35 Burst results for "Two Thousand Twelve"

Xi Jinping Takes a Page From Mao Zedong's Red Playbook

America First with Sebastian Gorka Podcast

01:40 min | 1 year ago

Xi Jinping Takes a Page From Mao Zedong's Red Playbook

"Start at the top bill. Let's talk about who now runs the world's largest communist dictatorship who is xi jinping. What do we need to know about him. And what changes he made recently to the constitutional order of that communist state. Xi jinping is the ruling dictator of communist china He assumed that position in two thousand twelve and immediately began to undo many of the reforms that had been taking place under deng xiaoping began after maoz demise in nineteen seventy six Basically these policies have been taken in ended attempt to re communize china. I would describe xi jinping a neo. Maoist he's a his as reported in my book. Deceiving the sky his his His favourite leaders are hitler-stalin. And now and he is working very aggressively to return China to its communist roots almost in the style of north korean totalitarianism. We've seen him go. After the business leaders in china who wielded enormous power by becoming billionaires Many of them have been imprisoned. Some have been killed. Some others have been driven into exile. And this is all part of xi jinping plan to once again make china a dominant world communist

Maoz China Xi Jinping Deng Xiaoping Stalin
Ryan Braun Announces Retirement, Leaves Behind a Complicated Legacy

Baseball Tonight with Buster Olney

02:01 min | 1 year ago

Ryan Braun Announces Retirement, Leaves Behind a Complicated Legacy

"Ryan braun The the brewers formally announced his retirement. Yesterday he announced. Its milwaukee brewers. And i gotta say this. Because i i think of ryan braun is being Like lance armstrong of of baseball Not only did he use pd's but he also attacked people leading up to that most notably the sample collector specifically went after him Publicly accused him of being anti semitic He called other players when he was a i. You know. I had the first positive drug tests. He told them look this. This collector was coming after me. he's an anti semite. And i thought it was just despicable. And so i give mark at nausea. The brewers credit for his loyalty that braun. I'd say this. He's a better person than i am. A given that. If i were mark grad nausea after bron lied about you being a pd user and then accepted a sixty game suspension. What was it a half year suspension. I would have never forgiven him after giving him that. Huge contract mark attanasio did no in from afar. That's my viewpoint to. I can't get passed it. He tried to destroy. Somebody's life yup and he lied. You know that was. He gave that speech in february of two thousand twelve. It wasn't until two thousand thirteen that he finally got caught up in the biogenesis investigation and got his suspension. I get it in milwaukee they the fans there for gave them gave them standing ovations. You know on the field is the third greatest brewer of all time. You know buying rodney out in honor for me. I just can't get past. His initial reaction is. Denial is lies. And you know great player. No doubt thirty thirty. Mvp all that. But you know. I think i would hope. He looks back in wishes he had done at all differently.

Ryan Braun Brewers Mark Grad Milwaukee Brewers Lance Armstrong Mark Attanasio Bron Baseball Braun Nausea Afar Milwaukee Rodney
He Cyberstalked Teens for Years, Then They Fought Back

Unraveled: A Long Island Serial Killer

01:37 min | 1 year ago

He Cyberstalked Teens for Years, Then They Fought Back

"That brings us to another troubling story per group of high school. Girls in new hampshire help came in the form of the only detective in their tam giang. Ladies were fighting to even go outside. It was not something that i had ever dealt with before. That's detective rachel molten in two thousand twelve in our small town of belmont. She found pursuing a mystery. Man was targeting multiple female students in a disturbing way. The case started when bolton was contacted by a girl. Refer to as. Kate and kate had a distressing stories share and unidentified person had been chatting her up overtaxed even though she didn't know who it was identified himself as seth initially it was friendly contacts and then one day it was like a light switch was flipped on and he just started requesting nude photos of her. She kept telling the person. No i'm not going to send them to you. Attend her the nude photos that he already had of her somehow is more or less a surprise attack on her that I have these. And i want more. And if you don't send them on going to spread these over the internet this mystery man was threatening to up and kate's life and it was now up to detective molten to stop him.

Rachel Molten New Hampshire Belmont Bolton Kate Seth
German Philosopher Herbert Marcuse Was the Architect of the New Left

The Charlie Kirk Show

02:09 min | 1 year ago

German Philosopher Herbert Marcuse Was the Architect of the New Left

"The author of the new left. Who's behind all of this so really important question now. There isn't a single person. go to karl marx. You can go to hey goal and the haley dialectic and the long march institutions and a german historisches view of our experience in our existence but there is one person that every conservative should become familiar with now. I want to give a hat tip to the great newt. Gingrich newt gingrich did something back in two thousand twelve where he insistently introduced the author and the activist saul alinsky into the mainstream of the conservative movement. When i go to republican lincoln. Reagan dinners when. I go to tea party. Meetings truly don't exist anymore. When i go to any sort of function and i say saul alinsky. I'd say seventy or eighty percent of the room knows who i'm talking about now. Actually i've been going across the country. Speaking at churches you'd be amazed at how few churches know who saul. Alinsky is a man who wrote rules for radicals thirteen. We've covered them extensively on the show and the dedication. That book was to lucifer. Who he said was the first ever rebel trying to tell me. We're not spiritual war. Oh charlie it's just a bunch of matter versus matter notes not to spiritual work. They admit it's a spiritual war now. The man who is the architect of a lot of chaos. You're living through the man who is largely responsible for a lot of the academic backing of is a man by the name of herbert markova using the frankfurt school. He was a communist. That was kicked out of the frankfurt. School in germany found a safe space and the united states of america taught at harvard. Columbia brandeis and eventually settled the university of san diego. He was the architect of what is now known as the new left.

Saul Alinsky Karl Marx Gingrich Reagan Alinsky Lincoln Saul Herbert Markova Charlie Frankfurt School Columbia Brandeis Frankfurt United States Of America Germany Harvard University Of San Diego
The Latest: Paris Games To Fly Giant Flag From Eiffel Tower

AP News Radio

00:39 sec | 1 year ago

The Latest: Paris Games To Fly Giant Flag From Eiffel Tower

"April Ross and Alex climb and win the gold medal in the women's beach volleyball tournament the American do blitz to leak but Clancy and Maria fair top show of Australia in straight sets delivered team USA's first gold in the event since misty may and Kerri Walsh three peat in two thousand four two thousand eight in two thousand twelve the thirty nine year old Ross winter third medal in beach volleyball and her first gold after winning silver in the London games and bronze in Rio metal back without Alex and all the hard work that she put in our team I don't know if it was possible and so I'm just a laid it thirty one year old Climent earned her gold medal in her Olympic debut I'm Danny cap

Alex Climb Volleyball Ross Winter Kerri Walsh Clancy Ross Maria Australia USA RIO London Alex Climent Olympic Danny Cap
Nastia Liukin on How to Win (and Lose) at Work

Skimm'd from The Couch

02:32 min | 2 years ago

Nastia Liukin on How to Win (and Lose) at Work

"Hey everyone our guest. Today is not stale lucan. She has gymnastics legend who won five olympic medals in the two thousand eight olympics in beijing including the gold medal. For all around to out her gymnastics career. Nastya has also won four world gold medals and thirty two total international medals since retiring after the two thousand twelve olympic trials. Nastya has not slowed down. She's a gymnastics analyst for nbc sports. She's written a book and has competed on dancing with the stars. Nastya welcome to the show. Thanks for having me be before we start talking about work and your career. We like to start these interviews with our lightning round to get warmed up so quick questions. Quick answers here we go. Are you ready yes. I feel weird like an athlete like are ready to. What was your first job on your resume. It was when i was twelve. I guess basically. Because i shot a commercial for adidas and didn't really know it at the time obviously i got paid for it but at twelve years old. You know my parents took care of all that and yeah little. Did i know that led me to my career today. What is the most recent job on your resume. I guess being broadcaster for nbc. Just got back from the olympic trials. And i'm heading to tokyo in like two weeks so exciting i know. Do you have any hobbies or skills that people don't know about. No i think like all of my talent and everything went to gymnastics now when you think about it not when you were at the height of gymnastics but now vault bars beamer floor. What's your favorite bars. mine to. What is something that most people don't realize about competing in the olympics. I was telling somebody this yesterday. But it's like we don't have an off season so not to compare it to like any other sport of professional sports. But we're still training seven hours a day six days a week in our quote unquote like off season and then non-olympic years competing at world championships national championships. So i think they don't realize how many years i get your entire life. You're basically trading for this moment and that also like speaking of training we get to the olympics like two or so weeks before the competition started. Just to get acclimated time change like all of that and we don't get a single day off until the competitions over so it's a lot it's exhausting. We don't get to see our families.

Gymnastics Nastya Olympic Lucan Olympics NBC Beijing Adidas Tokyo World Championships National C
How Carlos Welch First Got in the Game

The Chip Race

02:11 min | 2 years ago

How Carlos Welch First Got in the Game

"I grew up like i said in the atlanta georgia area Grew up pretty. Poor am was a pretty good student in school. So i kinda like work my way up in Started you know. Having some moderate financial success for myself Eventually graduated college became a math teacher. And somewhere along the line along the way i found poker and i found poker because like i said grown up poor i was always looking for ways out of poverty and i used to mess around with these get rich quick schemes that you see the late night. Infomercials lost a lot of money. Going on certain days when i was probably seventeen eighteen years old and then one night i was watching and they said this guy named moneymaker won a bunch of money. And i'm thinking like who writes this shit like this is like. Obviously this one's a scam. I'm not falling for that. But i gave it. You know. I did a little research and i was like wait. This is real and sounds okay. This is going to be my quote unquote get risky scheme. That Starting me down that rabbit hole and so started playing a line around two thousand four and then singles primarily up until black friday Obviously that was like a disaster for a lot of us in the us. So i i was out for like a year and then these rogue. Us site started the pup. You can play on as so. I kinda got back in and at that time the sitting does are kinda dead so that started me on the tournaments and So this is around two thousand twelve and in two thousand thirteen I was a member of tournament. Poker edge and andrew brokers is one of the pros on that site. And so that's how i met andrew and Met him for the first time in person in vegas in twenty thirteen to get on the pie. And i think you pretty much. The rest is history from

Atlanta Moneymaker Georgia Andrew Brokers United States Andrew Vegas
test-debug

The Crossover NBA Show with Chris Mannix

51:23 min | 2 years ago

test-debug

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

NBA Basketball Damian Lillard United States Chauncey Billips Brett Brown Nigeria Lillard Tatum Jason Kidd Blazers Olympics Howard Tokyo Moseley Jamal Moseley Beal Orlando Portland
What Does Monopoly Mean in the Internet Age?

Reset

02:10 min | 2 years ago

What Does Monopoly Mean in the Internet Age?

"Lawmakers have had it out for facebook for a while last year a house judiciary subcommittee report accused the tech giant of anticompetitive behaviour and in december. Facebook got suit on monday. Those lawsuits were dismissed. It's a big win. For the social media company it also signals a rocky path forward for legislators both sides of the aisle trying to rein in big tech here to break down. the latest development is recode serene ghaffari high serene. Hey adam so let's start with the lawsuits. What were they about yes. The lawsuits basically accused facebook of acting as a monopoly to crush. Its competition two different lawsuits. One was filed by the federal trade commission or the ftc which is the top government agency for enforcing antitrust laws. And then there was a parallel lawsuit also filed by forty eight attorneys general from different states and territories in the us and they both essentially said the same thing that facebook's allegedly monopolistic practices leave consumers with less choices for which social networking apps. They wanna use and advertisers have less choices for aware. They want actually advertise reach. People lawsuits also said that. Facebook engage in a quote systemic strategy to eliminate their competition and that this was something really tactical that facebook was actively doing crush its competitors. What exactly did that strategy look like so. The lawsuit said that when facebook bought instagram. Back in two thousand twelve and remember at that time. Instagram was a startup. it was considered an up and coming rival to facebook They said that that was an example of something that facebook shouldn't have been allowed to do because in regulators view this was essentially facebook trying to stifle competition by eating it up and buying it rather than letting market competitor truly compete and they also point to win. Facebook bought the messaging app called whatsapp in two thousand fourteen. Again this up and coming service. That was rivaling. facebook and facebook went ahead and bought it today. More people are on. What's app than they are on facebook's own messenger product but that doesn't matter for facebook because it's all part of the facebook ecosystem now

Facebook House Judiciary Subcommittee Ghaffari FTC Adam Instagram United States
Interview With Actress, Sarah Paulson

Awards Chatter

01:35 min | 2 years ago

Interview With Actress, Sarah Paulson

"Surplus thank you. So much for doing the podcast. I feel like a long time coming. I mentioned to you on twitter. I looked up the last time we did. A proper interview was two thousand twelve. Which is you know whatever nine nine years ago but like a lifetime ago when we think about the fact i just want to note a few things. It was right after game change but before the emmy nomination it was before the second season of american horror story which was your first big one with ryan. It was back at a time when you said you were still auditioning. You are still sort of anonymous. You weren't yet. sir paulson. Who second home is at the emmys. who other actors are you know revering. Who has this crazy twitter following which. I've been reminded of this week. So i guess i just first of all congratulations on everything that's since we've been in touch but not for full thing like this graduations and secondly does it feel like a lot has happened in the last nine years. Oh my god it feels like a lot is happening tonight. The last nine years. I mean i remember. I think we were at a real estate where we were born. You're at the office in new york city. And i remember sitting down with you and i remember you saying. I think you're going to get nominated for game change. And i was like no way. I don't think i really do think so. I think. I don't. I never been nominated before and i just couldn't imagine that it was true and you seem pretty confident and i liked that about you right away

Sir Paulson Twitter Emmy Ryan New York City
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Thinking Poker Podcast

Thinking Poker Podcast

02:40 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Thinking Poker Podcast

"Beat the one eighty minutes so i started with t. Probably about three or four months after they started in two thousand ten. And i was there with them up until black friday and they went black. Friday hit. I was like well if i can't play online poker anymore. I don't see a reason to keep this training site subscription so i canceled my teepee subscription in two thousand eleven Shortly after black friday. And i came back to tb in two thousand twelve in two thousand twelve. When i discovered that. Hey there was some light. Rogue sites popping up like carbon carbon was the big one plano bagged in. And that's when i came back to tv. And then a couple of months. After that is when i met killing and then i came back to as that year. And that's when i met you guys but let me paul so you sound like you're going to jump in. Yeah i was just going to say it's good that you came back to it to tournament poker edge because i was not working for them in in twenty ten. When you first joined up. I i started with them. Either late twenty. It was after black. Friday late twenty eleven or or early two thousand twelve but yeah. I think we probably wouldn't have known. I mean i i i knew you were as well from the forums. Actually i thought you were brazilian. Carl yeah yeah. But i was like. Oh that's that luxy guy like when you when you introduce yourself. I did have some sense of of who you are as well from the forums but Yeah i wonder whether we would met if you had not rejoined tournament poker. Probably not since we met at the made up exactly will remember. I saw the meat. So two thousand eleven when i first got here before the second coming at tb he. I was just like this guy who watched poker on tv and online but you know back in the heroes. Were all the guys who played on tv so that ten day trip. Ten years ago. I spent most of my time taking pictures of like scotty win. And eric linger in and like all these guys i saw on. Tv between grinding sitting goes and the few online players on new were people from the sitting..

Carl Ten years ago black friday Friday late twenty eleven two thousand twelve second first two thousand eleven twenty ten scotty two thousand ten late twenty one brazilian early two thousand twelve Friday eric linger eighty minutes four months months
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Leading with James Ashton

Leading with James Ashton

03:08 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Leading with James Ashton

"Then or did that come lighter with puma and adidas came a little bit at unilever but not much for that came later with british american tobacco for awhile and then without a nestle huma. You did what you said you wanted to do. You folded your passion. You got into the sports industry through the sportswear companies in the footwear company. So kind of observing it from the flip side of way on now and puma. I think you looked after the relationship. Maybe struck the relationship with usa and then prior to that you are very closely linked to the all blacks in your addidas time. I'm just interested in what you get from being close to such fantastic elite performance. Yeah if you look at both of those. I mean you saying built was a freak. Strange situation of puma wear puma had repositioned itself more was a fashion brand as opposed to a sports performance. Brian now. But i think to reverse that a bit and have stronger performance credentials But they had the wills most marketable athlete and really. They went doing much about him. They weren't using him in any way. He didn't even have a new pair of spikes for the two thousand twelve olympics so we then took a different approach and focused on him and built pergama around commercializing and promoting you same boat athlete to drive the brand in that. That was really interesting. I think he was fascinating. The sense of his ability to cross over seventy different areas. He wasn't just an athlete. Is the presence in music. His transparency in his accessibility on media was huge and he was fascinated. What with many of the all blacks which unfortunately the most successful rugby franchise in the world and probably successful sporting franchise and that there i think is all about culture. It's all about they talk about the jersey. They talked about leaving it in a better place they talk about the pipeline of talent from those interactions with them. It was a great experience. Main other things to learn from as them being the top in sport and in their discipline net chosen area..

adidas puma Brian both british unilever addidas seventy different areas two thousand twelve usa american olympics
The Hard Truth of the Marijuana Industry

Axios Today

01:49 min | 2 years ago

The Hard Truth of the Marijuana Industry

"Two thousand eighteen. Almost seven hundred thousand people in the us were charged for possession of marijuana. Black people were almost four times more likely to be arrested for possession than white people despite the fact that both groups use marijuana at similar rates for a long time because of the so-called war on drugs of the eighties and nineties. These disparities were the primary story of marijuana people of color in the us. But now that story is. Changing as marijuana is legalized in more states. Across the us and growing into a multibillion dollar industry black entrepreneurs are trying to reclaim the plant that crushed their communities for so long black entrepreneurs like gmo modern. I saw this as an opportunity to say if i watch people my community get arrested for this. Why can't i help people my community enter from the legal quote unquote right governmental legal standpoint of this and seeing where we can seek those opportunities. Jia runs her own. Pr firm gb m. communications and public relation services for marijuana businesses. She started her company in two thousand twelve after working goldman sachs for fifteen years three years after starting her company into the marijuana industry. This was in twenty fifteen. Twenty seven states in dc had either legalized medical marijuana or decriminalized marijuana possession but it was instill is illegal at the federal level. So entering that space meant carrying the stigma of working in what many still considered to be an illegal business. My gut never said. Stop what my gut said is back. Be prepare. that you're gonna get a lot of flack keep coughing

United States JIA Goldman Sachs DC
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on The Ringer-Verse

The Ringer-Verse

03:20 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on The Ringer-Verse

"When the variant is mocking lewke physically attacking loki. Not the best showing from loki in these fights by the way i'll note what is look. Say here daggers. Magic back right off wickedness you know drew rusty or maybe how about you know we should i guess cut him. Some slack is coming off of the two thousand twelve new york sequence. Where the whole hulk pulverized him into the the floor of stark tower but what is low. He say here. I would never treat me like this. Is that a clue. There are so many lines. If you had any honor you'd fight me yourself. I have shit back good.

loki so many lines two thousand twelve new york
When Should You Quit Your Job and Become a Full-Time Entrepreneur?

The $100 MBA Show

02:45 min | 2 years ago

When Should You Quit Your Job and Become a Full-Time Entrepreneur?

"I made the leap to full-time entrepreneurship. After working one of the most stable jobs and careers in the world. I was a teacher for thirteen years and after thirteen years in two thousand twelve. I quit my job. My very cushy and senior position at the university. I was working at and men. I was really good at my job. I was advancing in my career. I was way ahead where i should be for my age. When it came to my directory in the world of education i was a head of department of top five and moved up from there so the decision to leave my job and become a full time. Entrepreneur was a tough one. 'cause leaving something so secure something i know for sure i can do really well and continue to do for as long as i want but i knew i wasn't getting any older and i realized i didn't wanna work as a traditional teacher for the rest of my life. I didn't see myself doing that for my life. And i thought i'm not getting any younger. I need to make this decision now. Now i need to tell you that before. I took that leap. I was not newt entrepreneurship. By the time. I got to that point. I have started and created and run multiple businesses big and small in different industries services online products arbitrage e commerce. And the reason why. I share this because i gave myself enough years at enough chances and enough reps to figure out how to do this entrepreneurship thing how to earn money. How to run a business how to manage people how to hire people. I wasn't perfect and there was still a lot of room for improvement. But i wasn't quit my job to start my first business ever. I had a bunch of failures under my belt already. I made money. i lost money. The point i'm making here is a lot of people. Ask a question. How much money do i need saved up before. Quit my job. I say that is actually not as important as how much experience have you had as an entrepreneur as a business builder before you quit your job. The beauty of side hustle is that you have the safety of your job and yes. It's limiting what you can do as a side hustle. Because you're not working fulltime in your business but you can have a taste of it you can see if he will actually like your product your like your business but more importantly if you like business if you like being entrepreneur what kinds of business you on run kind of products are you intruded into b. two b. or beat a c a retail. Are you into software businesses. No maybe you like networking businesses. That's the point. I highly recommend before you quit. Your job is to get some reps build some businesses on the side

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Problematic Premium Feed

Problematic Premium Feed

05:41 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Problematic Premium Feed

"There's certain topics you can't talk about what people without that friendship. It's a religion spirituality of damn good point. Yeah that's that's absolutely right. That's absolutely right but you know there's there's people that can't be told nothing you know what i'm saying. Yeah for for sure or they don't care to a- like i i tried to Think about having a relationship with my biological father rat. Because i have a. He can't around every so often it was cold. But you know. I told you this before. It came like the way the situation was presented to me why he just dipped off. And you know left me out there. You know and the ended up but i didn't know that it. It really didn't happen like that. You know what. I'm saying so We try to hook up on facebook back in two thousand twelve. Something like that and it was cool. You know what i'm saying. 'cause i really didn't have any Animosity towards him or anything. I just didn't know you know what i'm saying. Like i knew i didn't know him. You know him right so One day he says something. Just real inappropriate. You know like you know what. I'm trying to figure out how tell me. How can i can connect with you because your biological father in his put it all out there all pays for all people to see long about the nova best situation. The moment raised me was my but nobody will be the meta my friends as she. You know what. I'm sure. So i want that healthier. You don't like it. So i had telling like ed is i have a gun matassa man that say. This is not the right Time had that conversation..

facebook two thousand twelve ed
Environmental Racism is Real

Tamarindo

02:27 min | 2 years ago

Environmental Racism is Real

"Are going to talk about environmental justice and along with that environmental racism and which describes the fact that people of color and low income people are most likely to be situated in your sources of contamination and away from clean water air and soil so research by the la times finds that in the us. The best predictor of whether you live near hazardous waste site is the color of your skin. That is wild but not surprising right. This is america so now from not far from where i live here in the very latin next community vernon here in los angeles families have been waiting for over three years to have lead contamination. Cleaned out of their community. Contamination came from the exile plant which melted down. Used lead acid car batteries. You don't want that in your backyard. But that's what these families had in their backyard which state regulators had allowed to operate on a temporary permit for more than three decades so state regulators like thirty. But you keep doing it. And then they kept letting them do it for over thirty years. It's crazy right. And what can i tell you. More about this. Despite history of air pollution and hazardous waste violations. They were still continued to operate ex. Able to operate it. California health department analysis found that nearly three hundred children under six years old living near exide have elevated blood lead levels in two thousand twelve. We've known this for a while. The last year the plant was in full operation in twenty twenty. A court allowed exide to walk away from its clean up responsibilities leaving us the taxpayers with the bill to clean this up and i wanted to echo this example or highlight these example because a heard of exits. Its own backyard but too because you see the failures of the government time and time again in airing on the side of corporations and this is an example of environmental racism at play and unfortunately as a nation points out this is. There's nothing you this has been happening for decades and decades and a few insights here about specifically about the us fifty six percent of the population. You're toxic waste. Sites are people of color. People of color have thirty eight percent higher nitrogen dioxide exposure compared to white people. There are two times more likely to live without potable water and modern sanitation and ninety five percent of people of color that have claims against polluters denied by The environmental protection

California Health Department La Times United States Vernon Los Angeles
A New Approach to Defending the Human Rights of Migrants

TED Talks Daily

01:54 min | 2 years ago

A New Approach to Defending the Human Rights of Migrants

"A decade ago after peaceful revolution toppled longtime tunisia dictator bin. Ali i was sitting in an orange grove outside athens. Greece documented migrants. Were hiding there. I came to interview them about human rights abuses suffered while enter europe one of them. Tunisian fellow in a leather jacket explained the people who overthrew ben ali they want democracy and identified life. We across the mediterranean want. Democracy didn't life. What is the difference. The migrant is a kind of revolutionary is idea stuck with me and informed might work as a lawyer and a scholar ever since as middle eastern revolutions turned into civil wars. The refugee crisis unfolded in the measuring. This exacerbated political pressures against asylum-seekers. Initially the european court of human rights took a strong stand against sport or violence in two thousand twelve court decided that the cannot turn asylum seekers back from the mediterranean dangerous libyan territory that first hearing them the human rights community cheer. I was not one of those who cheered in my scholarship. I predicted that this kind of decision could also generate bad results states determined to enforce their own return back asylum seekers even before the entered the supervision of their own courts. I was regretfully correct in recent years. The italians have relied on living to do their dirty work. So eager are some european governments deduction on human rights obligations if an armed libyan militia ignoring the rampant use of torture. This is also why since january. Twenty fourteen more than thirty. Four thousand migrants died by grounding in the mediterranean and since covid nineteen again the militarized border into. Mentoring has come in some ways. Even more extreme but has the militarized quarter caused deaths by drowning.

Dictator Bin Mediterranean Ben Ali Tunisia Athens ALI Greece European Court Of Human Rights Europe
Wolfgang Van Halen on his Debut Album and Influences

Rolling Stone Music Now

02:33 min | 2 years ago

Wolfgang Van Halen on his Debut Album and Influences

"Hearing the whole thing. It does emphasize to me that it's dead on to say two of the touchstones here are foo fighters jimmy world. You and i have been talking about it for a while. And i mean obviously there's a ton of influences and their stuff that only you can do a lot of that but when you think of what lineage. That's what it is. Tell me about like discovering those bands. It's not like you had to dig deep in the crates to find them. They're pretty popular bands. But you know discovering this bans personally really specifically what you kinda took from them as far as inspiration. Yeah when it when it comes to. I always had this dream of doing an album with me playing everything. Just like dave grohl. Did the first firefighters album. It was just a thing. I always wanted to try. It was always on my list of like this'll be really fun. And when i got back from the two thousand twelve Van halen tour. I was kinda just like okay. Well what do i do now. And i started writing like taking it seriously. And that's when i wrote the song mammoth and it was like okay. I think I think i'm onto something here and that's kind of where it all started. And just from from the band's. I would listen to all the time. Everything from foo fighters to jimmy world to nine inch nails to tool to alice in chains queens of the stone age. You know it just kind of those influences really seemed to inspire me and Yeah i mean th but with the main thing just the dave grohl doing that first fires album and just he. I always had an affinity to two bands like blink. One eighty two and and jimmy world. I really love harmonies. And i think that's where my love for like harmonies melody. Came from with bands like jimmy world. 'cause they're just so strong with that type of stuff so i really laid the foundation for me in terms of that. Mammoth which is a aptly titled. Song is one of my favorite tracks on the album. Tell me about especially since it was the beginning. Tell me about that one coming together. Yeah it seemed to kind of it. Gave me the confidence to kind of be like. Hey okay i think i'm on the right track here. I kind of hit the the tone and the pace of what i was going for for something you know. It felt knew it felt different. It felt something that was like original in my own. It didn't sound like van halen. It didn't sound like anything. It just sounded like this might be what my music sounds

Jimmy World Dave Grohl Van Halen Jimmy
China's Lost Civilization "Sanxingdui" Meets Ufology with Ufologist Shao Ma

Truth Be Told

02:16 min | 2 years ago

China's Lost Civilization "Sanxingdui" Meets Ufology with Ufologist Shao Ma

"Well. I'm excited. Because i was telling you before that i've i've never had anybody that from china or even anybody to talk about Chinese ancient civilizations and mixed in with ufology. So this is exciting for me. So i really appreciate it I was telling you before everybody has their own ufo stories. You know myself you know. Many of my guest people on the streets they well. I don't really believe. But i did see something or i've saw a spacecraft or i saw an. You're an alien or extraterrestrial so but you've had sounds like quite a few encounters. Could you talk about your your own personal encounters before we get into anything else show. Thanks so my experience. Back in two thousand twelve before dow every joke. Low working at defy. What when i was you know traveled to brazen office and i saw a ufo crop hovering outside of the sky in a window. So look at him. Some my gosh. That is silver in color round voice shape just hovering sky midway through so that really challenged might hurt on so starches think there might be something beyond what we know and Off the guards. It's just here for a minute of a threat is a kind of panic connection between me and cross Dot crop radiate much love. You know war really so our start to won't digging a home. I decided to the further in order to on a youtube channels trying to know what is saying. Is that really man. May or ufo craft so after that incident happened back in two thousand twelve. Of course none of my colleague believe me. I saw this out of my office. So nobody believes me so i my experience. Just that to picking up. You know all those very intense auto body experience Meeting with various different each e. beams some benevolent Most of them have been neverland. The new true you know business life just here to see what your dream basically

China Youtube
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Radio Free Cybertron - All of our Transformers podcasts!

Radio Free Cybertron - All of our Transformers podcasts!

02:46 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Radio Free Cybertron - All of our Transformers podcasts!

"And the first thing that popped up as johns luna. Who's on the show. Hello john sharing a photo of a smiling headmaster. Don who's on the show don a discord. What what is that convention is that from. It's from khan. And i could see two thousand twelve. I think it's two thousand twelve.

johns luna first john twelve two thousand twelve khan two thousand
Massive Online Courses Got a Boost During the Pandemic. Will It Last?

Marketplace Tech with Molly Wood

01:31 min | 2 years ago

Massive Online Courses Got a Boost During the Pandemic. Will It Last?

"When a couple of stanford professors founded core sarah in two thousand twelve. They promised to democratize access to higher education. By making courses from prestigious colleges available online now nearly a decade later many of us were thrust into the world of online education by the pandemic. and of course sarah saw tens of millions of new users join its platform some just looking for lectures to occupy their time other seeking new skills in areas like machine learning and data science. Jeff magin khalda is ceo. Of course sarah. He says states like new york and tennessee have also paid the company to provide free courses for their unemployed residents. governments have realized that online re-skilling programmes had a speed and scale and cost effectiveness. That is just not really natural. One of the exciting things after a year of seeing really growing in inequality and many women dropping out of the labor force to take care of kids. Who can't go to school what we've been seeing on chris. Era is the percentage of enrollments especially in stem courses. From women has gone up from about thirty. Three percent to forty seven percents. Almost fifty fifty so women are actually turning more to online learning and as we think about the future of work for states who are about reskilling being able to get your citizens access to jobs. That maybe aren't in. Your state is going to be much more possible with remote work.

Sarah Jeff Magin Khalda Tennessee New York Chris
Paula Brennan  Conversion and Nurturing Trumps Photography Lead Generation Numbers

PhotoBiz Xposed

02:51 min | 2 years ago

Paula Brennan Conversion and Nurturing Trumps Photography Lead Generation Numbers

"When you hear the term and when i say digital marketing online mocking what does that mean to you. Well this is back going to go back because it was around two thousand nine hundred ten when i started leukemia said if like facebook marketing and things like that you know back in dies you could pretty much like p- pasta shape and you'd have sixty me follow as the next day. Do you know that. Respect when i had the wedding studio Look into how could hotness that a little bit better figured out some systems that worked but then very quickly recognized that the algorithms were introduced in you know. The organic reach wasn't as easy. So i had to start learning about high traffic. Sorry it was probably around two thousand twelve. I would say that. I really started kind of educating myself around and doing looks online courses and things to figure out how to you know many people like these so i was doing things creating landing pages and silence pages. I looked at Creates very crude rudimentary funnel spec in the early days and then obviously learning to drive traffic to that using facebook ads so there was quite a good period of education for myself. Maybe about threes. Where i was you know. I was already a good shooter so i didn't have to learn about photography angle of things what i really worked on with Marketing side. and how do i drive traffic. And how do i take the numbers to increase the the the results of h campaign. I guess i love. I'm so excited to keep going with this conversation because you are talking my language so when you have all this experience you you're a successful she'll like you say you grown up a photographer like us success. When they know how to run a business talk me through that change or that transition. Interpersonal brandy photography. Why you did it and you did sorry. I guess when. I was running the portrait business. What i found was a lot of my clients are coming to the guy all. Can i just get a headshot doing the headshots so lack all not to say to fight of me doing excited as well. Maybe a little bit of behind the scenes and of course any say not really messy Why pay kind you know the instagram laugh. That instagram version. If you're working in sorry. I started then looking following a lot of the big online entrepreneurs who coincidentally the people who will leaning Signed time so. You're looking at like the lex. Murray fully as the antiporda fields. They sort of big huge entrepreneurs out day. You've got a. I mean you down a liberal going down to the lexi. The tiny robbins fit most of the people. That were of out spatting personal branding. At the time. I was watching what they were doing. In their fade and let's face paper were employing photography's but a lot of the young upstart so we're talking like the twenty and thirty. Somethings in the demographic in the same area of entrepreneurship with doing it themselves. And they'll find really creative ways of utilizing day i

Facebook Leukemia Murray Robbins
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Bobbycast

Bobbycast

04:51 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Bobbycast

"The right the right in with I've been trying this whole time. i mean kind of on purpose but not khanna not on purpose. I just wanted to be a a nice little letter to him when he can understand music. But i wrote him the song. Recently that i'm thinking about recording Called an even met you at about The real feelings that as a father. I was going through In the moment and it truly is the most exciting. Tom my life and i know about to come in to from what all my buddies tell me the most exhausting time of my life but I've never been more ready for anything in my entire life. You guys are really funny on instagram. Did shaver was you. Got chevra of dream about you and then you're in trouble when you wake up. That was caitlyn all the time. So bad dream and the dream and she'll wake up to like get back to even and i didn't do anything wrong larry when she's pregnant. Does she have any of that. Like crazy dreams or anything like that happening. Yeah i mean no along the way like just throughout our relationship. I feel like she's definitely had those dreams where she's like. I'm sad and i'm like well strong. She's like i had a dream last night that you cheated. I like what. I would never do anything like that. Me play with things here from two thousand twelve here is all. I ever needed from.

instagram Called an last night Tom caitlyn two thousand twelve
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Down the Security Rabbithole Podcast

Down the Security Rabbithole Podcast

04:46 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Down the Security Rabbithole Podcast

"Around that. Obviously but ultimately we ended up in this discussion where Cyber insurance is going to mandate a certain level of due diligence. The suit certain level of something right. And if you don't do it it's either gonna be really expensive to have insurance gonna say no not gonna not gonna ensure you're not gonna pay out. Are you seeing this. Is that your head kind of going to save direction. Yes so there's a lot to unpack their last week. I was actually in connecticut speaking two days at a cyber liability insurance liability conference and it sounds like date my day. One topic was hot trends in litigation coming. You know not not what's here. But what do we see coming and really my number one thing. There is this litigation against service providers for these supply chain hacks. Whether it's your managed service provider your managed security service provider. I mean they're getting hit with ransomware and passing it onto the client or enabling the attacks on their clients and and so we're going to see a lot more that in the future. I think We haven't seen much in the past There's only a few cases that i was able to find dating back to two thousand twelve dealing with this and they all get saddled in resolved and but then the second layer of that is insurance. Companies are paying out for all these ransomware attacks and they're really getting hit hard by this and so what they're going to start doing in the future is looking to subrogate against the company. That's actually responsible for this. So whether it's the supply chain the vendor that the software vendor or the tool vendor of the security service or the ms or whomever the insurance company's gonna pay out to their insured to get them better and then they're going to go to the other company and say hey you calls this were subjugating into our insurance rights to go against you for this and what's gonna end up happening is the other companies going to.

two days One topic last week second layer two thousand twelve cases connecticut one thing
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

02:37 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

"It's just it's a pain in the butt for the size of the market of people that are going to spend bitcoin on tesla for a global company. Right and rather than just say i. I must say. I considered it. I thought maybe. I'll get one of those tesla trucks whenever they made us to get those things that are moguls of the media. World like you are on your two hundred stations and not very many of the tree of knowledge right now. Free talk live was the first media in the world to discuss bitcoin to You know so. Yeah and so. He did not have it in himself to just admit to people. We're not going to be able to do that right now. I'm misspoke i miscalculated. I did something. But instead i'm going to create this whole narrative that we did it because we're so green loving it doesn't fit with our mission statement at tesla i used to. I had some friends of mine. After i stopped playing and heavy metal bands for a couple of years and i would always just be hanging out with them at their rehearsal place and they dubbed me executive producer. Because i would bring booze didn't actually help the band in any way. So i think executive producer probably fits the bill Even though i'm doing more and not providing you guys with booze. I do appreciate it. Thank you so captain entering. I don't know i. I didn't mention but i'm on the wagon to It's been Months and months. Since i've had anything to drink and captain brought it up. I know that you didn't want to drink or you didn't drink i. I don't know what i wanted and didn't want to do what i decided was that It was probably going to be easier to lose weight. If i didn't take in a depressant that caused that My body would haven't drunk since two thousand twelve looks the wonders it's for me. It's probably those chocolate covered. Oreos you were mentioning earlier and you know the sugar. Has that same mechanism that alcohol does. It was a dopamine response. And all like that. Except you're allowed to drive a car. I think that sugar is prob-. Alcohol includes a depressant aspect. That sugar doesn't have so alcohol. I would say is worse in the sense of drive on alcohol. Well that's the mind altering aspect to the dopamine response. Mind day of drinking you just heard highlights from the latest episode of free talk live. You can download full episodes. Subscribe to our podcast. Listen live and more all free at freetalklive dot com..

two hundred stations two thousand twelve first media one tesla freetalklive dot com captain years live
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

02:09 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

"He goes thanks and it gives me the watch. That's how it's supposed to work. And what would be the problem with that. Another feature quote unquote feature of bitcoin is. Is that if you send somebody bitcoin out of a wallet. That has a great deal of bitcoin. It They know they can look and find out. I should say and do you want that. Is that what you want from your money. Look this is just the way the system works. This is software and it works the way that software works and this mixing service allows you among other things to not show people how much money you have. I mean literally if you got into bitcoin in two thousand twelve and you bought a thousand of them and you're sending somebody out of a wallet that has let's say nine hundred nine hundred left Today now that you have nine hundred. Bitcoin left and i don't know how wealthy that makes you but it makes you pretty darned wealthy. I mean multi deca millionaire. Do you want people to know that you have tens of millions of dollars because that's going to change a whole bunch of things.

nine hundred Today tens of millions of dollars nine hundred nine hundred multi deca two thousand twelve bitcoin a thousand
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on The Speaker Station Podcast

The Speaker Station Podcast

05:37 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on The Speaker Station Podcast

"He's also the tech guru of the evening news. Show to seven which ears on the nbc affiliates in maine joining from one of my favorite places. Portland maine is rich brooks rich. Welcome to the show. Thank you so much for having me. I really appreciate the opportunity back in two thousand twelve..

seven nbc two thousand twelve one maine Portland maine
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Real Estate Disruptors

Real Estate Disruptors

04:58 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Real Estate Disruptors

"I ended up going getting surgery and had our economy into two thousand twelve and it was like one of the best surgeries. The surgeon said he'd ever had and but during that process i had to reevaluate and things and i had this moment of regret. I'm gonna share this real quick because this is the thing that changed everything on what my why i might go back to that. It's a long answer so just work with me. I had a vision or dream that That my brothers called me in the middle of the night and they said hey brother gusty said. Hey man don't want don't want to Alert or anything but mom died right.

gusty one two thousand twelve surgeries
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on getWITit | Women in Technology

getWITit | Women in Technology

03:13 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on getWITit | Women in Technology

"If i'm got him on and i'm doing the video of my volleyball game right with my daughter and my mom links in it's live streaming live livestream are just say you say something like A as livestream. Mom ended a look at your contacts. Find your mom's phone number. They'll leak in she'll click the link. She can view the video as long as she wants to. Or as long as you allow her to okay so if you want to me though an error hurry here her each but she gets here you. She can hear every single f-bomb that i dropped. I'm curious what what did you think we did. What what do you mean. What did you think so. Well i thought you were like changing the music industry. But i didn't realize that it was more this way. Then like what you hear over the radio ray. Because this is you know like i was like okay and yeah so we do have some cool music features. So what are the things These will be tuna so these are earcups. They just come off so the idea is that we can get chris. Paul we can get whatever. Musician wants to tune their headphones. We can sell that. We could buy their their head. You're cushions put them on and it'll change. The tone of the headset thought about music. And they are kind of came from from from audio. I which makes it even harder because we kind of said we want these to sound like best in breed headphones as well as how all these other features so are kind of space claiming the ability to fit all those things in an have the space we need for the sound. Kind of tricky. Okay yeah the. I thought that's what i was like. Oh this is really interesting in lake. They're changing the face of kind of like music right and how but you blitz Your way past that. Nineteen ninety lay. That's wow so you guys are gonna be the video. I didn't even consider the video part. Like when i was like. Oh okay i see but yeah. I didn't even put together the recording thing. So all right so this is gonna launch right. And then you know you'll have your justice or whatever so Okay so how does this go with what. He's already patent it because you said he already has a bunch of rate patents. so how does this all kinda come together. Because that's what happens on the actual functionality. So you know if you can imagine two thousand twelve there is you know. Gosh there is That was pre..

Paul two thousand twelve chris Nineteen ninety lay each volleyball single f-
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on BiggerPockets Business Podcast

BiggerPockets Business Podcast

03:35 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on BiggerPockets Business Podcast

"What is the most pertinent but Yeah i used to be told. That was the guy in high school who were seven jobs in two years. Try them all had one. That was constantly constantly. I worked at blockbuster for six months. I worked at pickup sticks. For eight weeks. I worked at a nursery for ten days and hated it and it was like. Hey you need to find that thing and back then one might said i had. Add or adhd towards careers and. It was just none of that was inspiring because like you just said the idea of doing the same thing over and over and over and over and over and over and over again especially when you're not passionate about it. You know i didn't want to do that. And but what. I did fall in love with and what i realized now than because i have clarity of being on my own now since two thousand eight in doing all these different businesses as what i love is startups. I love starting companies. I love the. I could do those over and over and over and over again because the what we do is different but the how we do it in the process is the same. And there's a success formula that i've developed just two trials and tribulations that i use for businesses that for me and what business i do or choose to get into. What industry is is kind of agnostic. It doesn't really matter so from payroll and you know me and my partner. We grew that company. We raise some private equity capital in two thousand and nine ended up selling the company at the end of two thousand eleven company in florida simultaneously. I started a recruiting agency to serve that those customers because by timing was impeccable starting a company right during the right literally. I think two weeks before the financial meltdown of two thousand and eight. Because why not. Why not that onto inexperience and no money. But it taught me a lot of taught my partner a lot. 'em from that journey You know once we got out of the payroll and hr business. And then i sold the recruiting company in two thousand twelve. I started a handful businesses in two thousand twelve..

six months eight weeks ten days two years florida seven jobs nine two thousand two thousand twelve two one eight two trials blockbuster eleven company weeks
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on AXE TO GRIND PODCAST

AXE TO GRIND PODCAST

03:30 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on AXE TO GRIND PODCAST

"I know there was a time where like having the uniform almost like you had to right. So i think that's changing. I think that's changing for the better. Beautiful hey bob i did want to mention just kind of follow up. I kind of went off topic. But of course we're saying about shows being weird during our time is very true. And i'm sure we'll get into that more but like that whole generation of i think when we got into it it was still like real hardcore type people even though people started mix styles but then like what we ended up in which was like this like laminates to vfw hall type of this weird in awkward quarantine haircut that now but like haircut that everyone had you know that that wasn't around when we started that that happened. I feel like you know in the in the host victory early two thousand twelve which we got caught up in but we definitely like suspect of that and not and not trying to be that even though that was happening to people around us this this is going to be a weird place to start with this question. But i started interacting with you when you started your ban grace. We'll talk about later on what happened with on the prince's towards the end like how did it come apart because it felt like it came apart at the seams and then i'd like to work backwards. Yeah that's a really great place to start. Because it's very interesting and pray dramatic to be honest i don't there was a crossover where you bobber our anr guy you had inherited us from larry ransom no. That's somebody else but I i was after that there was jeans. Maybe they remember james. Yes so this long story short. I felt really bad because by the time we ended up on revelation there was so much inner turmoil and drama and nonsense. That was so unprofessional. That was happening at the time. And put it this way like I came from a pretty well off back. I wasn't or struggling by my bandmates. Definitely were coming from like a working class background. Nobody was rich or anything like that. I'm not saying i was just to you. an idea. And jason are singer..

jason james bob early two thousand twelve ransom larry
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Pop-Punk & Pizza

Pop-Punk & Pizza

03:25 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Pop-Punk & Pizza

"Was an old guy there that was like a dj or something. I don't know no sorry. No no no. No no no no. You're all you're all good. I'm just like i said for some reason. Because i feel like you and i are are. Are we facebook friends. Yeah yeah we've been friends okay since then right. That's what. I was trying to figure out because when when eric talk to me about having you guys on and you know i looked up big smile and i saw that you were in it and i'm like okay. The scooter smith. I was like i feel like i know who this guy is like. Who is this guy. And so i'm like on a mission to try and find. So do you remember at least Was it a show that that my band was or did we lose john. I apparently so okay. Oh here we go. He's he's coming back there. He is after or my connection or what has just froze up on it. That's that's a good view Do you remember if it was a show that i was just helping you guys out with or was the band i was in called the projection plane. The show as well that that's a good question. I was just thinking about that. Because i think now that you said that you might just help just book it. Okay i remember. I remember like i think it was the next door or something we. We weren't supposed to play together. But you guys were playing. I think it was pat's in the flats in cleveland. I think i think that was a and like we. We were like double booked or something and they cancelled are set. And then you guys can openers of the drop off and so we ended up playing that. Show two gotcha interesting. Remember pat's in the flats at all. Now i don't. I don't remember that i don't remember that venue at all cleveland. I'm like i might have to just save this for after we're done with this This podcast but like this is going to bug me for the rest of time. If i don't like figure out when and where this all took place myself it was. I think it was two thousand twelve or some thousand twelve. Okay hold on. I think.

cleveland two thousand twelve facebook john eric thousand twelve pat two
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

02:29 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

"Sympathizer where where do you differ fan. I i i don't not you know ever want to see a man you know attempt to dominate women. That don't wanna be dominated. You know what i mean. This is and i i think. The potential for that and their philosophy is is probably stronger than i would like okay and you don't buy what i mean. I don't buy the the leader of a activist. Organisation could possibly be a federal informant. I i'm not gonna say that it's impossible just going to say that less probable than maybe not probable. Why isn't a completely plausible. And thank you for the call tonight. Slave he just doesn't want to believe it. Yeah why isn't it completely plausible. That this enrica cario has been working for the federal government since two thousand twelve and has continued to be an undercover informant for the federal government to the point where he was able to get his work his way into the highest levels of the proud boys organization by whatever means i mean unless he was one of the founders or whatever somehow he got to the top of the proud boys and that he's been feeding them information the entire time. Why is that so hard to believe. I would believe that they all worked for the government. Well i mean. I would tend to agree with that. It's hard to believe that all of them do because obviously the whole point of organizations like this is to bring non federal agents in and try to convince them to do things that they otherwise. We'll done bomber thing or tilting or whatever Six zero three two three sixty one sixty six zero three two eight three sixty one sixty or you know sell some drugs or whatever other things they can arrest these guys. Let's do crime against more coming up the german shepherd now eleven and he's been an amazing dog is so active and alert and hasn't had any kind of health problems that all. He has a beautiful coat and that eleven. You'll still running the ball. He's been on dynamite since he's a puppy dina fight for life because if they're getting all their vitamins micronutrients microbials from the beginning. Then you're not going.

tonight one eleven two thousand twelve six enrica cario sixty government two german
"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Midnight Double Feature - A Film Podcast

Midnight Double Feature - A Film Podcast

01:30 min | 2 years ago

"two thousand twelve" Discussed on Midnight Double Feature - A Film Podcast

"Andrew is a socially awkward introverted teen whose main form of escape and expression is a video camera but things begin to change when andrew this cousin matt and popular classmate steve discover a mysterious substance. Leaves them with incredible powers as their abilities. Become more powerful. The teens live spin out of control. When they're darker sides begin to emerge andrew's camera captures the unfolding events. What can to another feature presentation to midnight double feature and on this episode. We'll be covering two thousand twelve chronicle directed by josh trank thick. What is going on guys and gals. Thanks for the night double feature Thanks for tuning in to chronicle as you heard in.

Andrew andrew josh trank steve double feature two thousand twelve chronicle double