35 Burst results for "Talion"

"talion" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:11 min | 1 year ago

"talion" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Of giant pandas I'm Brad Steve The Yankees needed something to start their bats It happened to be a hailstorm in Baltimore After a rain hail delay the Yankee bats erupted In fact Josh Donaldson's two run Homer came after Anthony Rizzo and Giancarlo Stanton at RBI hits the Yankees go on to beat the Orioles 5 two in Baltimore Yankee starter jamison talion had given up a two run Homer to Cedric Mullins and the Yankees trail two zip heading into that rain delay The Matt sounder three game winning streak stopped at city field losing to the Arizona Diamondbacks three two but don't blame starter Carlos Carrasco who was simply brilliant 8 strikeouts and allowed just three hits over 5 innings of work but the bullpen gave up three runs in the top of the 7th the mets didn't give up though starling Marte smacked a two run Homer in the bottom of the 8th but the rally would fall short and the mets lose to the Diamondbacks NBA playoff action gets underway for the nets and the Celtics Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock in Boston plenty of action in first round play It was the Utah Jazz surprising the Dallas Mavericks 99 93 Luka Dončić didn't play for the Mavericks and it hurt Donovan Mitchell leading the jazz with 32 points The Minnesota Timberwolves destroy the Memphis Grizzlies on the road Anthony Edwards with 36 points he's hot All star center Carl Anthony towns teammate had a monster game with 29 points pulling down 13 rebounds in the T wolves victory The sixers looked good on their home court in Philadelphia beating the Toronto Raptors one 31 one 11 Steph Curry returned to the Golden State Warriors lineup just in time for game one of this playoff series against the nuggets and Golden State beat Denver one 23 one O 7 Rangers goalie Igor shish turkey is proving he is the real deal His 5th shutout of the season The restaurant ranger skated past Detroit Ford and nothing that's a Bloomberg sports update I dug Doyle Welcome to Bloomberg opinion listeners I'm Bonnie Quinn This week Russians have developing.

Yankees Homer Brad Steve Josh Donaldson Anthony Rizzo Giancarlo Stanton Baltimore Yankee jamison talion Cedric Mullins Matt sounder Carlos Carrasco Arizona Diamondbacks starling Marte mets Luka Dončić Orioles Donovan Mitchell Yankee Baltimore Carl Anthony
"talion" Discussed on We Hate Movies

We Hate Movies

05:57 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on We Hate Movies

"Think so monkeyhouse wieder. He's a photographer. Heads maybe now the house to fucker. The competitive love. i mean. this guy's career was not great ladies and gentlemen. Well you know. We're talking about him today. That's more not talking about you listener and not talking about you. Who's listening to this. You didn't pretend to be in high school. Steve but yeah i mean it was it. We talked about this on beverly. That james pickett's junior thing when you have a key when you have one by the apple it doesn't go great. Somebody gives you another bite of the apple like on a on a tv. Show dig in like an eagle. Just digging on a fucking rock totally dude totally until it fucking breaks off this. I'm not moving. Mother fought charlie sheen left that. Show me give a fuck. He stayed right there. Five hundred episodes of wherever that's commitment. Who say all that fucking. Charlie sheen madness that was going on when that show is still on the air. Kept it going with ashtanga kuchar. All right hey look. If you're going to bring you gotta you gotta give me a raise interest absolutely. I'm going to have to talk with him. You have to understand this. Just gonna make a problem for me chris. You find the secret okay. So this movie is called no small affair from eighty four. As like a shutter bug becomes obsessed with demi moore directed by jerry schatzberg the great director behind scarecrow and the panic in needle park. And it's just. It's like teen comedy awful. I got to see it. That sounds great. I honestly i love so every jumps out the window. There's like a chase through boston. Klindworth eddy makes his way to train train. The train station union stationer would case. Point is amtrak. He's running on the tracks he catches up very like you know the fugitives like hitchcock or something like grabs onto a train. I love him giving the finger to the assassin. I also as his shirt is a fucking reservoir dog toto and then when he gets to delaware he's just walking around with pay them yeah Tickets are also. Who did you kill a dog. I'm sorry when he gets. The delaware gets a store of looking at him. I had a bloody nose like a real bad. Bloody no. no no. You're covered blood. Might look my favorite thing about him. Running for the train is like this. Assassin is shooting at him. There are all these things blocking him and then at the end when there's nothing but there's a good like i don't know like big me like fifty feet there where there's nothing block. He's like what he won this one. I give this went to him. Yeah you know. What if i shot him now you know. We probably don't have much of a movie. I big challenge. He goes to delaware he gets outfit. He dyes his hair and also dies. And it's the thing he does this. You've been to this weird. Wingtip blonde blonde is only like a skunk reverse gung new blonde. You shave your beard. That's easy to do all this wealth. Real quick Full blonde if i was hiding from the mafia but i think the thing is like full blonde. You're like that's a disguise. But you see. Like the paulie walnuts hung wreck paulie walnuts. Then it's like well and he has to intend to live his life like that. You want to stand out as much as possible. Draws much attention deers. because he's trying to pose as like a punk kid. I scheduled idea because at this rest stop area. He gets a skeleton t. Shirt which is pretty good find. He still wears the slacks and then he trades his jacket for you know. There's there's a hobo outside favorite season movie this hobo trading jackets with jon. Cryer for a pack of cigarettes. Pretty and it's just this random assortment of homeless people hanging out feel one. It's like one of the scenes in the movie that actually feels like it goes on onto longer than should resume. Seems kind of well paced. But this one is going on for a while to the point where this dude is like. Hey fellas look what our god shigeru talion jam get fellows also all right then. Everyone he's meeting is just like oh. My coty smells like shit. I mean the cia. Just jacket could you imagine. Yeah a big heavy wool jacket guys but sleep. Fake fucking dry cleaners aged vomit. Oh god i'm here to talk to you about blenders. Eyewear might be september but you still need shades. I was at a music festival. This sunday and i wish i had brought my blenders. It was quite a duke task trophy so let me tell you about him. Lenders eyewear is fresh from san diego california. And they're the only sunglasses brand. I'm ever gonna wear again. No that's not. Because i might immediately get involved in a jet ski accident after this but no i'm saying that because it's the quality and they're awesome styles. I've actually got my eyes on a few of the styles that they have out now like bowling moon and magic roy. With names like that. You know you wanna check these out. Chase fisher started blenders by selling his beechy shades out of a backpack while doubling is a surf instructor on a pacific beach. His goal to create an venturous mid priced eyewear option with the same cool factor as the leading styles but unlike those big brand shades. You've probably lost her smashed in the past. Blenders actually affordable. So you're not gonna cry when the inevitable happens name. A team of in house designers are constantly coming up with new styles. And it's not just sunglasses. Blenders has prescription glasses. Readers blue.

monkeyhouse wieder james pickett charlie sheen ashtanga kuchar jerry schatzberg needle park delaware Klindworth eddy apple demi moore beverly hitchcock Steve shigeru talion Assassin chris boston Cryer jon
"talion" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

Rock N Roll Archaeology

03:28 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

"Singers for a lionising the fucking ghetto and and these guys kind of lay out this tableau where you know where it's not some place you know where we were playing basketball in garbage can and it was always kinda fun. Stodgy sepia tone stuff where it was just kind of stark in cold and horrifying Doug that not doug them actually for doing it so yeah. I think their use of classical music samples. It's like they were listening. The horror movie soundtracks and that blood or in a way that like the ghetto boys are even grave diggers with rizza. Didn't to me like as creepy. And i think the other the other groups like eugene was imagining. And i can you're also highlighting nate. They had their foot in different places. You know so for the grave. Diggers you know the risen was there so he had this thing where it was horror core but there was also i mean wu. Tang certain members of hooton flirted. I mean method man like sort of a certain elements of the oric. Orrin ghetto boys had certain elements as well so. But there's the elements just like embracing it. And i think that's what kind of Three six mafia. You stand out then. Also i think that's what made their music not as commercially accessible. You know or when you know at the time when they were blowing up. I was in new york and Rolling with folks. Listen to have up. I was myself and it just really wasn't on our radar just for some reason really you know. I think that we are too far removed from the scene. You're getting a lot of stuff second and third hand. But you know it's one of these things like you'd hear three six mafia just hearing all these guys are trying to be. Satan is whatever you know. So but but that's the difference meantime grave diggers and ghetto boys and other people that were flirting with certain kinds of things. They seem like they were straight up. They were far into it a lot. More than other folks that were just like. Oh let me let me try this. Little new flavor of hip hop there was something more. There were more sinister also. I think you can't you can't you. You can't I there were different constituent. Like you have to go back to times square. Forty second street and There were different. Constituencies that went to the cheap kung fu flicks raised seventy five cents and hanging out there day and the ones that went to the horror flicks. You could have suspicious playing right next door to five fingers death but they were completely different audience. You could feel you could feel that would remove from grave diggers onto the wu tang. He had a much much more aggressive. Feel for the constituency that hung out at five finger death and frankly i was a five finger. Death guard myself to go into horror movies in times square. Just seems stupid to me somehow. Is the the the movie superior. I wasn't into it was at a gallo. Talion ashes them so it was lame stupid so whereas kung-fu could take that and apply that in times square. You ask give shout to goblin soundtrack to spirit. Though that is incredible soundtrack album and just the soundtrack of that gave us..

rizza hooton Orrin ghetto Doug doug nate eugene Tang basketball times square Satan new york wu tang Talion fu
"talion" Discussed on Mosaic of China

Mosaic of China

07:57 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on Mosaic of China

"Well thank you so much. Murray onto part two okay. Ten questions they start here. So i ask these questions to every guest. We will start with question one. What is your favorite china-related fact. The word shanghai beans up from the ocean shang means up and high means ocean in. I think many people use that name without ever stopping and thinking. why is it called shanghai. So this is one big river delta. It's just silt deposit over hundreds and thousands of years and we're about maybe a meter or less above sea level so literally. This is a city which hasn't just risen vertically in the last twenty years as we see the beautiful skyline of legit sway. it's a physical creation that has risen up from ocean. It's still being created if you've ever seen as maybe when you land at pudong airport and looked out at that coastline. There's mudflats that just stretch out into infinity and the water's very brown color at silt. Coming down the unsee river being deposited in the east china sea so shanghai is continuing to be created. Wow do you have a favorite word or phrase in chinese. If i were to choose a couple of words such should be part of the english language lee high because it's a word that's both positive and negative. You know somebody who is Is hanley high can be really strong And it can be resolved if it can be negative. You know his attitude tightly high. He's he's you know he's too strict. He's strong he's not flexible enough Where's personality But you know you can also describe someone who's leigh high's really good at something. He was really got great competency or skill. It can be very different meanings depending on the context the context duality of it is so rich. Which lee hire you. Do you think if you ask one of the people it works with me. They might have a negative. I like to think that. I'm both and neither that i'm just you know just me. Yeah the second thing talion tagliani. The literal context means disgusting. Oh disliked right. Yes but if a girl would say you talliin. They're saying it in a in a in a positive way almost flirtatious way No-one flirts with me. Murray to ensure that someone does. I'm sure that someone does. That's great thank you for that. What is your favorite destination within china. Pingyao pingyao guten. I think maybe others have said that. To credible i would recommend it to anybody. You know. it's a wall. Street is about six square. Kilometers rises up out of the agricultural plains of shansi province and it is a tremendous experience. He feels like you're stepping into a ming dynasty movie and within that wall city It's a protected unesco world heritage site. So there's really no development on the outside of the of the wall cities mostly just farmland of course is a few tourist things that have popped up but within the the wall city there really are no cars. You can rent a bicycle. You can bike around the city on the wall. There's lots of traditional hotels and restaurants and great food and great people And just wonderful experience. The photos ice off my friends letter that did show a mass of tourists said. That's the one downside right. I was lucky enough to go twenty years ago. If you left china what would you miss the most. And what would you miss. The least the most is the excitement of every day every day. Something is happening. I learned something. I'm challenged in some way. I also feel like it can contribute in some way. I just feel like it's where everything's happening. That's what i would miss the most what i would miss. The least is the fast pace. I don't know if that makes any sense. But when i do get out of the country and when i go to my comfort zone france or somewhere else to not have a fast pace and You know every so often. You need to kind of recharge batteries. I think it's obvious and The problem is when i'm there. I missed the fast pace after a couple of weeks. When i'm here after a few months i need a break from the fast pace so i'm never going to be completely in either. Thank you for saying that so well. Is there anything that still surprises you about life in china yes I can't tell you what the because it'll be tomorrow surprise but there's definitely things that surprised me but sometimes surprise me in special ways. I i give you a kind of unique example. I remember when i first came. Here i had the The opportunity to travel domestically and is like twenty seven years ago. And in those days you gotta boarding pass. You went to a small airport terminal and then you'd be bust out or you'd walk out to the aircraft on the tarmac in wasn't anything like it is now and Even though you had a reserve seat a scrum to get onto the flight and it was. I mean it was a rough scrum and You had your seat in theory Sometimes you had to remind people who got your seat that it was your seat and always always work out. And then you know the same thing on an escalator. Everybody would just push in. There's a lot of reasons for that. And it's not a criticism i remember. It was like about eight years ago. i was on an escalator. Going up to a second floor in my office building at the time and I looked up. And i noticed that everyone was standing to the right. Everybody without exception and it just made me realize everything. You thought you knew was different. Because people are progressing in society is changing so quickly and so dynamically and it's just the smallest of things but It's exciting to see it and it's exciting to be part of a. I kind of almost felt like i was the one that was kind of standing on the wrong side. So you perspective changes yes and when you see it as a stock image like you said then. It does hit home very good. What is your favorite place to go out to eat or drink or just hang out m on the bund. Oh go. And i hope it exists forever At least as long as i'm here. I almost feel like it's named after me because the m for murray it's not for me it's for michelle. Who owns the restaurant. But i love the restaurant. I love the location. I love the the cuisine night loved the branding. I love the feel of the place. I also love. We'll con- lou It's just a beautiful area. And for liu hulan lose single that whole area so i spend a lot of time with the little cafes and restaurants there when i have a chance to come back to the pusey side of shanghai. Yes i think that's where we first met in one of those cafes. They're right that's right. What is the best or worst purchase. You have made in china. I bought a one thousand nine hundred eighty s house on. We'll lou years ago you one of those people who got him Early enough. i made the brave decision to buy. You know the top of nineteen twenties house. A standalone house. The top part of that house in about two thousand five and lived in for seven years and had a wonderful experience. And then i sold it in the old adage buy low. Sell high definitely applies to real estate in shanghai. You are not winning any friends right now. At least you give me that coin. Yes yes you have your coin. Now the hardest question. What is your favorite which astika and it's a great question. Actually because i communicate more by stickers than by text so there's a series of we chat stickers which is called. Shell leo little leo. And it's actually you know. Couple of characters as a dot com. There's a cat. And i think there's a couple of other characters that occasionally make an appearance and i just think that the designs are brilliant and it just super fun and a little bit naughty. And.

shanghai pudong airport china talion tagliani Pingyao Murray shansi east china hanley leigh lee liu hulan france lou murray michelle astika leo little leo
"talion" Discussed on Don't Blame Me!

Don't Blame Me!

02:25 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on Don't Blame Me!

"Think you should go to both schools and tour and see which camp i mean. Campus life is a little weird during these times but see what type of campus like you like. Also i would talk to the financial aid offices at both schools and also talked to a career counselor at both schools and i also talk someone. Who's in the major at the school and be like how do you feel about this. And even just like pick their brain and be like. I've been thinking about doing community college here in like this and they can tell you like khayyat janette is like a fucking shit show. Get it done as much as you can. Because a lot of people have gotten a lot of jenin done in like eighth classes and they can give you an insight to all of that. But i personally a big believer in like if it's not about the social stuff and it's about like the outcome of the degree and the career field. My personal belief system is like get whatever degree is accessible to you. And i mean it's kind of a pipe dream to say like i don't necessarily believe in going in debt for degree because it is pretty standard at this point but i think that like if you are able to minimize the amount of debt will you can go into As much as you can and get whatever degree that you can get. I think a lot of those places that like you know. Medical school are certain things that require like always higher. Education requires a specific name schools. If you don't need that the education same across the board and it's about the experience and do you value social experience in college but you also have to factor in like kovic social experience or do you valley value like work experience and being able to kind of be more hands on with that kind of stuff. Potentially get an internship while you're in school or get a job or like a fellowship do something not fellowship dude like Feel like do anything that is into that field so you're simultaneously building connections and working towards your future career. While working perjured degree. I dig it. You got options well I am twenty five years old. And i have been a long time listener spot a couple of times like other things and i listen to this day one still. I have a question about talion ready. I have been married to medicine for about eight months. And we had a very tiny.

khayyat janette jenin talion
"talion" Discussed on Decibel Geek Podcast

Decibel Geek Podcast

04:26 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on Decibel Geek Podcast

"We're playing in the room and walks in. He sits down on the steps and watch us rehearse play. He really liked us. Go holy shit cramps when he walked in and then like can't play anymore and then we got to start hanging out with them because we never did the family thing. So There was a pool table in the next room. We played pool with him. He felt safe. That's why kept coming back then. He really liked the ban. So i'm sitting there. Where smoke joints with them. He wanna coke. But i didn't do co. I said i got this great pot now. Roll join and smoke with them. And so we're talking about talion food so i tell them my family and grandparents from italy. My mother makes lasagna. Grandma's upstairs making the meatballs and hit a make. My mother make you some and a couple of days later. I bring in trail lasagna. And i see john. This is for you. This is from my mother and takes the takes it. Thank you was great. Rather and he went away and then that was that and then and then the story continues. So i'm playing with rod stewart. Five nights at the garden in the last night we had a party. Last st john lennon and who's with his wife at the time may pang come to come to the to the party. We had wherever we had it. And my mother and father came to see me rod so my mother father came to party with me. It's my mother goes. Hey isn't that john lennon over. The mother took talion. Yeah that's not intimidated. And i met him that day. you know. i didn't get to know. But i met him. We talked about you. Know vinnie hanging out with himself and yes. That's him she goes you know. I made him some lasagna. Never found out if he liked it. I said okay. Hr vinnie and my parents. My father my mother. Mary chali because oh nice to meet you as my mother says how he. I made the lasagna. I just wanna know if you liked it because oh british accent. I loved it. It was fantastic so my weather says could have my pan back and we never got it back. Yoke goes got it right. I couldn't believe it. I was shocked when she said like. I think i'll bring the pan back. Maybe combine mother's gonna walks in. Addison square garden with the pan. Tell tell them about the day in school after lennon school so then we started working with them. Yeah he asked to do three videos that's on. Dvd's with my band minnows..

john lennon coke vinnie rod stewart Grandma pang Mary chali italy rod john Addison square garden lennon school
"talion" Discussed on The Moratorium

The Moratorium

04:15 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on The Moratorium

"They picked it up again. Does sound like a french. German definitely german. So they anyway. They made several of these. He plays ed straker in this movie. Not striker but straight his strikers striker. Oh it's italian. Ma talion he was also in. Diamonds are forever okay. So that was nineteen. Seventy one. Schreiner remember diamond for forever. A diamond smuggling investigation leaves. James bond to las vegas where he uncovers an evil plot involving a rich business. Tycoon are there any other kinds of plot evolving rich business. Tycoons they have nothing better to do but be diabolical. Bruce glover okay. Yeah that's diamonds are forever is the one that has Hotter their names the to weird gay. Assassins mr kid and mr win Which bruce glover plays mr went. Yes and putter. Smith plays mr kid. Looks like your basic comecon guy putter smith. I'm so intrigued. And weirded out by bruce glover and this weird son has everyone should be aware. Yeah i mean it's just when you get to the part of his career where he's a bodybuilder. Then it's like oh man what is what's going on. Yeah those were good. Assassins were they. Don't remember it. it's awkward and uncomfortable. And i'm sure there's a lot of gay jokes so Ed bishop was also in the day after tomorrow. Nineteen seventy six. This was a tv movie. And i thought i'd seen this before the crew of the light ship. Altai ariz are lost in space when the craft is struck by a meteor shower and goes out of control. I think it was like maybe a they were trying to push a pilot and just didn't take off because it's only forty eight minutes long but it does star brian blessed. Oh cool main. love that guy. We just watched a the first season of blackadder which i think everybody kinda considers it. Well it's just not as funny as the rest of them But brian blessed as He doesn't need like to be miked or anything. He's so loud that come from stage acting. Oh yeah for sure has to. And he's just a giant like insane affable man vets that an acronym. That's not like i had seen no but i will. What is the demon headmaster. Need to know what that is. That was a tv series. I clicked on that a minute. But i also clicked on whoops apocalypse. I know that there was a movie. But in nineteen eighty two was a tv series. Weird weird area where. I do not recognize anybody at this. It has to be like a talion right or some other I think it's British okay recognize any of these people. I watched the trailer for it. It's a lighthearted. Look at the final week before doomsday. Oh american president. Johnny cyclops is trying to run a election campaign while dealing with the russians. Adipose shah needing to be hitter and a new weapon called the quark bomb. God it looks a lot going on atrocious. And that's maybe why it was on for one season really lampooned us with that whole what you say..

bruce glover mr kid ed straker Ma talion Ed bishop Schreiner Altai ariz James bond las vegas brian blackadder mr Smith smith Johnny cyclops Adipose shah
"talion" Discussed on Monocle 24: The Briefing

Monocle 24: The Briefing

01:37 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on Monocle 24: The Briefing

"Of some heads. What twenty twenty one's version Be it's really interesting. D look at big trends. Can you predict a surprise. That's going to be the song of this summer. You mentioned surprise a special today. Tone artists datum talion. They're going to release songs. I mean you know beyond that can come with tracking become the son of the summer and and even as journalists. We don't know because they like to keep as a surprise but my guess one band and a particular sewn might be the son of the summer. I might be wrong but At for now at least it's going to be the song butter Do you remember when we were talking a few weeks ago that i love that the word butter in english this is ri- has that somehow subconsciously influenced your pick for the summer break out. Maybe maybe maybe foreign because this everywhere. Maybe people love batista's and and they're very simple. They know how to dance. They have this perfect image. I think they are the sound of two thousand twenty one here a little bit of that. In a second in the meantime we have reached the end of today's program. So i thanks as always entertaining us on another terrific. Global countdown thanks to our production team of msl. And reese james where we lack of course on the racing at the same time tomorrow until my thank you for listening and fe. It's your pick for the big hit of the summer so you introduce it. It's videos with butter. Three men bed.

batista reese james
"talion" Discussed on Inside Europe

Inside Europe

03:40 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on Inside Europe

"In a greenhouse full of sprouting flowering. Greenery away looked our shows some of the plants. She's thinking of buying well. Adopting is the word she uses because this is no ordinary shop. The plant protection society is. It's called is like an abandoned dog sanctuary but for plants all of this flora was destined for the trash idea not to raise plants and like food. I also Try to buy. Food could be thrown away like because of the that comes from expiry date. Yes so Instead of going in a flower shop to buy fade pretty run. Good one. I want into edison plant. Some of the plants are donated like thigh. high orange tree is former. Didn't want to look after any more most no longer. Quite fit for sale plants bought at very much reduced prices from nurseries and wholesalers. Who going to shut them out. Trained as a landscape gardener the plant protection societies founder. Nikola tie you nurtures them back to good health and sells them diaper. He opens the back of a van and shows we what he's picked up. That morning was the possessor matter. It's an impressive haul. The van is crammed shout banzai. Says there's a sixteen year old bonsai. That's lost a few leaves for example sixteen years old. He only has the capacity to save a fraction of the plants on their way to the garbage in his area over the years. People ask me if. I know how many plans are being trashed. I don't but i do know. I only have space for about a tenth of the plans that are thrown away in. The nurseries is important to reduce this waste. He says because the carbon footprint of house plants and the plants people put in their gardens is surprisingly heavy on or edry liaison poulsbo. If you just look at the transport take the example of a capitalist. Let's say you want to buy it in marseilles. It has grown in santa gaza in spain. Not far away but if you buy directly from the producer it will cost you twice as much as if you buy it from a wholesaler in the netherlands so before getting to your flat that cactus will have traveled thousands of kilometers for no reason. Leon's deputy mayor nikola roussin says he hopes to team up with the plant protection society to as he puts it extend recycling living. Things are the ones who i've all-star greenspaces managers to look into either doing something similar on our own or a joint venture with nikola talion. The aim is to recycle more of the plants in our parks and gardens that haven't reached the end of their lives to get them back into the circuit and back to good health for the moment. He says the motivation for taking a leaf out of the plant protection. Societies book is environmental. it's not about plant welfare old. Needless destruction of plant life not for the moment response go to on some public opinion nor the legislative framework is ready but in a few years time why not. Animals only recognized in french law as sentient beings. In two thousand fifteen will things evolve in the same way for plants. I hope site in a small greenhouse. Some big ideas started to grow johnson. W leo.

Nikola nikola roussin sixteen year old twice spain thousands of kilometers sixteen years old nikola talion johnson santa gaza two thousand fifteen about a tenth leo Leon french
"talion" Discussed on The Wellness Mama Podcast

The Wellness Mama Podcast

05:26 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on The Wellness Mama Podcast

"On your life and if so what they are in life. Yeah so. I so been doing. This work might entire life in the daughter of italian immigrants and my parents taught me through his medicine and so the book. That is really the dramatic impact on me. Is a book called prescription for nutritional healing by. Phyllis balk b. a. l. c. h. And it's really an encyclopedia. The talks you to you about nutrition and supplements and i we started Doing integrative care before the internet. So i had to go look at microfiche. Need both you know what that is you might have to google. What microfiche is right and i. This book was just transfer for me. I practically had this book memorized and you can buy any amazon. Any every mother should have this book as a resource. Because if your kids got bellyache. It's going to give you nutrition and supplements a naval homeopathy version as well so just made a huge impact in understanding that that we put limits in the in the allopathic world but in the eastern world. And in you know when you really talk about. Integrative care means combining the best of things so i. I just think it's a book. Everybody should have just have on the shelf. I love it. I don't know that anyone has suggested that on this podcast yet but reminds me. My mom had that book. When i was a kid as well and actually saw yesterday on her bookshelf when i was having coffee with her in the morning and Yeah is there so much information in it. Ironically you would think you'd be able to find all that information online but yeah it's so hard to dig through and as google has changed the results to prioritize the more mainstream medical side. It's harder and harder to find those things. So that's a great idea to have that resource on hand because you also when you have a child with who has an earache. Who has a stomach ache. You want the answers now. So that's such a good suggestion and it led me to build sort of a resource kit. Katie of light. Water the things you want to have on hand like i love getting a mom when the oppy kit when i go baby shower for Talion you're gonna get a good guest. But i bring homeopathy. I bring things that are safe for moms and babies on so that they can start their wellness majority and realize that you don't have to have you know a chemical if your kid is constipated or whatever it is so It's a great resource perfect. I will make sure people can find that as well look. We'll be in the show notes any parting advice for all the parents listening before we wrap up yet you know. Nobody ever regrets getting help. The only regret when they don't and if your kid is struggling in the tiniest way you know whether you want to use its case to resource Actual tips or you wanna go to a licensed therapist you know. It's only going to help bring lifelong health in. We don't have our mental health. We don't have any time and it doesn't really matter all the things that you physical things you have. It's gotta start it all starts from within and that's where we need to focus on with our kids. Is that mind body connection the physical side of all these beautiful holistic things. Great food that you're giving your kids beautiful homes education. You've got to build that internal resilience and every parent has the power to do it. And we've talked mostly about kids health mental health today. But i think that's another important point as we wrap up is in many ways we also have to be the example of this and i know many moms who have some version of a health problem that also leads over into mental health. And i think it's a very powerful thing when we get the chance to be the example that Because in our kids also get to learn by watching us work through a struggle and they get to see the resilience firsthand so I think that's an important point in a perfect place to wrap up and like you said. I think there could be whole other episodes related just to the tick borne illness side and to prevention and to a whole lot of other aspects of children's mental health but will wrap up here for today. And if you guys have any questions for dr an please leave those on instagram or the comments so that if we can do around two day we can make sure we address all of those things. But i know how busy you are as a mom and practitioner. And i'm really grateful for you for being here today and for sharing. We'll thank you so much for supporting kids and family mental house. Because like i said it's just so important more important than ever right now. And i want people to feel like that they can take themselves and understand just as you said self care for mama is just as important as the love that we give our kids in you will lead and show your kids such a deep level that you love yourself enough to take care of yourself. You'll also show them what you can do for your south by demonstrating that so. It's so important it's great conversation. Thank you thank you and thanks as always to you guys for listening and sharing your most valuable resources your time and your energy with us today. We're both so grateful that you did. And i hope that you will join me again on the next episode of the wellness mama podcast. You're enjoying these interviews. Would you please take two minutes to leave a rating or review on itunes for me. Doing this helps more full to find the podcast which means even more moms and families can benefit from the information. I really appreciate your time and thanks as always for listening..

amazon yesterday itunes two minutes instagram google today both around two day prescription for nutritional h italian Talion Katie wellness
"talion" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

03:08 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

"I'm not gonna i'm not gonna say what i think. The jews initially a as far back as three thousand. You agent kenny. Three thousand years ago. Do you know that the romans occupied us for four hundred years lou. Well less than three thousand years ago but see if other talion thumbs up at my house and says that's my house. Because i lived here two thousand years ago. Well he'll gasoline easier kenny. And i think you'd give them one to came to your door of course but also goes under the un estimates the property losses by choosing out of companies with ten teams. But that's a completely different question. That's that is there. I'm ready to debate it with you anytime. But you talking about the palestinians who once had a country now do not who wants the house but now do not who wants an orange grove. And i promise you it was not as swamp but now do not who are living in exile who are living as refugees who living as internally displaced people who are living in gaza in an open air prison camp. Can we deal with them. Can we deal with them in this debate. Yes of course you know what. I'm just redeposited. Gosport i know you have a script but for the interest of you on the stop talking about what happened in morocco do jewish people in morocco. You phoned up to talk about palestine you said. The palestinians well debt ridden peasants and none of them on land. That was all owned by absentee landlords. You said land swamp you said they had no orange groves. All of the is a racist. Trope right okay. Well i'm like. I say they all sort of the article using not yet because i think it's interesting. I want to see what your point of view on your mind. You listen to make any. Never listen to me. Don't believe or what does said reid. Isreaeli historians read gideon levy the greatest living israeli. Who was on here last week. Read professor abby slime read the finest jewish israeli academics.

reid last week morocco Three thousand years ago abby slime two thousand years ago ten teams jewish Isreaeli gideon levy kenny three thousand one four hundred years three thousand years ago less than jews palestine israeli gaza
"talion" Discussed on Chelsea Mike'd Up

Chelsea Mike'd Up

02:05 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on Chelsea Mike'd Up

"Their rights are owned in a in wfl by racing louisville. But i guess wanted to play during the offseason. Their priorities always gonna be to play in the united states. I think they just saw an opportunity without really w without an nws's for six months. I can get some games over across the pond and be fit and and have had a full season's worth of play before we go to the olympics in tokyo. And i think that's kind of the opportunity that they took but i would still love to see more players coming to an end to the. Ws oh excuse me and also to these champions league clubs like from a us women's national team standpoint like one of the us women's national team players wanna go to barcelona. I wouldn't hate it because they seem. They seem replaying some really good stuff and could offer the. Us women's national teams from ideas. It would appear all right. We got a legend coming up here from telemundo. Andreas cantor the signature called. Don't worry i don't make them do it. I also is it like Is it like michael buffer. That i have to pay him every time he his trademark. I'm not even going to do it but this guy does it better than anybody and a lot of people do it. You know the signature. Gold call andres cantor for many has been someone that you grew up with listening to so this is very cool and i'm extremely honored and i know i speak for you. Who your broad gasser. In your own people can check you out on noxious inter miami broadcast but also sap buttons on do ana and you can just briefly. Speak to the The tremendous career interest kantor has had. Oh he's an absolute legend. And you say this to him. And you're spot on like the soundtrack to a lot of people watching the sport even english speakers. Don't understand a lick of spanish like there is a time where you know spanish language coverage of the world cup. All you could find a talion ninety one.

tokyo six months andres cantor Andreas cantor michael buffer united states english barcelona louisville olympics one spanish racing ninety one talion world miami
"talion" Discussed on Veteran On the Move

Veteran On the Move

04:41 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on Veteran On the Move

"For warriors or non. Thanks for being here today. Take us back. Tell us what you do the navy. Thank you joe thank you for having me upwards eight really appreciate though like many miss airman. You follow my started by creating with the marine corps. Raza razek corman with a stay company. talion seven marines. I love that. And i went on. See mike's mission throw a cs. At became a surface warfare officer deployed to iraq and afghanistan at three combat towards iraq afghanistan. And i love the navy still spin there today. A sense that. I was tired of seeing what my friends. Dying up. Drugs and suicide and san diego bombs and bullets Today change something navient started or chest. Warriors awesome god. Bless you man for being a corman with the marine corps. Appreciate that Tell us a little bit about workshops for words and what you do there Thank you we're such warriors is a nation is only accredited school that does advanced manufacturing train eat placement and credentialing or veterans wounded warriors and transitioning service members into advanced any extra careers throughout america and know how to buy cost. So how does that walk us through that. How does that work in. What how do you. Define advanced manufacturing mass manufacturing be three d. printing computer design computer dramatically controlled genes. Five asks. water jedi five axis lead laser cutting welding fabrication. Their skill sets are using it. S a tax rate but have a nationally recognized credential coupled to it. It's a marine corps. You were a pilot measure. You're going through in military through on tour but then you don't have any. Fa service at the end noah Twenty four years. I'm wrinkle and you have nothing. You've been piloting Aircraft helicopters no problem. But you go out and you cannot get a job because none of credit transfer unless during your service. One of your show nate said. Hey joe come on over here. Take this test and mary up your sibling..

america Today today mike iraq Twenty four years Raza razek corman nate joe afghanistan One san diego Five asks noah eight talion seven marines five navy
Alcohol in Early America

Everything Everywhere Daily

01:50 min | 2 years ago

Alcohol in Early America

"Despite the very strict religious beliefs of early american settlers their religious beliefs didn't include abstaining from alcohol. Far from it they saw alcohol as natural and a gift from god. Jesus both consumed wine as well as made it at the winning qena so long as you consumed in moderation. They had no problem with alcohol. The rationale for drinking alcohol was that water wasn't considered safe. This belief wasn't totally wrong. Prior to development of modern water purification methods the simplest and easy way to kill microbes in water was with alcohol. Straight water was almost never consumed. One stories told a better. Talion immigrant named philip massey. Who caused a stir at large dinner. Party in philadelphia where he asked for a glass of water. He recounted quote. I perceived some confusion among the servants and the water did not arrive the host next to whom i sat whispered in year asking with a smile if i could not drink something else because the unexpected request for a glass of water upset the entire household and they did not know what they were about unquote. When the first. English settlers arrived in america. Getting the ale that they were used to consuming was difficult. The ingredients to make ale didn't grow that well in new england and importing from england was really expensive. This led to the consumption of different types of alcohol and those tastes drove a large part of the colonial american economy. The biggest rank in colonial america by far was rum by the time of the american revolution. Colonist were drinking three point seven gallons of rum per person per year rum is made from molasses. Which comes from sugarcane. Rome was first made in barbados and then imported to the american colonies. However the demand for rome was such that the first round distillery was established in boston in sixteen fifty seven. Eventually every town of note in the colonies had their own. Distillery

Qena Philip Massey Philadelphia Confusion America New England England Barbados Rome Boston
Prof. Cecilia Lunardini, Professor of Physics at Arizona State University. - burst 01

Scientific Sense

59:38 min | 2 years ago

Prof. Cecilia Lunardini, Professor of Physics at Arizona State University. - burst 01

"Welcome to the site of accents. Podcast where we explore emerging ideas from signs policy economics and technology. My name is gill. Eappen we talk with woods leading academics and experts about the recent research or generally of topical interest scientific senses unstructured conversation with no agenda or preparation. Be color a wide variety of domains. Rare new discoveries are made and new technologies are developed on a daily basis the most interested in how new ideas affect society and help educate the world how to pursue rewarding and enjoyable life rooted in signs logic at inflammation v seek knowledge without boundaries or constraints and provide unaided content of conversations. Bit researchers leaders. Who low what they do. A companion blog to this podcast can be found at scientific sense. Dot com and displayed guest is available on over a dozen platforms and directly at scientific sense dot net. If you have suggestions for topics guests at other ideas please send up to info at scientific sense dot com and i can be reached at gil at eappen dot info. Yesterday's dini whose professional physics at amazon is taking versity. One of the primary of usage focus is new leaders. Welcome to see you thank you. Yeah thanks for doing this. So i know that you have done a lot of work on neutrinos. You have a few papers. That came out recently. And i want to talk to a twenty eighteen paper dalogue and my own neutrino signatures of primordial black holes. invite you say. These studied primordial black holes ph is as sources of massive neutrinos by hawking radiation under the hypothesis that black holes emit nuclear no bass item states be described quantitatively called the pbs evolution and lifetime is affected by the mass and flew munich dialect my own nature of neutrinos before we get the details celia I wanted to get some definitions of folks would know what black court saw a few episodes of black holes Here we're talking about. The pride won't imprac codes owes The these black holes are fall close to the big bang And then as caulking radiation Sort of The black hole evaporating So to speak and that That lady Imitating these particles called neutrinos. Right is that. Do i understand that correctly. Yes so so pry bhutia blackhaws before we get the neutrinos what is sort of the mechanism of formation their ho- exactly what they have formed sure We believe that Primordial hose could form in the early universe from density fluctuations so We know that any object could can possibly become a black hole if you compress it into a very very small volume so this same process could happen in the universe with Density fluctuations that could be a regional space where there is an over density compared to the surrounding and each of over the east coast past Then then it could get to the point of becoming a black hole This this The details of this process are beyond my expertise But this is fairly reasonable thing to expect and The diesel really small rate in the scheme of things. Yes so when i started to Learn about time or their black holes. I was amazed by how different in mass can be. They can be may be the massive wouldn't but they can also be The mass of Being or they can be Even even smaller so they can really be very very tiny. Yes oh so. That's really really small so this is sort of quantum fluctuations only universe Kind of getting Getting concentrated in vide- small areas But we believe those. Those primordial black holes emit nucleus. we Have to go back to stephen hawking for that stephen hawking wrote this seminal paper Which is about what we nowadays. Nowadays call hawking radiation so he demonstrated that any black hole regardless of what it is could be primordial black hole or a stellar. Nicole doesn't matter any black hole isn't really black because it meets radiations so radiation particles And the the process that we call evaporation so Because a black holes fundamentally gravity objects they would meet any particle that couples to raggedy including trees so It's the moment you have a black hole you do. Have hawking radiation and neutrinos are just that are expected. Part of hawking radiation. You're so caulking radiation so that that happens to every black hole even the even the supermassive ones right so i it said gentle phenomenon And so going to neutrinos now Don't typically thing neutrino site Caltrans and electrons are really well known. neutrinos are particles. Dad don't interact with The matter Espionage don't interact much with matters. We don't really see them. They don't really see them. And and so it's difficult to measure that's right and so so this could you give a. What does the history of neutrino vendor we. I understand such things existed. Let's see We go back to the twentieth century and the story goes That the father of neutrino sees Warfare he. He made the hypotheses of a new particle existing as a way to explain Some strange behavior of neutrinos produced by by nuclear decay so It's it's a long story but Let me just say that For a long time. Neutrinos who just the hypotheses and then around the mead of this twentieth century They would actually officer so we started to Know that this particles existed and But that was pretty much heat. So we didn't know much about the properties And one of these properties the mass which we still don't know i'm easy after all these decades but we still don't know if neutrinos have something like a magnetic went for example And something that we didn't learn until much later on is the fact. That neutrinos oscillate. That's that that sounds. That's something that we that were somehow established Turn of the sanctuary around the around the year. Two thousand really after after decades of of testing with the solar neutrino selling trainers. So there are still there are still a number of no on your trainers. One of them is the mass one and the other one is the The nature of the neutrinos being the iraq particles or miranda particles we She's kind of a fundamental cost. So there are that. That's that's that's related to the fundamental nature of the neutrino as particle break. So so they do. They have a mass but masses small. Do they have a chunk. Neutrinos don't have charge so they are electrically neutral and that's Comedy the biggest reason for for them to be a so allusive as you were mentioning earlier on especially in the in early. Nineteen hundreds all the particle detectors so basically a electro-magnetic detectors they were looking for charge or Magnetic behavioral some sort. So neutrinos don't have that and so they They only have the weak interaction At that that we know wolf and gravity of course and so that's why they They escape detection so so easily because their interaction is very weak. Yeah so so. That's sort of the beauty of neutrinos right so because they don't interact V can go back digits of years. Simple hats Perhaps become pickup one on earth and it would have travelled that distance through all sorts of things but would not have affected wider rate right. Yes and so so the other phenomenon of neutrino is that you mentioned that they also late so are they're failures of tinos they go back and forth. Yes it's It's actually a fairly Easy to this cried kwan to sonam on We know that In quantum mechanics there is this Particles described by these function which is called the wave function. And so the neutrinos could be on. Neutrino could be born as a say an extra and then it's quanta way function would evolve over time in a way that after sometime. The wave function is no longer a purely electron neutrino way function. But the has a little bit or even law actually of a different flavor. It could be a new one or tau. So what we observe in the actors. Is this change of flavor and perhaps the most striking demonstration of this phenomenon is solemn. Neutrinos because we know that the sun produces an extra treatments and It doesn't produce a new on and talion trainers so But here on earth we do Have evidence that the solar neutrino flags that we receive has some You wanna talion. Trina in it and that can only be explained by sedation and Actually after this other neutrino data showed this phenomenon. This was also confirmed by a saint men made experiments so it's a fairly established phenomenon it and so that the flavors are Electron new on tall. Yes that's right and so. Did you understand the vendor made in the sun for example there they are made as electron Neutrinos and by the time they reached the earth day the Immunes dot. Yes yes Impart young. that's that's what happens so ease. It always the case that they get a manufactured so to speak as as electoral neutrinos always. It depends on where they are born. There are places where neutrino sutter born in or flavors. A so it's it's it really varies with With the type of environment We are talking about okay. Okay and so in the people you say ph is this primordial black holes. We talked about radiates right. Handed and left handed dutra knows in equal amounts so anybody right-handed unless the cleaners. Okay let me see so Yes you say. Indicates of dirac neutrinos. pba Left neutrinos in equal amounts possibly increasing deceptive number noon pheno species nest. Yes is that explainable. Yes so right handed than left handed. Neutrinos that may take why to explain what that exactly means me. Just say that It's related to the neutrino mass. So if you're truly knows didn't have a mass which we know they do but if they didn't have a mouse They would only exist as left handed particles which means that basically their spin is Is anti aligned with the momentum and but if they have mass and the iraq particles There could be another type of neutrino which is right handed. Which where the This being ease aligned with a mentor other than anti line and so If you are iraq these these two different species could exist and so instead of having one species of neutrino emitted left-handed one Indicators of a massless trina if we have not suv nutrients than you would have to species and so. The black hole radiate war energy compared to The case when neutrinos don't amass so when we started working on this paper i was interested in this phenomenon that A lot of the literature having to do with a developer. Evaporation of primordial black couls. Consider the neutrinos as massless about. Now we know that they are massive. And so i thought well Sixty speaking at primordial black hole could radiate more energy than previously thought. So i found that aspect interesting and then sees you mention the possibility to increase the effective number of species. That's related to what it was talking about. So then you the black hole would ra- gate more neutrino States or more neutrino Species to spe pseudo speak and then Would increase the number of neutrinos per cubic centimeter Data we observe today so I'm kind of glossing over a lot of these days. But basically cosmology gives us a measurement of this and effective which is called the effective number two species. And if you have this right. Handed neutrinos coming from the primordial black holes. This number could be higher than than expected. And so that would be may be a i way to tell that maybe there are more black holes in the universe yet. So so the hawking radiation essentially creation coming out of black holes Expected defined Expected that over a long period of time. Black holes radiate away lap. Later ray out the mass or information that didn't do it And so this. Radiation is hockey. Radio station is it is a new park. Or is it. Fundamentally composed of neutrinos hawking radiation is made of every particle that no of so A black hole. A camera gate Pretty much everything. Photons neutrinos throngs You loans It said cetera but There is the catch here. The fact that a black hole has a temperature which is another Big achievement of stephen hawking to end and others To that the black hole is thermo dynamical object and so Basically the bigger the black hole the lower the temperature so if the temperature is really low The black hole wouldn't be able to immed- Very massive particles because they are thermal energy would be sufficient for that so because masses energy Mc squared right so because massey's energy If a black hole has too low of a temperature It wouldn't have its quantum energy It's it's Wouldn't be enough to produce the mass off a particular particle for example a proton may be too heavy to be produced by a really low tanto black home so so the beaker. The black called the lower the temperature. Yes ed so. So then can expect the bigger black holes to have more of a neutrino content in radiation. Yes because The bigger black holes would as i said be able to radiate the heavy particles and so they would only be able to radiate away the low mass particles and so there could be black holes that only emit photons gravitons and Neutrinos do a of sort of the distribution of this primordial black holes Isn't you know sort of everywhere. What is what do we know about you. Know some of the distribution of bbc's you mean spatial distribution like where they are now. I'm wondering just like the easy would do sort of look at the early universe will find them everywhere Probably at the beginning they would be a more or less uniformly distributed Bug in the universe. Today they would probably be Behaving like the dark matter. Does they would Be part of galactic halos In other words they would be they would class gravitationally on large structures like a like a galaxy placido galaxy so these call still around They would they would behave like like the dark matter down. So they would be in in halo. Galaxies would have by. Now have april would would they not have disappear because it far it depends on the mass That they have when they are born so their if their mass is less than a certain value that trying to remember Basically yes they would have to By now they would have completely evaporate did their masters larger than they will take longer to evaporate and they could still be around So they roughly speaking the dividing line between a black hole. Steve being around today or not. I think it's something like ten to fifteen grams fiery recall correctly into fifteen clams though So this paper. Eusebio obtained the diffuse flux of right hill. Neutrinos from his idea and so so. So so the nikkei actually act to build these neutrinos. They'd be flying here do pbs specifically In principle that's a possibility we Considered that for certain Masses of these black holes and certain density of this black holes the flux of neutrinos that they generate over time could be fairly large and so we could Detect these neutrinos If we had a very Power who attacked so Now life is never ideally in the sense that a real Ut detector have substantive issues like ground And so on. So at the end of the people we conclude that impact is giving given the limitations that current nutrient doctors have It may not really be possible to detect neutrinos trump mortgage black holes but people. That's a possibility and that alone is interesting. Yeah because they suggestion that this primordial black holes could be as as you mentioned could be part of the dark matter that yes to seeking. Is that still About us that has been. There has been a debate on these Kind of going back and forth in the scientific community The latest i heard is that Black whose could be part of the dark matter. Maybe even a large part but probably not they entire dark matter so a one hundred percent primordial Battery is a bit difficult to justify the day. experimental bowels that we already have constrained so various types but there could be scenarios where maybe a fraction of the dark matter. He's made of primordial black holes. I wanted to go into a ended up paper in twenty twenty supernova neutrinos directional sensitivity and prospects for dissertation here the export potential of current and future liquid cinta league neutrino detectors. I decade old town. Mass a localize a super a supernova neutrino signal into sky in douglas was feeding the core collapse nearby star tens to hundreds of english Coated and don't be constructed policy in the detector can be used to estimate a direction to the star so so this is now neutrinos from supernova and You so so we. We have Idea here that before this opened on what happens. If please open over a time period it is creating neutrinos that could pick up and and potentially get ready to see the super bowl. Yes that's what excites me The fact that Think about bitter jews. Beetlejuice is the most famous nearby star. That could go supernova anytime and we don't know when that's going to happen and If it wasn't for these neutrinos that our paper is about we will know until the style literally Collapses and and then soon after becomes superman but in this paper we we Show that before the star collapses which is the beginning of the supernova process We can detect these. These neutrinos That are used at that at that stage and so increase the pool we could know that You know tomorrow. These days beetlejuice exploding and that that would be quite exciting. Yeah it's beetlejuice is is red joy and reasonably close to was really big star. I can remember Cecilia there was some suggestion that It could go supernova within something one hundred fifty thousand years which is obliquely in cosmic time so it is getting ready to go to Supernova right yes. I am not you formed about exactly the number of years give or take but it's it's ready it's ready. It could be any time and any time any time for an astronomer muse anytime the next thousand soviet so we should. We should hold their breath. But it's ready could be tomorrow. It could be in a hundred years could supernova. I know that this is not part of the paper but could the beetlejuice supernova avenue adverse effect on north really know a supernova is very very spectacular event. it's it's a star that collapses so it implodes i and that explodes and then when he explodes It's very bright. In the case of bitter jews we could. We could see by naked-eye shore but in terms of A fact of each radiation and neutrinos in light on on us and on our daily activities. It wouldn't it. Wouldn't affect them in any way so it's a save Show to just enjoy without any worry. Great answer so you talking about supernova neutrinos so so can be actually detect neutrinos from supernova. What different from what we talked about in the previous people Different from pbs I'm not sure. Can you repeat yes. So the new teen emanating from a supernova different from the Neutrinos of expectancy from a primordial black hole. Yes the the different In many ways disney trails have higher energies. So it's much much easier to attack them and indicates will beat the jews. We would detect thousands or even more of dan millions. Probably of them Indiana so different in the way they are born because in our primordial black hole ordinary black hole The processes volcanoes the asian. Which which is a gravity phenomenon in a supernova. You're born out of the very hot and dense environment That the that that the star as after it has collapsed so star collapsing on its own way to become very dense and so In this very dense in hot environment nuclear processes take place that produce these nutrients. So i guess the main difference is that indicates supernova it's most nuclear phenomenon and in the call is really fundamentally a gravitational sonam. Okay you discover technique in this paper and you saved sin principle possible unique the identify the progenitor star so So the existing technology and ideas discussed in the paper viki see teacup a neutrino decode. Identify valid came from or what direction thing from embed you can go back and look at the in that direction if he find to supernova then you could say that the supernova that created in-principle Yes let me. Just say that There are situations and this is not one of them but there are situations where if you have one neutrino you can point to the pointing the sky. What came from in these case. It's a little more complicated. Because what really gives us. The information is the statistical distribution of these nutrients so we are talking about may be the tax in hundred a hundred Gable take from say be for example and What did detector really observe is not the neutrino is kind of a vector which is related to the products of these neutrinos so this neutrino sues interacts with the interact with the detector. And then out of this interaction you have a positive on the new thrown and those can be observed and you can you can create a factory using these two and then and then these rector will have a certain orientation but each each neutrino coming will give you a differently oriented vector but statistically if you look at the distribution of these factors you you can tell you can you can do for with a certain of course The direction of the neutrinos because these vectors are not uniformly distributed they are they have a non uniform distribution of the direction. And so using this information we can we can define a regional the sky where The new three could come from so we can. We cannot now down to a point but we can now down to maybe a cone of a few tens of degrees Width and then we look in that cone and see what stars that com and maybe be juicy one of them. Yeah so As you say you if you see a few Neutrinos Statistics bution of those will give us some some probability That it is in in some region of the sky. And then you say the paper You can then that if it is happening please open nola. You learnt other observational. Modalities multi messagero rations Invisible in radio and other other types of observations Do actually pick up more data so this is almost like a early alert system If it is in place right yes i would call it a very early I learned to because it's we're talking about maybe our worse or insert very fortunate cases. We are even talking about maybe day Before the assad goes supernova and. so that's enough time to plan for for it so a something that fascinated me When i heard about this from a from a an experimentalist is that there is a human factor which was not aware of but The factories so if you have come up with thirty minutes to plan for watching supernova this may not be enough because it just takes stein to make phone calls and get a hold of people and and decide what to do. Come to a consensus in that. I saw in addition to technical things. Like okay have to maybe turn your telescope Direction which takes time. But i i was really fascinated by the human factor. Those things that if you had style we'd be you can kind of gathered. Relevant people decide something but if you have thirty minutes or or or minutes maybe not so. Yeah yeah i wondered. If such a earlier system is in place Perhaps could be something programmatic. Crises is picking up And you have some you know. Maybe some ai techniques or something like that that identifies the region and it goes. Programmatic returned the telescopes look. Yes yes exactly so. There could be a protocol in place For that so e if a telescope was suitable for observing a nearby supernova which which is not always the case than than now that we showed that it's possible to know beforehand if a star is going to go supernova then there could be some sort of protocol in place already so that when the alert comes which is we can just activated the protocol and oriented telescope. maybe automatically will in some sort of Organized way yeah as you say if you remove humans from the process it becomes not better there is actually already working this direction It's called this new two point. Oh a network which has to do with Exactly these using neutrinos as alert for the astronomy community and That has to do with exactly a creating alerts and also creating protocols for how to react to an alert rate. I want to end the people that just came out. it concordant scenario for the observation of neutrino from the tidal disruption. Even eight hundred twenty nine hundred ninety s t You say be induced at phenomenology concordance canadia with the logistic jet of for the title disruption event Between ninety s jesmyn proposes a source of the astrophysical neutrino event. Ice cube So the title disruption even this is star getting cooler into a black hole getting Getting sucked in rate is that the is that even up to the match yes This is something that we We had about be in in popular science stalks What what happens if you get too close to black hole and It's kind of scary. So the answer is you would be ripped apart because your feet will be pulled in with a strong force than your head and these. This is what happens to two statehouse. Use the star gas to close than by guests Ripped the park. Which is what the tied is option means and so instead of a star Rotating around a black hole we just have a stellar stellar That dr intially. I created by the black hole and so This is something that The happy neighbor cops serve did so so we have. This does happen this particularly Eighty twenty nine hundred ninety s and Bequeath actually see a new cleaners from that particular even so tightness. Deduction events are fairly well established phenomenon in astronomy. We have many of them served They they are Fairly a common plays events But what's special about this particular one. Eighty two thousand nineteen years. G is that We could let's say It could have Produced on neutrino that was detected a ice cube so eighty twenty nine hundred ninety s. She is the first either direction event. For which is coincident. Neutrinos detected a dice. Cube in queens. This coincidence is likely to be accidental. So on approachability estimate tells us that these coins. This is pretty causal not accident so eighty twenty nine hundred ninety. The g could be the parent of this neutrino. And that's that's that's a i. That's very interesting. Yes i skew. is a is a big ice cube in the in. The south is I'm not sure it's exactly cuba. But it's it's the biggest block of is which has been Eastern With values Small detectors So it's it's an array of swarner detectors but yeah it's basically a big block of ice which has been transformed into a detective and so so the idea that this high energy neutrinos from what they were System montemar even that happened Out there this high energy neutrinos passing through that ice q. believe some telltale signs All of that happening and yuxi picked up Then began back Just like you were talking about the previous creeper begin. Please back to a region so this is one of those cases where you can tell from a single neutrino of course the with with a narrower where you can tell the point in the sky where three neutrino kate from. It's doable with one single neutrino because this high energy neutrinos when they enter the is They produce ca a shower so they kind of illuminate. They you me nate. The is but the do it in a way which is very much Beat so and then and then the direction of the the direction of bigotry knows. We have a pretty good accuracy often. How often could be a pickup something like that. Do we have an estimate of how often that would happen. Meaning ice cube detects something like this. Every year ice cube the tax Of the order of ten high-energy neutrinos froth outside our galaxy. Tadesse the number for the entire crop of neutrinos that ice cube has It went we talk about tidal disruption events in the specific these are fairly rare phenomena and so they estimated that maybe a few times so percent of the entire neutrino flux the thais cubeys of serving could be from tidal disruption events. Not much more than that. So we are talking about less than half of the total flats being to tell this option events okay and so the tug disruption burned as as you mentioned It starts getting clipped applaud and pulled back into a into a a black hole but this ten percent. Do they have to be these braces as they call it. The things that have a jet that is sort of lying towards us. Is that it necessarily condition for these types of high energy neutrinos. It's it's a plausible scenario Let me just say that. There is an important difference between blazers in tidal disruption events. In the fact that the ablaze is something that has a jet. She's always on so the jets kinda kerman feature of of these particular galaxy but the title is adoption. Event is transient events. Saw dotcoms creates the accretion. This accretion of the star of the black hole produces flair is flair can last year or two but then it would just fade away so There could be jet and in fact in our paper we present where there is a jet so they partisans the user chat But if there is a jet in tiger disruption event. That's a transient suggested. That's born when This starts to create the stellar debris. And then it's on for months or years and then and then shuts off and it has two point in our direction as you as you mentioned because otherwise we would. We would see the trains your so this high energy neutrinos sillier how. How many orders of magnitude are we talking about coming to the one set you pick up. Let's say from the sun I'm not sure about the question. Can you maybe rephrase yet. So when you say this high energy neutrinos that is coming from let's say a tidal disruption events or something like that How much comedy orders of magnitude more energy Outdoors come to you. Know the ones that might be created the sun a lot menu of this magnitude so It is a big difference. So the sun produces new three meals. over a wide range of energies Higher energy neutrinos from the sun reach energies of the order of ten am pt and mega awards and for the ice cream. Neutrinos we are talking about one hundred of the older one hundred t. v. or even thousand teams. Which would be p so. Let's say maybe eighty tortoise magnitude finding the mass rife or okay and so this e. v. measure it is actually measuring the mass of the neutrino of newfield. Now these these neutrinos are have such a Such high energy that basically It's impossible to know their mass Because because as i said massey's energy so they talk energy of neutrino Detected is to be so high that that percentage view to its mass east so tiny that this practice mutual so i was wondering if we know the energy couldn't be sort of back computer to save the mass is or it doesn't follow The reasoning is a bit different and The way to sink about this is perhaps they let me see the formula for energy particle Which used the rest energy Applause the kinetic energy and So connecticut is so high that he thought the overwhelms direct energy. So it's it's and of course every time you measure the energy when three no. There is a narrow associated with the measurement so You we can't really we can't really tell what What led the boss of the detroit news but both roughtly this. This appears to be sort of an early warning system for many many things right topped the supernova the in the title disruption events producing heightened plano's So this could be sort of inundated with a monkey message. Observations protocols as you mentioned that gives us a higher success. Wait suspect. I would think certainly nominated be one right That's the power of multi messenger astronomy the integration of different signals coming from Photos tree knows navigation waves Causing me craze and Danger plays very powerful emmanuel cases and maybe supernova case is the most striking Xenos come first. But that's not always the case So in the indicates of tidal disruption events Did you know that was observed. Came about five months later than the initial dhammika looser version of the tidal disruption events so It's if it can go both ways. neutrinos can be early alert or they only alert could be for example a radio salvation or or an x-ray use ovation and then and then the neutrino attacked or could Focus a surge in that direction as see what they find which which has actually been done ice cube sometimes. Does these these archival. Search this on the basis of others from From for example x ray or gamma ray surveys interested. Exciting eighty that said a lot to be owned It seems It seems like these till don't know all the production mechanisms for neutrinos but if we have robust with to pick them up on than we can place them back and and talk asking questions What might be there definitely So yes so. People celia the next five years Wanted the aid is that you believe Be will make a significant crocus in this Innovative neutrinos then two different areas. That a very promising One is Broadly speaking Manmade nutrients so there is. There is a big push especially hitting the united states to build Create very powerful beams of trainings and then these beams are manmade. So we know that very well. We know that energy we know the composition and we can use them to learn about The properties of treatments and then That other men bead neutrino experiments where Scientists look for the between months so that's also very promising In something i really. I really excited about that. That may be a furious novel with noble the neutrino mass us from these very high position laboratory experience. Then there is the whole Topic of neutrinos as part of the mouth of mike messenger astronomy and in that area. I think what was was to look forward. To among other scenes is the interplay gravitational waves shock waves. You still Somehow a science of its own into a large extent but there are so many possible connections. We've neutrinos tidal disruption adoption events should produce reputation ways so baranov shoot us gradation ways So so there is. There is a a lot of potential there which is still unexplored in and that's where i see myself Working on in the next few years you adjust very quickly The do gravitational waves travel bid closest and new ashtrays and so if If they both are produced in In uneven they're expected to arrive on earth close to simultaneously. It depends on the timing of the production if the answer is yes the waves ending a knows are born at the same time which may not be exactly true because the physics that governs tation waves is different from the one that that governs neutrinos. So but the difference in timing would be the difference Accumulated that birth But but the two were were generated genetically the same time. They should arrive the same time. Just thinking this a systematic difference in the production time than guan lorries given early warning for the other. But that doesn't seem to do a case right. There could be cases where significant lag in the production of rotation way with respect to the production of the tree nose and one example is. We haven't touched on this before but let me just nation mergers so if we have if we have a merger for example we have maybe a merger of a neutron stars or black hole neutral star before the merger happens so when the two objects that kind of still approaching each other we should start observe serving ways and this is what this is what has been seen so Delight experiment observes these these nominal But if we have a merger After the merger has occurred and the two objects have become one than a. Dan could be the formation of of over an accretion disk and he secretion Trainers which we can which we can back so the neutrino We come After they initially asian waves and so relation as would be the alert for the neutrino. That does excellent. your this has been great as celia. thanks so much complaining pleasure. Okay thank you bye. This is a scientific sense. Podcast providing unscripted conversations with leading academics and researchers on variety of topics. If you like to sponsor this podcast please reach out to info. At scientific sense dot com.

Policy Technology Economics Science Stephen Hawking Eappen Eappen Dot Info. Iraq Dutra Eusebio Dini Celia PBS Sonam Gill Munich Trina East Coast Miranda Nicole Amazon Massey Dr Intially
"talion" Discussed on Adventures with Grammy

Adventures with Grammy

03:48 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on Adventures with Grammy

"Kids with learning disabilities often excel in languages. As you said it really taps into a different part of the brain and as the kids become confident in learning a foreign language it often helps them improve the english. Yes that actually is true. I did read. That is well when you learn a second language. It actually improves the first language you're learning. That's so true and it's interesting you say that 'cause thing when i was learning french and now it makes total sense but then i didn't realize this so when i was learning french might time became so grandly snicking talion weirdest thing i could never understand.

first language second language english french talion
Neil Patrick Harris And David Burtka Talk About Their Relationship

Double Date with Marlo Thomas & Phil Donahue

05:13 min | 2 years ago

Neil Patrick Harris And David Burtka Talk About Their Relationship

"How old is the house. Nineteen zero five. Wow i it's been everything from a speakeasy for mill workers to a music school for girls to a single person occupancy and when you think it was a brothel is just wishful began to wonder where in this five storey house. Would we have our talks. Who's the decorator. David has better taste than i do. So if we ever have disagreements about Interiors it usually comes from a financial standpoint in that. I tend to say dude. We have dogs and two small children. We don't need a forty billion dollar rug. So you're the sort of decorator in your the accountant. Then they led me into their red velvet screening room with rows of quickly theater seats. Just like an old hollywood. What a fitting place to chat with these two actors. What kind of marriages did your parents have. My parents were together until my mom passed away years ago. And your parents. My parents are still married. And they've celebrated fifty plus years of marriage so they've always been only together with each other so because you were gay. Did you think you wouldn't have that. I thought that i was going to be alone or single for most of my adult life. But i had a random path from adolescence into adulthood because i ended up being on a television show when i was fifteen years old and so all pre puberty through puberty. When you're figuring out what turns you on i was. I felt a bit under a microscope of television. And so i didn't have the freedom to randomly hit on somebody or go to a bar. So i i was by myself a lot and had a fantastic group of friends in los angeles. Who knew everything about me. But i just i just wasn't dating. I had never even showered with another person till i was in my late twenties so it was all new to me. And what about you. Deeming i you know. I didn't know what i wanted to. Until sort of i got into college and then after college living in new york i you know i saw lots of different relationships than men having babies and having a family so i i always knew that i was going to settle down and be with someone and stay with someone and have a family and kids. Once we started dating. We never really stopped so we didn't date lots of people while we were dating each other and then decide. We just started dating moved in together. And we've been together ever since same. Sex marriage wasn't legal at that time and and it seemed like a potential but not an inevitability and so we were more conscientious of what wording we used to call each other. I just didn't like the word partner for some reason i just. I still think that's a very strange way to it. Eliminates any sense of lava lover of or some only rome antic lake invasive of your life lover eighties and boyfriends very juvenile was forty calling. Fill my boyfriend and to seems like it's short lived like we've just met together for years. So is it better half and then and then once the marriage thing happened it happened very quickly but we didn't want to get married because it was suddenly allowed to get married. We wanted to get married to get because we wanted to get jeweler already in a committed relationship correct and that was and did you get kids. I just didn't want to go to the courthouse. With a with a hundred other people and people holding up signs and other people picketing and refers i. It's an. I don't want to get married in context owning remember with my family right in italy when it's legal and it's not a big deal. The nice thing about destination wedding as you can easily reduce the number of people. You've been very small weddings. Only forty seven people. We've got married with thirty five and it wasn't a great wonderful. The nice thing about talion wedding or a any italian trip is that everything is so delicious there. Yeah and what we're was testing this rueda. Yeah the mountains in a one of the things that i've noticed because we've been married forty years. Do you count from the day that you started dating or from your barrier wedding. We're counting from the day we got married. We met three years before but we knew immediately. I mean we. We fell them up. We went we went to dinner. We went to bed. That was it was it. That's because we're gay. We count from the day a reverse day because then you add ten years dog enga- years fifty years. We've been together.

Hollywood David Los Angeles New York Talion Italy Rueda
New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo again refuses to resign

The Young Turks

08:37 min | 2 years ago

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo again refuses to resign

"Have been moving fast. In governor cuomo's ever expanding set of scandals of the past forty eight hours from the news that his office apparently reached out to a number of different former employees to see if they'd spoken to The first accuser which seems weird an intimidating and it turns out that a former aide says that it was in fact intimidating and she felt bewildered by it to yesterday during an emergency meeting and state assembly announcing is going to be Starting an impeachment inquiry involving both the allegations of sexual harassment and assault as well as the nursing death scandal to about forty percent of his entire parties members in the assembly in the senate signing on asking for him to immediately resign and then there was this morning when representative alexandria ocasio. Cortez tweeted that after two accounts of sexual assault four counts of harassment. The attorney general's investigation. Finding the governor's admitted nursing home data from the legislature in public saying we agree with the fifty five plus members of new york state legislature. That the governor must resign. There was a letter that she put out with congressman bowman then at least eleven of the democratic house representatives from new york called for him to resign and just including jerry nadler button adler by the way and then just as we were going live. Senators schumer and gillibrand both also said that. His time for the governor to resign. As of this afternoon he said that he would would not which is what they always say until they do but he seems like a fighter jank for. What do you think is he. Is he gonna stick around no matter how many people tell them if biden gets involved yeah. I'm really curious what you think. Francesca there's one part of this tournament so that's already interesting of they. There's nothing that i'm talking about. In regards to andrew cuomo he's establishment democrat extraordinary. and he. he's been wrong on so many issues. and he's attacked progressives and good meaning people in behind the scenes a thousand different ways and a he's a political apparatchik extraordinarily now he's claiming like oh i'm just a regular joe. Your name is cuomo governor governor. Don't pretend you're one of us okay. You're an ultimate insider. Any use insider system to attack all of your opponents. You've done it for decades and and as anna keeps pointing out rightfully so the guy caught four hundred million dollars for medicaid actually overall customer is slated to be two and a half billion dollars to talk about of doing it in the middle of the pandemic delayed for after the pandemic but some of the cuts had already that he had done was the reason why they didn't have enough hospital beds and that's why he then took. Two people from the hospital was put in in the nursing homes and then everybody died nursing homes and so for all those reasons he already was a terrible governor from a perspective of people who i was gonna say progresses but really anybody critique of him is correct is my point sexual harassment issue. The only thing i have here is that. And that's why i'm curious. Were both of you guys. Think about it part of me thinks okay yes. Let's go through. The process like seles. Allegation is groping. If that's if that's true that's he should be gone within the minute right. So that's not an that's not a question. The question is how are these. Six six is a lot on the other hand. If you remember al franken it had piled up to be a big number but every one of them was like a fake picture. We took her picture once and put his hand around my shoulder and they were like. Oh levitin mike though. That's not eleven right. That's let's have an investigation so there is a part of me that says is you know. Do we have a. We sure that these are all true. One hundred percent. We can act on it and i get the other point. Which is they all. Have to be one hundred percent true. There's six of them. It looks like we've got an obvious pattern here. So francesca what are you. Oh yeah no. There's when this first broke weeks ago. I was like i've never been more sure that there was a giant iceberg underneath this very very tiny little tip that we're seeing sticking out of the water. You knew the goal and just it's it's his. I don't know. I'm not trying to be anti talion as someone like. Don't don't go to the mafias a brand new things but like the guy in clearly in exactly all the reason that you said in the ways it. He's bullied around his political opponents for years in the ways that he is so trump being in that he's got an gotten everything from his father and then also in the cavalier ways because some of these incidents were while he was rising to stardom. Which i gotta say man. It's been real fun to watch him fall as someone who was never on board for the rise who was look. It's a doing the absolute bare minimum the absolute bare minimum thing. You should do believing in science locking locking things down even though. I don't even think he did that. Amazing of a job. Yes i said it like. It's been nice to watch like. Oh here's the real cuomo and and like it's funny to me that there are so many cuomo's around this country there are so many sort of middling mediocre like kind legacy politicians dynastic politicians. who escaped by they. They assault a couple people. They bully their opponents but they kind of then. Then they get applauded. They come out with a book and they're fine. But i feel like the meteoric rise that he had under covert and the way that he laid into it so much just set him. He set himself up. It's like you could have just the way that trump could have been absolutely fine. Just doing cameos on home alone. Five or whatever it was and then he had to go and run for president And now we're looking at his taxes. So look here's my thing about resignation. I feel like it's a little bit of an escape hatch. And i think for when it comes to actually having investigation actually and as painful it as it is like having the people came forward to testify or discuss it absolutely like not or at least have an investigation. I don't know what it would look like. it feels. There would be more accountability. And i think that so many creeps and so many predators getaway in the workplace because there's no accountability to begin with so i'm not even sure if immediate resignation is accountability. Do do you know what i'm saying. Yeah i actually francesca. I love that point in that gets the another problem in the political system. So cuomo keep saying. I you know i wanted attorney general to do. Finish the investigation as letitia james and if we all believed that our democracy was on the level and politicians warn politicians. I'd say definitely finished investigation. Because i wanted to if he did it and we get it then that gives us closure as opposed to well. He's resigning you to deny it forever. Because then they won't bother finishing the investigation et cetera. Right but the problem is i. Don't trust politicians so is cuomo part of the reason cuomo's doing because he wants to delay it and then he thinks if i can just delayed thousand other political maneuvers to avoid it and the and then he keeps saying he wants so much that i a wonder is fisher. James doesn't look like a political ally of cuomo based on her previous experience right but one if she is something we don't and then they a bs investigation. Those women took you know suffer a second injustice so you think yeah and i just think it's important to mention though that like the investigation of sexual assault or harassment claim. Is it so hard because it is always a. He said she said type of situation. Which is why we have. Things like the slogan survivors right And believe women which because you have predators who will always deny it. I do not foresee a future in which andrew cuomo admits. Anything that i can be sure of. We might hear more about the stories from the from the staffers and the and the people who were he victimized but i do not foresee him being. I guess i remember doing that. No it's not gonna happen so again. I just want set that up that it's not a fair you're never gonna get to the truth kind of thing.

Cuomo Alexandria Ocasio Congressman Bowman Democratic House Jerry Nadler Legislature Assembly Levitin Gillibrand Andrew Cuomo New York Cortez Schumer Adler Francesca Biden
"talion" Discussed on The Supporting Cast

The Supporting Cast

03:41 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on The Supporting Cast

"Licensed through the city to be able to get all those things but at the end of the day. The roi for us is is. Can we be that neighborhood gathering place. Can we put in those. You know those things that will help encourage that. And i think the that particular store we have. We can tell that story a few times. Right really is the thing that is most meaningful Is the fact that you and your family get to enjoy that. We get to sell you. Happy yeah and this is on the corner. Draper listening because in the corner of sort of montana and santa fe and there's a bank of america and there was not a lot of life to that area. And i think there to your credit. There is now there's outdoor space that's been built. There's a lot of activity around that restaurant across the street. Now you have an alfred coffee and you have joan juice. There's just more activity that whole. Try abraham now so before we go. There are a few standard questions. As part of the supporting cast they relate to we are known for our movies are food of course and our climate. So first question is i guess for each of you. What is your favorite movie. I'll go with a few good men for multiple reasons one. That's kind of funding. That's an inside thing. That ellen is snickering. That i picked it either. There's that summit where jack nicholson has absolute breakdown and totally reveals that. Tom cruise's character can't handle the truth. And i think entrepreneur as much as he is the antagonised you know in that story. I think that there was so much truth that was spoken. You know two things that are done behind the scenes and how much it takes to do certain things. I obviously while so many people rooted for tom cruise leaned into nicholson's character was like wow really while i don't agree with the methods. I totally debt the pressure to try to like protect us and do the right thing so no. I'm not ordering people to be killed in their barracks. But i believe it's called the code red kate brown yards on certainly look few good men. Great grateful can't actually catch it midstream in not just stay on it. It's it's you don't go over it. it's sticky. It's a sticky movie. I totally great. I love that movie. There's a great podcast called the ra- watchable 's by the way which they go back. And they re watch great movies and they talk about the movie and the a few good men episode of the row washable. Podcasts out there is if you know the movie as well as i bet you do i do. What about you on. That is a really great movie. I love that movie. Mine is a little bit lighter. And there's it's not as intense and there's not like a storyline. I actually love princess bride. It's just a beautiful love story. And i think it's a. It's a story for all ages. We've been still trying to get our kids to come watch it. But for some reason. I can't seem to hook amend but that just i love that story when i love that movie all right next question. What is your maybe as a couple. What's your favorite meal in. La like where do you guys like to go when it's a special occasion or maybe with your family. What sort of aren't really hard because it really depends on how we feel. I know that sounds really strange. 'cause we all kinds of foods so depending on how we feel. I think thursday restaurant for a certain time. Would you talk through what we love. Cassia cassia is amazing. It's in santa monica. Our kids love sushi so this has been a huge favourite during the pandemic it's amazing prior to the pandemic. It's amazing during the pandemic joy talent. What's your favorite talion..

Tom cruise nicholson tom cruise santa monica jack nicholson thursday first question each two things pandemic pandemic joy talent one santa fe couple of america talion Draper abraham
"talion" Discussed on How I Got Here with Dave Fiore

How I Got Here with Dave Fiore

04:09 min | 2 years ago

"talion" Discussed on How I Got Here with Dave Fiore

"I was fourteen but that tired my money and i started cooking. And i ended up in virginia through friend of my dad's and he was going to open a restaurant italian restaurant. He sent me up there to train under the italian chefs up. I went up there and trained and was coming back to florida to do that. And when the economy tanked that started my cooking career but anyway that that took me through my child you'd mentioned before but you got into the restaurant business so you were cooking and You venture even said. According to the information i've found that you even co owned a couple of restaurant overnight cooking career actually. I was very very good at it. I i worked for a seafood restaurant in del. Ray call bush seafood and they were the high class highest classwork seafood restaurant or a restaurant in that area there on the on the ocean overnight. One a in ocean ridge and the chef. There took a liking to me. And i did a real good job learning how to do my job his job and whatever i could i. It was a natural gift to me. And that's where there was a gentleman that was going to develop the farmland where we had our farm and he bought bought the farm land and he was a developer out of virginia beach virginia but he was going to build a golf course in a country club and he was the guy and he had his favorite italian restaurant in virginia so he wanted to open her talion restaurant in dell right so he knew cooked and my dad him were were. Dad was very business. Savvy was on a board of about barnett bank and those kinds of things so he was very well connected and i. He asked me if. I go to virginia beach. Virginia and train under the his talion chef up there that he frequented at a restaurant up there and he was gonna pay my way and and put me up in a hotel and sounds like a good. I mean i was eighteen years old. Sure of it was great. I mean it was. You know and i love cooking and i love that nights that that lifestyle because most of the people that i knew in that industry liberalized style. That was exciting. Drugs were acceptable. Drinking was acceptable. And so when. I got to virginia beach. It was an italian restaurant. The owner was A wonderful guy or wonderful man. I thought and he had two sons my age and a daughter my age are about all of us. Were about the same age. I hit it off real well. And i did real well there and the nice thing about working there is not only did was drinking drugging acceptable. We did it while we were on the job. We would drink behind the line while we're cooking and the owner would furnish the drinks and we would always have extra on top of that. The chef was an alcoholic as well. and and i'm i'm his shadow so that worked out really well for me Sons were into pot and cocaine and they had a nightclub. That's that opened at ten o'clock with live. Show groups from las vegas so we close up the restaurant eleven. Go there to two o'clock and drink and watch. The shows not hit the after hours clubs. And then i get up at eight o'clock in the morning and start back to work come to find out that the people i was working for were pretty well connected with the some families out of new york bookmaking loansharking. That sort of stuff was was pretty much prevalent in my daily life at that point I started gambling on football games through the bookmakers. There and that that that i knew and actually that lead into me becoming a collector and and the book bookmaker would give me the money to pay off his people and they become they would use the kitchen. They come in the kitchen. Give me this money to give to him. And you give me so. I ended up being in the middle of that. And i thought that was great. It was exciting to me. All right And with the restaurant kind of a front for that activity or well it it it was and it wasn't i mean it was a fine. Is the restaurant in virginia beach and find his club to is legit was legitimate but the the lifestyle then went behind that it was all you know you would. We would call it today. Mafia and there was write

virginia beach virginia Virginia florida fourteen del. barnett bank two sons dell eighteen years old call bush One italian a Savvy talion
Meditation and Beyond with MindFlow App Founder Fabio Mattiussi

Mindfulness Mode

05:12 min | 3 years ago

Meditation and Beyond with MindFlow App Founder Fabio Mattiussi

"Today. I'm interviewing fabio matuzici fabulous. Are you in mindfulness today. Absolutely thank you for having me. Yeah it's a great pleasure to have you here. And i just wanna share a little bit about you with mindful tribe and that is that not only. Are you the founder of the mind flow app. Which is the first adapt of meditative app. Well helped you started. Your career is a computer hacker which is very fascinating to me and you've always been passionate about the human mind obsessed with understanding. Why people do what they do. And as a result of that fascination you studied neuroscience neuro linguistic programming and even if they're happy which. I'm very interested in as well. And you've practiced on these things with hundreds of in your your global journey. And you're now a coach and creator of meditation courses and you use sophisticated yet easy to follow practices. Which are based on all of this. Is you have so so exciting to have you on the show fabio. Mindfulness mean to you. Well as you said. The computer engineering me has to answer with the definition by book that is focusing your awareness on the present moment but the therapies to me though that he's more used to work with wards has to focus also mind and fullness which in a way the way it is to fully use your mind potential. So how do you use that state of mind being so focused on the now to open your capabilities for everything. They are doing Whether it is in in sports or in business or more in general for your personal improvement. And that's what. I really like to see in mindfulness. See it as a tool for achieving what you want to achieve february. I have so many questions. I want to ask you but the thing i want to say right away is that i downloaded your app. Mind flow and turned it on and and check out a few things in the first thing that struck me was how incredibly awesome. You sound on that app. Your voice your accent. I just like. I just was absolutely sold as soon as i started listening. Because you have such an incredible way as a meditative. Your voice and accent. It just is perfect for that. How long have you been doing guided meditations to help others the way you do on this app. Well thank you very much first of all. It's a it's been a few years and it's interesting how it started that. I didn't quite do it to be meditation for a lot of people. It was just because my my family's back in europe. And i'm here in the us and so once. It was back in europe. After a course that i've done on an lp and hebron therapy and other things in that room and Obviously wanted to experiment new techniques that i've learned and my mom offered to be volunteer and so i did it a little bit with her and she was incredibly receptive to bat so she was a whole new experience for her and i was so excited to to hear her saying that she could swear that she was swimming and she would feel their the hands. Where moving and obviously she was not doing any of that because that was just in her mind and and so i wanted to create some experience for her because when you go by comb. There's a lot of people that you need to see. Obviously and the time is limited. So i couldn't quite do all the things that i wanted to have her experience and so when he came back here to the us. What i thought was well. I should just record it and then send it to her and then i thought the easiest ways just to put it in this app. She says need to download and click on without having a lot of loggins and things and And so i did and so she really liked. It was talion at the time. That was the first track. I created and she was happy to hear my voice. And you know. It's it's great to connecting as many ways as possible when families not near and so the some point. They saw that a lot of comments came in on that track and they even had people that were that. Were sending the were sending donations to me. And i thought this is incredible so i thought that if somebody is donating to me for for this it has to have some value and it. Three has to mean something for them. Because i certainly didn't ask for any of that. And so that's where i started to think. Maybe it can really make a difference in these and they started to create some more

Fabio Matuzici Fabio Europe United States Swimming
"talion" Discussed on The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

02:00 min | 3 years ago

"talion" Discussed on The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

"You like barbecue. Have you read one apart cologne. Have you ever table data. Talion dude was swag from staten island. Can't say okay. Well maybe this might be something you might want to venture off into that book. Hold on hold on how i wanted. The beta i wanted to debate debate debate this whole i. I have to refrain from saying. He thinks she's ready to go off. On but sal sal. Everyone in the group room is salads. My friend we got much. He has an open. Invitation to folks that wanna go down to joe's pizza right is it. Joe's pizza frank. John john john jot down. There aren't yet. John and any other group member that wants to hang out with south who. We can all hang out with south down bleaker at john's pizza. How about that Sounds that okay like a group of us. Come down and we meet you. We all go into south pizza and just chop it up. No doubt data right so so we know you busy. Thank you please refrain from. I know you loud and your passion. You're not angry. But if if if if narc forty five if nothing happens today can just easily go on with your life. How about that. I'm not gonna after today. I don't even talk about it anymore. That's it i'm done and you put up to white thread. So without cornerback. for friday sydney. We have things to talk about. that's great let's clarify. I join south. Yeah we gotta go. Lee said he wanted.

John staten island today Joe Lee john joe John john john friday frank one south Talion south pizza sydney narc forty five
iPhone  water test: We tested it way beyond the claim, CNET Says

Mac OS Ken

00:43 sec | 3 years ago

iPhone water test: We tested it way beyond the claim, CNET Says

"Remember when apple said iphone could stand up to real world. Submersion and italy said apple was full of it while see nut hasn't said that italy is full of it they do show the phone surviving something besides lab water. I told you yesterday. Italy finding apple twelve million dollars. Us for leading consumers astray on iphones. Actual water resistance while apple says several models of iphone can stand up to thirty minutes of submersion without sustaining damage. Italy says that's only true for pure water used in the laboratory. Drop your phone and real world water and damaged more likely. According to a talion authorities

Apple Italy United States
Italian Wine and Music

Travel with Rick Steves

04:11 min | 3 years ago

Italian Wine and Music

"To start. I thought we could all use a touch of the simple pleasures of life has enjoyed in italy. Aband- from or veto has fun with the popular songs. People like to request in italy. And just a bit. Let's warm up with virtual sip of the great types of wine. They've been producing for centuries. Our guides are francesco clunky. He's a licensed so may from tuscany. and alberto. Batak specializes in farm and food tours in the companion region around naples francesco. Alfredo benvenuti run journal. Nice to have you guys hear clearly. Alfredo italian wine and vineyards earn an important part of the tradition of italy. And you're making your own wine now and you've got tour groups that come in and and experienced the wine. How do you teach an appreciation of italian wine. Well actually i'm just implanted my vineyard only two years ago so we are not yet at the stage of producing and also having groups arriving back in the future i plan to do so and i am not the only one who's Starting a new vineyard region which is compound yeah and Precisely maybe near is in the area of europeana which is close to a sexually between avellino benevento and It's a process that many young people in companion starting to do again like going back to the land. That families said abandoned for many years when they moved to the cities to work there now. Many people are thinking it's a good idea to restart producing implanting nervion yards but being not a professional of this sector economic implant to limit it a quantity which is called italy personal use quantity. I know this sounds something. How many bottles is personal use. It's not in terms of bottles in surface you can you can. It's like actually One thousand square meters maximum. That quite small. It's all it's like nine thousand square feet and how many bottles you produce in a you can produce out of that probably Seven hundred hundred bottles sending like that depending on the year and the quick enough for you and your friends exactly. That's the idea. There's a blended personal use. That's a lot of energy. You're putting into y. You must really love wine. I love wine and does so actually starting in the same plot which is bigger. I started with the olive trees and planted to one hundred twenty seven years ago and then i told that wine and olive oil is a good commission. That's nice but you work all of this. Put all this energy all this money into that. You make seven hundred bottles. What if the winds not good and you love wine i. It'd be a pity to to drink mediocre wine when you've got great wine all around new well that's said it's a little bit of a challenge and also i'm not making my note may own and i'm gonna get people didn't make really expert help i. I'd love to hear how that goes in. When will you pop up your first bottle. I'm gonna start probably really producing in a couple of years from now all right and when we think of italian wine what makes it talion special compared to french or spanish wine. Well i i will say a french. And italian can be comparable in terms of the variety and quality and is actually what happens every year. This fighting between italy and france to be the best one for the year and in terms of production quality and varieties. The spanish winds are getting better and better. I used to live close to spin for a while in the nineties. I was into will go often over the border and drink some good spanish winds. They're improving. But i will not say that varies as much variety and as much quality. They'll be having these two countries italy and france and as Talking from the point of view Really a lot of variety like everything else in italy. One is regional specific varieties which are with aversive personality. Exactly and also in each region you can go through the different levels of quality and for example in my region panya we have five top winds which audio cg once and most of them are white but we also tout out to one name to you before.

Italy Francesco Clunky Alfredo Benvenuti Avellino Benevento New Vineyard Francesco Alberto Tuscany Naples France
Riff Pinot Grigio 2019

The CheapWineFinder Podcast

05:21 min | 3 years ago

Riff Pinot Grigio 2019

"They. They've wiped by DOT com again. We have. White Line from Italy. Kind of a Chardonnay. SAUVIGNON BLANC RETINA intentionally out and. Inexpensive. Ratios. Are. Up British Joe from twenty nine, thousand nine from the Benishi the Delvin. Easy. Dot of northern Italy way up north. In the Girls Love Dolemite, which are the southern l.. A. White Wine region up that way and they have as many German bridles talion five Chardonnay. British show is in the same area A. Whitney'll set a Magherita who brought. To the United States that way. Little farther north from where these are. These are not the High profile regions but they're legit. This is a pretty nights. For Ten dollars nine ninety. Nine. Solid. Light. Little Wind. Kind of a guy like to kind of city that gets you the take that next SIPO. Thinking about it. Got? Really. Nice. I. Might not have layers of flavors. The complexity of the also abuse varieties upset win which cost a bit more. EXC. Does very well for supper. A bright and breezy young wine. The website strict it within two years and so that means frigging now. If, properly stored, which means. Still has flavor. I like that. I've. Had in the past inexpensive Italian Puteh Garages. That were asking. I mean. You had heartburn yield. Dropping tongue. By this one's got a nice flavor to it's got the acidity that will get you thickness Ziplock said before. That too much and it sounded like found the right. Right right in the pocket of the. Flavors easy flavors to like there's. There's apples and pears. Melon and lemon while the type of thing it's on lease unle- use music they left the. Dead East and maybe a little bit of great president with a wide and they certainly gives you A. Little bit of a nutty salty taste. The nutty thing is kind of hard to pick up some time plus you really look or. A salty thing is always there. It's it's a nice term. You want to see a wine white wine. Red Wine too much going on per. Are. Delicate thing that you don't really see on lease early doesn't really matter. For Red wine to be. Nice, blind some. Flavored. Delicate. I wrote in the taking notes that had a clean flavor profile which I don't normally do. But it tasted fresh brain was nice. Young line, I think released. February. So. You know six months old by Netflix's. Then get the next year the twenty nineteen. Dip because of the city's. That's about it. I mean this is a nice little everyday wind. You know it's inexpensive ten bucks ten bucks. We call up cheap wine planner but that's the. Internet term. Ten dollar wine. One because that's the style made quick easy. You can release it twenty, nine fifteen. Can release it easy ahead of time, the winds that are more complicated you have to hold back logger some those are the two, thousand, eighteen, or two, thousand, seventeen extra time adds money these quick and easy ones. It's a style and it really works a lot of great it works for. That works for. Soviet block a bunch of wines quick and easy. Maybe. The preferred for me for the. Sometimes the more complicated ones they're. Nice. But these. Expensive ones might be the way to go. So don't think a one is Reno. Chief I should pay more. Often, the prices, what it's supposed to be for that style. This isn't from the fancy also. Vineyards, but it's not far from there. And? It's got a lot going for and if. They did it right. So is the rick. Bridge winning. Nineteen. Keep cheap. Audio look.

Red Wine Little Wind Italy Delvin Italian Puteh Garages JOE United States Netflix President Trump A. Whitney Reno
Can the Otto Aviation Celera 500L Deliver on Efficiency Promises?

STRUCK: A Lightning Protection Podcast

04:14 min | 3 years ago

Can the Otto Aviation Celera 500L Deliver on Efficiency Promises?

"In our engineering segment, we're going to chat about first off the auto aviation Celera five hundred L. which their companies calling the most fuel-efficient commercially viable passenger aircraft in the world. Now if you were to if you're going to go back to elementary school and draw fish, were you make like the big loop and then you make the tail that's essentially what is aircraft looks like. And so it does look strikingly different looks kind of like a blimp it's got a you know a rear pusher propeller got some really long thin than wings but all these things have a very specific purpose. They say it extensively utilizes lamb and our flow over the fuselage wing and tail and that it can glide one hundred, twenty, five miles at thirty thousand feet, and so obviously with all this glide, you know the ability to glide so far. It's extremely fuel efficient. So Alan, you say this is almost like a rebirth of a previous jet is that true? If he remembers the Lear Fan in Lear Fan was bill lear late in his life Bill Lear. Was Building an aircraft out in Kansas I. Think it was Kansas. Composite Airplane and it looked very similar Lisa. had a just kind of a fish shaped fuselage propeller on the back and not as highly lambda flow wing at the time just because he didn't have the computers to do that stop but. Had A two engines. pity six kind of turboprop engines that were driving I think to recap inches ever driving through a transmission, a single propeller, the back. And? Just. The era in which it was being developed, it had difficulty the transmission had difficulty and or make it out carbon-fiber, which was really knew at that point that's before the the the beach starship in came out. So the be starship was sort of an outgrowth of the Lear Fan all the engineers that were around the learfield kind of jumped over to beach at the time to make the starship, they make the the premier in the horizon and everything else after that But. The aerodynamic design. Has Been a constant for a while. So it's not like this auto aviation is a necessarily a new idea as much as they have now, the computational power to do the Lamido flow thing and to make it super slippery to be very efficient, which biller didn't have during his lifetime. So, it's sort of a combination of old old school sort of Basic fundamental design I e one two engines so he can fly Keith propeller turning, but you want all they are an amick efficiency can get because you have the computers to do it. That's what it looks like to me So It doesn't look and I know the thing about here's the thing about. Aircraft shape I always find fascinating is there is a little bit of human psychology into the way that they signs aircraft. that. When you're putting down the amount of money to buy an airplane, some of that is a cool factor. Looks Cool Piaggio has been in this marketplace for a while. Piaggio is a very similar shaped aircraft. It's a pusher plane also in has kind of cool factor to it and it's talion in its is got all these things. So what you saying on does have go factor does not I don't know if this thing has cool factor is it look sometimes it's by sometimes by paint and so here's the thing that I knows I just painted all white, right? Yeah. Right and if I'm if I'm a marketing guy or marketing person and the guy. Giving anybody. Marketing Person At. A new aircraft company I want my aircraft of to be the coolest looking thing that anybody has ever seen. I want to to look like a Formula One race car that's what I'm looking. For and right now, it looks like a a bloated fish a little bit which is not particularly appealing to the eye. It is very efficient, Amex very efficient, but they gotta find a way to make it look cool also.

Lear Fan Bill Lear Piaggio Kansas Amex Alan Lisa. Keith
Italy investigates Apple, Google, Dropbox over cloud storage

Daily Tech News Show

00:29 sec | 3 years ago

Italy investigates Apple, Google, Dropbox over cloud storage

"Complaints of unfair commercial practices. Italy's competition thirty announced it lodge investigation into cloud storage services from Apple Google dropbox. All three are being investigated for potentially problematic terms of service including lack of valid consent for commercial data collection sweeping rights to interrupt or suspend service liability exemptions for data loss and prevalence of English talion in contract language. DROPBOX is also being investigated over terms of service regarding how commercial customers can withdraw from

Apple Italy
How a Law School Dropout Builds Profitable Companies Using Virtual Assistants with Ravi Abuvala

Entrepreneur on FIRE

04:32 min | 3 years ago

How a Law School Dropout Builds Profitable Companies Using Virtual Assistants with Ravi Abuvala

"Ravi say what's up to fire nation and sheriff something interesting about yourself that most people don't know what is going on fire nation. Thank you guys for lending me your ears I've been listening to this podcast for quite a while now, and it's a little surreal experience to be on this end of it. So this morning I'm thinking I listen to this for very long time and I'm like I. Know John's GonNa. Ask Me something that a lot of people don't know and like any online digital marketer. Open Book and so I was like what? So I'm going to share with you guys on that literally one person this entire world knows and it's funny I'm bringing it out on this block Seo but about a year ago in July of Twenty nineteen, I had this weird edge and I ended up actually selling all of my stuff in. Florida about a week including my caller just junked it and I moved to. Spain and I lived in Spain for about forty five days and I was just hopping coastal city council city working on businesses, work my clients, and while I was in a coastal city. In Spain I'm not GONNA say what? So people don't look up when I'm about to tell you my walls in a coastal city in Spain I don't drink. I drink a few times a year and I was out at this pretty cool jazz club and I was like two three in the morning, which is in Spain when they're just getting started really and there's a brawl breaks out right where I'm at at the bar or ordering a soda at the Bar and just abroad but breaks out right next to me and ends up at, I. Try to break the brawl up the police come. they come up to me I speak decent Spanish because I've lived abroad for a while but not good enough to get me out of the situation I I actually end up spending the next three and a half hours in a drunk tank and a small jail cell in a coastal city in Spain and it took him a while to you if I had to give my find my password and it showed all that stuff and I finally got out of it and The only other person that knows someone that met me the next day and they wonder why looks so off By parents don't know nobody knows that stories. So yeah, I'm on our convict in Spain. Okay. Well, this is only a couple listeners. So fire nation keep it to yourself here like not a big deal. So. I WANNA start off on a little bit of a somber notes because as I shared fire nation during the introduction, we're talking about barshop way to millions but in many of us have dealt with some one in our lives that we love who dealt with some form of this but your Dad Ravi had stage four cancer. So talk to us about that and how that situation. Caused you to throw it all away. Awesome questions. So whole life was going to be a lawyer and that was that was the goal was law school was the number one priority, and in order to be a lawyer, you have to take what's known as a law school admission test and you had the really score highly on and if you WANNA go great law school which I did. And so I took a year off after graduating from college and I was about to start studying for this also emission tests in about three days. After I graduated I, got a call from my dad who lives in Atlanta Georgia. I was in Florida at the time and he told me news he was diagnosed with stage four lung cancer and like John Says, you know everyone here has experienced cancer somewhere the other, but it's like when it's yourself or someone as Close Your Dad, it's a whole different experience and kind of threw me. For a loop and so I ended up packing all my stuff up moving to Atlanta. Georgia, and for the next year I would wake up at four am workout until five. Then from five to eight, I'll be studying for this law school admission test than about eight to five I'll be doing Chemo and radiation with my dad every single day. Monday. Through Friday and then when I got home at about six, o'clock, I'd be studying until eleven midnight every night back again on a law school admission test. So it was quite a surreal experience. I'm really really blessed to say my dad's been about two years in remission. So just actually visited him in Savannah Georgia, two days ago I was just seeing him but what it really did open up for me was. How fragile life was I was kind of going down around that I think somebody else wanted me to go down and I read a really awesome book called the subtle not giving of an economy I was just like, okay I'm doing this for all the wrong reasons and I decided you know what I took the law school admission test spent eighteen years preparing for it. I actually scored in the top ten percent of test takers in the United States I got into my dream schools, top schools in the nation. and. Then I said you know what? I'M GONNA go work at a talion restaurant down the road and try to figure out this entrepreneurship

Spain Ravi John Says Atlanta Florida Georgia Savannah Georgia United States Talion Chemo
BA's Best Chicken Parm

Bon Appetit Foodcast

09:38 min | 3 years ago

BA's Best Chicken Parm

"Buzz? Are you ready department up? I thought we were going to ring the Parnell arm with me. I I prefer to ring the palm alarm like when the chicken is done. Then that's like ringing the Dinner Bell. You know you ring the alarm everyone to the table but when you're partying it up that means you're gonNA make sure we don't have any chicken parm in the oven at the moment. So the alarm. It's going to get there soon. Okay so I have like. We've collaborated you've let me ride shotgun on several recipe developments. We did the brock. Bolo the Brockley as a we did the pork Mar Bay. We did Matzo ball soup. I kinda think this is the best one we've done. Well this one has also been a true co lab. I feel like we were both very in this the entire way and I think that's probably why it's the best for the listeners. Who Don't spend a Lotta time on BOND PETITE DOT COM? We have a feature called B. as best and we pick iconic dishes and the test kitchen editors really go deep on them and they leave no stone unturned try every iteration of something to achieve the platonic ideal of that dish. And I think what's so interesting? What chicken Parm is when people were coming into the kitchen for tastings? Everyone's got an opinion. Yeah also feel like for whatever reason. The world is having a chicken parm moment right now. Like people or chicken parm obsessed more than they've ever been in my lifetime so I think it felt like a particularly important dish to develop right now. Okay so talk to me about the developmental process because you went about it in a very methodical methodical I guess it's the word elected choose approached it developing this dish and so what was your strategy. So there's a lot going on and chicken parm and I think that the only the only viable option was to deconstruct it from the inside out and kind of go into into the center of the dish and evaluate every element of it. All the way out to till it's like last moments before it's on the table so we started with thinking about the chicken itself and whether that was going to be abreast or a thigh and then we started thinking about. How are we GONNA treat. That piece of chicken isn't getting married. Needed is getting season. What's happening to it? And then we moved a layer out to the breading which is obviously an important part of the chicken parm before it gets fried and then we moved on to a discussion about. What is the perfect chicken parm tomato sauce and obviously there are a lot of thoughts there and finally there was the cheese. Combo and so we just broke it out into those fundamental parts and we worked one at a time and built upon the last until we got to a place where we thought it was pretty frigging great. It is great. I will say that with full confidence or let's start with chicken As much as I love chicken thighs in general love boneless skinless chicken pies grilling bone in for like Pan Roasting. The chicken thighs did not get much of a welcome this recipe. No you did not give the chicken thighs a look. I looked at them and I love the. You didn't let me because nostalgic got the best of you which is understandable because this is undeniably nostalgic this recipe and so. I think you were right to decide that. Like a breasts felt more conic. But I will say that I do generally always prefer a chicken thigh when it's breaded and Fried Chicken Buzzer juicier. Their media. Again. They were nostalgic. I think carries a lot of weight with this recipe in particular. It's one of those this at everyone kind of comes to the table with some sort of notion of what it should taste like of dishes. They've had you know the little Italy or red sauce joins in America and those are always boneless chicken breasts so I think that was fair to start but I think what you did so successfully in the next step was I had not done successfully as a home cook. I made chicken. Parmesan was always like good but never great. You leaned in hard on the seasoning of the breast itself. Yeah so the the best thing you can do to a cut of meat like a chicken breast which has a tendency to dry out and is out the gates. Less flavorful than say dark meat is to introduce flavors and ingredients that will help to tenderizer got so. We tried a bunch of different marinades for everything from white wine to buttermilk to just salt and pepper and we ended up with a like fifteen. Twenty minute marinade in grated garlic. Lots of lemon juice in lots of olive oil as well as salt. Obviously so the salt is there to season and to allow it to have a little bit of time to actually penetrate through the breast and then the lemon juice was there to tender. Is it sort of like the way buttermilk act so the vinegar we tried? We also try to vinegar. Brine is a really like fast acting way to tender is a piece of meat like a chicken breast the graded garlic. I also love what you guys do this a lot in the test kitchen. You take a whole garlic and a micro plane in just great it back and forth and that sort of like Dr. The marinade instead of just having to cloves smashed that grading sort of coats each chicken breasts and really sort of penetrates flavor wise. And so that there's something just so at talion tasting like taste like Italy. The olive oil the lemon garlic and to your point it also tend. Rises was really cool. Yeah so we were off drug. Let's start with the tender tender chicken breast away. I'm sorry I'm going to rewind before he marigny talk about the chicken breast itself. The pounding in the butterfly and what that technique is like very important so we took chicken breasts and butterflied them and open them up like a book so that they ended up being like one large very flat chicken breast and then we also played around with all of the different widths so pounding it to an eighth of an inch a quarter of an inch a half an inch and taking that piece of chicken all the way through the recipe to see which fared best ultimately and. I think that we ended up with a half inch as the diameter as the thickness of the chicken breast which is a lot thicker than most chicken farms in the world. That you'll eat out in restaurants. I would say a couple of things. You did a good job teaching me on the video. Like the you've got the whole breast would suppress you know. It can be pretty big and on the curve side. That's when you sort of laterally cut into it with the chef's knife so you open it up and almost like shaped and then you put that between wax paper and if you have a tenderizer or you know if you ever wine bottle whatever you have to pounded thin and I think I a little bit thicker because it stays juicier and I tasted chicken more. Some people like at dinner. That's fine again. It is kind of up to you to decide how you like it so wrong wrong. It's reason this is the best. It's the best. It is best all right so we pounded it. We marinate it for twenty minutes. While we've got the chicken marinating. We set up our dredging station. So let's talk about that. So here's the things that we tested we did a classic dredge of just flour Egg Pinko. We did a classic flour egg bread crumb would did a flour egg mix of Pinko and bread crumb flour EG mix of blitzed Panko and on blitzed Pinko. Can I just interject there? Like just so the it was very hard to keep track of all these cutlets in one going to which one and again masking tape and sharpies everywhere at some point. My friend Nikki resources. We're going GONNA BE A. She was making chicken farm. And we love Panko breadcrumbs because those ice little Shahrzad get super crispy. But she was saying. Oh well sometimes when you do just Pinko you get some bald spots. Or it's not as densely packed so we were like well. What if you mixed Panko with traditional like Progresso breadcrumbs to sort of get some fine some shards or you said well what if he took Pinko and then blitz food processor and I think a lot of those things as best like you WanNa go enough steps that it is the best but at some point you're also like okay? This is crazy. I'VE GOTTA get out my food processor and blitz half Pinko and put them back with the other ones right like we still want this recipe to be cou- Qabail and makeable for home cooks. This isn't a restaurant dish. So those are all considerations that we take when we develop. Ba's best so it's sort of like the best given all circumstances but we also then tried a version where we went straight from the marinate Intertanko then into egg back into Pinko and that was actually a revelation because the crust was so thick and so- crispy but we found that by the time we got to dredging the fourth breast. There was a lot of like glue. Be Panko egg situation happening and it was just kind of a mass overall required a lot of care and it didn't feel necessarily foolproof again. Another restaurant

Pinko Mar Bay Parnell America Italy Qabail BA Panko Nikki
How Is Hung Handsome Howard Doing During the COVID-19 Quarantine?

The Howard Stern Show

02:11 min | 3 years ago

How Is Hung Handsome Howard Doing During the COVID-19 Quarantine?

"Say good morning to hung handsome. Howard are you. Are you a hunkering down in your house? Like me Howard food. I got it made man. I just got back from Italy. It was beautiful. Dude God Top that's talion private great life and you don't Howard. Yeah I get such a kick out of talking to you because you know I'm sitting here with a very small Pena's I'm sitting with this face and I'm washing my hands twenty times a day in wiping off door handles with lysol wipes and aren't you doing that. No no no. I'm not. I just did the corona challenge on talk looking things in public for likes. I'm going viral right now. I'm like so lucky in. I don't worry about anything. I'M NOT GONNA GET CORONA virus. See this is the difference between us. Everything goes well for you I. I'm stockpiling supplies like bottled water. Freeze dried food and bleach. What about you may? I'm stockpiling supplies. Too I got weed Lou robbers. I got a whole inventory. I've never fucked so much during this vires. You're seeing people. This is what I mean rob. Yeah Hung Hamson Howard lives the exact opposite life as me by living a life. That could kill one but nothing ever kills him. He doesn't care you know I'm Howard. I'm wrecking my hands. Washing them over and over all day long. Yeah I'm wrecking my hands too. So you're washing hands like crazy. Also no no no. I've been shredding guitar all day. Thank God they had such a good self image and healthy upbringing. I didn't waste a moment in my life and I learned to be a masterful guitar player when I was young. You see I wasted my youth you you really really you. You learned virtuoso here. I'll play you something. This is Eddie. Van Halen's enjoy. Wow this if I had been handsome and I would also be playing eruption

Hamson Howard Pena Van Halen Italy Eddie
Warriors: Wa Shi

Encyclopedia Womannica

02:55 min | 4 years ago

Warriors: Wa Shi

"We're talking about a warrior who defended countless cities against a pirate scourge but the help of a legendary of Italian meet the noblewoman and General Washy Washy was born in fourteen ninety into southern China's minority Zhang People. Her father was a powerful nobleman of those wings. Send clam which had a long military tradition. Washy is noble. Blood kept her safe from going to war while she was growing up but she eagerly studied military tactics. There's Wong traditionally trained. They're women as warriors wash. She married nobleman named And together they have a son in the mid fifteen twenties. Send men rebelled against Chinese government endangering all along clans and the process to maintain stability wash. She's father had seven men killed. This left a power vacuum that washy filled. She took her late husband's place a local ruler and eventually became one of the most powerful drug lords over time washy grew more involved with the broader Chinese government in fifteen fifty three a band of pirates called the Wuku intensified raids along the country's southern coast. China had been struggling with these particular pirates. For centuries. The ruling dynasty was well aware of Bossi's military prowess and appointed her to help. Defeat the raiders. Washy let an army thousands of miles to defend the city of Jinchon way or Modern Day. Shanghai in the process. She rescued a key government official from an ambush. Why she went on to have several key victories because of the Jong's unique culture law. She's infantry was one of the most skilled in the country they were able to forage for Food and conditions that would have caused other talion star. It became known across land as both soldiers while she was able to deal the pirates their first major defeat she personally joined the fray despite the fact that she was nearly sixty years old at the time as the battle against the pirates continued another war waged within China's ruling class. A power quarrel ended with the death of the general who had recruited washy to fight while she then asked for permission to return home she lived for another year or passing away in fifteen sixty without someone skilled as washy to keep them in check. The pirates remained a regular threat for another twenty years after her death. A local temple was built or washy spirit. It was maintained for centuries while she is among the most famous. There's wrong women for her military genius for the countless lives. She saved

Washy Washy China Jong Zhang People Wong Blood Bossi Raiders Shanghai Jinchon Official
Nancy Rommelmann Digs Into the #Meneither Controversy

The Four Top

09:08 min | 4 years ago

Nancy Rommelmann Digs Into the #Meneither Controversy

"Nancy. Hey I'm so glad to be here with you. Thanks for joining us well yet. Maybe we should start with your ear passes food writer. Tell me about that Schumer. So when I first started working as a journalist it was in nineteen ninety four And I had a knife column in in Los Angeles where I lived at the time and But you know and I was also reading with really super long on features I interviewed cereal. Kalaniiki see and just like really chunky sort of more difficult stuff but you have to bring money right and I thought well what do I like and I was like. Well let food in writing so maybe it dabble in that and get a call one day from this woman that says hey this is Barbara Fairchild from petit and I've been reading your work and I'd like to if you'd like to go skiing for us. In in Sun Valley it was literally those like who is moments call but she had read my narrative. Work look into start. I had a good voice and I wound up writing for not on and off. Mostly travel pieces. They send me to these places for about ten years I did some food writing in La when Jonathan Gold Gourmet for awhile took his column over at the L. A.. Week later it was just something I always kind of did but the reason I n WanNa keep moved up to Portland. I wrote for I wrote restaurant reviews for a week and I had a column in the monthly. But the problem for me is that I never primarily considered myself a food writer. I was doing like really long features and articles and profiles including stops that really I really was invested in but I kept getting known as a food writer. I actually just at some point said I'm not doing it anymore because my my first love was writing different kinds of journalism so I kinda ditched. Yeah well I mean your work as hard hitting and you tackle really really difficult subjects things that tend to fascinate me. I have to just keep following the thread so so so What what have you worked on recently listeners? To check out well I Have I've been waiting for reason magazine And and sort of having to do with with sometimes with free speech or wait now where people are not interested interested in other people having free speech. I've written several articles Roy them having to do with Berlin stuff that happened for instance the city council Banning hate groups but not naming who they were and then the big sort of big got a thing down by the waterfront between the problems and Tika everybody screaming free meet each other. You know we live in a very a very polarized environment right now. We're nobody wants anybody else to be allowed to say anything and that's been sort of fascinating waiting for me. And what a journalist to cover and you've really experienced this personally. In a way that intersects with the food industry Yeah and exercising sizing your free speech Maybe we can talk a little bit about. It was just about a year ago that you launched your video blog right. It actually trait about last December and other journalists nine nine New York. We kept having these really long email threads about stuff. We saw going on in the culture that we thought needed to be aired out One incident was Gento Zinat talion actress. She was Anthony Dance girlfriend. She'd been sexually assaulted by Harvey Weinstein. Then onto have like a ten year relationship with him on and off she really had become sort of the face of the metoo movement one of the phases of metoo movement. I written about her already. I'd foot night interviewed reviewed her years ago and then After her boyfriend Anthony Bourdain killed himself. it turned out that she'd had sex. The seventeen year olds and Dana had been paying off the seventeen year old and then she denied it and she sort of got caught in a a bad situation that maybe should fessed up to But she didn't initially and my friend. I were questioning whether she was really the best face of the me too. It's like you Wanna be able to have this incredible momentum be able to fly straight and we just didn't think she she was and so we talked about it on air. We talked about some other stuff. My friend had written about some of the heads of the women's March who were deeply anti Semitic and that it was problematic so we talked about things that I didn't think that they were particularly controversial. I thought that they were pretty sensible. And pretty data-based but we live in an environment right. Now we're if you are not sorta according to some people if you're not on that party line like you can only believe this way and if you're not forest against us and Some people in Portland decided that my views were very dangerous. And in order to make their beliefs known went to the press about it and decided the way to to state their displeasure was to a boycott and and really slide. My husband's business restarted roster and It was pretty effective in terms of Really getting the entire city who for fifteen years really loved her husband's business like never problem. family owns. I never. That was something mistake they thought and I thought that was really just wish people would come to talk to me. Because that's what I do. I host shows I interview people all and if People WanNa have a conversation with me I opened that door and we have a lot of writing bad people go online and they can website and see wherever about it but happily we all move on and we go onto the next interesting phases of life and work with more information than we had because when these kinds of things happen can you really try to sit and think all right. So what was this really about. What is really what is really animating people And how do we you better conversations. That's what I'm super committed to always work and and now probably never. Yeah and I just. It's kind of stunning. Yeah I mean your husband. Didn't Johnson is an artisanal coffee roaster and he really just cares about high quality coffee and he had to close one of his locations He lost asked loses biggest customer. Will we have a location at Nikolai. That was the lease was up in a month and the temperature was just so hot and so not that we just want like. Let's just close this early early. Yeah wholesale definitely definitely did flee but one of the reasons was because I mean I know this only because Blah Blah but you know the people that were angry. They called all his customers. And said you know you will drop or Streto or else and that was the problem. People believe me I can understand not wanting to be in the middle of the stuff. It's not fun. It takes a lot of time very stressful but it was. You know super unpleasant situation nation having said that did is doing well. And I'm to lots and lots of projects and you. You know these things happen in your life changes but in many ways it's changed for the better so there you go. Yeah but you know what strikes me as interesting is as if it were another if you had this video blog and your husband had a different sort of business like an accounting firm or an insurance agency. I don't know that this would have happened. I I feel like right now. Food and beverage are so much in the in the public eye that played a role. Well it's visible okay. Like if if my husband had been an accountant it's like frankly. His appliance would have been like whatever they would. They're not the demographic that's going to get super woke up about this kind of stuff right right. So you've got who goes to coffee shops you know young people and then we'd have reading series and we'd always had it had been a very sort of friendly and social environment. So you know they're going to try to hit you. Were you hurt. I mean if they come around like wow. Nancy is a terrible frisbee player. Like I don't mm cure but they make sure that you know it's going to affect you and it's going to be public because that's we're sort of I guess The satisfaction what really does make me SAM on. I've talked about this a lot before the idea that people will take pleasure in uh other people's suffering I mean seriously catherine I just cry. It's like that's this. This way is really lies madness. You know if you just think the way to forward in the world is to make sure were that people. You don't like suffer publicly. This is a this. Is Everybody's what he's doing this on the left and the right right now. I watched the impeachment hearings today. It's not a good way to live and I don't think it's a good way to live for the people who are proponents of it either. It's just it's unhappy

Writer Los Angeles Portland Barbara Fairchild Sun Valley Schumer Anthony Bourdain Nancy. Gento Zinat Talion Harvey Weinstein Jonathan Gold Gourmet ROY Petit Dana New York Berlin Johnson Nancy Accountant
Do genetic ancestry tests know if youre Palestinian? A cautionary tale of race and science

Science Friction

08:49 min | 4 years ago

Do genetic ancestry tests know if youre Palestinian? A cautionary tale of race and science

"Welcome welcome to size friction on the tension ritual in. Today's episode is Genomic Science to go to striking story for you of the shocks. You can engage when you take a genetic ancestry tests and the problems are not in your Diana. They are in the science. Oh man so so I want you to make mercury eight to buy. Oh my gosh. So she's an American Palestinian cartoonist illustrator. Leaving in Brooklyn New York and when Shae Shea started to draw well I kind of helped his stop making sense of the world. When I was younger all I wanted to do withdraw from Warwick fantasy characters? who were you know exploring some fantasy world adventuring trying to figure out the meaning of war? Yeah you Matz I. She was an intense keyed. He'd sigh relate to that. I'm not even joking. That was my first comic when I was like thirteen or fourteen trying to figure out the meaning of war yes the law plot. What was really hard? Core rate was trying to figure out the world her family stories. We're helping figure out a self my family. So my my Palestinian side of the family were originally from Ramallah they came to the US in the sixties after the nineteen sixty seven war. And and. That's where my father. My mother my mother is mostly of British and Scottish ancestry and they met in DC and the register and Marguerite was born. She grew up in San Francisco but she understood whole lot about the deep heritage in history. If if family I lived with a lot of my extended family on my father's side and and the constantly I mean I think it's a very Palestinian thing to talk about loss. I'm sorry to say Palestine and talk about what was lost in talk about how it was and things like that so I heard very much about out where we were from and how it was there and everything and there is actually a book. That is a congenial logical history of Ramallah so my family needs to say his in this book. This is actually a book that was done maybe thirty years ago. There's actually a recent effort to update the books so this is kind of a big thing and it's very much a Palestinian thing to try to keep memory alive. It's a need to assure after that. Hey you know we exist who've had the we had this entire history. We're going to write it somewhere. We're going to you know. Put it somewhere. I wish I could've seen Palestine back in the day honestly because it just sounds really chill a nice. I'd like to go okay. Okay so mercury thought. She had a pretty clear idea about her ancestry but then she sped into a test tube. Well first half-brother on her father's side spat into a test tube. He decided on a whim to take a day and I taste and he got the results back in he was just blake. Yeah you might want to take a look at these results. He's her kind of weird. Well we'd in an intriguing conaway. Our understanding ending was that from my Dad's side. We were fully half Palestinian half Arab but these results they suggested something different so so we were just like what so marguerite decided to do an ancestry test to this was back in two thousand sixteen. They went through twenty three and me did the all spit in a tube and she said it off to the company twenty-three May and literally Chino. Even more surprises would be in store for her so the saliva gets to our partner lab. The DNA is extracted from that. and My name Ms Joanna Mountain and I'm senior. Director of research at twenty three and me and previously at Stanford with Joanna also did her PhD and specialized in human evolutionary evolutionary genetics. So when customers sign on with the genetic testing and Analysis Company twenty-three May which is headquartered in Silicon Valley. He's what what happens to this speech sample around a half. A million positions in the DNA are analyzed and we get the genetic variants at those half million positions genetic knitting variant. Now that just means some kind of unique variation in your genomes deny say quance so then twenty three and me use an automated computerized Haraz prices to p different stretches or windows of your day and I and then I compare those two James off a reference group made up of individuals individuals from different populations globally. Now what ethnicities are present or missing from that reference group. That's K. as you'll he'll IDA and and we look at each one of these little windows and we say to which people is this individual most genetically similar and we continue as we stroll along the genome looking and saying well at this point this genome looks very similar to people from say Iberia and then we get a little further down in. Wow it looks similar to people from commoner and even in further down. It looks similar to people from Ireland. So there's a method we have that classifies each little patch of the genome by saying. Is this more similar to people from Ireland Orland or from France and then the algorithm says okay the probability that's from Ireland and appropriately. France in whichever is highest. Is the winner there so then we patch it all together come up with percentages for each individual so it's a multi step process and that's what we present to the customer okay so back back to margarite radium waiting for the results from twenty three and May to land in her inbox and sure enough. I got I got the results back and Some of them made sense. You know I knew enough about my mother's side of the family told me that okay. HALF OF ME is British and Scottish Scottish. Okay cool makes sense what came next made very little sense to her. Other half is going on percent Italian Elian it said thirty five percent Italian and then the rest was Arab Specifically Oh what did it say. Think specifically had said western Western Asian or something they actually tried to give me a breakdown of what regions of Italy it came from but they couldn't actually detect wherein Italy. It came from at all Wade. It'll Italian come from and actually I think is sweet coincidence. Is it true that your husband is Italian. My husband is Italian and I did actually when I got the test I did ask him like do I look talion. He was just like no suddenly just like that. Migrate was possibly thirty percent Italian and only fifteen percent western Asian and north African and canete slightly saving detail that she is Palestinian heritage. We'll wait until you hear what happened. Win Twenty Twenty three and may updated her results two years later. It's fairly incredible. I though Hel genetically different we really well at the genome scale there. Her over three billion nucleotides that make up our genome. So My name is Sarah Tishkov and I may professor of genetics awesome biology at the University of Pennsylvania and she's hugely influential Sarah and colleagues published the first pipe to support the out of Africa hypothesis of human migration using analysis of the DNA inside cells Nuclei and has conducted the largest studies of genetic variation in in African populations. We differ at about. I would say less than point. One percent of the genome. So that's a relatively small mall amount of difference to give you an idea of we. Compared the human genome to a chimp genome. It differs at about one point. Five percent of the genome less than point point one percent and yet what is contained within that variation that difference the majority of variation is not functional and in fact that variation is very useful for making inferences about evolutionary history about population history demographic McGrath history tracing migration events and so on the part of the genome it actually is influencing variable traits is important for understanding how how we adapted to different environments during human evolution and also understanding why some people are more at risk for certain diseases than others

Palestine Marguerite Ramallah France Ms Joanna Mountain Sarah Tishkov Italy Ireland Mercury Eight Genomic Science Warwick Shae Shea Twenty Twenty San Francisco Brooklyn United States New York
China Promises To Regain Control Of Taiwan

Monocle 24: The Globalist

08:27 min | 4 years ago

China Promises To Regain Control Of Taiwan

"China has repeated. Its Promise to regain regain control of Taiwan after voters reelected president sighing. When Chinese state media said the president resorted to cheating repression and intimidation to get votes? Were joined in mischievious by Isabel Hilton editor of China Dialogue. Good to have you back in this year is this was a very convincing. Victory for her wasn't it. I could hardly be more convincing. And not they need to cheer chief record. Numbers of votes For any Taiwanese politician She also won a convincing victory in the Congress winning twice as many any seats as serious. Rival Gorman down and what is it that brought this. This huge victory is pretty much. Hong Kong You know the the the example of Hong Kong the the failure of One Country Two Systems in Hong Kong the Kuomintang have traditionally being the Party. Reunification the Kuomintang are the the the The relic of the Chinese civil war which was between the Kuomintang and and the and the Communist Party. They agree that China is one country in Taiwan belongs to it they just disagree about who should run it so the Kuomintang's historic position of being there the rightful ruler of all of Hong Kong. Where saying when is a Taiwanese politician politician and takes different view of history in a different view of democracy in a different view of of Taiwan role in the world? And that is is what particularly the young voters in Taiwan and they came out in record. Numbers Dave look at Hong Kong. They say well. You can't trust China. It breaks its promises what we have is freedom and democracy here and we wish to defend that that's what it is seen as a steady pair of Hanser. She's pretty steady. There were where to other parties that did rather badly One one is one was a a much more radical independence party and that Did very badly. So she's seen as somebody who defends the status quo essentially. She's not going to declare independence because that would be that that would trigger a global crisis But she is going to resist pressure from Beijing to talk about the the future of a close future with with with the People's Republic. So I think you know like a number of international crises. The best solution certainly for the time being is the status quo for Taiwan. He mentioned the idea ever close future with the People's Republic China's reaction promised to regain regain control of Taiwan. That doesn't necessarily time. We've what you've just said I'm but Kennedy genuinely says it we could have react. We could have expected that reaction yes she didn't for Xi Jinping to acknowledge it this is. This has been a very embarrassing victory this gala victory has been very embarrassing Xi Jinping because it it it is rebuked not only to his approach to Taiwan but to Hong Kong and You know unless Beijing finds a way to modify its. It's policy in Hong Kong. This will go on feeding into the Taiwan political situation and and entrenching Taiwanese view of the mainland so so that puts Xi Jinping and rob difficult position of having to acknowledge that he is wrong. Whereas you know Xi Jinping thought invincible in and cannot make mistakes so so I think what we're looking at is what is the? What is the tone scale of the response given that China is not going to reverse its policy? Xi Jinping Champion has declared in the China dream. China's May he's making China great again. The reunification with Taiwan is they would put. It is a key part of that and the it's it's kind of shared for the hundredth anniversary of the founding of the People's Republic which is in two hundred forty nine so there is time on the other hand any any move to kind of slacken off the pressure on Taiwan would be viewed as weakness on the mainland. So I think what we'll see is a certain amount of low level harassment Rasmin so where China has had a number of successes in other in other Fields if you look sad Chinese see for example the kind of sub military pressure of water essentially armed fishing boats taking on for example Taiwanese fishing boats off yet news fishing boats there are fifteen very small countries. It's still recognize Taiwan As as the Republic of China we will see increasing pressure on them to switch to the People's People's Republic We might see some harassment of extensive trade and business relationships which exist between Taiwan and China neurotic Taiwanese unease doing business on the mainland. We've already seen a cocktail moment of tourism to Taiwan from the mainland. So you know there are a number of ways in which which Beijing can express its displeasure short of precipitating further confrontation Anita. How much is this actually high on? Its list given the fact that that China has has an awful lot more than it has to concentrate on the moment. We Got Hong Kong as you've mentioned which played directly into the hands of signing when we also have the US trade trade war we have in. China is busy with stuff can actually afford to put Taiwan on the back burner little. Yes I think it can. I think you're absolutely right. There are immediate crisis and there will go on being meet you crisis. It's you know th the economy's not going very well. There's some troubling signs in the financial sector that we might be in a in for a few bankruptcies and there's very limited trade deal is about to be signed the United States. I don't think China wants to jeopardize You know a kind of calming down of the. US China trade war. So do any move on. Taiwan would obviously do that. And so far we've seen or other muted reaction as you said. They accused diving when of dirty tricks describe. This is an anomaly. There was a wonderful phrase from Shinwari which said You know these temporary versus A. They're just a bubble in the tide of history. And you know she shouldn't count on this being a kind of permanent state of affairs so they're standing back and saying well you know these things happen but we can get over it and our long-term policy history is with this. That's that's interview that said we had trump making positive notes about Taiwan for quite a long time right from the beginning of his presidency. And yes you say that. The number of Countries now fifteen who who actively recognize Taiwan as a state and large companies such as airlines have now diverted their attention to to Beijing. But if you you have this state or this place which is allowed to just take along quietly. Is there a chance as a little bit of soft power will allow Taiwan to actually bring a few more countries back into the fold really curious you should say that because the because prog recently Decided to twin with with the Taipei rather than Beijing which is fanny kind of substantial. Move for the for the Czech Republic And and a bit of a rebuke. I think it was so one. Shouldn't underestimate the quiet soft. The effect of the quiet soft power of Taiwan inside China there are a number of of individual visitors from the mainland. Who made a point of going to Taiwan to observe the elections? Because you know they're curious about the only real substantial elections take place in the Chinese world and that will you know that one shouldn't underestimate the quiet effect of that It it's quite. It's quite the powerful thing Talking of quiet. Donald Trump has been unusually quiet on the subject of the Taiwanese elections but the people around him have been pretty robust in their supportive. Talion when so you know the US representative in in In Taipei met very quickly There have been you know it'd been in using language like no shared values of democracy and freedom the kind of thing honestly that one hadn't heard from trump for quite sometime but you're hearing from his officials officials and there have been hints from the US military that their commitment to the defensive Taiwanese as robust as ever last year saw a large number verve of quite significant arms sales and indications of military cooperation. So there were. There are lots of reasons China to sit fairly quiet Wyatt on this one. I think his Bell Hilton. Thank you very much indeed for joining his monocle. Twenty four

Taiwan Beijing Hong Kong China United States Republic China China Dialogue Republic Of China Xi Jinping Isabel Hilton Donald Trump Kuomintang President Trump Czech Republic People's Republic
 Rescue ship captain held in Italy attracts donors, defenders

Reveal

00:53 sec | 4 years ago

Rescue ship captain held in Italy attracts donors, defenders

"Talion police have arrested the captain of a rescue ship with forty migrants on board on charges. She resisted authorities NPR's Sylvia Pohjola reports after seventeen days, standoff, Carolina, Katie said she could no longer wait for permission to dock before dawn, the thirty one year old captain steered the sea watch toward port on the island of lump, it doozer ramming customs police motorboat that was trying to block her the migrants disembarked, and we're taken to a reception. Centre TV footage showed vacate escorted off the vessel by police and driven away amid applause from bystanders interior minister, Matteo Salvini, author of a controversial decree, banning rescue ships from Italian ports called her a criminal who committed an act of war, and opposition lawmaker likened the captain's actions to an ambulance driver. Who runs a red light to get ailing people to a

Matteo Salvini Sylvia Pohjola Talion Katie Carolina Thirty One Year Seventeen Days