35 Burst results for "Teri"

ANGEL LADY Movie Talk : How to Connect with Angels Podcast
"teri" Discussed on ANGEL LADY Movie Talk : How to Connect with Angels Podcast
"I've had

ANGEL LADY Movie Talk : How to Connect with Angels Podcast
"teri" Discussed on ANGEL LADY Movie Talk : How to Connect with Angels Podcast
"Function at all with oh my God. Acute kidney failure and so this is not cute at all. Gosh. If I had waited any longer, she don't know how long they could not work. But if they said if I had waited any longer, it would have been fatal to be in the baby. With timing, I just had to be there. Yes. You had that discovered so that they could take care of it. But then it's one of the reasons why they call kidney disease the silent killer. Yes. Because I didn't know. There was nothing to indicate that my kidneys weren't working. So they immediately put me in hospital. Yeah. And I went on by Alice's. And I was on dialysis for the next 8 months after that. But during that month, that I had to stay in the hospital. It was traumatic. It was very traumatic. I didn't know any of this. I didn't know what to make failure was. I didn't know what dialysis was or what to expect or how it worked. I cleaned the body, and they did not explain. That after they put in the tubes they needed to connect me to the machine that it would start. Like immediately and I fell asleep. They could put me to sleep because of the pregnancy, but I fell asleep. I woke up and I'm in this room by myself. And the dialysis machine back then was his monster. It was like a floor to ceiling with all the coils and blood running through it. Wow. I woke up and I freaked out because I was all by myself. Already scared because I didn't know what the heck was going on. And no one had explained to me that I was going to be attached to this monster machine. And I just yelled out for my hospital room for help, you know, and I just screamed out in this lady came in. And calm me down, and she goes, you know, you're going to be okay. It's all right. They'll put me in a minute and explain things to you. I'm sure. And help you out and do just breathing, calm down. And I'm like, okay, I can do that. I'll wait a minute and see if the doctor comes in. That's what I was waiting for. And she left. Well, nobody knows if she wants. She didn't have a name tag on. But my description of her because I asked for her. She wasn't there on that floor. I am positive. Yes, she was an earth angel that she came in. And let me see her as an earth being to be there to calm me and to help me through that moment. It was quite amazing to have that experience. Oh, Terry, when you described it, I got confirmation. You know, I mean, I just got chills. Yeah. Obviously thought I was hallucinating. They're like, we don't have a nurse like that. All right, so I had to deliver the baby before growing up a transplant. Okay. So she came early. I delivered her and December, and so in January, they had told me after the delivery that the kidneys might get some function back because of the strain of the pregnancy might be diminishing the function. But it never came back. And I'll stay on dialysis for 8 months. Oh gosh. And they started testing family members, you know, people that would be able to donate to me and the time at that hospital. They were only doing better transplants. So they hadn't really dealt with live transplants at that one. Maybe one or two, but all of it was cadaver. So they started testing my family, and they found three matches, and they were all brothers, so they had what they called perfect matches. Where everything just kind of lines up. It's like, yeah, this kid needs in your body would go really, really well. And that brother at first he said that he would donate, but then he changed his mind, which, you know, that happens because it's a huge commitment. And you're giving a part of your body, it's a spare part sure. You know, we have two, and we only need one. Yeah. But there's that always that fear, I think, would donators that what it's something happens to my kidney that I have. So it's a huge commitment, and he had done children. So as soon as I did find out that, okay, he changed his mind. One of the other ones it matched, said, I'll be there tomorrow. And he came down from Kentucky, and they did all the testing, because they put the donor through some rigorous testing. Just to make sure they're able to give that body part. So on Dubai 7, 1975, a humble 48 years ago. Wow. We were wheeled back to the operating room together. And it's kind of interesting when the grass plant happens. The whole staff at the hospital just kind of pause and celebrate what's going to happen. So the halls are lined up the people and the willing, the two of us down the hallway and I don't remember this part with the say we were holding hands to where we were together at the gurneys down the hallway. And the kidney took immediately. It was just a beautiful match for it to be in my body. You know, according to their testing, it wasn't a perfect match by it was the perfect match for me. Yeah, and so it started working immediately. It has still worked fantastic every time that I go in for testing. Let's see how the function is. Some of the doctors tell me your kidney functions better than mine. So my body has adapted it as its own and Syria, I feel like it is such a miracle to have this second chance at life. And I'm grateful every day when I wake up and grateful for another day live. Oh, gosh. I know you are. That's part of your beauty. Their marriage ended, and you

Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier
Deadly Passion: How an Obsession Led to Murder
"Once. Esther and jim retired. Esther insisted on moving south to swim. Washington soon after the move to swim esther learned. She had cancer and she died two years later. Esther's death hit jim hard and he decided to move back to alaska where he would be closer to his son. He bought a house in wa- silla on golden dale drive and his neighbors across the street were hanged dawson and his eighth wife. Thirty year. Old terry according to neighbors wheeler became good friends with the dawson's and was a frequent dinner guests at their house. Hank and terry dawson suffered marital problems in the summer of nineteen ninety-three and hank temporarily moved out of the house to live in anchorage. After hake walked out on her teri immediately called her neighbor. Jim wheeler to cry on his shoulder. Perhaps terry considered her relationship with jim platonic but friends say. Jim fell hard for terry. Jim apparently could not keep his emotions to himself because he told anyone who would listen that he was in. Love with terry dawson. Meanwhile terry and hank decided to work on their marriage and hank move back into their wasila home over the nineteen ninety-three labor day weekend by this time jim wheelers feelings for had grown into an obsession and he told several people that he could not stand. Think of terry and hank in bed together. Hank died in the explosion. Only four weeks after returning to live with terry in

The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"teri" Discussed on The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"Question totally terry. Thank you so much for talking to me. I rip good to see you. You're so smart. I hope you stay healthy. And i appreciate your time and and talking to me about this first of all talk to you about anything because i love you and it's such a joy to be able to kind of walk back down certain parts of our super long memory lane. I'm really excited to hear what everybody else has to say too. I know i know and we really cool. Because i think i get these questions asked all the time and so it's nice that we were able to share it so i love that you're doing this and i'm absolutely the real to be a part.

The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"teri" Discussed on The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"Must see. Tv became a big thing for nbc. Where do you feel like the office fit into that. Legacy of must see tv comedy on. Nbc l. Maybe you know this is Arrogant but were integral to the nbc. Thursday night lineup. I mean we are integral to the conversation about what a seminal. Nbc comedy is. I absolutely believe that. I believe that. We defied all odds of becoming a successful comedy. Who would have ever thought we were going to do. Two hundred twenty episodes. I mean think about it. We got to five episodes pickup and then we got a thirteen episode pickup really. We didn't get a full season so not only define all of those odds but also kind of redefining. What comedy was on television. And introducing people onto a world Might felt different but they also felt like it was so familiar to them and that you could really because people come to comedies for two reasons really to laugh their faces off and to fall in love with a cast a family a workplace. You know but he comedy whatever it is and i think having the extensive cast that we had i mean what did we have towards the end of the run or two characters fifteen garissa. Who does that and every single one of you had people who just loved you. Everybody had their fans. I mean we got our tv land future comedy classic in season. Three or four or something. It's right here yes. So what year is that. Not a date on how we hold on. Now there's a date it's probably on the other side otis. Two thousand and eight thousand and eight so we were classic already in season three to four four and the fact that we were considered that and look at it. You know now. I mean i have young kids. I went to a kid's bar mitzvah last year. They're authored in fourteen. I was accosted. It was like i was a celebrity at this bar mitzvah because these kids were obsessed with the show and we always said we had to hit it hit demographic from the beginning that was under eighteen but now we have the show has had a life and then another life and another life and i really do believe that we are are part of that conversation. What do you remember about the decision to end. The show pain hated it. It was one of the worst memories that i have of our beautiful love story. It's always hard when you're making decisions about when you move forward on the show and when you don't from a business standpoint which i can't respond to because i wasn't on that side of the business at that point but it was really fucking hard. It was hard all the conversations we had you know from from being executive producer sitting with our cast talking to you know the studio the networking. It's kind of a blur now. Because i tried to push it out of my consciousness but it was it was excruciatingly painful and I think it hurt a lot of us. I don't know if really talked about it. But when we shop the last episode. I was so emotionally and physically exhausted. I think i cried for the last but when we were all taking that very last shot i have a book that nbc may press. I'm sure you've looked at it and my face. Is this big. I'm bright red. And i am crying. Might i couldn't believe that it was over. I felt like we had so much more to do. And it was over and took a long time to have a lot of my own kind of internal things about the show that you know. I'll you deal with as a professional. It was excruciatingly hard. Yeah what are you most proud of about to show. How do i put that in one thing dude. Most proud that every single one of us that were involved in the first season of our show. We came to work every day and said if we're only making six total episodes let's make the best episodes that we know how to make and let's come in here and do the work and do it with love and do it with everything that we have do first cells you know and we all show up on that lot every single day. And may i getting shot this and made an incredibly beautiful show. And it was for all of us whether you're in the cast where the crew whether you're in accounting whether you are in props catering whatever everybody came and just like we were on our own island. I think that we all love did so much. And everybody came and did their job and did really well and for each other. I could tell you a million other things. But i think i'm most proud of that being given that opportunity and making our family you cry. I hope here trying to not say anything. I wanted to get your audio there. No it was great. Yeah i Everybody that came in. i played them a clip. And we don't have that ability here. God gannet no but you'll know it's the last line of the show. It's jenna sorry pam. There's beauty in ordinary things. Isn't that kind of the point. I feel like greg wrote that episode. He wrote that last line. that's what he thought about. What did you think it was about. I thought it was. I thought it was too. I thought it was taking something that could have been the most simple and uninteresting idea about a group of people you know going to work in a dying business and turning it into something. That was so much bigger than that was bigger than them. It was bigger than us. All of us yeah. It was finding joy and using opportunities to just make people laugh. You know and be able to escape the maybe the doldrums of their own life and go be with their friends all of those little beautiful jams that all of you guys were able to create every episode. I mean we can still probably go back through. And i'll see things i never saw before and i've seen those things a million times and now is the whole idea you know. Everything was calculated to homer. Simpson was sitting in the. you know. Bullpen all those. Everything was perfectly calculated just to for fun of people being able to find the little easter eggs. That's another thing about greg. He's he's like a grown child. It was uc spoke. He did these things with his hands because it was so fun. You know he always just wanted people to have fun and joy. Even if you're an adult you could still just be a kid. Answer a.

The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"teri" Discussed on The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"First minute and a half of the show so it was having to maneuver a little bit differently as becoming a kind of network person as opposed to his partner on the shell fascinating. Yeah i never put it within. That context that at that moment the people that he was having to do this. Push poll for that episode. Was you guys. I was the person. That would call the network greg or the studio and say he's not doing that or we're not changing miss or 'cause he did not like those confrontational moments and i always said you want confrontation. Just bring it over to mama. And i'll take care of it now. I'm the person on the other end of the phone getting you know. Will we want to do this. We need to do that. You know and giving notes you know on scripts was crazy but it wasn't. It was a you know. My instincts didn't change his knew. That was way smarter than me. And i you know i could. Only you know the one thing that greg said to me way back in the beginning when we first started this relationship and he started developing. The show was what's important to me is that you tell me how you feel. How does the episode make you feel. How did the relationships of the characters in this episode make you feel you know. Do you feel moved enough to feel motivated enough. Do you feel and so. I would look at the scripts and just think about. How did it make me feel. I didn't look at it and say what all the structure isn't so much blow la roses about. Are we accomplishing this. Really quiet moment between jim pam. Is there something going on with the accountants in the in the corner that were peaking in on you know but the rest of the offices insane so those little things. Are you feeling them. Are you picking up on. Them is really about how it made me feel and i. That's how i continued to produce from that point on how to characters.

The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"teri" Discussed on The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"You were in the room for the george. If not all of the casting sessions. Was there anyone who walked in right away. That was ultimately cast that you went. That's the person john. Steve steve's different story. he didn't really audition. It was a really interesting dish process. Because i don't think any one of us had ever really kind of been through anything like that before because actors would come in and read a scene and they would improv. You know in greg with throw ridiculous little lines out and say go. Tell me you just got into your refrigerator this morning or disease really kind of weird random things and we saw so many actors greg myself can howard ben allison and phyllis would be in the conference room. Reveille for eight or ten hours a day. Just just a constant and allison. She had such a deep knowledge of you know standups second cities in groundlings and people bet we'd never seen before and so there were so many people that were so interesting to us and i think as we whittled things down and he became all of you. We knew it was all of you because everybody didn't fit and mold that we were looking for but they brought something special and beautiful. It was like making a puzzle. Everybody just fit in so beautifully. For jim and pam and dwight etc talking a little bit about doing screen filming them in the office as opposed to doing regular studio in network test. How rare was that. At that time we were the i. If i remember correctly and the reason was very it was selfish on our part because a we thought they will never make this show to actors because at that time actors used to walk into the president's office and there would be twenty people behind the president and two people would be asked to perform a scene or something with all these eyeballs on them and it was the most unnatural process. Anybody could ever imagine. And then i remember when i went to nbc and became a programmer. And we were asking people to do that. I counted is not wanna do that. I want to put people on tape because it doesn't you don't get the real person because they're so busy performing for room and so so yeah i think we were the first of its kind and i think because of that it started kind of shift the way people were auditioning do you remember phyllis course know i mean reading and anything about the discussion around casting her. Yes i mean. A part of the process was either she would run the camera or alison would run the camera and nfl ascendant. Feel like reading. Phyllis would read and then fill started reading more and more and remember if it was ken. That said i or greg but said god we. She has to be in the show. She's so funny. And we all said. Oh my god yes and i remembered us asking alison. How do you feel about if we steal villains. And she said oh my god you know yes tweak. Her and i remember us telling her and it was. It was pretty amazing. What do you remember so thinking about the office and what that show was the styled no laugh track all that. What's landscape of television. The dodge show was born into like what was popular what was done on broadcast. Tv at that time frame fails cheers. All of this. Seminal comedies that were so smart but the thing about that time is i. Remember that ratings. Were everything eighteen to thirty four. Was everything you had to have. You know a twenty share or something so having five million people or six million people watching your show announced harder you know it had to be twenty million and our audience was very very concentrated in the eighteen to thirty four and it was very hundred k. Plus but it was small. And so that's the challenge was. How do we keep ourselves on the air when a pilot tested worse than i think any other pilot had ever tested on nbc. Besides i think seinfeld didn't test well either and You know we only had six episodes to prove ourselves and we were kind of at that time also scheduled in kind of the okay. You're dead it was in march. And that's when people said will wire shows starting to air after the prime time fall in midseason shows and so we kinda felt like they were just getting rid of us right so the pilot bombed when it was tested. Were you concerned about that. Yes because it was. You know at that time if something tests really bad it's do you know and if it's not deal a good luck trying to convince your network that it's a pilot that they should bet on. And so if not for kevin reilly show would not have a life. I really do believe that. He put his career on the line. So yeah we're very concerned. And i think part of the reason why tested so cordless just because it was something that people never seen before and those groups that come in to do the testing you know they get paid seventy five dollars or fifty dollars or whatever and then they judge your material based on twenty minutes of something and tell you if it's good or it's bad that was a real learning experience for me and something that i thought god if i could i think when i went to nbc. We didn't care so much about testing. We care more about instincts. We cared about the shows that we loved monitor program so i think that came into a full circle as we went from producer to programmer. That testing serves a certain purpose. But it shouldn't be the be all and all of the success of something right. We'll speaking of that. How did your relationship to the office change. When you move to nbc. The only thing that changed was that i could be an even larger advocate for it inside the network. Not that i needed to be because at that point you know we were. We were just a well oiled machine. It was interesting. Because then i became greg's executives and to switch from being partner and fighting for certain things over here and now being you know had programmer having to fight for things that i knew were in the best interest of the network without interfering with the integrity of the show. And here's a perfect example. We wanted the office to to air after the super bowl and We needed to make sure that if whoever was watching the super bowl had never seen the office before that we had to do something completely outrageous to let people say. Oh my god. I have never seen this show. I love this on staying. And greg had pitched a cold open and i remembered. Say you know this is kind of cool but getting a little pressure from giraffe band to make sure that we have some celebrities in there. You know we never had celebrities on our show. It was always about. You know making sure that it felt like we were dropping into a world of just human beings and in greg's brilliant. Fashion found a way to bring in celebrities without having celebrities. Feel like they were really a part of the office and i challenged him to do the most outrageous called open that he could. You know people were only going to see the.

The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"teri" Discussed on The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"Really was about the love that created.

The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"teri" Discussed on The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"Were the most incredible cheerleaders one could ever have. I mean they were absolutely dream partners and they literally just sat back and liked fans fell in love with the show. I'll never forget. And i'm sure you'll remember it was kind of a blur but when we won the emmy and we were all on the stage and greg reached out and said ricky and steven. I know you're out there somewhere. You know because of you. You're really. I can't remember exactly what he said. And then i remembered. Watching the telecast fat and ricky and steven they were so proud but got so shy and didn't want to take any of the credit for it. It was beautiful and they never had egos about it to say this is our thing and more lending it to you. This is our thing. And we're giving this humor trusting you to go and do your own thing. Yeah so at what point in the process when you were working with revelead. Did you become aware of the office. The british office. I mean it had to be in the beginning. Because ben had the rights he had already secured them. And i remember ben showing it to me and said look at this and tell me what you think and i remember watching said. Oh my god. I have to. We have to do this. I don't know what the fuck we're doing. We have to do this. I was absolutely obsessed so is very early on and then then we put the time in to try to find the rights voice and in the conversations the bennett had with ra. Greg's name obviously came up. And i'm sure he probably told you this but he just would not watch it. I mean i think he sat on it for three weeks or something like that. And then finally ban talking ari and said is this guy ever watched us. And i think ari said the same thing to greg. Are you gonna fucking watch this. you know. because they're gonna move on a man greg. I think watched it over that weekend and came back and said oh my god i hope to god. They didn't move on. Because i have to do this. That's awesome. What was your initial impression of him. Introvert brilliant. What are the nicest people i've ever matt. Collaborative open you know. Unwelcome didn't bring any ego respected us and me. Even if he knew how much i'd ever produced in my life and immediately just treated us like his partners fell in love with them immediately. And that my god we get so lucky. This man is just bringing you know greg. He's thoughtful. He is tactile in his hand like he thinks before he. You know there's a lot ruminating in here before a with sharon idea but it was incredibly thoughtful in very very respectful format in a regain stephen and cautious because we all knew we were stepping into gigantic pile of. Are you kidding me that you're actually going to attempt to do this. So yeah i. I only have them most and still the fond memories of greg. Was there anybody else that you feel like you seriously considered or was greg it. Is it ricky and steven told me both separately that what sold them was that greg saw it is a love story. Yeah it was a. It was a love stories about humanity human behavior. It was all about people. It was all about heart. The thing that we can all relate to is that in some form or fashion we've been in a workplace where you're not necessarily happy about the work that you're doing but you fall in love with the people it's love and hate relationship. They become family they become. You know you see them more typically in your life than you do your family members so it.

The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"teri" Discussed on The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"A lot of the cast. I will say look we do really still you know. Keep in touch air like Our fantasy football league is still going like fifteen years later. So john and rain and me and some of the crew is good at this year. Exactly but you know. Oscar and angela and rain and i and john and that's part of the thing too about this co businesses. That people are reaching out mar. You know my birthday was on monday. And i spent the entire. Dan's mean the entire day. You know but people you. You're learning two things one. We're working harder to stay connected with people and then you're also learning crew wants to stay connected to you. You know fathers. I heard from people like others day. Like what nobody ever reasons why. I'm not sure their account like everyone's reaching out. I don't know that's been really great. Okay so you were so omnipresent through all of the beginning so if you go all the way back now's nineteen years ago. Yeah how did you meet ben. When did you start working for reveille. What was the transition there. I'm at ben in two thousand. I two roommates at the time. One of my roommates who had known for some time who i think he dated for one second ryan introduced him to our other remain now. Ben was still working William morris. I think he was still in london and he would fly out to l. a. And he would be out here every month and he would stay for a couple of weeks whatever so she introduced one remain. Introduces him to the other. They start dating a true ben fashion. He is to stay at the lerma towns. I think it was for three weeks at a time. Either she would stay the taj with him or he would stay in our duplex. And so i started to see him a lot and got to know him just socially and at that point my roommate that he was dating and knee. I just left. Icm and i. We started a skincare company. I would be up all day all night. Making all skin care products in my kitchen. And i was talking about you know what my experience was that i see him in. Whatever we just snow each other really well and it was in march. I think of two thousand one. He pulled an all nighter. I think at the oscars came home. I'm up at four or five in the morning making these things. He comes walking in his oswal. Tang corals suits right and We just started talking to you. Said you know what. I'm i'm gonna start my own production company i've been bringing formats to the states and i really just want to have more of a creative experience. I wanna be producer. And when i do that i want to work for me and i said okay what i have no idea what you're talking about but okay ban talk to me next year because i didn't take him seriously but he kept bringing up and he always said to me. You know i really appreciate your work ethic. I like the experience that you have. I have no idea what you'd be doing yet. But i know that i needed be a part of my company so cut to next year where he made the deal with vivendi. Universal was berry diller at the time and he bri- howard owns mark. Coupes and chris grant from new york they were all still in new york and he said i'm bringing any street guys didn't know them. We have a bungalow at universal. So i want you to go and set up. The office. And i need a house. Go find me house. This is no surprise. No and we will be there in two months or something like that. So what do i do. I go on a lot. I get the whole entire bungalow up ready to go. All they had to do was walk in and pick up a pen and go to work phones. Everything i'm navigated my way through the entire universal every department you could possibly imagine anyway they come out and we all just learned how to produce just the five of us you would have thought that one hundred people worked at that production company and it was five and so ben mark and howard. You know we're focusing. Mostly on international in had nashville star was being developed. And because loser just kind of you know looking at formats and kind of touching on what that stuff was going to be which i really didn't have any interest in and we have the format to coupling that was our first Show that we started to produce in scripted television. And so i just kinda cut my teeth in that process. I would just sit in a corner you know in a room enlisted the conversations i went to every i did everything with ben. I went everywhere on every phone. Call do everything you could possibly imagine. That's really how i learned is listening to executives listening to studios listening to creative people. I certainly had deep familiarity with script. Because that's how i was raised at. I see him. And then i just each day. I just kept immersing myself deeper and deeper in that process and that's really how i built the scripted department at reveille. What did you learn from your experience on coupling that you felt like impacted bringing the office over. We learned a couple of things. One you know there was so much pressure on that show because it was being coined the next france and we realized that oh shit. That's a big problem because people are going to have an expectation that we are trying to be the next france which we had no intention of being so learning about how critical marketing is a show and also we pretty much adhered to every script from the british version. Instead of kind of making it are on and so we also learned that. That stuff doesn't necessarily translate so. I think we learned that going into that process. We needed to have a voice we needed to. Have somebody come in that you know understood the rhythms and the uniqueness of what that show was had to bring in their own voice and make their own rights even actually said to me that he felt like his greatest contribution was actually one thing he said. Ricky was step back like they know culturally about what's happening in america org rhythms or specific sensibilities or whatever so the more we could stay out of it the better. I mean the most beautiful thing. About what ricky stephen did was exactly that they came over met the cast spent time with greg and just talked about the things that we really cared about. How did you create these characters. What made you want to be in this world. How did these rhythms like all of the things that were more important instead of. Tell us exactly how you get the shot or whatever it was really more about all the impetuses on creating the show and then they.

The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"teri" Discussed on The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"Brian baumgartner but i bet you guessed that too because you are all very smart as my wonderful guest. Today teri weinberg tat was a transition. Now terry was an executive producer of the office and a longtime partner of ben silverman which truly makes her a saint. Let's be honest but she was definitely there from the very beginning in the room where it happened as they say the room were. They grew the office from tiny seed of an idea into the crazy popular. Show that it is today as you will hear all about momentarily terry was involved from day one in the casting and in really the creation of the show. But what's even more fascinating to me. Is that in the later. Years of the show terry jumped over to work on the network. Side at nbc. So she saw things from the inside and then also from the network side and how the network was dealing with the show. She has a really unique perspective on the whole story of the office. And this conversation kicks off another miniseries that we're doing highlighting just some of the many talented hilarious Super smart women who made the office what. It is both in front of the camera and behind the scenes. this is a great bunch of interviews. If i do say so myself so i am. I'm really excited to share them all with you. So let's get started shall we. Today with teri weinberg..

The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
"teri" Discussed on The Office Deep Dive with Brian Baumgartner
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The Podcast On Podcasting
"teri" Discussed on The Podcast On Podcasting
"Tate is that its native content so instead of saying play this on spotify or play this on audible or play this on whatever pandora. It's going to be native native and it's from my experience in social media. Every platform wants native content. So that's why spotify even though what's that guy's name i never remember because it doesn't really matter paid somebody millions of dollars to go to go only on that platform so that it was only native. Additionally there's something called stream yard and it allows you to be in like eight different places at once or something like this where you can be on linked in and youtube and this facebook page and this facebook group and some other places all at the same time and those platforms are starting to say. Oh my gosh when stream yard comes to me. I'm gonna shut it down. Facebook is like i'm gonna shut it down tick talks like i'm going to shut it down because it's possible that there on all these other platforms and that's not going to help me at all. They want native content so they favor native content. So that i think is critically important. It helps it become more searchable. If you're a podcast or and you're one of the first to this platform in your industry say you're a real estate investor and all the other real estate people haven't even gotten there. Say your doctor. And all the other physicians haven't even gotten there. Say you're the podcast on podcasting and the other podcast host haven't gotten on amazon yet amazon alexa on this voice platform. It's critically important for me to be the first one. But it's not going to be just my regular podcast is it terry. You said these are shorter clips. That are only going to be on that platform. Can you tell us a little bit more about that correct. So i think there's a couple of things just to clarify their with what you're saying number one is when you set up a flash briefing. Yes you can have it on amazon. Alexa i mean that's the whole point of the reaping but at the same time that flash briefing can actually be distributed to other channels as well so for example my flash briefing. That is native to amazon alexa. That is on the amazon alexa platform. I actually have it available as a podcast as a traditional podcast as well it. Just a very short podcast. One to two minutes in length and people can subscribe to that. So i give my audience options now. Having said that the flash briefings the typical listener of a flash briefing will usually subscribe to about five to six flash briefings as part of their the personal catalog. They're curated list of flash briefings. And i've served my audience and i've asked them. How long do you want your flash briefings to be when you're listening to a flash briefing and most people will say around two minutes in length so i think that's the sweet spot now. The amazon limitations on a foster leaving is actually much higher than that you could if you wanted to create a flash briefing. That's up to nine minutes and like that's the limit. But here's the thing if you think about it from the listeners perspective if they're subscribing to potentially five or six of their favorite flash briefings and you are creating flash briefings that are nine minutes in length..

BBC World Service
Europe Floods: Death Toll Rises as Devastation Is Revealed
"Death toll from flooding in northwestern Europe has climbed to at least 180 Teri Schultz reports that many more people are still missing as waters in Belgium and parts of Germany slowly start to recede. More bodies are being discovered. Entire villages have been devastated by last week's torrents and continuing rain means the threat of more overflowing rivers and burst dams has not yet passed. In Belgium. The army has been brought in to help with rescue and evacuation in four of the country's 10 provinces. Tuesday will be a day of mourning in Belgium for the more than two dozen people known to have died so far. German officials say they will urgently begin work on a package of emergency financial aid, with the immediate need estimated at more than $350 million and longer term rebuilding expected to cost billions. For NPR News. I'm Teri Schultz,

Morning Edition
EU Unveils Sweeping Climate Change Plan
"In parts of Germany through tomorrow. The European Union is unveiling a sweeping new climate strategy focused on slashing greenhouse gas emissions. As Teri Schultz reports the EU plan includes a number of policies aimed at making the continent carbon neutral. EU Commission President Ursula Vanderlei in says the next 10 years will be key in the effort to save the planet. She says the block has made it legally binding on governments to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 55% from 1990 levels by the year 2030. Our targets are now written into Europe's first ever climate law. So we are no longer discussing if but rather how to wean ourselves off fossil fuels. The new package of measures is expected to include attacks on items made outside the EU that generate high emissions during their manufacturing process. It may also include a ban on sales of new diesel cars in

Millennial to Millionaire Podcast
"teri" Discussed on Millennial to Millionaire Podcast
"And that's where. I actually tell my students to start when we opened an account. We we use Excuse me we use a broker. Call trade station right now. And then some of the students are using brokers but with train station. You can actually open an account with five hundred dollars and then trade in their simulator and trade with fake money. I think that's the best way to start learning trade in the fake account in practice. And then as you become better and better and see your returns in your consistency than you put more money into your bank account so you don't actually have to start with a lot then. Another thing i get is with terry. It's gonna take me so much time. I don't have time to sit in front of my computer and watch the screen. But the truth is we actually have the The broker is on your cell phone so the way that i trade is a trade a little bit in the morning when the when the stock market i opens and then went out and this is when i had a job. I know a lot of you all have jobs so i would trade in the morning and make a meeting with myself about thirty minutes. When the stock market opened justice. See how things are going. Then i would go about my job. you know. run the school. Do do all the principal things. At lunchtime i would check my cell phone again. Justice see how the stocks are are going. It was still okay and the not check one more time around the end of the trading day for the market and then at night. That's when i would do my homework. Which is looking at charts putting in my buyer and seller levels. Where i'd wanna get into the stock or get out of the stock. I'd look at what other company they're doing check on the news of my stocks so it actually doesn't take a lot of time especially as you get better and better as a traitor. Most of your work is a little bit at night to kind of prepare and then during the day. You're just checking and then as you become even better trader. He's been like two hours a day and then it goes to like two to three hours a week. Just checking your stocks so like that that excuse. He actually doesn't take a lot of time and you're not going to be staring at a computer screen the whole time. That's not that's not how we trade and then another myth that comes up. a lot is I think i'm not smart enough like it's gonna take a lot of math and a lot of You know like things that i just don't have and and that's actually not true. Either i think. A lot of millennials. A lot of engines e- everybody has good business sense. If you have like good kind business savvy you know when the fine a good deal you can go into the store and go to the clearance section than. That's the kind of savvy you'll need when trading stocks because it's really a negotiation between buyers and sellers like always think of it like at. My family is nigerian. And when we go to the market in nigeria. We go to buy cloth and we never pay full price. The sale the person selling cloth is going to tell you she wants to sell it for whatever high price you as the buyer. You buy it for that. You haggle you negotiate. That's what you're actually doing in the stock market to it's a real market with you negotiating between buyers and sellers so that's a couple of the midst that i hear out there. Oh and another one. And then i'll get off my soapbox 'cause i know it's a hit these because i know that people worry about them. Another one is teri. It's a gamble. Have you heard that when payers people like. Oh my god i can do. Because you'll be gambling. Exactly like i could lose all my money..

All Things Considered
EU Plans Summer Opening for Vaccinated Tourists
"Travelers have been fully vaccinated may be allowed into Europe this summer. Teri Schultz reports the European Union is considering a proposal to ease restrictions for non essential travel among those who have been vaccinated for covert 19. The latest recommendation from the European Commission would allow tourism by everyone who has received vaccinations approved by the block. Which includes AstraZeneca, Johnson and Johnson, Madonna and Fizer. People coming from countries with a very low infection rates would also be allowed to travel. Even if they haven't had their shots. Regardless of the EU wide proposal, Individual governments still have the right to enforce their own rules, such as requiring negative tests at their borders.

BBC World Service
Czech Republic Expels 18 Russian Envoys, Accuse Moscow Over Ammunition Depot Blast
"European Union foreign ministers are to discuss the Czech Republic's claims that Russian agents We're involved in a deadly explosion of stored ammunition in 2014 Prague in Moscow, have expelled each other's diplomats. Teri Schultz. Reports. Neto says it stands by the Czech government in a diplomatic spat with Moscow after Prague announced links between Russian intelligence and the depot blast that killed two people. Czech police are searching for two men they say were in the country around that time and use the same names as those accused of poisoning former Russian spy Sergei Scruple and his daughter in the UK in

Get Up!
What Should the Atlanta Falcons Do With the 4th Pick?
"Talk about another quarterback order player Who people these days. Certainly no. and that's matt ryan about that for a transition Terrific quarterback for very long time. 2016 was his best year was the mvp of the league with the falcons and took that team all the way to the super bowl and then from that point forward it has been sued of a steady decline for the team despite making the postseason in two thousand seventeen. They've won just eighteen games over the last three years and with that regression the falcons might hit the reset button in this draft with ryan being almost thirty six. They have a new head coach. And arthur smith they have the fourth pick. Overall general manager is teri faulk no and he said quote. We wanna stack good quarterbacks. Its prime time to do it. When you have a player like matt ryan because when you can get in the white quarterback you don't have that pressure play them right away so it opens up so many possibilities and we have to make sure we're evaluating those positions and we feel good about what we where we are there a lot of different ways to take that it certainly what i would say if among other things i wanted someone to come and try and trade for my fourth pick in this draft so teddy. I'm giving it to you directly here if you were the falcons right now. Are you looking to bring in players to help matt ryan try and win a championship again or are you looking to draft his eventual replacement. Said like i said about the smokescreen season. There you go right there you make everyone think that you're okay with draft a quarterback in developing under matt ryan. But you gotta take advantage of the quarterback desperation which is in this draft and everyone one maybe sneak up if they're guy falls to four and go ahead and get him because i think they should build and they need to usually head coaches come in. And they'll want to stack pile not quarterbacks but draft picks in terms of building a foundation model for their team so i would say definitely take advantage of the fourth overall pick trade down. Try to see if you can get some building.

The Takeaway Weekend
More Covid-19 Vaccine Production Sites Have Been Approved in the E.U.
"Approved three additional facilities to produce vaccines for Coben 19. Only about 10% of people in the European Union have received the first toast compared with 22% in the United States. Teri Schultz reports. The EU blames part of its slow vaccine roll out on a lack of supply. The European Medicines Agency has granted its approval for additional production sites in Germany, the Netherlands and Switzerland to help with the shortfall in vaccines. A new facility in Marburg, Germany, will join one and Poor's Belgium for producing the Fizer by on tech vaccine. The active ingredient in the AstraZeneca shot will now be produced in the Dutch city of Lighten, joining three other facilities and Madonna will add new manufacturing capacity in this Switzerland. European regulators have also approved allowing the visor vaccine to be transported and stored at lower temperatures than previously authorized. While this will reduce the life span of the doses, it will make it possible for pharmacists to keep the vaccines in their freezers and is expected to aid the distribution campaign for NPR news. I'm Teri Schultz in

BBC World Service
Countries across Europe suspend use of AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine over blood clot fears
"More countries around the world are suspending AstraZeneca's vaccine based on fears that they cause blood clots. In Brussels, Teri Schultz reports that the European Medicines Agency says it's ongoing investigation has not found any such connection. After a preliminary review of claims AstraZeneca vaccinations have caused blood clots in some recipients. Head of the European Medicines agency Immer Cook says that's not born out by the evidence at this point, but presence there is no indication that vaccination has caused these conditions. They have not come up in mechanical trials, and they're not listed as known or expected side events with this vaccine, Cook says. Final results of what she describes as a rigorous analysis of the data will be available on Thursday and then the agency will see if it needs to act. But in the meantime, she says, the health risks of not having a Corona virus vaccine are more dangerous than the possibility of developing blood clots. For NPR News. I'm Teri Schultz in Brussels.

MTR Podcasts
"teri" Discussed on MTR Podcasts
"Are related. Because they always students work as much as the. I need a break. You get a here home alone so late. I'm like okay. let me just do some work caramel. I'm wondering every day. But now i being ninety fiance that saw i saw the original movie. Heaven washed a series yet. But it's on my list really cool like really cool and slowest music artists. Why all this year. In late redmond wash before they quarantine our own other alleged. Tv honestly is so sad aside. I'm usually articles looking at work online or writing so my enjoy doing things that are involved like no creative who My tv how bad so bad pads you quarantine so you say do nothing. I share birthday requests love. So that means it's a quality thing they're secure fan gang. Yeah i mean i. It is bad. The work thing is bad because i'm logged in all the time. So sometimes i have a weird sleep schedule. Lake finally got under wraps so sometimes. I might wake before morning. I'll go out. Take a walk. Do mind magnum the normal waited cardio the morning and then come back and it's like five o'clock and this i guess i'll log in the next ten hours. It's like i need to have better. But i think it's also asked this question like last a better is exactly but i feel mighty were because there's nothing else for i can't go to gallery year in like or walker but myself. I can't like get on the market. Dc you or travel or just like the crown so let me just work in malecki for black people. This is how currency there's just like grinding. And hopefully this time next year will be able to give you a better. Hold you to that this time. This year mark. Hi terry okay okay. So the less no actually. I have one more question. You'd have a baltimore questioning. They'll be that so crystal bowl this one for me if you could. How do you see art specifically in baltimore moving forward in the next. Let's say five. Maybe ten years i see both somewhere which becoming more When i say relevant. I don't mean that it's irrelevant now to more of late. Heavy hitter Artwork in the united states at alz more. Now i don boss for to become new york are in l. a. would lose our soul but i want people with money to collect where from artists and i think that will happen I think that all somewhere like anything rated what he shot. I assume recently for klein. Incredible lewis coverage Our magazine that came out yesterday were three baltimore's on the forbes thirty under thirty list like you can't ignore you work in the city anymore. So i think in the next years. We'll see that continuing moments and building also closures or with being shifting because of covid whole to see more diy basis popping up that are black owned your represented things. Moore's spaces that are riding by people for people in the city which are necessary. I think it's possible. That's what i tell me about. Act that's optimistic. And i think i agree with you. Mostly okay. the last question. I had this is generally the ball. Buster question so i want to combine it so you have to include at least one place to eat and in this scenario if we're not encoded so you have a friend that's visiting town. What are three things that you tell them that you have to do. Let's say as long weekend three things that you have to baltimore. Put me on five times not cova tunnels where everything's chill. Okay let me detail free. I'm gonna pay pay somebody that is coming to the city. The only three things one has to be fooled by the way. I wanna okay gene. Okay let me take close said Stinks so food we go. There's only three. We're gonna the stove minutes in and they have tuesday night. Verdant begin so we can get hamburger several been good and i make release geometry suit and then crown. I haven't read. That's fine only been will probably you know they're like being space awesome. What kind. I mean probably are probably a gallery for some of my favorite species are like sixty visits So we would go to allow resort which district current as we would go there and there's usually a it would always be on openings. Illich shows were so it'd be easy to kind of leg so see some art graziers detail and he'll be there for my ten until like one forty five. I like this. I like this stealing any now. We you.

Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me!
COVID-19: EU leaders divided over vaccine passports to allow European travel this summer
"European Union countries. They're planning to create a system to allow people who've been vaccinated against the coronavirus to travel, possibly in time for summer, Teri Schultz reports. There's a lot of excitement about the plan and a lot of unknowns. The president of the European Commission, a medical doctor herself, says there are scientific as well as technical questions about whether a vaccination certificate can safely allow freedom of movement. Ursula von der Lion notes. While early indications are encouraging, it's not yet certain that vaccinated people cannot transmit the coronavirus. It's unclear how long immunity less and the appearance of new variants poses

Morning Edition
ICC convicts Ugandan rebel commander of war crimes
"Ah, Former commander of the Ugandan rebel group. The Lord's Resistance Army, is facing a potential life sentence after being convicted today at the International Criminal Court in The Hague. His Teri Schultz reports. He was found guilty of dozens of war crimes and crimes against humanity. Dominic Ongwen was found guilty of 61 of 70 counts of atrocities committed against internally displaced people in Uganda between 2002 in 2005. The charges include torture, sexual enslavement and forced pregnancy on Gwen's defense, argued he, too, was a victim since he'd been abducted by the L. A area as a child and forced to become a soldier. The court said there was no evidence his crimes have been committed under

Snap Judgment
Faced With Vaccine Shortages, EU Set to Impose Export Controls
"The European Union introduces export controls today on Corona virus vaccines, forcing producers to receive permission to ship doses out of the block but is Teri Schultz reports, the EU was backed off an earlier plan to include regulating shipments across the Irish border, with vaccine producers lagging behind in filling pre orders by the European Union. Block has moved to stop companies from sending supplies anywhere else. First that includes to the UK now that it's no longer an EU member. The Brexit deal kept open trade flows between EU member Ireland and the U. K's Northern Ireland with a clause allowing that to be suspended in certain cases Friday night without consulting the Irish government. You announced it would trigger the claws to prevent vaccines crossing into Northern Ireland, where they could be sent to the rest of the UK, Britain, Northern Ireland and the Irish government blasted Brussels, which then announced a late night you turn, saying the emergency clause would not be used for NPR news. I'm Teri Schultz in Brussels.

All Things Considered
European powers press Iran to back off latest nuclear move
"The Iran nuclear deal are demanding Iran halt its announced plans to produce uranium metal based fuel. Teri Schultz reports. Tehran is banned from this activity for 15 years under the 2015 nuclear deal that is still technically in force. Despite numerous violations, Britain, France and Germany say in a joint statement they're deeply concerned by Iran's announcement it would produce uranium metal, noting the country has quote no credible civilian use for it, but that there are grave military implications. They insist Iran should immediately return to compliance if it wants to preserve the deal. This is just the latest example of the regime's violations since claiming it has the right to breach them after the U. S, withdrew and 2018 and re imposed sanctions lifted by the deal. The International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed this week. Iran has begun to produce the uranium metal. Iran says it wants the Biden administration to rejoin the agreement, and then it will discuss complying with it. For NPR news. I'm Teri Schultz in Brussels. This is NPR.

Science Friday
Dutch Government Resigns After Benefits Scandal
"The Dutch government is resigning over a scandal in which families receiving child care benefits where mistakenly accused of fraud. Teri Schultz reports Prime Minister Mark Ruta and his Cabinet will remain temporarily in a caretaker position. The Dutch government's downfall comes after some 20,000 working families were wrongly accused of cheating the system and forced to repay thousands of euros in benefits The Dutch tax office said had been mistakenly paid. Many families were put in severe financial distress for what was later found to be largely a result of administrative errors. In a press conference announcing his resignation, Prime Minister Rudy acknowledged quote Innocent people have been criminalized and their lives have been destroyed. He says the country's parliament was not correctly informed about the tax offices procedures targeting the parents. 20 of them have launched a lawsuit against current and former officials

Yakshi Yash Podcast | Teri Dosti
"teri" Discussed on Yakshi Yash Podcast | Teri Dosti
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Yakshi Yash Podcast | Teri Dosti
"teri" Discussed on Yakshi Yash Podcast | Teri Dosti
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Yakshi Yash Podcast | Teri Dosti
"teri" Discussed on Yakshi Yash Podcast | Teri Dosti
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Forum
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson signs Brexit trade deal
"Minister Boris Johnson had signed the newly reached trade agreement between the United Kingdom and the European Union. Britain's House of Commons voted to approve the post Brexit deal earlier today, Teri Schultz reports that compromise which avoids tariffs and quotas between the two sides still has to be approved by the European Union's legislature. While British lawmakers were rushed into voting today on the post Brexit trade deal. European Union parliamentarians refused to do that. It won't start scrutinizing the more than 1200 page agreement until their first sessions in January and may not vote on it until March. Nonetheless, all 27 EU governments have approved it and the terms go into effect provisionally January 1st, averting a disaster for businesses on both sides when the post Brexit transition period ends at the start of the year. Teri Schultz reporting from Brussels.

Morning Edition
UK lawmakers approve Brexit trade deal
"Trade and Customs deal forged on Christmas Eve has been signed by European Union leaders and flown to London for the British side of Finalize. From Brussels, Teri Schultz reports while British lawmakers were rushed into voting today on the post Brexit trade deal. European Union parliamentarians refused to do that. It won't start scrutinizing the more than 1200 page agreement until their first sessions in January and may not vote on it until March. Nonetheless, all 27 EU governments have approved it and the terms go into effect provisionally January 1st, averting a disaster for businesses on both sides when the post Brexit transition period ends at the start of the year.

Houston Public Media Local Newscasts
EU ambassadors approve post-Brexit trade deal
"Brexit trade deal clinched. On christmas eve has now been provisionally approved by european governments teri schultz reports. This will allow the agreement to take effect on january first ambassadors from the twenty seven remaining members of the european union have given their formal backing to trade and customs agreement worked out between the eu and uk last week this agreement will prevent tariffs and quotas being imposed on uk goods entering the e eu single market when the brexit transition period officially ends december. Thirty first although parliament's on both sides also need to approve the agreement. The european parliament refused to call a special session to consider the more than twelve hundred pages of court on such a short time line. That will only happen next month but will not prevent what's being called the provisional application of the term starting friday the british parliament will vote on the deal wednesday and expected to approve it

Pat Walsh
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell recognizes Joe Biden as president-elect
"Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is recognizing Joe Biden as president elect Teri more reports a day after the Electoral College certified Biden's victory, McConnell said. I want to congratulate President elect Joe Biden, the president elect is no stranger to the Senate. He's devoted himself to public service for many years. I also want to congratulate the vice president elect our colleague from California Senator Harris

Inside Europe
How the Biden administration will affect the EU
"With the biden administration taking office in just under a month. You leaders a counting the days until they feel like they can have a new start with an american team. that's more committed to transatlantic relations this week. The us foreign policy chief. Joseph barrell reveal the agenda he hopes to pursue well joining me on the line from brussels. Is our correspondent. Teri schultz terry. It's not an exaggeration to say most e you leaders a hugely relief with the biden win and believe things are going to be different now. Where does the e u. side wants to start well and they've actually released this document now laying out where they believe. The most progress can be made in the fastest and most efficient way. And that's what you high rep josette burrell released yesterday. And they've got four areas where they want to start the europeans. They want to start with corona virus. Response making that again. A global effort with president trump having pulled out of the world health organization saying constantly america first america first when it comes to a vaccine. That's something that does not sit well with the europeans who are committed to making vaccines affordable and available to the entire world on climate. They are very much looking forward to president-elect biden making good on his campaign promise to rejoin the paris climate accord. That's something that suffers without. Us leadership and i think president-elect biden is is committed to doing that the third one is a little a little tougher trade and technology that you use third priority and that's one where you're not going to automatically see any. Us president stop protecting or trying to protect american tech giant's against for example e regulators who want to recoup taxes from from the multinationals. That's going to be somewhere where we we may not see as quick progress but on trade looking at the world trade organization where president trump is just continually attacked and and made it impossible for the wto to get reforms that the europeans also support. I expect that that will be one of the areas that there will be some quick progress and unwed burrell calls global action and he says this is working toward a safer more prosperous and more democratic world and they're hoping that president-elect biden will put more emphasis on human rights on rule of and on basic democratic values that the eu and the us due to a large extent share but is it realistic for the e. You just think that the biden administration shares these views simply going to sign onto this plan. Or i think europeans may be disappointed by the fact that foreign policy is probably not going to be the first thing on on president-elect biden's list he's got to deal with the corona virus that's just raging in the in the us and and the divisiveness that this campaign and actually the trump presidency has brought about in america and he's got to work on that before he can justify to anyone that he's going to be working on with with european leaders but he very much wants to do that. All of his statements during the campaign to to europeans. Were basically i understand. This is not the way the. Us you relationships should work and he will. He does share a lot of these views. He certainly will not be giving comfort to leaders. Like hungary's viktor orban or the polish government. That is rolling back the rights of women. He will have. He will have a few things to say about that. Which president trump left unsaid or probably didn't even believe