35 Burst results for "University University University University"

AP News Radio
In this week's AP Religion Minute, a pioneer of Gospel music is rediscovered
"I'm Walter ratliff with the religion minute. For more than two decades, the work of gospel music composer, Charles Henry pace, sat silent and 14 unorganized crates. I knew we had this gospel collection, but nobody had ever really looked into it. Christopher lynch is a musicologist at the center for American music at the university of Pittsburgh. We had about 140 pieces of music that didn't exist in any other library in the world. Lynch and his team discovered that pace was an early pioneer of gospel music. Herbert Jones, the founder of the heritage gospel corral, says bases archives helped secure Pittsburgh special place in music history. Pittsburgh was a stop over point for jazz musicians and from blues musicians back in the 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s. So this is another niche in the history of Pittsburgh and the music field. This week, the community showcased pace's work at a free concert in Pittsburgh's hill district. Hi, Walter radliff.

AP News Radio
Ramadan begins for the world's Muslims, a pioneer of gospel music is rediscovered
"On this week's AP religion roundup, Ramadan begins for the world's Muslims and a pioneer of gospel music is rediscovered. Hundreds of millions of Muslims began the daily facts of Ramadan this week during Ramadan observant Muslims abstain from food and water from dawn to dusk and gather with family and friends for nighttime meals. Enjoy within the bandages now. Imad Hamad of Dearborn, Michigan, says it's like opening a new page with God each year. This is the way that is required to face the month. This is the way it's required to again guts rewards and gain the forgiveness and open a new chapter. That's why we quote Ramadan is a month of renewable. Islam follows a lunar calendar, so Ramadan starts about a week and a half earlier each year. For more than two decades, the work of gospel music composer, Charles Henry pace, sat silent and 14 unorganized crates. I knew we had this gospel collection, but nobody had ever really looked into it or really even figured out what it was. Christopher lynch is a musicologist at the center for American music at the university of Pittsburgh. We had about 140 pieces of music that didn't exist in any other library in the world. And might be completely lost. Lynch and his team discovered that pace was an early pioneer of gospel music. His independently owned publishing company helped elevate and expand the genre. I remember working in our music store. If my late teens. Francis pace barns. She was surprised at her father's impact. I think what I learned as an adult, I recognized, God, he was smart. Just a little ahead of his time, maybe. One, two, go. Average Herbert Jones, the founder of the heritage gospel corral, says bases archives help secure Pittsburgh special place in music history. Pittsburgh was a stop over point for jazz musicians and blues musicians back in the 20s, 30s, 40s and 50s. So this is another niche in the history of Pittsburgh and the music field. This week, the community showcased paces work at a free concert in Pittsburgh's hill district. Hi, Walter radliff.

Mark Levin
Conservatives Should Know Polls Are a Dangerous Thing
"I just want to make this abundantly clear People keep pointing to the polls He's cratering in the polls Ladies and gentlemen Abraham Lincoln was cratering in the polls during his second reelection effort He won his first election as a minority president with a plurality And he wasn't even on the radar And I go through one historical example after another The polls were a dangerous thing We conservatives should have learned that a long time ago A long time ago Now what about Donald Trump Donald Trump is a great president Not by Washington's standards Not by the standards of leftist tenured historians and colleges and universities Donald Trump was a great president and would have had a great second term Again I don't agree with everything that Donald Trump believes or says But so what He was far more conservative than anybody could have possibly imagined when he was running

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Mediate: Despite DeSantis Smears, Trump Seeing High Polling Numbers
"Here's mediaite. Headline, former president Trump has been lobbing rhetorical bombs and unfounded smears at Florida governor Ron DeSantis, these strikes seem to be having an effect, Trump sees a seeing a double digit game in his polling since December while desantis have fallen nearly that same amount. A Monmouth university poll was taken nationally from March 16th through March the 20th. That was last week. Trump has made gains among nearly every voting block since the start of the year and is especially popular among strong maga supporters. Trump has improved his numbers to 41% to desantis 27%. That's a notable gain from the same polls February numbers, which had him tied with desantis.

The Trish Regan Show
No One Is Committed to Getting Our Economy Under Control
"Know, I keep saying this. We got real problems. We've been talking a lot about the border. This week, we also, of course, on this show, talk a lot about the economic picture. The fed is not committed. That's quite evident to fighting inflation in the way that needs to happen in order to get this under control. I mean, even Larry summers, and he's not exactly what you'd call conservative, right? Larry summers. Economist, former president of Harvard University, who was part of the Clinton administration and then part of the Barack Obama administration, treasury secretary of the United States of America. He's been pushing the Federal Reserve to do more. We have a problem and no one's committed to getting it under control.

AP News Radio
What made Beethoven sick? DNA from his hair offers clues
"Nearly 200 years after Ludwig van Beethoven's death, researchers are searching for clues about his health problems. The legendary German composer had hearing problems and severe stomach ailments, a new study says chronic drinking may have been a factor. You have to live a disease. And this seems to have developed over about the last 6 to 7 years of his life. His first inhabitants in 1821 were the tomb of the tack of jaundice quiz. Researcher Tristan baggett the University of Cambridge says they couldn't figure out what caused Beethoven's hearing loss. That seems to have had an onset in his mid to late 20s. It was a slow progressing form of hearing loss that appears to have been nerve related. Losing his hearing is believed to have limited Beethoven's creative work. He died at 56 researchers pulled genetic clues from Locke's Beethoven's hair that had been snipped off and preserved as keepsakes. I'm Ed Donahue.

The Eric Metaxas Show
Voddie Baucham and Eric Discuss REAL Oppression
"Look, at the heart of Christianity, is we're supposed to understand I am my own worst oppressor. I need to repent. I am the problem. So when you want to point the finger at somebody, which is what atheist marxists do, it makes the problem worse because it is not identifying the actual problem, the actual oppressor, it's creating a scapegoat and around and around we go. And you are quite right. I mean, we don't call out real oppression. And then when we see real oppression, we don't call it out. You know, for example, as you said, I'm a dean at the African Christian university, and Osaka and Zambia. I've lived in south Central Africa for the last almost 8 years. And it amazes me how people want to talk about white colonizers and white oppressors and they set in the other. But you never hear them, for example, to talk about female genital mutilation. Or women being basically sold as child brides. I mean, these are real things that are happening. But we're not hearing about that. We're hearing about these other ideas that are about power. They're about transferring power. They're about me speaking up in a way that will cause people to give me positions to give me power to give me prestige that I haven't earned and that don't require me to really do anything in regard to real oppression.

AP News Radio
Pence seeks 'common sense' Social Security, Medicare reform
"Former vice president Mike Pence is still in the category of Republicans described as mulling a 2024 presidential bid, but he is laying out the policy approaches he'd like to see. I'm Ben Thomas, with this latest comments, common sense, and compassionate solutions. That's what Mike Pence says it'll take to reform entitlement programs in the nation's debt burden. Speaking to students at Washington and Lee university, the former vice president suggested changes are needed to social security and Medicare. As they closed in on projected and solvency dates. And while not offering specifics, he asserted, we can introduce common sense reforms that will never touch anyone who is in retirement or anyone who will retire in the next 25 years. The Pence said it will take courage to do it in the support of the current generation of young adults. Many leading Republicans, including Donald Trump, have recently signaled unwillingness to touch entitlement programs that the party has a history of threatening them. I'm Ben Thomas

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast
Dean Cain on His Journey From Trailer Park to Princeton to Hollywood
"So dean, your life has been so fascinating. So I wanted to ask you a little bit about just kind of your journey before we talk about more of the news stuff. I saw that you spent some of your childhood in Michigan and then in California. And in high school, when you were in Santa Monica, you were excelling in sports, and you even played some baseball with Charlie Sheen and Rob Lowe. Is that correct? And what was that like? It's mostly correct. I grew up, so I grew up in I was born in Michigan, but I moved to California when I was three. My mom up and took off with her two kids. Her first husband was my biological father. It was not an ideal husband, was philandering and so she left and came out to LA to be an actress with two kids to the Asian kids. And we looked more on my given name as Tanaka. So she came out here with us too, and met and fell in love with my dad. Who she married a year later. And then through a really terrible story actually, a woman was raped and I believe killed in an apartment next to us or right near us. And then the next day myself and a couple other guys, my brother and another couple kids were out playing cops and robbers as they used to back in the day. And I was the youngest and so I wasn't able to have I didn't get to a gun. So I went looking for something and I found the real gun and it was apparently the weapon that was used and that day my dad borrowed, I don't ten, $12,000 from his parents in South Dakota and moved us to a trailer park in Malibu. And I grew up in a trailer park in Malibu, which sounds, you know, like trailer park. Yeah, but it was in Malibu. So we'd spend our days outside all day long on the beach, running around, and I grew up with kids like Sean Penn, Chris Penn Rob Lowe, Charlie Sheen, Emilio Estevez, all those kids were just, we were all just part of this one little Malibu group. I guess all our parents were involved in the business, not all of them, but in some way or another. And so through this weird happenstance, those kids all ended up being actors. Now I played baseball Charlie for a long time. Rob, rob was never the great athlete. Rob even back in the elementary school was just all the girls loved him and he's so pretty. And he loved the girls back. So that was the that was the skinny and rob, so to speak. Charlie very good baseball player. Played on teams with him forever. And then went to high school, Santa Monica high school. And I was a good athlete student. It worked out real well for me. A lot of the kids are madly when they got to Santa Monica worked able to compete at that level, unfortunately. So a lot of the kids stopped playing sports, Charlie continued to play for a while. I don't even know what he did to seeing it if he played a scene here or not. And then I was lucky enough to with my grades and thank you to get the president of the university, had a wonderful career at Princeton. Grew up a lot turned into him and went from a boy to a man there and played very well. I played football. I mean, football ran track and I played volleyball. And then I got a chance to play for the Buffalo Bills afterward, which was great. And got hurt right away. And then it's been acting and directing and filmmaking ever since.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Liberals Are Salivating Over Trump's Potential Arrest
"Are jubilant. There's a hashtag arrest miss. They are celebrating. They are salivating. You see, when you do not have a belief in the divine or the internal or you do not have a strong ethical code, you find meaning in the cruelty of others and the treatment of others. And Donald Trump has been made as a hitlerian type figure. And right now liberals all across the Internet are celebrating. They're having parties. They're saying that finally we are doing it and they're going to realize that, okay, Donald Trump gets fingerprinted in the process. Your life is still super miserable with all your cats and your apartment in Brooklyn. It doesn't make your life any better. All of a sudden, because Donald Trump has to fly in and has to fight a felony. It's a really bad way to run your life. To all of a sudden, act as if your meaning is connected to somebody else's life becoming more difficult. But that's what you get when you have an entire university system that isn't built on wisdom or goodness. So the left is celebrating their salivating, it's happening in great numbers. And this is all built on revenge. It's built on revenge because it was the regime that never got implemented. Donald Trump disrupted so much of this. In particular in the courts and the international scene from how he rearranged NATO to getting out of the parents climate accord to redoing nafta to finally holding the Chinese Communist Party accountable. And if it wasn't for the virus and the lockdowns and the infiltration of Fauci and Burke's into the Trump government, then Donald Trump would easily have won four more years. In fact, of course, we believe if it wasn't for Zucker bucks and the mail in ballots and the signature verification, he would still be president.

The Charlie Kirk Show
How Do We Take Back Academia?
"Do we start to take academia back? What is the best route to achieve that? Well, that's a great question. Thank you for the enthusiasm and the fact that turning point USA has positively impacted your life makes the last decade of work worth it. So thank you. That really touches me. And for those of you that support turning point USA, you're changing lives every single day. Secondly, to take academia back, look, it's I'm not convinced it's possible in certain areas. I think we have to build new colleges and new institutions. Jordan is doing that with the university of Austin and many other places. But you have to do what we're doing here tonight. You have to try to show up, start turning point USA groups in California. It's hard because the board of regents is just completely and totally lost and out of control. And that's just too bad. And it's a shame. But look, the problem with academia is conservatives don't want to go into it for good reason and liberals just continue to or left wingers continue to protect their own. My big fear is that this woke ideology is now infiltrating the social sciences. It's also infiltrating engineering and mathematics. The things that you thought would be immune to the kind of racial preference worldview is now totally and completely infiltrated. And so I wrote a whole book called the college scam. So I'm not exactly big on saving higher education. But I do think there is a place for higher education. And it pains me because I go and I visit to hillsdale college quite often. Hillsdale college is America's greatest college, by the way. They do a fabulous job. And it pains me because I see how good education could be.

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Furman Upsets Virginia in NCAA Tournament
"You're doing brackets. Mine already busted, dead dumb. But yeah, it was what we had a couple of big upsets. You had Arizona going down, Princeton, beating Arizona, and then this Furman. By the way, I've got to play this audio. I love a good radio announcer. And we've got the guy they've got for firm and did a terrific job calling the game this huge upset win last night cut number two. Inbounder. Clark gets it in. Gets it back with him. Clark double teamed along the baseline. Those are at the floor. Intersected by heme biggie's for three and the win. With 2.2 to go. 68 67 pounds. Virginia calls its final timeout. They get it into beekman on the right side. His three on the way. No. No. And vermin wins it. Burman wins it. JP McGee's getting involved by his C mates right here in front of us. The palette is winning 68, 67. And not Virginia out of the tournament. Garbage first appearances 1980 will not be one and done. Jump in hoy look at this scene here on the floor. The purple paladins. By the way, a little history here. And by the way, we have all family members working on the show today. But you know, our family, we got a couple of buildings at Furman, named after our ancestors over there, so a big firm in university. We had a lot of our relatives that went to school there played basketball there, so a lot of sports stars back in the day, from Furman University. It used to be a good baptist school.

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast
Author Michael Foley Talks About His Book 'Dining With the Saints'
"Guys, I'm happy to welcome back to the podcast. before, doctor Michael foley. He's a theologian, Professor of patristics in the great text program at Baylor university, Professor of theology at the Aquinas institute, but I love these titles of his books, drinking with the same drinking with saint Nick and the politically incorrect guide to Christianity. We're going to talk about his book called dining with the saints, I think a very appropriate topic on Saint Patrick's Day. Doctor foley, thanks for joining me. Great to great to have you. I think you can see I've got the appropriate. I don't know if this is the right shade of green, but as you can imagine, I'm not really. Well, I'm not Irish. I guess I could maybe I should change d'souza to oh, Sousa. And then I then be I then be, I could then play the baby I identify as Irish. Okay. These days we're allowed to do that sort of thing. Talk to me about Saint Patrick's Day. It's a day, I didn't have any knowledge of before I came to the United States, and who was this guy with Saint Patrick, the guy who was who evangelized Ireland, is he what brought these crazy Irish people into the folds of Christian couldn't have been an easy task and that he did he used some large buckets of alcohol to get the job done? Well, he was a real person and you're absolutely right. He was the person who brought the faith to Ireland, there was an earlier missionary actually who tried and ran from the place screening. The iris was such a hard nut to crack. But he got a commission from the Pope to bring the faith to Ireland and by all historical accounts he did. He almost single handedly within his own lifetime, turned an entire island from being druids, which was a very dark and sinister religion into Christians. So it really is a singular accomplishment.

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated
No. 15 Princeton Shocks No. 2 Arizona in NCAA Tournament
"Good morning, glory, America, bonjour, hi, Ken. I'm Hugh Hewitt live. I woke up this morning. To the news that both Princeton and northwestern had won their first round NC two a tournament games, and I began scanning the night sky in California for a meteor. I mean, northwestern and Princeton both win their first round. I don't know that that's ever happened before. Duke one, that's the other smart kid school. So that's kind of we're used to duke winning because they have a subdivision. A basketball major that people take advantage of. But I'm just amazed. We had duke UCLA, Penn State won something. Now that's kind of remarkable. If you're in Ohio State fan, you realize Penn State doesn't win a lot. I told you that Arkansas won too, so senator cotton will be a little bit insufferable, but maybe by Saturday night they'll come down to earth. Auburn. Northwestern Tennessee and Houston, and if you don't know this, a lot of beltway journalism depends upon the output of school graduates, I think model is probably the best connected journalism school. More than Columbia, more than Missouri, more than the other fine programs like Syracuse and Ohio university, which is not an accredited college, but nevertheless had a good television program. Miami law. There are lots of great journalism programs in America. But the best is probably medal.

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Laura Ingraham: Fans of Reparations Want to Stereotype You As Jerks
"Lara Ingram last night on Fox News channel weighing in on this. Let's take a listen. But fans of reparations want to suck you into the debate in order to stereotype all of you as unfeeling uncaring jerks. Have been struck by the overheated and irrational response to this draft report. Those are my constituents who lost their minds about this proposal. It's not something we're doing or we would do for other people. It's something we would do for our future for our collective future and the generations to come. Wow. It would benefit our collective futures. How could anyone be against that? Now, reaching into your wallet to apologize for slavery is the least you people could do. Well, and of course, money talks. Just enhance for a law professor at Howard University, put it this way. If you're going to try to say you're sorry, well, you have to speak in the language that people understand. And money is that language. Recall that this debate began on college campuses decades ago. And then the idea really gained traction in recent years, especially after the death of George Floyd. And now, even African Americans who've enjoyed huge success in America, they think they deserve cash.

Mike Gallagher Podcast
Trish Regan: The Connection Between Canceling Tests Scores & CRT
"I mean, you think about Columbia University. My Alma mater, by the way, saying, okay, you don't need the SAT anymore. Well, part of that is because it's rooted in this CRT, which came out of a lot of academia, specifically law schools, critical race theory, which suggests that you're never going to get a fair shot in this country. If you happen to be born black. And so we need to somehow correct this. And the idea is, well, if we have more people that we allow into these quote unquote Ivy League schools, they'll get that stamp of approval, which will enable them to be on a certain course in life. And the only way may be because unfortunately, and this gets back to some root issues to quote Kamala Harris, rue issues, we got education systems in so many poor minority communities that are beyond messed up Chicago, Compton, out in California and New York City. I did a story years ago about how kids were getting passed from grade to grade all the way to 12th grade. They couldn't read Mike. I mean, this is a problem. And so the answer is somehow, okay, well we're going to just get rid of SATs because we can bring all these people in and I think they're afraid of lawsuits because what about the poor kid who, you know, whose parents immigrated here from India or the Philippines and has been studying his tail off for years and years and years and gets a perfect score on the SAT and straight a's, but that child because he's from Asian descent may not be able to get in. They're preparing for this. There is an agenda. They think they can fix it this way with handouts with college degrees. And the truth is you can't because it goes back to something pretty simple. We need to do a better job organizing at the local level to ensure everybody's got some kind of access to opportunity. We don't do that. When you see Lori Lightfoot out in Chicago, thank goodness Chicago voted her out,

The Dan Bongino Show
Stanford Law Students Riot Against Judge Kyle Duncan's Visit to Campus
"You hear what happened in Stanford Stanford University a federal judge Kyle Duncan probably heard about the story was invited by the federalist society to speak at Stanford University school of law A law school Now Jim what is stupid idea right Why would you want a lawyer of federal judge to go and speak at a law school Jim shaken his head Mike too Mike's like I don't know can't figure it out They're having liberal amnesia today Like I don't know Dan what a dumb idea Get a lawyer You know come on that's stupid Jim Stop saying dumb stuff Come on I used to respect you brother Jim said he might have something to say no No Be an idiot But he have to add Does he know Has a federal judge But the law So they invite this guy to speak A great honor I have a federal judge show up By the way let me just say and it's not in kind of full virtue signal either I'm at a law school I'd like to see a liberal appointed judge maybe someone by Obama I like to hear what they got to say how they justify their view of legal theory Why Because I agree with it The hell but because if I'm a lawyer I want to know how to argue against it in court right Not liberal idiots Liberal idiots don't see it that way Liberal morons are like shout them down Exterminate them Immediately get the flame throwers Is there a firing squad closed So they screamed and shouted Until the judge can no longer speak So then the judge Kyle Duncan said is there an administrator here to get control of these raving band of childlike lunatics So an administrator shows up Her name is Tyrion steinbeck she shows up and she decides she's going to give this guy a now two three minute lecture about how his words have caused pain and this is a safe space whenever I'll play

ToddCast Podcast with Todd Starnes
Find Your Spine, Conservatives!
"Am so sick and tired of conservatives, and I get these emails all the time. They'll say Todd, you're not going to believe what happened to my child. You're not going to be you're not going to believe what happened to me. On the job. And then when I say come on the program, let's talk about it. Let's expose the evil. What do they do? They back away. Oh no, I can't do that. No, I'm afraid I might lose my job or my neighbors might say something or somebody might write something mean about me on Twitter. You know what? Forget that. Find your spine conservatives. We've got to start taking a stand. Did Charlie Kirk and his team go out there and riot at UC Davis? No. They embraced their rights under the U.S. Constitution. And they won the day. Look at what's happening right over at Stanford University. We talked about this a few days ago. Where a federal court judge was heckled and shouted down what he called for help the administrator came, the dean of the diversity equity and inclusion division showed up and began lecturing the judge. After the university apologized, the students rose up and now they're protesting the dean of the law school. And here's what needs to happen there. Every single student protesting, they're all law students. So these are individuals who have graduate degrees already. They've already got their bachelors. They're getting their law degree. Every single one of them should be expelled from Stanford law school, because we don't need ilk like that in our courtrooms.

Historically Thinking
"university " Discussed on Historically Thinking
"So middle solid and the third category said were i'd remnants without ability to focus and remarkable Students chose the most popular subject. Smith met this does not suggest people laugh where wild lana doing. Professional degrees the average agent students with older Began sixteen older than many often colleges in america and a lot of these colleges were basically just teaching high school. Ah evil raising as long as you can. Translate the bible and greek. You guess harvard. John trumbull artists could have gotten away with twelve because he was that good translations but it was realized is too young so these are these are much over to them. And if he bought me thinking about edgar allan poe who actually turns out to be probably a better student than i realized yes but then there's also what's henry top wiler who's revelation who's goes onto basically one of the founders of the university of alabama and abolitionist that so he didn't last long in alabama but then how did a successful profitable school coeducational school. Yes so you find in your book find people like that as as well as a point even sing so old. Because jefferson zog migration will one day be considered like which the justice out predecessors and the ad hoc point lead us used bring bell improve and better society and that he insisted each generation needs able to rethink the future. an shouldn't be held by Dead end of the possible by which he meant tradition. That wasn't based on reason fault and so he wanted people like top island who go off to do things that he himself made never envisaged he was not particularly for looking into the teaching women. Huffily that was public because he wanted the invest. Have real influence. Women were excluded from politics. He suddenly gave his daughters and granddaughters. An excellent education took seriously. I'm let's finish up Another yard another thing against contract. I assumed was that. The university of virginia was su generous on. There is a book by two alumni on ten years ago in maine but they made really these claims about how every modern american university takes after university. Virginia and i. I think i might have read a review or picked it up and said to myself. No get into and then just but you make the case that it has institutional children and They occur in some really interesting ways for for one thing. I as a freshman lived in sylvester house at the johns hopkins university and was laid to find out that sylvester had taught at the university of virginia for three months before getting into fight with sword with a student and left-back franklin but still there was a way in which there's one small connection between uva and johns hopkins but there's some other connections are like mit. Which i had no idea former faculty was as president and introduce many of the traditions university of fat. The genu- is always very difficult. Also down so. It's very difficult to demonstrated Obviously anyone like jefferson sell says influenced by number places factors but dome able to detail The impact to the investment michigan. Mit off the university of texas. Austin the dexter engines made claim actors influential throughout the south. The most influential idea which was not entirely is borrowed from revolutionary france. Degree from germany added to be tried. I would No carolina but was really popularized by. Jefferson's us us do. Virginia was the idea of elected curriculum. A- students chose subjects. This has become a whole american so so contrast younger certification that it's it's like tanya yellow has wait two electives oxford or any of the bruce universities What what was the influence in harvard. I was restricted with four of audits. Greatest presidents who took a specific interest in jefferson. the dumb. The fest was soon off to jefferson. Died instantly one of the reasons To opt best young professes visited jefferson. A couple of times while building This virginia this joe tickner endeavor everett's edwin evers. Actually notice repulsed on the university. That again helped to popularize it some ideas. Of course they were also the german universities so the getting several ways of attending jefferson Wide jimmy suddenly at some of the best universities in wella headed a time of enough He is before americans in any numbers over to study in germany. Just czar quincy when he became president of off. Today's twin before he took office. He tried to travel down to look at the st of virginia. Not only Who prevented than heads back. Washington when he discussed typhoid devika investing lockdown some contemporary. But charles eliot would not just presence hopper as the the big reform predicted folders kendall to the nineteen sixties fifties yesterday book. Jefferson's ideas education at if costs people i hidden. Baxter adams was one of the first of the professors at johns hopkins university which is often regards Which is a bit dramatic. Is research been developing. Upping invest is a semi less Research lab archery and that that was a derives. Well i hesitate to conclude that such mistaken know vicious kalemie now toward some automotive. But i will anyway. Thank you. I will andrew shafi. I can so much for being Thinking thank you very about chows. We've you just a brief reminder if you're listening to historically thinking on the website that's great but for your convenience you can also find us on apple podcast. Google podcast spotify amazon music. Pandora's your iheartradio. Joe saban pod chaser tune in deesor and there are more fact wherever there are podcast there. You can find historically thinking while great reviews are wonderful on whatever platform. You want to write them. The best possible review that you can give us is to four the podcast to a friend you think will find it interesting. You can also follow us on. Twitter hissed underscore thank or on facebook..

Hack
"university " Discussed on Hack
"We the uni degree we've got to talk about the cash problem sir. International students a worth soil much to these stralia economy. Nearly forty billion dollars a year. And they keep you going financially. Giving local students in education basically but obvious covered raisins. Enrollments of those students have dropped next year. I'll down by a third shalala madeira reports. I joined the university of sydney in separate twenty and things quite normal back then. Ashra peruzzi had just arrived in australia to start degree when covert struck. My parents started panicking when they heard that india might be closing. Its blood is soon the asked me if i could come back once. I cleared it with her unique and heard her student. Visa would still be valid. She packed her bags and returned home. She's been studying online ever since. But it's been really tough. Offshore international students in particular have been feeling extremely extremely anxious and a lot of them are also suffering with depression. I shrieked said deciding to come to australia. To study is a big deal. Students leave their homes their families and their jobs to make the move. It costs up to forty five grand for an undergraduate degree and fifty grand for masters also take up huge Student loans which have an interest rate of two percent and right. Now there's not a lot of certainty about when they'll be able to come back. They're not so sure about their own futures. What's going to happen to them. And how employable they would be. After the end of this. Entire pandemic ashra is one of the tens of thousands of international students currently locked out of australia. Ju to the pandemic they're paying top dullest study but can't get back in there about twenty thousand national students at any one time one hundred forty thousand dollars wraps country they they people who've usually urine back in such a little bit on the katrina jackson heads up universities australia. She said the last eighteen months also have been super tough for the university sector up one point. Five billion dollars revenue lost last year of sector opportunities about two billion dollars lost this year because of the combined including student pawns when the borders i shot last year the sector was worried that international students would just stop coming numbers. That worry me a commencement. So we're about a third down on way. We was intimations jeans. That's i at the start of the. She painted twenty nine teen. Probably part of the problem. Is that the australian government basically hung up a. We're closed sign when the pandemic i hit and at the same time you had countries like canada. Who were putting very different message about welcoming students in simon costain heads up. Go study australia. He says international students a really sensitive to the message implant by government. The sentiment change very very quickly and canada moved to becoming the most popular destination for nearly every nationality and uncertainty is a huge factor too. But he says as soon as new south wales announced it would let people back in popularity picked up again since then out. Overseas offices have had a flurry of activity of people. Because there's a perception that borders will open at the end of this year and that's probably for the best because higher education is worth big money in australia fourth largest export after i an oil coal and natural gas and nets us nearly forty billion dollars a year. Thirty percent drop might not sound shoot joel as big as anticipated I think that we're gonna see a long term impact if we're not improving the quality of courses again off the pandemic president of the national union of students. Zoe rangan nothin is worried about what that shortfall in money will make the student. Experience has decreased the lost twelve months. Universities get a set amount of funding from the federal government for domestic students but the revenue from international student phase goes into funding research and support programs on campus any section of university life that impacts students positively who are currently represented in in universities. Sasha's racial remote students. Lois students into disabilities indigenous students. All those programs on the threat plus the national tertiary education union says forty thousand jobs about one in five in the sector have been lost. Thanks to code when the government support government needs to step in right now despite. The hardships simon's really positive. What i think this is actually going to do. Is form a bit of a reset and a reality check for everyone. When times were good in international students flowing universities made the most of the but now moving forward we need to actually look at. What is the reality of delivery quality. Education hack triple j jalala madora that nicholas on the hack facebook page says with you being almost all remote learning. The universities offering discounts for the savings on cost that they've had paying tens of thousands of dollars deceit in you'll lounge and learn as a hod knock. Rose has texted. Yeah how. 'bout a reimbursement of heck's how can they justify keeping off heck's payments if we don't even access face to face learning on campus facilities let's make to the federal education minister alain touch. Thanks for coming back on. Triple j minister pleasure. So if you're a minister right now you're about to finish school. You're looking at your next steps in life. You need to have had to cut courses. Because they're struggling financially. Thousands of staff have lost jobs. Lots of lessons are online. Would you need be your first choice at the moment. Gosh just painted a very busy mystic view as to what's going on there avenue These infect more opportunities that universities. Today i didn't they ever has been in the history of australia This year ally this opposite more students who are doing university and that will continue to grow next. So that's what outside you twelve. There's many opportunities to go to university. There's also fantastic employment opportunities by the way if you wanna go straight to work. Because the the youth unemployment right is the lowest level in twelve years and one of the challenges with god. He's actually unskilled shortages. So if you want to go down that path. That's a great opportunity. And of course. There's the occasional pathway as well where with putting so much more money in so many more opportunities as well so again going back to that original question. I'm really optimistic for those twelve. Because there's never been so many opportunities as there are today for him to pursue medicine. Is that the case. They're looking at universities. So many courses of being caught across the board at every univesity from every faculty basically math. Science s- whatever. We're seeing those postcards now. It is true there is the is the sort of figure Several unique require unique. Just caught maps and science courses. I mean that's geeta funding cuts a cool according to those unions.

Deep Background with Noah Feldman
"university " Discussed on Deep Background with Noah Feldman
"When's the last time you ate something that truly stopped you in your tracks if it's been too long since food is blown you away. It's time to try janis ice cream. Every pint of jenny's an unforgettable crave worthy flavor that makes you feel good try- brown butter on brittle with a buttercream base and golden pockets of cara mellon crunch. Maybe you'd like bramble berry crisp which tastes like fresh berry cobbler. Or if you love cake try buoy butter cake. Which is oozing with rich butterscotch sauce. From chocolate to the fruity and more each flavor is made from scratch using a recipe from founder jenny. A james beard award winning ice cream maker and she doesn't cut corners when it comes to ingredients in fact you won't find any chemical dyes flavorings or off the shelf. Ice cream mixes in these points. Janis one of a kind ice creams including more than a dozen gluten free dairy free flavors at scoop shops and grocery stores nationwide and online at jenny's dot com. That's j. e. n. i. s. dot com. Jenny's makes it better. When's the last time you ate something truly stopped you in your tracks if it's been too long since food is blown you away. It's time to try jenny's ice cream. Every pint of is an unforgettable crave worthy flavor that makes you feel good. Try- brown butter almond brittle with a butter cream base and golden pockets of caramel. Crunch maybe you'd like bramble berry crisp which tastes like a fresh berry. Cobbler or love cake. Try buoy butter cake. Which is oozing with rich butterscotch sauce from the chocolate to the fruity and more each flavor is made from scratch using a recipe from founder jenny. A james beard award winning ice cream maker and she doesn't cut corners when it comes to ingredients in fact you won't find any chemical dyes flavorings or off the shelf. Ice cream mixes in these pints by jenny's one of a kind ice creams including more than a dozen gluten free and dairy free flavors at scoop shops and grocery stores nationwide and online at jenny's dot com. That's j. e. n. s. dot com. Jenny's makes it better talking to dean tamar gander. I was really struck by the dual way that she conceives of power in and around the university. I there's the question of power within the university and in that context tomorrow was very clear that it's a mistake to think of the university's power as emanating either from the top or the bottom or anywhere in between rather power. Any university is complexly negotiated between all of the different actors. Who are involved. It's not like the dean. Ken speak and expect the entire faculty to listen similarly. It's not like the faculty can express their views and expect the students to fall into line. In fact what we see within the university is a lot of different actors trying to work out how they can function collectively while still pressing for the things that they believe in the most simultaneously with respect to the role of the university in the world tomorrow spoke extraordinarily thoughtfully about how important it is for universities to train people and to generate ideas about what our values are and what our values should be. Those are the topics that the humanities covers and without them our society would be adrift full of technologies full of new financial instruments. But with no idea what we should do with them. What's ethical and what's and what overall objectives we should be. Aiming to achieve simultaneously the universities power in the world also stems from the social sciences which studied the ways that human beings actually interact with each other and actually deploy power relative to one another and the sciences which stem cells explorer in the deepest sense the nature of the world around us in those senses. The university plays a crucial role in helping to shape a healthy society and where the universities go awry to society's own troubles are unlikely to be far behind. So as you send your kids off to school or go back to teaching or studying yourself. Remember that whether you like it or not you're participating in multiple great power dances that shape the way the world around us operates until the next time i speak to you. breathe deep. Think deep thoughts and if circumstances will allow it have a little fun. Deep background is brought to you by pushkin industries. our producer is mola board. Our engineer is ben. Tolliday and our showrunner sophie crane mckibben editorial support from noam osbat theme music by louis. Kara at pushkin. Thanks to mierlo bell julia. Martin lydia jean cot heather fain carly glory maggie taylor eric. Sander and jacob weisberg. You can find me on twitter. At noah feldman i also write a column for bloomberg opinion which you can find at bloomberg dot com slash. Felt to discover bloomberg's originalist later podcasts. Go to bloomberg dot com slash podcasts. Pant if you liked what you heard today. Please write a review or tele france. This is deep background. Listen we all have ice cream. But there's ice cream and then there's jenny's ice cream janis as unique flavors brown butter almond brittle a butter cream ice cream with golden pockets of karen melon crunch and bramble berry crisp ice cream that tastes just like a fresh berry. Cobbler topped with vanilla. Ice cream all made from scratch. No synthetic flavorings are dis. Ice cream is great and jenny's makes it better find janis. One of a kind ice creams including gluten free dairy free flavors at scoop shops and grocery stores nationwide and online at jenny's dot com. That's j. e. n. i. s. dot com. Listen we all love ice cream. But there's ice cream and then there's jenny's ice cream janis has unique flavors like brown butter almond brittle a butter cream ice cream with golden pockets of karen melon crunch and bram berry crisp ice cream that tastes just like a fresh berry. Cobbler topped with vanilla. Ice cream. all made from scratch. No synthetic flavorings are dis. Ice cream is great and jenny's makes it better find one of a kind ice creams including gluten free dairy free flavors at scoop shops and grocery stores nationwide and online at jenny's dot com. That's j. e. n. s. dot com..

Deep Background with Noah Feldman
"university " Discussed on Deep Background with Noah Feldman
"Passion..

Deep Background with Noah Feldman
"university " Discussed on Deep Background with Noah Feldman
"Pushkin this episode of deep background is brought to you by see me wine. Seamy wine was born from the grit. And perseverance of its tenacious. Founder isabel seamy because when life gave for grapes. She knew exactly what to do. And that's why a glass of wine is a reward worth having because good things come to those who work hard. Even a small goal achieved is a moment worth celebrating. Whether it's a sip of their medium bodied wipe chardonnay or the full-bodied red cabernet-sauvignon raise a glass to the moments that make us see wine. Goodness from grit. Enjoy their many varietals. Wherever fine wines are sold or visit online at shop y wine dot com to learn more about their premium selection of california wines and.

ELITE University
"university " Discussed on ELITE University
"We cannot afford them and then they went to local christian the area and they had a lot of work. And yeah we're juggling debts. Not so much yet. And hopefully that will change point in also one of the the really cool benefits of juggling is that it transcends language which really so you've been able to go all over the world and for me. My background being a mental i. I need to be able to talk without without people understanding what i'm saying. There there is no entertainment value. So was was hell. How's that played into the opportunities you've been able to to build. I think we'd met mental ism. It's way more difficult. But like i saw care mccambridge in las vegas and they select. You cannot mentally for drunk people. They cannot follow it and he was doing it and it was a great show so i was very impressed that he found a way to do it. But like generally yes. It's way more difficult and then juggling like. Yeah there's like a people. I think people like seeing athletic skills stuff they cannot do. They know hand-eye coordination and then It's kind of cool when you for example when you go on a win to asia and i couldn't now i cannot speak. Japanese can all speak chinese but then through juggling. You can communicate with the audience. Wanna one without needing an interpreter which is cool but then also for that were so certain degree. If you wanna do a full theater show so if i would wanna do seventy minutes theater show in china than i will need the language one way or the other so are found a way with voice overs and stuff that i can still make it work but than parts of it i can communicate but then i think that the time you can is a little bit longer than you can do with momentum but it's still there's a there's a limit to it as well how..

ELITE University
"university " Discussed on ELITE University
"And twelve is already so hard there is more people have walked on. The surface of the moon has done twelve rings so is less than ten people in the history of planet earth. Hello and welcome to the show. I'm your host. Jonathan pritchard and this is the elite university podcast. The show dedicated to helping you. Make your most ambitious goals a reality..

ELITE University
"university " Discussed on ELITE University
"Has never been an aspect of my career that i have enjoyed less than being a keynote speaker Is it it is i felt guilty. Cashing those checks. Truly did i felt guilty to the point where i completely abandoned this keynote speech which was called the choice is yours. I abandoned it. And i got up there and instead started telling stories for my career which made me feel better which in turn engaged the audience. A little better but these keynote speakers unless it somebody who has stepped foot on the moon developed a cure for a terminal disease or one three. Or more world championships. I don't care what you have to say. I don't care because ninety percent of it is going to be smoke. it's going to be smoke you know. Listen if you're up there. If you're you i'll tell you who i'll go see. Speak on key sales techniques any one of the sharks from shark tank. They can talk about sales. If you wanna talk about a positive attitude it better be a better be. I'll go see tony robbins. Tony's great if you wanna talk about persistence and determination your name. Better be michael jordan. Or larry bird otherwise. I don't wanna hear it because it's nonsense. I've never met a group of people who inflate their salaries so much. You know if anyone is telling you what they're getting paid. They're lying because no one discusses what their kid. If somebody says. I get fifteen grand keynote. They'll you don't. You're staying in the same hotel i am. And why is that. The fourth thing you've said you know we've only been talking for ten minutes. But i know i. I did the whole national speakers association. Nonsense it's all utter nonsense. If you want to learn from somebody in your specific field find somebody who has done it at done it. Well pursue them by their book and learn from them for me. When i knew that game show hosting was what i wanted to do. I went straight to the top. I begged bob barker to mentor me. And thankfully he's a big saint louis cardinals fan and he got married in saint louis and we had that connection. So he allowed me to come see taping after taping after taping. I didn't graduate college. But i sat in the audience of the prices ride for three four days a week for. I can't tell you how long and you know he would talk to me. After the show's we'd be standing on the stage talking about blocking and pauses creating drama and enhancing risk and really learning about a contestant. But i'm not gonna go to some you know i've been to these game show hosts can win or these game show conventions and i. I don't know who these people are. You know but that keynote speaking world i everybody goes through a personal development phase in their lives. You know whenever you had a hard time it look. When i went through a divorce i bought a couple of books. I'm not gonna lie and say that you know. I'm i'm human but looking back now. I realise those books were a waste of fourteen ninety five. You know and we get when you do a podcast. You get inundated with quote unquote experts. Who wanna come on your show. I don't know how you become an expert in this or that but You know you gotta before you invest your time or your money in some guru or some expert. Really do your homework. Because people were too hard for their money to just throw it away but they keynotes. Oh my god. Yeah that that is that is worth its weight in gold because every single big opportunity that i've ever had came directly from a relationship that i had with somebody who was way better at everything i wanted to know how to do. So my whole strategy for my whole life has been figuring out what i wanna do figure out who's really good at it. Then figure out how..

ELITE University
"university " Discussed on ELITE University
"Walk on a you know a purple cape. But there is a definite definite value to having a master of ceremonies You're talking specifically in the corporate world. And i love that world as well and i'm thrilled that That you get full feedback. I'm sure you do an awesome job at it and the reason you do an awesome job because you understand the role the role going back to johnny carson. The role is to let the real stars shine here to introduce the next speaker to talk about the entertainment coming up tonight even to do a few housekeeping notes whenever job. They need you to. Do you do it with razzle-dazzle man in a get up there. Do what you gotta do. You want to go going. The master of ceremonies is the thread that ties all of these elements together. And that is why when you successfully tie those elements together. That's why people come to you and say oh this. Was you know why. Because last year carl was up there. Carl from agr funny like you said in the break room around the water cooler was up there. Pan metis sweating. He's got a few corny jokes on a piece of hotel stationery that go over. You know like a fart church at the just wants to get on if you look out at that audience an all new. Get out to the bar or get out to the pool. But they know that they're trapped for another hour band that's a room to be but a good host a good mc realizes that it's all about the energy that it's all about the flow and if the crowd starts to dip a little bit. Well you grab that hand held microphone and you go out there a little for a few minutes and yet you you wake him up because when they see you come closer. They're going to sit up straight. They don't necessarily want to talk into the mic. But they're going to pay a little bit of attention or you give something away or you. Just don't you know you've been doing it long enough. You know that you know guys like us. Girls do what we do. We all have a bag of tricks. We can always go to this or you know we can always pull this out of hito. It's going to work every single time. You know these event planners are beginning to to really see the monetary value of pudding a master of ceremonies in the budget for these events because we are trained and we are schooled in creating a higher of exhaust of excitement and more importantly a higher level of engagement. And when they're spending all this money to bring in two.

ELITE University
"university " Discussed on ELITE University
"Break. I want to ask you if you ever thought about learning another language for me. I took a couple of years of french in high school and it wasn't something i was super thrilled about. It was lots of rote memorization in mindless repeating phrases. That i didn't really understand so it wasn't the best experience. Flash forward couple decades later a find a platform called mandarin blueprint method. If you somehow don't know. Mandarin is one of the most spoken languages in the world. It's also super hard to learn for most native english speakers. It's a tonal language which means that every syllable can have a variety of inflections and the writing is not based on sound there little pictures basically. You either know what it is or you. Don't so there's no phonetic just sounding it out and all that up and you basically see you buy almost. Nobody even tries to learn mandarin in the first place and if they do start they're not going to keep up with that. That's why i love. Mandarin blueprint method so much. I've been using it every day for about two years and it is seriously impressive. It's made by two guys who has somehow made it through to a high level of fluency in reading writing and speaking mandarin and they've created a system that teaches you how to read write and speak all at the same time they're method uses really cool demonic techniques that i was already familiar with but they've applied them in such a cool way that it's actually a lot of fun to learn mandarin in a way that avoids all the major pitfalls of most strategies. You'd find somewhere else so yeah go check it out. Elite dot university slash mandarin for details about how to get started. That's it for the commercial. Break back to the conversation with todd. Awesome awesome from a couple opportunities that i had to. Mc it was tech conference in investment conferences. The the feedback was. Oh my god. We've never that. That was the best conference ever up until this point. He's had karl who was nice around the water fountain. He's hilarious in that context. But you know we've had people tell us they. They didn't expect us to have this conference again. Because of how awful it was run we had no clue how important in mc was to the whole success of the event. The have you faced any of that and also how do you help. Educate your clients on. Listen the mc is the lightning rod for whether or not everybody loves the whole thing and emcees are often times. The last detail managed. They'll have three different kinds of desert nail down before they even think about. Who's going to be the interstitial. Who's going to vamp win. The speaker isn't miked yet and the whole production comes to a screeching halt. But how do you help folks appreciate the value of what it is that you're bringing into the table. Well let's let's. I remind everyone mc is it's not emc e it's mc as a master of ceremonies master. That's a huge word. I am the master of these voting..

ELITE University
"university " Discussed on ELITE University
"There's no autopilot. It's a rush for me. Every time i get on the stage you know when. I'm behind a curtain or a mind behind those prices right doors and i know that i'm seconds away from walking out there this i still get it. I'm fifty one years old. I'm doing this thirty years. I still get this feeling in my stomach. It's not butterflies. it's not nerves. it's more of like this thing that saying come on man opened that kurt. let's go. let's go at. I've never at an event where i'd been paid to speak for fifty minutes. I've never come off the stage sooner than sixty you know. I've never had to kill or fill time out there. Because that's what i live for. Man would you do what we do. The the one hour on stage that you've prepared for and rehearse for man that's the easy part. It's the other twenty three hours in a day. The other twenty two and a half hours a day. that's drag. you know. I remember i. I did a thing with the wrestler stone. Cold steve austin and i remember during the interviews. Go get my ass kicked in that ring for forty minutes man. That's the easiest part of my day sitting in a holiday inn express watching the news channel for twenty hours a day. That's the part that kills me and it's so true you know. Listen it's the same with any gig with ever if you're doing what you've what you're meant to do. Then it will be effortless effortless but if you hate your job. It listen. I tell my kids One of my kids just started in in the workforce. And i i said if this job ever becomes a grind digit. That's it get out because no paycheck is worth dreading going to work. No paycheck is worth looking at the clock. And the minute hand just saw for. I don't want that for my children. I don't want that for anybody but fortunately that's not. That's not what i have to face so Yeah it's it's not about. You know if an audience is tough hopefully i can turn them But you know my goal is just to make it so that everybody when they're driving home that night you know. I just want him to be in a good mood and to have had a good time. I mean what. What more can we want for another person. You know kind of shifting gears is. I've often thought that if the universe doesn't destroy with failure it'll tempt you with success and a lot of folks are facing that struggle of trying to make it completely unaware that success could be even worse in some ways. So were there any of those demons that he had to face when it was the best of the best and everything was going along perfectly fine and then you're like this is too easy. Let me hit the big red self destruct button. What challenges an uphill battles on that front. Well you know. I i grew up in missouri and You know not far from ozark mountain country. And i wrote in in one of my books. I think it's life in the bonus round..

ELITE University
"university " Discussed on ELITE University
"There are an ungodly amount of performers. Who see their role as feeding on the audience instead of being the facilitator of experiences for their audience which to be that that's a fundamental in version of what a good incher entertainer does. What's that journey. Been for you. Why i think i think the reason somebody brings me a board. Is they either. Want me to entertain. They want me to inspire or they want me to inform you know Either one is fine. I you know. I i don't i don't really believe in quote unquote motivational speakers or You know life coaches anything like that. I don't think any one person is more qualified to coach another. But i think that when you step on the stage you have to give it everything. You've got to leave you know when when we're doing the prices ride stage. Show my sue. You know i. I like a finely tailored suit. So i'll invest in a nice suit l. Invest in a nice pair of shoes but the shirts that i wear under that suit. I'm getting from the bargain. Rack at tj maxx marshalls or target or walmart. Because if i get to shows out of each shirt it'll be a miracle what i come off the stage. The back is full of sweat. The pits are full of sweat. There's makeup around the collar. You know but i do not mind wafting up that shirt and tossing it in the trash in the dressing room because i know i put everything i had into it. You know the audience i. I should have no expectations of them. They hired a babysitter. They opened up their wallets to buy tickets They drove here. They spent some money on dinner before the show. They're giving me their time. They're giving me their attention. That's it that you don't have to do anything more. Let me do the rest. That's it so. I understand what you're saying. Yeah it's it's it's a performer. Should have no expectations of the audience. That's not what we're paid to do. That's not what we've been asked they're to do they're going to get. You're gonna get the same todd. Newton in dallas. That you got a couple of nights before in phoenix that you got a couple of nights before in san diego you know because this is what i do..

ELITE University
"university " Discussed on ELITE University
"I went straight to the top. I begged bob barker to mentor me and thankfully he's a big saint louis cardinals fan and he got married in saint louis. We had that connection. So he allowed me to come see taping after taping after taping. I didn't graduate college. But i sat in the audience. The prices ride for three or four days a week for. I can't tell you how long welcome to the second episode of the elite university podcast. I'm your host. Jonathan pritchard and today's guest is a real delight. We both share a life performance background and it was a real treat to hear about how he started his mission in life and why he hates keynote speakers so much. Let's get into it. My name is todd newton. I m made television personality author and podcasters slash content creator. How in the world did you get into that kind of line of work. Well i know. I started my career in radio in my hometown of saint louis and the reason i pursued radio so so diligently and so passionately was because i grew up watching guys on television like johnny carson and bob barker specifically when i was twelve thirteen years old i had no idea what a host was all. I knew that it was that these guys were on television entertaining people by just being themselves or as i now know slightly exaggerated version of themselves and i wanted to do that. I never wanted to be an actor. I never wanted to be a comedian. But i come from a family of Of people to kind of do what i do. My grandmother was a comedian during world war. Two and a little bit of vaudeville experience in there. My grandfather on my father's side Was a radio broadcaster. I've got his certificate hanging up here in my studio from the midwest school of broadcasting he graduated in nineteen forty seven. So i was always around people like that. You know great storytellers and And people that just had these powerful voices. he's very animated personalities. So that that part of it was in my blood. But i realized that bob barker and johnny carson came from radio and i assume that they've developed their Public personas from behind a microphone. Just like this one here and then that kind of leads to television. So you know i. I did radio and was pretty successful at it. Had a great run at it in saint louis but eventually was tapped to move to hollywood for entertainment television. This is in one thousand nine hundred ninety five And i was at e for a very long time. Twelve or thirteen years But about ten years in. I was doing a shoot in barcelona. Spain and i came back to my hotel room Late at night After the shoot. I'd been out drinking with the camera. Guys man that was just you know that i will do what we did..

The Red Box Politics Podcast
"university " Discussed on The Red Box Politics Podcast
"Subscription to the times dot cut four times west box up next. We challenge the universities to explain. Why the not leaping off students. You're listening to the red sox podcast. Now let's turn our attention to universities this week gavin williamson. The education secretary for england announced some good news students. I move so pleased to be able to say. There will be no restrictions on in-person teaching and learning in universities unless students are advised to isolate or impacted by outbreaks in terms of universities. We of course always supporting universities in terms of international students but also supporting them to get back to face to face teaching welcoming youngsters back into the lecture theatre which is know something. Can a university experienced that. So many students have daily daily missed however time survey this week found that lectures will be online at most selective universities next year despite what gavin williamson sat thousands of students at the university of manchester particular protesting as the audio. Coding blended teaching. But the associate vice president professor. Danielle george jumping. There's a wide spread misconception about the balance of online versus in person teaching unfortunately these protests. Were about something that we haven't said and we aren't planning to do you know. Students were given this impression from the articles that were written that we're moving teaching permanently online. So i understand there that unrest about it but it's simply not the case the online teaching what it's supposed to do is just sort of ornamental. All that stuff that we do on campus all of the interactive stuff that we want to do will all be face to face on campus. The digital side of stuff is really. Just sort of like you might. You might have read a book but actually watching some videos or reading an e book. These days is also a good thing. So that's what the digital contents about whether the of people have been told that lecture will continue to be a online even the prospect of blended teaching and no reduction of tuition fees. In a moment. We'll speak to office for students. We'll hear from them as to what people can do about. Maybe try to get some money back. Now let's hear from some. We asked you what in the week for students to get in touch. Let us know your view. This is what some of the students who got in touch that to say personally think he's actually disgusting. Some universities are still planning to stick to online learning phoenicia from mentors in person. Learning tarragon fall two weeks and then stop. I think the decision may black to in line is a real kick in the teeth to suspend the united party or two years of online teaching to move to complete online permit for essentially cost. Cutting reasons is disgraceful. Michael it's been mandy through youtube. It is and zoom meetings. Have we realized that damage that the past year and a half is done to streets mental health enough. I think students could take another year of online. Learning is absolutely so disheartening. Unmotivated spending every single time zoom tuition fees maintenance and that was literally nothing now. We expected to go again. We will go but expect massive massive refer anxiously for two missing of the year. We now need any has been developing completely online courses. And i think that longer term it probably much away from important as possible profit-driven at the end of the day and if they can find a motor which saves them money while still being able to touch foods jewish and they'll be more than happy. Take you off. I mean if it was pencil. Impulsive teaching invest brilliant of people do said the in person teacher or my ninety just isn't adequate for students anymore especially when the pain ridiculous as five. Nine grand students has site to us this week. Well what can you do if you're unhappy about your learning going online. The higher education regulated the office for students says it's monitoring the quality of teaching at universities. I mean record levels of student dissatisfaction. Nikola dandridge is the chief executive of the officer students and she explained to me what blended learning remains. I think the first thing to note in this is that the vast majority of universities are planning to continue. Its face to face teaching seven hours and with lab work and things like that. What we're talking about here is the lectures and the extent to which lectures are going to be delivered online. And i think there are two things going on. Firstly is responses to the vandamme egg corona virus responses and then the second is longer time considerations about the balance between face to face and digital teaching. So if it's a corona virus related responsible way at the office the students are saying is that there is no reason. Why universities can't tell students that they're aiming to continue with face to face teaching and lectures while being clear that if health restrictions mean that that's not possible. Then they're going to be contingency plans so what we're saying is that if the pandemic requires that the the face pay teaching stops then that's one thing and our concern will then be the quality of the provision whether it's digital or face to face that's quite sat threat to longer term plans to move towards more blended model stood at the pandemic and i think are consigned. These two getting mixed up. And i think we need to separate them out. Because different considerations apply in different circumstances as opposed to question. Is you know particularly for students. Ready at university. They signed up year ago two years ago three years ago. They're paying nine thousand pounds a year and particularly if you're not doing one of those very hands on practical particularly science or medicine that sort of thing where you all in a lab and you are probably getting quite intense face to face tuition if you'll doing an arts degree which is mainly you know lecture based you'll send me paying nine thousand people messaging in saying you know if i wanted to do. Just watch some videos online. Signed up to an open university course. This isn't part of the thing and actually being able to grab the lecturer afterwards chapter students going in and out of the lecture. That's all part of the of the learning experience. I totally agree with that. I think the thing is to do with health related concerns because if if the university is being required to deliver online only because they can't face to face then what are concerned would be is the quality of the online provision and the online lectures. But if if it's nothing to do with panic restrictions than i totally agree. There's real value in those face to face interactions and there. I think what say to the students. This is really important. I find out exactly what's being offered and they should get in touch with the university so for example if them understanding is that next is going to be delivered in intellectual and they need to find out whether that's going to be the case or not. I think it's worth noting all of this moving to more digital lectures is not necessarily a bad thing providing it's done in the right way providing backs up with extensive face to face teaching seminars in groups. And what you've got is a shift away from large lectures and a focus on small face to face teaching groups. I mean that is a good thing. So i think it's not that face to face like justin themselves necessarily seventy essential because it can be good. They can be bad what matters here. I think students are clear about what's being offered. And if it is a blended off us a call a mixture of face to face and digital teaching then. The students should know what's being offered and they certainly should be consulted on any changes. If that's what universities are proposing for the office for students point of view. Should there be any allowance taken into account then with the fees that are being charged. Because it particularly if you're a student who you already at university right now literally what your being offered you know if you went on the open day and they showed you that lovely lecture theatres and this has ought to be part of the experience. You sign up on that basis you know essentially the contract that you made. That university has changed. Is there any possibility. Do think of refunds renegotiations of what what students are. They literally not getting what they signed up for. Not getting what they.

ELITE University
"university " Discussed on ELITE University
"Have some happiness right but it'll be it'll be fleeting contentment. And one nece is only achieved from focusing on who are in restoring that link and the rest happens without words without anything. It's an intuitively designed system that that changes the outward perceptions of your entire live with no rallies no tickets. I got the front row like none of those things. It happens in the heart in the seoul in the backcountry of here in montana. And that's my journey. And that's all i do so like if i go do. Something has a profound impact on my life. I just had it with that off. Did it works. i do that like it it. So that's that's what's cool about the program. It's innovative not a program. I called the un program really because it's not a program because we don't tell them any the they're like they're out there like learning again on himselves spending forty one days with themselves it is saying hi to complete and total stranger. And that's a sad thing when you're fifty years old or forty five years old and your life your kids off to college. You're miserable you're all kinds of Life is down and you're like the whole time what you're looking for. you already had. you already had. It was right there in your front pocket love. It sounds about as good a place to sick. That landing as i've ever heard. I definitely appreciate you spending so much time sharing your story and everything so for the folks that are all about you and i like his vibe or somebody that's like fuck. I know somebody who needs to know him. Where's that the folks should start their journey. Well you can check us out at heroes and horses dot org. You can check us out on instagram. At heroes and horses and you know we have a lot of incredible content that we put out there kind of a lot of the things i shared. We share. we don't like Or not i mean we're just really raw and honest and what we put out there when people like our and at the analytics or any of those things and we share really strong messages in checking out on my own instagram Hundred dollars or something. Right access started at which i love out there saying the words at three hundred three speaking my truth man. I'm doing differently now and asked what i say to. The machine sucks but check out. Here is an dot org. This is a wonderful broadcast jonathan. I'm really thankful for the opportunity. I'm great to reconnect with you. I'm really glad that like you reached out. And i see stuff you're doing. I loved it. And you've got a lot to offer the world in a. I've read through a lot of your stuff. So stay that course and in his sounds like you are in And i look forward to working with again. The future huge thanks to mica for being our first guest of the show. I really appreciate him again and sharing his work and again. This was just a fraction of the conversation. We had supporters of the podcast will get access to the full conversation or as much of the conversation. I'm legally allowed to share without violating national security protocols. And that's not a joke. And i want to thank members of the elite university who are currently supporting the project through memberships taking courses and being active in the community in no particular order. Peter vale walker. Brad rutta crater hunter sacra tillis. Faster russ zero zero nine one neo. C seven judd taylor will hair. Vw conception sushi are if a tom britain franklin brown seed monte raymond riley madeira. I o benjamin williams. Sydney smith liquid death. T graham lewis a twenty ryan are john k andrew hill t s michael. Johnson had a bit biz. Sickener fig bus and finally we'll go to join the community head over to elite dot university in find your way in there. This has been the elite university. Podcast your host jonathan richard..

ELITE University
"university " Discussed on ELITE University
"The reconnection to salve any no self is connected to source like as far as i'm concerned and you know what happens is is that where you're supposed to be in life directed directly related to the strength and continuity of that connection to source and so if you're not connected to that source than what you are is an album nation of other people's ideas about what life should be and so just chase these little rabbit holes down an eugene I always like you know. You walk to barnes and nobles like like you walk in there and it's like it's like you know twelve steps to a good life you're like okay and then you go now. I'm like you go down the bosley eight steps. Well definitely going to buy twelve. Because i can do it in a way that i doubt over there is one the soon there's going to be one step to a good line right in people. Just they spend their life on the self help bullshit when the reality is. You can't help what you don't know because you're not you. So what are you helping your helping amalgamated. In interpretation of all these ideas of religions governmental contracts idea people. Life coaches mystics. Zoom sayers demons which whatever. And you're like you're sitting there and you're like a miserable like what have you tried well to bob. Franken read this. Do this tony. Romm woo like Everyone's like fired up and it doesn't work because you you spend your life pursuing other people's concepts rather than your own when you when you when you restore that link than you have to have the confidence in strength and then use your mind said okay. This is what i'm gonna do right. And then you're intuitively moving through life not using force and grinding pushing these guys grind wake up every day grind like no the folks listening to. This can't see the video we've got. I got this at one of the conferences where we met and it says rising grind. I never wear this out of the house the that whole grind a. That's not my vibe. Just just need no. I'm right there with you flow right you flow because life is a flow. It's it's it's i. Listen i did it i grinded. I mean i did a wake up. Every day. couldn't lift enough ways. I couldn't run enough things. I couldn't accomplish. You know ironman and this and feet straight and all these things right. Because really what i was doing was just trying to be a thing. I was trying to be at trying to maintain my place of becoming something. You're disconnected from your source of self and all that creative energy isn't devoted to creation is devoted to maintaining this external reference point in. That's exhausting year. that's it you just nailed it. I mean that's that's it. That's what i see. The problem with humanity lake humanity has a disease. It has a virus in the mind. It has a. Has it disease that we've contracted where you know. There's a one in one chance that you die right and we're so worried about the mechanics like gonna get cancer is a bus gonna hit me patty gonna stab me and my sleep like what like. It doesn't matter who cares like we should put that to bed right like whatever it's gonna be it's gotta come over. Don't have so the terribly flesh off but if it does whatever you know it is what it is like. The idea is to go beyond the physical realm in everything. Today is designed to trap you in the physical is you get a million dollars won't be enough. We get ten million. Won't be enough one billion us shit. That has five billion. Oh he's got five. I'll get ten saudis. He's got one hundred one hundred miles. Got one hundred fifty ac. I can never win right. Wasn't he wants to take over mars. There is no end state. There is zero n state right so that that means i reject that system because if you gave me a billion dollars today put me on a deserted island. I die right. So it's relative. That game is only a relative game. And so we think that there's some nc state like what drives a person to wake up work. Eighty hours a week neglect. Their kids the glac their health. Do all these things right to get to. Where where where are you going. You're going nowhere. Yeah you have a bunch of stuff cool but cars going to break down and it's not gonna matter and you get the next one either seventy seven airplanes that miserable. I'm like what's is going to be seventy eight seventy nine. We're going to do like you gotta learn to fly yourself wings. installing is no end. Stays like just like wake up and just reject authority right in authorities. What can shrug roles as it's placed upon us a traps us in bizarro world where it's never enough. You're never good enough. You know jonathan. You're never get enough. You'll never have enough. You never have enough clients. Never have enough and you'll just burn. Burn burn and the next thing you know you're just like and then the tickers there. And they're like don't worry you save a lot of money and you got good health insurance and now we're gonna take this little strong on your bank account we're gonna we're gonna suck it all back so you can get another five eight years out outliving in a wheelchair so i mean. We don't want that. We want to thrive and live harmoniously. And if a self actualized person a person plugged in the source is not like. Let's do math in rob a grocery store like up a consciously actual is being doesn't do that right. Gandhi is not like at the ufc like smashing beer cans on his forehead right. Like i mean because they understand the greater meaning a hawaiian flag in. That's connection in that link has been broken is a my vision is really for this kind of like universal shift in power perceiving life and relating to one another as humans in. We've lost that because we just judge people by what they have or what they're trying to become and that's why instagram and all these sally eighteen thousand dollars and then like which is nothing. I'm not saying it'd be cool. But like i like instant payments but i just like woke up one day and i was like i just deleted it. And they're gonna work should be like dude like you should have like. I would have liked it for you. Know just like delete it. I started up a new one three world but.

ELITE University
"university " Discussed on ELITE University
"My name is mike athene. I'm the ceo and founder of heroes and assist former navy seal former cia para-military contractor. My life right now is veterans reintegration and human of. I live out here in north south western montana and yeah run a foundation full-time background. How in the world did you get into navy seal. What was it about that program that drew you to it and got you through. You know people kind of look at it. You know they come to my office and they see these pictures these wards and they see all this kind of stuff and and know. I really didn't start out my life that way. You know. I was really kind of an unassuming kid. I you know just love. Music grew up in a really small town came from pretty humble beginnings. You know my same bedroom with my mom and dad and my sister grew up. I guess you could say horror but added had a really great life and I ended up leaving home at sixteen in pretty much on my own ever since. Then so my dad kinda got into the whole like tent revival things. I like around that a lot The eighties restoring and the demons coming out and it was. It was a wild time. You know there's gotta the charismatic crews matic's you know. Faith floaters like. I just knew like as a kid that that that kind of That simple but thorn in my life. She sit well with me in. So i've always been a thinker. i've always been a feeler. I've been one. That's kind of question things. And so i mean that that's taken me on a pretty excessive journey throughout my life and it's caused a lot of pain and it's caused a lot of heartache and it's also caused a lotta incredible successes in helped me become. Ym william today. And i ended up moving back home not with my parents back. Upstate new york. When i was twenty one and Started going back into line work. And so i was a telephone pole. Linemen climber and I ran my own business. So the whole internet cable things coming online road runner so i was responsible for grounding the power supplies and hooking climbed guy so everything i did was from climbing in actually really. My goal was to be a drummer professional drummer. I started playing at eight years old and my band was doing super wells planning in a funk scott band shop loomis. We'd opened up for long. Beach dub allstars kinda like like black hair earrings like that. That's what i wanted to do. In on september eleventh. I was in queens new york and that's when the first plane hit the world trade center in so a water but he was running away from those buildings. I got my car with a friend of mine in drove in parked right in manhattan manufacturers held up by gun point and they had all these like tight security at all these like cable. Tv id's i told him it was the demolition crew had been called it. They let me through so yeah and when the citibank tower fell and know that story is something that will be with me for the rest of my life in september twelfth. I was sitting here with my friend. you know kind of asked me what i want. You know what we're gonna do. And i'd never seen a dead person before you know. I've found a dead police officer in arm torso and You know at that point. In my life i just i never wanted to be the victim of circumstance in i think by just your nature by design in how i grew up i i went down and i. I told the guys at well. I don't know if i can customers buy gas but i I looked at him. I said i'm gonna fucking kill. Whoever did this in. He just looked at me and was so weird. Just kinda pat me on the back. So came in and i went down in. I enlisted in the military and be honest with you. I wasn't interested in the military. I didn't grow up like running around g. i joe's like drinking my own urine and now run around five fifty court bracelets like decided that enroll like that. Ed i did. And i was trying to join the army and the navy guy came out In insomnia and he'd seen me there several days. What are you what are you doing. I keep seeing you come here at the time. Everybody loves america so everybody was trying to join. And i'm trying to join the army. I wanna be are ranger. Why you wanna do that. And i've seen him on. Tv was like that's the best of the best known for not in. He's a component here. So i go in the navy office. Nobody's in there. You know the navy guys trying to make weight standards overweight ball burger king bags sitting there. You know everybody else in the army. Looks like they're ready for war. Navy guy looks like he's ready to go to marshall's so i i kind of i kind of looked at him and he pulls out this one thousand nine hundred video and he like puts it in there and of course it's like heavy metal and like famous navy seals like cj. Crock is doing hip thrusters and doing their legs. These little shorts and wearing my climbing gear. And it's like heavy metal. And they're coming out of the swamps. And i was like man. This looks like really intense. It's looks really cool. And he's like yeah. They're called the navy seals interested in gas. Surely we're gonna sign up some training. I'm great and then. I like you know so here i am i signed his kind of i dunno promissory notice or whatever it was and and then i started like on the internet and i was like oh man like like this is like a serious thing like this is like nobody makes it like it. I started my research. Everything i joined up and yeah and then Ended up making her buds in making the seal team so it was serendipitous to say the least That a kind of rolled into their career was really the external circumstances that revealed to me in that moment. You know who. I was gave me an opportunity to make a choice. You know kind of red pill blue pill choice in. And so you know i. I made that choice. And that's how. I i know really wound up where i am today. What is it about so many people flunking out is it really that goofy thing of mindset will help us through it and it's just that you could be physically capable and it's just such an awful experience that your mind breaks. I would. What is it that that weeds out. Everybody i i would say this. I knew when i went there that i already knew who i was. Okay i have like a pretty tough life. I was very tough kid. You know i've been boxing. Most of my life. I i came from a family long line of ruffians and even my dad became a preacher. You know you had been served part time in in federal prison. So they're like a tough tough family. And a grandpa is rolled. With the mob. Enforcer like so you know even though they had become christians and they did the revival. And all those things like i grew up in a pretty rugged family and so there was really. No quarter for weakness is so i never really learned to be weak and i think that a lot of times a weakness is a learned trait and it happens from childhood right. We wouldn't have all these problems. We lived in a hunter gatherer society because the week died right. they were eaten by bears. They were trampled. By herds of elk weaknesses a byproduct of modernism in. So i just didn't have that. Modernism was normal for me to go to the food bank and sort through. My mom was normal for me. Go to school. And i'm going to let christian school in my little tiny on the kids. Siemian a chase me down. You know get punched in the vase and beat up on fighting back. It was i come home. How.