40 Burst results for "Universe"

What Are Energetic Activations? Photographer Adjanys Marrero Explains

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa

03:10 min | 3 d ago

What Are Energetic Activations? Photographer Adjanys Marrero Explains

"Talk about like you do these, what do you call them? Energetic activations is your part of what you do, you like to do. What is that? How do you explain how they work? Yeah, absolutely. So during the photo shoot, just because I have done so many throughout the years and each session is an experience, but as I started to work with more people who are in the law of attraction, manifestation, and energetic, I noticed that while we were in session and the way that I directed them through the direction actually created these crazy breakthroughs. So I started to really get these downloads around how when you not only brand your vision and brand it for the world in a very beautiful way, whatever feels beautiful in a line for you, but you're absolutely almost able to break into that frequency into the future because a photo shoot could be quite a pampered experience. It could be like you're leaning back and you're receiving the spotlight and you're allowing yourself to be seen and there's nothing you can do except pose, you know, no matter how uncomfortable you are, you're still being held. And I realized that a lot of people, it's almost like they grabbed that future self and they just literally brought it to this very present moment. And I was like, it's like you meet your future self because you're dressing how she would dress, you're speaking and you're feeling into that. And I'm bringing that energy because I want you to be at your highest calibration because I know that's what's going to get captured in the image. So the reason I do metaphysical branding is because if you're in a negative mood, okay, for example, I'm sure you have a lot of listeners, but I'm a woman who is speaking to women, being in front of the camera is nerve -wracking. Yes, it is. So many body issues, so many issues, you know, it is nerve -wracking. And so when you are scared of how you look, even if you look beautiful, but your hair and your mind is going, I look crazy, I feel ugly, I'm bad, I'm this, I'm that, I don't care how beautiful your images look, the energy that is being emitted is going to put people off. Yeah, I agree with you on that. So what I need to do is to break people out of thinking about themselves and thinking about their clients. In my sessions, you're always constantly thinking about the work and the love that you're giving your clients. So when I capture you, I literally capture you the love you have for those who are going to see these images. So they can like receive something from that. So that's where we have the 50 milliseconds, you know, because we do energy work and we do it very intentionally. So yes, they look gorgeous. Yes, you're having fun. But at every step of the way, we're thinking about how we're serving the collective in the name of the divine. Always, always, always.

Each Session 50 Milliseconds People
Fresh update on "universe" discussed on Bloomberg Daybreak Europe

Bloomberg Daybreak Europe

00:08 min | 10 min ago

Fresh update on "universe" discussed on Bloomberg Daybreak Europe

"Litigation in the courts. You can wait for years before your case is resolved, and the longer your case proceeds, the more your case can cost, not with the American Arbitration Association. Arbitration or mediation with the American Arbitration Association is faster. In fact, nearly 50 % of our cases settle prior to hearings. ADR .org. Resolve faster. Walking into the building for the first time after the shooting, it was crippling, but it had to be preserved. In response to the Pulse nightclub shooting that affected the LGBTQ community, Barbara Poma, owner of Pulse, founded the OnePulse Foundation to honor Pulse victims and survivors. you're If an ally of this community, speak out. There are more of us together than apart. It is the power of love in its rawest form. Join the fight for LGBTQ acceptance. Learn how at LoveHasNoLabels dot com. Brought to you by LoveHasNoLabels and the Ad Council. Do you love Elon Musk? Do you hate Elon Musk? Do you have no idea what to think about Elon Musk? Then we have just the show you. for He's become even more larger than life. Put a chip in my brain. Each week on this podcast will break down, analyze and debate the most important on Musk and his empire. It's all one big universe. You just work for Elon Ing. From Bloomberg Business Week, this is Elon Ing. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. Wells Fargo proudly supports Sam Ramirez Sr. and Jr. of Ramirez in company. When my father founded the firm in 1971, Wall Street was an old boys club. Our biggest areas of business are our municipal bond area. We're usually top 10 to 15 in the country. We've been in 40 transactions

Adjanys Marrero Talks Sharing Your Message With Authenticity

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa

04:42 min | 3 d ago

Adjanys Marrero Talks Sharing Your Message With Authenticity

"Would be a good question for anybody listening to ask themselves if they have something, a brand, a product, something that they want to offer to people? Like, what would be a good question for them to say, how do I share this or how do I market this? I hate the word market. Like, I wish we could come up with a better word than marketing, you know, because it always makes me think of, like, car salesmen, you know, like, as soon as you walk in, like, you get hit with, like, you know, sorry to all the car salesmen listening, but, you know, like, that aggressive, like, like, you know, they're pitching you, like, you don't want to feel pitched to all the time. So, what should I ask myself if I want to share my message, like, to make sure I'm within integrity? Yeah. Yes. I would, I would ask if you got no benefit at all whatsoever from the work that you do and it would only be of a benefit, you know, what would you do? Because I think that so much of our culture and just living in just the modern society, we're not exempt from fear. And a lot of times that fear triggers that self protecting and acquiring material things. And, you know, we all know that there's no real safety in that. But I think that the best thing that I teach people with the same movement, which is more about creating a focus on healing the world and really being kind of big about it. Like, I have a personal mission that if I could eradicate domestic violence from society and it's so big that I don't know how it's going to happen, but I can only just like tunnel vision. Like, so all the fame, all the glory, all the podcasts has absolutely nothing with me. I know I'm a representative because that's the nature of the work, but it's really, I just cannot wait till I have, you know, so many people who are saying, you know, you helped me get out of domestic violence. I didn't know what to do. I didn't know who to talk to, you know, like not relying on the government or anything like that, but having that internal manifestation ability using creativity, because you have to be creative. Sometimes creativity is all you have. I talk to women who are undocumented, illegal women who are in domestic abuse relationships. Who are they going to go to? Right. But the imagination is something we all have and visualizing could be just the biggest, most powerful thing. So if you could be selfless in your pursuit and imagine that you're, you're actually fixing the world, that you are actually taking on a big, powerful, beautiful vision. Can you draw inspiration from that? And it doesn't matter what you sell because the mission doesn't change. Yeah. Yeah, I can see exactly what you mean. I get it. Because if it was, if I could offer everybody in the world to know and feel seen, validated, heard, and grateful in their life, then I know the world would change. Because if I'm grateful for my life, how am I going to hurt you? I can't hurt somebody else, right? I can't because I'm happy, joyful, and grateful, right? So if we all felt that way and looked at their own life and felt grateful for what they have around them, the love that they have, and whatever it is they're doing, it doesn't matter, then the world would look different. So yeah, I know what you're saying. Because if I could do that, if I could offer and teach people how to do that, then I would, yeah, everything would start to shift. Everything would shift. And if you think about it, it's not that big a deal. You're just teaching people to be grateful. It's not like we're not offering a magical pill or some very varied thing. We're actually offering something that's concrete and solid, that scientific evidence, that just being grateful makes you make better choices because you're happy. When you're happy, you have more access to better decisions. Well, yeah, and it raises your vibration. Like you mentioned Abraham Hicks, like that's what they talk about, raising our frequency, raising our vibration. So gratitude is high on the vibrational scale compared to like guilt, shame, anger, fear, all those things, which are low. So we attract more of those low frequencies where we want to attract higher frequencies. And that's what we all want

Abraham Hicks
Fresh update on "universe" discussed on Bloomberg Businessweek

Bloomberg Businessweek

00:06 sec | 12 hrs ago

Fresh update on "universe" discussed on Bloomberg Businessweek

"Visit adoptUSkids .org to find out more. This message is brought to you by OptUSKids, the U .S. Department of Health and Human Services and the Ad Council. Do you love Elon Musk? Do you hate Elon Musk? Do you have no idea what to think about Elon Musk? Then we have just the show for you. He's become even more larger than life. My Twitter doesn't get us closer to Mars. Oh Elon, I volunteer. I put a chip in my brain. Each week on this podcast we'll break down, analyze and debate the most important stories on Musk and his empire. It's all one big universe. You just work for Are you a Wirehouse advisor that's looking to break away? Commonwealth Financial Network can help you take control of your career and build your business on your business, your

Jo Ann Fawcett on Her Ex-Husband's Imprisonment, UFOs and Government Conspiracy

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa

04:40 min | Last week

Jo Ann Fawcett on Her Ex-Husband's Imprisonment, UFOs and Government Conspiracy

"Everybody and welcome back if you're just joining me today it's very interesting topic we're talking UFOs I have Joanne Fawcett as my guest and uh her last husband worked for the military and had first -hand knowledge of um working with aliens and uh yeah from other planets from our government and like I said you know I don't know anything is possible right I'm not gonna close my mind off to it you know I had a thought though when I was during the break um do you think that maybe somebody set your ex -husband up because he may have too much he may have too much information so it's you know what I'm saying so it's easy well he's in prison so I know he's gonna believe this guy right you know kind of thing well yeah and part of it was um he's what do I want to say he's he's he's a lone wolf or a lone ranger and he did tend to piss people off along the way yeah so yeah you know if you're in the habit of fighting the elite and new world order people who are trying to control everything and and they happen to be involved with this U of O stuff as well um when you make them mad they they can make you go away or you know I think he's too important to just have killed off even though I'm sure they've tried many times but um so to put him in prison you know they they thought yeah you know if we can get him out of the way then he can't really be fighting us or you know stopping us from doing what we're gonna do so I do I definitely and not everybody believes this but I definitely believe that they um either used this crime as a you know they use this crime as an excuse or as a way to get him out of their hair and it's worked very well he's been in prison almost 40 years so oh wow that is a long time yeah oh my god so all right so let's go back to the UFOs so you were talking about that one species that the government works with and that we have treaties and basically the treaty is we get they give us technology we allow them to take they kidnap humans in 1961 it was different facets of that conference one part of it there's going to be no open communication between civilians and aliens so that's why we don't see them showing up for tea yet okay parts of it was like do we sell them our spaceships are used spaceships for them to use how far can we allow them to go out into space can we continue kidnapping humans can we can we let them weaponize space will we let them defend space you know they're not they're not real I mean the humans leaders know where a lot of the aliens live the aliens don't necessarily like that because number one you mean the aliens that are here on earth live the aliens out in space don't necessarily want us pointing our telescope and saying look they live right there because we make a mess of things look at the planet we've made a mess of our own poor planet and there's so much trash out in space literally they really don't want us going out there and there's vast resources out there so you know they're already mining asteroids and moons and rings and stuff they don't want us fording in on their territory and their commerce so that's that's just one little thing but so the treaties have to do with different different things but you know I know many side treaties also because often you know here's the major treaty but maybe there's side treaties between that government and a specific alien species might be about technology and kidnapping you know quotas and stuff so it just depends because different different species have often worked with different governments you know it's just depending on who's going to make the best deal you know and what I've said before is like on the dark side is if you look at where major terrorism has happened or if certain wars have happened like Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq there's been a lot of UFO activity there and so often the military has to go in and under the disguise of a war is because you're really covering up dealing with alien stuff.

Joanne Fawcett 1961 Today Earth Almost 40 Years One Species One Little Thing One Part Afghanistan Many Times Iraq Syria A Lot Number One O OF
Fresh update on "universe" discussed on Bloomberg Markets

Bloomberg Markets

00:04 min | 16 hrs ago

Fresh update on "universe" discussed on Bloomberg Markets

"Most important stories on Musk and his empire. It's all one big universe. You just work for money from Bloomberg Business Week. This is the learning lesson. Wherever you get your podcasts. Markets, headlines and breaking news 24 hours a day at Bloomberg on Bloomberg Television and the Bloomberg Business app. This is a Bloomberg Business Flash. Mm hmm. And John Tucker in the Bloomberg Newsroom with this Bloomberg Business Flash on a pretty low volume day. Stocks have dialed back from their four month highs, but we have paired some of the earlier losses that we saw. And on this Cyber Monday, we have shares of Amazon dot com. They're among the most active. They were up 1 .3%. Etsy shares among the leaders in the S &P 500. They were up 4%. Meantime, Peter Shearer at Academy Securities says the leading stock gainers may soon be overshadowed. You've seen both the equal weighted NASDAQ and the equal weighted outperform. S &P So I think you're starting to see a shift of that. If you look at what happened last week, I think it was really encouraging. If any had had earnings, they seemed OK. The stock drifted a little bit, but the markets did well, especially the Russell and the equal weighted. So I think we're going to see a little bit of a transition in leadership coming into year end. Right now, the S &P 500 five points lower, that's down a tenth of a percent. We're at forty five fifty four

Jo Ann Fawcett Dramatically Changed Her Life Over the Last 20 Years

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa

04:16 min | Last week

Jo Ann Fawcett Dramatically Changed Her Life Over the Last 20 Years

"Joanne Fawcett dramatically changed her life over the last 20 years, seven marriages, including abuse, divorce, and death, the seventh husband was a former military intelligence officer, an active member of the Mormon church for nearly 30 years, she left it behind to embrace the world of UFOs, elementals, magic, and paranormal, which speak deeply to her soul, through her many struggles, she found her strengths, gifts, and inner power, learning that dreams do come true, she is an international speaker on the topic of UFOs, extraterrestrials, including the military's involvement, her book, Midlife Magic, is the story of her journey, her passion is to teach others about this world of wonder, and today, she is a warrior who proudly carries the title, Wise Woman Crone, I love that, and you can find out more about Joanne if you go to her website, which is dragonhillbooks .net, welcome Joanne, thanks for coming today, I'm excited to talk to you. Thanks for having me, can you hear me okay? Yeah, I can hear you great, you sound great, you sound good to me, wow, so first, seven marriages you're like Liz Taylor, almost, yes, wow, that's so interesting, I can find seven people that I liked enough to even date, I don't even know about Mary, yeah, and then so was it the last, the seventh husband that got you, because he was an intelligent, in the military that got you into the UFOs, yes, exactly, all right, so I'm going to turn the mic over to you, like, why don't you share a little bit about, like, how you got into what you're doing today, and talking about UFOs and extraterrestrials, I totally believe in it, many of the people that listen to my show do, many of my former guests believe in UFOs, you know, so, yeah, tell us about it. Okay, well, and I can't remember, that was part of my bio, but you know, when I was a kid, we watched, I grew up in the 50s and 60s, so we watched Martian movies that were pretty cheesy, and then, yeah, I didn't think anything more about it, and I didn't, you know, I didn't even think about it until much later, I'd had some ghost experiences in my when I met number seven, I was still a member of the Mormon Church, but after I met him, and I started visiting him, and we started talking about other things, and other spiritual things, and stuff, I left the church, so that's, that's a different story, because like, it was no big trauma there, but then, you know, probably years, well, it wasn't right away, but years, I mean, I knew he'd been into the military, eventually, I knew it was military intelligence, and eventually, you know, it probably was a good two or three, or, you know, it was a few years into the relationship, and he gave me something to read, and type up, because he'd written this story about a space mission that he'd been on, and I'm going, what, this is real, and you've been in space, and there's aliens, and this is all real, and yeah, yeah, yeah, and it's funny, because in 2004, he said, oh, there's a, and at the time, I was living in California, and, and he said, oh, there's a UFO conference in the San Francisco barrier, you know, you might want to go, it's like, okay, that sounds like fun, and I went, and I was just going to go for one day, it's like, oh, I need to go back for the second day, because this was all new, and exciting information to me, and then, by the next year, I had enough of his information at my fingertips, so that I could have my own booth at that, that fair, and then I started getting on radio shows, and speaking at conferences, and things, so it, you know, it was, it lasted, well, I was, I was on the speaking circuit until a COVID hit, basically, okay, you know, yeah, and then I've been on a lot of podcasts, and, and I just start, I just did my first in -person speaking thing a couple weeks ago,

Liz Taylor Joanne Fawcett Joanne 2004 California Mary Seven Marriages Dragonhillbooks .Net San Francisco Seven People Second Day Next Year TWO Three Wise Woman Crone First One Day Today 60S Nearly 30 Years
Fresh update on "universe" discussed on Stephanie Miller

Stephanie Miller

00:07 min | 17 hrs ago

Fresh update on "universe" discussed on Stephanie Miller

"Miller We will have Oh hi, I'm just doing holiday shopping on stephaniemiller .com did you see this is cute I'm wearing my work t -shirt but this one is hello my name is Wokey Wilkerson that's cute yeah just saw that now who knew what the magical array it's stephaniemiller .com for all of your holiday shopping needs we also have a list of all of our sponsors at the homepage of stephaniemiller .com and we invite you to support our sponsors please holiday season please and thank you that's keep how you this little stephaniemiller cinematic universe spinning and whatever here's an early Christmas present we might get Ceebo tweets one detail in Trump's golden shower denial raises questions Trump denied being with four hookers nobody before said the number of hookers where did Trump get the number four what do we want for Christmas Jodie where the prostitutes peed on your house and some Russians back in back in the woods for their Ouch Ten pounds on Trump's a damage outro yes please and thank you I would like the yellow pea tape early for Christmas thank you I've always believed it Jodie I've always believed that particular because that whole like on the germaphobe it's not peeing on him no they

A highlight from Rockets Surprise Start & Maxey's Star Turn

The Crossover NBA Show with Chris Mannix

02:38 min | 2 weeks ago

A highlight from Rockets Surprise Start & Maxey's Star Turn

"This is the Crossover NBA Podcast. I'm Chris Mannix joined by my colleague Rohan Nadkarni and Rohan this is unfortunately going to be a James Harden centric podcast because the three teams we're going to talk about today, Houston, Philadelphia, the LA Clippers all have a connection to one James Harden and the only team that's struggling right now is the team that James Harden is on. But before I get to what we're going to talk about on this week's show, do you remember that takedown from a couple of days ago that the Dallas Mavericks broadcaster did on James Harden? A really well articulated takedown. Also felt personal. Also felt a little personal. I didn't really, honestly, I didn't feel that way. I didn't think it was personal. I thought it was pretty professional. I mean, it wasn't bombastic. It was all facts. Don't get me wrong. All facts. Just funny to come from a Mavericks broadcaster, but continue. Definitely. An unusual source on something like that, but it was factual and it viral it and was widely applauded for the substance of what it said. Our friend, Jimmy Traina, our colleague over at SI .com says that Bally Sports Southwest has taken down that video because yes, they've taken down the video because according to Jimmy Traina did not meet with the values of the Mavericks. What? What are we talking about? That was the furthest thing from controversial. It was certainly, you know, spicy. It was opinionated. Perhaps it was a take, but isn't that what you want from broadcasters? Like, don't you want them to have a take? I mean, how vanilla do you want a broadcaster to be? I mean, again, it was out of left field coming from a Dallas Mavericks broadcast. You expect something like that from like Stephen A. Smith on first tape first take or skip Bayless on undisputed. You don't expect that from an analyst on the Dallas Mavericks broadcast, but that's where it came from. And that's how it got into the universe. It got taken down wild, wild to me. So I had no clue. That's kind of an embarrassing look. I someone had to have complained. Perhaps it was the Clippers. Who knows? That is or maybe just Mark Cuban doesn't want that guy, you know, acting like he's representing the Mavericks. I don't know. But can like, can we just be adults about this? We all know that that's one person's opinion. No one is ascribing this take to the Dallas Mavericks. It was again, as we sat here, it was all true. Nothing he said was a lie. Nothing was exaggerated.

Chris Mannix Jimmy Traina Mark Cuban Rohan Stephen A. Smith Rohan Nadkarni Bally Sports Southwest Three Teams First Tape Clippers La Clippers Today ONE First Take Dallas Mavericks This Week One Person Houston James Harden A Couple Of Days Ago
Fresh update on "universe" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

WTOP 24 Hour News

00:02 sec | 18 hrs ago

Fresh update on "universe" discussed on WTOP 24 Hour News

"Hectic to electric. BMW, the ultimate electric machine. Hurry into the BMW Black Friday sales event now through November 30th. Visit kbrstetters .com today. For more than 50 years, KBR's science and engineering expertise has enhanced our ability to explore, examine and understand the universe as a leading provider of technology solutions both on and off the planet. No company is better equipped to solve the challenges of mission critical operations and health technology than KBR. From launch to landing and everything in between, we are the team behind the mission. For more information and career opportunities, visit kbr .com slash careers. A single intelligence environment compiled by

A highlight from EP148 Decoding SaaS Security: Demystifying Breaches, Vulnerabilities, and Vendor Responsibilities

Cloud Security Podcast by Google

29:33 min | 2 weeks ago

A highlight from EP148 Decoding SaaS Security: Demystifying Breaches, Vulnerabilities, and Vendor Responsibilities

"Welcome to the Cloud Security Podcast by Google. Thanks for joining us today. Your hosts here are myself, Timothy Peacock, the Senior Product Manager for Threat Detection here at Google Cloud, and Anton Chuvakin, a reformed analyst and senior staff in Google Cloud's Office of the CISO. You can find and subscribe to this podcast wherever you get your podcast, as well as at our website, cloud .google .com slash podcasts. If you enjoy our content and want it delivered to you piping hot every Monday, please do hit that subscribe button. You can follow the show, argue with us on the rest of the Cloud Security Podcast listeners on our LinkedIn page. Today is a special episode because it was originally live streamed. If you'd like to follow our live streams in the future, do follow the page. You can get the video content on our YouTube channel as well. Anton, we are talking about. Caspi 2023? in No, we are really not. We're not, we're not. What are we talking about? We are not. We are talking about securing SaaS. That sounds like Caspi. And I was deluded by claiming that securing SaaS is really just Caspi. And suddenly I think you are trying to troll me a little bit and flip the positions and pretend that you believe that securing SaaS is all about Caspi. You would never do that. Me? Troll you? Never. I would never do that. No, no, no. Okay. No, no, no. But it is a securing SaaS episode. And it is. And I think that there's a whole universe of things. And the strange part, there would be like a one particular surreal bit today. Most people who use software service assume that securing SaaS is about configuring security. Yes. And at the same time, most people correctly point out that the chance of a SaaS vendor being breached in some particularly nasty manner is really not high for the top tier vendors and that it can be handled through paper security contracts, questionnaires. And is that the truth? Is this not a year where we've seen counter examples of that though? I think that's the year where we've seen counter examples to put it mildly. Yes. Yes. Yes. Okay. Well, maybe with that teaser listeners, let's turn things over to today's guest. All right, listeners. Welcome to another live stream of the Cloud Security Podcast by Google. Thank you for joining us today. Our guest today, Adrian Sanabria, Director of Valence Threat Labs. Adrian, thank you so much for joining us today. Delighted to have you here. You are, of course, somebody who has also cool Legos in their background. So already you're doing great on the show. I want to start us off by centering us on SaaS. Spent a lot of time on the Cloud Security Podcast talking about cloud security for Azure and AWS and some other smaller cloud. I think that's called GCP, but there's this whole other world of cloud services that is SaaS and where users access an app like Salesforce or Workspace or O365, depending on what kind of credential they've stolen that day. So how do we think about securing SaaS as opposed to securing, say, the three infrastructure clouds? Well, it's a blurry line, right? Like how do you access those infrastructure clouds? That's also SaaS. It is, yeah. If you're using console .aws .com or whatever the GCP equivalent is or Azure equivalent. So, yeah, it's really interesting because it is kind of a blurry line. And we do find ourselves somewhat overlapping with infrastructure protection and stuff like that. Okta was a big supported platform. Also, the SaaS interfaces of security tools like CrowdStrike. We support SentinelOne and CrowdStrike as SaaS consoles that we secure because that's how everything works today is through a web browser, through an interface in a web browser, through some kind of SaaS interface. But wasn't it not like that in the past? Because you're a former analyst as well, right? And I do recall my former analyst years when there was this whole secure SaaS, you know, buy CASB, do the classic SaaS stuff. And there was on the left people who lived and shifted VMs and treated IaaS as kind of a colo, sadly. You know, we may rant about it, but it happened. But it sounds like the two worlds were further apart in the past. Yeah. Am I hallucinating it? No. Or is there something to that? No. And I think where it changed is behind the scenes quite a bit. A lot of it's we went from these monolithic web apps to API first dumb interfaces, which maybe have a little bit of JavaScript now, but there's a lot less heavy lifting by the JavaScript and a lot more done behind the scenes through the API. It used to be you'd run a search somewhere and it would pull the entire dataset, like the actual query in your browser tab and just use a ton of memory to do that. Now that that happens behind the scenes so that it's a much lighter lift, much quicker on the front end. Also, all these applications integrate now. Like before the pandemic, Zoom was just a dumb meetings app. Now it's this whole platform overnight, almost it seemed it had hundreds and hundreds of integrations. And a lot of these integrations work like if you had some kind of an inline tool like a SASE or a CASB or something like that, that's depending on looking at inline traffic, you're not going to see this because it's SaaS vendor to SaaS vendor where these actions are taking place, whether they be scheduled. But is it a customer problem? If it's a SaaS vendor to SaaS vendor, sometimes customers don't even see that stuff going on. So that sounds tricky. It is. I mean, shared responsibility, just like the public clouds. Right. And sometimes it's not clear where that line is, where that shared responsibility begins and ends. You know, like, for example, turning on logs, like I remember running an investigation years and years ago, they were using Office 365 and it was a case where somebody had gotten access to their email and we got in, we started investigating and it was clear they were on the inside because they were able to send convincing looking emails as other employees trying to change the bank accounts for large seven digit commercial real estate payments. And none of the logs were on by default. Like, we had no way of knowing when they got into the system, how long they had been in there, the extent of what they had access to. So during the investigation, we were the first one to turn on email logging. But that's sort of like so, okay, should I say so 90s? Well, none of this stuff existed in the 90s. So it's almost like it's just so sad 90s mistakes. Our job is just Groundhog Day, Anton. It's just Groundhog Day every day. But it's a Groundhog as a service. Yeah. Okay, fine. It's just supposed to be more funny than it helped. The Groundhog has moved. We still see 90s problems so often. Like, how often do we see some new fancy DevSecOps tool where there's a port exposed or default credentials or something like that? Like, we see these same issues popping up again and again because a lot of the people engineering this stuff are a new generation that didn't live through those times. And maybe we elder security folk didn't do a good job of passing down our lessons learned. Oh, that's for sure we didn't. I think you're supposed to invite Adrian because he's such a positive person and he would like shine the beautiful blue light. And now I'm more depressed than normal. So probably we should switch topics. How about incidents in the cloud? Oh, wait. Yeah, that's different, too. So what do we know from the actual breakage? I saw somebody post on LinkedIn the other day. Do we need CVEs for like cloud and SaaS? And didn't make a whole lot of sense to me because to me, a CVE is something you have to fix in your environment, like it's fixed once by the vendor, fixed many by the customer, whereas SaaS and cloud infrastructure is the opposite. The stuff we constantly see, like now it's these research teams working for vendors, for CSPM, SSPM vendors, they're out trying to find vulnerabilities and issues in these services. But once the vendor fixes it, it's fixed for all customers all at once. Right. So it doesn't make sense to assign that a CVE, right? I think that might be a limited view on what a CVE is for. No, no, I'm with Adrian. No, no, no. Hear me out. Hear me out. Wait. Okay, go. Okay. So sure, a CVE is definitely a statement that, hey, I have to go install some patches, but it's also a signal that something was vulnerable and I was at risk for a period of time from disclosure to patch. A CVE in the cloud or a CVE in a SaaS could reasonably serve the purpose of I need to investigate whether that was used against me while it was vulnerable and unpatched. And without a mechanism like CVE, how do I as a user know that my cloud provider or my SaaS provider might have lost my shit? I'm not arguing there shouldn't be a mechanism. There does need to be a mechanism, but I think it's confusing to lump it in with CVEs. I think it needs to be a separate database, a separate acronym. Yeah. And the most evident client facing, the client face inside is probably a misconfiguration. So it also wanted the CVE type. It is the defunct CCE or whatever they tried back in the day. In theory should have helped, but ultimately misconfigured SaaS would get you. And that's something you need to fix. Yeah. And just like with traditional vulnerabilities, we do need to understand the type. Like a lot of these issues we see in the cloud, you know, it's unclear if the researchers were the first ones to find it. And some of them are cross -tenant vulnerabilities. Like I remember one where if you knew the disk ID of a disk image in Microsoft in Azure, you could mount it. There were no access controllers. That's the early days. That's very early days. That's like 2013, maybe 14, right? No, it was like two years ago. Yeah. What year is this? It's 2023. Last time I checked. Thank you. Holy cow. We talked about it on Enterprise Security Weekly, and I've only been running that podcast for two years. So it was in the last two years. That's wild. Wild. Yeah, it was wild. Wow. Yeah. And you can imagine people taking screenshots that would show that ID or uploading things to GitHub where they would still have the, like, I wouldn't think to treat that image ID as a secret, right? Of course not. Why would you? You would think there's access control on it. Yeah. So again, shared responsibility, a very blurry line here with SaaS and cloud. And so we rely on a lot of researchers to say, hey, did they, did they build it? Like, surely not, you know, but you got to go and test it. This is why I think CVEs and cloud are important. How else would you as a, and again, it could be some other mechanism. Sure. Right. But I think structured vulnerability disclosure is important because if I'm a buyer and I want to decide, oh, man, is that system trustworthy? Does that system have these kinds of things? How else am I going to figure that out? Other than a database of the history of stuff we've discovered about it, maybe listening to podcasts. Yeah. And there are some now. There is a cloud vulnerability database. I forget what it's called. Yeah, it's launched by one of the cloud security, what we call a third party vendor, I think. Yes. There are actually two or three attempts at the cloud vulnerability database as a service protocol. We'll add them to resources. Yeah, that's great. OK, so I want to shift gears a little bit away from the again. We got back to Azure for a little bit. Tell me about the recent O365 SaaS breach. What's that? Is that a breach? Is that a cloud breach? Is that something else? Where does that land? Well, first of all, they rebranded. You got to keep up with the rebranding. If I try to keep up with Microsoft rebranding, I will. There's no more Office. What is it? Microsoft 365, M365. M365? And everything's defender, except for the things that are not defender. OK, fine, whatever. The email service in the cloud that's not workspace, that got breached. Was that a cloud breach? So there were several in the last couple of months. Are we talking about the AI data leak one or are we talking about the one where a bunch of government agencies broke into their emails? That one? Yeah, the storm. The 26 agencies that got popped because of bad token health and bad access key signing security. Yeah. So that was an interesting one because we don't know how it happened. We know that a Microsoft engineer lost access to this key at some point, but they're either not sure or they're not telling how that engineer got compromised. If you look at the wording, they don't even necessarily connect the engineer getting compromised to the rest of the attack. So it could be a red herring. I'm not sure. Maybe I'm reading into it too much, but there's going to be a government investigation into that. So there's a subsidiary of CISA that just does these investigations. And I predict in about 12 months, we'll have a much more detailed report telling us what happened there. But certainly access tokens played a role. Wait, is this one of the first real big NTSB cyber investigations we're going to see? No, I think the first one. What was the first one? Log4j. Yeah, Log4j was the first one. Yeah. So but wait a second. I'm getting this surreal vibe from all of that. So back when I was an analyst, I'm not going to joke about back when I was younger because it wasn't that far into the past. When dinosaurs roamed the earth and Anton was an analyst. Yeah. When the gas cloud, I kind of think gas cloud first, not before dinosaurs. Many people sort of assume that the infrastructure and a bunch of other stuff is taken care of by a SAS security vendor. And then the other Gartner wisdom, about 99 percent of cloud breaches being customer fault applies. So it's almost like my mind wants to naturally go back to the world where SAS providers, at least the top tier ones, are pretty secure, pretty well done. But customers kind of screw up configurations and then they cause issues. But we are seemingly in the world where SAS providers screw up and not the client. So like bring me back to the familiar, because now I'm getting even more nervous and I want to like unplug my computer from an Internet or something. The SAS vendors, you know, it doesn't grow your SAS revenue to build in the security or more security than your competitor. You want to reduce friction. You want to increase adoption. You want to increase spend. And none of that is done by making people jump through extra hoops when they authenticate, making them do step up authentication, making them spend a bunch of time checking their configuration, making sure the configuration is correct. So there is some pressure for the SAS vendor to pick a configuration, get it right. And typically they don't. That's not the top priority. So the customer bears the brunt of that. So a great example of that is how we handle external data sharing today. So by default, overwhelmingly, at least from my research, the number one use case for data sharing is I'm about to jump into a meeting. I've got a file I need to share with somebody. We're going to discuss this file during the meeting. We shared a file to prep for this podcast, right? Like the very common use case. But what's the expiration on that? Why isn't there an expiration on that data sharing? In many cases, that data share no longer needs to exist the moment that meeting ends, right? Sometimes it's a little bit longer. Maybe you're working with a contractor, maybe it's three months out, but there's no lifecycle. There's no full governance on that data share. And the same thing with integrations, the same thing with a lot of identities in SAS, very optimized for getting you in the application, creating the integration, creating the data share, but little to no focus on cleaning it up afterwards. So you end up with this big mess. And we find on average, here's a stat we got from our customers. Ninety one percent of data shares have not been touched in 90 days and can just be closed. This certainly rhymes with kind of the material security thesis of let's lock down all your old email and make you put in a different password to get access to it. So I totally buy that this is how information works in our presence. But what we're finding is like CISOs will say, well, nobody's touched it in 90 days. What's the worst case? They have to reshare a file like just remove all that, just clean it all up, just sweep it all away. Attack surface gone. Well, I think Googlers who are coping with our changes in access control might take issue with what's the worst that happens. They have to wait for a reshare. But I can see how a lot of reasonable people would come to that conclusion. Yes. And it also sort of reminds us, by the way, it also this whole ghost of IAM barges into our conversation and roars. Sorry, I'm mixing ghosts and dinosaurs, but the point is that ultimately these are permission problems and I'd watch that movie. Yeah, it's not about bad SaaS vendor or bad customer. It's about over permissioning and not having the right IAM culture or access management culture, whatnot. So it's back to almost every cloud problem has an IAM problem behind it somewhere. Right. And a lot of it is just simply UX. Yeah. Huh. When I go to share a file, where's the option to share it for a day? Why isn't share it for 24 hours the default option? Why don't I have an option to share it for seven days, share it for a month? That's a profound thought. Expire after my calendar with this share, tie this share to a calendar event and expire an hour after it. Did we just give somebody a cool startup idea to build that and get rich? That's a feature, not a company. Right. That's what analysts say. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Fair point. So privacy engineering is already focused on this when just managing the performance of your mobile devices, your iPad will unload and shove over to iCloud your mobile app data to save space if you run out of space, rather than just saying you can't install this new app because you're out of space. Or if you haven't used an app for four weeks, five weeks or something like that, your Android might say, hey, it doesn't look like you're using these apps. Would you like to clean them up? So this idea of cleaning up unused stuff isn't even so much for security implications or privacy implications. It's just for performance on mobile devices. And I think that maps over pretty well to enterprise SaaS and cloud as well. Like Google. Google will do that. The first time I used GCP to run a workload, it told me you over provision this. You're not using nearly as many resources. You saw I am recommend you could save some money by choosing a smaller instance. I was like, that's the only cloud that's ever told me, hey, you're spending too much. We're not paying him to say this, right? Tim, just to confirm this is very organic. Very organic. But he's also not paying us to mention the balance, right? Like it's all kind of very fair. Yeah. Balance is up. Or he didn't pay us to mention his podcast either. Oh, that's right. Yes, exactly. It's all kosher here. I want to shift back onto the SaaS world and maybe ask if I'm a director and I'm bringing out a new SaaS vendor, what are the things I'm least likely to understand about securing it when I first start using it? And what should I do different? I think number one is understanding how the business is planning to use it. But I think there's an assumption in what you just said there that might not even be true. Maybe it's already been in use for three months when the IT team finds out that it exists or three years or something like that, right? Like sometimes SaaS is owned completely outside of IT and security IT are unaware of it. Who are the Salesforce admins? In many cases, they don't even work for the company. You hire like a third party group of Salesforce experts to set up your Salesforce and run it for you. First of all, you need to understand how the business is going to use it to understand how it needs to be secured. Because Salesforce, just rolling with that example, I think there's well over 200 different configuration options. And then you could extrapolate that to more if you take in all the options within options. So the least understood aspect here is that ultimately, when you say, hey, let's secure SaaS because you're onboarded it, you may then realize it was onboarded three years ago. It shouldn't be not understood in 2023, because again, I vaguely recall this whole people whipping up a credit card and buying SaaS going back maybe 10 years ago, maybe more. So it's a little strange how we are misunderstanding it for 10 years. It's more that it's been deferred, I think, by most security teams than that it's not well understood. Well, and it's not well understood because it's been deferred for so long. You'll have teams say, well, let's figure out patching first before we moved on. I was talking to an old friend of mine and he was telling me the other day he had to teach the Linux admins how to turn on patching in Red Hat. There was no repo enabled for updating software. What century is that? Yeah, I know. I shouldn't even say what year is this? Like, what century is that? Yeah, Red Hat Enterprise and no enabled repos, no way to apt update or apt upgrade anything. So that's where we're living where SaaS seems like, okay, like that's something I'll tackle in the future. But the problem is, most of our business stuff has moved there already. Workloads moved in two directions. The custom in -house stuff moved to cloud and then everything else moved to SaaS. And you have to have a really good justification to not use SaaS. Like, let's stand up this internal HR platform or are we going to use Workday or Bamboo HR, something like that. You're going to go the SaaS route. So if you're structured to top three misunderstood aspects of SaaS security, I guess maybe I'm going to reserve the number three for CASB just does it. So what are the other two? One of them is that they're all unique. There's no standards for SaaS configuration. Like in one SaaS, maybe all the security options you want are there. In another one, half of them are there. And in another one, you have to pay extra for the security features. Yes, exactly. You just had to make it even more depressing, Tim. Sorry. Yeah, my bad. So one of them is just the uniqueness of each one. Each one is a snowflake, pardon the pun, and you have to learn each one from scratch. On some platforms, for example, MFA is the one step process. You just enable MFA for an identity. And in another, you have to both enable and enforce it. And if you forget that second step, then you haven't actually done MFA correctly. What? Yeah, it's also Microsoft. Sure. I can see that. Maybe MFA is something you enable and then users have to configure it if they want it, or you can enforce it. I get it. I understand some poor PM who couldn't migrate all his users or her users or their users. That sounds awful. And it leaves us with this kind of situation. And there's different layers of enforcement. When I log into a lot of services, I get an option that says, don't make me MFA again for 30 days, or maybe ever. Once I do it once on this device, just give me an OAuth key that lasts indefinitely. And that's where we see cybercrime taking advantage of that. And there's a special kind of malware called info stealers that do nothing but sweep up all your SAS OAuth keys and sell them on a black market or use them to get into a company and deploy ransomware. So wait a second. I feel like we haven't talked about CASB enough. And the reason why we did an episode on podcast on SAS security and which we'll link in the resources. But the thing is that I was very skeptical. And again, maybe it's my old garden of brain or something. I was like, yeah, why are we talking about this new platform for securing SAS? CASB does it. And then, of course, now we have SSPM. So we have the CASB bucket. We have SSPM bucket. SAS security posture management. People, our audience have been beating on us a little bit for not explaining all the acronyms. CASB, I'm not going to explain. Acronym is kind of too embarrassing. Cloud access security broker. Tim Wood. Fine. That counts. But I'm not sure that explains it. It's meant to be software that helps you use cloud stuff securely. But it's the only security acronym with a B. So that's already kind of a little disturbing. Yes. Broker is a weird word to have in an acronym. Yeah. I mean, I think broker ended up in there because a broker helps you use other stuff. Right? It kind of makes sense. Anyway, go on, Anton. Sorry. So the question is, Adrian kind of quietly implying that maybe there's another category of SAS security tech that we need to have. So how does it all fit with securing SAS? Do you have CASB, SSPM, or other? Early on, long before I joined Valence, I referred to the new SAS security companies as CASB v2. And I largely saw CASB as a failure in what it tried to do. It pivoted a lot during its very quick and hot burn that it went through before they all exited. Isn't this too harsh? This is harsh. CASB as a failure is too harsh. I'm sorry. I'm not offended, but I'm like surprised. So I don't think we've yet seen us live alongside of CASB, but we do replace them. And we see this all the time in security. We see a category that's largely defined by one or two vendors, and then all the other vendors follow that model. And it's the wrong model. It's not a model that has market fit, that lands with customers. And then we see the next generation come in and try a different approach. You know, NT malware didn't take the wrong approach initially, but the adversaries switched. And if you didn't pivot quickly enough to the next gen approaches, when we got CrowdStrike and Silence and all that, you were kind of dead in the water. And we saw a lot of companies directly impacted by not moving quickly enough. And so CASB, I think they did start to pivot towards more API models than forward and reverse proxy. They were very excited. And I was very excited about the idea that I can adopt SAS, but not this feature. And I can add this feature, but the idea that they're taking away JavaScript and injecting JavaScript on the fly, I can do step up authentication where it doesn't exist. The SAS vendor doesn't give me that. Like I want to change somebody's payroll or change where it direct deposits. Maybe I want my CASB to require step up authentication for that. And you could do that with a CASB. Or I want to use Yammer, but I want them to use Slack for chat or Teams for chat. I don't want them to use the built in chat within Yammer. So you take away the chat box using an inline CASB. And just turns out, even if they said they wanted that, nobody took the time to set it up. So most of the customers I talked to, the use cases they would get around to that they would have time for were much more basic, much more simple. And I think the other thing that kind of killed it is the CASBs were very focused on shadow IT and discovering as much as possible, which became very overwhelming. We just talked about how each of these SAS needed though, right? Well, but it created a problem. We just talked about how every SAS is a unique snowflake and you have to study and understand each one to be able to configure it correctly. So now I just told you, you have a thousand. I discovered your entire long tail of SAS use within your organization. Where do you start? Whereas now you look at this current gen of SAS security companies like ours, it's very much more focused on Microsoft 365, your Google workspace. There's a lot of work to do there already. And it's much more of a hygiene governance focus than discover all your shadow IT and lock it down. So much more business enablement, much more like, hey, we're going to let the business continue using the SAS, but we're going to give you the visibility you need to go in there and without disturbing them, without killing productivity, going in there and fixing things up as you go, rather than come in as blockers. Well, Adrian, this has been a fascinating and wide ranging conversation. We are unfortunately at the time where I have to ask our closing questions. One, do you have a tip to help people improve their SAS security? And two, do you have some recommended reading for our listeners? Yeah, so the tip, I would say integrate identities as much as you can. Don't let people use the native stuff. Then you don't have to worry about a lot of the built in SAS settings like MFA and stuff like that. If you push everybody to Okta or push everybody to Google or Microsoft, you can rely on the configuration you've already done there and get the benefit of scale from that. So take advantage of single sign on and integrations like that, that take some of that work off your hands. What was the second question? Recommended reading. Well, so recommended reading, we do have a report that goes through a lot of the stuff that we're talking about. It's got examples of breaches. So if you look for the 2023 Valence State of SAS Security report, it has examples of breaches to go along with. A lot of the stuff that we've talked about goes through the different use cases that we see in SAS security. We kind of break it down into the different components, misconfigurations. We talked about identities. We talked about external data sharing and also integrations, those SAS to SAS integrations that you wouldn't see in line and then has all the data that we pulled. I got to play with the data that we actually got from our customers. And I mentioned that 91 % stat. There's a whole bunch of interesting stats in there that are in that report. And then we give recommendations and predictions. And one of my predictions was that AILM will lead to an explosion of new SAS. So there'll be more than ever to deal with. Got it. Adrian, thank you so much for joining us today. Listeners, thank you for joining us on the live stream. I see lots of fun comments. I want to thank everybody for the engagement. And Adrian, your fellow podcaster in the security space, Rafal Los, is calling you out on some of your comments about exits and the CASB space. Well, he has a podcast too. So you know what to do, Raf. Raf knows what to do. We'll all get together and argue about CASB. It'll be great. God, I was going to say that'll be a great time. I don't know about that. All right. Thanks, folks. Depends on your perspective. Yeah, sure does. With that, thank you all for joining us today. Well, thank you very much. I appreciate it. And now we are at time. Thank you very much for listening and, of course, for subscribing. You can find this podcast at Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever else you get your podcasts. Also, you can find us at our website, cloud .withgoogle .com slash cloud security slash podcast. Please subscribe so that you don't miss episodes. You can follow us on Twitter, twitter .com slash cloudsecpodcast. Your hosts are also on Twitter at Anton underscore Chiwaki and underscore Tim Pico. Tweet at us, email us, argue with us. And if you like or hate what we hear, we can invite you to the next episode. See you on the next Cloud Security Podcast episode. Bye.

Timothy Peacock Anton Chuvakin Tim Wood Adrian Sanabria Anton Adrian Rafal Los 30 Days Tim Pico Seven Days Cisa Four Weeks 24 Hours Ailm TWO Ipad Five Weeks Valence Threat Labs One Step ONE
What is Alignment? 'The Answer Within' Author Erin Newman Explains

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa

04:12 min | 2 weeks ago

What is Alignment? 'The Answer Within' Author Erin Newman Explains

"And welcome back. If you're just joining me, I'm talking with author Erin Newman from a lot of what we're talking about is from her book The Answer Within How to Access Your Spirit Guides for Alignment and Abundance. So before the break, we're talking about your your activist tapping me, telling me she wants to meet with you, I guess. That's what I got when I was on the break. So she's like, tell her she wants to she wants to meet with you. So I guess you need to reconnect. Yeah. Yeah, I love that. So I want to talk about alignment because you talk about alignment and a lot of people don't know what that means. Like, what does that mean? What do you mean when you you tell us about, you know, discovering, you know, what our soul path is and our sacred path and we have to be in alignment? What do you mean by that? Yeah, I think it could mean many things. The way I speak about it is that. Our sole purpose here on Earth is to learn and grow. Right. And so I think a lot of times we get tripped up in the idea that we have to have this one defined full purpose and when we know it, then everything is going to sort of, you know, rainbows are going to fly out of your butt and everything is going to make sense. And yeah. And so instead, I like to think of it as this is my soul path. Right. And I'm just I'm just stepping more and more along my own whole path. And the alignment for me, the best way to describe it is when you when you feel like you're out of it, right? When you feel like you're not you're not walking that soul path, you're not doing the things that are really lighting up your soul. And it could be, you know, it could be small or it could be huge. Right. And and I think when people hear these concepts, they think, OK, that means I need to go quit the day job tomorrow and go find my alignment and go back onto my whole path or maybe find it for the first time ever. But I think there's always a middle ground. I think there's always some smaller baby steps that you can take towards that alignment right now versus, you know, having to quit the day job. Right. But maybe there's things you can do even within that day job that are that are more in alignment for you. You know, I'm not going to do these kind of things anymore because I hate them. And maybe, you know, maybe I find a way to delegate them or maybe I find a way for somebody else on my team to do them, whatever. But here's the other thing I really, really love doing. Can I do more of that? You know, can I bring more value through those things? So, yeah, alignment, again, I feel like it's easiest to define it when you're out of it. You know, when you're feeling that that nagging sense of like, God, there's more I'm supposed to be doing here. And it does not look like this. Right. It doesn't look like the thing that that that I have been doing, maybe. And I'm not even you know, that's even true for entrepreneurs. Right. We get to these spaces. Yeah, we get to these spaces in our business where we're like, that message no longer feels aligned for me. It doesn't it doesn't light me up to keep talking about this anymore. It doesn't light me up to keep offering, you know, like for you, maybe Melissa, it's like, I don't want to do another workshop. Right. Yeah. You know, yeah. And I feel like, too, for me, like about about, you know, like where my soul path is, like I feel like when I'm in alignment with my soul path, things come flow easy. It's like, you know, if you've ever tried to make something work and like in your mind, you think, well, it has to work because it's a good thing and it'll look like this and it'll be like this. And no matter what you do, it's like trying to jam, you know, a round peg in a square hole or square peg in a round hole, however you say it. And you're like trying to force it and it's not working. And I'm like, that's a good indicator that this isn't in alignment with what I'm supposed to be doing. Right. But when I am, things just flow so easy. They just come, there's no forcing it, you know, it's just like allowing it, which is a big difference.

Erin Newman Melissa The Answer Within How To Acces Earth Tomorrow First Time
Meet Erin Newman: Speaker, Author, and Soul Fire Ignitrix!

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa

05:51 min | 2 weeks ago

Meet Erin Newman: Speaker, Author, and Soul Fire Ignitrix!

"Let's get to my guest, Erin Newman. And she is a speaker and author and soul fire Ignitrix for women entrepreneurs. She helps business owners to overcome mindset blocks so that they can truly do what lights them up in their business and make the income they desire. The answer within how to access your spirit guides for alignment and abundance is aligning with your true purpose and create your unique version of success. Find the answers to all your important real world questions by connecting with your spirit guides. Erin Newman teaches you how to safely work with them in a non -appropriative way regardless of your background or belief system. These guides help you make money doing what you love, relieve physical pain, cultivate kindness, heal ancestral patterns, and more. Erin presents 30 hands -on prompts that support all aspects of your life and give you the wisdom to move forward despite obstacles. By journeying to your spirit guides, you'll become more compassionate and release blocks along your sacred path. Perfect for any experience level, this easy to use book encourages you to align with your deeper purpose and bring the magical back into the practical. I love that. And for more, you can find about Erin. You can go to her website, which is Erin and Erin Newman dot com. Let me spell it for you. So it's E -R -I -N -N -E -W -M -A -N dot com. Welcome, Erin. Thanks for being here with me today. I'm so excited to be here, Melissa. I love that introduction. Thank you. Well, when I was reading your book, I thought, oh, she's talking a lot about the same stuff I talk about. So of course, you know, that's that's why we resonated to each other. So how did you get into the kind of work that you're doing today and what inspired you to write your book? Yeah, well, I guess like everybody's journey, it's it's not linear, right? I would definitely say I would definitely say that I got into the work of connecting with your soul guides because I was writing fiction at the time and really wanted to know how to do that kind of work. So I started following a bunch of different people, as one does, and eventually landed on shamanic a practitioner training out in Colorado that I undertook for three years. And yeah, and like I said, it just it just kind of continues from there. It just sort of deepens into your bigger message, which for me is really that this work is accessible to anybody and that it can be accessible to anybody. And that, you know, like like you shared already that I'm really interested in bringing that magical back into the practical. Yeah, I love I love that sentence so much because I've talked about this a million times like magic magical is like my favorite word. So I'm always using that word. So I love it because I think that we do have more magic in our fingertips than we realize that we do. And it's just like tapping into it, right? So you talk a lot about accessing your spirit guides and in the book, you show us how to do that, which you have all these wonderful journaling and these prompts and exercises for us to follow along. So like, how did that start for you? Were you just like writing and then you got a message or or like a thought came in your head and you knew it wasn't coming from your brain because we always get like, did I make that up? You know, kind of thing. So I'll let you share your experience for sure. Yeah. I mean, for me, it was it was an actual process that I take people through in the book of journeying and that's when you're entering into that altered trance state, which sounds really out there. But, you know, you get into an altered trance state when you're just watching television, right? We all kind of zone out and this has a very specific purpose of accessing something that's bigger than us, right? Whatever way you want to think of the life force, the all that is source God, universe, the thing that is bigger than all of us and and unites all of us. And for me, that gets translated into spirit guides and or working with source directly. But in the book, I walk everybody through a process of journeying where you're you can you know, you can do it with meditation music, you can do it with drumming music and whatever, or you can just silence. Right. But I personally find it really helpful to utilize either a drum or meditation music because it helps me drop faster. But really dropping into that altered trance state first, that that space of silence, that space of where your conscious mind has been able to let go, at least for a little bit. And then asking to meet with a specific guide. And then the third step is really trusting whoever shows up or whatever shows up is is actually real. Right. And I mean, we can talk all day about the concept of real and reality, but that that guidance that you're receiving is is for you. It's real. It's coming in for you with a very specific purpose.

Erin Newman Melissa Colorado Erin Three Years 30 Hands Third Step Today First A Million Times GOD M W
A highlight from 1454: How Much Will 1 Bitcoin be Worth By 2025? - Fidelity

Crypto News Alerts | Daily Bitcoin (BTC) & Cryptocurrency News

23:29 min | 2 weeks ago

A highlight from 1454: How Much Will 1 Bitcoin be Worth By 2025? - Fidelity

"In today's show, I'll be breaking down the latest Bitcoin technical analysis, as we're currently pumping, looking to retest 36 G's baby. And quoting the high priest of Bitcoin, Max Keiser, Bitcoin separates money from the state, defund monarchy, defund the central banks, Bitcoin fixes this. He also predicts rate cuts will boost Bitcoin to his $220 ,000 target, send it, let's freaking go. Also breaking news, Bitcoin ordinals see a resurgence on the Binance listing, we'll also be discussing Caitlin Long's Custodia Bank officially launches her Bitcoin custody platform, as well as Hong Kong is now considering crypto ETFs as part of an effort to become the leading digital asset hub. I'll be breaking down this latest report, as well as the latest regarding Bitcoin ETFs and the fresh surge of capital incoming. We're also going to be discussing one of the largest asset managers in the world, which is Fidelity, currently with four and a half trillion in assets under management, exactly how much one Bitcoin will be worth by the year 2025, according to their head of macro, Jerry and Timur. Now that we have had a new price pump, this is a brand new prediction I have never shared before. We'll also be taking a look at the overall crypto market, all this plus so much more in today's show. Yo what's good crypto fam? This is first and foremost a video show. So if you want the full premium experience with video, visit my YouTube channel at cryptonewsalerts .net. Again that's crypto news alerts .net. Welcome everyone. This is podcast episode number 1454. I'm your host JV and today is November 7th, 2023. We have lots to cover. Let's kick it off with our market watch as we do each and every day. As you can see on your screen, we got Bitcoin back in the green, looking to retest 36 ,000 and creeping towards that target while Ethereum, BNB and XRP are currently pulling back and in the red. And checking out coinmarketcap .com, the current crypto market cap is on the climb as well at 1 .34 trillion dollars with roughly 45 and a half billion in volume in the past 24 hours. The Bitcoin dominance a little on the decline here today at 51 .8 % and the Ether dominance has been dropping as well, currently at 17 % even. I'd love for you to tell me in that chat, how high do you feel this Bitcoin dominance is likely to climb for this cycle peak? Let me know. And checking out the top 100 crypto gainers of the past 24 hours, we got the trust wallet token leading the pack up 9 % trading at $1 .79, followed by Solana up 9 % trading at 44 bucks, followed by Kronos up almost 8 % trading just under 8 cents and checking out crypto bubbles so we can see the top 100 gainers of the past week. Kind of a lot in the red right now, but we do have a handful in the green as well. BNTWT up 9 % and PLS up 6 .4 % and TON up 6 .7 % with the biggest loser being WeMixed down almost 19 % and checking out one of my favorite indicators, the crypto greed and fear index shows we're currently rated a 68 in greed yesterday was a 74 last week a 66 and last month a 50 dead in the middle, which is neutral. So there you have it, fam. How many of you are currently bullish on that king crypto? Please let me know in that live chat. So let's just kick it off into high gear and let's break down today's Bitcoin technical analysis. Check out the charts where the Bitcoin price action is likely to go next. So here we go. Check it out. You're looking at the Bitcoin one hour candle chart here. Bitcoin fell towards 34 .5 November 7th as analysts attention turned to mushrooming the open interest data from coin Telegraph and trading view showed Bitcoin struggling to reclaim 35 ,000 to support Bitcoin lacked clear direction into the Wall Street open, but market participants predicted the volatility would soon return. The reason they said was a sharp increase in open interest on derivative markets, quitting them here, almost 10 ,000 BTC worth 350 million in open interest added today, according to financial commentator Ted talks macro now coin Telegraph open interest reaching elevated levels has coincided with bouts of volatility in the recent months. Current levels total nearly 15 and a half billion at this time. And James van Stratton research and data analysts at crypto insights crypto slate described the fluctuations as noticeable, quitting him here. The CME exchange preferred by institutional investors has achieved a new record in open interest with 105 ,000 BTC contracts open valid at $3 .68 billion. Finance has edged past this figure would open interest of approximately 113 ,500 BTC. This trend points to increasing involvement in Bitcoin futures, hinting at either a positive shift in the market mood or a move towards protective strategies by the investors. Now the sense of uncertainty over how the open interest phenomenon would play out was shared by J .A. Martin, a contributor of on -chain analytics platform crypto quant as he shares here on X Bitcoin on the low timeframe. The open interest on Bitcoin futures is ramping up. Certain apes are taken significant positions, but it is unclear to me whether they're going to short or too long. Now in his analysis, he suggests the open interest was now in a territory that had previously seen 20 % of the Bitcoin price drawdowns, quitting him here historically, whenever this metric surpassed 12 .2 billion, it resulted in a minimum 20 % decline of the Bitcoin price. That interest open deserved significant attention. Now continuing this current pump, we have 36 ,000, which I think we're likely to retest here shortly as we started pumping right before I went live. According to school analytics, Bitcoin's looking like a short covering bounce here. Some open interest is coming off the lows here too. Word up and good to note. And going back here, let's see what other analysts we can quote here. We also have material indicators who shared the following. Calling a local top at 36 ,000 doesn't mean 36 ,000 is off the table this year. But the metrics I'm looking at indicate that at the very least it is off the table for this week. He says that call also doesn't mean the price will free fall back to the prior 25, 28, five range. But if a bull breakout isn't validated for this month, that range low is critical. So there you have it. I disagree with this analyst. Clearly, we're pumping right now and I feel we're likely to retest 36 ,000 potentially here today. We shall soon see. And quoting Max Keiser, the high priest of Bitcoin, he says, Bitcoin separates money and all that gold from the state, defund monarchy, defund the central banks. Bitcoin fixes this and he's responding to this news here. The king delivers the king's speech from the throne in the House of Lords chamber. The speech is written by the government and sets out the legislative agenda for the new session. Max Keiser also wrote here in regards to this tweet, the Fed doesn't want to talk about rate cuts, but Wall Street is sniffing out an increasing likelihood of just that. Six months ago, if the economy had fallen off the cliff, the Fed's hands were tied and it couldn't cut rates. Well, now it can. And Max Keiser responded, the rate cuts will boost Bitcoin to my 220 ,000 dollar target for sure. We'll send it and let's freaking go. Let's dive into our next story of the day and discuss the latest with Bitcoin ordinals, which is their NFTs. How many of you have actually experimented or used Bitcoin ordinals before? Please do let me know. Ordinals is a BRC20 token collection minted on the Bitcoin blockchain, which surged 80 or sorry, 40 percent in the past 24 hours to $10 .19 after listing on the crypto exchange Binance. And according to Binance's November 7th announcement, traders can now trade ordinals against Tether. Now, Bitcoin and the Turkish lira as well, Binance claims that it did not charge developers any listing fees for the already token and that withdrawals will now open November 8th as part of the initial incentives. The first 1000 users who deposit at least 72 already to the exchange receive 50 USDT trading rebate voucher, quoting them here already is a relatively new token that poses a higher than normal risk and as such will likely be subject to high price volatility. Word up. Now, the Bitcoin ordinals is a numbering system that assigns a unique number to each individual Satoshi or one 100 million of a Bitcoin, enabling tracking and transfer and combined with the inscription process, which adds an additional layer of data to each Satoshi. This allows users to make unique digital assets on the digital Bitcoin blockchain. The current token listed on Binance already is not associated with developers of Bitcoin ordinals. Good to note. Invented by Web3 developer Rod or more in January, BRC20 tokens have surged in popularity of one of the largest technological advancements in a 15 year old block chain. Now, self custody wallet providers such as BitKeep now BitGet Wallet have enabled BRC20 token deposits as well as withdrawals since June. The total market cap of BRC20 tokens currently stands at one point three four billion dollars. So there you have it. Hi, fam. Let's dive into our next story of the day and discuss the latest with Custodia Bank now offering Bitcoin custodial services. This is actually pretty cool. And this is Caitlin Long's company. By the way, she's also very bullish on BTC Custodia Bank, a crypto friendly bank founded by Bitcoin advocate Caitlin Long launched its BT custody platform. The firm shared November 7th to announce the launch of Custodia Bank's Bitcoin custody service targeting businesses like fiduciaries, investment advisors, fund managers and corporate treasurers. The launch comes soon after Custodia Bank earned approval from the Wyoming Division of Banking to go live with the service. The announcement notes and announcing the news, Custodia Bank emphasized that the platform is a non lending bank built by Bitcoiners that offer segregated custody accounts on its custom built Bitcoin custody platform. The statement said Custodia Bank offers integrated Bitcoin custody and U .S. dollar services all on one platform designed to simplify the user operations while reducing risk. Here's what they shared. Since we built our Bitcoin custody platform in -house, we are especially grateful to those willing to help us by providing user feedback. Now, Custodia Bank's approval from the Wyoming Division of Banking follows a series of regulatory challenges for the firm. Back in January of this year, the Federal Reserve Board rejected the bank's application to become a member of the Federal Reserve System. Not surprising, right? Saying it was inconsistent with the required factors under the law. The Fed subsequently denied Custodia's request to reconsider its membership application in the system. That's just straight wrong. In a detailed report back in March, the Fed's board said the decision to reject Custodia's app was due to concerns about banks with high concentration of activities related to the crypto industry. Hence why they don't want it. They don't want to support crypto, fam. It's clear. Custodia Bank opened for business in August of this year, though the Fed has blocked much of its proposed business model, which doesn't come as a surprise. Founded in 2020, Custodia is a bank aiming to bridge the gap between digital assets and a digital asset custodian. The firm was formerly known as Avante Financial Group and is based in Cheyenne, Wyoming. Custodia Bank did not immediately respond to requests for comment, but hey, it's definitely a good sign that adoption is coming and banks will be integrating Bitcoin or they're just going to get left behind. So hopefully many major banks follow in the footsteps of Caitlin Long's Custodia Bank. But let me know, fam, how you guys feel. And a reminder, only keep in the bank what you're willing to lose at the end of the day. Because what if there was a bank run? Even with it being FDIC insured, they don't have the money to give it to everybody. Hence what happened earlier in the year with the regional banking crisis and what happened in return to Bitcoin. We started pumping. In fact, Bitcoin's up well over 100 percent since the start of the year. And I feel we're just getting started. All right, fam. Now let's dive into our next story of the day and discuss the latest with the ETF news coming out of Hong Kong, which I know is not in the mainland of China, but still considered a part of China. And I think we're going to have ETF adoption not just in the United States, but clearly in Asia as well as in the Middle East, because in all markets they're seeking it and competition definitely a good thing, especially when it comes to these ETFs. So let's break down this latest report. Hong Kong is reportedly weighing the possibility of allowing the spot crypto ETF in a Bloomberg report. The Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission CEO, Julia Leong, outlines what it would take for the spot crypto ETFs to be authorized in the city -state, quoting her here. We welcome proposals using innovative tech that boost efficiency and customer experience. We're happy to try it as long as new risks are addressed. Our approach is consistent regardless of the asset. So according to Bloomberg, Hong Kong currently only allows future based crypto ETFs and among the listed products includes the Samsung Bitcoin futures active as well as the Bitcoin and Ethereum futures ETF issued by CSOP Asset Management. The possibility of a spot crypto ETF getting approved in Hong Kong comes at a time when Hong Kong's ambitions of becoming a leading digital asset hub are in high gear. According to the report earlier in the year, Hong Kong rolled out a virtual asset regulatory framework and on the crypto regulatory framework. Here's what she shared, Hong Kong's comprehensive virtual asset regulatory framework follows the principle of same business, same risks, same rules, and aims to provide robust investor protections and manage those key risks. This will enable the industry to develop sustainably and support innovation. Also reports emerged in June that Hong Kong Monetary Authority pushed for banks in the city -state to offer their services to licensed crypto exchanges. It was also reported in February that China was supposedly in support of Hong Kong's plans to allow both institutional and retail investors to trade in crypto assets. So there you have it, fam, mass adoption. Let's freaking go. We all know there's trillions of dollars sitting on the sidelines just awaiting that spot Bitcoin ETF approval. And once we get that green light game on, it will absolutely be a game changer. But anyways, fam, now let's discuss Bitcoin ETFs being we're discussing them already. And it's on everyone's mind right now before we break into the latest prediction from one of the largest asset manager, Fidelity, who currently controls four and a half trillion in assets under management. Let's first discuss these BlackRock ETFs and ETFs from some of the other asset managers. Here we go. The launch of a spot Bitcoin ETF from BlackRock is a highly anticipated event in the crypto industry. I'd say the biggest, most anticipated event next to the Bitcoin halving. You know what I mean? It's expected to provide unprecedented institutional access to the crypto market, representing a significant shift from leading banks and promising substantial capital inflows. These developments will eventually change the industry and kickstart the new market cycle. What we're seeing in the market at the current moment is still speculation by the whales, some traditional firms and industry insiders. Now, while the move towards the ETF app approval is a positive development, the price discovery mechanism for Bitcoin is typically driven by derivatives like perpetuals. Let's keep in mind that these are leverage orders that can be liquidated with the right catalyst, whether on the upside or doing a pullback as traders take profit or leverage longs get liquidated. This means that recent price hikes post announcements weren't necessarily caused by a fresh inflow of institutional capital. Though that will happen eventually, they were actually caused by speculation around ETFs driven by people already plugged into the crypto space, including the whales, quoting them here. An ETF approval means that there will be an exponential increase in the amount of capital with access to BTC. That's right. And spot ETF. Unlike futures, there is true price discovery, so there will be no market manipulation. So we should still take this as a sign of institutional interest. It is not unlikely that the capital that kept Bitcoin outperforming traditional assets came from the large institutions or savvy allocators of capital buying ahead of the positive ETF news. CME futures are dominating the crypto future markets right now, suggesting that indeed it might be more traditional institutions that are speculating. These are some of the players that have entered the room in the previous cycles, bull run or not. This kind of activity is par for the course. Now, how capital from Bitcoin ETFs will eventually trickle down? Let's discuss it. We should still pay attention to the possibility of fresh capital coming in. Former BlackRock managing director Stephen Schoenfeld stated at CC Data's Digital Asset Summit in London that an ETF approval can bring 20 billion dollars into Bitcoin. While we all know that's extremely conservative, I'm looking at trillions pouring into the King, just saying. While Alliance Bernstein, the global asset management company, expects the BlackRock ETF approval to drive the crypto asset management way up, all the way up. Now, ultimately, an ETF approval means there will be an exponential increase in the amount of capital with access to BTC. This simple change will be greater than any other development in the market's history. This arrival of capital will come over time as more and more investors and asset managers digest the news, deciding that an allocation is not only responsible, but absolutely necessary preach. Likewise, the adoption of this financial product will take years as institutions such as broker dealers, banks and RIA's undergo due diligence and other processes before they can even offer Bitcoin ETFs. It will also hinge on the arrival of key players such as market makers that are an essential factor in building investor confidence. The role of the market maker is vital to ETFs. They are responsible for creating and redeeming new shares of an ETF, a role designed to keep its price tethered to the price implied by the value of the ETF holdings. Now, finally, we have the question of what a Bitcoin ETF means for the rest of the crypto market beyond Bitcoin itself. Market cycles have historically moved from Bitcoin first to ETH second and then cycled into the smaller altcoins or more exotic projects. This time around, the effects might be less direct, but still obviously noticeable. It is true that a rising tide is not guaranteed in the aftermath of the ETFs going live as the new inflow of capital will not come in the form of direct ownership of BTC. Investors who choose that instrument won't easily be able to change or diversify their exposure to other crypto assets until more ETFs are introduced. Now let's break into our featured story of the day and discuss what will one Bitcoin be worth in the year 2025. While Fidelity's head of macro, Julian Timmer, makes this prediction with an exact number. There's a brand new prediction I've never shared before, so let's break this one down, shall we? A massive shout out to everyone in that live chat just joining us. Fidelity Investments global macro director, Julian Timmer, is updating his outlook on Bitcoin following the latest Bitcoin price surge. He just shared on X to his almost 200 ,000 followers. The Bitcoin can soar beyond $96 ,000 by 2025 due to two main factors. He lays out a scenario for Bitcoin's price performance in the coming years based on retail interest rates, which is the interest rate minus inflation and the Bitcoin adoption rate, which is based on historical Internet adoption. Quoting Timmer here, with Bitcoin moving up once again, will its adoption curve accelerate as it did a few years ago? And how does the macro trend on rates affect it? Here's the data to consider. Here you go. I show a fair value band based on both the slope of the Internet adoption curve and the path for real rates. The bottom boundary assumes that the treasury inflation protected securities real rate of 2 .5 % and the upper boundary assumes negative 2%, which is where we were in 2021. The macro can speed up or slow down the adoption curve, which we have seen play out recently as outlined here in this chart. And looking at the chart, the analyst predicts the Bitcoin price would hit the lower bound of 41 ,000 in 2025 if the TIPS real rate remains as high as the current rate. However, if the real rate declines to what it was in 2021, the price prediction would soar to $96 ,210 in 2025, which is a 175 % increase from the current value. Now let's read his thread, which he shared here on X. I also got to throw out there, he also is predicting a $1 billion Bitcoin price by the year 2038. So by 2025, yeah, a little conservative, but extremely bullish for the long haul on Bitcoin. And I know I've covered that previously here on the show. How many of you have heard the billion dollar price prediction from Jerry and Timmer as I have covered it here? Let me know in that live chat. But anyways, let's just break down what he did share here in the thread so you can see the full discussion. Here we go. Above, I show the fair value, as I mentioned a little earlier. He also mentions the macro can speed up or slow down, which we have seen play out recently as outlined in the chart. He also says, assuming for a moment that Bitcoin will mature into an asset class that plays on the same team as gold and silver, how should we think about where it should sit in a 60 -40 portfolio and what would be a reasonable position size? Great question. Here's what he says. The good news for Bitcoin is it is an annualized volatility down from its 2018 peak, although at 58 % is still head and shoulders above traditional asset classes. That's right. There's no asset in which can compete with the king crypto because Bitcoin is a hedge against inflation as well as a hedge against deflation. It's a store value. It's incorruptible. It's unconfiscatable. And guess what? Gold can't compete either. He also shares here even better is 52 week correlation versus the S &P 500 had declined steadily and is now actually negative. More on the Bitcoin outlook on the next thread. And I highly encourage you to follow Jerry and Timmer. He shares a lot of good threads here, especially regarding Bitcoin and what's happening around, you know, the ETFs, the Bitcoin halving, the macro and all of these TA, which is technical analysis. You know what I mean? Let's see if I can find another good thread for you. He has quite a lot and he's very active as well. Here we go. Here's a good thread right here. He mentions continuing the discussion for my recent thread on Bitcoin. Let's talk about Bitcoin as a store of value. Yes, please. Let's talk about this. Shall we? Gold is delivering solid risk adjusted returns remains hard to beat above. We see that gold has one of the best sharp ratios out there, but Bitcoin is respectable as well in line with other major asset classes. This chart is based on monthly returns because it broadens the universe of alts. In this case, alt such as managed futures and equity long, short hedge funds are the less liquid variety, which broadens the mix while improving their returns. And below is a ranking of correlations to the S &P 500 based on monthly data of September. Bitcoin still has a positive correlation to the equities, but less than many other assets as outlined right here in this chart. And don't forget to check out CryptoNewsAlerts .net for the full premium experience with video and to participate in our live Q &A. And I look forward to seeing you on tomorrow's episode. HODL.

Max Keiser Avante Financial Group November 8Th February Stephen Schoenfeld January March $10 .19 Hong Kong Monetary Authority 2 .5 % Federal Reserve System 2021 12 .2 Billion $1 Billion 40 Percent 2020 $220 ,000 20 % 41 ,000 September
A highlight from S3 E53: Time for the Mother of All Reveals

Six Minutes

03:02 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from S3 E53: Time for the Mother of All Reveals

"Hey listeners, it's Jess here. If you're like me, you know there's nothing worse than finding out about a party after it's already happened. I don't want to miss out. Well, the GZM Family subscription is a party, and it's not too late to join. If you want ad -free and early access to new episodes of your favorite shows, plus bonus content that's only available to GZM family There are kids in this world who are different. Special. They go to school in a place you can't find on a map. And they're about to get a new classmate. How are you here? How are you her? Brinley, would you mind being weird mumble chick later and help me, I don't know, get through these rocks? How are you my age? This makes no sense. Clearly my maturity level far surpasses yours, but what is wrong with you? Now get over here and be useful for once in your life. Listen to me. This is important because everything out of your mouth is oh so important, right? Can you please take a look around? What's important is getting out of here so we don't die. Hey, I need you to shut up and listen. I know who you are. Okay, great. I know who you are too. You do? Yeah, an egotistical overbearing narcissistic pain in the butt. That's totally useless in dire situations. Hello? Do you really have to wonder why you're all alone? Nobody wants to be around someone who has to be the center of everyone's universe. Why would anyone hang around for this? You don't mean that. I've never meant anything more. Seven freaking sandwiches. No wonder you and Cyrus broke up. Or why your dad runs off to drill oil. Why your mother? Oh yeah, and her. I was getting to her because I get it now, Brinley. I finally get it. You get what? I get why your mother abandoned you and never looked back. Why would anyone stick around for a daughter like you? How, how could you be so cruel? Oh, the melodrama.

Cyrus Brinley Jess Seven Freaking Sandwiches GZM Gzm Family Once Family
A highlight from November Market Update: Three Things to Watch

Wealthy Behavior

04:47 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from November Market Update: Three Things to Watch

"Welcome to Wealthy Behavior, talking money and wealth with Heritage Financial, the podcast that digs into the topics, strategies and behaviors that help busy and successful people build and protect their personal wealth. I'm your host, Sammy Azuz, the president and CEO of Heritage Financial, a Boston based wealth management firm working with high net worth families across the country for longer than 25 years. Now let's talk about the wealthy behaviors that are key to a rich life. Welcome to the November investment edition of the Wealthy Behavior podcast, where I talk to Heritage Financial's chief investment officer, Bob Weiss, about what's going on in the markets and the investment universe right now. Welcome back to Wealthy Behavior, Bob. Thank you, Sammy. What is going on? I noticed that recently just kind of following the news that we had three negative months in a row for the market, the S &P, that ended October. We're recording November 2nd right now. The markets appear to be in a pretty optimistic mood today and this week. I think there's been some good news on the yield front, the 10 year yields have backed up. So what are your impressions as you've followed things along since the year? Yeah, so yields have been climbing this year after the first quarter. First quarter they fell and they've been basically climbing pretty rapidly in Q3 with the 10 year treasury that people look closely at, touching 5 % a few weeks ago and that got a lot of attention. And I think we talked about this in the last podcast and the webinar we did, but part of what's been driving that is what people call market technicals from the treasury issuing new debt. So think like economic supply and demand and as there's an increase in supply from the treasury having deficits and from all the kind of nonsense in Congress with the debt ceiling, there was a flood of issuance and that pushed yields up. And with higher yields that obviously impacts the bond market directly, but the stock market has been, I think, adjusting based on that as well on two fronts. One, just the fact that, okay, 10 year treasury yield is now 475 to 5 % that's been traded in that range. So what should stocks be valued at as opposed to when yields are say in the lower fours. So that's been adjusting. And then there's also, I think just kind of a lingering concern of like, are we done at 5 %? Is that gonna be the cycle high in treasury yields or is six around the corner, is seven around the corner? And those start to get to be kind of scary numbers for markets on a number of fronts if we were to see those. So the good news is we haven't, as I said, it touched five and it's been down and the Fed had a meeting earlier this week and did not raise rates. And overall, I think it's what they call a dovish press conference and notes that they could have said like next meeting, there's a decent likelihood that will raise rates, but they left the door open, but market odds of seeing a rate increase again, this cycle declined. So it's like a 20 % chance of a rate hike at the December meeting now and going into the meeting that was higher than that. So the market's backed off a little bit on expecting the probability of the Fed raising rates. And also the market has been digesting new treasury issuance well this week. And as a result, bond yields are down, bond prices are up and stock prices are up. That Wednesday treasury auction, is that what you're referring to in terms of the market has adjusted to treasury issuance? Because I know there were fears that that auction would not go well. You and I talked about it earlier this week. What were the fears and what did we see? Yeah, the fears were that just really simply there aren't enough buyers for treasury debt as the treasury comes to market with over a hundred billion dollars in treasuries that they would have to think it's an auction. If you're going to an auction for art, you have to sell it. And just for treasury, they have to sell it. And if they have too much, then they have to sell it at a higher yield and that you'd break through that 5 % level. And we did not see that. In fact, we saw yields come down. So the market absorbed what they had to issue and we're moving on. So it's been good news to see treasuries stabilize and even decline in yield.

Sammy Azuz Bob Weiss Sammy S &P November 2Nd 20 % 475 October BOB Boston December Wednesday November This Week Congress Two Fronts 10 Year 5 % SIX ONE
A highlight from 1452: Exact Bitcoin Price After BlackRock ETF Launch!

Crypto News Alerts | Daily Bitcoin (BTC) & Cryptocurrency News

01:42 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from 1452: Exact Bitcoin Price After BlackRock ETF Launch!

"In today's show, I'll be breaking down the latest Bitcoin technical analysis and quoting the high priest of Bitcoin, the one and only Max Keiser, I just popped in from the other universe and I wanna tell you, the Bitcoin's already trading at $10 million per coin in that universe. We're all living in the past. As we approach the Bitcoin singularity in the cosmic now, we all see and live this price. The ones who never get there are incapable of seeing the truth, preach. Also in today's show, crypto analyst says the Bitcoin structure is bullish, predicting a parabolic rally for the king crypto. I'll be breaking down his latest targets. Also in today's show, breaking news, an Ethereum insider drops a bombshell. That's right, the ETH founder's fraud is bigger than the FTX fraud, according to this insider, quoting him here, Ethereum is the fraudulent elephant in the room in plain sight, 1 ,000x bigger than Sam Bankman Fried, Joe Lubin and Vitalik Buterin have been at the front with corrupt officials at the highest levels of federal agencies, such as Clayton, Gary Gensler and many more. I'll be breaking down this bombshell for you. Also in today's show, rich dad, Robert Kiyosaki, says Bitcoin provides lifelong financial security and freedom, that's right. Also in today's show, I'm gonna be sharing why Bitcoin will 10x from here to $350 ,000 per coin, according to the one and only giga Chad, Michael Saylor. Also in today's show, I'm gonna be sharing with you the exact Bitcoin price after the BlackRock ETF launch, which we all know is inevitable. We'll also be taking a look at the overall crypto market, all this plus so much more in today's show. All on mine.

Robert Kiyosaki Michael Saylor Max Keiser Gary Gensler Clayton Vitalik Buterin 1 ,000X 10X Joe Lubin Today $350 ,000 Per Coin $10 Million Per Coin Sam Bankman Fried Blackrock Bitcoin FTX ONE ETH Giga Ethereum
A highlight from Fidelity Just Said Bitcoin is Exponential Gold! | SIMPLY OG CLIP

Simply Bitcoin

06:29 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from Fidelity Just Said Bitcoin is Exponential Gold! | SIMPLY OG CLIP

"You can see the distribution of the positive versus the negative returns for Bitcoin is much more positively skewed than it is for silver and gold. And so to me this is why Bitcoin is kind of the new version of gold and silver is because of its convexity. It's like a more convex version of gold because of its network effects and its increased scarcity that this has become kind of the leader in terms of hedging against monetary inflation. Getting pretty hard to deny that the Bitcoin bull has arrived. And that was Fidelity's global macro director Jurien Timmer dropping a bombshell on the Bitcoin versus gold debate. And he didn't stop there. He said Bitcoin is in its own stratosphere and projects that possibly Bitcoin could hit 700k this cycle. Is he insane? I don't know. We're getting a lot to cover. Let's get it. So Jurien Timmer, the global macro director of Fidelity Investments said that although often compared to gold, Bitcoin can increase in value faster than the yellow shiny rock. Quote, in my view Bitcoin is a commodity currency that aspires to be a store of value and hedge against monetary debasement. Now we've heard digital gold but Timmer says I think of it as exponential gold. Now let's see why. Alright, let's go ahead and run through Timmer's thread here. Bitcoin is volatile but its scarcity and adoption curve create potential for it to be a high powered hedge against monetary shenanigans. I think of it as exponential gold. This rally is way beyond the rumor. I think the rally today is about a flight to quality with all the issues around the Israeli war now. Global terrorism. And I think there's more people running into a flight to quality whether that is in treasuries, gold or crypto depending on how you think about it. And I believe crypto will play that type of role as a flight to quality. Next he gets into Bitcoin's adoption. One of the attributes of Bitcoin is that it's a network asset and as such its adoption curve has followed the typical S curve shape. We've seen many of these throughout history but man that Bitcoin line is pretty steep. So where is Bitcoin along the S curve? A network asset value driven by its adoption so the slope of that curve does matter. As we know the supply of Bitcoin is already fixed, set, its monetary schedule is known. The only variable then to add in is demand. And Timmer may echo some of us. When we first went down the Bitcoin rabbit hole its adoption curve which he defines as the number of non -zero addresses was very steep. It resembled the S curve for mobile phones during the 1980s and 90s also echoing Michael Saylor who called that one and was one of the first ones on Wall Street to get in other than Jerry and Timmer because Fidelity got involved in 2015 even been mining as far back as such. So let's get into more of what Timmer was talking about. Bitcoin is exponential gold but what makes it valuable? Well monetary debasement. Bitcoin was designed to be the safe haven. Now more into Timmer's projections as he hints at a bullish Bitcoin future. If history rhymes, say it followed 2011 and 2013 trends, he believes this could catapult Bitcoin to 700k. A more modest outlook mirroring 2017 suggests a rise to 200 -300k. We talked about it yesterday. We kind of talk about it all the time but there appears to be an awakening to the understanding that there is Bitcoin and then there is everything else from Larry Fink and we got more of that coming. Michael Saylor, this FTX debacle was a great advertisement for why Bitcoin and not crypto but right here and this is again Jerry and Timmer. He created this risk reward chart for investment assets and the report stated that Bitcoin's risk reward is in a different universe and they're not wrong. Think about FTX. FTX is creating its own token. It was not a defi. It wasn't a ledger that was open to the world. It was a closed ledger. It was not distributed. So the whole foundation of what crypto is is supposed to be a distributed ledger that is across the system. I actually believe this technology is going to be very important. Man, it's very interesting. Take a look at the past couple days of Simply Bitcoin Live and yesterday's episode, kind of getting into this, but everyone is flying to quality, flying to safety but what are they fleeing from? And that is essential and it is the insane economic damage that has been caused by central planners, the Fed and inept politicians for way too long and Bitcoin is here to rebalance the scales and give that power back to the people. Really? Yes. I'm encouraged by how many people are focusing on it. I'm encouraged about the narrative but I don't believe we should think about crypto as a substitute of currency but I am fascinated by it as an asset class. Specifically on Bitcoin, we're a believer in digitization of products and we do believe it could revolutionize finance. It's digitizing gold in many ways as a hedge against inflation, a hedge against the devaluation of your currency. Bitcoin is an international asset and so it can represent an asset that people can play as an alternative. The foundation of BlackRock is about hope. The floodgates institutional are about to open and it is epic that we've had the opportunity to front -run these people. But be sure to self -custody your Bitcoin, get them off exchanges and if you need any help using Bitcoin best practices or have questions on what wallets, what nodes, things of that nature, well, we got just the guys to get you started. As your dedicated Bitcoin IT team, the Bitcoin way is here to guide you from start to finish on your journey to properly self -custody your Bitcoin. What's more, they've recently introduced 100 % privacy -focused collaborative custody services where you benefit from advanced multi -sig security, inheritance planning and much more while remaining 100 % in control. Book a free 30 -minute call to get started using that link below. So much major bullish news coming out the past few weeks and it looks like Vanguard and VanEck and BlackRock are kind of projecting the ETF to be approved by the end of this month. So buckle up, guys. Make sure to like, subscribe, share that sound money gospel. We got some more fun stuff coming your way this weekend. So make sure to set those notifications and follow us on Twitter where we're getting all the breaking news out there. Follow all things simply and we will be your guide through the peaceful Bitcoin revolution. I'll catch you all tomorrow. Peace.

2015 Jurien Timmer Michael Saylor 2011 2017 100 % Fidelity Investments Vanguard Larry Fink 30 -Minute Blackrock 2013 Fidelity 700K Today Tomorrow Yesterday 200 FED Wall Street
A highlight from Begging for bubbles

Bitcoin & Crypto Trading: Ledger Cast

19:40 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from Begging for bubbles

"Hello and welcome to LectureCast, my name is Brian Crossguard, here with the one, the only Josh Olszowiec. Mr. Brian. Josh, how you doing, man? I'm fully engaged. Training goes on. Fully engaged. Fully engaged. That is a readiness state I wasn't prepared for. We have charts on my end that are - Yeah, you did preparation. I'm impressed. I did not. That's okay. But you encouraged me to look up some stuff that I want to talk about on the show. We're going to talk about bubbles today because I titled it Begging for Bubbles. Well, you mentioned my moving average video and clearly that just set off - Listen, I just need the price. I need the price to separate from the fast moving averages and the slow moving averages to the upside, of course. We need some bubblicious behavior. And listen, if you're feeling some FOMO, don't worry, you're not alone. You're just like Isaac Newton. We were talking about people who had gotten fleeced in bubbles and I really enjoyed this one. Even smart people struggle with FOMO. Isaac Newton invests in the South Sea stock, exits with the profit, then his friends get richer than him and then he re -enters with a lot of money at the top and then goes broke. I don't know. A year later. It's almost like the investor sentiment chart or Wall Street cheat sheet. It is except for the whole re -entry component and he's just like you. So if you're feeling FOMO, don't worry, there'll be other trades. There'll be trades. Take your time. I was going to ask you this too. What do you think is the most important thing about trading? Trade management. Discipline. I'd go even more basic. I'd say just make sure you have a seat at the table. There's always another trade. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Don't go broke. So that's part of trade management, right? Don't blow up. Yeah, it is. Don't blow up. Like the Solana stuff, we can talk about Bitcoin in a second, but Solana with the 45 and all you had to do was wait, you know, all you had to do is be patient. And you had your entry. I think it was a great setup. Most of us paying attention caught that. Same thing with LINK, right? It was hard to mis -trade that, I think. I hope, but I don't know. We looked at LINK for... Everybody looked at LINK. I thought. I don't even like the token. Anyway, I don't like Solana either, but that's another conversation. Point is, there's always another trade. There's always a trade somewhere. Be patient. Pick your battles. Be super choosy and look for specific stuff, right? If you're looking for a fastball, don't swing at a curveball, you know? Oh, baby. Speaking of baseball, did you watch the World Series at all? I did. I didn't. I saw it was the lowest rated World Series in history. Dude, what happened to frickin' Twitter's pasting URLs on to TradingView? I used to be able to do that. Oh, I have my drawings turned off. There it is. Classic. Oh, yeah. You knew what I was looking for. Yeah. I mean, look at this. I've pasted it on here like 17 times now. There we go. Do it one more time. There we go. Look at this. I mean, beautiful. I mean, the divergent top. Arthur, what are you doing, man? Well, I woke up and saw that and I was like, what? I hope he's kidding. Like, I hope he's not just now buying all the way up here. Sometimes I wonder, like, did he really buy back here and then he's just, like, saying this stuff at the top? I don't know. He seems too smart for this. But has he a great success of calling tops when he does these types of tweets. Yeah. That was in the high 40s, wasn't it? Yeah. I mean, this is an hourly chart. It was literally, like, 45 bucks. Yeah. Yeah. That didn't make sense to me. So, I hope he... He's immediately down 20 % if that's where he bought. I hope he's a little joking around with that, but maybe not. I don't know. But long term, like, that entry is probably fine. If you're trapped, quote, unquote, trapped in a spot position, I think you're fine. But you're holding for a while. If you're in a leveraged position, I think you're sweating it a little bit. You're not good. Your entry is 45. Yeah. The thing is... Tell us what the thing is. How many days was this? Let's just say from the breakout. You entered the day after to today. Two weeks. For two weeks, Solana, like, traversed this range. I've had this range for a long time, this 25 to 50, basically, 25 to 47, 50. That was the old range before FTX blow up. And then it spent a long time below that on its way to eight. And so, it got back in the range and then floated right back to the top of it. Why would you buy it at the top of that range? I really hope that wasn't the case, but maybe he's got a different time horizon. A lot of people... I'm not just calling out Arthur. A lot of people were feeling FOMO. I haven't really seen anybody on Twitter talking about anything. I don't know if that's just because Twitter's broken or what, but... I feel like a lot of people have been talking about the move that we've had over the past week or so. I haven't seen anybody saying, like, Sol, the 500. I haven't seen any of that stuff. No, not Sol, the 500. It's more like just, I told you so type stuff. Maybe you don't follow Z. Who's that? He's... I don't know. Maybe all my friends are liquidated. I don't know. I just... Handsome. Handsome. I call him Z. No, I haven't. I don't know who that is. Sorry. You're missing out. He's got a good call. He's going off about Coinbase now. Coinbase is at 200. His handle is BlackNoise06, but with a different spelling. He's a good trader, and he's been early on some of these, like, loud beliefs of something's going to happen. I mean, what? We said... Maybe he's just been talking about Solana so much that I'm like, everybody's talking about Solana. It's really just Ansem retweeting it, like, 35 times. Okay. I mean, we said what? Bitcoin, 28k was the level. I don't know if we said it on here, but 25 was the level for Solana. These are just horizontal levels, right? They're not like anything crazy. Yeah. I talked about this, I guess, on Bankless. Just like... The benefit we have right now is we're neither at all -time lows nor all -time highs, so therefore there's horizontal levels that you can compare it to, and you can just trade level to level based on daily, weekly closes, whatever floats your boat, and play it that way. If you're trying to really risk off and take it one trade at a time or whatever, if you're not looking at things with a longer -term lens, you can do that. What I would say right now is goodbye. Buy the retest at 30k if you get it. That would feel rough for a lot of people, 15 % drawdown, but if that occurs, that would be a good entry, right? I don't know what people are waiting for. I guess you're waiting for a COVID -style drawdown, because what's next in the economy? What's it going to take to bring Bitcoin back down is the question. If you're waiting for an entry still... A little bit of bad news, some kind of regulatory thing. There's plenty of things that can pull you back 15%. We can go to 30. You mean we're going to all -time lows type stuff, or not all -time lows, but multi -year lows? No, I'm just asking, if you haven't allocated or whatever into Bitcoin yet, what are you waiting for? Are you waiting for a yearly low? Are you waiting for 15k? Is that what people are waiting for? I don't know, I can't get in the head of bears. It's hard for me. Because we've got halving in less than six months, ETF in less than six months. Unless you just assume those things are priced in and or are bearish. I don't know. I don't know what you're waiting for at this point. I'm not saying we won't go lower, I'm just saying like, what is it going to take, you know? Yeah. If you're trying to think of... It's hard when these are hypothetical people of who's not deployed or whatever. But what would you be waiting on? Wouldn't you be looking for re -entry opportunities where you appear to have value? I mean, I don't think there's that. You think there's a lot of people in our ecosystem of active participants that expect like new multi -year lows? Or do you think most people are looking to just accumulate a little cheaper, if they're not all the way in right now? I just haven't seen enough to even gauge what sentiment even is, on Twitter at least. There's this macro out the yin -yang on Twitter, but I haven't seen too many people discussing crypto targets. I just haven't. Maybe I'm just following the wrong people, but... Yeah. Well, thankfully, the legacy media is kind of avoiding us right now, at least in terms of price action. They're all focused on Sam getting convicted, which he did. People, I'm sure everyone's seen this, but SPF was found guilty on all seven counts of, I don't know, different types of fraud. Well, that's the thing. You have a legacy media saying, I told you so about Sam, some of them, and the other half of them... Meanwhile, Bitcoin's up 100%. Right. They're saying, I told you so, crypto's dead, it's all a Ponzi. And I'm like, what? Am I living in a parallel universe? Am I looking at the wrong chart? So by the time they wake up to the fact like, oh, Bitcoin's at 50K. What happened? I thought it died. You know? SafeMoon people were arrested. Yeah. Good point. Oh, yeah. Lying on a what? It said SafeMoon guy was arrested yesterday. I saw they brought charges. I didn't realize they arrested anybody, but Josh, I mean, who would have thought? You named something SafeMoon, and it turned out they didn't have the best intent. Well... Apparently, it was even quite egregious. So I've heard, I don't know anything about their charges, but it's more than, we created a coin and we want to sell it. It was sneakier. They have had more egregious levels of crime they wanted to commit, I guess. I don't know. Anytime someone, it's like hex, right? Anytime someone tells you they're going to lock up tokens for X number of years and give you yield and no. SafeMoon. Can we just remember what happened last cycle and not repeat that this cycle? We just all collectively say we're not going to do that shit again, please? Yeah. But it keeps not your coins. If yields are higher, then the risk -free rate in the United States is probably not real. Okay. And what else did we learn? You know what is on the up and up right now? You tell me. Crypto books are coming out left, right and center. Like real books? Yeah. Like people are interested in the crypto story, the crypto boom and bust. We talked about the... Well, I think if you're not in it and you don't have a podcast empire like yourself, it's fascinating. Like I have real friends who they've been reading them like the Michael Lewis book, for example. And I kind of roll my eyes at that one. But buddy of mine that owns a local bookstore was telling me he kind of liked the Number Go Up. I think it's what it's called. Number Go Up, I think is what that one was called. So that was pretty good. More of a skeptical lens. But I saw another book. I think it came out like at the same time as The Conviction. And yeah, the outside world is interested in the story, but they are disinterested in the price action. And I find that fascinating. That's a good sign, I feel like for crypto. Well, people are still telling them it's for criminals and going to blow up. And don't I know what I was going to say about Solana relative to SafeMoon. If Solana pops off, they got to dodge some regulatory heat from the SEC or settle or something. Yeah. And I think that kind of stuff could definitely affect, especially, the altcoin landscape for how aggressive do regulators want to be in terms of who they go after, how they go after them. What's the expectation? Even in light of Ripple winning a huge portion of its case, I don't mean it's a free for all. No. And it doesn't mean Solana gets a free pass either. Or DeFi. DeFi. The UK wants to destroy DeFi. So does the United States. We need to stay with Bitcoin legislation. We don't have that either. There's an Elizabeth Warren video going around about basically just self -custody should be illegal. That was the moral of the story of our video. And the SEC just went after PayPal for their stablecoin. Yeah. What's that about? Well, you got to wonder, didn't they see that coming? I don't know. I don't know if they launched that thinking we need to be a part of the conversation. I don't know. It doesn't make any sense to me, but good for them for fighting the good fight, I guess. Should we talk about the list I made? Yeah. I made this list. It's going to trigger people. Josh prepared a list. I just usurped it and started talking about random crap. Trigger warning. Okay. Okay. It's talking about politics, religion, and war. Let's go. I didn't even know those things were on the list. Let's hear it. I think you have to have some sort of opinion about this stuff because it's related to markets, you know? I think you have to have an opinion. So this week... Where are we starting? We'll start with macro because we had a ton of macro stuff. I don't know if we need to explain each little thing here, but the UJ, the Bank of Japan, they stopped their yield curve control mechanism and let UJ weaken further or strengthen further. And potentially that just means they're going to stop selling United States Treasuries potentially. There was also bullish news on the refunding announcement that they weren't adding a bunch of long -term debt. They're going to veer from their historic plans of like 22 % short -term and go above that. So that made yields really happy. That made TLT get excited. This was before unemployment. You mean it made bonds happy? Yeah. Like yields went down, bonds went up. Right. Yeah. Right. Because the narrative before that was, hey, they're going to issue all this debt. It's going to be long -term because it has to be, because that's what the historical percentages were, blah, blah, blah, whatever. They're deviating from that. Okay. So that's maybe good short -term, but long -term, maybe not so much. I don't know. It depends on your viewpoint there. But then we had the Fed come out and say they're not going to raise rates. Rates probably topped for now. Again, that's like reading tea leaves and Rorschach tests. There are people saying the Fed can't hike anymore, they're done, but that's going to go out of control. You keep reading the list while I show the charts. Sure. Yeah. So 30 -year came way down. 10 -year came way down. I haven't checked the yield curve. I'll pick it up in just a minute. Basically all this is relevant because of its relation to risk -on -risk -off sentiment. It's certainly relevant for TLT, but then today we had unemployment. And you got to remember bad news is good news for risk because risk wants rates to come down. I don't think risk wants a recession, but I think the quicker we get there, the better. If we get there, again, you hear people on both sides of that argument, whether or not this is actually headed for a recession or not. It certainly feels like we are, but unemployment ticked up to 3 .9%. Job numbers were 30 ,000 less than expected. But if you consider the striking numbers, that actually evens out to reaching expected 180K. Anyway, point is bad news was good news. Dollar's way down. Yields are way down. And non -crypto risk markets are up on the news. So kind of a shift in the very near term, it's a shift. Long -term I think we're still in trouble because of the debt spiral, but high long -term yields have come down. Go ahead. Lining this up, if people aren't familiar with what's happening on this chart, the yield curve is inverted when it's red, and then the area filled portion is essentially how wide is the spread between the two and the 10. So we could be facing a scenario where yields are starting to go down, and then you create the, you uninvert as yields go down and start to see the spread widen and yeah, kind of a steepener effect. Historically, we get a recession after the un -inversion, unemployment also goes up after the inversion. I mean, this looks, there's a few recessions on here. This chart doesn't go back before 1988, so it's not that useful. Well, I don't think with the recession stuff, like why are we afraid of that happening? You know? Of a recession happening? Yeah. Like it's part of the business cycle. It's part, it's like life and death. You know? I don't know. It's like, we're afraid of talking about death. It's okay. You have to choose recession versus, you know, like sustained 8 % inflation. Most people would choose recession, or not most people, but like the holistic body would choose recession because they'll say, I'll be fine. It'll be other people, but I don't want inflation to be that high. Well, you're either in the camp that we're too restrictive, inflation's already come way down, enough's enough, bring rates back down, or you're in the camp that, hey, we're not to our 2 % target yet, PCE is still elevated, CPI is still elevated. All these other metrics still elevated and unemployment is still quite low. That's the other side of that coin.

Josh Olszowiec Brian 30 ,000 SAM Josh Arthur Brian Crossguard Yesterday Elizabeth Warren United States 22 % 8 % 30K Isaac Newton 15% 15K 180K 17 Times 15 % Bank Of Japan
A highlight from God Comes to Man_05PT4

Evangelism on SermonAudio

11:44 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from God Comes to Man_05PT4

"Hi, I'm Darrell Bailey, thank you for tuning in on the Gospel of John as we continue our Wednesday in the Word, the identity or the deity of Jesus. Here as we're talking about chapter 1, we're talking about God comes to man. Here this is the fifth in the series, part 4 of God comes to man. We pick up with verse 35 going all the way down to verse 51 to the end of chapter 1. When we look at Genesis of the New Testament. And so when we look and we begin to realize, now John mentions the first in John 2, which is basically the most unique thing about the book of John. When you look at all the comparisons of the portrait of Jesus as the king, the servant, the teacher and the son of God. John in the fourth column. Here we see that his key phrase is believe and but what you can't see is right down where my face is located is the most unique thing about the book or the Gospel of John is there's three Passovers involved in it. In the Synoptics of Matthew, Mark and Luke, there's only one Passover mentioned. Remember, Jesus mentions or John the Apostle mentions so many things that were unique in the Gospel of John. He talks about his sermons. He only mentions seven miracles where there's only two that coincide with the Synoptics of Matthew, Mark and Luke. And so John mentions the first in John chapter 2 and the second Passover is in John chapter 6 verse 4 and the third Passover is in John chapter 11 verse 55. It extends on into John chapter 12 verse 1, John chapter 13 verse 1, oh so as it hits back on John chapter 18 verse 28 and 39 and John chapter 19 verse 14. This third Passover was really the one that occurred on the night before Jesus died and it was the one recorded by all four Gospel writers in conjunction with the Last Supper and the death of Jesus Christ. So the first Passover is only recorded in John's Gospel and it may have been the Passover around April the 18th, 8029, the first year of Jesus's public ministry and so as these three Passovers occur in the three years of Jesus's earthly ministry, John alone records the three separate Passover celebrations that he mentions again as I said a while ago. The first one, John 2, the second Passover is in John 6 verse 4, then the third one extends from chapter 11, 12, 13, 18 and chapter 19. And so what an extraordinary writings of the book of John that we see that's in front of us and so this is very, very unique because the Passover as the Jew that obeyed the Mosaic law according to Deuteronomy chapter 16 in keeping with the mission to fulfill the law, the first Passover John records, he's running out the money changers and so in John chapter 2 verse 12 that I said a while ago that after he went down to Capernaum, he and his mother and his brothers and his disciples, they stayed there a few days and so it deals with that first Passover in John chapter 2 and how he deals with things there as well. And so you can compare this to Luke's account of Jesus is doing the same thing two years later in Luke chapter 19 and you know as he was throwing the money changer that my house shall be a house of prayer but you've made it a robber's den and so each and every one of us when we look at the different accounts that each begins to transpire, the most unique thing again I say that in the Gospel of John is there's three Passovers where the synoptic of Matthew, Mark and Luke only have one Passover. Now John tells about the witnesses to the revelation of Jesus Christ, John begins his Gospel by talking about the deity of Christ. He describes the ministry of John the Baptist and then Jesus is baptized and he calls his very first disciples and so Matthew emphasizes his kingship to portray Jesus as the son of David, the Messiah, the king of the Jews and it's directed especially toward a Jewish audience. The genealogy traces the Lord's family tree from Mary all the way back to Abraham and the key word as we said of Matthew is fulfilled because the messianic prophecies were fulfilled in Jesus Christ then we see Mark in his servanthood and in that it betrays the Lord as this suffering servant with the Roman reader in mind it opens the beginning of public ministry of Christ and it records even events of his life that's the key word of straightaway meaning and indicating immediate action and so when we look at Luke and his manhood the Gospel of Luke portrays Christ as the son of man that emphasizes his humanity and of Christ it traces the genealogy of the Lord back to Adam and has the Greek and the Gentile reader in mind. The first three Gospels as we said the synoptics of Matthew, Mark, and Luke describe the events and the life of the Lord Jesus Christ but when we come to the Gospel of John, John his godhood, we find that he emphasizes the meaning of the events in the Gospels that he records much of what is unsaid. He portrays Jesus as the son of God tracing not to Abraham, not to Adam, but before time there was no genealogy, there was no major scene, there was no boyhood, there was no baptism, there was no temptation, there was no amount of transfiguration, there was no guessing domain in the book of John, there was nothing, no publicers, no demonics, there was no parables. The Gospel of John was written with the church in mind. I thank God Pastor Keith preaches a great deal out of the Gospel of John, amen. And so when we look and begin to realize as we said then we noted that every chapter in the book of John emphasizes the Hebrew alphabet. There's only 21 chapters so it leaves off it doesn't get all 22 because there's only 21 chapters but the first chapter everything about that chapter deals with the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet, the aff, the symbol of God as the creator and the master of the universe. When you get to chapter 2, when you get to chapter 3, every one of them follows the lead on the standing of the Hebrew alphabet of what it says in verse 34. Jesus the Messiah, the Christ, the witness of Andrew verses 35 to 41. And so remember what we said in Matthew chapter 3 verses 13 through 17. This is the record of John the Baptist of the synoptics of his baptism that he was baptized, amen. And Mark the same in Mark chapter 1 verses 9 through 11, the second of the synoptics of Mark where it talks about how Jesus was baptized. Then of the third synoptics of Luke chapter 3 verses 21 through 22 that it talks about where Jesus was baptized. These took place in the synoptics but notice the events that recorded the record of John the Baptist and his baptism that Jesus occurs not only in Matthew chapter 3, not only in Mark chapter 1 verses 9 through 11, not only that but in Luke 3 verses 21 and 22 that we see the testimony of Jesus baptized. Here the events take us back to that day because John baptizes Jesus in the Jordan River immediately after Jesus goes into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil. This is verse 35 but as we get on down it can jump back to verse 29, amen. If you go back into verse 29 you'll see that because even in verse 29 it said the next day and I thank God that Satan appears before Jesus with three Pacific temptations when Jesus resists these temptations Satan leaves him in time and so I'm glad in verse 29 if you go back to it it says the next day John says Jesus coming unto him and said behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world. That's verse 29 the next day but when we start up in verse 35 in just a minute you're going to see the phrase again the next day and these are the events that transpired. I'm glad that we see again. Meanwhile back at the Jordan John speaks to the delegation from Jerusalem about his ministry and verses 19 through 28 that's already the 40th day. The 41st day was the 29th of the next day that you look and you'll see that all the way down to verse 34 that John had already publicly introduced Jesus and described the events that took place 31 days earlier at that baptism, amen. And so I'm glad that as we see this on the 42nd day we actually get to verse 35. John points out Jesus to two of his disciples and they follow him that day with him and later that day one of them they bring their brother to Jesus which is Andrew that brings Simon Peter and so as we get all the way to the end you get to the 43rd day that Philip and Nathaniel meet Jesus. Remember this because this is what's so unique about John because here we see the three temptations of Jesus by Satan. Stones in the bread in John chapter 6 verses 26 and verse 31 to make the bread in the wilderness jump from the temple and thirdly the kingdoms of the world in John chapter 6 verse 15 to take the kingdom by force. What a temptation that the devil tried upon him. The testing and trying that he went through just like the Paschal lamb went through for those 40 days. And again what did I say? It's the same as in verse 29 here you see in verse 35 and again the next day after John stood and two of his disciples the day after he made the previous statements Andrew and no doubt John who at that time they were disciples of John the Baptist. The two disciples were with John immediately they became disciples of the Lord they followed Jesus they may have been Andrew I know and I believe they were John and Andrew and so John did not give his own name nor did he refer to himself by name in the Gospel of John. His experience was very simple of he basically as many of us are that we come to Christ and so Andrew he stood where preaching was.

Nathaniel Darrell Bailey Mary Philip David Two Disciples John Seven Miracles Abraham Capernaum Jerusalem Fourth Column Fifth Keith 21 Chapters 40 Days First Chapter Jordan River First Jesus
Change Your Space, Change Your Life! With Julie Ann Segal

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa

04:19 min | 3 weeks ago

Change Your Space, Change Your Life! With Julie Ann Segal

"And welcome back. If you're just joining me, I have Julie Ann Siegel with me today, and she is a feng shui centered interior designer, and we're talking a lot about feng shui -ing our space and a lot from her book, which is called Change Your Space to Change Your Life. It's really interesting. This stuff's like, I love this stuff. It so fascinates me. So I wanted to ask you something, and I had this thought when you were talking about thinking of creating our space for what we want, right? What we want to bring in. You said sometimes we hold on to things that are clutter from the past. Now, what about photographs, like family photographs? I'm a photographer also, so I have a lot of old black and white photos, especially of family members that I think are kind of artistic, and we have a lot displayed. So what would your advice be on that? Because obviously that's the past, memories in the past. Oh, but the good past. Make sure you look at all the photographs you're putting out, and if they have good memories and feel good, but I want to make it a point to let you know that one of the bagua areas is called family, and that's a great area to display family photographs in that area. And I heard you say that some of your family members were creative, a lot of creativity. You can also put them in the area of children and creativity with the intention to bring your creativity up another notch or so. So those would be two good areas to put them in, just make sure that they have happy memories for you, and they're not too much clutter like the too many things and too small of a space, you don't overdo it. So it gets, you know what I mean? I understand. So yeah, so like if it's something that you love and you love looking at, it makes you feel good, it's worth keeping. But let's say you're keeping china that was passed down from your family and you have it displayed, but you may have some, every time you look at it, it maybe makes you think of not good family times and things that were painful. That might be something you want to let go of. Let go of, exactly. And it's okay. And like antiques, those are, you know, like sometimes people think they have to keep a heirloom in the family that they don't even like. Right. That's not a positive thing for them. It's okay to give it to a different family member that might love it or let it go. It's okay to do that. I'm sure, you know, relatives that have passed on, I get the feeling that they're okay. They don't care if we let go of these things on the earthly level. They know that they're in your heart. You still have memories of them. You can take a picture of it so you, if you want to remember at some level and then let go of the actual piece if it's not fitting in with your aesthetics or who you are or how you want to design your home. Yeah. Yeah, that makes sense. Yeah. Yeah. I don't think they really care what we're holding on to personally. I mean, that's just my own perspective. I could be wrong, but I doubt it. I feel like a lot of mediums. Exactly. They don't. I don't think they do. I don't think they do. Right. But on the other hand, you might have one piece that you absolutely love that was a hand -me -down and you might want to space clear it. Anything you bring in that was once other people's, it's going to carry their energy, the positive and negative. So you may want to do some things like clean it really well, maybe use some sage around do those things to space clear before bringing it into your space.

Julie Ann Siegel Change Your Space To Change Yo Today One Piece China Two Good Areas ONE
Julie Ann Segal Tells Us About Feng Shui (and How Your Clutter Affects It!)

Postcards to the Universe with Melisa

05:03 min | 3 weeks ago

Julie Ann Segal Tells Us About Feng Shui (and How Your Clutter Affects It!)

"So for everybody who's tuning in today and is listening, I know what feng shui is, but many people have no idea what it is, what you do or what that even means. So let's start there. What is feng shui? Sure. Well, feng shui comes from China over 4 ,000 years ago. It's a philosophy, not a religion. Some people get mixed up and it's not a religion. It's a philosophy to create balance through the art of placement. So it's working to improve the flow of positive energy in your home or workplace so that space better supports you and your family or, you know, whether your office, you could do it in your office. Sometimes you could do it in any kind of space, but it's a way to just make the energy feel more comfortable and flow and more positive in your space and becoming very mindful of what you're doing in your space. So, you know, for example, I'm just going to go into one of the big, the main issues I see just the very beginning stages before you start to like put intention into your house is to work with your clutter. You know, a lot of people end up keeping a lot of stuff they don't need and it creates a lot of chaos in our lives when we have too many things around us. And you know, what is clutter? Clutter is things you do not use or love. You want to surround yourself with happy, joyous, positive things. And if you ever look at the objects that you have surrounding you, some of the things have positive things to say. A lot of them have stories that come with them and some of them are not so nice stories. So it's okay to let go of those things. It's better to let go of those things that don't have anything positive to say to you. Also, clutter is things that are untidy or disorganized. So we know that feeling. So have you ever felt it was chaotic in your office and realized internally you felt chaotic too? So that kind of is how that will affect you. And also too many things in too small of a space where you feel cramped. I know people that have too many things and it causes havoc on their bodies and health problems because there's no breathing room and you feel constricted in your life. And also anything unfinished, be it physical, emotional, mental or spiritual. For example, we all have those like knitting projects that are up in our closets that we never and finished we started maybe five years ago. And every time you open that closet, you might just get a little bad feeling and not even be conscious of it. So it's important to decide, okay, I'm going to finish this in the next month or I'm just going to let it go and it's okay to let these things go will actually bring your energy up. Yeah. Well, that's funny that you mentioned that about clutter because I cannot handle clutter at all. I realized about myself that if my space is cluttered, my brain is cluttered. I can't think I don't function as well. So I keep my space very, very organized. Now I also work with my mom. We have a couple of group homes. We take care of special needs. I do a lot of office work and she is the complete opposite. So when I come into her, when I come into her office, it literally makes me crazy. And it's so funny because my mom has attention deficit disorder. So it's not surprising to me that, you know, cause her, she's on a million thoughts at once and it shows when you walk in her office, I'm like, Oh my God, right mom, you know, I don't know how people can function and clutter and it's interesting to understand that either I'm very much like you, like I always, you know, have to have everything in good working order and let go and not have too many things. And it also looks more beautiful when you keep a little more minimalist. It doesn't have to be so minimalist that there's nothing there, but you know what I mean? It just feels so much better. So clutter, you know, and I, it's interesting, this is something new I learned this year or maybe it was last year. I found out that I had ADHD and I thought, I, I knew people that have had that and are a mess. Like their spaces were a mess and my doctor said, well, maybe I'm so much like this because I knew what to do to help myself.

Last Year China Five Years Ago Today This Year Next Month 4 ,000 Years Ago ONE Million Thoughts Over
Kira Davis: To Liberals, the Laws of Physics & Biology Don't Apply

The Dan Bongino Show

01:36 min | 3 weeks ago

Kira Davis: To Liberals, the Laws of Physics & Biology Don't Apply

"Communists have been hugely successful in doing that I mean what was one of the first things that the Chinese Communists did when they came into power in China they they made basically old culture illegal they jailed all the professors and artists or killed all of the artists they restricted independent art and made it government approved and funded and and that's how you win the hearts in the minds of the people is by taking over their culture and and so what we have seen is better at immigration we used to require immigrants to assimilate when they came and then suddenly someone made assimilate a bad word but assimilate just means assimilate to our values but this is the problem with the liberal mindset the progressive mindset and this is what has gotten us to where we are today it's because liberal and this goes back to what I was saying in the last hour about we don't speak different languages we live in different universes because in the liberal universe the laws of physics and biology don't apply they think one more law will just change those things so in the liberal universe they don't understand that their values and morals are baked in Judeo -Christian values they don't understand that so they assume because they're ignorant that everyone in the world thinks like them and that everyone in the world is just basically a good person longing for freedom and but we all share the same values of equality and diversity and yada yada yada but that's not true that the truth of the matter

China ONE Today Chinese Judeo Last Hour First Things One More Law Communists Christian
"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

Mysterious Universe

04:58 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

"Like al bicep sword. Yeah thinking about it though. I'm a kind of like this idea and we talk about quite frequently. This understanding that traditional culture is a more connected to spirit and in doing so you know they have a greater knowledge credit knowing but then i'm thinking the same time. It's not sustainable. We've got you pull been much. Must have been very naive about it. An almost idealistic about it. But oh we just need to be more connected to. We can't do it. This billion bloody paypal dina. How amazing it would be to just wake up and have no plan and night responsibilities and just wonder through the forest and fully your instinct a copy don wynn who has time for that exact. So the only way. I've realized now the only way for humanity to go back there and reconnect with spirits. And it's for essentially ninety percent of the population to be eradicated. I'm calling for that. But what i'm saying is it would be a great plan as well errands to solve all our problems. If he could figure out a way hill ninety percent of. I find it rather depressing in a way. Because i've always i. I like the idea of This spirit world and connecting with these stories of shaman. And you know. He people suffering from depression in saudi. And all these other egotistical things nigger these are the answers. But it's not the answer. Because it's not sustainable. Maybe a bill gates went on like a trouble retreat or something and he had this connection with jungle off. Well if i kill ninety nine percent of population. And i obviously get this connection all the time and then he just. That's his plan now that he's grew boobs. And we are george soros. They just had a weed jungle experience. Now they just planning to kill off the whole just like you did see how easy it is to become the free hiring to say. Oh the only way to do this will just be ninety. Percent of the world is dead. Say that you completely turned around what i was saying to happen right now. I eight percent of the population. Happy wiped out. I'd say i want that to happen right. So that's the kind of that's very idealistic The ideal is hateful connected to the haman ius It's the very utopian idea of the native existence you know what the aren't mentioned whether or not the eating each other do they. Very very rare. Yeah because Most tribes as we're about to find out in the plus extension aid each other to gain knowledge. They have to eight the other guy's head. Yeah like if on stein came along with all his head. And then i'll understand how to calculate the speed of you want. I'm not kidding to gain someone's literally the essence here. You have to eat them. And that's how you captured the spirit and take it in you utilize it. They don't even the spirit so even they consciousness. It's just the the essence of that person and their capabilities. You take that on board by consuming them. It's very strange. And various attack will being disgusting at the same time. Consuming essence finding the chiefs hog and aiding billion is coming up in our plus extension. Hit mysterious universal old forward slash plus all the details. They get access to the big extensions. We do on these shows every single fridays and get an exclusive shirt. Every single tuesday as well plus members also get a high bit right fades a high quality audio version. We put out exclusively totally ad version of the as well and disconsolate digital box store again mysterious universal ford slash plus full details nine bucks a month. Hell support your favorite show. That's a wrap for this tuition of 'em you make sure you check out the show nuts for rubber wolf's excellent new book original wisdom stories of ancient ways of knowing The attorney a little bit of the book. He talks about the adventures in south america as well. He's early work with with children In south america that think completely differently. It's it's really weird. Good stuff.

al bicep don wynn paypal george soros bill gates saudi depression stein ford south america
"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

Mysterious Universe

08:22 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

"Are. That's the real world interesting. Say this is exactly the same. As the as matt people they have no perception of there being a difference between reality and the dream state like it's exactly the same reality that they believe that this culture believes that they live in and that can interact with it and utilize it in this reality. Yeah that's why it's the first thing they do in the morning when they wake up like oh what did you discover in the real world. Now we're back in this crop. Maybe that's why they're so nor chalan tobacco being wiped out saying we're dying culture. Yeah they have An anchor into another world and basically what happens is a story is created around the memories of everyone in this will at least in this hot causes civil hotson the village but it kind of sets the tone for the day so once they realized that here in stories created from the images. I share from their dreams. They would literally leave that story the next day so it would be something simple like They ever on dreamt a variation of bird showing them to a tree. That had this awesome new fruit on it. Oh communal dreams fascinating and he said light of that day they would find that tree like the mud would lead them to it just like the dream and that would find that tree and it would indeed have ripe fruit on it so in a way. Validating drains or the next day that would dream that there would be a horrible storm a really serious storm so people wouldn't venture too far out into the jungle. That would stay close to their shelters and he said it would always turn out that in the evening it was a big storm and occasionally they'll be stories dreams that would go from one hot to the other and everyone would have to get together and h kind of hot in. The village would share portions of their dream and that would realize that it was some grand theme so when they had a series when they had these dreams it was some kind of major incident. Like the river's going to flawed. Or you know something. They might be a tiger around and it's dangerous And he said it was odd because it wasn't really chatter about it and this is something very strange. It's he talks about when you ask them questions this this. We'd paws right. There's this kind of moment where it's almost like they're chatting amongst each other for the and saw but no one saying anything telepathically then. Some almost designated member of the tribe will answer the question. But then you'll answer them in a completely different questions straight off data they'll be that we'd poles again and then a different person will answer the question like suddenly they've been designated to answer the question and he he always like the way rights is. It's i swear the toying to each other but they're not talking to each other. It's so weird. I got work it out. Is it almost like their collective having sent people don't even amply but it's almost like it. Sounds like the kind of having a unified consciousness in the way that they're kind of speaking. I mean the book is about knowing it's about ancient ways of knowing so is there ways that they have of knowing things that we don't understand in the west. I think that's kind of what he's getting at. But again the impact of the dreams was such a coal pot of their day to day life and he makes a point that they didn't really they don't have schedules like that. Have time keeping that and have stuff to do during the day yes the quite active until about midday foraging food but he says even that they they don't really have to put much too much too much effort into it. Is that because of the telepathy and possible pre-coalition. Can i just find food through some successful. He actually went with a couple of guys walking through the forest and they're grabbing food but they're not really looking for it and says kinda we'd that just so casual about it like oh. Oh there's some fruit okay. Grab that but it's not like the in hunting mode. You know looking for something to kill the there on this kind of hyped up mission to get stuff done everything's just kinda relaxed lots up and It's a very relaxing game of life. And he says by about midday. They basically done this. There's nothing to do good for wall that crack jokes that just hang out and it's also casual but if for example like i said i dreamt about something. That's kind of the diet. That's what they do that day. Like if i dream about funding a mango tree. It's like that's the whole day is funding. The mac tree. It's really weird. I'm so he learnt about the power of this dreaming technique when One night he had this really strong dream where he was basically credibly visit vivid. He was back In his family home and he sold one of his family's dogs this Old black mongrel. He had when he was a kid and quality employ and he said that tried to get rid of the dog but it always came back so they ended up calling it the the mongrel guardian or something and it became the family pet. But it's it was the idea that it was the protector of the property. Even though it was kind of unwanted and he sold this dog in the dream and it was also vivid and so real that when he woke cop and told the tribe the next day they stop kind of pressuring him full details and ultimately long story short they realize like elder memo's members of the tribes. Say this is a warning for you Because it's a black dog could soon arman or was it was a protector of the family. They figured out. Obviously it's got something to do with his family and because it's a protector. He needs to get back and protect them from something. Yes so they said you have to leave. Now you've got to get back to your family. This is a prophetic warning leif. So he immediately gets up. He takes the three hour drive. And he's jeep gets back to civilization any arrives just in time because he's one of his sons has a medical emergency and he managed to rush him to hospital like if he was there an hour. Later it would have been very very grim so this method of dreaming became almost a part of his life where he would kind of practice at even when he wasn't visiting the tribe. I find it intriguing because you have this culture that is disconnected seemingly disconnected from mortar materialism but they readily accept the dreams saw Have an influence upon our reality. I can give you free cognition. That can give information. This is exactly the same kind of stuff that was being discovered all the way back when s pr in the eighteen. Hundreds late eighteen hundreds was looking at this looking at shed. Dreams looking at pre cognition and dreams and it's continued with dream researches but even today by contrast you've got a culture that goes yep it's real you need to get there now whereas now cultures like it's just a dream. Don't worry about it. It doesn't seem to be changing. I don't know what what is it gonna take for us to go. There's information if it's funny because twenty. Ask them questions. Like how do you know where to go. And how do you know that that is going to be there. Always and they just kind of laugh at him. I think it's a joke that he doesn't do this. Yeah because to them. It's just a simple. Just something always don. It's an remember although the other side is the real world to them say on his next visit the the next story. Sorry the next morning. The story from everyone's dreams was about a bird that cold other birds to come and see a huge flower and he didn't pay much attention to it. He's another sees a flower story. Like who But later that morning one of the youngest children of the tribe comes and grabs his hand and says let's go look at the flour and he thinks that they're just gonna go outside the village like a few maids and she'll show him some random flou- but she starts leading him through the jungle like this little three year old on this massive trek through the jungle and they come to this is clearing and almost the whole tribe is standing around this wheat flour and he says there's no visible plant. It's just this.

matt elder memo arman leif don
"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

Mysterious Universe

05:10 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

"Every single report had been removed had been raised. A bit of an anomaly. And because we live in this digital world this of what can happen is it can just simply be raised with the press of a button on one data that suspicious the absence. It's the absence of the data and she requested detail she wanted to know. Why did this happen. The information didn't come through. she was just completely ignored. So then we go to this. German guy by the name must soula and have pronounced that correctly. Problems probably destroyed that but food la. This job is a former german navy vet and he was one of these as he was looking at these satellite images as he was looking at the satellite images he was convinced that he had seen debris of the coast to vietnam and so i'm like most armchair researchers say what you do with this. Tom naud platform. Is that when you see debris you essentially highlight or click on on target and then that information gets sent back. Tom not right and then. Tom naud claimed that they were taking this information. And giving it to people in the area and search teams to be able to find the debris so it seems like it's a great thing that a whole heap of people kind of get together and student outsourcing funding applying. Yeah exactly or it's also crowdsourcing a cover up brought because what came from todd which is very clear is that off. Some people had tagged this information right like funding a wing or debris winter braid. There were people that said that they had seen an actual tile With the colors of the malaysian airlines on it when they went back to the images that were raised what they will go on what. It appears. these people crowdsourcing is that they're actually crowd souls. Tom nord was using them to find all the images that had debris in them so that they could arise them so they could delete them this same to vetus the. It's blatantly obvious. And you know what they did. They replaced it. They replaced it with all the images that ended up. Redirecting these people to.

vietnam Tom Tom nord one one data soula Tom naud Every single report malaysian German navy german
"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

Mysterious Universe

03:39 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

"Serious universe. And we're discussing the disappearing act the impossible case of match three seventy by florence to chang. And as i've said you know she's written a fantastic book. Many years finding witnesses looking for data going through archives digging up information about the truth behind the disappearance of m h three seventy and. It's becoming very clear that already. There is some type of disinformation campaign. That is taking place trying to even dissuade rescue searches from looking in the location. Where it's most likely that the ama three seventy aircraft went down. But as i said earlier on why. Let's have a look at why someone would do this. What's so important about this. And some people have suggested that look. Maybe the reason why this took place is that it was something to do with you know finance now. It's not just finance the plays a role. Here there's also political reasons There's public safety issues. The finance cattle so one of the finance angles was really fascinating. And this was a story that came to to florence when she flew to make contact and this one contact was actually so convinced that he knew what had happened to match three seventy that his wife had threatened to leave him. Because the god had literally talk about being shackled. He had literally turned his house inside out into a massive whiteboard and everything was linked together with red string and he was smoking constantly being completely consumed by the like you. The softening kind of his belief was that the reason why. Ms three seventy had been covered up was purely for financial reasons because the aircraft have been struck by lightning. Then when you hear that you just go we'll so i walked the across struck by lightning. Have a faraday cage effect. No he was saying that. The aircraft to use prior to this had been a little bit more than two years. Prior to this event have been involved in an incident a small accident at an airport where it had part of its wing effected oshii it off and in doing so that repaired the aircraft but in repairing the aircraft it had then removed the faraday effect of this aircraft. Right right so the aircraft. This m h three. Seventy this triple seven boeing aircraft. It was hit by lightening as it crossed from malaysian s. base individuals airspace. This we'd kind of perfect winstons taking place when that happened when it was struck by lightning. That would explain all the things that happened. It would have either killed the captain or incapacitated the captain or fried the brains of the computer and that would give us indications as to why it flew to an extreme altitude white flew back down to a low altitude because the pilot was trying to maintain that and i would be messed up. So it's the finance angle is a disabled. The shares of boeing right. It's not boeing's fall. Be the maintenance crews fall. Knowable the conspiracy is is that boeing knows that the faraday cage effective aircraft is Destroyed when an aircraft is repaired. So that would kill the ship. Every single boeing aircraft. That are being prepared would have been pulled out of the sky massive repairs every single and not just been going on..

florence Seventy more than two years chang match three seventy single one contact one ama three seventy triple malaysian single boeing seven boeing three seventy three m h three seventy
"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

Mysterious Universe

05:55 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

"Apollo needs to be able to do anything so florence points out that with a little bit of research he would have been able to to turn off often do this so the the story says that all of a sudden took a u-turn and disappeared off towards the indian ocean and what we know. Is that what it disappeared and obviously didn't lend in beijing. People started frantically looking for there were reports coming out from air traffic controllers that they hadn't seen it that it just simply disappeared days later or even i think it was up to awake leading a company called emma sat had announced that they might have some information regarding where this aircraft was because emma sat technology was on board image. Three seventy and what this was is that even though the transponder was switched off on the aircraft the aircraft continued to every hour ping satellite. That was earned by emma set. Now emma sat says that using this ping data they would be able to work at an arc of where possibly the aircraft had disappeared. Too right now. They claim that this arc had followed an octave flew directly into the indian ocean the southern indian ocean and it had obviously the story was that something had caused the pilot to become incapacitated and then the plane had obviously flown for a certain number of hours until it read a fuel and crashed into the south indian ocean. That's the story that we know and there are also versions like he committed suicide ed or he was drunk. Look of them. One's was and this is information that has been confirmed is there was some obviously with analysis of datta afterwards. They're able to say that. The aircraft traveled up to an extremely high altitude that was beyond the capabilities of a triple seven aircraft. Barn triple seven craft and then flew down extremely low and the theory wall says that he flew up. He was clearly suicidal captain. He had flown up to an altitude. That was You know extremely high where he could depressurize the aircraft and then allowed the oxygen masks dropped down but those oxygen masks the way that generate oxygen is chemical reaction so once that moss drops down i think is only twenty minutes also of oxygen so once that was expelled then people would experience hypoxia and would have died within moments. A bad way to go. It's still horrible but hypoxia isn't necessarily a bad way to go once. Everyone had been incapacitated on the flight. He then flew down to an extremely low altitude to avoid right off so that he could crush the plot the the plane and the thing is is that obviously there have been massive investigations into the pilots history. And who he is and all that we found out about this pilot is that the man seems to be a man of principles. He never expressed any kind of extremism before know that we live in a world of post terrorism and you know people crashing aircraft into buildings and other locations and these things can take place. He had never given any indication that he had that kind of intent on top of that when they recovered a flight simulator from his home. They had found that he had flown to several airbases. That were in that area but that doesn't suggest that he was trying to learn how to avoid right or fly into the southern indian ocean all very very odd when you start picking apart the narrative you start to see that there are things that simply. Don't add.

twenty minutes indian ocean south indian ocean southern indian ocean Apollo emma sat days later Three once florence hypoxia emma triple sat seventy seven
"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

Mysterious Universe

04:48 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

"Universe season twenty five episode. Twenty-three coming up on this show. We've got black ops fruit smuggling cellular chicken nugget memories and the to a race. M h three seventy. I'm benjamin grundy joining these aren rights. I have this incredibly serious groundbreaking boca. I'm gonna do. I'm so excited to share this with you. Add you start with cellular chicken nugget memories. Yes let's see a problem with this. I like that. There's often i found this correlation between how decrepit you look how mri you look and the excellence of you'll segments like you right now. Look like mel gibson at the end of a lethal weapon movie. You've been doing so much research you look like you've just taken out one hundred bad guys. I have spent a couple days working on this on very little sleep. Thanks to my four month old deciding that he doesn't want to sleep for more than an hour at a time. So i am quite exhausted. But sheffield was the woodall's extremely excluded. I meant disheveled. Conspiracy look get has all over the place like you've just stuck your finger in a socket because you've been researching so hot. This is incredible. So i was gonna pick up spoken. Just read it personally. I wasn't even thinking about doing it for the show. But after i started getting into it i realize just how important this is because this book the disappearing acts the impossible case of imagery three seventy by florence to change. This isn't really. i mean. Obviously the whole book is about ms three seventy and what possibly took place with this terrible disaster in this tragedy and we still don't know what happened to the aircraft officially but it's more than that it's about the power struggles in the world. It's about exactly what we talk about a mysterious universe for so many years. It became so apparent to me reading this book that the official narrative that we are told by the mainstream media by big tech. All a gawks by anyone you can possibly imagine in the government. It is most likely wrong. We are not told the truth. Sounds like someone's been reading some conspiracy theories the thing..

mel gibson benjamin grundy Twenty-three four month old more than an hour florence Universe one hundred bad guys three seventy twenty five episode M h three seventy so many years seventy sheffield three
"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

Geek Girls Universe Podcast

03:40 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

"To well. And even kevin and michael alluded to that in the interviews the other day. This is basically going to be where things start to like mrs the almost the foundation for those changes. Yes hayes engine. In the at our local time during the vendors films shown moebius also shows lucky as db cooper because apparently he lost a bet to thor and that was his punishment he had to go to earth than steal some money to see if he could. The bet was not like. I wonder what the bet was Yeah i don't think we'll get it. But i hope so So lucky obviously still thinks all of this is a track. He thinks that the circus with a bunch of clowns in it. This like whatever and tv it doesn't faze him so mobile decides to show him scenes from thor. The dark world now remember. This is twenty twelve loki. This hasn't happened yet to hem so unfortunately that means he and us have to watch his mother die again only this time. he knows. It's kinda his faults which is awful because if you know anything about lucky he's close to his mother and she loved very much actually so like i was clearly. I was devastated watching all my tom. Hilson is just amazing at playing loki. And when he started to cry. I wanted to cry. I did cry a little bit. Not lie i was like oh tom. Loki huggies so impressive. Oh gosh yes. So he ends up escaping. Because you know it's lucky. Did not think he would escape. Come on now. He encounters casey who is the clerics tester act from him earlier cases. The hands back the test from junk drawer. Mind you but inside. That drawer are several several different in at this point i paused and i was like screaming. Like oh my gosh you. This means like this is insane. There's so many infinity stones anyway. It's casey's like oh yeah. We got a ton of those all the time. People use miss repeats suggest and in that moment locals like maybe the tv a. is the greatest power in the universe. And you kind of see. The wheels start to turn because he has a trickster. Rake a mischievous camp is what a mobius calls him. I think he calls it himself in. The movie is called him that later so he goes back to the theater room. 'cause now he's kinda leg he's plotting and planning. Maybe i would assume as lucky or maybe. He doesn't know what else to do so he goes to the room and decides to watch the rest of his life. Well he didn't realize it was the rest of his life. He just wanted to watch more of himself. Unfortunately that means that not only was his mom. Die again and see him heartbroken over it. We got to see him redeemed and thouron rock and he's smiling and so happy and then then there was his death. That was not cool. Like i know why we had to see. It marvel to confirm that he is dead dead as it said in a.

kevin michael Hilson db cooper earth tom twenty twelve Loki loki some thor moebius
"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

Mysterious Universe

08:03 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

"I felt intensely connected to the islands when i walked upon the land. My fate would tingle with the energy of the earth but she said looking back and writing about my early connection to the islands was hod because although i remembered that bond the feeling behind the recollections was gone not just faded. It was gone. It was as if they were someone else's memories and i was only able to repeat the stories so she explains a little bit of what she was doing preparing for the end of the mind. Calendar like a lotta people. She'd read all the books she'd seen all the prophecies she was convinced. Those going to be some ascension to the fifth dimension. She was yeah. She was that extreme that she said Others prophesized armageddon. But she was at least curious that something was going to happen. She mentioned. She's a very spiritually evolved person and that it would at least be an opportunity to find a high of version of herself and step into a higher reality getting a sense of Heading was is yeah but before she went on this trip to hawaii with her family she had contacted. A woman was organizing a ceremony with a hawaiian kahuna hollyman shaman and the ceremony was to actually mock the end of the mayan calendar. I don't know why a hawaiian holy man is mocking the end of the mind calendar but apparently he wants and he was doing this at like two. Am on some secluded sacred. H somewhere and she was pumped about it. She really wanted to go now. The problem was on vacation so they had they only had one car And where the hotel was was several hours. Drive away from this secluded sacred beach. They needed to be at at two. Am so she's going to go have to go alone and then drive back and get back by sunrise so the rest of the family can have the cop now the day before. This ceremony is ju. She gets a coal on a phone from the woman who's organizing it and after you know thinking for a moment and chatting to. I felt it was best not to go to the ceremony. She said pot of me was afraid. That if i went alone i might actually jump into another time line and in so doing be disconnected from my husband and my kids out be cut off from this version of them and couldn't wrap my head around what seemed like a decision to abandon them. Maybe that's what happened on. Twenty twenty four. A bunch of people went into an alternate dimension on the rest of us. Just stuck here and everything's been downhill in. Maybe she said she and she said to the woman on the phone look the logistics so too complicated and it's hard to get out there to. Am i'm going to be able to make it. And as soon as she said those words. I don't think i'm going to be out of make it. She felt this fog lift over her like a lift from her. As if it was just this huge relief like something a full office shoulders and it felt like she'd made the right decision. She clicked a phone shot and the sense of pace washed over her and then almost instantly children eighth in and alison wanna do this. I don't want to do that. Man mom like they just started whingeing and wining and wanted to go home sick sick of these kids and she says truly when i clicked that phone shot there was a change in my world. I'd made a choice and my world filling sink around that choice. This instance was not the first time that a single simple choice. Change the course of my life but only recognized the gravity of those choices in hindsight because time i felt the change immediately but i was oblivious to the consequences an unaware that the initial piece i felt was actually the calm before the storm. Now she goes on to say that this was one of those moments like for the previous guy. He had this horrible Traumatic experience that he claims shifted him to another timeline for her. It was simple choice of not going to the sacred beach ceremony. On december the two small december the twenty first twenty twelve. She said she found the door to the version of her parallel life. That was the most disconnected from spirit and it took four years to realize that she needed rescuing. Basically what happened is life seemed normal at first but slowly. She started to realize that something was seriously off. There was something wrong. She felt empty inside before she had been this love and light. You know meditate. Every day in touch with her spirit guides to have fox spirit animals every morning and soul actually leave songs like fuck Too many too much crystal magic for me in this dimension Yeah that's basically what happened. The connection she had with spirit seemed distant. She said her old memories of incredible spiritual experiences and should written a bunch of books on them as well. She was known as this kind of really enlightened five d woman whenever she thought about those things again. It was like that happened to someone else. Even the strong emotions and feelings of love and light she had attached to those experiences will gone. She felt like a hosk and she realized she had some kind of weed emotional amnesia. She couldn't remember what it was like to feel like herself anymore. Or i'm just thinking in a lot of what we're talking about before about living you know multiple la times in the same existence if that element of her that that ego. I suppose actually did go. That would explain why she's feeling this way. She's like a a splinter left behind. Yeah she's a fragment tako will she said. I slowly lost track of who i was. The memories of these spiritual experiences languished in my head but my hot didn't connect to them. It was as if i was telling stories about someone else so she tried to figure out what was wrong with her. And she kept returning to this idea of alternate realities for some reason questioning. Had i really walk down this metaphorical hallway of dimensions and chosen a door to a different version of myself. And there's a bunch of bad luck in a family as well like a husband Lost someone at work someone who worked under him from like industrial accident and he got really depressed. And you know the kids kind of got alder didn't nader's march and she's just she's just a mess like she's just again not the same person at it again. It's pushing back now. I kind of feel like she just needs some vitamin d. Well that's a positive much as it feels to me like when not if if we were meant to do we would do it and we would know. We're doing it but it seems like these people that are doing this kind of thing that messing with something that the not supposed to mess with. Maybe there's some underlying mechanism within the into dimensional nature of the universe that will shuffle people between realities for its own purposes. Not you trying to get your life to be better. But she didn't do it. That's the thing she didn't go she did. She didn't go to the two thousand twelve ceremony. The maybe said i did. I don't wanna do it. And that decision is one cent turned to another dimension. That's tools thing. That's like saying i don't want to go to the new age festival and all of a sudden in we'd parallel universe. That's what most people say. Christmas people wanna go to those things rightly so So eventually they moved from hawaii. They moved to virginia. 'cause husbands in the air force They bought a house close to the same neighborhood. I grew up in they went. She went back to church. And all the people that knew who from the all dies. New has spiritual depth. She said they had expectations of her ability to connect spirit to pray and.

hawaii december one car virginia four years one cent hawaiian Christmas first time two thousand twelve ceremony fifth dimension earth new age festival two Twenty twenty four eighth one of those moments twenty first twenty twelve alison kahuna
"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

Mysterious Universe

06:35 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

"Really great example of that is that the main character or when the characters go through this doorway essentially that allows them to travel back in time. Time pushes back. Time doesn't like it when the whole premise. If you haven't seen the whole premise is trying to stop the assassination of jfk but time is almost like an entity. It's an intelligence and it's pushing back and causing trouble for them. It's like this guy has jumped to a parallel dimension but it's like the intelligence or whatever is controlling that is like no. You shouldn't have come here and starts destroying everything upsets the balance. The direction of the bulk is he basically takes his sister's advice to heart and he starts meditating and radically taking responsibility for everything that happens to him. And i do mean like a radical way. He says if i was in a taxi and got rear ended all sitting in the back. I would take responsibility for that. Like that's kind of pathology. Yeah says he's just using that as an example of how extreme he took it and it was very very transformational and how he's life started to play out but when he says that when he says he takes responsibility does he then get out and pay insurance just an example erin. it's just an example of how seriously he took it. He wasn't actually going to do that but every time he meditated. He started to reach new levels. He started to fix his life He's business started to turnaround. He forgave his ex wife. He forgave his mother stuff. That happened earlier. And his life all these deep beliefs that had plagued his subconscious mind and and kind of made him miserable started to be lifted and stopped blaming the external world forever thing that ever happened to him and sought a tight more responsibility for his life and he's reality started to transform and that's what the book turns into. It's a self help book again about influencing your reality by how you react. How you take responsibility to water 'cause and he does talk about some strange things that happen meditation like. He claims that during one pioneer gland. Meditation he shrank down to the plane of his pinal gland and he says it was like he was sitting in a room and in this room will all these different versions of himself and he says it was like an inter dimensional gateway where all these realities interact because remember on the last couple of shows. We've been talking about this idea of parallel incarnations. Yeah and dick sutton was saying that. You'll parallel incarnation. In china somewhere is somehow influencing your inclination that you're aware of and your somehow influencing vail life you apply because his wife didn't leave him now. He's saying that these parallel dimensions into sick they interact and he started to say that. Those a fat brian. There was an old brian. Those married brian. Those a childless blah brian. All of them were sharing this space with i could communicate with each other and there were timelines so very different that he could never even access them because there was so unimaginable. And that's what you start talking about. Lizard people with their heads all backwards on your ability. He said i came out of the meditation crying and changed forever. I wanted to share it with someone. I wanted to tell people but who would believe me. Would i do know. Is that the not. The broncos won the super bowl. I was not fatally wounded brian. I was not bleeding on the kitchen floor. Brian anew everything would be okay and it was. I had that brian to and i knew how to get there so again. The rest of the book isn't really shy material. because it's all it's instructional. It's all positive thinking. Mind of matt a healthy lifestyle to this kind of trick to it and examining your in a self talks about. It's kind of like the secret. Yeah i was thinking attraction just very standard. Self-help stuff is a little chapter on doing stretches and she gong meditation bit of wu and metaphysical metaphysical stuff thrown in public stuff. There's nothing bad by any stretch. Our it's just not exactly jumping into alternate universes like. He had a cool story. But he's not exactly teaching people how to go through a rick. And morty portal into another dimension are no it's it's not that and i guess maybe the that's what's happening here is that i mean because it's described as people that have Many many years ago you have dreams and the same kind of dream it can be really mundane. It's like you have this dream and the dream is you getting up and going to work and got but your work is just slightly different and people wake up and go. Gee that was a weird dream. And i've had this depiction that well know this might be you to simply seeing the other you in another dimension that had to get up early and you actually experiencing what's going on in the dreamlike state. So they might be these really subtle ways that you can see other realities that you exhibited jumping between the mobile hotter. I think what i'm getting from. What you're saying. Is that most other realities equally as lame as this exactly. That's exactly what i say. Yeah yeah there's no no extreme place where pelicans of taken. I've odal i mean maybe there is but i think the the ability to access that would be as i said extremely rare right. The color of the interior of your car is different in another dimension and subtle being stone. It's sleigh it's a different shade of brown. Yeah well i i again. I was searching for more extreme steers stall stories. I want someone getting sucked into a portal. Yeah well they're out into a realm of dinosaurs. There's this whole online communities of people that think that they can actually jump into other dimensions by ridiculous. No one no one says anything interesting. It's always much shoelaces with different. Well defined this book from rebecca white cotton. It's called pull yourself together. A true story of alternate realities and this is an interesting one because she believes she acquired a kind of spiritual amnesia. now she says. I vividly recall the exact moment. I abandoned my spirit. At the time. I was not aware of how such seemingly small choice could up end the balance of my life so she takes us back to december the twenty first twenty twelve. She was on a holiday with her family. Thou visiting is at kauai kauai..

china december Brian kauai kauai dick sutton many years ago twenty first twenty twelve brian jfk one pioneer couple
"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

Mysterious Universe

07:23 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Mysterious Universe

"It a shot. Fly me to the moon. Let me play any singing frank sinatra. Isn't that disingenuous. Is like the essence. Really of frank sinatra. Not to these in other words he says look. I know this sounds insane but my singing was so good. They asked me to sing song after song and they even started recording me. I was so good. This is from someone who is a horrible thing. A no seeing experience and he started to realize an infinity of universes. I was everything in every profession. Every occupation every straughter of society with every talent. There was a version of me. I could tap into so he said i studied and worked with people again and again smoothing out this process. Simplifying it so that anyone could use it and came to a word. The scientists will using which is d'appel ghana. He believed there was a twin self. A duplicate in another universe that he was tapping into that had different upbringing. Different programming different series of life choices that led to a different outcome and he was able to find them so this was for him was way quantum quantum jumping was born. He discovered a jump out of this world and into another so. He goes on to claim that he did this with photography as well. He how he wanted to become a photographer so he bought a camera and realized he knew nothing about photography so he went into this date meditative state and found an alternate dimension where. He's a professional photographer. But it was like it was a different time line. It was a photographer with one of those old box. Cameras with like a hood over his head in the eighteen hundreds that applied to a digital la. Well he goes up to this version of him in the eighteen. Hundreds professional photography him and asks a Do you have any advice. I wanna win photography and this man says plant yourself sunday and then he's back in the real world and he's like what that didn't really work plant myself. Does that mean so. The next day he finds himself on the marina in san diego and he's trying to find a spot to get a pitcher and he stamps. He's fake down and kind of slips down and plants himself and he's like maybe that's what the advice was. I have to be solid and plant myself. So he stands in this one spot planted and starts taking. All these pitches takes a lot of pitches everywhere and when he gets them all developed he spreads them out on the bed looking for the best one but he realizes all the pitches he's taken about one hundred and thirty of them a one giant voter and it's because he planted himself and he acted as kind of like what's the a swivel of sorts. And that was that's channeled. He quantum jumped into another dimension. It now he says now he says hayes an expert photographer any says that photo that giant photo that was messiah couve everything he'd taken That has been shown in several galleries. Any now says the original photos sell thousands of dollars and people call them the original buttons. 'cause that's these but these names burton's anita look. I had a search for burton's and depart from. He's own website. There's no way they're selling for thousands. They might be listed for thousands. All i could fight as the original trusted haiti. Grip path yeah. I couldn't find any suggestion that this is a true statement but He claims he also did the same thing with piano. He doesn't know how to play the piano or we could play. Was that old scotus june. He found did a quantum jump and found a parallel universe with l. Is of him who was a professional pianist and then he took his like. He downloaded his skills like the matrix and now he can be professional piano player if he wanted to. Can you enlighten us. Does he give us any indication. How this works is a busy saying that. He's getting the downloading does he. Go does emerge alternative self and why is does this happen for every single one of us we all have an expert in everything in alternative dimension. These yes then. Where does frank sinatra coming. Did he steal it. Actually from frank sinatra. Did you steal it from himself. Being lack forgotten never explained rod. I can recall. Many of you is starting to realize the problems. The inherent problems with this ideology The technique used about the technique. He does detail this and this is the this is the problem with. This genre is talking about it on the shire. It's all self help books. So it's all instructional techniques. Is this hardly any stories. I gotta go through all these crazy books to fund some stories but he he talks about the bug hough technique which he lent practicing yoga and to put it in a nutshell. What you do. It's very complicated. You take your tongue and you touch it to the top of your palate and then you You do a little mantra of what you want. So he says to practice this. When you're driving to a busy parking lot for example you put your tongue to the top of your palate and usa olsen parking spot. And you just keep doing awesome. But how do you say that when you've got your tongue to the top of the appellate you decided in your momma's talking it's more powerful. If you say it like that and then you will find you will start finding amazing. Parking spots like costanza seinfeld universe. Cuba's you find that you see a parking spot but you pull them. There's a motorcycle there. yeah. I hate that those motorcycle riders. He also describes a trip to paris. This as the book goes on just gets more and more insane. He describes going on a trip to paris where he's giving a talk somewhere and he's staying in this hotel. He's in the hotel for like four days. Any decides that he doesn't like the ought on the walls in his paris hotel so he spends half a day going to buy cowboy posters from shop in paris to hang up his hotel. like who. Are you mr bean. Who replaces the odd in the hotel room. Giving that old episode of mr bean or he goes. He goes to a seaside hotel. And he's oreo thins these suitcase. And he's got all these paintings from home and he starts hanging on the hotel walls. That's what this guy's doing but with cowboy posters but by doing this and by entering this he's meditative state he says somehow old cowboy posters. He put up on his parisi and hotel. Room opened up a portal to a cowboy dimension where he found his world but he's dimensional fanned a version of him like a parallel universe where he's a fiction writer who writes western fiction cowboy cowboy novels so he take like matrix stall takes literary powers from.

san diego thousands paris thousands of dollars four days Cuba burton Hundreds professional frank sinatra half a day twin june one about one hundred and thirty sunday Is shire d'appel eighteen hundreds one giant
"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

Geek Girls Universe Podcast

02:42 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

"Like. <SpeakerChange> Yeah <Speech_Female> that's the dude. Right is <Speech_Female> like none because <Speech_Female> i don't care to <Speech_Female> own <Speech_Female> he knows man <Speech_Female> and then he's like he could <Speech_Female> see that he's clearly <Speech_Female> like not a tiny <Speech_Female> man. <Speech_Female> It's pretty <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> jarred. He's <Speech_Female> like any <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> kind of like. How did you run <Speech_Female> into heaven as a <Speech_Female> good <Speech_Female> question good question. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> I wasn't paying attention <Speech_Female> to where i was <Silence> going. Okay <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> world <Speech_Female> of today's <Speech_Female> podcast. <Speech_Female> Listeners is <Speech_Female> always watch <Speech_Female> where you're walking <Speech_Female> especially <SpeakerChange> in the <Speech_Female> airport <Speech_Female> especially <Speech_Female> lax the day <Speech_Female> after <Speech_Female> the academy award <Speech_Female> ceremony. I'm just <Speech_Female> saying <Speech_Female> guess <Speech_Female> so <Speech_Female> is up. <Speech_Female> Listeners <Speech_Female> is up <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> so <Speech_Female> you don't have a mortifying <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> running <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> with <Silence> <Advertisement> michael <SpeakerChange> jordan <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> literal runnin. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> A literal <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> running <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> has <SpeakerChange> seriously <Silence> <Advertisement> honey. Okay <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> anyway those <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> men have ours. <Speech_Female> They're so special <Silence> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> Nee <Speech_Female> are so funny. <Speech_Music_Female> <Speech_Female> Well <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> i think that's it <Speech_Female> for today's bugle. <Silence> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> I think that's <Speech_Female> we've I <Silence> mean that's a lot to cover <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> the. Oh we're going to <Speech_Female> link to our <Speech_Female> interviews and <Speech_Female> our reviews of <Speech_Female> the bad batch <Speech_Female> if you have <Speech_Female> an embarrassing celebrity <Speech_Female> story <SpeakerChange> we'd love <Speech_Female> to hear it. Is <Speech_Female> it as bad as jam. <Speech_Female> -solutely <Speech_Female> i can't be the <Speech_Female> only person that's ever <Speech_Female> run into a celebrity <Silence> literally right <Speech_Female> <SpeakerChange> please. <Speech_Female> Somebody tell <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> this story. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> Yes of y'all gonna <Speech_Female> barest story. <Speech_Female> Please share it with us <Silence> because <Speech_Female> janet's <Speech_Female> somebody <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> on her <Speech_Female> you know and if you don't <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> just make one up <Speech_Female> that's okay too. <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> We won't know <Speech_Female> so you you <Speech_Female> could totally <SpeakerChange> bring it up <Speech_Female> and we'll believe you <Silence> you know <Speech_Female> and <Speech_Female> if you don't have <Speech_Female> one let us <Speech_Female> know who he <SpeakerChange> would want <Speech_Female> to run into the <Silence> <Advertisement> airport accidentally. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> Chris <Speech_Female> is you wanna come face <Speech_Female> to face with when <Speech_Female> you yeah. That was a <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> really fast answer. <Speech_Female> It's like <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> thought about this or something <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> but we would make me <Silence> <Advertisement> want run to run into <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> an <Speech_Female> you end up. You know <Speech_Female> face to face with <Speech_Female> when you bend over to pick up <Speech_Female> your things and <Speech_Female> they're nice enough <SpeakerChange> to help <Speech_Female> you after you've walked <Speech_Female> into them chrisevans <Speech_Female> followed <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> by <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> tom huddleston. <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> <SpeakerChange> <Speech_Female> <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> Yeah tommy <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> be great. Any <Speech_Female> <Advertisement> the tom's any british <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> tom. If you're british <Speech_Music_Female> <Advertisement> <Speech_Female> and a <Speech_Female> hot. Tom <Silence> please thank you <Speech_Female> for tuning into this <Speech_Female> episode of <Speech_Female> the girls universe. <Speech_Female> Podcast <Speech_Female> join us next <SpeakerChange> week. <Speech_Female> As we <Speech_Female> break down <Silence> the bad batch <Speech_Music_Male> episode. <Speech_Female> Thirty <Speech_Female> you <Speech_Female> I'm sure it'll be <Speech_Female> more exciting. Marvel <Speech_Female> news fingers crossed <Speech_Female> for an eternal trailer. <Speech_Female> Whatever's <Speech_Female> going down. <Speech_Female>

Chris Thirty tom huddleston Marvel today jordan Tom british michael Speech_Music_Male tom
"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

Geek Girls Universe Podcast

05:34 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

"You know one of the one of my favorites in this was a short called the name of the sun. they actually did a q. And a. with the director But this one was about a transgender boy. This is a live action is summary animated in some live action and this one was a live action shore about transgender boy and his relationship with his father and his younger sister. You know he's a teenager and you know he's distant and has a hard time connecting with people around him you know goes on vacation with his his dad and his sister in ages. Kinda you know is able to connect with them on a different level And that's a really impactful emotional Film vini one of my other favorite ones. was called. I won't say correctly because it's a hawaiian name. And i will butcher it. But it's a cap Actually shortlisted for an oscar and it's animated one and it's all about the beauty of gender in the community and so this i think the one that i that touched a thing that touched me the most about this one basically. It's a legend of like these are ancestral stones and at the end of the day. It's really just it. Brings it back to the fact that they believed in dual identities joel birth for like since the beginning of time and so they use these stones to kind of represent The beauty that is the transgender community. And not only that. They should be respected and accepted but that they've been here as long as humanity in general and it was just. It was a beautiful animated piece And just a really interesting way. How other cultures You know look at gender identity. Yeah that's what. I really liked about the new york. International children's film festival. They are specifically out there. Trying to present diversity and showcasing different cultures in stuff like that and i just i relate so this is my first year attending. Virtually this festival and i'm looking forward to next year. I will link to them in our show notes n. y. c. f. Dot org but not just critics can attend. You can.

next year first year new york International children's film hawaiian one name of the sun oscar
"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

Geek Girls Universe Podcast

03:34 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

"Totally worth thirty bucks. You can watch it as many times as you want. You can go to the theater and see it there as well if you feel comfortable doing so you've already done your whole review of legend lead. I have not mind better yet but total studio ghibli vibes so how i say it ghibli. Yes i can i always. I'm always like. I always say this word nation just it. It's beautiful but yet totally reminds me of that studio so much. The second i walked i mean just the the image on the site looks like it but you watch dislike like. Yeah it's gorgeous. It's gorgeous as it's got the action and like avatar the last arab bender. And hey is probably the cutest flipping protagonist. Like i have ever seen for sure. I need to know where to like order all the hey march because has god i need. Oh you should make one. You should make a hey sticker. Should i should make a whole. Hey stiffness so cute. I mean he's a little black cat spirit with these giant is august. She's so cute. So it's orbs coming to the united states. In april april twentieth it'll be available on digital and then it'll be on blu ray and dvd may. But if you're an animation fan if you're an anime fan we both highly recommend the legend of hey. It's great for the family and lay aside. It's just gashi. So like i have a picture of a picture of him in the show notes. I dare you to be like. Oh he's not cute. You won't be able to me literally not possible The festival also had a lot of shorts. And i know that Janna had a few favorites. She talked about on her. Sciatic will link to yet. Yeah they i one of the things they did this year They have a whole new section of shorts called be coming ourselves breaking the binary am and yes. It's the first year that they did it and it includes there's a short called self story Which was kind of the inspiration for putting this whole section together Was there last year and they did really well and it was basically they. Were like yeah. Let's why don't we just do a whole section on it. And so i think that series. It's about an hour long and included six different. Yeah thanks different films And it's all about gender binary at discusses how queer kids kinda shape their own identities. And you know just discovering themselves and it's just it's beautiful in its first of all. Just wonderful that they're being inclusive in the first place but the fact that every one of these films is they're all from different countries. Some of them have subtitles. So you know kind of reminds us that like gender identity issues transcend everything. It's you know every culture every race every language..

thirty bucks april april twentieth last year Janna this year united states both first year six different about an hour first august first place second ghibli one arab bender
"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

Geek Girls Universe Podcast

03:56 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

"Oh that makes me feel so much better because surveys too much to tie up like even with all my goodness i was like. How is this going to wrap up. I'm going to die. It's going to all be better. i must not have. I must have missed that. They're more after this. When the when they came back from the mid season break. i believe it was four or five episodes. So we've seen too so. I mean there was a big cliffhanger sort of this up this last episode right with the fog. That's kind of creeping into town. And they don't know how to navigate it and it's really bad and i'm like are they gonna wrap this up for me because i don't think they are like i need to know what's going on. Plus you know. I love the show. It's definitely girl power. Her there's representation phenomenal representation an lgbtq plus community and Tim rosen is doc holliday. So like the. I love melanie. I'm obsessed with her. She's hilarious on twitter as well for is worth their also good. They are and like this week so we were talking about kim's command but Kimchi on kim's convenience has been a character season foreign. Why known casey and he was back this week. Too and i'm so happy to see him is hilarious. So hashtag andrew fung man. It's so great on the screen and has such a good vibe with this cast. Like that's again like i'm so mad. The cast is has so much chemistry frustrating to think. This is the end in that. It's possibly not gonna be the end that they wanted it to be so hashtag bring wine own a home hashtag like save. Why known ah five for y known. I thinks the other hashtag hashtag vie for winona. We need at least one more season. I feel like that way. They know it's gonna be the end this time it's gonna be surprise so then it's like okay. We can tell her story and do what we want to do with it. There's a lot to be said in purgatory. Just saying i will say laugh pretty hard. At the whole cupid thing so was episodes. I was like wait. He's cupid i'm like. Oh no it's just ridiculous. I love the like. Was it like the eighties. Like lighting whereas like blowing.

Tim rosen four kim winona melanie five episodes andrew fung this week twitter eighties Kimchi doc holliday casey least one more season season five
"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

Geek Girls Universe Podcast

05:24 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

"Like that kind of style of panther whatever to make him look physically more like the vision in a human form. If that makes sense have you. Maybe i actually thought. He was pretty muscular for the the role. I know that he was joking. That he couldn't eat certain things during quarantine because he had to be able to fit back in his suit. So i mean maybe maybe he just like drops the muscle when he's not working actively working as the vision. I'd also laugh when he said the reason he got. The rule is jarvis is because john for bro was like we need someone with like an emotional est boys loud thanks so much and then he was like well and somewhere just wheaton thought that i should work for a living even act again or something like i'm dead history. I mean if nothing else this hour long behind the scenes as worth at just for laughs even if you have anything you will chuckle. Because they are all so funny. Yes and i. I love how it lets you kind of catch up with each of the main characters and you got to hear from like donna. coming on. She didn't even know what she was for her. She was handed a piece of script and she said it was for the seventy s episode. And she was just like a okay. She's like. I had no idea what i was auditioning for in. They're like make it big like come in and do again that kind of that. Overacting that we learn on stage and you know randall. Park talking about bringing woo back. And how all those little conscious things that they plan in. An ant man wasp. They got to us like the magic tricks him telling way personal stories when nobody asks for them or my personal favorite the fact that he knows way too much about the accords section. Things are in such terrible. I loved when they did the reverence to like him telling cassie..

randall each donna seventy Park jarvis john s
"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

Geek Girls Universe Podcast

04:14 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

"You know her theatre school experience where they they teach you things like us on the war and over to acting things that like you know. Typically you you won't ever really have an opportunity to do and she was just like wow really excited about being able to kind of flex this muscle of something that like. She knows she learned all those years ago but never had an opportunity to use in clearly she should have been using them because she is fantastic gas with it and the super i loved it had visual effects. Guy he got his start doing Physical effects so doing all the things with like the wires and whatnot to make the food fly across the kitchen and the recipe cards hanging in the air and whatnot. I just i was like oh. That's so much fun. And i was like and it is very theatrical right. Yes and then. I always love watching anything with wires just from having been in the theater and whatnot. So i think i think harnesses are like the most fun thing ever super scary. The first time you use one but like super-duper fun at the same time technically challenging and so then like when she was taught you know she elisabetha talking about that this sort of challenges in difficulty behind not just navigating like one person flying but multiple people flying in the same scene and unlike Kathryn hahn's you know fantastic aga- the heart messes seventh hero costume ashes and just imagining us. So it was amazing. It's like you're gonna watch that and you're like wow. It was very informative. I would say it's definitely a must watch if you don't mind seeing a peek behind the magic it's like i said i'm a theater too. I enjoyed it. It may be missed being on stage to be honest also made me missed a set visit so i i just i miss it. I miss all of it. But i will say one of the things. I laughed at the most that was not. His face was the fact. That like the ladies in the fifties and sixties had to wear those very uncomfortable outfits. I know debra jo rob. She said she likes fifties close because it gives her a waste. She's like i don't have limbs. Because i'm really short but i have a ways to improve your posture. Because it makes you stand up straight. But paul bet new had to wear a fake bottom. Which is hysterical. Because i just like imagine like. Ken.

Ken debra jo rob Kathryn hahn paul bet fifties first time one person one seventh years ago sixties
"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

Geek Girls Universe Podcast

04:45 min | 2 years ago

"universe" Discussed on Geek Girls Universe Podcast

"It was a week without one division. Well sort of so whatever we do with our lives. Well we watched assembled. The making of wanda vision laughed. Is why known herb. Kick some demon but and screened the first episode of a show. You might know about. Maybe and if you're near here haven't already. We would love it. If you left a five star rating on apple. Podcast subscribe wherever you're listening from. It helps our podcast other gigs. In the more the geeky are right. We also have a facebook group geek girls universe if you wanna talk more nerd with us on the daily. You don't need to be a girl to join only a geek first. Let's talk about assembled. The making of wanda visions. I just watched this last night. But jonah had already watched it and it was awesome. I loved it. I loved the like i geeked out so for me. This is one of the reasons. I love like when we go on like set visits and staff is like and i think it might just be the speeder nerd in me but i love him yes. Learning how things are made When i was a kid. I would spend hours like my dad studio or electron shop just like watching and seeing how things are done like right just even watching like a print. Because i thought was magical. There's nothing on her and two minutes later. There's a photograph. So i've always just kind of loved that the magic of housings are made and so watching this. I just thought was really intriguing. And i think like one of the things that really stood out to me was A guinness is like one of those things. Maybe just knew it because my dad was a photographer but like i knew that certain colors don't translate well to black and white and so Certain things that you do right so like i know you know blue is something that just it translates. Well the black and white depending on the shape that you're using right so like the pain of the kitchen blue. That wasn't surprising to me at all. But my daughter kind of chuckled. And she was like. I would have had no idea that was blue and i was like well. What color did you think it was. And she's like. I don't know why gray.

five star jonah apple first episode facebook last night two minutes later one division first one of those things one of wanda vision things wanda reasons