23 Burst results for "Zapruder"

The Charlie Kirk Show
A Maricopa-Style Super Bowl
"Yesterday morning, I was going for a walk and the Super Bowl was in Phoenix and I saw a bunch of guys wearing eagles gears and again, I don't have strong opinions about the eagles or the chiefs honestly. Don't really have a dog in the fight. And so I said this non sarcastically to this group of guys, maybe it came across our cast. Hey guys, good luck today. And they stopped. They said, we don't need it. We're going to wet. I was like, what? That's a very strange way to respond. And unfortunately, that was a pattern of eagle fans that I encountered in the valley. They were very, very convinced that they were going to win. And they didn't. But however, to the eagles community, they definitely do have a rather strong argument that bad things do happen in Maricopa County when the referees don't do their job. Okay, so let's just indulge me for a second. I know a lot of you in the audience say Charlie, why do you talk about football? They're the worst and all this. I love football. I'm not going to apologize for it. Yes, I know I have to I have to tolerate their wokeness and all this stuff. But the beauty of the sport of football is worth cringing and complaining during the microdosing of woke ism. This is the zapruder film. I'm sorry, it has to be pretty film. It is the end of the chiefs game, the chief's eagles game, which is now in eagles, folklore, gonna be analyzed more than that of the Kennedy assassination. Watch this objectively. By the way, I did not want the eagles to win. The whole day I was bothered by the fact that the eagles fans are we don't need luck. We're gonna win. Okay, pal. And also, I really, I like Jalen hurts and I like Patrick Mahomes, but just look at this, this is how a Super Bowl should be decided. No, I liked the outcome and I'm telling you, this is an in. This is a bad call. It's bad for the sport. It deteriorates trust in referees. Let them play, especially that's two minutes. There should be an unspoken rule by NFL officials that you only throw a flag unless it is convincing.

The Charlie Kirk Show
Jack Roth, Author of 'Killing Kennedy', Joins Charlie to Dig Deep
"With us is Jack Roth, who is the author of killing Kennedy exposing the plot to cover up and the consequences and Jack Roth joins us now. Jack, welcome to the program. Thank you. Thanks for having me on Charlie. I appreciate it. From a young age, I was convinced that there was more to the story when it came to the assassination of Kennedy. It's very obvious to me for a variety of reasons. But tell us about your book and make the kind of layman argument for someone that is not really in the weeds of the zapruder film and Kevin Costner's rendition of it and actually walking in downtown Dallas and seeing the Texas school book school book depository in the grassy Knoll. What is the kind of short version of why you think there was more to the story when it came to the JFK assassination? Yeah, well, I think you have to start with the idea of being a critical thinker when you think about these types of things. And for me, I was like you. I was born in 65, you're younger than me. But I missed the assassination by two years. But I always felt since I was young kid that there was something not right. And that's just by using common sense. The idea that Jack Ruby would get into that police station and shoot Oswald take Oswald out. So now there's no trial, right? Oswald can't talk anymore. So there was so much to it. And over the years I read, I'd read more and I'd read more. But I felt that there was even as time goes by, right? We're reaching the 60th anniversary this year. And I felt that still mattered. And I felt like it was important to reach other people and document some interesting things and present that. The fact that there have been ripple effects that have changed this country since that day,

The Charlie Kirk Show
Was There a Second Shooter in the JFK Assassination?
"Charlie, the government released more several batches of the JFK documents. So was there a second shooter or not? So we have a fair amount of younger listeners that might not be let's just say familiar with the entire Kennedy assassination story. Now full disclosure, I've spent a lot of time on this topic. In fact, when I was much younger in high school, I watched every documentary, I studied it in great detail, and so I know it pretty well. And the conclusion that I came away from with it is that there is a 0% chance that the government was not even aware or in some way involved with the assassination of JFK. And then they smear you and they call anyone who daresay that is a conspiracy theorist, but the evidence is so beyond overwhelming that there is something funny that happened with the Kennedy assassination. Now, whether or not there was a second shooter or not remains to be seen, I think it's very clear when you watch a zapruder film that you could see a projectile coming in straight to the right temple, enter of JFK. We'll actually can play that tape for you here. And so for those of you that are young and you don't really kind of know the story of the JFK assassination, let's just set the time and place. I believe the year was 1963 from that mistaken. Dallas, Texas, JFK lands, and was supposed to be with Lyndon baines Johnson, who of course was the vice president of the United States. And was a Texan. Linda baines Johnson was suspiciously missing from the parade that day. JFK piled into a convertible with his wife, Jackie Onassis, or Jackie Kennedy, and also the governor of Texas. It was November 22nd, 1963. JFK starts on the parade route, and we knew this now afterwards, the parade route was changed in a very strange and inexplicable way. And the parade route went all the way around a street by the name of Elm Street. Took a left on Elm Street and the motorcade started to slow down. As the conventional narrative goes, Lee Harvey Oswald, who had a very suspicious past involvement with the KGB potentially or allegedly, was up on the 6th floor of the Texas school book depository museum. As soon as John Fitzgerald Kennedy's motorcade took a turn, Lee Harvey Oswald allegedly took out a bolt action rifle with expert and military precision despite the fact that he was a very poor shot, one of the worst shots it is entire military class. And was able to strike John Fitzgerald Kennedy a moving target while going away from him with a little bit of a, let's just say a three to 4° slant for memory serves me correctly of the motorcade going downhill.

The Slowdown
"zapruder" Discussed on The Slowdown
"Been especially hard on the educators in my life. Whether you are an elementary school teacher like my brother, or a college professor like many of my friends, teaching through these years has been nothing short of harrowing. I remember my older brother telling me about trying to teach kindergarten in Spanish over Zoom and how mind boggling it all seemed. Not to mention the new teaching models the new technological skill set that everyone, including the students and parents, had to learn overnight. I remember teaching one college class over Zoom, and having two students suffering from long COVID symptoms, trying hard to keep their screens on. And it all seemed so preposterous that we were supposed to just teach as if these conditions were quote normal. And I can't even begin to describe some of the bizarre antics and comical missteps that happened in board meetings and committee meetings. Even so, I am grateful for the virtual spaces we've created, and the way they brought us together. Today's poem deals with the absurdity of those virtual meetings, and even more so, the way our constant need to follow protocol and stick to existing systems can turn any meeting into a modern day comedy of errors. The evening meeting, my Matthew zapruder. Finally, the hour has come. It is time for the long journey. I say to my wife and child, a last farewell, and click the blue button. My face appears across from my face. It is the day we will virtually discuss the unpredictable resolutions I am sure obscurely will decide my fate. The ostensible chair begins to speak. Thank you for your electrons. I hope you are well in these days, or at least surviving. I touch the hem of a book. Someone says, that's a lot of togetherness. Some one says the asymptote of dusk. The chair mutes us all. It's so good to see all your faces. Thank you for availing this interstitial convocation. To consider these extraordinary times, I put on my educator mask and stare into the unsmiling grid, trying to look as if I understand the one named after a star. She has mastered this new technology. She shares the document of potential pasts through the forest, into uncertain autumn. We talk and wander among them. We must decide, but can not stop. A great blanket of acknowledged despair, silence threatens until the one with all the hidden power speaks, his eyeglasses catch the light of an akkari. It is my sad roll to remind you, yes, there are bodies piled in the streets, but don't forget the learning outcomes. Then the most mordant of us says, if I may quote my accountant, all solutions are sub optimal, laughter, ripples through the proximate squares, for a moment we sit sensing vital decisions, faces keep speaking, they dissolve, and become shapes on my screen, more and more they resemble lonely ships, carrying vital protocols into the distance, the voices get further away. At last, the endless meeting ends. I begin to recite the ever more infinite list of things.

The Bill Simmons Podcast
"zapruder" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast
"It's like, I fed the dogs. Three of the last four days. That's kind of hard. It's attitude about basketball? Yeah. It's like, it's like, what happened against that Philly game? It's like, it's fine. Two days ago, I had 42 against Sacramento. It's like, yeah, but this was on TNT and this was against your old team. Since he's like keeping like a mental note or whatever and he's like, dude, I played hard on Monday, man. I don't need to play hard today. I looked at my stats. They're really good. How are you giving me shit? Yeah, he doesn't say it. All right, now I can't wait. The number one character of the year for you. 2022 season. I'm on the edge of my seat. I cheated again. I went with the jokic Bros. You know, they were the odds on favorite on FanDuel to get this. I'm not, I'm not shocked. I mean, I was pissed that I couldn't bet on it, but I was trying to, I was going to make a joke about that football. Who's the guy? Calvin Ridley, doing the coward. Decided not to. So this is like with a big caveat of that jokic brothers Twitter account. That got created the night that markie Morris gave the little elbow to yo kitchen and jokic ran marquee for his over. And that knocked him out for half the season. He didn't play again until the week ago. He was in the beginning of November, and he didn't play again until March 12th. And we learned a valuable lesson about bullying. And don't mess with the mess of the oakes. The Morris brother tweets wait until bro turned his back, checking my head. Noted. And then he did the writing emoji, which is the one that I think a lot of people forget about. And I like it, and I would like to just writing about you. It's like a hand with a pen, you know? And then he says, noted, I think that's combo. He's literally noting it with the emoji. Yes. I appreciate the visual. Yeah. They responded to that with, you should leave this alone instead of publicly threatening our brother. Your brother made a dirty play first. If you want to make a step further, be sure, we will be waiting for you. Oh yeah. And there is a world where this is just that it's not real, but it is not it wasn't even a month later, like the videos started going around like late November right before December, something like that, the jokic, the jokic and his brothers were in some club in Miami. Yeah. And like playing the Serbian national anthem and there was like a big sign that said like NBA MVP, you know. And it was just one of the things I was like, oh yeah, these guys are just, they don't care about it. And look at them. Why would they? You know, you got tattoos on the back of your neck. You're not, you know, I don't have anything to do. I don't have anything to say. You know, sure. It's amazing. We found an NBA player who has two brothers that are somehow not intimidated by the Morris brothers. Just the fact that we got there. But you could do a podcast on the history of MBA stars and their brothers or family members. 'cause I remember when we were doing the bill and Jalen stuff when we did a whole thing about Tony Parker's night club that he opened in San Antonio that was run by his brother that immediately went to the ground and we had pictures of it and the name and it was like what were the ads Tony Parker's brother was going to open a successful nightclub in San Antonio. Like 20 to one? It's pretty it's pretty wild that like I mean it was the sun's game last year when the brothers like tried to come out of the stands on. Right. Oh yeah, they got mad. It was Booker, right? Yeah, they didn't like it. They didn't like something. Yeah. You know, I feel like the NBA is both over covered in undercover. LeBron is the most over covered guy we've had really since the heyday of Kobe. And on the flip side, the oak ridge brothers like, why wouldn't they what's that NBA show that Malik Andrews host where it's like coming out of the gate? It's like, is this team for real? Yeah, no, it's not called the jump anymore. It's whatever they had said, let's go to woj. Has some information on contract extension. To me, I would just start with the oak brothers. But here's what's new with the oak ridge brothers today. If lavar and lavar has been vindicated in a lot of ways, if lavar ball can go on first take, I don't see why the yogurt brothers can't go in there and debate Steven. It's a great point. Maybe they should come on here. Jokic brothers, I'm extending an invitation. It's called NBA today, by the way. If the oak ridge brothers, come on, would you like to join us? I would love how I love to a four man pod that I'd love to get in on that. All right, writing emoji to you. Great job at the list. Congratulations to the jokic brothers for winning Tyler's character of the year. We can redo what's your next piece on the ringer. Next.

The Bill Simmons Podcast
"zapruder" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast
"Hot take that I don't actually believe, but like, you know, maybe in like 5 years I'll believe it. Yeah. Is that I would never draft a white American ever? Okay. We gotta work out that in the hottest thing. Just cross them off the draft boards. There hasn't been a first team all NBA American white dude since I think like the one year mark price was it or something? Is that true? Yeah, you're right, Kevin Love was only second team. And I think before that, I mean, I think before that, it's bird pretty much. There might have been one year where Stockton might have got first team one year, maybe. But like, that's it. That's a ridiculous. Would I used to do my MVP calm when I was a writer back when my fingers were? I used to hand out maybe it was for that or the trade value used to hand out the Mackey award, the Paul mccaskey award for the best white guy each year. Kevin loved one at like four straight years. He was just like cruising. Yeah. Taking it down. All right, speaking of awards, it's time. Okay. The Tyler awards for 2022 season. The only instructions you had for this were the weird and the wacky, the things that you just gravitated to is somebody who loves the underbelly of the NBA. That's the weird stuff. Enjoys things like Kyle Lowry, watching Jimmy Butler and Eric spoelstra about to get into an argument. And he just says fuck this and he's out and he walks onto the court. You're trying to interview him. That's the stuff that you love as a basketball fan. Yes. Yeah. Your text said it was NBA characters of the year. Your personal MVP ballot from a character slash comedy slash social media ruckus standpoint. Great. All right, let's hear it. What are we doing? We work in 5 to one one to 5. Let's go 5 to one. Let's build some drama. All right, let's do it. Let's skip. You know, I think that I think that for 5, we're going to kick it off with Joe LMB. Okay, let's hear it. The a lot of these are just specifically for kind of one thing, maybe. Some of them, they've built up a lot of, they've got a lot of notches in their belt. But this is specifically just because after the after Simmons trade, he tweeted a picture of the funeral, the guy who goes to the funeral for his number one hater and he has and he's just like dressed in like all black or whatever that have you seen that picture. He tweeted that after they traded Simmons and then when someone asked him about it, he said, I saw the picture on the Internet and thought he was well dressed. And that was his answer. There was no underlying message in the tweet at all. I just like this close. I thought he was I thought I thought he looked good that day. I would add to that award, which I think is the right spot for him. Unbelievable job of reigning himself in about the Ben Simmons thing. He sees one along. You think every day the most annoying person in your life, which for him was probably Ben Simmons and reporters are just like, hey, what's up with this Ben Simmons thing? Yeah. Think about it. Did you see what Benson and he just never took the bait? I was always surprised. It really is impressive that it was that it wasn't more because it could have been, I mean, it was open season in a way, I guess, but it could have been a lot. Yeah, it could have been. All right, number four. Number four, I cheated here a little bit. And I put the curries. I have Stephan Aisha here for the married couple. And you know, specifically just because of the beat the curry's game during the about last night promo that happened in between the three point contest with dunk contest. They got food. I don't know why that doesn't happen every year. That should probably replace the dump contest thing this point is just that. They should bring, they should bring two chains. And she left back every year, bring Stephanie ready back every year. I've never, yeah. So you'd rather have that than three ball. I mean, based off of this year, I'd rather have that than the dunk contest at this point. But I don't, I mean, stuff should be in the actual MVP discussion way more.

The Bill Simmons Podcast
"zapruder" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast
"Against the okay see thunder. We had to talk about the OKC thunder quick and then we'll do the awards. Okay. So you're a die hard OKC fan. Your poker's last believer. That's your new book, actually. It's called poker's last book. Coming out in June. You have a really nice backcourt to get anything worked out. You must love giddy. I love giddy stuff. I mean, don't get me wrong, would I rather have Evan mobley? Yeah. But I love getting. When we drafted him, I was terrified because the shooting was so bad. And it's proven to not be great. It's not, it's not good yet. He's changing his form after the summer. They've already talked about that, which is good. I think because it looks so weird when he shoots it now. He's 77%, I think, on his free throws, which is a good, you know, that's encouraging. I'm choosing to kind of free throw stat at me. Oh yeah, absolutely. 77% of his free throws. All sorts of things. What I like about it is he teams nicely with SGA. As a combo, they make sense to me together. And now you start thinking about who would be the perfect guy from this draft class. We're still and I talked about it. You put your bar in this team just, it would be great. But there's this chat homeground wild card piece. Right. Where do you start? I know you have a chat opinion. Everyone, he's become the most polarizing draft prospect in a while. Where do you stand? I like vacillate wildly. There's like a part of me that thinks that if we took him, it would be an absolute disaster. And then there is another part of me that's like, no, this guy's a footer that can, you know, bring the ball up to floor and take threes about the break and all sorts of stuff. And, you know, protect the rim, blah, blah, blah, that sort of thing. Like I don't, I see what people are excited about. I was like, I was a Paolo guy for a long, long time. I'm not going on jabari at the beginning of this year. And I honestly don't know what I haven't, I haven't like, you know, I'll go down my hopeful deep dive, you know, here soon, but I want shae and giddy to have a lob threat that can do something with the ball in his hands. I want to 5 that is a threat when he's got it kind of wherever he is and somebody that can go catch the lobs. I mean, if you give, if you give giddy and Shea, a guy like that. I mean, his numbers, you look at Shay's numbers when he's playing with somebody like mezcala who just like, he's just a good shooter. Some play so much free or so much more room to work with, like, I mean, you know, get his stuff with shooting issues, it wouldn't be as big of a thing if we just got a big that could, you know, do a little bit offensively. Well, it needs a good passer. So you'd have a couple guys who could move the ball. You would have a white guy who's even more awkward than poker. I think that that takes a lot of pressure on poker as the token awkward white guy. I mean, I just wanted to, I think that's one of the few compliments I've ever heard you give photo. He's not quite as awkward as one of the strangest looking prospects. Looking kind of unicorn white guy fit in with the OKC kind of fan base, what they're looking for. Could this be a natural fit? I mean, 1000%. I would say that we as we as a fan base, if you come if you show up and you want to be there and you play hard, that's it. We will, we will love you very, very much. But the jet stuff, the chest stuff, because all the smart draft people are like, this guy's, you know, this guy's a could be a monster. All that stuff. I just, I would rather take him at three than one. My hot take that I don't actually believe, but like, you know, maybe in like 5 years I'll believe it. Yeah. Is that I would never.

The Bill Simmons Podcast
"zapruder" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast
"But he handled it perfectly. And then this one, like, checked every box. When he stands up, butler stands up. And suppose stands up and it's like, he's kind of getting in between him and haslam, but he's also kind of like, I'm fucking right here, dude. There was a physicality to it that I enjoyed. When he does, you know, they've gone, the players have gone away from the bench. And he has come back around and he's thrown the he's thrown the clipboard and he's still so fired up, but there's still that thing in his head that's like, I'm in public and a lot of people are watching this. I can't go ballistic. And so it looks like he's trying to like hold in like he's like he's constipated or something. Like he's so upset. There's so much rage there, but he doesn't want to step over into like, he doesn't want to go into haslam territory. Right. And then butler, who reigned himself in, it seemed like a little bit. Because if he had escalated at all, it would have been a situation. I was at the game when Durant draymond went each other. And I actually have a cell phone video, 'cause I started taping it at one point. Were you right behind the bench? I was behind the bench closer to the clipper side. But I was watching it because I saw them get mad at each other. They were walking off the court. So I kind of followed them. And everybody else was about to go to overtime, but I was like, uh oh. I could just see it. And then all of a sudden, people are standing and boogie cousins is involved. Oh my God, I'm filming it with my phone. These things are great. Ultimately, we love to do the thing after the fact where people are like, it means nothing. This is what happens on the court. Yeah. I am a proponent of that 90 7% of the time. But sometimes it does mean something. It's something that night with Durant and draymond. And everybody is like, it's fine. It was like, it did not seem fine. It seemed like it had crossed the line. And I wonder with the heat like, did this cross the line or not? I guess we're going to find out. Yeah, I don't know. I mean, you know, like a butler seems to be pretty comfortable with conflict..

The Bill Simmons Podcast
"zapruder" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast
"We are going to talk about OKC and Jimmy Butler and then the Tyler awards for the 2022 NBA season. I want to start with Jimmy Butler 'cause it's fresh. We're still a lettuce podcast with it today. Did a whole thing about how butler has burned his bridge and every city he's been in. I was so fascinated. It's been a while with the NBA. I mean, they are test melee is obviously the peak. That's the granddaddy. That's the ten out of ten of just rewatching the same thing over and over again. Noticing new things each time. Yes. I watched the multiple angles. Thank God for Twitter. Of the Jimmy Butler thing blowing up. And each time I would become fascinated by something else, one time I was watching just caram butler, who's just not moving for 40 seconds, who's just so unimpressed by any sort of animosity? It's amazing how just undisturbed. He sort of is at that point. It's almost like he's like looking at that he saw like someone knocked on his door and he came outside to look and it's like, oh, there's no one there. He's like a second line at the Jack in the box. Wait for his order. The whole team is busting around him. Then you had Duncan Robinson who I felt like looked like the almost famous drummer during the plane crash scene where he's like, oh man, can't we just get, can we just get some food? I'll get along and just has this kind of panic look on his face. He wants no part of it. Suppose faces? Oh my God. Who knew? Who knew he had it in him? He was doing the thing, especially once he got up, like at first, you know, you could tell he's like, he couldn't even believe it was happening to him? Yeah, he had the are you fucking kidding me, look at that. It was like a, it was like, is this actually what's about to happen is what's happening, the thing that is just going to continue to happen to me, what's happening right now is this actually happening. I'm going to fight my player. He had that spot to him. And then once he got up, because he got up to go, you know, talk to him some more after it. And that's when he came with the unbelievable, unbelievably graceful, very accurate, perfect touch with the clipboard going down. Really nice. Made a sound, even on the audio basically. And didn't have to and didn't have to get aggressive with it really, like there was obviously aggression behind it, but he could have, he could have been reckless with it and broke the clipboard and that clipboard spine today. That clipboard sees that again today. It's probable for today's game. Absolutely. The scatters, the papers scattered in multiple directions, which is, I think, what you want in that scenario if you're spell, you want a little bit of an explosion there. We had the PJ Tucker to kind of triple take. Look away. Like, oh my God, is this my teammate and coach about to have a fight in the huddle? It took me a little bit to see it on and I forget what she it might be, I think it's the behind the bench angle. It was like the first angle that came out. Not the warriors. Broadcast angle. But the behind the one with the laffy emojis. You can see them starting point when haslam is like fully fully in it, you know? Yeah. You can see, I think it's Caleb Martin is the Martin brother that's on the heat. You can see him. He does like the get back coach in college football move where he grabs him. By the way, and you can tell he's like, he feels he has to do it. He can't not do it like because it was about to happen, but he does not want to be grabbing as no, he does not, you know, yeah. And I think chasm is can go from zero to ten. It seems like faster than maybe anybody. And this is one of the reasons you have has them on the bench. There was a clear violation. The player crossed some sort of line and has them immediately. I love the pointing to the pointing to the runway as one of my favorites too. That's great. I don't feel like if you and I are an altercation, we're not pointing to let's go underneath where we could just settle this and only one of us is going to come out of the runway. Just went there immediately. Great nonverbal shorthand, you know? You just, we all, you know what it means. And it's good for NBA fights because a lot of times they're getting pulled away from each other or whatever. And so you don't have to be able to speak loud enough to where the guy can hear you. You just body language yet. Right. He by language it. And the other one about a language that was spell. I'm trying to remember, so this is like a random altercation that ultimately nothing other than the heat fans are going to get super upset because everyone's been making heat culture jokes for the last day today. Dispose that everything about it was so impressive. It was pretty unbelievable. He was already one of my favorite coaches. I got when I was doing the finals for two years. We would interview him before the games. He was just cool. You know, because the announcers get to go so we can do our whole thing where we go. Well, when we talk to spell after the game, that with him once or twice, but then hung out with him at the espys one year, and he's just like the greatest guy. He's like beloved at MBA circles, all the other coaches love him. He went through a whole bunch of shit with those LeBron teams. Where LeBron, LeBron was ready to fire him or get him fired after him, right? Yeah, there was some stuff..

The Bill Simmons Podcast
"zapruder" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast
"To reinvent the wheel and push everybody into the spread era, you know, like just bang our head against that wall constantly. We can build with some malleability. And so I think I believe that the chiefs offense has a good chance over the next two or three years to be as good as the hill Kelsey mahomes offense will. Was, excuse me. But I don't think it'll be because of the stars. I think it'll be because of the secondary guys. And because of the flexibility, right? Because of the coach, you can kind of that process. So I don't think it will ever be as big three as it was. And that's why I think we'll look back at this era with fondness for a long time. It was fun football on the field, man. Wow, it was so struck. You know, The Rookie QB contract, which is the number one thing you can have. Yeah. I look at what happened with this and with devonta Adams, can't be on the same team with Rogers because it's just too much money and combined. And it almost like with the way the cap works with the way the receiver money has gone up. It almost seems impossible to have the really expensive QB. The really expensive receiver and also the ability to have 5 guys who can block for the really expensive QB. It's like something has to give at one point. So you go to Vegas, they can pay Adams because they have car in this awesome contract. You have the dolphins. They can pay tyreek hill because they have a rookie QB a rookie contract QB, who, by the way, that's the funniest piece of this. Is they have this incredible deep threat and QB who literally can't complete long passes to anybody. I really want to see a bad very bad. We can talk about the Miami piece. Actually, let's take a break and we'll talk about the Miami piece.

The Bill Simmons Podcast
"zapruder" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast
"Era of chiefs offense is really interesting. Because with juju, with Kelsey was clearly to them like a receiver right now. He's their ex receiver. There's a little bit of a pendulum swing back. This thing always goes where you get swings back and forth of saying, oh, we need like a guy who can block. Like he had a stretch. And that's not Kelsey. That's juju for that, right? That's as well as scanning, who blocking was critical to that Green Bay offense that he was previously in. And so there's a little bit of that swing back. This is all right, we saw the benefits of spread and shred, but now also defenses have an answer. So let's continue to evolve. And if that means we have to lose one of our big three, we're confident we can find another one to fill in the gaps with our cafes and our graphics. I just love the way the three of the and I hated it as a pats fan, but I just loved the way the three of those guys complimented each other because you'd see it in basketball sometimes, right? You'd see big threes will get shoehorned together. Or sometimes they made perfect sense. Like, in a weird way, LeBron and Dwyane Wade and Bosch all together. It should have made as much sense as it did. And then when Bosch learned how to space the floor a little bit, there was that year and a half run where I was like, holy shit, these guys are amazing together. And you know, when I was growing up, bird and Mikael in Paris and Kareem and worthy and magic and these guys that just, they made sense as a threesome. I think it's a really hard place to get to. I was trying to think in football, you know, we had Manning and Harrison edger and James that had a couple of years there. And many Harrison and Wayne, I was a lot of thinking about as well, but it's a little bit like personal way weren't redundant. It was just that was Mandy's offense. And both those guys had the skills as to make it make sense in terms of the rat running and the detail and stuff. Yeah, you're right. That's a better that's a better version of that. We had Jim Kelly with Thurman Thomas and Andre Reed. The Warner rams when they had Warner and Fox and torry holt, and it was basically, I don't know, I think it was a three year run for them. But it was the same thing. I felt like everybody, the geometry of a comp. I don't remember the geometry working as well as I did with these four guys. Like the pat certainly. Brady Gronk and Hernandez deserves a mention there as well. And she's going to go, I'm just going to go Brady moss Welker. And welcome underneath. I thought work, too. Right. Honestly, like both of them work and the reason they work is because Brady's involved to the trio to just kind of tells you how much the office can change. But in terms of Hernandez and Gronk, nobody was putting too tight ends of the field like that. Right. And that was because nobody realized that tight ends could have us varied of skill sets as Gronk and Hernandez did. They were like completely different players. Yeah. But they both play tight end, right? Kind of in quotation marks. And that get into the field with Brady as a quarterback who could parse defenses matching 12% incorrectly. That's something like watershed short of a trio. We don't talk about Hernandez on this pod bin. You didn't get the memo. No, you're right. I mean, he was basically Kelsey S, Kelsey is a better version of him, but he wasn't really that much of a blocker, but he was a fantastic receiver in Gronk was more of the traditional. I think the thing with these three guys, Tyreke, I don't know if he's the greatest deep thought I've ever seen in my lifetime, but he's in the short, whatever the short list is. I think moss is up there and I go back to cliff branch and the Raiders, way, way back when, but he certainly one of the most one of the most frightening people I've ever seen on a football field when you're playing him or when you're betting against him. And then Kelsey is one of the four best tight ends of all time and then you mentioned my homes who I think has the most tools of any quarterback we've had. It's been a little erratic the last couple of years with it. Just when you think it's like, oh my God, this guy is, here he goes, we're having a Hall of Fame run here and then he has the second half of the Bengals game. But together, it was a really special thing. And I really do feel like this is another era now. And it seems like you do too, but I think we both maybe like the upside more now. Yeah, it's a different, it's a different era, and I don't think it will ever be so big free dependent. I think it will be more valuable. Bring back that worthy use previous, right? I think that the chief saw this year that they invested so hard into the offense built around the homes calcium hill and how that had to work that they felt the cost of it was a little bit too great and they said listen if we're going to have mahomes for ten plus years. Let's build with long-term flexibility in mind. Let's build both malleability and the cap and we have it here and how we pay our money and also invaluable in our offense. So that when we do get teams that are just lining up with too high for the entire game, the chiefs who are the bangles, we're just dropping 8 into coverage. I only rushing free all game. We can actually run the football. We can actually punish them the way that football has historically punished defenses like this. We don't have.

The Bill Simmons Podcast
"zapruder" Discussed on The Bill Simmons Podcast
"Chiefs. He went to the Miami Dolphins. I'll give you my quick take and then you go. The chiefs are dead and yet, I actually agreed with this trade. I think you can have both opinions about the same trade. I think that for your run they had come to kind of an end of what that iteration was. And they had to move to a new phase, which they recognized. They made this trade. And yet I weigh less scared of the chief. So they made a trade. I agreed with. And I think they're worse. Okay, so they're Super Bowl odds went from plus 900 to plus 900. So books wise. Not been changed. So it's interesting, right? Because I very much had that experience when I went to go write about my these are the consequences of the tyreek hill trade. And you kind of end up at this place where it's like, all right, but also, you know, they got Andy and they got mahomes and Kelsey's so good. They got cap space now and they're going to be able to attract some free agents or whatever. They just signed markets of all the scantling. I did have that internal sense that I think books did as well, where it's like, all right, the chiefs inevitability thing still feels real, though. And so right, there's so many different ways to look at this. That you can end up defending like any give or take. And kind of what this all hinges on is how healthy and effective this tyreek hill stay for the next four years. And if he's still this quick and this explosive, when he's 32, the dolphins are right. And if he isn't, then the chiefs were right. We won't be able to tell. I think until we get all the way down that mountain a little bit. Because I get why it makes sense for the chiefs to absolutely make sense to the dolphins. And I think you're right. The chiefs are kind of moving into phase two of the mahomes era. That's going to be really fun to see. And that was what you wrote about. You had a statin there about 16.1% of hills targets in 2021 were more than 20 yards downfield, which is significant because three seasons earlier, it was 31.8. And then it dropped to 25.2 and that was two years earlier, actually. And down to 16.1. Now, you thought you and Warren sharp would talk about this on the gambling show. You thought at least a small piece of that was that defenses had kind of figured out not a way to play the chiefs, but a strategy to try to limit what hill did. So how do we know if he lost this step versus the defenses? That's a very good question. And a lot of there's a lot of data about how fast is tyreek hill get off the ball and how quickly this you get up feeling these vertical routes like next gen stats charting him through the 2020 season. So before 2021, had hills like the fastest guy off the ball on goes and I'll post it on the crosses. Like all these field stretching routes, hail was running them faster, more explosively, more dangerous than everybody else. And then it feels like we lost that a little bit last year. Are the chiefs telling us that that's because they think hill as lost a step. You can read that between the lines here. But in general, that field stretching nature pills play up until 2020 fell away a little bit in 2021. And some of that has to do with defensively what you're getting, right? When you're getting these two deep safeties and when they know number ten is on the field and they know what he means, they're getting so much attention from guys already lined up 15 yards, 18 yards down the field, that it becomes more difficult to access hill on those vertical routes. All those deep routes. It doesn't mean that hill can't open up space in the intermediate. You still run that guy down the field. Safety's still got to go with him. And now it's a little bit easier to throw your 13 yard slant to Byron Pringle or your 15 yard curl route to Travis Kelce or whatever you want. So he still opens up that space. It's just, do you want to be paying $25 million for a player to be opening that space? If you believe internally, that one, you can pay $12 million to market as well as scanning. And he'll still open up space for you. And two, the defenses are always going to prioritize taking away your deep wall. The as long as 15 is a quarterback. As long as mahomes can chuck it, 65 yards down the field, four seconds into the snap. Teams are going to prioritize taking away our deep space, then we can't really prioritize in terms of our money in terms of our cap. Paying the most preeminent deep threat in the league. That's what hill it was for them. That's what he was for four years. The best detail there is. There is a disconnect there. And I think the other thing that matters in that disconnect schematically is that, well, the chiefs decided to start throwing the ball short and start running the football board to try to get teams out of these two high looks. Just not really hills game. Hill's not a very contact loving player. He doesn't want to go hit a guy or block a guy. He's just not him. And so when you're throwing it short and you're asking him to break attack on a bubble screen or when you're running the football and you're asking him to get involved as a run blocker. It's just not where he was maximized. I'm not saying that's why they got rid of it. That'd be really dumb. But they do, I think, see internally, I need to get a little bit bigger and a little bit more physical. All across the offense. Think the prioritize speed and tackle angle braking, agility, a little bit too much, and now you're seeing that backswing a little bit. You saw them change down the offensive line. Now you have mark as well as scaling due to Smith Schuster. Those are big physical receivers. The chiefs want to get bigger. They want to get a little bit more physical and tyreek doesn't.

Mark Levin
Mark Levin: Kyle Rittenhouse Did More to Defend His Community Than the Government
"Pervert You know nothing about this young man Here he is He's involved in a trial And he took the stand He has guts And he took the stand because he knows he's innocent There is more video here than with the zapruder film And we all know all you have to do is look at the art video that the mob the mob That's right the mostly not peaceful mob was trying to kill that kid And you you jerk You jerk Hit a civic interest in trying to help protect the community that his father lives in That he knows very very well That's more than the damn mayor did That's more than the damned governor did You jerks at CNN you sit on your fat asses When you're not sexually harassing somebody or you don't have your pants on that's why you have no ratings you moron This isn't a legal analysis It's the analysis of a

KFC Radio
"zapruder" Discussed on KFC Radio
"Talk in a second We got a segment on us. Doing olympics will do a top five olympics related. I i watched the video. It's very rare. That i would watch like a six minute video of anything certainly not like one thing the six minutes of you puking lowering. The bar is one of the funniest things i've ever seen. I couldn't even watch. It's rule i don't wanna i know this is a crazy. Say but it's like it's like jackass level of funny. I was laughing as hard as i ever laughed at like stevo puking knoxville puking. It's it's art. And because because now bibs is used to it so he knows to not break character and not stop and he. I mean he. He's just like talking about whatever the thing is your eating completely stone faced while your legs gargling noises. You made and the faces. You may look at your face. I won't point you're like is come on affirmative mercy and the noises we've come. Jesus christ jesus christ not doing this to me. I swear this is not a joke. Leagues are still sore. I you were you wrenching. You were from from the site of it when when he goes shall i just glued. And you're like yeah. I guess the fuck man i mean. It's always is wait. Wait we the first that comes out. Look at that. It's a baby and then this one is a waterfall. I watch watch us like zapruder. Film i want like a baby and then this one is coming. It just falls out just falls out of your mouth. I ended really whatever that was. I didn't do that one. Thank god that was and then he holds it up here but he holds it holds up. You.

Pod Save the World
"zapruder" Discussed on Pod Save the World
"We were ahead of the curve will not because it was a year ahead of the alien report two years and we were calling for this to happen recovered and then they cancelled the march member. And i think there were. They're all going to die and that's fair. I was going to put it on from here. I was in action again. So fifty one great mystery. Everybody loved good. Mystery right knives out. Get out memento scream. Who framed roger rabbit. Here's a new entry from our friends in australia. Did australian prime minister scott morrison shit himself. Mcdonald's in nineteen ninety seven. Apparently everyone in australia wants to know. So ben the weirdest part of this story you people are wanting. What is tommy talking about. I guess a huge deal brought this up in a radio interview. So the i guess. The rumor went viral in two thousand nine. Hundred down this on world any other time. You could have done any of that. So i guess in twenty nine. This went so viral that a street artists put up a commemorative plaque. And you can find like kennedy assassination zapruder film like breakdowns of what is exit. Would be going from the rugby matched a home. So it's absolutely hilarious. Some the most advanced Conspiracy theorists wonder if you brought this up in the interview to distract from their terrible record on covert. I don't know like what do we make of. This could be couldn't bad. Mcdonald's b. y. Those guys got lost naked in the woods a few weeks ago. So i have a couple of thoughts in this and i was going to start with the vacant people. Woods just allude to the fact that like we keep coming back to australia through these pretty interesting angles. But i have to say. This is kind of what i love about. Australians is it like the how big this. When i started reading about this like how big this was like is set like if you know. Australians and like their sense of humor like the endless jokes that there must be about. This episode is is just kind of awesome like yes in the same way that there was something weirdly awesome about like the naked dudes who were probably so high that they ran into the wood the way though a lot of listeners were talking shit to us being very credulous that we thought that these guys were really scared by Neither of us ruled out. They were engaging in other activities. Lushly perhaps other. I just didn't understand how you could run so far into the woods you got lost or the deer. Component is the component adalah cover story if it's cover story So kudos to the australian people for keeping this conspiracy theory thing alive about scott morrison whose kind of a pretty creepy guy anyway. But then the other thing is clearly. And i'm gonna go on the record here and he clearly should himself. I mean you. Protest too much like he kept. I saw the you know. Oh everybody says this. And and i see why people think it's a good yarn but it's wrong and like like it sell their felt like a defensiveness like if you've been accused of shitting yourself. Mcdonald's like fifteen years or twenty years ago. I probably like come on that's crazy. I'm hearing that. He seemed to like really engage. You know yeah you know. It reminds me of A very famous viral tweet. But i think said something like My not engaging in human trafficking t shirt is raising more questions than it answered you know bringing up. The story of you may be starting in mcdonald's nineteen ninety-seven look man. I mean i've done that but like you know what was going on. In ninety seven and a half aimlessly shed happened. may mcdonald's bathrooms usually not dislike. You'd probably slamming some pints at the rug. I just get in like a couple of big macs after have not too much drink. Like all right man..

MikeyPod
"zapruder" Discussed on MikeyPod
"The streets are wide and bright I see fathers make us proud. We see them and we clap so loud we can't tell wrong from right we smash whatever's close at hand and sound a bit ramen scent can be close to me in the stands party is to come up this morning. Our engineers have worked it out we make our food from mud we fill our yards up to the flood and we can eat whatever sprouts are darling babies never will they just have too much self esteem we always have blood in the cream and dropping in the bed but then again warrants no to be upscaled we keep all the new quarantine we want to say hello you want businesses to get through deliver like a magazine thank you for your selflessness the work you didn't ask for thank you for being cool and living life with love believe us when we say you have the more you stress..

MikeyPod
"zapruder" Discussed on MikeyPod
"But it's really a song about my frustration and also my complicity in living in ways that just are insane, really. I mean, so like in this song, the singer is saying bragging about things that are horrible. You know, they always have blood in the cream in their thing, or bragging about being or telling the singer is singing to people who live out in the wastelands around this area, new quarantine. And saying, thank you for being poor, believe us when we say the more you have, the more you stress. And being completely un self conscious about how horrible that is and how the song is just it's like almost like I'm embodying a lot of toxicity to get it out of my system, I think. Yeah. Well, yeah, I love that point because it's so real. How many people I just imagine like real life people? Like, oh, it's so stressful to be so rich. You don't understand. Yeah. You're lucky or whatever. Yeah. There's so much frustration, I think, and in this day, in this time, especially as a parent and just seeing a lot of American adults be what I would say is non functional. You're just not even clearing the bar into adult living. You're not listening to science. You're not just not doing the very basic stuff. And so this is like, you know, just to make expulsion of poisons or something. But in the context, I love Brazilian music, especially tropicalia and that kind of stuff. So in this colorful, almost party track. And in fact, the coolest thing that's happened with the record emotionally for me so far is I got a message from somebody in Rwanda who said I can't go I can't finish my morning jog until I listen to new quarantine. Wow. And I'm like, oh my God, there's somebody running in Africa listening to this song. That's so amazing. And the person who said this message was like, I'm not totally clear what the lyrics are. But, you know, I can't finish my retina. And so it's that weird thing where it's like almost like a party track. But the words are quite quite dark. Wow. I love yeah. So we should give it a listen. And this is going to be the end of our conversation too. Right. Before we do that, there are two things we should do. We're gonna have a special bonus conversation that will be on Patreon Patreon dot com slash Michael Heron. And I wanna make sure everyone who's listening knows where to find you online. Can you give us the rundown of that stuff? Sure thing. Michael zapruder dot com is my website. And my music is available on band camp. If you look for my name through label called howells transmitter, HOW ELL, transmitter. And I'm on all most of the usual services Twitter and Facebook and Instagram. And yeah, I'd love to hear from people. Thank you so much for having me and for playing my music for people. That's really what it's all about. So I've had a great time. Yeah, I have too. And I love sharing great music with people. So thanks for making great music. We'll.

MikeyPod
"zapruder" Discussed on MikeyPod
"I couldn't get my arms around it. And meanwhile, I was during that time I started my master's program at California state university east bay. So I started composing, obviously busy with family and this job. Then I was able to leave my job and move to Texas here in Austin to do a doctorate. And so in the course of all that, I would dip back into the record when I could. But I just couldn't figure it out. I couldn't get it together. And then toward the end of my doctorate, which obviously was super demanding and obliterated most of the time I had to work on the record or even kind of think about it. I just said a certain point said, okay. These 8 songs feel like they go together, I feel like we can finish these. The rest of them, I'm flushing down the drain. We're done. And I sent them to Scott and I said, can you prepare these for me to sing? I'm so full. I can't even hear them anymore. Please, just do whatever you need to do, try to bring the life out in these 8 songs and then we'll do it. And to close the story, that's how we finish the record. And by the time I sent those 8 songs, that was late comers, and that was the sense of the album is late. We're living now feels like it's late, having kids late feels like it's late. And so Scott and I went back and forth and finally finished the record. After 7 and a half years of gnawing on it. Yeah. When you sent those songs to him, was that about arrangements or something else? It was about the musical arrangements and the textures, because because I hadn't been prepared, I had this idea of super imposition. So a lot of the songs have poly meter. Polyrhythms or superimposed meters they'll be like take a takot tuck at the top at the top of it. Like twos and threes and other levels of that stuff. It's really interested in that as this kind of ticking clockwork, the time part of it and I'm interested in very lay person way and physics and the questions that that brings up about life the idea that light is a particle and a wave and neither. And so there was that dimension of the music, but what we had were these slabs of music with layers with just stuff going on. And it was just like, there were no, none of the instruments were like I'm in the song now. It was just like everything was just like in the whole time. There were, there wasn't a lot of curve. There wasn't a lot of things breathing and so Scott really took the songs and created these entrances and exits created moments created all that stuff. And saved me because I was exhausted and just I just couldn't get there with these tracks for some reason. So it was about the arrangements for the most part. And then once that was done, there was a little more room and there was more of a flow and so it was easy to go back and sing them and feel like, oh, I'm singing a record. You know? Yeah. There's something really exhausting about having an unfinished project like that too. It must have been like a relief to get it to like find just finding that spot of like, oh, this is what it's gonna be. Definitely. As Scott said at one point toward the end, he was like, everybody has a record like this, that won't let them go or the torments them. And yeah, I feel much more. It's exciting to be able to think about what is next. And you can't do that if you have a bunch of songs that are half recorded and for sure. Yeah. Let's talk about the song, new quarantine, which we're going to kind of wrap up our conversation with. Reasons, the name of this song peaks some ideas, tell me about it. Yeah, that's such a weird coincidence, although that sense of foreboding the latecomers thing there was some confirmation, because new quarantine was written 7, 8 years ago. And I actually started it. So for a while in the mornings I would wake up and I would write lyrics for 20 minutes every morning. And I would write versus or chorus is without reference to any music. And this piece was based on Latin American verse form called the Decima. I think it's called. It's ten lines. It's got this unusual rhyme scheme and meter and I so I wrote these verses for the song new quarantine and it's kind of. Modest proposal kind of a thing. It's like an ironic somebody who lives in a grotesque, beautiful, beautiful place is sort of boasting and has no idea what a monstrous life they're living and so anyway, so it started with that Decima form and this idea of in a very humble kind of inspired way. Latin American protests songwriting and just trying to find a new way to, for me to access that. So yeah, I wrote I wrote a lot of verse is actually the one week recorded the version we recorded is like 5 minutes long and there are two extra verses, but the version on the record and the video is ended up I cut I cut some of the verses because it was just too many damn words..

MikeyPod
"zapruder" Discussed on MikeyPod
"But I think I naturally am inclined to, I'm interested in synthesizing a lot of different things into something simple. And so I think composing instrumental music is just such a fascinating, vast realm. So it's kind of a mix of those things. I can relate to so much of that stuff. I had some learning differences when I was coming up too. And there was something when I was in middle school. Was it middle school? Yeah, I auditioned for a talent show. I was ready to go sing it. This was in the early 80s. And I didn't get in the show. And I don't know why, they're just little moments like that that I think kind of, you know, especially as younger people we can kind of file away and be like, oh, that use that as an indication to mean like, oh, this isn't something you're really cut out. You're not invited. Yeah, those injuries are real. Even if they're, you know, they're in the context of otherwise being fairly privileged and comfortable. They still you're a kid and that Mark leaves the Mark. So yeah, yeah. Yeah, so yeah. I'm sorry that happened to you. To be the one to say, hey, that sucks. And as a teacher, I taught music at the my graduate school during my graduate school programs. And it was always really cool and meaningful to be not be that kind of a teacher and to be like, yeah, we're studying sight singing, we're studying all this conduct and soul fish and all this Euro generated stuff, but we're not doing it in that way. This is a tool that you can access, but it's not a club to beat you down with. Yeah. I think that's part of what is intriguing to me about the fact that you went on to get your doctorate in composition because I went back to music school in I feel like I tell this story a lot, so I'll make it quick. I went back to music school in like late 20s at a community college Houston community college and it was great. It was this really cool experience of working with the teachers there were also like working musicians and you know it was just like this kind of scrappy, cool experience of exchanging things. And then I was really apt to move on to a real college. And it was a direct opposite experience. You know, it felt like there was this club that I didn't know like why is my piano professor freaking out right now like there was a Beethoven snot. I was working on it. You can't play Beethoven like this. I was like, I didn't get the memo. Yeah. And of course, it's interesting that that was playing my jury. That's also another story. But you know like that and that, I filed that away as just like, oh, maybe college isn't the place for me. But it sounds like for me. Yeah. But it sounds like that's fascinating. The performance side versus the composition side. I think maybe some of it has to do with that. But it's interesting because I also got my start learning music, academic music at community college in Oakland, California laney college. So very similar self taught musician never quite found a way in never found a teacher and then community college was where I and it was also the same thing in Bay Area, all these great, you know, great artists and musicians, I learned so much at laney college, both I learned theory and started learning piano, but also I'm not a jazz musician, but for a few years I would go to these jazz sessions with Ed Kelly, who was a teacher and an Oakland musician, a kind of center of the community there. And we would all just stand around in this classroom and hack through tunes in the real book, horrible, horrible, jazz crimes, at least on my part. And Ed was so generous, respectful, bringing us into his music and that music. And just such a different experience than the experience of you can't play the music that way. And so I'm really fully on board with making it accessible. Every kind of music is just a different, even in analytical thing, your theory or whatever, it's just a different lens you can put on to learn more and to get deeper into the music, but none of them is better than another, in my opinion. Amazing. Agreed. Let's talk a little bit about the album again. Latecomers, there was you mentioned earlier that it took a long time to make this album happened. Can you tell me more about that? What's the story about? Yeah, so I started this record with Scott solter who is the co producer and an incredible, incredible recording engineer and artist in his own right. We had made a few records before then we booked time at a studio in California called Prairie sun and brought musicians in, and I had this idea for a record called thou shalt be new. I had this sense of life is going to make you knew whether you want to be new or not. I kind of want to be new. I don't know what that means. And we had just had our second child, and so I had this kind of this idea for this unapologetic, messy record where it was going to be 20 songs, maybe a double record, and they weren't going to fit together and bottle up. I was working in a job that I was not very happy at. That was taking more and more of my time and essentially I wasn't really ready to make the record. I booked the studio time brought everybody in, but didn't really have time to totally finish the songs and I kind of overstepped, I think, so we started all these songs and then every year Scott and I would get together at a different studio we went to a studio called decibel in San Francisco, the second year and brought more musicians in and started a few new songs, including latecomers. At that session, the next year we went to the hangar and Sacramento and I kept going back to this record and it just wouldn't close.

KTKR 760AM
"zapruder" Discussed on KTKR 760AM
"Erin Torrez, Arnie Spaniard, and I'm not kidding around when I say it's a busy Saturday night are you doing tonight? Torres? What we got to talk about. I mean, not much, really, I well, Arizona Wildcats lost today. I know we're gonna lead with that so that there's nothing going on in sports field. I was actually going toe lead with Big tie in to Vermont to the Super Bowl. Oh, boy. Oh, I mean, if you and if you have to say the possible M v p Can you lead our from this area? Can you lead our for with that? That the possible M v p is from this area. Okay. Who is that? Honey? If you're gonna watch the puppy Bowl two apart which the puppy Eyes got adopted here in the Vermont area was filmed earlier, like couple of 34 weeks ago, and he's been adopted. So Bravo big story, huh? So he was a free agent, and now he's not a free agent anymore. Not a free agent anymore. Um, they played that put people like 34 weeks ago. I know if you know that soup there, you know, we gotta ask Bernie. You know, it could be a compromise line out there in Vegas right now. If that if that report the other I'm breaking a story breaking the story. Anybody in here, did you? They took the national anthem off. Um, the betting line. So what was it elite? I phone videos that would happen. One of the reporters. Well, first of all, we knew that it was pre recorded. And I guess he was at the rehearsal practice. Listen to it Time to the 2 15 or to 18 and the over under was 1 57 1 59 on he put it up on Twitter. So they had to take it down. I don't know how many people ran the bet on it or what? But that Zapruder Good. Um you know, pretty good wind is near What? Even close? They're like, 20 seconds over. We'll have to ask Bernie. I mean, does that does the bet get voided? Even for people who have already done it. I'm serious. I'm kind of curious. Because if if the video is an out they have to honor those bets, right? Oh, no, everybody, You got a bet down. No honor. Yes. Absolutely. You can't take that away. What are you crazy? I'm just listen. I'm not the prop Bet national anthem of fish. United Here is where we go straight out to Vegas it at you know, Midnight eastern or 11 P.m. Eastern. Excuse me with that. Look, we first of all, speak up now or forever. Hold your peace. We want everybody's prediction. Who you like in the game. The score keys. The X factor. M v p. We wanted all Aaron underscore Torres. I've been stinking genius. One I was just thinking before we even get into everything. How many people do you fink doors? Won't be watching the game. Whether it's because they have to go to work or they're not interested or their protest. Ng are boycotting the NFL war because of Colin Kaepernick, or or whatever. I'm just kinda curious if if you're not watching the game, why aren't you watching the game and how many people you think are just saying I don't feel like watching the game? You know heck of a question of lead off with Let's hit the key demographics that are definitely not listening to the show. Right now. Everything always wondered that no way the believing those people who work or just don't even want to watch it because the team's not in it well, then they won't watch. This is an important plug. If people are working, they can listen to you Implant tomorrow. That's true. That's true, but I think people whose teams get eliminated Sometimes they just don't care sometimes just so, like Green Bay fans by not watching. I don't know. What is the what is the tone in New England right now? Outside of the Puppy bowl. Well, they're watching. They're watching. It was a they got Tom Brady. They thinks about if Tom Brady wins the Super Bowl, that's like a half a win for the Patriots or something like that, you know? Yeah. No to answer your question. I mean, I guess in theory, we usually get about 100. Million people. That watch which what? What is that? 250 Million people that don't watch. I don't. Wow. I don't know who those people are, but But, Yeah, no, I everyone I know is gonna be watching. So I mean, I know you want it. You're looking for a better question. Better an answer for me that I don't know anybody personally, but we're gonna have robbed Collins join us next segment. He's out in Tampa. He's from Kansas City. Of course, he works for Fox for TV, So I'm just kind of trying to get what it's like out there. The sights the sounds the the fields because he put a picture of like Ah, whole bunch of people parting outside. I don't know where it was a restaurant or an area And maybe one person was wearing a mask out of like 500. I don't know it was. It was just like a big party area. But nobody was wearing a mask It above first personal thing that came to me was how many people are there. I thought they're only letting in, like 20,000 or something like that, but seems like it was absolutely packed with fans and ready to get going. I don't know well, I think people are ready to move on and have a little fun. And I would still think that even if it's not a traditional Super Bowl setting That people would still say. Hey, Tampa. That's the place to be this weekend. Let's drive down if you don't live in the area, so I wasn't really surprised When I saw the pictures. I I know it's not a normal scene, but Listen. I mean, we're almost a year into this pandemic. People want to have fun. People want to live their lives. And even if you're a Chiefs fan, you know, I could see the scenario where maybe you try to scalp tickets the day I mean, if you could afford it, obviously you fly down if you can afford to scalp tickets, get away that isn't that so? I mean, I don't know how many people are in town relative to normal year. It's obviously significantly less, but I wasn't surprised to see Ah packed downtown area of of Tampa. Oh, I totally was. I'm like, Oh, my God. Really? Yeah. I like Tampa Underrated Fun City by the way, under normal circumstances. Have you been listening to a lot of sports radio here on Fox? I'm during the week or last couple weeks, because especially this week because it does have a different field without radio row. I mean, it's a whole different type of show between doing it, You know, not on radio rolling on radio row wouldn't When you're on radio role. They just dragged everybody across off. It doesn't make it. There's no flow. You could go from Ah, former ex Hall of Famer to some guy pimping mountain due to a reality star ever do you do you like it Better with no radio row. Do you like the craziness of having people down there?.

WMAL 630AM
"zapruder" Discussed on WMAL 630AM
"Other orthopedic tests that are mainly suggestive, you know, well in our office. We kind of chuckle about orthopedic test because I mean they're only is reliable is the person that's doing it. So in my opinion, it's more more or less a way for us to communicate with insurance companies on why we diagnose something. If we have a certain orthopedic test it It lays to certain duck diagnostic codes. Having said that, I think the moves to important thing is a very thorough evaluation by the doctor. You need to actually touch the patient. You need to check the range of motion. You need to sit and talk with them. If the doctor only has five minutes to do all those things, he's probably gonna miss a lot of it. He touched the patient. Oh, my God, That's sacrilege. And then that doesn't happen too much anymore. No, Unfortunately, I think a good physical exam is a lost art. And if you sit and certainly you've been in practice a lot longer than me if you sit with older clinicians The way that they go through a diagnostic exam. This far is that the testing is is masterful to say the least. You you see so many patients come in, and you know, you asked him well, how did they diagnose this? Well, they sent me out for a memory. They sent me out for a cat scan. They sent me out for an X ray. And they said that's where it's coming from because they see a bulging disk or they see some irritation. So here's my question to you. They come in. They really haven't done an examination. You know, they do a pal Petar E. They just poke or push on an area that they sent him out for for imaging. How often is the imaging by itself truly accurate and doesn't lead to procedures that shouldn't be done. That could make things worse. You know, I don't know if I could put a percentage or a number on it. I will say this if you get if a person has scientific that leg pain and they have an impairment now, that's the important part. When you know when I do my my presentational Wednesday, we're gonna talk about impairment. There's a big difference between pain, which is the perception of person has an impairment is something that's measurable. We have weakness or, you know we have lacked lack of function. So if a person gets an M r I and there's a huge, bulging disc, or maybe the disk is broken free, and it's you can see it's jammed against the nerve then Yeah, I think it Zapruder Good way to diagnose it now. That's not the majority of cases of people have back pain. They have moderately protruding disc or, you know, you know, moderate arthritis. So it Z on the fence. If that's truly what's causing it, So the people that have the tremendous ruptures and the tremendous stenosis those air those air not typical that I see day in and day out. I agree with you and you know the signatures said you have to be very careful with a Zafar as a clinician is concerned that it may not be the initiating cause of what the patient's presenting with at that moment in time, but it's also put drama and that that Ruptured desk that ball Gene desk that narrowing of the disc space. Ultimately, if it's not treated in addition to the symptom process is Prognostic of further problems that could be much more severe downstream. Absolutely So, you know, there's a continuum of issues that happened when the spine loses his motion and first and foremost, joins her designed to move and when they lose motion, then they typically deteriorate similar to if I bought an automobile and I didn't Started but three times a year. Well, one would think. Well, the engine doesn't have much mileage. John it well, That's true, but the fact that we're not using it it's designed to be used. It's going to cause it to break down. Justus quickly, so good function usually Is something that I look for him. We lose it. That's when we see the degenerative changes. The other situation would be trauma the person as an automobile accident sport injury that type of stuff or micro trauma. That ad posture. You know those types of things. So what? We're getting that little deep or we're coming up to a break and we have some colors coming and we're had triple 86309.

The Garden Report | Boston Celtics Post Game Show from TD Garden
Rockets' James Harden was fined $50,000 for Covid-19 violation. Did he deserve it?
"So the story comes out to James Harden James Harden is in a strip club. Okay, and he's and there's video and he's wearing a mask and then everyone goes like all you know Zapruder film with it. They're talking about the balloons and the decorations and how long his beard is and whether it matches up and was it a recent video or not and blah blah blah. I really basically just comes out. He's like, yeah, I was freaking there and I was there to support my girl and it's not a strip club strip club in the media sucks. So basically, yeah, I was in a club. I know I'm dead. What should be there? I know it's a violation of league league league rules. Just ask. Yeah, I definitely wasn't wearing a mask, but it wasn't a strip club. So the media and like yeah, they you know, this is what gets me is like a player to something wrong or says something wrong and then they blame the media and say that were twisting. It keeps dragging their name through the mud or not. That was that was Vindication that the saying that like it wasn't a strip club there for media is like I'm supporting my you know, my my girl or my my friend who's a woman and I'm supporting her because she's a boss and like that's great like and and I get it isn't strip club. The story is out in public. I asked if that was like a Mike dropping moment when he was like it wasn't a strip club like that wasn't dead. Part of the story is the least important part of the

Monocle 24: Midori House
White House, Donald Trump And Jim Acosta discussed on Monocle 24: Midori House
"Has been much to enjoy in Trump's reaction to defeat on Tuesday, at least in the house of representatives. Not the least of which has been the whole online will going all zapruder film on the footage of CNN's. Jim Acosta having a microphone taken off him is the row over this is this actually significant or is this just the media disappearing into a vortex of self regard. Again, I would actually argue this is probably one of the most significant esscalation that we've yet seen from this White House. I think you. If you can't overlook the the optics of what this video represents. Now, the the actual incident if you if you look at how it took place in the news in the actual news. It was a very small moment. And yet the video that was circulated by the White House by Sarah, Huckabee Sanders. The actual White House is an edited video that was taken from a contributor to the conspiracy website info woes the video depict something that did not happen. This is the White House sick leading something that did not happen. Now, I cannot look at that. And think this is not probably the most significant escalation of of war against facts against journalism. This is the president telling us to either disregard our own is all literally get out and don't come back. I mean, I I don't know how you can look at that. And think oh dome. Ari? It's trumping Trump. No, it's not this is him. This is him raising the stakes even further and telling journalists that if didn't play my game they will be not game just to follow that up. And how do you think the rest of the White House press cool should react to that moment to this? I mean, do we reach a point at which they just make a point of stop bothering to show up for things because there's the the counter to that is though these. It is our guest to a large extent a total waste of everybody's time. Asking this administration any questions and expecting a reasonable answer. But via the administration they do need to be questioned. Yeah. Funnily enough, I've made the argument before on monocle twenty four that the the world of sitcoms tend to be a little bit more skilled at getting to the heart of announcement than the news media quite often. And Murphy Brown had a prophetic episode fairly recently where the character of Murphy Brown was actually Bod from the White House had have press poss- cancelled just as Jim Acosta from CNN did full being a little bit too. Harsh on the president the president in that show being Donald Trump. Of course, it setting set in reality, and the moral of the story in the end was that well, we still to some degree half to play the game to some extent. Because eve when they're asking the tough questions, a we'll get up and leave because we're principled, and we believe in freedom of the press and facts and truth. And if you give that to us than. We went be here. Who's going to be left? Sean hannity. I mean that doesn't sound like a good functioning democracy to