40 Burst results for "Tend"

Capstone Conversation
How Gina Del Carlo Is Redefining Workforce Development With Earn and Learn
"Was at an event the other day at Autodesk and it's a company a lot of us know they're involved in so many things. But as an example, it's hard for a kid to say, I want to grow up and work at Autodesk or Oracle or Cisco, right? Those are companies that are involved in everything, but we don't necessarily know what they do, but they are involved in everything. So it's so important to get the people there and get a perspective. You can and say, right, oh, I want to do light manufacturing or industrial this. Schools tend to teach basic jobs, lawyers, doctors, engineer, which engineer is a pretty broad field. But it's limited. And so to get the perspective of what some of these big companies, medium companies here in the Bay Area do, I think that's a really good benefit of the program. Yes, and many students have no idea about the possibilities of what they could be or what the steps are that are needed to get that type of career. A lot of times when we're in high schools, and I know when I was in high school, it was you go to college. That's just what you do. I didn't know about apprenticeships and I didn't know about job training programs that were hands on that maybe would have been a better fit for me. I wasn't exposed to that, so I didn't know. So we're all about providing all of the choices and paths so that students can choose what brings you joy. And many students don't have certain career exposure to certain careers in their own networks. We know that networked people get more opportunities. And so if you do not have that network, how would you even know? So we're trying to bring our networks to everyone, to every student, because they all deserve it. They all deserve work based learning. Well, I'm looking at my fourth grade daughter, her career day, and I'm excited for her to go through it. But it's all it's all professions with one word, right? Attorney, doctor, teacher, right? It's it's hard to get into some of those more complex, right? Like your job even hardly necessarily explain, oh, I do workforce and data collection and partner schools, right? It's how do you break it down and expose them to this? And I love that concept of what you guys are doing and really opening people's eyes to the possibilities out there. And we're seeing a trend with employers where they aren't requiring a four year degree anymore. Many of them, you see that a lot in tech, where that's not always where they're finding their talent. Now you see that with airlines who have a pilot shortage, many of them are dropping the bachelor degree requirements. And so it's good for people to know that these careers are available to you through a different path

The Charlie Kirk Show
Fresh update on "tend" discussed on The Charlie Kirk Show
"And taking over Harvard and liberating it is very, very hard. Let me just play some pieces of tape here yesterday. By the way, this is making waves in upper middle class elite Jewish donor circles. The eyes of that community were on these college presidents yesterday, and I have been forwarded emails from very, very wealthy, very generous Jewish Turning Point USA donors, and they've been forwarding the emails of secular Jews using F this and F that, and I mean language, and I love it. They are waking up. They are done. They are divesting. They are insulted. The presidents of these universities are held hostage by two. Well, actually, three groups, the administration. They're held hostage by the students, and they're held hostage by the professors. And then on the other side, they have alumni and donors that send us that tend to see the world far more like more realistic. And they think it's insane that the president of Harvard is retreating to excuses when the genocide of Jews are called on campus. Now we need to make sure this is clear. Bill Ackman, to his great credit, has repented for this, that Bill Ackman acknowledges that some of his donations has also been funding anti-white hatred. It's not just anti-Semitism. It's anti-white, anti-Christian, anti-Jew, anti-America. It is a bundle package. You get it all at Harvard. Play cut 41, please. Well, let me ask you this. Admissions offers be rescinded or any disciplinary action be taken against students or applicants who say from the river to the sea or into Fada advocating for the murder of Jews? As I've said, that type of hateful, reckless, offensive speech is personally abhorrent to me. And today that no action will be taken. What action will be taken when speech crosses into conduct that violates our policies, including policies against bullying, harassment or intimidation? We take action. I want to do a tweet about Kyle Kashuv. Again, we're always running out of time. Kyle Kashuv, we did a lot of work together at Turning Point USA, a survivor of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas. Amazing kid. He was going to Harvard. Unbelievably smart. NPR.org. Harvard rescinds offer to Parkland survivor after discovery of racist comments. He was 15 years old. He used the N-word a couple of times in a chat, which, by the way, a lot of young people have, and that is not an unforgivable sin. Acting as if that is akin to rape or murder is disgusting. Kids do silly stuff. That is an easy thing to forgive. Easy. It doesn't mean anything for some 15 year old to say that in a private chat or 16 year old. Oh, N-word this, N-word that. That says nothing about your morality. It says something about your maturity. It says nothing about your morality. Nothing. Yet, Harvard rescinded Kyle Kashuv's, he was a, by the way, a Jewish kid, and they rescind his offer. They rescind it. Saying that it was callous and inflammatory language. So Harvard made a public spectacle out of revoking a shooting survivor, Jewish kids offered to Harvard because he used the N-word immaturely a couple times when he was 15 or 16 years old, and yet they defend the Muslim Arab Jew haters. I hope Harvard metaphorically burns to the ground, divest them, tax their endowment, and then once it is embers, we'll think about giving them mercy.

Daddy Issues Podcast
LJ's Advice for Other Single Fathers: "Just Exist With Your Kids"
"For being a a single dad like is there some advice you could give other dads out there doing it solo How you're doing it you you have 24 hours out of the day You have to be a father. You don't you don't get that 50 50 time or the split time you have them all day Yep. Um, the only advice I can give you fellas is It's not about you it's not about what anybody else thinks it's not about the money it's not about the status Think about your best memories when you were a kid Didn't have anything to do with that your mom was there your dad was just there they just existed with you That's the advice Yeah, just exist with my kids man. Just exist with your kids be there Let them see you be there because you still have to live Whether you have kids or not, you got to work whether you have kids or not. You got to pay bills You got to take care of you so let your kids see that because That's the next bill they have to do they have to grow up they're gonna have to learn to work They're gonna have to learn to pay bills. They're gonna have to learn to take care of themselves So for your sons Show them what it means to be a man to move forward through adversity to Understand people in their in spite of their best efforts to make themselves impossible To do the hard thing because it's hard not because you're going to gain anything And for your daughters Just Let them see you love them So they know what that's supposed to be like so they won't accept any of this bullshit That's happening to some of these women these days Let them know that they're better than that that they're more worthy. They deserve more than What the world has to offer And just When you're upset when you're angry when you're sad Just remember that the best parts of you the most important parts of you They exist outside of you now and you can tend them They're real They carry your name and your genetics those people You owe them their lives they didn't ask to exist

The Crypto Conversation
Fresh update on "tend" discussed on The Crypto Conversation
"I think the number one thing that we kind of have to not compromise on that sets crypto apart from everything else is decentralization. Right. And I know a lot of people, you know, kind of say that a lot. That's a very common opinion. But, you know, in terms of like what are people actually building, what are they actually using? You know, I don't think those those actions or those words translate into action. And so I think I think we need to see, you know, a bit more action on the decentralization part and not just not just sort of armchair theorizing. I like it. All right. Kai, Bill Gates famously said that we tend to overestimate what we can accomplish in two years and underestimate what we can accomplish in 10. As a blockchain builder, you'll be familiar with that kind of concept, I guess. But look, you know, 10 years down the line, 10 years down the line, anything you like, DeFi, let's say DeFi, what does DeFi look like in 10 years time? Well, I'd certainly hope that, you know, everyone's able to use DeFi, you know, in a private manner. And hopefully, Railgun ends up being the way that they do it. But I'm not necessarily opposed to, you know, someone comes along and does it better. OK, sure, you did it better. I'm just going to be happy that, you know, privacy is a reality in DeFi. I think in 10 years, the number one UX problem that, you know, most hits people in the face is the cost of using all of this. Right. We just don't have the scale or the capabilities of scale in things like Ethereum or at least where all of the TVL or the value is to support, you know, everyone, like everyone in the world coming on board and using this. And so I think my 10 year prediction is we ride or die based on how well we do on actually addressing the scale question. Yep, I like it. All right. Well, the flip side of this, of course, is a quote by William Gibson, who famously said that the future is already here. Kai, it's just not evenly distributed. With that in mind, can you think of an example of the future being here right now, but most people aren't aware of it? Well, I mean, I can tell you not everyone has a ZK address yet. No, I think, I mean, even even with like just yeah, I'm not I'm not sure that like people understand that just how like how true that that statement is, even with technologies that, you know, people that would be listening to this podcast take for granted. Right. You know, there's there's many regions of the world where to them the Internet is just Facebook, because like the only way that you access the Internet is just through these devices that usually are provided by Facebook or whatever. And the only thing that you can do on them is, you know, access this very limited set of of of services. Right. And so like to to those kind of people. Right. Like crypto is just so far out of the realm of possibility. That, you know, like, wait, you mean that I can like send money back and forth on here with like other people? Or maybe it's not actually right. You know, maybe they've got a much better understanding of how these peer to peer systems would work. But like I think just this kind of a digital access, digital literacy and just access to like Internet services isn't fully distributed yet. And so I think in a way, anyone listening to this podcast is already is already sort of living in the future. If you want to, you know, take take that statement to heart. Very nicely said. All right. Time to finish this off, Kai. Finally, what is your favorite science fiction book, film or TV show? Well, I think I'd have to say Star Trek.

Mark Levin
Joe Scarborough Is an Absolute Ignoramus
"His government and the jerusalem post articles both of them that i read in the course of the last eighty two hours which were the really the first to break this information italy clear that the information per se got caught caught up in the bureaucracy got caught up in debates within the israeli military the initial information was collected by a woman who wasn't even really a full and so they started to dismiss her she pulls the information together she doesn't have a date the information is the head of intel for israel has already said he is going to and has resigned there's no information whatsoever that this government either bennett rapid and guns or yahoo in his coalition but for some reason bennett lapid and guns escape all scrutiny even though the information was bubbling around during their government a year netanyahu what happened it yet now it ignorance and this tirade about the west bank west they use the term west bank because the more orthodox jews not tend to live in judea and samaria the indigenous homeland of ism they want to take judea and samaria they always have on the left the democrat party and give it to the palestinians to take pressure off of jordan pressure off of egypt with the claim that this would be a two -state solution and the radical left in israel israel agrees with them just as we have our radical left they do too that's led by a hotblock left -wing parties in israel so menachem begging wanted nothing to him and now of course it's net yahoo so listen so listen to this tirade cut to go and let me add that look you at the chaos in the west bank that i lay all at the feet of benjamin netanyahu and policies over the past ten years you see ladies and gentlemen jimmy carter was big new he her daddy kept insisting that quote -unquote the west rid of the palestinians they had their eyes given the west bank which of course when you use that phraseology it shows number one complete ignorance and number two that you obviously hate the state of israel because there is no west bank of jordan anymore they sold it for nineteen years that's it when they took it during the nineteen forty eight war for independence i didn't blame his policies for the attack in plaza but the chaos in the west bank that threatens any peace process moving forward and also threatens another a second front in this war third fight in this war what is he talking about not anytime during this diatribe you'll notice does he blame the palestinian terrorists the iranian terrorists the hezbollah terrorists the p l o it's creation arifats baby a boss who's a terrorist joe scarborough has gone full thomas freeman in full barack obama and he's an ignoramus complete moron but it doesn't matter he talks about net yahoo the way talks about trump this guy has as a serious mental problem he really does go ahead the united states has the right to say if we're going to continue propping up your government if you don't have faith that's right there stop right there the united states is propping up the israeli government how is the united states propping really government joe scarborough wouldn't talk this way about about a genocidal maniac in any part of the world you're propping up the israeli government? let tell me this dumb bastard a little secret in the war for independence the israelis didn't get any help from the united states none other than citizens when they it could illegally sending weapons jews in the united states but it was illegal in the united states the then get support from anybody nobody got it? the british were their enemy nobody

Bloomberg Businessweek
Fresh update on "tend" discussed on Bloomberg Businessweek
"And services and so it definitely is an indication of maybe the higher end consumer percent. It's a very discretionary oriented trends that the economy and consumers in general might be facing. But it is interesting to watch the trends from year to year. It does track pretty nicely. Okay well let's get to some of these individual because items I want to make sure we get to all this Amanda. There was actually no deflation in this. So there So were there certain items that don't cost any more than they did last year, but nothing actually went down in price. What sticks out to you. That sounds about right. Yeah, so five of the gifts in the index, four calling birds, It's five gold rings naturally my favorite gift. Seven swans swimming, the eight maids and the nine ladies were all flat on a year -over -year basis. So if you're looking for a gift this holiday season maybe those five gold rings are kind of a deal on a relative basis here. Yeah, but don't try to buy Lords of Leaping, right? No, we certainly saw an increase there and I think this is an important tie -in to what seeing we're in the services side of the economy. Try as the Fed might to get this inflationary backdrop under control. Services inflation tend to be pretty sticky. The Lord certainly fall into the live performances or services category. When we break it down between services and goods, the services component of this index is up almost two times what the good side is. So, pretty notable there in terms of that dynamic. It's like the Taylor Swift effect. Yeah, exactly. Although the turtle doves, very pricey this year compared to last year. 25 % higher? Why are turtle doves so much more expensive this year than last year? So, I think, well, on the one hand, it's a fairly limited supply in terms of the breeders that we talked to. It's the point of the dove world, you're saying? Yeah, you could equate it to that, but limited very supply, but I also think demand in this environment for specialty doves is perhaps a little much less. I don't know that consumers are backing up the truck for specialty doves this holiday season. It's just kind of – I love it. Is that on your list, Carol? Specialty doves this holiday season? Absolutely. Top of the list. Partridge? What about a partridge in a pear tree? I'm more like a Piper's piping kind of guy. Well, that's going to be more expensive because the price of musicians has gone up. That's right. That's exactly right. Did anything surprise you in this year's reading? I think two things Things probably surprise me the most. The one is that when we look at the core version of the index, try so we to mirror the BLS's methodology and we back out the most volatile component in the Christmas price index. It's food and energy for the BLS. For us it's the swans and this year the swans did not move at all. I think that's pretty notable. It's the single biggest lion item and it didn't is not going to move move at all. We think about that as perhaps investors have been bracing for black swan sightings all year given recessionary concerns lingering that have failed to materialize. And then the other component is that the cost to shop online are up significantly. You're not going to get a deal this year in the Christmas price index by shopping online. So the convenience component of shopping online may allow us to slay our gift list all day, but it's definitely going to cost you. Why are the swans so expensive? Oh, they're not expensive. Why are they not? swans The are expensive. They're the single biggest line item in general, and they tend around a lot year to year, but not this year. I haven't gone swan shopping a in while. I've actually never gone swan shopping. You should try it. It's kind of fun. We plan to do that. We have a man to do it. She comes and tells us the price. The swan mall. Amanda Gotti, you're so much fun. Happy holidays. Chief Investment Officer, PNC Asset Management on Zoom from Philly. Bluebird radio on demand and in your podcast feed. On the latest Sound On podcast, I talk with Kurt Volker, former US ambassador to NATO and special representative for Ukraine on Keeve's last ditch pitch for money in Washington. If you took this to a four vote in the house, you'd get 350 votes. What they are concerned about is doing that without something on this, you know, funding for the southern border. Because they want to show that we are taking care of American security in addition to helping Ukraine with its security. And this is something the White House trying to turn up the heat on, you know, the letter that you saw from OMB yesterday, such sharp language, making it so dire. We're going to run out of money. Ukraine's going to fall. It's going disaster, to be a which is partially true.

The Dan Bongino Show
Unpacking Ireland's Immigration Crisis
"And all all all right back to the show so this exploitation narrative that's taken hold around the world that's resulted in open borders that's exactly what it's about look the United States you exploited everyone you stole their land you should let everybody in that's how you make up for your sins this is around the world Jim if you would queue up for me cut three folks what's going on in Ireland right now is absolutely insane this narrative is taken over there to an Ireland Ireland's got severe crisis of illegal immigration and just like the Netherlands and other places although they they haven't had the political revolution although I think it's coming Ireland soon they have had a problem with people people not assimilating and some members of the immigrant community legal or illegal have engaged in a lot criminality one of them resulted in a stabbing this this is obviously upsetting to people who have been in Ireland are taxpayers in Ireland no matter where they're from but are legal citizens of Ireland you have every right to expect in your club or your country or your treehouse whatever it is that you have an other set of rules and people are going to follow them and I'm sorry but people have been paying taxes there and families were established there for generations if you're new to the country it's your job to assimilate to the country not the country's job to assimilate to you I mean how long else why would you have a country what's the point of a country that you have a landmass the idea of a country and pledging allegiance to a flag is you believe in a set of values you're not pledging allegiance to the abrick it's 75 polyester or not who cares you're pledging allegiance to an idea what idea the idea that people have god -given rights to assemble petition that's what you're pledging allegiance to if you don't believe in that then this place isn't for you you but the globalists around the world they don't believe in national about any of this stuff they're obsessed with this idea that rich countries like Ireland Ireland by the public way is enemy number one to the Liberals you know why because they've got a good tax code for businesses so businesses tend to relocate to Ireland most of you probably know that if you're not into this stuff you may not but the world the civilized world absolutely hates the Irish tax code because it's

Bloomberg Markets
Fresh update on "tend" discussed on Bloomberg Markets
"And so as they get backed into these political walls, the question is, who is going to actually feel more of the pain? And they that's come when together. Nathan, great stuff. As always, appreciate you hopping on there. Nathan Dean, he's a senior policy analyst, Bloomberg Intelligence, lots going on in Washington, D .C. today. Former Speaker McCarthy saying he's going to leave Congress at the end of the year. And of course, we still have the Wall Street CEOs speaking in front of the Senate banking talking committee about additional regulations. So we'll stay on top of all of that coming expanding its footprint big time. The fast food chain says it's looking to hit 50 ,000 locations wide by 2027. That's the fastest expansion in its history. McDonald's currently has more than 41 ,000 restaurants and already committed to opening an extra 2 ,000 by the end of this year. McDonald's shares right now. They're down just a fraction. And to the airlines now where Delta has backed its guidance for fourth quarter and a full year. We get the breakdown from Bloomberg's Emily Grafeo the forecast they see for fourth quarter total revenue up 9 % to 12 % year over year for your revenue up about 20 % year over year and adjusted EPS $6 to 625. The stock though 21 buys and only one hold zero cells according to the Bloomberg estimates of analysts and shares right now. They're up about four and a half percent in other earnings news rent the runway shares well they're lower they're down about 22 % and this is after the clothing retail rental company reported revenue and active subscribers for the third quarter that missed estimates. Amazon maybe gearing up for a price war with Chinese fast fashion upstart Xian Amazon will be lowering its third fees -party for merchants that sell inexpensive clothing on its site at the current 17 % seller fees that will drop in January to five percent for items costing less than fifteen dollars and ten percent for clothes that sell for fifteen to twenty dollars right now Amazon is down about one percent and Chinese EV maker Neo plans to spin off its battery manufacturing business possibly before the end of the year. That's according to Reuters. Evaluation will be decided later. I'm Lisa Mateo. Can't catch us live your favorite Bloomberg radio shows including Bloomberg surveillance Wall Street week and Bloomberg sound on are also available as podcasts listen today on Apple Spotify and anywhere else you get your podcast. The wheel big idea pop culture something that touches everyone how we fill our leisure time and how we enjoy ourselves particularly when you're talking about the famous people and big personalities in entertainment and tech. There tends to be a need to sensationalize but what I enjoy is explaining to people how the things that they love get made come to be and people how make money off of it. I'm Lukas Shaw and I cover the business of pop culture how entertainment is changing and explain what that means for you because context changes everything. The inspired idea that's countless new ones. From the horse -drawn carriage to a rover on Mars. Thirty years ago

Mark Levin
The Differences in Political Ideologies Over Time
"Issue, there is a vast divide between the two. So then when you push it out or to the extremes and those that are willing to engage in hate, that's that's the problem is you probably have more people. Regardless of ideology, they get pushed to those places because they've grown up in a society in which there has been a larger divide. And that tends to breed more of that behavior. And I think that is an important contextual element in this conversation as well. But so sorry for your loss and appreciate the call. Let's go to Ken in Welcome to the show. Well, you know, Brian, I just want to say thanks for the show. It's been very good tonight. What I wanted to ask was please refresh my memory regarding the entire Palestinian area. In other words, the place that was called Palestine. Was it not the 1917 Balfour Declaration that the British were given a mandate that they were supposed to make sure that basically most of that area was supposed to go to the Jews is because of what happened during the wars and the fact that bringing them home to their homeland. There is no Palestine per se, which is better. It was called that.

Capstone Conversation
Fresh update on "tend" discussed on Capstone Conversation
"Was at an event the other day at Autodesk and it's a company a lot of us know they're involved in so many things. But as an example, it's hard for a kid to say, I want to grow up and work at Autodesk or Oracle or Cisco, right? Those are companies that are involved in everything, but we don't necessarily know what they do, but they are involved in everything. So it's so important to get the people there and get a perspective. You can and say, right, oh, I want to do light manufacturing or industrial this. Schools tend to teach basic jobs, lawyers, doctors, engineer, which engineer is a pretty broad field. But it's limited. And so to get the perspective of what some of these big companies, medium companies here in the Bay Area do, I think that's a really good benefit of the program. Yes, and many students have no idea about the possibilities of what they could be or what the steps are that are needed to get that type of career. A lot of times when we're in high schools, and I know when I was in high school, it was you go to college. That's just what you do. I didn't know about apprenticeships and I didn't know about job training programs that were hands on that maybe would have been a better fit for me. I wasn't exposed to that, so I didn't know. So we're all about providing all of the choices and paths so that students can choose what brings you joy. And many students don't have certain career exposure to certain careers in their own networks. We know that networked people get more opportunities. And so if you do not have that network, how would you even know? So we're trying to bring our networks to everyone, to every student, because they all deserve it. They all deserve work based learning. Well, I'm looking at my fourth grade daughter, her career day, and I'm excited for her to go through it. But it's all it's all professions with one word, right? Attorney, doctor, teacher, right? It's it's hard to get into some of those more complex, right? Like your job even hardly necessarily explain, oh, I do workforce and data collection and partner schools, right? It's how do you break it down and expose them to this? And I love that concept of what you guys are doing and really opening people's eyes to the possibilities out there. And we're seeing a trend with employers where they aren't requiring a four year degree anymore. Many of them, you see that a lot in tech, where that's not always where they're finding their talent. Now you see that with airlines who have a pilot shortage, many of them are dropping the bachelor degree requirements. And so it's good for people to know that these careers are available to you through a different path

The Dan Bongino Show
Leftist Health Policies Lead to Tragic Death of Young Girl
"Some military channel whatever it so during the break I tend to read stuff especially in show prepping for the next day I've read an article in the wall street journal I'm gonna cover tomorrow at length I just want to kind of touch on it just briefly here before I get to this little thing again however bad you think the modern left is folks progressives liberals leftist whatever you want to call them I don't care whatever euphemism they use for commies because that's what they are it's worse than you think no Dan I think the worst from no I see it behind the scenes all the time they are a thousand times worse than you think I say it all the time as a tech investor dealing with these people in the tech space as a former candidate for office and an activist however bad you think the left is they're worse there's an article just popped in the journal in the opinion section a few minutes ago it's about a young lady in India very young girl she's and five or so has a rare mitochondrial disease they in the UK they have the National Health Service government -run tyrannical like fascists like health care that's what they have in the United Kingdom there's a girl with this mitochondrial disease and the parents are like hey we would like to travel you know to India to take a shot at maybe extending our young daughter's life because the National Health Service won't won't cover it he told her no you can't do it the girl died Jim's like no yes read the piece they're like no you no can't they're like wait we're just gonna travel it we're not asking the government to pay this hospital in India specializes in this mitochondrial disease excuse me they're willing to treat her for free they're like nah nah she's gonna die I hear gonna die right she died no yes no yes here you want the title of piece I'm gonna cover it tomorrow don't sweat it but title of the piece is home in the letter section now just popped a few minutes ago okay you here Mark Rienzi Britain's NHS NHS excuse me left Indy Gregory to die she's oh she's eight months over receiving medical care in Italy to

The Mason Minute
A Face For Radio (MM #4624)
"When I worked in radio, there was an ongoing joke saying that I had a face for radio. And it wasn't just aimed at me, it was aimed at any radio personality. They weren't pretty enough to be on TV, so therefore they worked in radio. I joked it wasn't necessarily the face, it was my body, because I definitely didn't have a body for TV. And after this weekend, I don't have a face for much. Had an accident, stumbled into a step, well, face -planted, literally didn't see a step boom. Landed right on my face, cut myself under my nose, on the side of my nose, thought for sure I'd broken some teeth, but I didn't. My kneecap is pretty scraped up, my hands are pretty scraped up, and I'm feeling the pain. I definitely have a face for radio, and a body to match. It's not something I'm worried about right now, but what I am worried about, as we get older, we tend to hurt ourselves a little bit more. We all have those injuries, those sprains, those broken hips, you know, those kinds of things that aren't good. Could this be the first sign for me that I'm getting a little clumsy, that I've got to pay more attention to what I'm doing? That's what my wife says, I just need to pay more attention. I was paying attention, just not to the right thing.

The Mason Minute
A Face For Radio (MM #4624)
"When I worked in radio, there was an ongoing joke saying that I had a face for radio. And it wasn't just aimed at me, it was aimed at any radio personality. They weren't pretty enough to be on TV, so therefore they worked in radio. I joked it wasn't necessarily the face, it was my body, because I definitely didn't have a body for TV. And after this weekend, I don't have a face for much. Had an accident, stumbled into a step, well, face -planted, literally didn't see a step boom. Landed right on my face, cut myself under my nose, on the side of my nose, thought for sure I'd broken some teeth, but I didn't. My kneecap is pretty scraped up, my hands are pretty scraped up, and I'm feeling the pain. I definitely have a face for radio, and a body to match. It's not something I'm worried about right now, but what I am worried about, as we get older, we tend to hurt ourselves a little bit more. We all have those injuries, those sprains, those broken hips, you know, those kinds of things that aren't good. Could this be the first sign for me that I'm getting a little clumsy, that I've got to pay more attention to what I'm doing? That's what my wife says, I just need to pay more attention. I was paying attention, just not to the right thing.

The Mason Minute
A Face For Radio (MM #4624)
"When I worked in radio, there was an ongoing joke saying that I had a face for radio. And it wasn't just aimed at me, it was aimed at any radio personality. They weren't pretty enough to be on TV, so therefore they worked in radio. I joked it wasn't necessarily the face, it was my body, because I definitely didn't have a body for TV. And after this weekend, I don't have a face for much. Had an accident, stumbled into a step, well, face -planted, literally didn't see a step boom. Landed right on my face, cut myself under my nose, on the side of my nose, thought for sure I'd broken some teeth, but I didn't. My kneecap is pretty scraped up, my hands are pretty scraped up, and I'm feeling the pain. I definitely have a face for radio, and a body to match. It's not something I'm worried about right now, but what I am worried about, as we get older, we tend to hurt ourselves a little bit more. We all have those injuries, those sprains, those broken hips, you know, those kinds of things that aren't good. Could this be the first sign for me that I'm getting a little clumsy, that I've got to pay more attention to what I'm doing? That's what my wife says, I just need to pay more attention. I was paying attention, just not to the right thing.

The Mason Minute
A Face For Radio (MM #4624)
"When I worked in radio, there was an ongoing joke saying that I had a face for radio. And it wasn't just aimed at me, it was aimed at any radio personality. They weren't pretty enough to be on TV, so therefore they worked in radio. I joked it wasn't necessarily the face, it was my body, because I definitely didn't have a body for TV. And after this weekend, I don't have a face for much. Had an accident, stumbled into a step, well, face -planted, literally didn't see a step boom. Landed right on my face, cut myself under my nose, on the side of my nose, thought for sure I'd broken some teeth, but I didn't. My kneecap is pretty scraped up, my hands are pretty scraped up, and I'm feeling the pain. I definitely have a face for radio, and a body to match. It's not something I'm worried about right now, but what I am worried about, as we get older, we tend to hurt ourselves a little bit more. We all have those injuries, those sprains, those broken hips, you know, those kinds of things that aren't good. Could this be the first sign for me that I'm getting a little clumsy, that I've got to pay more attention to what I'm doing? That's what my wife says, I just need to pay more attention. I was paying attention, just not to the right thing.

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa
Jo Ann Fawcett on Her Ex-Husband's Imprisonment, UFOs and Government Conspiracy
"Everybody and welcome back if you're just joining me today it's very interesting topic we're talking UFOs I have Joanne Fawcett as my guest and uh her last husband worked for the military and had first -hand knowledge of um working with aliens and uh yeah from other planets from our government and like I said you know I don't know anything is possible right I'm not gonna close my mind off to it you know I had a thought though when I was during the break um do you think that maybe somebody set your ex -husband up because he may have too much he may have too much information so it's you know what I'm saying so it's easy well he's in prison so I know he's gonna believe this guy right you know kind of thing well yeah and part of it was um he's what do I want to say he's he's he's a lone wolf or a lone ranger and he did tend to piss people off along the way yeah so yeah you know if you're in the habit of fighting the elite and new world order people who are trying to control everything and and they happen to be involved with this U of O stuff as well um when you make them mad they they can make you go away or you know I think he's too important to just have killed off even though I'm sure they've tried many times but um so to put him in prison you know they they thought yeah you know if we can get him out of the way then he can't really be fighting us or you know stopping us from doing what we're gonna do so I do I definitely and not everybody believes this but I definitely believe that they um either used this crime as a you know they use this crime as an excuse or as a way to get him out of their hair and it's worked very well he's been in prison almost 40 years so oh wow that is a long time yeah oh my god so all right so let's go back to the UFOs so you were talking about that one species that the government works with and that we have treaties and basically the treaty is we get they give us technology we allow them to take they kidnap humans in 1961 it was different facets of that conference one part of it there's going to be no open communication between civilians and aliens so that's why we don't see them showing up for tea yet okay parts of it was like do we sell them our spaceships are used spaceships for them to use how far can we allow them to go out into space can we continue kidnapping humans can we can we let them weaponize space will we let them defend space you know they're not they're not real I mean the humans leaders know where a lot of the aliens live the aliens don't necessarily like that because number one you mean the aliens that are here on earth live the aliens out in space don't necessarily want us pointing our telescope and saying look they live right there because we make a mess of things look at the planet we've made a mess of our own poor planet and there's so much trash out in space literally they really don't want us going out there and there's vast resources out there so you know they're already mining asteroids and moons and rings and stuff they don't want us fording in on their territory and their commerce so that's that's just one little thing but so the treaties have to do with different different things but you know I know many side treaties also because often you know here's the major treaty but maybe there's side treaties between that government and a specific alien species might be about technology and kidnapping you know quotas and stuff so it just depends because different different species have often worked with different governments you know it's just depending on who's going to make the best deal you know and what I've said before is like on the dark side is if you look at where major terrorism has happened or if certain wars have happened like Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq there's been a lot of UFO activity there and so often the military has to go in and under the disguise of a war is because you're really covering up dealing with alien stuff.

The Dan Bongino Show
The Difference Between a Financial Cost and an Economic Cost
"Dispensation here it matters for this segment I'm fascinated by economics because it marries the two things I love business and psychology and I did both an MBA and a graduate degree in psychology and economics is kind of a symbiote of those two those two things why do people try to rationally maximize their own life and make the economic decisions they do it's fascinating me then people call it the dismal science it's not dismal at all I find it to be the most fascinating one and what I really find fascinating about economics is how easy it is and how overcomplicated even some Republicans tend to make it overcomplicated there is a there's a thing in economics and it's very simple to understand if you understand this you'll understand ninety percent of economics it's called an opportunity cost there is a difference between a financial cost and an economic cost they're not the same thing I'll give you a quick example it's going to apply to what just happened up in New York how liberals how when it gets bad enough is when economics kicks them in the junk and it hasn't yet but it's starting up in New York there's a difference between a financial cost and an economic cost if my wife Paula a who is very talented database web developer she can make a lot of money hundreds of dollars an hour designing websites she doesn't anymore she manages my business but she used to if my wife were to forfeit that career and go out and say become a barista nothing wrong with that value and work I'm not knocking anyone but the pace far less correct say the pace $20 an hour financially my wife is better off right if she works two hours she made $40 she's not economically better off though those are not the same thing a financial your financial situation in the economic one are not the same thing economically she's worse off because if she can charge 200 an hour and to she make chooses coffee for $20 an hour she's actually losing economically $180 an hour that's called an opportunity cost the cost of a foregone opportunity liberals do not understand this at all or they pretend not to the communists just don't care about but the useful idiots genuinely don't understand that Eric Adams is just a useful idiot he's just dumb if you are going to tax New York City residents to death you need to understand they are some of the highest tax residents of any municipality in the country if you live in New York City people at the upper end of the income scale in New York City are paying upwards fifty of percent of their income forty to fifty to the government for almost nothing in return for streets dirty drugs that being just garbage everywhere you're paying for nothing they're paying up to fifty percent of their income and the Liberals are living under this illusion that you can continue to take money to people and just dole it out to union benefits police department's fire department sanitation department's social welfare programs SNAP programs illegal immigrants public shelters beautification projects community empowerment you understand they don't understand the concept of an opportunity cost that when you give money to illegal migrants in New York City it has to come from a another opportunity

The Dan Bongino Show
The Israel Conflict: Are You Misinformed?
"Not because unlike Democrats I'm not a fraud but people are a lot of people tend to be sometimes misinformed about issues especially on the left but ladies and gentlemen I'm going to tell you some when it comes to this Israel conflict right now what's going on over there I have never seen an issue where so many people who know so little feel so entitled to give an opinion about something they know nothing about it is stunning here's what I mean Jim cue up on that the talker tick guy kosher kosher deals so he goes out makes these videos he does he's man on the street interviews at these rallies for the pro -terrorist rallies and people say some of the dumbest craziest things ever I want you to listen this where he has to say hey yo you love Hezbollah didn't they bomb that place in Lebanon and kill all those people lazy though the Jews did it oh really we're like rewriting history now here take a listen I see more freedom fighters where do you believe has was a terrorist organization I don't know I recognized mean they're by everyone else is a terror organization well they're a legit political party weren't they responsible for that big bomb that the tragedy and who who is responsible 1400 people's a lot of people to kill for I love your shirt first I'm just making youtube videos if you want to watch the video it's on my rumble pod today rumble podcast it's even more powerful watching how stupid people really 1400 people's a lot of people to kill the guy chimes in over the lady's shoulder but basically I they love deserved it they're occupied I've never seen so many people so misinformed even in the conservative content space listen your opinion you're allowed to have it it's constitutionally protected and god -given you have the god -given right to speak it's only protected by our constitution and I passionately protect that but again it also gives you the right to be stupid and I've never ever discussed an issue with so many people feel this entitlement to an opinion which you do have

The Dan Bongino Show
How Do You Know If You're Living in a Police State?
"State mayor. Police state. How do you know? Well, I can tell you there's a pretty definitive sign in a constitutional republic or a representative democracy of some form. You do not investigate people. You investigate crimes in search of people, correct? People tend to overcomplicate what police a state is. We did a whole movie on it, but we kept it simple. You investigate crimes in a constitutional republic, and then you go and look for the people who did those crimes in a police state. You investigate people and you go and look for crimes. Oh, Miss Perkins attempted to revoke the security clearance of this employee and ordered her investigators to canvas 10 police departments where the employee lived for any allegations of violations of the law. Sounds like they're looking for person a in search of a crime, does it not? Folks, this has to stop. I'm gonna tell you, one of the more kind of devastating moments of my life in this space, and I mean it, I'm not being hyperbolic or overly dramatic dramatic about it is I was in an airport flying up to New York. I think I was doing the five fox or and friend, don't matter, but I'm in the airport and I get a call and a friend of mine says, you're never gonna believe this. He says, people in the Ukrainian embassy were watching your social media stuff, likely on government time, and monitoring your activity because you're exposing all this corruption going on in Ukraine that I was writing about in my last book. I said, no, they said, yeah, we're going to get a, we're going to for you this and you're going to see if they were right. Now folks, the stuff they were watching was public. I'm, you know, they, from what I least know, they at didn't have access to my private emails and things like that or the direct messages. But I got to tell you it was pretty scary stuff. I don't mean frightened, like a coward, like a little puppy. I was, it's frightening in an anxiety producing way that your government simply because you expose their corruption is busy watching what you're tweeting about and not doing their actual government assign work. You're like, where the hell am I living, the Soviet Union? Now in case you think it can't get any worse the police state ladies and gentlemen, it already has You sensing a pattern by the way according to this story about who the FBI was allegedly targeting. Marines, people wear who didn't want a to face mask, people who are skeptical of the vaccine. You sensing how the FBI and the modern turn military DEI wants to go along to get along types and if you're not one of them they want you the hell out as soon as possible. There's nothing the police state likes more than to have compliancy. They want people

What Bitcoin Did
A highlight from Life Liberty & the Pursuit of Bitcoin with Robert Breedlove
"Bitcoin gets you to a world of more localism, so presumably you would have less proceeds to fund these bullshit false narratives, you'd have less of the systemic lying, less of the systemic stealing, and this would be just a more peaceful and prosperous world. Hello there from Texas, we've made it here to Dallas with my boy Danny, we're here for the Texas blockchain summit, a very exciting week of interviews ahead, some very cool ones booked in, cannot wait to get them out, get them out for you to hear them. Anyway, welcome to the What Bitcoin Did podcast, which is brought to you by the massive legends at Iris Energy, the largest NASDAQ listed Bitcoin miner using 100 % renewable energy. I'm your host Peter McCormack, and I've got Robert Breedlove on the show today. Now this was a very cool experience, we managed to get Breedlove down to Bedford, we got him down to the football club, we also got him out, we went for some drinks, went for some dinner, ate some steak. It's been very cool to see people now starting to make the pilgrimage to my little town, and hopefully we're going to see some of you there next year for our conference cheat code. Plans for that are going very well, I know hotel rooms are going quickly, so if you do want to come, you better go and check that out quick. You can find out more about the whole event at cheatcode .co .uk, but in this interview with Robert, we get into all the things we tend to get into, but I think we're a little bit less confrontational today. I think we've come to this kind of like realization is that we both come into the problem just through a different path, which is pretty cool because we start to agree on a bunch of things, so you know what we're going to talk about, tax, slavery, the role of government, the role of Bitcoin in all of this, everything we tend to talk about when I get Breedlove on the show. But I love this, I just wish we'd had longer, we didn't have a lot of time for this, we got about an hour in, and the first 10 minutes I lost because I forgot to press record, I didn't have Danny with me, so obviously I made a stupid mistake. But I do hope you enjoy this, if you've got any questions about this show or anything else, you know how to get in touch, it's hello at whatbitcoindid .com.

Crypto Banter
A highlight from The Best Altcoins To Buy This Week! (Act Fast)
"This may not be the optimal market to start DCAing into coins for long -term holds, but right now is the optimal time for trading with a lot of amazing trade setups presenting themselves every single week. So in today's video, I'm going to run through the 14, yes, 14 trade setups, all of which are long setups this week, because you know what happens when you try to fight the trend, you get wrecked. This is a market where as long as the uptrend lasts, is your friend until the end of the trend. And that means we long more than we short. So today I have 14 long setups I want to discuss with you. Most of the setups are a little bit shorter term, like mostly focused on this week, but a couple are a little bit longer term, I would say like in the three to four month range. Not focusing on super long term trades here, but still definitely going to have some alpha for you in today's video as to what altcoins I think could be part of a rotation. As we're seeing right now, basically narratives hop from narrative to narrative as traders seem to be rotating profits into different sectors. And we're going to discuss where I think that rotation could take us. 14 very different altcoins in today's show. We're going to cover a couple narratives like gaming, like ZK, and hopefully you enjoy. Smash the like button if you are enjoying the content at the moment. Let's just start with Bitcoin. An interesting observation to make on Bitcoin is that the last time it had four consecutive weekly candles in a row to the upside, as you can see, like we have currently gotten, it actually did this in early January and ended up reversing for two weeks before continuing an uptrend. So I mean, just because it happened once doesn't mean we're necessarily going to get like a sustained pullback now. But I think what needs to happen and what the market is already starting to show us with weekly open here is that Bitcoin needs a little bit of a cooldown. Now a cooldown is not bad for altcoins. A cooldown, if Bitcoin just moves sideways, maybe a little bit down is actually good for altcoins because it gives the alt some breathing room. It takes the wind out of Bitcoin sales a little bit and gives the alt some room to run. So what I want to see longer term is definitely a sustained increase in Bitcoin dominance that shows liquidity is flowing into Bitcoin. And then eventually I want to see that siphon off into the alts. So I actually want to see dominance pushing up to 60 % for a really healthy market. So altcoins can have a sustained run. But for now, if Bitcoin just cools and alts run a little bit, that's okay for now. Another interesting thing to note is that Bloomberg analysts still expect a 90 % chance of a Bitcoin spot ETF approval by the 10th of January. At the moment, the SEC has another five days to approve an ETF. If they don't approve it, then they're going to have to delay until January. So we could see an approval this week. I don't think this will be the case, but it is a possibility given the fact this week we are in an approval window. So definitely look for some volatility on Bitcoin. All right, let's get into the official list of altcoins that I'm looking at my weekly watch list. By the way, this is a show that I've been doing pretty much every week, but obviously now there's extra attention on the show because we're finally getting some market movers. If you looked at my watch list last week, basically I think six out of the seven tokens that I listed all ended up in profits. We had some amazing trades from that watch list. So congratulations to everyone that got involved there. Hopefully from this week's watch list, similarly, we have some good trades that come out of this one as well. The first place I want to start is ThorChain. What you need to understand about ThorChain is that it's the ultimate bull market token. Because of its reflexive mechanism, the more capital that goes into Roon, basically the better the yields end up being because they need to incentivize LPs to stake tokens in the pools to balance out the Roon LP because Roon is pumped in price, right? So when you have a higher APR, a lot of people ape into Roon, increasing the TVL. We can see the TVL is skyrocketing at the moment, as you can see here. And what that means is that Roon has this really explosive effect, this compounding effect, this flywheel when the market starts to deposit into Roon. So Roon is actually pretty much the ultimate bull market token. In a bear market, it's the opposite. It's one of the worst tokens because it gets hit really hard the other way. When the Roon price is going down, the yields tank. A lot of people exit the ecosystem because remember, to facilitate omni -chain swaps, what Roon does is it basically has LPs where you're required to hold an asset one to one with Roon. So if you want to swap from, let's say, Ethereum to Bitcoin, you're going to need in the omni -pool your Roon pairing with Ethereum and Bitcoin in order to facilitate that swap. So that's why in a bull market it does really well and in a bear market it does really bad. Because we're in a bull trend at the moment, Roon is clearly performing really well. It's one of the strongest performers in the market at the moment. And for that reason, if we do see a pullback like we're seeing right now, this is one that I'll look to ladder into on continuation. As I mentioned at the start of the video, this is really a traders market and it's a market where you probably want to be longing more than you are shorting. And when we're longing more than we're shorting, we want to look at the strongest coins. There are a few rotational players that I want to talk about but you generally want to look at the strongest coins and on any major pullbacks you can use them as dip buying opportunities, not for spot but for trades only. So depending on your risk tolerance, you can use different amounts of leverage. Some people, if you have more capital, you'll prefer spot trading. For me, I actually do a fair bit of spot trading so I might go in with a bigger position or a low leverage position because I don't want to get wicked out like we saw on the 10th of November. But here are some levels that you can look at to enter Roon on the pullback. The major level I'm looking at is this cross section here between the horizontal and the upwards diagonal trend which comes at around $4. If Roon somehow makes its way back down there, I don't think it will. This would be an amazing zone to do some buying. If not, then you do have this zone right here at the 4 .7 area that could be an interesting look as a small ladder in zone. You could probably ladder in here and then your last gasp is at $3 .60. If it starts breaking this trend, then that looks really bad that it's just going to reverse all the way back down. I don't think that's going to happen though. I think momentum for Roon has been upwards and as such, we should treat it with respect and it's certainly what I'm looking to have a nibble at if we continue to get any sort of sustained pullback in terms of trading, of course, not long -term. Long -term positions will be on more key high time frame supports. If you want to learn a bit more about that, I actually uploaded a video called If You Miss The Crypto Rally Follows This Exact Roadmap, which talks about long -term investing. So today is the short -term show. Yesterday, if you go onto the channel and go onto my playlist, and there's also a playlist linked in the description, that will give you a roadmap for the spot side of things. In terms of buying spot Roon, you want to be doing so on key support levels on the higher time frames because we don't like to buy long -term positions on the shorter time frames. It just doesn't make or the lower time frames. It just doesn't make any sense, right? 4 swaps an interesting play now starting to wake up as well being the main decks on Roon. This is definitely a 4 beta play or a Roon beta play rather. So 4 is definitely what I'm looking at in a similar gist to what I'm doing with Roon. Any major pullbacks probably going to gobble them up from a trading point of view. And you can also see they closed with an all -time high trading volume right now. A lot of people are actually using Roon to swap, which is an amazing thing and great for the ecosystem. So that's Roon. Now I want to talk about Solana because Solana is in a similar position to Roon in the sense that being one of the most explosive price movers. But it's kind of an interesting spot, right? Because it's come all the way up from what $15 to $53 in price. It actually hit $60 for a brief period of time. Spot holders don't know if they should take profits here. Traders don't know if they should be longing here. It's kind of in a weird position. But if we look at Sol, we can see that it broke above the key weekly resistance at the $48 level. So for me, a pullback into this zone similar to a buying opportunity, because I think what tends to happen with these coins is the most explosive move happens last. We haven't, I don't think seen that blow off top yet. And I may be wrong, this $65 zone could have been this blow off top. But I still have a feeling that we get that final thrust from Solana that just squeezes all those shorts that are now starting to pile up a little bit. And that will be your final blow off top for Solana. So because I think there's a tiny bit of juice left in the lemon here, I would be looking at any major pullback similarly to Rune continuing to ladder in until the trend reverses. Happy to kind of lose a bit of money trying to play this game considering that the upside is fairly immense in my opinion, if you can hit that trade. So Solana is one that I'd be interested in longing on a major pullback. You know the key level on the weekly. Obviously, you want to confirm that with lower timeframe trade setups because you have a fantastic level to look at. And on let's say the one hourly, the four hourly, that's when you'd actually be entering. Okay, let's move on to a new subset of tokens. These are the tokens that haven't moved. I know Rune and Solana have moved aggressively and we are playing the by the dip game, I guess on those ones. But some of the coins I want to talk about now actually haven't really moved. Now they have moved because the whole market's moved, but just not as much like Polygon hasn't done a 5x like Solana has or you know, 6x, 7x like Rune has. It is significantly up of course, but there is a really interesting narrative starting to brew here and that's the ZK narrative. So if you actually remember back to earlier in the year, January, February, some of the strongest performers alongside like AI and LSDs were the ZK coins. There was a lot of ZK hype and Matic being your biggest coin in this ZK basket of coins tends to be a market leader and it also happens to have this big announcement happening on November 14th which is garnering a leader of the ZK sector if ZK starts to wake up. Because right now we're in this rotational market, we saw Solana rotate into Avalanche, we saw that rotate into Phantom, we saw gaming pop off, we're seeing all these narratives pop off, AI popped off last week. I think next, a narrative that hasn't really popped off, but one that did in January is ZK. So Matic's definitely one of them. In terms of trading this, you do have your major support at 76, but what I would be more interested in is a break of the 92 cent level on the four hourly. Any confirmation above this level would be a decent entry in my opinion and you can see this level mapped out on the daily chart as your key resistance that we're currently trying to test at the moment. If we break that level, then suddenly we can look at a scenario that happened earlier in the year in February, as I said during that ZK run, where Matic ran all the way to 150. A 150 Matic in this run is not out of the question at all. In fact, I think it could happen if ZK gains steam. So that's what I'm keeping my eye on. Now let's talk about some of the other ZK protocols, but before we get into that, while we're speaking on the topic of Polygon, if you do want to earn any yield on the Polygon side, you can go to the farming page on SmartX, which is one of our official show partners. It's an AMM, which reduces the negative effects of impermanent loss and sometimes leads to impermanent gain that currently offers some of the most competitive, in fact, the best rates on the Polygon side for yield farming. So you can see in front of you, you've got 30 to 40 % APRs on a variety of pools, which as I said, have a mechanism which reduces impermanent loss, which is obviously one of the biggest headaches when it comes to Lping in crypto. So I highly recommend using the link in the description below to check out SmartX if you are interested in farming, or you can also do swapping on SmartX and get some of the best swap in the market as well. Link in the description below to check out SmartX. I've got some big announcements coming soon that I'm excited to share with you as well, so stay tuned for that. So let's talk about some of the other ZK protocols. So if Matic starts to make a run here, what will I long? Well, I'm going to long the leaders. I'm not going to try and pick the laggards in this sector. I want to pick the strongest coins in this sector. If we look back to the last run, as I mentioned at the start of the year, some of the best performers were Mina Protocol, Loop Ring, Nute and Dusk. So these are the ones I'm looking at because the market's really familiar with them. I think there's a bit of synergy here with that narrative in these coins. So those are some of the ones I'm looking at. But whatever leads in this sector after Polygon, those will be the ones that I'm interested in. And you can see Polygon and Immutable, the two biggest ZK protocols have run, but a lot of the others haven't run yet. So I think it's a narrative that's flying slightly under the radar, but I think it'll catch up quick once it starts to gain steam. So as a rotational play, this is definitely one that I'm interested in this week. Another one I'm interested in, which is already starting to pump, but probably has a little more upside left in it, is Sei Network. Now we know how explosive these career pumps have been in recent times. Pretty much every token that's been listed on Korean exchange a bit has exploded. We saw this earlier in the year with Sui and Aptos. We've recently seen it with Mina Protocol. Now we're on its pair on Upbit. So Sei is definitely one that I'm watching. It's catching a strong career pump. It has moved, but Sei is what I would call a new coin, right? It's a coin that has launched in the bear market. It's newer. It has pumpermentals because there's less underwater bag holders, and it still is down from its original trading price on its first day. Not from IDO price, but from the peak that it hit on its first day because it had a huge pump, ended up coming back down. It did hit its low of, what is it, like 0 .09 here. It's now started to move back up to 0 .15, but that's less than a 2X on a coin that has, as I said, pumpermentals. It's obviously a trading blockchain built in the Cosmos ecosystem. So some interesting stuff with Sei. If you do want an entry here, I mean, you could look to get an initial position, but if you're using leverage, you want to be careful. I mean, this is kind of not really a great place to trade. Obviously on one hourly, you might be able to find, it depends how, like if you're trading breakouts, you could probably look for like a breakout of this trend here. By the time you're watching this video, it might be too late. So the best I can do for you is actually looking on the four hourly and showing you these key support levels. The 0 .1344 level, if we do get some sort of confluence with the horizontal and diagonal trend here, this would be a great pocket to buy in. But any zone along this major support zone will be an area that I load up, but it does depend on your trading strategy. If you are a high leverage trader, you want to be a lot more precise. Me, I'll either go in this with spot or super low leverage. So I'm not so concerned about getting the exact entry. I'm just trying to really catch it for the uptrend. So depends how you trade, of course, if you're trying to snipe that entry, got to be a lot more careful. For me, a much lower leverage than your average person because I found that's what works for me because I don't have time just personally to sit in front of my computer all day and snipe entries. That's not me. I much more size. So let's say instead of taking a 2k position, I'll take let's say a 10k or a 15k spot position. And then I can't get wrecked on margin, which has been helping me a lot. Or I'll just go in with like a 3x leverage position. So it would take a lot to shake me out of a trade. So that is one I'm looking at. Similarly to say another coin that has pumpamentals and has shown this in recent times as another new coin is Celestia. Remember guys, the new coins can pump so much harder than all coins in the market. That's why I've been saying for a long time, you should definitely keep your eye on the new coins from both accumulation and a trading perspective. Celestia, by the way, is one if you've been following me on Twitter that you may have gotten an airdrop for because I did an airdrop guide last year and I included Celestia and this could end up being one of the most lucrative airdrops of the year. Congrats to anyone that watched that guide or watch my tweet and got involved because right now if you held your Celestia bag, you'd won to $2 ,000 but for some people it could be a lot more if you use multiple wallets. So I think this one is fantastic and there's a few people that have been coming out and saying that it's this cycle's soul. Smartestmoney .eth, it's an account I respect. The number one coin m p &l trader on Binance, that's pretty crazy, that is very crazy actually, has added spot to a massive seed position quote unquote and basically said watch and learn wannabes. These guys out here buying salt while I'm buying the next Solana. Big call but I mean the market cap is reasonably valued 700 mil okay five bill fdvs a lot but we know in the short term the circulating supply definitely goes to dictate how explosive the price moves can be market cap 700 mils reasonable at rank 71 calling it the next soul I don't know I like this one I like it as a spot play but not maybe after this massive pump in terms of a trade though super interesting now actually on support trend you'll notice a lot of coins are following the same trend they have a diagonal up trend as long as they stick to that trend you long if they start to break down below you've got to be a little bit wary but they've also got these horizontal support levels that they make after their retracements so this is actually a good one too long there's a couple of levels here for you to look out for on the one hourly on Celestia so that's an interesting one and let's move into some of the final narratives here I've got two more to share with you and both of these include a variety of alt coins so the first one is perpetuals I think if this volatility is to remain in the market we could definitely see perpetuals performing well we're starting to see a catch up in terms of price and fundamentals despite that not being the case a couple of weeks ago and if you see in front of you volume is performing really well this is purpose trading season this is an on -chain aping season this is the season where people are trading perps I think the centralized exchanges are doing the best that's where most people are trading but I think decks could catch up and for this reason as well as the fact that I think volatility could remain for the foreseeable future I think the perp decks remain super interesting looks at the moment not for short -term trades this week but over let's say the medium term so two to three months maybe even six months so these are definitely ones I've got my eye on dydx I'm going to do a video on this week that's a very interesting trade GMX and gains network being the ones that are kind of your decks perp decks proxies and a few others and as you can see on the weekly a lot of these are barely moved so especially like GMX and games they're a very interesting look in my opinion and if you do want to snipe better entries on a coin like GMX I recommend you use Kyber AI which is a software that basically tells you the momentum of a coin based on a variety of on -chain indicators like the number and types of trades trading volume net flow to whale wallets and what I would do on a coin like GMX is essentially if you're lining up a buy and let's say you want to start buying when shifts momentum what I would look for is a pattern like this where it shifts from bearish into bullish territory now since this video is not live you're gonna have to open your up your own Kyber AI using the link in the description below to see where it currently is but right now this would actually be potentially an interesting place to long GMX if on the lower time frames it lines up with what the Kyber score is showing which is basically bearish price momentum shown by a strong reversal so heading back into bullish territory as you can see buys are now starting to outpace cells and volume is also up ticking across GMX all of those are metrics that go into the Kyber score Kyber score is one of my favorite metrics in crypto if you go to rankings you can actually sort by market cap I love doing this so I go more than 500 million for the large caps that you can actually trade perps on and you can see which coins are looking the most bullish this can help you get entries in the market especially in a bullish market like this searching for the bullish coins can be an amazing way especially using on -chain analysis to get better trading entries so link in the description to check out Kyber AI it's an extremely useful tool especially for confluence with getting trading entries and crypto bad to subscribers will get early access versus the rest of the pack so link in the description below of course it's free so not showing you anything paid it is a free service to use the last narrative I want to talk about quickly is one I think people are forgetting about it has had a bit of a pullback um but it's the gaming narrative into YGG the reason I say people are forgetting people aren't forgetting about gaming there's a lot of talk about crypto gaming on twitter but I think they're forgetting about one of the biggest gaming conferences in five days time starting on November 18th it lasts for a week there definitely could be some I mean a lot of the major projects are speaking there so there could be some interesting announcements and even if not I think there's bound to be hype into that conference so for that reason definitely keep your eye on the gaming projects there's two in particular that I like YGG because it's their conference and this is now having a pullback into a decent zone in my opinion and also GMT which on the weekly and I know once again you don't enter short -term trades on the weekly but on the weekly if it can pull back down into this pocket at 0 .22 and confirm this is support and if you line that up with your lower time frame indicators of course that could be a decent zone also to enter a GMT trade so gaming is something I'm not going to fade the bees are kind of going from one narrative to another but gaming is one that I've got my eye on ahead of the conference so I hope you enjoyed this video these are all the narratives I'm looking at right now mostly short -term some medium to long -term hope you enjoyed this was fast it was alpha packed let me know in the comments below if there are any other coins I should look at and I'll see you in the next one. Peace out.

AI Today Podcast: Artificial Intelligence Insights, Experts, and Opinion
A highlight from AI Today Podcast: CPMAI in the Real World, Interview with Dr. Philipp Schlenkhoff, CPMAI
"The AI Today podcast, produced by Cognolytica, cuts through the hype and noise to identify what is really happening now in the world of artificial intelligence. Learn about emerging AI trends, technologies, and use cases from Cognolytica analysts and guest experts. Hello and welcome to the AI Today podcast. I'm your host, Kathleen Mulch. And as you can tell from my voice, I'm a little under the weather today. So I will be on today's podcast, but Ron might be doing a little bit more of the talking than me. Yeah, well, sorry to disappoint you. You're here for Kathleen to hear her more than 50%, but you know, she will still be here. You're going to hear her questions, but you know, I'm going to do my best to channel Kathleen's voice when she's not speaking. So I'm your host, Ron Schmelzer. And if you're listening to AI Today podcast for the first time, you should know that this is the place to go to hear all the great interviews and thoughts about what is happening with AI Today. And for those of you that follow AI, you know that every day is like a millennium. You know, here in AI, things just change so fast. And we have been in the midst of a lot of series of different podcast series on talking about different things about AI. Of course, generative AI is like the hot thing of the moment because it's everywhere and in every product. I think it's in a toothbrush I have now, generative AI. You can talk to your toothbrush. It's going to be everywhere. It is everywhere. So we have a generative AI series, but we also talk about AI failures. We have an AI failure series. We have a use case series. We have a trustworthy AI series. We have our glossary series, which actually is now starting to come to an end. I think we've gone through almost all the terms we can get to. But of course, we also have interviews with thought leaders and especially those who have gone the next level and certified in the CPMI methodology, which is a best practice for running AI projects. And on that note, we are really excited to have with us today Dr. Philip Schlenkopf, who is co -founder of the AI Transformation Institute and is CPMI certified. Welcome, Philip. Philip, thank you so much for joining us on AI Today. Thanks for having me, Ron. Great pleasure and quite an honor for me. We're really excited for today's interview. We'd like to start by having you introduce yourself to our listeners and tell them a little bit about your background and your current role. All right. First of all, sorry for my accent. I'm calling in from Berlin in Germany. And my way, how I found to AI is sort of a bit surprising because in the end, I started with business administration and studied that, went into corporate restructuring, went into consulting or that one, and then shifted further into the part of sales and learned that from the very beginning. And then after, you know, in a role managing director of a medium -sized company for which was owned for private equity, after a couple of years, I felt it was time for something new. So then I got to know via a business angel, Hans Utzgerreit, who is a professor at the German Research Institute for Artificial Intelligence, DFKY. The name might be familiar because his son actually was co -publishing the Google paper, Attention is All You Need, Jacob Utzgerreit. And I got to know him and he had a spin -off out of the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence, which was called Giants Technologies in the field of natural language understanding, relation extraction. And we were doing at that stage, some kind of corporate intelligence service. So I got to know him. I liked the idea. And so I invested into the company, led the company, and we did a lot of things to scale it, you know, having an architectural frame, which would actually do the job, setting up a sales team and doing sales and getting the first customers on board. And that went quite well. So we could sell the company after something like more or less a year to a strategic investor, which was very, very fortunate and very productive. And then I had to stay on board for the post -merger integration for quite a while, another year. And after that was kind of the question, what do we do now? What's generative AI? We saw early, we saw from the very beginning in our job to understand information that we could use transformers to help to get our precision up and our recall up. So that was actually great. And then, you know, then was the phase it was after November last year. And then was the question, what do we do? Do we build a product? And at that stage, our problem was that, you know, we couldn't find a lake, a market, which was not too big, that the big players would go into that market and crush you. And which wouldn't be too small, which could actually sort of, you know, still have where you can have a reasonably scalable business. And in the end, in the application layer, we didn't find the business case who would do the job because we thought, and we saw that, you know, this application layer was very thin. If it's so easy to set up a product based on API, then the problem is everyone can do it. And then the product actually sort of gets less important than the market access. And then we thought, you know, if the product gets less, export and less important than the market access, the market access in the end is the more important thing. And that for that market access, you don't find a startup because market access as a startup is very expensive. So in the end, our analysis led to the fact that in the end, generative AI and the boom which comes along it and all the transformation and change will be something for the existing companies who can just incorporate the solutions into their current offering. So having said that, our solution to that was, yeah, well, that will lead to a massive need for re -upskilling in the field of, well, actually for all professions, more or less. And that's why we founded the AI Transformation Institute where we do, you know, partly something like you do at Cognalytica, training people to better understand the technology and how to use it. And on the other hand, we do quite a few consulting jobs with customers on sort of helping them in their project to challenge them to go into the project management and eventually even take over some coding paths to help them to actually get their product onto the street. Yeah, in the past, I mean, that's fantastic, by the way, and hard for us to disagree with any of what you said, because you're right, AI is so transformational. And as you said, AI will be a core part of every product, right? Even things you would never have expected in the same way that the Internet and mobile have been so core transitional that just selling something general about we will make the Internet work, we'll make mobile work doesn't do anything for you because it's so core to everything. And I like how you think about market access. That's very, very interesting. But yeah, what you were saying about, you know, really trying to implement these for particular industries and particular applications, I think that's sort of the rub. We always are so surprised sometimes when we talk to people in major companies as we spend time, some of our interviews even here, folks who are unfortunate 1000, some of the biggest companies, and you think to yourself, they surely must be implementing, you know, AI at some advanced level. I mean, these are fortunate 1000 companies represent like what percentage of the global economy, like what 90? I don't even know what the percentage is the vast majority of the global economy. So you'd think that they would be well, well, well ahead. And then when you talk to them, you find it's actually the opposite. They're much farther behind in their AI. They tend they're not the leaders as much as the fast followers and the ones that can figure out how to apply AI to their problems. Those are the ones that get ahead, not just some AI experiment. So I don't want to ramble on and on about that, but it's hard to disagree with everything that you've said to that point and actually really sort of like, you know, my question kind of follows up on that. And that is sort of like the the challenges because people see the promises. They kind of get wrapped up in the hype. Maybe they even do some small AI projects. A lot of them are proof of concept that don't really find their way to any sort of long term use. So something kind of gets in the way. Right. So what do you see as some of these challenges in making AI projects work data, advanced analytics, any of that in that realm? Yeah, thanks for the question, Ron, because well, thank for what you said earlier, because that's something I've always thought that was only the case in German large corporates. Yeah, some of them are quite far ahead, but some of them, there's really not happening anything. And if you say it's the same in the U .S., then I'm a little bit relaxed from the European perspective. Yeah, but that's what we see in companies quite a lot. Yeah. That actually the C level is because of their age. Yeah. They're not that innovative. Yeah. They haven't fully understood the impact of the technology. And then sort of they talk to their CTO and the CTOs are maybe not that open towards the technology either. And they say, you have so many projects already in my pipeline. Yeah, I cannot prioritize that right now. And then you talk to the legal departments and those guys as well say, well, yeah, but there are a lot of and, you know, in Germany, you GDPR, you know, data regulation, we are sort of very cautious about all of that. And then the legal your legal team tells you, well, that's kind of, you know, everything is quite unsure and, you know, there's not real legislation, you know, and then sort of things get postponed and there's no active pressure to change that. I'm not talking about all the companies, but there are a few which go in that direction. And then the problem is sort of the grassroots thing works against it. Yeah. People use it anyway. And then exactly what then is happening, exactly what, you know, legal and the tech department wanted to avoid, you know, all the private and the customer data flowing into sort of some model by sort of the open, by the free version of the tools. And that's kind of a challenge. Yeah. So first of all, valid point, it's a top -down approach. Yeah. There needs to be an AI strategy in the companies and that needs to be sort of carefully thought through, always depending whether it's the core value creation process where which is being transformed or whether it's just a support function like sales or marketing, then you'd rather go for a tool option. But if your core value creation processes are going to be transformed, you need to think about something between using tools or maybe sort of build your own AI and that needs to be understood and then implemented. And as you said, you know, it cannot be some kind of a pilot which never goes into operation because then you don't have a success. And if you don't have a success, you will never really put money on it. So it needs to be, and that's something I really love about CPMI, you know, think big, start small, iterate often. It's so true in the projects, yeah, that you cannot tell that often enough. And I know you guys pronounce it a lot, but it's really true. It cannot be said, you know, enough.

The Bitboy Crypto Podcast
A highlight from Is Solana The Next Ethereum Killer
"Can a Solana overtake Ethereum? We're seeing a lot of metrics that have a lot of people, their heads are spinning. They're surprised. They don't know what's happening. They don't know why Solana keeps continuing to pump, or we're seeing a lot of positive numbers. We're seeing active users skyrocketing. And also we're getting listed on Perpetual's futures on a very major exchange. You're going to want to check this out. This is Discover Crypto. Thank you for joining everybody. Welcome back, Rodney. We're talking about some altcoins. And now we're not going to talk about ranked 8 ,000 meme coins. Is that okay? We're talking about Solana. I guess we could talk about... Everybody's talking about Grok, I thought. That's right. Grok. Well, yeah. It was like, what? Maybe a top 200 at this point. Hit $186 million market cap. I just saw Kyle Chasse tweet, or Chasse tweet. He's like, I bought the top. Ah. You know, so it happened. As they do. Did you get in on Grok, Rodney? I did not get in on Grok. I faded Grok at 20 million. Sorry. Excuse me for not buying a meme coin. You know. It went up to 150, right? So you missed out on about a seven and a half X. It's still sending, yeah. All right. So you're only missing out on a 10X so far. So far, it's a 10X. But Rodney, you just got in last night, correct? Yes, sir. Yeah. How was that? How was it flying into the Atlanta airport? I heard it's... My fiance, she has Follow Atlanta now, and they're shutting down the whole airport. Apparently, it's like, you know, entire hallways are like two foot wide. What was your experience? Well, I actually drove here from Charlottesville, Virginia, so it was an eight hour drive, but very nice. Got to listen to Joe Rogge on the way here. Some of my favorite cryptocurrency channels. Okay. Yeah. All right. Well, speaking of cryptocurrency, let's just get right into the stories here, folks. We are going to talk about Solana in a bit, but first, let's look at the crypto market. We have Bitcoin down about 1%. Let me go ahead and hit refresh just in case we're getting a little bit fresher. All right. Bitcoin down 1%. But Ethereum is up about 2 % right now, XRP down 2 .5%. Solana is cooling off, folks. Solana is almost down to 5 % along with Cardano, but both of them had a positive week. Solana just had a 10 times better week than Cardano there, 38 % to a 3 .8 % pump there. So if you're holding Solana over Cardano, you're feeling pretty good. If you're holding both, you're wondering, you're looking at your Cardano bag, poking it with the stick, like the meme, come on, do something, do something. It'll happen eventually, folks. Just trust me. Then we have Chainlink down to 5 .5 % as well, but Matic is up. But we look, look at Celestia, Tia, Tia is up. We were talking about Tia, Tia is up 25%, 125 % for the week. Now, TJ, did you see any Tia actually, you saw Celestia? I mean, I know it's Drew's wife's name, so he's been big on it, but he actually, I think was talking about Celestia. Yeah, we did a short on it a while back. We noticed it when it very first popped out. Obviously it's strong in some of the Asian markets, a competitor, so to speak, coming out of nowhere. We're seeing, we're moving up very quickly through the top 100. I think it's ranked 65, 68, something like that right now. I mean, it was under 100 a week or two ago when we first covered it. Definitely something to keep an eye on. And this is something that's important that I wanted to mention on today's stream. As we're getting into a new bull market, there's a lot of different ways to look at different altcoins and value different things. When you're building out your portfolio, there's something to be said for projects that have been around for a little while that you know are going to perform into the bull market. Again, we've looked at them a lot. They're in the top 20s, top 50s, the Maddox, the Mutables, the avalanches, the Solanas, kind of the big performers of the last cycle. However, the ones that tend to have the most explosive gains can be the things that are launching around this time, the newer things. It'll be interesting to see if that trend proves through in this cycle. But Tia, Celestia would be one of those ones that it looked like tech had been around for a while, the team had been around for a while, and they were waiting for the right time to launch to really capture attention in this bull market. So watching how those perform over the next few months, I do think is going to be key. We're going to be doing a deep dive on Celestia coming up in the next week or so. I have some of that going into the works. But watching layer ones, layer twos in the narratives, obviously, in this cycle, I think is going to be a good strategy if you're looking to make those gains. All right. But speaking of gains, we also have the other side of the coin, and that's the losses, folks. The biggest loser is Rollbit for the day, down 10 percent and then Kronos. But if you look at the week here, the biggest loser is Trust Wallet and then followed by XRP. Oh, no. XRP was the number two loser for the week, folks. So it's just interesting to see a top five coin be one of the biggest losers right there. Nio, Nio as well. Nio is down now. Nio is on a video I'm working on right now, the top five coins out of Asia, everybody. And Nio is one of the five. So that might be one. All right. I'll be joining in in a second here. But I think it's time for us to talk a little Solana here. Now, Rodney, what are your broad thoughts on Solana as a sign in real quick? Yeah, well, I think that could be one of the bigger comeback stories of this next run, because really the reason why it dumped down so much, because look at everything dumped during the bear market. But the reason why it dumped down significantly was the negative association it had with Almeida Research, Sam Beckman Fried and stuff like that. But now that we're putting all that stuff behind us, it's probably going to recover. I mean, beside what the occasional network outage is, it's actually a pretty solid project. So a lot of people bought that dip understanding that the reason why it was down wasn't because of function. It was because of the negative publicity. Just like Elon Musk going on Joe Rogan's show, smoking some, you know, green and then dumping Tesla stock. Yeah, I always talk about that podcast. I saw that podcast and I remember thinking, oh, wow, this guy is incredibly bright. I would want to own Tesla stock. A lot of people say, oh, yeah, let's dump it. Well, Solana is overtaking Ethereum by active users after a 70 % spike. Everybody let's look at some of the numbers here. So this is according to Arnimix, they had 356 ,000 unique users on Saturday beating Ethereum's 330 ,000. So beat them by 26 ,000 right there. The milestone was driven by a sharp uptick with the network hosting only 200 ,000 just one week ago, less than a week ago. So it was $100 ,000 less. For comparison, ETH consistently holds around 300 to 350 with two brief spikes above 400k in a surge of more than 1 million wallets. But the price of Solana has plummeted. Is it still more than 96 % from 2021 high of 250 bucks? Does that sound right? I don't know about 96%. Yeah, no, no, that's not right. At one point, at one point when it fell to $10 in January, active addresses on the network shrank 85 % from over a million, 1 .28 to around 200 ,000 this September, according to the block. But Solana refused to stay down and now it is up 145 % just in the past four weeks. So everyone holding on to the profit feel good. And then some analysts have been quick to pronounce that Solana has flipped Ethereum by active users due to the recent uptick. However, the ecosystem has expanded beyond its base layer with the majority of ETH activity now taking place on layer two. So Solana may surpass Ethereum, but there's a giant asterisk because if you want to incorporate little activity, two well, Ethereum, the EVM as a whole greatly surpasses Solana there. But TJ, what do you think about Solana ever surpassing Ethereum as far as, you know, being the number one chain? What odds would you, would you put it less than 5%, less than 1 %? No, I think what you just said really matters there by what metric, right? You know, so you've got transactions, you've got daily active users, you've got a market cap, you've got volume, you know, there's so many different metrics to measure a chain by. So I could see it passing it in transactions one day. That's what it's designed for, right? If you get some good, if you get some good games running on it, you could see it hit higher active users, higher transaction or, you know, but volume, probably not, you know, like DeFi is going to most likely live on Ethereum for the foreseeable future. We talked about that a little bit last week. The ecosystem really matters there. And so I think what we're seeing right now in price gains in the short term, sure, it could, it could outperform there. And I think part of what we should talk about here today is why we saw all that price movement happening over the weekend. And I think, I think you've got my screen here, BJ, you can pull it in here, but some of the factors that came up on this article on Cointelegraph, why Solana Price woke up this week, it really has to do with, you know, obviously FTX getting reopened back up. A lot of people thinking there's less likely for Alameda and what's held on the FTX balance sheet, less likely to dump.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"tend" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"You know what we tend to see out over the long term and so i think it will have uh... some effect on the economy but you know what we've had relatively high role prices here now for for most of this year and certainly all of last year the recession that everyone's been talking about hasn't arrived and uh... and so i think the underlying uh... drivers of the economy the u s and and frankly globally uh... pretty healthy so i think it's a drag on the economy but one that thus far i think the economy's been able to to tolerate have you adjusted your price tag meaning that's my question being like are these higher prices sustainable for the long term we we take a very long -term view on supply demand policy technology we haven't changed our long -term price uh... but we really don't change that very often and and and not in response to what our short -term we've been in a volatile market really going back to the pandemic when things the came recovery down when it was high the war so this has been a period of time where prices have been unpredictable and volatile and not what you would call mid -cycle mike if i worked for you and i work for chevron would this would this be my cue to say mike can i have a pay rise please i think you're making reference to what's going on in in different parts we're of the seeing world organized labor you know in many different industries now kind of assertively step forward and say look we we want to be compensated inflation in the economy and uh... we've seen companies recover we've uh... uh... had a very strong paid program last year for our employees we try to stay very competitive and uh... and i would expect will continue to do so think i think if if i'm sitting here in europe i should worry about what's happening here this is going to be a problem when we get to winter do you think mike? well last winter europe came through better than i think most thought guy now inventories were high going into the winter because russian gas had been flowing in industrial demand really came off and it was a relatively mild winter we we certainly can't count on all of those things happening again but gas inventories in europe are pretty strong right now relative to history and so i would say europe is set up much was last year uh... the weather is always difficult to predict but uh... i i feel like europe is in uh... in about as good a place as it could hope to be by this point in time and that was the ceo of chevron mike worth speaking with bloomberg sky johnson and alex steel now we head to paris where danny burger of bloomberg news caught up with blackstone co -founder chairman and CEO steven schwartzman for an exclusive conversation at the ipam private equity conference they discussed global economies blackstone strategy and the outlook for u s recession let's go to part of that conversation going down uh... it's pretty clear that there's certain countries for example germany where it was yesterday you know where growth is uh... slightly negative france today uh... we've got expansion of our office here and france is doing the best of the european countries and i think has been the biggest beneficiary of brexit i think the government's done a great job making uh... attractive paris uh... attractive but as as the central uh... continues to raise interest rates no one ever knows where these things stop uh... you know it's certainly suppressing growth so i think it's a reasonable expectation uh... for europe over the next year let's have pretty muted performance does the e we need to stop soon for fear of not just being muted but a full on recession well that's uh... not to be uh... and uh... uh... i i think inflation still pretty high here it's in the fives and you can't stay uh... at that level uh... and so the central bank typically would do what it needs to do uh... to lower uh... steve ever the diplomat one one source of support for europe though that we don't have that we thought at we would have the start of the year is china we came into the year thinking china would be this huge source of global growth now we're just hoping and for more large -scale stimulus have your assumptions about trying to change this year well i i think they did uh... change i was in china in uh... uh... april and my expectation uh... was that there would be a pretty rapid bounce back uh... but what i found uh... what was that people really have had a tough time uh... over the last uh... three -and -a -half years uh... they had had a real estate crisis for a while uh... and that became more pronounced as they uh... actually had to meet maturities uh... and the chinese people tend to put eighty to ninety percent of their savings uh... into real estate real estate goes down it really takes away confidence because nobody likes spending a lot of money as their net worth is going down it's just not how humans work whether they're chinese or other any place uh... and so it's difficult for china now in the face of that have the kind of rapid growth rates that we're having and uh... europe has been a big uh... uh... exporter to uh... china that china has provided you know last ten years or so before uh... covered no probably half of the world's growth was opportunities that look like for blackstone in china then is there still opportunity or do you to need wait i think most people including the chinese are uh... for a wait and see uh... type of approach one of the things with china is they often make mistakes but they typically don't continue uh... and they don't have a lot of pride in wrong decisions they're uh... practical and so it's in a way a matter of time uh... before they make uh... the appropriate adjustments and start growing again in the short term uh... i think it's going to be somewhat difficult steve if i can take you back around for decades when you founded blackstone just four hundred thousand dollars in pocket and capital to now one trillion dollars how do you get to the next one trillion we just keep doing what we're doing uh... i i i didn't realize that one trillion was an ending point of some certainly sounds nice it's nice when you start with nothing we've got a market cap now of a hundred and forty billion dollars worth of fifth largest financial uh... company in the united states after j p morgan and bank america and wells fargo and we're not a banking and in the fourth ones morgan stanley were seven and uh... uh... dollars com short of morgan stanley at the moment uh... so hopefully at at some point you know will be the fourth largest uh... in the only non uh... i don't manage anything to a number uh... we're in the business of creating great products refer for institutions and schools so that they can perform better than all other alternatives uh... with uh... that's what we do are we still overvalued though in pockets that you're concerned about or has as coming evaluations down in the venture space is that normalizing are you still concerned we're still a ski with fundamentals well i think we're probably still a little optimistic you have to get through a cycle uh... to see uh... you know where where things will really be worth uh... a lot of venture business uh... where i'm not an expert and but it struck me that ever -increasing markups with no cash flow ultimately every time i've seen it that stuff really goes down and and we're in that cycle are how steep of a downturn are you expecting in the cycle in terms of a recession are you expecting one are you preparing for one i think we're gonna do pretty well this uh... and that kind of environment is tough to have a serious uh... recession without a fiscal accident causing something well you can always trigger that really affects markets uh... which will affect uh... an economy were running uh... huge deficits uh... and you know we have more fiscal problems that we do normal

WTOP
"tend" Discussed on WTOP
"Rudin in the First Alert Weather Center. Just a lovely evening we have sunshine still cool temperatures low humidity of breeze and 79 right now in northwest Washington at 630. This is WTOP Everything you need every time you listen. The WTOP producers desk is wired by Wlocal 26 where electrical contractors come to grow. Good evening I'm Anne Kramer and I'm Brendan Hazleton. Top story we're following for you today we learned that a Maryland resident who lives in the DC area has contracted malaria and state officials say that person hasn't done any traveling to an area where the disease tends to be prevalent. A case acquired in Maryland the State Department of Health got that information from the CDC Friday afternoon. This is the state's first non -travel related case in more than four decades. Dr. David Blythe with the Maryland Department of Health on how this local transmission could happen. A person who has traveled to somewhere where malaria is more common gets the infection, comes back to Maryland, a mosquito bites that person and then bites someone else who hasn't traveled. Blythe directs the state health department's infectious disease epidemiology and outbreak response bureau. Now the strain of malaria? Plasmodium falciparum. that's different from what has been seen recently in Florida and in Texas. The risk is low for this type of malaria transmission but the health department says the best ways to avoid it prevent mosquito bites by using insect repellent with DEET and to keep the insects from laying eggs by emptying any standing water at least once weekly. more Read at wtop .com. Liz Anderson, WTOP news. After a summit at Camp David, President Biden and and the leaders of America's top Asia Pacific allies are heralding new cooperation in the face of growing challenges from both North Korea and China. As they met at Camp David. Today we've made history. Today will be remembered as a historic day. We are indeed making a new history as of today. The president and his counterparts from South Korea and Japan through interpreters agreed on boosting security and economic ties and to staying in quick touch if any threats arise in the Pacific. That means we'll have a hotline to share information and coordinate our responses. The president says all three countries are stronger and the world safer when they stand together. Sagar Magani Washington From Camp David to Capitol Hill now where Congress does not have much time left to pass a new budget and avoid a government shutdown at the end of next month. But can a stop -gap spending plan get passed over opposition? conservative Let's get more on this now from WTOP's Mitchell Miller today on hill. the The House will only have a matter of weeks to pass nearly a dozen spending bills and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has signaled to fellow Republicans that a short -term spending measure will likely be needed. But some conservatives in the House Freedom Caucus don't like that idea. Virginia Congressman Bob Goode is among those who have been pressing fellow voters to rein in spending. The American people gave us the majority back in November because we ran on fiscal responsibility. But Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer indicated this week that he and McCarthy have agreed a continuing resolution is going to be necessary and it will need bipartisan support to avoid a shutdown. On Capitol Hill, Mitchell Miller, WTOP News. It's 634. The search is on this evening for a member of the Proud Boys extremist group who vanished days before he was supposed to be sentenced his for involvement in the January 6th insurrection. Prosecutors say that Christopher Worrell of Naples, Florida should serve 14 years in prison for his actions that day. Now he was supposed to be sentenced earlier this week but a bench warrant for his arrest was issued when he didn't show up. Worrell had been on house arrest in Florida since his release from the D .C. back in November 2021. Former President Trump and 18 others have just a week left now to surrender at the Fulton County Jail in Atlanta. The group is facing charges in connection with efforts to overturn Mr. Trump's election loss in that state in 2020. But we've learned the jail is being investigated by the Justice Department after an inmate was found dead and with bug bites. Ben Brash with the Washington Post says jail leaders have been getting ready for the potential additions. The jail does have several problems, but the sheriff has been planning this for many, many months, as is the whole law enforcement system in Fulton County. So as much as one can't have a heads up, they've had a heads up. There have been ongoing problems with overcrowding in the jail, including violence, overflowing toilets, and faulty air conditioning. Sheriff called the environment a humanitarian crisis last month. Campaign 2024 here on the scene. Only one place it appears that former President Trump will not show up is at next week's Republican primary debate in Milwaukee. The former president has been coy about whether or not he would take part. The New York Times reports, however, he's told people close to him he will skip the debate and sit for an online interview with former Fox News host Tucker Carlson instead. Coming up after traffic and field Wi -Fi is

WTOP
"tend" Discussed on WTOP
"On WTO coming up after traffic and weather, we'll take a look at a part of inflation, that tends to be the highest of all. Healthcare inflation. It's 8 36. I'm Katie from long roofing. For four generations, we've helped families just like yours bring beauty, value, and comfort to their homes. Now that legacy has grown into so much more. Our professional and customer focus process will ensure you protect your most valuable investment for decades to come. Get no payments and no interest for a full year, plus $1500 off. Get your free estimate today at long roofing, dot com. At Kaiser permanente, we know that wellness means more than physical health, and as a business leader, you have an enormous amount of influence on the overall well-being of your employees. Happy and cohesive teams increase employee engagement and improve the work experience for everyone. As a result, businesses have lower employee turnover and decreased costs related to recruitment and absenteeism. Learn more about how you can support the total health of your employees at KP dot org slash lead boldly slash WTO. Your next success begins with university of Maryland global campus. For more than 75 years has offered working adults and affordable accredited education. Choose from more than 125° and certificates and enjoy online and hybrid courses, financial resources, and lifetime career services. Has what you need to succeed again. No application fee if you apply by May 31st. Learn more at UMG C EDU. Certified to operate by shev Nice to be with you on this Saturday evening in Washington whether you are making your way about town or perhaps passing through or maybe you're a gig worker, making a few bucks this weekend. Thanks for listening to WTO. You found Washington's news traffic and weather station. We're here for you 24/7 WTO. It's a 38. Traffic and weather on the 8s Rick McClure in the WTO traffic center. There's only one mishap reported on the capitol beltway at

Markets Daily Crypto Roundup
"tend" Discussed on Markets Daily Crypto Roundup
"Today's featured story is an opinion piece from doctor Paul Dillon Ennis and Scott Moore. Our feature today is entitled Ethereum's regions tend to Ethereum's public goods. Although the term goes all the way back to pre modern times, the first rigorous framework for defining public goods was created in the 1950s, first by economist Paul Samuelson, and then later Richard Musgrave, who formulated the definitions of non rivalry and non excludability that we so often use today. Goods like clean air, parks, roads, or national defense are often used as canonical examples of these types of goods. If one person has access to it, everyone does. And one person's use can never deplete anothers. These definitions were created at a very particular time in the nascent league global post World War II environment. Nationalism was still a prominent feature of contemporary life, and how we understood the notion of the public beyond the foundational borders of states, wasn't always clear to a society whose well-being and very survival depended on them. In a post Internet age, the conversation around global public goods and what we mean by the term has grown significantly. It's become clear that there are much broader degrees of excludability and rivalry when we think about these goods. A road might only be accessible if you're allowed into a particular city. And a gate might be locked around a park during nighttime hours. The Internet, although far more omnipresent is still not fully accessible around the world, even as projects like Starlink continue to roll out, we still pay for all kinds of not so public goods, because we recognize that aspirationally we care about the openness of the goods in question, but practically we're focused on the positive externalities they generate. We pay for local subway systems that might overflow from demand and where riders pay a fee because it helps the city to thrive. By paying writers form communities and organizations that build economic activity. Property holders thrive as value accrues around stations and in turn, the taxis levied return value back to the city. Despite their restrictions, goods like a subway system add to our collective well-being. Ethereum, like a subway system, produces meaningful positive externalities, even if it sometimes gets clogged with transactions. Volumes have been written about the way that the so called world computer could increase human agency and coordination, with some even comparing what's been and remains to be built to a city. Others have noted that programmable money enables us to move value the same way the early Internet enabled us to transfer information. So in at least one sense then, Ethereum is a public good. It's built for its own kind of digital city, often by its citizens with the aim of improving everyone's well-being. Practically, though, like most things we define this way, and especially with no state and sight, Ethereum functions like a commons and all common goods need to be carefully maintained. In 2009, Eleanor ostrom was given a Nobel Prize for her work on governing the commons. She showed that by designing local, self sufficient systems, we could solve what Garrett Hardin, an American ecologist known for his influential research on the tragedy of the commons, thought was an inevitable depletion of resources without relying on the state more companies. In Ethereum, our maintenance means taking part in writing meaningful open-source software, participating in governance and preventing capture through the dilution of culture and principles of the ecosystem. Managing your comments like Ethereum is a complicated process, unlike traditional, centralized models of organization, Ethereum's management is distributed across a number of stakeholders, who have to reach rough consensus over a protocol hosting billions of dollars in value. Ethereum's block ocracy, those users most focused on upkeep, are the various client team developers, researchers validators, and the Ethereum foundation. Yet it is not the sole responsibility of the block ocracy to keep the common safe from overgrazing. Builders on Ethereum, those developing decentralized autonomous organizations known as daos, decentralized finance, or DeFi protocols, or non fungible tokens, better known as NFTs, have a responsibility, too. Ethereum can be overgrazed, culturally. Degens, meanwhile, can be considered Ethereum's selfish farmers, who take advantage of the permissionless nature of the commons to exploit it, adding one more cow to the field than they were supposed to, and accelerating its decline. Reputation is the resource, and we're letting people squander it. Ethereum is trapped between two sides. On one side, it's seen as a home to an astonishing ecosystem of innovative smart contracts designed to produce public goods, the regions, and on the other it's known as the home of the rug pull. The degens. These sides don't need to be in conflict, but they do need to coordinate. Another way to frame this distinction is between missionaries and mercenaries. We believe deep down, many of those who self identify as degens do care about the ethos of Ethereum, whereas FTX founder Sam bankman freed, and those who supported him have forgotten when a new system of value could mean, or more realistically, never cared at all. Left to their own devices, mercenaries will see Ethereum as a place where we can simply engineer our own disasters more openly and transparently. Radical permissionless Ness is sacrosanct and crypto cultures. It is non negotiable, like decentralization or censorship resistance. Yet there is no denying permissionless contributes to the deterioration of the Ethereum commons through the proliferation of scams, hacks, and hustles. Since nobody can be denied access to a blockchain and a technical level, it always comes down to the question of culture and expectations. By believing in Ethereum as a public good, and developing a strong and robust culture around why these kinds of public infrastructures matter, we can prevent mercenaries and fortify our ecosystem for the next cycle. We can create our own future between regen and degen. My learning to see the Ethereum ecosystem has a shared comments. That needs to be tended to, but not overgrazed. And that's our show for today. Thank you very much for listening. If you have any questions or comments, send the show an email at podcasts at coin desk dot com or you can email me directly at Adam Levine at coin desk dot com. If you like what we're doing, we always appreciate reviews on Apple podcasts or your preferred listening platform. This episode was produced by Adrian blust and myself with further support from the podcast team over at coindesk dot com. Have a great rest of your day and we'll be back tomorrow with another episode of markets daily.

Okayest Moms: The Podcast
"tend" Discussed on Okayest Moms: The Podcast
"Thoughts about the experience. If you're feeling the new year new you vibe and your goal is to get organized once and for all, then you need an essential calendar. We both been using an essential calendar for the past few years and their unique design allows you to see three months at a glance. This makes planning so much easier and guarantees that you make time for all the things you want to do, not just things you have to do. And new to the shop this year is the year to glance calendar. If you like to see your whole year mapped out the sleek, minimalist design is perfect for you. You can get 10% off your order from the essential calendar by going to okay is moms dot com slash essential. That's okay as moms dot com slash essential. We'd like to introduce podcast sponsor dry farm wines. Dry farm wines is a wine club that sources natural wines from small family farms that grow organic grapes. Each wine is dry farmed, meaning no irrigation, low alcohol below 12.5% ABV, sugar free, lower in sulfites, free of toxic additives, and is keto, paleo, friendly, and vegan.

Bloomberg Radio New York
"tend" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York
"On inflation expectations and volatility with John authors and we're also now joined by Jonathan Levin. Okay, so Jonathan Levin has joined us in studio, Jonathan, one of your columns this week or so of your Collins talked about inflation volatility and how that's actually the more important thing to watch. It's also very difficult to compute. Yeah. Exactly. The problem with high inflation isn't necessarily that it's high, but inflation that tends to be high also tends to be unpredictable. The models stop working very well when we're in a regime like this. In a perfect world, if I told you, vani that inflation was going to be 5% next year, then you could adjust the cost of your goods and services accordingly, you could raise wages for all of your workers by 5% and everybody would go about their business and it would be no big deal. But when the models work as badly as they're working today and I don't mean to pick on you. The Wall Street models have stunk. The fed's models have stunk and just in general, the way that we go about understanding inflation has not worked very well for more or less the last 18 months. So what does this mean? These hard decisions for households and businesses, they're taking them without very much visibility at all. Well, John author is 5% of our team did have another piece about inflation volatility this week. And it's high. They say it's as high as levels of the 1970s and 1980s. Does it matter for real activity as Jonathan Vince as it is? Yes, it does because metaphor often used it. It throws sand in the wheels. It adds an extra layer of uncertainty, which more or less requires that you meet it with some degree of wastage. It's in the same way that if you're nervous about a storm coming, you're just going to have to have more in the inventory than you'd prefer to have to be safe. If you're really not sure where prices are going to be in another 6 12 months, your behavior is going to be less predictable and it's almost certainly going to be less efficient. So we should take confidence in the fact that New York feds inflation expectations, data showed that they're coming down a little bit at least on the part of the average consumer, but we're waiting for you, Michigan data to tell us a little bit more about that. But that plays very much into overall inflation volatility, right? Jonathan wrote a great column on Michigan expectations. It's a little bit like deciding presidential elections by getting gallop to go away and do a poll and tell us who won. Do you think those inflation expectations surveys really merit the weight that's put on them? The trouble is that a lot of economic research about inflation over probably the past 20 years has found that inflation expectations are very, very important. We just don't know how to measure them. Very little confidence in our ability to understand how consumers and households form their inflation expectations and to measure those expectations in real time. And yet that was the whole impetus for the fed's last move. So the question is, to what extent is the fed still flying blind? Jonathan Levin? I think they were playing relatively blind. I mean, the situation is that we've had good reports in the past, right? In the summer of 2021, it really looked like we had turned the corner, but one good report does not a trend make. Frankly, three good reports does not trend make. I will take one and I will hope for the best. You know, two, three, four months from now. I would say at least the feds can now take some degree of confidence that the really extreme transitory effects that followed the pandemic are now dying down, having been somewhat less transitory than everyone had hoped. They have still been transitory. So there's maybe one area of unpredictability that's been taken out of the situation. But I think the critical point, I think it is very likely that the headline inflation peak is in because of all those extreme oil and transport related things. So let me that's not what really matters. It's how quickly does it come down. If it's still at four and a half, 5% at the turn of the year, everybody's going to be demanding much more in the way wage races than they would be if it was two and a half percent at the end of the year. Is it fair to say and I'm asking you both that recession is the base case for the treasury market and still is gentleman? You know, that's one reading of the yield curve and other reading of the yield curve as my colleague bob burger just pointed out is that the fed is going to get the job done. And that's why ten year yields are significantly lower than say two year yields. You know, for me, for 6 to 12 months, my base case has been, if there's going to be a recession, it's going to be because of the fed, right? So on the margin, if you think that this lowers, you probability distribution that they're going to go higher, this most recent report, then the probability of a recession has dropped slightly in the past 24 hours. And the possibility of a soft landing which I hit ticked down to pretty much zero at one point is I'm still don't think it's likely, but it's possible. Again, now. Bob Burgess's column as you mentioned Jonathan also though asked the question of whether the yield curves predictability has been diminished, John authors would you say that that might be the case these days? Like inflation expectations, another number that's incredibly important, but totally impossible to measure in real time is the term that premium. Most sensible measures of the term premium, the degree of uncertainty you factor into your future prices suggest that the term premium is never been lower, which would in turn imply that people really aren't worried at all, which suggests in turn that something very strange is indeed going on in

Daily Whispers
"tend" Discussed on Daily Whispers
"What type of cook are you? Are you one of those cooks who just has 5000 pans going? Messy kitchen. Running, doing other things while cooking, checking emails, checking social media, talking on the phone. Or are you a slower cook? Are you more of a prepper and a planner? Well, my Friends, welcome to your daily whisper. This week we are looking at behaviors as a way to gain insight into how we are living. As you do one thing you do all things, as you cook, it is an indication of how you are prepping and tending to other things in your life. And I chose cooking today because I could talk a lot about cooking. Let me tell you, I am an Italian chick. I love to cook. I love to eat. However, I am also a scattered frantic entrepreneur who gets caught in other things. And so cooking for me has been one of those behaviors that I can tell so closely where I am mentally in other things in my life by how I am prepping, planning, cooking, tending. So, what type of cook are you? I'll tell you what really drives me, especially when it comes to cooking is this quote by tic not Han. He said, the real miracle in life. Is not to walk on water. The real miracle is to walk on the earth and be present in the moment. That's beautiful. It's so simple. I will put that in the show notes for you to grab. And put at the top of your journal. The real miracle is to be present in the moment. And so we are using these behaviors this week. As a way to heighten our awareness, so let's talk about cooking for a moment. My story, and it's not as much now that I don't have my yoga studio, and I don't have kids at home. It's a little different. I'm a little I am more mindful. But when I was at the in the heat of it all, busy mom, driving, here and there, busy business, phone calls, questions, I burned everything. Well, not only did I burn everything, I never planned. It would be literally 5 36 o'clock and I think, oh God, one of my making for dinner tonight. It was not top of mind. It was not priority, and I'm a little embarrassed to admit it. My poor kids, I don't know what they ate. Taco Tuesdays, you know, lasagna on Wednesdays. It was not like, you know, all plant based organic this and that. I was doing the best I could. So I'm totally not beating myself up. But looking to how you cook or tend tending I love that word tending. Tending to the simple things in your home. Tending to your home, tending to your car, tending to your garage your garden, your desk. Your desktop. These are all behaviors that we can look at. Wow. How am I doing this? Because this is a reflection. Of how I'm doing other things in my life. As you do one thing you do all things. So remember, there's no shame in this. They're there sweetheart. They're there. You're running a business. They're there. You've got soccer practice. You've got kids with homework. You've got a night shift. There they are, sweetheart. This is an exploration, not a judgment fest. So I invite you today this week to look at cooking, prepping, planning, cleaning up afterward, how are you doing that? And you can also look at tending. I love that we're tending. Watering the plants or not. That's another thing I do. I kill plants. And I'm right now in this sublet where there's like 20 plants in the one bedroom apartment. So I have to be really mindful to water those little babies for the woman that subletting from. So it's made me heightened. My awareness heightened of how I tend to plants. So, there we go. That is what I have for you today. Yesterday was walking today's cooking intending. And we'll see about tomorrow. But for today I just ask you to hold this all with a light palm and with a loads of love, this is just opening up our awareness to how we're living our lives and helping us to become more mindful. And so with that, I want to just share with you one new thing that I'm putting down there in the show notes. And that is the website for my mental fitness collective. Two of my main things, the main things that I'm focused on these days, besides these wonderful daily whispers that I enjoy. Two things are supporting women in the arena, which is the four week mastermind I run every month. And then also supporting wellness, fitness, and mental health professionals in the mental fitness collective. It's how we work together, innovate, create opportunity, collaborate, and also prosper. Create different sources of income for our small businesses. So if you are one of those wellness fitness coach, mental health professional, take a look at the mental fitness collective in the show notes. Until tomorrow, go out there and go pay attention. There's so much to learn, be.

600 WREC
"tend" Discussed on 600 WREC
"Or the difficult decisions they had to make when they were In combat or years old. But you know, you tend to bury those Bad experiences. Deep in the resources of your mind. No clinician, But, you know, talking to the folks from the National Institute of Mental Health. Sometimes the trauma doesn't you know? Present itself until years later. And that maybe, you know, avoiding people. You know, having trouble sleeping. It may be frightening thoughts or or even alcohol, alcohol and drug issues. Feelings of guilt or blame loss of interest, uh, failed relationships, loss of a job, sometimes all those things that happen in life. Can be attributed to experiences that we're faced and you know, in combat or in just everyday trauma. And that's why You know, I think the national campaign for helping Veterans and not just veterans. But every American realized that mental health is physical health. You've got to ensure the same help of your mind in your brain that you do with your body. And you know, Ryan, if you were I broke her leg. This afternoon. If we fell down the stairs we'd be at the emergency room this afternoon getting treated And we need the same. Level of, you know, priority. And awareness and and stigma reduction in in going to get help for for, you know, traumatic experiences we face either in the military or in life. And the quality of light that comes with getting care. Just can't be explained. I mean, I've spoken to too many warriors that said, You know, I spent 10 years struggling with these. You know these these visions of what took place. Were these experiences I faced while I was deployed. For Vietnam veterans, many of them are still facing Post traumatic stress from the time they were in combat. It's never too late to get help. It's never too late to check on somebody that you know that was wasn't wasn't a difficult situation either in combat or in life and reach out to them and get them the treatment they need. And that's why you know there are national call centers or Resource center is available. There's lots of resources available. And you know the key is having the courage to reach out and ask for help. Lieutenant general, retired Mike Linnington, CEO of the Wounded Warrior project. Again, You can find out more wounded warrior project dot org General, Thanks so much for coming on and telling us all about the organization and raising awareness for the work that we have to do when it comes to PTSD. We really appreciate it and thank you for your service as well. Thank you, Ryan. And thanks for having us on and thank you for helping us reach more veterans in the God Bless, all right, coming up. Next. We're going to talk to a military reporter for the Washington Post who took an inside look at some of the search and rescue operations that take place across the country, including the one taking place in South Florida following that condo collapse. You're not gonna want to miss this. Hang on. World home. It looks a little different for everyone..

WGR 550 Sports Radio
"tend" Discussed on WGR 550 Sports Radio
"Tending or they go for a vote. They're going to come away. With an excellent prospect, and probably that prospect whoever they take will be the number one prospect in their pool. Which is not not not a bad thing, considering the Sabres Prospect pool right now. Developing into one of the better ones in the league. So how about Owen power? Is he? First of all? Is he your number one or if you got maybe veneers or somebody else up there? No powers is my number one. He was my number two way back in September. Uh, he never went lower than two, and he's been number one since about March, and a lot of that was based off of what he did with Michigan. As a freshman in college, and then he goes out and has a dominant if you want to call it that showing at the, uh, the the men's world championships there and love your playing with nothing with nothing but NHL players, and he's Basically looking like a pro and erotica lines played him 25 minutes a game in the gold medal game. I mean, that's Some pretty impressive stuff, But now he's my number one. But I would say mapping years is a close second behind them. Yeah, I'm curious. Like how much separation you have there and like, if the sabers I'm fine with them drafting power. He kind of he grew on me. You mentioned the world championships and I watched a lot of that, and I watched plenty of them at Michigan and was a little I guess I was a little more leery of them watching them at Michigan. Um, because you just don't see like the flash that you see with some of the other hot great skating defenseman. But for a man his size, he certainly our kid his size. I think he certainly does move really well, how much of a Catholic let's say the Sabres. Didn't for whatever reason, want to draft own power? One like Is it A Is it a glaring mistake? Or can you see the merit of going would say maybe Ba nears at one instead? The same as can't go wrong, really, Like I already said, no matter which position they lean towards, Yeah, they have needs. You know, they need help in the goaltending department that there's been on the on the right side of the defense and Power being a left. He doesn't help because I think that the prospect pool is pretty strong on the left side, if you want, even consider deleting, considering how young he is, uh, in that group, but no like the separation between power and everybody else is very thin. It wasn't like It's just that power had that. I guess you want to say that. Has always been heralded as a potential. Uh, you know a kid who could go first. Overall, we just didn't see enough of him in critical situations. You know, he didn't play at the World Junior tournament. He didn't play the Ivanhoe Lanka. He's only had really won major international tournament that he played out before the world championships. So in the best on best environment, you want to see some of these better kids play there, and we never got a chance to really see power in that, So because of that, you have to say that guys like math in years and forwards like Kent Johnson and William Ekland. These high High scoring wings that they have to be in the conversation as well. Then you have the other defenseman. Guys like Brent Clark was Variety and Luke. Huge, you know, couldn't use is Young and Jack use his younger brother. These are all phenomenal prospects. So I really can't say well would power had a phenomenal world championships, So I'm automatically going to make him out to be the better prospect in Luke Hughes. Or let's say, brand clock or any other. The other defense minutes. It's a very close Competition. We're involving these guys, but I just think, in the end the maturity that guys like powers have been years had that puts them up at the very top for me, with Echlin, a close third Before the draft takes place on Friday, July 23rd. The Sabres have a couple decisions to make see that this could alter what they do with the number one pick. What, whether they trade Jack Eichel and or Sam Reinhart. They could be looking at. Hey, we really need to kind of replenish in Help our depth at forward in the organization, So if it's not power, and they go that way, especially at center, what does that look like? Well, I I've had veneers mark to the Sabres for a while, Uh, And the reason why is I just think that the Sabres need to create this culture where they're they're a tough team to play against. They have to take on the persona. Of the Boston Bruins or Tampa Bay Lightning or New York Islanders, where if you could have come into our house, we're going to make you pay for it. And you want the opposition to feel the same way and the neighbors haven't been a tough team to play against for quite some time now. And I think when you draft a guy like this villain cousins in 2019 to me, that was the start. We're like, Okay, this kid is going to be, you know, ferocious on the park a great attitude. He's going to make it. He's going to be physical. We saw him. It really is a real young kid. Collins cousins play that way to season and even with a drafting guy like Jack Quinn last year top 10 pick he could be an effective two way players tough to play against. So Bernier's to me epitomizes that. You know the hard nosed 200 ft. Yes, he might not be. Let's say 85 or 90 Point player. But you look at Jonathan Caves or mark sightly, where they can contribute in all areas and also provided with that leadership. And when you have a guy like cousins and veneers on the same team that could be contagious, that type of work ethic and hard nosed style, So the other, the other forward their asses all that. I mean, they're more wingers, but they're incredibly skilled. Isaac William Echlin from Sweden. You know, the saber has been drafting out of Sweden like crazy the last four or five years. So you have to think they have a pretty big book on William Metal and the fact that he plays against men and he's not very big. It's about 5 11 a buck 70. He put up one of the highest scoring you under 18 seasons on the 19 seasons in that league, Ken Johnson Well in Michigan. I mean, this kid is a fantastic point produces. So in any there's other kids like Mason, Macavity and Coal Selinger. These kids are hard nosed, physical in your face type, so I really think that the safest can't do wrong. I no matter whom they take, unless they try to be cute and go way off the board and say, Well, we want to address right defense. So we took some kid that was ranked 40th. Alright, that might be a little Controversial, but I think I think that it seems to me, you know, they bring Don Granado back. He apparently was good with the kids. At the end of last season. We saw guys like the Lien and middle stat and Cousins, the impact players, especially not second half, so I think that you know if if the Sabres are looking for players like that, you just come in and and help. I guess if you want to call it was so called this rebuild. That they will find the player no matter that regards the position. They will find the player in that in that top, uh, 10 grouping that will make the fans happy and also make them a better team to play tough team to play against. Yeah, maybe Maybe they'll even end up pulling two of those guys into the boat. If they make these trades and and and you know, avail themselves of another high pick they could be looking at, you know, having the luxury of drafting own power, and and I don't know, maybe one of his Michigan teammates or the Sakhalin from Sweden like you say on him, Steve Echlin, specifically some of the scouting reports that I've seen on him. Of course, you know, list him as a left wing, but he is also was described as having potentially positional flexibility and being able to play some center. Do you agree with that? Do you think he could project as a center? Or do you think wing is where he should stay? He's just He's pretty good at the wing. And I don't like, you know, like they say, if it ain't broke, don't fix it. Uh, and he's been fantastic. He plays in the same line as Alexander holds, who was a top 10 pick of the Devils last year. And this kid drove possession. I mean, he's you're right. He acts like a center and I can see a team saying you know what? But the Sabres seems to have a couple of those guys. It was specifically middle stat. And cousins who could play wing..

KNBR The Sports Leader
"tend" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader
"Are blind. I know you were listening to the game. What did you hear about Johnny Cueto? About Johnny Clay, or he came back too soon. Okay, That's what you figure, huh? We passed the demon elf Snow, and he wasn't there. And you thought that what do you do that what he was doing? I think he was doing just standard stuff. You know, Like another stroke bone on the swing going all that's up there to distract the batter or you're not that I think what happened? You know, he went out there and you do the best you can do and he wasn't there. Yeah, I agree. And you know you were listening to it with John and Dave and I got to watch it and it just he wasn't perfection in the ball wasn't hitting the corners is slider was Ah, Spin. It wasn't a heartbreak. The changeup wasn't the deceptive like he usually did. And precious it was It wasn't good and for him what he did in Sacramento with the alternate site thrown on the side or throwing batting practice. It wasn't game ready. And like I always say you can throw live BP you can throw on the side and feel great. But when you go into those hitters and those hitters on the Padres, and you're going right into the fire with the San Diego Padres, Plus Losing the first two games. They were tying your shoes a little tighter and gripping at battle, Wilmore and and that's what ended up happening today and they chased him after three That torture you know, it's kind of like going back two years back. We had tortured no trying to win games, and then we win the game and always put a hard but we got it. But sometimes, you know, You got take forward to take the grand solved. Just what you lost. Make up tomorrow. Let's start over again. Yeah, that's what you got to do on some of these games, and we haven't had these bad of games. So far this season has been Tremendously better on the positive side there 20 and 14 13 34 games And that's really the first stinker they've had. And it was. I tell you what Matt Whistler and Darling Garcia, Those guys threw the ball well, Whistler that was the best two Waiting's he's thrown is in Giants uniform. He was spot on couple strikeouts. Six up. Six down. Could be that middle guy now and then Garcia came in. We haven't seen Garcia since he got sent down with that injury and I thought he threw the ball well to, um Alvarez struggled right off the bat and then to throw into center field the balance when he caught the ball in front of the mound. He was off balance and throwing it up going in center field, but You have to make those adjustments, especially if you're on the front of the mound. You have to make it where it's in the in the second basement, short stops, chest and hey, let it go, and it really blew up that inning cause that inning they scored four runs. That's your question. Uh, what's going on with devolved computer ball and and the other young hit, which was real hard? No, Harlan, do ball or no. Jailing your ball. Of all, you know that one commuter ball is millet of all? Yeah, Camilla Double. He came in the game The other night He came in who you had a guy that came in there and you give up a home run. Hey, thought real hard at the helm, a slider and even else No getting sent down. I think it's 2021 22 years old. Exactly exactly tells up Are you talking about Gregory Santos? Chanted, Ergo, the big Santos is in Triple eight. They're playing Las Vegas right now, and I don't know if they won or lost Today I was following that They were having a good game in Las Vegas they lost last night. They had a Tend five league going in the bottom of the ninth inning and then a blues in that game. They're playing good baseball in Sacramento. Matter of matter of fact, every division triple A double A single a low way are the Giants have really been playing good baseball around. So, uh, you ready to reliever? Who's that? The windows. Gregory Gregory. Yeah, he's a reliever. He's middle guy, short guy. Uh, you know that type of role, but you know, he throws hard. Hey, was put in a couple of late games and it didn't work out for him, So they sent him back down. I tell you, a guy that really like his who's up now, exactly Tell pitched a little bit with the Twins threw the ball real well yesterday pitcher in the major league She played today. You know, weather Ryan Weathers. Ryan Weathers you're talking about? Yeah, that giant so that no, That's what the Padres the Padres. He was. Yeah, he's a starter Middleman. He threw the ball real well for the Padres today. Right. Thanks for the call, man. Thanks. Appreciate it. Have a great Sunday. All right. Thanks. Right. Let's go to Greg in Portland. Greg, How are you doing this evening? I am doing fine. Let me take up the speaker. I didn't think it gets to me so quick. Yeah, I got a couple more calls. I thought I'd jump on you real quick here and talk about do Bob because he did make a blunder again on the basis and watching the ball instead of watching rotten voters are Watching that kind of thing. The guy from Oregon he kind of robbed me of my thunder, but But, you know, anyway, I'm just You know, we talked about this last week, and it's I'm not of the analytics school, So I'm just looking. You know, I'm like a crab. I'm waiting to jump on those guys. But you're watching the game. That's that's what you're doing and what you're doing. You're analyzing the game, good and bad, And that's what That's what happens. It seems like this kind of game 11 and one little things like do Bond outscored its back to find him and I'm watching the game and listening. I think it was type that said, You know, you know he made a bad mistake, and I hope it doesn't come back The harness. Cause we need to do something this inning. You're down 50 in the seventh and we all know That those leads don't always hold up and we should know that giant fans but also the potteries. You know, they don't work serious champions yet. I'm I'm not sold on them yet. They have a great lineup. I'm not sold on them. They do. Their bullpen is really good. They're starting pitching's coming around. They are a top line team. Don't get me wrong, but I'm not sold on them running away with the NL West. No chance, right? Right. So anyway, I didn't like that and do but the body of work is piling up with du Bon. Uh, on what I said last week, too, you and it's not just him. It's these young guys. They don't know how to play baseball there clearly. You're right. You don't like my word coaching, but they need to be coached Fundamentals..

Beyond Picket Fences
"tend" Discussed on Beyond Picket Fences
"And we'd like you to think of any color of light can be any color of light and i want you to think of this color of light coming up three or feats traveling up your legs your knees. It's is your hips your stomach your chest parts of your back in your shoulders and your arms. Your napkin your crown. Your head wanted envision. This color light just flowing through your body as color is helping you to relax more deeply so i didn't go of any remaining tension i want to think i let go of any tension in all tension in my body. I'll thinks that i have hung onto. I let go now. I like go now breathing in.

Beyond Picket Fences
"tend" Discussed on Beyond Picket Fences
"Miles east don't know who's in your is ready. Continue your breathing reasoning out and.

Newsradio 1200 WOAI
"tend" Discussed on Newsradio 1200 WOAI
"So he still tends not changing, either. So I mean, that was actually to have them both on the happy It would be very interesting. What can we have the conversation? Listen in on that one E guess it goes into the bigger sphere of why is it That if you're on the left, and Caskey clearly is, and you believe this cancel culture, you think being negative, profane and somehow getting people to applaud you on Twitter is life. It's not. It's not real life. I'm a real dude. I'm a father of five daughters. I've got Children about his age. I want school safety like everybody does. It's almost like the whole capital riot thing, right? Nobody but noted you. Have you ever talk to somebody who said Carrie? I'm so glad they did that? No, I've never heard him. I said that. Has anybody ever come up to us again? I'm so glad they shut up that school. No. So they're trying to pick sides and pretend that this side is for school shootings, and this side is against them. This side is for riding at the Capitol or Minneapolis or Portland. This side is against it. No, no. Nobody wants writing. Nobody wants. People killed. Nobody wants the capital to be breached. Nobody wants a bad guy to show open should have a school. So how do we stop the capital for being breached again? Let's let's put that in place. How do we stop schools from being places of violence and where your kids might be shot? All right, let's put those provisions in place. How do we make that happen? Knowing that both sides want the same end? Let's find out what Caskey wants. Let's find out what Nugent wants. And let's put those Those actions into place and let's see what works. Then we could both of the end of the day. So you know I disagree with you on abortion, But I'm glad that the kids are safe in school today. You know, I disagree with you on taxation, but I'm glad the kids are safe in school today. Why is it hard to have that conversation? Why I excluded from that conversation? Because you think that I don't agree with you? I think there's they've got these blinders on. You are the enemy. That's all they're thinking. You are the big, mean, right wing conservative talk show host and he hates everything that you stand for, And he's never gonna agree with you. Um, just because that's that's what he's chosen to stand on. You're right. But didn't I expose that? That group think yesterday when the guy called in, said he was from Canada. He said that Trump is a fascist and I said, All right, let's do this Got you on the line because most people who disagree if we are afraid to call the militants attacked me on Twitter or Facebook. But let's all right. Give me one thing He's done that was fascist. Remembers. His answer was It's too complicated. We'll have time to get into it now. I'm not going to know I'm giving you the time. It is expensive to buy your time on my show very expensive. Asked my sponsors. They step up every time and they're amazing. But it is not cheap. I give this guy all the free air time You wanted yesterday, and he just couldn't give you one instance. But for some reason, his life is better Cascades. Life is better. You know those on the left. Chris Cuomo's life is better by saying they're wrong. Cast them out of society. I don't have to tell you why. I think they're wrong, isn't it? It's not just weird. It is. It's really dumb and stupid and scary, and I don't think it's gonna get worse before it gets any better, though. Because we as a collective society, we are allowing that to happen. Yeah, I agree. I'm with you. Let's take calls in that same off the top here. We'll get into what was happening at the Capitol today. That diamond and silk on this program today love those ladies. They're amazing, But let's have the discussion. And I especially wanna hear from you If you think that you generally speaking disagree with me. I want to know why. And let's break that down. Because if you and I talk and you and I disagree, we're gonna find some common ground And maybe we solve the problem. School shootings. Maybe we solve the problem of breaching the capital. Maybe we solve the problem of burning down Minneapolis after you know, a guy dies in police custody. Let's let's have that conversation. Can we have that conversation? And now I'm going to really confuse you. So I'm trying to figure out what the best social media site is now, right? I posted, you know to a lot of places Go follow me on Gabitza, Joe PAGs J J o e p A g s gap dot com slash joe Paige just v dot com slash joe PAGs and posted it on Facebook. So you got my Facebook page Facebook now warned you That gap is an all right site that blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. I mean, it's so weird Facebook and Twitter and Instagram don't want people like me on there. Then they warned people not Go follow people like me when? When we try to leave there. It is such a conundrum. And then I get this curveball. Well, you really gotta join clubhouse. No. Oh, my goodness, Terry. I kid you not now opposed to join clubhouse. Are you going to? I think I do You have any answer to that? I think you are. I mean, it was speaking of Yeah. Okay. Twitter and cancel culture You know, they canceled are suspended The account of Ah. Project Veritas. They did. And you know why? I don't know why. I just know they got rid of them. They can't want going. They approached the vice president or some big bigwig over Facebook, and we're asking him questions on video. Twitter alleges that James James up people we've had on this program and project Veritas violated the privacy. Of that guy by going to his house. That's why they were suspended, Although people are docks all the time. On social media sites where they live with their name is it becomes involved in a shooting that has been investigated yet here is his name. Here's what he lives here with his wife works all that's okay. But James O'Keefe they were looking carry. They're looking for a reason. They also suspended the account of Devin Nunes. Did you see that? Oh, I didn't know that. They said hope. Sorry. That was a mistake. Sorry. It was an accident. Like they didn't know they were. They were one of the highest profile guys in Congress. They didn't realize that they were making the accident of suspending his account. It's now back up, but they did that. That's how crazy this is. So, yeah, clubhouse. I'm not even Joe PAGs reserves for me, but I haven't done anything on again. And you know what it is yet, But let me say this high level technical digital people that I trust say you might want to check that one out. Okay. And how you want to speak. Okay. All right. I know. Hold on. E can't last 7th 17, But so what? So way diversify. All right, 88941 Paige's 889417247 Joe PAGs calm. Stay right here. This'd is the show Paige show from the W Away I traffic center Good afternoon, starting off near the midtown area We had across blocking two lanes on the upper level of I 10 eastbound at CU labor with heavy slowdowns back to Fredericksburg Road doesn't have a crash supported affecting the exit ramp from 35 north bound onto the Northeast 16 04 traveling into New Braunfels from the San Marcos area construction, causing delays on the South bound side of 35 between Posey Road in what It's in lane, Shannon Samson NewsRadio 1200 Wook I. This report is sponsored by Merrill. With Meryl Guided investing, You have the option to work with an advisor revel low cost a minimum.

Z104
"tend" Discussed on Z104
"Tend to be your man. When the roof Cajun and the truck came out. I just didn't know what to go. Not become star women living so much of anything, so tell me, Girl likes a man. You did What? Say what? Say what you say about fun. What? Do it, man because you did what you want to say what to say. I'll tell me what to say. I don't want you to leave me though. You coming creative? Tell me Tell me what to say. I really need to win my life because things in your biker Tell me Tell me what you say. I don't want you to leave me. So you come nto Tell me Tell me. Says. I've been in need to win my life being safe. Okay? Again in the truth came out. I just didn't know what Tonto what going to become stop will be living so large and do anything. It's a baby. What you say much say Holy man way because you did much. So what to say What to say guys up, Father. Because it is what what to say. C, one of four WNBC effeminate she won north of Newport News, Virginia Beach Radio com Station. All the hits nonstop C, one of four E think I'm crazy, But I have been craving if that part of my plainly just give me the babies so that you don't think they're doing. You write what you want to.

WFAN Sports Radio_FM
"tend" Discussed on WFAN Sports Radio_FM
"Hours a day, seven days a week alive. Pull the time. Welcome back in. Appreciate you hanging out with us on the Sunday morning all the time. We have talked plenty of football we've done A lot of fun things already this morning in the calling number. You want to join us, 855 to 1 to 4 to 27. That's 855 to 1 to four, CBS. But believe it or not, There's been a lot of activity going on around baseball. Over the last few days. It's like the hot stove started to pick up now that it looks like spring training is only about three weeks away, so I want to talk about the deal. That everyone has been talking about, And that's the fact that Nolan Aaron Auto has left Denver and is now going to be a Saint Louis Cardinals. So I decided I reach out to buddy, my buddy Chris Rogie, who I worked with in Chicago and then when he was in ST Louis, working Down there doing sports radio and in the afternoon drive slot, and I wanted to bring him on to talk about all of this stuff and what it means for the Cardinals. What it means for the The Rockies what it means for the NL West versus the NL Central, and he joins us now here on CBS Sports Radio. Hey, Chris. Rogie. Well, hello, warrants. Holmes. I'm so glad that you were available to talk about this. I want to know. First of all, because I felt like over the last two off seasons The Cardinals have been chasing Nolan, a Renato and my my writing That assumption? Yes, well, Okay, Well, I don't know if they've been chasing him or if everybody has just been hoping they would go get him. But the two entities have been linked at least the last couple of years, maybe three. Go back three years. Everybody's always talking about Nolan Aaron Otto. What a perfect fit. He would be. They don't have a third baseman their infield prior toe acquiring Goldschmidt. Their infield production just wasn't there, so they got to do something. This guy's a perfect fit. He doesn't wanna be in Colorado anymore. Um Yeah, Why not bring him He plays good defense because they had carpenter Matt Carpenter playing third and he struggles over. I mean, he's fine at 30 is just not. He's not great, and you can tell when he Makes the throw to first like there's this ark in the throw, and sometimes it just beats the runners. Sometimes that it has trouble getting to first base. So there's always this moment where you're like, Is he gonna make this play or not? So now you got a guy who plays that position better than maybe anybody in the game with the exception of Matt Chapman. And now he's he fits perfectly into what they need. So I think the question that I've already been asked before you and I'm assuming you were going to ask me this is m I surprised they did it in the answer is yes, I Two names have been linked. For a long time as I mentioned, but the Cardinals tend to The exception of the Goldsman acquisition. They made that happen, but they tend to fall short of it. You'll be a David price. They fell short on him, bringing him in or are you know, signing him? They fell short on bringing back Jason Heyward. They fell short on Giancarlo Stanton, even though they allegedly had a deal in place. To acquire him. He said. You know what? Miami? Um I'm not gonna let you have what you want. So I'm not gonna take that deal, so they fell short on him as well. So it just kind of felt like This Aaron auto situation was never going to materialize. So quite frankly, I'm a little surprised. They made it happen, but they did it and they should be commended for it. They should and you start looking at like O P s at their base. Over over the last decade or so. You could see why they would want an upgrade in that spot. It feels like with the Cardinals that they've been waiting a little bit for Rainmaker and Goldschmidt, I think fits that Now, when you add the two of those guys, now that you've got your quarters together, this this Cardinals team looks really dangerous to me on a day in day out basis. Well, okay, for I know the The concern is going to be and I don't think people should be worried about it. If you're a Cardinals fan, I really don't think you should worry about the ballpark factors too much. Because yes, he played in Colorado. The numbers could be inflated inflated in Colorado, but the Cardinals have had pretty good luck with guys who have played for the Rockies. And have come over to where they are and have done pretty well there to Larry Walker being one of them Matt Holliday another so there is precedent for them, acquiring players who have done well at Coors Field. Then also come to Busch Stadium, which which plays a. It's about 15th or 16th and baseball. In terms of of, you know, home runs and offense, so it doesn't play big. It doesn't play small. It's right there in the middle. Don't see any reason he can't be productive there. Maybe there's a little bit of a drop off in his production, but I still think he's going to be a pretty darn good, productive player for a while. So you've got him you got Paul Goldschmidt. Who is in his thirties, now well into his thirties and his 2019 full season first season for them was not great. At least it wasn't close to Goldschmidt standards, but it was pretty good. Um, there was a little bit of a rebound last year. But again, that was only two months of the season. So I guess you could kind of keep an eye out for what kind of production they'll get from him. I would imagine it's still gonna be really good. It's still Paul Goldschmidt. He may not give you like a 9 50 or better O P s, but he should be productive. So you've got two guys in the middle of the order. That should drive in a ton of runs for you. If you're the Cardinals, the question is..

850 WFTL
"tend" Discussed on 850 WFTL
"Tending this like before in your fingertips. You're trying not to show but maybe. Oh, There's no value in your eyes when I reach for you. You're starting to the side. Little things that we owe. It makes me just feel like crying something Mm hmm. Hmm. Maybe down on my knees you down on money if Me Lucky's studio way. Really no fun every day. Wow. I said, please. You got to be. Oh, Bring back What Back. Well, bring Dr Yeah. Hey. Yeah. Strikes Come on the sun to set up a time out chasing Okay with you. When I wanna be with you. Where Sit here. With somebody with somebody. What's with you? Yeah. Yeah, baby with her. With a lifetime just released a new trailer for the Whitney Houston and Bobby Kristina. Didn't we almost have it all documentary? It's set to premiere on Lifetime on February. Six. If you want to watch the trailer I got for you on my blogged sonny 1279.

TalkRadio 630 KHOW
"tend" Discussed on TalkRadio 630 KHOW
"Ever met. I have this constant battle with a rubber plant that I've raised from a just a little little tiny guys now about 4 ft, Tall or so. And I fight this battle. I think I over water it and then a couple of leads will turn yellow and fall on the floor. And then I back off, and then I do in on I'm I know I'm loving it to death. Is that sound like a possibility It does can And that's a very probably the number one thing. People have problems with. In their house. Plant. Care is too much care. They set a schedule to water say every Monday or one day of the week. I water on my house plants well, houseplants. Don't follow a schedule. You need your poke your finger and the soil And if it feels dry to the touch, it's timeto water. So it maybe once a week it maybe every 10 days, So you just gotta check plants. That's part of the fun of gardening is you gotta use your finger to check the moisture and then give him a good watering and let them dry out slightly between waterings to prevent yellowing and dropping leaves and things like that tend to accumulate on houseplants. Well, I joined love your comments on this. I went to Amazon. I bought a little moisture meter along probe has a green kind of a green plastic, You know, little meter on the top. And there's only about eight or nine bucks or something. And I'm using that to probe the soil. Do you like those? They fairly accurate or or maybe not. What do you think? Well, they you know, can they aren't a helpful tool and some of them work better than others. So you know you get what you pay for. So keep that in the back of your mind because soil moisture meters can be Correct. So to speak. If they detect high soluble salts are minerals in the soil, So you could Yeah. So you should. You should need to use it in conjunction with the field. You was that it? It could be fairly accurate but also poke your finger in there. That kind of go down, maybe down to the the You know a couple of inches into the soil and feel if there's moisture down there, because that helps just validate different that moisture meter is working correctly, so the meter can be fooled, even in dry soil by excess. Excess salt Salt. Is that what you're saying that exactly? I am saying yes, that can happen. Yeah. So I got to do both. Huh? All right. That's what I thought I'd recommend. Gotta do the finger test. Although guys our age, we don't like to talk about that very much. Do we? Johnny? That's another. Well, that's another subject. Another check that I know. Anyway. Um, Hang on, John. I gotta do a commercial for one of my beloved sponsors here and then we'll take a break and Be back, John Credit or gardening with an altitude guy. I'd love it if you'd call in 3037138255. And and I've never known John to be stump in all these years, But if you have a question About winter gardening or what's happening, and I do of us foliage around my house and maybe getting ready for spring. John is right here three or 37138255, but I want to read an email. From Thomas Eagleton, Eagle Crest heating and Cooling. This is the subject of his email my furnace they installed with little notice several years ago in the other one who suddenly went out of the mist of a terrible Cold spells stops to staying lit. He came out this morning clean the ignition worked on the humidifier. All for 30 bucks. So I guess Brian put a furnace in for Thomas on. Do you know just ages and didn't want to stay lit. You just clean that That igniter and I'm sure that's what happened and is back in business. He wouldn't charge me for the house call just 30 bucks, Thomas says. He's a gym. I found about out about him listening to you on the radio. Well, Brian and Eagle Crest I know is glad to hear that email and I got lots of those testimonies. He's a feeding air conditioning. Furnace guy That is very good at what he does. Since 1983 just what you need when you need it doesn't have a lot of lot of doesn't have any technicians on commission. Don't have to sell you a lot of extra junk. You don't need to, you know, make the overhead and all that just what you need, because he knows you'll have a customer for life. If you just treat you well, many times, you could get a problem solved right over the phone..