22 Burst results for "Tarpley"

AP News Radio
Oath Keepers' Rhodes guilty of Jan. 6 seditious conspiracy
"The head of the group, all the keepers has been found guilty of charges connected to the capital insurrection. I Norman hall. A Washington D.C. jury convicted oath keepers founder Stewart Rhodes of seditious conspiracy for violent plot to overturn president Joe Biden's election, wrote was acquitted on two other conspiracy charges, defense attorney at tarpley. We're grateful for the not guilty verdicts that were received, were disappointed in the guilty verdict. The case handed the Justice Department a major victory in its massive prosecution of the January 6th, 2021 insurrection, seditious conspiracy, calls for up to 20 years behind bars and appeal will be filed. Norman hall, Washington

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast
"tarpley" Discussed on The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast
"Guys, there's a huge trial going on the oath keepers trial and I'm delighted to welcome to the podcast Ed tarpley, Ed's a criminal defense attorney from Louisiana. He's practiced law there for 42 years. In fact, he served as the district attorney in Louisiana from 1991 to 1997. He's one of the attorneys on the team representing Stuart roads Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the oath keepers. And welcome to the podcast. Thanks for joining me. A lot going on. I know in the courtroom and thanks for taking the time to step out and give us an update. How in your assessment is this trial going? And where is it at what stage are we at right now? Yeah, let me just say, first of all, that it's a pleasure to be on the podcast today. As you know, the local court rules prohibit me from discussing the evidence that's in the case that we have to be careful not to run astray of violating the local court rules. But there are many things I can tell you. First of all, I can say that we think the trial is going well. That we have an outstanding team of attorneys working on this case. I'm representing Stewart roads along with Bill linder with Phil lender and James Lee bright from Dallas, Texas, to outstanding lawyers, we have the other defendants, Kelly maggs has Stanley Woodward and Julie Halle from Washington, D.C., Ken harrelson, has Brad guy from New Jersey. Jessica Watkins has a Jonathan Chris from Pennsylvania and mister Thomas Caldwell has bay Fisher from Maryland. So we have a lot of outstanding attorneys on this case and we have a great camaraderie and rapport with each other. So I just think we have an outstanding team in this trial on behalf of the defense.

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast
Dinesh Interviews the Attorney for Oath Keepers' Founder Stuart Rhodes
"Guys, there's a huge trial going on the oath keepers trial and I'm delighted to welcome to the podcast Ed tarpley, Ed's a criminal defense attorney from Louisiana. He's practiced law there for 42 years. In fact, he served as the district attorney in Louisiana from 1991 to 1997. He's one of the attorneys on the team representing Stuart roads Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the oath keepers. And welcome to the podcast. Thanks for joining me. A lot going on. I know in the courtroom and thanks for taking the time to step out and give us an update. How in your assessment is this trial going? And where is it at what stage are we at right now? Yeah, let me just say, first of all, that it's a pleasure to be on the podcast today. As you know, the local court rules prohibit me from discussing the evidence that's in the case that we have to be careful not to run astray of violating the local court rules. But there are many things I can tell you. First of all, I can say that we think the trial is going well. That we have an outstanding team of attorneys working on this case. I'm representing Stewart roads along with Bill linder with Phil lender and James Lee bright from Dallas, Texas, to outstanding lawyers, we have the other defendants, Kelly maggs has Stanley Woodward and Julie Halle from Washington, D.C., Ken harrelson, has Brad guy from New Jersey. Jessica Watkins has a Jonathan Chris from Pennsylvania and mister Thomas Caldwell has bay Fisher from Maryland. So we have a lot of outstanding attorneys on this case and we have a great camaraderie and rapport with each other. So I just think we have an outstanding team in this trial on behalf of the defense.

Forever35
"tarpley" Discussed on Forever35
"And the way that my cats used to come up and shuffle my papers. So. Do you have any cats currently? No, we don't have any pets right now. It's a, it's an ongoing discussion. My husband is a dog person. I am not a doctor. He loved the cat. So maybe, but I'm also loving a life that is free of cat hair. Yeah. And letter boxes. Yeah. I had a cow. I loved my cat. I have her ashes. She was the best, but the amount of vomiting and litter that I had that we dealt with for 16 years. Was a lot. It's a lot. Cats are a lot. We have a forever 35 cat Facebook group. We have this like amazing Facebook community that have spun off from the podcast. But there is a very diehard group of listeners who are cat people who have their own Facebook groups. So I think they will. Yes, they'll be very happy to hear you speak of the spirit of your cat still lingering. I think that's really special. Cool. Well, this has been such a nice conversation, Natasha. This has been really great. Yeah, thank you. Thank you guys for having me. I think it's been a lot of fun. If our listeners want to find out more about you, your books, your work, where is the best place for them to look for you? My website has most of my books up there. It's Natasha, tarqui rights, and that's writ. Dot com. Instagram at Natasha tarpley. Natasha tarqui on Facebook as well. So I'm terrible with social media. So if I don't see your message, you're getting just know that that's the reason. Well, you are seeing. Thank you again. This was really lovely. Thank you guys too. You know, Kate, we didn't talk about this in our conversation with Natasha, but it was so it was interesting talking to her because the way that we kind of first knew about her is because she's the older sister of a friend of mine from elementary school. Yes, we didn't talk about this until the interview ended and we were like, how's blah blah blah? And I was like, oh, wait a second. And Natasha was always like the much quote unquote much older sister. You know, because when you're like 13, someone who's like 19. Oh my gosh. So old. And it was so cool. Yeah, and she's in college. I was like, wow. I couldn't even talk to my Friends older college age siblings. They intimidated me, not by anything they did, just like they're just their existence. That's intimidating. Especially because at the time, this was the early 90s, like, and boy, if you were in college in the early 90s, you were badass. Oh yeah. You were in Doc martens. You knew music I had never heard of. Yeah. You maybe had a piercing. You maybe had a piercing. I loved getting to talk to Natasha. I really just you know what I really loved. I kind of loved finally having a night owl on because you know I'm so obsessed with going to bed early. Yes. Dory. Oh my gosh, I was in a meeting yesterday for my book promotion. And I'm very lucky that my editor and the person who does publicity for forever, my publisher, they listen to the podcast. So they know me like both from working with me and also from hearing the pod. But we were talking about what time and event would start and my editor was like, but don't you guys know that cake goes to bed early? And I was like, oh, I feel so seen by you all right now. But yeah, I liked having I liked having a representative of the night owls on the show. That's so funny. You know, we need like I do feel like we need more night owls to speak. To speak the truth because, you know, I feel like they get a bad rap, especially for me. I feel like I've been talking shit about night owls, you know? Yeah. Anyway, I'm glad that Natasha spoke to that and what it's like to be a late night person. Yes, such a good point because you're right. We so like, I feel like wellness culture quote unquote has really indoctrinated us to this idea of you must go to bed early for your mental and physical well-being. That is like a corner stone. Yes. The whole book I'm reading is basically about that. It's like that is the ethos. Yeah, and she was just like, this is what works for me in my body. I remember years ago a few years ago when I worked at BuzzFeed, I profiled the author Michael shaban. And he basically also works overnight. He would stay up all night and then sleep till I think like 11 or something. Whereas his wife worked more during the day, but yeah, he was just like, this is like, this is like one of my most creative, my most productive, I work at night. And then during the day in the afternoons, he was like, they have four kids, so he was always like free to hang out with the kids and do that kind of stuff. But yeah, he was like, I'm a night owl. So, yeah, I feel like there is ultimately right there is no one size fits all. Yeah, I will say I agree even though going to sleep early does feel better for my own body and bones. Well, you had to be more open minded about it. Then that's right, then that's what works for you. Yeah. You know? So, well, let's intention. Let's intention out. You know, last week I had committed to not feeling guilty about getting off my phone early if need be. Turns out I had a hard time getting off my phone before like 9 9 30. So I don't know if I really succeeded, but I'm going to keep trying. And then this week, if you've listened to the podcast recently, you've heard how I made a really bad vegan macaroni and cheese. And so I would like to find one good family friendly vegetarian meal that I haven't cooked before that everyone in my family can enjoy. That's my intention for the week of one vegetarian dinner. Okay. I'm excited for you. Do you have any leads? Do you have places where you're going to look? Well, you know, I was going to make this sweet potato kidney bean burrito, but then after the macaroni and cheese incident, I wasn't trusting my instincts. So now you're a little gun shy. Honestly, I am. I'm kind of questioning myself a bit. So I need to kind of I do know like my kids do love like an air fryer tofu so I can kind of go down that route, but I like to expand our palettes a bit more. I'll keep you posted. Please do. What is on your list this week? Well, so last week I wanted to kind of explore my restlessness. How did this go? Well,.

Forever35
"tarpley" Discussed on Forever35
"And now, I think that there are so many other opportunities in terms of being able to produce media independently that we're really trying to look at my mom and as well as we're as a family just trying to get this started again. It's a really all of us are very committed to creating media products that really celebrate diverse kids and families and experiences and we're just trying to figure out what that's going to look like. Is your sister also a writer? Is this just as a family passion for storytelling? Was this just passed down or did it all kind of everybody all kind of meet at a point where you all were doing this? My sister is not a writer. She's into technology and so she's started her own tech company where she created a keyboard for kids. She's working on other kind of technology related products and apps and things right now. So I think one of the things that we were fortunate enough to have as a family that really nurtured that sense of exploration and curiosity, I know others who are friends of mine felt like they were very pressured to go in a certain direction or take a certain path and their lives and we were very we were able to kind of explore and figure out where we wanted to go. So all of us have gone on different paths, but yeah, just that sense of permission and having it sense of curiosity instilled at an early age. I think that's really important for all of us. It's interesting you say that too because I feel like that sense of permission is hard for adults to give themselves like during I get a lot of questions from people, you know, like am I too old to become a writer or can I do this? I don't think I've ever heard the word permission used, but that just clicks so deeply is that it really is like permission. You give yourself permission to explore, try something new, not worry about failing. And that is very hard to come by for a lot of us. Absolutely. And I think it is so important, I can't go back to kids, I kind of instill that early on so that they approach the world with that sense of curiosity. I have a lot of kids who ask me, well, how do I become a writer? How do I get published and I think that's definitely a goal that's achievable. But cultivating a sense of openness and curiosity about the world and wanting to explore and learn about new things, I think is so key to any kind of endeavor, whether you're going to be a writer or an architect or scientist, whatever you want to be. That sense is very important. And I try to it's hard when you're an adult to get out of those patterns. You know, but I think if you do little things that definitely helps to get you more comfortable with exploring a little bit further each time. Do you have advice or thoughts for parents who want to raise intellectually curious creative children based on what sounds like your own wonderful upbringing? Yeah, I feel like, you know, one of the things that my parents did, especially my mom, growing up was expose us to a lot of very different things. And I feel like that's part of the culture of parenting now. What kids being exposed to a lot of different things. And I'm seeing that in when I meet kids, go to school visits, kids are very aware, they're very aware of the world. They're very aware of their interests. So I think a lot of that is coming more a part of our culture now. I think it's also important to be as honest as we can with our children and to talk to them about. Things that are happening in the world, but also encourage them to explore other cultures to meet people of different backgrounds to talk to them to talk about the experiences that you've had in your own family and to connect them with their own family history so that they have a greater sense of who they are. I mean, I think that's one of the things that we all kind of miss out on, you know, many of us have parents and grandparents and others who came from different countries or even my family from the south and a lot of them wanted to leave the past. In the past, and they weren't as interested in sharing those experiences. So I think being cognizant of that and really sharing your own experiences and your family's experiences will I think help kids to be anchored and more aware of the fullness of their own history and who they are. And maybe from that can get a sense of, well, I can go and explore and make my own path as well. I hope so that was so rambly. It wasn't. It was really really thoughtful. And very helpful. It's a parent. Okay, I have to ask about the ghost of two cats that you live with per your bio on your website. You said that many people reference this. Do you regret putting this in your bio because everybody notices and latches on? Are these your cats that have passed? Yes. You know, they're not like me and ghosts or anything like that. It's just really a sense of them being, you know, in this space, you know, spiritually, in fact, the reason I put that bio put them in that file is that that was originally a bio that I wrote for my book the Harlem charade. And both of my cats kind of died sort of during the during the writing of that book and it was really like, you know, very kind of one of them was unexpected. And the other was almost 20 years old. So that one was not as unexpected, but having been with that those animals, they were really a part of the family. And so I feel like there's still kind of hanging around, sometimes I'll just catch a glimpse of movement out of the corner of my eye or something will move on my desk..

Forever35
"tarpley" Discussed on Forever35
"Out, what else is there out there for me to know about? I think the thing that I've also learning to is that there's an emotional exploration that has to happen as well. I'm very, very devoted to my work. I'm very excited about the world, but I recently have a couple of health issues, nothing major, but enough where my body was like, you have to focus on yourself in this way too. So this kind of slowing down really really going inside and recognizing the needs that I have in that way as well, you know, emotional physical, that kind of thing. So it's always a process. And it's a journey. Yeah, it's never easy. It feels always feels like the older we get the more we should know how to do that. And I feel like the older I get, the more I'm relearning that I don't know how to do that. Okay, well, let's take a quick break and we'll be right back. It's a new year. So let's all learn something new. And if you're looking for a place to learn something new from the best of the best, then I highly recommend you check out masterclass. I am currently taking Daniel nagrani teaches poker and more than anything I've learned that these classes are well structured, easy to follow. And really beautifully put together in film. Also, I'm getting better at poker. When you're taught something by someone who loves what they're doing, it's easy to find their passion infused in your lessons and masterclass knows how to get the most out of these instructors. And with over 100 classes from a range of world class instructors, that thing you've always wanted to do is closer than you think. So let's learn by doing this here. Sign up for an annual pass and get unlimited access to every masterclass. As of forever 35 listener, you get 15% off an annual membership. Go to masterclass dot com slash forever 35. That's master host dot com slash for over 35 for 15% off masterclass. Today's episode is brought to you by ritual. You know, protein is one of those things that we hear a lot about and it's gets a little confusing. It's like you're not getting enough, you're eating too much, you should eat it with this, not with that, et cetera, et cetera. But luckily, ritual makes it really easy to get the right amount of protein from the right sources with their essential protein. It's a really tasty plant based protein powder with three distinct formulas designed to meet the body's changing protein needs. Heck, yes. Now look, there are a lot of protein powders out there, and you might be asking, what makes this one so special? Well, I have the answers for you. I mean, number one, I use it. So that makes it pretty special. Number two, ritual is made with a complete amino acid profile. 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Natasha, I'm curious since, you know, at the beginning of our conversation, you talked about how you sometimes stay up till four in the morning reading. I'm wondering what does a kind of typical day for you look like when you are working on a book? Do you wake up at 8 a.m. or do you sleep late at when do you work? I'm curious about your process. Yeah, I usually don't wake up very early. I want to say that time, but I don't usually wake up very early, but my ritual is unfortunate enough to be able to work from home, my husband and I both work from home. So I get up got upstairs, make my coffee and come right back up here where I am now in my office. And I'm pretty good at sitting down at my computer, I'm trying to make a routine where I don't go directly into my inbox and just look around. It's so much time and all the busy work that has to be done. I've tried to figure out a way to restructure that, but something's obviously I need an assistant, which I don't have yet. But I have to, there are things that I have to address and then I get into making my writing plan usually if I'm right in the midst of a project, I usually make a plan for what I'm going to do the day before. So I like to write in little chunks. So I know exactly how much I mean you never know exactly, but I like to at least give myself a guideline or a guidepost of a big outliner. So I try to identify a point that I want to get to and then achieve that that goal for that day. I would love to be that person. Me too. It's easier said than done. Yeah. I know but it sounds so satisfying. You know what you want to get into? Going into your day and then once you've achieved it, I mean, I assume you can just be like, okay, I've done what I set out to do today and kind of wrap up, which is that feels so satisfying. I feel like when I sit down to write, I just sort of like this. Wow. Thank you. Absolutely. That unhinged feeling. I know what you're talking about story. I know. I know. Natasha, you also, you have a company called wunderbar media and I was wondering if you could talk a little bit about that. From what I have gathered, you started it about ten years ago and I'd love for you to talk about some of the projects you've produced there and also kind of how you've seen the landscape change or not for multicultural children's media products. Yeah, so one of our I started ten years ago, also with my mom, this is a project we were going through together. Cool. And at that time, we were focused on primarily books. So we started we published one book and we realized this is very hard. Publishing your own book is very difficult. And we kind of after that experience wanted to relook at certain point where we wanted to go with the company. So it's been kind of a hiatus stage for a while..

Forever35
"tarpley" Discussed on Forever35
"As you said, I love my hair has been around for over 20 years. And at that time, it always felt to me that books that featured black kids were very heavy and that there was always this big message that you had to get out of and get out of it and admittedly, I left my hair also has a message, but I wanted to bring a sense of levity and joy to that kind of writing for black kids. And I think for me, I want to create spaces in my work where black kids can not just see themselves on the page. I can kind of make an emotional connection and be invited to kind of explore who they are on all levels and not just look at external things like your hair or your skin color and feel like you have to kind of wrestle with that or apologize with for that in the world and my hope is that the stories that I write will appeal to all readers in general, but also specifically to black kids in that. They will be able to enjoy who they are and who they are and approach the world in a more holistic way. So you're not just always dealing with an issue or confronting this topic or fighting against this thing. Your whole person and I want kids to really acknowledge and revel in that. I feel like joy is such a good word to describe your new book, which you know when I was reading it's called the May I choose to be. And it exudes joy. And it's just such a lovely book and I'd love for you. I'd love to hear a little bit more about that. I really saw it as like a celebration of children's emotions of their hopes and their dreams and I'm just wondering, what do you, what do you hope children reading this get out of the book? And how do you hope they'll be kind of inspired by it? Yeah. I hope that they will be one of the reasons why I really wanted to write this book in this way. I mean, it's written in text that I hope is dividing. It's rhyming. It's, as you were saying, Dory had a very joyful and I really want to encourage kids to not always see the photographs by creative soul are just stunning. They're amazing. Yeah, they're gorgeous. They're so cool images. Yeah. That I later found out from them that their models are actually involved in creating those costumes and creating the book. So how cool? Yeah. So they're really authentically kind of what young kids would be into that. I mean, that really that makes so much sense and that really comes across. In the book. And so for me, it is that sense of power. You know, it's joy, but it's also power. That statement of I am to me, I choose to be, you know, for me, at this time, I think there's so many messages about black people, black culture, that, you know, I want kids to really claim that sense of know, you're not going to tell me who I am. I'm going to explore and I'm going to figure out and I'm going to decide who I am. And for all kids to kind of claim that that power. Can I ask a question as a children's book author, do you also consider the impact that your books have on the adults reading them or reading them with their kids? I know that I'm a parent and I mean, Dory is as well. And there have been times where I've just sat and wept at some of these books that I'm reading for my children and I get completely caught off guard at how powerful they are just for me and I would love to know if that's something that you consider at all or if you've gotten feedback from adult readers along those lines. Yeah, that's a really good question because I think when I'm writing I'm usually mostly focused on the kids. So that's so focused on how adults will receive the book. So that's the short answer of that. The bigger the bigger answer is that I hope that the books that I write will impact all of us in that adults who are purchasing these books, the adults who are raising children. Who have the power to say I want my child to receive this kind of education or I want these kinds of books to be published I really hope that that will be something that sparks a desire for more of the kinds of stories that I and other writers are creating. So in that way, yes. And also I've been really fortunate that people who I've read, I love my hair are becoming parents themselves. And I've had people come up to me on the street crying and saying how much fuck meant to them, you know, as they were growing up or even receiving it as an adult. So it's been really wonderful to get that feedback and to recognize that that's also a part of the experience what the adults are getting on the book as well. I love your Instagram bio, which says I promote self love empowerment and self acceptance, which I think is very evident in your work. And I wanted to know how you cultivate those things in your own life for yourself. Has that been a journey for you or those things that come organically? What is that like for you? It's always a journey. And I've learned over time to accept it as such. So, you know, when I was a teenager, I wanted to look a certain way or you know I wanted to be something else. This was a funny part of it. I imagine that I would become a British rockstar, you know, used to speak with a British accent. I don't know how to crack band and all that stuff, you know. So that was my family, but overall, I think it's always a process. And the way I kind of cultivate that is I'm a very curious person. So I'm always exploring things so I'm always kind of having to my sense of self and that way, like exploration and figuring.

Forever35
"tarpley" Discussed on Forever35
"A while at night. Absolutely. I think all of us and our family, we were all raised as night owls, so it comes naturally and we were never the kids who had the set bedtime, your one time, my mom as a punishment made us go to bed at like 9 o'clock. It was just torture. We ended up sneaking up TV, you know, staying up a little bit later anyway, but yeah. So it's just a part of our upbringing. Your mom sounds amazing. And I know that she was part of the inspiration for. I love my hair. I was wondering if you could kind of tell us how the seed of that book, which has now been out for over 20 years and has been such an important addition to children's literature. If you could tell us what your relationship with like was her with her and how it kind of grew into the inspiration for your book. Yeah. My mom and I are very close, we were just I just had my birthday last week and she was telling me she always tells us my siblings and our birth stories of she was telling me about a moment when I was 5, actually we were walking down the street and how we had kind of made a deal that we would be best friends. And so that is kind of in the thing that she is very close to me. And when I was younger, she would write these little stories about me and my siblings as we were growing up. She would take down this big clunky black electric typewriter and go off into her own little space and she would produce these stories. And for me, it was an important moment in that it made that connection between my life and the things that I did and what happened in a story and what made a story. So that was one very crucial moment for me. And as far as I love my hair, we also had a ritual where there are four kids in my family. I'm the oldest. So I'm the person who always have to share everything. So when I got my hair comb, that was one of the few times my mom and I had time alone. And so we had a ritual where we would pretend that there were people who were living in my hair as she called my hair. So we would make up these little stories about these characters as we went along. And I tried to achieve that recreate those stories of those characters in the space of a picture book and it was it just got very unruly and very hard to follow. So I paired it down to the essence of what that experience was about and it was about that connection between my mom and myself. And it was also about creativity, so the little girl, and I love my hair. Tell us about all the different ways that she can wear her hair and she connects a sense of creativity and imagination with all of those styles like her Afro as I could glow or her ponytails are like wings. And so that sorts of that sense of creativity and imagination was what I hope and joy was what I wanted to put into. I love my hair. Talk about an amazing self care practice passed down from a parent, not just like the nightly ritual of doing hair, but just the creative exploration and just that connection with each other sounds really magical. I mean, what an amazing gift. That's so. Your mom sounds incredible. Yeah, that's really, I mean, that's really special. I'm wondering if you could talk a little bit more about your decision to write children's books. I mean, I know you went to law school and seems like you were headed for a different path and then decided to write children's books. I'd love to hear more about that. Yeah, so by path is definitely not a straight line. I've not been anyone says, but I've always so in some ways it is because writing has always been a part of me. I always say that I started writing when I was 7, but you know I think even earlier than that, I was so drawn to the world of stories and books that just felt like something that was organically a part of who I was and writing was also the way that I could have found my own voice. My own place in the world. I was very shy kid. Still in a pretty shy person. And so writing was the space where I could just kind of express myself and kind of be who I was, and then I found, once I did that, and I was rewarded for that teachers, parents, family members, encouraged me in that. So I was very fortunate in that way. And so that as in terms of writing as that way of navigating the world, has always been consistent when I got to college. I felt pretty lost. And again, I turned back to my writing and I created a network of black college student writers and that network ended up in an anthology, which I edited called testimony, which is no longer in print, but includes early work by some of today's really fantastic black writers like title IC codes. Johnny carb, others are, you know, we were all kind of in that space together. Wow. So it's also a document of what some of those writers were doing very early. Yeah, career. Oh boy, I would love to read that. Yeah, I mean, you could still get a copy. Okay. But it's no longer in print. I actually have the rights to it. So I'm trying to figure out if I want to rerelease it or something like that. So writing has always been that thing of making exploration and also making a statement because part of I know I'm on a long winding journey, but part of testimony was about, you know, making a statement that was beyond this kind of typical narrative of black life and culture. So it was really looking at who these writers were as individuals as intellectuals looking at the spectrum of our experiences as young black writers. And so that's what I wanted to also bring into my work for children..

Forever35
"tarpley" Discussed on Forever35
"Something to be said for the amount of time I can avoid how gross the stove is. It just keeps building and there's like splatters. And you just let it sit there. Well, good for you. How long did it take you to clean your whole kitchen? That can be a real schlapp. I want to say it took about an hour and then I also washed my sheets. Oh, Dory. You are just killing it today. Well, you know, we do normally have a cleaning person who comes we're lucky enough to have that. But they haven't come and almost a month. So as discussed previously on this podcast, my husband, I are not naturally the most tidy people and having a weekly cleaning person is like kind of barely keeps us on the edge of the bare minimum of cleanliness. And so the fact that she hasn't been coming has been rather detrimental to our houses, yeah. Here you go. You say no more. I hear you and I see you. So, yeah. So yeah, it was like at the point where I was like, we got to do it. We got to scrape this food off. Yeah. Yeah. I should do that too, actually now that you say that. All right, well, okay, before we take a break, let's introduce our listeners to our guest this week. Take it away, Tori. Our guest is Natasha tarpley who is the author of the bestselling picture book I love my hair, as well as other acclaimed titles for children and adults, including the recent children's book, the May I choose to be. She's the recipient of a national endowment for the arts fellowship among other awards. And when she is not writing books, miss Harper can usually be found reading them, which is something we get into in our conversation. She has also taken up the cruel and unusual hobby of running marathons. Miss tarpley is the cofounder of wunderbar media and multicultural children's book media company she lives with her husband and the ghosts of two cats, another thing that we did talk about. We did south side of Chicago. I was like, the first thing I was like, I've got to deal with these ghost cats. All right, so we are going to take a quick break and then we will be back with Natasha. Today's episode is brought to you by purple. You know, sometimes people DM me and they're like, Kate, do you really sleep on a purple pillow? Are you really obsessed with it and also which purple pillow do you use? And I tell them yes, I do. Yes, I'm really obsessed with it, and I sleep on the purple, harmony, pillow, which look, they call the greatest pillow ever invented. And I have to agree. Look, sleep is not always something that has come easy to me. I especially have a hard time getting comfortable. I've had a lot of aches and pains in my back and my shoulders, but my purple pillow has helped me sleep better. I wake up more refreshed, and my body doesn't hurt. And that's because purple mattresses, their pillows and their cushions have the one and only gel flex grid. It's super stretchy ultra squishy material that adapts and flexes around your pressure points. And what I love is that it doesn't retain heat so you have a supported cushioned and great night's sleep. And you stay cool, which is big for me. I come sometimes sleep hot. I mean, look, I am hot, but you know what I'm saying. No matter how you sleep, purple is perfect for you. You can try your purple products risk free with free shipping and returns, getting a great night's sleep starts with having a great mattress. So get a purple mattress. Go to purple dot com slash F-35 and use code F-35. For a limited time, you can get 10% off any order of $200 or more. That's purple dot com slash F-35 code F-35 for 10% off any order of $200 or more. Purple dot com slash 35 per promo code F-35 terms apply. Natasha welcome to forever 35. We're really glad to have you on the show today. And thank you for having me. I'm glad to be to be here. So we try to start every interview by asking our guests about self care practice that they have in their own life. That can look like anything to them. We've had everything from naps to letter writing to journaling. I mean, you name it, we've talked about it. So we would love to hear if there is something that you do on a regular basis in your life that you consider a self care practice. Well, one of them is something that I've had since I was a kid and that is reading in bed at night before to sleep. And that has been my absolute favorite through again since I was the kid. So I will read. Now I have a Kindle. I used to have a flashlight or a reading light when I was a kid. So that's one that I do. It just helps me to kind of the compress from the day and you know when you're getting your under your covers. It's like your own little private space, and so it still feels that way. Can I ask you a question about this is something that we have discussed actually very recently because Dory and I are both bed readers at night. But I have a hard time shutting down as a reader. I could keep going the second I'm involved in a book until two in the morning. And I know Dory has talked about this. Do you get swept up in a book? How do you set book boundaries for yourself at night? That is the question. I think my body sets the boundaries for me because I'm a night out just naturally, and when I start getting sleepy, it's like, okay, I know it's time for me to go to bed. Even reluctantly, sometimes I just set it aside because I also gave her books, you know, so if I'm really caught up in a book and I know I'm gonna wanna come back to it, I try to save it deliberately. So it's hard, but those are the kinds of things that I do. I stay up till like or accompanying reading sometimes, which is really terrible. Oh my gosh. Wow. It's a terrible though. I mean, you can, right? That sounds very satisfying. It is satisfying. Natasha, I'm curious what you are reading right now. I'm reading a lot of ghost stories speaking of ghost cats, I'm writing a middle grade, a new middle grade series that has to do with the Supernatural so I'm reading a lot of middle grade ghost stories right now I'm reading the peculiar peculiar incident on shady street. By Lindsey curry, I'm also reading a novel called your house around my body, but violet Cooper smith, which is a Vietnamese based story, which is really interesting as well. Oh, do you think this is why you are like if I were reading ghost stories at night, I too would be up until 4 a.m.. Because I was the thing for me. It's not the ghost. You know, I actually really love that you mentioned being a night owl. And this is not to make it about me, as I love to do, but I have been reading a book about going to bed early, so I can with the light and wake up early with the sun. So I appreciate you coming in with the other perspective because so we're fed so much information that feels like this is what we should be doing, but sometimes I think we can not honor what actually our bodies and brains want to do, you know? It sounds like you've always known this about yourself that you are a person who can go for.

Forever35
"tarpley" Discussed on Forever35
"Website. I think you have to go. You have to follow your heart. Follow my heart and not my credit card statement is what you're saying. Follow my heart and not. My bank account. What I am not going to get involved in your bank account. You just support my shopping habits. I support I support, you know, I just support you being a happy fulfilled person. Well, thank you. I mean, as I feel like we've discussed, you know, the endless pursuit of a cream keeps me imagining like I can achieve that goal. I think it's a laudable goal. Hey, before we discuss more COVID stress, do you sunscreen your hands every day? Like the top of your hands? I do. I feel like I've really let my hands down. I will also say I've started doing something else. I've started putting just dabbing a little bit of the same skin care I put on my face on my hands. Okay, wait, break this down for me. Do you wash your hands? Wash your hands with skin care soap? Now. Okay, okay. But after you do your facial skin care, you just dab some, I'll just slap some Coke ten, serum on, and then I'll put a little bit of cream on. Like nothing super crazy, but I've started doing that. And I also do sunscreen my hands. Okay. Wow. What are your hands? Your hands are getting the full facial treatment. How do they look? Hold on. Let me just take it. Let me take a really good up close clip. They look good. I have hand wrinkles. This is what I was pushing my cart in Costco, and I could see they're hard to show you via camera. I can't really see. I'm experiencing aging on my hands. And I was, we all are. And I know that's like, we're all going to age everywhere. But I was kind of like, oh, I've been ignoring these things. These paws of mine. Yeah, I mean, I think sunscreen on hands is just generally a good practice. It is, and I always forget to do it. I don't do it. Regularly, and I really need to, especially because now I have a scar on the top of my hand. Oh yeah. Yeah, you know, surgery, scar. How is your hand, by the way? Well, Dory, thank you so much for asking. It is, I don't have a full grip. I'm going to probably be in physical therapy for many months. But you know, aside from some stiffness and the fact that, you know, I can't. Can you see the difference? You can see, right? Kind of. It's a little pixelated. Yeah. Yeah, it's not fully back to normal. I would say, I'm at like 60%. But I can do stuff. I can type, I can hold a grocery bag. I can swing a baseball bat. I don't know. I can kind of do stuff. So it feels it's feeling okay. I feel like overjoyed that I'm able to work, honestly. That was the scariest. That was the scariest thing. Anyway, you've also been in COVID hell. Although you've been in the same kind of hell, I've been in the like. Is it COVID or isn't it? Yeah. Either way it affects everything. Yeah, so we had like a child care scare with is it or isn't it? And it's pretty clear now that it isn't. But yeah, it just sort of like, it starts this snowball effect of things. Where you're like. But that's just like where we are right now. You know? Yeah. Yeah. You know, it's interesting, like you are kind of having this happen this week. In my observation of you as your friend and business partner was like, you were handling everything like really in stride. Which I just noted. Thank you, but I feel like it is also only fair for me to note that my husband is not working right now. So he yesterday, for example, I had a bunch of work I had to get done in the morning and he was able to take Henry. If he or if this had been like a month ago, that would not have been possible. I would have very true. Been with Henry all day and trying to get work done. So I was really lucky. So I think that that may be a little less stressed about it than I perhaps would have been if we were both trying to work full time or when Matt is working, he's not here. He's on a step. It's not like he can take breaks between zooms. It's like he's not here. Right, right. That was just, I felt like, okay. At least he's here. But you know, I think almost everyone I know with small kids right now, there's been some disruption. Because if older kids who are vaccinated get exposed, they don't have to quarantine. No. If they get vaccinated, yes. If they're vaccinated, if a younger child gets exposed, they have to quarantine and like usually means that day care classroom is shut down. It just leads to all sorts of problems. The fact that kids under 5 can not be vaccinated right now, which is like very infuriating and like, I don't know. Doesn't seem to be a priority for anyone. It's so annoying. It is annoying. So yeah, I mean, I'm just hoping that we can ride this wave until it subsides and hopefully come out the other end like a relatively unscathed. Yeah, me too. That's where I'm at right now. Oh gosh. I mean, there was a report today that's like the waves are coming down and then I read another headline. It was like, this might not be the worst wave. And it was like, I don't know. The emotional bandwidth for that. Right? Yeah. Yeah. So, you know what I was thinking? We've been doing this podcast for four years now, right? Yeah. Two of those years have been in this pandemic. Yeah. Yeah, we only did a podcast for two years in like quote unquote normal times. I mean, look, were they even normal? That's up for debate. I think now that we're coming up on two years, this has made a lot of people be like, wow. You know? Yeah. Yeah, so you know what else, though, I did this morning. Besides serum in your hands besides serum in my hands, I clean the kitchen. Did you wash the top of the stove? I did. And the top of the stove was very gross. You could make a meal from the amount of food that's stuck on the top of my stove. Yeah, it was not. I didn't. I didn't mop the floor, but I pretty much did everything else. But yeah, the top of the stove was like, oh my God. That was actually, I think the impetus, not even the stack of dishes in the sink. It was like this stove is so gross. That I need to address this. There's.

Forever35
"tarpley" Discussed on Forever35
"Now, you've heard us mention that. In the past, we've wished we could just have someone help us with our style and a big part of that is knowing what your best colors are. Okay, this is something I have struggled with for a very long time. Enter color guru. Okay, in the most simplest process possible, they analyzed my hair, skin, and eye color, and they matched me with my ideal color palette for clothes, and they gave me this amazing color card, which includes a digital one for my phone and then an actual laminated card to bring with me while I shop. Complete with my best 35 shades. Okay, already this is influenced, not just like what I'm wearing, but the makeup that I'm using. It has made shopping number one so much easier because I just look at this card and I'm like, oh yes, right. This is where I need to be. FYI I am an autumn Twilight. That is my palette. And it has also influenced me trying out new makeup colors like I went for an orange red lipstick and it looks so good and let me tell you that is on my color palette. Picking the right colors and shades is like, it's just so much easier now. And my color card is this family of colors, so it's also easy to put together outfits, because all of the colors in my closet that they recommend go together. Plus, like I said, they sent a makeup card too with go to makeup shades and they offer a package with a haircut color consultation. If you are struggling to decide which shade to try out next. You want to discover your best colors for clothing. Here is an exclusive offer for you forever 35 listeners get 10% off any color consultation at your color guru.

The Autosport Podcast
"tarpley" Discussed on The Autosport Podcast
"Not many But when they have always yeah you can tell it registers with more more than any other car. I'm sure i'm sure it does. Yes now from a race winner to to call. That didn't actually sort of starts race in the end but perhaps one of the most fascinating cars in loaded history number. Five is the lowest eighty twin chassis cars. So you you've got to tell us how how a known winner or even a non racer. I think what you're gonna say but won't lies this car so high on your list incredibly important. My father to him represented everything that the license was about the more he felt Should be about which is innovation and freethinking minimum of regulations enrolls but it did carry inside with becoming more political Mainly because full moon was becoming more money and my father had driven the as much as anybody had because the more money Money he could spend on the cows site He was the first one to lead the the arms race in terms of money which which led to the politics but it's the fast composite monaco. Nf took to the track murphy weeks before the mclaren went to the first growing pre did take to the track box was not allowed to qualify and not really kicks off a A debate which which was tense for a few weeks and then dragged on for a few months. We've got a pile of paper fouts about four foot high of legal documents arguments that surrounded the the most controversial aspect Which was the twin chassis at. The same time is coming up with the first composite monocoque. The team had decided. The twin chassis was the way to exploit the most autographed affects the a Bam scutts which inadvertently actually played into the hands of the twin chassis concept even more but increased the potential advantage. I've more normal. Designs mocked just drag on and on about it with another crack at the british grand prix Be with a slightly modified car Airing and it was looking good than they. I really weighed in hard on the and In the end relative on the car was. And i remember my father shouting to the mechanics. Labs lance hang on the line in the pit lane fights i is. He knew that that was the last time. Three eight eight forever going to be seen. The last time and then mechanics fell fell. The cows converted one of them back to seven spec overnight but some extraordinary story and assigned chapter. Read it because i think it was. It was part of the stress that lamey anybody but look clearly. My father died young. That was kind of one of the things which which weighed him down. Poignant and and Controversial but now look at listen. Extraordinary machine From whenever we get the chance absolutely. I think can separate podcast or piece on that on that house all gonna call. I does seem a little harsh given. Some of the calls in that period were pretty. I mean you had water. Water called breaks. Which weren't mortar coordinates. Drop bags off and it had brabham with its noble. Just change the roy tarpley quite crude ways around the rules and something nice and sophistication. Clever comes along. And that's the thing that gets band but there we go i suppose. But how much potential do you think it had. Do you think it could have been a dominating. The time while with some development may be the. I think that's why the other teams really wanted to see it because having an open the cockpit to lower the right hot in kind of fifty. Quit but to make a twin chassis cal. That's pretty fundamental. So you could basically throw your existing house hawaiian on stuff together anyone's very keen on the idea that we have used in historic merger sports. But it hasn't really offered multiple advantage to say. But as i think that's spoke Developed a little bit like to sixteen in that respects happily we ran into the goodwood festival speed with don collins the longest standing customer and one of the longest running customers forget hell cain and He managed to win the shootout which was just fantastic sur- it didn't ever win a grand prix. But it did manage to win the festival of spades shootout so we got a little wind sticker added to the risk for brit. We're proud of that blanket. Well i mean that's the car from towards the end of of ground effects before it was eventually banned together and you're next on your list. Number four is the is the kind of car that made ground effects happen. The low to seventy eight which i think people forget should have won the nineteen seventy seven world champion. Hands of mario andretti had just had the team not been the victim of development davies. Going angra too often. So this is an unreliability factor. That wasn't anything to do. Voters don't think more about misfortune or the engine. So yeah why wabi. Chasing seventy eight. Seventy eight was the result of Long program of of development which kicked off the father spending one summer holiday lying on the roof of veterans spine pondering for hours and hours than in the evening writing up his his his nice About the design direction but the team should take post largest seventy two Which should carry the team for extraordinary six years at a time when the company was demanding a huge amount of time and attention on the company's resources i think he realized together with tiny rods time to get back to basics. Start with a clean cheaper sheet of paper and Really undertake research and development program to find out which way to go forward. Peter riot was possible. That program having a tiny rabbit. Vrm team realized the potential and importance of the wind tunnel in particular and his pasta. That's a pizza. Took up his idea that he had had baram originally belief of aerodynamic side pups being used wings that enormous by accident in the wind tunnel wing profile events profile under the car between the inside of the cow an track was realized as being the the holy grail of aerodynamics inasmuch as it gave a lot of downfalls branded track really elegant solution was frustrated is with electric seventy eight which was a spice a little bit.

The Propaganda Report
"tarpley" Discussed on The Propaganda Report
"You're there once you join. It's here you will be able to open all the old shows and bonus material and everything from that year since the beginning. If i understand it correctly so now it'd be the time. Hopefully i'll get a couple of patients today. I always go to bed at night. I wake up in the morning checking patrons. I feel like it's a vote of confidence when they see my little got a new patron. So hopefully you will be. I patron thank you so much and now on to the last story of the free thirty which is a couple things heo see. I like to call her sandy. Okay so since. That was her name before she made her name. A political statement. Sandyhook aco which is exactly what it would be because you drop out last name anyway. Like barry obama. It was barry so tarot indonesian. Yeah barry sotero. He was adopted by indonesian. Father the guy who was the liaison between union oil and the us government after the us to the coup in indonesia. And that's i think around the time. His mom worked for tim geithner's father at the ford foundation. I have right here behind me. Webster tarpley book the unauthorized biography of barack obama before they got support poor webster and wow notch socks off and i think there was another big expose wayne famous guy. No alternate in that conspiracy research department. I forget wayne madsen. Maybe i can't remember anyway. There's a big really really fascinating. Cia back story of the whole obama history. But we digress. A oc shows up at. I guess it was a met gala wearing an expensive dress that said it was white with blood. Red letters on it straight out of the life of brian who says tax the rich now. This is an event that cost thirty five thousand dollars to attend..

H3 Podcast
"tarpley" Discussed on H3 Podcast
"Day and one very strong deficit. Day today Actually we had a egg sandwich. That what we say. Four hundred calories. I thought it was called that. That post actually did Push you. That's part of why i wanted to. The guy knows man. Yeah the guy actually inspired me. I have to say well. Maybe pull up the posts. Give it to me just to show you guys but yeah and look i. He said he was doing something similar. We use on fifteen hundred to eighteen hundred calories a day and at that you can lose two pounds a week and i feel like i just need to see some results. I know it's not like there's just go run you fat folk. When was go. run you fat. Fuck when you just walk around on the problem is that if you do it unrealistically. You won't actually be able to maintain listen. People say people say to stop eating and then when you stop eating. They go this way to do it. Why don't you just run i. You can't lose weight on my own on my own terms the lose weight you fed folk but on my terms. This is it. Thank you come here to this. Hooper trooper that lost Seventy pounds and five months. That's what the fuck is up pro. Because if i could lose fifty pounds i'd be like i'd be right there where i wanna be kills chickens progress from sixty five to one hundred four months below up bra. Nice load up. My roy tarpley that same guy. I mean that's the same guy but it looks. It looks great. Good for you did a lot of progress in five months man. Yeah.

Racing Post
"tarpley" Discussed on Racing Post
"To be fabulous now this race on the race. We're gonna look next. Which is the six enlisted hopeful stakes at newmarket by them could have impacts on handicap. Big handicap sprints later on in the season. Any of these sort of strike. You as being wants to watch for cup sprints. they're racist. I plot for long in advance money to be honest with mean. I do enjoy them. I do enjoy them. The races that you know i'll i'll take it as a nice little bonus that presents itself in front of me on a flight morning rather than the races. I'll will be. I'll be looking for months in advance. But it's actually the handicapper fancy industries of the lucky. I've been beverly beverly lovely. Tighten the tracks saying. I've been lost at times even walked from timing up to the race. Course so i've walked up the hill that runs parallel to the lost five follows and even i was surprised. When did this earlier. That she on google after find out how much the rises over the last follows at beverly is forty five feet. Which is highest. I've seen i think is really step finish and i think you are running out. Walking i was. I was walking up and go along strategy so Knowing our windows. I've never forget what strikes. Maybe one day not yet. What do you got to get to more advantages before you start getting getting the troops to earn but anyway that is a really stiffish. Beverly seems that sort of thing that hurricane ivers gobble up from to me is you saw how he finished. Not five and a half furlong race at your copyright renewal compromise very fast horse and he did your thing as he kicked skept on and they don't catch them yorkshire seems to be like i was a little bit more steady about set but finished anybody strongly. He's obviously been a revelation. This sheet improved quite off. The law is to best friends prior to that. You're assigned that an oscar guess. What steph finishes bu- petroleum Steph is beverly just in terms of topography and yeah i just think he's. He's better things than if he's gonna find that. Might of a progress against the core goal to i thought was a bit appointing the thought to be honest even billions and outsider and judicial. I think he's got chance of making improvements. I k- more sprinters. Now we're going to go into new markets the to forty five Hopeful stakes listed race on the market centering around tap deed strikes two hundred ten to one royal crusade. He's been goaded the first time at six some Favorite thirteen to call them with blinkers for the first time. Eight to one on royal scimitar. Also out the same press chief of chiefs won't Driven up the wool in recent weeks. At eleven to one. Twelve won't ball mock how assessment knicks race because on full on probably on the on the fingers tap daddy's is clear but he's not always the most straightforward proposition. No probably not for driven off the wall as as backed scimitar at share cope meeting. And say your hair is still being picked up off the ground from pulling the dope because he was cashier eye-catcher azan and you not syllabi on thousand seven here and to be gone for this race. I thought that was the beginning with him. So this is find him here and but he is entitled to turn up and have a have a say even though he's wrong with the way it's with some of these i thought tabby was the more you know it's it's a drop in pass from you know albeit. I wasn't totally inedible. This on the heck with it was a grand ron and he wasn't beaten fired all i think if he turns up with his game he's clearly the best cars here Somewhere and is one that if those markets support for him you know. I think he was dropped. A couple of pounds for the astronauts sorta wanted. If he was dropped note a couple of pounds. Here he'd be interested in a big handicap again. That'd be more interesting to me than here. You know would a group penalty. So i think just process of elimination tab. Data is the best horse here on children. Roy tarpley speaking of ro scimitar. Pricewise tom siegel put him up for the cup. Hence why mentioned these big handicaps in all previous section keeps royal crusades whole saga with light. Toss odia law potential. But he's not ready delivered that i wonder if doubting could be the making i know gilding uphill vast majority who horses selling meal horses get guild that only five percent of those would have an opinion on what killed them. If i there was a horse that run this week run yesterday. Run on thursday. The governor dot gov gilded. That's a horse depending on gilbert. I think you'll benefit our horsing time. Because i think he's and he was ready to to lose a couple of things that royal crusade no opinion i do the general making the he has. He has disappointed that she does need. Then we time. He's really turned up in dubai and sometimes off on can be a little bit who keep top. Deeds has never taken his racing that well. He's been investigating torture. Could hear some are gone. A grilled hosp hasn't looked great form. Recently kadhem is a little bit. Another one like royal chrissy. That hasn't really got on the show. Let you thought you would. And i think the hope that scimitar and is price for the uncle cop. I running really well here. The last two runs. I'm sure you've read tom. Seacoast piece you'll know all about this already. But there's law students have been desperately in mucky one has cited the july being by two and a half lengths when he was fourth two. That's a horse. It was up against it from where he was that day. One has sides. Well he want to walk on his side. Oscar shogun cup the actually because nothing else restored. Not stan say italy. He did and he was only beaten basically in a hand. Babur is go more than not absolutely shoot it. And if he improves by a lance on c. Two lengths is here but all this. Does you have about the horrors in front of an athlete. Royal scimitar the industry k. Could be worth taking a chance on clive. Cox's horse anything else. On saturday marco. Vity yet little bit of a quaker weekend here. Just one meeting navin. On saturday nights we celestial horizon for joel singer brian. it's forty five or seventy handicap restrictions. Three year olds on the overnight at six. I just thought he was standing out. His one would actually enjoy coke district whereas others are kind of run out of options. But you know. I'm not sure on pedigree are visually. Exactly what they're crying out for is by fastnet rock and he's from family. The pedigree i think is damaged a sister or half sister kingfisher. Who was runner up in the gold cup and ask and his last run at leopardstown. He's just east gradually find these feed. He's one of these jokes. O'brien horses that we're tying with ruins. He's speaking the hanging things. And it was more encouraged by. I saw there ain't runner-up mundi as he went to on handicap the race league doncaster. Since you know has burned against editors lasts twice now comes into three year old only company and gets the stable in trip that he wants up to eight and six. I thought he'd be very solid In the four fifteen navin estienne horizon. I mean we just wanted to give a show to as well in the last as well inquirer within now. It's slow great stuff in terms of a race but amir is just getting the hang things day. Well you know doesn't have a huge. Why isn't talk for her age. But she likes strong pace chile trip. And i think you know you got showers in here. Who's all goes forward daughter value. Kevin kearns taken raise time. The and i just think that she will get the she. You can pick them off. Seems to get confidence bypass and horses and a abasement market should go at. You might be a little bit. Price so enquire within the four fifty nyland with more bullish would be celestial horizon. The four fifteen at the same place fantastic. Thanks very much mark. Some good cards on saturday. Obviously good with beverly and mark touched upon avenir but also newmarket would save. Think caught male. Read called windsor host of international. Great ones case anything. Take your on my not such running one of the intelligences that could i'll come it obviously when we when we do the knobs just wanted to point out..

Chicks in the Office
"tarpley" Discussed on Chicks in the Office
"Now lake paul. You're enjoying follow them. The guys all wanted to talk to katie. This going into hometowns. It's a big deal. Michael i think was the most nervous about it when it came to kids in and lifestyle and how things would go on the outside. Katie seemed to really reassure him. I thought this may be what have been the moment. That might go what i said. I can't do this anymore. Because they did show a brief face time with his son. That seemed like it went. Well it was not the clip we saw in the coming attractions so happened later. Must because i thought that was where that was going to happen. I know but instead it was very. I know something else has got to happen. Maybe with fancy sweets or after that or or something where he's like gotta go home. I don't know we'll see we'll see we'll see what happens but like you said just in pulled out this giant canvas like the size of this Tv in here maybe bigger. Maybe bigger of these beautiful butterflies and another rose and it was blue very conveniently. We did not see him waiting that he paid right. All these all these guys just hanging out in the hot tub. I thought when to debate that. I like is he been working on that for a while. Now the i did see on instagram. That the guy who's saying During justin and katy's date the live performance. The song he sang was called butterfly for. And that's why and then they're like. Oh he brought. The painting with the butterfly was like connection. But so is he been working on this for a week as he clearly didn't do it during the day. There'd been. I be shocked if that was a one day painting. No way couldn't be no. He's been working on i or somebody working on it confusing but andrew they all. They all had great conversations with katie. Once again we're katie. Was really reassuring all of them and telling them that you know she really cares about all of them excited to see what happens. Michael is the one that got the group date not the day. Rose not too shocking. I feel like because. I thought it was going to go andress as well but i think the the kid. The kid factor plays a big role. And in katie's mind. You probably was like. I really need to show michael that i want him here because now we're coming down to the end and he's worried about his child. Roy because the night tweeted this too. When when michael and cater on the screen. It's the bachelor for me. I'm watching to see of katie. Is right for michael and i think katie probably feels that as well like i need to prove to him that i'm in this and that i'm okay with his situation. I understand what it is. So i think that's kind of what got the group day. Rose yep and the last one on one date one to mike p which of course like classic bachelor fashion. They put the guy who we all know is a virgin into a very awkward physical dates where they had to basically just lay on the ground and hug and cuddle and different weird positions that. That's it cooking with nothing. Yes in very thin. The holiday like to make him uncomfortable because he's a virgin so it's like all right. Let's make them have to touch. And michael get an awkward boehner. Even though he doesn't know how to use it. That was the meeting was like. How do we give mike a boehner. Let's do a cuddle date. Let's take michael's virginity on this day. How do we how do we put it in the forefront of them cuddle in the words have some lady popout out of more and then boom and then like we're literally like their juvenile bizarre positions and talking and chatting and they really cut it to make it look as uncomfortable as possible. I feel bad for my p. He must have hope watching it back because they made the whole thing looked so awkward because they cut back and forth from them cuddling to mike in his interview comparing katie to his mom forever very very strong. I think the mistake that mike made was that at one point during the cuddling date. He said something about his mom and they were like are somebody asked him questions about his mom's we can splice that shit. Remind me of my mom. And she said oh. Jeez mike responded to check off his comment on instagram. No life now barstool posted about it like him. Saying the mom's stuff and we wrote hotseat. Mike's mom and he goes. She would eat girls alive a laughing face. We have beef with michael's mother seem more like oh she would kill you guys here. Yeah we we get it. Michael you wanna fuck your mom. So every point. you'll just gasser. His mom have a very close relationship. Obviously we went very in-depth about their cuddling when they when he was younger. But it was just like the way. And that was a re bizarre. It's just the way these spliced together like you can't for him to talk about. Hey like my mom gives great. Hugs like that's nice. Sure your mom does give great hall. Moms great aren't sure. But when you when it cuts to him holding katie and his arms or his head and katie's lap. That's when mary bizarre war said you know my mom's a great cutler katie might be a little better. it's it was just. It was uncomfortable. Maybe he was using that to kill his boehner. Maybe he's just like calling so much thing. reminds me of my mom trying to keep his boehner down just like grandma at theory glacier grandma third grade i sow dogs dying all that stuff and he's just trying to keep it down very possibility wild. If that's true for him to say loud is kind of crazy. He seemed like seemed like a very sweet man and it does suck because once again. It's another like guy who is a virgin on this show who we really don't learn anything about besides being virgin. You know roy tarpley nice guy. Katie being like i wish everybody kind kinda got to know him better because this is of course all we got to see right he becomes just the virgin yup. There's definitely more people to see it. I sure so. That's where that ended abruptly because katie katie. And i give yes. She can't hide her emotions. You knew cuddling dinners like she comes around the bend the tree wherever she was and you can see it on her face already crying. It's like oh. And here's the end for my p. She says you know. I don't see this going anywhere. Not wouldn't be fair to even have dinner with you and we got another luggage. Pull while the men were sitting there chilly. Just i would love to know who that lady was. It was a woman. Yeah it's just you know. Every time i just got to be more available. I just have to your entire. There's just want to wanna clear everything. There's been a lot of very dramatic. I feel like luggage. Polls the face. Oh yeah the really in their own luggage mills like well. He's not going do it. We're going to the front of the wanna make it a big deal. Slow zooms on the pieces of luggage. I wanna do it again. Please let me back. I will clear my schedule. I swear man i well. Hopefully we get this. We'll get it back. This was the end for mike p. I don't think we were surprised about that. Either these top like four or five guys felt like they were pretty set in stone for a while. Except when we all got thrown. This curve ball justin. So let's get into that but first sunglasses. These days are so expensive. You go into a store you pick up a pair two hundred three hundred dollars. You don't understand why they are that expensive shady raise also. They didn't get it either. So they made affordable sunglasses shady. Raise our premium polarized shades at a fraction of the price of those big name brands. He don't need to overplay overpay for sunglasses. That don't hold up in the outdoors..

Wendell's World & Sports
"tarpley" Discussed on Wendell's World & Sports
"In sports on your host wonder wallis so glad you could be with us but i don't stay up the podcast saving my coaching topic. A whole lot of coaches getting fired. The whole coach. Leaving steve clippers. Scott brooks Rick carl l. Just said he's not coming back to the to the dallas mavericks. John calipari is talking about you. Know what dhabi open to hear. Some folks talked about head coaching positions in the nba. I'll take a listen to the phone. All of these things going on hold on a movement in the nba. In terms of coaches moving. Going on so. I will save that talk for another podcast coming up soon. Please remember that in. Today's june nineteenth Which is what is june nineteenth. Another saturday saturday right. It's a saturday right. Yeah saturday please take a moment of silence in remembrance of my hero of them all the great the awesome len bias nineteen eighty six died of a ex dental cocaine overdose. Fuck you brian. triple but He was going to be better than the jordan. Now baby the cocaine problem that he had a slow them down with once. You hit the leak. But i don't give a damn what anybody says as far as players are concerned enough in the acc. History len bias. A maryland was a better basketball player than north carolina's michael jordan. Now maybe once we got to the nba style of play. Jordan was unleashed because he was no longer being held back. If you want to say by dean smith who is the only player who do you person in basketball history. Whoever helped michael jordan under twenty points a game dean smith so you know who knows what would have happened. And as i mentioned before len bias. The gone the way of roy. Tarpley and chris Washburn and william residence guy because he was snorting the white stuff but You know from the prince george's county maryland. Lamb biased lenny bias. That was that was our guy and for me. June nineteenth is always something where it's like. Where were you doing. we're word you. What were you doing things. Every every every day of that date. I think about that turns a man. Wake up in the morning and my boy david. O'neil call him up talking about here. News limb bias died remember. This is one thousand nine hundred eighty six. Though there was no there was no cable. There was no cell phones. There's was no social media. There was no twenty four hour access none of that kind of stuff so you know we had the radio. We had the local news in basically. That's about it so when o'neill call me up that saturday morning i was gonna go out. School just ended going to go out to some basket before the weather got too hot and dc. So i was going to go up to the park and You know practiced by len bias. Practice by turn around. Jumping bernard king. Practice my ball handling like Magic johnson practice outside shooting. Virus got ricky pierce and up going to do my thing practice my with james worthy spin. Move like james worthy. You know was going to get into my bag of tricks. Going into my senior year was going to do everything. I could to impress the marcy andrews in the joe's berrios and the Monica spain's the world who what kennedy high school at the time. So i was gonna go out there and become the super shoes basketball player and have all those absolute beauties fall in love with me. Yes i was dumb. Yes i was unrealistic. Yes i was on my mind but a dislike martin. Luther king said a man can dream so you know dedicated my summer to being the best basketball player. I could crowded fulfil my dream of going to georgetown university and play.

Serienweise - Der Serien Podcast
"tarpley" Discussed on Serienweise - Der Serien Podcast
"The s and critiquing also academic Focus was ugliest on divine oc- lake nova. Yelich is unbelievable. He does eat a fully. The lock via effendi esme from four. I've only sledged on diesel. Let's defy the casino. He does county ancell elliott's his oeuvre poke medina odeon in over sitcoms helped in their fiery gets jim tells under lozano dating went on the lam and he's a police. Brutality is the xenophon shop from from newton or darvish. Tedford is tight auto tyler oskaloosa as a skit style. You mush watsa in messina vixen defensive performance vice and put it systems and the ninety fan. Dr vans stopped an highest yup to involve knocker clouds and slogans clar side so it is resistant to tarpley. She was appropriate. Marta shinners these these schwarzen- teenage dividing the theriesenstadt psalm. Out by star. cistercian crops. a gallup. It got up device of your cops are best arts shine vasa remark. What max schwartzkopf lawson do you have that kind of money. But he's is really good problem. Even among comes of us amalgam in a sitcom gutman. Keep good nuke by villagers ritchie. Could tommaso Fogo on brooklyn. Nine nine terry often ask them system that sutin on to the fish after order much be blackish the zoysia speeding team. Audie trump filing is worst mid weekly exquisite zonda for ungeared vusi deka sumter followed these team of it men when done own skin tone desire is busy isn't team in person. Here in gig. Vert diseases team. In for nick mistreating tufty kite. Unggung does is for d. n. plot via under plotter by on this has autism blood. Billingham geck's two-man deduction combing years. And if you go taut because he becomes the content stunt desk fund weekly few few asean nicholas as much atlanta as lente vendors vice-minister would dominate a fuel atlanta spirits. Osh pa leash zia in zona house. So now he's in the heap kuchwara adviser on designs schwarzen- evade visitors about the architects. Each substance complex From some other ministers fussy versus curfew against the rookie said would also the office party. She says what is only as a another hidden onto to ask. A few doesn't augur the system the to his niece. Nephew invite boy does not. This is sam. Where my lovecraft country some species schwarz's area of of the hormonal to advice. Alvar that combines eastern audits vice. Hasn't it's awesome steamed. A few shock on slashed as mr advice is awesome steering into shares damage as an admission vice and they investment only doesn't pull it on the say you are no. They are not on the massage abated. The quite an offer as this is vaguely. Guns can slim office to singapore last medicine. Eddie murphy fund fund..

The Showtime Podcast with Lakers Legend Coop
"tarpley" Discussed on The Showtime Podcast with Lakers Legend Coop
"And they asked me if I could play for in the NBA and I said, yes, I played the post player of the most playoff in the town. Where you down for 7, okay, but there's no way once I got to that professional level. There's no way I could have played the power forward position. But I mean no play my first three years in Dallas and they drafted me as a Ford had no idea that I could face the basket and shoot of the Range Rovers treatment group. Who was the coach there. Big Market monitoring plus model was a good coach, you know by the time you got there. We had established a pretty good rivalry the Mavericks and the Lakers and I know they had James Donaldson Roy Tarpley back with you or after you brush who came out to me, I think after you okay and didn't Brad Davis was a point guard grabbed was pretty good with Road Blackman their logo Blackland are talking marker bulb. We have a nice spot but not nice enough to be that so they'll listen the thing. I work. We talking, you know, you and I are too old to do anything now, but all we have is off Emory. So let's talk about our memories of that series. What do you remember of some of those games that we played in that series? You know, when I I remember their conquered driven the time off the clock when I was in Dallas and we were at home. We had an opportunity to beat you guys. We were hoping, and then the year I left and went to Seattle. That following year. I was in the Western Conference Finals. Mr. Lakers. Well, don't jump so fast past that Maps thing. What did you think when heart was Villanova? Cuz it shocked us. I mean we were living with shock when he he was just flipping around cuz we were like focused on trying to play defense and when he started dribbling toward half court, I was like, okay what's going on here? Yeah. I felt awful for him, you know running all over the place trying to get that bald yelling for, you know, the players already broken. He didn't have a clue that you know, we were behind for all performed. I looked at the situation was there was a good friend of mine we came in and the same year. We're both both were from Jenkins, so I thought I could handle that situation a lot lot better than him the first time I played organized basketball. We had a jump ball Coupe. I got the ball dribbled down the floor laid it in the first two points. I turned around and looked at my teammates and I realize that shot the ball in the wrong basket off. So it's not being bitterly to pay attention to details so you could kind of comfort him a little bit when that play happened with him and stuff like that. Exactly. Yeah where Harper was a hell of a player man. I mean probably one of the stuff is one of the toughest guards. I've had to go against I mean heart had that little trick where he put his foot out there and he tripped me a couple of times and backed off officials that stuff like that go but you know what that was a heck of a series and one that I'll always remember because you know what you guys are always tough and I tell people now they'll walk you look at Players like Harden Curry people don't realize the shooters that we had in the eighties yourself Craig Hodges real and you have some great great great job. Or who was your top three all-time alt I'm sure who's your top three best perimeter Shooters..

PhotoBiz Xposed
Dan Milnor and a conversation (you may need to hear) about pro photography today
"Today's guest is a photo book and creative evangelist. He loves photography, but he really does it for paying clients anymore, which he says has led to a more rounded interesting and better life. He spent twenty five years as a full time photographer mainly shooting documentary work for newspapers magazines clients in Nineteen, Ninety, seven, he quit photography, but in nine, hundred, ninety, nine talked into coming back. To work as a photographer then in two thousand and ten, he quit a game this time for real and today he works for Blurb the print on demand bookmakers he lives in. New Mexico one of the United States with his wife where he rides bikes explores and continues to work on his own documentary projects and create box that potentially no one will see or even care about. I stumbled across him on Youtube while rediscovering my passion for Photography and start shooting more for myself. He's breath of fresh air full of positivity even though he will potentially go against everything you've heard from any other guests of interview. Thing is crossed. This is a positive experience. All of us I'm talking about Dan. Mill Nor am truly rat to have him here this now Dan welcome might yeah. Thanks, I appreciate it. Wow. I've sounded amazing intro. Maybe. We should read that again. I'll send details to. Tell me why do you feel that you are? A happy better more random person now the shooting professionally. Oh, man it's a great question I just started thinking about this a couple of weeks ago. I've thought about it a lot but prior to that, but I made a realization a couple of weeks ago that I sort of pushed aside since two thousand ten when I made the decision to really walk away from being a full time photographer I became a better person almost immediately, and the reason for that is that being a professional photographer especially if you're trying to. Make your own work and not just you know sort of content with any assignment that comes along the Pike if you're trying to adhere or hold to a certain standard or style that may or may not have a home in the industry, it's very difficult, and so the consequently you're forced to think about yourself far too much. So the moment I quit photography, which was I think it was Tuesday afternoon in two thousand ten just said I'm done and I deleted my email account primary email account and I suddenly didn't have. To think about myself all the time I didn't have to speak about my business I. It was like being on the freeway letting your foot off the accelerator and all of a sudden you can lift back and say, wow, I can take a look around here and I realized one I've been focused on myself for far too long and I've been focused on a very narrow sliver of Tarpley for far too long. I should have been a more well rounded human being and educated in in areas that I wasn't also Just more educated in regards to the creative industry in general, you know what our designers doing, what are illustrators doing, what a writers doing why am I not collaborating with these people? You know it just was a wakeup call of sort of epic proportion and it's on me because I made the same realization in the nineties when I quit the first time and then I talked myself out of it I was like, oh I should do this again and I probably should have never gone back from ninety seven or ninety nine. I was like a square peg round of the photo industry I never really felt completely at home because my philosophy about what I was doing was not typical. And I WanNa make the pictures that other people were making I. Didn't WanNa make them in the style that other people were making them and I just kept finding myself swimming in quote unquote wrong direction and you know my colleagues and other folks in the industry were just like what are you doing? You can't do what you're doing and I thought well, you know I can and I am and it is. A weird scenario to end when you're constantly in the minority. But yeah, I just took a look around inside I need to stop thinking about myself so much and start thinking about other people but understand, hey, you had a chance to thanks so much about is still if you answerable to, I guess an editor so won't you focus on the work you had in front of you had to submit and get done. Well, it depends on what style what I'm shooting. So I made a couple of realizations very early. So I graduated from photo journalism. School. Ninety two I got an internship at a major newspaper ninety three to meet year to find an internship I was like banging my head against the wall. I found internship and ninety three. I got very fortunate because it was a big paper they had good budgets. They had a lot of photographers that I was rabid I was so amped on being talk refer and the photo editor realized that very quickly and it wasn't like I was a great talker or great inter. It was just that I was rabid and my pictures were in focused and I could talk to people without slobbering over myself and so I think the photo editor looked at me and said Oh. He's not a liability like I can actually give him good assignments. So I got good assignments. Photographer when you're working for a newspaper or a magazine Yes, you are almost entirely beholden to their editorial style it what the editor wants, photo editor, etc, and so found very quickly. You know what I could get away with in the newspaper world? Picture wise because we were a very conservative paper and I I would shoot things in in the field in my head as I was framing it up I'd say they're never gonNA run this even if it was a great image, I would say all the higher ups are GonNa make nervous they're not gonNA run. And when I went into the magazine world, it was the same thing I realized very quickly that I was not shooting my photographs shooting their photographs.

Bloomberg Businessweek
Mets' Pete Alonso ties Aaron Judge's all-time rookie record with 52nd home run
"At Citi field on Friday night Mets rookie first baseman Pete Alonso club his fifty second home run of the season tying Yankee Erin judges Major League rookie home run record the bench defeated the Atlanta Braves for two JD Davis went two for four and hit his twenty first home run of the season Marcus Stroman pitched six innings giving up two runs to improve his record to ten and thirteen on his final start of the twenty nineteen season seven Lugo pitched a scoreless ninth to pick up his six that same Saturday night Stephen mats will take the hill of for the Mets as he looks for his eleventh win of the season and Pete Alonso looks to wrestle the rookie home run record away from Erin judge meanwhile down in Texas the Yankees on Friday night beat the Rangers in a fourteen seven slug fest the Yankees saw Giancarlo Stanton Cameron Maybin Brett Gardner G. O. or Shelagh Austin Romijn and Mike for all go deep all the Yankees in total had eighteen it's Stephen Tarpley picked up the way one of nine Yankee pitchers for the evening but we Severino makes his third start of the season Saturday night for

WNYC 93.9 FM
Waffle House shooting suspect Travis Reinking in custody
"The people are at now is like no no bring it on i have to face it we have to face it i'm krista tippett and this is on being stay with us live from npr news in washington i'm jack speer a terrifying scene in downtown toronto today where police say at least ten people are dead fifteen others were hurt after a white van jumped the curb and plowed into pedestrians still not clear is why the vehicle struck pedestrians oh video taken nearby when the van driver was apprehended showed him armed with what appeared to be a gun deputy police chief but this date us the city of toronto pray for all victims and also to assess the tarpley service in bringing this matter to a successful conclusion as i stated earlier we have one person in custody and the investigation is ongoing toronto police have shut down the area where the incident occurred they say they're still trying to figure out a motive in the case the suspect in a quadruple slang at a nashville area waffle house restaurant has been taken into custody after being at large since early sunday morning authorities say say they arrested twenty nine year old travis ryan king taking into custody not far from his apartment photos posted by police showed him in a police car police and agents from the f b i and the bureau of alcohol tobacco firearms and explosives joined by tennessee highway patrol officials and mounted a massive manhunt for ryan king police allege ryan king was wearing only green coat opened fire with a semiautomatic assault style weapon killing four people early sunday for others were hurt the.