much you could do which sounds weird but okay where i live now so cheesy the specific city i live in. It's great. there's a lot to do but in comparison to japan obviously not in any way comparable though living in japan. Just really situation where you can be like. Oh this weekend. I'm going to go to kyoto. And i'm gonna do xyz. I remember. i went to cuba to renew years. Like on my own for just a couple of days exploring different temples and stuff like that to celebrate new year's or next week and you can be like. Oh i wanna go to all sokha. And i wanna go to. Us jay and go on all these roller coasters. So it was such a new experience in terms of being able to do anything and everything whenever you wanted and that really allowed you to have a wealth of experience in such a short amount of time so that's one thing that i remember having the opportunity to have different experiences and the second i would say the food. I loved the japanese food a lot. I would say my favorite sushi. Those number one i had sushi japan and it amazing and then a couple of others that i really grew to love takasaki. Oh octopus it is. Yeah think i'd like it at first. But i i absolutely loved it also economic with my stu. I ate that a lot. So i really grew to like the food as well. It didn't pick up any recipes. Sadly i wish i could. I would have been making them here but yeah so the food and also just the opportunity to have different experiences. Where the two things that stat out for me very cool so you finish up teaching english in japan. Did you then go back to leeds or did you go back to tanzania. After done in japan. I finished end of twenty nineteen and actually came back to tc so the plan was to go back to school. Did my masters at the time. It was because as much as they liked teaching in japan teaching. Something i wanted to do as a career forever. I always knew that. I wanted to go back to design so i thought the best way of doing that would be to go back to school at the time. That's kind of my thought process. Go back to school get another degree. And then you'll become a designer. That was kind of my plan coming home. So that's kind of what. I immediately worked towards applying for different schools. Eventually i went to humber college. Okay and you mention just now that you just finished up there. Can you tell me about you. Know what you're studying and kind of how the program was yeah. It was a short program so technically year more under a year. And i was studying user experience design so it was a pretty comprehensive course in the sense that we got to learn by research methods which is great but also practice actual visual design skills and visual design processes so it was good combination of both aspects. The i the part of it and i would say that the professors we had and the projects that we did really helped me kind of grow and refine my skills as a designer. So when i came from japan i was applying to school. But in the meantime also working. So i had these jobs as a graphic designer and as a junior art director at different companies. So even before i started my course had designed experience from these different jobs that i have but actually taking the course helped me really develop the research aspect of my skills. So how do you conduct you research. How you become an empathetic designer. Which is something that people talk about a lot so it was a really good course in terms of developing those kinds of skills and the great thing is that we also had an internship that we're supposed to do after you're done with your studies so right now. I'm completing my internship. I'm done with my classes. But i'm finishing up. The actual design internship that doing. And then i'll technically be completely done with school but overall it was really great course not that long anais to learn logs. Everyone i studied with. I think helped me learn and grow in some way as well or some really dope projects one of which i'm working to add to my portfolio right now but yeah. It was overall really great experience. How do you think your prior experiences. Like both teaching and japan as well as studying in the uk. How do you think those things helped you out as you were studying at humber. I think they kind of helped me become quick to adapt in terms of working with different people so our course had a lot of group. Assignments most Assignments group assignments. We're working on projects with different people. And that was really easy for me because i during my time at leeds and in japan to certain extent i was working as a lot of different people from a lot of backgrounds. And i would say for anyone in that kind of environment. You have to be patient and you have to be flexible and a lot of different ways. And i felt like doing this course. It was a lot easier for me. Because i did have that experience like even terms of times on so a lot of the people that i was working with. The other students on my chorus lived in canada. Canada is seven hours behind my time. I think so even in terms of adopting to working in the evening or late at night my time which was easier for them because that was early in the day for them was just something. I adapted to as well so i think it just made me a lot. Flexible like in terms of just working with leverage. That was working with and bring out each other's strengths and just kinda working collaboratively to achieve the same outcome just made it a lot easier for me. Nice overall. what appeals to you about. Us.

Revision Path
"sokha" Discussed on Revision Path
"To most japan number one and probably will remain number one forever. It was just such a different experience before going. Japan wasn't my list of places i wanted to visit. I met a couple of japanese students all leads so exchange students and gotten to know them really well and become good friends so the whole experience for me was okay for one thing. I could reconnect those people in link up with them again but oh psych would explore this country that i've been wanting to visit for such a long time and for me for the entire year. I was there initially. I knew it would be very new and very different from anything else. I'd before so putting aside the language barrier just adapting to a whole different culture. But it wasn't as hard as i thought it would be. I wouldn't even say it was hard as all like right from. When i first arrived i stayed with a friend for a couple of days and then eventually kind of started organization for my job and everything but it felt so smooth and easy and everyone. I'd met both like international on my program but also local people were just really nice and accommodating one thing. I'll always say that the japanese people actually wouldn't be right to generalize. But everyone. I met while i was there was very accommodating and berry polite very helpful in a way that was so different from anything else. I'd experienced like people would go out of their way to help you in any way possible. So it was just so surprising to kind of be met with that politeness and be met with that type of sincerety and people's actions and the communities i lived in i lived in a small town that was kind of near kyoto soccer and it was a really small town but community wise. The people i met there were just so like. They brought me into their community in ways that i initially wasn't expecting so i'm christian so i went to church even while i was there and the church community in particular i guess because even adopted me like they were just so accommodating and so helpful and so nice and really went out of the way to include me because it is easy to feel alone into feel like. You don't really have anyone especially in a small town way out. In japan super far from tanzania but the community in particular were just. They went out of the way to really make you feel like you were at home with people that cared about you. That was something that i really grew to appreciate during a year. They're just getting to know different people and learn more about them and feel accepted by them. And that's something. I miss as well for my time there. We're cool. i'm curious what's one thing that you really kind of like. Remember that sticks out aside from the antidote that you just mentioned but like is there like a food or a piece of culture or art or anything they really sticks out to you when you think back to that time i would say trace my memories of the very many things that stick out i would say a couple couple so for one just to how much you could do which sounds weird but okay where i live now so cheesy the specific city i live in. It's great. there's a lot to do but in comparison to japan obviously not in any way comparable though living in japan. Just really situation where you can be like. Oh this weekend. I'm going to go to kyoto. And i'm gonna do xyz. I remember. i went to cuba to renew years. Like on my own for just a couple of days exploring different temples and stuff like that to celebrate new year's or next week and you can be like. Oh i wanna go to all sokha. And i wanna go to. Us jay and go on all these roller coasters. So it was such a new experience in terms of being able to do anything and everything whenever you wanted and that really allowed you to have a wealth of experience in such a short amount of time so that's one thing that i remember having the opportunity to have different experiences and the second i would say the food. I loved the japanese food a lot. I would say my favorite sushi. Those number one i had sushi japan and it amazing and then a couple of others that i really grew to love takasaki. Oh octopus it is. Yeah think i'd like it at first. But i i absolutely loved it also economic with my stu. I ate that a lot. So i really grew to like the food as well. It didn't pick up any recipes. Sadly i wish i could. I would have been making them here but yeah so the food and also just the opportunity to have different experiences. Where the two things that stat out for me very cool so you finish up teaching english in japan. Did you then go back to leeds or did you go back to tanzania. After done in japan. I finished end of twenty nineteen and actually came back to tc so the plan was to go back to school. Did my masters at the time. It was because as much as they liked teaching in japan teaching. Something i wanted to do as a career forever. I always knew that. I wanted to go back to design so i thought the best way of doing that would be to go back to school at the time. That's kind of my thought process. Go back to school get another degree. And then you'll become a designer. That was kind of my plan coming home. So that's kind of what. I immediately worked towards applying for different schools. Eventually i went to humber college. Okay and you mention just now that you just finished up there. Can you tell me about you. Know what you're studying and kind of how the program was yeah. It was a short program so technically year more under a year. And i was studying user experience design so it was a pretty comprehensive course in the sense that we got to learn by research methods which is great but also practice actual visual design skills and visual design processes so it was good combination of both aspects. The i the part of it and i would say that the professors we had and the projects that we did really helped me kind of grow and refine my skills as a designer. So when i came from japan i was applying to school. But in the meantime also working. So i had these jobs as a graphic designer and as a junior art director at different companies. So even before i started my course had designed experience from these different jobs that i have but actually taking the course helped me really develop the research aspect of my skills. So how do you conduct you research. How you become an empathetic designer. Which is something that people talk about a lot so it was a really good course in terms of developing those kinds of skills and the great thing is that we also had an internship that we're supposed to do after you're done with your studies so right now. I'm completing my internship. I'm done with my classes. But i'm finishing up. The actual design internship that doing. And then i'll technically be completely done with school but overall it was really great course not that long anais to learn logs. Everyone i studied with. I think helped me learn and grow in some way as well or some really dope projects one of which i'm working to add to my portfolio right now but yeah. It was overall really great experience. How do you think your prior experiences. Like both teaching and japan as well as studying in the uk. How do you think those things helped you out as you were studying at humber. I think they kind of helped me become quick to adapt in terms of working with different people so our course had a lot of group. Assignments most Assignments group assignments. We're working on projects with different people. And that was really easy for me because i during my time at leeds and in japan to certain extent i was working as a lot of different people from a lot of backgrounds. And i would say for anyone in that kind of environment. You have to be patient and you have to be flexible and a lot of different ways. And i felt like doing this course. It was a lot easier for me. Because i did have that experience like even terms of times on so a lot of the people that i was working with. The other students on my chorus lived in canada. Canada is seven hours behind my time. I think so even in terms of adopting to working in the evening or late at night my time which was easier for them because that was early in the day for them was just something. I adapted to as well so i think it just made me a lot. Flexible like in terms of just working with leverage. That was working with and bring out each other's strengths and just kinda working collaboratively to achieve the same outcome just made it a lot easier for me. Nice overall. what appeals to you about. Us.

Post Show Recaps
"sokha" Discussed on Post Show Recaps
"Get the best of dodgers shikata shar but decides that. I don't also say we can move on but yeah that's pretty much it just able to beat them in like one day trading Things name but his is fat. Like being guy. New fat is like it's not as impressive as beating someone else. I don't know fashions not brandon would even consider that doubt to like eat a guy named fat like a butler at the school. Maybe that's why he's the butler like since he's not the master. He's very much the bumper like some other student level to Above soccer us like not literally fetching glasses of water and is like actually training would would be here but anyway the next thing we get is uncle. Iro shops. He doesn't even go onto his hands. He goes on his knuckles to new the push ups while I would like to admit something on the jess. I tried to do this this morning. No easy to your knuckles. Quite trade. you land on your knuckles after clapping. not fun. We're not idle. Could even come close to this. I didn't even. I thought part of me thought about six. Should i attempt this. And i was no. You know what it's not even worth it. Will this monkey bars at atlanta playground. Next to me. And i did consider trying to do like an upside down. Stood up to see how hard that would be. But then there's a child at ground weird to at eight in the morning go hang on. The monkey bars ended up next year. Child so automated that one could have done it anyway so it would have been even more embarrassingly hung off the side and then like tried and then had to ask the mob like hey come help me like online and just just just just how here then. I don't really get why he's actually clapping. Like maybe it definitely makes it harder Pretend like he just leaves himself open so like getting caught because a word and light he happens. Start doing his crazy clapping in time. There's a chance that like horns season a little bit earlier. Yeah i dunno. I thought this is a bit of a strategic air from That's a good point. I didn't realize how the clapping pushups could. Draw the attention of the guard earlier. No you're right. That is like a tactical error from ira. That's a weird way to like. Play it off too. Who does that person. Just like. Class like random. I don't think definitely a real like crazy person. Like vibe kind of thing. I don't i don't i don't know about that word that his true. I've never seen someone clubbing. So maybe maybe like ever trying to get someone office of how on top of things. I am absurd clapping randomly so then yongle iro is seen as like some crazy dude. He goes back to exercise so we go back to team. Avatar team avatar is staring at the map without soccer. They've got nowhere where they're going off actually calls noodle brains noodle arts making it new breads and qatar is really proud joke than she has. Her joke is if you miss sokha so much. Why don't you marry him. Probably like the worst. Most juvenile joke ever washes proud of it but they This is not funny I don't get why she was so proud of. I love how she grins. She looks like so happy about herself. She looks like very proud Yeah not not a great job abercynon. Do you ever go to joke that you like to tell man. I wish i could use it right now and be really funny But i can't so. I'm not i'm not the no i'm not look i'm not doing stand up anytime either jacob. What's your go to joke. Because i don't have what i'm just going to. Is that right now. I used to tell his anti-drug that was like it took like three minutes. To tell is not worth. But but but but my go-to joe. Okay not funny but okay. Fair walks into a bar in bartenders. Like hey what do you want to drink in the bar. The bears i want a gin jinnah and tonic and the bartenders. Like sure but why the long pause and he says. I don't know i had them all my life too long pause there. Yeah i get a gin and Yeah all right. it's also use. I saying i thought that was the punchline. But then i understood the ause you to pause to job funny. Yeah the long cost i get. It's just it's weird thing. Because i under bears off are other pause long. That's the weird thing. I don't know the joke really angwin like this joke. How's your way of you me that you also didn't like it but you're trying to be nice because that's why bender breads. Alright that's fine know. I assume that this job is. She doesn't organ jesse out like he was an action. Right all right well. Maybe dislike knowing. Here's nelson anyway Apparently soccer's master is happy day of training He says like you did. You did a good job. Because like i did. I thought i messed up everything he says. You must have everything in a very special way. Is that not an insult brandon. If i told you hang things are coming on the podcast a mess things up in a very special way. When she not be offended i would feel bad for messing things up but i think in soccer. I took this. This is a compliment. Maybe in soccer's world because it's very much him being like unapologetically him thinking outside of the box. I think maybe his approach to all this stuff in thinking of things and unique way can take this kind of weird compliment in a way that it's supposed to be taken out. He knows he kind of can know what this needs. The neuro person yes. I think this'll be offensive but Specifically i think he gets yet That is there does seem like the type deal. Take this If anyone is trying to complement the please a mess things up in a special way. I relate to do things in a competent way. So yeah zac. What's what's the best way to comment on any any. Call mets coupla with me. I don't i won't get offended. You can say mess things up in a special way. And i'll take.

Wendell's World & Sports
"sokha" Discussed on Wendell's World & Sports
"Three hundred sixty five days a year you wake to be experiencing experiencing happy all the flip and time in life doesn't happen that way so when i say i want naomi osaka to be happy. You know of course i wanted to be happy but and more than anything i want her to be able to handle life in everything that comes with it ram and it seems right now that She's not in dinner. It's like when she wins. It's fine when she loses it's like the end of the world and they bring up mental health and all these type of issues is like look man. I you know do what you need to do to make yourself better. But i i'm just here. I just wanna watch the sport. I'm not looking for a human trainwreck. I'm not looking for someone who's battling you know. Confidence inner demons insecurities to call it. Whatever she's got get. I'm not a psychiatrist or psychologist. Some ignorant in the field so i i don't know i don't know but really if she keeps this up enter. Tennis suffers all of a sudden now in some small very small way. She is in danger. Speaking of daimyo soccer here on windows rolled the sports podcast with yours. Truly wendell wallace. Naomi asaka in a very very very minute. Small ways is in danger. If she doesn't get any help she continued to low a road that she's going in her tennis suffers because of it she becomes. She becomes a danger of becoming a caricature of herself in the male version of nick curious of them. Not saying that you know she's going to be you know acting the way nick. Cereal says but i mean you know if if if a nail meal sokha and we're gonna start trying to be a pop psychologist start talking about you know what's wrong with her mentally and then the other i mean. How are we not doing this with nick. And we if we wanna take it that far so why because he's a male and the female because males are more acceptable for males to show their frustration with curios. I mean we go look there and like we. We understand some cheer. And he's a bad boy and all this kind of stuff the other but really we like him and he's really a nice guy and we point out some of the good things that he's done and some of the things that he's done off the tennis court that kinda balances out the nutty. This we see the court for those who think that he's completely office rocker for those who think that he's a terrible guy for those things that he's a horrible human being because of the way that he acts on a tennis court will go ahead. We'll show or will or will right or will blog or will post or we'll tweet some of the good things all of the good things a lot of the good things that he does off the to this. Coordinate carriers does do a lot of good things but on the court you know. It's predictable that sometimes he's gonna have a mental breakdown. So why are we equating the same type of that's interesting. Let's take a look. Let's you know what was go ahead and give her analysis on what's going on. Why why don't we do that. For the burials the same way that we do naomi osaka. Maybe with the advent. Now that asaka in other athletes simone biles was another great example during the olympics..

The Mini-Break
Naomi Osaka Weighs Another Break From Tennis After US Open Loss
"Was just one of those days at the twenty twenty one. Us open a day that featured sixteen round of thirty two singles matches saw eight of those sixteen go the distance. Four on the side. Four on the women's side. Want to break down all of that action on today's show. Of course the place will start. We are down a defending champion. Two time us open winner. Twenty twenty twenty eighteen ninety homeo- sokha your third seep here. At this year's event knocked off by uber talented eighteen year old canadian leila fernandez. I wanna talk about the mechanics of that match. I wanna talk about soccer comments after the match as well she indicated. She's not sure when she's going to next step on a tennis

The Charlie Kirk Show
Who Are the Taliban?
"Who are the taliban well the taliban were removed from power in afghanistan by us in two thousand one and they have been displaced from power over the last twenty years and obviously they have seized power again taliban or otherwise known as students in the pashto language emerged in the early nineteen nineties northern pakistan following the withdrawal of soviet troops from afghanistan it is believed that the predominantly pashtoon movement first appeared in religious seminaries. I'm reading from. Bbc dot com mainly mostly paid for by money by saudi arabia which preached a hardline form of suni islam the promise made by the taliban in pashtoon areas straddling pakistan and afghanistan was to restore peace and security then enforce their own very steer version of sharia or islamic law. Their political office is in doha right now and they will return back to afghanistan very soon. My head of the taliban is this guy. Holy moly good luck pronouncing this molewa hip. Tula august sokha zodda. He's the former taliban chief. Justice leader since two thousand sixteen. There's a senior judge political. Deputy deputy and deputy and they're from southwestern afghanistan. The taliban began quickly extending their influence. In september of ninety five and captured the province of herat bordering iran now the taliban the actual pashtoon people they have a history going back hundreds of years wallover a thousand years. They own those hills the taliban they have banned music television cinema disapproved of girls over ten going to school. They have been accused of various human rights and cultural abuses and in fact the taliban destroyed the famous byman. Buddha statues in central afghanistan

The Takeaway
"sokha" Discussed on The Takeaway
"About whether that is gonna look like you absolutely anticipated precisely where where i was going to go next because i know that listeners will be wanting to do something and sometimes doing is is worse than doing nothing but naomi asaka tweeted over the weekend. That really quote. It really hurts to see all the devastation going on. In haiti i feel like we can't catch a break. I'm about to play a tournament this week. And i'll give all the prize money to relief efforts for haiti. I know our ancestors. Blood is strong will keep rising And and yet you know. As i read that i thought okay but where like where would the money go from From you know either folks like night. Neil sokha or others Towards trying to assist. Well it's a will went and see because after rescue mission you have other needs. That will be Necessary there's food shelter because right now a tense Needed almost like camping Gears unneeded people. So there's gonna be for for all kinds of stuff so what i would say to me. Who admire for for grace for love of her of a country that she's been to a few times but it's still the blood. She has really embrace a culture part of country which is japanese in america but she has a really Risen to the occasion and we got so haiti so there are many people like that. And i think that you we should wait and see where the needs are before we send money. You know we we we. We should open up a wallet but until directed to the rights organizations because one of the organizations that people are saying absolutely not to donate to the international red cross. Because the money doesn't necessarily goto the needy in experience. Last time was disastrous. Even for the red cross. They admitted that there were not equipped to do development work and they were giving money for development. Work with red cross is disaster relief the an in the moment and what happens next. It's not there a belly week but they were giving a lot of money a lot more money than they knew what to do it at frankly and what they to say you know Melissa is that when i think about this this song. If it wasn't for bad luck eighty would not have any luck dog..

The Redesign Your Body Podcast
"sokha" Discussed on The Redesign Your Body Podcast
"You say you enjoy the most about working with able Having influence And probably guidance on. That's that's really important especially gaza get drafted into the nfl at Hiding and that's often stride at a schools have a lot of life. Experience often come from families that a the head football experience old niveau experienced. I am i not have someone. Can god him. Along the way In my parents were non football pebble. Dad pied sokha side when always looking for gaudence. Her as a as a young fellow coming through didn't really have to tokyo his odd debate. One that i can come to shavings with offered boss as well. I think any way you can influence table and put them the right direction and help them along the li- You look back at And evils that head on may to bay. The coach now is rewarding Mentoring and guiding people using your life experience. I have the same Scenario i have a lot of younger siblings younger brothers and what. I've learned and the mistakes that i've made is the things that i want to pass onto them so they don't have to experience. That and i have that mental. That i might not have had so yet. Working with people in in especially that sand is super awarding and. I'm glad that you mentioned that. Because you also mentioned that the young fellas and the young people that coming when they just turning eighteen or just a pain which you get drafted into the afl iran the in our nor lav experience What sort of trite sent end aspects of their their attitude and sort of their mindset. Tried to bring to the spot when they coming in. And the difference you see between updraft and someone who's played four five seasons. Yeah i guess. I in that can differentiate sump. It was when i got drafted. Say if you have a really hard traffic often they've been the most talented playa probably through the different age groups And now they've come through and often they haven't had to work for Dropped from tame not midas quarter released. And you look at. The guy did get drafted lighter in the draft. They've that was Adversity all the way through. They might not have faint..

1A
"sokha" Discussed on 1A
"Writer for g. q. Magazine and g. q. Sports tyler welcome back and thanks for having me also with us is kinshasa gunter sport psychologists based in atlanta georgia kids. It's great to have you thank you so much. It's it's it's a pleasure to be here and been strauss. He's a sports media reporter for the washington post. Been welcome to the program. Thanks so much great to be here. So tyler why was sokha's decision to not speak to the press and then to drop out of the french open altogether so significant it was significant for the way that we cover athletes and specifically significant for the way that we think about female athletes specifically those who happen to not be white and so when it comes to the general idea of how the sports press operates have the press conference was created in the twentieth century. And what it means for athletes have immediacy with the press. Do something like this is very striking. Not in the sense that she doesn't want to speak to the press because athletes to me at least have no obligation to the press. It was striking for the fact of why she did it. In the media story that became not of why she did it obviously but about press conferences and decorum and how athletes should act. We should be speaking more about why naomi osaka decided not to speak to us. Not about why press conference matter. Not about why. Sports journalists have such importance important our space nothing about that a young lady. Who is the biggest female athlete in the world. The star sterling piece of her generations of athletic said. I can no longer do this. That should be the conversation. Nothing else well give us a little. More context for y. Osaka doesn't want to speak to the press relationship to the media. Been like in the past. It's been actually lovely in the reality too. Is that people like naomi osaka again. They have no obligation while they're contract say they do. The reality says they don't. It is a privilege for our journalists. Speak to these athletes who to be honest with you are killing themselves on different fields of play just for our inner taint and they only sokha said that. She had become a bit too depressed to do that. She wasn't doing well on clay courts at roland garros and she felt as though she wanted to just focus on the thing that brings us entertainment. Seems noble enough to me. But that stirred up a bit of a ruckus for my colleagues in the press. It shouldn't have. But i do understand why did now. Being athletes in the sports press have a unique relationship. What is that relationship for people who might not be familiar. Yes going back You know years and years the locker rooms and access to athletes has been somewhat extraordinary especially when you compare it with the way. The system works in the united kingdom and around the big time soccer in the united states after every single game reporters are the locker rooms open. Reporters stream end and can go up to just about any player to the nfl or baseball or hockey and go up two guys and then ask them. You know what went wrong. What went right. Tell us about this play. Tell us about that play. And it's a fairly remarkable Relationship that has developed over time and Given the pandemic and the locker rooms have been closed Soccer announcement has sort of Become part of that debate in terms of what does the sports press. Continue to expect you know. Continue to offer athletes tyler. You you wrote a piece for g. q. And part of what you said was quoted. The central contradiction. Sports is the idea of it as some mighty force for unity. It's easy to wax lyrical about the triumph of the unyielding human spirit until athletes began acting like more than lifeless apparitions. Where were you thinking about around this expectation. Particularly for athletes have colored to just be silent and play in more than just athletes. Color specifically what happens to the black body especially in american abroad when it comes to our black athletes and so Paraphrasing obviously frederick. Douglass said that athletics are hell on earth that this was something born from the plantation in europe born from the coliseum. This is never been something that has been helpful for the black body. Never been something that is going to be helpful for. The black athlete and black athletes have been used by politicians by campaigns. By anything in terms of how. You're building the general idea of whiteness in america over and over and over again from the plantation to the civil rights movement in on wendell wilkie when you lewis on campaign buttons we tried to make track athletes to cry protests in the civil rights movements. This is what the sport has always been so to see now are black athletes. A current generation who are reacting to the springtime of athletic is in a way that is so refreshing we should be honoring that when we look at our press corps there are people who do not look like us when we look at the people who are officiating these matches they do not look like the athletes. The people who run vs sports they do not look like the athletes and so of course this is the response but again the centrality of what we should be talking about. Is that the star of her generation of athletics. The most paid female athlete in the world right now as of last year quit a major tournament under threat from those people and also because of her depression that is story and nothing else. Eileen writes on facebook. Go watch the twelve minute. Post-match press conference from osaka's win against serena at the twenty eighteen. us open. There were questioned about her dad. How she's going to spend her prize money. Has she ever had a drink and a follow up about her mental state. We are just not entitled to demand answers from anyone about their mental health. Athletes are required to talk to the press but with social media in the mix..

ChupaCast
"sokha" Discussed on ChupaCast
"Spit us. Cuisine negotiator so many feet up. Alex those young fuzzy almost caguas the kapor crashing serve. Money is have drawn museum pasquale ghana cuisine. We're cheerful widow will stay a swamp running past swap boom. You is up. thank you pie. Eyed finds talk evasive. Helsing money will allow. I just beautiful will sexual cook now put no own. Kospi ought to know anna cuisine. Mice game face as gaza just got saad sokha's inclusive keep money s indefeasibly elephant foot to move. Put this kiss. Search for sabotage. Kim beg it out because the way come is out thrown geog. Were fueled the fall of a very dodging chiefdom. I-if isn't big bigger. Open a political Face kitenge gaza. No watch me do my think. So damage on the thing ought to get out. Who trays pressing up at. The raising three eleven hundred year is likely to his gaza. I think coastal buying your game face on base. You we miss you. Be cutting virtue savvy gap seema in cuomo that. You basha as scotty virtue. Those scott banking linked to the solid. You saw by beings thankful. Says he did not join us. Took a visit at school. Paquita for them subbotin. Nope assad disney was audited gaza. Show now they and his adolescent like saving people kissing skis leslie scott. The chicago college my packing your garage a car. Because when she gets yeah useful do that. Geneticists side i got more war cava you becoming a no secret peres over mill adere if you fall away guy zeki. Steel prices are terrible. Day starts garage. I pledged to say. The metals seem quaint. Yuccas thinks boom lewis. Scott up top more who've position default on aqazadeh game by zhang. We'll do you. You've got sort of the van because at eleven th coverage sit on that i look dated faucet back makia july vica. Lots came your hawks again. Our hope state fung very harmless morici of this kc patricia's walk baladara we'll fossil kennedy today scattered edge. What a yellow for we. Now an awfully lot. I scott of whom some we saw of age. I no. yeah. Yeah this but companies can. I thought that you got it. It's tough kind. Say i don't see wilson shadow data. Soap buys off the bar up all day skied yet. Jank briquemont is up. Revised show vein. I scotty car as gonna murphy. Cod edgy triple after eight. Shula purvey double arba kinky dow. How i you going to solve war. What zone you sure. Four seem that schubert paraggio chabal in part imagina virtual to allow the hospital. The current policy show hospital. Now briscoe say. I don't bill. Meeting students jaw lachey. Look back being donor up as your void about being so pete their parking zone. Ain't that walk out. We'll see this civil about a bit of mud to flawed utah. They starting the book cinemas subway. Billy's did it okay. Bucket a culture of sold a paid daily pancake cinema by bog opposed of sensor is starting his stupak gas. Gm mike lu you burn is a santa potential syllabi. I rather than as a key. But i'm mission roussy media hoste misinformation. Gotta you'll begin cookie fam- o w smuggle yoga mysterious. Yuck yum use was atomic photos. New mobile thrown at yet siege book mishit pretty bottom whiskey day achidi missiles as eligible cardia museum also prima kick daddy she at a hostile birth. You're gonna see a guy. God letter enough headed boat. You.

The Glossy Podcast
Saucony President Anne Cavassa on Prepping for the New Roaring Twenties
"I sit down with an vasa president of sokha ni best known for running shoes in the last year. More people have become runners gyms temporarily closed and wanted to ask how the company leaned into that opportunity. Plus how it's remain competitive with more brands entering the performance. Where space welcome in. Hi jill thank you very much for having me really appreciate being here Well indeed throughout the pandemic we have seen a runners and anyone actually just looking to get outside Coming to the brand. So whether they're walking hiking running or just general activity We have been seeing an increase in consumer is coming to the brand. Were really excited about it. I would say that The running boom is real Were i think all brands across the industry are seeing this. And what we're doing really specifically as we're making sure that were Connecting with engaging with consumers where they're at so whether they're experienced runners and they're running malar whether they're new to running whether they're walker's coming in whether they're on trails whether they're hiking really making sure that we're communicating with them In how they need to and want to be communicated with and what the topics are so. Whether that's around what shoes. They need with their training. Should look like With their diet should look like all of those things around running in the running lifestyle. We've been we've been working on from a communication perspective and from an inspirational perspective. I would say okay. So would you say you are marketing strategy. I mean one eighty. You flipped it last year. No i would not say that i would say are absolutely a technical performance running brand and we serve runners so as people have as gyms have closed and if people have turned to other things. It's really just recognizing who people are and where their ad in there running

Hogsmen Podcast presents Talk To The Hog
"sokha" Discussed on Hogsmen Podcast presents Talk To The Hog
"From the land of the rising sun. You're listening to the. oh sokha. Saint the saitama superstar the mad titan of tokyo. The american guide you welcome to the hogs cast red and black. Welcome back hop stack. We were gone last week. I had a little little pets. Emergency my my boy. Flynn my Australian shepherd and border collie mixed had full blown reconstructive knee surgery so he will not He will not be at mania this year. Unfortunately unfortunate i know everyone was looking forward to it. You had the add some minions that. We're going to carry torches forum as he made his entrance He was gonna leave his collar in the ring at the end of the night. And go out on top but Unfortunately he's He's in recovery mode. So we we missed last week but it was well worth it. Wouldn't either i wouldn't. I wouldn't rule them out. Though i mean there is a man wrestlemainia that will be competing this year. That was literally set on fire. so well. okay that's fair. I wouldn't rule them out. It's a tough recovery tes to come back a week from now but adama's your Really enjoyed what. You're doing duke. I like the podcasts. At really enjoying it oba hoped listeners. Of our podcast. Hans casto g. are checking it out I didn't get to see the video. Because i was only listening to the podcast laws. Driving you told me. I missed some funny things. What did i miss. Yeah so when. I logged in before we got on. The pod looked at duke background and it was. What do call vader ville which was star wars thing. You would know better than i. And then so i said okay. Well what can i put in the background. That'll pop and he's like he started talking about the simpsons and he's like no viscera so my the tire podcasts. If you just look at it for a couple of seconds it's literally viscera standing behind you with his arms out like he's holding my shoulders that's beautiful span of an hour. It was really good. I think you know for anyone that didn't get a chance to check it out. I mean it just proves why by you about why. You mos a two-time haagen award winner so good such a good interviewer such good interview such a funny guy Very good i i. I hope everyone goes back and checks out to dukes podcast from last week. I actually do care what you did this weekend. Adam you did something very interesting what did you do. I got the first dose of the pfizer vaccine this weekend. Hey oh mr. Mr man of the hour out of dako actually was a lot smoother than i anticipated a friend of mine..

Buccaneers Observer
"sokha" Discussed on Buccaneers Observer
"Bryant. Matt bryant was playing with matt ryan. Her did play with mary. So ryan sokha was rain sunshine. Cloudy part of buccaneers history. The he had fifty two extra points out of fifty seven. He made so that was ninety one percent of his extra points. Twenty eight of thirty one field goals. That was ninety percent. He averaged eight and a half points a game and scored a total of one hundred thirty six points for the buccaneers as a comparison man. Gay last year may well you know. I just wanna see where we improved so mang gaming forty three forty eight extra point so that was eighty nine and a half percents that was close but where ryan suck up dust. Blue by matt gay was in the field. Goal percentage matt. Gay made twenty seven of thirty five. So that was only seventy seven percents. We went from seventy five seventy seven percent success rate with field goals to ninety percent. So that really the difference huge difference and suck up you know. He's he's gonna ask for more money. Of course he said yeah in. Pay the man. He didn't miss really a single bill goal or extra point when it mattered and he didn't miss any in plows You know so. I think we can kick him a couple of extra million dollars. it's You know if it's between him and reciting antonio brown. I'm going with suck absolutely no question. His success rate of ninety point three percent ranked second in franchise history to connor. Barth ninety two point nine percent in two thousand eleven. This season ryan was named nfc special teams player of the week twice With made him the first buccaneer to do them and then his ninety four point seven percent field. Goal percentage mark inside of forty yards is the six best among kickers with at least two hundred fifty attempts since nineteen ninety one when they started tracking up so I'd say we got to bring this man back the okay pun teen. We ryan are bradley. Opinion is our partner..

Sake On Air
"sokha" Discussed on Sake On Air
"That i wonder if that's why do try to keep the first point very love. And it's not a lot of gyms of what's on the market. It's a very The price point is an very very low bandwidth from the cheapest on the mac to the mice. Expense pretty close. Yeah and that means that the that the fula on the there's very limited potential folks juices to really be able to get creative with something that's you know. Maybe a luxury high end product because they're very Seems to be very little interest in the market for an information that is sort of added value. Don't and it also limits. Perhaps they way that we mentioned it was appreciated in the international mac. Because it's may be seen as Cheaper option which is my gun out an attention not at all actually that leads to over to utah because i want to get into kind of the production so you are in walking. I'm doing this. And i guess it's worth noting right now too so that Wakayama was also got a geographical indication last year. So what's what's it look like them. They're now in in in wakayama. You're down there so getting back into your what you're doing down in walk. Am we'll kind of get back into half interview as well as insight sure yet. Choya choi has warehouses down here as well and they've contract farmers in they do their remembering down ear as well as sokha probably narrow as well genius is not this campaign they have to call all choya. Although that's kind of insidious in its own way but but the genius of troy. It was just getting on every shelf in foreign markets. Go on sales calls in america And who may. She was a category. It's it's suck as little Illegitimate brother but it's still a category. You have to have something on the shelf and they've already got choya and so you know i it all from a taste of mine and they'd say oh. Yeah this is better. And i can probably get you a better margin now. Choice is out there you know they did the marketing blitz. And that's a hill. Everybody else has gotta climb now that that's not to say that the getting junk on the shelves like i said i wasn't too excited about their issue with fruit in their standard offering But if i was going to recommend like i bottle for people to explore the probably the choya single year for the three year. I think for the price point just probably in japan there. Eleven hundred and fifteen hundred yen maybe They're really nice really deep dish color. Great may flavor definitely on the south side really like those And also for the price point. I gotta say they're difficult to reverse engineer their home. Kaku so there's not a lot of mystery to it the like. How did they get such a good product in a bottle in a custom bottle that for that price. So so that's why. I recommend people start as for what on the shelf in like. There's so much out there. There's so many different varieties on the same price point like neon shoe. You have this amazing interesting variety of.

Feminist Utopia
"sokha" Discussed on Feminist Utopia
"Because i haven't closed okay you can keep talking though about how awesome there i have heard people complaining of i mean trying to defend fled cruise. Saying that he deserved vacation. And don't you ever take a vacation and it's so ridiculous. When there was so much that he could have done to help. His constituents is just ridiculous to me how anyone could defend his behavior. But we're we're getting off track. And i wanted to talk more about good vibes. And congratulations are due to naomi osaka. She's a champion of the australia. Open in twenty twenty one and she. That's a fourth grand slam that she's won so so when people talk about goats and tom brady. I wanna remember women. Like noumea's sokha in Serena williams and plenty of women are goats in their own fields. Now it took me a while to go and still get it and its greatest of time. Oh greatest greatest of all time okay. I thought athlete was in there but now anyway one more political good vibe. Just because she's my hometown girl. Lena hildalgo and i also learned recently. She's the same age as my daughter. But she is the head of harris county's governing body. She's a judge and the first woman to be elected county judge and only the second to be elected to the commissioner's court and she has just been named to the time. Top one hundred list. The one hundred next list says she's a up and coming she is very up and coming. This is just one step on her very long probably path and she's already met with the typical resistance as we've discussed here with disgusting means and She'd be better. She didn't talk so much or should be better. You know why is your hair. Not looking great name like because she probably doesn't have water. I was watching this interview that she did In light of this crisis in someone on reddit said well. Her hair's looking really ratty today and i'm like like you had power or water you know is really kind of like these expectations that come up and i even think people think.

Hogsmen Podcast presents Talk To The Hog
"sokha" Discussed on Hogsmen Podcast presents Talk To The Hog
"Jump and technology like innovation. I guess you could say Are they going to be more socially awkward probably because they're going to be annoying to be around because we hopefully. I'll be dead 'cause when we were going to school you'd get your information from school and text books and stuff and now you can just. When did this happen your phone and you information math you can. Just what's the what's this plus this. Plus how incompetent do new teachers feel like you got to think like now. Teachers are millennials. Right and essentially millennials and whatever i guess is newer than millennials are the teaching generation but for kids that are coming in and the teachers like. Oh hey check this out in. Exactly what adam just said like someone's like looked it up in the time it's a right that on the board. I looked at up the answer for you. Let me know when you're ready down. You know what i mean like. It just seems That's pretty crazy. it's not how inconsequential being in. A classroom is nowadays for someone to learn or go at their own pace. I remember kids this to me. I still to this day Kids it would take five. Ap courses and honors courses. I never understood like why. Why i was not one of those kid. I wasn't either but it was like it was like why. Why are you busting your ass to do all this shit. That's i understand. Maybe you'd maybe to you that's competition you know maybe like oh i like this competitive nature of of learning the instead of sports or whatever but for me it was always like you're going to go to the same school even if you ev- even if you're going to. Sds you right. Let's say you're doing that. You're getting all these the people s you what you do once you're there you're all doing the same shit There's not a p college just in college yet. The finish the four years of college before you do masters and ship it was always It was just always one of those things where some people learn out in different ways. And when you're talking about how socially awkward they were to me. Seeing people do that and restrict their lives to like ap courses only like five six courses day In schools that that was socially awkward to me. And i think it's getting worse because you don't need teachers to do that for you now if someone wants to hone in on i'm just gonna do this now. I'm going to do all my school. May of course do some junior high call junior class college College courses as well. Someone can do that if someone's in college or someone's in highschool right now during the pandemic let's either junior and in highschool wouldn't you be signing up for college courses as well and it's been like fuck it. I'll take like two three college courses a week as well. I don't know you know what's interesting. Is the two smartest guys that i know. Thank you Now you out They didn't go to college and i don't. It's weird just because you're you went to call. It doesn't mean you're smart you know. I know a lot of dumb shit that went to college. Thank you But it's interesting like you know. People think like oh he went to college. He's obviously educated Blah blah blah and this person over here. They didn't go to college. Many these have a high school degree. And then they went into the workforce They're probably not as educated right. But that's the weird thing is i. Don't just 'cause you what to call. It doesn't mean you're you're promised genius the problem with perception. Now it's because you spent four years at some college or obviously smarter than somebody else. Yeah i think that is. I think that went to the wayside around ninety eight one. The internet started taking off and taking over. I really do think that once the internet age took over college kind of no is it still matters for people who are trying to get jobs and stuff. No no i know. But i'm saying i'm saying like actually educating person like he just said oh. That person went to college. Smart guy. I don't think after ninety. I you know unless you. You're becoming getting an advanced degree. Master's doctorate something like that. It just like a regular bachelor's degree associate especially an associate's degree though really mean shit anymore. i mean i've been i've been there the type of you know education that you get. It's not phenomenal. is nothing crazy. I yeah. I just thought that was interesting. As i grew up kind of noticed like hey look to the to the smartest guys i know. They have no college degree and one of them is a millionaire and the other one is just kind of like a dude. That is like a day to day work guy and he's smart as fuck i. How do i know that. Because i played jeopardy against this guy for six years like multiple times a week while we're at work and The he's fucking he's smart as smart as fuck man so be. I do think You in in the next decade or you're going to techno techno techno caught logical advances incredible. Social awkwardness i think is going to be very prevalent. So you have ever met home like like like new like a home schooled. Kid yes did you ever notice like something. A little weird yes. Yeah so i. So i worked when i was in the bar industry I would work the front door as security. I'd have to handle a lot of different personalities that were upset and this one guy that i worked with. He was home schooled Growing up so there's a lot learned in that social environment of school right. We all probably went through it. You probably had a girl you like that in like you. Maybe had to get into a fight. You had an argument. You had a disagreement. You had all this kind of stuff. Maybe some kid wanted to kick your ass and you're like fuck. I'm going to get my ass kicked. I gotta talk my way out of this right so you gotta learn how to handle all these situations that are going on and it's good. It's good because this is stuff that's going to help you grow. And in the future you're going to be You're gonna see these situations again and you're going to stand how to handle it right. You know how to handle a talk to people and handled situations so this guy. He was so funny so he was home. Schooled and He was he was good employees. He was great employees but it was funny because whenever somebody would start giving him shit like giving them maybe for not getting lead in or being asked to leave or anything like that all his mom. Kiewit you know. They were starting to get loud angry at at him and he would just be like i. I don't know how to handle this. And you know you just in his face. He doesn't know how to handle this. And i i would step in and take care of the rest. But i i started noticing like that's probably why man because he was home schooled. He was never in these situations growing up. Which i think is a valuable lesson man. Valuable lesson even more than just you know learning Geometry or something like that. Like how often are you used geometry throughout your life day by day but you are gonna have social interactions every single day. You're gonna have problems that you're going to have to like overcome and And figure out how to how to how to solve them. When you're dealing with people that you know like maybe a different view than you and you got to come together and compromise. You know so that was a. He has a huge thing. I I believe that with With school and being in person expand. These kids are screwed right now. Yeah i think. I've noticed with my three year old even like because she was. I think we've talked about it. So i won't go into too much detail but she was very outgoing. She did a lot of like ballet classes and games with kids Just d- in any type of class. You could do with the kid to sign him up for she was doing it And she just misses that social interaction a time into the first couple of months where everything was closed down like she was like totally different person. Sokha really shitty. Will you look at it man okay. These kids can't go to school. Can't see their friends youth sports is is not going on right now. There's another outlet like man. I feel i feel bad. You know you have a young girl she you know. These kids need to be stimulated mentally physically like they gotta go get energy out you know and handed. It must be tough being apparent right now. Because i've done some tea parties this week there have you. Yeah with its year on No i had a cowboy hat. I had a witty cowboy hat a little little one the cheaper site. Who was with.

The Soccer Specialist Podcast
"sokha" Discussed on The Soccer Specialist Podcast
"Much even when the talent. Is there a hundred feet in the air. You prefer performance under pressure whether it's pressure from the other team in a game or teammates parents the coach or yourself mentally. Maybe you're a perfectionist. In every mistake weighs on you and you're terrified of making mistakes on the ground that performance when you're confident okay. That makes sense will make it soccer specific. Let's look at in terms of penalty. Kicks you go out and take. Pk's on your own on your own team practices now. Maybe team practices where it's at the end of a practice in your decide who's gonna take him in the game so it compete with your teammates. Now it's in a real game. Maybe you're up six. Nothing w taking a peek. Now maybe it's going to decide a game. Maybe it's gonna decided tournament. Think about how player feels when they're stepping up to take a pk in the world cup final and if they missed out right there's one hundred feet in the air. Maybe there's the thousand feet in the air okay and just but nothing has changed in terms of the physical performance. There's nothing about the penalty kick. there's nothing about walking on the beam that has changed but your mind has changed dramatically. This is why everyone professional soccer as the skilled in l. a. p. pk but only a handful can do it. Consistently during the most pressurized moments look. It can be complicated. It can be many exercises many things that we go through to help develop confidence and put you in the right frame of mind for things like that today. I wanna talk briefly about what i believe is number one. Everything follows from this and that's preparation the more prepared. You are the more confident you are with anything. You do this is why michael jordan. Everyone knows who michael jordan is. I'll use that and sokha's michael jordan as he's don could shoot a free throw a real. Nba game with his eyes closed. Preparation breeds confidence. Michael jordan took so many free throws. He can almost literally in his sleep. Next best thing is is close. The free throws the same right at same distant. Same everything no matter. What the situation whether. It's two minutes into a game that zero zero or it's no time left on the clock and you're shooting the to tie the game and win the game and this now going to preparation and another key. Part of that is what i like to say is. Don't do it until you get it right. do it. until you can't get it wrong..

BrainStuff
What Are The World's Biggest, Baddest Jigsaw Puzzles?
"Even before. It became a popular way to while away the hours days and weeks during isolation putting together. Jigsaw Puzzles was a favourite family activity. But did you know that? Jigsaw Puzzles have their origin in education. Sir John Spills Berry an English engraver and map maker in the mid. Seventeen hundred is credited with creating the first jigsaw puzzle in seventeen seventy six by attaching a map of the world to a piece of wood then cutting the country's out teachers used the maps to teach geography to their students and a recreational activity was born spills berry would hardly recognize his creation today in the early part of the twentieth century. Jigsaw Puzzles were used as marketing tools often given away or sold for mere pennies today companies. Still use puzzles for creative marketing. Take Kodak for instance. It's selling what it. Claims is the quote world largest jigsaw puzzle. We HAVE TO ADMIT. This thing is pretty huge. The fifty one thousand three hundred piece puzzle features twenty-seven injuries from around the world and when completed measures twenty eight point five feet by six point. Two five feet. That's eight point six meters by one point nine meters and this beast costs more than four hundred dollars but all due respect to the Kodak Jigsaw puzzle. The world's largest jigsaw puzzle by surface area. According to Guinness World Records was put together in Dubai in July of twenty eighteen. The puzzle was an honor of the year of Ziyad a year long tribute to the founding father of the United Arab Emirates. The late Shahid there are more than twelve thousand pieces in the puzzle which was an image of Zayed the official record size measured sixty five thousand nine hundred and five point one seven square feet which is six thousand one hundred twenty two point six eight square meters putting together. Jigsaw puzzles is a Greek group activity but one thousand six hundred students of the University of Economics Ad Hoc Human City in Vietnam took it to the next level. When they completed the jigsaw puzzle with the most pieces on record five hundred fifty one thousand two hundred and thirty two to be exact when it was finished the puzzle measured just over. Forty eight by seventy six feet about fourteen by twenty three meters. It took the students seventeen hours to create the massive puzzle which featured a lotus flower with six petals. But what about the hardest jigsaw puzzle? Ever it contains only nine pieces and it's called the puzzle nine it was designed by Asaka. It includes a small board. The nine pieces include right angles and curved edges. That fit together in several combinations. Think Tetris but way harder. The challenge is getting the last piece to fit. It's nearly impossible to fit all the pieces on the board. It took Chris Ramsey a magician video creator and master puzzle or two hours nine minutes to solve the ice nine and by his own description. He was completely exhausted. By the end of the experience. You Sokha created another equally. Difficult puzzle called the Jigsaw Puzzle. Twenty nine the challenge here is to fit twenty nine pieces into a five by five inch. That's twelve by twelve centimeter trae. It comes with five corner pieces. Just let that sink in. Then there's the largest hand cut wooden jigsaw puzzle Guinness record held by Dave Edmunds England. Who created a forty thousand seven hundred sixty three piece puzzle celebrating the Queen's Diamond Jubilee the puzzle which featured thirty-three Images of Jubilee celebrations was twenty by eight feet? That's six by two and a half meters. When completed though it collapsed soon after Evans completed it took him and force. More than sixteen days to rebuild the puzzle and move at Sandringham where it went on display and was confirmed as the Guinness World record holder. We spoke by email with Caitlin vesper records manager with Guinness World Records North America. She said one of the main criteria for all Guinness World Records titles is that they must be breakable. Every record titled S- monitored is open to being challenged which allows for all kinds of record breaking opportunities all over the world. The Guinness record for most Jigsaw puzzle pieces tattooed on the human body belongs to the aptly named enigma. Sometimes known as Paul Laurence. Who'S A sideshow performer? Actor musician originally from Seattle in two thousand eleven enigmas set the record for having two thousand one hundred twenty three puzzle pieces tattooed on his body from head to toe in no word on whether anyone comes close to second but many puzzle records are held by companies such as the record for the largest spherical jigsaw puzzle. It measured fifteen point seven feet. That's four point. Seven seven meters in circumference and it was made by unit industrial limited in Hong Kong and featured scene from Winnie the Pooh vesper said brands and businesses. Come to US looking to harness the power of record-breaking to commemorate anniversaries and celebrations or to highlight the launch of a new product. Whole communities can come together to attempt to record to a like in March of two thousand nineteen when more than one thousand seven hundred people formed the largest human jigsaw puzzle piece on record a I. The record raised awareness for autism spectrum disorder. The puzzle pieces the symbol for the autismspeaks organization. Vesper explained each Guinness World. Records title has a set of guidelines. That must be followed. The record for the largest human jigsaw puzzle piece is a great example to highlight. This is considered one of our largest human image categories and the idea is to have a group of people gathered together to form a recognizable image. We define a jigsaw puzzle piece as an oddly shaped interlocking and Tessa leading piece designed to be part of a larger picture. The human image to be created would need to be instantly recognizable as a puzzle piece and not an entire puzzle. This record title can be broken if another group creates same image with a larger group of people. Anybody up for the challenge.

Encyclopedia Womannica
Juana Azurduy de Padilla: The Mother of Bolivian Independence
"Today's warrior is considered the mother of Bolivia independence. She let the fight for indigenous peoples even when it meant risking her own life. She was heroic unafraid and fiercely determined. We're talking about WANNA ascertain traded Padilla. Qana was born in seventeen eighty two an indigenous mother and Spanish father in Shuki Sokha. which at the time was considered upper Peru? Wanda's mother died when WANNA was seven so she became particularly close with her father. He encouraged her to learn skills that we're not typical for women in colonial society including sharp shooting and riding with these skills she was able to accompany him to work where she met and bonded with indigenous laborers she even became fluent and catch Wa. I'm Mara to indigenous languages. Uh when she was around twelve years old Wanda's father died leaving her an orphan she was sent away to a convent to become a nun. But unlike the other Thir Sisters WanNa had a particular affinity for the battlefield she looked up to Joan of arc and talked about her dreams of becoming a warrior clearly. had a rebellious streak by the time she was seventeen. Quanta was expelled. An order to leave the convent. She returned to her late father's village and spent more time with the indigenous people. There many of whom worked in the silver mines. The hours were grueling. Physically labor intensive WanNa witnessed the harsh realities of that work and eventually she became a dedicated supporter of the Indigenous Revolutionary Movement. At the age of twenty five. You've been married Manuel Sense. Yo Padilla. Who shared her love of the indigenous people of what's now Bolivia together? They joined the Shuki Soccer Revolution. An uprising against the governor of quotas hometown during the battle WANNA was imprisoned but fortunately soon thereafter are after. She was rescued by her husband. Manuel together they escaped and joined an army that fought against the Spanish occupation of Upper Peru ultimately sadly they were defeated and imprisoned for a second time once again Montreal successfully rescued her in eighteen. Twelve WANNA And Manoel helped the head of the northern army recruit thousands of troops WANNA had a knack for recruiting and managed to convince many indigenous people and women to join join the 'cause she got to live out her dream of being a military leader. Who WanNa let a group of indigenous people called the locals who fought against? It's the Spanish forces and one ahead of the army was so impressed by WanNa and her leadership that he awarded her Valuable Sword Quanta and Manoel then engaged phase of guerrilla warfare in eighteen. Sixteen Quantum lead thirty cavalry to attack the Spanish forces they succeeded and obtained their standard and rifles. They also captured the main source of Spanish silver a symbolic victory given in his previous anger at seeing the endless toil of the indigenous people as they labored for the material that victory let wanted to be promoted to lieutenant colonel that same year during the battle of Laguna quantum was injured. Manuel was captured and killed when he tried to help. Her QUANTA was devastated after she recovered from her injury she tried to attack the Spanish in an effort to recover Manoel's body and failed. Why continue to fight with determination and fearlessness? She was appointed to a high position in the army and legend. Has It that just a few UH hours. After giving birth to her fourth child she returned to the battlefield despite her loyalty to what was eventually a successful 'cause Qantas died impoverished in eighteen. Sixty two she was eighty two years old after her commander had passed away in eighteen. Twenty one Quanta was laughed with no money and the newly minted Bolivian government declined to return items that had been taken from her while she was imprisoned. The famous liberator Simone Bolivar said of her this country should not be named Bolivia and my honor. But Padilla or other because it was day day who made it free WanNa is remembered for her heroism to this day she became a symbol of bravery determination and hope she tirelessly fought for the independence events of others even though it left her alone and impoverished. She was a warrior in every sense of the term

UN News
Trading in suffering: detention, exploitation and abuse in Libya
"This is the news. In brief from the United Nations. The world should not accept the dire an untenable situation facing children in Libya the head of the UN Children's fund UNICEF said on Friday children in Libya including refugee and migrant children continue to suffer grievously amidst the violence Arlington. Chaos unleashed by the country's longstanding civil war executive director Henrietta. Four said in a statement since last April when the hostilities ability is broke out in Tripoli and western Libya conditions for thousands of children and civilians deteriorated further with indiscriminate attacks in populated areas that have caused hundreds of death and UNICEF has received reports of children being main killed and also recruited to fight. Since the fall of President Moammar Gadhafi twenty eleven Libya has been in the throes of ongoing instability and economic collapse despite its large oil reserves preserves meanwhile over the last eight months more than one hundred fifty thousand people ninety thousand home or children have been forced to flee their homes uh-huh and are now internally displaced the U. N. High Commissioner for Human Rights has condemned the continued killing and displacement of civilians in northwestern western Syria despite a ceasefire announcement last Sunday. Michelle Bachelet called for the immediate cessation of hostilities. In and around. I'm the de Escalation zone of it. Live as well as the protection of all civilians and civilian infrastructure. The latest ceasefire as with others in the past year ear has yet again failed to protect civilians. Who faced the threat of being killed and means going about their everyday lives. She lamented it. is is deeply distressing. That civilians are still being killed. On a daily basis in missile strikes from both the air and ground she elaborated hundreds of thousands of people have been displaced by the violence and forced to traverse conflict zones. Some have fled to smaller territories in northern Italy job while others have crossed into areas in northern Aleppo under the control of Turkish backed armed groups independent. UN Human Glenn writes experts on Friday expressed concerns about the treason trial that opens this week against Cambodia. Opposition leader Kem Sokha saying the the entire process has been beset by regularities. Mr Socha was arrested. Detained and charged with treason for twenty thirteen speech. He delivered delivered in Australia. That was broadcast by. CBN The Cambodian Broadcasting Network if convicted. He faces a custodial sentence of between fifteen to thirty years. The experts said they had strong grounds to believe that the treason charges politically motivated and forms. Part of a larger Roger Pattern of misapplying laws to target political opponents and critics of the government following his arrest in September twenty seventeen. Mr Socha was detained without bail and held in pretrial detention for a year. Then put under house arrest allowed to leave home last year he. He was then banned from travelling abroad and forbidden to conduct political activities. The experts repeat their call for restrictive bail conditions to be removed and for all political rights to be reinstated with compensation and reparations lists. Kapiti U._N. News.

Bloomberg Businessweek
Vladimir Putin, OPEC And Salman discussed on Bloomberg Businessweek
"Six to nine more months of oil output cuts. That is the word from the OPEC plus coalition. Opec members and allies Russian President Vladimir Putin struck the deal with Saudi Crown prince Mohammad bin Salman in Sokha. It shows Putin is basically, the main policymaker within

Bloomberg Businessweek
Kremlin confirms Trump-Putin meeting at G-20
"The kremlin says russian president vladimir putin will meet with president trump on the sidelines of an international summit in japan and talks come amid bitter differences between moscow and washington trump has said he plans to meet with putin during the group of twenty summit sokha and putin has said he welcomes dialogue and is ready to sit down for more talks the kremlin says the meeting is set the last about an hour though it will be up to the president's to

On the Media
Nine dead as plane crashes in Hawaii, believed during skydiving trip
"The small plane crashed shortly after takeoff, last night, and Hawaii, impure Amy held reports all nine people on board died on the first day of summer. The twin engine aircraft took off for a sunset skydiving trip shortly afterward around six thirty in the evening. It crashed into a fence at the Dillingham airfield on the island of law, who bursting into flames, Tim Sokha, HARA is a spokesman for the Hawaiian department of transportation. He says the plane was operated by the awas. Who parachute centre hit preliminary indications are that there were six employee's. And then three customers that were on board. Honolulu fire chief men. Well, never says some of them left family members behind at the airfield in my forty years as a firefighter here in Hawaii. This is the most tragic aircraft incident that we had the FAA and the NTSB are investigating the cause of the

BBC World Service
Breathing polluted air may make you worse at maths and language
"And you study suggests that air pollution causes a, significant reduction in intelligence, research is. In China analyzed a sample of language and maths tests taken by twenty thousand people across a range of age groups over a four year period. Then compared the results with the level of pollutants in the air at the time they concluded that the longer people were exposed to air. The greater the damage. Turn teleconference she is one of the researchers Appleton's can't go directly into the blood vessel into the brain so, which can change the chemistry of the brain and in the. Long-term people may even in fact the by dementia as a, result of