40 Burst results for "Three Year"

Mark Levin
Newt Gingrich: McCarthy Outmaneuvered Biden on Debt Ceiling Talks
"You're going to lose if the other side has the courage to stand firm. And the fact is that for over 100 days, McCarthy kept saying, and he went to the news media, he got more press coverage. If you go back and look at it, it's amazing how clear he was in communicating through the media despite their liberal bias because he just kept saying over over, and you know, we want to get this solved. And the key there was that the House Republican Conference actually passed a debt ceiling bill with real reforms. And therefore, the Senate Republicans, to my great shock, came out and said we are for McCarthy. And Mitch McConnell, who negotiated many of these deals, said, I'm not in this. This is McCarthy's opportunity. We're going to back McCarthy. And that in put a him position, and the reason I think this really matters in the long run, Mark, is if the center of gravity in Washington becomes the House Republicans, they are the most conservative group in the city, more much conservative than the Senate and obviously dramatically more conservative than the Biden White House. Now the question be will between the investigation process and the effort that they're going to put into the appropriations bills. Can they build on this? I tell everybody, if the debt ceiling was the final deal, I would have voted no. But if it's the first step in setting up a rhythm of winning, we keep so getting more and more goodies, then it's a very important yes. And I say that because if you read, the Mark, majority, you'll figure out, you know, we didn't jump to a balanced budget. We had three years of constant work, gradually inch by inch, getting Clinton in a position where a once balanced budget became possible. I think in this case, I don't think Biden's going to last three years. So the question is, can we get through 2023 2024 and be in a great position in January of 25 with a Republican president, Republican House, Republican Senate, to really drive dramatic, bold, deep

News, Traffic and Weather
Fresh update on "three year" discussed on News, Traffic and Weather
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AP News Radio
US safety agency to require automatic emergency braking on new vehicles and set tougher standards
"The national highway traffic safety administration wants to require all new passenger cars and light trucks include potentially lifesaving automatic emergency braking and meet stricter safety standards within three years. This is another step toward regulating electronic systems responsible for what drivers usually do on their own. Nets a chief council and Carlson says they want breaks to be effective at much higher speeds. We're also including what we call full collision avoidance. That means that a vehicle has to stop without touching another vehicle in front of it. The systems would allow vehicles to fully avoid other vehicles at up to 50 mph if a driver doesn't react. With this proposal, we could change a high speed crash from a deadly one to a lower speed crash with minor injuries or just property damage. Nietzsche says 90% of new passenger vehicles already include the braking technology. Ed Donahue, Washington.

Bloomberg Wall Street Week
Fresh update on "three year" discussed on Bloomberg Wall Street Week
"Raise 125 million dollars over the next three years to help end the AIDS epidemic. But I can't do this alone. I need you to play a big role in our mission. Help us spread the word by letting your inner I out. want to see you in your best ever Elton -inspired look. Think sequins, feathers, bright colours and big glasses. Or whatever makes you feel your true self. Post a picture or video and share why you support the Rocket Fund and its mission to help end AIDS. And make sure to tag me and the Elton John AIDS Foundation at EJAF. What are you doing with your phone? pictures? Taking No, I'm asking it questions. Like what? Hey Bobo, do flowers have best friends? I'm sorry, I'm afraid I don't know that. Hey follow something. Look, flowers do have best friends. Woah. Some answers can only be found in nature. Discover the unsearchable. Visit discovertheforest .org to find a trail near you. Brought to you by the United

The Dan Bongino Show
Vivek Ramaswamy: The Secret of Geo-Politics
"I agree with your premise and there is a lot of a kind of a potemkin village component to China where the threat is real and significant and could be extremely destructive be a war like we've never seen but the hard reality is Vivek our military we have what 11 aircraft carriers I think they would have won in their construct in a few months I mean we've actually been in combat The Chinese Communist Party I don't think they understand like it's one thing to talk about playing a football game and it's a whole other thing to get on the field with the cowboys and start playing the game right It's a different it's a totally different animal I think that we have more strength than we give ourselves credit for especially economically But Dan it requires the willingness to make some short run sacrifice You know at declaring independence from China I think we can actually do it more easily I have studied the supply chains if we're willing to use Korea and Japan and India and Australia It becomes a little bit more digestible It's not that hard but it will involve some short run sacrifice but it's like my parents taught me You can make a sacrifice if you know what your sacrificing for And that is this thing we call America Thinking on the time scales of history instead of election cycles that's a little bit more of what we need And the secret of geopolitics It's like a business is that it's when you're most willing to make a sacrifice that you won't have to actually make one at all but the thing we've missed for the last 40 years now over the last three years is four to two in The White House and not just fortitude but I think a president who is compromised Literally by our top enemies financially Why do you said

Morning News with Manda Factor and Gregg Hersholt
Fresh "Three Year" from Morning News with Manda Factor and Gregg Hersholt
"At the scene. Police say they're cooperating but it's unclear if drugs or alcohol were involved. Northwest News Time 110. Time for an update on sports from the Beacon Plumbing Sports Desk and Bill Swartz. The Jeweless Storm looked for a Friday night win on the home court. Leading scorer or Jewell Lloyd dealing with a foot injury will not be in a Seattle uniform tonight when they host the Washington Mystics. Sunday the Storm retires Sue Bird's Jersey 10 in the Climate Pledge Arena Rafters. The only other player with that honor, number 15 Lauren Jackson. Miami Heat have the home court tonight trying to even up the NBA Finals at 2 -2 against Denver. A Seattle Mariner player signing before the August 1st major league trade deadline. MLB Network reports the MSAV inked veteran infielder D .D. Gregorius to a minor league deal. The Mariners at halftime launch a series tonight in Anaheim against the Angels and their ace Shohei Otani. It's Luis Castillo throwing for Seattle. The Sounders when they play Charlotte FC. Coach Brian Schmetzer has his soccer team training in that new stadium this evening. just get a feel for you know sight lines and what it looks like what it feels like because is a it new stadium that we haven't been to before. And the OL Rain have a Saturday night home soccer match at Lumen Field against Kansas City Current. Sports was swore to 10 and 40 after the hour. Northwest News Radio. Northwest News Time 111. We're hearing from the NFL coach who recently saved a drowning Matt Gutman. Ellie Rams defensive coordinator Rahim Morris scooping up three -year -old Wyatt who nearly died in his arms two weeks ago. Truly a miracle

AP News Radio
German prosecutor says clues to McCann child disappearance possible at dam site
"A German prosecutor says clues to the Disappearance of Madeleine McCann, the British child who went missing in 2007 in Portugal a possible at a Portuguese dam site. The latest search for clues regarding the disappearance started on Tuesday, following a quest by German authorities, some 30 Portuguese German and British police are taking part in the search operation at the dam, which is located about 30 miles from the resort of pra da lush, where the three year old girl was last seen 16 years ago. In Germany, prosecutor Christian Walters told German broadcaster NDR,

Stephanie Miller
Fresh update on "three year" discussed on Stephanie Miller
"Losing you can't find any empirical data that the right is winning you ask about abortion support for abortion being legal in most situations is higher than ever during the Roe v. Wade era today support for gay marriage higher than ever so that's why the right is trying to steal elections and it in is the data that David Pakman show with the evenings at 10 on WCPT 820 Chicago's progressive talk I've always gotten tons of UTIs cranberry products never worked for me and I was desperate for a way to be proactive I'm Jenna Ryan CEO and founder of Eucora we've worked with doctors to develop effective urinary tract health products Eucora is helping over 100 women stay healthy ready to join them get 30 % off at Eucora .com slash radio that's Eucora not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease this is a WCPT better admit it when thinking of the revolutionary war many think of George Washington and Benjamin Franklin however you know the name of the man who is believed to be the creator of the American Army Karen Frederick von Steuben three years into the war Benjamin Franklin recommended von Steuben Washington to due to his military experience with the Prussian military Franklin also

AP News Radio
NFL commissioner Roger Goodell's contract reportedly to be extended to March 2027
"Agreed on the framework of a three year contract extension that will keep him in place until 2027. Indianapolis Colts owner Jim irsay confirmed Tuesday at the league meetings. Goodell's current deal expires in 2024. He has been commissioner of the league since replacing Paul tagliabue in 2006. Says he's under the impression Goodell will retire after the extended contract expires and be involved in the development of a potential successor. I'm geffen coolbaugh.

The Maverick Paradox Podcast
Fresh update on "three year" discussed on The Maverick Paradox Podcast
"Okay, that's great. So thank you for that. Let's listen to a quick advert. The Maverick Paradox. Judith Germain is an author, speaker, consultant, mentor and trainer and the leading authority on Maverick leadership. She is the founder of the Maverick Paradox, which supports organizations to enhance their leadership capabilities and to help business owners develop and grow their businesses. Judith enables individuals, business owners and organizations to improve their impact and influence. She is also HR Zones leadership columnist and her expert opinion has appeared in national, international and trade press. Welcome back to the Maverick Paradox. This is the podcast for the pathologically curious. I'm wondering whether there are some key highlights. So if someone's going to compose a story that is inspired, I'm wondering if is there something that must be in it to make it an inspired story compared to just a marketing story? Because I think there are so many marketing stories where people hit stuff. I mean, as you know, can I lift off the streets and then three years later, I'm a millionaire and I have to nothing happen. You know, it's just, it's just, it's like the, like the hard luck part is really, it's not like a little bit bad. It's like really bad. And then the, and then the, the response is minor. Like, you know, anyone could do this one thing that I did. And now I have trillions of dollars, you know, I'm doing X, Y and Z. And it just, I'm over the first two or three times you've heard a story like that. It's just like, that's amazing. But now there's like a hundred million, you can see, I like to exaggerate a story similar to that. And you just like, even if they were true, you no longer believe them. It's like, okay, so we know the pathway of the journey and you've hit all those points and I just don't, I still don't believe you. And that's the thing is the believability has to do with that integrity, has to do with that truthfulness and honesty, even when sometimes it's not as pretty.

AP News Radio
Police in Portugal resume search for Madeleine McCann, British child missing since 2007
"Portuguese police have resumed searching for Madeleine McCann, the British toddler, who disappeared in the country's Algarve region in 2007. Media assemble as police teams arrive on erect tents and coltons in the area by the ara de dam, about 30 miles from where the three year old was last seen alive on Monday, Portuguese judicial police released a statement confirming local media reports that they would conduct the search at the request of the German authorities, and in the presence of British officials, in mid 2020, Germany's police identified Christine bruckner a 45 year old German citizen who was in the Algarve in 2007 as a suspect in the case. Has denied any involvement. I'm Charles De Ledesma.

CoinDesk Podcast Network
Tornado Cash Attacker Submits Proposal to Undo Attack
"Kind of got an odd one to start the day off with Wendy O, what's going on with tornado cash? This one's kind of crazy. So apparently, yesterday, there was an attacker that took over tornado cashed out with vote fraud. The token apparently dumped 40%, but the attacker offered to undo the attack, which is all very interesting considering what's happened with tornado cash. So the latest update, the attacker submitted a proposal that would undo the changes to the Dow if the proposal passes the malicious code that the attacker integrated into the protocol will be removed and the governance of tornado caches down will go back to token holders, voting closes May 26th and apparently torn was up 10% on this news. It was really bizarre that this happened on a Sunday, but I feel like a lot of the crypto news is starting to come out on Sundays from what we've seen this last year. Will you're a little bit more technical than I am. Do you want to talk about this a bit? I mean, it kind of seems like I should put my tinfoil crown on. I don't know though. Anything with tornado cash, you definitely should. An interesting problem for tornado cash started going back two or three years to their torn token, which they launched to kind of be like all the other products out there to have a Dow to be a DeFi protocol that has some sort of governance scheme, it was a very hot topic. Also give some liquidity for early people who invested in tournament cash protocol and wanted to get some money for what they built. Unfortunately, for a product for their cash, a token really didn't make sense because of the privacy implications. And now we're seeing even further issues where it seems the governance wasn't set up correctly. There were some bugs involved with it. And someone was able to exploit the underlying code to mint themselves a bunch of new tokens and then take over the entire governance scheme. They essentially meant to themselves so many tokens that the only vote that mattered was their votes. Now we're seeing something that I don't think many people thought would occur and that is that the person now in control of governance might undo everything they did. And just sort of show that this was a white hack or maybe a gray hack, a torn token has been down on the news, but it has been back up since by about 10% since the news about the possible reconfiguration and governance has been going through.

AP News Radio
California, Arizona, Nevada offer landmark drought deal to use less Colorado River water -- for now
"Three western states are offering a landmark drought deal to use less Colorado River water for now. I'm Lisa dwyer. Arizona, California, and Nevada have proposed a deal to significantly cut their water use from the drought stricken Colorado River over the next three years. It's a potential breakthrough at a stalemate over how to deal with a rising problem that pitted western states against one another. The river provides water to 40 million people in 7 U.S. states, parts of Mexico and more than two dozen Native American tribes. The plan would conserve an additional 3 million acre feet of water from the river, an acre foot of water is roughly enough to serve two to three U.S. households annually. Cities irrigation districts and Native American tribes in those states will receive federal funding in exchange for temporarily using less water. I'm Lisa dwyer

The Dan Bongino Show
Calling All Dermatologists: Help Dan Bongino
"There's this thing On my index finger right I've got this vertical line in my nail It's this white line like really white It's not dark it's a white lines vertical not horizontal It's not one of those horizontal white lines you get They have a name I know what that is This is vertical because all the way down to the nail bed And it's been there for like three years or so I never thought anything of it I think I showed it to a doctor once and I remember him saying anything about it but I'm reading this story yesterday in New York Post And it's the craziest thing I see it on I think the truth or Twitter It's like woman goes to a manicurist there And saves her life and I'm like what is this about And I see a picture of the snail and it turns out the manicure is that these women had the same thing although the line was brown which is obviously different It turned out that she had some really serious melanoma growing underneath the nail bed and I'm like that's it I'm dead I am so dead I am dead And you know the first rule of the Dan bongino show is don't get that right So I don't want to get that So you know my Facebook page you know I leave it open for messages If you have any expertise in this you're a dermatologist and oncologist whatever gist you are What does that mean It is a white line in my index fingernail goes all the way down It's been there forever Never changes color It's not dark Am I going to die or something So I'm going to go to Facebook here and if you guys know what that is let me know because I don't want to violate the first rule of my show which is don't get that I've read that story The lady had to have parts of her finger removed I was like oh my gosh I can't go through another one I just got out of three surgeries I can't afford anymore Said the PT over my house yesterday Calcium First response Jacqueline rose Thank you Jack I mean calcium deposit is I don't know Is that what it is Are you guessing You could save my life your Jack Do you have any experience here in

The Charlie Kirk Show
A Fundamental, Unwanted Transformation of America
"Was watching some of the, they call it conservative media last week. This show obviously did a fabulous job, but most of the conservative media was just, they were dancing around the issue of what's happening on the southern border. It was, it's very vanilla, very light. It's very careful because they don't want to talk about the issue of what's really going on in our southern border. They're playing patty cake with the issue. They say, oh, this is how you know. This is the big tell. The big tell. Is if they call what's happening on the southern border, migration. Oh, it's just migration. It's no different than just how the geese go down to Florida in the winter. And then they come back up. It's just a normal flow of people. And how many conservative media people were just parroting this? And not even giving any thoughts. What exactly is happening here? And in fact, some people are saying, oh, well, this is just, this is chaos. This is out of control. This is a paperwork processing issue. You're all afraid to get down to what's really going on here. You see, this is planned chaos, which is hilarious in some ways. Because this regime previously, we were living through absolute planned tyranny for the last three years. Can't go to church because of a virus, can't go to, can't go to your local small business. We're going to contact trace you. So we have lived through some awfully tyrannical times and now we're supposed to believe that the same people that one of the contact trace us force a vaccine spy on us. They can't secure the border. No, no, no. What's happening on the southern border is exactly what they want to have happen. And this is the thing that most conservatives are afraid to mention because it gets down to something that the opposition media comes with remarkable hostility. You can't say it. You see, what's happening on the southern border. This is not immigration, okay? This is even more than an invasion. This is a planned transformation of the country. That's right. This is a planned, deliberate transformation of our republic.

AP News Radio
NYC converts hotels to shelters as pressure mounts to accommodate asylum seekers
"New York City will open a migrant center at a midtown Manhattan hotel as pressure mounts to accommodate asylum seekers. The Roosevelt hotel on east 45th street closed three years ago will eventually provide as many as a thousand rooms for migrants, according to mayor Eric Adams, the asylum seekers are expected to arrive in the coming weeks because of the expiration of title 42 that allowed federal officials to turn them away. The mayor says the city is running out of room and has come up with other plans that send migrants to hotels in other counties, but still take care of their food and basic needs. He says the city has now cared for more than 65,000 asylum seekers already opening up over a 140 emergency shelters. Many of his plans have been met with criticism and opposition, Julie Walker, New York

AP News Radio
Doomsday plot: Idaho jury convicts woman in murders of 2 children, romantic rival
"And Idaho jury is convicted a woman of killing two children and rheumatic rival. I Norman hall. Idaho mother Lori vallo de bell has been convicted of the murders of her two youngest children and romantic rival. The verdict follows a three year investigation that included bizarre claims that her son and daughter were zombies and she was a goddess sent to usher and the biblical apocalypse. Prosecutors described valada bell as a power hungry manipulator who would kill her two youngest children for money while the defense team said she was normally a protected mother who fell under the dramatic sway of a wannabe cult leader valada bell's 5th husband Chad daybell faces the same charges, but his trial is still months away. I Norman hall

The Charlie Kirk Show
Sheriff Mark Lamb Comments on Mayorkas' Plan to Undermine America
"Highlight something for you sheriff. Bill melus put out a tweet. He said, FYI, when you hear DHS secretary mayorkas say that migrants are placed into removal proceedings, that does not mean they are being removed. Sometimes it does, but a large majority of the time it means release with future court date, that is part of title 8 removal proceedings. Well, then he follows that up here with this is a news nation reporter on the board. He says, I'm speaking with Venezuelan migrants in El Paso who have been released with NTA's notice to appear with a court date in 2026. 2026, they get a three year Visa basically. Well, you beat me to it. I was actually telling you that the average core date was two to four years now. It's about three to 5 years from now. So they give them the ability to come into this country and not be held accountable for coming into this country illegally. They're giving them court dates from who knows when. And you don't have enough judges to process all the thousands of people that are covered. Hey, and so imagine, are those court dates ever even going to happen? And they have the statistic for those who show back up to court is extremely low. So basically, they know that once we let them in, the likelihood of them actually going through the process and becoming legal is very low, but yet they continue to do it. They know the damage this is causing yet they're refusing. They're turning a blind eye to it. And to me, it feels like it's on purpose that they are actually undermining this country. You're doing it at the southern border. It's basically like they've looked at how can we screw this up the most royally possible, let's do that.

The Eric Metaxas Show
Eric Brings Dr. Simone Gold and Brandon Straka Together
"I have the joy and the privilege of sitting with two friends to warriors for freedom, Brandon struck, and doctor Simone gold in the same room together. I've interviewed you separately, but I thought it'd be fun to have a few minutes to talk to the two of you together because you have some things in common, why don't we talk about those things? Let's do it. You ready? I'm ready. You ready? Mmm um. All right, what do you guys have in common? Fashion? There you go. That's good. We both get into a lot of trouble. Yes. Troublemakers. Right. Yeah. Well, seriously, what you have in common is pretty dramatic. Both of you have suffered at the hands of tyrannous elements within our own government, not that there's anything wrong with tyranny, who are we to judge. But you both have. And so I think it's what endears you both to me is that you've been willing to put yourselves out there in a way most people aren't. And so let me start with you, Simone. What is it in you that you think enabled you to be a voice to be a face in the midst of the madness when everybody's sitting back and thinking, I don't know what to do. You stepped up. What do you suppose it was in you that enabled you to do that? I think everybody faces those moments in their daily life. I don't think I'm unique in facing those challenges. So one day I was at work as an emergency physician and there was a patient in front of me who needed early treatment for COVID and the government said I couldn't do it and the hospital said I couldn't do it. And I remember thinking, well, that's nonsense. The person in front of me needed that. And I knew that I'd face repercussions for doing it. But it was not relevant to me in the moment of the question and the query from the person in front of me. Everything that has happened in the three years since it was April of 2020 has followed from that one decision. So I urge everyone that in their daily life, every day you have a crossroad, a decision to make every day you're going to do the right thing in the wrong thing

AP News Radio
Texas mall shooting victims include guard, young sisters
"More details are emerging about the victims of the weekend mass shooting in Texas. I Norman hall, the people killed by a gunman at a mall near Dallas include two elementary school aged sisters, a couple and their three year old son, and a young engineer from India. The victims represent a multicultural cross section of the metropolitan area's increasingly diverse suburbs, also killed at the outdoor shopping center where three members of a Korean American family, a couple and one of their sons who was three, and other son was wounded, and assisted manager at the mall's Tommy Hilfiger, said she was devastated to learn the day after running for her life that wanted to dad was a 20 year old security guard who previously worked at the clothing store and often stopped in to chat. He had escorted her to a car a few days prior. I Norman hall

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
President Biden Addresses Nationwide Negativity
"President Biden gets a chance to answer the low approval numbers he's burdened with. Why do you think you're polling is where it is? Well, I don't think, by the way, every major one who won reelection deploying numbers for mine are now. We're polling aside then, right? Sentiment in this country, despite all these wins, it's not very good. I think all they've heard is negative news for three years. Everything is negative. I'm not being critical of the press, but you turn on the television. No longer you're going to get a hit as if there's something negative. Anyway,

Nudge
An Interview With One of London’s Most Well-Known Black Cabbies
"I'm Tom Hutley. I'm 31 years old, London taxi driver. So in 2020, I had a bit of an identity crisis. Of course, you know, pandemic happens, stay at home, you're not allowed to go to work. So I'm thinking, well, if I can't drive my taxi, what am I? What can I do? So I got on YouTube and I was like, I'm just going to make videos about taxi driving, you know, the nuanced stuff, you know, what are passengers like? 75 ,000 people subscribe to Tom's videos, and over 6 million people have watched him driving around London. Most people who do watch Tom are surprised by something. They are surprised that he entirely navigates London without a GPS. Some cab drivers do use a GPS in their cab, but it's more used as a tool. We're not being directed by it. My analogy I would always use is that if you look at a professional chef, they can go into the kitchen, they can make any sort of like, you know, standard kind of recipe, and they can just do it by like intuition. I'll have a pinch of that, I'll do a bit of this, or I'm cooking for this person, I might change the recipe a little bit. Whereas the sat nav, using a sat nav is like going from a cookbook. We can all cook from a cookbook, but it might not turn out as well as what professional chef does. And the professional chefs can be more efficient, they might be able to get it done sooner, have that bit of flair about it. And that's what it's like being a taxi driver. From day to day, the same route I will take one day might not be the same the next day, even 10 minutes apart, you know, because something might have happened on the street, which then influences a small corner of London. And then that then has knock on effects across the rest of London. So how on earth does Tom navigate 25 ,000 streets in London without needing a GPS? Well, he's studied something called the knowledge. So I'll just introduce the knowledge of London. It's capital T, capital K. It's fascinating, even just the name of it just sounds so like prestigious, the knowledge and I'm like, wow. And it's the normalised process examination that us London cab drivers has had since around 1851. Its routes go back to the great exhibition held in Hyde Park during the reign of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. And basically the cab drivers, we've had taxis in London since the 17th century, we was first licensed by Oliver Cromwell, but taxi drivers would frequently get drunk, they would crash their carts of horses and stuff. It was astonishing that we still have a taxi trade today based upon those Hackney carriage drivers of the 18th, 19th century. So they brought in this formalised process called the knowledge whereby the drivers had to learn the streets that they were driving on. So if someone said taxi driver, take me to, they would know exactly where they were going. But yeah, effectively a character building exercise because of how long it would take to get your badge. In those sort of days back in the times of the great exhibition, it might have taken a year or so to do the formalised study to then eventually get to a badge. In my time, it took three years and the average sits around between two and four years. And as we can allude to that the knowledge basically involves learning just about anywhere within London within a six mile radius of Charing Cross, which is roughly the geographical centre of

AP News Radio
Kentucky Derby races on amid 6th death, scratched favorite
"Forte was the 5th scratch from the Derby in the days leading up to the $3 million race for three year olds. He'd been the early three to one favorite, Chloe's dream a gilding that ran on the undercard, got hurt in the second race Saturday. The horse was taken off in an equine ambulance with a right front knee injury and was euthanized, according to a trainer who said the horse just took a bad step. Meanwhile, new anti doping and medication rules enforced by a central governing body of the sport are scheduled to take effect May 22nd, I'm Julie Walker

The Angry Therapist Podcast
"three year" Discussed on The Angry Therapist Podcast
"Doesn't have to be bad like there's beauty in the contrast you know over the three years because because in the beginning i thought because we have different sense of humor i mean i mean. Sometimes we have the same but generally speaking like vanessa was. Show me something. You'll get nothing from me. Or i'll show her something. She may rule her eyes. So we're on a different on different page with humor. And i used to in the beginning like oh well. That's like one leg of a table gone you know. that's one. Piston added the engine. That's not working. But what happens is as you start to appreciate other things about the person and you put you know different weight on other things like like you know. Vanessa has a lot of capacity which is important to me is emotionally intelligent all of that. Then you actually start to see Now when you think something is funny. Even if i don't i still think it's like adorable. He doesn't bother me that. I don't think it's funny. I accept it. You accept my love for pumps. Yeah not big word. play on words. I think i did say something with words. That really makes you laugh. I think one time. And i thought it was really dumb. Yeah i love dumb word. Play pong immer i i love humor. Where situational and unexpected right. I don't like jokes like if someone says john. I have a joke for you. A hundred percent. I'm not gonna laugh but but but if someone does something where they're trying to falls and hurts themselves. Are you going to laugh at that. Yes especially if they do it in a way where it's unexpected. I would probably laugh at an at the time where it's like he was someone runs into a if they're trying to go out and the patio but they have a glass door but they think it's open but it's not to me that's funny right so anyway the the three yeah. I think it's something for me to look at you know It's something for me to discover you know it's something for me to Kind of examine and sit with in. And i know you know. There's always something deeper happening right. It's not just about the surface of it's about What's happening on a deeper level. That is a kind of lead lives of subconscious. That is making me either. Pull away or question or react or all of that stuff. Yeah i you have made comments before about how. Maybe you left the other relationships too early like you don't know but you've thought about maybe maybe i didn't. I don't know it's try hard enough or whatever but you know the interesting ac- different house and we have a kid right for. I'll be curious to see as we transition into this next year. What comes up rio. And and i hope that you share with me while i hope that as you are in this. You're not waiting from the bleachers watching me but you are engaged and in it because there's also a part of you that may be like. Oh it's three years it. He you know he's gonna turn pumpkin and.

The Angry Therapist Podcast
"three year" Discussed on The Angry Therapist Podcast
"I don't think it's outdated. I think it's a lot less now especially with how fast time going. Swipe culture You know i think also just the rising divorce Well we live in a culture where there's always something better around the quarter of slow. I think that's seven. Years has now become a three rich. Okay so get into that. So why do you think it is for you. That three was the make or break. I don't know. I think in so if look at my relationships I mean you're right. I think so too of my relationships. I left both around three years and i've only been in okay so there's one a may have only been in say a four relationships for five and they've all been three years plus around three years and so kind of spans all the way into my twenties. I i've only been. There was a long stretch that i was single. That was for about five years and I know. I know. I chant being this whole thing single on purpose of Just know unlike me. Couldn't i didn't have a choice but to be single during that time but it was when i was going through my rebirth But yeah three years was is generally. The i think a lot of stuff happened subconsciously. I think I don't think it's one thing. I think there's a lot of things you know. I think it three years. You He okay let me break it down. The first. the first six months is is just a dopamine exploration. You know discovering bodies and It's kinda fiery. it's it's exciting. You're getting to know someone you know. in the year goes by quick so after a year on it should still be good. No one's doing chairs jet. It's it's not the telemundo episode jet. And then i think when you move in. That's the the next act break when you move in with someone now. You see the dirty socks on the floor right now. You see now vanessa. H-how i put the dishes away so like putting in for dishes in starting the dishwasher right. I see how. What makes a anxious. And i see you know. She's super organized. And then you know and so There's also might have a way you know a may be compromising because living together is a constant thing and even something like snoring or something like you know the way that someone fourth like things can start bothering you right. And so if you're not someone who Tends to look inward. There could be a lot of reactions right so that could start to create drift right on top of that. If you're starting to hold anger and resentment that's gonna cause drift if you're starting to Not be happy with whether it is you know flirting or sex or whatever but you're not expressing it these crowbars set are gonna slowly push people away and then i think the so that's your to and then your three and this is why you're three so important. I think you're three is when you took point where you're like okay. I now know a three sixty of this person in. I'm i'm willing to invest in this or your three. You're like okay. I now know three sixty this person in. I don't think one industry this you know. Yeah yeah. I think there's two things that come up when you're talking about the i think versus coming back to the original kind of half joking conversation about the ice cream comment And you and i having different ideas of like what romance might look like or like. And we've had this conversation where i think for you. It has to do with It cinderella at the ball right and for me. It's what happens after the marriage. So it's like i look at romance as.

The Angry Therapist Podcast
"three year" Discussed on The Angry Therapist Podcast
"Could be listening to this. It's fine. I'm almost everything. Your sister could be listening to this. My sister knows to your brother could be listening to this. He probably would turn this episode of you. Know what's amazing about me and my family is. My mom has not discovered the internet yet. So i could be more free when do anything you want. Yeah yeah you have you. Have you have a family who are all participants of the internet. So anyway my grandfather's on instagram exactly exactly so Different languages and so one of the learnings for me with you and now we're going on close to three years Which went by pretty quick. Well we packed a lot of shit in three years. Yeah yeah and i gotta say three years is a very important time and this is a whole different conversation will get into Because i feel like three years is kind of that for most people. It's that That kind of make or break you know. Three years is kind of the the amount of time it takes to really get to know someone and yeah. I mean we've talked about this about how there's a little bit of nerves on my end that you kind of have a track record of the three year. Mark being your decision where you you cut and run a while. You're just going straight in this podcast. Maybe only one episode because the last one. Okay go ahead. now. I mean here. We are standing at the precipice of like john. Kamm talks about swimming past the breakers. Is it gonna do it. You know what turns me on..

You Beauty
"three year" Discussed on You Beauty
"The <Speech_Music_Female> <SpeakerChange> <Music> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> ocean for <SpeakerChange> the fee. She's <Music> <Music> <Advertisement> <Music> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Female> so pretty <Speech_Female> big news. From <Speech_Female> australia's biggest <Speech_Female> makeup brands. <Speech_Female> Nude by nature <Speech_Female> is launching skin-care. <Speech_Female> So <Speech_Female> in case you missed it. <Speech_Female> Nude by nature is one of australia's <Speech_Female> biggest makeup brands <Speech_Female> and best shelling <Speech_Female> mineral foundations. <Speech_Female> They <Speech_Female> padded monroe. 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You Beauty
"three year" Discussed on You Beauty
"Aaron you're back. How was your name surgery. I'm back hello. It was the awkward. Really well. And i'm actually. I'm feeling a lot better. I'll icon walk around normally here needs to walk in isolation by is a fat swollen math. But i'm hobbling around on crutches right now and i have a very attractive leg brace on and i have to work for four. Wait oh well if you're going to do it anytime i saw at the right time to do it right. Yeah definitely. it's just not a look. That i want to roll. Yeah gotta do what you go to. What are we chatting about today okay. So we've got lots of beating us today. One of australia's biggest makeup brands has just dropped a super exciting skincare launch. Plus people on tick talk and now using say salt water on their face to supposedly clear their acne and we need to talk about it. But.

The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
"The in definitely not alone. Um that was important for me to put in the film. That is part of you. Dave which is having made the film. I got to spend all this time with people. From tony's life who are still coping with the grief of losing him and all these complicated motions is suicide. Brings up and all that and i both wanted to kinda. I wanted an audience to feel the impact of that. Because i felt it spending time with people but then also understanding that we can get to the other side of that and so i had this idea a bunch of people. David show josh amee. Were just talking about being stuck for a long time. You know. I think everybody in their own way and of trying to show that people can start to put their lives back together or move on or just you know there is another side to the crater of grief and i asked you dave for a for video of you in hugo which i put in the film just and i asked everybody in the film to send me videos just so you could because i thought that too and i think it's important to remind ourselves alike. It's okay you know like his painful things are. We have to remember that there. We can get beyond it. Because i think hopelessness is the kind of thing that leads to things like suicide and like i'm not hopeless in that way and i think i think that that's kind of blindness when you find yourself that helpless i just wanted to reflect a little bit of that in the film. I think it's okay not to have it clear understanding of what happened. I think that's part of the forgiveness is just accept that it happened and that that's really it and i never easy to think about. Whenever i see hugo at some point during the day i always think about tony because of the conversations that we would have and i definitely want to be a better father because of the conversations. We've had. It was so hard to watch this film and just think about it because of all the different ways like like tony knew that tony knew all this shit about so many people yet. He couldn't do it for himself. You know like. I know tony said about me to the people around in his inner circle. I did this guy we almost have. I would just imagine tony saying like we just have to capture this fucking lunatic right now. Because it's probably all going to end soon you know and like i think tony understood that. Because that's how he sort of lived his life and the idea suicide. I know something. We talked about to morgan. Just people that have come up to you. I don't think there is a magic bullet and if if you feel less clear about it about what happened. I also think that's okay..

The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
"Hey dave yeah. I know you said that this movie was hard to watch because it makes you miss your friend. But i mean i'm just hearing i don't mean this jokey way at all but just hearing morgan talk about tony. In this way like i know you had a lot of conversations with him to the extent but is part of what makes this hard the parts that uc tony's life in yourself in some of these struggles to well that's the thing is like i don't ever want to impose i whatever similarities but i see them. I think i can empathize with the seismic shift in his life and the growing responsibilities he had and i think ignorance is bliss. It's very true. I just feel like the burden of being. Tony was just a lot and you know i. I don't know like did you get a lot of video. That's going to seem like announce tour but it's not. Did you see any of clips where he's just trashing emerald morgan. Oh yeah oh yeah. And i had a whole scene about it. Which is maybe where you're going to go. But you know. I talked to david simon. Why have nothing but respect for. I am a huge fan of his. And i had a whole scene in film that i had to cut as it didn't fit but i it meant a lot to me. Which was the story that david told me about when tony became a writer on trey and dave you're part of that you got roped into that and but they're you know for years. Tony was trashing. Emerald summit in in the documentary is kind of a sell out and then entre may have emerald come on the show and he gives this speech that tony wrote which is basically the argument against everything tony ever criticized him about. And it's a beautiful speech about us. Start a restaurant and then you have people depending on you. And then they're feeding their families in certain point. It's not about the money or success. It's about trying to help the people on your boat. Your the cap dema of and you're trying to protect and i've heard dave. I've heard you talk about this. I i felt this as somebody that runs a production company over the years to the sense of responsibility and gives his beautiful speech. The tony wrote for emerald today. And i love it. I love it so even it's not the documentary. Everybody should go watch that. Watch that speech. And that's exactly what i was trying to explain. Is i got to know. Emel particularly during those years. And i saw the burden of responsibility because i was like dude you're so wretch you have it all and he's like i don't you don't you don't understand. I have to keep on doing this. Even if i don't want to. I don't have a choice. And i was like i don't understand that. Have no idea what you're saying. That's the most ridiculous thing i've ever heard. And he such a nice guy news so open with his wisdom. And i know tony. And a lotta times. Tony's trashing people made it very difficult to be friends with people and i remember that whole period to tony was writing the scripts with simon tremain. And even before that. I think you began to see. Tony makes amends with this past because he was able to better empathize with the burden of responsibility. That someone like emerald had and i think for me. I don't know just watching the film. Like i don't know if you agree or not. Morgan is like at some point. She just didn't get to live his life anymore. And that's the craziest thing..

The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
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The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
"There's so much to do what i came back to that. You know. i'm not writing a book. i'm not with a pedia. I'm just trying to figure out what makes this guy tick like what it's a psychological portrait. I tried to think of it as much as anything. Like i'm never gonna win trying to tell every story so let me just really try and just understand how this guy thinks and that became my north know you watch every single moment of his life that was captured on film. And the funny thing. Is you people watch. Even the edited stuff right. And i think people have this weird memory that tony gordon was this a credibly. Charismatic telegenic perfect tv host and just as world traveler. That knew how to do it all and had the perfect protocol for every place but if you watch the first three years the first season especially it's incredibly bad it's really bad is really really bad at it. What do you think you saw. That made him get better. Do you think tony being hard on himself or was it just the reps. I mean i think it was..

The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
"But that we just kind of barely get into that because again. There's so much to do what i came back to that. You know. i'm not writing a book. I'm not wikipedia. I'm just trying to figure out what makes this guy tick like what it's a psychological portrait. I just try to think of it as much as anything. Like i'm never gonna win trying to tell every story so let me just really trying to understand how this guy thinks in. That became my kind of north star. And i know you watch every single moment of his life that was captured on film. And the funny thing is like you. People watch even the edited stuff right. And i think people have this weird memory that tony bourdain was this a credibly charismatic telegenic perfect tv host. And just as world traveler knew how to do it all and had the perfect protocol for every place but if you watch the first sort of three years the first season especially it's incredibly bad. It's really bad as really really bad at it. What do you think you saw. That made him get better do you. That was just tony being hard on himself or was it just the reps. I mean i it was i mean. I think everything got better. She got better. He got more comfortable The camera were got better like less cheese. He like home movie. Like but i think is writing and his voice got stronger and stronger. And it's it's interesting. Because after he died they finished a few episodes of episodes. They had in that they had never finished. And there's no ration- in episodes and in watching them. I i kind of remarked to the producer of it. I said there. There's kind of a melancholia to to watching without his voice over all over them and they said if you actually go back and watch a lot of the episodes if you take out the voice over. It's there and i think that thing we don't really think about is how much that whole show rested on his point of view and his voice. I mean that was that is the show in many ways like yes. They're great scenes in great vigils but the reason people watched it is because they wanted to see what he thought of things or see. You know him react to something. That just can't be overstated. That was that was his thing. And i think his voice was the thing that eat his writer leave. I mean that was he was a storyteller and he always said that the the only label he'd liked was writer when people call him chef. He said it made him very uncomfortable because he hadn't been in a kitchen in years and that was not really when he to be known for he wanted to be known as a writer. I think first and foremost in. I think the writing the narration of their shows in the books or the things that he was proudest of well. I mean it's crazy. 'cause i kind of can't imagine your film without his voice present to write a place. The voice overplays such a huge role..

The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
"It was like you know within certainly within a few months. His whole life was different. I mean he was suddenly on a plane by december of that year. Starting to shoot. Cook's tour you know in the head a new book contract and everything else so it was kind of amazing as a filmmaker to find that footage and it's part of why i wanted to start the film there and then you know again with his story was so big and there were so much stuff and so much footage shen so many stories. I didn't include in this and so many other people i talk to. You aren't in the film who were great but it was just to condense it so you know. I think we had something like twenty thousand hours footage which is insane and trying to kind of find the moments the needles in the haystack of were. You see him being him you know i mean he was always version himself but something i noticed in the footage and his crew talked about this too that often when he would sit down with somebody. There's even a moment of it with you. Dave in the documentary. Where when he would. I sit down to shoot something. He would just start. Going on about himself was happening in his life can be really open and then other people would open up to. It was like his crusoes was like his technique is like just to be totally confessional and open right from the get-go and then they used that stuff in the show but it's all there in the footage of him just talking about what's going on in his life yet. One of those moments was with you guys having hotdogs that day well and that was like right around when i started hanging out with him quite a bit but i think for me when i thought about the prospect of you or really anybody at the onset of making this was like i knew tony from my perspective and i knew pretty early on that. Almost everybody had their own tony dane particularly in his universe. And as you got to know some of his idiosyncratic behavior his neuroses his personal life. I was just going to be like. I don't know how the hell i don't know how you do this. Because it could be a ten hour. Pbs documentary and still not cover all the she points that you have gone into you so in some ways i was like morgan. This is an impossible project. So i know you said that you started around the tore or the beginning. Post life of the book. But how did you decide. Not to incorporate you know his relationship with his family and and all all these things. Because that's what i was like. I don't know how. I how you could have done it and you did it because it still has to be a movie you know who hours on. Yeah i mean the movies hundred nineteen minutes and i know tony was a big fan of citizen kane. The same running length of citizen kane like if worship can do citizen kane and one hundred nineteen minutes we can. Do tony ordain amazing..

The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
"Direction i ran in which is like. Let's just run into the gray and kind of embrace. It you know in the film to me is is about questions you know and i think people come up with their own answers out of it but i think that's what tony believed. It know. it's interesting that you talk about it in in terms of this second. Act of tony's life where he got everything he wanted at an age where you don't really expect that to suddenly happen to you at forty three or whatever and you know i think about his death and if you're not dave if you're not somebody who is intimately familiar with tony for his friend his real friend and also somebody who didn't really unders. You don't understand addiction and mental health and struggled with mental health. I think the reason why his death was so shocking to your average person was. Why would he do that. He had everything he had everything that everybody wants. He had a job where you travel around. And and i think the fact that that's that's the flip side of the coin of what you're talking about like what happens if you just get everything you want. Is that the salute. You suddenly become a happy person. All your addictions and problems melt away and you know the answer was no you know but i think that's why people are so fascinated with his. You know his death. Yeah i mean. I think the more i think about it that so many of the things that were his strengths were also his weaknesses. I think you know. So for instance. He was somebody who like. He pushed his crews. All always like do better go more extreme. Now this new episode is going to be antonioni movie. And then it's going to be a one car y movie and then he was tough on his cruise because he was even tougher on himself but he believed that he would rather fail in a big way than just do something that was mediocre like mediocrity was just this creative death and but i think he he seemed to feel like living in the middle was a kind of You know just a failure. You know that that if things fell to safe you shouldn't trust that in so part of those instincts helped his work in a big way but part of his instincts hurt his life in a big way. So like the fact the matter that you know he was such a searcher in so many ways was always looking for the next thing and he was so excited about the next thing. That sounds great but at the same time. If you're searching as much as he did you know he never slowed down. He was always travelling at least two hundred fifty days a year..

The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
"Film about anthony bourdain. I think more than anything. When i watched the film it made me just miss him more. And i'll just leave it at your young good fred morgan novel oscar winning director documentary filmmaker producer. Our good friend a partner in other delicious and are soon to be hulu. Show that come out sometime this year. And he has been on the press. Junket doing a lot of media. I know because when we're filming. He was starting to media for the anthony. Bourdain dock road runner out july sixteenth. Is that the date and morgan. That's the day amp in theaters. So go out there. Check it out. Is that what we're supposed to talk about. I feel like we talk all the time talking about all the time we can talk about. Whatever you wanna talk about. But ostensibly were supposed to talk about the film and not only is coming out. But you're in the film to dave. Yes yes. I am in the film Yeah there's a lot to talk about this this a lot of a lot of different emotions about this movie How it got made why god made but before we get into that. How many interviews have you done so far to promote this film. Yeah probably twenty five. What what is the answer. Let's just get the regular question. You're like okay. I've been asked this every for twenty to twenty five times. So what how did you end up. Making about anthony bourdain. How did you end up making the snowman. We're not asking you questions. We're just trying to get some questions. Actually you know what. I what i was looking forward to about. This is that we don't have to talk about those same things. Because i remember. I mean my connection to bourdain other than just being a fan and having read his books and watched his shows and was really for you. Dave and i remember when we started the idea of ugly delicious which originally was going to be lucky peach. tv.

The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
"Bourdain. I think more than anything. When i watched the film it made me just miss him more. And i'll just leave it at your young our good friend morgan novel oscar winning director documentary filmmaker producer. Our good friend a partner in ugly delicious and are soon to be kulu. Show that come out sometime this year. And he has been on the press. Junket doing a lot of media. I know because when we were filming he was starting to media for the anthony. Bourdain dock roadrunner out july sixteenth. Is that the date morgan. that's the day in theaters. So go out there. Check it out Is that what we're supposed to talk about. I feel like we talk all the time. And you talking about all the time we can talk about. Whatever you wanna talk about but extensively we're supposed to talk about the film and not only is coming out but you're in the film to dave. Yes yes. I am in the film Yeah there's a lot of talk about this a lot of lot of different emotions about this movie. How it got made why god made but before we get into that. How many interviews have you done so far no to promote this film. Yeah probably twenty five. What what is the answer. Let's just get the the the the regular. What was the question. You're like okay. I've been asked this every for twenty to twenty five times. What how did you end up. Making about anthony bourdain. How did you end up making this..

The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
"You're preserving the sort of perfect ideal. Rightness the the ideal state of starch to sugar ratio. Whatever you know. It's locked in frozen and it's such a bad rap frozen food frozen vegetables frozen. Fish have gotten such a bad rap. Why i don't know ask yourself. Why do you feel like frozen. Food is inferior when i think great frozen food is oftentimes better than fresh. It really is and you'd be surprised. How many of the things you eat is frozen. Most of the fish you get at sushi restaurants. Let me tell you. The truth is frozen tuna at a sushi restaurant more often than not is i in fact i think you have to by law. I buy a lot of frozen arctic. Char about a lot of frozen sakai. Wild salmon i know that it was preserved at its freshest moment whether it was on the boat or directly when they get back to dock then to buy something that i find questionable when a fish is filleted. I have no idea when it was fully. I have no idea when the fish was caught. I have no idea what state it was in. And it's not a way to judge. A fish is by the fillet right. You need a touch it feel it you know. See it and i always say when you look at it. Fresh fish they always say look at the gills. Look at the the is are clear. This is the best way to judge a piece of fresh fish. You just have to look at it. You know it when you see it. You'll know that that piece of fish or that fish itself is fresh beuing to ask any question. It is almost self evident if you have to ask. Is it fresh. It is not fresh but fresh. She talked about. This is a whole nother debate. The idea freshness is just a marketing. Term it really is it is Nothing is fresh in so many things we eat or do in day boat this and whatever it just is constantly changing food is constantly changing. And the one thing that will prevent that change in the food to Prevent the food from evolving. because it's constantly changing no matter. What whether it's potato piece of fish it's constantly changing. Which is why it's hard to figure out where to get. You know the best.

The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
"Frozen foods are often or not oftentimes just better great. Frozen foods are better than oftentimes fresh. And let me explain whether it's fish whether it's things like a spring p. even like a You're preserving the sort of perfect ideal. Rightness the ideal state of starch to sugar ratio. Whatever you know it's locked in and frozen and it's such a bad rap frozen food frozen vegetables frozen. Fish had gotten such a bad rap. Why i don't ask yourself. Why do you feel like frozen food is inferior when i think great frozen food is oftentimes then. Fresh really is and you'd be surprised. How many of the things you eat is frozen. Most of the fish you get at sushi restaurants. Let me tell you. The truth is frozen tuna at a sushi restaurant. More often than not is i. I think you have to by law. I buy a lot of frozen are char about a a lot of frozen sakai wild salmon. Because i'd rather know that it was preserved at its freshest moment whether it was on the boat or directly when they get back to dock then to buy something that i find questionable when a fish is filleted. I have no idea what it was fully. I have no idea when the fish was caught. I have no idea what state it was in. And it's not a way to judge a fish is by the fillet right. You need to touch it. Feel it you know. See it and i always say when you look at a fresh fish they always say look at the gills. Look at the the is are a clear. This is the best way to judge a piece of fresh fish. You just have to look at it. You know it when you see it. You'll know that that piece of fish or that fish itself is fresh. Beuing have to ask any question. It's almost self evident if you have to ask. Is it fresh. It is not fresh but fresh. I should talk to you about. This is a whole nother debate. The idea freshness is just a marketing. Term it really is it is Nothing is fresh in so many things we eat or do debuted this and whatever just constantly changing food is constantly changing and the one thing that will prevent that change in the food to prevent the food from evolving because it's constantly changing no matter what whether it's potato piece of fish it's constantly changing which is why it's hard to figure out where to get.

The Dave Chang Show
"three year" Discussed on The Dave Chang Show
"Director for twenty feet from stardom. If you haven't seen that you should. He has made documentaries on. Keith richards pop mr rogers. She has done a lot of epic work in one of the great filmmakers out there. And i'm honored in lucky to consider them my partner in tv. We've made ugly delicious together. We are making a show on hulu that should be. I don't know coming out soon Next few months. And i think he is just an extraordinarily good person and one of the few people i think they could do. The documentary on anthony bourdain life justice and we get into a conversation with that. It's not an easy conversation. I still have a hard time. Talking about. Tony's death it's still hard to move on and after three years or so. It's still remarkable to see the imprint. His life has add on so many others and man. I don't know what else to say about that other than go. Watch the movie Roadrunner it's coming out. July sixteenth in theaters. Please check it out. I think it will go onto streaming a month after but it should give you some insight into his life. It is not doesn't go into everything. I think that would be impossible. You'd need like twenty five hours but Morgan did the amazing job of giving some clarity. And hopefully some resolution to everyone that mrs tony i mean i remember doing a podcast way back when a couple years ago whenever tony died and was That was emotional. And and i think anybody that listens to this. Podcast knows about my feelings about that. A mental health But know that you're not alone and don't forget to ask for help. And that's oftentimes the hardest thing to do But the people that seem to be doing the best don't assume that they are in a good place You never know and that's why we are all needed to help each other out but it's a it's a very good movie very entertaining and christine and i get into a conversation with morgan novel. The director of roadrunner. Please please please go check it out on a different note and there's no way to make a transition outside of that Because anytime you think about bourdain at it For at least for me. It's pretty pretty heavy shit. But i will do my best and go directly into frozen foods and dairy queen and milkshakes I haven't been to a dairy queen in a long time in a very very very long time and the place. I wanted to get ice. Cream for my son was There was a roadblock. There was a construction. I couldn't do it. But i said let's go to..