35 Burst results for "Three Levels"

Monitor Show 12:00 11-02-2023 12:00

Bloomberg Radio New York - Recording Feed

01:53 min | Last month

Monitor Show 12:00 11-02-2023 12:00

"Pop culture is always evolving, and those changes impact our lives in ways that are both visible and not so obvious. I'm Lucas Shaw, and I cover the business of pop culture for Bloomberg. My job is to uncover how entertainment is changing and explain what that means for you. Because context changes how you see things, how you change things. Context changes everything. Start exploring my coverage and more at Bloomberg .com. No landing, no landing. I don't know. True, what the heck does that mean? I don't know. Breaking market news and insight from Bloomberg experts. We're going to be in an environment with higher rates for longer. The five day in office work week is effectively dead. It's definitely a good sign that we're not ready to land this economy just yet. This is Bloomberg Markets with Paul Sweeney and Matt Miller on Bloomberg Radio. All right, coming up in this hour, Andrew Bailey, Bank of England governor. He's going to be speaking with Bloomberg's Guy Johnson. That'll be coming up in just moments, and we will bring that to you. We're also on our C -suite conversation. Going to speak with Amit Walia, CEO at Informatica. It's a publicly traded company, and he's going to join the show to discuss earnings, cloud technology, and potential layoffs in the technology space. But first, let's kick things off. Wait, hang on. Yes, sir. I have a surveillance correction. Okay, please let it rip. I said Tom Kean was the only one of us in terms of people on air that have passed all three levels. And I'm guessing... I stand corrected.

Andrew Bailey Matt Miller Amit Walia Tom Kean Paul Sweeney Informatica Guy Johnson Lucas Shaw Bloomberg First Bank Of England Five Day ONE Both Bloomberg Radio Three Levels Bloomberg Markets Bloomberg .Com. Governor
A highlight from BTP-WP7 Chapters 20 thru 26  The Way of Perfection by St. Teresa of Avila  Beginning to Pray with Dr. Anthony Lilles

Discerning Hearts - Catholic Podcasts

04:02 min | 3 months ago

A highlight from BTP-WP7 Chapters 20 thru 26 The Way of Perfection by St. Teresa of Avila Beginning to Pray with Dr. Anthony Lilles

"I've said it several times now, she's very practical, and she sees that people come from different places. She even describes the different types of prayer that we may encounter. For example, when she talks about vocal prayer, or mental prayer, contemplative prayer. Could you help with us to understand what she's speaking of in those instances? Vocal prayer is the most basic, but really in some ways the most important starting place. When disciples the approached Jesus, they approached him because they saw him praying. This is in the Gospel of Luke, that account. They saw him praying, and after they saw him praying, witnessed him praying, they said, you know, Master, the disciples of John the Baptist were taught by John the Baptist how to pray. Will you teach us how to pray? There was something about the prayer of Jesus that was dynamic, meaning it evoked questions. It evoked a response. You wanted to somehow know how he was doing what he was doing. Jesus, rather than teaching an elaborate technique, a method for meditation or some very technical spiritual exercise, Jesus doesn't teach that. He teaches a kind of prayer that anyone who has even the first moment of faith can take up and make their own. He teaches a vocal prayer, so vocal prayer is a prayer that you pray out loud with your voice. Moreover, this vocal prayer he teaches, I mean, somebody could say, oh, yes, well, he taught like a mantra, like, you know, the Hindus have mantras or, you know, some kind of hum or something like that, but he just uses words instead, and so this is kind of a mantra. No, each of the words that he teaches has meaning and content, and that meaning and content that is unfolded reveals to us the beauty of his own heart, the heart of Jesus, as the heart of the Son of God from all eternity, our Father who art in heaven. It's a declaration of love. It's a declaration also that recognizes that if our Father is in heaven, our earthly cares and the things that we're going through here on earth, this is not our true home ultimately. We are meant for a life. If our Father is in heaven, we are meant for a life that this world can't hold down. So we live in this world, we contend with this world, we're in this world, but we're not of this world because why? Our Father is in heaven. Jesus doesn't say, my Father. He could have, and it would have been theologically right in his case, but he says, when you pray, pray our Father. In other words, he's in this very humble vocal prayer. He's inviting us into his own sonship so that we can relate to the Father in through with him so that his relationship with the Father becomes our relationship with the Father. His love for the Father becomes our love for the Father and the Father's blessing in his life becomes a blessing in our life. So vocal prayer has to have, in order to be Christian, Teresa of Avila is going to say it needs to have three kinds of attention to it. It needs to be meaningful, meaning it needs to engage your mind on one of three levels. One level that it should engage your mind is you should be attending to the words that you're saying.

Jesus John The Baptist One Level ONE Each Earth Three Kinds First Moment Three Levels Gospel Of Luke GOD Teresa Of Avila Hindus Christian
A highlight from The Gospel Professed Pt. 3

Evangelism on SermonAudio

03:50 min | 4 months ago

A highlight from The Gospel Professed Pt. 3

"Christ that was shed for us. Thank You for Your Word that is to give us understanding and to light our path and to guide us in the Christian life to our heavenly home. I thank You that the Word of God is living. That which was written some of it 3 ,000 or more years ago is as living and as applicable today as written anything in the 21st century. Father, we pray that as we look to Your Word that You would be pleased to give our hearts and our minds understanding of Your Word. I pray that Father, You would be pleased tonight to make this evening worth Your people's time. That they would leave here having come to hear Your Word, having heard it and administering to their hearts. Father, we pray for those that have put their requests down out there and for those that will be praying for them. We do pray for this body of believers. And we would just ask that You would continue to extend grace towards us. Lord, please renew us and revive us. Oh, we live in a world that draws us in. Give us grace to renew us and revive us. Lord, may this fellowship tonight be sweet and encouragement to Your people. We pray this in Jesus' name, Amen. Well, it's good to have you here this evening. It seems like it's been a while since we've been in our study in the topic about evangelism. We entitled it Evangelism Revolution. I think it's brought hopefully a new awareness to what the Bible has to say not only about what the Gospel is, but how it is preached. In the class that I teach for our school in rhetoric, I teach how to read a book. Actually, a man wrote this book back in the 50's and it was in the New York Times bestseller list for like over a year. And it's certainly not exciting reading by any stretch of the imagination, so it tells you a little bit maybe where the mindset of the population was back in the 1950's, but it was a very sought after book in the 1950's and it was instructing people how to read. And it describes four levels of reading. The first of which is elementary where you're just learning to recognize words. Cat sat on the hat. They really don't stop to think if a cat sat on the hat or not, they just cat sat on hat. And it moves up into what you would call an inspectional reading or a superficial reading where once you've mastered the ability to recognize words, you begin to look for books and find out if they're worthy to be read and you just read through them very quickly, superficially, not taking the time to look up all the words and try to understand them. You're simply trying to determine if this book is worthy to be read or not. If the book is worthy to be read or not, then you go to the third level of reading which is called analytical reading. In analytical reading, your primary job is to understand, to take apart and to understand what this author is actually trying to say. You may need a dictionary or other books to help you define some of his terms and to understand them. But the author of this book made this particular statement. If you wanna find out if a book is worthy to be read in that way, to actually work at it, you have to have a book that is going to increase your understanding.

21St Century Jesus' Tonight Bible Christ Today 1950'S Third Level 50'S First Over A Year New York Times Four Levels 3 ,000 GOD Evangelism Revolution More Years Ago This Evening Christian Lord
"three levels" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

04:56 min | 4 months ago

"three levels" Discussed on WTOP

"Issued more than 5800 citations and warnings over seven days earlier this month it's the third wave of what police call their road shark campaign high visibility stepped up enforcement to deter aggressive driving here's a tip for drivers in Fairfax the fourth wave is coming it'll begin July 31st the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority is looking at ways to add spaces at Reagan National you're often in a hurry when looking for airport parking in Reagan National Airport could get more parking spaces in a relative hurry the Metropolitan Washington Airports the airport's authority board got a presentation of a solicitation to build a three -level 1500 space your parking facility according to documents from the board's agenda the contract could be advertised by guest begun in the fourth quarter of this year and then the facility could be up and running by 2025 Washington Business Journal reports the contract could be worth between fifty and one hundred million dollars Kate a driver who hit a tree in Montgomery County this past week died from her injuries the preliminary investigation reveals a woman was traveling southbound on Belsville Road around 930 near Thursday Jerusalem Road when for reasons that remain unclear the car left the roadway and struck a tree she was transported to an area hospital where she was pronounced dead anyone with information regarding this crash is asked to contact detectives at 240 773 the -6620 US women's national soccer team opened three with a -nil win against Vietnam at the World Cup in the women's game has never been more popular Virginia Tech professor Patrick Ridge studies the cultural impact of soccer for a living a lot of the countries have started to more heavily invest into women's soccer he says the women's game in particular has come a long way since title 9 but believes are we at a tipping point of sorts in 2023 it's probably going to be the most competitive World Cup to date going to be the most women's watched World Cup today with 2 billion expected to tune in he says he's more optimistic than ever for a more equitable future the stadium serves as a mirror that reflects greater society Matt Kofax WTOP news sports at 25 and 55 powered by Red River technology turn black and white, think red yeah let's find out what's going on in the sports world and turn things over now to Frank D .C. he has signed and Dylan Cruz gets a reported 9 million dollar signing bonus outfielder LSU out of has taken number two overall by Mike Rizzo the GM just a couple weeks ago so what about was it Cruz that you liked and this is a good year to get him you know it's never fun to draft high because you had a bad really year the year before so it was it was a good year to be bad the year before because we got ourselves hell a of a player with the second pick and a guy that's going to be a cornerstone for us you know moving forward and and if you're gonna pick high it's good to pick high when you got a player like Dylan Cruz that you can take Nationals Nationals beat San Francisco last night five to three same two in about 90 minutes from Nats Park and be actually a really nice night person baseball Josiah Gray pitches for DC birds busted things open up five zip at Tampa Bay In the top of the fifth British Open American Brian Harmon shot a third round 69 leader by five shots. He's at minus 12 at Royal Liverpool. John Rahm shot a 63 to get to minus six for the tournament. So he's six shots back Cameron Young is five back. He's at seven under par WSL we're just talking about women's soccer with some players over in Australia and New Zealand representing the United States the World Cup spirit players that is they will still continue to play on they face North tonight Carolina Frank hand ran to be top sports okay Frank and coming up after traffic and weather finally the commanders have a new leader but where will the team land in a new stadium it's 26 you're out of breath your constant dry cough just won't go away it might be asthma it might be COPD but it could be interstitial lung disease ILD won't wait and should neither you so ask your doctor find a pulmonologist the sooner you know the sooner and you your family can face ILD together with ILD knowledge is power and your strongest advocate is you go to LungsInYou .com forward slash learn more provided Bowringer Ingelheim you get more for your money at Thompson Creek energy -efficient Thompson Creek windows can lower your utility bills as summer heats up don't wait get windows now and pay later Thompson Creek does it all design build and install so you won't pay the middleman markup you get high -quality windows at an affordable

John Zmirak of Stream.org Reviews Christian Film "Nefarious"

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:12 min | 8 months ago

John Zmirak of Stream.org Reviews Christian Film "Nefarious"

"Mirac, welcome to the program. Hi, Eric. It's always a pleasure to talk to you. All right, look, we got to talk about a lot of stuff, but why don't we just start talking about nefarious, the film, our friend Steve dais, created this film, nefarious, you have reviewed the film at stream dot org, have you not? That's right. I'm going to do something slightly unethical now. As a wannabe and failed screenwriter, I'm going to praise a project that I had absolutely nothing to do with. Oh, come on. Don't get any benefit from it whatsoever. Nevertheless, I regret to say that Steve D's has done a fantastic job, and that this film from which I received no benefit whatsoever. Is absolutely fantastic. I endorse it hardly. You sent me a preview screener. Yeah. I got my girlfriend to come over and we watched it on the computer, which is not the super fun way to work. I was going to say, that's how I watched it. And that's how Alban watched it. But by the way, it's pronounced days. Don't ask me why, but Steve days in creating this film. I mean, to get you, you're finicky to get me. I'm finicky to get Alvin. He's finished, you know, we're honest with each other about whether we like something, we all were thrilled to see how good this was. But we're here to ask you for a specific. So go ahead. In my review, I talk about the three kinds of the three levels of Christian or Christian ish films that you see. The first ones are the ones that are obviously well meaning, but just flat. Didactic, they're preachy, or they're just mindlessly inspirational. All look somewhat adopted a puppy. Yay. And they mentioned Jesus twice. Yay, dragged the whole school group. Or they don't want to, they don't want to face real evil, like the worst evil is daddy might drink too much. They're kind of like hallmark films with a few Bible versus scattered among them. So this is not that kind of movie.

Eric Steve Dais Alban Alvin Steve Bible Three Kinds Jesus Twice Three Levels Steve D Stream Dot Org Mirac First Ones Christian
"three levels" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

02:11 min | 1 year ago

"three levels" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Were escorted into the conference room through three levels of security. Really? And the gentleman starts the negotiations. He goes, let's have a toast. Here's to my wealth and to your health. You just have to have people on the ground to pick that's just, that's just bad. Now, is that a local custom? Or is that a subtle threat? What is that? I mean, I think it was, I think it was a subtle threat. And again, you know, we're not so subtle. I wouldn't make that blanket statement throughout our emerging markets, but quite frankly, when I see some kid in their 20s or 30s, start a business. And there are three or four people around their Bloomberg screens. And they don't have the internal analysts and they don't have the external network. I don't know how they think they can do it. That's really quite fascinating. You mentioned your shop. You have offices around the world, right? What countries do you have offices in? So we're based in Greenwich Connecticut. We have offices in Latin America in Mexico, Peru, Argentina, we have a lending platform at office in turkey, Brazil, done some stuff in Africa as well through a lending platform. And getting back to the local presence, having a platform, having your own team in the market, has all the obvious benefits, but also it gives you the ability to get depth and breadth and our business, particularly our private credit business. We're doing asset backed lending in a country. And I remember a friend who does domestic private credit told me once. You know, Robert is just as easy to do a $400 million loan as a $40 million loan. And so what we're trying to do with these platforms is get depth and breadth in the different regions. So if I go to Mexico, for example, where we're lending to the suppliers to pen X, people who lay pipes, people who build the platforms. If you do it on a one off basis, you can't really scale it. But if you have a platform of dedicated people to that and the controls, it gives you the ability to depth and breadth in Mexico to look at other industries. Now maybe we can look at real estate, but also think about the same industry in a place like Columbia or whatever it may be. Coming up, we continue our conversation with Robert koenigsberger, founder and chief investment officer of gramercy funds

Mexico Greenwich Latin America Peru Argentina Connecticut Brazil turkey Africa Robert Robert koenigsberger Columbia gramercy funds
Fat Discrimination Expert Virgie Tovar's 3 Levels of Fatphobia

Food Psych

02:53 min | 2 years ago

Fat Discrimination Expert Virgie Tovar's 3 Levels of Fatphobia

"Concept is called the three levels of fat phobia and the idea. Is that although people of all sizes can definitely be stigmatized for their size. People in larger bodies generally experience more weight across all areas of society than those in smaller bodies and especially in these three levels of fat phobia and the three levels are the intra personal or within person level the interpersonal or between people level and the institutional level so the first level the interrupt personal level is about how fat phobia affects people's self image. And that's the kind of internalized stigma that basically all of us have right. The vast vast majority of people in this culture have experienced and probably everyone listening to this. Podcast is experienced regardless of their actual size and the fact that we pretty much all have some level of interpersonal weight. Stigma in our society is one of the hallmarks of living. In diet culture now the second level the interpersonal level is about how other people treat you and perceive you. People in smaller bodies may experience fat phobia on this level for sure like when someone in their life foist their own disordered views onto them. Which is what happened to you with your dad k. And sadly this often happens when a parent or caregiver has an untreated eating disorder or body morpheus of their own that makes them see their child as unacceptably large because in a lot of cases. They see their child as an extension of themselves but it can also happen when a parent has other mental health issues that make them abusive and the abuse just happens to take the form of fat phobia at times because that's very common form of bigotry and diet culture and so you know if people are seizing on something Used to abuse another person with fat phobia can often come into play there. So for the most part people in larger bodies are the ones who bear the brunt of fat phobia at this second level the interpersonal level. So you know think about bullying on the playground. Fat-phobic comments from lots of family members. Maybe not just one or two teachers and other authority figures telling you to lose weight all of that stuff right but interpersonal fat phobia can also definitely happen to smaller body. People in specific ways like the one year describing case. So you definitely had this the second level fat phobia aimed at you. And then the third level of fat phobia which is called institutional fat phobia exclusively affects people in larger bodies. And that's the experience when physical spaces like airplane seats and restaurant booze and mri machines are not able to accommodate you. Or when you can't find closed large enough to fit you at mainstream stores or when you don't see people of your size represented in the media except as harmful stereotypes or when you're barred from getting appropriate medical care because of your body size. All of that is fat phobia

Phobia Stigma
The Founding and Crimes of The Children Of Thunder Cult

Let's Start A Cult

01:27 min | 2 years ago

The Founding and Crimes of The Children Of Thunder Cult

"On memorial day. Nineteen ninety nine. The helzer brothers attended a murder mystery. Dinner held at their local mormon temple that evening reportedly dressed in all black and thus stood out from the rest of suburban attendees. Most of whom were start shirts and press chino's. It was at that event that justin met don goodman a single mother mother in her mid twenties. Who had recently moved into town and was working a grocery store desperate to find a direction in her life. She decided to join the mormon church although she was said to be an outcast. Much like the helzer brothers will. Don began dating just shortly after the murder mystery dinner. She was reportedly fascinated by his cares. Medical brother taylor managed to convince her to join a self awareness. Seminar which consisted of spending a few days inside a windowless room while a facilitator aggressively badgered them to confront their inner demons which sounds like most university classes. I attended so not that crazy but no absolutely ridiculous After completing two of the seminars three levels don began receiving spiritual guidance from taylor. He had become completely unhinged by this point telling her that sometime in january two thousand it was his destiny to take over the mormon church by all means necessary. He also began calling himself. Don and his brother the children of thunder claiming that it was their mission to create a state of peace and joy for everyone.

Helzer Don Goodman Mormon Church Justin Taylor DON
test-debug

The Crossover NBA Show with Chris Mannix

51:23 min | 2 years ago

test-debug

"When the olympics start will be the most talented team in tokyo. Hands down no question. Most talented team in tokyo with the roster that they have but this is like a five alarm fire right now howard. This loss to nigeria. I don't care if they win the rest of these pre olympic games which will take place through next sunday. This has to make you nervous if you're a fan of the team because not only is it this. The loss to nigeria. But you go back two years ago at the world championships where you had a us team. That was good. Didn't have probably better team now than they were back in two thousand nineteen but all nba players. They finished seventh. They've been seventh at the world championships. You have the seventh-place finish the loss of nigeria. How concerned are you howard beck about. Usa basketball. It's just an exhibition game. Chris oh no no. It's not just an exhibition game. Stop this team was thrown together over the last however many weeks they had what like three practices. I think i'll ever. Us team is thrown together. What are you talking about. There's no team. There's no no mid season practices for usa basketball. No but the nigerian team has been practicing. What i'm saying is some of the play in the nba though wants win the nba nba. A few of them play in the nba but that team has had time together more so than the team. Sorry brown coaching. that team. That i missed was that a facsimile of mike brown on the bench all season long. What what are we talking about. The warriors have been out for like two months kris k. Okay so two months. that's what matters. That's that's the number three three practices. Also they're still missing. I believe at least three guys because they're playing in the finals right now. Booker middleton chris paul get it. Yes not chris. Ball's not playing a holiday with the the what holland is your holiday. Those those guys will matter especially given that middleton and holiday are to the better perimeter defenders that that team. Usa has and if you look at the rest of team usa's roster. I don't see a ton of great defenders. There there are a few. I think those three guys by the way are going to be exhausted by the time they get to. They may well be. They may will be so. We're going to judge them. Judging when their whole judge when the games matter to strange to me like we don't judge nba teams based on the preseason but we judge team usa based on these exhibition games. That they do going into international competition. I feel like it's thirty. One point favorites. Why why is there betting line on a freaking exhibition better training but a little league baseball. Now country degenerates damn right. I didn't mean chris i'm with. Let's go monday. Nigeria money line. I just. I can't get too excited about this. If they lose the rest of the exhibitions does that mean something. Yeah that might be alarming if they're if they're still struggling to find some cohesion. That could be alarming. But i mean the talent is obviously their talent alone doesn't win on the international stage in style of game is different team ball matters. Shooting matters like yeah. There's a bunch of budget stuff that comes into play. But i i find the panic over this loss or at least the outcry to be a little bit much. So you don't take into account the seventh-place finish in two thousand nineteen. I mean that to me. It's the it's not just as game. The totality of it right. Like and i don't know howard like so in the early two thousands the world kind of caught up to the us ninety to ninety six thousand us. Gold maps then comes the two thousand two world championships in indianapolis and that's seven. The place finish was one of the worst worst outcomes in at least recent usa history. They got it together after that. They hired jerry colangelo. They bringing mike chef ski. They get their act together. Two thousand six two thousand eight then. They run off. Three consecutive years are three consecutive cycles of gold. Medals is argon. Made that like the world's caught up again that somewhere along the way and the last four or five years. The rest of the world has once again caught up usa basketball. I'm trying to understand this. I mean that's close games in those olympics cycles. No question about it. But i can't imagine the oh eight. Twelve or sixteen team losing nigeria. I can't exhibition or otherwise. I can't see it happening. No team and the and the one that followed it were built around like lebron koby. Carmelo enjoying wait. I mean that that groups at another level like as good as this group is that we're seeing right now as talented as they are after k. D. tatum's really good damian. Lillard is great. I mean come arbit- tatum. Bill lillard auto bio levin. Draymond dream ends up there in years but one has won some things. Jeremy grant jeremy grant zach living out of like. These are guys who have done anything in the nba yet. But they're all stars most they're they're also but are they to level of lebron kobe now but do you think is that what you're saying then is that what you're saying to be at the level you need to have like i'm saying the crop to win. I'm saying that if we're going to start comparing the twenty twenty one team to the twenty eight a two thousand eight two thousand twelve teams there is. There is not an equivalent right now. Lebron kobe laurent cobaine weight. And plus what we what. We called olympic. Mellow like carmelo. Didn't have the success in the nba. That some of his teammates did but carmelo in terms of talent level and certainly has resume like that group was at a whole other level. That group is a different level than jason. Tatum bam outta bios. Zach levine. Okay so not saying that you necessarily should have to have that level of time firepower to win an exhibition game against nigeria. Or anybody else. But i am saying comparing usa to itself different iterations of team usa. This one is not that one. This is not as dominant group as the ones we saw in eight and two thousand twelve. It just isn't what do you do like. What's the solution here. Like i mean i jerry. Colangelo deserves an enormous amount of credit for rebuilding that program when it was at. Its nadir mitra chefs. He comes in enormous amount of credit for what they did. But as we sit here in twenty twenty one like it's almost to me howard like the usa basketball rebuilding. The program became cool. Like lebron wanted to do it. Chris paul like dwayne wade. These guys wanted to do it and then they did it. And i think playing for usa basketball didn't become quite as cool as it was fifteen years ago. Like is that what has to happen like does not need to have like a fifth place finish in tokyo for all of a sudden the next generation of a-list stars wherever that may be in two thousand twenty four to come back into the mix and is that the only way this team can win. I mean i think we need to pay attention to the overall context like obviously one. These olympics were supposed to happen a year ago. They're delayed a year because of covid got durant out of it though like that right. It's questionable whether these the olympic should be happening at all still but along the way because of these back to back brutal seasons and everything else like team. Usa doesn't have james harden right now. Doesn't have anthony davis because of the injury doesn't have steph curry doesn't have kyrie irving doesn't have lebron kawai again. If your argument is that the second or third tier it sounds like sounds like insulting. Somehow but if you're saying that the next wave believe after those guys should still be good enough to dominate on the world stage. Maybe but if the point is that the team as best are they still. Are they still able to win. Gold fairly easily. Your probably but a bunch of them aren't on this team right now because of injuries and just the stress of the last year or two so this this is not necessarily representative of the best of the best right now. It just isn't and yes. They should still be good enough to win. Yes the world has caught up to some extent. No the the group that at nigeria's put it put out there last week. Does not leap off the page improbably. Us should've still want it. But again i exhibition game after like three practices. Let's see what happens with the rest of this. This schedule out brought mellow back. I mean he's not what he was four years ago. Eight years ago twelve years ago but the guy knows how to play international basketball. He might have sat. maybe. I guess. I didn't really. I assume that he just want to keep. He didn't kind of like four formerly re retire from the olympics. But it'd be pretty much says like i'm done like lebron kinda did to get talked into it. I feel like. I don't know if i was if i was the usa team would try really hard to get carmelo blake because his style. Whatever it is to the nba is perfect for the national basketball. He's a really good or national basketball player. On this subject damian lillard. He spoke for the first time. Since the hiring of chauncey billips. Only listen to what little had to say about his future in portland. I'm prepared to go in and do my job every year. Like hopefully we make strides over direction and could become a better team a new coach notice. That's where i am. What soured it sounds like. Lillard is at least nominally on board with going back to the blazers. But if i'm a team out there with assets. I don't listen to that response and say well it's over damian. Lillard is back on the same page with the portland trailblazers. If i'm a team with assets i hold onto those assets because it feels to me like the blazers might be one like sixteen to start from blowing that whole thing up with louis mccollum on the way out the door so get the sense now. That seems more likely than not that damian lillard at blazers training camp. He's in ablaze uniform. He starts the season with the portland trailblazers. But if it doesn't work with chauncey billips early and you get close that trade deadline. It wouldn't surprise me at all to see portland decide. Look we've got a. We've got to do something here and opened the door for damian lillard trade. What do you think. I think that nothing has changed. I think that his remarks last week because he sounded a little bit lukewarm. Or just you know you hear one of two things. Well you want to hear one thing if you're a portland trail blazers fan or if you're just looking for any indication that lillard is all in your you want to hear him say listen. I know things are rough right now. But i'm all in you know this is. This is where. I want to be you to repeat all the usual talking points that you hear from players in his position and that we've heard from bradley beal that we used to hear from james harden houston. Which is a win in phil in city fill in the blank with the city. I want to win here. I don't wanna go somewhere else. You know we're going to get this right blah blah. He didn't go down the usual list. And so i think it left open. Some interpretation but getting has changed like the disappointment was clear when the season ended. Some of the things have happened since including obviously the the the train wreck away they went about the the coaching search and lillard. Being caught in the crossfire. There at feeling heat from fans about chauncey billips being selected and so. I don't think we should expect he's going to be rah. Rah right now The trailblazers have a lot of work to do. But we also have not even hit the summer yet. Like there's the draft hasn't happened yet. Free agency hasn't happened yet. There's there's a lot of work to be done. And i think if you're damian lillard which you're probably doing is internally saying here's what i need to see happen externally saying you know what let's let's wait and see i mean you see. He can't he can't say publicly the same things that he's telling say neal o'shea right about what the the state of the roster i i would think that there are some very impassioned debates or discussions being held behind closed doors about what they need to get this thing right and if they can't get it right the he might shift is his stance about staying there long term. But that hasn't happened yet that we know of. What do you think the most interesting potential conversation is amongst players over these next four weeks like i'm kind of curious what jason tatum bradley beal talk about. Tatum and beal close friends dating back to their highschool days both went to the same high school bill with something of a mentor to jason. Tatum actually got him involved with his trainer. Drew hanlin which helped. Tatum elevate his his personal skills and they've talked about how happy they are to be playing together. Played the all star game together for the first time beal last year of his contract. Like you know we've seen these conversations yield real tangible conversation. You'd like to be a fly on the wall on for any of these guys in the next couple of weeks. Yeah i mean look we. We have a history now going back over a decade. If we're to believe that the that the heels were formed in part through team usa activities. You know which is true which is true. That's that's yielded an extra things guy. You know guys who you mentioned. Tatum and bill because they were already friends but guys also become friends through this experience right and then they start getting the ideas about playing together. Like oh hey. This is a lot of fun. Let's do this again in the nba. So there's i'm i'm sure some of that is is happening. It always does. Who else in that group. I mean man. If any of these guys that'd be trying to recruit bam out a bio but he's too early in his in his contract with miami to pry him loose from there And you know the heater still a pretty potent team but you know jimmy butler is up there in miles and outta bios future won't necessarily be there forever. That's the way it goes in the nba. I think tatum has the potential to be like the biggest recruiter. They're like he's about to start the first year of his max level extension. He can recruit bill. But like you can also does damian lillard like. It's great to play in boston. I love it here. Answer some questions of my have a playing on the east coast for the first time. Like i think data might be boston's best asset at this point. Yeah again some of this comes down to bradley. Beal's coming up to that point where he has the leverage to task out because of his contract lillard under contract for several more years and so he's not in that position. So what if it says. Like i need to go like. I don't foresee the blazers being no finish your contract. Just don't see it. i think right. And they would work with him on a deal to sure but directing it is harder so beal can use the leverage of his free agency to say well if you send me to team x. I'm not gonna resign there. Which then blows up that deal and he can direct himself to the team he really wants to be at lillard would have a harder time to doing that. Because he doesn't have free agency looming two to play that card. Yeah well i encourage any reporter. That's in tokyo tatum. Beal and lillard talking to each other. Just take a picture and then let the internet go wild crazy because it will unquestionably last thing for you. Howard the breaking news. This week in the coaching ranks. Is that jamal moseley is headed to orlando moseley of course last with dallas. A really well respected assistant coach there. Who was a candidate for that. Maverick job before. It went to jason kidd my immediate reaction to that higher howard beyond i think being an excellent choice for orlando is that we're gonna look at at moseley and jason kidd on parallel tracks. The next couple of years moseley. There was a strong case to be made that he should have been elevated to that head. Coaching job he'd been considered for other head coaching jobs. Before most recently in new york he had by all accounts a great relationship with luka doncic i understand bringing kit in he's got a history with dallas and as riccar lau said publicly having a player that played the game like kid and having a player that plays the game like don-shik make some sense to pair those two guys together. But there's always going to be as i watched these two situations unfold. I'm gonna wonder you know. Did the mavericks make the right choice. Leading jamaa moseley go and bringing jason kidd in and there's so many variables in this the first being at orlando's in step one or maybe even steps zero of a massive rebuild right there in the negatives right now. I think there's still maybe more fat to trim on that roster before they really bottom out. Yeah and you know you talk about trying to build around. You know markelle foltz. And and jonathan isaac jonathan isaac for so long. They're getting hurt and he's a great player but they've loved writing in a weird way john stays healthy. He's still more of a complementary store right like he's he's a potentially defensive player of the year at some point. He's not a guy who you're building an offense around though and marquel foltz okay. He he got himself back on track in orlando. He has a career now where he didn't have one but he's not a foundational building block. Come on like that's crazy so the roster doesn't have much talent jamal. Moseley's is coming into a situation. Which a lot of first time head coach is committed to which is all right. There's a lot of work to do so You're gonna have to do a lot of development. You're going to have to take a lotta lumps in the win loss column. It's gonna be rough going for the first year or two or maybe three. Let's see how they can get things going. But you know as it has been a certain other like kenny. Atkinson came to look a completely hopeless situation in brooklyn but was known as development coach in atlanta. And sure enough. Everybody who went there. Joe harris spencer. Dinwiddie jared allen versus lower. First round picks. Guys who were you know whether they were reclamation projects whether they were low picks everybody seems to get better the second they went to brooklyn and play kenny atkinson and his staff congenial. Moseley have the kind of effect in orlando can the front office. Get him to kind of guys. That will thrive in that in that kind of environment and carve out careers from cells and carbon identities. Jamal moseley has a lot going for him. And we've heard like many great things about it but we often hear great things about assistant coaches who don't end up panning out so i always. We have to caution ourselves on these things. Because i thought. Brian shaw was gonna be a great head coach and he was. Everybody loved him all the players sung as praises when he was associate head coach under frank. Vogel indiana he goes to denver probably just the wrong guy at the wrong time but he hasn't had another shot since then but that went really badly. Brett brown was really great in in some respects for the for the early years of the process and then suddenly. It seemed like they'd hit some sort of ceiling. Eager kokoschka of had been talked about for years is a great assistant. Coach didn't work out. Swells head coach in phoenix. David dale bumpy ride in memphis and then disastrous in new york. We just don't know like luke walton. Another example like there are plenty of coaches who as their when their assistance. We hear and see the best of them and then you know some of them be go on it and have great success coaches. I mean tyler has been fantastic. Mike malone has been fantastic money williams. Nick nurse dwayne casey a lotta longtime assistance. Get their shot and then you know it. It works out in a dozen. It's all contextual. It's all just the opportunity you have the thing for dallas is. They went with a guy who has experienced jason kit. That experience was not necessarily good experience. Like i think most people around the would look at what he did in milwaukee in brooklyn and say. I'm going to steer clear. Maybe you'd rather have the the unproven. Jamal moseley versus the somewhat proven jason kidd but. I don't think we'll know what the right choice was there for a while yet. Because it's it's gonna take some time before we can evaluate moseley as head coach. I maybe jason kidd learned something in two years as an assistant. I mean that happens. You know working with lebron for entire for two entire seasons working under frank vogel maybe picked up some things that'll be useful to him as a head coach. Moseley to me. The key is giving him time. Like you've got to be committed to moseley for a minimum. I think of three years and more likely five years. And then you see what you have in head coach. You mentioned gore. I mean it's worked out for phoenix. Absolutely but i do think he got hosed out there i mean he only had one year on the job and that year was without deandra aiden chris. Paul had devon booker of course but that was not a good team that he was coaching. There i gotta get moses the because you want to see what the guy can do when you put that team in a position to win a great example to me is james breglio in charlotte. I mean berea. Was one of those guys assistant coach elevated to head coaching position in charlotte. Not great first couple of years there but when he was given players and chance to win he did pretty well. I mean up until lamelo ball went out the horns were really good team and i think they will be a good team. Going forward in part because of the borrego is a pretty good coach. I want to see this magic team. Invest heavily in jamal. The you're the guy developed these guys and we'll keep you around no matter what the won loss record says until you get a chance to win then you judge like brett brown six or seven days since brett brown left but i can see the for letting go of brett brown. I mean they had a talented team and to a degree the underachieved. But you've got to let the coach get a roster on that level before you really make any decisions about whether they can coach. Yeah well and that's the thing about. This is what set up says apart. I think the good organizations from the bad ones is that you you decide when you choose a guy. Especially if he's a longtime assistant not a guy with head coaching experience. And you've said we believe in this guy. This is somebody who's got a great trekker record as an assistant. We're going to first opportunity. It's your obligation to when you say investment. Yeah it's time investment. It's a give them all the tools to succeed. Give him the time to succeed. You've decided you believe in him. So stand behind that have the conviction to stand behind that and take some bumps along the way you know maybe maybe memphis and or the knicks should have stuck with david physed longer. You know we had heard nothing but great things about fiscal coming out of miami. Initially we may yet you know. Find out that he. He can be great head coach in the right situation. Maybe those worth rights situations. He might be one of those guys though. I love physios and assist one of those guys. Though the just the temperament is always important. Like the government like memphis yet. Some battles with market assault didn't work out your plus new york. You just might be one of those guys that doesn't have the right temperament to be is based on what we've seen a memphis in new york might be better suited for these ranks but if he succeeds in l. a. I think he'll get another chance right. Maybe i think the point being though that if you as an organization have identified a guy instead he we believe in him then. Okay then believe in him. Stick with them and make sure you've given them enough tools to succeed Is it a pulling the plug at the first sign of of struggle and that's what happens in the nba. too often. is that seems panic. You know the fans turn. There's some minor flare up. Oh the coach and player got into it. Whatever it may good teams that can happen on as well. And it's it's just. It's the way franchises. React so you have to know whether or not the guy is is is right and then stick with them. And so yeah. Let's jomo's should get a nice long here. She got a ton of latitude in orlando given where they are as an organization given the state of that roster. Yeah i agree. Howard enjoy milwaukee looking forward to hearing the conversation with the lazarus on friday. You can check podcast. Right here on the crossover feet again. Make sure you listen to howard's interview. Spencer dinwiddie from last week. It was really really strong. Enjoy -joy the mid west our. We'll talk when you're back on the northeast always a pleasure. My friend the newest player in the pre nba basketball landscape is overtime. Elite elite will begin playing sometime in the fall. And we'll be headlined by some of the top now. Former high school players in the country players would be paid minimum one hundred thousand dollars with some making north of that and have access to high level facilities training as well as educational programs to help. Get a better grasp on that. I'm joined by brandon williams the head of basketball operations for overtime. Elite and kevin ollie the former. Nba guard uconn. Coach was the head coach and director of player development bread. And i want to start here with you. Just kind of give me the ten thousand foot view overtime elite. What are the objectives. What what what was behind the formation of this league. I think any of us. Chris who've been around for a long time i've actually seen Sort of the downside of young players who entered into professional ranks to this point. It's been the nba Who are not ready. And so what does that mean you know not not ready to form and be stars or is it just not ready to be great teammates or is it not ready to be good partners. is sort of all that you know the idea that the work day is much longer than they know. And that there's more responsibility to be in a professional athlete The responsibilities to families and communities we just have to do a better job preparing them and here was an opportunity to be part of a program that wanted to address all that. It's not just about being a good player. It's like we wanna address the whole athlete. Hope so on. Three levels were hitting basketball. Easiest thing understand. I think businesses in our world is education And then there's brand you know. These young people now are moving at a speed that we aren't as older folks and they want to build things An earlier age particularly off the court so building a brand is important something that can last well beyond their tread on tire so we're hitting it in basketball business brand. That's that's that's really thirty thousand foot view. Kevin what attracted you to this job. Just like his dad is the whole person being able coach them from a mind body and soul Experience and understanding the mindfulness athlete I've seen it from a pro level. Got up tune into play thirteen years with twelve different teams so i understand like the different trials and tribulations you go through with a player not saying that these players are gonna go through that but is getting them more prepared if they do come into some certain situations where it's not typically going the right way. How can they manage that situation. So what they do today can echo into tomorrow and having the ability to kana paint on a black blank. Canvas is what a really attracted to me to to this you know. Ot league program we can take the player really shape the curriculum you not with teaching them about subjects. But we're really teaching them about themselves as well from media training From mental health issues. All the different things that come involved because we all know chris is stress. You know from success is a lot of pressures is a lot of people pulling at you. It's a lot of people won't certain things. But how do you deal with that from a player's standpoint where you can play when you get on the basketball court and half clear and not be caught up in the distractions of off the court issues. Um as desks desks were really kind of vocal. Spirit to give back in it and how these kids you know. Have these players be available at the moment of truth to make the right decisions and that was very important to me. Kevin as you mentioned you played in the nba brand. You played in the nba. As well i wanna ask both of you guys and kevin. I'll start with you like if this was available to you as sixteen. seventeen year. Old looking back. Would you have founded attractive with a definitely founded attractive You know i kind of thought the box anyway. I was from chris. Shaw from from from south central and i chose connecticut. So you places that. I didn't even know nothing about growing up. You always thought out the box and never wanted to go down a path that everybody was going down So i was always curious. And i think that's how my mom especially my mom. My dad raised me. So i definitely been curious of this situation. No no speaking now without you know took it. I'm not sure. But i think it really gave me another option to look at it and this is what we're trying to do not saying that the ncaa is wrong overtime. Leaders wrong or right. It's not about that. It's about if you really care about the student. Athletes you give them as much options as possible. And i think this gives the lee student athlete. Another option and i think you know it's a very Great option for them to have and if they choose overtime league we're going to give our whole heart to make sure they're developed on and off the basketball court chris i- jumping after coach It would have been interesting. Chris but i certainly would not have been a candidate i would. Let's just get that right. What what things that's important. We sit down going through just grassroots community and we spent months just talking to people educating about. You know what we're about who we are. Each of us has a reputation in some other space. Not here The this program isn't for everybody is not the right fit for everybody. We are cherry picking and a lot of ways. These are players that feel like they are destined for professional basketball. There are a lot of sixteen year olds. That don't know that yet and their parents aren't convinced that yet in people that support them. Don't don't feel that confidence yet. They may be another year away or two years away but this is not. This is not the right path for everyone. Twenty four athletes roughly twelve per class. We're looking at juniors and seniors and the truth is at this age. What was really funny about scouting them is everybody's skinny and like a lanky and underdeveloped and still has like a mountain of upside to you know to to get through before you can really see who they're going to be but you know if you have a young player like brand williams who's just dreaming of being an nba player but does not much certainty. That's even realistic We gotta be very careful about this approach In taking because there there are risks but for those that that have already established in this deke. They've established a day of separated from their class. You know jaylen. Lewis has an example the most recent example. He's he's he's elevated in separate. The draft isn't tomorrow though so there's still a lot of work to do but he's already in front running physician and it gives everyone low confidence that this is the kind of investment and the kind of pet that would make a ton of sense for players like that. Let me follow up on that brandon. Because you're you're entering. What suddenly become a fairly crowded space in terms of leagues like this. You know the g. league ignite is one season in but they've had a measure of success. We've seen jalen green probably a top pick. Jonathan kamenga top five or six. Then you have the ncw with this. Recent ruling allowing top players to make money off their name image and likeness. How does how does the elite separate itself from that group. Why think i is. We start a little bit sooner so the g. league zone a great job with what we call it a year the prep year that year. That a recent graduates would be going to college and they've already been hacking the system you know going to italy or china So so there's a market for those players and we want an alternative to college for for for us though. Our players are seeking an alternative to high school so we are a school but we think about the resources that were bringing to the table first of which being an nba like environment You know start coach. Ali coach lehto in a robust set of staff. I mean scouting staff a high performance staff administrative team. Our goal was to simulate an nba organization for for young athletes at sixteen seventeen eighteen. Th there there is no other environment. Like that. And i think the big way that we separate with high school athletes Is that both domestically and internationally. We're able to put twenty four of them together in a building. So what we're selling is the best competition for these guys starts at home. I mean every day in line coaches don't minister drills administer competition aspects of practice and getting ready for games but when you look to the right and left and i noticed as a player. There's no weak link. I mean everywhere you look. There's somebody that's doing what you're doing and possibly doing more. Because they they are not just dreamed about the into the league or to the high level. They're on their way there That's where we've been able to. I think create a little separation from others that have tried or looked at something. Like this kevin. How do you approach this job. Do you do it in a similar mindset and you had at uconn where you have young players you also you know yukon. You had to keep them academically eligible you to follow that pretty closely. I mean is there is it a similar mindset or do you take a different tact. I think you just let it be you know. Similar is not. It's just whatever comes you say yes to it and you cultivate hope from it I never coached high school players. They was always you know graduated from high school. And now they're freshman's This situation is a little different in in was recruiting for two to three years. This situation is a little different. But you know from me. Chris i love the unknown about it. And that's the space i live in. Not just wanna make sure that. I have the space incorporate something in these players that they can just think about it can build from a have a foundation so when they make the transition they have every tool in the toolbox to say okay. Oh that's a problem Assess it let me be able to correct it. Let me obsessed. Let me be aware of it and i think that's the difference between you know coaching a high school kid in in the college. Kid i mean you get able to mold them a little bit better and then you have to understand where they at. Now you know back then. I didn't have social media. We didn't have social media now. These kids these players are building their brand a little bit earlier and now you just meet them where they are. And i can't wait to get them up on campus get them up until atlanta just continue to build a great relationship. Welcome spend time with the one on one in. This situation is going to provide us to do a lot more skill development that i didn't have a really good opportunity and it had not one say good opportunity. I didn't have the best opportunity. Because there's so many things we own a row recruiting You own a row fundraising these different things. Brandon's taken care of in. Dan porter is taken care of. I can just really coach the player and work on his skill development on and off the basketball court. So it's really given me my own lane. So i can really perform my job. Mama job is really breaking down and relationships it starts. Relationship is start with trust. Stars will hold is spending time with the the young student athletes on and off the basketball court and pushed them to greatness and the competition is not on. our side of competition is with him. You know can you beat your previous best bestself. Can you be better than today you know. Can you be better tomorrow than you were date. And that's what i'm coaching. And that's what i love to do. And i think we're going to have some great young man as open as biden has going to be vulnerable going to try to reach for the sky. In the sky is going to be ob- you is not going to be limits. I can't wait to get up to atlanta. We've been having some many camps. Chris has been wonderful to get back on the court with the guys. And i'm looking forward to the next mini camp and dan looking forward to getting them up to atlanta. So we really can go to work. You know when. I was was talking to brian. shaw a couple of months ago. Kevin about how he was coaching. The ignite you know it was a lot of pro stop. He was trying to bring to that team. Are you taking that same. Approach you trying to coach them like their nba players or something different. No it's nothing different is just. I'm building pro. Habits in every situation is going to be different. Chris this is going to be some guys. Come in you know. Say for instance like a. John montero will we got him and he you know is a little bit more advanced than some other players because he's been a pro- already and then it's going to be another situation where we gotta talented guy might not be able to get quick but these opportunities we can go at our own pace we can sit down and talk to them but we're really teaching and building pro habits and those habits is going to translate over to them being great pros when that opportunity come invest in the nba are the euro league so every day you know we are building like a practice plan like more of a college practice plan nba practice bandwidth doing drills. That i got from my numerous stops in the nba. You know we're doing sets in the nba. Then we gotta understand that sixteen years old as well you know and maybe sometimes you gotta you know kinda doubt it down a little bit. But i'm gonna let com. I'm going to let that go. i'm not going to focus on one of it. I'm not gonna say oh. We're doing this process. Each and every day every day is different. And that's what i love about the unknown. And i'm gonna treat it like that and we just gonna continue to bill because i think we got great mas and organization that really want to coach the whole person. And that's what i'm really excited about. You decided to upgrade your outdoor deck. So you ordered the essentials. Power washer said a patio chairs and a shiny new grill. And you use your bank of america. Customized cash rewards credit card choosing to earn three percent cashback online shopping and up to five point. Two five percent preferred rewards member which you put toward your most essential deck addition a bird feeder of yours at bank of america dot com slash more rewarding copyright two thousand twenty one bank of america corporation support for this podcast comes from invent together according to studies less than thirteen percent of all inventors who hold a us patent are women black and hispanic college graduates patent at half the rate of their white counterparts. But we can fix that by increasing participation innovation and patenting by underrepresented groups. It would quadruple. The number of american inventors and increase annual gdp by almost one trillion dollars. Invent together is a coalition of organizations companies. Universities and concerned citizens committed to ensuring that everyone has the opportunity to invent and patent because the more diverse. The american patent system gets the stronger and more successful. our nation will become. What can you do to help. Divers inventors patent and unleash economic opportunity. Find out at invent together dot org learn more and take action today brandon not to continue to compare this team to the ignite but when i talked to sharieff abderrahim about that i mean. I had asked him about the sustainability of that team. Given how much. Money was being poured in to pay some of the players. And he bobbed and weaved floyd mayweather trying to answer that question. Because it's it's hard to commit to it without say a television contract more sponsorships and things like that when you can you speak to kind of the sustainability of this because we've seen startups with an influx of cash. Get get in big the first year. But then peter out. I mean what needs to happen. Four overtime elite to become a long term successful program while has got to answers. I think you know a concept. I mean we're we're selling on the ability to develop young players and have a more more pro ready right. So this is. This is the path we are offering basketball development. Call it professional Business development And we are also like leveraging. What is an incredible media platform that again. The things that we like to call a distinguishing factors. That's a huge one. So not to bob and weave one. We gotta be good ass. You know that. That's how have long deputy spurs the spurs. They were good for really long time. And so we've got the that there were good at this note. No pressure on kale right The the the second piece though is you know and this comes from my my time in the nba. It just wasn't that long ago where it out of chicago. Pre-draft combine interview. If i said. I wanna build my brand. Everybody in the room was like smirking and like you know what. What are we talking about like. It's about basketball basketball basketball And you know if you are young team developing and not winning a lot of games truth is you can't sell just basketball because your basketball isn't great you got to sell personalities and stories in that there's something that people can invest in in fall in love with other than like the final score like otherwise. The sixers had no chance right any any development team yet to buy into a story and for us. I think we have a chance to create stories but we get a chance to show those stories because we have a platform. So it's it doesn't take much. I mean i'm not a social media guru. But when i got recruited for this job haven't been around the block a little bit certainly from an nba perspective. I heard a couple of things. I really got my attention. One was fifty million followers That's eyeballs and we all know that that Business follows the eyeballs in whatever in whatever respect. The other was which is unfair. Because i think that number changes month over month but it started at one point four and not set maybe one point eight or one point nine billion with a b. billion views of content a month that overtime in some ways has found a way to the heart. The mind of young people It is being communicated and solid as you know the generation z. sort media and content engine We are doing an amazing thing here which is developing young talent in a pure way that we want to make sure that they are prepared. Top to bottom to do well on the court to do well and communities to do well in business but then there's this other thing which is they want to be known like. No player wants to play in an empty building. Everybody wants to play where it matters. They wanna play. When nick can rock and like the building and just like recognizing their talent. We're just artists. And one thing that is kind of showcase. By one event that that overtime overtime the media company producing s called. You see it on youtube to. Is that over. Hundred million people watched that. I mean that that's not an insignificant number that players that are going to play overtime. Lee will have the opportunity to be known The the opportunity of bring brick big brands to the table and support this platform If not already indicated by the kinds of investors that that have shown interest but the brands that are coming to the table our sustainability is going to be showing value delivering value to not just the athletes but to overtime visibility. I would imagine great for them but can you monetize it. Can you make it so this league is in the black or does it need to be in the black every year. Well my the good news is as a basketball man. No different than a different than the is Get a budget. My job is to be fishing and and spend wisely. I i'm not. I'm not asked to sell tickets or generate revenue that's for a tremendous And in successful a business operations Our job is to make sure that what we are delivering is high is a high level product That you see the growth and development of our young players. What's there recruited. We gotta make them better. They need to be able to perform and probably the best testament of our success is going to be our nba. Gm voting with this pick right but with a coach saying like they did a nice job. This guy was. Well coached testament to takeo and the rest of the coaching staff. That if we're doing that will prove successful. Because guess what the next crop of recruits when we're in the gym like we're not chasing them. There's sort of meeting us at at minimum half way. We need to keep bringing high level taliban and developing talent to prove successful and i have a tremendous set of partners across academics and across content media. That will will do their part to elevate our business. Can you expecting to tap into some of your. nba relationships. I mean as you mentioned thirteen teams in twelve seasons. You've made a lot of friends over the years. We're going to see like san preston sitting in the crowd for your practices as a whole so sam and so many gyms that i know you know Kevin durant and all these guys are destinies in overtime. Just having them be around. We had our first minicamp. Ray allen showed up and not only showed up. He brought his son to work out with guys. Just it was just amazing. does just see how the branches that we can continue to pull up on and they continue to pull on us and be a partnership in. This thing is going to be great. Are you expecting to have kind of drop ins. Durant's involved with the league. You expecting these guys. Just be around. Which i would imagine would be both a resource for you but also an attractive quality to this league definitely. Definitely we going to build a place where it's going to be hopefully a development premier development destination for everybody and you know hopefully katie can come out and work out with guys and russell westbrook and james harden and all these guys that we know and i know i had opportunity to be evolved. Then it's kinda beat a veteran guys We want them to be around. Because it's not. Just me sean. It's also watching tape like these are the different drills and look how k. d. and look how chris paul is using the pick and rolls and now they're showing up that's a that's a big big bang for us with us growing these young talented student athletes To get them inspired to the next level and they're doing a great job done only gonna do. I coached him. Chris a coach me on a day to day basis. I'm open to that and we just really want to have a love affair with guys and and the end of the day chris. We want appease the basketball guys. We wanna play the right way. We want to share a basketball. We wanna run. We wanna have fun. We want how to join the game but it can't just be me me me. It has to be weak. And i'm wanting to teach guys how to be involved in any system they get drafted about. They can be a part of a productive system and be a productive partner in in the community as well no matter what city they when they arrive to the nba brandon. Before let you go. What schedule gonna look like i mean is this team playing. Just walk me through kind of what these kids are getting into. And what kind of schedule you gonna be able to put together so schedule that that is really interesting for everybody. And i wanna try to illuminate. But i've got to be careful we are still contracting with some teams But for the audience the think about it in buckets. We're gonna play independent prep schools. That's going to be a significant part of our schedule. We are a high school so we are looking to schedule. Some of the top independence that you would typically no to have a national schedule can travel that have the ability to be mobile. We're scheduling home and away with with With those folks and it looks like net set as an example It looks like you know. Folks that are playing for a national title Arizona florida california. So it'll be a widespread travel schedule for us. We're also looking at European competition so think about junior euroleague as an example. Some of the best clubs the Insects as an example Where we can get a collection of sixteen to nineteen year old elite talent to compete against us. And then as i mentioned earlier on the show we really feel like the best competition is gonna come internally and that's where our league play Comes into effect so we are looking at our group of twenty four as three teams of eight. There will be standings you'll be able to track will compete against each other. That'll be a significant part of our schedule as well. We don't want to overstep our guys one of the things. We really wanna correct leading science. Guide us here. is is minimized the wear and tear. Nobody's while still developing and preparing for a professional level place so a schedule of maybe thirty five. To forty games is our target. We started september Training camp will will begin Play by mid august. We'll be done by by Late march is how we see our schedule shaping up i'm looking forward to it brennan kevin. It's a really interesting concept and hope you guys have a lot of success with an. I'll certainly be watching a lot of. Nba people will be watching but brandon. Stay out of a set of massachusetts. Kevin has like some basketball. Ptsd from all those bc. Matchups i'm sure would probably were so tough. I don't remember kevin. It's not real like talk about it. But lita past. We'd be six thousand. That's not very nice. That's hovering kevin brand. Thanks for joining me. I appreciate it all right. Thank you chris. Thanks so much.

NBA Basketball Damian Lillard United States Chauncey Billips Brett Brown Nigeria Lillard Tatum Jason Kidd Blazers Olympics Howard Tokyo Moseley Jamal Moseley Beal Orlando Portland
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The Crossover NBA Show with Chris Mannix

03:55 min | 2 years ago

test

"Like the government like memphis yet. Some battles with market assault didn't work out your plus new york. You just might be one of those guys that doesn't have the right temperament to be is based on what we've seen a memphis in new york might be better suited for these ranks but if he succeeds in l. a. I think he'll get another chance right. Maybe i think the point being though that if you as an organization have identified a guy instead he we believe in him then. Okay then believe in him. Stick with them and make sure you've given them enough tools to succeed Is it a pulling the plug at the first sign of of struggle and that's what happens in the nba. too often. is that seems panic. You know the fans turn. There's some minor flare up. Oh the coach and player got into it. Whatever it may good teams that can happen on as well. And it's it's just. It's the way franchises. React so you have to know whether or not the guy is is is right and then stick with them. And so yeah. Let's jomo's should get a nice long here. She got a ton of latitude in orlando given where they are as an organization given the state of that roster. Yeah i agree. Howard enjoy milwaukee looking forward to hearing the conversation with the lazarus on friday. You can check podcast. Right here on the crossover feet again. Make sure you listen to howard's interview. Spencer dinwiddie from last week. It was really really strong. Enjoy -joy the mid west our. We'll talk when you're back on the northeast always a pleasure. My friend the newest player in the pre nba basketball landscape is overtime. Elite elite will begin playing sometime in the fall. And we'll be headlined by some of the top now. Former high school players in the country players would be paid minimum one hundred thousand dollars with some making north of that and have access to high level facilities training as well as educational programs to help. Get a better grasp on that. I'm joined by brandon williams the head of basketball operations for overtime. Elite and kevin ollie the former. Nba guard uconn. Coach was the head coach and director of player development bread. And i want to start here with you. Just kind of give me the ten thousand foot view overtime elite. What are the objectives. What what what was behind the formation of this league. I think any of us. Chris who've been around for a long time i've actually seen Sort of the downside of young players who entered into professional ranks to this point. It's been the nba Who are not ready. And so what does that mean you know not not ready to form and be stars or is it just not ready to be great teammates or is it not ready to be good partners. is sort of all that you know the idea that the work day is much longer than they know. And that there's more responsibility to be in a professional athlete The responsibilities to families and communities we just have to do a better job preparing them and here was an opportunity to be part of a program that wanted to address all that. It's not just about being a good player. It's like we wanna address the whole athlete. Hope so on. Three levels were hitting basketball. Easiest thing understand. I think businesses in our world is education And then there's brand you know. These young people now are moving at a speed that we aren't as older folks and they want to build things An earlier age particularly off the court so building a brand is important something that can last well beyond their tread on tire so we're hitting it in basketball business brand. That's that's that's really thirty thousand foot view. Kevin what attracted you to this job. Just like his dad is the whole person being able coach them from a mind body and soul Experience and

NBA Memphis Spencer Dinwiddie New York Brandon Williams Kevin Ollie Basketball Milwaukee Orlando Howard Uconn Chris Kevin
"three levels" Discussed on KCRW

KCRW

07:14 min | 2 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on KCRW

"And anchovies on the cover, I was thinking I could call it for little things or or I could find what was common to them on what turns out to be coming to mall. Is omega three fatty acids. Everyone in the United States, I think at this point is heard of the Omega three supplements. Many millions of Americans take them on a regular basis. So it's really you know, through self interest. I think that we become interested in the rest of the world and the rest of the ocean. So I decided to use this sort of amber colored pill as the lens through which I would show people the very bottom rungs of the way the ocean works. Do you take Omega three supplements? I do not. I eat quite a bit of fish. I mean, I did for one year during the research for this book. I did eat fish pretty much every single meal for a year and I actually went to this company called Omega Quant and had my finger pricked and they sent me a test. I pricked my finger. And I tested the Omega three levels in my blood after I had eaten fish for a year. And I'm also tested all the different metrics that our associate ID with omega threes, cholesterol, triglycerides and stuff like that, But no. Generally I'm not a pill taker. I'm gonna supplement taker. I wanted to try and do the work kind of in a way outside of the realm of supplements and They certainly talked to many supplement manufacturers who talked to a lot of people who took them on a regular basis. I went deep into the way supplements are marketed to people. I went to the good to the summit of the Global Organization for EPA and DHS, Omega threes at the Ritz Carlton in the Canary Islands. I really They did everything but take supplements if you want. If you see what I'm saying, so I'm curious. What did that little finger prick reveal? After a year of eating fish? Well, it revealed that I have After that I had blood of a sort of Japanese person. Or maybe a Mediterranean person. A pre introduction of industrial food. So I had ah, levels. 10.5% of my blood lipids were omega three fatty acids. And that, according to Omega Quant, anyway, is the desirable well into the desirable range. Many Americans they're making three levels are below 5% and one of the problems with this book, and we're what difficulties of this book was trying to understand what is a real study and what isn't a real study. So everything or of not everything. A lot of things associated with Omega threes tends to focus on what are called association studies. So in other words, we seem to see these high omega three levels in certain people, and those people seem to have lower levels of cardiovascular disease. So there's an association is a correlation, but there's not a causation and what I always liked uses. The example is that you know, the worst example of an association study would be say. Somebody who says I live in a White house. The president lives in the White House. Therefore, I am the president so, but it is. It doesn't work that way. Omega three levels in your blood or high. You have load rate of cardiovascular disease. Did the Omega threes caused that? Or was it some other thing that was generally associated with your lifestyle that also included Omega threes. That's really the question that lays at the bottom of a lot of the debates about weather, Omega threes in supplement form, work or not, So let's start at the beginning of the book and of where these things come from. The Predator prey split. Yeah, People often think that Omega threes are made by fish. But in fact, Omega threes are made largely by Clinton by fighter plankton, photosynthetic plankton. And they're part of what are called Tyler quit membranes that are sort of the frame around a photovoltaic cell in a photosynthetic piece of algae. So that's what they were used for primarily the way other life forms get Omega threes into their body is primarily by eating things that have omega threes in their body. So you have Little fish that will eat plankton. And they will bio accumulate that omega threes in their blood lipids. And then that, in turn, gets passed on to the larger fish that eat them and then eventually we get them by eating the fish. There's a little bit more subtlety in the book, like The book goes very deep into early paleo history, And there's kind of an interesting split, where in early plankton one half of the tree goes in the direction of photosynthesis, and you know things that grow there to create their own energy from the sun. But the other direction goes in direction of predatory plankton. And what's interesting to see is that where is the Omega Three in the photosynthetic plankton is used really, pretty much as part of photosynthesis. In the more predatory plankton. It immediately gets incorporated into sensory things into sensing light, for example, and in fact, there are some early forms of plankton that have this very early form of an eye that will help them perceive movement in front of them. And turns out that early I is high in omega three fatty acids, so it's there and photosynthesis, but it's also there in perception. So to me that makes this kind of magical mix that we nonfiction writers are always looking for. So one of the things that's fascinating about this whole story. Well, some people might say there's two stories. There's the human Health and development story, and there's the ecological Web story. But of course, really, It's both one story. So this whole idea of way back way. Way way back. The idea that the plankton was actually clearing the atmosphere of carbon allowing oxygen to flourish. Yep. And so now we're sort of at the back end of that, right? Yeah. I mean, I had this sort of funny realization that you know, early Earth we know had very high levels of Seo too. Win photosynthetic vital plankton started processing that and turning in a tow oxygen. They actually cooled the planet and they actually made the planet less hospitable to them because they evolved in this very warm carbon rich environment. And so other plankton had to evolve to kind of enter that knish. What's interesting now, as we burn billions and billions and billions of tons of carbon and put it back into the atmosphere that we're actually recreating the ancient atmosphere that those original plankton destroyed, So in other words, You know, you could say that. Oh, humans were destroying the earth that we grew up in. Or you could say weirdly, that were part of some giant plank tonic cycle, And as we release all this carbon that plankton stored, we're going to create a boom in those plaintiffs. So You know? Depends how you want to look at the world. You wanna look at it through the end of the telescope? That's plankton. Are you looking through the end of the telescope? That's humans. So now we get to the part of where we find something that we think is going to be good for us. Mm hmm. And we decide we're going to go after it and use it. You say that No one is ever truly cared about the sea. It's been treated as a mine from which wealth is taken and never returned. That's true. E mean, we're at the dawn of two possible moments, one good when terrible. The terrible moment is when we sort of head forever in the direction of destroying and plundering the ocean. The good direction is that we are starting to see the error of our ways and that we are starting to understand what it means to do sustainable fisheries management..

United States Canary Islands 10.5% one year two stories earth two possible moments Clinton Earth DHS both one Global Organization for EPA billions of tons of carbon billions and Omega Quant one story White House below 5% every single meal
"three levels" Discussed on Mr Barton Maths Podcast

Mr Barton Maths Podcast

03:17 min | 2 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on Mr Barton Maths Podcast

"No we came from a theoretical perspective of what it means to lannon. Teach by rewards inquiring what does it look like The basically we were inquire into awarded. Looks like to create learning situations for students in mathematics through inquiry so we were enquiring. Three levels will recalled free layers. So if you imagine a mogul dia way you have central which is doing investigation. Doing choir base not matic's with students in the classroom than surrounding. So if you're drawing it you draw centrally lips and then another round that that would be teaches enquiring into the processes of working inquiry ways with students and then the outlets Three land mogul. The alternate is about doing research into the whole process of inquires. Now i'm working in a big european project. Now which is using that mogul so the model now is in literature and basically in the middle of the teachers and inuit way we call ourselves. Deduct titians teaches in Work together on what it means to change. Do developmental work in classrooms. And then in the outer the researchers who be either teachers or deduct titians actually collect daydream do more rigorous analysis of that data. So i've got lots of publications from that work. It was a four year project. A stay didn't know where for nearly five years then. I came back to the uk cheese. Well above lots of questions to ask you about inquires and investigations. We best we best career with your career though. Barak wanna leave the audience cliff to here so you you've come onto the uk. What happened next. Well as i said one of the main difficulties in no way was analyzing my otherwise. I would have stayed in no way. I had a wonderful life that my border flat should tie. One fatten have moved to not be along. And i continue living in no way but my research by this time is my life So i looked out for jobs in the uk. And i knew. I didn't want to come back to a new job. Certainly didn't want to go back to. Pg c. teaching. I'm then this job. Loss.

four year uk Barak Three levels one nearly five years Three land european
"three levels" Discussed on Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier

Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier

04:32 min | 2 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier

"Let me take a short break to thank the folks at the puzzle game app best fiends for supporting murder and mystery in the last frontier. I appreciate you. I guess nearly everyone has heard of best fiends by now. It's a bright cheerful game design for adults but appropriate for all ages. The funny colorful insect characters. Keep you smiling while the challenging games. Focus your mind on the task of solving each level and moving on to the next if you're not sure whether best fiends is for you download it and give it a try. I bet you will be just as hooked on the puzzles as i am. I've mentioned before how the game both relaxes me and stimulates my brain. It improves my mood and energizes me even after playing it for only fifteen minutes. Spend time with your best scenes and de stress during a coffee break or for a few minutes before you turn out the lights at night. I just completed level seven hundred and thirty three. I breathe through the last three levels but struggled with the previous puzzle before i successfully completed it. When i do finally succeeded solving a puzzle my fiends. Jump up and down and cheer for me. I feel as if i have a pep squad in my corner. if you haven't played best phen- jet to give it a try. Engage your brain with fun puzzles and collect tons of characters trust me with over one hundred million downloads. This five star rated mobile puzzle game is a must play download. Best means free on the apple app store or google play. That's friends without the.

five star google play fifteen minutes apple app store each level both over one hundred million downl three levels level seven hundred tons of characters thirty three
"three levels" Discussed on Southern Tomfoolery Plays

Southern Tomfoolery Plays

04:29 min | 2 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on Southern Tomfoolery Plays

"You need for the next upgrades you have to like buy the best set of armor. You can get at when you do. And then that's gotta carry you for three levels. Weapons yield tend to find drops on those a little bit more. You know you might find something that but it doesn't matter as much because that scales up with your with your character abilities but your armor doesn't really so you'll be sitting pretty at like level six but come ten. You've you feel like really exposed on your arm. S time feeling right now with wealthy we just hit in as gin. That's the only thing that i can relate to but like i started off strong with the armored Gave us a little extra money than that. We would normally have just to kinda give us some things but now like i wasn't able to upgrade his armor this time around with the upgrade because i spend it on other stuff in you know i'm sitting at fourteen fourteen at level four like i'm going to get hit. Most of the time right now. You know is to happen to be next level when i upgrade my armor and so whole level of getting the shit knocked out you. Yeah i've found as a player. Mostly i don't upgrade the items themselves I'm more looking for drops. Any loot that drops is likely going to be my next upgrade if it's applicable to my character and that's it's been that way for pretty much every tabletop game that i've played. Maybe it's just a me thing The not liking spending however much many credits or much gold on whatever item. But i feel that chances are gonna find something eventually that replaces you know my my club with you. Know some sort of bad ass battle axe or something. I don't and you've gotten you gotten lucky on some good armor. Drop for sure from the get-go because you know you're the only other one that could do heavy armor right..

ten fourteen level six level four three levels every tabletop game many credits
"three levels" Discussed on Progressive Talk 1350 AM

Progressive Talk 1350 AM

01:41 min | 2 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on Progressive Talk 1350 AM

"Outer edges. So these gears are all horizontal, not vertical, so they're at a nine degree angle. Relative toothy water wheel. The figurines were positioned in such a way to be easily seen through windows of the tower. So if you looked at the tower from the outside, you see these little figures in various windows along that side, like three levels of them with one window. Showing certain figures that indicate a certain increment of time. The figures all carried signs that representing numbers that men it means they were effectively digit counters. So you look at the figures and you could suss out what time it is. But Su Song had to come up with a way to make this a steady regular syriza of events. If you left this on its own if you just had a big waterwheel And you were having water flow into these scoops. The water wheel would eventually just started turning continuously as long as there was water to push it, Which means all the figures would constantly be in motion, And that could be tricky to read the time, especially between minutes. So you know, you could have a figure that's half in view and half out of you. You're not really sure what time it is, Su song need a way to keep a gear in position for a certain interval. Given amount of time, such as a minute and so he and his team had to come up with a way of stopping gears, but only temporarily so that the passage of time could be more regularly communicated. So he and his team created a clever gadget that would end up being an important part of clocks for centuries. It's called an escape mint. So what is an escape mint? We'll go into that in just a bit. But first, let's take a quick break to thank our sponsor..

Su Song first one window nine degree angle three levels minute half Su
"three levels" Discussed on ABA Inside Track

ABA Inside Track

05:24 min | 2 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on ABA Inside Track

"She says you know black. Liberation has its roots in behavior analysis to so skinner says that would be the removal of verse of controls. And so you know like when you look at the system in place now right. There's a ton of versity there's tons of aversive stimuli over particular to you know the black community in. We have to do better. As behavior analysts to work on ways. I think on all levels sadly right both on the personal level right at any behavioral organizational level right so that we can support our employees and our clients and then you know at the broader cultural level. All three levels. We gotta get to it. i think. Sometimes what's interesting specific like to our field of like in the pipes said since is that. I think sometimes because we work with children oftentimes Almost austin that we feel like we don't have a stake in this or feel like you're kind of exempt from these conversations. I have a scholar. Who literally like just friday was like talking about her peer. And i'll just call him mellow. So she's like mel's not black and real in and mellow has black routine. Rb and my other rb two who is working with the client who said this was like i mean literally like have this look on her face and i was just like you know it's okay like black isn't a bad word bike you know. It's okay that you can and you can literally validate. Because he's not black brown. He's a whole he's hawaiian. You can literally validate like you're right like he's that black brown or he's ali- inner. He's in the the sense of like improbably. Also because i was there the sense of like discomfort even work on tack dang. Somebody's race or in this case skin color. Like i don't like i think for me like we literally especially when it comes to like tapping things and colored like it's important like it's it didn't not it shouldn't Opinion beat us like taboo thing. The reality is this kid isn't black. I am black like at just. It's like so in in. And i think we end so i think for me. It's like the fact that we're not even comfortable touting like race the fact that we're still on this whole colorblind wave that like our parents taught to us. I do think it's a barrier to even considering are thinking what black liberation would even look like like. If you aren't even willing to to look at me and simply see me as a black woman or at least admit that you see because it's very clear you know what i mean. I just i. Don't i feel like tatting. It like calling a thing thing is so so so so so important because again back to this idea of the other side of this might other side of this when it comes like my lesbian identity. You would like you wouldn't be like cami likes women you and not call it because identifies lesbian. Like you wouldn't be like she's she's not a lesbian she just she just likes like you know what i mean like. We wouldn't like dance around on this you not. I mean you'd be like all right like you like women. Are you a lesbian. Sure your lesbian and we would literally just go on about our day but it's something about blackness specifically. I think that is so uncomfortable to people. And so i love this article because i think denise she did a really good job of talking about it in the most simple way because oftentimes that race conversations..

friday both skinner hawaiian three levels Rb lesbian cami two
"three levels" Discussed on Coffee Podcast by Cat & Cloud

Coffee Podcast by Cat & Cloud

02:32 min | 2 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on Coffee Podcast by Cat & Cloud

"Don't know what if we just did the right. And if all three levels are just completely defeated you kind of have an idea you're dealing with but you might click on someone's like oh i can get halfway for sure if this that and that i can get like two thirds of his done by five o'clock won't be done by the end of the day but it'll be really good progress. Okay that's awesome. That's great let's do that. Yeah you know that's powerful to. Oh i can fuck and step this to where i need to go. Yeah you know not. Every question is all or nothing all the time. in fact most of them aren't all or nothing and that's the best thing to realize and that's kind of weird. This conversation started right. It's like it's never all or nothing. Even though i am absolutely the first when it comes to life and things catastrophes myself go all or nothing. But it's not a place. I do that with our business. Not all don't which is awesome blessing for myself. I'm like nah. it's all just like forward movement even when it's failure it's forward movement because somebody learned in somebody got better and that's why you take that full circle back there's never an all or nothing there and therefore flow chart style your free unless we tell you literally not to do something and that's in leadership and that's that's specific to. It's not like there is rules. I'm not saying that you have to earn humane. You still have to abide by our rules. You have to follow the values of the company. You still have a day to day thing which is to inspire connection by creating number experiences. But you remember like that is literally your job for the day to inspire connection by creating experiences and people like but you make coffee. Yeah now what. That's the end of the podcast. Thanks for listening. I know this is the time a shameless. Like we need your help but we do wanna get our message out there and we do wanna share this with a lot of people stuff you could share. You could subscribe you. Could you could review. It would greatly help us as we continue to. Not only the youtube. It's fresh but also the general podcast as we took nearly entire year off from doing it and so please do so share it. I believe that we have some information and some perspective that can help people in any industry any walk of life. Do us that favor that knowledge that love in. Turn up for us please. And y'all have a great time. Thanks for listening.

five o'clock youtube first two thirds three levels
"three levels" Discussed on (EA) Eternal Affairs TRUTH Radio

(EA) Eternal Affairs TRUTH Radio

04:32 min | 2 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on (EA) Eternal Affairs TRUTH Radio

"And by the way for every dollar that they print that they don't ashley print they have the serial numbers for it is a marked known of so many dollars and that block and could be actually printed if they needed to print money. But they're scared now. Because last i heard was that. There's as much crypto currency in the united states of america as there is fiat money. And now you can buy a tesla with it. You can go to the football game with it little by little. You're going to see a lot of things be able to be purchased with this crypto currency. And i think you're gonna see three levels. Now i'm making my prediction for the future folks if you if you want invest in something. I'm not an investment advisor. I don't have a license. But i've made plenty of money in the back end and been very successful. I could've made more. But i'm i'm very frugal. All right. i'm a cheap bastard. Okay so i could have made a lot more. If i hadn't been so cheap and scared but crypto currency is the thing to get into bitcoin. The forget bitcoin and bitcoin cedars three levels. I'm going to tell you what the three levels are. Then you can figure out on your own where i'm investing my money. There's three levels. There's the federal government and the and the and the the dark the deep state government and the federal reserve and the world bank. They're all the same they're all crooks so there's there's the world bank's and they're going to have a crypto currency of their own. They're going to have the dollar. Based on some kind of crypto. It's going to happen very quickly especially with what's going on right now but bitcoin's not going away and it's bitcoin's not going to be that crypto. Bitcoin is the coin of the rich millionaires and billionaires of the world. They've commandeered bitcoin to be their own. Play toy to buy tesla's with into by non fungible tokens which are totally uses. There less useless in.

united states of america three levels so many dollars every dollar of money government bitcoin tesla
"three levels" Discussed on Gaming and BS RPG Podcast

Gaming and BS RPG Podcast

04:48 min | 2 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on Gaming and BS RPG Podcast

"To a house. Is this a threats. Is it whenever you know who sees it as such so. Then there's a target on that beat a good target of bad target whatever but now they are the focus of mac nations that they may or not may not want to be. So if you were if you were to Another approach to Jerry would be a few implement. This entity like irregular d game or whatever You could have the player as they grow. Get a better grasp of that. Like oh yeah understand better. And then it doesn't become as wild and crazy so when they start out maybe their chances of going awry are much higher than as they grow to understand. The power of the magic's deacon they can keep that wielded in a more responsible manner because they become the master of that domain. That's a something that would also be a story arc which also prevents the player character from going. It started out really cool but every time of casting a spell. It's failing and it's like i'm not you know it's always pain in my ass now after five levels now you can kind of implement while now. It's getting better and you decrease the chances of it going to shit any guilt. That's where it can do for account book fans you can do the dark phoenix piece to where things start to go to the on you. Wow this is really good. Wow now when i do it. It hurts my friends now when i do it. I take three levels of exhaustion. When i do it. Because it's too powerful. I can't to control this thing. How do i figure that out. That's the story arc. Potentially no that's a lot of stuff to do there. Yeah interesting things. Right jerry pressure. Thanks for listening. Let's see here. What's next yes we are. Oh cross my lost methane there. I met age theory. Hmo published in hamburg. Good morning britain. Sean thank you for discussing the topic of written versus homebrew adventures. And taking the time to explain a few different ways to try to work character development freedom of choice into written adventures metro writer response. After i listen to the episode but at a hearing other bs or feedback especially how many felt that running written adventures was more difficult for them. Breath saying that anyone who put down dmc running written adventures is not being legitimate. Should go cts cake rocks. Cook this just what i needed to hear. I guess what it comes down to as always is it depends get fan john Some people are going to prefer one approaching someone another as laws. Everyone's having a good time..

Sean Jerry five levels hamburg three levels homebrew phoenix john Hmo
2021 Lottery NBA Mock Draft

Chad Ford's NBA Big Board

05:11 min | 2 years ago

2021 Lottery NBA Mock Draft

"Tony. And i are going to do our first lottery. Mock draft of the year today. We're going to go back and forth. Selecting picks to put a draft order together. Midseason is really difficult. Especially if you've looked at the standings anytime lately and seen how bunch together so many of these teams are so i went to espn's basketball power index That list teams projected records to the season through a number of statistical factors. I think it's it's probably a better look. At where teams are going to be at the end of the season then necessarily their records right now and then based off of that we put together a draft order that obviously is going to change and obviously will be affected by the nba draft lottery where the top top three teams each have a fourteen percent chance of getting the top pick and so on as you know how the draft lottery works and so doing a mock draft. This time of season tough until really until the draft lotteries over. We don't really know the order but but we have some guesses now based off of where teams what teams have played. And what's going on right now and we're going to do our best to give you a are mock draft For the twenty twenty one season. First one we're just gonna cover the lottery and we're going to let tony how the first pick in the draft and based off of that. Espn bpi has the minnesota timberwolves projected to have the worst record in the league. Which is actually pretty good news for minnesota timberwolves fans because the timber wolves have to trade pick to the golden state warriors if this is pick four thirty and so the only way minnesota keeps this pick is if they fall into top three right now. If the season were tomorrow they'd have about a forty point. Seven percent chance of keeping this year's draft pick a falling the top three in the draft. So this is no guarantee from minnesota that they'll have the number one pick they all said the number one pick last year. Tony you're on the board. Who do you select if you're the timber. Wolves with the number one. Pick in the twenty twenty one nba draft. I select the I will not need three minutes to make the selection I'm selecting k. Cunningham six hundred seventy one hundred twenty point guard out of oklahoma state and so when you When you make your draft selections you do to you draft for two things you draft For value and you draft for need and this is both in pick antibi- you pick for for for the minnesota timberwolves number one. K cunningham is the best player draft You know. I think the gap is actually close Because you know. I think jonathan coachman gain in jalen green. You know both of those guys you look at them and they have some real special tools But that being said you know k. Cunningham is is still am. I is the most shore Most short superstar player in his draft. In and i think that's a compliment to how good distract is going to be especially in the top five But you know cunningham can score at all three levels. No he's sick. He's all seven all twenty. He's he's a natural point guard You know if you're minnesota you're trying to trace the ngelo russell Like as soon as possible In you know you put k. cunningham in the backcourt with anthony edwards who i think both of us can safely say it's better than we thought he would And i think that. That's obviously a backward for the future for the minnesota timberwolves in a really nice triumvirate with karl anthony towns so Definitely you know we all rights won't always talk about. We need some some of these number. One picks the go out east but you get the number one pick in another kind of generational prospect that comes to the western conference. I'm totaling till the agreement with you. Tony i think look. I don't think. I think there's five guys that can make a claim to the number one pick in this draft and so it's not like cunningham is a lock here but because of that i would put all of these players in the same tier and then when you look at what minnesota actually needs on their basketball team. Right now i think cunningham is just the right fit for this team as well and i i see him as a really nice compliment to karl anthony towns and to ant man right now and i think that this is this will be a huge boon for minnesota. If they get this pick and you know look everybody in minnesota has got gotta be crossing their fingers at this point Like you said if they fall out of the top three golden state gets this pick. And i think golden state already one that andrew wiggins dangelo russell trade as it is but if they end up getting you know the fourth or fifth pick in the draft does as as well. It's going to be an absolute massacre on that trade.

Minnesota Timberwolves Espn Bpi Minnesota Cunningham Timber Wolves Tony Midseason NBA Jonathan Coachman Jalen Green Espn Golden State Warriors Karl Anthony Basketball Anthony Edwards Oklahoma
"three levels" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

04:22 min | 3 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on Conscious Millionaire Show ~ Business Coaching and Mentoring 6 Days a Week

"Marketing strategy negotiation strategy strategy for up leveling for leveraging and then execute typically involves not just steps but often involves putting specific systems in place for your business so start with mindset. there are three levels of mindset. The first one is your belief systems and typically. This is where most people starting end if got to deal with the belief systems because we've systems create the framework for how your mind is working. How you think about business how you think about your life. I think about where you're going to head. What kind of goals you choose. But new belief system i've discovered the next level down is your self perception. It's your identity now. Here's what happens as human beings. It happens to everybody. I don't care what level you're at. We tend to relate to our identity as something that's concrete it's ab salute. It's it's not so much dynamic. it's more something. That is an shifting. It's this is how i know who i am. You know i. I am an entrepreneur. I own this kind of company. I drive this car. I'm in a relationship with this person. I have these children. I live in this particular house or condo in this particular area. This zip code you know in this country. But here's here's the truth. Your identity is a series of stories that you tell yourself and this is the part where where people sometimes go navy but this is the truth is i know it. None of those stories are true. None of us here and in fact the stories. Hold you in the place that you are at this moment the truth is everything manifesto everything that is occurring around you the amount of money that's in your bank account the kind of clients and the number of clients what they pay you. What your business looks like what your day looks like. It's all connected to your identity and if you tell me we'll i want to be a millionaire or i'm familiar. I wanna we worth five million. Ten million fifty million. A hundred million doesn't matter. Here's what i can guarantee you. That i've discovered from years of working with people from having a masters in clinical psych from all the self exploration that i've done and from observing others and taking so many programs. Here's what i know you absolutely cannot go to your next level until you shift your identity and folks that means you have to let go of some stories so you can develop new stories but underneath that identity is another level. It's your personal reality. Ital- you at this moment are perceiving eighty. It's how you see it. it's how you feel. It is how you hear it inside. It's the things you say to yourself. But here's what it really means. It's about how you see and defined possibility. That's what person rally is actually about. It's about your possibilities. And what is connected to possibilities. It's the opportunities you see. Because right now there could be a million dollar opportunity just two feet away from me but if your mind does not perceive that.

five million Ten million two feet hundred million first one three levels fifty million million dollar navy
"three levels" Discussed on Brothers of the Serpent Podcast

Brothers of the Serpent Podcast

03:52 min | 3 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on Brothers of the Serpent Podcast

"Down long ways than had been it's like ziggurat or something you know and i i don't know who built the wall like they're obviously are small stones at the bottom it's been shipped up You know so. Possibly the inca tried to stand up some of this stuff but the net makes me question these long slivers that are in between them. Did they make those. Are the you know or tibet flying around. They were to do it. But at that block if it was laying on it side then that pattern makes sense. Then you're looking at three pyramids which is really interesting drawn this way. Yeah yata. I don't know how much of this has been worn off. And how it's how it's had this shape you know this vagueness of the shei-pa undock. Obviously that doesn't seem to be original but the rest of the face of it seems to be pretty good. It's yeah it's one of those things that who knows how many people have worked up here. So yeah and these and these schimdt blocks do fit exquisitely well right and the number of the modern knobs autumn right. You're right all right selena. And and i think the next to it the one we looked at early the couch block my well been orange differently somewhere else. Yeah it's just signed problem. You have in some places in egypt and whatnot you just. You're looking at this jumble. That's either been reassembled and and it's been modified and it's really hard to tell what it may have originally been there's there's definitely The characteristics stair steps cut into the solid rock. you know Yeah so that's sort of connects the styles of the i guess the and pasha. Yeah and those are the same terms. He used for the three levels of the world to his which is by design like mark of adopted that with his terminology. Which is the one that i used for. The pot showed pasha And that's more or less that they use for three levels of the world and they're and they're symbolic.

egypt three pyramids three levels one of those things selena
"three levels" Discussed on Brothers of the Serpent Podcast

Brothers of the Serpent Podcast

05:42 min | 3 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on Brothers of the Serpent Podcast

"We don't know excited what the people want to make here is. The point here is that you can see these symbol game. Young kid own three one. So the same philosophy that incas used three levels of the war to the mother are liberal. Underground label is where we are live. One is using this guy all these. Three label was symbolized for three months snake and condo where we represent hummus on level. That's why this is the current head. Spas can see clearly detail.

three months Three label three three levels One one
"three levels" Discussed on Jungle Brothers Strength & Movement

Jungle Brothers Strength & Movement

02:09 min | 3 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on Jungle Brothers Strength & Movement

"With people that you say who are in a position where they should be communicating. And they're not taking advantage of that. You mentioned before you pick a channel and sorta go and stopped doing it and the trust consistency frequency thing. What do you say is the major hurdle for folks. do you say the is it. The lack of there is like a lack of story like people on aware. Enough of what it is they they a has been there really experience that i can pass onto others or is it a. Is it a lack of confidence in their ability to do it or is it just kind of you know whatever laziness or a resistance to doing that. Sort of work post on instagram. Every day all brought a blog once a week if we assume that they're aware of the importance right so they're on board with a cat. This is something that i wanna do. Then i think the biggest thing is the perceived if the the state that evokes when we do something you this exposure we're exposing ourselves to the world to create something got three levels right i to get like i got to sit down. I got an idea so that took a certain amount of energy. I'm looking at say. I want to say i want to develop a new class with you. Guys right gonna watch everyone out there. And i and i see and i get an idea and use empathy listening. Seeing certainly energy will to energy is organizing. You got okay. let's have a meeting. I want to talk about this thing. I'm going to put the content and talk about the new class. Let's get the date. It's going to go out right starting to bring it into reality and enrolling other people right takes more energy right hot like it's another stiff liberal. Three of the the creating is to push it out to the world to actually release it to the world..

instagram Three three levels once a week
The Creation Of The Magnificent Makers

Short Wave

07:38 min | 3 years ago

The Creation Of The Magnificent Makers

"The griffis the author of the magnificent makers children's book series in the main characters violet and pablo are transported to an alternate world with awesome lab. We're talking robots cool bugs an anti gravity chamber there. They have to make their way through a maze by solving science based problems. Each challenge has three levels and they have one hundred and twenty maker minutes to make it through the maze. Otherwise they don't get the chance to come back. I didn't realize they didn't get the chance to come back. That's high state. Yeah yeah and these kids love science so they they have so much fun on these adventures but they have to be able to finish them in time if they wanna come back. Each book explores a different topic. There's one on brain biology one on sound. The one i liked best is about ecosystems in years one of my favorite parts of the magnificent makers as the reader you solve puzzles and riddles right alongside the characters and in each book. There's instructions on how to build something in that building or making was really important to the n. so science basically has two parts right kind of intellectual part where you're learning and you're thinking but then it has this very hands on part which is the doing so whether you're a biologist or an engineer or physicist you're usually making something like research is literally do and so. I felt that it was really important to kind of combine those two with these books right. They have you know kind of the sacks that the kids learn but then these activities that encourage the doing part of science as well. Yeah well. I think the way that science is taught in early. Education is often this memorization of facts. Stuff that other people have learned you know. And and you and i both know that sciences process set of rules to observe intestine problem solve. So was that really important to you in in the book. Yes definitely and it also shows kids you know. Just how fun science is. I think my favorite part of science is the doing being in the lab. Tinkering doing my experiments. You know seeing that positive result. It's just. There's really not something that i can compare it to in terms of that. Something that gives me that boost of adrenaline that science adrenaline talk about. So which character do you feel like you identify with the most. I'm gonna have to save violet. Foreshore little bit more of a daredevil. She's a little bit more of a kind of you know i'm going to do this. Nothing's going to stop me. You know pablo is a little bit more on the pragmatic side. He's a little bit more. Maybe i wouldn't say necessarily cautious but just you know he's the one that's always looking at his watch making sure that people are on time and making sure that you know that such a pablo making sure that they're getting through the maze. On-time environment is to reckless. But she's just a little bit more a little bit more carefree. And if i'm being perfectly honest with myself i definitely have a lot of pablo to right. That's what keeps me orderly. You know an organized you know. But i think my core and my essence has more of that like sco for it. Do it kind of side. Which is maybe how. I got into writing these books in the end right right sure. Well you know i noticed. So violent is a black girl who loves science and dreams of running her own lab one day. You're a neuroscientist as well as an author. And i'm wondering if in some ways this book was kind of like a little bit of a love letter to a younger you mo- currently most definitely not just a younger me. It's really a love letter to all kids who didn't necessarily see themselves in science rolls when they were growing up when they thought of a scientist they didn't picture someone who looked like them or came from where they came from or who had a unique feature that that's not what they were taught a scientist was and it's one hundred percent a love letter to my younger self as well as a love letter to. You know all the kids out there who just wanna do science and don't want to be told that they can't. Yeah i mean. I have to imagine it felt like good for the soul to write a children's book about kids of color who not only are engaged in science. But they're like really good at it cashing. Yes exactly because there's these concepts of what a scientist looks like in who is kind of naturally good at science. I think and someone you know who just kind of what they're born to do and that often does not include you know black and brown kids. I think black and brown kids are taught that we're strong where tough we can overcome. You know hardship which is which are all true things but we're also curious we're also creative. We're also excited about learning how the world works around us. You know and i wanted to really highlight that and i want to mention to that. I don't focus at least at this point in the series a lot on the kids races. I want that to just be a given you know. I don't want that necessarily that to be the topic of conversation per se. I just want them to be them to be care. Free to be out there doing love science and this. Isn't you know just for young kids of color to see. I think this is also important for white children to see the fact that there are kids of color who are also just carefree and doing science. I think representation matters for everyone. You know. it's not just important for young kids of color to see themselves. I think is important for all kids to see young kids of color you know doing science and kick him but at it. Y- yeah so. I kinda wanna talk a little bit about you in this process a little bit because you know when i was academia. There was definitely a hesitancy around putting a ton of time into outreach. Doing things that weren't quote real science. Were you worried at all. About what your peers might think of us spending time writing these books. Yes i mean yes and no. I've done outreach at museums with local libraries. And i've never felt pushback against those kind of activities but this is a little bit different because you know there. Are you know authors. Who are one hundred percent authors right and i am not a one hundred percent author. I'm also an active researcher. And so i was a little bit worried that it would be interpreted as me. You know just kind of taking on a new career and putting science on the back burner. And that's not what i aim to do. You know. I guess. That's the violet in me. I do both you know. I'm still going to be an active researcher. And i'm going to pursue these books actively because i think that they're both important you know as a black woman in science who is an academic science. I don't wanna leave this position. There aren't enough of us.

Pablo Griffis
"three levels" Discussed on PodcastDetroit.com

PodcastDetroit.com

01:30 min | 3 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on PodcastDetroit.com

"We're gonna kick it off with a frequent guest here on the program Tamra shoemaker of Cyber patriots and university of detroit mercy I see you've got your Your background they're like i do Plugging your employer a little bit. Good for you So so tell us a little bit about Let's start off by by assuming that people may not have heard of cyber patriot So tell us a little bit about what the cyber patriot program is. And what's happening with these days. Initiatives are patriot. Program was organized to increase the number of students. Studying the exciting career cyber Cybersecurity and to expose middle school and high school kids to the context and cyber security in a fun virtual competition With easy to be able to drop down did classrooms a very low barrier to entry so we can get a really diverse folks a group of people involved in it. There are three levels of play so depending on even had no background whatsoever. You can play or if you can reverse engineer the game. You can fi- mom and it runs from october until march. Every year this is its thirteenth season and in michigan. We've been going across the state trying to make sure that everybody knows about this. Broke honestly truly appreciate on on the pie. Video kaseke up. Yeah and you wrote a column talking about how you're looking for more support from the industry not only in participation but perhaps.

michigan october march thirteenth season three levels university of detroit Tamra kaseke
"three levels" Discussed on Arrested DevOps

Arrested DevOps

05:05 min | 3 years ago

"three levels" Discussed on Arrested DevOps

"I'd say it's the it's the three levels of argument right like as a white dude in tech there's saab legation to publicly call out other white dudes intact with bad takes right. There is a point to say like this is not acceptable in the space. And not only is it not example because other people say it is but also i agree and i look like you The the second is like good faith arguments. I will have those just for the sake of having interesting discussion and maybe have them loudly so that other people can gain something out of it if we go back and forth right like if there's a good faith argument to be had and we're hearing each other it's worth with continuing but like the second it comes back with a bad take or someone's clearly not listening or just trying to press buttons. Then forget it. It's not worth having. And i've been sucked in. I think we all have been sucked into the like. Someone is wrong on the internet's like combination. But yeah for the most part you of a better life if you can drop out of. That is the number three comic. There was three was three. So there's there's like the call out the good faith and then there's bad faith or you can just walk away and i will say so through the public responsibility in that many followers you have share. I think her handle has shared dot deborah something that she had that point about fourteen thousand dollars and she posted point Like rodent and nice blog post about. What does it mean and she had this like stadium. Four feet role is like this is many people like. This is your megaphone. Doesn't that many people are listening to you. Like you have a responsibility. And i that point i never thought i would have almost fourteen thousand followers but i do now and i'm like oh i guess yes. Euro like very on point with whatever we say kinda has an impact me and and it's not to like i were not famous. We're not even sacked famous but At the same time like some folks that are listening bugs taking cues from what we do. Yeah there was something. I said what i had Four thousand twitter followers..

Four thousand Four feet three levels second about fourteen thousand dollar fourteen thousand followers twitter three dot deborah
Behavior Analyst Creates Resources for Parents and Teachers

Side Hustle School

06:14 min | 3 years ago

Behavior Analyst Creates Resources for Parents and Teachers

"Today's story and expert uses her knowledge to create resources that help parents teachers and professionals improved behavior in children with autism. So i worked on story. I was really impressed by all the things this expert and also her twin sister who helped out a bit did grow her business show. I'm going to tell you about them. Of course but i also realized that a long list of actions can sound overwhelming. First of all welcome to us. We'll school my name is chris. Fellow i'm your host the privilege of making the show for you every single day. I'm thank you so much for being part of it and the day before yesterday. I mentioned that. What i'm trying to do here is get you thinking thinking about ideas as well as help you acquire a mindset the mindset really is critical mindset and taking action those are probably the two most critical things so when i mentioned this list of actions. I was thinking about that. I was like you know variations of this topic or this question. They come up a lot. I hear these questions all the time. Do i have to do social media. do i need to learn about seo. I'm not good on video. Should i just get over it and get on youtube. What do i need to do about advertising and so on and so forth and a lot of those questions are why each week. I'm answering three or four those questions and trying to give you some real specifics. That people actually know what to do and at the same time. I know there's this lingering concern in the background about well. I don't want to be overwhelmed like do i have to do all this stuff so as i said. I'm going to tell you what this person did in the story. Because that's the best way we're gonna learn through stories and examples. But i never want you to think that you have to go out there and try to do everything in fact you're going to be much more successful by figuring out what the right things are just doing those few things anyway. We'll talk about that some more but the story is coming up. Behavior analyst creates online resources for parents and teachers of children with autism. Stay tuned big thanks to our longtime sponsorship station bringing you this episode and so many others completely free if you sell stuff online you know how busy twenty twenty wise. Everyone and their dog was shopping online. Also some cats well get ready for twenty one going to be even bigger and that's why online sellers like you need ship station. No matter where you're selling amazon oetzi. Your own website ship station can make everything just so much easier. Get twenty twenty one off to a great start by visiting ship. Station dot com. Just use our opera code hustle to get a sixty day free trial. That's two months. Free of no hassle stress. Free shipping just gonna shift station dot com. Click the microphone at the top of the homepage and type in the ship station. Dot com enter. Offer code hustle. Ship station make ship happen. Amelia bellefonds found her calling seventeen years ago while she was teaching with head. Start a program that provides early childhood education to low income children and families. She worked with all kinds of kids over the years but one in particular stood out. He was a four year old boy with frequent tantrums and very little verbal communication. Amelia and our fellow teacher wanted to help him so they began researching his behavior and discovered that he might be autistic wanting to learn more. Amelia began studying applied behavior analysis. A scientific approach that can be used to reduce challenging behavior and teach new skills and children with autism. Amelia liked aba strategies because they're easy for non-professionals to learn and can have lasting benefits for the child if they're used consistently not too long after. She started her research. She ended up switching jobs. She wanted to understand more so she decided pursue a master's degree and become a board certified behavior analyst again specializing in working with children with autism. And this is what brings us to the side hustle part of the story. Amelia started a blog called accessible. Aba dot com hoping to share insights to help parents understand more about the field and their child soon. Afterwards around christmas two thousand eighteen. Her twin sister. Diana came for a visit. Diana enjoyed writing so she offered to write some post. The goal of the blog was simply to share information with both sisters working away. They started posting one or two times a week as they built momentum. They increased to two to three times a week. After six months they were posting almost every day looking back. Amelia says she would have started posting daily to the blog right from the beginning. But it's always better to pick up the pace as you go along than lose momentum by slowing down. They started out blogging just for parents but eventually expanded to have a separate log for each of their target audiences parents teachers and professionals altogether these blogs get over forty thousand page views a month they also started offering courses on you to though now they self host courses well sisters celebrated their first sale overtaxed even now more than two years into their business they still celebrate every sale with a text some days. It feels like texting all day long in addition to online courses accessible. Aba also offers three levels of membership per nine dollars a month or ninety five dollars a year members get self paced learning and downloadable content. They can pay a bit more and get all that plus monthly videos and a monthly free product. They can pay a bit more. Still get everything. Plus thirty minute monthly one on one call. Before the pandemic hit the sisters had plans to attend a couple of live events but when everything was cancelled they decided to double their efforts on the website they also put together some of the content they already had and self published a book on amazon called. Aba fundamentals for parents. Finally they're starting to post on youtube as a way to extend their reach ameliorate. Miss that is difficult as the pandemic has been it's also been a catalyst is pushed them to work even harder. They're bringing in around fifteen hundred dollars a month however they've really just started to focus on monetization for most of two thousand twenty. They were focused solely on growing the blog and developing those courses. The pandemic hasn't been the only challenge plus opportunity. They've also had to deal with moving to a new state. Changing jobs illnesses and kits despite the business. Amelia says. they've gained a lot from the experience. There's a feeling of control over the future. they don't get working for someone else. They know that if they want to make more money they have to come up with a better product or offer improve their marketing. Reach a new audience or take some other action one of those things or perhaps all of them is exactly what they plan to do.

Amelia Autism Amelia Bellefonds Youtube Diana Chris Amazon ABA
The College Football Champion Not in the Title Game

The Dan Patrick Show

01:49 min | 3 years ago

The College Football Champion Not in the Title Game

"How impressed for instance, were you With the way Ohio State showed up in the second semi final, especially given how they had looked throughout the season. Yeah, I was blown away. Jim. I just really was. I thought that I didn't think they could win, And I thought they may even get trucked a bit by Clemson just because I thought Clemson was playing in a much higher level and then Ohio State just stepped it up three levels, you know, and the way they X executed the way they performed Justin Fields, really One of the great performances I've seen from a quarterback, especially after nearly having his rib cage split in half. You know, just just courageous and brilliant. Um and Their defense played better trace sermon has been a monster. Lately. Their receivers are excellent. Their offensive line is excellent. S so they've got the ports and I think it's gonna be a real shootout in the final with Alabama at 40 My guest. I mean, amazing win for Ohio State an amazing performance. What about clumps? And what about the flipside? How bad of a loss was that for Clemson? It was bad. It was especially bad for Davos, Sweeney. You know who ran his mouth a bit. And you know, if you if you hand out that bulletin board material of putting Ohio State 11th and no that's gonna be public on then you you go out and get run over. That's a bad look and Davros had a great great run and it's it's going to continue. They've got really good players. You lose Trevor Moritz on even though the rest the next quarterback is really talented. He may not be Trevor Laurence. Yeah, You know, it's just a situation where They had a great as I said, a great run. But you may have missed a little bit of a window here with Trevor. They may still be a top. They should probably still be a top five program. They may eventually be a national champion again. Like you wonder if the last two years if they may be Mr Chance to add a second or third national title under travel on it before asking about the final really quickly when you look

Ohio Justin Fields Clemson JIM Trevor Moritz Trevor Laurence Sweeney Davros Alabama Trevor
Proper Radio Communications

Behind the Prop

05:20 min | 3 years ago

Proper Radio Communications

"What's walling. Hey bobby great this week. We are going to dive into another requests from a listener Thank you very much to corey. Mclean for giving us this idea. And it's all about proper radio techniques. I'm sure during all your check rides wally. You have heard some crazy stuff but I give me an idea give the listeners. An idea like how much bad radiotechnique dc. There's there's a lot of improper radiotechnique. I think the end of the day that the reason we talk on the radio is to communicate and so we want effective communication And can can. We communicate effectively using Maybe improper techniques we can. So there's there's kind of three levels of of communicating the way i look at it The the top level the the the one that we all wanna strive for. I would think is that we use Proper terminology and we. We communicate effectively The the i'm gonna skip to the absolute the the number three Scenario which is where we don't want to be is improper technique and ineffective communication And then somewhere in the middle is maybe improper technique but still effective communication. I mean i guess if you were in a an unfortunate situation an airplane and you screamed and yelled that you're on fire Maybe the controller may understand your predicament and Provide the necessary. help where you know. Obviously there's a better way to do that. rather than screaming over the Which i've never heard by the way But as what. I see as an observer and that's what i am as an examiner at an airplane. I'm an observer i'm not a crew member i i am not really even a pilot I'm just observing the check ride and making an evaluation. I see a lot of of applicants speaking to air traffic control and As i'm sitting back. I'm thinking well. They said something. But i don't think. Atc really understood what that person is saying and And you need to you know as a pilot we need to pick up on the fact that maybe. Atc didn't really understand what i was getting at or day didn't understand my request one example. I always give to applicants from. We're talking about this. I say okay for sitting in this briefing room. And i tell you that there's a bomb on the table and it's going to explode in sixty seconds I would expect the reaction out of you would expect you to maybe get up and run out of the room and i'd be right behind you But a lot of times we will say things their atc an atc will will respond But atc maybe didn't really get it sometimes. We have to read between the lines. So the i think the most important thing is effective communication. And there's all kinds of accident cases where there was not effective communication. Where you after. The fact We had an accident here in houston a couple of years ago with airplane running very low on fuel down at Hobby airport and Again after the fact we all listen to it and later everyday saying how. How could the controller. Not here in the voice of of this pilot that they were running out of fuel while the pilot never really said they were running out of fuel so bottom line is effective communication. And that's what we're we're trying to effect here is is communicating effectively between the pilot and the controller. The and i think when we get the request online to to talk about proper radio techniques. There's there's a that that could be. It could be many many shows. But we're gonna try and take some what. Wally sees someone what i see around the fly school every day and share some techniques. That will make you better on your communications and give you some best practices to you. So we're going to kind of talk about some guidance at a high level. And then we're gonna share some best practices and then we'll wrap it up and we're not just taking this from experience that there is a very crisp. There's chris guidance on how to use the radio right so we're gonna reference a section of the aim. Which is the article information manual. If you if you if you talk about or heard of the foreign name there really two books. I think when. I was a student pilot maybe even a private pilot. Maybe even an instrument pilot. I thought the foreign was one book. While don't i guess. I just told everybody knows but i thought it was one book but it's really two books. The aim is the back and it. It's really good collection of information.

Mclean Wally Corey Bobby Hobby Airport Houston Chris
Complexity's COO on Race to World First

Esports Network Podcast

02:25 min | 3 years ago

Complexity's COO on Race to World First

"We're talking about race to world first and complexity limit race. The world first is a competition between World of Warcraft guilds for bragging rights and massive achievement as we had bought a World of Warcraft Shadow. Let's raise the world's first complexity limited method are the two guilds likely to lead the race Sunday sports fans may not be aware of this particular competition is one of my blind spots in Esports as well. But luck with Kyle here to Rover what's fed is about why everyone should watch and how the broadcast production has evolved over the last few years. So Kyle I had to avoid while because it took me years to kick by Roots game addiction, but I do wow. Wow. A buffet that's a reduction by like five times so four people are familiar with Warcraft. What is the overview for race to world first? Yeah. I'm right in the same boat with you. I played well for many years and I got class and until our first race earlier this year. It got me hooked back in so it's it's a pretty exciting event. But on a high-level World of Warcraft rating takes 20 players in a concerted effort to defeat computer-generated scripted events or dungeons rates, whatever you want to call them and wage every 6 months or so blizzard the developer and publisher for World of Warcraft releases new dungeon and raid content. This concept has three levels normal heroic and the most difficult being Mythic and upon the release of Mythic content guilds from around the world assemble their best twenty players and some juice. Institutes analysts and coaches and try to become the first group in the world to defeat the the content and while mostly sports events are normally, you know a day or two thousand events can be quite long as this is extremely difficult content and often take a number of days. It's really interesting. There's so many unique things with it erased the World Cup that you don't see anywhere else a t sports events the length of competition just having twenty people working together in teamwork. The biggest other game teams are like six in a major use for it, right? There's no other sport that has anywhere above Ted people working together to try to accomplish a goal like this that I can have Battlefield. I want to say Battlefield 4 was nine players wage. That's right. I forgot about really took

Kyle Blizzard World Cup TED
Sustainable Meat with Diana Rodgers

Baby-Led Weaning Made Easy

04:40 min | 3 years ago

Sustainable Meat with Diana Rodgers

"So is a registered dietitian. I am so fascinated by your background. And i know you're registered dietitian as well as wondering if you could just tell our audience a little bit about the work you do and then how you got to be in a position where you are dietitian specializing in this very unique area. Yeah i mean my current. What i'm doing is i have a part time nutrition clinic where i help people i mostly focus on moms That's just who tends to gravitate towards me folks who are looking to either lose weight or fixed gut health. Those are the two specialties and actually lately though during covert i've had a ton of binge eating and stuff like that so it's really interesting to me kind of didn't really work a lot with that population but it's just kind of come out. I think of cove it. So i'm learning more about that. I think it's really interesting. And then the other part of my time just to mix things up a little bit. Is i just finished. Producing and directing film called sacred cow. The case for better meet. And i released the book this passer. So i'm doing a lot around the promotion and advocacy for especially meet the value of meat for women and children worldwide and. Really sort of debunking all of the concerns around meat so it's sort of attacked on three levels and it's really beef that i'm focused on but i'm pro all animals foods. But it's you know we've got the tricia arguments meets gonna cause cancer and heart disease and all of that. We've got the environmental case against me. Cowards are ruining the planet. They take to up too many resources. Why not just eat directly from crops. You know it's inefficient to eat me. And then we have all the ethical concerns of course around me and i address ethics last in the book because i feel that you really have to fully appreciate the nutritional environmental contribution that well raised. Animals can make before we can even talk about whether or not. It's okay to kill beautiful animals to eat them. Because it's you can't just start with that rate and how i got here is a little wind. E i had undiagnosed iliac disease as a child and was extremely malnourished and muscle tone. Basically everything i just went straight through me and i also had a lot of neurological issues from that to just like words swirling around the page kind of almost like dyslexia kind of thing and it wasn't until i was twenty six when i got diagnosed and i couldn't believe that you could be allergic to wheat. I mean i was like that's what people eat you know So really took me by surprise. And i gave up way and it did make a huge difference but i also at the same time still kept waiting my doctor saying. I think i'm diabetic. Like why. I need to eat every hour or two. I was always had my gluten free granola bars on me. All of that stuff. So i've always been interested in like. How do i fix myself. Because gosh if i miss lunch i have like tunnel. Vision asserts sweating in. You know just it was horrible and so i really entered the field of nutrition later in life just to figure out how to fix myself and at that point i then decided to become a dietician with two little kids and at the time it felt really overwhelming but i just decided i really wanted that medical credential. I wanted to be able to take insurance. And i wanted to have some credibility in the space and so having that medical credential of our d really was important to me for while the rating speaking i do and so i just made it my part time job basically to date biochemistry and all these courses that i didn't take undergrad is an art major and so it took me a very long time. It took me about seven years to complete it and it was really rough. Because i was already sold on no processed foods and kind of the real food. Wait life as going through the program and so it was tough for me. And especially when i was working in the hospitals and nursing homes. Where like boost is your only solution for. Everybody is just so depressing. So i'm really happy to be on the other side to have a private practice. Where i can help people who want to learn more about the new tradition and i don't have to necessarily follow guidelines of my boss telling me what to do in a more clinical setting

Iliac Disease Heart Disease Dyslexia Cancer
CFA Schedule Is Disrupted Again With December Exams Canceled

Bloomberg Daybreak

00:45 sec | 3 years ago

CFA Schedule Is Disrupted Again With December Exams Canceled

"CF candidates are going to have to wait a little longer to take their tests. The CF a institute is canceling December exams in 37 locations around the world. We get that story from Bloomberg's Charlie Pellet December dates for the chartered financial analyst exam have been scrubbed in 13 cities. Including New York, San Francisco and Chicago, as well as 11 in India. The institute says it may announce additional postponements in coming weeks. The move again disrupts the plans of test takers, hoping to earn a CF a credential, bypassing all three levels of the most challenging test in finance. The institute had earlier postponed its joon exam. Candidates will be able to reschedule for dates in 2021 Charlie

Financial Analyst Bloomberg New York India San Francisco Chicago
How to Conduct the Right Sales Conversation

Daily Sales Tips

05:08 min | 3 years ago

How to Conduct the Right Sales Conversation

"Tip comes from Scott Roy. Scott is the CEO of Whitman Roy partner. He spent his lifetime building and running large direct sales organizations and co-founded a billion-dollar Nationwide Insurance Company in the US. He's also the co-author of the brand new book decision intelligence selling. Hi my tip for you today is how to create both concern and urgency in your customer to act and to buy from you. If you're a salvage sales person, you've already figured out that you should initiate your sales conversations by focusing on the problems the customer has and not by starting with your Solutions good sales people know this month, but still I see so many of them fail to do it or to do it. Well, so today, I want to cover the key skills around problem definition that drive the pace and the certainty of the sale this month. Ability transforms good sales people into great ones. Generally, there are for sales behaviors. I observed in sales people starting with the least effective in building from there to what I would call a standard the first kind of sales person assumes that they know the problems faced by the customer because they've had some training and their experience with other customers who are in a similar situation. They tend also to assume that the customer is aware of their own problems. And so this salesperson presents the product or service quite quickly and hopes, they spark the customers interest and then that's for the close. It's the most ineffective form of person-to-person selling the second kind of sales person listens to the customers challenges, but only long enough to hear the problem. They can solve then the dive into pitching their solution in trying to persuade the customer to buy this approach has a better chance for connecting the solution to a problem actually felt by the customer, but the check Bizarre that the sale is less certain the customer is going to have more doubts and will take longer than you want because the customer isn't really experiencing a deeper concern or an urgency to buy off. Now the Third Kind of salesperson is actually getting pretty good. They show genuine concern and empathy for the customer and they're actually expressing curiosity in their situation. They own know that listening deeply to the customers problems is primarily for the customers benefit not theirs and it helps the customer to build up their concern about the impact these problems have on them by lingering longer during the problem definition of the sales process. They create more engaged buyers who are attracted by the experience that you're providing them and because of this you'll close more sales, but actually there's a fourth level of selling that is reserved for the truly great ones. They do everything that the third level seller does plus one more thing off. They take the time to help the customer estimate the cost of the problems they have if they are not addressed and solved so they don't tell the customer the cost of their problems. They actually lead them through a brief back-of-the-envelope calculation and come up with an annual or multi-year cost of doing nothing about the problem. Then they asked based on the problems. We've defined a cost you've estimated. Is this a problem worth solving if the number is big enough the customer will proceed with urgency to find a solution and if it's a fit they'll likely by month. So in summary take the time to really listen to your customer Dig deeply into the problems. They have estimate the cost of the problem and ask the critical question. Is this problem serious enough and costly enough that you want to solve it. And if it's a yes then present Your solution to fit the well-defined problem. Now what have led you through today as a brief overview. You have the first two steps of what it's called decision intelligence selling or DQ sales for short just like IQ and EQ are about intellectual and emotional intelligence DQ selling is all about leading buyers through a set of Common Sense steps that help them make Intelligent Decisions. Now, they won't know how to do this. You must lead them through the process step-by-step DQ sellers are committed to help customers make the best possible decision by building their decision intelligence. They do this other customers by exploring for subjects thoroughly. And in this order first, it's the problem second. It's the cost of the problem if it goes unsolved third month. It's the solution to the problem and forth It's the value of the solution you're bringing this framework can be applied to short cycle one call sales all the way up to wage. Complex multi-million deals that require many conversations over a long period of time, but always the four major steps must be covered to greatly increase the customers competition to buy and your chances of making the sale.

Scott Roy United States Whitman Roy Nationwide Insurance Company CEO Partner Scott
How Much Vitamin D is Right for Me?

Green Wisdom Health Podcast by Dr. Stephen and Janet Lewis

05:39 min | 3 years ago

How Much Vitamin D is Right for Me?

"Hello and welcome to this week's edition of the Green Wisdom Hell show I'm Janet Lewis after Louis and we are going to educate you today a little bit of `Bout Vitamin D. a lot of you already know about vitamin D or You're beginning to learn it. But I think that you know one of the burning questions that we seem to be having is how much vitamin D is right for me and there's really It's different for everyone and there was a book called optimal dose that Dr Louis Read. There was some other of our. Clients that ask about that book they wanted to know well, how much do I take because? I think it was very high levels and Dr Lewis is going to answer all that for you. Today he's going to help you discern how much is right for you because there are other factors involved as I just loading up on a bunch of D. and he's going to tell. You what can happen when you do too much of that, and we are also going to answer a whole lot of questions that we've received from our audience via our shooting straight with Dr Louis facebook group, and if you're not a member of that, all you have to do is go there and ask for yourself to be invited in either by email or send him A. Message on facebook and he'll accept shooting be part of our community. You can also answer or ask US questions online. There's an online forum for the PODCAST. So anything we don't cover here today that you still want to know or any other topic Please reach out to us that way we try to work it all in and make it a very enjoyable show. So Dr Louis. Vitamin D seems to be the thing immune system right now can you tell us how much what the difference is and is there anything wrong which is loading up on it? You ever been just one drink away from telling people what you really think. Never. have been quite often Yeah, you know I'm GonNa talk a lot about this, and you know it's absolutely amazing facebook The shooting straight has been a good thing. There's people that follow me there that actually work for some really big. Supplement. Companies. Which is afforded US Janet and may an opportunity to do some really big things I was called salt of the Earth yesterday which I thought was funny. In longhorn Texas as well as we thought, that was even funnier. We've renamed our town from Longview to Longhorn now I I love it. I guess SOCI- eight that we owe steers and Texas I. was kind of funny Yeah. But I've got lots of and this all started about five years ago when I was on a podcast as guests from Jack, Speer Co, the survival podcast, and he is crazy crazy smart, incredibly intelligent. man he he really knows what he's talking about and he's tastes certainly blonde by giving his opinion and you need to listen to him. But I got a lot of people from being on his podcast and people would say there I'm taking five thousand or ten thousand years and you know of course I'm looking at Lamma. It's not working. But I'm taking over ten thousand I said, it's not working MO- supplements don't work. And some of them are actually very toxic to you and there's reasons for that too. I finally did the percentages on it with the help of my count it because I'm not good at percentages good Lord I skipped that class in high school probably when fishing or something and ninety three percent of what people were buying and taking not working ninety three percents your odds of getting something niche. Good. Yeah and Jack Speer Co was talking about it and again spare 'cause a really crazy smart guy. You check him out he's he's really good he. He'll tell you what to do during times of stress and trouble where I'm just good for telling you how to be healthy, which is not bad too but. And I was in Tulsa. and. He he was talking about that Nina is getting involved in his facebook group and he said, well, you ought order this book and you know it'll change your per-. Paradigm about what you think about bottom of day and I said with the books already been ordered. It's on the way coast read books all day long. And Yeah, I don't know this change paradigm I try to push it in any way but I do think what this book outlines, which this guy says take thirty thousand a day. It's like one Manana don't do that not without testing and that this is from the book. Now from Jack Sparrow one of the things that people talk about is I can't sleep dog do you have any kind of thing for sleep? Well, if you're low in Vitamin D. That can cause you to not sleep well. At date threes plays a very pivotal role in the body achieving the state needed for deep sleep and very, very important and I have people at tight. You know five, thousand, ten, thousand and some it gets them up for you need to be I think the sweet spots hundred. Seventy, five or this book says more than that, and there's no evidence of it being toxic, but there's more to that some teach you that. But when you're three levels are optimal, you your your immune system, the depth of sleep in the rest that you get there and your metabolism, your metabolism becomes primed to function more edge greatest potential.

Dr Louis Janet Lewis Facebook Jack Jack Speer Co Jack Sparrow Longhorn Texas Texas Longview Speer Co Lamma Nina Tulsa.