40 Burst results for "This Weekend"

A highlight from S17E6: Recovering From Crimes of the Heart w/ Rory Uphold

Dateable Podcast

04:20 min | 2 hrs ago

A highlight from S17E6: Recovering From Crimes of the Heart w/ Rory Uphold

"Hi, I'm Yui Xu, and I'm Julie Kraftchick. We're active daters turned dating sociologists here to dive into everything modern dating and relationships. Welcome to the dateable podcast. What's up datables? Welcome to another episode. We are feeling refreshed after kind of a weekend in Joshua Tree. Julie and I had a romantic getaway. We did. We sure did. We've been trying to do a dateable retreat for a long time. And you all know that last time we tried to go to Joshua Tree, a hurricane decided to visit the high desert. So we had to cancel our trip. But we finally got to go this past week. And it was so magical, so relaxing. We got to do a lot in person. It's just so much different in person to discuss everything. And we got to like bond and catch up on our lives. And also on you all are dateable. It really was so magical for anyone that hasn't been to Joshua Tree. I feel like I went a long time ago, and I thought it was cool, don't get me wrong. But this time around, I think because we went at you know, sunset, just how incredible that national park is. It really just felt like, you know, we were like in this far out place that we actually looked up the definition of Joshua Tree. And it felt so relevant to everything that we were going through is like maintaining love and hope. And now I'm like butchering this and what was it positive or faith. That's what it was love, hope and faith. When things are challenging in your lives, you can make it through. So I feel like that was such a testament to where we are both right now. And it was something really sentimental of just googling that and figuring out that was the meaning of Joshua Tree's. Yeah, perseverance in the face of adversity, such harsh desert conditions, these beautiful trees can grow and thrive. In fact, they're actually not trees. They're succulents that are as tall as trees. I went down the rabbit hole. I wanted to know everything about Joshua Tree's afterwards, but they're supposed to emit some sort of spiritual magical vortex energy, healing energy. And I truly felt that we weren't there for that long. But even in like, what, the hour that we spent just taking photos, walking around, I felt this. Yeah, this energy and like a bondedness to nature, to each other. So it was just really cool for. Yeah, definitely. If you haven't been to Joshua Tree, it's definitely worth going to. We also went to a Sound Healing at the Integratron, which is a world famous institution. And that was also magical. I fell asleep so hard I started snoring and Julie had to nudge me to wake me up. So that's a testament to how wonderful that experience. Well, you had to get a buddy, a snore buddy. This is so funny, because reason why is that you're in this sound, like the echo of the sound is that the person next to you only hears like a little but the person that's directly across, they hear that snore come through hardcore. So they told us like, find a buddy, even if you don't know someone, find a buddy. And if you hear them snoring, give them a nudge. So obviously, he was my buddy, and I heard her snore a little and I'm like, For me, it's not that bad, but I'm gonna give you the nudge. Yeah, she caught me right away. It's a perfectly circular dome. So your your sound bounces right off the circular wall and go straight back to the person behind you. So I can't imagine what that person heard. I definitely heard quite a few deep breaths snoring, nothing too bad. But it was like 45 minutes of sound bowls. And we all got to lie down these really comfy pads. And right next to each other. It was like a slumber party with 33 people. So wonderful. And then there is the center of the dome that you could say what you're grateful for or an intention. And what was super cool about it is only you heard it. You said it and it magnified for you, but no one else heard what you said.

Julie Kraftchick Julie Yui Xu 45 Minutes Joshua Tree 33 People Integratron Both Past Week Sound Healing
Fresh update on "this weekend" discussed on Bloomberg Daybreak Europe

Bloomberg Daybreak Europe

00:01 sec | 29 min ago

Fresh update on "this weekend" discussed on Bloomberg Daybreak Europe

"Latest the sound on podcast. I talk with Maura Gillespie of Blue Stack Strategies, former advisor to Speaker John Boehner on discord within the House Republican Conference. Well, it does because what Kevin McCarthy did over the weekend like him or not, you know, trust him or not. He got the job done and kept our government open because the government shutdown would have just been handing it to the Democrats to I mean, with every right to be, you know, lamenting what Republicans failed to do was, which is the job that is House of representatives. You have you have to fund the government. And so Kevin McCarthy did what he had to do this weekend and shocked a lot of people, probably myself included, And on then the flip side, so going in with all that momentum and having, you know, the best case scenario. OK, let's work together. Let's put it on the Senate. Matt Gaetz comes in and kind of just throws a bomb and all of it. And now whatever leverage was had is completely gone because this just shows that

A highlight from Rep. Matt Gaetz plans to oust GOP House Speaker Kevin McCarthy

Mike Gallagher Podcast

11:56 min | 10 hrs ago

A highlight from Rep. Matt Gaetz plans to oust GOP House Speaker Kevin McCarthy

"Lots of channels. Nothing to watch. Especially if you're searching for the truth. It's time to interrupt your regularly scheduled programs with something actually worth watching. Salem News Channel. Straightforward, unfiltered, with in -depth insight and analysis from the greatest collection of conservative minds. Like Hugh Hewitt, Mike Gallagher, Sebastian Gorka, and more. Find truth. Watch 24 -7 on SNC .TV and on Local Now, Channel 525. This is your source for breaking news and what to make of it all. This is The Mike Gallagher Show. Someone has to convince President Biden that if he runs again, he's going to go down in history as Ruth Bader Biden, the person who doesn't know when to quit. I do intend to file a motion to vacate against Speaker McCarthy this week. The only way he loses his job is if a handful of Republicans join up with the Democratic Party to fire him. That would be a disaster for the future of the Republican Party. Now, from the ReliefFactor .com studios, here's Mike Gallagher. Can everybody sort of cool it with the attacks against Matt Gaetz right now? What is going on? I'm telling you what, nothing upsets establishment Republicans more than disruptors. I suppose that's why they despise Donald Trump. I suspect the same people, many of the same, not all, but many of the same people who are attacking the Freedom Caucus, the Ralph Normans and the Matt Gaetzs and the Marjorie Taylor Greens, the same people who hate them, hate Trump. You know, we all sit around, we talk a good game about fixing Washington and trying to stop the out of control spending and flushing good money down the drain after bad and getting some fiscal responsibility going. But then when somebody tries to do it, we lop their heads off. We want it to be business as usual. Now, let me qualify. If you're not following this, this has been a wild weekend. Matt Gaetz went on TV saying, I'm going to try to lead an insurrection against Kevin McCarthy. We're going to have an ouster of Kevin McCarthy. I'm going to get him out of there. I'm going to get Democrats to side with me. There's all kinds of reporting that he's even offering subpoena power to the Democrats because he really doesn't like Kevin McCarthy. We get it. Kevin McCarthy gets it. Matt Gaetzs has never liked Kevin McCarthy. These guys are going to be butting heads forever. OK, so be it. McCarthy led to the...was able to avert a government shutdown with no funding for Ukraine. I think that's a win. I don't know that it's a win with a capital W, but it's a win. We got through it. With hours to spare. So Matt Gaetzs is livid. I guess he wanted a government shutdown. OK. He's an elected representative. He's representing his constituents in Florida. He can feel the way he wants to feel. And, you know, if he wants to take on Kevin McCarthy, all right, so be it. Might not be a great idea. It seems to me Republicans have some momentum right now, and this threatens that momentum. But having said that, I don't know why people on our side are attacking Gaetzs the way they are. Mark Levin, who I consider a friend, I actually love the guy. I think Mark Levin is one of the smartest guys around. He's calling Matt Gaetzs a traitor. Literally a traitor. Mark Levin posted of Matt Gaetzs, This clown is a Benedict Arnold. He killed a CR slashing spending by 8 % and strengthening border security. Now he plots and schemes with the most radical Marxist Democrats in the House, including AOC and the Progressive Caucus. Reject this demagogue. He is the uni -party leader, and he has no intention of cutting spending or securing the border. Boy, that seems a little harsh, don't you think? I mean, Trump is the ultimate disruptor. And it's going to be fascinating to see what exactly Trump does with all of this. Now he's in New York today trying to ward off this wack job, you know, civil suit against him. And he's sitting in on day one of his trial. But here's what Matt Gaetzs said on CNN over the weekend as a result of Kevin McCarthy heading up an effort to avert a government shutdown. It apparently enraged Congressman Gaetzs, who took to CNN and said this. Speaker McCarthy made an agreement with House conservatives in January. And since then, he has been in brazen, repeated, material breach of that agreement. This agreement that he made with Democrats to really blow past a lot of the spending guardrails we had set up is a last straw. And then overnight, I learned that Kevin McCarthy had a secret deal with Democrats on Ukraine. So as he was baiting Republicans to vote for a continuing resolution without Ukraine money, saying that we were going to jam the Senate on Ukraine, he then turns around and makes a secret deal. Now, I know you and I probably have different views on U .S. involvement in Ukraine. But however you think about that question, it should be subject to open review analysis and not some backroom deal. So a motion to vacate tomorrow? I do intend to file a motion to vacate against Speaker McCarthy this week. I think we need to rip off the Band -Aid. I think we need to move on with new leadership that can be trustworthy. Now, this gets complicated because Speaker McCarthy is going to have to rely on Democrats to come to his rescue. If enough Democrats side with Matt Gaetz, guess what? McCarthy might be out. And you could have an argument, we could have a solid substantive debate about whether that's good or bad for us. You know what's good for us? I don't think there's any dispute. Disruptors. Do you want more of the same? Are you OK with business as usual in Washington, D .C.? Are you satisfied with the way things have been going? With the reckless spending and the over -the -top nonsense like writing Ukraine a blank check. I have to tell you, with the exception of Mark Levin, and I have tremendous respect for him, I don't know what's up with why he would call Matt Gaetz a traitor to his country. Matt Gaetz may not be everyone's cup of tea, but I thought this is a time where we all agreed that we needed some disruption. I thought this was a time when we expect fighters in Washington, not people who are going to play footsie with the Democrats. And most importantly, I don't like, pardon my metaphor here or my imagery, but I don't like hearing people urinate all over the millions of people who are lifting Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene and the other fighters in Congress up. What does that say about what those of us with a platform think of millions of people who want a good old -fashioned street fight in Washington over out -of -control spending and fiscal irresponsibility? I mean, I'm not trying to be wishy -washy on this. Again, I think McCarthy has done a pretty solid job as Speaker of the House. It can't be easy. It's not easy. You've got a lot of warring factions within the GOP, and the problem is the Republicans have some momentum right now. And I don't want to see anything interrupt the momentum heading into November. We've got an important election in Virginia. We've got big things coming. I just, I'm absolutely mystified at the vitriol that a lot of people are demonstrating towards Matt Gaetz. I don't think that's helpful. I don't think that's productive. Can't we disagree respectfully? Because I have a lot of respect for the millions of people, many of whom listen to this show, who believe that disruption is in order. I have a lot of respect for people who appreciate what Matt Gaetz is trying to do. Even if it may be the wrong outcome, even if I might disagree with trying to oust Kevin McCarthy, I don't like the wild -eyed attacks that I'm hearing directed towards these renegades in the House. Because I just think it's very, very disrespectful to millions of people who appreciate what Gaetz is trying to do. Now, do you agree with this or not? We've got a lot of text messages already pouring in on the MyPillow text line as we kick off the first Monday in October. It's October the 2nd, 2023, here in the Relief Factor studios. Here's where people are texting me right now. Here's Pennsylvania. I don't want more of the same. I think Mark Levin is a warmonger. Here's Colorado. I 100 % agree with Mark Levin. Matt Gaetz seems like he's a glory hound who hates McCarthy. He wants to oust Kevin, but he has no plan to replace him. And finally, people are attacking, this is from Ohio, people are attacking Matt Gaetz because he's an idiot. And the people who voted him in are idiots. He just wants to make a name for himself, hoping to be governor of Florida. Well, what do you think? Let's find out. I want to open up the Ph .D. weight loss and nutrition phone number to you. 800 -655 -MIKE, 17 past the hour. Do you understand my point about respectfully disagreeing with what the Freedom Caucus and the others are doing with McCarthy without taking their heads off? Do you agree with me that Matt Gaetz reflects the disruptor status that Donald Trump gave us and why we love Donald Trump? Does that make sense to you or am I missing the boat here? Straighten me out. If you disagree, you go to the top of the line. But however you feel, I want you to join us. Flood the zone here with your phone calls. I want to jam our phone lines with your voice, with your perspective. Again, the Ph .D. weight loss number is 800 -655 -MIKE, 800 -655 -6453. Hope you join us.

Mark Levin Kevin January Mike Gallagher Matt Gaetz Hugh Hewitt Gaetz Sebastian Gorka Florida New York Marjorie Taylor Greene Tomorrow Virginia Benedict Arnold Donald Trump Gaetzs Ruth Bader Biden Kevin Mccarthy November 800 -655 -6453
Fresh "This Weekend" from Rollye James

Rollye James

00:00 sec | 1 hr ago

Fresh "This Weekend" from Rollye James

"Many governor of residents Hawaii say to they're hold still off grieving on but plans to others reopen say they part need of the West tourists Maui so they to can tourism work this weekend hotels and restaurants the forecast from the WGN Chicago Weather Center clouds thickened hours maybe up tonight even a 71 thunderstorm in the for city the afternoon mid 60s and evening inland the cloudy high tomorrow windy at warm tomorrow 83 some scattered 77 at O 'Hare and Midway 71 at the lake I'm David Jennings UGN news next news when

A highlight from The Mike and Mark Davis Daily Chat - 10/03/23

Mike Gallagher Podcast

13:59 min | 12 hrs ago

A highlight from The Mike and Mark Davis Daily Chat - 10/03/23

"Not just any Fleetwood Mac record, little secondhand news, first track when you put the needle down, when that little Rumors album was released, you heard this, you heard the great Lindsey Buckingham, who is 74 today. Mike, you've caught, you've caught the Mac a few times, have you not? Oh, sure, sure. Love Fleetwood Mac. What a sad, what a sad story because he's so, he's a genius. He's a total genius. And they fired him like four or five years ago. The chemistry was just terrible. He does solo tours now and does some, some Fleetwood Mac stuff, but I just hope he's just not... These stories, these stories about these guys all breaking up and fights and all that. The Eagles, of course, had an epic, epic battle. You know, who they fired, they fired, I guess, the, I mean, they had a big, the two of them, the two founders, I guess, of the Eagles. They broke up and then they came back and, you know, it's like, hey, life is short, you know? That's it. You know what it makes you think about? It makes you think about Aerosmith. Same five guys, 50 years. There you go. You got to get Steven Tyler well again because he like blasted a vocal cord. But anyway, speaking of people who've been together for a long time, here's my buddy. How are you doing? Well, I'm good. I'm just trying to make sense out of the, the rage that the establishment Republicans and the Rhinos and the squishes are exhibiting towards Matt Gaetz. Now, I, I think there's a lot of merit towards the frustration over what Gaetz is trying to do in, in ousting Kevin McCarthy personally. I think Kevin McCarthy has done a great job. I think he's, he's fine. You know, it's a tough conference. It's a tough coalition. You got to hold it together. McCarthy did a great job in helping to identify strong candidates in California and New York, in New York. And without those victories, Marc, we don't have, we don't have a Republican majority in the House. Now, we have a slim majority in the House, slim, four, four people. That's it. All right. So I want to present, and I get it, you know, this is probably giving the Democrats a lifeline. It's ceasing our momentum. This is probably not the most productive thing to happen right now to try to have this crisis over the Speaker of the House. But what the establishment types are saying in their rage, and man, are they mad. I mean, Marc, they're not agitated. They're not, they're livid. I mean, I, I heard this morning, I, I never knew Switzerland could be so angry. Man, for Switzerland, Switzerland's got the knives out in the show before yours. Geneva is on fire. Oh, my gosh, Switzerland is burning. This is a reference, of course, to the always even -handed, neutral, and presidential matters, et cetera, our buddy Hugh Hewitt, who has decided to take a couple of sides, take one side on this. Not so neutral on this issue, is he? I mean, it's just like full -blown, Gates is a clown, he's a fraud, he's a traitor, he's a this, he's a that. I saw a tweet last night that got me thinking, and this is, I think, a reasonable thing to have as part of this conversation. Has Kevin McCarthy fulfilled the promises he made in order to get elected speaker in the first place, or hasn't he? It's a reasonable thing to talk about. It was, you know, Gates and Lauren Boebert and Eli Crane and all these real, you know, sharp -elbowed Republicans got concessions from McCarthy in his bid to become speaker. Remember, I'm old enough to remember that wasn't so easy. That was not long ago. Exactly. And it wasn't that long ago. It wasn't that easy, right? Well, he promised they would pass 12 appropriations bills for a budget, in other words, fiscal responsibility in the budget. He'd give members at least 72 hours to read legislation. Now those are not, that's not onerous and that isn't crazy. So those two promises, well, both of those promises were broken this past weekend. And Gates is saying, you broke your promises and we're going to hold you accountable. Now, does he have a plan? It doesn't really sound like it to me. I don't know who you replace him with. Thank you. And it does hurt the Republican momentum we have. There are over 200 Republicans who are solidly in McCarthy's corner. But Mark, we expect some accountability. We do expect disruption. We do expect people who are warriors and fighting for what we believe in. So it just seems to me that to turn on Matt Gaetz all of a sudden and, P .S., insult the millions and millions of Americans who are rooting for him isn't very productive. Are they rooting for, first of all, your sound, sound logic throughout. Are they rooting for him in this particular tactic or they admiring the lofty standard that he has? And it may not even be all that lofty is like, hey, you made us promises to become speaker. How about keeping those promises? There's an old adage that it's possible for multiple things to be true at the same time. Here are the two things that are true at the same time. Kevin McCarthy has been a very successful, very impactful speaker and deserves a lot of conservative praise for the things he has been able to do. There's thing number one thing. Number two is he might have fudged on some of these things, seems to have fudged on some of these procedural things, and I don't say that to be dismissive of them. Some of these things that he promised the Gang of 10 or whatever they were that were that were holding him up. So in what form is this the only accountability? Is this the only way to call him out? Because all I would ask, and I'll give this back to you in the following way, is if Gaetz tactics are so great and if they are to be admired, what is the end game? What is the plan? Trump's have disruptions a plan, and it's a wonderful plan. Various other people who are disruptors, there's a place they're trying to get you to. Here's what I want to do that is specific. Here's the goal I'm trying to get to. What exactly is the Matt Gaetz end game? I don't know, and I don't know that he knows. I'm not sure he does. I would suggest, I would respectfully submit that the way to deal with these differences is behind closed doors, not to burn it all down. I mean, again, make no mistake. I don't agree with the Gaetz tactic right now. I don't want anybody to be lost on that, but I also strongly disagree with disparaging the spirit with which he's doing it. And again, savage millions and millions of Americans in the process. So listen, I guess Cal's out of the barn. He's called for the vote. The vote's going to come today or tomorrow if they oust McCarthy, which is possible because Democrats are quite capable of adding to this misery right now. Right now, Gaetz needs some Democrats. And if he gets Democrats to support him because they like to sit back and see this kind of dumpster fire, well, McCarthy's out, Mark. Is there an irony there in that Matt Gaetz needs Democrat help to oust a speaker whose worst sin is doing something with Democrat help? Yes. That's a great irony with a capital I. Great way to put it. It really is. And I heard a congressman, you know, a RINO New York congressman on Hewitt this morning and they are again, they are on fire. As you said, Geneva is burning. But this guy pointed out, well, I don't think any of the Democrats are going to want to be associated with this guy, Matt Gaetz. Don't be so sure. Strange bedfellows sometimes. Well, AOC of all people said this week, hey, we're not going to it's not up to us to bail the Republicans out of the mess they're in. Believe me, they're enjoying this. I do agree that this benefits the Democrats. I'm sorry for that. And I hate it. But I also don't like seeing, you know, somebody called a nihilist. I mean, nihilist. You know, it's like and he's anti -American and he's got his daddy's boy and daddy was the Florida. I mean, they're just attacking him personally. I mean, it's it's kind of wild. To see it. There are bigger fish to fry. I want to share with you. You mentioned earlier I was listening to you talk about the plight of the big cities. Horrible story out of Philadelphia. There was a young journalist, an LGBT journalist who was very prolific on X and social media mocking conservatives for being concerned about crime in big cities like his city of Philadelphia. And this guy was even mocking the idea of having a gun to defend yourself in your home. He was mocking and taunting Republicans for criticizing cities like Philadelphia. He loves this Jim Kenney, this sanctuary city mayor. Markie was shot and killed in his home this week. He was murdered seven times, seven bullets put in his body. And of course, the ghouls on social media are dancing on his grave and they're mocking him. Can't do that. But but you must understand that this is life or death, that things are happening in these cities. And I hate it. I hate it for his for obvious for him and for his family, his loved ones. And again, a well -known journalist in Philly, apparently in the LGBT community. But the bottom line is a day before he was murdered, he was literally, you know, poo pooing the idea that we got a crime problem in Philly, mocking the people who are trying to draw attention to the issue to make it better. And it's funny. So did you hear the two things when I was talking about the conversion of Dallas mayor Eric Johnson? He said, listen, we need Republican mayors in our big cities, so I'm going to become one. We also need to elect more of them. And that seems like a ridiculous long shot. How do you get a Republican elected in most of America's big cities? And I don't know the answer to that except to try. A lot of people don't even want to try. We have given up. We have ceded the cities to Democrats. Is that helpful? 70, 80 percent of Americans live in these big cities. Is that helpful to just give up or should we try to it's a marathon, not a sprint. It's an uphill steep climb to try to get some sensible Republican mayors who can save our cities. You spend so much time in New York. I grew up in the suburbs of D .C. I'm in Dallas and Fort Worth all the time. You're in Tampa all the time. Big cities are beautiful. There's no more beautiful city in America than San Francisco. It breaks my heart what happens out there. Should we try to save American cities or say, screw them, get buried under your own bad policies? I'm inclined to say you own it. You live with it. You've got to you inherited this. There's a great column by Douglas Murray of the New York Post called The Fall of Lululemon. How stores have surrendered to looters. He tells the story of how Lululemon fires employees who try to stop shoplifters from walking out with the high end material and merchandise from Lululemon. And a lot of stores are doing this. They're firing any of the employees. They're saying, let them go. Let them walk out. And guess what? When you when that happens, when you encourage it. I mean, it's not a sane society anymore. I mean, call us old fashioned. Law and order is an important thing. It's one thing that people want to steal, but for businesses not to mind being stolen from. Well, but I'm intrigued by the employees thing. And for those that don't know, Lululemon is high end athletic wear, mostly for for women, but not exclusively. And so there's some some an arm load is some serious cash if you're going out the front door. Thousands and thousands of dollars. What do we expect? I mean, if I'm an employee, I'd love to say, well, I'm not going to let this happen, blah, blah, blah. But sometimes these people might be armed. I mean, what these what these stores need is armed guards to prevent this, not employees trying to try and try to go vigilante. Two female Lululemon employees in Atlanta confronted three masked men who pillaged the store. All they did was call the police. Right. I mean, one of the systematically said, you know, what do we want them to do? What do we want? They did call them. They were fired. They were fired for for for OK. Pardon me. Confused host for for calling the police or for not doing more for calling the police. No, they did too much by calling the police. One of the fired employee told the Atlanta Journal Constitution, we are not supposed to get in the way. You're supposed to clear the path for whatever they're going to do. And then it's over. You scan a QR code. We're not supposed to call the police. We're not supposed to talk about it. And Douglas Murray says Lululemon isn't the only company in America that has taken this completely lax approach to its own stock. Well, guess what? Lululemon's on the verge of bankruptcy. They're going out of business. And Douglas Murray writes, you know what? I'm sorry. Count me as one who's not real sympathetic. We're in post consequences America. And this is how Congressman Henry Cuellar gets carjacked. Or it's not the specific because of this, then that because crime is going to happen. But we're going to get more of it in cities where people know they'll get away with it and know that punishment does not await them. And there is a choice that Americans get to make. Republicans are law and order. The Democrats are certainly not, no matter how mad Switzerland gets. Look at that. Look at that call back. Happy Tuesday. And the Mike Gallagher Show lies ahead. Everyone knows that putting money aside and savings is really important. But then what? Should you keep your savings locked in a CD for a higher rate or keep them liquid in a money market? Can your checking account help you save, too? Or is it about creating the right combination? We believe real banking is a conversation. Let's talk about the savings options that are right for you. Learn more at SandySpringBank .com. Member FDIC.

Jim Kenney Marc Douglas Murray Lindsey Buckingham Kevin Mccarthy Hugh Hewitt Henry Cuellar Matt Gaetz Mccarthy Steven Tyler Donald Trump Mark Seven Times California Atlanta San Francisco Eli Crane Markie Gates Lauren Boebert
Fresh "This Weekend" from News, Traffic and Weather

News, Traffic and Weather

00:00 sec | 2 hrs ago

Fresh "This Weekend" from News, Traffic and Weather

"On west 410 there's a crash near 171st avenue causing backups to miers or next to less traffic in 904 the news radio 1000 fm 977 forecast from the northwest crawlspace services weather center we're slowly but surely drying out this week and warming up wednesday morning we may see more showers but then we clear out but you should make it into the mid 60s warmer still on thursday and friday when we return to the 70s under mostly sunny skies the weekend looks very nice as well with lots of sunshine and temps in the low to mid 70s i'm kelly blier and a look at your northwest news radio weather for what it's worth i'm sherry preston it is one of the insidious uses of ai a recent case in spain where dozens of young girls none older than 14 were sent sent pictures of themselves without any

A highlight from  Crypto Update | Surge in US Job Openings Sparks Economic Jitters and Market Reactions

Markets Daily Crypto Roundup

05:27 min | 12 hrs ago

A highlight from Crypto Update | Surge in US Job Openings Sparks Economic Jitters and Market Reactions

"This episode of Markets Daily is sponsored by CME Group. It's Tuesday, October 3rd, 2023, and this is Markets Daily from CoinDesk. My name is Noelle Atchison, CoinDesk collaborator and author of the Crypto is Macro Now newsletter on Substat. On today's show, we're talking about Ether, Hong Kong, jobs and more. So you don't miss an episode, be sure to follow the podcast on your platform of choice. And just a reminder, CoinDesk is a news source and does not provide investment advice. The launch of the crypto market's first U .S.-listed Ether futures funds yesterday did little to lift spirits. After rising in early trading, Bitcoin drifted lower throughout the rest of the day and today so far it has been holding steady. According to data from CoinDesk indices, at 10 a .m. Eastern Time, Bitcoin was trading at $27 ,434, down 3 .5 % over the past 24 hours. Ether weakened by even more, trading almost 4 % lower at $1 ,655. In a moment, we'll discuss the underwhelming results of the Ether fund launch day. One thing to point out is that Bitcoin's price is still higher than it was heading into the weekend. In other words, it has not yet completely unwound Sunday's sharp jump and is currently almost 2 .5 % up on early Saturday morning. Ether, on the other hand, is half a percent lower. Today we got a fresh batch of job market data for the U .S. with the job openings and labor turnover survey, known as JOLTS. This tells us how many job openings there are each month, how many workers were hired, how many quit their job, how many were laid off, and so on, and is a key indicator of labor market tightness. It came in way higher than expected. The consensus forecast was for 8 .8 million job openings reported. The actual figure came in at 9 .6 million. This suggests that job market tightness is not abating, not even close, which complicates the fight against inflation and makes higher interest rates in the U .S. more likely. In reaction, U .S. yields jumped by even more, gold fell, and the dollar did some see -sawing. Moving over to stocks, the JOLT to interest rate expectations sent U .S. indices lower. As of 10 .20 Eastern Time, the S &P and Dow Jones were down roughly 1%, with NASDAQ down more than 1 .4%. This kind of sharp reaction to economic data is typical, and things could calm down as the day progresses. Markets are jittery, though. U .S. stocks were mixed yesterday, with the S &P flat, NASDAQ up almost seven tenths of a percent, and the Dow Jones down two tenths. The fact that the S &P did not have a good day yesterday in spite of the U .S. government shutdown being avoided shows just how cautious investors are feeling. The flat performance is also, in spite of August manufacturing data, coming in much better than expected. This was good news, and yet the market was still nervous. The U .S. 10 -year Treasury yield today has reached almost 4 .8 % for the first time in 15 years. In Europe, stock indices are also heading down fast. Yesterday, the German DAX, the French CAC40 and the Eurostock 600 all lost roughly 1 % and have continued lower today, losing another 1%. In Asia, Japan's Nikkei Index dropped more than 1 .6 % in today's trading, partly in sympathy with stocks pretty much everywhere, and partly because concern about the exchange rate is ratcheting up. One thing to keep an eye on is potential intervention by the Japanese central bank to defend the currency. The yen -U .S. dollar exchange rate is a hair's breadth away from the key 150 level for the first time since last October. Back then, the central bank intervened by selling dollars and buying yen. This sent the DXY dollar index tumbling over the next couple of months. It is not clear whether the Bank of Japan will do the same this time, but if it did, it could have a significant impact on global markets. A weaker dollar in theory would be good for crypto prices, as Bitcoin and the dollar often move inversely. It should also receive some pressure on commodities and other currencies. Speaking of commodities, the Brent crude benchmark continued to fall in early trading, as the supply outlook is becoming more complicated. Yesterday, the Turkish energy minister said that a pipeline channelling supply from Iraq would reopen this week, yet it closed in March due to a payment dispute. According to Bloomberg, an Iraq official has cast doubts on this timeline, so who knows. Traders are apparently also getting concerned about the impact on demand of a global economic slowdown. Over the past few hours, however, Brent has been clawing back some of its recent decline, and earlier today was trading at $91 .5 per barrel. It is still down 1 .8 % on the week and up almost 3 % on the month. Gold continued to retrace, earlier today hitting its lowest price since the beginning of March. It is currently trading at around $1 ,820 per ounce, down 0 .6 % over the past 24 hours.

Noelle Atchison Cme Group $27 ,434 Today March $1 ,655 Europe Bank Of Japan August 3 .5 % 9 .6 Million Sunday Yesterday Tuesday, October 3Rd, 2023 Last October Asia Each Month Two Tenths More Than 1 .6 %
Fresh "This Weekend" from News, Traffic and Weather

News, Traffic and Weather

00:05 sec | 3 hrs ago

Fresh "This Weekend" from News, Traffic and Weather

"Seattle to Bremerton Ferry. There is a 15 minute delay. Our next oldest traffic and I for 8 14. Come before Shannon O 'Donnell has our forecast brought to by you Northwest Crawl Space Services. Hi there, everybody. And good Tuesday night to you. We're gonna see partly starry skies overnight, and that'll help coax out a little bit of that murky morning fog by the Wednesday early drive into work in school. So low visibility out of the gate, but eventually a beautiful day with mid to upper sixties Wednesday and Thursday, Friday and Saturday. warm We start waving here is we head toward the weekend mid to upper seventies by Saturday afternoon in the couple for Weather Center. I'm meteorologist Shannon O 'Donnell. Most cloudy skies 57 Seattle news radio 1000 97 FM 7. Stay connected. Stay informed. I'm Kelly Blier. And here's what's happening. A 21 year old man is dead near White Center. The shooting happened at 15th Avenue,

A highlight from MARKETS DAILY: Crypto Update | Surge in US Job Openings Sparks Economic Jitters and Market Reactions

CoinDesk Podcast Network

05:27 min | 12 hrs ago

A highlight from MARKETS DAILY: Crypto Update | Surge in US Job Openings Sparks Economic Jitters and Market Reactions

"This episode of Markets Daily is sponsored by CME Group. It's Tuesday, October 3rd, 2023, and this is Markets Daily from CoinDesk. My name is Noelle Atchison, CoinDesk collaborator and author of the Crypto is Macro Now newsletter on Substat. On today's show, we're talking about Ether, Hong Kong, jobs and more. So you don't miss an episode, be sure to follow the podcast on your platform of choice. And just a reminder, CoinDesk is a news source and does not provide investment advice. The launch of the crypto market's first U .S.-listed Ether futures funds yesterday did little to lift spirits. After rising in early trading, Bitcoin drifted lower throughout the rest of the day and today so far it has been holding steady. According to data from CoinDesk indices, at 10 a .m. Eastern Time, Bitcoin was trading at $27 ,434, down 3 .5 % over the past 24 hours. Ether weakened by even more, trading almost 4 % lower at $1 ,655. In a moment, we'll discuss the underwhelming results of the Ether fund launch day. One thing to point out is that Bitcoin's price is still higher than it was heading into the weekend. In other words, it has not yet completely unwound Sunday's sharp jump and is currently almost 2 .5 % up on early Saturday morning. Ether, on the other hand, is half a percent lower. Today we got a fresh batch of job market data for the U .S. with the job openings and labor turnover survey, known as JOLTS. This tells us how many job openings there are each month, how many workers were hired, how many quit their job, how many were laid off, and so on, and is a key indicator of labor market tightness. It came in way higher than expected. The consensus forecast was for 8 .8 million job openings reported. The actual figure came in at 9 .6 million. This suggests that job market tightness is not abating, not even close, which complicates the fight against inflation and makes higher interest rates in the U .S. more likely. In reaction, U .S. yields jumped by even more, gold fell, and the dollar did some see -sawing. Moving over to stocks, the JOLT to interest rate expectations sent U .S. indices lower. As of 10 .20 Eastern Time, the S &P and Dow Jones were down roughly 1%, with NASDAQ down more than 1 .4%. This kind of sharp reaction to economic data is typical, and things could calm down as the day progresses. Markets are jittery, though. U .S. stocks were mixed yesterday, with the S &P flat, NASDAQ up almost seven tenths of a percent, and the Dow Jones down two tenths. The fact that the S &P did not have a good day yesterday in spite of the U .S. government shutdown being avoided shows just how cautious investors are feeling. The flat performance is also, in spite of August manufacturing data, coming in much better than expected. This was good news, and yet the market was still nervous. The U .S. 10 -year Treasury yield today has reached almost 4 .8 % for the first time in 15 years. In Europe, stock indices are also heading down fast. Yesterday, the German DAX, the French CAC40 and the Eurostock 600 all lost roughly 1 % and have continued lower today, losing another 1%. In Asia, Japan's Nikkei Index dropped more than 1 .6 % in today's trading, partly in sympathy with stocks pretty much everywhere, and partly because concern about the exchange rate is ratcheting up. One thing to keep an eye on is potential intervention by the Japanese central bank to defend the currency. The yen -U .S. dollar exchange rate is a hair's breadth away from the key 150 level for the first time since last October. Back then, the central bank intervened by selling dollars and buying yen. This sent the DXY dollar index tumbling over the next couple of months. It is not clear whether the Bank of Japan will do the same this time, but if it did, it could have a significant impact on global markets. A weaker dollar in theory would be good for crypto prices, as Bitcoin and the dollar often move inversely. It should also receive some pressure on commodities and other currencies. Speaking of commodities, the Brent crude benchmark continued to fall in early trading, as the supply outlook is becoming more complicated. Yesterday, the Turkish energy minister said that a pipeline channelling supply from Iraq would reopen this week, yet it closed in March due to a payment dispute. According to Bloomberg, an Iraq official has cast doubts on this timeline, so who knows. Traders are apparently also getting concerned about the impact on demand of a global economic slowdown. Over the past few hours, however, Brent has been clawing back some of its recent decline, and earlier today was trading at $91 .5 per barrel. It is still down 1 .8 % on the week and up almost 3 % on the month. Gold continued to retrace, earlier today hitting its lowest price since the beginning of March. It is currently trading at around $1 ,820 per ounce, down 0 .6 % over the past 24 hours.

Noelle Atchison Cme Group $27 ,434 Today March $1 ,655 Europe Bank Of Japan August 3 .5 % 9 .6 Million Sunday Yesterday Tuesday, October 3Rd, 2023 Last October Asia Each Month Two Tenths More Than 1 .6 %
Fresh update on "this weekend" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:07 min | 3 hrs ago

Fresh update on "this weekend" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

"Is doing it's up by about five percent from june twenty five percent disapprove more is particularly doing well among independents and even some republicans he has a fifty three percent approval rating among independent voters and thirty percent of republicans also give them good marks poll takers say that the approval rating among GOP voters is one of the best they've seen in a long time when it comes to a democrat in that office the gonzalez poll surveyed eight hundred likely voters the margin of error is plus or minus three -and -a -half percent have you an seen ad for a nice juicy burger but ended up disappointed when you got the real thing one person did and decided sue to mcdonald's and windy's for false advertising claiming their online ads show bigger burgers than what you get actually a federal judge in new york isn't buying it he dismissed the suit in an opinion released over the weekend us us district judge hector gonzalez says the images on the company's websites include the weight of the meat and the calories each each burger has windy's and mcdonald's have not comment well you better not share your disney plus password anymore mickey mike kick you to uh oh uh excuse me do you mind just like netflix disney is also started cracking down on password sharing a lot of this in canada for the moment

A highlight from 1274. Shutdown Delayed, Uptober Begins | Crypto Market Outlook

Tech Path Crypto

09:48 min | 18 hrs ago

A highlight from 1274. Shutdown Delayed, Uptober Begins | Crypto Market Outlook

"All right, so here we are. It is October, October. You get the message here. We're going to dive into that today and find out if Bitcoin and some of these great crypto assets are actually on the move or we're going to get a correction here. We'll break it all down for you guys today. My name is Paul Bearer and welcome back in to Tech Path. All right, let's jump into it. Before we get started, let's go over to iTrust Capital. If you guys are looking at doing some long -term holding on your crypto assets, one of the ways you can do it is through a crypto IRA. So check it out right here, itrustcapital .com. It's the number one crypto IRA platform in America right now, $7 billion in transactions, 200 ,000 accounts created. Definitely, they are killing it over there. Use our link down below. It's going to give you a $100 funding reward. And of course, we get a little help from iTrust to help you guys continue to see this content for free. So that's one of the ways you can help us out. All right, let's get into a couple of the notes today and really kind of talk about where and what has been happening over the weekend. Obviously, Bitcoin's been up. Most of the top 20 have been up. And for the most part, we've even seen some of the Web3 projects also get some good positive action. So what's causing that? Obviously, the biggest issue was the, I guess, the scenario that played out right now over the weekend where we actually came to an agreement, somewhat of an agreement, to not shut the government down, which is always helpful. Kobe Easey comes in and says, breaking Senate vote approved the short -term funding bill to keep the U .S. government open till November 17th. Not bad, 45 days away. This bill includes $16 billion in disaster funding and keeps the U .S. government open for 45 more days. The U .S. government is seeing a new crisis every month now. What's going to happen in 45? I think that's the big question right now everybody's asking is, do we see maybe the month of October as our correction month? And then we have to kind of go into a realization that we're back to where we started. Love to get you guys' feedback on that. What do you think is going to happen here in the month of October? Drop some comments down below. Make sure and smash the like button because it does help us get into the algorithms and help other people kind of explore what's happening in the market. Let's listen to what Mr. Chuck Schumer had to say about this. Let's play this clip for you guys. It's been a day full of twists and turns, but the American people can breathe a sigh of relief. There will be no government shutdown. Democrats have said from the start that the only solution for avoiding a shutdown is bipartisanship. And we're glad that Speaker McCarthy has finally heeded our message. In the end, more Democrats supported this bill in the House than Republicans, proving bipartisanship was the best answer all along. I want to thank my colleagues here in the Senate, especially our appropriators, yourself, Madam President Susan Collins and Leader McConnell. Our bipartisan work in the Senate set the tone for the bill we're about to pass. Our bipartisanship made this possible and showed the House that they had to act. All right. So you saw a couple of things here with Schumer, and that is the whole scenario around the bipartisan approach. A lot of Dems had to come into play on this. Obviously, the Republicans were the ones that were seemingly holding a lot of this back. Now you even have Gaetz really pushing hard against McCarthy, trying to dispose him as the speaker. There's a lot happening there, and it's going to continue to push forward into next month when all of this has to go right back to the drawing board and redo this. So this could get a little up and down. And especially I'm concerned with November because of the scenarios that we will see in both the jobs numbers, the Q4 will start to play out in the sense that we'll start to see what's happening in the markets itself. And it could be a very bad timing for this to occur again. So hopefully this all gets corrected and playing into it. Let's listen to what Squawk Box had to say about this and the impact it might have on the markets. Listen in. Joining us now is Jared Bernstein. He is the chair of the President's Council of Economic Advisers. And Jared, let's talk about this. We have a deal that nobody really expected we'd see. So we made it through this weekend. But what happens in the next 45 days? Well, first of all, good to see you, Becky. This is good news for the American people in the sense that an unnecessary crisis that would have inflicted pretty deep and wholly unnecessary pain on millions of Americans has been averted. That's good news for over 1 million active duty troops, for over 7 million women and kids who risked lacking nutritional support for travelers because of the reauthorization in this bill of the FAA and disaster relief that was also in this continuing resolution. But it did not have to happen. I think what you just played from the president is, of course, exactly right. He shook hands. He had a deal. In fact, there was a law passed with McCarthy back in in June, in early June at the end of the debt ceiling debate that was designed specifically to avoid this Senate. All right. So, you know, they kind of take doing their victory lap, even though I think it's a little bit premature. But the point is, is that there was a huge economic disaster that was averted. So I think that's the positive news. Obviously, the markets responded in such ways that have helped adjust for that as well. But that's not necessarily all of it. We've also seen some other implications coming across from external resources out there in the markets that have caused a little bit of this movement. I think the question everybody's asking now is, is Bitcoin going to continue higher or are we going to start to see Ethereum start to adjust now? Do we see some of the projects like Solana, Avalanche, etc. start to really fly? We'll break into all of those. So don't miss those. We'll look at some charts for you guys as well. I want to go over to a couple of stories here. Why Bitcoin prices up today? A couple of points that were hit on here. US shut down a version, obviously, and also the ETF launches. Now, that is the opportunity. Because remember, Ethereum ETF launches today. And the other idea around this is that when you look at not only the Bitcoin opportunity for ETFs, by the way, if you're not following our market sentiment indicator, you guys should because we are tracking both the Bitcoin and the ETF, the spot ETF sentiment as a whole. It's interesting to see that sentiment kind of go up and down. But the point that they're hitting on in this article is that October is historically one of Bitcoin's best months and is often called October, named in today's video. Bitcoin's October overall. You can kind of see the rundown right there. That green line right there, as you can kind of see where I'm waving my cursor, almost all green over the years going all the way back to 2013. So not bad. Nearly 43 million worth of shorts were liquidated. That's another scenario that plays into that. And of course, I think when you look at the general move with what Bitcoin had to do, I think this is going to be an interesting week ahead of us. Now, there's a lot more that could be happening this week that could still maintain Bitcoin around the $27K to $28K range. That will be a very, very interesting thing to watch because if Bitcoin starts to edge toward around $28K, this is where it's going to get interesting for the future. All right. A couple of things I want to hit on. Right here is Ben Cowen talking about lucky number seven. First green September for Bitcoin in seven years. That's a good sign. But is it a short -lived sign? That's, I think, is really the scenario that plays into this. Sellers have lost momentum. Buyers are now in charge. Target is near the top of the range right now. If it breaks this range that we've been talking about, which I'll show you the chart here in a second, that Bitcoin has been moving to. If you look at just here on the daily, right there is that little high right there around $25 .73 and a little bit. And then, of course, the red candle started to point its way down on the hourly on Bitcoin's move over the last $24. So interesting moves for sure. How are you guys playing this? Is this a zone? Because this has been up and down on the sentiment charts for us. We still see sentiment somewhat waffling with Bitcoin. Not necessarily as much with Ethereum, but definitely with Bitcoin. But the real question is can we hold around this $28K mark, which is where we're hovering right about now. All right. Other things. China's central bank continues to stimulate. So reverse repo injections now at levels not seen since 2020. This is another factor that plays into it. China is starting to inject liquidity. This, of course, causes movements in the markets. It also causes some ripples in the markets as well, because I think China is going to be one that we have to continue to be cautious about in the sense of awareness of what's happening in China, both from a real estate standpoint, but also just from their GDP and their economic growth. Those are the other things that play into this. A couple of reports from Chain Analysis that are kind of interesting here. I thought this would be larger, and it's not. But right now, eastern Asia, fifth most active crypto market accounting for 8 .8 % of global crypto activity. And this is July 22 through June 23. So it kind of gives you a little bit of insight to that. Point is that you do have a significant amount of the market that is in control. Remember, the United States still has a large percentage of what is happening around the world in crypto markets, ironically, without legislation. Can you imagine what is going to happen with legislation and institutional adoption really kind of playing forward? That's where it's going to get super. I think that's when we're going to start to see some big market moves overall.

Jared Jared Bernstein $100 July 22 $7 Billion Paul Bearer $27K America Chuck Schumer $16 Billion Becky 8 .8 % Ben Cowen November June Itrust Capital $28K October 45 More Days June 23
A highlight from News Block: Did SBF Try to Pay Trump Billions Not To Run? U.S. Debt Hits $33 Trillion, Chase UK Banning Crypto, Honda Now Accepts Bitcoin

Coin Stories with Natalie Brunell

08:52 min | 1 d ago

A highlight from News Block: Did SBF Try to Pay Trump Billions Not To Run? U.S. Debt Hits $33 Trillion, Chase UK Banning Crypto, Honda Now Accepts Bitcoin

"Welcome to the CoinStories news block. I'm Natalie Brunell, and in the span of just 10 minutes, roughly the same time it takes to mine a new Bitcoin block, I'll provide you with concise, insightful updates on Bitcoin and the global financial landscape so you're well informed on the week's top stories. Everything you need to know in one place, in one block. Let's go. Bitcoin has been on the move this week, breaking out above its 200 -day moving average and climbing back above $28 ,000 a coin for the first time since mid -August. Despite its volatility, Bitcoin is now up 68 % on the year as it enters October. And October, by the way, has garnered the nickname, Uptober. It has typically been one of Bitcoin's best performing months. It's gone up an average of 22 % in October over the last 10 years. Some believe Bitcoin's recent price performance is related to increased awareness about the unsustainable nature of the US debt. Our national debt recently hit a concerning milestone when it crossed $33 trillion for the first time in history. According to the Treasury Department, this is a result of fiscal spending increasing nearly 50 % from 2019 to 2021. In other words, government officials went on a spending binge the last couple of years. And given the rise in interest rates, the US government is now spending more to pay interest on our $33 trillion in debt than it does on national defense. Billionaire hedge fund manager Ray Dalio, who has written extensively on how we are about to reach the end of the long -term debt cycle, is warning that we might be close to a deleveraging event. The long -term debt cycle refers to the idea that over long time periods, typically 50 to 75 years, economies accumulate larger and larger amounts of debt with each short -term business cycle. This all culminates in a peak where the debt becomes unsustainable and sparks a large deleveraging period marked by reduced spending, falling asset prices, slower economic growth and debt reduction. In a recent interview, Dalio was quite blunt. We're going to have a debt crisis in this country soon. How fast it transpires, I think is going to be a function of that supply demand issue. And so I'm watching that very closely. The reality of the debt problem was all too apparent in a recent report from the Institute of International Finance that showed that global government debt has hit a record $307 trillion, the title of the report, In Search of Sustainability. Now, Bitcoiners have been sounding the alarm about the debt problem for many years, but now the narrative appears to be going mainstream. Bloomberg published a short documentary titled America's Looming Debt Spiral. So the media seems to be waking up to the fact that this debt is unpayable. The solutions, well, they can choose to default, which would be catastrophic and politically untenable, or they can choose to try to print their way out, which would devalue the dollar even more. Scarce assets like Bitcoin will ultimately be the beneficiaries as the debt spiral continues and investors are finally starting to recognize Bitcoin as an asset to protect themselves from the debt doom loop. All right, shifting gears, much of the focus this week will be on FTX and its founder Sam Bankman -Fried, whose criminal trial is set to begin this week. SPF faces seven counts of fraud and conspiracy related to the collapse of FTX. If found guilty on all charges, SPF could spend the rest of his life behind bars. FTX customers, investors, and employees will all be testifying in the trial against the infamous former poster child for crypto. In a 60 Minutes interview Sunday, author Michael Lewis, who's famous for The Ranging Interview about SPF and the book he's releasing about his rise and fall titled Going Infinite. Lewis had spent more than six months traveling with and interviewing SPF in the lead up to FTX's collapse. A letter from a talent agent from Creative Artists Agency said that Lewis likened SPF to the quote, Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader of crypto. Clips from that interview went viral on social media, including one in which Lewis says SPF was trying to pay former President Donald Trump billions of dollars not to run again in 2024. He also said there is an SPF shaped hole in the universe that now needs filling and that FTX was quote, a great real business. Overwhelming consensus on Bitcoin X, Twitter was Michael Lewis was casting FTX and SPF in a favorable light, despite operating one of the largest frauds in financial history. And heading into the trial, the timing and tone of this interview raised some eyebrows given that Lewis said the book was a quote, letter to the jury, which appears to suggest the jury should read the book potentially influencing the outcome of the court case. The trial will be dominating headlines for the coming months as the industry and millions of victims follow it closely to see what happens. FTX is still a topic of discussion in Washington DC, where the company came up in a hearing in front of the House Financial Services Committee. That's where SEC Chairman Gary Gensler was grilled for more than five hours on SEC oversight. Much of the conversation revolved around its enforcement actions toward the broader crypto industry. Democratic Senator Maxine Waters, who strangely called Bitcoin, Bitcoin during the hearing, asked Gary Gensler about ways he would protect investors from frauds like FTX and Terra Luna. Now I have to mention this was the same senator who met with SPF on multiple occasions prior to FTX collapse and even commended SPF for his candidness and willingness to talk to the public after the company went bust. Gensler and the SEC have also come under heavy criticism from Congress for meeting with FTX behind closed doors and also for the lack of clarity around the regulatory approach to the crypto industry. One notable exchange during the hearing was when Gary Gensler was asked directly by Republican Congressman Patrick McHenry whether or not he considered Bitcoin a security. This was Gensler's response. Well I think the staff of the SEC have also ended prior to the hearing. I'm just asking you this question and this is not a gotcha. I thought there's going to be an easy softball into harder questions. Do you think Bitcoin is a security? No, I think I've said this in the past that I think that it doesn't mean a Howey test. I'm asking to answer my question now. This is not supposed to be hard. I know I said it does not meet the Howey test which is the law of the land about being an investment contract. So it doesn't meet it's a commodity. Is that fair? I would say it's not a security and then the test is otherwise for other laws. Many of the questions directed at Gensler were around the SEC continuing to reject multiple spot Bitcoin ETF applications. Despite the congressional pressure for an ETF approval, the SEC continues to delay them. In the last week the Commission delayed its decision on several prominent ETF applications including ones from BlackRock, Bitwise, ARK Invest and Invesco. These delays came earlier than many expected and the SEC noted that the announcement was expedited due to the risk of a government shutdown that was narrowly avoided over the weekend. The next date to watch will be January 10th when the SEC will have to make a decision on ARK Invest's filing. And finally this week Bitcoin has not only been the topic of courtrooms but boardrooms as well. Companies continue to take different approaches when it comes to embracing or rejecting this new monetary technology. We saw two major companies take very different stances this past week. The first came from Chase Bank in the UK when it put out a notice to customers that it will be banning crypto linked payments and transfers citing the fraud and criminal activity associated with crypto. Chase UK justified this censorship announcement by stating that the bank is keeping its clients money safe and secure. Now it's no surprise to see Chase taking the stance given that Bitcoin threatens its core business as a financial intermediary. With Bitcoin there's no need for Chase to be a middleman and take fees with every transaction. Meanwhile Honda appears to be making moves to accept Bitcoin for payment. The Japanese car giant has entered a partnership with a blockchain payment system called FCF Pay. This partnership will allow customers to use cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin to purchase or lease Honda products in lieu of traditional fiat currencies. In the coming years I think companies will continue to be forced to make a decision on how they will approach the growing demand for Bitcoin. Some companies like Honda will benefit from embracing the tech while others like Chase will probably lose ground to competitors that do recognize the benefits that Bitcoin can bring to their business. That's it for the news block your subscribe to coin story so you never miss an episode. This show is for educational purposes and should not be construed as investment advice. Until next time keep stacking.

Michael Lewis Natalie Brunell Ray Dalio January 10Th Institute Of International Fin Darth Vader Ark Invest Washington Dc Honda Chase Chase Bank Patrick Mchenry Sam Bankman -Fried Lewis Sunday $33 Trillion 50 October Luke Skywalker UK
Rep. Malliotakis: Jamaal Bowman Should Be Charged With a Crime

Mark Levin

01:34 min | 1 d ago

Rep. Malliotakis: Jamaal Bowman Should Be Charged With a Crime

"Dc code but it's a felony for disrupting the congressional seatings and so that's what elevates it so i do believe that he will be charged with with a crime at some point and we'll see how this plays out but you're absolutely right it may it you you can't ignore it you can't turn a blind eye this is a terrible example for our young people and in addition to that like i said he was a high school principal and in his school he would be either suspension or expulsion and that's why i felt expulsion was what was warranted here because this is the united states congress this is not a new york city public high school i'd like you to listen to AOC is what i call her AOC on in and yesterday with uh... jake tapper cut fourteen mister producer go there was an uh... interesting moment uh... over the weekend when your new york ollie congressmen jamal bomb bomb and he's under investigation for now after capital police say he pulled a fire alarm in one of the house office buildings democrats are trying to delay a vote a final vote on the bill uh... there is uh... pulling the fire alarm he says it was an accident he thought in the alarm would open a door uh... based on the fact that the doors to his right there were locked in there was a sign that he said he was compared i think someone said it was confusing uh... i'll be honest uh... that doesn't really make sense to me his explanation have you talked to him what what what's going on i mean listen i think if you actually do see some of the photos of the signs i think

Yesterday New York Congress AOC Jake Tapper Dc Code Democrats Fourteen One Of The House Office United States
Monitor Show 19:00 10-02-2023 19:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:55 min | 1 d ago

Monitor Show 19:00 10-02-2023 19:00

"With Bloomberg, you get the story behind the story, the story behind the global birth rate, behind your EV battery's environmental impact, behind sand, yeah, sand, you get context, and context changes everything. Go to Bloomberg .com to get context. They used to weigh you beforehand, and well, if you're above a certain level, you paid more. All right, the next hour of Bloomberg Daybreak Asia begins right now. Broadcasting 24 hours a day at Bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act, this is Bloomberg Radio. This is Bloomberg Daybreak Asia for this Tuesday, October 3rd in Hong Kong, Monday, October 2nd in New York. And coming up today. The sell -off in bonds intensifies as the market digests fresh comments from Fed officials. A group of U .S. senators hopes to meet with President Xi Jinping on a visit to China next week. And the Reserve Bank of Australia will probably hold rates steady for a fourth straight meeting. Matt Gaetz threatens vote to remove Speaker McCarthy. Support seems to be fading. President assures Ukraine and allies of continued aid. Trump trial on empire fraud. I'm Ed Baxter with Global News. Chelsea wins its first Premier League match in five weeks. I'm Dan Schwartzman. I'll have that story and more coming up in Bloomberg Sports. That's all straight ahead on Bloomberg Daybreak Asia. On Bloomberg 1130 New York, Bloomberg 99 .1 Washington, D .C., Bloomberg 106 .1 Boston, Bloomberg 960 San Francisco, Sirius XM 119, and around the world on BloombergRadio .com and via the Bloomberg Business Act. And it's hour two of Daybreak Asia. A little past 10 in the morning now in Sydney, Australia changed the clocks over the weekend. And so we have trading...

Dan Schwartzman Ed Baxter Matt Gaetz Hong Kong China Reserve Bank Of Australia Chelsea Today New York Next Week Donald Trump Bloomberg Business Act Global News Washington, D .C. Speaker Bloomberg Monday, October 2Nd 24 Hours A Day Five Weeks Bloomberg Daybreak Asia
Republicans Agree We're Going Bankrupt yet Approve Stopgap Bill

The Dan Bongino Show

01:48 min | 1 d ago

Republicans Agree We're Going Bankrupt yet Approve Stopgap Bill

"How is it that we have a Republican Party that universally agrees in Washington DC universally agrees on what I'm about to tell you they all know it's true this country is going absolutely bankrupt yeah yes not like a chapter 11 I get that because we can print money but in every other essence of the word bankrupt the country's going bankrupt you lose purchasing power the country loses economic clout debts won't be repaid and the value given in the in the debt will not be repaid with equal value in every essence the United States is unquestionably on that path every single person who has a brain in Washington DC who's a Republican agrees with that so you're probably saying well why can't we do anything about it because they all suck and the problem is because I watched it on social media this weekend and man did it tick me off I'm sitting there and I'm watching this Auburn game because that school's got a special place in my heart they almost beat Georgia this weekend and I'm still working and Jim I ask you this morning what time roughly did I start sending show prep material on Sunday around 1130 central time thank you folks I'm at it all weekend because I can't stop so I don't want you to think what I'm telling you I'm telling you at a peak or I'm telling you because I'm upset yeah I'm emotional but there's nothing to do with this all weekend I was fielding calls from people telling me how the other guy and they all screwed you no no but this guy wears a hat up on Capitol Hill like a cowboy hat he's a cowboy no he has never seen a he's never seen a cow a cowboy or a horse or a so or a revolver so what do you think he is the lone freaking Ranger

JIM Capitol Hill Washington Dc Chapter 11 Republican Party This Morning This Weekend Republican Sunday Around 1130 Central Tim Every Single Person United States Auburn Georgia
Joe Biden Hopes Kevin McCarthy Had a 'Personal Revelation'

The Dan Bongino Show

01:38 min | 1 d ago

Joe Biden Hopes Kevin McCarthy Had a 'Personal Revelation'

"Not okay I'll tell you even people in church this weekend like Dan you okay I'm okay I'm just disappointed at what chronically constantly getting sold out by people he was Biden this weekend someone and on social media noted you must have taken some edibles before I don't know what kind they were with the THC level was I'm guessing Jim was up there I don't even know what THC levels are for these things that are good or bad because I don't do edibles personally maybe I should start I could President be of the United States so here's Biden the Republicans and Democrats signed on to another bankruptcy bill extending our inevitable bankruptcy to 45 days in a 45 -day CR and Biden said uh I don't know what he said maybe you know take a listen I hope this experience for the speaker has been one of a personal revelation. I'm I've not been facetious I uh um that the guy he's really powerful can ask in his speeches I mean I've never seen speeches like this the great some of the great speakers I've seen Reagan I'll tell you now great speaker Mark Robinson Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina he's up there Joe Biden's up there anyway sounds like he's taking a dump in like a diaper or something like that you can't control himself control your bowels

Joe Biden Mark Robinson JIM Biden 45 -Day DAN 45 Days United States Republicans Democrats Governor This Weekend North Carolina Lieutenant Reagan THC
A highlight from Upstream Works transforms United Airlines passenger, agent CX and EX, Podcast

Telecom Reseller

19:26 min | 1 d ago

A highlight from Upstream Works transforms United Airlines passenger, agent CX and EX, Podcast

"This is Doug Green and I'm the publisher of Telecom Reseller and I'm very pleased to have with us today Rob McDougall who is the CEO of Upstream Works. Rob, thank you for joining us today. Hey, great to be here, Doug. Good to talk with you again. Well, this is really exciting. I've been enjoying talking with you just before we started our podcast about what's going on in the AR market. And you know, what's exciting to me is we've been doing a series of podcasts the last few weeks where folks have been coming forward and talking about how they've made AI a practical tool for a company or for an organization or for maybe an entire industry. So we're going to be talking about an exciting story today about how Upstream Works has changed United Airlines and also about the idea of operationalizing AI. So we're going to be talking about those topics in a second, but for people that don't know Rob Upstream Works well or maybe know a little bit about you guys, what is Upstream Works? Upstream Works is a software application company. We focus on the agent experience and we provide an agent desktop application that's designed to run either on premise or in cloud so that your infrastructure doesn't matter. Our goal is to make sure that your agents have a consistent interface that they can work with across platforms, across applications, across channels. And these days we've been using the term EX. So what you're doing, it feeds right into that employee experience. Absolutely. We call it AX because we're focused on agents, but that's what it's all about. A happy agent is going to give a better service. We believe that that smile on the agent's face comes across the phone. It's a tough job. It's a tough market. You know, you can't find enough people to do that job today, so you want to keep those employees happy and they're the face of your company to the world. So with that in mind, you have actually taken AI and you're doing something called operationalizing AI. Sorry, that didn't come out so smoothly. So what is operationalizing AI? First, it's a tough word to say. I will give you that. Look at it this way. If I was to ask you, Doug, to go to my office, go to my computer, log in and add yourself into my CRM system or billing system, you wouldn't know what you had to do. You understand my ask, but you don't know where my office is. You don't know how to get into my computer. You don't know what my CRM or HR systems are. You don't know how they work. AI is the same thing. Even with the new generative AI model, is it really good at understanding? I know what the guy's asking, but I don't know how to do it. Operationalizing AI means doing that connectivity between what the AI can do and making it do something actually for your business. So integrating it into your backend systems, providing an interface that an agent can use to view things easily, using it to provide other business value like routing or translations, but making it actually work properly in your complex in silo the contact center. So this is really interesting because what you're telling me is it simplifies things. Well, tremendously. What we saw back in the early days of chat and email is a lot of people would put in chat and email, but they were discreet channels. They didn't integrate with the contact center. It was a bad experience for customers. You had to have specialized agents who got different training because the desktop interfaces were different. The tools were different. Omnichannel has now taken us into a realm where an agent can deal with sort of one set of tools across the different channels, but then you start throwing AI into the mix and it comes up in a different place. So you put in AI and it's got its own interface. So I need special agents to do something over here, or it doesn't actually integrate with the other tools that I have in the contact center. So I've got to make all that stuff work together. And this is what Upstreamworks has been doing for 23 years is being the spider in the middle of the web and taking the applications that are important for your business and help you make those work for the business and for the agents to make their life easier. So it's interesting that you're using a new thing to basically follow your brand story, which has what you're describing sounds like what Upstream is all about. Absolutely. We focus on enterprise contact centers. We don't go for the small contact center. And the reason we focus there is because large enterprises, when they deal with products, what they want is something that's shrink wrapped in out of the box, like Word, and they just put in the disk and it all works, but it's got to work exactly the way they work. And that doesn't exist. So what we have always done is we built a product that is designed to provide all the features out of the box, but have all the configurability and integratability such that I can integrate it into the workflows that the company has and make those work properly in an enterprise environment. And AI is no different. You could look at a manufacturer who's going to say, oh, we'll put in our product and here's our AI. And the company says, well, that's nice, but we use this other AI. That's where Upstream works comes in. And they may use Amazon AI for translations, and they may use Google AI to search their knowledge base, and they use Watson to look up their medical information. They may have different AI applications. Our goal is to make them all work and make it seamless to the agent. So the agent doesn't know there's different AIs happening. It's just there's stuff that shows up and stuff happens. And I'd love to hear a little bit about your product line and offerings right now, but maybe you could tell me that in the context of where you're offering this operationalizing AI service. Well, it comes as an actual part of our product, right? It's right there. It's right there. So one of the components is a desktop component called Virtual Agent Portal. And we spent a lot of time kind of working through what to name this, because we didn't want people to start thinking we're providing AI to them, because we're not an AI provider. But what Virtual Agent Portal allows you to do, it's a kind of an open placeholder, so that if I need to interact between an agent and an AI on the desktop, it can go into Virtual Agent Portal. And I can do things like I can try Amazon, or I could switch it out for Google, because maybe I get a better price. The agent doesn't see the difference. I don't need to retrain them. I'm using a certain AI, and I put in a different training model, and I want to do some A -B testing to see which one's giving me better results. The agent won't see the difference. Virtual Agent Portal handles all that in the background and feeds the information back to management to say, okay, yeah, the new changes are working, so we're going to now use that AI. But it's all about making it transparent to the agent, so they're focused on the customer and my understanding is that with all this, you guys have now developed and are operating with a very big customer. Yeah, somebody we've been having a lot of fun with over the summer is United Airlines. So they're a big Cisco shop. They've got Cisco UCCE. They've got Cisco Webex. And they had this concept that they called Agent on Demand. And what they wanted to be able to do was to provide airline -side services to customers remotely. And with Webex and the Cisco Contact Center product, those things didn't work together. So Cisco brought in Upstream Works, and so we're kind of the glue between all this. So now what happens at United Airlines is, and if you're traveling and you're at United, look around because you're going to see QR codes all over the place. You can shoot the QR code with your phone, and you will get hooked up with a live video call with the United Gate agent. So it's for doing airline -side things. So can't buy my baggage. I got to go change my flight. I want to change my seat. You know, all the stuff that you could go up to the gate to do, there's a big lineup, or you're in the United Club having a drink and you want to do this, you can now do this on your phone remotely. From a customer experience point of view, it's an awesome thing. But what's even better about it is think about gate agents. These are the people who are standing at the gate and they're doing stuff and then you board your flight and then they go back in the back room and they sit around until their next flight. Well, now what they do is they go back in the back room and United has little, I'll call them informal contact centers in every airport. Gate agents leave their post, they go back and they get on the phone and they start dealing with other customers from all over the world. So from United's point of view, they're now getting much better utilization of their staff and they're assisting people at any airport where there's United Airlines. And from the customer's point of view, they just know that, hey, I want to change my seat and I can do it on my phone and talk to a person to do it. So it's a win for the customers and it's an absolute win for United as well because now, you know, I don't have to line up to do this stuff and I can better utilize my agents. It just occurred to me that it's liberating for both sides of that equation. In other words, as you were mentioning from the customer point of view, now I don't have to stand even, you know, it was used to be a problem. I have to find the right line to stand in. That is, you know, we've all had that experience. I can just click on one of these wherever I am in the airport and get help. Yeah, absolutely. You hit the QR code and it's going to ask for your flight number. So you put your flight number in and your passenger name, and then you're going to get to the right person to talk about the right stuff. It doesn't matter what line you're going to get in because it's skills routed to the right person. Wow. And that also means that remote, to your point, remote agents, whether they're at an informal contact center, a little mini one in the back office there behind the gate, or maybe just as in a more, it may be out of a home even, right there, there is help now, you know, late at night, maybe there's no one at the little airport in a smaller center, which United does fly in and out of, maybe you're just talking to someone somewhere else. That smaller center, you could talk to an agent at home, but you could also be talking to an agent who's on shift at O 'Hare in between flights. Right. So that's really, that really is an amazing step forward. And it really, it leverages all the technologies already in place. Yeah. And then, and then they went further because they said, you know what we, cause you can, you can escalate between voice video and chat on the application. You don't have to do video call. You can also just chat with the agent as well. But they've also got translations. So they're using, I believe it's Amazon for doing, there's Google, sorry, they're using Google to do translations, but now I can go on, I can click that QR code, say I'm Spanish. I can type in in Spanish, what the agent sees is coming up in English and they answer in English and the person gets it back in Spanish. And this is a great use of generative AI because that's, I will say a year ago, when you showed translations in a demo, it was anyone spoke the language went, yeah, that doesn't really work. The language was stilted generative AI has, has changed the game on translations because generative AI can translate really well. So that's a very excellent use case for it. This is very exciting because it sort of opens up so many doors that, you know, the, the agent might be in Berlin, the, the, the other, the passenger might be in Mexico city and they're able to talk to each other in their own languages. Yep. And you can do it across industry as well. Think about, you know, you as a person, you go to a drug store and you need to consult with a doctor and they've got a nurse practitioner there who can triage. And then click a QR code and get a video conference going with a doctor who may be at a central site. Now I'm sitting, having a conversation with a medical professional via video that's been queued up. And, you know, on the doctor's side, he's between patients, he logs onto the system and he just starts taking some calls and he can deal with patients. And now I don't have to have doctors everywhere. I can centralize them and I put nurse practitioners around. So there's a lot of healthcare uses for the same type of application. Hey Rob, let's stay with that a second, but in both cases, because, um, do you, do you, I'm going to use maybe the wrong term, but is there a continuity on each case? In other words, let's say, um, I opened up a conversation as a United customer or as a, as a patient and it's concluded, but now I have the same problem maybe four hours later. Will the next person who helps me know about my last conversation? Well, we captured the interaction history of every interaction that happens. So the answer, the quick answer is yes. Um, as a, as an agent or a doctor or a gate agent, uh, you can go back and review the previous recording, um, or the transcript of what's going on, or again, another great use of generative AI. You could also get a summary delivered back to you of what had gone on on that previous call, but that whole contact history is tracked. So every single time Doug Green contacts, they're going to be able to say Doug Green always contacts us and says, we screwed his seat up. He does this every single flight. So maybe he's just pulling our leg. So, you know, it works both ways. And that's really amazing because that's the type of information, you know, old school that, you know, there would be someone around who knew some other people and would say, yeah, look at Doug. And this is, he does that all the time. Here's how to handle it. Now we're able to do this on a, on a, and that must make agent life or the doctor life, whoever's receiving the contact a little bit easier, right? They've, they've got that contextual and historical information. Yeah. We've always believed, I was talking about the elephant never forgets. And I've always believed that as a person contacting a business, there are certain things that I know the business should know those things as well. Most importantly, I know that I called last Thursday about the same thing. The business should know that the agent who picks up my call, this is, you know, this is video or just a voice call, but the agent should know that as well. And that's the important part of interaction history. So regardless of the channel you come in on, the agent has access to that information and they can see what that context is. Cause that's all important to them providing you good service. Rob, you know, I know it's early days and, and, but you know, this was an historic summer for travel. So United you've already flown, if you will, through a challenging time. What's the reaction, what's United telling you and what are customers saying what's happening? Uh, United loves it. Um, all of the airlines are aware of it and are looking and, and want to understand how they've done it. Um, we're getting a lot of inbound, uh, requests coming in from basically all the major airline carriers from very senior people. Um, I think over the Labor Day weekend, it was something like, I don't know, 2 .3 or 2 .8 million passengers went through Chicago O 'Hare airport, uh, and NBC news and Chicago did a section on United and all the travelers and right in the middle of it is, and they have this agent on demand application and they show here's a phone talking to an agent. That's the upstream application right there, which was very cool. So Rob, you know, uh, with this, this, uh, work you're doing with United, I understand they turned to you because they were able to find you as a reliable source for this. So original the agent on demand idea, uh, came from United. Um, and they, they did a proof of concept to say, okay, it kind of works, but it wasn't robust enough for sort of the enterprise you will. Um, and they turned to Cisco who was sort of their trusted communications provider and said, can you do this? And Cisco looked into it and they came back and said, no, we can't get all the bits and pieces, but we can't make them work together. And then somebody inside Cisco who knew upstream, wasn't talk to upstream. And so Cisco came to us and we said, yeah, of course we can do that. So it went back to United said, okay, we have a solution. Um, and we put that into United and they'd been extremely happy with the stability and how well it works. So everything's great. And since then it's, I don't, I mean, maybe it's early to say this, it sounds like it's on its way to becoming an industry standard. Uh, we're getting a ton of inbound interest. People are coming up and saying, you know, we, we, we've heard about the agent on demand. We want to know how it works and how you do it. And, and now we find out that upstream works is kind of the key enabler here. So, yeah, we're getting a lot of inbound demand on it, which is great. Well, uh, I wanted to, uh, conclude our podcast with just about how we can get a hold of products from upstream works. I understand that you're a channel oriented company. So do you have a channel pro program? We have a channel program. Uh, we do not sell directly at all. Uh, we have distribution channels, uh, throughout, uh, Canada, the U S and Europe. Um, we're available, um, on the Amazon platform, we're available on the Cisco platforms. Um, and we are expanding our market. So if there's, you know, if you're one of our resellers, uh, you know, you, you can, you can get at this. Um, if you're new to us and you want to talk with us, you've got some opportunities you want to discuss. Uh, we do have a channel program. We're really easy to deal with. Um, basically we can sign you up and then we'll do all the heavy lifting and until such time as you want to take on as much of the sales training and implementation training as you want to based on your business needs. Sounds like a great way for a channel partner right now or an MSP to win with AI. Absolutely. Absolutely. Well, this is an exciting, ongoing story, Rob. I really hope that we get to do an additional podcast, maybe just about the United application, if you will, or, or that the, what you're doing there and in healthcare and maybe some other industries, learn some more news and do some stuff in the future. But for now, I want to thank you for joining us. Where can we learn more about upstream works? www .upstreamworks .com. Well, I hope everyone takes a visit and takes a second look, but for now, thanks very much for joining me today. Thank you, Doug. It's been really fun.

Rob Mcdougall Doug Doug Green Berlin Cisco ROB Upstream Works United Gate Www .Upstreamworks .Com. Today Amazon 23 Years Last Thursday First 2 .3 Both Cases Upstreamworks Canada Europe United Airlines
SBF TRIAL: 10/02 Update

CoinDesk Podcast Network

03:08 min | 1 d ago

SBF TRIAL: 10/02 Update

"Welcome to the SBF trial, a Coindesk podcast network newsletter bringing you daily insights from inside the courtroom where Sam Bankman -Fried will try to stay out of prison. Follow the Coindesk podcast network to get the audio each morning with content from the Coindesk regulation team and voiced by Wondercraft AI. It is officially trial week and as Bloomberg's Joe Wiesenthal would likely put it, this is why we get up in the morning. It's been exactly nine months and 20 days since Sam Bankman -Fried got arrested at his then home in the Bahamas. Today marks the last day before he is set to start the trial in which he will win back his freedom or be locked up for what a federal judge says could be a very long time. Thousands of pages of evidence ranging from internal documents to audio recordings will be presented and fought over in the next six weeks as US prosecutors try to prove that the former FTX founder knowingly defrauded customers and business partners. Arguably the most damning evidence or lack thereof could come from the recollections and personal opinions of Bankman -Fried's former colleagues, friends and housemates. Caroline Ellison, Nishad Singh and Gary Wang were close friends and roommates of Bankman -Fried as much as they were colleagues. Ellison was emotionally invested with the FTX founder and troubled by the former couple's on and off relationship which according to a diary entry from her slowly fizzled out in February 2022. Prosecutors also say they intend to call up FTX customers and investors including non -US customers over the course of the trial. On another note, do you remember when FTX suddenly announced it was hacked and lost some $600 million worth of crypto? This was the same day it filed for bankruptcy last November. A decent portion of those funds sat in a wallet for a few months and then started moving this weekend. Around 15 ,000 Ether worth around $26 million at Sunday night's prices moved out of a wallet through various routers and privacy tools between Friday night and Sunday morning. We never got an explanation for what exactly happened and how the exploit was carried out. I imagine federal investigators are probably closely tracking this episode. On a logistics note, Judge Lewis Kaplan ruled in favor of the DOJ's motion to prevent Bankman -Fried from getting into the weeds on what his lawyers may or may not have said about FTX's operations in his opening statement. However, Bankman -Fried's defense team can still raise the advice of counsel defense later on with notice to the court and DOJ. In court filings, the defense said the argument would be that FTX's in -house and external lawyers were part of decisions to use auto -deleting messaging platforms, set up legal entities in the US, loan funds to FTX and Alameda executives, and other aspects of the FTX -Alameda relationship. Want to follow along? Sign up for CoinDesk's new daily newsletter, The SBF Trial, bringing you insights from the courthouse and around the case. You can get the podcast each day right here by following the CoinDesk Podcast Network. Thanks for listening.

Joe Wiesenthal February 2022 Gary Wang Ellison Caroline Ellison Bahamas Sam Bankman -Fried Thousands Of Pages Lewis Kaplan Today Sunday Night Nishad Singh Sunday Morning Last November Friday Night Around $26 Million Bloomberg Each Morning Each Day DOJ
A highlight from Episode 124 - Oct. 1st, 2023 - Bringin In The Fall

On The Rekord

07:29 min | 1 d ago

A highlight from Episode 124 - Oct. 1st, 2023 - Bringin In The Fall

"Yes indeed, another episode of On The Record Podcast. I am your host with the most DJing tents. I may sound like I'm under the weather, I am not. It's just the sports blues that's been going on right now. My beloved Jets, they fought hard. They did. At one point it was 17 to two. Wow. But they lost by three, 23 -20. I saw some good things. I'm seeing the elevation of Zach Wilson in front of my eyes. When he has time to think and do what he needs to do. Maybe Aaron Rodgers being there tonight was a boost. We don't know. We shall find out as the weeks progress. They are one in three right now. It is a long season. I saw the Jags make it to the playoffs, starting off terrible and ending it off hot. A lot can happen. I think it's good signs when your best player who unfortunately got hurt the first game is still there, even if he's in a VIP box, still there looking and offering more support. And I'm sure he'll offer him words of encouragement and tell him this is part of the process. Exactly. Exactly. That voice you hear is I am Walt. What's up, Walt? Life, man. Yeah. Life is going to. It's the peaks and valleys and but, you know, I'm pretty good for the most part. You know, I got some got some lows, but I'm working through them and I don't want to be too high at times, but I don't want to be too low. But when you are low and stuff like that, you just got to realize it's not forever. Even if even if it feels like it's forever, even if it feels like you mind to get past all the little things that happen throughout your days and stuff like that, or you try to make sense of things that don't make sense. So, yeah, man. Yeah, the valleys. Yeah. Let's get real for a second. IDG, as you know. Of course. Up and down, up and down. Yeah. Trying to get this, I strike the right hot again. This month was September was a very iffy month, a very iffy month. OK. Business wise, I got you. Even this past weekend, yeah, I have been locked in. And unfortunately, the weather just derailed my whole entire weekend plans and just just derailed everything for people out there. If you guys don't know, we're located in the tri -state area of America in New York. And it was a torrential downpour. It's horrible. I've never seen something like that. And New York City got hit hard. Actually, that's why. I've seen something like that before, but it wasn't too long ago. Yeah, but a year or two ago. No, I know. Usually when it rains heavy like that, flooding is inevitable, especially out here in Rockland, as the more they cut down the trees to build these houses, these luxury apartments, et cetera, et cetera, these storefronts, they're changing the terrain, and there's more flooding every time. Bro, the city was looking like Miami, bro. And during the hurricane, it was bad. It was bad. And this wasn't a hurricane, this was a tropical storm. So you had that going on, and I had one of my gigs supposed to have been out there, and they were like, look, our area is flooded. People can't come outside. I'm like, understandable. And the worst thing about it, which I hate, especially for the self -employed people and the people who run their own businesses, I tell myself going now, going forward, I have a ticket deposit. I usually say, nah, it's OK, because I always get it. But now when your back's kind of to the corner a little bit, you're trying to shimmy out of that little corner. So going forward, deposits are a must. Like I said, I do not usually take them, because I'd rather get it all. Because if my whole thing is on my end, in case something happens, I don't want to be held responsible. Fair. That's why I'd rather just get it all, walk through the door. Here you go. At the end of the night, here you go. Boom, bam, thank you, ma 'am. But it so goes, man. It so goes. How have you been? Yo. Man, yo. I've been like, honestly, when it comes to the fall, it's a period where I get a bit moody. I get a bit reserved. I'm more isolated and stuff like that. This is just due to stuff that happened in my early 20s with depression and things like that. And every fall since has just been like moody, isolation, and stuff like that. Now I'm just trying to be in a situation where I find things to keep me motivated, whether it's like watching one of my good friends. He'll be sending me YouTubes of religious stuff and stuff like that. I'm not the most religious person, but some of those things that are said in those videos, I can apply to my life. And then there are the things where we talk about business and things like that, things I don't understand. And I just try to watch videos and try to to listen learn, listen to understand. Now I'm going to get to a point where I'm just going to start writing things down just to keep my mind going. And yeah, man, that stuff I have going on, then what I told you earlier this week I had going on, that was a lot of BS, bro. I can't make sense of that. I can't make sense of that. I'm not trying to dismiss it off as weird behavior, but it feels like it and stuff like that. In a way, because my thing is just like if I'm cool with you and I've always treated you good and stuff like that, I've never called you out your name, said anything disrespectful to you and stuff like that. If you have an issue with me, I would like to know that and stuff like that. If I've done something wrong and I know it was wrong and stuff like that and I reach out and I apologize and I get nothing back, I'll leave it alone. I'll leave it alone at this point. But when I know there was something I did wrong and stuff like that, it's just like, yo, I'm going to be like, yo, and I addressed it, I was just like so -and -so person, what you did was foul. I'm not going to badmouth you, disrespect you and stuff like that. But if I ever see you, just keep it pushing.

Zach Wilson Aaron Rodgers Rockland New York City Miami 17 Three First Game Jets TWO September ONE Tonight On The Record 20 New York 23 Earlier This Week One Point America
Monitor Show 16:00 10-01-2023 16:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

00:25 sec | 2 d ago

Monitor Show 16:00 10-01-2023 16:00

"With Bloomberg, you get the story behind the story, the story behind the global birth rate, behind your EV batteries' environmental impact, behind sand, yeah, sand. You get context, and context changes everything. Go to Bloomberg .com to get context. I'm Tim Senevec. And I'm Carol Master. We start off the fourth quarter next week. Busy, busy. Have a good and safe weekend, everybody. Stay with us, though. Today's top stories and global business headlines are coming up right now.

Tim Senevec Carol Master Fourth Quarter Next Week Bloomberg Today Bloomberg .Com
Monitor Show 07:00 10-01-2023 07:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

00:25 sec | 2 d ago

Monitor Show 07:00 10-01-2023 07:00

"Interactive Brokers charges USD margin loan rates from 5 .83 % to 6 .83%. Rated the lowest margin fees by stockbrokers .com. Rate subject to change. Learn more at ibkr .com slash compare. I'm Tim Senevec. And I'm Carol Masseur. We start off the fourth quarter next week. Busy, busy, have a good and safe weekend everybody. Stay with us though. Today's top stories and global business headlines are coming up right now.

Tim Senevec Carol Masseur 5 .83 % Fourth Quarter Next Week 6 .83% Today Ibkr .Com Stockbrokers .Com. Brokers
Monitor Show 18:00 09-30-2023 18:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:55 min | 3 d ago

Monitor Show 18:00 09-30-2023 18:00

"Love the feeling of getting more for less? The drop app lets you score free gift cards by shopping at brands like Ulta, Adidas, and Sam's Club. What are you waiting for? Download the drop app and get $5 with the invite code, get dropped 444. Fans, so we'll have to wait and see. Thanks Harry. That's Professor Harry First of NYU Law School. This is Bloomberg Law on Bloomberg Radio. I'm June Grosso. Stay with us. Today's top stories and global business headlines are coming up right now. Broadcasting 24 hours a day at bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg Radio. The Senate is expected to quickly take up a stopgap funding bill that cleared the House earlier today. The question is on agreeing to the Speaker's approval of the Journal. Those in favor say aye. Those opposed need plenty of the Chair, the ayes have it. The Journal stands approved. The House passed that 45 -day stopgap funding bill, 335 to 91. With overwhelming Democratic support as dozens of Republicans voted against it, White House official indicated President Biden would support the bill, which includes disaster relief and FAA authorization. Justice Department special counsel Jack Smith is requesting a gag order against former President Trump. It would limit what Trump could say publicly about the ongoing criminal cases against him. Smith initially asked for a limited gag order, but updated the request on Friday, citing Trump's threats against witnesses. Last week, Trump claimed General Mark Milley had committed treason and should be executed in the gag order request. Smith argued no other criminal defendant would be permitted to make such inflammatory public statements. Full weekend services up and running on New York City, subways and buses, despite historic rainfall and flooding that inundated the system on Friday. Jennifer Falsoni reports. Governor Hogle praising the efforts of those who kept the city moving on Friday as best as it could while.

Jack Smith Harry $5 Jennifer Falsoni Friday Donald Trump New York City Smith Last Week Adidas Ulta White House Bloomberg Business Act Sam's Club 45 -Day June Grosso Justice Department Today Senate Mark Milley
Monitor Show 12:00 09-30-2023 12:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:55 min | 3 d ago

Monitor Show 12:00 09-30-2023 12:00

"Investment Advisors, switch to interactive brokers for lowest cost global trading and turnkey custody solutions. No ticket charges and no conflicts of your interests at ibkr .com slash ria. George Lavender, Marshall Louie and Jen Sargent for Wondery. I'm Hannah Miller and this is Bloomberg. Broadcasting 24 hours a day at Bloomberg .com and the Bloomberg Business Act. This is Bloomberg Radio. The clock is ticking on a government shutdown. Federal funding runs out at midnight with no deal in sight. House Republicans are meeting behind closed doors this morning to find a way forward after failing to pass a short term funding resolution on Friday. The Senate is set to vote at 1 p .m. on its proposed stopgap funding measure, but it's unclear if Speaker Kevin McCarthy would bring the measure to the House floor for a possible vote. L .A. Mayor Karen Bass is among those mentioned to fill Dianne Feinstein's U .S. Senate seat for the remainder of the term. Governor Gavin Newsom said in March he would nominate a black female if Feinstein retired before the end of her term. A spokesperson for Bass said at the time that the mayor would absolutely not consider stepping down to fill the Senate seat. Senator Feinstein passed away Thursday night. Full weekend service is up and running on New York City subways and buses, despite historic rainfall and flooding that inundated the system on Friday. Jennifer Polcioni reports. Governor Hogle praising the efforts of those who kept the city moving on Friday as best as it could, while some areas experienced the most rain seen in some 70 years, she says. Metro North, the LIRR, city subways and buses functioning a day after delays in suspensions as heavy rains poured into the Bass transit system. Hogle crediting M .T .A. leadership with planning ahead by rerouting trains and having pumps in place in advance to clear as much as possible.

Hannah Miller Feinstein Jen Sargent Jennifer Polcioni Dianne Feinstein Thursday Night Friday March 1 P .M. George Lavender Governor New York City Bloomberg Business Act Senator Bass Kevin Mccarthy Marshall Louie Bloomberg M .T .A. Ibkr .Com
"this weekend" Discussed on Xtra Sports Radio 1300 AM

Xtra Sports Radio 1300 AM

01:41 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on Xtra Sports Radio 1300 AM

"Worst of the weekend is having a seizure at work. My best weekend is watching my Seattle Seahawks win this weekend. Wait. What happened to you at work? I had a Caesar. Armory Mt so that the perfect place to have a seizure, You know, could you paramedics watching me? You know, it's great. Okay. Okay. You might be the first person who's called who's best and worst of the weekend had to do with the seizure. I'll take it. Well, We're glad you're still with us there, Tyler Thank you. And I thought, he said he had a Caesar like he was having a Caesar salad. I'm going alright, A bad Caesar salad can ruin your day. There's no doubt about that. There's no doubt about somebody says, What's the worst thing that happened to you? This weekend? I had a Caesar Caesar salad and Caesar salad. You know that? They just can't get good crew tons, man. You know I can't get good croutons. Let's take a break. Last call for phone calls. What we learn what's in store tomorrow. Did you guys hear? Did you think he said seizure? He was blase about it. Like, Yeah, the seizure work and then went home. Yeah, club like, go hawks. She's like I came out on top at the end of the weekend. Yeah. All right. We'll take a break back after this. are you're probably in your car right now. And that means at some point you're going to have to fill up that gas tank. Why not get cash back when.

Tyler Seattle Seahawks tomorrow This weekend Armory Mt first person this weekend
"this weekend" Discussed on Newsradio 600 KOGO

Newsradio 600 KOGO

04:38 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on Newsradio 600 KOGO

"Also the FTC taking a shot at fixing Mcflurry machines. And life. Coming full circle for a woman after 9 11 that story in about 20 minutes. Well do bad times really make us better people. As the saying goes, the 20th anniversary of 9 11 occurring in the 18th month of the Covid pandemic offers a reality check. Also a sobering study in contrasts. Jim Beckerman, reporter at North Jersey dot com says because of 9 11 brought us together Covid seems to be tearing us apart. Jim, take us through it. Okay, Well, first of all, I want to give a disclaimer. I am not an expert. I'm just someone who talks to experts. And since experts are part of the issue right now, whether people trust them or not, I almost feel there needs to be like a big disclaimer on the whole any kind of conversation like this, But I will tell you what people have told me so that that fair? Yeah, of course. What are you hearing? Okay, so I think you know, start out with I mean to to a certain extent, compared 9 11 to, uh to Covid is it's a little apples and oranges. I mean, they are different situations in many respects, but I think a lot of us have been struck by what we remember. Is this great sense of national unity immediately following 9 11 and this, uh, sense of division right now. We also did at each other's throats, and nobody can agree on a common strategy or common enemy. And I think one of the things that people have mentioned to me is just that very thing. In the case of 9 11, there was a common enemy. Everybody kind of agreed who the enemy was, Uh, you know, would certain outliers. I mean, I guess there's some people think it was still think it was an inside job or something. But I think in general, most people would agree on who it was that attacked us and that we all as Americans were Attacked. I mean, it was basically not only we attacked by a foreign adversary, but somebody who attacked the specifically because we were American. Okay, right. That really brought us together because I think we tend in general. Well, we're not in a situation like that. We tend to be very, uh, We tend to be very bakery country, and we tend to also identify with our own particular group. You know, I'm black feminist. I'm gay. I'm Christian and whatever it is Uh, but, you know, once 9 11 happened, we were all Americans, and I think that's something that is really different about this situation. All right, so so bring us to the pandemic, which is created the different scenario. How in terms of our feelings about this? Well, I think you know, Another thing about the pandemic is that there is no I mean, who is the enemy? The pandemic? I mean, in a way, I mean the virus. But virus is not a very satisfying enemy. So I think it's you know, I think everybody depending on the political bubble that they're in, you know it's either the former president is to blame for the current president is to blame. Or it's the doctors who are insisting on the West Wall taking vaccines or it's the people were saying no. Not to take the vaccine. You know, I'm not. You know, I'm not weighing in on, you know, I mean, I have certain opinions about what I think, is, uh, Rational, but at the same time, it is a fact that there is a big difference of opinion whether that's warranted or not, So I think that's a big issue, and I think also there is a sense the big simply because, like any time you're in a pandemic, there's there's a kind of paranoia that sets in because in a sense, we are all each other's enemies. I mean, anyone of us could be carriers. You know the person you know, in the the person in the supermarket, you know who's six ft. Away from me. Could be my enemy. Uh, you know, my relative across from me at the table could be my enemy. So I know in the article I wrote, I sort of compared 9 11 to War of the worlds. It's like, uh, you know, we were attacked by an external enemy that was clearly identifiable. We all came together, and, uh, Covid is almost like the thing or invasion of the body. An actor's. It's like you know, the enemy takes the form of us. Uh, so we are all a little bit afraid of each other, And I think that's also feeds into this. Thanks. Jim Jim Beckerman reporter at North jersey dot com, Coming up next financial questions to ask yourself before taking a new job..

Jim Beckerman Jim Jim Jim Beckerman six ft 18th month 20th anniversary FTC about 20 minutes 9 11 dot com North jersey dot com one North West Wall Jersey Christian Americans American 9 Covid
"this weekend" Discussed on 600 WREC

600 WREC

02:02 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on 600 WREC

"Oh, God. The federal government's weekly unemployment supplement is still on the way for some people, even though it expired on Labor Day specifically for those whose payments have been delayed for weeks and even months and some states still struggling with the backlog of claims, and anyone who was eligible for benefits before the Labor Day expiration have 30 days to apply. More private employers are considering vaccine mandates A major oil companies among the latest Bertha Coombs reports oil giant royal that Shell is considering a vaccine mandate for its employees and whether to fire those who refused to comply. The Financial Times reporting, Shell is outlining a case for a selective mandate initially at offshore platforms and other remote locations where staffers work and live. And were approved vaccines are available, an internal memo says. While all reasonable efforts would be made to avoid termination shall may be faced with no alternative. I'm Bertha Coons. General Motors is keeping its Chevy Bolt factory on idol for at least a couple more weeks. The automaker blames production delays at battery supplier LG Kem. Production of the All electric vehicle was originally shut down August 23rd amid a complete recall of all bolts because of battery fires in at least a dozen of them. It's expected to cost GM about 1.8 billion to replace all the defective batteries. But General Motors says it's pursuing reimbursement from LG Kem Ford is restructuring operations in India, where it says it's lost about $2 billion over the last decade. It's ending production in one of the plants by the end of this year ended the second one by the second quarter of next year, resulting in 4000 job cuts. And Bill Gates investment firm is about to own almost three quarters of the four seasons. Luxury hotel chain Cascade Investments already owns about 47%, and it's paying $2.2 billion to buy half of the four Seasons stake owned by King Holding Company controlled by Saudi Prince Alawite bin Talal. The deal values four seasons at $10 billion. Consumer and business News. Joe McConnell, NBC news radio,.

Joe McConnell August 23rd $10 billion $2.2 billion 30 days King Holding Company India General Motors Cascade Investments Bill Gates Shell LG Kem 4000 job cuts GM about $2 billion about 47% second quarter of next year Bertha Coons second one four Seasons
"this weekend" Discussed on 850 WFTL

850 WFTL

03:51 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on 850 WFTL

"Of care. We will and you cast your fears aside and you know you can survive. So when you feel like, you know, just go look in such a way members strong. And you'll finally see the two that I hear Well, eyes and you Oh! Oh, And you face the world alone. One witches out again or you. Oh, look at Your research wavin stand empty nation will this up, okay? And then a hero comes along with the strong to carry. Oh, And the cast you aside and more you can times when you feel like office girl. Looking started strong. And if I see that will matter here lies yes. Greens are to follow. At anyone. Will move into tomorrow. In time you'll fund Here where the strength talking and you casting me and you You can't stop when you feel like you can start strong and we'll finally see buddy Careful lies. Somebody here. You Mhm. You. Could Gwen Stefani be saying? Yes. This weekend under some amazing fireworks display. It's trace against Sonny 179. This is the 60 minute commercial free workday kick off. Word is she and Blake Shelton got their marriage license on Tuesday and they could be doing it this weekend. Anybody gets back jurors, make sure you post them. Move yourself. You always with your life. Never thinking up. Prove yourself. You are moving..

Blake Shelton Gwen Stefani Tuesday Sonny 179 60 minute tomorrow two One this weekend weekend
"this weekend" Discussed on Newsradio 600 KOGO

Newsradio 600 KOGO

05:15 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on Newsradio 600 KOGO

"It. Can be overwhelming to think about where to start. While we're excited about these reunions, post pandemic, It helps to manage our expectations as we hear from this weekend's Jennifer Cash Enka while you might be ready to get back out there and see your friends again, the process may be a little more complicated than you think. Here with some tips is Elizabeth Bernstein of The Wall Street Journal. Elizabeth. How do you start the process of reconnecting? Well, I think we need to do it with intention. There's this Eagerness. We can't wait to get out there. We do, miss people. We want to see them. But I think if we just jump back into the way our old social life was, we're going to become overwhelmed. We haven't seen a lot of people even our closest, nearest and dearest for more than a year. Many of us and so was he just jumped back in this a lot of catching up to do. You're going to get overwhelmed. Your article mentions that you should kind of make an a list. Why? Well, I think that we know who we really, really messed. You know, we missed everybody. But if you really stop and think about it, we know who we really missed the people that we want to see a soonest and the most going back. And so this gives us this pause. We took from from seeing people gives us the opportunity to come back and design our our friendship. And are sort of social life the way we want, So pick your a team, Sit down and lift the people that you missed. The people you want to reconnect with names will pop out at you who you want to see first and start there and another advantage to this pick. Your 18 is you're going to know who you want to reach out to. First, the woman that tone rings. You get a tax. You're going to notice the names that they're on your list. You're going to reconnect. I had this experience. Made my list. Then somebody will be a friend wrote me on a Saturday morning. Hey, want to catch up? It was a friend of my list. And it's like Jack, pick up the phone. Elizabeth. Don't just put it off until you feel like you're talk later today. So you're that list is going to help you. It's going to solidify who you want to talk to, and move forward. Do we have fewer friends now? Or a relationships? How much have they changed over the last year and and plus months they change an incredible amount of, uh, I think we knew this. But the research is striking. There's research from Yale sociologist named Marissa King and her colleagues did research during the pandemic, looking at how our social networks changed, and they found that our inner circle like again. Our nearest and dearest are our most inner circle of people shifted. Who was in that inner circle shifted during the pandemic, and it went from, you know, some family and many cents mostly family, and in fact are we had 20% fewer, very close friends during the pandemic that we kept in touch with, and that's a striking number. We're speaking with Elizabeth Bernstein of The Wall Street Journal, Elizabeth. Why is it important to maintain friendships? Friendship is really a lot built on friendship. I think we don't really realize that it's very important for our mental and our physical health. And and there again. There's a huge body of research that shows people who have friends. Solid friendship lived longer. They're healthier friendship decreases. Blood pressure decreases. Stress reduces the risk of depression increases longevity. It goes on and on. And then this is one of my favorite pieces of research. We are happier hanging out with our friends and we are with a romantic partner. Children. What if you meet up with somebody you decide to get together and that person wants to do nothing but recount bad stories tied to the pandemic, And that's the last thing you want to talk about, or vice versa. I think this is one of the things that's kind of pop up. We all had a hard year. We're going to get together. We're going to want to go through. Okay. How is your year? How is your your, but I think some of us, um, may be ready to move on. Great. You know, I want to catch up. I want to hear all it was, but let's move forward. Now. I think we're going to be surprised to find out friends had sometimes they have had even harder years than we knew. And in a in a normal time, a pre pandemic time we were used to catching up with our friends, so something was happening in their life. If we knew about it, you know, as it was popping up, and we heard about it Now, if we've been out of touch, you know, largely out of touch for a while. We're going to be surprised to find out Wow. Somebody's marriages on their own. Oh, I didn't know that person lost somebody. I didn't know that person was struggling with a health issue, and so Of course we all kind of want to move on. But I think of a good friend You want to you want to Basically brace yourself and prep yourself to be there to be supportive to know that something surprising they come up in the conversations as we get together. That's Wall Street Journal columnist Elizabeth Bernstein with This weekend's Jennifer Kush Enka 30 Minutes after the hour on this weekend. Mm hmm. Own a home. See how much you can save. Call me at 803 335157. This is Kevin Lyons.

Elizabeth Bernstein Marissa King Kevin Lyons Elizabeth 803 335157 20% Jennifer Kush Saturday morning Jack 30 Minutes Yale 18 last year Jennifer Cash Enka First one The Wall Street Journal Street Journal this weekend first
"this weekend" Discussed on Bro Bro Bro Bets

Bro Bro Bro Bets

02:43 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on Bro Bro Bro Bets

"As well. Yeah he did for for the show. Yesterday shot callers love callers. We'll get the phones fixed or next week. Definitely hopefully does fix week though. Yeah i got it thank you. We are also going to have brownback for the phones. Oh yes that's awesome. Wasn't he's supposed to have a horse. Pick brad brown actually tried to call into the phones today. I was getting tax about that. God phones do not work. We send you leave yet. Nobody leave he just reminded me that. Seekie cbd amdi official sponsor hammer. Don i don't know if that's true official sponsor but today there if you're not using the md what are you doing. Paul don't dono. I take it i take. Cb mvp 'em go sleep at night. Yeah some for my dog. Did you have doggie cd to how's it working haven't actually tried yet. I just got it okay. So you got it. Let us know how it works out. We'll do fill was in here the other day. Cfo fill came in here. The other day was doing the the role on cd md like freeze. Menthol relaxes the one. That's the one i freeze. Yeah yeah it's very nice. Cbd md takes care of us for pretty much everything -solutely and now what a deal dude. Kind of deal cd md. Get if you do this right now go on you get twenty five percents off. Yeah okay when you go to. Cb cb dot com and use promo code dot. Don dot done at checkout. That's probably got done dad at checkout cb md dot com don with us for what we like those people. They're they're good since good Good merch to people good hoodies thank you for the reminder route. That'd be back next week love. Ip brown tweeted picks in the morning. Yeah picks in the more. I probably won't pick up your will for sure i will fuck and actually no i. I'm actually pretty this weekend. So i probably will tell you i was hosting a bunch of people. Those were thank you. Those are good burgers. Dude heike you. let's go refunding from another one of our sponsors certainly nice this weekend beautiful. Hey get out there. Make some money hell. Yeah hamer dad..

next week today Paul Yesterday dot com twenty five percents Ip brown brad brown amdi this weekend weekend cbd one dot
"this weekend" Discussed on The big d zone

The big d zone

04:43 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on The big d zone

"This weekend while the definite of the expression take as needed. Because i have indictee medicine that i could take as needed. I take like pro. That an i take needed. This weekend flipped. Bill definitely flipped to bill today. Finally attendant finding all the took my mom. My mom medicine. That was crazy. We went from getting stiff off a pay full. We pay mill. Okay then i got emotional own my best friend. Yeah i got emotional. My best friend. We had a twenty debris. Drop me hacking and coughing and coughing hacking and then all of an on top of that. I couldn't go well. I didn't want to go to because it was too cold. And i didn't want jinked it because i was about to go to a hotel so do my video for the class and now i'm only going away for the class video because the other reason why this weekend thuc as coming up i mean ridiculous and not bad enough. I had to get a couple of orders. One that was that i was stiff at all. I had to call another person back to get do all the daughter which i did and then we'll do picnic picnic and in the video when i was trying to do the video. A me supporting the monthly that that we should have on a very started this trading that we were forced to give a year of i and some of us mostly almost two and a half years of alive to this crazy pandemic and i couldn't even get the damn video onto youtube. I'm the until i get to the hotels. Nellie i'm will be doing a Video of my class. But i also be doing The campaign video that originally started from here at the second alice. You know on this weekend sucks. I gotta take my med today my vitamin because this this weekend this weekend. Destroy me this weekend. Absolutely positively identified. Destroy me own a of that. I was trying to help with a business for something that just joined to help them out. I'm trying to help other bands of the dow. Oh please don't ban my page really. I'm trying to help you. I'll try to frigging help you out and you say you don't want me to pay and that's another thing that's another three. I don't. I don't plan on joining anymore unless the company gupta anything. It's already difficult to note that. I don't have fun for advertising Different business and especially show but don't want people to advertise on this on that include. I mean my land with the held the freedom of before been the people to what l. to freedom of for that what a weekend. What a weekend. I mean i d told us citizen. I had to d- told us in because he didn't want my hell. He told me the police. Donald top scant spamming and removed the moved website. Now only did that i do. I took those manton from took his mansion. What the hell audible being a state level. Playing field. Unbelievable does whole weekend with unbelievable pumping memorial day weekend. I have a speech that i'm going to be putting on later today. Taking truth for serving our country and for those that gave their lives for our country. I mean this weekend was hell this weekend with how old we get what hell..

Donald today youtube three Nellie this weekend This weekend later today two and a half years Bill One weekend a year twenty orders alice day couple second
"this weekend" Discussed on Let's Talk Wellness Now

Let's Talk Wellness Now

04:38 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on Let's Talk Wellness Now

"They're kind of considered not really doctors are the stethoscope and you know put in centralized and things like that. Yeah so You know you can really get lost. And the that's not the way our bodies work we are integrated you know. Being right we have consciousness. we have spirit. We have a memory. We we have blood. We have all the the structure of our body. All the physical we have all the microorganisms organisms. That are in the community with ourselves. Right it's a very complex system. An order to truly address health. We have to address it comprehensively. So i've seen all different combinations of expressions of illness. For example i've seen mental distress or mental illness like anxiety or depression or things like that that are caused by purely biophysical costs. I've seen physical illness that was caused purely by a psychological costs but mostly most commonly there are a combination of factors like there might be a physical insult like a certain type of toxicity but it might be related related to some kind of trauma like a stress like because many times like. Let's say we're going through a divorce. For example well we would be under a lot of emotional trauma and that might lead us to break from our healthy lifestyle so crap. I'm gonna just you know binge on beer this weekend. Or or i'm gonna you know medicate myself with junk food. And then you have the combination of factors that you know sets off and then maybe the relationship is related to abandonment trauma from childhood. Yes he like. It brings all these things and if you if you leave any of those elements out of the equation as you're trying to restore yourself to health you're gonna you're gonna have lingering problems or it's going to come back in another future episode or you're not gonna get fully better and so it's really key to look at all of these elements and that's That really helped me being a psychiatrist because if one you know there were there were some benefits..

this weekend
"this weekend" Discussed on Christoph Trappe: Business Storytelling Podcast

Christoph Trappe: Business Storytelling Podcast

05:49 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on Christoph Trappe: Business Storytelling Podcast

"Probably we'll be way to do it. So basically the way. I envision it you have a content strategy map. This is what we're trying to do these topics whatever and then the computer can figure out. Okay this is most important less important. Whatever but that's still aways away you know so you still need content creators to do it but if you have usable data coming in that can then be turned into a good story. An interesting story. Most of the time you were flooring whether us narrative science i don't i don't know them. This is not a sponsor chill from them saw this weekend or another similar tool give it a try and i think i think it's we're trying and here's the other thing. I think it's always important to remember how to integrate. All these new things. And i've been in way too many systems on way too many projects where there were people who fought the new things make so they thought it's not the case. Podcasting is not going away. Podcasting is not going. Livestreaming is not going away. The internet is not going away all kinds of things not going away so you might as well embrace those things and basically integrated them into what you're doing back. In the day. I grew up as a writer. Then i went on tv. I didn't go into writing to be. But i'm an introvert i am canal goes but i've embraced all this new technology. I've embraced new things. I've learned marketing automation tools. I have learned different things that are interesting and important to understand when it comes to making my content go further and at the end of the day. That's really what we're all trying to accomplish. We want our content to perform. You might be aware of to performance. That's in my carousel on amazon anymore. But at the end of the day we want our content. Heather's i highlighted over on the live version content performance culture christoph trap you can search for them on amazon. Find it that way as well but integrating the right tools and the right price points can help you be more successful with your content..

amazon Heather trap this weekend
"this weekend" Discussed on Hermit_Radio

Hermit_Radio

05:22 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on Hermit_Radio

"I've met many people in my time being in the military who drank every day who drank themselves to sleep. I mean even in my own life like there were times. I drink myself to sleep. And so why does it matter if he drinks. I mean really. I mean if you were in his position if you were homeless would you not also just drink and drink or do drugs. I mean if you're homeless. What better things do you have to do other than to satisfy that need which is to be somewhere other than where you are now because the suffering to grade or maybe they're not even suffering. Maybe they enjoy it there. I mean think about the freedom that comes with that. they don't have to pay for a house. They don't probably pay taxes. They probably don't whatever they rely on the generosity of others and that's kind of beautiful so i appreciate who he is what he is. I appreciate the woman at the counter for who she is and what she is and if all could just look at the bigger picture and realize how similar we really are. We would be so much more forgiving and compassionate all this time. I want to tell you what. I've been feeling lately. And i hope it doesn't sound egotistical because that's not That's not it at all. I feel that. I and a place outside of the rest of the world. I no longer feel satisfied having the normal day to day conversations that take place whether it's at work or the grocery store or what have you always goes a little something like this. How are you. Oh i'm fine. Did you have coffee this morning. Oh yes it was great. The weather's sherman is. Oh yes it sure is. I'm gonna go out this weekend and do whatever and.

this morning this weekend
"this weekend" Discussed on Learn English Podcast - English Danny Channel

Learn English Podcast - English Danny Channel

03:37 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on Learn English Podcast - English Danny Channel

"You'll get confidence out of did it and it worked and it did it again and it worked and then over time you're going to start to feel like hey i've been doing things and it's been working your consciousness will your your self consciousness will go away and those successes will build on each other so maybe set up situations for yourself where you can have some easy simple successes that build on each other. That might be something and then the are confident. You feel the more likely you to experiment and oh well. Now that i feel confident with these simple conversations let me add a little bit more. Maybe i'm really good at having that. Hey how are you. i'm good. Maybe next time. I'll ask a question like oh. What are you gonna do this weekend. Just something a little on their. You can kind of build as.

this weekend each
"this weekend" Discussed on Fresh Anointing Show

Fresh Anointing Show

04:43 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on Fresh Anointing Show

"Protect her all of that he'd he had done to show that he had earned the right for her to trust you. Now we out trust the way too soon to people that we don't know that's not their fault. That's our fault. yeah you're right. It is our fault because again as you just said we we move to to quickly There's a teach this This leadership class that ended it talks about Having a trust account so you have a trusted cow with another person and then and then began making deposits and you can make deposits or you can make withdrawals from it. So i'm making karrada pop deposits along the way as we get to know each other as we get to experience each other's live together so now i'm making character deposits And then there's the deposit but there's also the withdrawal so i can with aiken make withdrawal so if you and i are great friends and you say hey man i i wanna talk to you about something but very very confidential. This is just between you. And i and you confide in me you trust you. Trust me with the information that you give me. However if i go behind your back and i tell somebody else and you've already told me no. This is confidential. Then guess what i have made a withdraw out of that trust to cow and then you on the other hand says well i don't i don't really know if i can trust you again because you you can i confide in you so i betrayed you. Are you still going to trust me. Well i say now you have to understand. Some people require a different degree of friendship. That other people. Now let me break that down for you. Some of those Extra versus some of us are introverts. Some people everything is confidential is private. don't tell nobody. I'm leaving town this weekend. I told you..

this weekend
"this weekend" Discussed on KQED Radio

KQED Radio

01:49 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on KQED Radio

"The ongoing crisis in me and Mars had a devastating impact on one particular ethnic group Ro hinge a refugees forced to flee to cramp camps in Bangladesh. Battling the Corona virus and now being asked to relocate to a flood prone island news, our special correspondent Tania Rashid, reports. What were once homes, hospitals and schools at the world's largest refugee camp burned to ash as a massive fire rips through these makeshift settlements. 15 people were killed, 400 missing and tens of thousands displaced Three years ago. The Rohingya, a Muslim minority group, led a bloody military crackdown launched by the Myanmar military and police bordering Bangladesh. Mass killings of greats and arson drove close to a million into these sprawling camps in Cox's Bazar. In a report published in 2019, you went, investigators warned of genocidal intent. The Myanmar army denies that and claims it on. Lee acted against insurgent groups who attacked the police. But now these fires have uprooted these rocking goes, lives get again. Bangladesh authorities and agencies have been providing emergency assistance to over 45,000 homeless refugees. Since December, The Bangladeshi government has started moving more than 13,000 refugees from the overcrowded camps to bash on shore, a remote island in the Bay of Bengal. According to our local sources, the Bangladeshi government has offered those affected by the fires help with relocating there

Nick Schifrin PBS this weekend
"this weekend" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

Boomer & Gio

05:50 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on Boomer & Gio

"So he had a great dinner. We had a big chocolate cake. Then we all sat down and watched the pliers get specked bro and it was the best birthday present besides my beautiful daughters and my wife that i could ever got man. It was a perfect night troy. Can you do me a favor and say. Shake it out guy for this weekend. That's raider i like you. Such as like scott extract out..

this weekend
"this weekend" Discussed on The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

01:36 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on The Shawn Harvey Morning Show Podcast

"Early in is wrong right. Well i think the yellow you jump the board this thing been running with us ever since nonstop You have jumped on this this express train and you're taking in straight to the last stop each and every morning and we appreciate you for all you do in all your support and being in the chapel and developing relationships with folks in that chat room and we just take a moment here on those my birthday. We're gonna turn up all weekend. But i want to say i want to say thank you to you because again everyone has choices here and you choose to listen to this show and you choose to with us with your own free will and now i'm running exactly and you. I appreciate you young lady put for all that you do hear each each and every day with the show you part of this show just like i'm a part of the show. This is a team and do a part of the team and thank you. That's right this is over with making visit. Okay know you're supposed to be a new york twice already. Well i missed it. I suppose i came this weekend. But don't know where. I've got dr issuance. We'll be here when you get up here grand wintertime happen. Well you get vaccinated. You come.

new york twice each this weekend
"this weekend" Discussed on CRUSADE Channel Previews

CRUSADE Channel Previews

01:40 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on CRUSADE Channel Previews

"It's okay you know it's economical. It happens to me frequently as well. Gee i can't get to the butcher this weekend because they have to work or something else. But i knew the next weekend. Yeah those are the things like that that differentiate that kinda of that kind of stuff and you're going to automate certain things. Of course it's wintertime now so i carry a lot of water because you know you can only bipolar out so far again capital. How much underground you know where we live. How many how. Much underground water. Do i.

next weekend this weekend
"this weekend" Discussed on WTVN

WTVN

05:44 min | 2 years ago

"this weekend" Discussed on WTVN

"Once. News radio 6 10 TVs help calm and transport you from pandemic stress, but many of us are finding it harder to read. Now. Here's how and why. Get back to it from this weekend's Jennifer Krauchanka books are good for the brain. Now, more than ever, Elizabeth Bernstein of The Wall Street Journal has more on the importance of reading during the pandemic. Elizabeth What do books do for us? The books were so good for us of my like to say neuroscientists tell us this psychologist Telesis but also your high school English teacher told you that so they expand our world. We get Tau learn, of course, but they also provide an escape products. I am always on my Ended this year of the line of poetry By Emily Dickinson. There's no frigate like a book a book and move us away from this thing 2020 2021 now that we're stuck in, so they do that, But also there's research that shows that they broaden our perspective and they help us emphasize more with others to help us. Calm down. Other in our head. They distract us when we get enough flows State of reading. We're not worrying about everything else. How did book sales do last year? They skyrocketed. And so I think this was a surprise to a lot of people that book sales had the best year since they didn't condemn in 2004 with comparable data, so they really skyrocketed. This was driven by very specific categories. I think about 30% of Adam A little more was Children's books, fiction and nonfiction. People started home schooling and had to start reading with their kids. So that did it. Memoirs were big. Don't nonfiction, especially books about race and civil rights were big biography, something that had a narrative Obama's book with huge Bolton's books with huge so there was a very specific categories. That drove this but but huge sales. Elizabeth you mentioned in your story that you have had some trouble getting through books. Why? I have. I'm a life long reader. Somebody who's you know, one of my biggest loves is reading. I could in a typical year, read one of your books a week and I'm talking substantial books and suddenly you know the pandemic hits last spring, and I can't get through a sentence. Really? And I went in and watch this. I got a little bit back into reading, but I saw many people tweet about this discussed. Friend would even confess it like they were confessing some kind of, you know, drug habit like, Hey, I can't read. I'm humiliated. So want to know what was going on. What's going on is our brain is so focused. Basically, I'm trying to keep alive and scanning for threats. We have been in a state of constant fight or flight activity in our heads. The spring. And so it's very hard when your brain's busy try it. Concentrate anxieties, very taxing. And so it's hard to have that concentration left. We're speaking with Elizabeth Bernstein of The Wall Street Journal. Elizabeth You have some tips on what you should do when you're getting started. What are they? So I talked again. Psychologist. Neuroscientists really decide, you know, give our brains tax and it's busy really scanning for threat. What are we going to do so that we can get back to reading or read? It's such a great thing. And one of my favorites, which I wouldn't have guessed is meditate before you read, so sit down with an app. It could be five minutes a little guided meditation or just sit down quietly and try to clear your mind. Do that before, because you're creating space in your brain. Basically to read. I love that one. Another one again Straight from the neuroscientists is to start short. Don't launch into the 800 you know, page biography that, you know, Start with a short story. Maybe start with the short story you've read before something familiar and comforting or something from a favorite author. Because what's happening is our brains are wired to love reward. So when you've finished something, you even a short story your brains like said it's going to want more. Something that I have trouble with. I start a book, and I really don't like it, but I feel guilty if I quit reading it. Is it okay to close that book and start something else? Yes, you have my permission, and you actually have the permission of all the major readers and book industry people. I talked to it. Life is hard now it is, too. There's no reason why reading has to be unpleasant. Put it down. If you're not getting into it, there's a lot out there that I'm sure you would get into. When people do feel the guilt. I had this experience last week. I made myself focus on a book that was highly regarded, and I thought I would love and I just couldn't get into it. Put it aside. Maybe you'll come back to it later. Maybe not, but returned to something else that you might like. What about the switching back and forth? Do people do this? I do. And I'm sure you do as well switching back and forth from fiction to nonfiction. Other people that just read fiction or just read nonfiction or do a lot of us. Mix it up. I think a lot of people mix it up. But there certainly are people who say I prefer one of the other and they read heavily in that area, and even within it, they might say I love nonfiction. I read only in military history, whatever it is, and so, but people mix it up. I would think over the course of time. Certainly. It's Wall Street Journal columnist Elizabeth Bernstein with this weekend's Jennifer Krauchanka 30 minutes now after the hour on this weekend. Yeah. Use traffic and weather for Columbus. Use radios. 6 10 double View TV End.

Elizabeth Bernstein The Wall Street Journal Jennifer Krauchanka Emily Dickinson Telesis Obama Adam Columbus Bolton