29 Burst results for "Tolman"

"tolman" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

77WABC Radio

01:30 min | 6 months ago

"tolman" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

"I like to fill this one hour on Sunday there's an hour of sanity for you an hour of information an hour where we reinforce our principles and our beliefs one hour that's all we ask if you're interested Life Liberty and Live In is probably the most television because I let the guests finish their statements and I bring on guests who I think are compelling I'm not filling time it's just like this people ask me you know you do these opening these they monologues run anywhere from 15 to 20 minutes how do you prepare for them I'll tell you how I prepare for them I typically spend three to four hours before the program doing research scribbling little mark notes to mark getting my thoughts in between my ears nobody writes my comments for me just as nobody writes my books for me I think when people do that they demonstrate that they're really not up to the job and they're very misleading to their audience every

Rep. James Comer, Brett Tolman Will Be on 'Life, Liberty & Levin'

Mark Levin

01:30 min | 6 months ago

Rep. James Comer, Brett Tolman Will Be on 'Life, Liberty & Levin'

"I like to fill this one hour on Sunday there's an hour of sanity for you an hour of information an hour where we reinforce our principles and our beliefs one hour that's all we ask if you're interested Life Liberty and Live In is probably the most television because I let the guests finish their statements and I bring on guests who I think are compelling I'm not filling time it's just like this people ask me you know you do these opening these they monologues run anywhere from 15 to 20 minutes how do you prepare for them I'll tell you how I prepare for them I typically spend three to four hours before the program doing research scribbling little mark notes to mark getting my thoughts in between my ears nobody writes my comments for me just as nobody writes my books for me I think when people do that they demonstrate that they're really not up to the job and they're very misleading to their audience every

15 To 20 Minutes Life Liberty And Live In Sunday An Hour One Hour This Three To Four Hours
"tolman" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

77WABC Radio

01:58 min | 6 months ago

"tolman" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

"Want you to listen to this We can do it here We have multiple platforms Want you to listen to this This is Brett tolman who was a U.S. attorney in Utah really really top lawyer And he's very soft spoken so check it out Cut 22 go But you make a very good point The us attorneys nominated by the president not the attorney general and confirmed by the Senate They are presidential appointees and they serve at the pleasure of the president So despite what the practices may be the last couple of decades you're making the point It's a very important point that the U.S. attorney in Washington D.C. I believe his name is graves That he has his own authority to act that he doesn't have to sit around and worry about what the criminal division of the public integrity section or the U.S. attorney's office or the attorney general or anybody else has to say to open an investigation at a minimum and to bring an indictment correct That's exactly right He has all that authority and I'll tell you something else that I've learned relative to this The outgoing U.S. attorney at the time of January 6th Had identified a very small number of individuals that should be prosecuted And had indicated to DoJ that that was his intention They forced him out because he did not have the same vision that they did in terms of what they would turn the January 6th prosecution into And so I think about that and who they put in in their place and it is someone that will toe the line and follow what Washington D.C. wants And that is the greatest injustice we have because now we see that they will do make decisions and use their power to based on politics rather than based on the facts and the evidence which would result in a lot of people being prosecuted and put in jail including the Biden family

Brett Tolman: The Real Authority of U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves

Mark Levin

01:58 min | 6 months ago

Brett Tolman: The Real Authority of U.S. Attorney Matthew Graves

"Want you to listen to this We can do it here We have multiple platforms Want you to listen to this This is Brett tolman who was a U.S. attorney in Utah really really top lawyer And he's very soft spoken so check it out Cut 22 go But you make a very good point The us attorneys nominated by the president not the attorney general and confirmed by the Senate They are presidential appointees and they serve at the pleasure of the president So despite what the practices may be the last couple of decades you're making the point It's a very important point that the U.S. attorney in Washington D.C. I believe his name is graves That he has his own authority to act that he doesn't have to sit around and worry about what the criminal division of the public integrity section or the U.S. attorney's office or the attorney general or anybody else has to say to open an investigation at a minimum and to bring an indictment correct That's exactly right He has all that authority and I'll tell you something else that I've learned relative to this The outgoing U.S. attorney at the time of January 6th Had identified a very small number of individuals that should be prosecuted And had indicated to DoJ that that was his intention They forced him out because he did not have the same vision that they did in terms of what they would turn the January 6th prosecution into And so I think about that and who they put in in their place and it is someone that will toe the line and follow what Washington D.C. wants And that is the greatest injustice we have because now we see that they will do make decisions and use their power to based on politics rather than based on the facts and the evidence which would result in a lot of people being prosecuted and put in jail including the Biden family

22 Biden Brett Tolman DOJ January 6Th Senate U.S. Utah Washington D.C Washington D.C. The Last Couple Of Decades
"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

Build A Life After Loss Podcast

02:10 min | 1 year ago

"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

"So it's a really cool experience and I'm so happy to be able to share it with the world. It's been a long process to get it here. And anybody can pick it up on Amazon, Kindle now, and then we're also working on audible. It should be up on audible any day. That's fantastic. I've got the physical copy because I got that before it was even on Amazon. And then so now that it's on Amazon and Kindle, I'm going to get a Kindle version too so I can search it because it's so good. I love it. Well, thank you so much for being here, Vinny and sharing your experience and sharing the knowledge that you came back with. I think it's fascinating that God is allowing these experiences and allowing us to hear them so that we have further knowledge about what is happening when somebody passes away and what we can expect our experience to be too. I think it's just another sign of his love for us. Absolutely. It is. And it's time, it's due time that the world understands the power of God's love. It's so important for us to understand it. And that shows up in so many different places on this earth. We really got to seek it out and embrace it everywhere we can find it. Amen. 100%, 100%. Well, thank you so much for being here. And like you said, the book is available on Amazon. I'm going to have a link to it in the show notes. So go there to find that link. Be sure to email with any questions that you have about the episode about our discussion. I know that Vinny would be happy to answer your questions. I'd be happy to answer your questions about anything that you have questions about there. And just know that I love you, I believe in you and have a wonderful week bye. Yes, sending everybody with light and love. Yeah, absolutely.

Amazon Vinny
"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

Build A Life After Loss Podcast

05:21 min | 1 year ago

"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

"And all of a sudden, it was just all there. I remembered at all. It was so much so that we had just gotten our food. And I couldn't eat. I couldn't speak for the rest of the night for almost 24 hours until almost Sunday, so that was on Friday night. I couldn't even speak to anyone until Sunday. Because I just couldn't even I couldn't even I had to sit here and digest all of this stuff that had just, that just came back to me that it happened to me. And of course, I give it a couple of days. Ego starts kicking in saying, you're delusional. You need to go meet with a therapist or a psychotherapist and see what's really going on. So I did it. I actually scheduled appointments and ended up with a professional and at this point in my life I could actually see and speak to spirit and I still do today. And I was at this appointment with this professional, this doctor, and he was telling me that he was going to put me on these anti schizophrenic meds and said that I really had some major problems. And that I was delusional. And you know, my brain was just filling in the gaps with my imagination. And that this didn't none of it happened. And while this is all going on, it just so happens. His grandmother who's on the other side is literally sitting next to me in the appointment and she's just like tattling on him. Like telling me all these things he did when he was a little boy. And these are little things, these are things that he didn't know anyone knew about. Like they're literally things that he thought he was going to take to his grave that nobody knew about him. But the reason she knew about him because she had already crossed. So she knew these things about him. And so she was telling me all these things to tell him. And I'm telling her, I'm like, I'm not going to tell him these things. And then I have, you know, my guy Drake, he came in very, very strong and said no. You need to listen to her. She's going to help you.

Drake
"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

Build A Life After Loss Podcast

03:42 min | 1 year ago

"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

"So helpful. I was wonderful. Yeah. Yeah, it's pretty amazing this whole system how it works. It really is, it's amazing. Yeah, it is. Well, I wish that we could just share everything that happened, but I'm going to encourage everyone to get your book. But we have more time. If you want to share more principles or whatever you'd like to go with it, the story or the I got to get up to actually to see heaven and by then we were calling it heaven because I had figured that part out. I was a little slow, but not too slow. So I figured it out that we were in heaven by then. But I also realized that there is more than one heaven, and more than one version of heaven, and that the soul and the existence, the eternal existence, is so much more complex than we can physically understand in this physical world here with our third dimensional brains. But existence itself is unlimited. Our growth is unlimited. So there's no, there's no waiting room that you end up in somewhere in heaven and you're like, hey, I made it the best place I can go. This is where all exists for the rest of eternity. And it's so funny. In our limited brain or linear brain, we tend to think like that that heavens this big waiting room with angels and wings and harps. But it's not. Creation is unlimited. And we get to go forth and progress unlimitedly for eternities. And so no matter where we are in progression, if we're not at the front of the pack, we're at the very back of the back. We're still going to progress. We get to the back of the pack over there with Hitler and a few other people. That they're still progressing in their own right. They're still progressing. But I'll tell you the hardest part is to understand that the only place that there is a hell is between our two temples. Right here. So between your two temples in your head, that's the only hell that ever exists. So here's what's weird is we can carry forth hell with us from here to that existence. And it will prevent us from growing. We'll stay in this encapsulated energy there where we can't progress until we deal with it. So we've got to deal with the darkness that shows up inside our temples. Inside our head and we need to clean that out and make it make our head a holy temple. And the holiest temple that you can ever find on earth is right there between those two bones in your skull called temples. And that's the holy space. That's the holy of holies that you've got to clean it up, get it clean, clear out the clutter, clear out the disgust, the unforgiveness of yourself and others, get rid of it all. And start fresh with clean energy and that's where we grow. That's where we can actually progress eternally is in that space. And that's what I learned. And after I thought, you know, hey, I'm really loving this heaven. I'm so glad I'm here. Oh my God, whose name is Drake? He pulled me in for a really amazing hug because we're more energetic body and it's weird, but we're more physical there than we are here. Here are our physical nature is very limited, but there it's very just so, so complex, but he essentially gave me this energetic hug that there was just immense and beautiful and I could see the eternities in that hug.

Hitler Drake
"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

Build A Life After Loss Podcast

02:35 min | 1 year ago

"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

"Quick way is to understand how frequency works is if you want to close your eyes and visualize a ladder, you know, think in your mind the ladder and at the very top of that ladder visualize God, creator and love. And at the very bottom of that ladder, fear, deception, grief. Anger, loathing, all the negative energies, right? And we sit there and recline and we go up the ladder and we go down the ladder. And of course, which way is it easier to go? It's always because we have gravity, right? So gravity makes us go down way easier than it is to go up. But there's an opposite that there's an anti gravity and it's called love. And if you can really utilize love in your life, and I mean love those who deserve it, but love even more, those who don't. That's your way you raise your frequency. When you, it's really weird when you feel empty inside, go put some kind words in a stranger. Put energy, loving energy, and someone random stranger, and watch look inside and be like, wow, I feel amazing. Do you know why? 'cause that's how we help each other. That's how we're built because we're all fingers on God's hand. All of us. So to help want us to help self, to help another is to help self. But what's weird is to help self is to not help anyone else. So we kind of circumvent the system when we're only going after our own needs and desires. But when we're really helping others, we're helping ourselves. It's the easiest way to get out of depression, out of grief, is go out and serve, literally serve, go take a homeless person to lunch, hug them, sit with them and eat with them like a human, because that's what they want to feel like. They want to feel alive. And so many times in this life, we don't feel alive. And so go make someone feel alive and you'll feel alive. It's really a beautiful process that I have to keep reminding myself that when I get in my down days, hey, you know, go help someone, reach out, do some service. That's the way you fix these type of problems. But more importantly, that's how you raise your frequency. And what's also really neat is after you've been at a higher frequency for quite a while, you don't want to sink back down. You don't start playing the old mind games that you used to in the old days. So you start learning new games, but you don't play the old games anymore. And you tend to keep yourself at a higher resonant frequency or a higher love frequency. Once you start resonating at the higher space, yeah. I love that.

depression
"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

Build A Life After Loss Podcast

05:35 min | 1 year ago

"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

"And you said you can go back to where your body is. If you would like, or you can come up with me and see what's next for you. And it was a no brainer. I mean, why would I want to go where all that pain and where that body was barely hanging on, there was it was just gross, it was disgusting. And it was not even possible for me to choose that. So even though I had agency, it was not possible to even choose to come back. So I chose to go with him. He made me an offer I couldn't refuse, really. So I went with him and he helped me understand that there was going to be quite a process to get to our destination. He didn't call it heaven. He just kept calling it our destination. And he's like, there's going to be quite a process to get there. And as we started to move away from the earth, he showed me that we were going to be moving through physical space, but also through dimensional space. Like we were going to be raising our frequency to go to a higher dimension. A dimension that we can't access from here because we were quite a low dimension compared to where that place is. And he went over ten primary principles that I had to fully embrace. I didn't have to completely take them on in myself, but I had to be willing to accept that they were true or the chance that they were true. And so he worked me through these ten primary principles. And he didn't lay him out like that. Like, hey, here's ten principles. He just started with the first, which is authenticity. He showed me how I was an authentic. I thought it was. But he showed me how I had many different personalities. I had many different versions of my personality that I would allow to come out with different people.

"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

Build A Life After Loss Podcast

05:46 min | 1 year ago

"tolman" Discussed on Build A Life After Loss Podcast

"Let's get started. Hey my Friends, I am so, so excited. Do you have Vinny tolman with me today? Vinny Todd tolman. He was born in Arlington, Texas, and has a remarkable story that I'm looking forward to sharing with you. I'm just going to share a little bit from the from his bio on his book. So you know a little more about him before we get started. Like I said, he was born in Arlington, Texas, and has since traveled around the world living in both Cambodia and Thailand. He loves animals, meditating, and spending time in nature. His greatest priorities are his relationship with his creator, his family, and the people he meets. He currently lives in Las Vegas, Nevada, with his wife, Andrea, and their two children. Welcome, Vinny. Hey, it's nice to be here. It's awesome to be here. Great to great to be speaking with you today, Julie. I'm so excited about this. I got your book this week. And I've read it all the way through once, and I've read it multiple times in different sections. And I just knew that your story was something that people need to hear. They need to understand. And so why don't we just jump in and you just share because I haven't even given you guys a hit yet? What his story is. I'm just going to let him jump in and start sharing and it really is a remarkable, beautiful story. Well, I'm one of the few, the few out there that people would consider dead men and women walking that we had an experience to cross over and that's me. I'm in that category, they categorize me as a body bagger. I was in a body bag. Passed away, I had aspirated in a public bathroom in a restaurant from a toxic supplement that I ended up taking. And yeah, so I was dead in a body bag and I went from, you know, feeling dizzy in the bathroom to all of a sudden watching a movie, what felt like watching a movie in a theater. And watching this odd movie that they were shooting from the ceiling down, which I was like, 'cause I used to work in film. And so I thought that was really funny that they're shooting this film from the ceiling looking down. And I was just watching what was going on. But I had no idea that what I was seeing was my own body and what was going on around my body. And the reason why I didn't have any ideas because me was up here watching, you know? It wasn't like I was playing a video game, you know, with a controller in my hand or something. And thinking, that's my remote virtual reality down there at all. It was a 100% me is up here. And what I'm watching is over there. So I was completely disconnected from that. What was going on there. But I witnessed, as they did, load the body in a bag, and put it in the back of an ambulance and watched a rookie magic on his first week on the job, feel God connect to him and send him a message that I wasn't dead. And he had the courage and the faith to take action. And despite the fact that I was cold,

Vinny tolman Vinny Todd tolman Arlington Texas Vinny Cambodia Andrea Thailand Nevada Julie Las Vegas
"tolman" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

03:58 min | 1 year ago

"tolman" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Global news update. An FBI search warrant shows former president Trump is under investigation for potential violations of the espionage act and obstruction of justice laws. The FBI recovered 11 sets of classified records from Trump's Mar-a-Lago estate Monday. This is the former president of the United States who has the highest clearance, has the ability to designate something as classified or to unclassified something. That's the opinion of former Utah U.S. attorney Brett tolman who believes the FBI raid was politically motivated. Author Salman Rushdie is being placed on a ventilator after he was attacked in New York and his agent says the news is not good. Rusty was attacked on stage while speaking at an event at the chautauqua institution. The inflation reduction act now heads to President Biden for his signature after passing the House Friday. Democrats pushed the bill through after it narrowly passed the Senate last weekend. The polio virus is being found in New York City wastewater samples, which suggests the virus is spreading in the city. Natalie migliori reports governor hochul says all levels of government are monitoring the polio virus in New York closely. But the number one thing that people can do to protect themselves is to ensure that they, their children, their loved ones, are vaccinated. We are standing up more vaccination sites. State health commissioner doctor Mary Bassett called the detection of the virus in New York City alarming but not surprising. Federal officials set to team to New York to investigate the only case reported in the state earlier this summer. I'm Natalie migliori. An Australian court is ordering Google to pay over $40 million for misleading users about location data. The court found that Google breached Australian consumer law between January 2017 and December 2018 by misrepresenting some Android users about the use and collection of their location data. I'm Brian shook. The historic Cecil Hotel in downtown Los Angeles may soon serve as housing for homeless people, Phil Hewlett has more. To Los Angeles city council members introduced a motion that would start the process of offering vacant rooms at the hotel to homeless people on a permanent basis, the Cecil Hotel was converted into an affordable housing complex last December, but only 73 of its 600 rooms are currently occupied. I'm Phil hewlet, a movie about the death of Gabby petito is set to premiere on the first day of domestic violence awareness month. Lifetime announced the Gabby petito story will debut on October 1st, the film will explore Gabby's complicated relationship with fiance Brian laundrie and what may have led up to her murder and eventually his suicide. A $5000 reward is being offered for information about the owner of a Eurasian links that was caught in central ice lip last month. Jennifer reports. The large cat was captured July 29th after being seen wandering in central Iceland for several days a wildlife rehab center in smithtown, taking in the links after its capture naming him, Leonardo DiCaprio, the cat checking out his about a one year old with a healthy weight but had parasites in a wound on his face. There were no injuries to anyone during its days of wandering the Long Island streets, the Eurasian lynx is on a state list of animals that can not be possessed without a special license from the DEC, anyone with info about the link's owner asked to contact the Suffolk county society for the prevention of cruelty to animals. Jennifer Paul Sony, New York. Emmy nominated actress Lauren lapkus is set to executive produce and star in a new indie comedy called another happy day. Deadline reports the film is described as a postpartum depression comedy that's loosely based on the movie writer and director Nora Pfeiffer's experience becoming a mother. Lapkus is known for roles in hit shows like orange is the new black and films like Jurassic World

Natalie migliori FBI president Trump Cecil Hotel Brett tolman President Biden Gabby petito polio governor hochul Mary Bassett New York Australian court chautauqua institution Salman Rushdie Brian shook New York City U.S. Phil Hewlett Trump
"tolman" Discussed on All Things Vocal Podcast

All Things Vocal Podcast

04:43 min | 2 years ago

"tolman" Discussed on All Things Vocal Podcast

"To watch? Music ro magazine included her in next big thing class of 2020. Legendary music row writer Robert K orman says tolman is practically single handedly bringing humor back into country music. She's been featured in such national publications as People magazine, Rolling Stone magazine, and American songwriter. She's done a duet with country legend, Jeannie Seeley, actor Jeff Bridges, cut one of her songs. She's one CMT, video countdown, not once, but twice. Her tour dates lately have included a spot at Bridgestone in the Charlie Daniels event. She was featured in an episode of say yes to the dress, and yes, she's getting married. Her fiance is Grammy winning producer, Dave brainard. And she's done all of this without signing with a major label, yet. So, welcome to all things vocal Jenny Tillman. Thank you. Yeah, you know, just reading it. So much about myself and what I wanted. All at one time. We're going to go back in time to kind of find out how you got to this point in a minute. But for now, let's talk about that dress. And, being on the show, you and your mother used to watch when you were a child. Yes. So thank you very much. First of all, this is very exciting to be here. Yeah, I had one of the craziest experiences just a couple weeks ago getting to actually see myself on say yes to the dress and then months prior to that actually getting to shoot my own episode in New York City. I have watched say yes to the dress, my entire life. I believe it's been going on for 15 years and I'm 25. So since I was ten years old, I've been watching this show with my mom. It would always be a special thing that we do. And so as soon as I got engaged, I was like, oh, hey, babe, thanks for the ring, but hey, how do you get on sale to the dress? I have an amazing publicist her name is Melissa Matthews and she also watches say yes to the dress with her daughters. So it's a special show for her as well..

ro magazine Robert K orman Jeannie Seeley Dave brainard tolman Jenny Tillman Rolling Stone magazine People magazine Jeff Bridges Charlie Daniels CMT Bridgestone Grammy New York City Melissa Matthews
"tolman" Discussed on The Passing Shot Tennis Podcast

The Passing Shot Tennis Podcast

07:55 min | 2 years ago

"tolman" Discussed on The Passing Shot Tennis Podcast

"It could be a sacree rounded candy semifinal because i think push push cuba may have bit more. You know she's got more experience and think she's got a few bigger weapons. I think could ratty candy and you know we talk about candies. Weights have shot and it being something that a lot of the players say five really kind of struggled with and who say the movement around the court but you be interested to see how how will can't be able to handle the you know the power and particularly the serving in particular making radical return game if she'd be come up against carolina fishkhabur. Yeah especially has been bombing down. Acl this tournament like she's she's been doing very well and serve and and especially like in her fourth-round against public cafe. She saved pretty much. All of the breakpoint says she faced by one. Say i think i agree. I think zachary would be the more winnable match for some. Let's see what happens tonight. Let's see what mo continue tomorrow. We've got the other side of the draw. As well we've got a semifinal sat between layla finance and arenas lenka not came about joe because well we had one straightforward match at another match was far from web. We are eating your words get. Oh gosh totally. I mean fernandes's just out previous very you know. She speaks in a soccer cub now. Switzer lena this a loss at tie-break. She is just. She really impressed me. I saw this march because she just had say much kind of confidence and self belief and it's quite rare. You see a young player actually appearing very mature in the way she composed and conductors often. We see that all say with with radical new. And i just saw. I love the way she was easing the crowd. You know. obviously they were very much on. Her side is a north american crowd and she was really getting them going when she needed them. And i think having that relationship with the crowd is being quite kifah. Her a fortnight. Yes i think great to see just to play a really really enjoying the tennis and having that relationship with the fans i think on court because it certainly i think elevated her game when she needed it because i think sicily and it will be kicking us out in terms of winning this match because she was in the thick of it. I think you know in that set sat. Selena was down five. Two in the thought sat was able to force a deciding tiebreak and there was one down in that tiebreaking came came back to five or not i think was really the the pivotal point. Not that point. Five oh It could have gone. I think it could have either way bake. It went the way of fernandez. And i think she again. She just has that belief in her. The i guess you would have now given that you've beaten someone like asaka given her record a on hardcourts and usa burden defeating another former usa champion in kerber and now defeating selena. Who's probably been playing really good tennis again. Another player i think is playing with confidence since getting that bronze-medal in the olympics but she just just having none of it and i think with the more of these matches she plays where she is the underdog and she gets her enough she. She gets more and more belief. I think we've each round and is really kind of coming. Three four are in the in the most difficult of moments and a certainly think not helped to win that fun. Tie-break yeah i d- wonder how how it might change when she is the favourite and a much. Can you imagine joe. This may be getting very much ahead of ourselves and it will probably be appreciative for suppling ca final. But imagine if it's eradicated if anandas final and you've an eighteen year old against a nineteen year old bases of the youngest. Us open seven instance. Shar-pei like sixteen years ago. I mean this is just a soldier. Breakthrough breakout tolman. I for both of them. And i mean it's it's a shame especially because she's been at this stage many many times before but you know she just doesn't have that that cutting edge she doesn't either she just lacks that extra something to get her over the mall and she's always going to be vulnerable to players like if anandas on their day. We'll just go for and have that confidence in shorts. And i think it's just at times just t- passive like we've seen her before and then she's always waiting for for the era and she's she's working to be kind of the you know the the last woman standing but someone's going to get that before that even get to that point isn't it. Yeah i agree. I think particularly in that first. She was certainly to passive and i. I think that with fifteen. I think she was thinking if i got the ball. Back to finance is gonna hit unfo- sarah's not is going to see me through and win this match but that just wasn't the case now. Does it forty two winners In the match competitive thirsty to from fits later. And you know i. It's disappointing because fitting a we'll look at this match and think given my experience at this stage versus someone like fernandez. Who yes. she's got a lot of talent but has not a has go Even a comparable level of experience compared to fit sabina. How did she lose this. Because she is now six only one to at the quarterfinal stage or later at a major. And you know it's it's it's a problem for that. She needs to go away and think about. How does she overcome it. Because it's a question. I think that we've been asking for a few seasons now. And even though she looked like she was coming in with real confidence. I think she was on a nine match winning streak coming into this match. There's some sort of blocker that is stopping her from. Really i think fulfilling her her potential because i sent me look at her as a player who has the capability to get to a grandson final. But for some reason it's not happening at the moment and you could say you could look back to that. I sat and think that she is just playing a too passive and she can't just rely. Think i in these latter rounds of the tournaments. You can't just go out there not expecting to lose it. I think you've gotta go out there and expect to win it and that's possibly the mindset change that she needs because i think she is sort of expecting her opponent lose the match as opposed to herself city going on to win it. Yeah absolutely and i mean it's it's it's sitting is going to have have to work on this if she wants to see progress beyond semi she has made semi's before but i think fanaticism very exciting young. This was actually the first match. I'd seen more of her. I hadn't seen all the way through the asarco even the cub much. Say this one. I was yeah. She just hadn't really seen it from had before. I think he's been around for a while. I mean she seems to have dropped the anna as well which is good because i was never sure whether she wants to be the whole thing just lay low. Liliana i was reading. Came if if it does happen just going back to if it does happen. A final between finance says ratty candy the last all teenager grand slam final. Do you want to join. Have a guess who who those two teenagers were. Oh gosh would have been a william's sister as sirri note Three to when she liked..

arenas lenka Switzer lena kifah selena asaka tennis fernandez fernandes layla joe zachary cuba Us mo carolina tolman soccer olympics sabina sarah
"tolman" Discussed on AoS Coach

AoS Coach

03:35 min | 2 years ago

"tolman" Discussed on AoS Coach

"Gonna fight my hero phase. I dropped all those characters outside of nine and then rest army. Just let's pass them. That is worked very well for me to prevent more wounds slapping me in the face before i get across the table. We just why having shape heroes like the candidate. The tune banshee spiritual man just a couple of cheap heroes. That can just go up. And just be that death louis boost And then as you said keep some of those those he Worried about tech lost. You are about a machine. Gun negotiated these arcane bolts on that scenario. But you know what. I mean like the. If you're worried about your your heroes bank stopped early janda wills but make sure we got a couple of heroes cheap ers. You can afford to lose that. Move the full stop in cape. Kate them seen a is supported as you kinda move off the table but the big thing i found is having at least for night haunts is. It's kind of a good and a bad thing. We have a lot of characters that can do one thing like the about maybe a couple of things but like one big thing where it's like okay. The guardian souls is that plus one to one guy nice rounds at that plus one to hit guide spirit. Torment is the real. The hit guy like so the bad thing is you have to of characters. The good news is overly cheap and it means that the opponent does not have an easy decision because fighting me. They're looking at that going. Okay i can try and kill the changes. But if he has any chain rests left then he can resurrect light just stupid amount. As long as they're not too low. Because the new record rule where. You can only resurrect sony minis next to other minis But or it's like okay. Do i wanna get rid of the rules to hit. Well that i need to kill spiritual or don't wanna get revolt. Immortal wounds to get rid of lady allender and that has that like trying to make your opponent as flustered in confused as possible as far as distraction. Carney faxes as the saying goes is invaluable like Especially against not as seasoned opponents as it as a regular nighthawk apart. It grinds my gifts. Because i feel like i'm wasting i at a essentially a hero that has like five to seven wounds right. I put all of god. No you know you ignore half of them because of you know you're you saves ignoring rent Ego death save as well as all these deep things that happened right so a seasoned veteran against death knows that. You can't just do a couple of cheapens here. Cheap wins cheaper in t- you've got to concentrate everything at the unit whether it's a hero or troop bought five waste like a thousand points of focus. Just try to take down a five. Green hero grinds mikey's because i'm like If it wasn't knighthood i could be killing two units but right now i'm just trying to kill a five win. Hero seeks here that nine hundred five or six brain heroes a critical to the collapse of your full. Sorry you're right it does make a it does make me feel like i'm having i'm confused like do i take down the black coach. Do i take down the spirit. Tolman fikile the spirit told me. Like if i if i don't then i just enable you're forced to to kick my ass so it's it's as you said it's a fun challenge that in a bit of mind games there as well that as opposed to like if someone's running arcane on You are already arche on. You know that if you kill. Archaeology won the game. Nine times out of ten people started. Marathi go trick. You can kill those two week. You'll want those two and no you..

janda wills allender army Kate Carney sony Tolman fikile mikey
"tolman" Discussed on AP News

AP News

03:36 min | 2 years ago

"tolman" Discussed on AP News

"With their life, she says. Doyle is a tight knit town with a lot of older people and knows everyone will help as much as they can. I'm Julie Walker 80 news. Good morning. I'm Ed Donahue. Here's wildfires in the Northwest are threatening American Indian tribal lands. Kathy Moses is public information officer for the Mount Tolman Fire Center due to the weather conditions and everything we've had This area is just was just waiting for fire and and it's just terrible that piece people have lost their homes. Buyers in Oregon and Washington are among some 60 large active wildfires that have destroyed homes and burned through close to a million acres across the West. Former President George W. Bush is criticizing the Western withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan, the 43rd president told the German broadcaster. He fears Afghan women and girls will suffer unspeakable harm. Pope Francis is home from the hospital. Francis has arrived at the Vatican after he was discharged from a Rome hospital 10 days after intestinal surgery to remove half of his colon. The Ford car carrying Francis stopped briefly at the side entrance to Vatican City. Francis emerged from the passenger seat with the aid of a bodyguard to greet security guards standing outside and some well wishes. He then got back in the car and proceeded to enter the Vatican through the Perugino Gate. I'm Charles, a government estimates says Overdose deaths soared to a record 93,000 last year in the midst of the pandemic. The Japanese city of Hamamatsu, which is hosting a Brazilian Olympic teams. Pre game training says there was a coronavirus outbreak among staff at their hotel. Brazilian athletes and coaches are in sections of the hotel that are isolated from other guests. The Labor Department says inflation at the wholesale level jumped 1% in June, pushing price gains over the past 12 months. Buy a record. 7.3% Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell is expected to tell Congress today inflation will likely remain elevated in the coming months before moderating. This is a P news The U. S. Olympic team's uniforms include Navy blazers, stripes and flag scarfs for the team. USA flag bearers. Ralph Lauren has designed a special jacket. So we've added a cooling technology to the jacket. So just as it looks classic, it's infused with a modern technology that's totally groundbreaking. David Lauren, Ralph Lauren's son says It's a personal air conditioning system into a roomy white jacket. Former Olympic fencer Peter Westbrook tried it on When I push this button, I feel the air conditioner or the fan in my back and I can feel actually the breeds so I know was working. Current fencing team member Daryl Homer says. This jacket will come in handy for the long opening ceremony. It makes everyone feel really special. It makes people feel is really well designed. And you have the sustainability peace. I think everyone should feel really great about these. The team USA athletes will also be wearing striped belts made of recycled plastic water bottles. I'm Ed Donahue. AP News I'm Rita Foley, with an AP amusement at the World Health Organization says there was a 10% increase in Covid infections around the world last week. 3% rise in deaths that reverses a months long drop in Covid cases. Daily Covid cases here in the US have doubled over the past three weeks. Driven by July 4th gatherings and slowing vaccinations. Today, President Biden's taking action Here's our Jackie Quinn happy.

Daryl Homer Kathy Moses Francis Rita Foley Jackie Quinn Oregon Jerome Powell Ed Donahue Congress Vatican City June World Health Organization Washington Ralph Lauren 7.3% Mount Tolman Fire Center Hamamatsu July 4th Pope Francis 1%
"tolman" Discussed on Sci-Fi Talk

Sci-Fi Talk

04:33 min | 2 years ago

"tolman" Discussed on Sci-Fi Talk

"Really had four to five months from from the get go. The irony headstart head was research and that means everything to do this movie. We found at that period. You know from from the guns to to damage explosions to everything was was always backed with with some realistic visuals of you know even to the point of torpedoes how they sounded how the ibm -sconsin had the sobs. The all evolved over time at really fast pace. We felt that we were. We started off with the cutler. References of some of some pretty pretty severe audition peyton. Now i actually felt. We'll get in somewhere and that really kind of put the the energy in stamen to deny pete and he's chain because we were actually getting something that will really liking that a very long winded. Sorry answer but i'm trying to frame it for you. In the wild. The understanding of there was really nothing to work with as besides from great script in an great actor in guiding teary work. We had to go down the route of time standing the whole shot from the beginning to the end and paid had system he did. Tom hasty are is. We will have to use him as l. timestamps on on periods so the lighting was kind of following the movie. We had you know. It was a let. Tate's speak very military driven movie to get it done. And this is science place waves now. So that's kind of a little bit of an answer for. I think from my perspective when we were first approached by the client Gareth regards to this show timeframe moseley some consider equally. Obviously it in tom. Hanks wolf you can say no. That's obviously he wants to stay. Authentic new wants to be sure that the quality's guaranteed throughout the entire film and we were very conscious authenticity as were mike and tolman the director of course nascent they did build a huge database stuff for us and it was a lot of stuff which is not predispose of course but will genuine stuff pathway of gray scale stuff you know the really old good old images of of north atlantic ships in the convoy and there is quite horrific stuff is quite horrific day and really try to drive the look of the film. It was basically an weather so me so that was kind of the ocean. Derived point belonging on the ocean as ninety nine. Hundred police interviews. The ocean was another character so that had to be determined that was not determined when we came on of course they were a multitude of different assets to do not from a normal perspective. You'd have to do a last because of the timeframe we were doing all this in parallel so we had to get the ocean up going as best we could now. What was fantastic. Was the nathan obviously said. I'll just say the filmmakers put together a beat sheet right. They've locked out all the film put. What the scenes that what they wanted from your narrative perspective about what they wanted those scenes to feel like right. Now if it's just a ship the notion than weather lighting albeit very minimal and it being winter north atlantic it's very barren and inhospitable place now thankfully with enough being in the uk whether is bloody appalling and it was winter when we started this show. Contacts is in october november time immediately basically out crew to the four corners of the uk to shoot on the coastal regions case. We need that. Clean horizon line critical. You conduct of the building in cities because of the lights bill and then would like the ships and it'd be entirely unofficial so we got a whole multitude of time lapse hasty are essentially..

Gareth october november mike Tate five months four north atlantic Tom uk ninety nine Hundred police interviews tolman peyton first tom. pete Hanks sconsin
"tolman" Discussed on YANBAR PODCAST

YANBAR PODCAST

03:40 min | 2 years ago

"tolman" Discussed on YANBAR PODCAST

"He said on by one of them were writer songs. Either john ringing. Whoever rather or john and one of them say Have you heard of this before even in to like i think so you know so yeah understand that like i read some of the lot reading as you can see I read something else. They don't know where do songs come from. In one of the theories. I heard is that the songs that we feel that our original ashley are like maybe tolman nation or a hodge podge of everything that we ever heard in from that we kinda form original things or pieces that we call originally got any thoughts on that. Well you know. I would say you're right. There's billions of songs out there. So i mean somewhere along the line. You're going to have that mistake of doing a copyright infringement now unfortunately well hopefully for the artist or band that made it or created so they fight if it's way back in the day i think there's a certain clause where it says if it was so long go then can't get you know i've read up on the laws of something like that. But for instance we get a blue someone time and we put it up on youtube and somebody came back and said hey that's copyright infringement certain piece of the notes that you're using the beginning and i sent it back and i said i'll see you with a lawyer because that rift that's particular blues. Riff has been used throughout the blues century of music so they couldn't get us work because every blues singer used it exacts so it wasn't a copy for you just have to really be careful. I mean it's like will you. Dang dang view said there are so many songs notice for fatou..

john tolman ashley youtube Dang dang fatou
How to Liberate From Diet Culture With Virgie Tovar

Tamarindo

05:41 min | 3 years ago

How to Liberate From Diet Culture With Virgie Tovar

"Yes i would have. Maybe you could start with sharon with our listeners. How do you describe what you do in this world in in your mission and how you help us you know. Seek liberation in a way. Yeah i mean. I think of my work as primarily focused on ending fat phobia and for people who maybe don't know that word. It's form of discrimination. That says that fat people are inferior intellectually physically healthwise you know and in every kind of category and there's a long history of where that comes from that attitude comes from the things that you name checked are very central to that history. I think of myself as kind of like a creative someone who just really loves to be able to share that message in whatever medium bills right like if it's writing if it's video if it's photographs. It's if it's like you know my like on the go performance. Art of eating doughnuts in public. And i think i think the other thing. That really is very intuitive to me. But i've noticed other people have commented on this is like i think of the revolution and justice in the world that we're working towards as fun and beautiful and i think i bring that ethos into my work right and i think there's like different like activism politics. Justice work has different tones. I think all of them are really important right. You've got like the tone of sobriety. Got the tone of urgency. You've got all these different beautiful spectrum of human towns and and the tolman ignoring is like really unadulterated joy an effervescence. And i gotta think of it as like you know. I'm like we do justice. The world adjust world. The go world with more justice is a woman as joyful and so like. I love being able to almost like forecast that vibe like i'm like i'm like i'm channeling that vibe of that world that i think that we can we can create together. You know i love that so much and that's something that we try to sort of bring into tomorrow as well as we can bring in joy the work of justice social justice and revolution an essential right. Yeah there's this myth that you can kind of control your body indefinitely right and that is about colonialism and when people of color next colonialism on their own bodies they get rewarded not just from society but but from that internalized sense that were subjugated that internal sense of subjugation gives us that emotional thumbs up right. And so there's this amazing scholar named judith butler. And i'm like many people have heard of her but she kind of talks about like she talks about getting that nod from society and like how that that's so important to the spirit. Even if you know society is trash or even if you know the rules are garbage and you know the game is rigged like society is still really important to all of us because it's like it's like an extension of family and so when you're getting that nod out like that pat on the back like oh you know you're doing your role the right way. And that's what that nod is about and like when people of color enact that colonial act on ourselves we get that nod from society right. Oh my god. I feel like my brain just like exploded right now. It's totally. i loved thinking of society is an extension of family. That's so real. i mean. Use the metaphor of sorry. I don't mean to like railroad. The whole conversation but i often am like sake of society rather than thinking of something. That's outside of you. That you're like icu. Europe garbage. i'm interested like think of it. More as like recognizing that you have a toxic family does because you know you have a toxic family. Does it mean that you stop caring about what they think of you. It doesn't mean you stop like having a connection to them. It's just a recognition of a layer. You know a that's such an excellent metaphor and it's like how can i redefine my relationship in. how can i create my boundaries with this family ice. Yes can you. Can you speak about how you define diet culture and what it represents. Yeah i mean like dia. Culture is kind of a formal definition. That i use them. I think it's useful to kind of walk. It back and and talk about the characteristics of a diet. Culture is just kind of like the ubiquitous reality that we cannot escape messaging that says that losing weight and being thin at pretty much. Any cost is a really positive thing. Obviously it's characterized by a multibillion dollar industry like a diet industry but it's also represented in. I think the inescapable nature of it is what makes it a culture because i mean what literally if you kind of tune in. You can't even go a day without seeing or hearing messaging that shames bigger bodies and applauds weight loss and thin bodies. I mean it's even like the like literally. I love bubbly water and like lacroix like probably the most popular bubbly water in the country at this point in has the word innocent written on every single can like this idea. It's like zero calories zero sweeteners innocent

Phobia Tolman Sharon Judith Butler Europe Lacroix
"tolman" Discussed on X96

X96

04:31 min | 3 years ago

"tolman" Discussed on X96

"Kids, kids and referees, she said. I went to a youth soccer tournament the other day. Kids and referees, not mass parents, with masks under their chins, shadowing, cheering in close proximity to others. This is not good. Do not do it. Joe Biden. Has selected Pennsylvania Health Secretary Rachel Levine. To be his assistant secretary of health, leaving her poised to become the first transgender federal official to be confirmed by the U. S. Senate. Pediatrician and former Pennsylvania physician, General Levine Or perhaps, Levin? I don't know. Was appointed to her current post by Democrat governor, Democratic Governor Tom Wolfe in 2017, making her one of the few transgender people serving in elected or appointed positions nationwide. She won. She won past confirmation by the Republican majority Pennsylvania Senate. So that's interesting Aunt has emerged as the public face of the state's response to the Corona virus pandemic. Dr Levine will bring steady leadership and essential expertise that we need to get people. Through the pandemic, no matter what their zip code, their race, religion, sexual orientation, gender, identity or disability and meet the public health needs of our country in this critical moment and beyond, President elect, Biden said in the state. I feel like he's being really thoughtful about all of his picks. I think he's really trying to Is diverse is possible and at the same time getting people that are the most qualified for the job because this doctor said I was reading a little bit about her extremely accomplished and respected and Look if he's being so conscientious about making sure that a lot of people are representative, where are there any Maga people in there? Any maggot people it is, huh? Oh, believe me, there are maggot people. Everywhere, like termites throughout the various organizations is not going to. He's not going to consciously appoint any maggot people to his administration. Brett Tolman, the former U. S attorney for Utah. Is making headlines by making big bucks lobbying the White House for pardons for his clients, huh? He's made news before. Uh, now he was the U. S attorney for Utah. He was an advocate for women who are victims of violent crimes. He was a crusader for reforming the legal system. More recently, however, Tolman has been advising the Trump Administration on pardons and commutations. And, according to The New York Times, he's been collecting tens of thousands of dollars and possibly more lobbying for clemency for the son of a former Arkansas senator, the founder of a notorious online drug marketplace, Silk Road and also a New York City socialite. Pleaded guilty in a fraud scheme. So he has been making the case for those three different people and others to the Trump Administration for clemency or pardons and and these people are paying him. A good chunk of change to make those Pleased to the Trump administration. I'll Brett, I'm not going to tell you how to make a living, or how not to make a living. Just know that the stain will go with you. That's think is going to stay on. You don't come off in a tomato, wash. Donald Trump's impeachment trial in the Senate will happen. Let's get on with it. What does Mitch McConnell say about the whole thing? He says, Listen, uh When we have this trial in the Senate What You know, it's a vertical. It'll be a little conscience. That's why I will be more. Yeah, I hope so. Because I hope that's exactly what it is. I hope you examine your conscience. Senators. Really? And if you vote guilty if you are Republican who votes guilty It's it will also say. You know, I've been wrong this whole time or it will say I knew I was wrong this whole time, and I didn't care. Yeah. So There you go. But again, not enough tomato soup in the world to bathe in for stink.

Brett Tolman U. S. Senate Trump Administration Joe Biden Rachel Levine Mitch McConnell Donald Trump Pennsylvania Tom Wolfe Utah U. S assistant secretary General Levine Secretary fraud The New York Times New York City White House Arkansas
"tolman" Discussed on Defocus Media

Defocus Media

05:15 min | 3 years ago

"tolman" Discussed on Defocus Media

"On our brains with a few of them felt like really tired or like mildly like prodromos. Flu like symptoms the next night. Just like kinda like fuzzy feeling So i guess maybe not a bad idea to prepare with an employer or with your partner or something like that if you do need to take the next work. But what did they advise you about. Your second round is. Because i've heard that that one may be with have more of a reaction where you might be to take a day off the next day. I have heard that from my friends who have gotten their second does that they had so i just. I had arm soreness the day after my first goes Lasted for day than it was fine. But that is something you expect with an intramuscular vaccine with the flu shot But the second does is more people are in italy reporting that they had fever chills or something like that for the one day afterwards. So i think the best advice would be to take the day off of work the day after you get the vaccine or get it on a friday the weekend. Recover something like that personally on probably go thursday at lunch because they tolman totally would air time so. I'm gonna try to do that because it's getting crowded now and you know but i'm digging a half day on friday so hours kind of the same No soreness at all on on the first day on the second day just a little bit of a sore are really. Didn't give us any expectations for the second shot. But the friends and family members even get the second dose I also like you to work. Mcguinness second folk go. I'm probably felt worse in still went to work So that's the plan it. I would rather argh rather just do that on the recommended day in so that. That's that's at the thing about is like you may feel funny. But you're not actually said there's no live virus your body's just having an immune reaction but you can't actually be sick which is is sometimes it's maybe even almost a little encouraging that your body is having an immune response kazini any now. The money actually extreme. So did they tell you a little bit. I think have not even on personally yet. I do have as people are talking more about like we've got to get this rollout. Unlike some politicians even is dated like we don't recommend splitting the doses are talking about to get more people vaccinated. Maybe we just go ahead and give you as many people with lung does not doing the second. Do you have any concerns about getting your second dose her the organization behind that next step Get pre-appointed or how that going to work. As far as i know you just show up again because you have your card from the first..

fever chills flu tolman kazini italy Mcguinness
A Love Letter to Short Men

Does This Happen to You

05:21 min | 3 years ago

A Love Letter to Short Men

"DOT COM and at her website Carlin Betcha. Dot Com and here is a love letter to short men. Your height is not an issue unless you make it one. It's one of the most common openers I see on dating apps a man's height. It's usually the first thing men list and sometimes height is the only thing listed. Yep just height nothing else as if those two numbers measured in feet and inches contain multitudes. I understand why it happens. We are a society obsessed with looks we treat beauty and both genders as a currency attractive people make more money are viewed as more agreeable and somehow more valuable. This is part of the halo effect, a psychology term where we assign one single trait beauty to other characteristics kindness. Personally I have never seen a woman who cares about height in fact, I find short men hot, not all of them but many. Let. Me Tell you a not hot short man's story. I recently wanted to date with a five foot five inch guy within fifteen minutes of our meeting. He ass is my height a problem. It was not until he mentioned it. I had not even looked at the height he listed on his profile. I then spent the next twenty minutes assuaging his fragile ego and explaining why many women like short men it was exhausting at one point I think he read the weariness in my slumped shoulders and tried to self correct. I'm only asking because you're right about love and sex. Sure if you went on a date with a dermatologist, would you ask her to examine the fungus between your toes? I didn't say that, but I wanted to my sarcasm is a feral beast. Then, there are the many many short guys who lie about their height. You know who you are. I once went on a date with a guy claiming to be five foot eight inches. He was five foot four inches. That's a four inch lie. If we're keeping track I wore three inch heels for that date that put me at five feet eight inches. Greeted him with a hug. This was pre pandemic days his head landed on my chest. Awkward. For most women height is not a deal breaker but lying is So. Here it is short men the painful truth your height is not the Lady Boehner killer. You think it is it your lack of confidence that makes women's ovaries shrivel up and never want to go on another date again, I have dated a lot of sexy short men and they all had one thing in common nothing to prove when Tom Cruise five foot seven inches was sexiest man alive multiple times. Did anyone add a footnote sexy for a short Guy Hell? No. When Bruno Mars five, foot five inches shakes what his momma gave him are women getting out there measuring. Sticks Adriano. then. There's Napoleon. Napoleon. Never had complex about his height nor was he even really that short you can feel his confidence oozing out of the impatient love letters. He wrote to Josephine one read a kiss on your heart and one much lower down much lower. Nowhere in that letter, will you find a postscript saying unless my height makes you not in the mood? Yet Napoleon somehow got his name attached to the height inferiority complex known as the Napoleon. Complex. The Napoleon Complex states that short men tend to be more aggressive lie more and try to compensate for their short stature by being exceptionally cruel. But researchers found the opposite to be true. One study from Nyu phone short men are thirty two percent less likely to divorce than tolman. The study also found women married to short men reported greater happiness and short men did more housework than tolman. Yes. There is a correlation between happiness and a freshly floor. Clearly short men are doing something, right? I pulled over twenty of my most dateable girlfriends for this article I asked the same question. Are you attracted to short men most had similar answer? It depends on the guy that's a nice way of saying that is not the package. It's the meat inside. So

Napoleon Napoleon Complex Carlin Tolman Bruno Mars Tom Cruise Lady Boehner NYU Adriano. Josephine
In MegaMerger, Teladoc Buys Diabetes Coaching Company for $18 Billion

Business Wars Daily

04:01 min | 3 years ago

In MegaMerger, Teladoc Buys Diabetes Coaching Company for $18 Billion

"Yesterday we told you about one industry that appears to be forever changed by the pandemic, the oil and gas business. Well, here's another healthcare. These days make a doctor's appointment and it says likely to occur on your screen as in an office maybe even more likely virtual appointments were on the rise before covid nineteen but the pandemic put this trend on steroids telehealth use tripled as the virus spread around the globe according to a healthcare research firm called. Robo Global. Half of adults age twenty five and older have virtually visited a healthcare provider over the last few painful months. The firm says music to the ears of anyone who runs a telehealth company more than half of those patients were brand new to telemedicine can handle one more statistic well, nine out of ten of those patients told Robo. that. They'd be happy to see Dr Virtual again most likely that include you. So why am I telling you all this or because at least two companies are making big hey from this socially distanced phenomenon last week telemedicine leader Tele Doc announced it's buying Digital Health, coaching? Company. Forget this eighteen and a half billion dollars. It's rare to see those kinds of numbers. Even in Silicon Valley acquisitions, although there are many privately owned telemedicine companies, Tele Doc which was founded in two thousand and two is the only publicly traded one because of the pandemic business is booming in early March, the company was conducting about ten thousand remote medical appointments a day just a month. Later, that number had doubled. The company told The Wall Street Journal. Tele Doc is purchasing a company called the von. Go using Technology Levin go remotely monitors and coaches patients with chronic illnesses. CEO Glenn Tolman founded the company after his young son was diagnosed with type one diabetes. The Condition Levin go is best known for the publicly traded company later expanded to help care for people suffering from chronic problems like high blood, pressure, anxiety, and depression. According to CNBC Tele Doc had long planned to add services for remotely managing chronic conditions and La. bongos leaders had been thinking about moving into telehealth. The two companies quote were either on a path of convergence or collision Tele Doc CEO Jason Gora Vic told. CNBC. Industry publication healthcare dive calls the do the country's first digital health megamerger and by far the largest consider this Google is working on an acquisition a fitbit for what now looks like a meager two billion dollars the trade publication points out. The TALLADEGA deal is set to close by the end of the year proved it'll create an entity worth thirty, seven, billion dollars expected revenues in its first year with top a billion dollars or almost double the two companies sales this year sound promising well, not so fast Wall Street dinged both company's stock prices saying the price was inflated and that telehealth might be an covert bubble. which wants the pandemic finally, Wayne's could pop furthermore there are plenty of challenges on both sides. Tell dot faces a host of telemedicine rivals such as privately held doctor on demand but perhaps the bigger issue is that the eye-popping size of the deal could create copycats other big healthcare companies both virtual and traditional have probably already started shopping for their own remote chronic care management acquisitions. The stock price of Levine go rival Barrio health, which also manages chronic illnesses spiked almost thirty percent following the news. But let's get real. What could all this mean for most of us? One Stop Virtual healthcare management that's at least part of the answer, your blood pressure spikes you'll see it on your digital sensor and maybe through that same device, your virtual doctor will be contacted automatically if it gets bad enough, it's a future that could be more convenient, less personal, not very private and very lucrative for digital health entrepreneurs. Watch this space.

Tele Doc Cnbc Ceo Glenn Tolman Robo Global Digital Health Technology Levin CEO Levin Google Jason Gora Vic Robo. The Wall Street Journal DOT LA. Levine Wayne
Federal judge not rubber-stamping DOJ dropping of Flynn charges

Rush Limbaugh

01:01 min | 3 years ago

Federal judge not rubber-stamping DOJ dropping of Flynn charges

"John Solomon seventy two years old delaying his decision on whether to drop charges against he's got no choice look what a judge doesn't drop the charges what happens the DOJ has to try the case if they're not going to try the case the judge can't do anything the judge cannot bring charges himself an act as the prosecution that's the D. O. J. they have announced they're not going to proceed here that's what this is all about they're trying to find a way to go on with this thing so they can get to the end of what would Flynn guilty and that's what this friend of the court brief ultimate objectives are or it is so anyway the question on to Brett Tolman he's not allowing outside groups to weigh in with this friend of the court brief what's your take on the judge's rule I thought I'd seen everything that in twenty plus years in the federal criminal justice system but this is a first this

DOJ Brett Tolman John Solomon D. O. Flynn
Winston sets record, No. 15 Spartans top Wisconsin 67-55

AP News Radio

00:41 sec | 4 years ago

Winston sets record, No. 15 Spartans top Wisconsin 67-55

"Number fifteen Michigan state picks up their eighth straight over Wisconsin in a convincing sixty seven fifty five when I'm issue senior guard Cassius Winston with his forces holds the big ten and Spartan school record with eight hundred and seventeen the first is just that if that is a far outnumber the understand India you kind of creep toward the creek toward the creature you to kind of hit you like a I got a chance to do that the badgers trailed by fifteen at half I wish you scored the first four points of the second half Wisconsin with a thirteen or run to cut the lead down to six and then it was all Spartans as they go on a twenty four to six run to put the game away spends with four double figures led by Xavier Tolman with fifteen he also grabbed eleven rebounds Wisconsin state rivers led all scorers with nineteen Marty Martin is Lansing Michigan

Wisconsin Cassius Winston India Badgers Spartans Xavier Tolman Marty Martin Michigan Spartan School
MLB to investigate comments made by Houston Astros assistant general manager

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney

05:58 min | 4 years ago

MLB to investigate comments made by Houston Astros assistant general manager

"Major League baseball is looking into claims about Astros Assistant General Manager Brandon Tomen Major League Baseball Center will interview relevant parties regarding allegations published Monday that's all straight article the SL reports had tall been the astros assistant GM repeatedly yelled toward a group of female reporters during the team's American League pennant celebrate in his remarks reportedly reference Houston closer Roberto Suna who suspended for seventy five games in two thousand eighteen for violating the league's domestic violence policy before joining the Astros in trade from Toronto according to the report in sports illustrated what Tom and yelled over and over again was essentially that he was glad the Astros added a suna an act for which they were criticized heavily last year on Monday night the Astros put out a statement according to the article as quote unquote misleading and quote unquote completely irresponsible but on Tuesday the Astra seemed attempt to walk that back you're putting out statements by twelve men and owner Jim Crane would seem to acknowledge the incident that took place and Thomas Statement indicated quote unquote he apologize to anyone and he may have offended privately major league baseball's were furious about that statement that came out Stephanie Epstein who's The reporter wrote the story for sports illustrated talked about witnessing what tolman had done it was startling I mean none of us were talking to this person none of us we're talking about this person get I we were kind of surprised why why is this guy yelling at us and then once we started listening to what he was saying and seeing kind of the look on his face we realized Oh this is this is an unusual this is an unusual moment a little bit scary I would say and certainly unsettling that interview was on aside the lines Stephanie continued to talk about when this happened and at that point a lot of the players had gone and we're beginning to shower get dressed get ready to to go home with their families some of them were celebrating on the field so there were still players in the clubhouse certainly but it was not the same kind of raucous celebration usually see and generally also it's mostly or entirely players there you don't see that many front office officials is generally left to the players to celebrate so he was in a group Brennan was in a group of people a group of other front office officials I imagine I didn't know all of them and they were sort of chatting casually among themselves until until I guess he spotted US and decided to speak out she talked about the Astros Statement which so infuriated Major League baseball it starts out by confirming my reporting just it says that actually I misunderstood the context well there was no as the Houston Chronicle has has mentioned there was no interview taking place as soon as farther away from you album than we were so that seems like a stretch and he turned to face us that's been it was the other direction so that doesn't make a lot of sense and then it also seems like sort of a miscalculation I guess when and it's a room full of reporters I think it's likely that people are going to speak truthfully about what they witnessed so I'm not I'm not really sure what the plan was surrounding that's Ah I will say that I did not fabricate it in the summer of two thousand eighteen one a sooner became available after serving his suspension every team in baseball passed on him other than the Astros and Stephanie gave context of that decision honestly this is an attitude that I see across a lot of baseball on Sports in general is that when these teams acquire players with reprehensible pass they say listen the bargain is that we're going to get this guy for fifty cents on the dollar but we will pay a price and public outcry and this was the start of a conversation we are prepared to keep having this conversation but they don't actually want to have that conversation they want to get their guy what they paid for them and then they want to sort of move on and have us all focus on the fact that they are very good at winning baseball games and I don't think they get to decide that before game one of the World Series Aj hinch talked about the incident in the clubhouse it's unfortunate it's uncalled for it for me as a leader in this organization down here in the clubhouse on the field take everything that happens in the clubhouse to heart you know no one I don't I don't it doesn't matter if it's a player coach manager any of you members of the media should ever feel like when you come into our clubhouse that you're gonna be uncomfortable or disrespected I think we all need to be better across the award in the industry I understand why it's a question today and I you know I appreciate it but I was disappointed. Aj hinch was asked about how the Astros Organization that handles people. I don't think it's my job to evaluate that I mean I understand the question I appreciate it but the last twenty four hours I've been pretty locked in on the What's and I think answering that question at this moment is probably not fair to me enough fair to the organization I tell you this that majorly Paul would've looked into the todman incident either way but I do think that the statement the Astros put out on Monday night double down not only the whole situation them but I think for Major League Baseball which was absolutely livid over how the Astros seem to target the credibility of the report. are mentioning that report was misleading mentioning that the report was completely irresponsible and it definitely when you see on Tuesday how the Astros tried to walk back the comment until the organization comes forward and acknowledges that their statement was mislead being in completely irresponsible the Front Office of the Astros will have no credibility in this issue and whenever discipline comes down and I do think sums coming down I think more of it's going to be about the statement that the team put out under organization letterhead

Astros Major League Baseball Center Baseball Major League Aj Hinch Assistant General Manager Brandon Tomen Paul Twenty Four Hours
A Not-So-Thrilling Ride For U.S.-Made Roller Coasters

NPR's Business Story of the Day

03:35 min | 4 years ago

A Not-So-Thrilling Ride For U.S.-Made Roller Coasters

"China is growing its population. It's Connie, we've heard this before, what you might not know, is that within the next few years, China is predicted to become the largest theme park market on earth ride manufacturers in the US are set to play a big role in that growth. But the US China trade war means tariffs on everything from soybeans two parts for amusement, rides and some American companies are feeling squeezed. K ers were Becca Ellis reports pretend you're bullet hanging out in the barrel of a gun, the triggers pulled. And then you're hurled into the air at turbo speed. Zero to eighty miles in two seconds that's being on a rollercoaster made by s worldwide is like these organ jumbling rides have turned the northern Utah company into one of the largest amusement ride manufacturers in the country. Earlier in may Preston perks and executive director s was overseeing roller coasters bound for Bari, New Jersey, Pittsburgh, Chicago, and China in the center of the factory to massive white steel police part of a sixteen million dollar ride going up in eastern. China's newest military themed amusement park sons. You cultural park soon a truck will cut off these police to Los Angeles. Across the Pacific in an ocean container and arrive at the Xingdao port southeast of Beijing. That's when the customer will have to pay tariff of a little over twenty five percent. Her says there's going to be some sticker shock liver. Would they have thought that they'd have to pay such a high duty and tax just like sweepings cars lithium batteries and thousands of other goods roller coasters have gotten caught up in the escalating trade war between the US and China since last fall? Beijing has hiked up the tariff on American-made amusement rights twice potentially, costing customers in China more than a million dollars in extra fees. It's enough perk, says for some buyer's remorse to creep in there when our customers are having to pay more money because of added tariff, they're gonna look other places. And that's what they've done this year, only one Chinese customer has reached out to purchase a ride in past years. Prick says about half of their business came from China. John Gerner, managing director. Of leisure business advisers in China. He says American companies are known as the go to guys for high tech rides pricey, but worth it. And so they've been able to compete on the value of, of innovation quality of intellectual property characters and brands if the new tariffs stained place, Kerner, warns American rights could lose their appeal as Chinese companies are encouraged by Chinese, Dave Tolman is a right, packager at the company, one of its hundred or so, please, he says, it's not just the Chinese duties that have made the trade war such a bumpy ride for us NS with tears zone stealing aluminum affect us in this business a real big amount. That's two of the main things that we use since last March. When the Trump administration announced tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports the price of the metal parties by s has risen by as much as seventy percent. Perk, says they had to rethink parts of their supply chain, seeking out, cheaper steel for the ties at old roller coaster tracks together and for the walk. Quays for ride means we have to change our country of origin. We have to build things and other countries to avoid the tariffs since the mental tariffs were imposed last year. He says that work is now done closer to much of their customer base in China for NPR news. I'm Rebecca Ellis in Salt Lake City.

China United States Rebecca Ellis Beijing John Gerner Connie Utah Los Angeles NPR Salt Lake City Executive Director Dave Tolman New Jersey Prick Managing Director Pittsburgh Xingdao Bari Kerner
Future of Football: Readers respond

San Francisco Chronicle Sports - Spoken Edition

06:50 min | 5 years ago

Future of Football: Readers respond

"You're listening to the spoken edition of the San Francisco Chronicle. Future a football readers respond by Al Sarah Cevic in late October, the chronicle published a six part series examining the future of football. The premise was simple now that we know the sport can cause lasting brain damage. Driving some to suicide. What are we going to do about it a dedicated team of chronicle? Journalists spent months digging into the subject, you can read the whole thing at SF chronicle dot com slash future afoot ball in a letter to chronicle subscribers I encouraged response. What do you think should be done? What will the game look like in twenty years? Let me share a few of those voices. Thanks, your reflection is so important. I did love your projection that football would look like boxing. Why the continued ignorance with little effort to address the problem, Frederick e Hessler at San Francisco, all your main recommendations. Make logical sense. And are the right thing to do. I was lucky. I was too small for playing grade school football, my coach realized this I believe in I sat on the bench. My mother always feared I would get seriously injured with regard to parents and kids now ultimately people need to make their own decisions about what to do with regard to their children playing football. If flag football is an option that would be great. I believe sooner than later American football, as we know it won't be as popular. Instead people will migrate to lesser injury prone sports that are also rewarding for fans parents schools and students John Durham Napa. Everybody's jumping on the football is dangerous bandwagon. This story is long winded bull all major sports have physical contact soft. Wimps are ruining this country and turning our men into soft little pansies look at the average something male today. Weak wimps worrying about the. Next superhero or Star Wars movie, all this coddling and winding is pathetic name withheld. I'm sixty eight I played for four years in high school and a year of college. I never finished a season mostly knee injuries. But I broke my thumb in college in a way that required surgery. I also boxed in college. I attended a forty Niners Cam for high school students where a very aggressive game of quote unquote, touch resulted in a hit that caused me to lose vision in one eye for a few plays naturally. I stayed in the game. So far it hasn't caught up to me. Anyway, I think one partial solution is to make all the pads and helmets soft on both the inside and the outside. Also, I think many knee injuries could be eliminated. If there were no cleats Leif ODA grin Petaluma step one change, the channel the rest of it really won't matter so much Greg Tolman, Berkeley Ulta. Emmett frisbee all quarterbacks. No, linebackers, spike. Connor Redwood City. It would be interesting to know, whether rugby has the same level of problems with brain trauma as football rugby players wear. No helmets or padding. And there are strict rules about tackling. I suspect that the protective gear in football increases the incidence of brain trauma because it allows players to hit each other harder. It doesn't take a direct head impact or cause a concussion. The sudden acceleration from a hard hit can do it. Even if there's no head contact in rugby players are less inclined to use their bodies as weapons when tackling because it could cause injury to the tacklers. It's counter intuitive, but reducing the amount of protective gear in football could make it a safer sport. The culture of the sport has to change to players coaches fans broadcasters and reporters have to stop seeing a disabling hit as a good thing. Ng? Jeff Lichtman Elsa. Reto? Bravo end. This disgusting sport. There's five thousand four hundred seventy two more peaceful ways for young people to quote, unquote, build character, Chris Moffet, San Ramon great articles on the game of football. If you get a chance read some of the books or articles on John gangly Ardy, the Saint John's university division three coach whose philosophy on the game of football was so different than any coach. I've known even in the fifties and sixties no tackling in practice. No practice longer than ninety minutes. Water breaks it Sarah his philosophy worked. He one more football games. Four hundred eighty nine than any coach in NC double A history along with four national championships. I played for John in the sixties on one of his championship teams. We never had anyone hurt in practice except the occasional ankle sprain. We had a few transfers from schools like. The university of Minnesota where Murray Warmoth coached with the philosophy of making the practices tougher than the games kind of survival of the fittest code that was not unusual at that time football needs to change again. Thanks for the great articles Terry Underwood, according Madera, here's a modest proposal. Make everyone eligible why linemen are ineligible for passes. Always been a mystery to me this is somewhat more radical than the eight ten offense. I think that's what it was called that. The Piedmont high coaches developed and was voted down by the NF s but it would keep the nature of the game intact while changing dramatically if everyone is eligible the game will spread out, and there will be more of a premium on speed and agility, then raw size, power football will make less sense and just as the three point line and the warriors style has pretty much removed the power game from basketball, especially at the lower levels. There will be a shift toward more scoring. And use of the whole field. It's not a complete or perfect solution. Of course. But it moves the game away from one on one contact and towards skill and speed clay Callum, walnut creek, the late US Senator, gene. Mccarthy democrat Minnesota had a great line. He said football is like politics, you have to be smart enough to understand the game and dumb enough to think it's important Eric mills Oakland, thanks to all of our readers who responded, interestingly, we didn't get much from people defending the sport as it stands. Maybe we're preaching to the choir here in the bay area. Maybe people are starting to see the truth.

Football San Francisco Chronicle Rugby Al Sarah Cevic John Durham Napa San Francisco Frederick E Hessler Jeff Lichtman Elsa Ulta United States Emmett Frisbee John Gangly Ardy Connor Redwood City University Of Minnesota San Ramon Saint John Leif Oda Petaluma Boxing
Looking at Apple's new camera system on iPhone

Vector Podcast

02:40 min | 5 years ago

Looking at Apple's new camera system on iPhone

"By picking your shots. But if you want the computational stuff and you want it for everything, you'll have to move up to an iphone tennis or tennis max or stick with an iphone, eight plus or seven plus to get it. Now I've shot with Esa LARs Endesa LARs all my life, but I've never considered myself a real photographer more of a hobbyist at best. So to get a better sense of the trade offs, I asked a real photographer a real professional photographer what he thought, here's Tyler Tolman. Thanks for having me be a part of your video. Renee. My name is Tyler stolen and have been working for for for over a decade. Now, I think this is the first time that apple actually under sold the cameras in their new phones with a whole new larger sensor and lens and camera compartment everything. It has been performing a lot better in the iphone tennis that have been using so far. But the best news is that we can expect most of those same improvements to come to the iphone ten har-. So I talked about what is the same is the most important stuff to me? And that's everything on the wide angle lens. It allow you to have the same increased dynamic range where it's using smart each yards, take multiple exposures every single moment that the camera is on and combine them into image quality that we just weren't seeing in cell phone cameras before. Now from previous iphones we're doing each as well, but they had to take the photo and then process it nude. See the results afterwards in the iphone tennis antenna are it is live processing all the time. That means that your life otas also have that effect as well as all your video. Even on the selfie camera, it's got that extra dynamic range and it makes a really big difference. But the new camera isn't just what you see. Incites a little bump on the back of your phone. It's also things like the neural engine which has been improved in both. The ten are antennas. It's exactly the same as well as the image signal processor, and those gather are doing a lot of the intelligent processing to give. You those incredible results of camera. Now, the big difference is that we don't have the telephoto lens on the iphone ten are that means that you can't zoom in with quite as much detail when you're taking portrait mode photos. There's a little less refinement around the edges of your subject. So the times that you see ears or noses or classes get cut off in portrait mode, that might be a little bit worse on the ten are because it doesn't have quite as much depth information to work with. However, you do get something for this different lands since it's only using one lens, the wider lens, you're able to take a wider portrait vote photo then you can on the tennis so strange that for so much lower price. The ten are actually has one feature. The tennis doesn't anyway. Thanks again for having me. Renate. Can't wait to talk to you more about the release of twenty teams. Thanks Tyler. If

Tyler Tolman Tennis Renee Apple
Goldman Sachs doesn't see a recession in our immediate future

The Ray Lucia Show

00:53 sec | 5 years ago

Goldman Sachs doesn't see a recession in our immediate future

"This is the Ray Lucia show. Talk show in America, the help to make better money moves right here on business talk radio helping you along the way, and I'll tell you what a very interesting show planned for today. Goldman Sachs I up little sign of recession for the next three years. Now, I don't know. Goldman Sachs knows what they're talking about. I suspect they do. I like that. I like the fact that Goldman Sachs does not see a recession. They say a recession is muted and below average even three years from now. There's only thirty six percent chance of recession. You know, what that means party goes on folks, the party goes on and Tolman? Should know. I'm being a little bit facetious there because they don't. I've talked about the cyclically adjusted price earnings ratios predictability in the past on how market returns do and we have found that to be flawed. If you go back to two thousand sixteen and you looked at the C A P ratio. The Robert Schiller CAP predictable ratio. Stocks aren't supposed to be doing anything. Right now in two thousand seventeen of course, a banner year twenty eight not looking so bad either. So when I read these headlines, I put everything in perspective.

Goldman Sachs Ray Lucia Tolman Robert Schiller America Three Years Thirty Six Percent