35 Burst results for "Thirteen Hours"

Pocketnow Weekly Podcast
"thirteen hours" Discussed on Pocketnow Weekly Podcast
"Have to try these. I was recently asked by a friend. What truly wireless you can get. Because the pixel buds to just keep cutting out their connection on my phone. And i was like and i was like what your budget and he goes two hundred. I'm like aw you like eliminate like five of my favorite earbuds right there including the sony's Well the previous generations are now getting steep discounts. I've heard tell you know if you don't mind the look in the design of the previous model and don't need ip ratings for working out in the gym it's really still one of the best options that are out there but That means you'll have to give up the better noise cancellations at this offers and also the battery the battery life. Oh my gosh. I i still haven't been able to in a single day drain. The earbuds completely granted only had these for two and a half days now By eight hours with noise cancellation on. You can be listening to music or watching a movie or your favorite tv show for eight hours with anc on and if you switch it off you get thirteen hours. Which is insane. I don't know like that's one of the. I think the battery life is the reason. Why i mentioned the fact that you can only use the right ear bud if you wanna do single singular earbud but that's all that is a gripe of mine that is a few tried to look for in chile wireless earbuds but because the battery life is so long. It's it's pretty much okay. So i have to give them props for that. Okay so the any final thoughts on the sony. Before i move on. No that's i'm still putting together thoughts for the four of you have only been using them for a couple of days now. But i've been waiting for these since last year. I was hoping there was going to be a another generation of these coming out sooner than they did. But i've i. I think it's definitely well worth it. And i think sony still proving that it's king of the wireless earphones space and earbud space With many other products that are coming out these days. That are a lot cheaper. But if you want the best of the best you got to pay for it and sony's the way to go. Yeah now counterpoint. There is another pair of earbuds that i'm currently. I'm i'm doing the review on them today. in this in the office with the setup i have First thing i want to show off is This is one of the better media. Kits that i've ever gotten Because it came in this wonderful cotopaxi little like fanny pack right that. I've actually been using part of the reason why i've been using it and i don't know if they knew this about me or not but if you look at this tag here inside even in tagalog it says here made with pride in the philippines so i was like oh snap. You can use us bag. And there's even There's even a philippine flag in one of the flaps here like where either the sun the sun logo over here it was made exclusively for. Jv absolutely like once. The box came. In and i opened it up. I was like whoa like. I'm almost more excited for the bag than i am. For these your buds but the brand here. So we have jaybird. And here are the jaybird vista to nicosia. I'm actually. This is my drive around for how i'm gonna do my livestream. I'm actually showing off the overhead reagan but then it gives us the jailbirds So jaybird vista pair of earbuds from two years ago. Two issues ago that. I really loved. But i never really talked about and now they've finally have another version Part of the reason why. I adore the jaybird. Vistas back then and i adore these now because they are one of the more full featured wines they actually championed the whole wingtip design. So it's actually a part of the year but and and jaybird been doing that for years. Exactly with with your even. Before they're truly wireless earbuds just the bluetooth headphones that they had Behind the neck and the even the Corded ones yeah i. It's it's what made them like the darling. Jim earbud Back in the day. And i will always wondered like why do people not talk about jaybird anymore. And now with the vista to hopefully they will because so quick things here Since we're talking about the sony's between the sonya's and the jailbirds obviously the sony is going to sound leaps and bounds better And they do. The thing is in these earbuds price one nine you do get anc which is good enough like it's not amazing the way that the sony's our which we just said but they're perfect for the gym so you're going to like The person the treadmill next to you. You're not gonna hear and i can. I can attest to that. I'd love literally done that. you also get a good ambient noise. Ambient sound environment mode called surround sense. That actually amplifies. If you wanted to you can amplify your and it makes it very comfortable to wear these and have conversations and have environmental awareness. But the other thing that i think most people need to look for and this is something. Only the jaybird vista twos. Have i p sixty eight on the actual earbuds the most rugged earbuds i've ever used And you damn right. I used them in the shower. While an ip sixty eight means you can technically take them swimming. Indeed i as long as the bluetooth connection is good enough to be still connected to your phone while underwater. The water yeah water. No but i've used. I've i can't remember which ones they were but i've used ip sixty eight earbuds before and As long as you're not thirty to forty feet away from your phone and diving in a foot or two under the water like if you're just doing laps in a pool it'll still stay connected. And yes they have been one of the One of the brands. That really brought us into the sports. Wireless earbuds segment over the years. But they've kind of got lost as everyone else came into the market but the previous generations. I say i love them really. Good the the fens that they have excellent for me especially for going to run much better than the pixel buds Those funds as if you guys can't see them but look look for a picture They they will hold them in your ear as tight as you can imagine. And the one thing i also love about. Jaybird is that they have within their app. They have quite a few different audio..

Doughboys
"thirteen hours" Discussed on Doughboys
"Before and after or just in general like where like how during the day when he had to grab snacks on the shoot day. Well yeah well. It's funny because in covert they don't even take breaks. Now right they deliver you know right. He made lent in the container. Like to go container that's cold invariably and the salad repack that you just picked up a starbucks. Whatever i'm not complaining about that. Because i'm not super picky. But the thing that they don't have time you don't have time to eat because they say you know we're going straight through so when you get a chance you eat and then you take your food on the excuse me you can't eat in the stage. Y'all wow oh okay. Well great well. I guess i'm not eating for thirteen hours or whatever i mean. It's not just me that other people have it worse. You know like the the camera operator. The camera crew. That can't leave it all as you know people can kind of sneak off during the take or something right. They have much worse. They need department way worse than me. I'm not gonna complain while now you always. I mean especially on this on the tomorrow war specifically there were times where we would like basically try to work through. We were eating lunch like on a city street in atlanta. This kind of got your sandwich brought to you a couple of times like during the shoot so it is crazy just like a when when when you have a location like that where you're like whereas even the the basis like two miles away or whatever and sometimes you just gotta eat right there on the street. So larry. there's a lot of things we wanna talk about. I think i nick. And i were going through your imdb and oh yeah you you got some. You've got you've got some amazing credits. I said i said this on my friends last night. I said it was like you're you're you're onset for some nineties videos that are legendary some some of the biggest videos from the nineties and set like you shot them right like you. Shy van halen's right now and rem's losing my religion. Is that correct losing my religion. That's like i was saying. I was saying to my friends last night. This is a bad comparison. But i said it's like knowing someone who knew ren and stimpy is what i said. It's knowing someone who is on. That's a horrible comparison cartoon characters. That's what it's like someone who's onset ra- losing my religion. It's like the one of the biggest videos of all time. It's crazy to me. It's it's like being alone harbor. Like meeting michael stipe..

Sales Success Stories
"thirteen hours" Discussed on Sales Success Stories
"So it was really front and center for me of understanding when i am less than three hours of sleep debt. I started like when i first started using. I was thirteen hours of sleep. Debt crazy. i think that's would be common for a lot of people. We get accustomed to run the almost getting numb to the fact that we're in constant sleep debt and we don't really know how much until we start putting a spotlight on becoming a bit more aware of it. So that brought a lot of awareness me rounds. Mankind are really core pillar to my coach now which is having a foundation of being well rested and sleeping well and then i started correlated search tracking. Things like all mini meetings. I was in in a day. Not in the sense that i wanted to have more meetings like sell more deals. Actually i wanted to start out of meetings. Because i was reading a book at the time by how newport call deep work and that was profoundly insightful for me because what cow lays out is that want to be hyper successful. In today's modern knowledge worker era you need to dedicate time for deep work and so in a simple rule spreadsheet. I would just sort of track. Here's how well rested. I and here's how i'm sleeping. What my sleep. Debt is how many meetings. I would need to a sweet spot an understanding of like no more than four hours a day meetings because in the other four or five hours a day i want. It's dedicated towards going deep with my prospects and it was sort necessary. Twenty twenty right because we were getting the amount of leads. We did that. The previous year to we had to go out of necessity had to go deep. I had to like think really creatively for my prospects. Think about some really creative ideas. That could fundamentally help with their business. Especially since. I'm sun transformation. How could they need super smart budget. How could i unearthed problems..

The Military Veteran Dad Podcast
"thirteen hours" Discussed on The Military Veteran Dad Podcast
"I mean i. The gyms were closed So i just found myself out running around and then memorial daily forrest. Gump yeah legitimately. I got up. And i started running ident stop stop. I remember. it was memorial day of last year. just to kind of give myself a challenge. i did. Let's see the saturday of memorial day weekend. I ran a mile fast. I couldn't broke five minute bio for the first time in my life. I ran a four minute video a second on saturday which was awesome. I was excited about that. So the next day i was like well. That's see. i ran the fastest ever. Let's see if i can run the most miles i've ever done in my life. So that's sunday up doing fifty k. So little over thirty miles Just in the neighborhood. Just running. As far as i can around town here and did that in about four hours and sixteen twenty minutes. Something like that So pretty competitive time for fifty k. time So i was like okay. That's douse a lot of fun to. And then. I came the next day on monday. I did I don't know if you're familiar with the boob memorial day murph murphy birth that one day and to play destroy myself that whole weekend but it was It it it kind of it was something that during covid it was a challenge in the then i caught the the altar running bugging. I always worn myself. I would never do an ultra reysen. October of last year. I ended up doing a thirteen hour. Do as many laps around a three mile for trailers. You can in thirteen hours. And i finished in second place and ended up doing almost seventy thousand thirteen hours and So obviously i crossed the finish line. After that us said what's next so i had the almost the olympic gold medal mindset of like i've reached the top here. What do i do next. Yeah yeah so what's next..

The Military Veteran Dad Podcast
"thirteen hours" Discussed on The Military Veteran Dad Podcast
"It brought to the surface of who you are exactly and so So started doing that. And then like two thousand nineteen again did and again more races and fall for more rate at war championship type races. Then than twenty twenty hit and It was one of those things where racist didn't cancel all over the world and nobody was doing anything and then So i started running a lot. I mean the gyms were closed So i just found myself out running around and then memorial daily forrest. Gump yeah legitimately. I got up. And i started running ident stop stop. I remember. it was memorial day of last year. just to kind of give myself a challenge. i did. Let's see the saturday of memorial day weekend. I ran a mile fast. I couldn't broke five minute bio for the first time in my life. I ran a four minute video a second on saturday which was awesome. I was excited about that. So the next day i was like well. Let's see. i ran the fastest ever. Let's see if i can run the most miles i've ever done in my life. So that's sunday up doing fifty k. So little over thirty miles Just in the neighborhood. Just running. As far as i can around town here and did that in about four hours and sixteen twenty minutes. Something like that So pretty competitive time for fifty k. Time so i was like okay. That's a lot of fun to. And then i came the next day on monday. I did I don't know if you're familiar with the bumble. Moyal day murph murphy. Birth that one day and to destroy myself that whole weekend but it was It it it kind of it was something that during covid it was a challenge and then i caught the the altar running bugging. I always worn myself. I would never do an ultra reysen tober of last year. I ended up doing a thirteen hour. Do as many laps around a three mile for trailers. You can in thirteen hours. And i finished in second place and ended up doing almost seventy thousand thirteen hours and So obviously i crossed the finish line. After that us said what's next so i had the almost the olympic gold medal mindset of like i've reached the top here. What do i do next. Yeah yeah so..

The Military Veteran Dad Podcast
"thirteen hours" Discussed on The Military Veteran Dad Podcast
"Than twenty twenty hit and It was one of those things where racist didn't cancel all over the world and nobody was doing anything and then So i started running a lot. I mean the gyms were closed So i just found myself. I'll just running around and then memorial daily forrest. Gump yeah legitimately. I got up. And i started running ident stop stop. I rubber. It was memorial day of last year. just to kind of give myself a challenge. i did. Let's see the saturday of memorial day weekend. I ran a mile fast. I couldn't broke five minute bio for the first time in my life. I ran a four minute video a second on saturday which was awesome. I was excited about that. So the next day i was like well. Let's see. i ran the fastest ever life. Let's see if. I can run the most miles. I've ever done in my life. So that's sunday doing fifty k. So little over thirty miles Just in the neighborhood. Just running. As far as i can around town here and did that in about four hours and sixteen twenty minutes. Something like that So pretty competitive time for fifty k. time So i was like okay. That's douse a lot of fun to. And then. I came the next day on monday. I did I don't know if you're familiar with the bumble. Royal day murph murphy birth that one day and to play destroy myself that whole weekend but it was It it it kind of it was something that during covid it was a challenge in the then i caught the the altar running bug and i always sworn myself i would never do an ultra reysen october of last year. I ended up doing a thirteen hour. Do as many laps around a three mile for trailers. You can in thirteen hours. And i finished in second place and ended up doing almost seventy thousand thirteen hours and So obviously i crossed the finish line. After that us said what's next so i had the almost the olympic gold medal mindset of like i've reached the top here. What do i do next. Yeah yeah so..

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"thirteen hours" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"Heartland newsfeed dot. Com is asian in east jerusalem. Shake jarrett district. The hearing was cancelled on sunday following a request from attorney general a small private hospital in india's most populous state is being charged under the national security act for sounding the alarm over lack of oxygen. The director of the sun hospital and look now in fresh claimed he faced being arrested at any time and his business ceased after the police late charges against him. Allah cash punday who owns and runs the hospital in the state capital set. Four of his patients died on a single day when oxygen run out. He says he made repeated appeals to the state authorities warning them. The his supplies were running low but they failed to resupply him with oxygen for thirteen hours. Hundreds of people were seen partying in several cities across spain as the country ended. Its eleven pm curfew which was lifted in thirteen of the country. Seventeen regions midnight footage was shared of people taking to beaches in barcelona on the streets of madrid to celebrate the end of spain. Six months state of emergency to combat the covid nineteen pandemic. Many people could be seen without a mask not respecting social distancing and gathering in groups much larger than six all in violation of corona of restrictions that remain in place and finally know a full year old from new york loves. Spongebob a lot. In fact he loves the cartoon characters so much that he decided to puff on amazon for spot of retail therapy little that his mother know that he had bought fifty one cases of spongebob. Ice lollies nine hundred and eight hundred of them to be exact up bill of two thousand six hundred and eighteen dollars. Eight thousand five cents or one thousand eight hundred and seventy two. british pounds. Amazon initially told no his mother jennifer bryan that they wouldn't take back. The ice lollies leaving the social work students stuck with the bill. However the company has since been in contact to find a solution on the spongebob. Saga has a happy ending.

Streams of Income
"thirteen hours" Discussed on Streams of Income
"Do you feel like Is it okay. If i wanted you guys to work during my day time hours. Which would be your nighttime because you are thirteen hours ahead of central time is normal for via to work in the middle of the night. Well that's pretty much normal Especially if we take into consideration the virtual assistance nowadays were who or who came from mccall center type setting so they're awake during the nighttime during the full games which is the daytime in the us. Right let's pretty much normal. Okay but at the end of the day it all comes down to you. If you would like your v8's work at the same hour as you are or if you're okay with them work during the daytime and in free just to check it during the daytime oslo. Yeah so But in terms of adapting to it or just in the hours pretty much full pianos or can do that. Yeah i if your life your. Va to be more comfortable with you. Know with working. You might want to ask you what they would like to do it during the night time because like for most of the stuff that we do it doesn't matter when it gets done I don't care if you work during my day hours or not. it's i. I want you to work when you work and that works out well for our our job. If i did have a call center where i understand. He needs to be making calls at between eight and five. And that's night for you guys but But for ard types of services are jobs with legendary. be as into. I don't care when when they work can so. That's gearing is the flexibility to work when you want to. So that's good okay. Any other thoughts or things about just tips for somebody if you were talking to somebody about hiring a ba anything you can think of that. We didn't cover here them ask. I remember from online job south ph..

The Spivey Special Podcast
"thirteen hours" Discussed on The Spivey Special Podcast
"Stephen here with us going to start out. What's your gutu barbecue place. So around here right. So i'd say probably the one that's the easiest to get to is just right down the road from where i live and it's it's decent scott good food i'd say probably lucille's they've got that. That apple cinnamon butter also that they have game. Change this world so good unbelievable healthy. Of course butter is always good for you. Yeah food's decent. They they have some good brisket some decent ribs and yeah. I mean the the apple cinnamon off burnt ends or something or an ends. Yeah for appetizers. So can't beat burden vernons. They're unbelievable tough to maximum up to if you can get them get them. So what your game in there. What are you ordering a. Typically anytime i go to a barbecue place. I typically do like a three played or if they'll let me out on more do four meet plate and some from home absolutely. Yeah i just like to try to get a variety of meat and they usually comes with a couple of sides you get you get the sides and just get as many barbecue sauces. They'll let you have and try them all out until you find when you like the best and then cover everything with it. Geico dad loves us. Sales more than anything in the world talk about the other night. Did he cater something with lucy like more than once. I think it was just us three. He's like twenty people all right so you get all these meads if you what is the best meat you had to just pick one at a barbecue place. What is your putting in your mouth. Probably go with brisk it. Because that's one thing that i cannot cook well and it bothers me that i can't and i love brisket but i never i never liked it when i make it so when i go somewhere where somebody knows how to make it. I'm gonna get that every time. We had a buddy who came over he cooked brisket. He got there like eight hours earlier or whatever it was and we got there. It wasn't like the best ever here then if the rest of the night because he put so much time and effort into it. Yeah he's like. Oh my gosh should have left for forty five minutes all night. But i can see how difficult would be cuckoo. Briscoe go. yeah that's the thing about it. Is it takes a long time. And if you don't do it right it's it's not great in. I mean. i had one that. I was cooking. It took his state at one. Fifty six internal temperature for four hours would not go above that temperature so the whole cook ended up taking like thirteen hours. We ate brisk midnight that night and it was tough. The family was not pleased. You got cook it right though have to in. You can't let it sit overnight. You're going to eat it right then. You can't rush it either. Can't say it's going to bump up temperature because then it dries it out to radio another. What's your go to meet a try. Tipper stake type of meat not too fancy with it. Usually just find some my like and ride that out. I could be it. Whatever like the biggest fred flintstone. Es reeb that. i can get. That's what i want. We went to north carolina barbecue. There now that's different. There's a lot of things..

What Fresh Hell: Laughing in the Face of Motherhood
"thirteen hours" Discussed on What Fresh Hell: Laughing in the Face of Motherhood
"You was like nails on a chalkboard or was it scary. Nails on a chalkboard moment he would start it. I don't know why it was our kryptonite spraying dogs with hose. It was like turning on the noise that you know only dogs can hear like we just go insane and you had a new common enemy which was like. You're the bad cop with the poem. The paul it did shut it down. It was like a kill switch. Basically he would just pull the switch. I mean that's genius. I need to get like a laminated card. We should make those available on our website of this poem to just like. Let's all try pulling this out the next time. The kids are fighting because it's baffling. I don't know if it would work. I don't know if it only particularly annoyed us. But what i mean and it sounds like we were all joking around but we would roll around on the ground and come here and like please stop so it was horrible but it was a kill switch. I think it's like someone's got shut it down bad cop in good enforcing stuff in good cop in this description needs actually a bad at enforcing rules. Good more ice cream. Means i started this to say that my children's version of this is where i was going with that. It's fun to have fun. But you've got to know dr seuss. And it is the thing that i say all the time right now in my house especially at the end of the pandemic. We've been together kid. Who's like if jumping out at. Someone is funny jumping on. That person is funnier jumping on that person in punching them in the face is even funnier and then jumping on that person and punching them in the face until they start to cry is funny est- trying to help him find the line of like it's not funny anymore. It's fun to have fun. But you've got to know. How are you more of the enforcer or are you the bad cop in your parenting dynamic parenting dynamic exist for us one hundred million and fifty thousand percent yes so. My kids are older. I have three teenagers thirteen sixteen and eighteen. So there's less of the before my kids except for the thirteen year old thirteen year old. I get heard about that. I can go to bed. Sixty eighteen year olds. It's at go with god. I hope you could It's important so there's less rule enforcing especially during a pandemic or nobody's going anywhere. So this sort of teenager will coursing doesn't exist. When they were little. I was around more so i was the primary caregiver for sure. My spouse traveled a ton for work and get home to see them before bed nearly twice a week. I think in that dynamic where there is a definitely primary caregiver it falls to that person usually to be the bad cop how this played out in our house when my kids were little as i'd have them. You know bathe pajamas like count on a bedtime but times in seven minutes. I've been waiting for thirteen hours. And then my husband come through the door and be the tickle monster and throwing them in the air and with them to a frenzy. Good time charlie goodtime. Charley you call him we. Yeah yes. I definitely remember you being like good time. Charlie gets to come home then..

Pool Pro Podcast
"thirteen hours" Discussed on Pool Pro Podcast
"Chlorine. It's something to do when baby the waters a little flat or hazy and has more of a chlorine need. Maybe you've got a bit of algae beginning to form So these are cases where you'd super chlorinate. Super carnation generally The definition of that is. You're gonna you're gonna kick that you're going to about ten to twenty parts per million Coronation that's a whole different thing. Hyper chlorination you're really gonna look anything in that pool and that's typically about a forty ppm You know. Introduction of chlorine the typical A scenario where hyper coronation would be used. would be in in the instance of somebody who had a if there's a fecal release or fecal accident and particularly if you're trying to deal with crypto and make sure that you inactivate crypto so you know gonna race klein level twenty ppm. Hold it there for thirteen hours That that would be considered Like hybrid Nation as well and then we get to breakpoint Again there's confusion there. And i've talked to guys. I gotta break point my pool. What do you mean you gotta break point. You put wellness shock it as i. Okay but what are you attempting to do for that break point and so break point. The traditional thing about breakpoint is We all know that the when chlorine introduced the water with any kind of contaminants and there's always contaminants in pool water. The after the chlorine does its work Or even before It can combine with those contaminants depending on the level of contaminants in it creates combined chlorine. Or what we know is closer means and those are basically three different types Monoploy army dichloromethane trichloride me and So break point is traditionally taught in cpo is a method where you increase The free available chlorine level to a point where you accomplish. What's known as a break point or at breaking apart or Basically on the ratification of those combined chlorine and oxidise them off You know and the primary..

That’s Strange
"thirteen hours" Discussed on That’s Strange
"Away. Recording a podcast. I'm trying to add juice in meat to the plot allowed to leverage tension between two characters. I gotta look up this dad and see where i seen him from. Because it's kind of driving me a little insane. It kinda funny if he was like the stunt double for bryan cranston on breaking bed. Thirteen hours is what i remember him from. Isn't that the movie on disney about the kid that becomes a dolphin or something. No not at all thirteen hours is the benghazi movie Yeah thirteen. i'm not sure what. I'm not sure what you're referring to He was in saving private ryan to all right. Yeah i saw that. But i don't and i was trying to remember who i knew. Kelly reilly what i knew kelly reilly from she was in the sherlock holmes. The robert downey junior sherlock holmes. Yup kid sit he. this is a great jeep commercial. Like how horrified. Is this kid right now though. Like yeah we're gonna get you cured and we're driving down this here here. We are blind manner. That's where you're going to go right. It really does look like how. How would you ever think this is a place where you would go to get healed from something. And it's not like they found this place on on yelp or anything no here about this like they found an abandoned place. There's gonna leave the kid and run. That's the question right of everything you could vast right. They're worse rebel. And why is there such a high tech like airlock door on the front of this really weird old building gay. Okay mom.

Native Opinion Podcast an American Indian Perspective
"thirteen hours" Discussed on Native Opinion Podcast an American Indian Perspective
"Joe biden the last administration had a name that he rightly earned the fool in the white house. So it's refreshing to hear president. Somebody's president howland frequently spoke to tribal consultation being hallmark of her new role. And i. i'm hoping she's going to push the envelope on travel consultation because all we've been hearing over the past administrations as lip service. That's all it's been. There's an old no teeth to that not coming. There's no teeth from the administration and from the administration to say we're going to make this possible we're going to stick to it. They just don't. It's all lip service quoting once again. I will work as hard as i ever have. And she added that she sometimes spent more than thirteen hours on zoom while in congress which is impressive and if tribal leaders don't have internet access. She's willing to talk on the phone. Now that is someone that's willing to step into the role of service. Do what they need to do for the people that helped put her there and be damned if anyone gets in the way to to stop her from doing what she needs to do for the people that is the kind of person. I see dead holland. S and again. I applaud her for her ascension to that role. And i'm going to support her. In every way i can and but as much as i want to believe all of congress wants secretary holland to succeed again. I'm not foolish nor naive enough to believe that..

Android Central Podcast
Oppo find x3 pro review
"Embargo for the for the find x three pro lifted this morning this is okposo latest and greatest opo and oneplus share parent company. Bb case so there will be some overlap in what we talk about We don't know a lot about the oneplus series but what we know about the finance three pro. I think will dovetail nicely into the rumors for the oneplus nine. So let's start with you. Miriam you have this phone. It's oboe is not a brand name and north america yet. But i think it's becoming a bit more ubiquitous in europe where alex is you've reviewed one pl- or oboe phones for years now and you're you're among the first people to bring kind of these. Chinese brand opal vivo. Walkway into the purview of us audiences. So when you take a look at the x three pro. What's your first impression. Is this a phone that was made for a worldwide audience or is this more a phone that was made for a chinese audience. That is them being sort of adapted for the west. I think we're at the point now. Where i wanna odd xiaomi to your last i think yeah okay. I think we're the point. Where really these global launches of these phones the me levin from shami recently of course the oppo phoenix three pro and financial three series our global phones through and through. And i think that that's very exciting to me. Now we get the short end of the stick in north america. You're in canada. I'm in the us. Because we still don't get full five g support for our weird bands. And that means that i hesitate to recommend this phone to folks live on the north american continent of this time. I haven't tested the oppo yet on five g. here i'm hoping that as qualcomm becomes more omnipresent not that it isn't already but i mean in terms of its Band support for five g. sub. Six that we get eventually to a point where even buying global phone will just work on some bands in us. Kind of like four g. Lt. foams do and in canada. So i think these phones feel like truly global phones to me. I think that the biggest challenge the biggest obstacle that existed in the pass with these two years ago three years ago. If you imported one was the software. Felt very chinese in the sense that it was. It's like it's hard to explain. But there's a certain flavor to chinese phones if you've ever used one that doesn't have google services on it and that's changed radically. I think caller west which is what apple runs which is an on top of android is even closer now to oxygen. Which is what one plus has which makes sense. Bbq groups same company but in the past. That wasn't always the case. And i think xiaomi's done a very good job as well as an improving it appears to be more you know more universal to the global markets to customers in different countries. So i really have no qualms with this phone i think. It's it's a solid all-round flagship. It brings to the table some things we've never seen before and it on top of that. You know short of the five g support from north. America is a truly global phone so alex. You're the only person among the four of us that uses this phone. Where in the markets intended give us your overview of how fits into the uk european market. And what your first impressions are so whether fit into the market. Whether hoping to the mock i think is in the gap. The is currently in the process of being vacated by wa so there is a a room for another major player in europe and the uk. And i think that's that's where they plan to slow us into already seeing that taking advantage of always current challenges in china whether the now the the number one manufacturer but yeah i think in terms of just the quality the phone. It's it builds on what we saw in the next two pro in little ways last year But the my money this is a little bit of a one. Step forward one step back. Sort of a situation They're all the things. I really enjoyed about the findings to pro- And it it just seemed to have every angle sort of covered in terms of photography and a big part of that is super zoom telephoto in it. Yeah oddly something that a lot of brands of moving away from this year with the exception of while way sometime maybe xiaomi That's something i really miss. Unfor- photography scented phone that seems like a big emission. Especially when you have this weird microscope thing which is fun to play around with but is not going to have anywhere near the practical value In terms like dealer photography assume would get you So that's one sort of disappointments. That i have with it Made worse by the fact that. I'm not a massive found. The microscope The other side air you. i know this is. This is a one. A one point of conflicts on this phone denialism massive out of the microscope. But just before we get to that. The other thing is Find extra prolapsed yet no wireless charging is kind of becoming a table. Stakes feature ever since apple introduced is Now we finally have that but the battery life is just null. Great unstaffed That's the problem right When you getting in the region of twelve to thirteen hours In its its fooling over after about three and a half hours screen on you know especially for me coming from pixel five and show. I've been spoiled a little bit by that phone but Yeah it's haunted. Described the boundary line for this thing is anything but just a big disappointment for me. I would agree with that in the week or so that i've used it especially coming from the galaxy s twenty one pixel five. This is a big battery. that just doesn't perform like a big battery but were still a month out from launch and miriam. I know you haven't spent a ton of time with it but what's your impression of. I wanna come back to the camera. Because i think the the cameras a sort of a question mark for me. Every time i've spoken to one. Plus they give me different answers for why they made the decisions they did around the load out but the phone. Form factor right. They made a big deal about this single piece of glass on the back and how they machine did and you know burned it in killing at seven hundred degrees and puts a magic spell on it to keep its shape and all that. What's your impression of the form of this device. It's really interesting. And i think it's something that a lot of people it's pretty arresting to somebody who's looking at it from the back for the first time. Yeah i love the design. I think it's really unique. A middle worried that you know. It's like form over function in some way. Because i mean at this price point. What's the price anyway. Do we know eleven hundred pounds or twelve hundred years this price. That's fine but i like so gonna be a thousand like it's about the same as the next to last year pros last year. But he's a little bit cheaper but yeah that over thousand dollar price point. I'm okay with the crazy. You know wizards type approach to making the thing with thousands of hours of manufacturing time. Whatever it might be. I think it looks really cool. I've got the kind of grayish color. One agree dark rate lack. I don't know what color that is. But it's looking at a mirror. The whole thing is one piece. It's very cool. My my thing is that i'm really happy. They added wireless charging. That was the thing that i wanted to make a final to pro my daily driver austere and it up with of course oneplus eight pro which is count like again you know the oneplus nine pro is going to be a dead ringer of this phone. So no surprise there like in many ways so the reason i couldn't do it because what trudging was missing. Now that's been remedied by battery life. I haven't tested yet. So i don't know but it might be a result of trying to run everything at one twenty hertz and quad hd. I feel that. If i have to compromise somewhere it's resolution usually my eight pro oneplus a prior run at ten eighty p right and probably run the oneplus nine pro and switched to it at ten pm. Pretty convinced. i'm going to switch to it so wait you're of all the phones that you've used including the galaxy s twenty one. You're still using the eight pro. Is your daily driver. Oh yeah no. Don't i don't want to switch to off and i have so many ops to reinstall and set up a one once a year thing and i have to pick wisely right last year. I decided that i was going to wait. For the pixel five and so i hung hoed with the pixel forty or whatever four acceler my pocket for a while and then i realized that the pixel five was giving giving me what i want and the four or five g was actually the better form but didn't have wireless charging in my opinion so then i went said. I need to make a decision. So i went eight pro and the reason for that is i want i want wanna pixel essentially but i wanna flagship right. So what's the closest you can get to that. You can't get a flagship from google anymore. Anyway i digress but back to the quickey unfortunately have just to go as soon but i feel that for me. What surprised me. The most is the telephone okay. I couldn't get numbers on this. Is it three x two x two x optical and switch to x optical with five x figs. Zoom whatever hybrid. That's hybrid probably looks okay at five x hybrid but probably know better than one hundred eight megapixel. That's trying to do five x kinda like the eleven right. Yeah these over the past It's just fine. I is is fine of five but go beyond five. It's a bit yeah. We had a paris copa. Like five x right. That was different from the oneplus. Eight pro which only had like three x telephoto. So i think the teleph- the the lack of the telephoto disappearing from almost everyone's phones except for you know an iphone doesn't really count because there's only two axe to me. Anything that's to excellence doesn't count. It has to be three more. And ideally it needs to have two of them like the s twenty one ultra or the. We p forty pro plus. Which was my darling camera phone last year. Despite the lack of gm's so you see. That's the reason. Part of the reason daniel that i went with the pro because i knew that if i needed a better camera just pull out a weiwei. P forty plus and carry that with me right and so so then. I guess the party question that i would ask is what would it take for the financial three pro to be your daily driver over the nine. The oneplus nine pro. Because they are so similar to things. And i want that i feel. Actually this might take away from this. Phone is that oppo is holding back for an ultra version. Yes that was my conspiracy theories. Well i feel like we're like because everybody's doing more than a pro. Now i feel that apple is exploring that ultra premium end. And he's gonna come out with a special edition of this phone. That will have a proper periscope telephoto. But what would make me switch would be more see right now. Could live with a two x telephoto. If it's any good. I don't know off to try it but i think for me. It's five g support simply. Because i'm on t. mobile in the us and it's actually beneficial in terms of network coverage for me it's not really beneficial terms of speed by re does give me slightly better performance in some fringe situations and that would be my big. My big request bought the other thing. That i'm interested intrigued. Bob because i haven't really had chance to tessies. Cameras yet. Is their choice of using the two identical fifty megapixel. I am seven six six sensors on the ultrawide and the main to get perfect color. Matching 'cause how's that worked out for you guys so interesting thing. That is the you in theory. That is what happens. But then you have the ai thing that's turned on. Which can you run. I'm not sure by default but if you use it You know it's very useful things in some situations but if you use it then you can get radically different looking switching between the two lenses if you don't have the tent on yet is obviously much closer as a parting thought. I have a feeling that while last year's apple finds pro would have been my choice for that time period of the year that first half of the year until the no twenty ultra came out. Which was my darling phone of the fall. But i switched to it because i was lazy. And of course he has twenty ultra. now is a pretty solid choice for photography. I think until until then until the eight pro last year the findings to pro choice other than wireless charging and five jeep but this year. I'm much more convinced that all want the oneplus nine pro. That's your segue as i'm leaving because for me. The one plus nine pro. F- i don't know all of the details yet but that hassle partnership has me intrigued and more importantly i know it's going to support all the bands properly in the us. And it's going to have wireless charging which i need and it's going to be a slightly smaller phone. I think this year which. I'm very happy about because the eight cross a freaking monster of a beast. It's too big for me over there. So i think the x three profiles held back to me somehow. Apple is i can know what apple can do and be group and this is very good by this. This aversion to telephoto in chinese phones right now xiaomi's doing it too is driving me nuts. I don't get it i want all of it. I don't care about microscope. it's cool. I don't care about a macro because an ultra wide can do macro like it is on this phone. It is on one plus pro phones

AdExchanger Talks
Updating The Numbers with eMarketer Co-Founder Geoff Ramsey
"Am so pleased to have as my guest. Jeff ramsey the co founder of emarketer and chief evangelist for insider intelligence. Jeff is a veteran of the attic. She'd your stage and we are going to talk on this podcast about the numbers. You should be paying attention to in the year head and the stories behind those numbers but before we get into jets predictions for the rest of twenty twenty one. I wanted to talk about twenty twenty. We saw so much change because of the pandemic and i'm sure that wreaked havoc on your predictions. Jeff well Yeah twenty. Twenty is year a lot of people would like to forget but we can go back and revisit that certainly in a busy year for our forecasters are forecasters busy themselves with excel spreadsheets Calibrating and then recalibrating numbers at a dizzying pace based on new information. That's coming in and certainly during last year we saw a lot of changes particularly with the consumer and So then ensued a ton of revisions to our projections that would normally last for you know at least eight nine ten twelve fourteen months You know we we were. We were spinning our wheels so fast. It's a wonder we didn't come off the tracks Biggest places where you had to revise those numbers Assure i think the biggest area without doubt was the area of e-commerce and we're gonna get into that in a little bit but if if anybody in the audience is thinking to themselves e commerce you think about about that. We'll think about your activity over the last year. And if you haven't done more door dash or grubhub or i'm not going to the store and never mind that. There's you know a massive winter storm that we're now seeing people are jew. Were just afraid to go to malls all this data and statistics were talking about you. Know people were a lot of most people. Were taking this seriously and mask or not. It was more comfortable. Felt more safe to order from home Whether it be on your desktop laptop or your mobile device so i would say the biggest set of numbers are the biggest changes in our set of numbers were in the e commerce space space and where we netted out to give a kind of a tip of the hat to twenty twenty is ecommerce sales grew by something like thirty two percent in twenty twenty versus twenty nine thousand nine due to the lockdown measures in the fact that we are all self isolated and just to put that into perspective If you look at non ecommerce sales that's that's the that's the the that's like the rhinoceros compared to the flea of ecommerce right but if you look at total retail says we're talking somewhere in the order of almost six trillion dollars right if you look at ninety commerce sales. They slipped by negative Three point two percent in two thousand and twenty. They might grow again predicting grogan this year but it actually slipped by over three percent and yet total commerce. Total retail sales grew why because of e-commerce growing a significant thirty two percent. So we some people said that we have Grown e commerce On original predictions something. We've advanced something like two or three years ahead of where we would normally be an and the trains left attracts. The growth rate is gonna go way way down. It's going to continue to grow some bets. That's the biggest change that we've seen. Yes i can. I can validate that anecdotally. In terms of how much ivan purchasing on amazon as well is kind of a lot of new e commerce stores. I was trying out to get you know farm to table food delivery and that kind of thing personally but that that's where my taste lies and you know you're making me hungry. Zony sales are seeing so many sales are moving to online. It makes me wonder you know one. What does that mean for all these digital advertising companies that kind of our that point right before you hit by And as well as how much time people must be spending online consumers platforms before they go on to you now. Consumed their dinner via door dash. Sir you know what that's a really good place it to really dig into because you know if i were say a a number two area where forecasters had to continually busied themselves. With reaching recalibrating. Numbers was in the area of time spent so let me just puts in perspective on that because i think most of us realize having or locked in an apartment or a house we start to go a little bit stir crazy. So what do we look to. We looked to digital activities to you know suck up our time and so a couple of things with these since cove it. Americans have increased the time that they spend with all media cross online and offline by about an hour and five minutes a day. So it's over thirteen hours a day. We're spending with media now. I do need to put a little caveat there thirteen hours you might be thinking. Wow that's a lot of time. And that's that's half the twenty four hours you know that are in a day. But it includes double-counting for multitasking. 'cause i don't think there's any of us on the planet that don't were we're watching. Tv have another device in our hand. We're doing something else right. And because we never know in the second or nanoseconds time where attention is fleeting from one. St the other way that attention actually lies. We have to double count that figure. So if you're spending an hour watching tv and you're on your mobile phone that whole time we have to double count That that our so it becomes two hours if that makes any sense so we're spending an extra hour a day and almost all of that Ghosts to digital so just to give some perspective before cove it we were spending. This is pretty pretty significant amount. We're spending about half a little over half of our day. Six hours and forty nine minutes a day Doing digital stuff alive. It was mobile. was streaming but then we went from six hours forty nine minutes in two thousand nineteen the pandemic hits and we go up by a an hour and a minute to seven hours and fifty minutes a day with digital And we think that digital time is going to continue to increase by twenty twenty two. We'll be spending eight hours a day with digital which was a little frightening for maybe some parents as they think of their kids. Because this is on average and if you think of kids and teens and it's probably way more than eight hours day so as we net out digital time now counts for roughly sixty percent of adults a total daily time spent with media and another area within within digital of course streaming Were all streaming more and when you think of time spent with streaming whether you thinking connected. Tv's court cutting or cord nevers. That's my favorite. Group is like college students who never will never have paid for a traditional pay. Tv subscription. why would they win. Their parents are basically donating their netflix account to their kids And then you got. Ot subscription activities with netflix amazon prime. And so on so. These numbers really shot way past our original pre covid estimates and so where we netted out. Was it in twenty. Twenty one time spent with digital video will have risen by thirty three minutes or over half an hour per day and so now we're spinning If we're looking at digital video time said about two hours and nineteen minutes And that's up from an hour and forty six minutes and twenty nine thousand nine but just a quick reality check. And then i'll let you jump in here. Reality check is that you might be thinking with all this streaming and so on that people are spending on average more time with digital video than they are with linear tv. But that's not quite yet. The case are estimated that traditional. Tv whether you're watching broadcasts abc cbs. Or you're watching a cable. Channel or direct access is is sixty percent of the time we spend with. A video is with traditional tv

LAN Parties: A Video Gaming and Esports Podcast
"thirteen hours" Discussed on LAN Parties: A Video Gaming and Esports Podcast
"How was your valentine's day weekend. It was fantastic. I it was actually kind of crazy. I had signed up One of my favorite artists citizen cope had a valentine's day was supposed to recording in a livestream Something happened with the venue. They rescheduled however he set up a private zoom With people that have purchased tickets so we spent the night you know gotta love with the in in in in covers getting the speak with one of my favorite artists listening to live music and stuff like that so that was awesome. Also you know. I it. you know. i've been playing through Spiderman so And fancy who we have on. Today i just got done whipping up. mister negative I'm still going through. The story still not complete. I haven't i haven't finished the game yet but we're getting closer so that was awesome. Have you been man. How's your valentine's day weekend. It was good. You know my girlfriend and i decided what better way to spend a romantic weekend than playing some more of a little nightmares to this is how big a fan. We are regard. The collectible figures come going on by the way awesome game. Still amazing game still were playing. This is a series that is not long. so if you haven't jumped into the series you can probably finish both games. And i wanna say like twelve or thirteen hours. That's not it's not that long amazing game and go out and buy it but enough about us because we have a very special guest this week and i am excited right. I know you're excited. You know him as mr negative himself from spiderman. Ps four and as red hood from the highly anticipated. Gotham knights among many other projects. Steven o youngest joining us. Stephen thank you so much. How're you doing my friend. Thank you for having me. No i want to hear more about you. Guys man you guys tell me more about your lives. Never you know these days. It's a lot of work from home. Play games and that these absolutely absolutely unlike the kidnapping man i just. I'm trying to fast forward through time. You know what i'm saying. That's me i literally. I literally to naps yesterday. It was crazy it was like. I hardly terrible i. I'm one of those like four or five hours of sleep. I'm back up the next day. But i usually take daily nap or i try to yesterday. I just i. It built so good. I was like i need this. My body clearly needs this naps. Eagles a sweet. My friend that by that point day is done in my friend. That's a pro tip. Hey i work done though. I way you're done okay. Now you can teach me about.

The 6 Figure Developer Podcast
"thirteen hours" Discussed on The 6 Figure Developer Podcast
"Know that they have like a certain level of knowledge i'm not walking walking around whacking people on hands for making the exact same mistake over and over. 'cause i never talk what i wanted. So like. give them all expectations of what you need from them. And then i'm also a big fan of secure design applying those concepts when you design and that usually means spending time with a security person. I'm also a fan of threat modeling. But let's put those aside says are extra things in pipeline for a lot of things you can do to make things faster and sometimes it means taking things sometimes it means having to so one thing you could do is if deb's have lots of awesome unit. Has you could work with them and create negative unitas or abuse unit tests. So you can add in things that are dangerous that you're concerned about every time. They run their unit tests. It will also test to make sure that they fail gracefully with bad input. So that's one thing you can do so if someone changes something and then all of a sudden the attack gets through. It's like sounds before. He gets to the pipeline. When you go to check in your coat you can do a pre commit hook so you can say like checking code. You can scan it for secrets and it's like. Oh gosh darn that. Looks like a that. Looks hatch that looks bad. I don't think you should check that. Whole only connections string including the password. No no no no no no thank you in. It can stop you there. And that's before you get to the pipeline than in the pipeline. You can new faster checks in the release one so the one that actually goes out and releases two different environments so fast check would be something like secrets canning something like sea something like you could do dynamic application security testing scan except for if you work with your qa team if they're doing something like selenium automated tests where like tests gooey. Every time when they do that they create something called a horror file. Hr file so you can take that plugged into your desk tool not all but lots of them do and then it will follow that exact thing like punching everything in the face as it goes but it'll run like ten times quicker than if you didn't give it that vial you can say like this. Is the functionality. Where the most concerned about or this is the way we want you test. You can do a subsection of testing with that. And then you can run the whole. Gamut in another pipeline. That does not bark release. That runs a synchronous -ly and it can have a security person check you know once a week today depending upon how many security people you have and they can go through and then fish false positives and look through it and say okay so there's actually ten things here but only three of them really worried me. Can we talk about these three. I wanna put them in your backlog and so you could automate these tests running because you know. Let's say every minor. Release that you change. Kicks off this parallel pipeline. That has a ton of security checks that takes thirteen hours to run. You never wanna wait for that. But i come in monday morning. And i'm like woo. I'm gonna go dig through these results. Unlike give everyone prays. It's good because we're catching these things. Right there's lots of strategies for how to do things faster but what. I see a lot of an industry as people plugging in really old apsect tools. That are high quality amazing tools. That are not supposed to be used that way. And then they're really frustrated with the results and it's like well yes i could take a mug and probably hammer and a nail something a goal. Well because that's not what bill for also what you're describing also sounds a lot like a lot of human working with humans..

The Business of Fashion Podcast
How Fashion Can Leverage the Audio Appeal of Clubhouse
"Earlier this year. Silicon valley became obsessed with a new app called clubhouse and audio bay social network where people can spontaneously jump into different chat rooms to together launched amid the pandemic since day one. The app has attracted the kind of funding controversy and hype that's ruffled feathers and made headlines. The social audio space is booming. Investors are piling in and recently twitter revealed that it's launching. Its own take on social audio space. That's currently being dominated by clubhouse one of is super users is none other than virgil abloh. Louis vuitton men's artistic director and creative director of off. White virgil joins us at voices twenty today from chicago alongside clubhouse founder paul davidson who is in san francisco. Welcome to you both. Thank you so much. Glad to be here liquors lurk whereas going and run. Get to see you again. Virgil i'm gonna. I'm gonna start with paul. Because i think everyone in the silicon valley world has heard of clubhouse but you know there are people watching who may not yet have understood what this is. So in the first instance. I'm gonna ask you the question you know. Why do we need another social media. What is it that clubhouse offers to the world. That isn't already out there. Yeah happy but that one slight correction the clubhouse house with my friend row on Clubhouse it's a new type of social network. That's based on voice where people around the world come together to talk. Listen and learn from each other about topics ranging from fashion to retail music and sports and social justice. It's sort of like hallways of this conference anywhere where it's all on your phone. There's no video but you can. You can reconnect with people you can learn or you can just be applying the wall and i think that connection is an inherently human thing. We're wired to connect invoice is a very different medium. We've seen it grow recently because of things like airpods and smart speakers an in-car integrations of this technology. But but it's it's in some ways the oldest medium in the world right. We were talking long before we were writing or taking photos or shooting videos but in the world of social media. It's a new thing and we find that allows people to connect in a different way you have all of the fidelity and authenticity and bids an asks an emotion. But you don't have any of things zaidi of video worrying about what you look like. Or how messy your houses and so it creates a different type of experience that is more about connecting with people in and having conversations than about getting likes or follows or projecting a certain view of yourself to the world. So we think it's a pretty different experience in what's out there right now. Burs let me let me turn to you. Because as i mentioned in the intro you've become a clubhouse super user and they might conversations of the. I know you're a busy guy. We were talking michael wolff earlier today. Who says like the average person is spending thirteen hours a day on their technology devices. You know why are you carving out time and you're very busy schedule to use clubhouse what do you get out of clubhouse. That's different from what you can get elsewhere. It's one of those things where i rationalize it like this. I'm in the design community. Which basically means that. I'm a part of the uber. Small percentage of people that get to dictate web pants. You wear next year. Look like you know like. I have an opinion. I'm in a part of a collective that decides. What the in like a trend for your car or your your interior of your home. They look like you know that's to me. Take that as a huge responsibility. This is like shelving away all the things like the fun side of the job or something like that. So i think it's a part of my responsibility of my craft to be knowledgeable to know what's going on in the world like if i locked myself in my studio and i sit in a place where i think from my sort of like shielded view of the world. This is what i think. The impact the lives of others. I think that's the wrong path. So when clubhouse comes around which i believe is a is a forward thinking concept from amazing people with great hearts and good vision. Like it's a no brainer. You know. And i project that out and so my friend told me adjust carballo from heist. Nobody was early user of clubhouse and he was like. Hey this is something i know you'd be into. You should try it out. And that's how. I became a user. An i've been a fan of the operation ever since two other quick. Things said that. I might add one. That because it's audio you can multitask and so it takes advantage of a lot of found time. it's not something where you're staring at a screen and just scrolling for hours and doing nothing else. People are using it while. They're walking while they're driving while they're in bed at night while they're folding laundry while they're doing all sorts of other things and the second thing i'd say is a big goal for us is to ensure that when people spend time on clubhouse it is time well-spent where were they can spend spend time on it enclosed the app at the end of the session feeling better than they did when they opened it because they deepen friendships. They've met new people they've learnt. It's a participatory different experience than than sort of scrolling screen purely consuming got it so virgil let me take it back to you for a minute. Your as you said your top designer in the industry now you can dictate what pants or as we'd call trousers in. Hey what you'd wear. Trousers wear next season. But what do you think. Fashion brand louis. Re tong could use or learn from clubhouse. How could fashion brands make use of this tool. They've found different ways to use instagram other other social media apps. But you know what could a fashion brand us clubhouse for you know. This is just something that i was just like reflecting on an essence. Obviously there's this in the fashion industry. There's hyper sort of like attention. Paid towards digital space. You know e commerce web impressions content photos videos data when at the end of the day. You know it's an extreme metric and tool to engage. And i think with the with the advent of clubhouse sort of refocusing on audio. It's it's an interesting case. Study and seeing like making sure that brands have something to say. You know you when you can't escape to creating an image that looks like fashion so then people consume it as fashion or a video. That looks glossy looks like moving. Image of fashion ambience. Like i for one. Think it's a like a new landscape to hear what brand about you know without the use of image or without that the the adjacency to say a product within that image. Like what do you have to say. And that becomes compelling as a fashion industry when we can use our voice to create engagement. Yeah that's that's really interesting because of course it's like second nature for the fashion industry to communicate through imagery. But how does how does a fashion company communicate through sound. I don't know paul if you have anything to add their think it's such an interesting contrast when you're talking about the fashion industry right. I mean extensively. Fashion is visual. It is curated. this is literally the opposite. You can't fake. You can't have a social media manager post the clubhouse right you're talking and the community aspect is a really big part of it. Because it's so participatory in your calling people from the audience here engaging with the people that care about your brand you have people in the industry sourcing creatives for shoots and and and talking about trends in what's happening in the news it's just a. It's a very different experience. So i love the fact that virgil has it enjoyed using the product because on its surface that contrast is just so fascinating to me like the division curated versus the the raw and intimate. Yeah all all the conversations that i have hosted or been part of on clubhouse related to fashion imron in a weird way. Have been more in depth than than interviews or sort of regular format sort of media. You know because the audience is getting to hear what they can't see on instagram too. Many characters to type. Obviously none of us are person like me. I'm not media trained to be able to like sound by. Have my ideas go through instagram. So that people exactly get the nuance and a medium like like clubhouse is where as a designer i can talk about the inspiration that i only usually talk about press

The Midnight Patriots
"thirteen hours" Discussed on The Midnight Patriots
"But i guess people do what they do anansie and i saw when i was sitting there looking at it. I saw that they were talking about in. Correct me if i'm wrong but something. As far as trump's speech actually started a little bit late and was actually. I think like a thirty minute walk. From where trump was doing it versus the the building. I think i know what you're talking about. What you're talking about is it. He was actually speaking about margin. Peasley patriotically when the quote unquote insurrection happened. Yeah i've heard that i don't. I can't confirm that to be quite honest. I wasn't watching the whole thing to be totally honest. 'cause all we really saw was a bunch of rhinos roll over and play dead another having tobacco. Apologize for doing what the democrats did any time or do. Anytime republicans elected. But i digress. I i hope the republicans start to find their balls honestly. I'm tired of them rolling over and feeling like they offended everybody for standing up for what they're supposed to be believing they took an oath to do. They seem to forget that they worked for you. And i part of our employees. These are not our leaders they work for us and they have forgotten that i was listening today to to to hag killary body count. Who has no business comparing body counts. The president trump. No business okay saying that. She wants to know if trump was on the phone with putin to to coordinate the whole march on washington march on the capital or insurrection. And i thought to myself gee hillary we'd still like to see your emails your phone records. What the fuck you were doing for thirteen hours. While an ambassador and several of our clandestine employees were slaughtered. Bring up any kind of facts because we have to acknowledge feelings over fat because the stove matter. What's more important is feelings. Fuck your feelings number. One and number two nancy pelosi says oh. We can't move past the issue because the the the members have been traumatized. Nancy pelosi listen to me. You had and you villainous bitch how do you think innocent. People in cities run by democrats..

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"thirteen hours" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network
"One ever said life is fair. Here's foul territory with jen on sports overnight america. I know you're in how about you. Urine urine urine. Everybody welcome back. Welcome to our partners and everybody out there listening on. Espn radio prior to bring the foul territory program. It's part of these sports overnight. America block of course part of sports byline broadcast network and catch all of our programming here on the network at sports byline dot com and jen. It said that we're not just going to talk. Tear hiatus about our in highest kinda round things out talk about the things that we do when we're not sports and we talk about sports here live ten. Pm pacific time sports pilot dot com for full schedule. By where here. We talk about sports. We watch the games. I think that we've moderate in h- just how much we take in that. We don't have to watch every college basketball game that i don't have to watch thirteen hours football on saturday and then thirteen hours football sunday. I mean i do. Because i like you do and will all london. London is still somewhat of a unique experience. So i i like the early to rise we like. Are we like our little traditions. That we like the we. We wake up on the fourth of july for the hotdog eating contest. And then we we make hot dogs and i. I don't put away six or seven. Like i did during the during the hour that the show aired like i you know like i did in in younger years but i think that we find ways to to entertain ourselves and few to call the major league eating a sport. I find with that but i think that is something. That's just an activity that we take on. That goes a little bit outside the scope of sport. It's amazing what those folks can eat in terms of quantity and just like cheesecake. I think they go by weight. Not slices slices cheesecake. It's like twenty three pounds of cheesecake a kid. Even say that with a straight face stomach drops just thinking about twenty three pounds. The closest thing. I've ever done to a competitive. Eating challenge was a place that specializes in bake it. Here in the valley of the side phoenix arizona. That have had the local news for a ten minute segment up there sending promoting their business and they have the bacon eating challenge. Now they put a pound of bacon in front of all the contestants and the determination for who won was based on who the least amount of beacon left on their plate. And i believe that you were able to stream this online over the local fox affiliates website. But i do recall how. I finished how i fared in that particular that i want you to finish because i don't trying to talk over you but honestly probably one of the most awkwardly weird things ever because i am at work which is a desk job and of course i tell my co workers that this is happening and we make sure we're all available to watch this via stream along and it's like halfway through the competition who served us all the time when we dine there is like rubbing your shoulders and my bosses making comments about like. This is kind of weird of obvious. And i don't know if i do remember how it ended. Just take your. It's just got so weird. I kinda spaced out. Good well one. But i couldn't tell you if all the beacon was gone. The plate was clear there was still some bacon laughs. But it just i know you want it just it was awkward from my angle to become. Because you've got to think about where i'm sitting. I'm facing the cameras. So i can't exactly turn around and say get your dang hands off me you you waitress lady watching four or five of my coworkers and the comments they're making and not the greatest morning in my mind now. How cheap would it be for me to put that on like a resume or a bio that. I a championship Award winning eater fourteen. That sounds about right. That sounds you still have the t shirt i do not still have the t. T shirt actually ended up becoming soil and it was converted the dust rag and that was all that i got. All you got was championship for you. Were eating champion until they did it again. Next year on the next national beacon day that they did it for national bacon day or international. dak- day your world baker day some bacon day. They do a lot of that. And so you know. I'm i'm kind of hamstrung for vacant that have had on the road. That was anything particularly special. Because i did want to talk about the for you know because we've travelled to eighteen of the thirty major league locations we've been in the some of the other cities just not not together not at at the same time but We've seen everything west with the exception of the north woods. Places wisconsin and minnesota. We've seen everything in the western divisions. We've seen everything in the central divisions other than milwaukee minnesota we haven't seen any of the yeast as far as as far as major league baseball travel goes so i think they. I appreciate the deep dish pizza that we've had in the mid west but not in the city that you'd think i was actually just telling a coworker who is from michigan about how much i love the digestion greektown at pizza populace. She gets exactly where it was. I imagine there's not a lot of deep dish options in motown or the state of michigan. In general we've had all three. We've had three of the big deep dish. Chicago places here in arizona in the phoenix market. We've had them all in the chicago area and we have had them all in the phoenix market. Look at so. I we're talking about luminaries. Who was first to phoenix. Didn't didn't go outside of illinois prior to that correct and then we had Gino's east Which opened maybe maybe six months to year later and then not short not long thereafter. We won giordano's and then we got a second wine. And now we're down to zero gino's one giordano's and a multiple. I quite a few on holidays so they won the deep dish worse phoenix and the butter. Well it was. It was such a novelty. where were they the. they're already going somewhere else. They're already going to what to to florida florida. Maybe florida probably and you would endorse lunardi series. You're good with that. Yeah gino's karami because we have the gino's that was here was painfully close. And we figured out what you had to order. So you've got the primo bus tasting food. And.

10% Happier with Dan Harris
A Holiday Survival Guide for Difficult Conversations
"Nice to see you again good to see you. Thanks for coming in. Have you try and get you on the show along. Yeah i'm pleased. I'm really pleased that you were able to get to new york city for this as you know fascinated by your work and we're going to dive into it. Can i start with your meditation career. And i'd love to hear how. I i also i think you also do Gone which i don't know much about. Yeah so i'd love to learn about both of those things. Well i started to gung meditation practice twenty years ago and two thousand two thousand the year. Two thousand so. I'm a practitioner. I'm not an expert. I'm not a teacher. Never written about it. But i had a good friend who was into it then had a master who taught locally in the twin cities and just decided to try it in mostly because i was interested in reducing stress in my life and i i loved it and i started out twenty minutes a day. I started out with the video of the master doing the moves. And so i just sort of watch and follow him. Then a weaned and my way off. The video started with twenty minutes and now i do forty minutes every morning. So i'm i don't really know what it is. Well it's Chinese spiritual and healing practice. So it's five thousand years old and it combines a breathing and gentle movements and there's a the theory behind it that i'm you know i'm not sure i'm into the theory so much but energy in the body as she that's right as a source of healing so the master studied with as a healer and i'm not into that as much as i meant to just deep relaxation breathing and gentle movements and it just calms me and centers. Me and i tend to have sometimes creative ideas during. Are you telling me that. The life of marriage counselor stressful well. I'm an academic. And i do a lot of community engagement work and i live a fairly intense life and that includes my clinical specialty couples on the brink of divorce. You know so. I'm like an intensive care physician. So all of that can add up to a fairly intense life and this meditation practice just grounds me and i felt at every day grateful to be alive. Well how does it ripple out to the rest of your life. Well a lot of the work. I do both with couples and also my work with As we'll get into my work with better angels where we deal with conservatives and liberals who are at odds with each other did you notice that A lot of it is for me is about. How do i manage myself in the face of conflicting people and conflicting agendas where the stakes are high. And so the meditation practice adds into my therapist training to do what we call them. The jargon phrase emotional self regulation and centeredness in the face of difficult interpersonal situations. I've watched you at work. I went to the national was the first better angels. National conference watched you do your thing and you're aecom dude at least on the outside. yeah well when. I'm in my work in my modem. Actually come inside to. Because i'm doing. This is what we're here to do folks so let's do and let me help you engage each other. Let's talk about the better angels. Just give me some background on how the group got started. Remember the two thousand sixteen presidential election vaguely. Yeah a lot of people. Remember that one about ten days after that election to long term colleagues of mine who had worked on marriage and family issues one in new yorker david blakenhorn upper east side of manhattan. The other david lapped southwest. Ohio south lebanon ohio universes apart in terms of how people there felt about the election. They were on the phone together. Howard new yorkers doing only ensuite new york upper east side manhattan gloom and doom of funeral and in ohio hope and change and they decided on the spur of the moment to get together. Ten hillary clinton voters and ten tunnel drunk voters for a weekend in southwest ohio in december. To see if any of the gaps could be bridged and then they called me. And i said oh. That's pretty brave. What we thinking of doing with them and they said they didn't know they thought i could figure that part out if they recruited the people and i remember sitting at my home desk hoping i was not free that weekend. You know kind of looking at my calendar. Oh darn you know having engagement. But in fact i was so i said let's go for it so we had people Twenty folks from that part of the country from south west ohio for friday night all day saturday and sunday afternoon thirteen hours and it was a remarkable experience.

podnews
Spotify investigates podcast subscriptions
"Spotify might be planning to launch a subscription. Podcast service it appears to be serving customers to gauge interest. In the others that have tried this. Include luminary stitcher and wondering reported. That wondering was up for sale at the end of september bloomberg. Report the both apple and sony have held talks spotify. The apparently an interested the asking price is between three and four hundred million dollars. The audio production award have just announced this year's nominations. The awards got the highest number of interest in their history. We linked to them today. I'm willing to an exclusive pod fest. China had its third annual conference. We've a full report from the day including developments in podcasting within china spotify twitter youtube and facebook all polls an episode of the pod. Being hosted steve bannon's war room. Podcast after bannon called for the beheading of dr anthony foundry and fbi director christopher ray. The episode in question is still available via apple podcasts. And the podcast index. The california privacy rights act passed last week the cpr. A has some tightening of rules especially around re targeting consumers based on their behaviour online which some podcast companies used for attribution. The nfl's it didn't go far enough. Meanwhile apple of center deadline of december the eighth at privacy data sheets. You need to identify all of the data you or your third party partners collects assay for podcast apps that could be interesting vocal via okay l. Dot co lets you create cool. Podcast video snippets for social media. So they say podcast addict has added a random pick button which returns a random list of podcasts and tacomas podcasting business including radio dot com and katie's thirteen claims a twenty-seven percent increase in downloads year on year in the latest earnings call. Espn is to lay off three hundred employees and let two hundred open positions go unfilled trouble for triton digital there mac accreditation for its webcast metrics. Local service was revoked in august. According to the quarterly update accreditation is suspended for the main webcast metrics service. No reason was given both us to compare streaming radio not podcasting in the seeking to regain accreditation for their main webcast. Metrics service anyway. Revenue grew by fourteen percent last quarter according to e w scripps his quarterly earnings call. The company also owns on the studio. It's a mondays. Here's another teaspoon of tech staff. The podcast index unveiled the podcast value. Tag it allows micro payments using crypto currency through the lightning network. Podcasters can opt in to be rewarded every minute someone lessons and this value for the podcast app and platform as well. There's more detail in the podcasting two point. Oh podcast which linked to today open source android. Podcast app antenna parks now. Has podcast indexes. Search built in as does podcast. Pod bay is one of the app supporting podcast chapters linked today to a c. Sharp rapper for the podcast index. Api with and blueberry has highlighted its full support of the podcast index. Impasse news powerful stories with torey arch. Bowl has joined nova. Entertainment's podcast network the show steps into the shoes of powerful women and discover how they earned success. Christmas partying is back for a third season. See what they've done their from. Brisbane in australia at tackles the fun all could and honest side of christmas and thirteen hours inside the nova scotia. Massacres launched today from curious cast and global news a thirteen episode series. It looks to piece together exactly what happened. And what could have been done to prevent it

Travel with Rick Steves
Enjoy Your Seat; Lisbon Neighborhoods; Buenos Aires Bio
"Rick Steves with borders temporarily closing countless travel. Dreams are now on hold. But I know that we'll get through this crisis and when we do it'll be more important than ever to venture out into our world so for now. Let's enjoy these virtual adventures through the Radio. And when we're able again let's promise to keep on traveling if you like to explore historic cities with funkier festive neighborhoods. We've got to for you to choose from in the hour ahead. Tour guides from Portugal will help us navigate the street life and the tangle of cobbled lanes and lookouts and their capital as we get acquainted with the neighborhoods of Lisbon and an architecture critic finds a lot to like faded charisma of Buenos Aires. But I writer Wendy. Simmons returns to travel with Rick. Steves to help us look forward to our next long airplane flight in coach as a photographer and contributor to Huffington Post. Wendy's traveled a lot so far she's been to eighty five countries. She doesn't read the overseas flights at all in fact she joins us now with her tips on enjoying your next flight. Wendy thanks for being here. Sorry my so you write that long haul. Flights can be more fun than short ones. That's pretty good trick house. Oh I travel all the time as you said and I've come to really not lake. Short flights feel long only. They're not so I can't get anything done and instead you know. I look at long haul flights as uninterrupted me. Time just ten twelve hours of time where? I don't have any guilt that I should be doing something else and instead I can use the time to do all the things I wanna do that. I never seem to have time for one on the so that takes a little bit of intention and thinking ahead. I do the same thing when I'm planning a trip to Europe and I know my departures a week out. I've actually got a little list of things I'm going to do during the flight because I will get hours of me time. What are some of your meantime activities that make that flight actually blessing? Well it can be fun stuff and it can also be stuff that I just have to get taken care of that. I never have time to do so. For example it's a great time. I listened to a lot of music. I love music and I am always frustrated. That can't find the song I feel like listening to her playlist and that type of thing so it's a great time to clean out my tunes library and get rid of music. I don't like or create playlists. It's a great time to go through my email inbox and just finally cleared out. You don't have to be online to do that. Those things take a long time in our lives are so busy and never get render so tedious and who wants to do that on weekends. You know for me. A related thing would be Hall the piles of photos. I've got packed into my iphone. You can just go through in down. It's actually it's the perfect time to do all the stuff you don't WanNa waste time doing during the weekend or at night. Also you can just do something that you would normally invest time in other ways. Absolutely you know I'll to things like if I've always wanted to read about the history of someplace or I've been wanting to learn a few key phrases in the language of whatever country I'm going to you know that's the perfect time to catch up on movies or season of television shows all season of whatever or watch a movie that you wouldn't have exactly those are the exactly the kind of thing so it's really about mindset or a movie that your partner wouldn't WanNa see with you exactly are the ones you'd be so embarrassed ask anyone to watch with you. If you're anywhere else I love to walk up and down the aisle and just look at the way. People are spending their time and see how they're really getting into all that trash on the screen. I mean I've watched some of the most embarrassing movies ever on airplanes humiliated if anyone knew but it's the perfect time and I think you know people go onto airplanes dreading it and if you just you know if you make a few simple changes and you bring a neck pillow and you dress in layers and you take your shoes off and you have a glass of wine and you sort of look at the airplane is your you know your personal private space albeit. It's not comfortable but it's not permanent. I know people that would they would travel less in order to go first class and makes no sense that ultimately. I don't know how much more I think you'd pay five or six hundred dollars more one hundred dollars hour or something at least just sit in first class and just makes no sense to me because what you can do is you can creatively work to make your coach seat. Feel a little more elegant. And there's ways that I always say I would rather sit in coach with my noise reduction headphones than to sit business without them because the rumble of the airplane is. It's just exhausting to me and I can have my own little cone of silence and when I put my headphones on nobody talks to me and I do have that meantime I remember this interview that the CEO of Spirit Airlines did one time after a poll came out ranking them dead last in customer service and seat size and space and all these other statistics and he basically said listen. We get you from place to place really cheap. You can spend the money where you're going and I thought you know what a brilliant response and that's how I look at it. The airplane isn't part of the vacation. It's to get me to the big Russian affordably. Say money to it up and uncomfortable for thirteen hours so I have an extra thousand dollars when I get wherever it is that I'm

AP News Radio
Survey shows effect of virus on food scarcity, rent payments
"Many Americans are reporting difficulty finding food and paying their bills during the corona virus outbreak more than ten percent of U. S. households said some of the time or often they could not get enough of the food they wanted or needed that figure went up to twenty percent for residents in Mississippi the household poll survey from the census bureau and other government agencies finds about half of the respondents report losing income because of virus restrictions twenty five percent say they'll have trouble paying their mortgage or rent about four in ten say they've delayed seeking medical care and for distance learning parents say they're spending about thirteen hours a week on average teaching their kids I'm Jackie Quinn

They Call Us Bruce
Filmmaker Renee Tajima-Peña talks 'Asian Americans'
"Teach Asian American studies at UCLA. And it's embarrassing. How little I knew. I'm being when I went back. I mean don't tell anybody with my colleagues because Dr Ahead filmaker would you expect but I mean you know. People are worried now about naturalization and I kept on thinking well that's a new thing but in fact South Asians back in the nineteen twenties were who had citizenship here were denaturalized. I mean they were because of the got sing tin case by God sing. Tin Was an immigrant from India and he was actually a World War One veteran I mean he fought he served for the US military in World War One so he was given citizenship for. Maybe four days or something like that. But then they reversed it because he was Indian Dan so he also went to the US Supreme Court and the only thing he can argue back then was while. I'm I'm white because I'm Caucasian because I guess that's the region or whatever and the Supreme Court decided. Yeah you're Caucasian but you're not white but you sure ain't white not white so no no no. You can't have citizenship. So he was naturalized. And then all the South Asians with citizenship were then de-naturalize and when you're denaturalized. You don't only lose the rights and responsibilities of citizenship. Like your property you lost your property. I mean it was. Just you know as heartbreaking the case of cutting thin is it's so interesting because it's like it confirms very like on the Supreme Court level. Whiteness is like why disease it's racist such a construct in that in the in the most sort of You know those like constitutional way that they've like defined it. You know what I mean like. You're definitely not white. We need to confirm that like you're not the common man's definition of white. Yes I think what's What's also a deeper structure aspect of? This is that speaks to the uncomfortable role that as I have played throughout history And especially in the present day right that we have been seen in some ways as a kind of like The stopgap other right uh-huh our yeah the wedge or the fill in or you know the standings for various things I I'm thinking here of the earliest immigrants. The United States as a Chinese United States specifically and Japanese as well it were brought here in part because there was a need for labor after After black slaves were free right so there was this sudden. Shortfall of people to do heartbreaking work at very low pay and they decided that it was cheaper instead of to hire black people to actually import people from across oceans right and that instantly set up a narrative for us to be seen as kind of the replacement minority and overtime. We've we've had this kind of pushing pull in terms of where we belong. How adjacent perhaps to whiteness and blackness. We belong or whether we belong here at all right because that's as we began this conversation. Talking about a cyclic thing where it seems like American decides. We don't belong so I you know one of the things I think about. This documentary series is how well that that subtext kind of plays out in in the way that the narrative has been framed. And when you're trying to do one hundred and fifty years of history you have to actually will. You can't tell all of it. It's really not in real time. So how did you decide what to include and whatnot? They're just so much right. You've got yeah you've got five episodes. And then the and the whole of Asian America. Yes so so. What do you do and as you know? Country Music got thirteen hours. Five hours hundred Fifty Years American history. How many how many hours did baseball in the civil war? I well Vietnam workout seventeen or something like that. But I mean that's that's fine a deserved it. But you know countries excessive.

Weekend Edition Sunday
Coronavirus testing: What you should know
"Us we begin today with a look at testing in this country as the corona virus continues to spread getting tested for the disease here is still hard consider two different stories one is from actually hiker she lives in Houston she began having symptoms on March sixteenth so she went to an urgent care clinic where she tested negative for the flu but when she asked to take a covert nineteen test they said they were going to test me there because I was young and you know I don't have any risk factors the next day a friend told her about some community health centers in Houston that were offering free testing they asked to the usual questions her symptoms if you travel to China recently if you've been in contact with anyone who had to cope with nineteen I didn't know if I come in contact with someone but the guy was kind of hinting like if you say that then I can you for advertising she got the test and waited for two weeks to hear back I mean there's so much uncertainty right now and so then waiting on this test was just another layer of uncertainty finally the results came back she was positive actually was then told that she would hear from the Houston health department within a week it took them three weeks to reach her this past Wednesday by then actually had already recovered so that was the case from last month but what about testing now let's hear from grace Belmont of Roxbury Massachusetts I had been ill for a while it started with a sore throat and moved into my lungs and increasing fatigue and throughout that process I sought out testing it was repeatedly told no wonder symptoms worsened she ended up in the emergency room and by that time I realized I needed to lie in order to get tested so I said that I had had a fever which I had not had and they because of my only other sentencing I was finally able to get a test she said the doctor seem nervous quickly testing just one side and not sticking the swap very far back the test was negative but she continued to get sicker it was very alarming to find my health going downhill at a rapid clip and not being able to get any help in the den the doctors I could tell were also very frustrated with that with the restrictions that have been put on them as well I was early April just this past week she got tested again and it was a much different experience my doctor was able to request a test I went to a designated co that hospital and I met with a trained nurse who reported that he did approximately seventy test today had a lot of experience again the test was negative progress continues to have severe symptoms so not quite trusting the result she is keeping her distance from our family just in case she does have the coronavirus in between the test and the result is the wait for the phone to ring and on the other end of that phone call is often someone like our next guest Dr Carolyn Schulman is a third year resident at George Washington University and she wrote an article this past week in stat about her experience informing people that they tested positive for coke at nineteen and she joins us now from the hospital where she's on a thirteen hour shift thanks so much for taking a break and being with us today thanks so much for inviting me I imagine it's really scary for people to find out that they've tested positive what kind of reactions do you get most people I found were specially in March when we news so much less than we do now and we still have a lot to learn they had a lot of questions a lot of anxiety I had some folks cry some people were relieved to just talk to someone and they hadn't been isolating in their house waiting for their test results and then some people are really relieved to find out an explanation for their sometimes and by the time I had called them sometimes they were feeling better I understand we have to keep people's privacy but you did in your article give sort of general descriptions of some of the stories that you heard can you tell us a few now what kinds of people were testing positive and and what does that tell you I found testing positive were from all walks of life are low income populations seem to be especially more of honorable in this pandemic the issue of overcrowding and housing in DC and many other cities is ongoing and in the setting of a pandemic it further highlights our needs for more social services in these areas some resources did exist and I would get what I could to my patients but it was definitely a role outside of what I had done previously in terms of practicing medicine it expanded into other areas that really affected people's health and public health you describe a man called Jeff who lives alone and who has a chronic blood condition but who had to resume his job as a a ride share driver because he needed to make ends meet yeah unfortunately that was that wasn't an uncommon reaction that I would find when when telling people their results really think people are trying the best they could but some people really couldn't miss a day's work or a week's work the headline of this article was it was my job to call people whose cover nineteen tests were positive that taught me a lot about medicine the law and society explain what you learned yeah I think it highlights the fact that health depends on so much more than just hospitals is really difficult as probably anyone but especially as a position to know how to help in those situations I wasn't trained on how to help someone who lives in an in an overcrowded house self isolate like I wasn't trained on how to help somebody get food like it wasn't on my boards it wasn't on any of the tests I took I just was determined and dedicated and trying to figure out everything I could while I was making these phone calls that was Dr Carolyn showman thank you very much thank you so much there are two types of tests taking place right now the ones we just heard about happen when you worried you might have a live infection the others are antibody test also called serological tests antibody test Rainsy who was infected in the past and some officials hope they can be used to decide who can safely go back to work because they have some kind of immunity there are now more than a hundred different types of antibody test available here typically it would take months or even longer to get approval from the food and drug administration which regulates medical products but after criticism for slowing down the process president trump removed approval barriers allowing companies to take their antibody tests street to market now house oversight subcommittee has raised the alarm saying that after a briefing by federal officials they found the FDA is unable to validate the accuracy of these tests Illinois Democrat representative Raja Krishnamoorthi chairs the house oversight subcommittee on economic and consumer policy and he joins us now from Schaumburg Illinois good morning Hey good morning will so as I mentioned your committee was briefed by officials about antibody tests coming onto the market what do they tell you they basically told us that there are two paths that makers of these tests can utilize to get their test sold one is to basically get authorization from the FDA to sell them and for companies have taken advantage of that and then the other is not to get any authorization from the FDA and go ahead and sell them and a hundred and seven have taken advantage of that and unfortunately a wild west of unregulated tasks are now proliferating and our biggest concerns are that they're unreliable inaccurate and in many cases making fraudulent claims about their testing results but isn't there a bit of a problem here because on the one hand there was a lot of criticism that the trump administration and the FDA was just holding the reins too tight and that they weren't getting tests out to people who needed them and now there's this other complaint that there's just too many tasks and there's not enough oversight it can sound like it's unclear really which direction the government should it should go on well I think that you know because the serological tests are so important because the trump administration is really promising the re opening of the economy on these tasks it's important that the tests to be accurate and that the test makers not making fraudulent claims about them there is a way to go about balancing the need to get a lot of testing out there with the need for you know making sure that they're accurate that's called the emergency use authorization route that allows makers to even begin using and selling the tasks at the same time that they're seeking authorization on Friday the FDA administrator Steven Hahn was asked about the antibody tests over which you raised the alarm here's what he said at the White House briefing we provide flexibility what we've told manufacturers is that in order to market in the U. S. they have to validate their tests they have to tell us that they validated their tennis package insert they have to let people know end users labs X. cetera that those tests were not authorized by FDA does this reassure you in anyway no because what he's basically saying is that these makers have to self validate and because of this kind of voluntary compliance type of regimen there's absolutely no incentive for a junk test maker to actually produce their results to the FDA so what would you advise people to do I think right now only use a test that has been authorized by the FDA they've listed the handful of tasks that have actually been authorized on their website I think the FDA needs to take action to clear the market of all under unauthorized tests and they should require authorization before any of these tests are sold and then they did it put out clear standards as to what characterizes a good test and what do you do with the test results that's the most important thing for a consumer standpoint you know that's where the FDA really needs to

Dan Proft
Canada mass shooting started with suspect's assault on girlfriend
"A police official in Canada says the country's worst mass shooting erupted from an argument the official tells the Associated Press the shooting rampage in Nova Scotia stem from a domestic dispute involving the gunmen and his girlfriend who survived investigators say fifty one year old Gabriel workmen acted alone in the shooting spree that killed at least twenty two people across northern and central Nova Scotia there are sixteen crime scenes in five different world communities the suspect was shot to death Sunday morning about thirteen hours after the attacks

Mike Gallagher
Canada mass shooting erupted from argument, official says
"A Canadian police official says Canada's worst mass shooting started as an argument the official tells the Associated Press the shooting rampage in Nova Scotia stemmed from a domestic dispute involving the gunmen and his girlfriend who survived investigators say fifty one year old Gabriel workmen acted alone in the shooting spree that killed at least twenty two people across northern and central Nova Scotia there are sixteen crime scenes in five different world communities the suspect was shot to death Sunday morning about thirteen hours after the attacks

AP News Radio
Canada shooting erupted after domestic dispute
"A police official in Canada says the country's worst mass shooting a rusted from an argument the official tells the Associated Press the shooting rampage in Nova Scotia stemmed from a domestic dispute involving the gunmen and his girlfriend who survived investigators say fifty one year old Gabriel workmen acted alone in the shooting spree that killed at least twenty two people across northern and central Nova Scotia there are sixteen crime scenes in five different world communities the suspect was shot to death Sunday morning about thirteen hours after the attacks began I'm I counted

AP News Radio
Official: Canada shooting erupted after domestic dispute
"The official tells the Associated Press the shooting rampage in Nova Scotia stemmed from a domestic dispute involving the gunmen and his girlfriend who survived investigators say fifty one year old Gabriel workmen acted alone in the shooting spree that killed at least twenty two people across northern and central Nova Scotia there are sixteen crime scenes in five different world communities the suspect was shot to death Sunday morning about thirteen hours after the attacks began I'm I counted

AP News Radio
Official: Canada shooting erupted after domestic dispute
"The official tells the Associated Press the shooting rampage in Nova Scotia stemmed from a domestic dispute involving the gunmen and his girlfriend who survived investigators say fifty one year old Gabriel workmen acted alone in the shooting spree that killed at least twenty two people across northern and central Nova Scotia there are sixteen crime scenes in five different world communities the suspect was shot to death Sunday morning about thirteen hours after the attacks began I'm I counted

AP News Radio
Official: Canada shooting erupted after domestic dispute
"The official tells the Associated Press the shooting rampage in Nova Scotia stemmed from a domestic dispute involving the gunmen and his girlfriend who survived investigators say fifty one year old Gabriel workmen acted alone in the shooting spree that killed at least twenty two people across northern and central Nova Scotia there are sixteen crime scenes in five different world communities the suspect was shot to death Sunday morning about thirteen hours after the attacks began I'm I counted

AP News Radio
Official: Canada shooting erupted after domestic dispute
"The official tells the Associated Press the shooting rampage in Nova Scotia stemmed from a domestic dispute involving the gunmen and his girlfriend who survived investigators say fifty one year old Gabriel workmen acted alone in the shooting spree that killed at least twenty two people across northern and central Nova Scotia there are sixteen crime scenes in five different world communities the suspect was shot to death Sunday morning about thirteen hours after the attacks began I'm I counted

AP News Radio
Official: Canada shooting erupted after domestic dispute
"The official tells the Associated Press the shooting rampage in Nova Scotia stemmed from a domestic dispute involving the gunmen and his girlfriend who survived investigators say fifty one year old Gabriel workmen acted alone in the shooting spree that killed at least twenty two people across northern and central Nova Scotia there are sixteen crime scenes in five different world communities the suspect was shot to death Sunday morning about thirteen hours after the attacks began I'm I counted

AP News Radio
Official: Canada shooting erupted after domestic dispute
"The official tells the Associated Press the shooting rampage in Nova Scotia stemmed from a domestic dispute involving the gunmen and his girlfriend who survived investigators say fifty one year old Gabriel workmen acted alone in the shooting spree that killed at least twenty two people across northern and central Nova Scotia there are sixteen crime scenes in five different world communities the suspect was shot to death Sunday morning about thirteen hours after the attacks began I'm I counted