35 Burst results for "Wien"

"wien" Discussed on Italian Wine Podcast

Italian Wine Podcast

03:23 min | 1 year ago

"wien" Discussed on Italian Wine Podcast

"Serve drinks right and it has to be their own produced wines and local foods from either they produce or them. Exactly your head wants out. He yes yes now that That's just sort of place. I is really lovely when one is find yourself in an area and it's a time when these places are open that i would be making a beeline to. I'm sure our listeners would too so you'll near experienced well not as much as i'd like to be. I would love to come back because it is such a beautiful area. And i'd like to come to sample your winds to meet in person you owe more than what Pleasure finally for our listeners if they find themselves in your area. Can you recommend a local restaurant that serves very typical cuisine. Man may be perhaps one also. That's doing things more creatively. Let's say we have a high standard dove restaurants here and it's it's hard to pick one restaurants where you should have to go but we have A nice little restaurant of fi quality food in the dna so the village next to us. It's called the vecchio sony. it's a good client of us and his producing really Food and of course he serves good wine. And it's a little bit above the beyond. What yana so the the rally of the trentino. And you're really nice overview you see the brenta mountains. I would recommend to go there a wonderful. That sounds beautiful spot. Dietrich thank you so much for taking some time away from your harvest. I know you'll be going straight from the microphone to on the trucks onto the track. There i have to pick up the books as health graves. Good well it's been a real pleasure learning the story of and sits new ceo and i really enjoyed talking to you. I look forward to meeting and particularly want to visit your shanka wien attack to try your winds over plate in the spec that your father's mate so festive luck for the twenty twenty one harvest and i hope to meet soon. Fake matz and good day. Everyone now.

brenta mountains yana sony Dietrich shanka wien Fake matz
"wien" Discussed on The DeadEndRoad Show

The DeadEndRoad Show

05:19 min | 1 year ago

"wien" Discussed on The DeadEndRoad Show

"It would be an extremely limited edition leather jacket. Yeah yeah yeah. yeah yeah. Yeah so sometime in the future. Yeah yeah but you have to. You have to do it when it's fresh you see once fresh. Yeah if there's a women window that you can yeah. I love that because nobody yeah. People have to watch the movie yet. No so what did you haven't seen them wien. you're in. you're just listening to talk about it. Some amy them for the central character. She is like going through like earns that she can purchase online and then she comes to the idea that she wants to turn herself.

wien amy
"wien" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

Rock N Roll Archaeology

05:38 min | 1 year ago

"wien" Discussed on Rock N Roll Archaeology

"Performances would be featured the let it be three years earlier really at the height of their powers. The fab four decided. They were done touring. The audiences were screaming so loudly. John paul george and ringo couldn't even hear themselves here the are talking about why they stopped again in a bit fellow. Anyway just because we've been out so long. It gets grueling along the fun anymore. Wien watch works with all the gold. We did no had anything for years for us of nagging around screaming in this mania. We'll get worse and worse as abandoned while people were screaming. It was lovely that they liked us book. We couldn't here to play so the only place we could develop was in the studio so their last official show was august. Twenty ninth nineteen sixty six at candlestick park in san francisco. It's where the san francisco giants played at that time. The beatles had pioneered concept of playing in sports venues. Okay here's the settlers. Okay give it to me. I opening with a chuck berry. Cover rock and roll music with john lennon. Second paul's tune. She's a woman third georgia's track from the fairly recently released rubber sole album. If i needed someone. Ooh oh. I needed fourth day tripper okay..

John paul george ringo Wien candlestick park san francisco giants beatles san francisco chuck berry john lennon paul georgia
"wien" Discussed on Feliz Dia Novo

Feliz Dia Novo

07:35 min | 1 year ago

"wien" Discussed on Feliz Dia Novo

"The super chief assessor to the bay that through the sat in asia should the gives him money puzzle happy. They are being view. The bunching contract key book sydney ash and this update game star kicks off as theme preface. Nyu see how. Would you bone though six that goods aboard but our facility jaffe. At least i did to the debunks physiology. Jack took the main capital. Todd jewish acid think. Yeah put ovalles bear. The tampa tampa. Dimple noah side deals attack one miles up because if they origin guess. Sis yours yes. I see liquid. Asana saggio osias. So you all to fight. They're say all through january. Said if fit in the differentiating as by using your body backwards bunks to the hard one thing or is it the temple. Supposedly that as far must opus coming as old as day dupree. Who's la's give us a thick fuzzy saliba celebre. Saint log will sit being so nice to to the accent. Excipient say because the gop got those who feels her diarrheas by lab is emotional complexity on silica. This geck suffice missy. Supercars moon about you. This michael kors mckay will see me. Mince phoenix day phoenix. The only if you need to pull up. Dan through because at margin as well. Keep on top. See hear digest. That's why she looks at the amplify mice. Who will muscle papa. Simply nutritive nas. Sasha simple but let's say they miss a possibility. The main support their key setting the at exactly as the chagall kick what do phillies yano version of. What they'll do shows up key. The hot bet not bought the opposite. Cheever are stuck you. Jiaguo leases dot on us all but the seoul not so jayanti editorial. Do hugh janeiro about this. Do you include your after space. Gives us is either but what s in phillies. Your mobile boys you ed days. Amazing margie said boys. Mealy wien june can chris stone centers. Yoy dantonio canada. I cooked meal quadriceps equality they threes calendar whistler learn equal. Do boy you. Lord oscar push inis yours you zsa. Fly your dod squats. So was quast summed up thus far sick. I'll show those. Don't assume give us a sense. Sent bills who picks feis glitzy winces. Hit cousteau it thing. I eat toddlers demise. The my the my his sophisticated technology that bill technology. Hey you does it jalen. But other lava chevy isaiah. The you pick one shot shot viet hit wide. Yup but isaac you've asia boy of five hundred watt alma plaza lose. You could be shack. Kill laura hippie two volts yet that i seen notre musical the carcassonne dupree's the have publico thing the book due to nozzle to explicit waste their michelle timur but the akina number i did. I'd be scared easily. But i looked out was abu saleh. Mcdonald's example vasantha zone budget zik to the fallon. Calor domiant being use copious my zing fee. Socil- arcus don't be legitimate mining contests plus on the conflict to noel poor. Antics divisive looks permit infill level van. Nuys hit wide input lunch up. I love averge you'll get. Vs believes that allowed nauseum. That you could play some two thousand four cleanup love it wa s simply think those years party here i suppose some suck at these name who my view the now is not valley up won't find atlanta here after conciliators yon- over my stack keillor's year nasa put his in the fear so i must have seen jesus but our values uh soon to but our sawtooth present must savvy the nana capacity daddy. Follow the biohacking valedictorian porta Philadelphia thought does a ceus keystone hill last show nowadays. Ob via our liberal people say. Don't mill bills fly leap. Sugar affiliates. john. Lewis gadsden you simply in the property and the only to sink well connex oh itchy followed the connex by by Supple cosmetic cobbles connects cobbler. Selm geopolitical nick died thrown. Thou- cnn view selectquote. Many custom communica samaniego news. Connect that jim l. Bazi judah humana akiva say lack lengths aspect that he gives a key. though money dodgy acacus. Kosonen flavia basel. That connectivity humana as itchy totally father named suspects by eating goblin at things. Caveat with the main losses ms sodas. You know medicine. Excise law set of science either banos aquatic song-chol lemme of the neck owning vast amical excelled Themes you're seeing instant absolute amidst the the gauge. Going excel. that you're gonna excel ashok engine so cutting edge month while lupu this sizes thanks.

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"wien" Discussed on The Nice Guys on Business Podcast

The Nice Guys on Business Podcast

04:29 min | 1 year ago

"wien" Discussed on The Nice Guys on Business Podcast

"Fuck is jay wien. I had no idea so. She told me joint venture partnership and even after she said. I never really understood what a. Jv or a joint venture partnership was until i met you and what was so great issue. Smart house doing again. Jay's got he's got his hand his phone enhanced you know. Here's the king of multitask. I i cannot talk right now. i'm on with the nice guys the other guy i. I'm texting my dear wife. Corey rate varies. Stop with the music. Okay so i'll keep talking as you're doing it so i so fast forward let's say about Probably about a year and a half two years. After i met virginia and i met a michael neely event. And i and i hear this guy speaking you makes a lot of sense. I mean he's talking about jv partnerships and he's talking about masterminds and all of that and long-haul. This is jay phys. Ed we go back to. I think it was. Jane albers house at the time and you and i had. This conversation was more about my dad. Because i think you know my family in the background of my dad's selling system and i was just fascinated by number one. There was no pressure. Like you've got to do this because this is the place where you you know you've got you've got to join. It was more of just building a relationship with me and we laughed ass. Aw base for that night to find that that's just who you are. You're a guy that legitimately will help the dumb. That's me understand without making me feel dumb but the second thing is it's like it's no pressure and how the somebody that applies no pressure. Get to be in the tacoma club. And so i start my whole thing with you there because that's totally. You're nice guy. You know what you're doing you've been successful and you have wheelbarrows of money that you've burnt in your backyard. I know that all the all the trials and tribulations you've been to. Where do we even begin with all of this stuff. Jay good lord. There's some burnt. Yes and that doesn't even count my car collection. That's already another wheelbarrows. Well i just think number one. In i i actually think it's probably an error in a weakness. Mind to be honest that joint venturing when you understand it it is so self evident that people either are going to say yes or no and no amount of what i call silliness or pressure or manipulation or sales tactics is gonna make any difference whatsoever. Now that said. I just recently had our website. Our website assessed by professional. And he's like so the very first thing on your website is a buy button and go. Yeah he goes. You're sure you wanna lead with my world is like yes. Hi either you get makes good sense to come and sit in a room with hundred fifty people who are your potential partners are going to send you free leads like. Should i do that or you..

jay wien michael neely jay phys Jane albers Jay tacoma club Corey virginia Ed
"wien" Discussed on Feliz Dia Novo

Feliz Dia Novo

04:08 min | 1 year ago

"wien" Discussed on Feliz Dia Novo

"Bitter spidla knowing steigler. Facebook cheever cei- compatible partic- jaguar. Who failures there in qantara. Almost johnny civil society log audie ventoux processor. Libra versatile lesotho. He was into mayes bar scene. Or is it wasn't partisan massimo give vied to innovate sasseville. Say look think z. Gitte serta default but the prosperity kill two but solo songs of but this impact. Your ideally visa. They say the bom war by siberia doc. Loose blow bloomers dissolved by Vartan being but that's a key thing set pasqua's give sinn on party. It has over voter mashpee set. The scores are software. Because of it. But i was semi move sarah responsibility. Dodge city is so so proud. Newsroom see what see. Our shock is seeing is shocking. Known them bain zoe this dumping the perez dish appear similar. Simplicity lingerie to see. What's the shock you thinking. The viper assume polka volume. So you have to do this. He was a wool. Wien colo's putting cpu chico's body is nowhere. Persist out there to the pause to us. Scholars system fussily seaver say nausea tupac stories diane but this is a quasi to vice juice to do by sylvia perot promote mantle. Mayors will give us a policy. Hey via the poison thought mattis. Hey say this issue the jia it might as well with tim professio- for several civil doppler travis zero at table civil procam deal yours. You travel tabane a sweet story by soobee. Stirs give significant basil physical seen those who oversee the mess up booths being one of those dilemmas. Cover saturday sampler. Seeing seeing oh. No vote involve bottle the bottle. Fear could dish we say mama anthem publicly shotgun by kibaki versus you got way orgy or pablo. Luckily papa ball my skin. Quota hobart universum betta tequila failures is through who geographies that may or complementary minnesota's caterers mutate over together was of accuracy mostly star phillies young phillies jadu guy. Herbert and phillies g. To eat bought up is improper not chief senate. Brando miso gio flukes that own money dodgy or jet goes through those mealy vinci own accounting cristo. Says the advocate jigsaw. Chivo see elma pessoa superstitious. Earn meals that. Say to the current value should icu anew at saint requiring toys calling whistler mccoo boy she as or jackie claridge's edgy icon. Coup flagellated dodging. Jesus emailing tora bora. Someone is huge organiser. Now part of the interview bob wars. I soberly mood has all his tattoos. Superficialities osage ecause manchego. Dumbledore say that.

spidla qantara sasseville Gitte serta pasqua Wien colo sylvia perot Vartan lesotho massimo tim professio travis zero Dodge city siberia bain seaver phillies mattis perez Facebook
"wien" Discussed on Guys We F****d

Guys We F****d

03:12 min | 1 year ago

"wien" Discussed on Guys We F****d

"K so on and off and then when i would sleep in the bed with her she would wake me up every couple of hours saying that i was breeding to loud or is moving too much lately and that's engulfing to the mat like that's that's one that's that's extreme and it's just like an example so i always try to think of examples for when people find out i don't speak to her because not to arrive either because like shore bull ing honest about An abusive situation as how other people realize that they're in abusive. Situations are not even that it's like people can't put themselves in your shoes because they have great parents. They can't relate. The can't understand. So i i always have like these snippet of things where i'm like. I know this isn't normal. This isn't the way it should have been like. She did some really fucked up shit. I'm like trying to ill. It would be like Yeah not even just killed. But i'm this one's well. It's safe to say here. She does. Listen to my podcast. you're trying to get cancelled and everything even though even spoken in mom try to. Wow yeah well. It was her sisters. She's also mental and they were like oh she said that her. She said that she was abused. And that makes people think sexual abuse would. You didn't mean to as talked about emotional abuse how we both experienced it and and does was just like this is ridiculous. He was like emotional. Or you can sneak by one of the books that are was reading about this. 'cause i the click that i just had was because i'm reading these books about narcissistic mothers and it's like a stranger author. Actually she was from ireland. The first one. I was listening to just just listing every single thing and i'm like what they talked about like a narcissistic mother is obsessed with their daughter's virginity. And that's i mean same back at that that she you know. My mom had asked me when i was sixteen. If i was a virgin in a restaurant. I did not even question that that was a completely inappropriate thing to say to your child. Let alone in public didn't even wouldn't even cross my mind. She got up. Ran to the car and i was like okay. Didn't talk to me and so it's like they see you as an extension of them and you are their doll. You're the daughter of marsa. Sick mother is the mother's doll not as child through no sense of self. That's so true because my mother foot like Doj on me. When i was like a and so when i did. Yeah i remember this but i remember my dad wien upset. 'cause i had like a really bad chest infection. When i visited him he had to take me to the hospital and he was like and he says the sweat wasn't getting out of your. I don't know i don't know who to do it. But it was more just that she would like dress me up and try to put makeup on me when i was younger than i don't wear makeup at all which is so funny but and he was like upset because he was like while you're she's not looking after your actual health. I'm yeah so it was. I sees as it's just like well and its culture. Culture is so interesting. Because i've been talking to a couple people that i'm working on some projects with and they're younger one of them's my age. One of them's younger than me and One of the women was is a different culture and a latina culture and she was saying that she thought it was her she was. I was telling her. Hey i need to take a break for like august. I'm just going to me. This is why making these..

ireland wien Doj
"wien" Discussed on Growth Mode

Growth Mode

03:18 min | 1 year ago

"wien" Discussed on Growth Mode

"Hey what's up. Champions and welcome to growth mode. I'm your host donny. Bo wien and i am the ceo of success champions and i've spent over twenty years in the sales game and almost four years now running a business and all that time. I figured out how figured out how to get better at sales and grow and scale a business hanging out with me as always my buddy kevin snow the sales automation tactician genius. This guy's absolute rockstar. When it comes to the back into your business and making sure everything functions and runs properly from a sales perspective on the show we talk about all things sales business development growing and scaling your business and we often debate it from the viewpoint of an expert and an introvert expert in an introvert today. not an extrovert. So i'm the expert. You're the introvert. I love that. We're just gonna leave that just the way. It is kevin on this episode of. What are we talking of a everyone. Just got a view into donnie subconscious expert. And you're not that welcome to my life so today. I wanna talk about something that Plagues all small business owners. At some point we're gonna talk about how you manage your clients and still run your business and this is a great topic. I think oftentimes were caught up with being see yield of our company. And we're caught up on maintaining keeping client relationships managing all that time man. It can be very tough to. It's not even switching hats. It's getting all the shit done. It's the guy on the ed sullivan show. That has a sticks in the plates since keep spinning. Yes that is exactly what it is. It's not even juggling. It's everything's gotta be spending at once and and literally. I mean one minute year over spinning this plate shaken the hell out of it the next minute. You're running over shaking this fucking plate and while you're doing this one another one's wobbling about ready to fall on your bounce back and forth and yeah so so last friday. This is real story. I had you know. I go in the weekend with an idea of all right so i'm going to get a couple of these. Little projects done for clients and get caught up on this and then monday. I'll have my big dale work on these things friday at seven forty one pm. I got an urgent email from a client that they had gone in and tried to build out a bunch of stuff in there automation and none of it was working the way they were wanting it to. An is actually screwed up other stuff. So let me clarify one thing for all your clients. Don't touch kevin shit. Break everything. I fucking touch so i have a couple of clients going and they'll do stuff..

Bo wien kevin donnie ed sullivan dale kevin shit
"wien" Discussed on The Indigo Podcast

The Indigo Podcast

03:35 min | 1 year ago

"wien" Discussed on The Indigo Podcast

"Lab. Free tutoring all of this stuff. You're paying for guys you should be using. It reminds me of disney movie. Pinocchio you know so. Sometimes you'll see older classmen right. You know junior seniors right saying oh yeah we got the new yeah. You're a cool freshmen. Come hang out with us. Miss your orientation stuff This is like so when when pinocchio they go to jack ass island right and they smoke and they play games all day and they turn into donkeys rather than real humans. watch out for those bad influences. That will be there in your freshman year. The cool kids group. Oh they want me to join a fraternity. Oh they will all this stuff. Don't be that donkey right. Wien become a real human. That's what that disney movie. Pinocchio is about and this is your first time to avoid jackass island and do good with your life. That's great another thing that you want to do. And i would advise anyone going to college to do is to intentionally try to carve outweighs which you can get involved in campus life so regardless of whether not. You're living on or off of campus. There's a lot of learning that happens there and this is these are the social organizations right. Just meeting people other types of clubs on campus organizations that exists professional organizations. Maybe there's something for your academic discipline sports that you can get involved intermural. Sports play ultimate frisbee. Every tuesday. At whatever time i those types of things can't be beneficial. You get to meet people. And kind of broaden your horizons other service or religious organizations that exist on campus these can also be great ways to make connections to figure out more about yourself and about life and just have a good time and if you're leaving your social circle behind right and that's part of what makes college so amazing that's part of it but that being said don't just be mr bro over there and always cracking the books and not talking. You have to feed yourself socially spiritually emotionally all of those ways. If you're having a hard time you know. There's generally free counselling at these universities. Go ahead and get in a few therapy sessions. Just to make sure your calibrated. You don't have to be really in the depths of despair to just check in with a therapists To make sure that your calibrated but you're think of the whole person approach here to your education. Yes you're going to learn some cool stuff but you also need to take care of your emotion and emotional wellbeing and the other piece ben. We're talking the physical well-being i went to college. Land there is a buffet at every meal. All you can eat buffet. If i want pizza and ice cream for breakfast i could probably have. It know this is not you know. Don't emotionally eat yourself and to the freshman forty or thirty you know you know in the freshman fifteen or something right. There can be some changes but get plugged in with eating right now. that's great. Yeah keep yourself physically in tune you know exercise and sleep and eating right. Those are all great things for you to to be mindful of as you go through this journey. We mentioned a few different areas on campus. Some different resources already that you need to be familiar with but a few others that you should be familiar with and and really get to know..

disney Wien ben
"wien" Discussed on The Moment with Brian Koppelman

The Moment with Brian Koppelman

06:28 min | 1 year ago

"wien" Discussed on The Moment with Brian Koppelman

"Yeah i think polling myself off line a bit in and focusing on other things has just made some of that die down in a way that i think you have to return to the forest. Sometimes or the gotta. Dm someone's mind through the window. No someone who you knew or the rando dam. And i mean i think actually was. Dm that i had one one point answered and then it was person again so it wasn't the one i knew but it was about. I don't think there was any intention. Like she was like yay. And i was like no i. I can't actually see how it wasn't. Yes pension no. It was sweet. But i can also see how how not that. Inst- the how young incident itself. but but what. It's a harbinger to be the thing that that really is that right right one points toward could but isn't this. I mean it's funny. You say you're offline lately. But like i mean i saw your stories in the last couple of days and my stories. Don't count right. Yeah how do we define off line. I now i mean. I think there are certain parts of my like my self my story that i not my answering my personal story that i yes. He didn't share online. Because they're not able to be encapsulated in like one minute. And i needed more time in my life to come to terms with sharing it and things like that and i think those are the projects. I'm sort of diving into now and those are like long. Those are meant to be like long versions of me exploring myself or diving. Whatever doing whatever and i wait. What was i talking about. I just lost my online offline elliott. And what you meant. which was these these projects. You're not really gonna tell them now in these little bursts your ideas you're going to tell in narrative form in some way whether it's book length or movie length or write whatever thank you for following yes and that like my stories are just like oh. I had like a weird breakfast. I found a dead pigeon on the road and it hurt my feelings. That's my story. That's just like the little moments that i'm like. Okay like to be connected. But it's not like why. Why is my trauma hurting my body this right now. Which is the movie the mood does. And which there was more of in the early days of your stuff there there was probably more of just willingness to say whatever yeah. How much did you think about camera. Because i wanna like. It's funny people. Don't all the time recognize the amount of and i know soon as you might say. Well i just did it like honestly art of this is staging milan-san like i think folks don't understand that this is storytelling with a camera. And it's directorial as you know wien and i recognized right away like visit filmmaker. There's an actor in a film maker and a writer and And i think it's easy to miss that in the same way. Everybody can criticize restaurant because they think they can cook. But if you spent two minutes watching someone make an omelet who knows how to make an omelet. You realize the difference so as a homemaker. I'm really interested. In the way you started thinking about the iphone and thinking about framing and thinking about when a view and how much of that was Instinctive iteration process. And how much of it was an intellectual iteration process. Yeah i think. I became aware of how i worked when i got to comedy central and because at the beginning i really only had an iphone so there was no other option then it got to central and they were like years of fancy camera. I was like well no. It's too heavy to hold. I can't hold it facing myself and have the angle. I want will with a heavy camera and i can't see it at the same time you know like i can't so and i also realized i i don't know i think it was quite instinctual and then i mean i had a ton of fun. Editing and i felt that i i found it quite joyful to like get the shots i wanted. I would know when i would know when we got the shot. We got the shot me. And my i don't know anxiety. Got the shot. And then i would edit the shots. I liked together. And i would like i. I liked feeling like oh. This has too much error of this is to clip be like that was a nice experience and i found it to be private as sort of almost like writing like it reminded me of writing. Because it's me alone like trying to put a puzzle together and feeling like all on. I know when when it's hitting right But yeah a lot of it was like. I wanted to told my iphone because if i set it up and then i stand back. Feels like i'm like a preschooler in like a talent show. And that's not the vibe like i want is intentional that it's presentational in some way that you can tell. They set the camera up. And there's the weird thing about like you edited out the part when he walked away from studying to camera. There's all this stuff that felt wrong. But then when i got to comedy central they were like we have a director for you. We have a camera for you. We have you have to write out your scripts. I you have like all this stuff and it was very interesting. Like to be given so many resources because i was like. Oh actually i tried one time to do a whole one with with all the resources provided like going to different locations and all this stuff and it was. It really. didn't feel good or it didn't i. We all agreed like everyone. There was like oh this is sure it had somehow no it wanted to be sort of scrappy. So.

elliott wien milan san
The Six Day War: The Waiting

The Jewish Story

02:20 min | 2 years ago

The Six Day War: The Waiting

"This episode. we're going to walk right up to the brink of war. And when i think about such terrifying in awesome event i think a lot about the courage bound up with the needs of the hour is fascinating idea to me. I mean where does it come from this capacity within the human spirit to overcome the rational mind tells. You is a terrible chance of survival. Not only that. But i think a lot about the courage embedded in our history about wien durrance which it takes to consistently over come. The obstacles life puts on our way in pursuit of the things which we believe our most sacred and when i started to do a little bit of research about what courage actually is. I found that in western culture. The idea reaches its first crystallization in plato's early writings and they're he calls it a sort of endurance of the soul. And you know despite the fact that we in the greeks parted ways long ago. If anybody makes the rich it's certainly plato. And that's a very jewish notion that courage is an endurance of the soul that pure essence the embodiment of the divine element within human existence. Is what gives us the ability to overcome all the challenges physical emotional mental and even spiritual know of. It's not a surprise that the origin of the word in latin is from coal. Right meeting heart. That somehow courage means that you lead from the heart that the head we'll get itself wrapped up in fear sometimes in fights paralyzed in the face of events in its ability to make a decision. But you can rely on the heart to know and push forward another piece of what courage is or that i found in my research at least actually comes from a completely different culture from the dow de ching out zoo and he says from caring comes courage. Where do we get courage from. When we feel that that which matters to us most is under threat. Think of the mother bear defending the cubs. Think of the amazing things that were all capable in. The name of love is a very important idea because it tells us that the powers of the human spirit don't always find their most powerful focus within the mind sometimes like i said the heart has to lead the

Wien Durrance Plato Latin Cubs
"wien" Discussed on KDWN 720AM

KDWN 720AM

03:11 min | 2 years ago

"wien" Discussed on KDWN 720AM

"Watch one minute of television. Not why did neither. Actually, I didn't I just When I get online, I start looking for stuff that interests me. And this is what I come up with all this stuff, So right, But I do have a clip that I have to play before we because I have to set up Why, Vander Wien? So forceful and powerful in his arguments. So Senator Chris Coons of Delaware he's a He called him Megamind. You ever remember that movie with Megamind? The evil Megamind? This guy is the equal Megamind. These giant forehead needs. I don't remember it. But okay, it was. It was actually What's his name who was on Saturday Night Live who played the part Anchorman? Whatever his name is. Yeah. Okay. So anyway, he said on ABC is this week I hadn't played Cliff 12. So you wouldn't you don't believe that a full trial. More witnesses. More documents give us a sense of what was going on inside the White House would better serve the cause of justice and accountability. I do think that we need to spend months and months unearthing all the evidence that can possibly be gotten to through a 9 11 style commission. I, frankly at that time did not think that spending months fighting over additional witnesses would have changed the outcome of this trial. One bit The House managers agreed. All of you the system that knows so much You decide what's right or wrong the same way that you decide what's funny. We're not okay. I think I might understand that you did this to start a movement to become a symbol. Come on, Marie. Look like the kind of cloud that could start a movement. Killed those guys because they were awful. Everybody is awful these days. It's enough to make anyone crazy. Okay, So that's it. You're crazy. That's your defense for killing three young men. Now they couldn't carry a tune to save their lives. Hey, that was from what? What was that from? I don't know that joker. The Joker went on television and confessed to killing these three young men because he tried to make me sing a song and they couldn't do it because they were so afraid. But you know what? This is What? I'm hearing these people. I don't care if he's guilty or not. I decide what's right around. That's why here Chris Coons saying Now? Yeah, right on this amazing interview with CBS and anchor Frog faced woman they call her Vander Wien. Just demolishes this woman. Listen to clip 13. Throughout the trial. You denied that Mr Trump had a role in inciting the January 6 insurrection at the Capitol. You argued First of all that there was no insurrection. But during your closing arguments, you seemingly admitted that there was in fact an insurrection using that word, saying that that was not up for debate. What rule that the former president say you didn't understand the case. I use the word give you the opportunity. Clarify, sir. Sure. I used the word insurrection of my closing argument when quoting the charging documents. What happened at the Capitol on January? 6 is absolutely horrific. But what happened in the Capitol during this trial? Woz not too far away from that the prosecutors in this case doctored evidence they did.

Marie Saturday Night Live CBS Vander Wien Trump January ABC White House 6 Anchorman this week Megamind three young men Delaware one minute Senator The House Capitol Cliff 12 Chris Coons
"wien" Discussed on KSFO-AM

KSFO-AM

01:54 min | 2 years ago

"wien" Discussed on KSFO-AM

"Nays are 43 2 3rd of the centre's president. Having 40 guilty. The senator judges that responded Donald John Trump. Former president. United States is not guilty as charged the article of Impeachment, All right, that was Pat Leahy on the acquittal of Donald Trump over the weekend, and it was pretty These air are sad and dangerous times when you could literally now. Holds one party toe one group of set of standards and another part of another set of sent standards. It is extremely it's extraordinarily dangerous. When evidentiary standards are completely bypassed. It's dangerous when Pat Leahy is presiding over the shift show charade, as I call it while he himself is ready on record, saying Donald Trump is guilty, that doesn't represent anything. That is that resembles due process presumption of innocents in any way. None of these videotapes that were used by the House managers would ever have been admissible. Inner court Court of law. Now add to that The There's a great exchange between one of the president's attorneys, Michael Vander Wien. As CBS anchor says, Well, you know, there's only a little thing a little, they literally altered evidence. Now that in any other real court of law would be considered a huge problem. Listen to how this exchange went down. Your question is to be clear for our viewers. Listen, what happened is worried about you say doctor and evidence The media has to start telling the right story in this country..

Donald Trump Michael Vander Wien Donald John Trump Pat Leahy CBS 43 one one party 40 guilty one group Nays 2 3rd United States
"wien" Discussed on 990 The Answer

990 The Answer

03:49 min | 2 years ago

"wien" Discussed on 990 The Answer

"And millions of views. From over the weekend. I It's long I typically wouldn't play it all. But it's strong enough that you may actually want to hear it all. I think it may be just the thing you need on a Monday morning. If in fact you're headed into work, telephone number 618 50 09 96 108 50 09 90 We're online at 9 90 the answer dot com s o this guy that I still moving about him. If you do Feel free to let me know. But C B F. N Don't know what that is. This was obviously like a digital or long form interview. Because they let him go for quite a while, and I don't know who the anchor is interviewing him. But Trump's attorney, Michael Vander Wien. Is being interviewed from the Rotondo. After the Senate trial. And Trump's been acquitted. And this anchor. Is basically kind of dismissive of what His case is which you know, setting aside the total fraud that the whole basis of the cases Two things that were really devastating about it. Number one was they point out that sheer and utter hypocrisy they rolled what had to have been Bit all told 20 minutes of footage of Democrats spewing some of the most bile. Load some hatred for Donald Trump from the day he was elected. About how they were going to impeach him. IMPEACH IMPEACH Him impeach him impeach him. I mean, just devastating montages of these Democrats committed to impeaching him from the day he was elected and then fighting fighting fighting and get in their faces. And you see these Democrats over four years put into a tight montage form of, you know, 789 minutes, just over and over and over, it was devastating. And the hypocrisy was glaring and obvious. And so that unto itself was enough, but then the second element that Trump's defense team brought to the floor. Was doctored. Quote evidence that the House impeachment managers brought Dr Tweets from Fraudulent accounts. They completely altered. I mean, graphically altered tweets. Misrepresented dates on tweets misrepresented verification on tweets to make it look like they came from somebody else. I mean, they were caught red handed, misrepresenting evidence. In a tribal And it was like nobody cared. And so this anchor Ed was completely dismissive of it. And Vander Wien. This Philadelphia attorney after it's all over and he gets his boss acquitted here. He does not mince words. He lets this lady have it. He's pretty hilarious. Um We might. I think I'm just gonna let it roll here. You need to take this in if you haven't heard it yet, because it's it's pretty enjoyable. Go ahead him. Joining me now is former President Trump's attorney, Michael van, Vivien. Thank you, sir. For joining us. Let's get right into those words that we heard from Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. He ended the trial with this passionate speech about President Trump's involvement in the insurrection. During it, he said that the former president is still liable for everything he did during his period in office. Are you expecting to face more charges against Mr Trump in the near future? And do you anticipate being part of that defense? No, That's just political rhetoric and I was hopeful that something would.

Donald Trump Michael van Michael Vander Wien Vander Wien 20 minutes Monday morning Ed 789 minutes Mitch McConnell 618 50 09 96 108 50 09 90 9 90 Vivien Trump Democrats second element Senate President Trump millions Rotondo Philadelphia
"wien" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

77WABC Radio

04:04 min | 2 years ago

"wien" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

"Wien. Now check this out. It wasn't the end. They're not only does he set her straight, But then she keeps trying to box him in which is it's remarkable. And she's not getting a little flustered. Like no, No, no. You do understand, sir. I am gonna box you in and he's like, Oh, no, you're not. And it's a real mike drop moment. But it's not literally later on. That comes the actual mike drop, which is the best part of all of us, But I want you to hear now. The next clip where, he says, I can't believe you would ask a question that minimizes how they doctored the evidence. Amazing. Check this out. Let's follow up with with a point that you're making right now about the house managers. As you say, doctoring evidence and on the argument of yours, they didn't deny it and put it in front of them three times worse. What you're what you're talking about. Now is is a check Mark. That's a verification on Twitter that did not exist on that particular tweet 2020 that should have actually read 2021, Andhra. Selective editing you say of the tapes is that wait? That's not enough for you. That's not enough for you. I wait. No, no trying. Look, I'm not a juror in this trial. What I'm trying to be clear for our viewers is what you see is what you're referring to, because not everybody has been following its not okay. Not everybody for a little bit of evidence. Respectfully. It's not. I have not said it is. Okay. Your question is turn clear for our viewers. Listen, what has happened is worse than the one that starts a doctor in evidence. Media has to start telling the right story in this country. The media is trying to divide this country. You are bloodthirsty for ratings, and as such, you're asking questions now that are already Set up with a fact pattern. I can't believe you would ask me a question indicating that it's all right. Just a doctor a little bit of evidence. Let me tell you. This is a seven minute clip of audio that honestly, if I had more than an hour, I would have cut this into equal pieces and let you hear the whole thing because the whole thing is so good now when she mentioned selectively editing, I want to just make a very clear statement. I've edited videos. I've edited audio being a producer, you know, for Project Veritas and this term selectively edited. Has been something I've pushed back on for a long time, because you know what is there a way you can edit that's not selective. Yeah, For those of you who've ever ended anything. You know exactly what you're taking out the stuff you don't want and you keep the stuff that you're going to take and put on the air. That's how you edit. So yes, all editing is selective to say that it's selectively edited this stupid. Now Some people like to say, deceptively edited and that is the better term because that's what the Democrats tried to do here. The Democrats added a blue check mark to make this person who was some nobody on Twitter. Look as if they were some grandiose person that made this this phenomenal statement and The whole thing was alive. It's just a lie. It's kind of like saying I was wearing a light blue shirt, the dark one pair of pants and then we just super imposed a little badge over my left thing. Oh, I'm not really a cop. I just the point is it was fake. Then the biggest point he makes when she says, Well, what you were trying to say was 2020 not 2021. This is not some oversight. One year. People do this to fake ID's all the time so they can drink so they could go to a party. So then go to a club. People do this to commit insurance fraud in all sorts of bank and wire fraud. You're going to be in one of the biggest trials and in the United States history and you're gonna start doctoring evidence the Democrats changing the date on a tweet so that it fits into the timeline to make it look like somebody said that Back then, instead of saying it now that is utter insanity, and he's right. We can't sit here and minimize that. But the mic drop comes up now when she continues to push and he's had enough check this out. Let's plant a slanted question. A slanted.

United States Twitter seven minute Democrats 2020 One year more than an hour one pair of pants 2021 Wien one Mark Project Veritas three Andhra
"wien" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

77WABC Radio

02:12 min | 2 years ago

"wien" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

"And he's breaking it down. This is America with Rich fell. Dez How right New York City? Welcome back. I'm trying to be like a cool guy. Put my hood on because you know I'm bald. I would say I have a great head of hair, but I am bald and it's a little chilly in this studio. So I go to throw my hood on. And guess what comes off my headset. And look, you know, it's one of those behind the scenes moment. The guys in the control room or laughing their butts off of me. Welcome back, everyone. Ritual Does Val desk with an S right here. Talk radio 77 WBC for this special live installment of the This Is America Podcast and please make sure that you are checking us out on the podcast platform on WNBC radio dot com. However, you get your podcasts rich Valdes filed this with an ass on all the social media and our phone number. If I haven't given it to you, let me give it to you and welcome you and invite you to give us a call 108 48 92 22 1 808 for a w A B c. I see that we have calls from New York City. From Florida from Scott and Jimmy and Viviane. And we're gonna get to everybody in a little bit. But first I'II been the thought You've been detained Ito Let me tell you what a verbal Smackdown President Trump's attorney, Vander Wien gave to Lana Zach, the fake news anchor person at CBS News, who interviewed him and repeatedly tried to cut him off and box him in and get him to agree to something that just wasn't true. It just quite frankly, was just not accurate, and it's great. I think he did it a respectfully be passionately, and it was just so spot on the videos on my rumble channel. If you want to check it out, because the audio gives it Most of the context, but the video's great you could see their faces. Her face is priceless because he keeps calling her out. She keeps no, I'm just but but but, I mean, it's really terrific rather than me. Go through the motions. I want you to hear it. Let's start with Vander Wien. Prosecution Doctored evidence. Check this out. During your closing arguments. You seemingly admitted that there was, in fact, an insurrection using that word, saying that that was not up for debate. What role the former president played. You didn't understand the case. I used the world give you the opportunity. Clarify, sir. Sure. I used the word insurrection of my closing argument.

Viviane Scott Jimmy Vander Wien Lana Zach This Is America Florida New York City 108 48 92 22 1 808 CBS News WNBC Valdes President Trump America one first Dez Rich WBC 77
"wien" Discussed on WMAL 630AM

WMAL 630AM

03:56 min | 2 years ago

"wien" Discussed on WMAL 630AM

"This is why you got to give this stuff for their two before you start trashing lawyers. We have people in the media who've been sued and have sued people and they don't like lawyers and all the rest. They're a bunch of munchkins. A bunch of munchkins. Projecting their own. Hideous experiences on everybody else. But you have to be temperate. You need to watch these things. You got to think about these things. These lords to the hell of a job today. They put the House managers on trial. They put the Democrat Party on trial. They put Kamila Harrison Schumer and the others on trial. They took their allegations and turn them against them. Because they're so absurd and hypocritical. And I feel A lot of you who worked for living and aren't watching this and I don't blame you. I really don't need to hear some of this. So we're going to spend some time tonight. Listening to some of this. Listening to some of them. David shown one of the three Laura's Bruce Castor, Michael Vander Wien. Played a montage of the Democrats saying they will fight It literally goes on for almost 10 minutes. We'll play a few minutes of this because the Democrats focused on this word fight. The president's lawyers said. Okay, let's focus on this word fight. Look who keeps using the word fight. You do. Got one go. And I'm a fighter and I'm relying on you. The way I see it now is that we pick ourselves up and we fight back. That's what I think it's all about. We stand up and we fight back. But we are going to make sure that this fight does not end tonight. Well, I'm wired to fight anyone who wasn't doing their job for us. I'm Jon Tester, and you Damn right. I approve this message. I'll have lots of fights ahead of us, and I'm ready to stand up and keep fighting. That's the fight. We're gonna fight. We're gonna fight bare knuckles fight. Now they're going to have to actually fight back against people. The fight has to be conducting still important that we need to fight. Fight that fight. We have been fighting. I was fighting very hard Time is of the essence both in terms of the fight. I think we should be fighting. Well, I really believe we need to fight. There were simply not going to take this lying down. We're going to keep fighting. So I'm telling all my Holly's This is the fight of our life. Whose side are you on? Who are you fighting? For their fighting for I'm fighting. We're both fighting. We will fight back. What happened to just take this lying down? I'm just gonna keep the fight up. What we have to do right now is fight as hard as we can. We have that rise up and fight back. And so we're gonna fight and we're going to continue to fight. I am going to be fighting like hell to keep fighting, fighting fighting or we kept fighting And we did. So we're going to keep fighting. We have to be fighting every every single day. We have to fight back and we have no choice but to do that. I think we're doing the right thing to do that. Fighting and I'm fighting people. Our job right now is the fight is really important. I'm going to keep fighting. I'm asking for the support of people across the country of fight back and you gotta be fierce in fighting biting around. I've been fighting for President Biden. I will find like man. I'll tell you what Now more than ever, we have to fight like hell. We have these battles on the floor of the Senate. I'm going to go down in battle and done and I'm gonna be down there on the floor. But we Democrats were fighting as hard as we can. Democrats. They're fighting as hard as we can. Credited in any way, but we're fighting back. What we've got to do is fight in Congress fight in the courts fight in the streets, fight online fight at the ballots done. This goes on and on and on. Nothing. Your times the other day, did a hit job on five of us on radio. They took some of our words out of context. They cherry picked and they said that we were stoking people before the riot..

Michael Vander Wien Jon Tester David Kamila Harrison Schumer Democrat Party Congress five Democrats two both one tonight today Senate Bruce Castor House three almost 10 minutes President Biden single day
Senate acquits Donald Trump of inciting the deadly Capitol riot in Washington, DC

The Mortgage Radio Show

01:18 min | 2 years ago

Senate acquits Donald Trump of inciting the deadly Capitol riot in Washington, DC

"Senate has voted to acquit former President Trump in a 57 to 43 vote 57 to convict 43 to acquit. Seven Republican senators joined Democrats to vote trump guilty of incitement of insurrection. But that was not the amount of votes needed to do a conviction that includes Senator Susan Collins of Maine. The abuse of power. And betrayal of his oath by President Trump. Meet the constitutional standard off high crimes and misdemeanors again. The Senate failed to reach a two thirds majority with 10 votes shy of a conviction. After the vote. Former President Trump's attorney, Michael Vander Wien, appeal for unity. Our country needs toe face the business in front of it with all seriousness and purpose, love and peace in our hearts and move the ball forward so that this great nation can get a strong as possible in the face of this pandemic. Former President Trump is welcoming his second impeachment acquittal and slamming the trial is yet another phase of the greatest witch hunt in the history of our country. Trump released a statement telling his supporters that the movement to make America great again has only just begun and that he will have more to share with them in the months ahead,

President Trump Senator Susan Collins Senate Michael Vander Wien Donald Trump Maine America
Impeachment Updates: Senate votes to acquit Trump

The Best of Ben Shapiro

01:22 min | 2 years ago

Impeachment Updates: Senate votes to acquit Trump

"In the U. S. SENATE. A verdict in the impeachment trial turns the centre's president having 40 guilty. The senator judges that the respondent Donald John Trump, former president, United States Is not guilty as charged the article impeachment The 53 to 47 vote minutes ago. Seven Republicans joining Democrats voting for conviction in closing Trump lawyer Michael Vander Wien refuted video evidence presented by House impeachment managers claiming trump inside of the Capitol attack despite all of the video plane. No point in their presentation. Did you hear the House managers play a single example. Of Mr Trump urging anyone to engage in violence of any kind House manager Congressman Joseph No goose challenging the defense position that an out of office president should not face an impeachment trial and it would be unwise. To suggest that going forward. The on Lee appropriate response to constitutional offenses committed by a president are criminal charges When the president returns to private life That's not the kind of Political system any of us want for time today. The trial brought to a near standstill after the Senate voted to consider hearing witnesses. But both sides ultimately agreeing not to and instead accepting new information into the record from a Republican in Congress Woman about actions by the president on the day of the deadly capital siege, the Biden

Donald John Trump Michael Vander Wien Mr Trump Joseph No Senate House Donald Trump United States LEE Congress Biden
"wien" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

06:40 min | 2 years ago

"wien" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"There's some debate over this moment. This is not the first outburst in the last few minutes. Is there? Objection. Your objection is hurt. Sorry. Michael Vander Wien had objected to David Sicily needs closing argument, saying he was talking about evidence that had not been entered in Nina Totenberg. Well, it sounds like the Senate's going to do a roll call vote. We have a few moments here. He seemed to be operated on by the rules of a regular trial. We have spent a lot of time analyzing the fact that this is not a typical vehicle trial. This is not and I have to say that even in a in a regular trial It's true that counsel can object. About Argument to the jury in closing. But Rarely do they do that. It's normally they would rather let it just go by and not Um and not Call attention to it. But here This is in fact, a tweet by a reporter. Based on that reporters. Work finding out from left, he says, from Vice President Pence's team that in fact, he did not receive any calls or any enquiries from the president for five days, and that they do not view this and the vice president. The former vice president never did view this as Being concerned about his safety, but rather leaving him out dangling in the wind. That's my dangling in the wind is my those are my words. So it's a very Brutal assessment now reported by a journalist and counsel obviously leaped to his feet to try to say, Well, we don't know that's true. This is just a reporter telling us it's you know, on and No, it's a perfectly valid objection to make, but it does call attention. Through this reporting and almost guarantees that there will be more reporting on this subject as the day goes on, and the evening goes on, and it will become more and more embarrassing for Republicans. When they do that. We want to pause right now and get some detail from Claudia Chrysalis is done. Some reporting can give us a sense of what's happened while we're in Quorum call this began. With Senator Mike Lee jumping up what was his issue, so this likely is going to tie back to another objection he tried to raise earlier this week. We're seeing a little bit of a replay here. He's taking issue with a statement that manager David Sis Cellini mentioned touching on him, and he wants to be sure that the record is clear. He has stated that to the chamber before he was very argumentative earlier this week, when this came up before about this his connection to this trial this Congress Nation. So this is an argument about himself, not the president. This is an argument. It does tie to the president to a to a phone call. It likely ties to this phone call between then President Trump to another senator, Senator in the chamber. It happened to come across Senator Mike Lee cell phone, and so he may be raising issue with that again, weaken, see senators with the defense team right now, arguing how they can make this point. Of order. Heard We heard Mike Lee moments ago trying to have his statement addressed on the floor. So we see Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin animatedly speaking to the defense team right now, Mike Leigh's is a step away from him. Also, they're trying to discuss Way forward in terms of him if he can be addressed, But as we heard, Leahy, the presiding officer said that this is this is not this is out of orders. In terms of these present. This is the closing arguments. This is not when this could be heard, but perhaps they could reach a deal. Is there pausing the trial right now, Nina, you have a point of clarification here. Yeah, well, the defense counsel and I couldn't see if it was Vander Wien or or or Castor. Got up and objected to the tweet by The Washington Post reporter, not Two. The talent, the the alleged comments that were reported about Mike Lee. I think Mike Lee is now trying to sort of Piggyback on that and say, Look, you screwed it up about me. Now you're saying something that's only based on a journalist Tweet. You can't talk about that in a closing argument, and you know it amounts to pounding the table, But it's you know, it's his effective is anything they've got. I guess this is a good moment to remind people that we are in closing arguments that after a good time spent this morning debating the idea of whether or not to have witnesses in the end it that witness's statement was entered into the record. Um, I believe Kelsey Snell was saying it was among those in our group saying that this is a very Senate like resolution to what seemed like a high drama moment. What happened? Well, you know, I did. This is also a very sad like moment of trying to get past the drama. People are upset in the room there. They reached a point today, where they essentially reset themselves. After three hours of drama about whether or not they should depose Jamie Herrera Butler, the Republican congresswoman from Washington, who relayed a story of a conversation between House Minority leader Kevin McCarthy and former president Trump during the insurrection, they Did. There was this threat from Republicans that they would delay the trial for for weeks for months, well calling as many witnesses as possible. There seemed to be an effort to try to avoid any kind of conflict and further rabbit hole down the witness witnessed direction. I just bring her statement in and having it be part of the record and it's come A. It seems to be a central part of this closing argument, though, right? We're hearing it over and over again now that it has been raised, and they're also having arguments now about what other information should be allowed in. The reason we are in the moment now, where they're having a quorum call is because they can't figure out what they're allowed to be talking about. This is they took a break here. Not necessarily because they they knew what they were doing. It's because they don't know what they're doing, and there is a they're trying to sort through a trial where the rules were essentially written and passed by the Senate offer for what is not a criminal trial but a political trial When we just want to mention we're in the midst of this corn called the Senate floor is incredibly busy right now, a lot of gesturing a lot of huddling as people. Discussed this point that's being discussed by Mike Leigh. I do want to bring in Tamera Keith. What, if anything have we've been seeing from the Trump team in handling this early afternoon? Well, they they certainly pushed back on the idea of witnesses..

David Sicily Claudia Chrysalis Kelsey Snell David Sis Cellini Mike Leigh Michael Vander Wien Jamie Herrera Butler Nina Kevin McCarthy Nina Totenberg five days Washington Leahy Republican today Republicans Senator Senate Wisconsin Tamera Keith
Trump lawyers rest case

AP 24 Hour News

01:02 min | 2 years ago

Trump lawyers rest case

"After House prosecutors and former President Trump's lawyers finish their cases in his impeachment trial. Members of the Senate ask questions Lead House manager Maryland Democrat Jamie Raskin, telling them Trump was the instigator of the events that led to the January 6th riot at the capital for us to believe otherwise. Is to think that somehow Rabbit came out of a hat. And this mob just showed up here on their own. All by themselves. This is dangerous. Senators. The future of our democracy. Truly Rests in your hands. Trump Attorney Michael Vander Wien dismisses a question posed by Vermont independent Senator Bernie Sanders as to whether Trump was determined to reverse the election. It's your relevant to the question before this body. What's relevant in this impeachment article is Were Mr Trump's words. Insightful to the point of violence and

Donald Trump Lead House Jamie Raskin Trump Attorney Michael Vander Senate Maryland Senator Bernie Sanders House Vermont Mr Trump
#86  Aprenda a dizer NO! - burst 2

Cueca Apertada

00:24 sec | 2 years ago

#86 Aprenda a dizer NO! - burst 2

"Newest into new mucus. So you can't make it or not. She was aliki. Ceo leaders program to source. Then you mean sizes pursues. He no sobbing zero. Craziest seamless fussing. Beep oversee those monday for the east. Mary's room. I

Brooke Metra Combet Moore Llamas Wien Grace Todd Matecki Judy Brazil Bosnia Foley ROY Asha Hikkaduwa Janeiro Aliki LA Hobart Jane Schubert Barack Obama Mary
The GREATEST Wealth Strategy of All Time with Reshveen Rajendran

Entrepreneur on FIRE

04:36 min | 2 years ago

The GREATEST Wealth Strategy of All Time with Reshveen Rajendran

"The greatest wealth strategy of all time who is not going to press play on this I mean fire nation if you're listening to this right now you obviously did I'm excited chat about this because there's a lot we're going to be covering and you have quite the story forest US brothers. So let's dive right into the story because I want to know how does a person go for making a million dollars a year to a million dollars a week break down for This year collected to combat a once and what happened was Tony Robbins became speaking been. Talked about how to dominate me say there's one Gorby said if you give more than every other person to give more Salvia yourself more than every other person in your industry, then you dominate and you win. Any. Seat John I think sometimes you know. Sometimes gets in your body in your soul. So like did quarter really really sunk in men how do you? How do I give more than everybody else and then really really stood something thinking my spirit is this something in my soul. Came back. Entrepreneur on file. Also, fire on fire to give money every single person all day in my industry and dude, you know like if you seen my actions like the action that. Are Given so much a neural. Brunton did something you said give your best stuff for free? I need this things man I need this do things I get my best offer free contrary what entrepreneurs beliefs And I. meet. Sure that I guess more than everybody else out there that nobody would even catch up what else doing this Halloween four million dollars in a year to generating a million dollars in a single week in the month of June I mean fire nation. This is one of those lessons you just have to really absorb just like rush Wien absorbed at Tony Robbins quote so. Eloquently it is critical to recognize the fact that when people don't know you when they don't necessarily have the opportunity to trust you yet they're not just going to lay down their hard earned money to invest in a product or a service or coaching from you like whatever that might look like you need to earn that trust and what better way than what rush Wien. Is talking about by giving the best of yourself for free to completely out serving your competition to such a level that you absolutely dominate and rush, and you're talking to fire nation. It's it's a massive audience around the world and a lot of people right now are saying, well, how do we even get started like I'd love to make a million dollars a week heck. I'd love to make a million dollars a year mean I'd love to make a million dollars over the next five years. That's a lot of money. But what would you say is the best way for somebody listening right now who has very little to get started generating income for themselves. Good. I. Love This. I. Love Your Question Man I love Christian and Syed. I have. I run my company Eramet Company. DEEM RUSH DOT COM check me out and stuff but ironic company in John. I wanted to share with you that I have this vision sue big in my vision is to create the largest community of givers in the would. That's my vision. That's what I've actually set my mind to do. In you know, it's very interesting that you asked me the question because just yesterday somebody actually asked me the same question, right? He is like. So again, a swimming bullock following me and yesterday somebody actually means wishing. He's like rush. Why don't you reply? Why don't you reply to messages right. So again, let me read you this exact messages crazy man, right so You to play I know you told me give more or you didn't know this but I have nothing to give men I will surely stop giving once not growing. Right see the problem is is in many people always see I will give I get rich I will give what I have the knowledge I will you know I will do whatever it takes but. When heavy but he meant you give when you have nothing. I don't know if it makes sense like what I'm seeing. Make sense but you know it's like. Women people tell me that. I was giving when I started growing I'll stop the meeting when I actually make money doesn't make sense. To me is like telling me like he made, I'll stop eating right excising. When I get expect right? Like Dude, you get the six pack because you're eating right and because you are

Tony Robbins United States Gorby John Eramet Company Brunton
The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey

Books and Boba

05:02 min | 2 years ago

The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey

"So, re-re yes. What do you want to start with this one? I think we should start with the author's background. and. Just like the inspiration behind Irvine. So. John Massey was born in England and she was raised in the US right now, she lives in Baltimore and her parents are from India and Germany. So she did a lot of traveling. She actually wrote another mystery series back in the nineties which was set in Tokyo while she was living in Japan and it's the Ray Chamara mystery series. But this book was more in the of own voices She did an incredible amount of research for the book I don't know if the people are goods forums read the acknowledgments at the very back but I tend to read all of the acknowledgments because I. I'm usually really curious as to who the author thank and it gives me like a sense of. Their journey when it came to writing the book and she. Massey doesn't have a background in law. She reached out to people reached out to legal historians at universities in. The US who specialize in South Asian law and also in Bombay she contacted magazine editors who are familiar with Parsi customs she went she actually went to Mumbai and she visited all of the historical institutions she reached out to like even railway experts. So she could figure out like how people were able to travel from one place to another and even with the food she I think she interviewed a bunch of like food writers as well. So like the food descriptions in this book are fantastic and our main character per wien is actually inspired by two. Women, attorneys. One of them was Cornelius One of them was Cornelius She was the first woman to read law at Oxford, and the first woman to take the British law exam in eighteen ninety to eighteen, ninety two that's a lot earlier than I would expect the first. First Indian woman to to study law, and the other women that appropriate is based on is Mathon Totta lung who also studied law in Oxford and whisk first woman admitted to the Bombay bar a back in one thousand, nine, hundred, twenty, three. So. Yeah like per Venus. This this book is set in the nineteen twenties. So yeah. It's actually it's really interesting that it's actually based on women who did practice law so Yeah. I mean it's I? Don't think reunite can claim to be experts in the cultures of India but this book real you can tell that the author did a lot of research especially to portray like Mumbai such Mambi during this time period, which was a pre partition it was it depicts a Mumbai that's very multicultural multifaith like a lot of different. People Customs Cultures Religions, and even value sets that kind of coexisting with each other which made for really interesting setting especially in the context of per wien enter father Jamshedi as lawyers who had to. Navigate these. Waters right because every single community has their own set of loss at they have to understand and know how to argue and just also takes place on the backdrop of this was when India was still in imperial colony, right is still part of the British empire and so you have the added. wrinkle of a colonizing power in the form of white people in the mix as well. Yeah Like you said, I'm I'm not an expert with a one thousand, nine, hundred twenty s India But in terms of like England nineteen twenties. So that was during George, the fifth Who was the grandson of Queen Victoria? It's so it's to rains after the Victorian era. So very the the the dad of the King's speech King Yes yes. So this was during time where there was a rise in socialism. And just. I. Think it was like at the height of the British empire and then it crumbled.

Bombay John Massey India United States People Customs Cultures Religi England Mathon Totta Lung Irvine Oxford King Ray Chamara Tokyo Japan Baltimore Jamshedi George Queen Victoria Germany Mambi
Chicago Blackhawks’ Dominik Kubalik named Calder Trophy finalist

ESPN On Ice with Wyshynski and Kaplan Show

01:11 min | 2 years ago

Chicago Blackhawks’ Dominik Kubalik named Calder Trophy finalist

"A record the podcast this week. We've seen some of the awards. Come down the pike. Including today's news that the calder trophy and Jack Adams award finalists are Quinn Hughes. Kelman, car and Dominic Kwalik for the caller and John Tortorella Bruce Cassidy and Elaine. For the Jack? Adams. Mike sold without a Jack Adams finalist. Kinda weird. He must not be nice to those broadcasters that given the time of day after skates something. A little, gruff or something, because honestly the thing about it. Is that like I? Don't know who kick out. For that. I'm really happy. Happy. Jesus I'm really happy. Cassidy made it I'm really happy. Cassidy made it because I feel like this award overlooks guys. That coach really good teams a lot. Yeah I think he's deserving of it, but I mean like. Tortorella did a great job in Wien. Yo You could point to and say there are tangible improvements. The flyers made under his watch I guess it might be. Even you know the guy you kick out for Sullivan, but I just I don't know Sullivan a really good job. This year I just wish I could have gotten into the top three.

Jack Adams Bruce Cassidy John Tortorella Sullivan Quinn Hughes Wien Kelman Dominic Kwalik Mike Elaine
Joe Profaci

Kingpins

03:36 min | 3 years ago

Joe Profaci

"The underworld. Today's quote comes from Salvatori profanity. An influential captain in the most famous Colombo crime family based in New York City for fought. She's actions were ruthless but they were necessary to keep the families disputes away from authorities. Nowhere was this sentiment more apparent than in his famous quote. Goodfellas don't sue goodfellas goodfellas kill goodfellas cheese. Father Joe was the original head of the crime family before his death in nineteen sixty two in the years. Following the family was taken over by Joseph Colombo. The younger prophecy never expressed regret over. Not taking over for his father. He knew it was best if he worked outside of the limelight. Things were easier to accomplish in the shadows while Prophet. She never led the family. His role was important in keeping the peace profound. She was known to be a great mediator. Inter family disputes and was called in to squash any problems for example in nineteen ninety two a mob lawyer in Philadelphia named Salvatore threatened to sue a mobster named carmine Franco Avena accused Franko of skimming money off the top of their Waste Management. Racket without telling him as if the accusation itself wasn't enough to stir up trouble. Avena wanted to take the matter to court. Never the best idea for a criminal organization. The fifty-six-year-old flew in to settle the dispute at the behest of the Colombo family Ci Son was also married to a Venus daughter so in addition to helping the crime family he was protecting his own family profonde. She begged Wien not to file a civil suit. Exposing the entire business in front of a judge would lead to more charges against everyone but Avena was steadfast. That's when pro fauci uttered his famous quote to survive the mob. You had to avoid the courts. This wasn't how things were run instead. Violence was the law of the land. Profonde she didn't want Vena killed. He was family but if he didn't relent. That would be the only way forward. It took some more working over but Avena down. He and Franco settled their deal out of court weeks. Later the problem was federal officials. Had bugged. Evine is office. Every word of his conversation with Prof Archie was heard and some of prophecies comments were used to pin his men on a slew of charges. It was the biggest and most ironic slip up of his career. But he himself ultimately didn't face prosecution he was able to retreat back into the shadows just the way he liked it after a few more years of peacekeeping by the early two thousands prof

Carmine Franco Avena Prof Archie Vena Profonde Joseph Colombo Colombo Father Joe New York City Franko Evine Philadelphia Fauci Salvatore Wien
When ventilators break, iFixit can help

Marketplace Tech with Molly Wood

04:19 min | 3 years ago

When ventilators break, iFixit can help

"Hospitals ventilators dialysis machines and mechanical beds are more important than ever. Sometimes of course that equipment breaks down and some manufacturers restrict access to repair information or require that equipment be fixed by authorized technicians. Meaning that biomedical technicians working in hospitals. Can't just fix things themselves this week. Diy and repair site. I fix it published a giant database of medical equipment repair manuals to help address. That problem Kyle Wiens is CEO of. I fix it and has been leading the project. This is part of the broader trend in products for manufacturers have been locking down repairs. Apple doesn't want you to fix your iphone and medtronic doesn't want hospitals to fix their equipment. They would prefer them beyond service contracts and pay very expensive rates but the hospitals have highly qualified highly trained by medical technicians. Already on site that can do the work But you have this. Trend toward more lockdown systems manufacturers have been taking freedom away from hospitals. Is there any benefit to you? Fix It to do this. Just out of curiosity. You're not charging hospitals for access to this. We have no business while for this. This is this is maybe one of the stupidest business ideas I've ever had. We're not running advertising. We're paying for everything out of pocket. I took close to half of my team off of the normal work for the last couple of months to do. This has been an absolutely huge project larger than I think anyone manufacturer because they've done we have information on thousands of devices from hundreds of manufacturers all in one place and the biomed. Tell me that that's what they really need. They need a central easy to search repository. Not only are you not monitoring? Is there a chance that you will get some kind of trouble or get sued over this? I mean considering like you said these expensive service contracts that manufacturers would prefer to be selling. There's a there's a tension where manufacturers don't want to share the service information because it will enable competition and to that extent we are enabling that competition But I would hope the manufacturers see this as a service that we are providing we're better at hosting in sharing collaborative service information than a medical device manufacturer is so let us do what we do. Well and let them focus on on their work. Do the manufacturers have a point like they spend years of research and millions of dollars on these devices? Do they have a right to protect that intellectual property? Well we're not talking about just anyone fixing these. We're talking about bio medical technicians. The already doing this maintenance already doing this work. I if you talk with hospitals and you see what's happening day to day it can be life or death whether they can fix a machine fast. If you have a ventilator go down you have the option to mail it into a manufacturer for service. You have to fix that machine that day. This is really more about power dynamics and about trying to do is squeeze every last dime that they cannot have the hospitals by pushing them into expensive service contracts when the hospital is really are perfectly capable of doing that work themselves. The database went up earlier this week. How is demand so far? We're seeing really good reaction from from biomed technicians not just in the US around the world. I got a message today from technician in Uganda this hill. Thank you so much. This is going to be really helpful. So we're excited that this is going to be a resource that will be used for a long time to come separate for medical equipment. I see people doing projects all the time of various types. I wonder what sort of traffic you've been seeing on the site since people started quarantining. The traffic to self repair guides on the Internet is dramatically. Up during the quarantine. People are at home board. They're fixing things all things around your house on the honeydew list. They are getting done. Our fastest growing repair right. Now is the Nintendo switch. Nintendo's repair centers are shut down. There's a common problem with the left joy. Con The left joystick where it starts to drift. And it's very infuriating is you're playing games and there's a really really simple fix for it. So nintendo switch any other device repair manuals that are especially popular. We're seeing laptops across the board. All of a sudden every schoolchild needs a computer and that wasn't the case. I don't think six months ago we'd say oh. I need to get a laptop for my kid. Well maybe that's a very lucky kid back then. Now it's an absolute necessity. Every kid needs a needs a laptop. Doing school from home on the phone is not fun. And so we're seeing old laptops. Being pulled out of the jurors people are upgrading them with SST RAM to make them a little bit faster. And that's Great Kyle. Williams is the CEO of the repair. Site I fix it

Nintendo Technician CEO Kyle Wiens DIY Medtronic Apple Uganda United States Williams
Camping during the coronavirus crisis

The RV Podcast

05:20 min | 3 years ago

Camping during the coronavirus crisis

"During the time of great confusion in the In all of North America but particularly for our viewers who may be on the road wondering where to stay. We're GONNA talk about that in our interview the week coming up got. Lots of corona virus. News affects Our viewers and campers. And we've got Some RV questions and tips and lots more to talk about and This Very interesting week that we've all been through Thank you for tuning in this. Is Episode two eighty six of the RV podcasts? And we're delighted to have you with US joining me right now. Is My lifelong traveling companion. And my bride Jennifer. What a Week. It has bend my dear and what a week coming. We'll be yes. I think you're probably right. I mean a week ago. We were talking about this in rather vague. Maybe this thing is going to cause some confusion little disruption but look what happened between episode to eighty five and to eighty six in that week's period many state parks among them New Mexico which is usually very popular. This time of year with with folks had out on their first trips to the year or snowbirds perhaps finally Starting to move out from there warmer weather locations North Carolina Illinois as we record this on The seventeenth of March today. All One hundred and seventy five Florida state parks and they're campgrounds as well as many local parks in many other parts of the country all been closed to camping because of the corona virus schools ours restaurants. Movie theaters and businesses are shut down or have limited services pretty much nationwide. People are urged to stay home indoors and practice social distancing some places have total lockdowns further restrictions are threatened and leaders are urging people to postpone all discretionary travel which would obviously include our Wien. There are hundreds of thousands of our viewers already on the road. Where can they say until this? Immediate crisis has passed in our interview. The week we're going to talk about that With an industry expert. But even though the information that we're giving you is current as record this podcast on Tuesday. The seventeenth of March everything is changing daily. And sometimes hourly so our best advice to you right now is stay where you are or if you must try to find a private campground and then stay there. We are in our condo on Okaloosa island along the Florida panhandle 's Emerald Coast and It has been relatively normal down here. I mean yesterday. We were on the beach in airplanes. Were towing banners signs behind them for beachgoers Promoting the world's largest Saint Patrick's Day party at a Irish bar. Not Too far away from here. Spring breakers are down here. That was yesterday morning. Governor Florida came on and like in many other. Parts of the country ordered all bars and taverns and restaurants closed They can restaurants can stay open if they do take out. Or they limit the seating capacity but It's just Just crazy Like many of you. We had travel plans We were supposed to this week to be speaking at the RV entrepreneur summit up in Lake in Alabama. We've been looking forward to that. Like hundreds of other our viewers For for months now but like all RV rallies RV shows around the country and other events that event has been cancelled. It's been moved online and we'll put a link in the show notes Where you can virtually attend the RV entrepreneur summit but it's all online and the in person part of it has been canceled after that were planning to head to Texas New Mexico and Arizona but all those plans as with millions of others have have to be put on hold. So we're just kind of laying low down at the beach and that's not a bad place to be and we're you know we're weighing our response daily. We like the beach but we also like to be on the move and there's no indication yet how long this will last. Everybody was talking about two weeks. And now we're seeing reports that last until summertime and we're debating now whether we want to pick up and And head back north to our our Michigan home So it's nice to be in the warm Florida Sunshine. But I get pretty Ansi Stan someplace for two or three months and I think a lot of people are feeling the same way so by is we. We don't know where you are but we do know that we are all in this together.

Florida United States North America New Mexico Okaloosa Island North Carolina Illinois Saint Patrick Florida Sunshine Jennifer Michigan Lake Alabama Texas Arizona
The Promise and Forgotten Journey by Silvina Ocampo

Bookworm

09:57 min | 3 years ago

The Promise and Forgotten Journey by Silvina Ocampo

"Of the joys on the path of a reader is seeing a name that you see for years and years. Who is this person as we know today? This person who we hear of and don't know is likely to be a woman who's been neglected. This woman Safina. Oh compo was considered to be one of the great unknowns of South American Literature. She worked with or who we spore his when he was putting together his collection of fantastic literature working on that anthology as well was her husband. Cassavetes who wrote a book that Voorhis praised very highly the invention of Morrell. I read born face and Casado race as a young man but until recently I had never read much to my discredit savina Ocampo. Now I can say in my defense. The two of her books a novel and a book of Stories have just been translated and published by city. Lights press many people know city. Lights Bookstore do you also know that froing getty has oppress attached to that bookstore? Yes there is a press and they have published Safina Compost Forgotten Journey which is a book of short stories. But if I am not giving away too much the forgotten journey is the journey out of the womb into the world. This is a journey. None of US succeed in remembering completely. He did not remember it or face. He saw that. Silvino aqap ball had the gift he said of clairvoyance and so now. We have to thrilling books. Forgotten Journey a book of her short stories and I mean the longest is six pages and then a novel called the promise and we say an awful because it is probably the longest thing she wrote. But it's fairly a hundred pages. I have three translators here who have been working on Silvino compo and they are just some of the translators who are working on Silvino Compo. Because she's about to be the discovery that we have all been waiting for. It's very exciting. And one of these translators is the marvelous Suzanne Joe Levin who goes by the name June. Wien many of you will know as soon as I tell you that. She has translated. Cabrera Infanta. Julio Cortazar Carlos Fuentes Man will tweak Severo Saad we hand Buick Assad Race. And she's translated a great deal of poetry more than forty book on translations she is the dean of Spanish South American literature and translation with her are to people who've been her students and who worked with her on each of these two books. Jill how did you come to know? Savina OCAMPO's work well I came to know Selena. Compost work Because I had the good taste and look to make amazing Literary critic when I was very young New York name a mirror years ago and he with him I was down in Argentina and Together we went to the House of Combo They were married. They were married and so I met them for the first time but of course I had already heard of them because I studied Latin American literature in college and And I was at graduate school that time so but getting to meet. These people was like so exciting. You know it's sort of like meeting Gods When you're a student you're studying. These people like absolutely amazing. Did you also meet for his? At that time. I actually met him the year before because he was brought to yell to give a lecture and evolve bone. Was there also Savino Campbell about whom we're speaking being cassavetes and all who were triumvirate of sorts? Once they married for fifty years he continued to be their dinner guest and You know he as I said. He said of her that she was clairvoyant. She didn't take many photographs. She did not like to be photographed when you see a picture of Safina or Campo. It's not unusual for hands to be crossed in front of her face and if fast if she were going to this or that party she would sing with this ugly face. Jessica Powell use started to read Cedar Fina under the direction of Jill Levine. Yes I was first introduced to Selena's work many years ago in a translation seminar that I took with Jill when I was a graduate student at UC Santa Barbara and after that class ended Jilin. I decided to collaborate on a novella which was actually the only work that Silvino Compo and her husband Blake Assad wrote together and so it was lower haight which is fantastic and we co translated it. And after that Jill and I started talking about you know Oh wouldn't it be wonderful to translate more of Selena's works and so then in Katie a? New Young came on the scene and she's completing her doctorate and her dissertation is in part on Compo Katie's Latif John worked on the translation of forgotton journey. A book of short pieces. There has been also. I don't want to confuse anyone a book of poetry from the New York review books as well as another book covering the entire spectrum of So Vena or Campos pros. I've found my own beginning point. Were these two thrilling little books. Let's here who would like to read a section of Savino Compo? Who'd like to go start with the first black? I can read a section of the Olive Green Dress. The first paragraph from journey forgotten journey. The very first book of Savino Gone Full. Let's hear the first paragraph of the Olive Green dress the olive green dress. The display windows stepped forward to greet her. The only reason she had left the House that morning was to go shopping. Miss Hilton blushed easily her skin translucent as a waxed paper like those packages who's wrappings reveal. All that's inside but beneath such transparencies where the thinnest layers of mystery behind the branching veins growing a little tree over the surface. She was ageless unjust when one noticed the deepest wrinkles on her face or her long white braids. It was possible to catch an unexpected glimpse of her youth in some childlike gesture. Other times she seemed to have the smooth skin of a young girl and light blonde hair precisely at the moment when she looked as if old age had caught up with her. The first paragraph of a very short story called the Olive Green Dress as I read. The stories seem to escape from me as I moved forward in them. There's a strange quality of presence and absence coal joint as she writes. It's quite extraordinary and this first paragraph. Because it's so zigzag you know I I saw it begins with a very odd sentence received like awkward. How could display windows stepped forward to greet you of course? That's that's very surrealist element of you. Know which was the time she was writing in but you know she she young as she old. It's like going from a woman's You know perception of herself but you were talking about how she felt about. She looked I mean. I thought this is kind of interesting example now. Above of that of of those issues and so as very twisty this is Jill Levine. Who is perhaps the Guardian Angel of these three translators bringing savina Ocampo's writing into our present

Jill Levine Silvino Compo Olive Green Dress Savina Ocampo Selena Savino Compo Cassavetes South American Literature Casado Lights Bookstore Savino Campbell United States Voorhis Cabrera Infanta Savino Morrell Julio Cortazar Carlos Fuentes Suzanne Joe Levin
Keith Recker on Color as Narrative

American Fashion Podcast

09:06 min | 3 years ago

Keith Recker on Color as Narrative

"Guest in the studio is Keith. wrecker who is the author of a new book true colors world masters of natural dyes and Pigments Heike. Hey how are you both pretty good Keith how did you get into color. I have to say it's been a long and winding road I come come from a background of poetry and literature and of course you know when you have that background you have to do something and I ended up having to separate careers. Maybe three three one and big retail as director of home furnishings at Saks fifth avenue gump San Francisco and Bloomingdales Direct Response and another career nonprofit as head of aid artisans As founder of the hand Eye Fund and hand eye magazine and currently as pro bono creative director of the international folk art market based Down Santa Fe and my third career has been in Trenton color forecasting with Panton. WGN A little bit with Stylus of really trying to inject a sense of adventure creativity relevance to their client base. Now when we did our episode where we interviewed Donna. Karen that was was She had part of the international folk art market in the urban store and and we were surrounded by products from that market But she didn't really talk about the interview. Can you tell us a little bit about the international folk art market. Yeah absolutely you were surrounded In the urban zone holiday market by I think it was twenty nine different artists from all over the world mostly textiles in that In that collection and the things ranged from the most amazing handspun Kunia hand-knit by artisans in Argentina And the group. That does these. Things is part of have a biosphere management program in the high dry plains of Argentina where Kunia are an essential part and the Kunas harvested the incan way where the village surrounds the Vicuna. So that there's no sense of panic. They slowly move in until the animals can be sheared It's a really touching story so you have. You were surrounded founded by twenty-five stories with that kind of depth and historic resonance And the folk art market is an annual event in Santa Fe. Happens every July. We bring together between one hundred sixty and one hundred eighty artists from all over the world fifty plus countries and they're bringing the best of what they make from a traditional point of view view sometimes from a personally adventuresome creative point of view sometimes from recycled and cutting edge social point of view. It's a real mix of creativity city that from our us-based experiences seems very out of the mainstream and therefore terribly exciting and motivating they must get a lot of just going to that and and meeting each other and seeing what they all do all around the world you that that must be just such experienced for an artisan who works in the community services that do the same thing and then meeting artisans who do wildly different things from other parts of the global. You've already understood the thing that the artists themselves I liked the best about it. They love exchanging topics with each other. Whether it's how to whether it's Oh my God you should try this. Sometimes they get together and collaborate after the market so somebody shares of an all white Chikan embroidery piece from Lucknow and they send handed off to one of their new friends to be dipped in indigo to be Bandini tie-dyed to to be transformed into something subtly and beautifully different so the exchanges which is really the magic plus the sales a lot of folks walk away from the market with a years worth of income in their pockets based on a twenty two hour event. We sell a around three three point. One two three point. Four million dollars worth of product in twenty one hours and all. The skit paid out Two days later so in five days you go from setup to pay out and reviewed archie. It's an amazing operation. It sounds like a really tight knit community than really so. Is it hard hard to join that community or WHO's finding new artisans for that. It's a very tightly jury. Joe Artists from all around the world apply online pictures and text and their two juries. There's a group of academics from museums around the world. Mostly around the. US who look at it from the point of view is of is this this really rooted in a cultural assets right that we recognize that there's techniques color languages languages motif. Is it routed somehow in community entity heritage and then the second group answers the question. Is this gonNA connect with the market. Does it represent a product. Does it represent a look. Does it represent a price is point and of course is it super beautiful. I mean that's that's the first question that we have to answer before we even proceed to the further analysis so those two groups are responsible. Secure eating something. That really is unique in the world. There's nothing like in the entire world so between that and what you're describing in your the book about being in touch with all these natural colors ways of getting color from the earth from plants a lot of this is about being in touch with what what you're making an and how it's being made and we talk about the supply chain a lot but most people aren't really at the root of their supply. I Chan they don't they don't go back to you. Know Not alive designer. Spent much time in cottonfields looking at different types of cotton as they're growing what the fibers look like in different fields. They get finished product. Kind of textiles What does it do for the world? If if people are more in touch with this I would love to answer your question in a complicated way. Cleans that's what the show is more. I think we need to look at the heritage Jane even as we look at the supply chain If you look back at how how we got where we are today in terms of what we make and how we make it into textiles especially The eighteen fifty six invention of the first synthetic dye. Mo- Oh Wien right by a teenage English chemists Perkins totally by accident. He was working with coal tar to try to find a synthetic Quinine quinine substitute right to treat malaria and the colonial era of of the British empire and he discovered that something that he was making Would dissolve Alvin Water and color rags in really very attractive sharp Purple Reddish purple. That unleashed the willful exploration exploration of using a lot of petrochemicals to substitute what were centuries thousands and thousands of years of heritage so for example the company that became. BASF right the maker of the cassette tapes that some of us are old enough to have fetish started off by making making synthetic indigo and interestingly the synthetic indigo they made did not appeal because they had not really captured that the full charm of indigo go went beyond just the indigo molecule. They had to go backward and realized that. Indie Ruben. A red molecule that would form in the process of indigo dyeing was needed to give the color depth so they had to go back and explore. Why Nature was so much more beautiful than what they were at first capable of making in any case since eighteen fifty six we have lost so much knowledge? If you and I walked down the street today and Looked at what people are wearing down the street and we asked ourselves well. How would you ever get that color? Are we using anything other than a chemical would have zero insight. Chances are right. We've left all that behind so the heritage chain I think has impoverished the richness understanding That we used to have about what comes from our world and how it's made and how valuable it is. We've gotten to a point where we're so distant from our heritage chain that things have the virtue of plastic bags of disposable valueless product after they've faded in the washed twice were done. There's a statistic out there that eighty percent of the clothing we buy ends up in a landfill within one year. And it's because we're so oh distant from people culture heritage skill invention and talent that the things we buy are not worth holding onto so then we go to the supply chain right and there really is in as an extension of this heritage chain a set of material knowledge judge that is still relevant in making textiles. It still relevant in making clothing and it's waiting for us to study at more and to really really incorporated into responsible valuable fashion creation.

Argentina Director WGN Keith Keith. Wrecker Bloomingdales Quinine Donna Hand Eye Magazine Karen San Francisco Lucknow Hand Eye Fund Santa Fe Kunia Panton United States
Visiting one of the world's tallest wooden skyscrapers in Vienna

Monocle 24: The Urbanist

04:34 min | 3 years ago

Visiting one of the world's tallest wooden skyscrapers in Vienna

"Is known for its ponderous imperial palaces but it's also leading the charge on contemporary architecture texture one example of this is Hojo Wien the eighty four to hightower in northeast. Vienna is seventy six percent word and is being lauded. Ah Lighthouse Project for the cause of sustainable living set to open this winter house apartments and offices as well as a hotel restaurant and and wellness center Alexi Korolyov reports. The concept of sustainable living has always been very popular in Australia. Both culturally and architecturally architecturally. But this man came Missouri Carolina. I'm architect in the office would pop the big has taken taken. This idea to new heights his latest project. Ho Wien is a skyscraper made of wood first of all the funny name. Yeah it's funny only name but did express the joy that we had to get the chance to play. This project always holds house quite easy. Wooden building wouldn't wouldn't high-rise house. I rise so why would I seem different reasons. The intangibles have some innovation nations energy materials. Etcetera that's the one recently the other reasons that we think that would is very important. Building material will vary Ekanayake remains. Still the building is not one hundred percents said No. I think we try to use every material where it's it's the. The best is easy that we have a core concrete and dress is because what is a material that this very good to resist whether it deserves. Some insulation qualities deserve renewable material and. That's one of the most important things that we try. Not Out to US material that we have to replace a lot of effort into real self growing in the marketing materials cereals and in a lot of articles that have already appeared about hoving. It says that it is the first such wooden skyscraper in the World Etcetera. I think a lot of skyscraper projects but it's true that it was one of the first one of the highest buildings that has been real constructed. Did Not plan to think they're fantastic. Plannings from Green in Australia from is swim in the states. But the thing it was the first project where you can say okay it can be. Built v very simple thing that's like playing rece- Children Galina still had some convincing to do before. The project was given the green light by the authorities. He even staged a fine to demonstrate the building's fire safety so if it burns notes only in this little little Bob and then it's much easier to to protect the rest of the House and strategy. He arrived authorities and they said okay. Sounds intelligent it's continue and the very important part of this project was because it was integrated in this concept that it should be multifunctional multifunctional project so that you can insert every single Taylor. Offices apartments fitness a clinic. Whatever uh-huh multifunctionality is one of the most sustainable elements. You can fix this plan. And you think that this will be just one special project one of a monument to a visual audit thing that there will be more. I think the reason why we made this was not to make a monument. I think it was only by accident that they've been the highest skyscraper in this moment and it was not our goal. We've been surprised ourselves. Sal but the main goal was wanted to show at vote as the same possibilities like concrete or steel there so our goal was more kind of off. Sign that we can see. If we can build a high-rise then it should be easy to build normal housing project. I think this is from from four to eight to ten floors. What you have in the city normally for monocle in Vienna. I'm Alexey Orlov.

Vienna Australia Hojo Wien United States Ho Wien Alexi Korolyov BOB Alexey Orlov Hightower Missouri Carolina Monocle SAL Galina Hoving Taylor
NATO is showing its age as the alliance turns 70

Morning Edition

06:23 min | 3 years ago

NATO is showing its age as the alliance turns 70

"Was formed in nineteen forty nine to counter Soviet power seventy years later as NATO opens a summit in London the family is just not getting along one member Turkey has largely gone rogue fighting its own battle in Syria president trump meanwhile has criticized the alliance even as he is pressured countries to pay more money into it the president of France a manual might crawl is warning that NATO is experiencing quote brain death Turkey's president Reggie tape everyone said maybe my crown should check whether he is brain dead right things could be awkward when aired one micron trump and company get together this week week and and that's that's our our Douglas Douglas lute lute served served as as the the US US envoy envoy to to NATO NATO from from twenty twenty thirteen thirteen to to twenty twenty seventeen seventeen appointed appointed to to that that position position by by president president Barack Barack Obama Obama and and he he joins joins us us this this morning morning good good morning morning ambassador ambassador good good morning morning I just can't get brain death out of my head I mean there are things that bad that NATO well I know I don't think so I think the present across making a point bought one NATO faces a whole series of very significant challenges I don't think these challenges are existential and I don't think NATO approaches anything like can bring death well what is the biggest challenge the UC frankly I don't think it has to do with France at all I think it has to do with the White House on for the first time in the seventy years of NATO's history we have a president US president who questions the value of NATO of who takes a some sort of value in being a figure of disruption of whose unpredictable and who is not reliably committed to this alliance which is for seventy years than a cornerstone to American security so that absence of reliable US presidential leadership in my view is the most serious challenge that NATO faces today what let me just push on a little bit because the the the man who heads NATO's Jens Stoltenberg on the Norwegian politician wasn't in charge of the alliance has said that that there's more money coming into the alliance today from member countries that is something that president trump pushed very hard for and that and still Berg says that that has made the alliance stronger so could could you argue the president trump while he is criticized exactly strings and strengthen the alliance well actually was in twenty fourteen that the allies agreed to move towards two percent of their GDP committed to defense spending so that actually happened under president Obama's watch it's true that president trump has amplified the message that European allies have to step up and do more pardon me but actually it's need assistance to whom I give credit for increased European defense spending I think the president who deserves that credit is Vladimir Putin because of the were not for his aggressive actions in Ukraine and twenty fourteen I don't think that the political motivation for European allies to increase spending would have been there so we may be focused on the wrong president what part of my Crohn's concern is is U. S. leadership I mean even saying that NATO members can't rely on the United States to defend them anymore which is it and an incredibly powerful accusation what where specifically do you see US leadership lacking well I think it was most prominently displayed when president trump made his first trip to NATO and shortly after being inaugurated in may of twenty seventeen and he stood before a artifact a large metal twisted Byron Wien are taken from the remains of the north tower in Manhattan of after the attacks on nine eleven and the idea here was to commemorate it at NATO headquarters this very historic day in NATO's history this should be the only time that NATO declared a it's mutual defense clause the sort of famous article five so the tack on one is considered an attack on all the NATO allies on nine twelve the day after nine eleven I came to our defense so there was this memorial that was all set up to be unveiled in may of twenty seventeen and it's even called the article five memorial and the whole purpose of president trump's trip was to have the new president newly elected president a recommit to this to this decades old pledge that America would be there if Europe needed us and vice versa but as he stood before this memorial on that day he refused to say the words article five and instead he turned to his European counterparts lemarchal and so forth standing there listening to his remarks and lambasted them for not committing enough to defense so began on that day in may of twenty seventeen but he's been quite consistent there after revealing in public comments and that NATO sessions and in front of his colleagues that that NATO is not worth it it's not worth while for American commitment and that's that's very damaging because NATO's an alliance built on American leadership you really believe that that the United States under present on leadership would not be there and in a moment of of true need for for a NATO country of the for the alliance so I wouldn't go that far in it it's not necessary to be absolute here the question is whether there has been doubt imposed on the answer to that question and I think that certainly rhetorically president trump has imposed out just in in a few seconds what what are you looking for most closely as as the summit opens this week well if if if I could design a summit it would have just really one outcome or as they say in policy circles one deliverable and the deliverable for the London meetings this week would be assigned a show of unity this show of solidarity so that the world sees NATO as coherent as cohesive and has committed to to confronting these challenges it faces so for example the key the key recipient of that message would be Vladimir put so solidarity is the one command former US ambassador to NATO Douglas lute thanks so much for your time this morning

Nato London Seventy Years Two Percent One Micron
The design legacy of Apples Jony Ive is iconic, but eco-problematic

Marketplace Tech with Molly Wood

07:19 min | 3 years ago

The design legacy of Apples Jony Ive is iconic, but eco-problematic

"Apple is known for beautiful expensive products that get replaced pretty often either for status or because the battery is dying when longtime designer Gianni. I've left apple last month to form his own design company. Lots of people looked back at his time at apple and his influence on creating. Waiting products that were hard to repair prioritized thinness and beauty over sometimes reliability and whether as apple gears up to announce new iphones this fall that might actually change now that I've is Gone Kyle Wiens is the founder of the electronics repair site. I fix it. He wrote a blog post about ives mixed legacy at apple especially when it comes to the environment and he said sometimes simple isn't better. It's this idea that it should be so simple to use the you shouldn't have to worry about how it works. What's under the hood? They decided intentionally that they were going to hide the complexity of the battery from us but what that did is a side effect was it limited the lifespan it made these last shorter and and so then when the new you know a sexy renew features comes out next year like Ammiel one doesn't work as well. I'm going to get a new one. How much did these design choices influence? The rest of the tech world like phones used to have walkable batteries until the iphone came along and Apple Paul really you could argue drove the rest of the industry into this sort of more throw away tack. Absolutely they drove the rest of the industry this idea that it was acceptable that you could get away with say integrating the hard hard drive onto the main motherboard. If you want to separate the computer from the data. There's no way to do it. That's the kind of thing that that most other companies would have said No. That's a red line. We won't Cross Apple crosses that line and then everyone else follows you've also. Written recently about how Johnny is designs based on the style of German industrial designer deter roms and a principal like a really important principle of deter ROMs design was sustainability environmental sustainability and you talk about how Johnny lives is leaving apple without having reconciled really a big gap there. Why do you think that that shift happened and really hasn't been addressed right out of design? Principles Design Zayn is is sustainable and design long lasting and I think those things get coupled together when you do something like like doing in a battery that artificially limits the life of the entire device to the life of its shortest component. You're getting on this consumer a treadmill treadmill where we just have to go out and buy more things and the the environmental impact of manufacturing these things is significant. It's it's over two hundred pounds of raw material to make an iphone but the fundamental product architecture of saying as thin as possible and damn the consequences it really is a challenge. What we've seen is apple's environmental team who is very good have done everything they can to make? The products is sustainable except change the design that has been driven by Johnny Ivan his team and there have been A. A number of very specific decisions that they've made that of limited lifespan of these devices I think probably to the Chagrin of apples embarrasment team who then has to support it in the best possible late how much of it is on us the consumer I I mean we have certainly bought them all the time. We've complained about them. You know you've got rid of the headphone Jack. Oh I can't slot my battery out. This is so annoying and yet we we do keep buying them absolutely and this is a challenge that we have is a culture. Is it when you when you have something where there's multiple variables that you have to choose from you want the best audio player but you also would like something that will last a long time <hes> because it doesn't have stamped on the box. Hey this thing last eighteen months. I think we tend to forget we put out of our minds. Were not very good. <hes> psychologically it making long term decisions and then then later we tend to justify say oh well you know it's not running as as long as it used to but <hes> you know there's a new one that came out so I think I think that is <hes> they've been able to take advantage of psychology <hes> that yes we bear some responsibility but I think the lack of disclosure if they said hey if a single key on this computer breaks it's going be over a thousand dollar repair that might change people's mind when they're purchasing things up front but people don't have that information and how do you think that that mentality that psychology is starting to change sort of like as you get to the point where you're feeling like <hes>. I'm about to buy my fifth iphone. Phone this one seems fine except the battery for example and then of course there was the scandal about it. Do you think that as these devices get longer in the tooth. There's more awareness that they don't last as long as maybe they should or could I think so we're starting to see people wanting to push their devices longer part of that is the improvement in smartphones is not as great every year as it used to be so as that's potatoing. We don't need to get new phones <hes> all that frequently but the batteries don't last any longer than they used to so all of a sudden. We're GONNA keep our phones twice as long as did three four years ago <hes> we're going to have to be replacing the battery and at that point making those batteries available <hes> is going to be an important competitive differentiator and that's where you have companies like Motorola that have come out and said we're going to sell service parts for our funds. We're going to make them available both to repair shops into consumers <hes> there's a there's a crack that apple has left in the market that perhaps mother all will exploit so we could start circling back around to the beginning where we have phones with <hes> swap -able batteries and maybe S._d.. I D cards lots and so this is something really funny people as as because we take these things apart I take apart every iphone. There is room inside the Iphone S._d.. Card Slot. There's room for some cards. There's room for Nestea card. They put that in there the only reason that you can't upgrade. Upgrade the memory on the iphone is is because they want to charge you an extra hundred or two hundred dollars for the extra storage Kyle Wayans the founder of the electronics repair site. I fix it and now for some related links lots of words have been written about apple and whether it still has its legendary Mojo and what will happen now that Johnny Ive is gone but I fought Jonathan Troy Aikman in the New York Post put a really well a week or so ago you said apple needs to figure out how to keep creating things that we didn't even know we needed. We of course also have linked to Kyle wiens piece on our website Marketplace Tech Dot Org and obviously it isn't only design. That's made apple products especially the iphone more likely to get replaced then repair. It's also the fact that a new device gifts introduced every year always at least in theory with some must have set of features that means the old one is now useless or at best unwanted and then new features in its operating system. Them Aren't always available for older phones like in the upcoming thirteen. There's a software fix to keep your battery from overcharging which should prevent your battery from getting old and not holding a tarred so quickly after you buy a new phone except that I._S.. Thirteen will only be available on newer iphone models but it does seem like consumers increasingly want off the hamster wheel research firm Gartner forecast last week that smartphone shipments will have their quote worst ever decline in two thousand.

Apple Kyle Wiens Founder Ives New York Post Johnny Ivan Gianni Design Zayn Johnny Ammiel Jonathan Troy Aikman Motorola Gartner Johnny Ive Kyle Wayans Nestea
The question is not whether the Fed will cut rates but why

Marketplace with Kai Ryssdal

02:03 min | 4 years ago

The question is not whether the Fed will cut rates but why

"The marketplace word of the day today is expectations expectations used in a sentence. It might sound like this, the Federal Reserve yesterday acted in accordance with expectations and signaled its willingness to cut interest rates the Fed's turned, although not unexpected was a big one from where the central Bank was just six months ago you might remember when it was raising rates. No, we're not talking about a huge cut here. Maybe a quarter of a percentage point. But as marketplace's Tracey Samuelson reports when you are trying to game out what a rate cut is gonna mean in this economy, it is all about expectations. Let's say the fed does shave a quarter of a percent off interest rates at its next meeting. Well, the biggest impact typically on lower rates would be on kind of interest sensitive sectors of the. Enemy housing autos. For example, thing is Tony Rodriguez. Head of fixed income strategy. For new Wien says that the market is already expecting lower rates from the fed, so some rates consumers and businesses pay already reflect that that positive impact is already in the market. So, you know, mortgage rates have come down. Financing rates have come down for you. Know durable equipment, autos, etc. So that cut on its own wouldn't make a huge difference for the economy. What makes a big difference for the economy is does that change expectations about where rates are going into Holland horse? Chief economist for Citi group says, if the fed is cutting rates in the relative near-term, the question is they cut more over the next few months, or next few years in cutting rates, the fed would be sending markets. And I got your back kind of a message that is ready to act if say the trade war starts really slowing economic growth, Carl Tannenbaum is chief economist at Northern Trust, but it's making the statement that the central Bank stands ready to support. Port the continuation of the expansion, and that symbolic message may actually be more powerful than the short room symbolism might be more powerful economically than the cut itself. I'm Tracey Samuelson for

Federal Reserve Tracey Samuelson Chief Economist Head Of Fixed Income Carl Tannenbaum Tony Rodriguez Northern Trust Citi Group Holland Six Months
Moon Tunes

Innovation Now

01:30 min | 4 years ago

Moon Tunes

"The music is, as much part of human nature as the drive to explore. So it's no wonder music plays a role in space history innovation now bringing you stories behind the ideas that shape, our future from the song selected for the golden records sent beyond our solar system on the Voyager spacecraft to favorite prelaunch songs music is connected to NASA. Missions, the shuttle astronauts used music for wakeup calls crew members on the international space station, often play musical, instruments, and every Apollo mission had a three day road trip. Playlist to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of Apollo eleven NASA is asking you for your favorite songs. The new moon playlist will air July thirteenth and fourteenth during a live show on Nasr's third rock radio. You only have from June third to June twenty eighth to submit song. The same timeframe, the Apollo eleven astronauts were given to make final preparations for their mission fifty years ago at your favorite song to Nasr's moon tunes today, then tune into the live show to see if your song made the playlist for innovation now. I'm Jennifer, paulie. Now is produced by the National Institute of aerospace through collaboration with NASA and is distributed by w. HR wien.

Nasa Nasr Apollo National Institute Of Aerospac Paulie Jennifer Fifty Years Three Day