35 Burst results for "Twenty Months"

 Hong Kong tycoon given 13 months jail for Tiananmen vigil

AP News Radio

00:41 sec | 1 year ago

Hong Kong tycoon given 13 months jail for Tiananmen vigil

"Hong Hong Kong Kong tycoon tycoon he's he's been been given given thirteen thirteen months months in in jail jail full full of of Tiananmen Tiananmen vigil vigil Hong Hong Kong Kong court court has has sentenced sentenced activist activist and and business business tycoon tycoon Jimmy Jimmy Lai Lai to to thirteen thirteen months months in in jail jail for for urging urging participation participation in in last last year's year's bound bound Tiananmen Tiananmen vigil vigil amid amid a a crackdown crackdown by by Chinese Chinese authorities authorities that that is is rolled rolled back back the the semi semi autonomous autonomous cities cities civil civil liberties liberties light light the the founder founder of of the the now now shuttered shuttered pro pro democracy democracy newspaper newspaper apple apple daily daily has has already already been been jailed jailed for for taking taking part part in in pro pro democracy democracy protests protests for for which which he he will will serve serve a a total total of of twenty twenty months months the the District District Court Court convicted convicted seven seven others others on on similar similar charges charges and and handed handed out out sentences sentences of of up up to to fourteen fourteen months months I'm I'm Charles Charles that's that's my my Hong Hong Kong Kong tycoon tycoon he's he's been been given given thirteen thirteen months months in in jail jail full full of of Tiananmen Tiananmen vigil vigil Hong Hong Kong Kong court court has has sentenced sentenced activist activist and and business business tycoon tycoon Jimmy Jimmy Lai Lai to to thirteen thirteen months months in in jail jail for for urging urging participation participation in in last last year's year's bound bound Tiananmen Tiananmen vigil vigil amid amid a a crackdown crackdown by by Chinese Chinese authorities authorities that that is is rolled rolled back back the the semi semi autonomous autonomous cities cities civil civil liberties liberties like like the the founder founder of of the the now now shuttered shuttered pro pro democracy democracy newspaper newspaper apple apple daily daily has has already already been been jailed jailed for for taking taking part part in in pro pro democracy democracy protests protests the the which which he he will will serve serve a a total total of of twenty twenty months months the the District District Court Court convicted convicted seven seven others others on on similar similar charges charges and and handed handed out out sentences sentences of of up up to to fourteen fourteen months months I'm I'm Charles Charles that's that's

Hong Hong Kong Kong Tiananmen Tiananmen Jimmy Jimmy Lai Lai Tiananmen Tiananmen Vigil Hong Hong Kong Kong District District Court Court Apple Charles Charles
International Poker Open Will Return to Dublin Come What May

The Chip Race

02:18 min | 1 year ago

International Poker Open Will Return to Dublin Come What May

"Just six weeks time. He will be bringing live poker back to our land. He is nick o'hara nick. Welcome the creator of times for having me along. Always phones josh. It's great to have nick. Let you start right there the it. Oh this is great news of the week. The international poker open is happening and it will be the first life fokker in ireland. Wanna say like twenty months or like eighty ninety definitely in that region for the fourth time the vet will be sponsored by unique poker. The festival is one of europe's longest running and most popular events. It's been held annually since two thousand and seven including an online version. Played on you bet last year. This year's live event will take place at dublin's burlington hotel as it has been for many years. We'll be on from october. Twenty fifth. Nick this is very much your baby these days. Tell us more. Yeah i mean. It's phony mentioned lockdown. The last major live events in ireland was to uni beto In february of twenty nine dame so we were last two now. It looks like prefer stand and on the twenty second of october government or to to move all remaining restrictions which lay the patch for live events to recommence has to wear before. Knock down so. I mean we're very excited about our and the government announced yesterday ten days ago so there's been a lot of our background over the last five days or so to gather websites updated schedule updated contacting staff finalizing details at the venue and and we finally yesterday morning. At eleven o'clock we announced the ipo online which was spread and we had a huge response on social media and the hotel Announced about eleven o'clock in the morning on the hotel called What's happened forgotten destroyed hair before imposing is bought does not mean is said what we sold about a hundred bedrooms in the last hour wowed. That's an incredible

Nick O Hara Nick Ireland Burlington Hotel Josh Nick Dublin Europe Government
Italian Grand Prix: Max Verstappen on Pole After Valtteri Bottas Wins Sprint

The Autosport Podcast

01:22 min | 1 year ago

Italian Grand Prix: Max Verstappen on Pole After Valtteri Bottas Wins Sprint

"Vouch. we bought one one seconds qualifying at the twenty two nd. Two italian gregory beating max staffan with lewis hamilton fifth after making a poor start from among side us down robotic finished third mclaren ahead of his teammate landowners who kept hamilton at bay for the duration of the race which was disrupted by a fast lap crash for twenty months of winter. Pa ouseley ghazi. Briefy fit the mccaren of down. Your ricardo damaged his front wing as a result which went underneath his front wheels causing him to shoot off into the gravel. The crash about the safety car and ask as these call was recovered a clash between iki snow to number but cubits so usa came about the race restarted on that four of eighteen with batas romping to one point six second lead over verstappen with hamilton chasing. The two mclarens both tie as fast as the mediums of the cheerleaders. On the second mercedes recorded came home fourteen point five seconds behind the winner with norris keeping hamilton behind him who at times was even sliding around dramatically shall lead time. His ferrari teammate call assigned in sixth and seventh the former recovering from feeding on while at the end of f. b. two scientists ferrari had been rebuilt off his heavy f. b. to crash came highway started ahead of antonucci of nazi. The affirmation drive ahead of the charging such a paris to finish with the red bull. Dr having to make a couple of attempts to pause after martin's launch drove for that position.

Max Staffan Pa Ouseley Ghazi Hamilton Lewis Hamilton Batas Verstappen Mclaren Ricardo USA Norris Ferrari Paris DR Martin
How the New Testament Opened Author Micah Wilder's Eyes to the True Gospel

The Eric Metaxas Show

02:22 min | 1 year ago

How the New Testament Opened Author Micah Wilder's Eyes to the True Gospel

"Mike. Take us back now. You're nineteen years old you you kind of stumble onto this baptist minister in florida. And you're trying to convert him to the mormon faith and you kind of bumped into the wrong baptist minister because this guy because there are many baptist ministers you could run into who wouldn't wouldn't have pushed back in the way that he did probably so what happens at this point Do you continue meeting with him or do you. Just go read the bible on your own. Yes so after his challenge to approach the new testament like a child. I i accepted this invitation but it wasn't in a humble or a childlike faith. It's because i believed in my own arrogance that i could prove the mormon church truth through reading the bible exclusively and so in the mormon church we had extra biblical scripture that we were adhering to for truth. So i'd never really put the same amount of of trust into the bible is is a christian should and so i then began this process of reading the new testament daily for the remainder of my mormon mission which was about twenty months and i actually ended up reading the new testament in total twelve times from beginning to end it was through the power of the word of god that my eyes were opened and i was washed by the water of the word of god and i started to see the difference in the gospel that i was teaching as a mormon and the gospel that was revealed in the new testament and i loved what you said before the break. You know paul said should we send deliberately so the grace may abound. Will god forbid right. So as a mormon i had the cart before the horse i was trying to earn a right standing with god and trying to prove my worthiness to god believing that it was through my works that i could somehow make myself righteous not recognizing that we love god because he first loved us and so our faithfulness in the works and fruit that are produced through us is that which comes as a result of love of gratitude of faithfulness to the god who loved and saved us and so we then walk in the good works the goddess prepared before him that we should walk in them and so i came to recognize that there was this beautiful gospel. This good news that jesus love for me with so grand and vast that he paid in full measure the debt that i owe to god and god was asking of me for justification was to trust in him to believe that jesus alone was the only way to salvation.

Mormon Church Mike Florida Paul
"twenty months" Discussed on Front Burner

Front Burner

05:18 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on Front Burner

"A one thing. I think it's probably worth mentioning here is is that we're talking about all the deaths in this country. Thousands of young children have been dying fed as well. What really stands out. And i think what's. What's extraordinarily distressing about. This is the death of infants and under five year olds and epidemiologists have been scratching their heads trying to figure out. Just what is the scope and scale of the mortality amongst the under five bureaus and some people say as many as two thousand children have have died the last twenty months this many think. This might be an underestimate because of the number of people who are dying of undiagnosed respiratory illnesses and this is really unusual right because we you know one of the narratives of covid nineteen th last year or two has been that. This didn't really impact children as as much as as adults and we're seeing brazil you know as a result of the fact that just the sheer volume of patients has led to this really appalling situation of of young children Dying in their beds and unable to see their parents because parents aren't allowed in hospital. So you know last words over tablets with infants just beyond the pale. It's incredibly tragic.

two thousand children Thousands of young children one last year brazil under five year last under five bureaus nineteen th two twenty months
"twenty months" Discussed on Mafia

Mafia

02:40 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on Mafia

"Simone was an <Speech_Music_Male> incompetent leader <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> de simone <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> remained in power <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> for eleven years until <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> his death in nineteen <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> sixty seven. <Speech_Male> He was <Speech_Male> succeeded by nick. <Speech_Music_Male> Lakota <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> after distancing <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> himself from the <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> family <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> frontino began <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> working for the san francisco <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> crime <Speech_Music_Male> family <Speech_Male> however he would <Speech_Male> eventually return <Speech_Male> to la <Speech_Music_Male> <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Silence> <Speech_Male> in <Silence> the next episode. <Silence> <Speech_Male> Jimmy <Speech_Male> became associated <Speech_Male> with the san francisco <Speech_Male> mafia <Speech_Male> but there was friction <Speech_Male> between him <Speech_Male> and their crime. Boss <Speech_Male> james <Speech_Male> lanza. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> The two of them <Speech_Male> never got along. <Speech_Male> Jimmy didn't respect <Speech_Music_Male> him. Lanza didn't <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> like how <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> much attention <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> jimmy brought <Speech_Music_Male> to san francisco. <Speech_Music_Male> I think <Speech_Music_Male> Jimmy said <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> all he does is sell <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> insurance and <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> all. It <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> doesn't do anything else. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> So <SpeakerChange> there's just very <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> little respect between <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> them fraught. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Diana would continue <Speech_Music_Male> to have conflicts with <Speech_Music_Male> several <SpeakerChange> of the la <Speech_Music_Male> mob bosses. <Speech_Music_Male> He <Speech_Music_Male> had a falling <Speech_Music_Male> out with <Speech_Male> lanza <Speech_Music_Male> and revived <Speech_Music_Male> brooklyn. Hair <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> short tino <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> of <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> la. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Jimmy <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> had no respect <Speech_Music_Male> for those guys <Speech_Music_Male> He <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> told me <Speech_Music_Male> at great length. Tiv <Speech_Music_Male> udom <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> as in <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> his words. Punks <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> part of <Speech_Music_Male> the mickey mouse <Speech_Music_Male> mafia. <Speech_Male> He would describe <Speech_Music_Male> them as people that <Speech_Male> never did any <Speech_Music_Male> work and probably <Speech_Music_Male> couldn't so <Speech_Music_Male> he had a <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> very low <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> opinion <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> of them <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> then when <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> l. A crime boss. <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> Dominic brooklyn <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> air was sentenced <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> to twenty months <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> in prison. <Speech_Music_Male> Jimmy yano <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> received a proposal <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> the position of <Speech_Music_Male> co acting <Speech_Music_Male> boss out <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> in la. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> The government got <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> a conviction on <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> brooklier for extortion. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> He was going inside <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> for a few years. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> He <Speech_Music_Male> wanted to promote jack <Speech_Music_Male> dragnes. Nephew <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> louis dragged into <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> the acting boss <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> while he was away <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> louis dragged. It <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> didn't really want to. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> He didn't really want. The <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> responsibility <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> are apt to take the <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> heat. How the <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> story goes that. He <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> agreed to this. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> Only if jimmy <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> friday yano would <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> agree to be his co. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> acting boss <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> however <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> events after his <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> reign co boss <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> would lead to threats on <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> his life <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> causing fraught yano <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> to change sides <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> and alter <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> history. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Male> So <Speech_Male> i didn't take a genius <Speech_Music_Male> to understand <Speech_Music_Male> that <Speech_Music_Male> something <Speech_Music_Male> <Speech_Music_Male> What's going <Speech_Music_Male> on in <Speech_Music_Male> jimmy's life <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> and his relationship <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> with the l. a. Family <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> that was <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> significant. <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> This <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> has been mafia <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> and <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> audio bouma real <Speech_Male> <Advertisement> series <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> hosted by me <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> fleet cooper. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> it is produced <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> by audio booms.

Dominic brooklyn Diana eleven years Jimmy yano twenty months sixty seven nineteen two Jimmy friday james san francisco brooklyn de simone simone jimmy Lanza louis Nephew years
"twenty months" Discussed on Ante Up Poker Magazine

Ante Up Poker Magazine

04:33 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on Ante Up Poker Magazine

"Twenty twenty one. You're listening to the best poker. Cast on the interwebs. Chris costanza and i'm just gonna along boy. I can't wait to hear this story. I know i actually get it on the wild finally. Get to talk about poker that we played. We're gonna wind because we're supposed to have her home. Game with a home game didn't happen this week. So let's talk about coming weeks. Guess whenever we get home game together. I actually got in a real life. Chris and play real live poker. I live tournament. Played think in twenty months is what i figured out the right. Yeah absolutely insane. And really i mean i played. I played a couple of light. Pokerstars free treaty tournaments sense in that. But that's about it. A couple of sitting goes to for a couple of sitting goes and twenty months. The flattening play a tournament was fantastic. So that's gonna really enjoyed literally every minute of their. I was Well it'd be up so here in tampa. Td that tgt poker which we talked about on the show last week Put the mix game series which is fantastic and So i play the omaha age studied event planning planning a couple more but thinks workout When i do the plano one and it was fun. And soon as i walk him chris. I see the remainder saying. Hey where are you old. Took a turn into rate left and look for the atm to are. Frequent cruisers. is up to say hi to them. And then i sit down with my own and there was another one of our cruisers sitting. Right next to me and antibiotic an hour to our coca-cola cruises shows up and wait registered senator table and then of course dealers that i remember back in the day like you know it's been twenty months but you felt like you're right back in Yeah so that was kinda cool finish. Fourteen thousand forty two so no money. So i'm not gonna brag all but it's not bad and there was more than five hours because the structure was fantastic for olympic tournament And really played pretty well. So and i was probably fourth or fifth and ships like five handed out..

Chris costanza Chris fourth twenty months last week more than five hours fifth this week tampa five olympic Twenty twenty one chris one an hour Fourteen thousand forty two coca-cola Pokerstars omaha
"twenty months" Discussed on The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

05:41 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss

"In terms of like nerdy out on all of the molecules it can potentially impact longevity and rapamycin was in many ways the poster child for the it p. program because first of all it's hard to get anything to live longer second of all when they were making the formulation for the rapamycin to feed the mice and these were very special mice. These were not your typical crappy lab mice that have no bearing whatsoever to real animals. These are very special type of mice. That are much more akin to real animals and that's very important distinction between what happens in ninety nine percent of miles research which is almost in applicable to humans. And it's why so many drugs that get tested in these b six mice and things like that show some marker of success and they become wild failures beyond the mice. But this was different. They had trouble getting the formulation to work and by the time they finally did the mice were like twenty months old. Which means they're almost at the end of their life. They're like seventy year old sixty five year old mice and they contemplated just scrapping the experiment but they were like screw it. Let's just run it late. So they started feeding the treatment group with rapamycin and the placebo group. Get to continue eating their regular chow. Because it was oral administration yes rapamycin was mixed into their chow. And lo and behold the rapamycin group despite initiating treatment so late in life had a staggering improvement in lifespan. There's been so many it. Ps that have replicated this. I don't wanna misquoted. But something to the effect like a seventeen or nineteen percent improvement in the males or females and eleven to twelve percent in the males and remember the atp used the very rigorous way of assessing this. Which is they're taking a look at total life not just remaining life. It's an even higher bar to clear. How much lifespan. Along gatien happens of course went and repeated. The study administering the dose when they were younger and saw an even greater response. This has been repeated over and over and over again and to my knowledge there is not a single animal. Study that has tested this hypothesis. That has not found on as a result of that's wild which again is very unusual Since it's just replicated over and over and over with replicated non stop what is also interesting is when looking at other markers other interesting things such as vision and hearing and other markers of health span. We continue to see improvements in these things for animals as well as i think we even spoke about before the guy named matt cable line who just interviewed for a second time for the podcast has been studying this in companion dogs and looking at heart function because as you know basically two things kill companion dogs primarily heart failure and cancer and.

eleven nineteen percent seventeen twelve percent seventy year old two things ninety nine percent of miles twenty months old sixty five year old matt cable single animal second first second time many drugs rapamycin
"twenty months" Discussed on The Mom Hour

The Mom Hour

04:20 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on The Mom Hour

"Okay so kind of continuing down this road of how do you know what do you do if you aren't sure whether to seek medical attention for an injury. I thought we could just talk about times. We realized later that we may be aired in one direction or another and not that. We're beating ourselves up for it. But i have a couple that come to mind one where i should have probably gone. In allegra had a bookshelf. It was a lightweight. Bookshelf fall on her but a bookshelf did fall on her arm and pinned her arm between the ottoman of her rocker. She was about eighteen months. Twenty months maybe. I was pregnant with read. And there was a bruise on her forearm. There was no like it was just a bruise. There wasn't it didn't get twisted or dislocated like and she cried and then she stopped but i have never seen a bruise that lasted quite that long or was that it was like hard kind of and ryan still maintains that he thinks like she had a little broken arm and her little her little wing. It didn't affect any like wrist movement. It didn't affect anything. It was just a giant. Bruce and i wonder you know the way little toddler bones knowing what i know now about toddler bones if there was a little a chip or a break or some. I don't know so that one. I feel like i was so naive. I probably should have taken her in later. I'll mention the time that violet Had broke a fractured elbow and walked around for like six days before i took her in I'll save that story for later. But i definitely i tried to do the right thing that time and got confused by a bad experience. So there again. It's like where you take them. Also kind of impacts the experience. So yeah right i know because you can take them in and still not get good advice and knocks not yeah and not get the treatment you need and then on the other side. The should waited. This is really funny. And i bet we have listeners. Who've done this two different times. I have taken a toddler toddler. Preschooler in to a pediatrician. Because they refused to walk on their leg and they're too young to really tell you what's going on..

Twenty months Bruce about eighteen months two different times six one direction couple one days allegra
"twenty months" Discussed on 20/20

20/20

04:25 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on 20/20

"Last time. I was going to see her use corn. The couch push goggles off. News in digital clock comes exactly five. Am so errands desperately trying to keep his eyes open but the sedative is really making him tired of castle and then my mom went off and called in sick legal. My hands free text her manager. And then i try and stay awake and pass out again up till eleven thirty and i looked around. There was a house with red tape around the borders to finding where i should be where the camera can see me shortly after emails and texts coming in from the intruders. Giving aaron instructions may tell me they want to payments eight five hundred to the ten thousand dollar. Federal reporting limit starts messaging the intruders. Here's nothing mar minds agrees saying twenty months about thirty minutes. And i finally call myself. I start trying to think. I realized i if i give him the money. You could just take me and killed both of us. I can't trust capable into this. He starts thinking his brothers and fbi agent to. I call my brother. do i call the police. Would we do imagine this agonizing period of time. Finally he makes the decision. I've got a call ethan. His brother who works for the fbi. His brother struck him that they always tell you this to not call nine one one they tell you they're gonna track you but you need to call nine one one right now. Errands holding his breath as he dials. He's doing the exact thing. The intruders told him not to do nine one and.

twenty months ten thousand dollar both ethan aaron eight five hundred five about thirty minutes eleven thirty fbi nine one one nine
"twenty months" Discussed on The Best of Coast to Coast AM

The Best of Coast to Coast AM

05:03 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on The Best of Coast to Coast AM

"What's not successful. Thankfully but you can imagine if we had maybe a couple of accidents or lose no crew in space. I think that would have been enough to end it. So the fire actually reveal what the problems were. They investigated they figured about. They went back. They redesigned that space craft and what came out of the fire was a magnificent flying machine that flew the moon nine times. That's amazing now. Why did we need the gym. I project which was to astronauts as a pros are going just from mercury straight to apollo. Whether original time sip was was there was only two programs mercury and then apollo and those were concede actually during the latter part of eisenhower administration. People don't people think kennedy came up with apollo. It was already on. The drawing board under eisenhower was a conservative. He you know he didn't wanna spend any money he had. You know he was bay. Pigs was on the charring board to before kennedy came in. Oh yeah exactly If eisenhower when he would continue owning office he didn't he was real reluctant to go past mercury now. Mercury goal was just to get a man in space orbit. There that was all mercury was To do and then apollo was go to the moon but they realize there's a lot more to go on to the moon and just flying out there landing and coming back exactly and then I'm not sure they even knew how to land at that time. they did. They all kind of you know con- different concepts of. How are we supposed to do this. And i go into the different concept's came up with But the point is they realize we gotta have some skills here and so they came up with jimmy. Which is i. call it the bridge. And that's what they call it. The bridge between mercury and apollo. It is essentially kind of gets lost in the shuffle How many gemini launches today have they were ten missions emissions and i think in twenty months it was a very ambitious programme And it was pretty well flawless..

today twenty months nine times jimmy Mercury two programs ten missions moon couple of accidents eisenhower gemini apollo
"twenty months" Discussed on Women and Crime

Women and Crime

02:44 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on Women and Crime

"It offers <Speech_Female> some level of protection. <Speech_Female> If for <Speech_Female> these reasons. I'm definitely <Speech_Female> more in favor <Speech_Female> of either legalization <Speech_Female> or decriminalization. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> There's also the other <Speech_Female> reason and the second reason <Speech_Female> for me is that <Speech_Female> i don't know the <Speech_Female> specifically the girls <Speech_Female> who are the women <Speech_Female> who worked for heidi fleiss <Speech_Female> But i know that <Speech_Female> her operation is different <Speech_Female> than most right is a high <Speech_Female> level <Speech_Female> Operation <Speech_Female> and some of them were aspiring <Speech_Female> for <Speech_Female> greater things. And <Speech_Female> that's why they were kind of. Starting <Speech_Female> what i do <Speech_Female> know though. Is <Speech_Female> that most <Speech_Female> women who are sex. <Speech_Female> Workers <Speech_Female> are not in <Speech_Female> high class brothels <Speech_Female> or high class <Speech_Female> you know. They don't work for heidi <Speech_Female> fleiss. They're not making <Speech_Female> that kind of money. They're making <Speech_Female> enough to give their <Speech_Female> kids dinner. And that's it. <Speech_Female> Maybe not even that <Speech_Female> so most of them. <Speech_Female> The women that we know <Speech_Female> are committing crimes <Speech_Female> of survival. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> And what do we <Speech_Female> know about these women and their <Speech_Female> backgrounds. They have substantial <Speech_Female> histories <Speech_Female> of abuse <Speech_Female> neglect <Speech_Female> mental <Speech_Female> health issues. <Speech_Female> Drug <Speech_Female> use on. <Speech_Female> So i think <Speech_Female> that what we <Speech_Female> do then is we <Speech_Female> punish those women. <Speech_Female> They're already victimized <Speech_Female> and we punish <Speech_Female> them again by victimizing <Speech_Female> them all over <Speech_Female> again and treat them <Speech_Female> as if though <Speech_Female> you know there are <Speech_Female> criminal and i think that's <Speech_Female> wrong and i <Speech_Female> do think that a lot of <Speech_Female> the women that were clients <Speech_Female> of heidi fleiss probably <Speech_Female> had other opportunities. <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> It just wasn't <Speech_Female> as quick and easy. <Speech_Female> I do i. That's why <Speech_Female> i said i. And i don't <Speech_Female> know specifically but <Speech_Female> i i think <Speech_Female> you know the women who worked <Speech_Female> for her are different <Speech_Female> than ninety. <Speech_Female> I'd say eight percent <Speech_Female> of your <Speech_Female> average sex <Speech_Female> workers so <Speech_Female> for those reasons. I <Speech_Female> actually Do <Speech_Female> i <Speech_Female> favor legalizing <Speech_Female> it. Because i think there should be protect. <Speech_Female> The stigma should be <Speech_Female> removed and there should be protections <Speech_Female> offered to <Speech_Female> the women and <Speech_Female> regulations <Speech_Female> but last question <Speech_Female> taking <Speech_Female> all of that aside <Speech_Female> or putting that aside <Speech_Female> what <Speech_Female> about heidi fleiss <Speech_Female> did. The punishment <Speech_Female> fit the crime. <Speech_Female> When you're talking about <Speech_Female> the punishment you're talking about <Speech_Female> the twenty-something months <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> of seven years <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> for me seven years <Speech_Female> seemed <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> to way too harsh. <Speech_Female> Oh that's too harsh. But <Speech_Female> i don't know twenty months. <Speech_Female> That might not be harsh enough. <Speech_Female> Yeah i'm with you. <Speech_Female> I would probably split the <Speech_Female> baby to. She <Speech_Female> served three <Speech_Female> years something of that <Speech_Female> for for me. I <Speech_Female> think you know three years <Speech_Female> probably would inappropriate. <Speech_Female> You can't defer on the government <Speech_Female> and you. Can't you know <Speech_Female> run. A <Speech_Female> white collar. Crime <Speech_Female> is still serious too. And <Speech_Female> i don't think it's okay to <Speech_Female> let white collar fenders <Speech_Female> simply breeze by <Speech_Female> but of course not <Speech_Female> because i hate when people. Say it's <Speech_Female> victimless victimless. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Not victimless people. <Speech_Female> Just don't realize because there's <Speech_Female> no immediate harms <Speech_Female> and so <Speech_Female> perhaps in this case <Speech_Female> the punishment didn't <Speech_Female> exactly <Speech_Female> fit the crime <SpeakerChange> and maybe there <Speech_Female> wasn't perfect justice <Speech_Female> in this case. <Speech_Female> I hope that heidi <Speech_Female> get some <Speech_Female> help for her drug <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> problem. <Speech_Female> Thank you megan <Speech_Female> all right. Thanks everyone <Speech_Female> for listening. And we'll <Speech_Music_Female> see you all next time <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> on women and crime. <Speech_Music_Male> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> Women and crime <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> is written and <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> hosted by megan <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> sacks and amy <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> schlossberg <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> our producer <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> and editor is james <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> varga music <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> composition <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> by desert <SpeakerChange> media. <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement>

megan seven years twenty months james three years eight percent ninety twenty-something months schlossberg three second reason heidi fleiss fleiss
"twenty months" Discussed on Women and Crime

Women and Crime

04:58 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on Women and Crime

"She had the most high-powered clients. I mean she had the biggest hottest. La brothel saying in two thousand fifteen. It was posted on ebay that her address book was up for sale. The seller not accepting anything less than one hundred thousand dollars was heidi fleiss the seller. She was in and she would have it. She said it was either stolen or like it was fake. Okay although i read that. The listing includes some original pages and who knows. I don't know where her book is. Who knows if someone actually did get a hold of it or had pages. They were holding it. You know. there wasn't very much information on the seller though and it looks like it really didn't go through because there was no way of proving if this was actually her book and fleiss said that it was not in two thousand and nineteen said that she wanted to reveal a client due to feeling betrayed by him but she ended up never doing so and she said basically that she just felt like that book was private and nobody else's business. One of the things about heidi is that heidi is she is. She does what she wants to do. She says what she want. You know she's she's not afraid I heard her also say you know. I'm just not likeable. But that's really okay. I'm dying to know what she's doing now. A lot of weird stuff going on after okay. So let's talk about now that we gave you a little bit or black book. And i know it took a step forward but i'm going to go back to when she left jail and that was in nineteen ninety nine after serving just a couple years. She served twenty months twenty month. Oh not even okay. Yeah no. She served seven years when she left jail in nineteen ninety nine. She started dating the actor. Tom sizemore do you know who he is. You have to look him up. he's famous. he's you'll know when you see him. He's been he's been in a lot of war movies. I actually think he's a really good actor but sizemore unfortunately also has a bad reputation. Two thousand and three sizemore was convicted of one count of physically abusing heidi and on several charges of harassing her during an interview. Fleiss said no one will have more disgusting stories in hollywood then him fleiss added. I have dealt with a lot of people doing a lot of different things. It's different with tom. He's a whole other level but she was dating him well. This was after a as..

twenty months seven years Fleiss sizemore two thousand tom twenty month less than one hundred thousand One one count nineteen Tom sizemore Two thousand fleiss heidi two thousand fifteen heidi fleiss nineteen ninety nine La ebay
"twenty months" Discussed on Celtics Stuff Live

Celtics Stuff Live

03:58 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on Celtics Stuff Live

"How I can start that with just such exuberance that excitement cuz it's more energy than the Celtics have put into a game. And well, an entire game in quite a. While John took some real tough to watch, man, and we've been through so many iterations of complaining about them and, you know, there's been dead. how many times where we said, oh You know, it's just a tough season or, oh, you know, they're just trying to get overcoat. And I just at this point when you watch Aaron Nesmith being, you know, the the big chungus consistent effort Giver, you know, not that he's making all the right reads and the right decisions all the time, right? When he is, like, just Far and Away the highest birth giver maybe save 48 a little bit and chemists got his moments, but it seems like when chemists successful, the team isn't at this point. But, but when these myth is the one that's just out there or turn it up, A lot criticizing Nesmith. When I say this it's just it's like a it's such a marker of just how much. I think these guys are just tired of the Season, I'll be honest with you. I think they're just tired of that. They're trying to be professionals, they're trying to do their job. They're not intentionally necessarily giving up but they gave up dude. They're just, they're exhausted injuries. They're exhausted with having to get out there. It's still exhausted from the playoffs and the bubble that, you know, they're just, they're just not their home life. Yeah, yeah, I think so. Let's let's let's go back. Almost, you know, twenty months at this point we were excited because we had a guy in Kemba Walker who had just signed with the Celtics he was going to go play v-ball with Jaylin. Jason dead. And Marcus Smart and they were going to build some chemistry. And that team did come out of the gate. Hot Kemba played great job Tatum was a little slow to kind of get going that year. But in time that team exceeded expectations, Oh, by February bananas really, you've had headed year, you know, obviously the issues with kemba's need were were considerable and and that may have slowed where they could have gotten Hayward wage was healthy. Apart from the, the, the fracture of his finger there in November had a pretty good season had some highs, was not, you know, the the high-scoring off my volume guy that he had been in part, in in Utah. But was really rounded into form compared to his, the, prior season. And they, they, they took off all the Badness off. All the crap of that final Kyrie year. That was all gone going to the bubble. The come into the bubble plane, as well as really, anybody is they, when entering the playoff really had a good shot, I think to to go deep and get to the finals. And then here, we're gets hurt. They kind of lose their way, mentally, I think in particular, in part in the Raptor series, but definitely in the Miami Heat series, let a team that I think, is better than we thought at that time, but it seemed I think they were certainly close with really take, you know, take their lunch money and I think ever since then this team has been struggling. You know eight weeks in between wage was just not enough time and so you've got a team it's really been playing since fever.

Marcus Smart Aaron Nesmith Kemba Walker Utah Jason Jaylin John November Celtics 48 twenty months Kemba Nesmith kemba eight weeks February Tatum Kyrie Miami Heat Hayward
"twenty months" Discussed on The Call with Nancy Sabato

The Call with Nancy Sabato

05:55 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on The Call with Nancy Sabato

"I wonder why why that was well. You know. I love this book that you wrote. I read it and And i do hope that anybody. That's suffering through a relationship like this or even you know any kind of abusive relationship would pick up your book. You know i'll pray for you Because really that's what isn't that. What a pastor said to you all pray for you. The title of the book comes from After my husband had and the the executives. And i ask. They didn't realize that that was real i. You're always just a made up tv show but the detectives actually interviewed me after my my now tried to kill him And they were convinced that he had tried to kill me and that he would as he stated to them when they arrested him. He said he would finish the job if he found me. And so i was saying a friend who is not a christian. Who is the only one who let me stay I went to see the head deacon of my church because they hosted by shower. And we had done you know it had dinners and all these things gone shopping reasons life than all these things that i thought we were friends and he met me at the back the back door and he didn't invite me in my thought was really strange and i said you know i really need help. You know minds. Men is stalking me and all these things and he said well we'd helped you all we can and you know he stayed dress and i said yes. I have bruises and he said well We basically we can't help you but we'll pray for you boy and and we'll pay for you and be lock but that was all i got you know i was homeless. I was raised my my soon to be accepting with stalking me. My daughter was twenty months. Old I had hall three and ps military. Police then would always come in three because of the danger of the situation. And i had fifteen minutes to get in my apartment and whatever i needed and get out They patted down every cushman. Every closet opened every drawer. I didn't even sit on the couch. Patting you down to make sure that he didn't mean something to hurt boy and it was just outrageous. You was just.

fifteen minutes twenty months ps military three christian hall
"twenty months" Discussed on NoCo Now ? 1310 KFKA

NoCo Now ? 1310 KFKA

01:43 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on NoCo Now ? 1310 KFKA

"Another tough time. Good good and it's good. It's gotta give you a renewed sense of energy when you when you see that That many applications come across and and that many youth that are that are diagnosed agriculture. Absolutely and you know. I'm just amazed at their some phenomenal young adults out there. I mean you read. What some of these kids do and some of them already started their own businesses. And i mean it's just it's the most energizing thing that you can do is to read about these kids. Who really i mean they they wanna grab life and go and after all that they've been through these last you know eighteen twenty months man. They're gonna we're gonna read about them somewhere. I love it rob environment. Livestock exchange robyn. Thank you so much for your time today. Appreciate you a and by joining me. And i'll see what i can do about warm in the weather up for you. Keep the grill. Lot stake there. You go thank you so much. Appreciate it. Let's robin vollmann. Livestock exchange Joining us as she does at this time always so cattle market headed up. You know things are greeting out that that tends to to give the farmers rangers out there. A little bit of optimism and and really get people excited for getting those cattle that they've been feeding all winter long out into grass nine fifty one snow cone now presented by the jeanine agencies. We back right here on early. Carla's voice thirteen ten kfi..

robin vollmann Carla today eighteen twenty months nine fifty one snow cone robyn thirteen ten
"twenty months" Discussed on The AIB Show

The AIB Show

05:15 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on The AIB Show

"Maybe he i doubt it but maybe didn't know and maybe he's genuinely trying to change. I dunno it. Just i feel like in two thousand and twenty one was should be giving less passes to people but how it how the cancel culture so i had this weird battle internally but how how is it even part like it okay. That's part if i'm playing a game and and i'm frustrated. That word isn't even immobile cobbler. That's that's the thing you know. What i'm saying here did that. Come from you bunch of stuff exactly. Mfn all those good things like this is not all you do. But i don't have that. We're not even in my vocab. Speaking of which papa john's founder. Oh yeah well he. I saw some. What did he do. He came out. And i said this has to be click bait. It can't be real. We actually posted an image on our instagram account. He came out. I verify this. Because i watched the interview and said know he was complaining again victim mentality. It's not clear. The board of papa. John's is essentially pseudo. And there's been a minute. Projected him as being racist because he he came out in the past and was using the n. Word and he said he's been working on for the last twenty days twenty days almost two full calendar years to eliminate the n. word from his vocabulary. This is how it's so absurd. It's funny he's been working on. It still hasn't accomplish this twenty months to eliminate the n. word from his vocabulary. I mean i appreciate the honesty rich that my these saying but i'm not racist. I just basically just struggles to not. Because i just love the word might get rid of it. I mean it means a lot. Yeah i again. If these were just aren't part of my vocab a lot of trash words all right. Don't get me wrong But there's a bunch of stuff like that..

twenty days twenty months instagram John two thousand twenty one two full calendar years john last twenty days
"twenty months" Discussed on The Dave Pamah Show

The Dave Pamah Show

04:51 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on The Dave Pamah Show

"But i also realized that at least the hottest reach because when they are athletes they don't think about anything else they just want to compete. They always lead to later. So i couldn't really impact a life but also realized that talking hundreds of their msa realized that a lot of them ninety percent end up becoming sports coaches. Yeah yeah so. If i if i actually went to the other end of the spectrum where go just then the impact is a bit more. So that's why. I started like i said i. I've got clients from all over the world now and a lot of my work is in the north america where i just feel that. They are a bit more open to to help because must be biggest in the world and it's business. Sports is big business out there grinding. Their college system. So yeah so. I did a similar webinar for a group of coaches in canada. I must say on. Friday and this morning was on a on a call with one of them. That felt that they really enjoyed the web. Anais it can you walk. We'd be sassy so spend thirty minutes is just signed on for the program Because it's it's a it's a very logical way of me helping people to to get from place on the maybe could be doing to three thousand dollars to twenty because they're ups right so One of the first things. I do is to start looking at someone's belief because what happens with a lot of us right. We don't know what we don't know right. Yeah the reality right. Yeah and and if i. If i told someone like if i told you i'm gonna get you to twenty months and you how you're going to do that okay. Secondly that's that's purely because you don't know how we're gonna get you that clear so and a lot of it is because you are here right now. You have certain skill sets that you look accumulated to be here right now like talking to me right to to get to twenty k. You need to be a different person. Because he needs to have different skill sets to get but in self help and all that and self development a lot of it is dixie of find out who you are like. Find out who you are. Yeah that's okay. That's great but that's not going to serve you going forward now right because not who you want business skills exactly so successfully schools if you look at all the most successful people on earth. They have a certain way. They dress the talk. You know the kind of books they read and stuff like that some big fan of fulling success like. How did this guy do it right. So whether it's richard branson whoever it is right so i think the best rates and i say okay if i need to get to indicate what's the mindset that i must have. I must have that. I going to invest myself. I got some flaws. Maybe i'm late for training or late for work or whatever whatever my florida. I'm gonna fix all of that. So that i pride myself success. So one of the biggest things. That working coaches i realized that they are the bottleneck like they are their own enemy. They're the biggest enemy. yeah so someone else. So sow fulfilling prophecy weekly. Exactly what what we ended up doing. We fixed the mindset. Like you need to be ready for the big time. Like twenty as life changing..

canada richard branson north america twenty months ninety percent thirty minutes twenty Friday one three thousand dollars this morning Anais twenty k. earth hundreds One first things florida Secondly them
Pandemic Parenting - Will the Kids Be Okay Socially?

Janet Lansbury Podcast

03:46 min | 2 years ago

Pandemic Parenting - Will the Kids Be Okay Socially?

"Note. I received on instagram. Hi janet. I'm reaching out to see if you've touched upon. The current isolations are toddlers are having because of it. I have a twenty month old. That has basically had little to no interaction with other kids. And i worry about it. I also try not to be concerned knowing. He is still under too. But i just wanted to know if you've spoken on this. Thank you so much. So no. I don't think i have spoken directly about this and As i said it's the question i've received most since the pandemic so the short answer i have is that the kids will be all right that they will not be harmed in any major way by this pause in pierre socializing And maybe extended family socializing as well and others. Who studied child. Development have said the same that primarily. Children learn social behaviors through their primary caregivers through the relationships. They have with us as their parents. And this begins quite early with i contact communication and then children beginning to verbalize and understand what we're communicating. Social learning is often said probably one of the most complicated nuanced types of learning is quite different than learning multiplication tables or something that's measurable the beginning. Of course there are these these signs that children are on track but as they get older. There is a wide wide. Range of normal temperament comes into play we have extroverts and introverts so there isn't a specific timetable when children should be achieving xyz beyond those really couple of years when when children just starting to to show that they are becoming able communicators. So i would love to take this possible stressor off parents list for now since there are many reasons to be concerned in life and this is not going to be a major problem however there are things that we can do and i would recommend all these things anyway. But perhaps they're even more important in pandemic times when there is more 'isolation and less opportunity for children to practice their social skills with peers and and extended family. And so. I look back on a piece that i'd written a couple of years ago called four best ways to raise children with social intelligence and i notice that as i thought there's only one of these ways that's about children practicing with other children. The rest of them are about primary relationships for example. The first one is. Don't wait to communicate. Start speaking with your baby beginning a two way conversation right away and that doesn't mean we just start talking about the weather and hope that our child will respond. It means talking about pertinent things letting them know when we're doing something with them what we're doing step by step. I'm going to pick you up now. Now we'll go over to change your diaper. Now it's time for the bath. There's the warm water so we will be communicating about meaningful things set. Your child understands that this is important tool that helps you to feel connected to not only the other person but your

Instagram Janet
"twenty months" Discussed on Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

05:51 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on Jeff Goodman Basketball Podcast

"Was loose like but I the best thing I can do is pass and so like that was when I was had Cuonzo and Glenn Robinson the same team. That was my best year because I learned by then to keep it more sympathy and I wasn't as good as we had another gardening Matt Waddell as a lot better than I was but I just learned to try to get it to to those guys and get out of their way and but you find yourself open when Glenn Robinson is on the cord is on your name. And so if you can't make a couple open wounds like so you get a couple more open shots and that helped me a little bit. And so I have I have four years of Purdue. I claim zero twelve twenty and thirty minutes and forty years. So I got a good feel of kind of what everybody goes through and I try to when guys have to go through similar situations. I try to kind of discuss those things but it's kind of the the metamorphosis of changing to not what you want to do, but what's best for the team and I try to like just be as honest and straightforward about that. Rob was kind of a different Type in that sense is that you had to get him to be aggressive you had to get him. You know, he was always trying to make the right plane at sometimes just you know, let it hang out like shoot the basketball more be more aggressive. But you know, he that wasn't his natural instinct. What was it like you're a junior in the big dogs, right? He was a prop. He didn't pray. He's allowed to practice that whole year Matt with you guys. No, no, he couldn't practice. I am a great story about that like our managers and him played intramural basketball and I coached him and we got beat so just shows you how good of a coach I couldn't even win a world championship with Glenn Robinson twenty months. So they bring it like a high school team came to Purdue together and they played them we got to them like like the quarterfinals and semifinals won the championship and they re in plays and stuff and we only had one that was good to clean Robinson get out of the way. It's in a rural. They weren't even break away rims..

Matt Waddell Rob Robinson Cuonzo Glenn Robinson Matt twenty months forty years zero twelve twenty four years one thirty minutes Purdue couple open wounds couple more
"twenty months" Discussed on Alison Rosen Is Your New Best Friend

Alison Rosen Is Your New Best Friend

04:42 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on Alison Rosen Is Your New Best Friend

"Wondering now yes sounds like your kids have different temperaments. They're so different any of you. Is that just how they emerged yet. It is they're just and that's again i. I was reading these. These letters about them for when my daughter was one before even before that like four months old till she was three. And my son. They're twenty months apart. I'm bad at math. I can't give you exactly his age. But the way that i write these letters each of them and described them is exactly who they are today. I mean like exactly who they are today. And i was screenshot like i was taking pictures of paper. 'cause i typed in print it sending it to my daughter and she was dying because it's exactly who she is. She's a same kid at my son. Jacob is the same kid and they yet. i mean they're very. I think what. I learned early on in my husband. Actually my husband is. I really credit him with this philosophy of just kind of following what our kids interests were and then encouraging them to do those things we were never the parents that were joiners. We didn't we don't make athletes so we didn't care whether they were on. The soccer field is just not the children remade and so our son's achievements or always academic in that followed him. That's just two years and my daughter truly put her anywhere and she will make friends with the entire place and then run. The place got more moxie then in her pinky. I have in my whole body fruit does. She's she's really great. I loved the idea of writing letters to them. What inspired you to do that. So i think that i was at i still am. I always wanted to do right by kids. And i still think every dad just always want to sort of say the right things or make them know how incredible i think they are. Warts and all A big believer in being super open and honest with your children..

twenty months two years three today each Jacob four months old one
"twenty months" Discussed on Sandy and Nora talk politics

Sandy and Nora talk politics

03:18 min | 2 years ago

"twenty months" Discussed on Sandy and Nora talk politics

"He he took he opened a laptop that contained and that had armor cons Whatsapp open on it. He took screen shots. He gave it to their by laws. Melanie for hayes. I don't know how to pronounce that word. Either for haji. Sorry whatever gave it to her but beyond just giving them to her and beyond just the screen shotting all of which is already too much. It's like god. How are you doing this to your colleague. Someone that you're in a with for fuck sake. Think he altered the images like some of those The screen shots that they used to fire him with quote unquote. Just 'cause were came from messages that he had made before his employment even started at the. Cdc so this was like a concerted. Like i don't know who leaves. What's at messages on their laptop from like years ago. But apparently that's what we're supposed to believe is that there were messages that spanned over year. That most your rat was able to just grab screenshots from and send over to his boss who who then decided that she needed to verify that and also went and took her own screen. Shut the whole thing. The the the way that he is automatically assumed to be suspicious and worthy of some sort of deep investigation the violation of his privacy. All of this conspiring together the messages between the boss and the rats that you know show them ridiculing him and all of this to them is fine and that is you know for those of us who have worked in workplaces before who are black indigenous or racialized in some other way and have seen you know who know you can kind of point out in your workplace these people who you know you have to be careful around. It's pulling back of the curtain of all of that. it is very just. It's so disgusting. It is so disgusting to know or to see the evidence of how things that we already know things that some of us have experienced before of people who are in our workplace just like no. We don't want this person around or were suspicious of this person doing this that or the other or they're making too much trouble because they've brought to us something to our attention. That makes us uncomfortable. Let's figure out a way to get them out Yeah also last week. There was another story of of Institutional white supremacy in this was in inside rabble inside rabble mcnamara who had been the acting editor in chief rabble for twenty months..

twenty months last week Whatsapp Melanie mcnamara years rabble
Boeing Max returns to US skies with first passenger flight

AP News Radio

00:47 sec | 2 years ago

Boeing Max returns to US skies with first passenger flight

"American Airlines flew a Boeing seven thirty seven Max with paying passengers the plane's first commercial flight in the U. S. since it was grounded after two deadly crashes eighty seven people were on the Miami to New York flight including Daniel Weiss with shelf white tents were really nice I was really nice with lights on the flight yeah you know I did feel unsafe at all to Max jets crashed in twenty nineteen in Indonesia and Ethiopia three hundred forty six people were killed changes have been made to the automated flight control system planes crash and it's unfortunate but twenty months following the great American company I like to think that's enough time to figure things out United Airlines plans to resume Max flights in February and Southwest Airlines expects to follow in March I'm a Donahue

Daniel Weiss American Airlines Boeing U. Miami Ethiopia New York Indonesia United Airlines MAX Southwest Airlines
For The First Time Since Grounding, American Airlines Boeing 737 MAX Flight Takes Off From Dallas

Here & Now

02:33 min | 2 years ago

For The First Time Since Grounding, American Airlines Boeing 737 MAX Flight Takes Off From Dallas

"For the first time in nearly two years civilians are taking a flight on a boeing. seven thirty-seven max plane today. The demonstration flight operated by american airlines will travel from dallas to tulsa with members of the media as the first passengers since those two fatal crashes grounded the aircraft for twenty months spring in here now transportation analyst. Seth kaplan inset. Today's flight designed to build. Consumer confidence approve their safe after the faa recertified. The max last month so tell us more about today's flight and when we can expect commercial flights yeah ninety journalists wearing masks as any flight these days plus the flight crew. You've got obviously pilots and flight attendants on there. So you add that all up and it's something like two thirds full which nowadays is rather full flight compared to a lot of commercial ones right robin and exactly the fact that they're doing this shows that they are concerned about consumer confidence. of course. now you have cova. Vid impacting consumer confidence in terms of flying. As well as those max issues the flights the crashes rather killed three hundred forty six people terrible well. Undergrounding was a huge blow to boeing financially. Pretty critical. I'd imagine to get these planes back in the air. So you know how critical and what's the sense that this is gonna work. People will get on them even more critical than before because before. At least you had airlines clamoring for the planes to despite the problems you just sort of had this natural inertia. You might call it. Air of airlines just needed the airplanes Now that's different. Now they have most of these airlines too many airplanes even though they still want these planes because they're more efficient they can afford to wait. They can afford not to buy new planes. So this this is is now a double blow to boeing. We thought the worst thing was that they couldn't deliver all these planes airlines wanted The airplanes on their hands airlines don't necessarily need even though over the very long term look airlines want to renew their fleets well and is that just to be clear is that they don't necessarily need it because of covid because so few people are flying right now right because demand is lower. So so if you remember robin when the grounding i happened before the busy summer travel season of a year earlier well airlines couldn't fly their schedules. They were killing on these planes. They count on every airplane to fly during a normal summer whereas now there's just a lot of slack in their fleets and so they might not have the plane they want but they have a plane.

Seth Kaplan Boeing American Airlines Tulsa FAA Dallas Robin
South Korea Has Passed A Law That Will Allow BTS To Postpone Their Military Enlistment

Elvis Duran and the Morning Show ON DEMAND

00:31 sec | 2 years ago

South Korea Has Passed A Law That Will Allow BTS To Postpone Their Military Enlistment

"Right so in south korea males are required to serve twenty months in the military by the time they turned twenty eight years old. But there's new rules any k pop band recceive. The government medals will be able to put their service off for another two years war which is called the unofficial bts bill because One of the guys actually turns twenty eight on friday and he would have had to have served will. They're saying no. Now we're going to give you two more years before you actually have deserve it eventually. Our boys from bt s are going to have to serve in the military.

South Korea Government
Boeing Max cleared for takeoff, 2 years after deadly crashes

The World and Everything In It

00:57 sec | 2 years ago

Boeing Max cleared for takeoff, 2 years after deadly crashes

"After being grounded for nearly two years boeing's seven thirty seven max. Jetliners are clear for takeoff. World's lee jones has more the federal aviation administration has certified the seven thirty seven. Max airworthy faa chief. Stephen dixon signed an order wednesday. Undergrounding the fleet. The agency said it has completed a comprehensive empathetical twenty month review regulators around the world grounded the max in march two thousand nineteen after a pair of deadly crashes that claimed more than three hundred lives boeing overhauled. The plane's flight control system focusing on anti-stalking software that appeared to malfunction in both crashes. The faa says. It gave boeing the green light in cooperation with air safety regulators worldwide. The company will now begin updating critical software throughout the fleet and wants pilots receive updated training. Us airlines will start flying the

FAA Stephen Dixon Boeing Lee Jones United States
US lifts Boeing 737 MAX flight ban after two fatal crashes.

THE NEWS with Anthony Davis

02:29 min | 2 years ago

US lifts Boeing 737 MAX flight ban after two fatal crashes.

"United states lifted a twenty month old. Flight ban on the boeing. Seven three seven. Max on wednesday easing a safety crisis that has left its top exporter with a tarnished reputation and hundreds of idle jets but relatives of crash. Victims denounced the move. Us federal aviation administration. Chief steve dixon signed an order lifting the longest jet grounding in commercial aviation history and the agency released. Final details of the software and training boeing and airlines must complete before carrying passengers. The 737 max crashes in indonesia and killed three hundred and forty six people within five months in two thousand eighteen and twenty nineteen in a show of independence. canada and brazil said on wednesday. They were continuing their own reviews but expected to conclude the process. Soon illustrating how the seven. Three seven max. Crashes upended a once. Us dominated airline safety system in which nations large and small for decades moved in lockstep with the faa questions. Remain over how quickly other regulators especially in china will lift their flight bans families of the european crash victims said in the statements. They felt shared disappointment and renewed grief. Following the faa's decision to return the aircraft to service the faa is requiring new pilot training and software upgrades to deal with a stall prevention system called 'em casts which in both crashes repeatedly pushed down the jets knows as pilots struggled to regain control but have the training to know why the aircraft was behaving this way. The faa which has faced accusations of being too close to boeing in the past said it plans in-person inspections of some four hundred fifty seven three seven maxes built and parked during the flight ban which could take at least a year to complete prolonging the jets deliveries investigation reports of faulted boeing and the faa on the planes development and for concealing information about 'em cast from pilots while the justice department criminal probe is ongoing but the toughest call could be getting passengers to fly on the doomed aircraft. Some passengers have suggested they would choose. Never to fly on the seven. Three seven max out of respect for the families of the deceased in protest of boeing's greed and negligence.

FAA Boeing Chief Steve Dixon United States Indonesia Brazil Jets Canada China Justice Department
Seattle-Based Boeing Max Is Cleared to Fly as FAA Lifts Longest U.S. Grounding

DeaconLive

01:49 min | 2 years ago

Seattle-Based Boeing Max Is Cleared to Fly as FAA Lifts Longest U.S. Grounding

"Boeing seven thirty-seven max has been grounded. Worldwide following two deadly crashes. The federal aviation administration on wednesday has approved for boeing's fixes on the airplane to clear the max to return to service. So if you're traveling out there now it's not going to happen right away but just think about in the next in the next year. The long delayed approved to mean that. The max is on track to fly passengers again in the united states. Before the year's end. I don't know if i if i want to be the first guy on that blaine after each plane and pilot meets requirements by the faa laid. Out in recent weeks boeing can resume jet deliveries and production of the renton ren thanh will begin to ramp up though very slowly since the first crash of the max two years ago has discovered the problems that has delayed this movement. Ceo dave calhoun in chicago in a statement says that lives had lost in two tragic accidents lessons. Learned from the max. Crashes have reshaped our company. The faa verdict says. That the jedis safe to fly. At least beginning. Of the end of the boeing crisis. For the max. But yet boeing grapples the logistics of getting more airplanes in the air the details because of the crashes tragedy surface. Over the past twenty months boeing reputation for engineers excellence has been shattered at the faa positions. The world as the arbitrator for for safety has seriously been undermined using flying the seven. Thirty seven max in the air. But they've made some changes they put a stick of gum on it. Put some duct tape over the things that said that the plane was what was it was an ultimate thing where it didn't didn't know how how close it was to the ground. Everything was off and all of a sudden you know planes crashing. So i guess boeing is going to let the seventh or actually the the. Faa's going to let the seven thirty-seven. Max a return to the

Boeing FAA Ceo Dave Calhoun Blaine United States Chicago
FAA clears Boeing 737 Max to fly again

AP News Radio

00:37 sec | 2 years ago

FAA clears Boeing 737 Max to fly again

"Federal regulators have cleared Boeing seven thirty seven Max to fly again the planes were grounded worldwide last year after two crashes within five months killed three hundred forty six people investigators had focused on anti stall software as a clause Federal Aviation Administration chief Steven Dixon lifted the grounding after a twenty month review telling CNBC squawk box the software's been redesigned and the maxi is now safe and I would put my own family on it still Dixon says the FAA will inspect every new macs before letting them fly Sager mag ani Washington

Steven Dixon Boeing Cnbc Squawk Box FAA Dixon Washington
The greatness of Rafael Nadal

The Tennis Podcast

06:08 min | 2 years ago

The greatness of Rafael Nadal

"We talk about tennis. She was about this final and put it on pitting off having to actually summer. The achievement of rough on the dull winning thirteen, French Open, and winning this French. Open in particular and doing it in the way that he did because. It. So astonishing I'm struggling to process. Frankly, yes. Apologies in advance for hyperbole and use of superlatives, but if you can't use them now when rough on the is now hundred and two girls and has won his thirteenth title when when can use MS utter the extraordinary? What is the chief today, and of course, this is an achievement that is actually fifteen sixteen years in the making it is it is unbelievable. Walk Needle is able to do both in tennis number one, but also just at this tournament, one of his best ever career performances David today. I would say so this was Up there with what he did to federal in two, thousand eight when federal and a handful of games arguably even better I think because federal struggled that day I think the conditions were less suited to today on paper at least I would have thought compared to a high bouncing day in June, and of course, he's you know he's twelve years older I mean, let's not forget. He's thirty four that's that shouldn't be. Put. To one side because you know he's got a lot of miles in those legs lot of kilometers and it's it's just mind boggling that he can physically do it for star I think it bore a lot of similarities to what Jackovitch did to him in the Australian Open file of twenty months ago, which was Jock itch referenced in Oh Sorry Nadal referenced in his post match comments it had that same feel inasmuch as when we were discussing this yesterday and we were building up to it all week long the one eventuality are could not see is one of these destroying the other one that's just could not see I mean, which is again just another example of how good predictions I am. But it was. A performance that I wasn't expecting of that level and that that feels unfetter I found the down after what he's done over the last twelve years but. He lifted himself to a level. We certainly haven't seen at this tournament. And it was this fortnight anyway it wasn't. It wasn't just. Fortunate needlework open happen to be having Berlin day today is it wasn't just what one of these things the way the cookie crumbles he change things in his approach today he was an I believe the stats ended up bearing this out in terms of name body was quitting. On your coverage David about the net clearance on his kind being significantly. Lower today than in previous matches indicating how much more aggressive he was being on that I mean I think on both wings in particular on that on that can side he was. Firmly the aggressor out there in an joke which was on the back foot right from the word go and. He looked. Bewildered by the level throughout, imagine, imagine playing really good tennis and being the world number one. And having lost six love. I just can't I can't imagine how awful that feels. You know I texted you guys. At the end of that first set and I said. Other than serving a bit better. I. Don't know what he can do. I don't think it's a question of just raise the level a bit and that'll be okay. What can he possibly do? Yeah and he's been in his press conference Djokovic and use the word surprised by Nidal's level. I don't think he sold this coming from the doll based on what we've seen from the doll these two weeks. Yes. Nidal's been great. He's the final without dropping a set, but it's clearly not been absolutely top top level in the dull and I'm not sure your conviction was expecting the performance that we saw from the Dell today he was caught off Guard surprise bewildered and that that. is so much credit. As you said to walk in the door was doing he was the aggressor. He was taking every opportunity to hit his forehand down the line and standing up on the baseline and kind of taking the drop shot away from Jackovitch. I'm sure we'll talk more about that but just little subtle changes in his game that he made the just made this huge overall difference and with the intent that he paid with it was it was overwhelming for Novak Djokovic Channon. was kind of reminded of a little quote I read from turning adult recently who often the Schwartzman team match said a lot of people compare team to my nephew. But I, don't think that's a fair comparison. This was in Spanish. This was in the Spanish newspaper El Pice and he was saying that team is a great player, but he doesn't have the options in his game that Nadal has and. The different ways to be able to beat you I. Think this goes back to what we were talking about on a podcast recently when David you said the fact that these players are always adding things today game, the dull Djokovic and Federer, and the Dallas got so many different ways he can beat you. He can change what he does and he did that today and I think it surprised Yovich and It shouldn't be surprising to me, but at the end to us, but it kind of was surprising to see the dull change tactically against your that that rivalry has been so familiar in my head of what that looks like in terms of the patterns of the rallies and this one was different out there nobles the those tactical awareness today was was as good as anything I've ever seen from him. I think

Tennis Novak Djokovic Channon. David Sorry Nadal Nidal Jackovitch El Pice Yovich Dell Berlin Jock Schwartzman Dallas Federer
Delivering Maximum Impact in the Public Sector

Recorded Future - Inside Threat Intelligence for Cyber Security

06:47 min | 2 years ago

Delivering Maximum Impact in the Public Sector

"Born and raised in California. I served in the military after graduating high school for ten years. And after completing successfully completing my arm service tenure. I became a civilian again and unfortunately. the. That I held as an armed servicemember did not transfer cleanly into the civilian world. So whereas I was the network manager in the military. I kind of add to start all over when I became a civilian. So digits that. Began working on the desktop and couple of years later moved into. The engineer ranks. After mastering NAN began working with small teams as a supervisor. Fast forward to three years after that got my first manager role it's been just an uphill climb since then on say about seven years ago was when I first entered into the executive ranks. And that was as light goal from a to be at the top of a particular foul. And so your position today, can you describe that for us and tell us what's your day to day like? Well, I can day to day is. Very, challenging We Dallas County is the eighth largest county in the United States. We have a thirty nine different departments and agencies that comprise the county, and so as you would imagine, there's a good deal of diversity and so in one day I might be you know working with public works the next day I might be working with the judiciary. The next day I made me working with Members of the court. It's just a great deal of diversity and I like that. But my team specifically. We have responsibility for the county cybersecurity program and really what that entails three different teams. The first of which is we call in threaten vulnerability management. and. We also have another arm. Architecture and engineering, and then we also supply for the hundred fifty or so folks that make up it services audit and compliance so that we can make certain that were firing on all cylinders with respect to our compliance mandates. Can you give us an idea of the scale of your team? How many folks do you have working under you? We have total. In, source and outsource of ten men and women. That make up the team. We've been asked to source streamlining keep things relatively small. and. So we have a number of partnerships. With outside entities that help us to complete the portfolio. For the security services. program. Can you describe for us how that works I mean how do you balance that I would hazard to say as a relatively small team for the size of the organization that you're protecting, and being able to work with outside vendors. Yeah I tend to agree day it is a fairly tall order. And a part of that call for us to take a look at everything that we had in existence. and then looking at how well, we did in the areas that require improvement what tools might we keep and what tools should we replace? And as we sort of went through that exercise with the backdrop being we're going to be small have to be Nimble. Not Do we have to keep the lights on world cross functionally, but we also have to do programs and other projects How can we do all of that remain nimble and so what we came up with wasn't hey I m L. model whereby we would replace just about everything with those types of tools. So that. Overtime and with clean data entering into those systems, we could train those two only stop work for those analysts for those engineers architects. When it was absolutely necessary, and so that's been I guess in eighteen to twenty month journey and I will not tell you that we have arrived but we're much better off in our day to day. Then we were when I first joined almost two years ago. I mean do you have any insights to share in terms of what that journey has been like for for other people who may be considering a similar approach things that they should be mindful of you know Dave I, I have an opportunity because there are so many cities within my counties and because we're making an Dallas county a model for other entities of our size and larger I get a chance to top twelve law practitioners local to the two hundred, fifty four counties set up a Texas as well as those that are outside. Of Our state and one of the biggest challenges that I see facing practitioners. Is that they don't really know where to start. So so you know the the person before them maybe they were doing their best the person before them maybe they add compliance focus. But with respect to growing the program, what I find most often is that. They have not adopted a security framework and conducted. A gap assessment against that, and then prioritize those documents those findings to give them a solid roadmap going forward. That's probably number one without question and it is on a day to day basis as I work with other practitioners very first thing that I subscribe that they should take a look at.

Dallas County California Supervisor United States Engineer Executive Dave Texas
How did Andy Murray win that?

The Tennis Podcast

05:36 min | 2 years ago

How did Andy Murray win that?

"Right Okay Day to the US Open. How on Earth did Andy Murray do that Catherine? He's just one from four, six, four, six, one, three down. How has he done that somebody explained to me Name Messing with the lewd tonight is the plum street in the deepened. Question isn't it? I mean what's going on? Well, they said to two women who we had to know primarily a CEO Tim. If you had to attribute that combat come back to one thing and one thing I think we're on a time limit. What would it be and he said halt. I think I mean obviously, that is that that is a word that covers a broad spectrum of things all of them are. Totally embodied by Andy Murray persistence to nasty doggedness stopping this. But obselete hot is what got him through a very bizarre tennis match today I mean I'm sure in the annals of time we remember the witness of if the match that will suitable fade away and we'll remember the school line in the emotion whatever ends up coming in the aftermath, but it was a It was a rookie right of a tennis match for for a long time. someone on twitter said that there was once a racehorse who died and when they cut the race open they realized he had a heart that was bigger than any other race horse in history and that feels like the kind of thing that might happen with Andy. Murray one day. That's a morbid take on them on a very joyous occasion for Andy. Murray. But it is one of those things isn't it? Because we think of Mary is so relatable and yet. On occasion like this, we I genuinely have no idea how he does something like that. It's it's thrilling to watch but I, come explain it. He operates on a different level of guts and defend defiance and resilient to what I'm capable of even imagining. In the you say that was a bit move it but didn't the encore interview immediately off the match the first question was Andy. We buried at the Australian Open last year and yet he He was just an alternate set of on the sports accidental turn of phrase unfortunately most well, we'll maybe fortunately a lot of these faces obscured by a mask, but I would quite like to have seen his full facial reaction to the declaration that he'd been buried the tennis community. Hopefully hopefully, we're looking at about fifty years down the road a sixty or something like that for. To have this. This forensic analysis. David Lewis let's get out of this. Yeah. Let's do that. Tell you what I think. We have just a bit of history in order so that we know exactly where we are with the Sandy Murry story. This is a man that was supposed to retire twenty months ago and. He didn't he went and had a hip surgery he went and had a new metal, hip. He then made a comeback and the combat went really well, and he won't doubles clean said he played mixed doubles with Serena Williams, at Wimbledon and then he went on won the singles title in Antwerp and it was just amazing and then he looked like he was hitting the buffet Z. looked like he was in real trouble when he had the complications and what was it called it the impingement of the joint with which which was think caused by sort of spare type thing on the hip and is causing all sorts of trouble didn't play the Australian Open this year I personally thought he was probably finished really at that point for. Twenty time. And slow behold he comes back place last week in Cincinnati Stroke New York has those two great wins over Varun Ti and then. Lost didn't look great against Manashe rich but comes into this match and a half to say I felt pretty sheep pretty. Confident on his behalf I thought he would. He would have struggle against a very good player world number forty, eight Yoshito Nishioka from Japan. He's twenty four years of age Manu beat Dan Evans. The Australian Open, this year, and who just has one of those really solid sprightly games left handed can hurt you but can also stay in rallies and for an hour and a half. He made Andy Murray. Look terrible Andy Maryland made himself look terrible and At that point I said on the radio and I know I said it on the radio because the BBC sport website copied and pasted my words into their text portal and I, got seventy four negative votes as a result of the words that I added which were Four six, four, six, one, three, headlined. He may not be able to do this anymore and I said this is one of the worst performances I've ever seen from Andy Murray to Grand Slam. He's got a metal hip, and he may not be able to do this anymore but looking at this having covered. So many of his matches I've never seen anything quite like it before past is not feeling very well, I, expected to see a fight tooth and nail his opponent is good and I thought he could cause problems but I expected it to be hyper competitive and Murray would win but it's not even close. And I stand by every single word that.

Andy Murray Andy Andy Maryland Tennis United States TIM CEO Dan Evans Twitter Sandy Murry Bbc Sport Yoshito Nishioka Serena Williams Catherine Mary David Lewis Grand Slam Japan Cincinnati Clean
Your Purpose is Beauty  Mercedes Lyson

The Get Foxy Show

06:06 min | 3 years ago

Your Purpose is Beauty Mercedes Lyson

"Today's guest is Mercedes Lisin. Mercedes. Thank you so much for taking the time to be on this podcast. You have a podcast called. Your purpose is beauty can be found on your website over L-, more. Ella. Music, DOT com. I wanted to talk to you about this because. Your podcast. Oh, my gosh, it's such a beautiful podcast. Gosh. Thank you. It's one of those shows I tuned in and. Your Voice on that are cast is just so soothing. But at the same time, you're talking about a wide array of subjects that I felt like my listeners would really gel with you're talking about alternative health. You're talking about beauty product. You're talking about. Different sociological things you're talking about house music I am. Yes. I'm very lactic person. So. How did you kind of come into this? Did this sort of? Choose you or did you sort of choose this profession herself? There's a lot to unpack there. So the podcast is really an outgrowth of work that I have been doing since two thousand fourteen when I started a youtube channel and the impetus for that goes back, even a little bit further. I was having some health challenges around two, thousand, eight, two, thousand, nine. So my my into holistic health and wellness is probably that unique. Unique I feel like a lot of people come into Those proclivities with some sort of health challenge which I had, and at the time I was really kind of unsatisfied with the directions that Western medicine was gonNA take and trying to get a diagnosis. So kind of divine timing on my side. I ended up starting to see an acupuncturist with no real. Background acupuncture I didn't know much about it. It was a friend of a friend and it basically sort of changed my life, which is why I was so excited to hear from you as an acupuncturist because that was really the beginning of my journey into this whole world. So in addition to acupuncture over ten years ago at this point solving might acute health problem. It also instigated as deeper awakening. How just What I can do to engender vibrant house in a sustainable way and I have actually had a very longstanding interest in beauty released since childhood. And I was kind of having this bigger awakening about what my life looked like in lifestyle choices. A lot of that started to coalesce around personal care products in and beauty. So at the time, I was getting into this. This is now like twenty, ten to twenty twelve. There was like a very nascent community of green beauty bloggers, Emin youtubers, and the Internet was I always talk about how different the Internet was back. Then it was just a very different space and blogging in Youtube is. Not, what it is today with rampant influence or marketing and things like that is really this very intimate and helpful community of very like minded and passionate people. So I started learning about all of the problems with a lot of conventional personal care products, and there were these like very small niche fatigues that were opening up mostly online at the time. And I basically just kind of fell in love with this world of Artisanal handcrafted luxury beauty products in the realms skin care makeup body care, and I was also getting very deep into the Youtube Beauty, community? which was like a whole, a whole thing at the time, this is all going on when I was in graduate school as well. So this was sort of my creative outlet at the time and I am someone that has always needed a lot of creative to balance the hyper academic backgrounds that I come from. And I just saw there were not a lot of people that were making content There were a lot of people making beauty content. There weren't a lot of people making videos specifically about organic judy products or clean green. Whatever you. WanNa call it has so many labels. So I had graduated am I earned my PhD in twenty thirteen and in the spring of twenty four team decided to just take the plunge and start recording videos on my I really had no idea how to edit video footage or. How did you any of it? Really, but it was sort of a very soup to nuts process of teaching myself in building kind of a blogger presence for myself through youtube and blogging to some extent. And Yeah. Fast forward. Now, six years I decided that I wanted to add a podcast to my suite of offerings mostly because I have benefited so much from podcasts and I think that there's such an accessible way for. People to consume content and learn and it my my appreciation for podcasts went to this whole other level when I had a baby in November of twenty eighteen. So I'm the mother to amazing twenty month old little boy. But as anyone that has had to be will know you need to be hands free all the time and you get nap trapped I them and you're laying with them for long periods of time and it can be very idle time. So I mean podcasts have just been my companion really on long stroller walks on vk bedtime. Even doing just mundane chores around the. House. And yet. Again, I found that there was not a lot of people in the beauty space podcasting about things that I am interested in personally and listening to

Youtube Mercedes Lisin Mercedes Ella
BREAKING: Herman Cain Dies Of Coronavirus At Age 74 in Atlanta

The Erick Erickson Show

03:35 min | 3 years ago

BREAKING: Herman Cain Dies Of Coronavirus At Age 74 in Atlanta

"A political consultant who worked for Herman? Cain on his twenty twelve presidential campaign is announcing that he has passed away. from. covid nineteen. That's breaking news here in Y'all I'm not confide. This is not. Confirmed other than through Ellen. And I'm Yup. nope. It's IT's confirmed folks. Herman Cain has died of the corona virus. age seventy four. In Republican presidential candidate in two thousand twelve. Herman Cain ran his platform very famously was the nine nine, nine tax reform plan. He had been Fox. News contributor and a newsmax contributor newsmax is confirming his death He was admitted to the hospital on July first two days after being. DIAGNOSED WITH COVA night teen. Ten Days Prior, he had been at the Rally for the President they they don't know where he got the virus. And Herman Cain has now. Passed away He was the President of Godfather's pizza. He. Rose through the ranks He joined coca. Cola. He worked for Pillsbury. He was regional vice president for Burger, King, which at the time Pillsbury owned and then he took over. Godfather's pizza turned around made it a profitable company. And his big issue is marketing. He became the chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City in Nineteen ninety-five He was in the position for twenty months in nineteen in two, thousand nine you'll recall the president renominated him for the Federal Reserve. Board? He ultimately withdrew his nomination. He dabbled in politics in one, thousand, nine, hundred sixty was an adviser to the Bob Dole Jack Kemp Campaign for President He ran for the Senate in two thousand four. He was defeated in the primary by Johnny Isaacson actually campaigned for him in two thousand four. Now he beat colon cancer it was stage four and two, thousand six he was diagnosed with it the and then from two, thousand, eight, two, thousand, seven, of course, he had the Herman Cain Show in Atlanta? On WSB, I was actually hired in two thousand eleven to replace Herman on WSB Because Herman had decided, he was going to run for president and he had been in the line to replace Neil Bortz they needed somebody to replace Herman as a result. So they hired me Herman off and ran for president. He at one point was the front runner for the Republican presidential nomination, and then he the ultimately lost the nomination and came back to radio has has wound down his career over time and. Herman Cain now dead he was a good man. Seventy four years old affected by coronavirus virus. Prayers for his family. And for for those who knew and loved and worked with Herman Cain God. Bless him.

Herman Cain Regional Vice President Herman President Trump Pillsbury Consultant Newsmax Federal Reserve WSB Ellen Bob Dole Jack Kemp Federal Reserve Bank Johnny Isaacson Neil Bortz Senate Kansas City Burger Atlanta
20-Month-Old Boy Shot And Killed In Englewood, Mom Also Wounded, Chicago Police Say

Dave Plier

00:45 sec | 3 years ago

20-Month-Old Boy Shot And Killed In Englewood, Mom Also Wounded, Chicago Police Say

"A a woman woman and and her her twenty twenty month month old old baby baby boy boy were were shot shot when when somebody somebody opened opened fire fire on on their their car car at at sixty sixty third third parkway parkway in in south south hall hall stead stead in in Englewood Englewood Fred Fred Waller is the Chicago police department's chief of patrol he was asked if this was a random incident of gun violence well I don't think it was random because the amount of times it was fired upon it doesn't seem like it was random the protectors I feverishly investigating this looking at video canvassing the scenes so we'll find out authorities say the mother was driving home with her son from a trip to the laundromat they drove themselves to the hospital with the toddler was pronounced dead

Fred Fred Waller Englewood Englewood Chicago