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This week I came across a fun show from August 19, 1989 at the Greek Theater in Berkeley California. The opener is so much fun -when you listen you just know you're in for a treat. A great 'Jack Straw' follows, played just at the right tempo :) Brent follows with 'We Can Run' - and its hard not to reflect on how little has changed.. 'Tennessee Jed' is always a good time, and Jerry really rips it up. Bobby belts out 'It's All Over Now' and then a great version of 'Loser' follows. I enjoy Weir's reading of Dylan next, and they end the set with a crowd favorite as Phil, breaks out 'Box of Rain'. Grateful Dead Greek Theatre - University of California Berkeley, CA 8/19/89 - Saturday One Let the Good Times Roll [3:48] ; Jack Straw [4:59] ; We Can Run [5:09] ; Tennessee Jed [7:46] ; It's All Over Now [7:19] ; Loser [7:13] % Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again [8:44] ; Box Of Rain [4:31] You can listen to this week's Deadpod here: http://traffic.libsyn.com/deadshow/deadpod082721.mp3 Thanks for your support that makes the Deadpod possible! Be well and take care my friends.. "Summer flies and August dies.... "
One of the most common reasons I hear women say they can't meet their health goals is that they don't have time. We live busy lives with careers, family, socializing, and all the logistics related to running a busy household. We often put ourselves, and our health, on the back burner, prioritizing everyone before our own needs.But what if dedicating time to ourselves, to our health goals or weight loss goals, can actually CREATE more time?Wouldn't that be cool?That's what I'm here to propose to you today. First of all, we spend a lot of time thinking about our wellness goals. That new health goal actually takes up a lot of your mental energy just having it mill about in your head. Often that energy and time spent thinking about the goal, shows up as guilt which is extremely counterproductive. If we actually committed to doing the thing, we free ourselves up from that angst, and actually create time for ourselves because we're not preoccupied with the ‘should' or ‘when am I going to do this goal'It can actually be quite liberatingCheck out this week's podcast, where I go through some more specific examples.
'It's life Jim, but not as we know it.' - a famous observation by Star Trek's Spock that could easily describe lockdown. Many things we take for granted are simply not as straightforward. Often more awkward. Tiring. So how do we cope? Conan Young has been looking at hacks for a more manageable lockdown.
Stories mentioned in this episode: Day in History: 1921: Airship explodes, killing 44 of 49 crewmembers 'It's become a lifestyle': Austin man finalist for USA Mullet Championship Proposed Rochester property taxes offset by federal funds, city growth Med City diners may have a noodle meeting on their schedule Read all stories in this episode at postbulletin.com.
Over the NDP weekend, on Facebook, Minister Shanmugam shared a Malaysia army video that was released during NDP 2021, and highlighted that the bulk of the video was in English, insinuating that it was a targeted message. This caused some angry reactions from Singaporeans online, but also left some people puzzled as to what the big deal was. Also, a doctor accused of molestation in 2017 was finally acquitted of his charges after 4 years. However, this leaves us with the question: what should happen to the accuser? Find us here! Our #YLB Subreddit for show notes Our YouTube channel to see our FACES! Malaysia army video released during NDP Malaysia posts English-language military video coincidentally during Singapore's NDP; Shanmugam notices Post by MP Shanmugam Entire SAF Was Mobilised 27 Years Ago, Due To Joint Military Exercise In Johor Doctor acquitted of molestation charges after 4 years 'It was humiliating': Doctor acquitted of molestation charges tells of painful experience [Feb 2020] Anaesthetist charged with molesting woman at Mount Elizabeth Hospital four times in one evening I'm sick of Singaporean men being put down in this country - Reddit link How false accusations mess things up for EVERYONE. - Reddit link SMU molestation case: Accused didn't think victim meant it when she said 'stop' One Shiok Comment Comment by pornsubmod_throwaway Comment by sanictaels One Shiok Thing Six figures in 6 days MyKayla Skinner's YouTube channel
Show Opens with discussions on such things as: Biden's recent failure in Afghanistan, Woman of Tulsa treat Dougie like he's Elvis, Strip Club Rules and Do's & Don'ts, Annoying habits of fellow comics, Steve questions why "Beyonce" is a Superstar & Much More! The News is a Joke "Indonesian army to end archaic virginity test for female soldiers", "Kraft Macaroni & Cheese ice cream debuts and quickly sells out", "Judge releases Boston teen accused of sexually assaulting a horse", 'It's not what it looks like' — Ottawa man caught with pants down in pony stall", "Sperm Bank Holds Contest to Find Out Who Has the Best Jizz", & "Man's handwriting was so bad Eastbourne bank staff didn't know he was trying to rob them" Thanks For Listening & Please Subscribe to our Youtube Channel
Stories mentioned in this episode: Day in History: 1996: Country singer Merle Haggard plays Mantorville Schools, teachers find themselves in the crosshairs of critical race theory debate 'It's a complete addiction': Inside the racing lifestyle at Deer Creek Speedway Mayo Clinic's latest quarterly report continues strong income trend Read all stories in this episode at postbulletin.com.
Ask any American about our health system and they will tell you the same thing. 'It's broken.' The system seems to be rigged against the consumer only to benefit the insurance companies and health care systems.Steve Neeleman has spent years working in this system as a doctor and seen how the system treats people. But his story is much more personal on how the health care system even failed him. In today's episode, Dr. Neeleman gives us a look into how his company 'Health Equity' is helping individuals, families, and businesses to truly invest into their health through HSA, FSA, HRA programs. These programs help every day people to invest into their long term health.Beyond talking about health, we also discuss his family and their entrepreneurial endeavors, building startups, how personal experience sparks ideas, the impacts of health and finance, and much more.Linkshttps://healthequity.comAbout SteveStephen Neeleman is the CEO and founder of HealthEquity (www.healthequity.com), a personal healthcare financial service and health savings account company based in Draper, UT. Dr. Neeleman founded HealthEquity to repair the fractured relationship between patients and their physicians and to help more people obtain quality health insurance by re-introducing consumerism into healthcare.As a board-certified physician, Dr. Neeleman brings to HealthEquity passion and firsthand knowledge for the practice of medicine.Prior to his medical training, Dr. Neeleman worked as general manager for Morris Air (later acquired by Southwest Airlines), in Utah.Dr. Neeleman combined efficiency, technology and excellent customer service to succeed in a rocky industry. This innovative business model allowed Morris Air to rise above financially struggling competitors. Dr. Neeleman's goal is to use this model to help save another struggling industry: American healthcare.In addition to his duties as CEO of HealthEquity, Dr. Neeleman is currently a practicing general and trauma surgeon for Intermountain Healthcare at American Fork Hospital and Utah Valley Regional Medical Center in Utah. Dr. Neeleman was appointed by Governor Gary Herbert to serve as a board member of HIP Utah, Utah's high-risk insurance pool. He also serves on the Council for Affordable Health Insurance HSA Working Group and on America's Health Insurance Plans' HSA Leadership Council. Dr. Neeleman is a former assistant professor of surgery at the University of Arizona and the co-author of The Complete HSA Guidebook—How to make health savings accounts work for you!Dr. Neeleman completed his undergraduate degree and played football at Utah State University. He attended medical school at the University of Utah and completed his surgical training at the University of Arizona.
August 19, 2021: Northeast Ohio venues band together to require COVID vaccines or negative COVID tests for entry, US to erase nearly $6 billion in student loan debt for permanently disabled, Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley calls out Gov. DeWine for lack of mask mandate for K-12 schools , and more on 3News Now with Stephanie Haney. Need a break from bad news? Watch It's All Good (News!) with Stephanie Haney, every Wednesday: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKG_PBRhHEU Like this show? Check out the 3 Things to Know with Stephanie Haney podcast: http://wkyc.com/3thingstoknow Connect with Stephanie here: http://twitter.com/_StephanieHaney http://instagram.com/_StephanieHaney http://facebook.com/thestephaniehaney Read more here: (0:10) More than a dozen Northeast Ohio music clubs and theaters announce COVID-19 vaccination requirement https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/vaccine/more-than-dozen-northeast-ohio-music-venues-announce-covid-19-vaccination-requirement/95-5d1faf1e-a6c9-49f2-9956-789578986bf6 (1:18) COVID-19 in Ohio: State reports 3,446 new cases in the last 24 hours https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/coronavirus-numbers/coronavirus-ohio-updates/95-e2faeb56-d02a-443a-bcdb-141f2c7fafe8 (2:25) 'Show some courage': Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley calls for Gov. Mike DeWine to impose mask mandate for Ohio's schools https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/ohio/show-some-courage-dayton-mayor-nan-whaley-calls-on-gov-mike-dewine-impose-mask-mandate-schools/95-6b75cea8-0ba0-49af-8fa5-75d8cb5c3e37 (4:09) Northeast Ohioans can still get assistance with rent, utilities, and mortgage. What you need to know https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/northeast-ohio/northeast-ohioans-can-still-get-assistance-with-rent-utilities-mortgage-what-you-need-to-know/95-933fe972-ddc1-43b4-8475-36dd8dea9421 (5:39) Motorcade paying tribute to 9/11 victims leaves Cleveland with police escort to Flight 93 Memorial https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/cleveland/september-11-motorcade-cleveland/95-145885dc-55be-448e-bc6f-24dd5d3a892b (6:32) US to erase $5.8 billion in student loans for those with severe disabilities https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/nation-world/us-erasing-student-loan-debt-for-those-with-severe-disabilities/507-fb7a4bd7-1a15-417e-add6-b044fdd603f5 (8:51) Dead wife's DNA could prove convicted killer Ryan Widmer is innocent, say supporters https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/nation-now/dead-wifes-dna-could-prove-convicted-killer-ryan-widmer-is-innocent-say-supporters/465-83c4df02-d7f8-47c9-b771-4fd451988b9a (11:03) A new baby, a teen with a vision and a guilty dog: 'It's All Good (News!)' https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/its-all-good-news/its-all-good-news/95-684f7d95-0805-4fa5-abbc-1c2814534662
On this episode of The It's Only Rock And Roll Podcast, rock's first celebrated female bass-playing frontwoman, SUZI QUATRO talks about leaving behind her native Detroit (as well as her resentful, former band-mate sisters) to achieve super-stardom across the pond with mega-hits like “Can The Can”, “The Wild One”, and “Devil Gate Drive”. And after a handful of cameo appearances on Happy Days as fictional rocker 'Leather Tuscadero', found belated success at home with her 1978 Billboard Top 5 hit “Stumblin' In”. ---------------------------- ● Visit the Official Suzi Quatro Website: www.suziquatro.com ● Click to order Suzi's new album “The Devil In Me” Visit the 'It's Only Rock And Roll PODCAST' online at: ° Homepage – www.ItsOnlyRockAndRollPodcast.com ° Facebook – facebook.com/ItsOnlyRockAndRollPodcast/ ° YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCFB7uJ3dg4IKSxsNny9Jiw/videos ° Audea.io - https://audea.io/channel?id=1gPaMupFVsX ° Instagram - @itsonlyrockandrollpodcast Be sure to check out our all-new OFFICIAL IORR PODCAST STORE!
August 13, 2021: New bill in Ohio seeks to ban school mask mandates, Browns quarterback Baker Mayfield teases new Progressive Insurance commercials, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost freezes first assets tied to FirstEnergy nuclear powerplant bailout bribery scandal, OSU graduate and Medina native Matt Amodio continues winning streak on Jeopardy!, and more on 3News Now with Stephanie Haney. Need a break from bad news? Watch It's All Good (News!) with Stephanie Haney, every Wednesday: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KofSZx4atQ0 Like this show? Check out the 3 Things to Know with Stephanie Haney podcast: http://wkyc.com/3thingstoknow Connect with Stephanie here: http://twitter.com/_StephanieHaney http://instagram.com/_StephanieHaney http://facebook.com/thestephaniehaney Read more here: Extra COVID vaccine dose authorized for those with weak immune systems https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/vaccine/us-covid-vaccine-booster-shot-authorization-high-risk/507-d8bbe183-333c-4c7b-8910-5c66a15ada48 COVID-19 in Ohio: State reports 2,732 new cases in the last 24 hours https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/coronavirus-numbers/coronavirus-ohio-updates/95-e2faeb56-d02a-443a-bcdb-141f2c7fafe8 Second bill seeking to ban student mask requirements to enter Ohio House https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/second-bill-seeking-to-ban-student-mask-requirements-to-enter-ohio-house/530-49e39766-5163-4128-9d3b-525873566418 Proposed bill would eliminate required conceal carry license in Ohio https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/politics/proposed-bill-would-eliminate-required-conceal-carry-license-in-ohio/530-e8aaeed8-1b6a-4802-a7dd-8ebb3020a9f9 Ohio AG Dave Yost freezes assets of former utility chairman Sam Randazzo for role in FirstEnergy bribery scandal: Mark Naymik Reports https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/ohio/ohio-ag-dave-yost-freezes-assets-former-utility-chairman-sam-randazzo-role-firstenergy-bribery-scandal/95-faba672c-86f1-45e8-a49c-23b192512c15 A birthday bash, turkey trot and veterans honored: 'It's All Good (News!)' https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/its-all-good-news/its-all-good-news/95-38a904a2-1953-45c5-83de-a6a12be19906 Baker Mayfield teases Season 3 of Progressive Insurance campaign https://www.wkyc.com/article/sports/nfl/browns/baker-mayfield-season-3-progressive-commercials/95-ea29aa3f-15cd-48fe-a3fb-09ba99c02854 What's coming to Cedar Point in 2022? Updates revealed https://www.wkyc.com/article/entertainment/places/cedar-point/cedar-point-changes-2022-season-chef-inspired-restaurant-frontier-town-castaway-bay-sawmill-creek/95-df2ab8dc-be34-4c30-896b-827daaf92a4c Ohio State grad and Medina native keeps winning streak alive, becomes 3rd biggest earner in 'Jeopardy!' History https://www.wkyc.com/article/entertainment/matt-amodio-winning-streak-jeopardy/530-bc213284-7489-4ae2-8a4d-eb2486a1e178 PETA petitions Cleveland Indians to include a veggie dog mascot in Hot Dog Derby https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/cleveland/peta-vegan-hot-dog-cleveland-indians-hot-dog-derby-progressive-field/95-234f883c-b8f8-4b97-a5d9-0752913f4dd9
Send your song and lyrics for consideration to info@daredevilproduction.com by using "Video Content Challenge" in the subject line.Listen to Thurane's song, 'It's All Good' here.Johnny and Brent have a FREE gift for YOU! To get your free gifts, go to GiftFromJohnny.com and GiftFromBrent.com JOIN THE C.L.I.M.B. COMMUNITY ON FACEBOOKIf you'd like to schedule a consultation with Johnny, please email us at info@daredevilproduction.com and put “CONSULTING” in the subject line. To schedule a personal coaching session with Brent Baxter, go to https://songwritingpro.com/coaching We are very excited to be a part of the @americansongwriter podcast network with other amazing podcasts. Check out our new home for all of our upcoming episodes! @americansongwriter #theclimb #americansongwriter #americansongwriterpodcastnetwork #aspn #interview #podcast http://americansongwriter.com/podcast PS: Get your free PDF download of 21 Biggest Reasons You Don't Have More fans today and improve the promotion efforts for your music. Go to GiftFromJohnny.com and tell him where to send it.
Brandon talks with Debbie Tudor (LPC SUPERVISOR) about scapegoats, narcissists, dual diagnosis, and much more. Debbie Tudor is the author of the healing workbook 'It's Not You, It's Them: 30 Days of Hope and Help for the Adult Child of a Narcissistic Parent', as well as 'Divine Relaxation' which is available on Itunes. Debbie Tudor's Website Can be found at https://rockwall-counseling.com Debbie Tudor's Email Address is info@Rockwall-Counseling.com You can buy Debbie's healing workbook 'It's Not You, It's Them: 30 Days of Hope and Help for the Adult Child of a Narcissistic Parent' at https://rockwall-counseling.com/product/its-not-you-its-them-30-days-of-hope-and-healing/ You can buy Debbie's healing audio 'Divine Relaxation' at https://rockwall-counseling.com/devine-relaxation-cd/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Who's afraid of the Art of Noise? Well not us, we loved 'em. So much so that we have invited the one and only Anne Dudley on to the show this week. Anne Dudley is an obscenely talented composer, arranger, producer and performer. She is a fellow of The Royal College of Music, was nominated 3 times for an Ivor Novello Award, she has won two Brit awards, a Grammy and an *Oscar* for her score for the British comedy 'The Full Monty'. In 2014 she was presented with a BASCA Gold Badge for her outstanding contribution to the music industry. And ALL of this was AFTER she helped change the face of electronic music forever through her work with The Art of Noise. We also celebrate one of the best soul and funk labels around 'Daptone' by talking to Jessica Lipsky author of the definitive new book about the label that brought us Sharon Jones, Charles Bradley and Lee Fields, its called 'It aint retro: Daptone Records and the 21st century soul revolution.' And of course Anne and Eamon kick it all off by shooting the breeze and ruminating on the long awaited return of the dancefloor! So strap yourselves in for another tasty slice of pod. PLAYLIST! https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2aJgGb30XvprGhMF8KDhdw?si=21812fd742644315 You:Tube playlist! https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLPPl5xM2fbUqmC91KCSAloSssLFoZeTgF You can buy Jessica Lipsky's book here (or at your local book store). https://www.amazon.co.uk/Aint-Retro-Daptone-21st-Century-Revolution/dp/1911036734 You can also buy the legendary Tokyo concert by the Art of Noise after over 25 years of being unavailable. https://www.roughtrade.com/gb/art-of-noise/noise-in-the-city-live-in-tokyo/lp-x2?channable=409d9269640033313338323106&gclid=Cj0KCQjw6s2IBhCnARIsAP8RfAgBuiSOZ46Yflr3ocolhZUvYQ4iOFhSXKWE86Jh7_VIoUgiYD2rN7waAuV8EALw_wcB CONTACT US: WHATGOESPOD@GMAIL.COM Twitter - @WHATGOESPOD Instagram - @WHATGOESPOD Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/WhatGoesPod/ *BIG UP THE LIKERS RETWEETERS & SHARERS*
In this episode, Tiny and I review the “last Castle Rock story” (insert Thor “is it though?” gif here), Stephen King's Needful Things. We also discuss some recent King news. Timestamps Show Start - 00:19 News and Check-ins - 05:05 Needful Things - 22:30 Non-Spoiler - 26:48 Spoiler - 44:13 Closing the Ep - 1:16:00 Patreon Stinger - 1:19:30 Pre-Recorded Outro - 1:20:51 Related Links The Endless Elsewhere Support Obsessive Viewer Podcasts Here Tower Junkies: The Masterlist Tower Junkies: Episode Archive As Good As It Gets - Patreon As Good As It Gets - Official Homepage “Overlook”: Bad Robot Series Based on ‘The Shining' Finding New Home After HBO Max Passes Stephen King Gets into the Podcast Game With a Series Based on ‘Night Shift' Stephen King plans to write COVID-inspired novel: 'It's gonna be difficult' ‘Jackie Brown' Icon Pam Grier Joins Cast of ‘Pet Sematary' Prequel Needful Things - Novel - Amazon Affiliate Link Needful Things (1993) - Movie - Amazon Affiliate Link Obsessive Viewer - Our weekly movie and TV discussion and review podcast Apple Podcasts - Google Podcasts - Stitcher Obsessive Viewer Presents: Anthology– Matt's solo podcast exploring science fiction anthology storytelling in television's first golden age starting with The Twilight Zone. Apple Podcasts – Google Podcasts – Stitcher – Twitter Episode Homepage: http://www.towerjunkiespod.com/066 Tower Junkies Subscribe Apple Podcasts Stitcher Google Podcasts TuneIn Radio RSS Feed Social Media Facebook Twitter Instagram Episodes by Category News– Covering news items related to Stephen King and The Dark Tower Palaver– General discussions about Stephen King and/or The Dark Tower series Khef– Reviews and discussions of books and comics in The Dark Tower series Novel Reviews– Reviews of Stephen King (and related) novels Novella Reviews– Reviews of Stephen King (and related) novellas Short Story Reviews– Reviews of Stephen King (and related) short stories and short story collections Comic Reviews– Reviews of Stephen King (and related) comic books and comic adaptations Movie Reviews– Reviews of Stephen King (and related) movie adaptations TV Reviews– Reviews of Stephen King (and related) TV adaptations Commentary Tracks– Special commentary track recordings that can be listened to while watching the title or simply as a podcast episode Interviews– Interviews with people with special ties to the work of Stephen King Special Eps– Episodes that don't fit into the other categories; usually announcement episodes pertaining to the podcast itself Matt's Top 19 King Novels 11/22/63 It Wizard and Glass (The Dark Tower IV) Pet Sematary Misery The Shining The Drawing of the Three (The Dark Tower II) The Dark Tower (The Dark Tower VII) The Stand The Waste Lands (The Dark Tower III) Under the Dome Christine Doctor Sleep Wolves of the Calla (The Dark Tower V) The Dead Zone The Gunslinger (The Dark Tower I) Revival End of Watch Mr. Mercedes Tiny's Top 19 King Novels The Dark Tower (Dark Tower VII) Misery The Stand The Shining The Drawing of the Three (The Dark Tower II) The Gunslinger (The Dark Tower I) Christine Wizard and Glass (The Dark Tower IV) It Cujo The Dead Zone Mr. Mercedes Gerald's Game Pet Sematary Wolves of the Calla (The Dark Tower V) Salem's Lot Under the Dome 11/22/63 The Waste Lands (The Dark Tower III)
We are celebrating the legends of Down HUNder in this special episode dedicated to Australian Idol supergroup Young Divas, which featured an all-star line-up of Jessica Mauboy, Ricki-Lee, Paulini, Kate DeAraugo and Emily Williams. Brace yourself for Right Back At Ya!'s most fabulous 'handbags-on-the-floor' episode yet! This multi-platinum-selling quartet of vocal powerhouses was never meant to be an official recording group - Paulini, Ricki-Lee, Kate and Emily only teamed up for a one-off single and joint national tour. But everything kicked off after the unexpected success of their debut single 'This Time I Know It's For Real', a high-energy dance pop remake of the Donna Summer classic. Together David and Joel explore the Young Divas' hit albums of covers - "Young Divas" (2006) and "New Attitude" (2007) - the latter featuring Jessica Mauboy, who replaced Ricki-Lee. It's big vocals, impeccable harmonies, and a relentless stream of classic anthems like 'Happenin' All Over Again', 'It's Raining Men', 'Gloria', 'Searchin', 'Turn Me Loose', 'Tell It To My Heart', 'Got To Be Real', and more. It's time to summon your inner Young Diva, shake off the lockdown blues, and - for the uninitiated - enjoy this little introduction to all five divas' solo careers. Follow Right Back At Ya! https://www.instagram.com/rightbackpod/ https://twitter.com/rightbackpod https://www.facebook.com/rightbackpod Check out our Spotify playlists https://open.spotify.com/user/1c3ks5jdh2x4j7jdg1o0aglwg Follow Joel https://www.instagram.com/dr_joelb/ https://twitter.com/DR_JoelB Follow David https://www.instagram.com/lovelimmy/ https://twitter.com/lovelimmy Email us rightbackpod@gmail.com
In this week's edition of the "HR's Role In…" series, Lucinda talks to Katy McMinn, the founder of Task HR, and co-founder of HR Independents, about the process of managing grievances - what exactly is HR's role in the process, and how we can remain compliant and balanced throughout. Key Takeaways Indeed, disciplinaries and grievances are not the same, and should not be treated as such. Grievances are about providing employees with a formal route to voice issues they may have with the workplace. Certainly, the first thing to consider is who will be involved in the grievance process. Furthermore, we must consider all parties that may have a stake and offer them the chance to be a part of the resolution. If an organisation is small, it may be worth looking for external support in terms of an adjudicator so as to prevent bias, and the matching of someone ill-suited to a role in the grievance process. Lastly, we must enter the grievance process with an open mind, free from assumptions or personal bias. We must endeavour to remember that grievances are fundamentally a way of making things better in the long run. BEST MOMENTS 'It's providing the opportunity for an individual to raise concerns' 'Ask them to talk it through in their own words, so that you can really understand the nature of it' 'Go into this with an open mind' 'It's about being objective, open minded, and listening to what's being said' VALUABLE RESOURCES Join the HR Uprising LinkedIn Group The HR Uprising ranked 9th in Feedspot's ‘Top 30 UK HR Podcasts You Must Follow in 2021'. Host of The HR Uprising Podcast, Lucinda Carney, is also the founder and CEO of Actus Software, where you can find additional free HR Resources: All free resources: https://actus.co.uk/free-performance-management-resources/ NEW infographic: 10 Steps to Creating a Successful Hybrid Workplace Introducing the new Actus Academy: your on-demand e-learning platform! Virtual Training Programmes: How to be a Change Superhero Hybrid People Management Change Superhero Resources: Book: How To Be A Change Superhero – by Lucinda Carney Free Change Toolkit: www.changesuperhero.com HR's Role In episodes: Sponsoring Overseas Workers – with Ruth Cornish IR35 - with Mary Asante Recruitment Essentials – with Katy McMinn The HR Uprising Podcast | Apple | Spotify | Stitcher About The Guest, Katy McMinn Over the last 20 years, Katy has developed strong, hands-on HR expertise working for blue chip companies. This includes General Electric, Shell and Ernst & Young, as well as providing independent HR consultancy. Also, she has an MSc in Human Resources Consultancy. Katy is also is fully CIPD qualified and is accredited in the use of a range of personality tools to enhance individual and team performance. Lastly, Katy runs her own HR consultancy practice and specialises in employee engagement, culture and values, recruitment and employee relations. Task HR – https://www.taskhr.co.uk/about Katy McMinn LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/katy-mcminn/?originalSubdomain=uk ABOUT THE HOST Lucinda Carney is a Business Psychologist with 15 years in Senior Corporate L&D roles and a further 10 as CEO of Actus Software where she worked closely with HR colleagues helping them to solve the same challenges across a huge range of industries. It was this breadth of experience that inspired Lucinda to set up the HR Uprising community to facilitate greater collaboration across HR professionals in different sectors, helping them to ‘rise up' together. “If you look up, you rise up” CONTACT METHOD Join the LinkedIn community - https://www.linkedin.com/groups/13714397/ Email: Lucinda@advancechange.co.uk Linked In: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lucindacarney/ Twitter: @lucindacarney Instagram: @hruprising Facebook: @hruprising See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Wave Racer performs 'Look Up To Yourself' before covering The 1975's 'It's Not Living (If It's Not With You)' for Like A Version.
What if I told you that there's a way to keep yourself young? It takes a lot of hard work, and it's a continuing process. However, the payoff is definitely worth it. It also offers a lot of benefits aside from longevity. The secret? It's developing a lifelong passion for learning and growing. In this episode, Craig Harper joins us once again to explain the value of having a growth mindset. We explore how you can keep yourself young and healthy even as you chronologically age. He also emphasises the importance of fun and laughter in our lives. Craig also shares how powerful our minds are and how we can use them to manage our pain. If you want to know how to develop a growth mindset for a fuller life, then this episode is for you! Get Customised Guidance for Your Genetic Make-Up For our epigenetics health programme, all about optimising your fitness, lifestyle, nutrition and mind performance to your particular genes, go to https://www.lisatamati.com/page/epigenetics-and-health-coaching/. Customised Online Coaching for Runners CUSTOMISED RUN COACHING PLANS — How to Run Faster, Be Stronger, Run Longer Without Burnout & Injuries Have you struggled to fit in training in your busy life? Maybe you don't know where to start, or perhaps you have done a few races but keep having motivation or injury troubles? Do you want to beat last year's time or finish at the front of the pack? Want to run your first 5-km or run a 100-miler? Do you want a holistic programme that is personalised & customised to your ability, goals, and lifestyle? Go to www.runninghotcoaching.com for our online run training coaching. Health Optimisation and Life Coaching If you are struggling with a health issue and need people who look outside the square and are connected to some of the greatest science and health minds in the world, then reach out to us at support@lisatamati.com, we can jump on a call to see if we are a good fit for you. If you have a big challenge ahead, are dealing with adversity, or are wanting to take your performance to the next level and learn how to increase your mental toughness, emotional resilience, foundational health, and more, then contact us at support@lisatamati.com. Order My Books My latest book Relentless chronicles the inspiring journey about how my mother and I defied the odds after an aneurysm left my mum Isobel with massive brain damage at age 74. 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Here are three reasons why you should listen to the full episode: Learn how to develop a growth mindset to keep yourself young and healthy, regardless of your chronological age. Understand why you need to manage your energy and plan fun and laughter into your life. Discover the ways you can change your mindset around pain. Resources Gain exclusive access and bonuses to Pushing the Limits Podcast by becoming a patron! Listen to other Pushing the Limits Episodes: #60: Ian Walker - Paraplegic Handbiker - Ultra Distance Athlete #183: Sirtuins and NAD Supplements for Longevity with Dr Elena Seranova #188: Awareness and Achieve High Performance with Craig Harper #189: Understanding Autophagy and Increasing Your Longevity with Dr Elena Seranova Connect with Craig: Website | Instagram | Linkedin Interested to learn more from Craig? You can check out his books and his podcast, The You Project. T: The Story of Testosterone by Carole Hooven Mind Over Medicine by Lissa Rankin M.D. Lifespan - Why We Age and Why We Don't Have To by David A. Sinclair PhD Neuroscience professor Andrew Huberman's Instagram Dr Rhonda Patrick's website A new program, BoostCamp, is coming this September at Peak Wellness! Episode Highlights [06:50] A Growth Mindset Keeps Us Young and Healthy It's helpful to take advantage of the availability of high-level research and medical journals online. If you're prepared to do the hard work, you can learn anything. Learning and exposing ourselves to new things are crucial parts of staying young and healthy. Age is a self-created story. With a growth mindset, you can change how your body and mind works so that you feel younger than your real age. [12:23] Develop a Growth Mindset It's vital to surround yourself with people with the same mindset — people who drag you up, not down. You can also get a similar experience by exposing yourself to good ideas and stories. Be aware of what you're feeding your mind, on top of what you're feeding your body. School is not a marker of your intelligence. Your academic failures do not matter. With a growth mindset, you can keep growing and learning. [17:40] Let Go and Be Happy People tend to have career and exercise plans, but not a fun plan. We can't be serious all the time — we also need time to have fun and laugh. Laughter can impact and improve the immune system. Laughing can change the biochemistry of your brain. Plan for the future, but also learn to live in the now. Having a growth mindset is important, but so is finding joy and enjoyment. [23:31] Look After Your Energy Having fun and resting can impact your energy and emotional system. These habits can help you work faster than when you're just working all the time. Remember, volume and quality of work are different. [30:24] Work-Life Balance Many people believe that they need to balance work and life. However, when you find your passion, it's just life. Even doing 20 hours of work for a job you hate is worse than 40 hours of doing something you love. There's no one answer for everyone. Everything is a lot more flexible than before. Find what works for you. [35:56] Change the Way You Think It's unavoidable that we think a certain way because of our upbringing. Start to become aware of your lack of awareness and your programming. Learn why you think of things the way you do. Is it because of other people? Be influenced by other people, but test their ideas through trial and error. Let curiosity fuel your growth mindset. Listen to the full podcast to learn how Craig learned how to run his gym without a business background! [44:18] Sharing Academic Knowledge Academics face many restrictions due to the nature and context of their work. He encourages the academic community to communicate information to everyone, not just to fellow researchers. He plans to publish a book about his PhD research to share what he knows with the public. Science is constantly changing. We need to keep up with the latest knowledge. [50:55] Change Your Relationship with Pain There is no simple fix to chronic pain. The most you can do is change your relationship and perception of pain. Our minds are powerful enough to create real pain even without any physical injury. Listen to Craig and Lisa's stories about how our minds affect our pain in the full episode! 7 Powerful Quotes from This Episode ‘My mind is the CEO of my life. So I need to make sure that as much as I can, that I'm managing my mind, and my mental energy optimally.' ‘If you're listening to this, and you didn't succeed in the school system, that means absolutely nothing when you're an adult.' ‘We're literally doing our biology good by laughing.' ‘Living is a present tense verb, you can't living in the future, and you can't live in the future.' ‘Often, more is not better. Sometimes more is worse. So there's a difference between volume of work and output and quality of work.' ‘It's all about those people just taking one step at a time to move forward... That growth mindset that I think is just absolutely crucial.' About Craig Craig Harper is one of Australia's leading educators, speakers, and writers in health and self-development. He has been an integral part of the Australian health and fitness industry since 1982. In 1990, he established a successful Harper's Personal Training, which evolved into one of the most successful businesses of its kind. He currently hosts a successful Podcast called 'The You Project'. He is also completing a neuropsychology PhD, studying the spectrum of human thinking and behaviour. Craig speaks on various radio stations around Australia weekly. He currently fills an on-air role as a presenter on a lifestyle show called 'Get a Life', airing on Foxtel. Want to know more about Craig and his work? Check out his website, or follow him on Instagram and Linkedin! Enjoyed This Podcast? If you did, be sure to subscribe and share it with your friends! Post a review and share it! If you enjoyed tuning in, then leave us a review. You can also share this with your family and friends so they can learn how to develop a growth mindset. Have any questions? You can contact me through email (support@lisatamati.com) or find me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube. For more episode updates, visit my website. You may also tune in on Apple Podcasts. To pushing the limits, Lisa Full Transcript Of The Podcast Welcome to Pushing the Limits, the show that helps you reach your full potential with your host Lisa Tamati, brought to you by lisatamati.com. Lisa Tamati: Well, hi everyone and welcome back to Pushing the Limits with Lisa Tamati. This week I have Craig Harper. He is really well known in Australia. He's a broadcaster, a fitness professional, a PhD scholar, an expert on metacognition, and self-awareness. And we get talking on all those good topics today and also neuro-psycho-immunology, very big word. Really interesting stuff; and we get talking about laughter, we get talking about pain management. We sort of go all over the show in this episode, which I sometimes do on this show. I hope you enjoy this very insightful and deep conversation with Craig Harper. Before we head over to the show, I just want to let you know that Neil and I at Running Hot Coaching have launched a new program called Boost Camp. Now, this will be starting on the first of September and we're taking registrations now. This is a live eight-week program, where you'll basically boost your life. That's why it's called Boost Camp. not boot camp, Boost Camp. This is all about upgrading your body, learning how to help your body function at its base, learning how your mindset works, and increasing your performance, your health, your well-being and how to energise your mind and your body. In this Boost Camp, we're going to give you the answers you need in a simple, easy-to-follow process using holistic diagnostic tools and looking at the complete picture. So you're going to go on a personalised health and fitness journey that will have a really life-changing effect on your family and your community. We're going to be talking about things like routine and resilience, mental resilience, which is a big thing that I love to talk about, and how important is in this time of change, in this time of COVID, where everything's upside down, and how we should be all building time and resources around building our resilience and energising our mind and body. We're going to give you a lot of health fundamentals. Because the fundamentals are something simple and easy to do, it means that you probably aren't doing some of the basics right, and we want to help you get there. We're going to give you the answers you need in a simple, sort of easy, process. So we are now in a position to be able to control and manage all of these stressors and these things that are coming at us all the time, and we want to help you do that in the most optimal manner. So check out what boost camp is all about. Go to www.peakwellness.co.nz/boostcamp. I'll say that again, peakwellness.co.nz/boostcamp, boost with a B-O-O-S-T, boost camp. We hope to see you over there! Right, now over to the show with Craig Harper. Well, hi everyone and welcome to Pushing the Limits! Today, I have someone who is a special treat for you who has been on the show before. He's an absolute legend, and I love him to bits. Craig half and welcome to the show mate, how are you doing? Craig Harper: Hi Lisa! I'm awesome but you're not. Lisa: No I'm a bit of a miss, people. I've got shingles, a horrible, horrible virus that I advise nobody to get. Craig: What it— do we know what that's made? What causes it, or is it idiopathic as they say? Lisa: Yeah, no, it is from the chickenpox virus. Although, I've never, ever had that virus. So I'm like heck how, you know, it's related to the cold sore virus and all of that, which I definitely have had often. So it sits on the spinal cord, these little viruses, dormant and then one day when your immune systems are down, it decides to attack and replicate and go hard out. So yeah, that'll be the down for the count now for two and a half weeks. In a lot of pain, but— Craig: What is it like nerve pain or what kind of pain is it? Lisa: Yes, it's nerve pain. So this one's actually, it hits different nerves in different people, depending on where it decides to pop out. My mum had the femoral nerve, which is one that goes right down from the backbone, quite high up on the backbone, down across the back and then down through the hip flexor and down the leg. I've got all these horrible looking sores, I look like a burn victim all the way down my leg and across my back. And it comes out through the muscles of your like, through the nerves and nerve endings and causes these blisters on top of the skin but it's the nerve pain that's really horrible because there's no comfortable position. There's no easy way to lie or sit and of course, when you're lying at night, it's worse. It's worse at nighttime than in the day. So I learned a lot about shingles. And as usual, we're using these obstacles to be a learning curve. Craig: Why on earth are you doing a bloody podcast? You should be relaxing. Lisa: You're important, you see. I had, you know, I had this appointment with you, and I honour my appointments, and I— Craig: Definitely not important. What's the typical treatment for shingles? Lisa: Well, actually, I wish I'd known this two weeks ago, I didn't know this, but I just had a Zoom call with Dave Asprey, you know, of Bulletproof fame, who is one of my heroes, and he's coming on the show, people, shortly. So that's really exciting. He told me to take something called BHT, butylated hydroxytoluene, which is a synthetic antioxidant. They actually use them in food additives, they said that kills that virus. So I'm like, ‘Right, get me some of that.' But unfortunately, I was already, it's— I only got it just yesterday, because I had to wait for the post. So I'm sort of hoping for a miracle in the next 24 hours. Also, intravenous vitamin C, I've had three of those on lysine, which also helps. One of the funny things, before we get to the actual topic of the day, is I was taking something called L-Citrulline which helps with nitric oxide production and feeds into the arginine pathway. Apparently, while that's a good thing for most people, the arginine, if you have too much arginine in the body, it can lead to replication of this particular virus, which is really random and I only found that out after the fact. But you know, as a biohacker, who experiments sometimes you get it wrong. Craig: Sometimes you turn left when you should have turned right. Lisa: Yes. So that, you know, certainly took a lot of digging in PubMed to find that connection. But I think that's maybe what actually set it off. That combined with a pretty stressful life of like— Craig: It's interesting that you mentioned PubMed because like a lot of people now, you know how people warn people off going Dr Google, you know, whatever, right. But the funny thing is, you can forget Dr Google, I mean, Google's okay. But you can access medical journals, high level— I mean, all of the research journals that I access for my PhD are online. You can literally pretty much access any information you want. We're not talking about anecdotal evidence, and we're not talking about theories and ideas and random kind of junk. We're talking about the highest level research, you literally can find at home now. So if you know how to research and you know what you're looking for, and you can be bothered reading arduous academic papers, you can pretty much learn anything, to any level, if you're prepared to do the work and you know how— and you can be a little bit of a detective, a scientific detective. Lisa: That is exactly, you know, what I keep saying, and I'm glad you said that because you are a PhD scholar and you are doing this. So you know what you're talking about, and this is exactly what I've done in the last five years, is do deep research and all this sort of stuff. People think that you have to go to university in order to have this education, and that used to be the case. It is no longer the case. We don't have to be actually in medical school to get access to medical texts anymore, which used to be the way. And so we now have the power in our hands to take, to some degree, control over what we're learning and where we're going with this. It doesn't mean that it's easy. You will know, sifting through PubMed, and all these scholarly Google articles and things in clinical studies is pretty damn confusing sometimes and arduous. But once you get used to that form of learning, you start to be able to sift through relatively fast, and you can really educate yourself. I think having that growth mindset, I mean, you and I never came from an academic background. But thanks to you, I'm actually going to see Prof Schofield next week. Prof Schofield and looking at a PhD, because, I really need to add that to my load. But— Craig: You know, the thing is, I think in general, and I don't know where you're gonna go today, but I think in general, like what one of the things that keeps us young is learning and exposing ourselves, our mind and our emotions and for that matter, our body to new things, whether that's new experiences or new ideas, or new information, or new environments, or new people. This is what floats my boat and it keeps me hungry and it keeps me healthy physically, mentally, emotionally, intellectually, creatively, sociologically. It keeps me healthy. Not only does it keep me in a good place, I'm actually at 57, still getting better. You know, and people might wonder about that sometimes. Of course, there's an inevitability to chronological aging. Clearly, most people at 80 are not going to be anything like they were at 40. Not that I'm 80. But there's— we know now that there's the unavoidable consistency of time as a construct, as an objective construct. But then there's the way that we behave around and relate to time. Biological aging is not chronological aging. In the middle of the inevitability of time ticking over is, which is an objective thing, there's the subject of human in the middle of it, who can do what he or she wants. So, in other words, a 57-year-old bloke doesn't need to look or feel or function or think like a 57-year-old bloke, right? When we understand that, in many ways, especially as an experience, age is a self-created story for many people. I mean, you've met, I've met and our listeners have met 45-year-olds that seem 70 and 70-year-olds— and we're not talking about acting young, that's not what we're talking about. I'm not talking about that. I'm not talking about pretending you're not old or acting young. I'm actually talking about changing the way that your body and your mind and your brain and your emotional system works, literally. So that you are literally in terms of function, similar to somebody or a ‘typical' person who's 20 or 25 years younger than you. We didn't even know that this used to be possible, but not only is it possible, if you do certain things, it's very likely that that's the outcome you'll create. Lisa: Yeah, and if you think about our grandparents, and when I think about my Nana at 45 or 50, they were old. When I think about now I'm 52, you're 57, we're going forward, we're actually reaching the peak of our intellectual, well, hopefully not the peak, we're still going up. Physically, we got a few wrinkles and a few grey hairs coming. But even on that front, there is so much what's happening in the longevity space that my take on it is, if I can keep my shit together for the next 10 years, stuff's gonna come online that's gonna help me keep it on for another 20, 30, 40 years. For me now it's trying to hold my body together as best I can so that when the technology does come, that we are able to meet— and we're accessing some of the stuff now, I mean, I'm taking some of the latest and greatest bloody supplements and biohacking stuff, and actively working towards that, and having this, I think it's a growth mindset. I had Dr Demartini on the show last week, who I love. I think he's an incredible man. His mindset, I mean, he's what nearly, I think he's nearly 70. It looks like he's 40. He's amazing. And his mind is so sharp and so fast it'll leave you and I in the dust. He's processing books every day, like, you know, more than a book a day and thinking his mind through and he's distilling it and he's remembering, and he's retaining it, and he's giving it to the world. This is sort of— you know, he's nothing exceptional. He had learning disabilities, for goodness sake, he had a speech impediment, he couldn't read until he was an adult. In other words, he made that happen. You and I, you know, we both did you know, where you went to university, at least when you're younger, I sort of mucked around on a bicycle for a few years. Travelling the world to see it. But this is the beauty of the time that we live in, and we have access to all this. So that growth mindset, I think keeps you younger, both physically and mentally. Craig: And this is why I reckon it's really important that we hang around with people who drag us up, not down. And that could be you know, this listening to your podcast, of course, like I feel like when I listen to a podcast with somebody like you that shares good ideas and good information and good energy and is a good person, like if I'm walking around, I've literally got my headphones here because I just walked back from the cafe, listening to Joe Rogan's latest podcast with this lady from Harvard talking about testosterone, you'd find it really interesting, wrote a book called T. When I'm listening to good conversations with good people, I am, one, I'm fascinated and interested, but I'm stimulating myself and my mind in a good way. I'm dragging myself up by exposing myself to good ideas and good thinking, and good stories. Or it might even be just something that's funny, it might— I'm just exposing myself to a couple of dickheads talking about funny shit, right? And I'd spend an hour laughing, which is also therapeutic. You know, and I think there's that, I think we forget that we're always feeding our mind and our brain something. It's just having more awareness of what am I actually plugging into that amazing thing? Not only just what am I putting in my body, which, of course, is paramount. But what am I putting in, you know, that thing that sits between my ears that literally drives my life? That's my HQ, that's my, my mind is the CEO of my life. So I need to make sure that as much as I can, that I'm managing my mind and my mental energy optimally. Lisa: Yeah. And I think, you know, a lot of people if they didn't do well in the school system, think that, 'Oh, well, I'm not academic therefore I can't learn or continue to learn.' I really encourage people, if you're listening to this, and you didn't succeed in the school system, that means absolutely nothing when you're an adult. The school system has got many flaws, and it didn't cater to everybody. So I just want people to understand that. You know, just like with Dr Demartini, he taught himself 30 words a day, that's where he started: vocabulary. He taught himself to read and then taught— Albert Einstein was another one, you know, he struggled in school for crying out loud. So school isn't necessarily the marker of whether you're an intelligent human being or not. It's one system and one way of learning that is okay for the average and the masses. But definitely, it leaves a lot of people thinking that they're dumb when they're not dumb. It's all about those people just taking one step at a time to move forward and becoming, you know, that growth mindset that I think is just absolutely crucial. You talked there about laughter and I wanted to go into that a little bit today too, because I heard you talking on Tiffany, our friend Tiffany's podcast, and you were talking about how important laughter is for the body, for our minds, for our— and if we laugh a lot, we're less likely to fall victim to the whole adult way of being, which is sometimes pretty cynical and miserable. When you think, what is it? Kids laugh something like 70 times a day and adults laugh I think, six times a day or some statistic. Do you want to elaborate on that a little bit? Craig: Well, I used to sit down with you know, I don't do much one-on-one coaching anymore, just because I do other stuff. I would sit with people and go, ‘Alright, tell me about your exercise plan and blah, blah, blah. Tell me about your career plan, blah, blah, blah. Tell me about your financial plan, blah, blah, blah.' Tell me about, you know, whatever. And they have systems and programs and plans for everything. I would say to them, 'Do you like fun?' And they're like, they look at me like I was a weirdo. 'What do you mean?' I go, 'Well, what do you mean, what do I mean? Like, do you like having fun?' And they're like, very seriously, like, 'Well, of course, everyone likes having fun.' I go, 'Great. What's your fun plan?' And they go, 'What?' I go, 'What's your fun— like, is laughing and having fun important to you?' 'Yeah, yeah.' 'Okay, what's your fun plan?' They literally, like this idea of just integrating things into my life, which are for no reason other than to laugh and to have fun. Not to be productive and efficient and to tick more boxes and create more income and elevate output and tick fucking boxes and hit KPIs and you know, just to be silly, just to laugh like a dickhead, just to hang out with your mates or your girlfriends, or whatever it is. Just to talk shit, just to, not everything needs to be fucking deep and meaningful and world-changing. Not everything. In fact, it can't, you know? Our brain and our body and our emotional system and our nervous system and— it can't work like that we can't be elevated all the time. And so, literally when we are laughing, we're changing the biochemistry of our brain. You know, literally when we are having fun, we're impacting our immune system in a real way through that thing I've probably spoken to you about, psychoneuroimmunology, right? We're literally doing our biology good by laughing and there's got to be, for me, there's got to be, because, like you probably, I have a lot of deep and meaningful conversations with people about hard shit. Like, I'm pretty much a specialist at hard conversations. It's what I do. But, you know, and, and I work a lot, and I study a lot. Then there needs to be a valve. You can't be all of that all of the time because you're human, you're not a cyborg, you're not a robot. And this hustle, hustle, hustle, grind, work harder, sleep less, you can, you know, you can sleep when you're dead, it's all bullshit. Because, also, yeah, I want to learn and grow and evolve, and I want to develop new skills. But you know what, I want to also, in the moment, laugh at silly shit. I want to be happy and I want to hang out with people I love and I want to be mentally and emotionally and spiritually nourished. Like, it's not just about acquiring knowledge and accumulating shit that you're probably not going to use. It's also about the human experience now. This almost sounds contradictory. But because of course, we want a future plan and we want goals and all of those, but we're never going to live in the present because when we get there, it's not the present. It's just another installment of now. So when next Wednesday comes, it's not the future, it's now again, because life is never-ending now, right? It's like you only like, live— living is a present tense verb. You can't living in the future, and you can't live in the future. You cannot. Yes, I know, this gets a little bit, what's the word existential, but the truth is that, yeah, we need to— well, we don't, we can do whatever we want. But I believe we need to be stimulated so we're learning and growing, and we're doing good stuff for our brain and good stuff for our body. But also that we are giving ourselves a metaphoric hug, and going, 'It's all right to lie on your bed and watch Netflix, as long as it's not 20 hours a day, five days a week,' you know. It's okay to just laugh at silly stuff. It's okay, that there's no purpose to doing this thing other than just joy and enjoyment, you know. I think that people like you and me who are, maybe we would put ourselves in the kind of driven category, right? You and I are no good at this. Like, at times, having fun and just going, ‘I'm going to do fuck all today.' Because the moment that we do sometimes we start to feel guilty and we start to be like, 'Fuck, I'm not being productive. I've got to be productive.' That, in itself, is a problem for high performance. Like, fuck your high performance, and fuck your productivity today. Be unproductive, be inefficient, and just fucking enjoy it, you know, not— because in a minute, we're going to be dead. We're going to go, 'But fuck, I was productive. But I had no fun, I never laughed, because I was too busy being important.' Fuck all that. Lisa: I think both of us have probably come a long way around finding that out. I mean, I used to love reading fiction novels, and then I went, ‘Oh, I can't be reading fiction novels. I've got so many science books that I have to read.' Here I am, dealing with insomnia at two o'clock in the morning reading texts on nitric oxide, you know. It is this argument that goes on, still in my head if there was an hour where you weren't learning something, you know, I can't. Because I know that if I go for a big drive or something, and I have to travel somewhere, or going for a long run or something, I've probably digested a book on that road trip or three, or 10 podcasts or something and I've actually oh, I get to the end and I'm like, ‘Well, I achieved something.' I've got my little dopamine hits all the way through. Now I've sort of come to also understand that you need this time out and you need to just have fun. I'm married to this absolute lunatic of a guy called Haisely O'Leary, who I just love, because all day every day, he is just being an idiot. In the best sense of the word. I come out and I'm grumpy and you know, had a hard day and I'm tired, I'm stressed, and I come out and he's doing a little dance, doing some stupid meme or saying some ridiculous thing to me. I'm just like, you know, I crack up at it. That's the best person to have to be around because they keep being—and I'm like, ‘Come on, stop being stupid, you should be doing this and you shouldn't be doing that.' Then I hear myself, and I'm like, ‘No, he's got it right.' Craig: Well, I think he does, in some ways, you know. It's not about all, it's not about one or the other, it's about— and it's recognising that if I look after my energy, and my emotional system, and all of that, I'll get more done in 8 hours than 12 hours when I'm not looking after myself. So more is not better, necessarily. In fact, often, more is not better; sometimes, more is worse. So there's a difference between volume of work and output and quality of work. Also, you know, quality of experience. I wrote a little thing yesterday, just talking on social media about the fact that I, like all of the things that I do, even study, although it's demanding, but I enjoy it. My job, you know, like, right now you and I do podcasts. I do seven podcasts a week, apart from the ones like this, where I'm being interviewed by someone else, or spoken to by somebody else. My life is somewhat chaotic, but I don't really, in terms of having a ‘job'. Well, one, I don't have a job. I haven't had a job since I was 26. Two, I don't really feel a sense of work, like most people do. Like the other night, I did a gig. I don't know if you, if I posted a little thing about this on Insta, and I was doing a talk for Hewlett Packard in Spain. Now, how cool is the world? Right? So I'm talking here, right here in my house, you can see, obviously, your listeners can't. But this is not video, is it? Just us? I wish I knew that earlier. Sorry, everyone, I would have brushed my hair. But anyway, you should see my hair by the way. I look like bloody Doc from Back to the Future. Anyway, but I'm sitting in here, I'm sitting in the studio, and I'm about to talk to a few hundred people in Spain, right, which is where, that's where they're all— that's where I was dealing with the people who are organising me to speak. Just before I'm about to go live at 5:30, the lady who had organised me was texting me. So it's on Zoom. There's already a guy on the screen speaking and then lots of little squares of other humans. I said to her, ‘How many?' and said, ‘You know, like a few 100.' I said, ‘Cool.' I go, ‘Everyone's in Spain,' and she goes, ‘No, no, we're in Spain, but the audience is around the world.' And I go, ‘Really? How many countries?' She goes, ‘38.' I'm sitting here and I'm thinking, I'm wearing a black t-shirt. I'm wearing my camo shorts. I've got bare feet. I'm talking to hundreds of humans from this big organisation in 38 countries, and I'm talking about the stuff that I am passionate about, right? I don't have to do any prep, because it's my default setting. I'm just talking. I had to talk for an hour and a half about high performance. Well, giddy up, that's like an hour and a half of breathing. You know? I just had such fun, and I had this moment, Lisa, halfway through, I don't know, but about halfway through, where I'm like, I remember growing up in a paradigm where pretty much when I was a kid everyone went and got a job and you went, you became a cop or you sold clothes, or you're a bricky or sparky or you're some kind of tradie. A few of my super smart friends went to university. That was way over my head, I'm like, ‘Fuck university.' But there was literally about 50 jobs in the world. You know, it's like there was only 50 jobs, and everyone or nearly everyone fitted into one of those 50. There was a few other ones but for the most part, nearly everyone fitted into about 50 jobs. I'm sitting there going— I won't say what but I'm earning pretty good money. I'm sitting in bare feet in my house talking to humans around the world about this stuff that I want to tell everyone about anyway. I do it for free on my podcast and your podcast and I do it anyway. I have this great time, it's a really good experience. Then I finish at 7 pm. Then I walk 15 feet into the kitchen and put the kettle on and check my messages. Lisa: No commuting, no travelling, no flying. Craig: I'm like, ‘How is this a job?' I'm like, ‘How is this real?' ‘This is a scam. I'm scamming everybody.' Like, how great is 2021? I know there's a lot of shit going on and I'm not trying to be insensitive, and it's smashed my business too. All of my live events for 2020 got kicked in the dick in two weeks, right? I got financially annihilated, but you just go, ‘Oh well, improvise, adapt, overcome and figure shit out.' But, I think when you can have it and a lot of people and it's a very well-worn kind of idea. But when you're, what you love, and what you're curious about, and how you make a few bucks, when that can all collide, then life is a different thing. Then there's not work and life, there's just life. You know, and so when we talk about this idea of work-life balance, you know, it's like the old days that talk about that a lot. And it's like, almost like there was some seesaw, some metaphoric seesaw with work on one side and life on the other. And when you get balance like that— because what happens, think about this, if we're just basing it on numbers, like all 40 hours of work versus however many hours of non-work or however many hours of recreation and recovery. But if you're doing even 20 hours of a job that you hate, that's going to fuck you up. That's gonna, that's gonna mess with you physically, mentally, and emotionally. That's going to be toxic; that's going to be damaging; that's going to be soul-destroying, versus something else like me studying 40 hours a week, working 40, 50 hours a week doing 90 in total, depending on the week and loving it, and loving it. And going, ‘I feel better than I've ever felt in my life.' I still train every day, and I still, I live 600-800 metres from the beach, I still walk to the beach every day, you know. And I still hang out with my friends. You know, it's like, it doesn't have to be this cookie-cutter approach. The beauty I think of life, with your food, with your lifestyle, with your career, with your relationships with the way that you learn, like the way that you do business, everything now is so much more flexible, and optional than any time ever before that we can literally create our own blueprint for living. Lisa: Yeah. And then it's not always easy. And sometimes it takes time to get momentum and stuff. Being, both you and I have both said before we're unemployable. Like, I'm definitely not someone you want to employ, because I'm just always going to run my own ship. I've always been like that, and that's the entrepreneurial personality. So not everyone is set up for that personality-wise. So you know, we're a certain type of people that likes to run in a certain type of way. And we need lots of other people when doing the other paths. There is this ability now to start to change the way you think about things. And this is really important for people who are unhappy in where they're at right now. To think, ‘Hang on a minute. I've been I don't know, policeman, teacher, whatever you've been, I don't want to be there anymore. Is there another me out there? Is there a different future that I can hit?' The answer is yes, if you're prepared to put in the work, and the time, and the effort, the looking at understanding and learning, the change, being adaptable, the risk-taking, all of those aspects of it. Yes, but there is ways now that you can do that where they weren't 30 years ago, when I came out of school I couldn't be, I was going to be an accountant. Can you imagine anything worse than that? Craig: Hi, hi. Shout out to all our account listeners, we love you and we need you. Lisa: I wasn't that— Academically that's I was good at it. But geez, I hated it. And I did it because of parental pushing direction. Thank goodness, I sort of wake up to that. And you know, after three years. I had Mark Commander Mark Devine on the show. He's a Navy SEAL, man. You have to have him on the show. I'll hook you up. He's just a buck. He became an accountant before he became a Navy SEAL and now he's got the best of both worlds really, you know, but like you couldn't get more non-accountant than Mark Devine. We all go into the things when we leave school that we think we're meant to be doing. And they're not necessarily— and I think you know, the most interesting 50 year-olds still don't know what the hell they want to be when they grow up. Just interrupting the program briefly to let you know that we have a new Patron program for the podcast. Now, if you enjoy Pushing the Limits, if you get great value out of it, we would love you to come and join our Patron membership program. We've been doing this now for five and a half years and we need your help to keep it on air. It's been a public service free for everybody, and we want to keep it that way. But to do that we need like-minded souls who are on this mission with us to help us out. So if you're interested in becoming a patron for Pushing the Limits podcast, then check out everything on www.patron.lisatamati.com. That's P-A-T-R-O-N dot lisatamati.com. We have two Patron levels to choose from. You can do it for as little as $7 a month, New Zealand, or $15 a month if you really want to support us. So we are grateful if you do. There are so many membership benefits you're going to get if you join us. Everything from workbooks for all the podcasts, the strength guide for runners, the power to vote on future episodes, webinars that we're going to be holding, all of my documentaries and much, much more. So check out all the details: patron.lisatamati.com. And thanks very much for joining us. You know, I'm still in that camp. Craig: You raise a really interesting point too, and that is programming and conditioning. And, you know, because we all grow up being programmed, one way or consciously or not, we grow— if you grow up around people, you're being programmed. So that's not a bad thing. That's an unavoidable human thing. So, situation, circumstance, environment, school, family, friends, media, social media, all of that stuff shapes the way that we see the world and shapes the way that we see ourselves. When you grow up in a paradigm that says, ‘Okay, Lisa, when you finish school, you have to go to university, or you have to get a job, or you have to join the family business, or you have to work on our farm,' or whatever it is, you grow up in that. You're taught and told and trained. And so you don't question that, you know. And for me, I grew up in the 70s, I finished in the 80s. I finished school in 1981. And I grew up in the country, and most people go to trade or most people worked in logging or on a farm or— and I would say about five in 100 of the kids that I did— by the way, doing year 12 was a pretty big deal in that time. ‘Geez, are you a brainiac?' Definitely wasn't a brainiac. But year 12 is a big thing now. Now, even if you have an undergrad degree that it's almost nothing really enough. It's like, you kind of got to go get honours, or masters or maybe even a PhD down the track. And that landscape has really changed. So it's just changing again to— you know, and I think to become aware— like this is for me, I love it; this is my shit; this is what I love— is starting to become aware of our lack of awareness. And starting to become aware of my own programming and go, ‘Oh, I actually think this. Why not? Because this is how I naturally think about, because this is how I've been trained to think about work. I've been trained to or programmed to think this way about money, or relationships, or marriage, or eating meat, or being a Catholic or being an atheist or voting liberal law,' or whatever it is, right. Not that any of those things are good or bad, but it's not about how I eat or how I vote or how I worship. It's about how I think. And is this my thinking? Or is this just a reflection of their thinking, right? So when we open the door on metacognition now we start to become aware of our own stories, and where they come from. And this is where I think we really start to take control of our own life, and our own present, and our own future that doesn't exist, by the way, but it will, but it won't be the present. Then, we start to write our own story with our own voice, not our parents' voice, not our friends', not our peers' voice, you know. And we're always going to be influenced by other people. Of course. Just like people are influenced by you and your podcast, and your stories, and your thinking, and your lessons for them. They're influenced. But I always say to people, ‘Don't believe me because you like me. Listen to me, if you like me and consider what I say. If what I say sounds reasonable for you, maybe a good idea to test drive, take that idea for a test drive, and see if that works for you, because it might not.' Right? I think, I really encourage people to learn for themselves and to listen to their own internal wisdom that's always talking. So listen to smart people. I don't know if Lisa and I are in that category, Lisa is, listen to her. But at the same time, do your own, learning through exploration and trial and error, and personal kind of curiosity and drive. For me, I opened my first gym at 26; first personal training centre in Australia, there weren't any. I'd never done a business course, I've never done an admin course, I knew nothing about marketing. I knew nothing about employees. I knew nothing. But I learned more in one year than I would say, most people would learn in five years at university studying business, because I was in the middle of it, and I was going to sink or swim. So in one year, I started a business and I acquired overwhelming knowledge and skill because I had to, because of the situation. But that was all learning through doing. The way that you've learned, you know you said earlier that, like, a lot of people think that they're not academic; therefore, they're not smart. Some of the smartest people I've ever met, and I don't— and this not being patronising, but like, mind-blowingly brilliant, how they think, live outside of academia. One of the reasons some people are so brilliant outside of academia is because they're not forced into an echo chamber of thought. They're living outside the academic paradigm, where we're not trying to restrict how you think or write or speak. There are no rules out here. So there's no intellectual inhibition. Lisa: Yeah, I love that. Craig: When you do a PhD, like me, and I can separate the two, thankfully. But there's a way of communicating and writing in PhD land, which is incredibly restrictive because of the scientific process, which is fine, I get that. But it's having an awareness of— this is what I'm often talking to my supervisors about is, yes, I'm studying this thing, which is deep, deep neuropsychology, and everything, the way that you do your research, get your data or interpret your data. The whole process of creating new science, which is what you're doing as a PhD, creating, bringing something new into the world. That's one thing. But you write your journal articles, which is my PhD process, you get them, hopefully, you get them published in academic resources and magazines. But then, I don't want that to be it. I'm going to write a book when I finish about all of my research totally in layman's terms so that people can use the knowledge, so that people can— because that's the value. For me handing in some papers and going, ‘Oh, Craig Harper is an academically published author.' That's cool, but it's not— and I'm so respectful of people who have had hundreds of things published, but that doesn't blow my socks off. I'm not really— like that's a real, you really hang your hat on that in academia. Oh, how many things he or she had published, publications, which is cool. They're all smarter than me. But I'm not. I'm like, yeah, that that's cool. But I want to connect with the masses, not the few. Also, by the way, people who read academic papers, they raise it— they're reading it generally, just like I am right now, for a specific reason which relates to their own research. There ain't too many people like you. You're one of the rare ones who just thumb through fucking academic journals to make your life better. Lisa: Yeah. And it's just some real goals. So you've got the wisdom of having lived outside of academia and being a pracademic, as Paul Taylor says, and then actually seeing the pre— and this is a discussion that I had when I was talking to someone about doing a PhD and they say, ‘But then you're going to become a part of the establishment, and you're going to be forced into this box.' And I said, ‘No, not necessarily because it's— I can see where you're coming from. But you can take that, because you have that maturity and that life experience and you can fit yourself into the box that you have to fit into in order to get those things done. That research done, but you don't have to stay there.' That's what you know, one of my things has been, I don't want to spend however many years doing a PhD, and then that's not out on the world. To me that that needs to be taken out of the academic journals, wherever you go to publish, and then put out into a book or something that where it's actually shared, like you say, with the masses, because otherwise, it just collects dust like your MA does, or your whatever, you know, that sits on your bookshelf, and how you got hey, your exam your piece of paper, but you didn't actually do anything with it. Of course, lots of people do their thing, they're going like they're in research, and they're furthering research and so on. But I— my approach, I think yours is too, is to be able to communicate that information that you've learned, and then share it with everyone, so that they can actually benefit from it, and not just the people that are in academia. The other thing I see after interviewing hundreds of doctors and scientists and people is that they are, actually, the more specialised they are, the more inhibited they are by what they can and can't say. While they need to be doing that because they need to protect what they are doing in their studies and what they're allowed to and what they're not allowed to do and say, it also is very inhibiting, and they don't get the chance to actually express what they would actually like to say. That's a bit of a shame, really, because you don't get to hear the real truth in the qualifying everything flat stick. Craig: I reckon you're exactly right. But they don't need to be that. And the reason that a lot of academics are like that is because they get their identity and sense of self-worth from being an academic. They're way more worried about three of their peers hearing something that might not be 100% accurate, and then being reprimanded or, rather than just going— look, I always say to my academic, super academic friends, when I talk with them, not everything that comes out of your mouth needs to be research-based. You can have an idea and an opinion. In fact, I want to hear your ideas and opinions. Lisa: You're very educated. Craig: You know, that's the— and as for the idea of you becoming an academic, No, you go, you do your thing you study, you learn the protocol, the operating system, and you do that you go through that process, but you're still you. Right, and there's— you and I both know, there are lots of academics who have overcome that self-created barrier like Andrew Huberman. Lisa: Yeah, who we love. Craig: Who we love, who, for people listening, he's @hubermanlab on Insta, and there's quite a few academics now, like the one that I spoke on before, on Joe Rogan. She's a Harvard professor, she's a genius, and she's just having a— it's a three-hour conversation with Rogan, about really interesting stuff. There's been a bit of a shift, and there is a bit of a shift because people are now, the smart academics, I think, are now starting to understand that used the right way, that podcasts and social media more broadly, are unbelievably awesome tools to share your thoughts and ideas and messages. By the way, we know you're a human. If you get something wrong, every now and then, or whatever, it doesn't matter. Lisa: Well, we'll all get, I mean, you watch on social media, Dr Rhonda Patrick, another one that I follow? Do you follow her? Fantastic lady, you know, and you watch some of their feeds on social media, and they get slammed every day by people who pretending to be bloody more academic than her. That just makes me laugh, really. I'm just like, wow, they have to put up with all of that. The bigger your name and the more credibility you have as a scientist, the more you have to lose in a way. You know, even David Sinclair another you know, brilliant scientists who loves his work. And I love the fact that he shared us with, you know, all his, all his research in real-time, basically, you know, bringing it out in the book Lifespan, which you have to read, in getting that out there in the masses, rather than squirrelling it away for another 20 years before it becomes part of our culture, and part of our clinical usage. We ain't got time for that. We have to, we're getting old now. I want to know what I need to do to stop that now. Thanks to him, you know, I've got some directions to show them. Whether he's 100% there, and he's got all the answers? No. But he's sharing where we're at from the progress. Science by its very nature is never finished. We never have the final answer. Because if someone thinks they do, then they're wrong, because they're not, we are constantly iterating and changing, and that's the whole basis of science. Craig: Well just think about the food pyramid. That was science for a few decades. Lisa: Lots of people still believe that shit. That's the scary thing because now that's filtering still down into the popular culture, that that's what you should be doing, eating your workbooks and God knows what. This is the scary thing, that it takes so long to drip down to people who aren't on that cutting edge and staying up with the latest stuff, because they're basically regurgitating what there was 20 years ago and not what is now. Now Craig, I know you've got to jump off in a second. But I wanted to just ask one more question, if I may, we're completely different. But I want to go there today because I'm going through this bloody shingles thing. Your mate Johny that you train, and who you've spoken about on the last podcast, who had a horrific accident and amazingly survived, and you've helped him, and he's helped you and you've helped him learn life lessons and recover, but he's in constant chronic pain. I'm in constant chronic pain now, that's two and a half weeks. For frick's sake, man, I've got a new appreciation of the damage that that does to society. I just said to my husband today, I've been on certain drugs, you know, antivirals, and in pain medication. I can feel my neurotransmitters are out of whack. I can feel that I'm becoming depressed. I have a lot of tools in my toolbox to deal with this stuff, and I am freely sharing this because what I want you to understand is when you, when you're dealing with somebody who is going through chronic pain, who has been on medications and antibiotics, and God knows whatever else, understanding the stuff that they're going through, because I now have a bit of a new appreciation for what this much of an appreciation for someone like Johnny's been through. What's your take on how pain and all this affects the neurotransmitters in the drugs? Craig: Do you know what? Lisa: You got two minutes, mate. Craig: I'm actually gonna give you I'm gonna hook you up with a friend of mine. His name is Dr Cal Friedman. He is super smart, and he specialises in pain management, but he has a very different approach, right? He's a medical doctor, but look, in answer to, I talked to Johnny about the pain a bit, and we have, we use a scale, obviously 10 is 10. 0 is 0. There's never a 0. Every now and then it's a 1 or 2, but he's never pain-free. Because he has massive nerve damage. And sometimes, sometimes he just sits down in the gym, and he'll just, I'll get him to do a set of something, and he'll sit down and I just see this, his whole face just grimaces. He goes, ‘Just give me a sec.' His fist is balled up. He goes, sweat, sweat. I go, ‘What's going on, mate?' He goes, ‘It feels like my leg, my whole leg is on fire.' Lisa: Yeah. I can so relate to that right now. Craig: Literally aren't, like, burning, like excruciating. I don't think there's any, I mean, obviously, if there was we'd all be doing it. There is no quick fix. There is no simple answer. But what he has done quite successfully is changed his relationship with pain. There is definitely, 100% definitely, a cognitive element to, of course, the brain is, because the brain is part of the central nervous system. Of course, the brain is involved. But there's another element to it beyond that, right. I'm going to tell you a quick story that might fuck up a little bit of Dr Cal, if you get him on. He has done a couple of presentations for me at my camps. He's been on my show a little bit. But he told this story about this guy at a construction site that was working and he had a workplace accident. And he, a builder shot a three-inch nails through his boots, through his foot. Right? So the nail went through his foot, through the top of the leather, and out the sole, and he was in agony, right? He fell down, whatever and he's just rolling around in agony and his mates, they didn't want to take anything off because it was through the boot, through his foot. They waited for the ambos to get there, and they gave him the green whistle. So you know that whatever that is, the morphine didn't do anything, he was still in agony. He was in agony. Anyway, they get him into the back of the ambulance and they cut the boot off. And the nail has gone between his big toe and second toe and didn't even touch his foot. Lisa: Oh, wow. In other words, psychologically— Craig: There was no injury. But the guy was literally in excruciating pain, he was wailing. And they gave him treatment, it didn't help. He was still in pain. So what that tells us— Lisa: There is an element of— Craig: What that tells us is our body can, our mind can create real, not perceived, but real pain in your body. And again, and this is where I think we're going in the future where we start to understand, if you can create extreme pain in your body where there is no biological reason, there is no actual injury, there's no physical injury, but you believe there's an injury, now you're in agony. I think about, and there's a really good book called Mind Over Medicine by a lady called Lissa Rankin, which we might have spoken about. L-I-S-S-A, Lissa Rankin, Mind Over Medicine. What I love about her is, she's a medical doctor, and she gives case after case after case of healing happening with the mind, where people think placebos and no-cebos, people getting sick, where they think they're getting something that will make them sick, but it's nothing, they actually make themselves sick. And conversely, people getting well, when they're not actually being given a drug. They're being given nothing, but they think it's something. Even this, and this is fascinating, this operation, pseudo-operation I did with people where— Lisa: Yeah, I read that one. I read that study. Craig: Amazing. Craig: Oh, yeah, it's look, pain is something that even the people who are experts in it, they don't fully understand. Lisa: Well, I just like, if I can interrupt you there real briefly, because I've been studying what the hell nerve pain, and I'm like, my head, my sores are starting to heal up right. So in my head, I'm like ‘Whoa, I should be having this pain, I'm getting more pain from the burning sensation in my legs and my nerves because it's nerve pain.' So I read somewhere that cryotherapy was good. So in the middle of the night, when I'm in really bad pain, instead of lying there and just losing my shit, and have I now have been getting up every night and having two or three cold ice-cold showers a night, which probably not great for my cortisol bloody profile, but it's, I'm just targeting that leg. That interrupts the pain sensation for a few minutes. What I'm trying to do as I go, I'm trying to go like, can I—am I getting pain because my brain is now used to having pain? Is it sending those messages, even though there's no need, the sores are healing? Craig: That is possible. Lisa: Am I breaking? And I can break the pain for about 10 minutes, and then it will come back in again. But I'm continuing on with it, that idea that I can interrupt that pain flow. Then of course, during the breathe in, the meditation, the stuff and sometimes you just lose your shit and you lose it, and then you just start crying, ‘Mummy, bring me some chicken soup' type moments. But it's really interesting. I mean, I just like to look at all these shit that we go from and then say, ‘Well, how can I dissect this and make this a learning curve?' Because obviously, there's something wrong, but I just, I feel for people that are going through years of this. Craig: It's, yeah, I'm the same I feel. Sometimes I work with people, where I work with and as do you, I work with a lot of people who have real problems. I don't have any problems. I mean, they have real problems. And I'm, despite my appearance, I'm quite, I'm very compassionate. It's hard for me because I, it upsets me to see people in pain. I feel simultaneously sad and guilty. How do I deserve this? But it just is what it is. But people like John and a lot of the people that I've worked with and you've worked with, you know, people like that inspire me. I mean, they're— I don't find typical heroes inspirational. They don't really inspire me like the people we normally hold up as, I mean, well done. I think they're great, but they don't inspire me. People who inspire me or people who really, how the fuck are you even here? How do you turn up? He turns up. He's actually in hospital right now because he's got a problem that's being fixed. But, and he's in and out of hospital all of the time. And then he turns up, he hugs me and he goes, ‘How are you?' I go, ‘I'm good.' He goes, ‘Now look at me.' So I look at him. And he goes, ‘How are you really?' And I go, ‘I'm good.' This is the guy who— Lisa: Who's dealing with so much. I've got a friend, Ian Walker8, who I've had on the show, too, so he got hit by a truck when he was out cycling, I think it was years and years ago. He ended up a paraplegic. And then he recovered, he didn't recover, he's still in a wheelchair, but he was out racing his wheelchair, he did wheelchair racing, and he's part of our club and stuff. And then he got hit by another truck, now he's a quadriplegic. This guy, just, he is relentless in his attitude, like he is, and I've seen him dragging himself like with his hands because he's got access now to his hands again. After working for the last couple of years, and he kind of, on a walker frame thing, dragging himself two steps and taking a little video of him, dragging his feet, not the feet out, working, they're just being dragged. But the relentless attitude of the guy, I'm just like, ‘You're a fricking hero. You're amazing. Why aren't you on everybody magazine cover? Why aren't you like, super famous?' Those people that really flip my boat. Craig: Yeah. And I
Techdirt Is Now Entirely Without Any Google Ads Or Tracking Code. Yes, Actually, The 1st Amendment Does Mean That Twitter Can Kick You Off Its Platform, Wall Street Journal. Klobuchar targets vaccine misinformation with Section 230 bill. Pixel 6 Preview: Here's What Google's First Smartphone Chip Can Do. Nikkei: Google Tensor is a 5nm chip and Samsung is handling production. Facebook disables accounts tied to NYU's research into political ads. Why Facebook's claims about the Ad Observer are wrong. 'It has to be known what was done to us': Natick couple harassed by eBay tell their story for the first time. Tencent cuts kids' playing time on flagship game Honour of Kings to appease Beijing. Google's 'time crystals' could be the greatest scientific achievement of our lifetimes. The App With the Unprintable Name That Wants to Give Power to Creators. Google+ class action starts paying out $2.15 for G+ privacy violations. Top German Court Says Facebook Must Inform Users About Deleting Their Posts Or Suspending Their Account, Explain Why, And Allow Them To Respond. Google takes legal action over Germany's expanded hate-speech law. Google founders have sold $1 billion in stock since May, the most since 2017. Amazon plans to cut waste following backlash over the destruction of unused products. YouTube bans Murdoch's SkyNews Australia for a week over COVID disinformation. YouTube's $100 million Shorts Fund to challenge TikTok goes live. Amazon's Covid Dilemma: Mandate Vaccinations and Risk Losing Warehouse Workers. Amazon will give you a whole $10 for your palm print. This $55 Amazon Smart Soap Dispenser is dumb as dirt. Seth Rogen Assures Fans He's Alive and Well After Hilarious TikTok Questions His Wellbeing. A PBS for the Internet? (Jarvis: No thanks) Biden Warns That The Next Kinetic War Will Be The Result Of A Cyberattack, Which Is Stupid. Google will kill off very old versions of Android next month. Chrome OS 92 rolling out: Redesigned emoji & picker, eSIM support, pre-installed Meet PWA. Google Chrome to no longer show secure website indicators. Chrome for Android becoming a 2FA security key for Google Account sign-in. YouTube 'Premium Lite' subscription offers ad-free viewing for less. August security patch rolling out to Google Pixel, factory images & OTAs live. Picks: Jeff - 40 years since MTV launch Ant - LumaFusion updated for iOS Ant - Sign Up for the Wanderers Photo Workshop in NOLA Leo - Waze now lets you use Master Chief's voice as your guide Leo - MTV First Four Hours Remastered - 12am Saturday August 1st, 1981 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Ant Pruitt Guest: Mike Masnick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: twit.cachefly.com
Techdirt Is Now Entirely Without Any Google Ads Or Tracking Code. Yes, Actually, The 1st Amendment Does Mean That Twitter Can Kick You Off Its Platform, Wall Street Journal. Klobuchar targets vaccine misinformation with Section 230 bill. Pixel 6 Preview: Here's What Google's First Smartphone Chip Can Do. Nikkei: Google Tensor is a 5nm chip and Samsung is handling production. Facebook disables accounts tied to NYU's research into political ads. Why Facebook's claims about the Ad Observer are wrong. 'It has to be known what was done to us': Natick couple harassed by eBay tell their story for the first time. Tencent cuts kids' playing time on flagship game Honour of Kings to appease Beijing. Google's 'time crystals' could be the greatest scientific achievement of our lifetimes. The App With the Unprintable Name That Wants to Give Power to Creators. Google+ class action starts paying out $2.15 for G+ privacy violations. Top German Court Says Facebook Must Inform Users About Deleting Their Posts Or Suspending Their Account, Explain Why, And Allow Them To Respond. Google takes legal action over Germany's expanded hate-speech law. Google founders have sold $1 billion in stock since May, the most since 2017. Amazon plans to cut waste following backlash over the destruction of unused products. YouTube bans Murdoch's SkyNews Australia for a week over COVID disinformation. YouTube's $100 million Shorts Fund to challenge TikTok goes live. Amazon's Covid Dilemma: Mandate Vaccinations and Risk Losing Warehouse Workers. Amazon will give you a whole $10 for your palm print. This $55 Amazon Smart Soap Dispenser is dumb as dirt. Seth Rogen Assures Fans He's Alive and Well After Hilarious TikTok Questions His Wellbeing. A PBS for the Internet? (Jarvis: No thanks) Biden Warns That The Next Kinetic War Will Be The Result Of A Cyberattack, Which Is Stupid. Google will kill off very old versions of Android next month. Chrome OS 92 rolling out: Redesigned emoji & picker, eSIM support, pre-installed Meet PWA. Google Chrome to no longer show secure website indicators. Chrome for Android becoming a 2FA security key for Google Account sign-in. YouTube 'Premium Lite' subscription offers ad-free viewing for less. August security patch rolling out to Google Pixel, factory images & OTAs live. Picks: Jeff - 40 years since MTV launch Ant - LumaFusion updated for iOS Ant - Sign Up for the Wanderers Photo Workshop in NOLA Leo - Waze now lets you use Master Chief's voice as your guide Leo - MTV First Four Hours Remastered - 12am Saturday August 1st, 1981 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Ant Pruitt Guest: Mike Masnick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: twit.cachefly.com
Techdirt Is Now Entirely Without Any Google Ads Or Tracking Code. Yes, Actually, The 1st Amendment Does Mean That Twitter Can Kick You Off Its Platform, Wall Street Journal. Klobuchar targets vaccine misinformation with Section 230 bill. Pixel 6 Preview: Here's What Google's First Smartphone Chip Can Do. Nikkei: Google Tensor is a 5nm chip and Samsung is handling production. Facebook disables accounts tied to NYU's research into political ads. Why Facebook's claims about the Ad Observer are wrong. 'It has to be known what was done to us': Natick couple harassed by eBay tell their story for the first time. Tencent cuts kids' playing time on flagship game Honour of Kings to appease Beijing. Google's 'time crystals' could be the greatest scientific achievement of our lifetimes. The App With the Unprintable Name That Wants to Give Power to Creators. Google+ class action starts paying out $2.15 for G+ privacy violations. Top German Court Says Facebook Must Inform Users About Deleting Their Posts Or Suspending Their Account, Explain Why, And Allow Them To Respond. Google takes legal action over Germany's expanded hate-speech law. Google founders have sold $1 billion in stock since May, the most since 2017. Amazon plans to cut waste following backlash over the destruction of unused products. YouTube bans Murdoch's SkyNews Australia for a week over COVID disinformation. YouTube's $100 million Shorts Fund to challenge TikTok goes live. Amazon's Covid Dilemma: Mandate Vaccinations and Risk Losing Warehouse Workers. Amazon will give you a whole $10 for your palm print. This $55 Amazon Smart Soap Dispenser is dumb as dirt. Seth Rogen Assures Fans He's Alive and Well After Hilarious TikTok Questions His Wellbeing. A PBS for the Internet? (Jarvis: No thanks) Biden Warns That The Next Kinetic War Will Be The Result Of A Cyberattack, Which Is Stupid. Google will kill off very old versions of Android next month. Chrome OS 92 rolling out: Redesigned emoji & picker, eSIM support, pre-installed Meet PWA. Google Chrome to no longer show secure website indicators. Chrome for Android becoming a 2FA security key for Google Account sign-in. YouTube 'Premium Lite' subscription offers ad-free viewing for less. August security patch rolling out to Google Pixel, factory images & OTAs live. Picks: Jeff - 40 years since MTV launch Ant - LumaFusion updated for iOS Ant - Sign Up for the Wanderers Photo Workshop in NOLA Leo - Waze now lets you use Master Chief's voice as your guide Leo - MTV First Four Hours Remastered - 12am Saturday August 1st, 1981 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Ant Pruitt Guest: Mike Masnick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: twit.cachefly.com
Techdirt Is Now Entirely Without Any Google Ads Or Tracking Code. Yes, Actually, The 1st Amendment Does Mean That Twitter Can Kick You Off Its Platform, Wall Street Journal. Klobuchar targets vaccine misinformation with Section 230 bill. Pixel 6 Preview: Here's What Google's First Smartphone Chip Can Do. Nikkei: Google Tensor is a 5nm chip and Samsung is handling production. Facebook disables accounts tied to NYU's research into political ads. Why Facebook's claims about the Ad Observer are wrong. 'It has to be known what was done to us': Natick couple harassed by eBay tell their story for the first time. Tencent cuts kids' playing time on flagship game Honour of Kings to appease Beijing. Google's 'time crystals' could be the greatest scientific achievement of our lifetimes. The App With the Unprintable Name That Wants to Give Power to Creators. Google+ class action starts paying out $2.15 for G+ privacy violations. Top German Court Says Facebook Must Inform Users About Deleting Their Posts Or Suspending Their Account, Explain Why, And Allow Them To Respond. Google takes legal action over Germany's expanded hate-speech law. Google founders have sold $1 billion in stock since May, the most since 2017. Amazon plans to cut waste following backlash over the destruction of unused products. YouTube bans Murdoch's SkyNews Australia for a week over COVID disinformation. YouTube's $100 million Shorts Fund to challenge TikTok goes live. Amazon's Covid Dilemma: Mandate Vaccinations and Risk Losing Warehouse Workers. Amazon will give you a whole $10 for your palm print. This $55 Amazon Smart Soap Dispenser is dumb as dirt. Seth Rogen Assures Fans He's Alive and Well After Hilarious TikTok Questions His Wellbeing. A PBS for the Internet? (Jarvis: No thanks) Biden Warns That The Next Kinetic War Will Be The Result Of A Cyberattack, Which Is Stupid. Google will kill off very old versions of Android next month. Chrome OS 92 rolling out: Redesigned emoji & picker, eSIM support, pre-installed Meet PWA. Google Chrome to no longer show secure website indicators. Chrome for Android becoming a 2FA security key for Google Account sign-in. YouTube 'Premium Lite' subscription offers ad-free viewing for less. August security patch rolling out to Google Pixel, factory images & OTAs live. Picks: Jeff - 40 years since MTV launch Ant - LumaFusion updated for iOS Ant - Sign Up for the Wanderers Photo Workshop in NOLA Leo - Waze now lets you use Master Chief's voice as your guide Leo - MTV First Four Hours Remastered - 12am Saturday August 1st, 1981 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Ant Pruitt Guest: Mike Masnick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: twit.cachefly.com
Techdirt Is Now Entirely Without Any Google Ads Or Tracking Code. Yes, Actually, The 1st Amendment Does Mean That Twitter Can Kick You Off Its Platform, Wall Street Journal. Klobuchar targets vaccine misinformation with Section 230 bill. Pixel 6 Preview: Here's What Google's First Smartphone Chip Can Do. Nikkei: Google Tensor is a 5nm chip and Samsung is handling production. Facebook disables accounts tied to NYU's research into political ads. Why Facebook's claims about the Ad Observer are wrong. 'It has to be known what was done to us': Natick couple harassed by eBay tell their story for the first time. Tencent cuts kids' playing time on flagship game Honour of Kings to appease Beijing. Google's 'time crystals' could be the greatest scientific achievement of our lifetimes. The App With the Unprintable Name That Wants to Give Power to Creators. Google+ class action starts paying out $2.15 for G+ privacy violations. Top German Court Says Facebook Must Inform Users About Deleting Their Posts Or Suspending Their Account, Explain Why, And Allow Them To Respond. Google takes legal action over Germany's expanded hate-speech law. Google founders have sold $1 billion in stock since May, the most since 2017. Amazon plans to cut waste following backlash over the destruction of unused products. YouTube bans Murdoch's SkyNews Australia for a week over COVID disinformation. YouTube's $100 million Shorts Fund to challenge TikTok goes live. Amazon's Covid Dilemma: Mandate Vaccinations and Risk Losing Warehouse Workers. Amazon will give you a whole $10 for your palm print. This $55 Amazon Smart Soap Dispenser is dumb as dirt. Seth Rogen Assures Fans He's Alive and Well After Hilarious TikTok Questions His Wellbeing. A PBS for the Internet? (Jarvis: No thanks) Biden Warns That The Next Kinetic War Will Be The Result Of A Cyberattack, Which Is Stupid. Google will kill off very old versions of Android next month. Chrome OS 92 rolling out: Redesigned emoji & picker, eSIM support, pre-installed Meet PWA. Google Chrome to no longer show secure website indicators. Chrome for Android becoming a 2FA security key for Google Account sign-in. YouTube 'Premium Lite' subscription offers ad-free viewing for less. August security patch rolling out to Google Pixel, factory images & OTAs live. Picks: Jeff - 40 years since MTV launch Ant - LumaFusion updated for iOS Ant - Sign Up for the Wanderers Photo Workshop in NOLA Leo - Waze now lets you use Master Chief's voice as your guide Leo - MTV First Four Hours Remastered - 12am Saturday August 1st, 1981 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Ant Pruitt Guest: Mike Masnick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: twit.cachefly.com
Techdirt Is Now Entirely Without Any Google Ads Or Tracking Code. Yes, Actually, The 1st Amendment Does Mean That Twitter Can Kick You Off Its Platform, Wall Street Journal. Klobuchar targets vaccine misinformation with Section 230 bill. Pixel 6 Preview: Here's What Google's First Smartphone Chip Can Do. Nikkei: Google Tensor is a 5nm chip and Samsung is handling production. Facebook disables accounts tied to NYU's research into political ads. Why Facebook's claims about the Ad Observer are wrong. 'It has to be known what was done to us': Natick couple harassed by eBay tell their story for the first time. Tencent cuts kids' playing time on flagship game Honour of Kings to appease Beijing. Google's 'time crystals' could be the greatest scientific achievement of our lifetimes. The App With the Unprintable Name That Wants to Give Power to Creators. Google+ class action starts paying out $2.15 for G+ privacy violations. Top German Court Says Facebook Must Inform Users About Deleting Their Posts Or Suspending Their Account, Explain Why, And Allow Them To Respond. Google takes legal action over Germany's expanded hate-speech law. Google founders have sold $1 billion in stock since May, the most since 2017. Amazon plans to cut waste following backlash over the destruction of unused products. YouTube bans Murdoch's SkyNews Australia for a week over COVID disinformation. YouTube's $100 million Shorts Fund to challenge TikTok goes live. Amazon's Covid Dilemma: Mandate Vaccinations and Risk Losing Warehouse Workers. Amazon will give you a whole $10 for your palm print. This $55 Amazon Smart Soap Dispenser is dumb as dirt. Seth Rogen Assures Fans He's Alive and Well After Hilarious TikTok Questions His Wellbeing. A PBS for the Internet? (Jarvis: No thanks) Biden Warns That The Next Kinetic War Will Be The Result Of A Cyberattack, Which Is Stupid. Google will kill off very old versions of Android next month. Chrome OS 92 rolling out: Redesigned emoji & picker, eSIM support, pre-installed Meet PWA. Google Chrome to no longer show secure website indicators. Chrome for Android becoming a 2FA security key for Google Account sign-in. YouTube 'Premium Lite' subscription offers ad-free viewing for less. August security patch rolling out to Google Pixel, factory images & OTAs live. Picks: Jeff - 40 years since MTV launch Ant - LumaFusion updated for iOS Ant - Sign Up for the Wanderers Photo Workshop in NOLA Leo - Waze now lets you use Master Chief's voice as your guide Leo - MTV First Four Hours Remastered - 12am Saturday August 1st, 1981 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Ant Pruitt Guest: Mike Masnick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: twit.cachefly.com
Techdirt Is Now Entirely Without Any Google Ads Or Tracking Code. Yes, Actually, The 1st Amendment Does Mean That Twitter Can Kick You Off Its Platform, Wall Street Journal. Klobuchar targets vaccine misinformation with Section 230 bill. Pixel 6 Preview: Here's What Google's First Smartphone Chip Can Do. Nikkei: Google Tensor is a 5nm chip and Samsung is handling production. Facebook disables accounts tied to NYU's research into political ads. Why Facebook's claims about the Ad Observer are wrong. 'It has to be known what was done to us': Natick couple harassed by eBay tell their story for the first time. Tencent cuts kids' playing time on flagship game Honour of Kings to appease Beijing. Google's 'time crystals' could be the greatest scientific achievement of our lifetimes. The App With the Unprintable Name That Wants to Give Power to Creators. Google+ class action starts paying out $2.15 for G+ privacy violations. Top German Court Says Facebook Must Inform Users About Deleting Their Posts Or Suspending Their Account, Explain Why, And Allow Them To Respond. Google takes legal action over Germany's expanded hate-speech law. Google founders have sold $1 billion in stock since May, the most since 2017. Amazon plans to cut waste following backlash over the destruction of unused products. YouTube bans Murdoch's SkyNews Australia for a week over COVID disinformation. YouTube's $100 million Shorts Fund to challenge TikTok goes live. Amazon's Covid Dilemma: Mandate Vaccinations and Risk Losing Warehouse Workers. Amazon will give you a whole $10 for your palm print. This $55 Amazon Smart Soap Dispenser is dumb as dirt. Seth Rogen Assures Fans He's Alive and Well After Hilarious TikTok Questions His Wellbeing. A PBS for the Internet? (Jarvis: No thanks) Biden Warns That The Next Kinetic War Will Be The Result Of A Cyberattack, Which Is Stupid. Google will kill off very old versions of Android next month. Chrome OS 92 rolling out: Redesigned emoji & picker, eSIM support, pre-installed Meet PWA. Google Chrome to no longer show secure website indicators. Chrome for Android becoming a 2FA security key for Google Account sign-in. YouTube 'Premium Lite' subscription offers ad-free viewing for less. August security patch rolling out to Google Pixel, factory images & OTAs live. Picks: Jeff - 40 years since MTV launch Ant - LumaFusion updated for iOS Ant - Sign Up for the Wanderers Photo Workshop in NOLA Leo - Waze now lets you use Master Chief's voice as your guide Leo - MTV First Four Hours Remastered - 12am Saturday August 1st, 1981 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Ant Pruitt Guest: Mike Masnick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: twit.cachefly.com
Techdirt Is Now Entirely Without Any Google Ads Or Tracking Code. Yes, Actually, The 1st Amendment Does Mean That Twitter Can Kick You Off Its Platform, Wall Street Journal. Klobuchar targets vaccine misinformation with Section 230 bill. Pixel 6 Preview: Here's What Google's First Smartphone Chip Can Do. Nikkei: Google Tensor is a 5nm chip and Samsung is handling production. Facebook disables accounts tied to NYU's research into political ads. Why Facebook's claims about the Ad Observer are wrong. 'It has to be known what was done to us': Natick couple harassed by eBay tell their story for the first time. Tencent cuts kids' playing time on flagship game Honour of Kings to appease Beijing. Google's 'time crystals' could be the greatest scientific achievement of our lifetimes. The App With the Unprintable Name That Wants to Give Power to Creators. Google+ class action starts paying out $2.15 for G+ privacy violations. Top German Court Says Facebook Must Inform Users About Deleting Their Posts Or Suspending Their Account, Explain Why, And Allow Them To Respond. Google takes legal action over Germany's expanded hate-speech law. Google founders have sold $1 billion in stock since May, the most since 2017. Amazon plans to cut waste following backlash over the destruction of unused products. YouTube bans Murdoch's SkyNews Australia for a week over COVID disinformation. YouTube's $100 million Shorts Fund to challenge TikTok goes live. Amazon's Covid Dilemma: Mandate Vaccinations and Risk Losing Warehouse Workers. Amazon will give you a whole $10 for your palm print. This $55 Amazon Smart Soap Dispenser is dumb as dirt. Seth Rogen Assures Fans He's Alive and Well After Hilarious TikTok Questions His Wellbeing. A PBS for the Internet? (Jarvis: No thanks) Biden Warns That The Next Kinetic War Will Be The Result Of A Cyberattack, Which Is Stupid. Google will kill off very old versions of Android next month. Chrome OS 92 rolling out: Redesigned emoji & picker, eSIM support, pre-installed Meet PWA. Google Chrome to no longer show secure website indicators. Chrome for Android becoming a 2FA security key for Google Account sign-in. YouTube 'Premium Lite' subscription offers ad-free viewing for less. August security patch rolling out to Google Pixel, factory images & OTAs live. Picks: Jeff - 40 years since MTV launch Ant - LumaFusion updated for iOS Ant - Sign Up for the Wanderers Photo Workshop in NOLA Leo - Waze now lets you use Master Chief's voice as your guide Leo - MTV First Four Hours Remastered - 12am Saturday August 1st, 1981 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Ant Pruitt Guest: Mike Masnick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: twit.cachefly.com
Techdirt Is Now Entirely Without Any Google Ads Or Tracking Code. Yes, Actually, The 1st Amendment Does Mean That Twitter Can Kick You Off Its Platform, Wall Street Journal. Klobuchar targets vaccine misinformation with Section 230 bill. Pixel 6 Preview: Here's What Google's First Smartphone Chip Can Do. Nikkei: Google Tensor is a 5nm chip and Samsung is handling production. Facebook disables accounts tied to NYU's research into political ads. Why Facebook's claims about the Ad Observer are wrong. 'It has to be known what was done to us': Natick couple harassed by eBay tell their story for the first time. Tencent cuts kids' playing time on flagship game Honour of Kings to appease Beijing. Google's 'time crystals' could be the greatest scientific achievement of our lifetimes. The App With the Unprintable Name That Wants to Give Power to Creators. Google+ class action starts paying out $2.15 for G+ privacy violations. Top German Court Says Facebook Must Inform Users About Deleting Their Posts Or Suspending Their Account, Explain Why, And Allow Them To Respond. Google takes legal action over Germany's expanded hate-speech law. Google founders have sold $1 billion in stock since May, the most since 2017. Amazon plans to cut waste following backlash over the destruction of unused products. YouTube bans Murdoch's SkyNews Australia for a week over COVID disinformation. YouTube's $100 million Shorts Fund to challenge TikTok goes live. Amazon's Covid Dilemma: Mandate Vaccinations and Risk Losing Warehouse Workers. Amazon will give you a whole $10 for your palm print. This $55 Amazon Smart Soap Dispenser is dumb as dirt. Seth Rogen Assures Fans He's Alive and Well After Hilarious TikTok Questions His Wellbeing. A PBS for the Internet? (Jarvis: No thanks) Biden Warns That The Next Kinetic War Will Be The Result Of A Cyberattack, Which Is Stupid. Google will kill off very old versions of Android next month. Chrome OS 92 rolling out: Redesigned emoji & picker, eSIM support, pre-installed Meet PWA. Google Chrome to no longer show secure website indicators. Chrome for Android becoming a 2FA security key for Google Account sign-in. YouTube 'Premium Lite' subscription offers ad-free viewing for less. August security patch rolling out to Google Pixel, factory images & OTAs live. Picks: Jeff - 40 years since MTV launch Ant - LumaFusion updated for iOS Ant - Sign Up for the Wanderers Photo Workshop in NOLA Leo - Waze now lets you use Master Chief's voice as your guide Leo - MTV First Four Hours Remastered - 12am Saturday August 1st, 1981 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Ant Pruitt Guest: Mike Masnick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: twit.cachefly.com
Techdirt Is Now Entirely Without Any Google Ads Or Tracking Code. Yes, Actually, The 1st Amendment Does Mean That Twitter Can Kick You Off Its Platform, Wall Street Journal. Klobuchar targets vaccine misinformation with Section 230 bill. Pixel 6 Preview: Here's What Google's First Smartphone Chip Can Do. Nikkei: Google Tensor is a 5nm chip and Samsung is handling production. Facebook disables accounts tied to NYU's research into political ads. Why Facebook's claims about the Ad Observer are wrong. 'It has to be known what was done to us': Natick couple harassed by eBay tell their story for the first time. Tencent cuts kids' playing time on flagship game Honour of Kings to appease Beijing. Google's 'time crystals' could be the greatest scientific achievement of our lifetimes. The App With the Unprintable Name That Wants to Give Power to Creators. Google+ class action starts paying out $2.15 for G+ privacy violations. Top German Court Says Facebook Must Inform Users About Deleting Their Posts Or Suspending Their Account, Explain Why, And Allow Them To Respond. Google takes legal action over Germany's expanded hate-speech law. Google founders have sold $1 billion in stock since May, the most since 2017. Amazon plans to cut waste following backlash over the destruction of unused products. YouTube bans Murdoch's SkyNews Australia for a week over COVID disinformation. YouTube's $100 million Shorts Fund to challenge TikTok goes live. Amazon's Covid Dilemma: Mandate Vaccinations and Risk Losing Warehouse Workers. Amazon will give you a whole $10 for your palm print. This $55 Amazon Smart Soap Dispenser is dumb as dirt. Seth Rogen Assures Fans He's Alive and Well After Hilarious TikTok Questions His Wellbeing. A PBS for the Internet? (Jarvis: No thanks) Biden Warns That The Next Kinetic War Will Be The Result Of A Cyberattack, Which Is Stupid. Google will kill off very old versions of Android next month. Chrome OS 92 rolling out: Redesigned emoji & picker, eSIM support, pre-installed Meet PWA. Google Chrome to no longer show secure website indicators. Chrome for Android becoming a 2FA security key for Google Account sign-in. YouTube 'Premium Lite' subscription offers ad-free viewing for less. August security patch rolling out to Google Pixel, factory images & OTAs live. Picks: Jeff - 40 years since MTV launch Ant - LumaFusion updated for iOS Ant - Sign Up for the Wanderers Photo Workshop in NOLA Leo - Waze now lets you use Master Chief's voice as your guide Leo - MTV First Four Hours Remastered - 12am Saturday August 1st, 1981 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Ant Pruitt Guest: Mike Masnick Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: twit.cachefly.com
Karissa Boudreau was reported missing by her mother Penny in 2008 at the age of 12. Penny told police she ran away after an argument in the car, but an undercover investigation would reveal something much more sinister xo -K&O Rate, Review and Subscribe on the platforms of your choice. Check us out on Instagram to join in the discussions about the case! Comment on the case related post, we can't wait to hear your thoughts. Intro music made by: https://soundcloud.com/aiakos Sources: Penny Boudreau – The Murder of Karissa - References N.S. woman admits she strangled daughter to keep boyfriend | CBC News Girl cried 'Mommy, don't' before being strangled | The Star Murdered girl's father speaks out | CTV News Penny Boudreau, who killed her daughter, to get escorted leaves from prison | CBC News Penny Boudreau, who killed her daughter, gets more leaves from prison to go to church | CBC News Ex-boyfriend of N.S. woman who killed her daughter says he feels guilty | SaltWire Penny Boudreau granted escorted leaves from prison so she can attend church | CTV News Ex-boyfriend of Penny Boudreau 'feels guilty' | The Star Bridgewater residents upset over decision to grant leaves to Penny Boudreau | CTV News 'Mummy, don't': Woman kills her only daughter, 12, after boyfriend says, 'It's the child or me' | Daily Mail Online Penny Boudreau, who killed daughter, granted escorted leaves from prison | CTV News Penny Boudreau, who killed her daughter, gets more leaves from prison to go to church (yahoo.com) Dangerous women: Karla Homolka, Penny Boudreau and the patriarchal reasons behind their crimes | Acadia Scholar (acadiau.ca) (143) Crime Beat: Karissa Boudreau, up with the angels | S2 E5 - YouTube PressReader.com - Your favorite newspapers and magazines. Mourners prepare for Karissa Boudreau's funeral | CTV News How Karissa died - Winnipeg Free Press Controversial release, transfer decisions involving Canadian murderers | CTV News
We preview the upcoming England v India Test series - that has had one of the most lukewarm build-ups in a time of Covid, The Olympics, and The Hundred. It's a time of bio-bubbles, quarantines, injuries, mental health and player rotation. And hopefully some memorable cricket too. Click here to support 81allout on Ko-Fi Talking Points The new Covid normal in cricket's landscape Separate teams for Tests and short-form cricket - the pros, the cons, and the economics The constant existential threat facing Test cricket How does one put a value to Test cricket? Monetizing stories, memory, and legacies Ben Stokes' absence and implications for mental health in cricket India's recent history in England - with their last win coming in 2007 How 4-1 didn't tell the story of the close series in 2018 India's fast bowling attack maturing over the last three years Bowling in England and New Zealand versus bowling elsewhere India's selection quandary - in the light of the feeble lower order Mayank Agarwal v Prithvi Shaw The temptation to pick Shardul Thakur England's thin top-order - and the wealth of seam bowling options Predictions Participants: Siddhartha Vaidyanathan (@sidvee) Ashoka (@ABVan) Mahesh Sethuraman (@cornerd) Related: Ken Barrington's demons - Gideon Haigh - The Cricket Monthly 'I've found my love for the game in the last couple of years' - Abhinav Mukund interview - 81allout podcast 'It's ok to take a break, it's ok to speak up' - Abhinav Mukund column - cricbuzz.com 'It takes time to understand what makes you tick' - Aakash Chopra interview - 81allout podcast Test of time - Wright Thompson - ESPN India have a tailender problem - Karthik Krishnaswamy - ESPNcricinfo The art of Bedi - Suresh Menon about his biography of Bishan Bedi - 81allout podcast
Carole is a vibrant individual who keeps herself very busy with all things theatre. She tells us all about her love of acting and directing and gives us some wonderful insight into what goes on behind the scenes in the world of entertainment. She is somebody who has embraced improv during the pandemic and has fallen in love with how positive and energising it can be. 'It's not so much the games themselves but the people who you are playing them with' is a strong message that Carole gets across in this chat and we can't wait for you to hear this fantastic conversation about all things improv and life.
This week Sam welcomes his buddy Cody to the podcast and asks him for a native Ohioan's take on LeBron James in 'Space Jam' (6:06) and the possibility that Adele might be dating LeBron's agent, Rich Paul (7:44). Then they give their thoughts on the reported budget for 'The Last of Us' TV show which could make it the most expensive TV show ever (10:58), followed by a debate about WarnerMedia's plan to make 10 movies exclusively for HBO max in 2022 (18:16). Cody also gives his favorites of 2021 so far (22:27). Then they gush about Apple TV+'s second season of 'Mythic Quest' and their mutual love for creator Rob McElhenney and 'It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia' (24:44). They continue to spiel about the beginning of season 2 of 'Ted Lasso' (48:58), and finally conclude with a discussion about Netflix's disappointing 'Gunpowder Milkshake' (1:04:00). Next week: I Think You Should Leave (Netflix) Pig The Green Knight Email us with your takes and feedback at: spielinganddealing@gmail.com Follow the show on Instagram. This episode is sponsored by ‘Out of Regs'. Available on Amazon and Audible. Get the ‘Out of Regs' audiobook free with an Audible free trial. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/spielinganddealing/message
Hosts Rekaya Gibson and Angela Spears discuss the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. They share their favorite moments of the Tokyo Olympics Opening Ceremony. They give an update on the Olympic medal count and how much Olympic athletes get paid for each gold, silver, and bronze medals. They highlight Team USA winners and other champions from around the globe. They also have a conversation about Gymnast Simone Biles withdrawing from the all-around final at the Olympics. Gibson and Spears reveal some facts about the Olympics. They explain why Puerto Rico has its own Olympic team. #KeepItSporty Podcast Items of Interest: Become a Monthly Patron - https://www.patreon.com/BlackGirlsTalkSports Buy Us a Coffee - https://ko-fi.com/blackgirlstalksports Join Us the Facebook Group (Women only) or Instagram @BlackGirlsTalkSports Download free Android App in the Google Play Store Podcast Sponsored by Cuisine Noir Magazine - www.cuisinenoirmag.com Sources: Armour, N. (2021, July 27). US Women's Gymnastics Team Claims Silver in Team Final After Simone Biles Withdraws at Tokyo Olympics. USA Today. https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/olympics/2021/07/27/us-womens-gymnastics-silver-tokyo-olympics-simone-biles/5383082001/ Associated Press. (2021, July 29). Olympic Sponsors Praise Simone Biles After Withdrawal. USA Today. https://amp.usatoday.com/amp/117687800 Bumbaca, C. (2021, July 28). US Women's 3-On-3 Basketball Team Leans on Duke Women's Coach in Quest for Tokyo Olympics Gold. USA Today. https://amp.usatoday.com/amp/5385151001 Camenker, J. (2021, July 29). Olympic Gymnastics Results: Suni Lee Narrowly Wins Gold to Become USA's Fifth Straight All-Around Champion. SportingNews. https://www.sportingnews.com/us/athletics/news/olympic-gymnastics-live-results-highlights-all-around/12fi04g4iptav1ilpltpvjfc69 Choudhury, S.R., and Goel, S. (2021, July 29). Here's How Much Olympic Athletes Earn for Winning Medals. CNBC. https://www.cnbc.com/2021/07/29/tokyo-olympics-how-much-athletes-earn.html Coleman, M. (2021, July 30). Simone Biles Explains the 'Twisties:' 'Physical Health is Mental Health.' Sports Illustrated. https://www.si.com/olympics/2021/07/30/simone-biles-addresses-accusations-of-quitting-answers-questions-about-twisties Coleman, M. (2021, July 25). Anastasija Zolotic Becomes First American to Win Gold in Women's Taekwondo. Sports Illustrated. https://www.si.com/olympics/2021/07/25/anastasija-zolotic-becomes-first-american-to-win-gold-in-womens-taekwondo Complete Sports. (2021, July 30). Tokyo 2020: Esther Toko Finishes on a High in Rowing Event. CompleteSports.com. https://www.completesports.com/tokyo-2020-esther-toko-finishes-on-a-high-in-rowing-event/ Dan Patrick Show. (2021). USA Loses First Olympic Basketball Game Since 2004. NBC Sports. https://www.nbcsports.com/video/team-usa-mens-basketball-loses-first-olympic-game-2004-france Dangor, G. (2021, July 24). U.S. Wins No Medals on Day 1 of Summer Olympics for First Time Since 1972. Forbes. https://www.forbes.com/sites/graisondangor/2021/07/24/us-gets-no-medals-on-day-1-of-summer-olympics-for-first-time-since-1972/?sh=6980b3485a00 DeMeyer, T. (2021, July 25). Lee Kiefer Becomes First American Woman to Win Gold in Individual Foil. NBC Olympics. https://www.nbcolympics.com/news/lee-kiefer-becomes-first-american-woman-win-gold-individual-foil Dryer, A. (2004, August 17). Why Puerto Rico Has Its Own Team. Slate. https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2004/08/why-puerto-rico-has-its-own-olympic-team.html Ekert, K. and Oeser, F. (2021, July 30). Tokyo Updates: USWNT Wins QF After Penalty Kicks, Mixed Relay Team Wins DQ Appeal. NBC Sports. https://www.nbcsports.com/northwest/tokyo-olympics/tokyo-updates-uswnt-wins-qf-after-penalty-kicks-mixed-relay-team-wins-dq Gilbert, AC. (2021, July 27). Simone Biles is Still 'The GOAT': Fans Shower Gymnast with Love After Tokyo Olympic Finals. MSN. https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/olympics/simone-biles-is-still-the-goat-fans-shower-gymnast-with-love-after-tokyo-olympic-finals/ar-AAMCwfY Hamilton, T. (2021, July 24). For Hend Zaza, Olympics' youngest athlete, reaching Games 'already an achievement.' ESPN. https://www.espn.com/olympics/story/_/id/31872405/for-hend-zaza-olympics-youngest-athlete-reaching-games-already-achievement Levinsohn, D. (2021, July 27). Naomi Osaka Falls in Third Round Shocker to Marketa Vondrousova. NBC New York. https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/sports/tokyo-summer-olympics/naomi-osaka-falls-in-third-round-rollercoaster-to-marketa-vondrousova/3177171/ Mullins, E. (2021, July 17). Ledecky Wins Gold in 1500 as US Swimmers Earn 4 More Medals. NBC New York. https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/sports/tokyo-summer-olympics/katie-ledecky-team-usa-swimming-events/3179836/ NBC. (2021, July 25). Team USA Wins Bronze in Women's 4x100m Freestyle Relay. NBC Washington. https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/sports/tokyo-summer-olympics/team-usa-wins-bronze-in-womens-4x100m-freestyle-relay%E2%80%A8/2741950/ NBCSports.com. (2021, July 29). Olympic Track and Field Schedule: TV Channels, Start Times, More. MSN. https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/olympics/olympic-track-and-field-schedule-tv-channels-start-times-more/ar-AAMIDzE?ocid=uxbndlbing Ninham, D. (2021, July 28). Surfing USA: Indigenous Hawaiian Takes Gold. Indian Country Today. https://indiancountrytoday.com/news/surfing-usa-indigenous-hawaiian-takes-gold?fbclid=IwAR1H5HAzSFcj6clqt_ahsq2Bbt-hk9DnPqCcGxYDZeeK0G-ZIJFAOwFMgKk Kennedy, M. (2021, July 29). U.S. 3x3 Women's Basketball Takes Gold In The Sport's Olympic Debut. NPR. https://www.npr.org/sections/tokyo-olympics-live-updates/2021/07/28/1021608448/u-s-3x3-womens-basketball-takes-gold-in-the-sports-olympic-debut Pigliucci, C. (2021, July 27). Uche Eke Becomes First Gymnast to Compete for Nigeria at the Olympics. CNN. https://www.cnn.com/2021/07/27/sport/uche-eke-nigeria-olympics-spc-spt-intl/index.html Puerto Rico Report. (2021, July 24). Puerto Rico in the 2021 Olympics. Puerto Rico. Report. https://www.puertoricoreport.com/puerto-rico-in-the-2021-olympics/#.YQRMTY5JFPZ Roscher, L. (2021, July 26). Weightlifter Hidilyn Diaz Wins First-Ever Gold For Philippines, Ending 97-Year Drought. Yahoo Sports. https://sports.yahoo.com/olympics-weightlifter-hidilyn-diaz-wins-first-ever-gold-for-philippines-ending-97-year-drought-202410805.html Roenigk, A. (2021, July 29). Suni Lee on her Olympic gold medal: 'It doesn't feel like real life.' ESPN. https://www.espn.com/olympics/story/_/id/31911577/suni-lee-olympic-gold-medal-feel-real-life Rosenberg, M. (2021, July 27). Simone Biles, Naomi Osaka Signal New Era of Prioritizing Mental Health. Sports Illustrated. https://www.si.com/olympics/2021/07/27/simone-biles-naomi-osaka-mental-health-era-sports Tesfay, M. (2021, July 27). Eritrea: Mosana Debesay - First Black African Woman Cyclist at the Olympics. AllAfrica. https://allafrica.com/stories/202107190557.html Thiessen, M. (2021, July 27). Small Alaska Town Embraces State's 1st Swimmer to Win Gold. Associated Press News. https://apnews.com/article/lydia-jacoby-alaska-tokyo-olymics-swimming-9ad8dc433ea01548a5959257d14a48f4 Wikipedia Contributors. (2021, July 31). 2020 Summer Olympics. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_Summer_Olympics Wong, C.M. (2021, July 29). Olympic Skateboarder Jagger Eaton Says He Competed on a Broken Ankle. Huffington Post. https://www.huffpost.com/entry/olympic-skateboarder-jagger-eaton-broken-ankle_n_6102a162e4b000b997df0405
Here are the relevant links for this episode:UAlberta WebsiteWelcome to our new University of Alberta website!Mayoral DebateCandidates come out swinging in first Edmonton mayoral forum, economic recovery and Downtown vibrancy top of mindPlanning AwardsEdmonton wins planning awards for open option parking and City PlanGuest: Mariah Samji Executive Director, Infill Development in Edmonton Association LinkedIn Top Barriers to Infill Development CoE Infill Infill Roadmap City Plan Edmonton Exhibition Lands Blatchford Infill Coverage Infill fills a need, but at a cost Seven actions from Edmonton's infill roadmap completed in 2020 'It has to work for everyone': Edmontonians call for more inclusive city planning Rezoning applications propose increased density in Windsor Park and Westmount Edmonton wins planning awards for open option parking and City Plan Edmonton second in nation for single-family home starts Speaking Municipally is a proud member of the Alberta Podcast Network: locally grown, community supported.This week we highlighted SHIFT by Alberta Innovates, a podcast that showcases the work being done in the province's innovation ecosystem. A recent episode features Jana Rieger from True Angle Medical discussing creativity, research and being an entrepreneur. We also talked about the Edmonton Community Foundation which acts as a bridge between donors and charities to create a strong, vibrant community for generations to come.Speaking Municipally is produced by Taproot Edmonton, a source of curiosity-driven original stories, curated newsletters on various topics, and locally focused podcasts, all in the service of informing Edmontonians about what is going on in their community. Sign up to get The Pulse, our weekday news briefing. It's free!★ Support this podcast ★
On Wednesday, the president tweeted 'It's infrastructure week.' Hours later, the Senate advanced a bipartisan infrastructure bill which is a key pillar of the Biden agenda. Meanwhile, Republicans are blasting Democrats and health officials over updates to Covid guidance. We discuss that and much more with Philip Rucker, Lisa Lerer, Dr. Kavita Patel, Dr. Luis Medina-Garcia, Eugene Robinson, and Matthew Dowd.
'It is a distinct possibility.'
July 28, 2021: Gymnastic great Simone Biles has withdrawn from individual all-around finals at the Tokyo Olympics, Ben Axelrod and Shawn Dunagan share live updates from Day 1 at Browns training camp, Pfizer says its data shows a third COVID vaccine shot boosts protection against the Delta variant , and more on 3News Now with Stephanie Haney. Need a break from bad news? Watch It's All Good (News!) with Stephanie Haney, every Wednesday: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LsfwecZNNpw Like this show? Check out the 3 Things to Know with Stephanie Haney podcast: http://wkyc.com/3thingstoknow 3News Now with Stephanie Haney is also available as a podcast https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/now-you-can-get-your-3news-now-digital-updates-as-a-podcast/95-e4d5a072-b625-4180-9f8e-733ab730ee90 Connect with Stephanie here: http://twitter.com/_StephanieHaney http://instagram.com/_StephanieHaney http://facebook.com/thestephaniehaney Read more here: Olympic champ Biles withdraws from all-around competition https://www.wkyc.com/article/sports/olympics/simone-biles-withdraws-individual-all-around/507-67c1c9a1-a814-4987-9ec4-2f7339da6a2f The 'twisties': Gymnastics requires as much mental strength as it does physical https://www.wkyc.com/article/sports/olympics/twisties-mental-health-gymnastics-physical-danger/507-f402dcd3-af68-49c9-be96-c3e696f9a246 Phoenix gymnast Jade Carey replacing Simone Biles in individual all-around final https://www.wkyc.com/article/sports/olympics/tokyo-olympics-phoenix-gymnast-jade-carey-replacing-simone-biles-individual-all-around-final/75-1038c78e-d341-453c-999c-364316f00251 Olympic gymnastics champion, Cleveland resident Dominique Moceanu offers insight into Simone Biles' battle https://www.wkyc.com/article/sports/olympics/dominque-moceanu-simone-biles/95-d12726ec-e000-4d44-9180-f3bb11effc9b New Pfizer data suggests a third COVID vaccine dose increases protection against Delta variant https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/vaccine/new-data-suggests-covid-booster-increases-protection-against-delta-variant/95-d54db746-b227-4791-a82e-dc71d60c02af COVID-19 in Ohio: State reports 1,456 new cases reported on Tuesday https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/coronavirus-numbers/coronavirus-ohio-updates/95-e2faeb56-d02a-443a-bcdb-141f2c7fafe8 Recall issued over McCormick, Frank's Red Hot seasoning due to Salmonella risk https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/nation-world/recall-mccormick-italian-seasoning-franks-redhot-salmonella-risk/507-ce24761f-90b4-420b-956e-edb764abe227 Cleveland Cavaliers NBA G League team to keep Charge name in move to Cleveland https://www.wkyc.com/article/sports/locked-on/nba-podcast/cavaliers-show/cleveland-cavaliers-nba-g-league-team-to-keep-charge-name/95-088ebcce-491b-40c7-afcb-0e7e5fbf7fb0 Finding 'Fido,' an unlikely love story and hugs for police: 'It's All Good (News!)' https://www.wkyc.com/article/news/local/its-all-good-news/its-all-good-news/95-60a5e073-4f8d-4c7b-885b-b8ca697f9eec Cleveland Browns' 2021 Training Camp Day 1: Live updates https://www.wkyc.com/article/sports/nfl/browns/cleveland-browns-2021-training-camp-day-1-updates/95-03f2da17-7ef0-48ea-95d0-b72066fb6a24 The Mike Polk Sr., Mike Polk Jr., Bernie Kosar photo reenactment project, 30 years later https://www.wkyc.com/article/entertainment/television/programs/whats-new/polk-family-bernie-kosar-photo-reenactment-project/95-383018f1-9214-456f-8642-d3b471f743e8
In This Episode You'll Hear About:Why David wanted to create this company with a product that needed to be iterated hundreds and hundreds of times to get it right to be a non-alcoholic alternative that could be added to cocktails What the process of doing what so many people in the industry thought was impossible was like and how they persevered with this unique ideaWhat it was like launching a brand right before a pandemic and how they navigated those unusual challengesWhat childhood in Oklahoma was like and what ways David was entrepreneurial very early on, learning valuable lessons about hard work even as a teenagerHow he got into the fitness and physical therapy world and what led him to the CPG world after thatWhat advice he has for Co-Founders and for setting yourself up to be able to let go more easily as you scale and grow the companyWhat unique route they took for raising money and what advice David has for other founders when looking for non-traditional fundraising ideasHow David and his Co-Founders run the team and cultivate a company culture that is built on trust and respect and keeping it personalWhat is next for Ritual and why they are confident that Ritual will become synonymous with nonalcoholic spiritsTo Find Out More:RitualZeroProof.comQuotes:“The idea never left. And what came to me was, if we could actually make these taste like known spirits, if we could approximate the flavor profile of whiskey, of gin, tequila, rum, that'd be amazing.”“The devil's in the details and the details matter. Let's get it right. So we kind of knew we were on to something really early on in the process and it became a matter of perfecting.”“It's kind of like the Impossible Burger or almond milk. There's never going to be a world where the coffee joints don't sell alternative milks to go with your latte. And in no world, the grocery store is not going to have alternative meats. Now that it's there, people are buying it.” “What we've learned is you can't change consumer behavior. They're going to do the thing that they want to do. Maybe it's not real meat, maybe it's not real milk. Maybe it's a Ritual Margarita instead of the real thing.”“If I could do things differently, it's prepare for more success because this category is on fire. This company is leading the charge in the United States for a category that's really needed. And nobody understood just how big this was going to get when we first started the company.”“You just can't do it yourself. You certainly can't scale. And if you started off with the mindset of this is mine, mine, mine, it's really hard to give those pieces away and grow. And you have to be able to give things away to be able to grow.”“There's nothing not personal about a startup. The whole 'It's just business' thing is complete bullshit. It's just personal. Keep it personal and become friends.”“The most important thing you can have among your Founders and among your employees is trust.”“It is so very gratifying to build something and see something out in the real world. But I think it's just worth it. I think it's a shame if you don't give some version of entrepreneurship a shot. It's a wonderful way to grow as a person.”“It's a learning process. Your life is about learning. That's as important as the money you'll get from this, and you'll realize later ultimately more important than the money you'll get from this is how much you've learned, people you've met, the experiences you've had…”
As much as AI has the ability to change the world in very positive ways, it also can be incredibly destructive. Sean McGregor knows this well, as he is currently developing the Partnership on AI's AI Incident Database, a searchable collection of news articles that covers questionable use, failures, and other incidents that affect people when AI solutions are poorly designed. On this episode of Experiencing Data, Sean takes us through his notable work around using machine learning in the domain of fire suppression, and how human-centered design is critical to ensuring these decision support solutions are actually used and trusted by the users. We also covered the social implications of new decision-making tools leveraging AI, and: Sean's focus on ensuring his models and interfaces were interpretable by users when designing his fire-suppression system and why this was important. (0:51) How Sean built his fire suppression model so that different stakeholders can optimize the system for their unique purposes. (8:44) The social implications of new decision-making tools. (11:17) Tailoring to the needs of 'high-investment' and 'low-investment' people when designing visual analytics. (14:58) The AI Incident Database: Preventing future AI deployment harm by collecting and displaying examples of the unintended and negative consequences of AI. (18:20) How human-centered design could prevent many incidents of harmful AI deployment — and how it could also fall short. (22:13) 'It's worth the time and effort': How taking time to agree on key objectives for a data product with stakeholders can lead to greater adoption. (30:24) Quotes from Today's Episode “As soon as you enter into the decision-making space, you're really tearing at the social fabric in a way that hasn't been done before. And that's where analytics and the systems we're talking about right now are really critical because that is the middle point that we have to meet in and to find those points of compromise.” - Sean (12:28) “I think that a lot of times, unfortunately, the assumption [in data science is], ‘Well if you don't understand it, that's not my problem. That's your problem, and you need to learn it.' But my feeling is, ‘Well, do you want your work to matter or not? Because if no one's using it, then it effectively doesn't exist.'” - Brian (17:41) “[The AI Incident Database is] a collection of largely news articles [about] bad things that have happened from AI [so we can] try and prevent history from repeating itself, and [understand] more of [the] unintended and bad consequences from AI....” - Sean (19:44) “Human-centered design will prevent a great many of the incidents [of AI deployment harm] that have and are being ingested in the database. It's not a hundred percent thing. Even in human-centered design, there's going to be an absence of imagination, or at least an inadequacy of imagination for how these things go wrong because intelligent systems — as they are currently constituted — are just tremendously bad at the open-world, open-set problem.” - Sean (22:21) “It's worth the time and effort to work with the people that are going to be the proponents of the system in the organization — the ones that assure adoption — to kind of move them through the wireframes and examples and things that at the end of the engineering effort you believe are going to be possible. … Sometimes you have to know the nature of the data and what inferences can be delivered on the basis of it, but really not jumping into the principal engineering effort until you adopt and agree to what the target is. [This] is incredibly important and very often overlooked.” - Sean (31:36) “The things that we're working on in these technological spaces are incredibly impactful, and you are incredibly powerful in the way that you're influencing the world in a way that has never, on an individual basis, been so true. And please take that responsibility seriously and make the world a better place through your efforts in the development of these systems. This is right at the crucible for that whole process.” - Sean (33:09) Links Referenced seanbmcgregor.com: https://seanbmcgregor.com AI Incident Database: https://incidentdatabase.ai Partnership on AI: https://www.partnershiponai.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/seanmcgregor
Lead-in Almost no one understands suicide very well. Almost no one. Some of you might say -- but Dr. Peter, I've been really down and out. I've been really suicidal. I've been there. I lived it. Not gonna argue with you about having been suicidal. But having intense feelings, almost irresistible impulses toward suicide, constant suicidal thoughts -- that doesn't mean you understand suicide. Not at all. I don't think most people who have attempted suicide really understand their experience. I don't think most therapists really understand suicide. Why ? Because we're afraid to really enter into what is behind suicide. We don't want to go there. We're terrified of what lurks underneath. We have parts of us that don't want to understand. Lauren Oliver, Delirium “Suicide. A sideways word, a word that people whisper and mutter and cough: a word that must be squeezed out behind cupped palms or murmured behind closed doors. It was only in dreams that I heard the word shouted, screamed." And I'll go further than that. And it's not so much because we're afraid of what we'll find in another person, a friend or relative or colleague. It's because we are terrified that finding the darkness inside of others will wake up our own sleeping giants of darkness. The darkness inside us. The terror inside us. That's why we avoid, why we distract, why we skirt the edges of this topic. Benjamin Franklin knew this: Nine men in ten are would-be suicides -Poor Richard's Almanack. Freud popularized it in 1920 -- book the Pleasure Principle. -- he discussed the death drive: the drive toward death and destruction, often expressed through behaviors such as aggression, repetition compulsion, and self-destructiveness. Death drive or drives went by the name Thanatos -- the Greek god personified death. Caught a lot of flak for it, then and now. Not really widely accepted. I think he was on to something. Something we don't want to think about others -- that they have drives toward self-destruction. It's something that we don't want to admit about ourselves. If we are really honest with ourselves in looking at suicide we would realize, with John Bradford There but for the grace of God go I. We would give up our false presumptions about our own strength and our own natural resiliency. We would realize, with Shakespeare's Lord Chancellor in Henry VIII “We all are men, in our own natures frail, and capable of our flesh; few are angels.” ― Lord Chancellor William Shakespeare, Henry VIII We would understand Mahatma Ghandi when he said: “If I had no sense of humor, I would long ago have committed suicide.” We would have a lot less judgement about the souls and experience of those who killed themselves. Yes, the action of suicide is wrong, gravely wrong, and we'll discuss that in next week's episode. We're not minimizing the gravity of the act -- I'm talking here about the phenomenological experience of those on the brink of self-destruction and why they are there. And we would understand something about the spiritual dimensions, the dark spiritual powers at work in suicide as well. I could be wrong about this, but I don't think you really have any accurate idea about suicide. Suicide is one of the most misunderstood of human actions. Because we want to avoid the churning darkness, the despair, the hopelessness, the alienation, the trauma within us, we don't want to see it in others. And if someone near is suicidal, we know, we know instinctively that he is tapping into his despair, his hopelessness, his alienation. We know that our suicidal is really in the grip of her trauma and her isolation, and her excruciating pain. And our natural response -- is to flee. To get out of dodge. To protect ourselves. We rationalize it -- I'm not a professional, I'm not a counselor, I don't know what to do with all of this intensity Or we stay in there, we force ourselves to stay in relationship, feeling really inadequate, not wanting to go too deep, not wanting to screw it up -- and in our timidity and fear, we actually aren't very helpful. OK -- I will grant you that you don't really know what to do. And I get it that you're afraid -- maybe terrified. OK. This is a tough issue. Suicide is a tough issue. And tough issues are what we specialize in here. [Cue music] Intro Welcome to the podcast Interior Integration for Catholics, thank you for being here with me, thank you for making it through the lead in and not fleeing from this episode. I'm glad you and I are in this together. And it's going to be OK. By God's grace, together we can handle, we can work with, we can work through this topic of suicide. We'll do it together. I am clinical psychological Peter Malinoski and you are listening to the Interior Integration for Catholics podcast, where we take on the toughest topics, the ones others don't want to touch, and we go really deep with them. Why? Not out of some kind of idle curiosity. Not out of disorder curiosity, out of some kind of psychological voyeurism. No. We go there in this podcast because we are working on ourselves. On our own human formation, shoring up the natural foundation for our spiritual lives, so that we can enter into loving union with God. That's why. It's about removing the psychological barriers you have to a much deeper intimacy with God the Father, Jesus the Son, the Holy Spirit, and the Blessed Virgin Mary, our Mother. In the last episode we looked at specific cases of suicide in Sacred Scripture. This is episode number 78, released on July 26, 2021, entitled The Desperate Inner Experience of Suicidality. We are going to enter into the phenomenological world of the suicidal person. Why? Why do we do that? Why do that? Two answers. The second answer is for going into all of this depth on suicide is so that you and I can love. So that we can love others who are struggling with this -- and there are so many. Franklin estimated 90%. Nine men in ten are would-be suicides. I think he's right, even though the vast majority of those don't even know there's a struggle going on inside them. I think Benjamin Franklin knew about the latent potential in most people. Freud: Thanatos. The Death Drives. Freud knew. For all his faults and follies, Freud knew something about the depth of pain in people's souls. The pain that lives in the unconscious. Locked away, at least for a time. Unnoticed, at least for a time. The first answer: Is so that we can be known and loved. That we can accept others knowing us, and us knowing ourselves. 1 John 4:19 We love, because he first loved us. He first loved us. We need to let God love us. We need to let our Lady, our Mother love us In our woundedness. In our suffering. In our shame, in our pain, in our fear, in our sadness, however our darkness is for us. Whatever our darkness is. Isaiah 9:2 The people that walked in darkness, have seen a great light: to them that dwelt in the region of the shadow of death, light is risen. Not just about the external world, but also our internal world. The Pain Caveats -- Difficult topic. “The pain of severe depression is quite unimaginable to those who have not suffered it, and it kills in many instances because its anguish can no longer be borne. The prevention of many suicides will continue to be hindered until there is a general awareness of the nature of this pain.”― William Styron, Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness “Nobody has ever killed themselves over a broken arm. But every day, thousands of people kill themselves because of a broken heart. Why? Because emotional pain hurts much worse than physical pain.” ― Oliver Markus Malloy, Bad Choices Make Good Stories “When people are suicidal, their thinking is paralyzed, their options appear spare or nonexistent, their mood is despairing, and hopelessness permeates their entire mental domain. The future cannot be separated from the present, and the present is painful beyond solace. ‘This is my last experiment,' wrote a young chemist in his suicide note. ‘If there is any eternal torment worse than mine I'll have to be shown.” ― Kay Redfield Jamison, Night Falls Fast: Understanding Suicide ““Suicidal pain includes the feeling that one has lost all capacity to effect emotional change. The agony is excruciating and looks as if it will never end. There is the feeling of having been beaten down for a very long time. There are feelings of agitation, emptiness, and incoherence. 'Snap out of it and get on with your life,' sounds like a demand to high jump ten feet.” ― David L. Conroy, Out of the Nightmare: Recovery from Depression and Suicidal Pain Suicide is best understood not so much as a movement toward death as it is a movement away from something and that something is always the same: intolerable emotion, unendurable pain, or unacceptable anguish. Maurizio Pompili & Roberto Tatarelli Parts and Suicide So helpful to think of suicide in terms of parts. A phenomenon that a number of people have noted while in deep depression is the sense of being accompanied by a second self — a wraithlike observer who, not sharing the dementia of his double, is able to watch with dispassionate curiosity as his companion struggles against the oncoming disaster, or decides to embrace it. There is a theatrical quality about all this, and during the next several days, as I went about stolidly preparing for extinction, I couldn't shake off a sense of melodrama — a melodrama in which I, the victim-to-be of self-murder, was both the solitary actor and lone member of the audience.” ― William Styron, Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness Definition of Parts: Separate, independently operating personalities within us, each with own unique prominent needs, roles in our lives, emotions, body sensations, guiding beliefs and assumptions, typical thoughts, intentions, desires, attitudes, impulses, interpersonal style, and world view. Each part also has an image of God and also its own approach to sexuality. Robert Falconer calls them insiders. Each part has Personality style Needs -- Episode 62 Attachment needs Integrity needs Emotions Body sensation. Belief. Thought Intentions Desires Attitudes Impulses. Interpersonal style World view Often have burdens Ways of coping Review of Parts Exiles -- most sensitive -- these exiles have been exploited, rejected, abandoned in external relationships They have suffered relational traumas or attachment injuries They hold the painful experiences that have been isolated from conscious awareness to protect the person from being overwhelmed with the intensity. They desperately want to be seen and known, to be safe and secure, to be comforted and soothed, to be cared for and loved They want rescue, redemption, healing And in the intensity of their needs and emotions, they threaten to take over and destabilize the person's whole being, the person's whole system -- they want to take over the raft to be seen and heard, to be known, to be understood. But they can flood us with the intensity of their experience And that threatens to harm external relationships Burdens they carry: Shame, dependency, worthlessness, Fear/Terror, Grief/Loss, Loneliness, Neediness, Pain, lack of meaning or purpose, a sense of being unloved and unlovable, inadequate, abandoned Exiles' Role in Suicide Furnishing the intolerable pain. Exiles bring the intensity. The fuel Description of the pain of suicide -- Quotes Perhaps everything terrifying is deep down a helpless thing that needs our help,” Rainer Maria Rilke wrote to a friend and protégé, encouraging him to make peace with his inner demons. “Actually, it was only part of myself I wanted to kill: the part that wanted to kill herself, that dragged me into the suicide debate and made every window, kitchen implement, and subway station a rehearsal for tragedy.”― Susanna Kaysen, Girl, Interrupted 1993 memoir of being in a mental hospital for 18 months in the late 1960s. Managers These are the proactive protector parts. They work strategically, with forethought and planning to keep in control of situations and relationships to minimize the likelihood of you being hurt. They work really hard to keep you safe. "Never again" attitude toward the exiles. Very much about reducing risk of overwhelm. controlling, striving, planning, caretaking, judging, Can be pessimistic, self-critical, very demanding. Firefighters When exiles break through and threaten to take over the system, this is terrifying. The consequences of exile taking over could be disastrous. So when these exiles are about the break out, the firefighters leap into action. It's an emergency situation, a crisis, like a fire raging in a house. Firefighters are focused on rescuing us from a terrible situation. No concern for niceties, for propriety, for etiquette, for little details like that. Firefighter take bold, drastic actions to stifle, numb or distract from the intensity of the exile's experiences. They break down the door and spray water over everything, trying to calm the raging flames. No concern for consequences -- don't you get it, we are in a crisis, All kinds of addictions -- alcohol use, binge eating, shopping, sleeping, dieting, excessive working or exercise, suicidal actions, self-harm, violence, dissociation, distractions, obsessions, compulsions, escapes into fantasy, and raging. Parts can take over the person Firefighters' role in Suicide Serious suicidal impulses can be driven by firefighters: Just make the pain of the exiles stop. Suicidal firefighters are filled with hopelessness -- they don't know of another way to protect you. They have been beaten down, sometimes literally, always figuratively. Desperation of firefighters If we could read the secret history of our enemies we should find in each man's life sorrow and suffering enough to disarm all hostility. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. “In my view, suicide is not really a wish for life to end.' What is it then?'It is the only way a powerless person can find to make everybody else look away from his shame. The wish is not to die, but to hide.”― Orson Scott Card, Ender's Shadow “I am constantly torn between killing myself and killing everyone around me.”― David Levithan, Will Grayson, Will Grayson “The man who kills a man kills a man. The man who kills himself kills all men. As far as he is concerned, he wipes out the world.”― G.K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy Rapid Shifts among parts The man, who in a fit of melancholy, kills himself today, would have wished to live had he waited a week. Voltaire When you're young and healthy you can plan on Monday to commit suicide, and by Wednesday you're laughing again. Marilyn Monroe who died of an overdose of barbiturates in 1962 at age 36 -- ruled a probable suicide by the county coroner. “The Suicide, as she is falling, Illuminated by the moon, Regrets her act, and finds appalling The thought she will be dead so soon.” ― Edward Gorey Impulse driven suicide 2015 Study in South Korea -- Clinical Psychopharmacology and Neuroscience 87% of suicide attempts were impulsive Most common trigger was interpersonal conflict Most common diagnosis was major depression. Often poorly planned Replicated a previous 2011 in South Korea study where 85% were impulsive 2016 South Korean Study in Psychiatry Investigation 48% of 269 suicide attempters brought to ERs were clearly impulsive, very sudden No Plan No previous suicidal ideation. They weren't thinking about it. Came out of the blue 1997 Study from Sweden 44% of suicide attempts were radically impulsive. Approach: Always reassure dangerous firefighters that you do not aim to get rid of them. Treat them with respect and appreciation; they have only been trying to help. They are trying to help, trying to protect you from misery. If dangerous firefighters think there is an effective alternative, they are often game to try that new way They need to experience hope. Hope is a necessity for normal life and the major weapon against the suicide impulse. Karl A. Menninger It is critically important to present them other options for safety, that they can be safe without needing suicide. We will get into how to work with them in the next episode. Managers' role in suicide Remember, managers are more proactive. Managers still can be very intense, and also in a lot of pain, but they are not so reactive. Planned Suicide Suicide seriously considered. Suicide as a "comforting" option. Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche was a German philosopher, cultural critic, composer, poet, writer, and philologist whose work has exerted a profound influence on modern intellectual history. He began his career as a classical philologist before turning to philosophy. The thought of suicide is a great consolation: by means of it one gets through many a dark night.” prepared a will, decided upon a method in advance, and planned the date of the attempt. Repeated suicidal impulses from firefighter can be taken up by managers Or firefighters can take on a more managerial role And use contemplation of suicide as a role. Quotes “The thought that I might kill myself formed in my mind coolly as a tree or a flower.” Sylvia Plath American poet, novelist, and short-story writer -- attempted suicide several times by several means. Succeeded at age 31, after experiencing major depression for most of her adult life. 1963. “There are people who fantasize about suicide, and paradoxically, these fantasies can be soothing because they usually involve either fantasizing about others' reactions to one's suicide or imagining how death would be a relief from life's travails. In both cases, an aspect of the fantasy is to exert control, either over others' views or toward life's difficulties. The writer A. Alvarez stated, " There people ... for whom the mere idea of suicide is enough; they can continue to function efficiently and even happily provided they know they have their own, specially chosen means of escape always ready..." In her riveting 2008 memoir of bipolar disorder, Manic, Terri Cheney opened the book by stating, "People... don't understand that when you're seriously depressed, suicidal ideation can be the only thing that keeps you alive. Just knowing there's an out--even if it's bloody, even if it's permanent--makes the pain bearable for one more day." This strategy appears to be effective for some people, but only for a while. Over longer periods, fantasizing about death leaves people more depressed and thus at higher risk for suicide, as Eddie Selby, Mike Amestis, and I recently showed in a study on violent daydreaming. A strategy geared toward increased feelings of self-control (fantasizing about the effects of one's suicide) "works" momentarily, but ultimately backfires by undermining feelings of genuine self-control in the long run.― Thomas Joiner, Myths About Suicide Like a drug. Battling among Parts “The debate was wearing me out. Once you've posed that question, it won't go away. I think many people kill themselves simply to stop the debate about whether they will or they won't. Anything I thought or did was immediately drawn into the debate. Made a stupid remark—why not kill myself? Missed the bus—better put an end to it all. Even the good got in there. I liked that movie—maybe I shouldn't kill myself.” ― Susanna Kaysen If a person with multiple personalities threatens suicide, is that considered a hostage situation? Comedian Steven Wright Reasons for Suicide Suicide is complex Suicide is complex, there's never a single reason why a person contemplates taking their own life, and there are no absolute indicators that a person could be in that state. Steve Crisp Superficial ones -- see IIC 76 section VII. Illusory Ones You didn't love me enough “A lot of you cared, just not enough.” ― Jay Asher, Thirteen Reasons Why -- young adult novel “Some people are just not meant to be in this world. It's just too much for them.” ― Phoebe Stone, The Boy on Cinnamon Street Vincent: Don McLean 1971 Vincent Van Gogh You took your life as lovers often doBut I could have told you, VincentThis world was never meant for oneAs beautiful as you Deeper, more primary causes -- unmet needs with despair that those needs will ever be met. Attachment Needs A felt sense of safety and protection, deep sense of security felt in the bones No parts feel this. Feeling seen and known heard and understood -- felt attunement Parts Isolated Felt comfort, reassurance Feeling valued, delighted in, cherished by the attachment figure Felt support for the best self When attachment needs are not met, who comes in? Satan. Integrity Needs All of the above. Each one of us needs help to develop our sense of self, our identity I exist my existence is separate from others -- I exist in my own right, a separate person. bounded, has boundaries My identity is stable over time and across different situations -- there is a continuity -- hard when parts are all over the place. I can regulate myself -- I have some self-control. Is integrated -- coherent interconnections inside between aspects of experience -- self-cohesion Is active, with agency, can effectively function in the world Is morally good -- ontologically or essentially good and thus has intrinsic value and worth, apart from others' opinions. I can make sense of my experience and the world around me Mission and Purpose in life We also need to make good choices -- seek what is good, true and beautiful in lif Compassionate responses When a famous person dies by suicide, we "remind" people to pick up the phone and call a hotline. "If he'd only reached out for help because help was available," is a frequent refrain, as if people who suffer don't know that and the disease doesn't disable cognitive function. We need to do more than give out phone numbers. Bob Collins We will be doing so much more. Through little things and big things. Next episode. Action Items If you are having suicidal thoughts or know of someone who is, contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255 for support and assistance from a trained counselor. If you or a loved one are in immediate danger, call 911. Resilient Catholics Community. Catholic's Guide to Choosing a Therapist Catholic Journeymen -- Dr. Gerry Crete community of faithful Catholic men seeking to renew their lives through prayer, personal growth, healing, and brotherhood! Conversation hours T, R 317.567.9594 Not July 27 and July 29. Pray for me and for the other listeners Patronness and patron
This week Sam welcomes his buddy Cody to the podcast and asks him for a native Ohioan's take on LeBron James in 'Space Jam' (6:06) and the possibility that Adele might be dating LeBron's agent, Rich Paul (7:44). Then they give their thoughts on the reported budget for 'The Last of Us' TV show which could make it the most expensive TV show ever (10:58), followed by a debate about WarnerMedia's plan to make 10 movies exclusively for HBO max in 2022 (18:16). Cody also gives his favorites of 2021 so far (22:27). Then they gush about Apple TV+'s second season of 'Mythic Quest' and their mutual love for creator Rob McElhenney and 'It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia' (24:44). They continue to spiel about the beginning of season 2 of 'Ted Lasso' (48:58), and finally conclude with a discussion about Netflix's disappointing 'Gunpowder Milkshake' (1:04:00). Next week: Pig The Green Knight Email us with your takes and feedback at: spielinganddealing@gmail.com Follow the show on Instagram. This episode is sponsored by ‘Out of Regs'. Available on Amazon and Audible. Get the ‘Out of Regs' audiobook free with an Audible free trial. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/spielinganddealing/message
On today's episode of The It's Only Rock And Roll Podcast, founding member and former frontman/keyboardist for Styx, DENNIS DEYOUNG sits down for a wide-ranging, no-holds barred interview talking everything from lazy rock journalism, to his new and final studio album, to the true reasons behind why Styx are no longer the multi-platinum-selling band a generation of loyal fans remember from the 1970's and early 80s. ------------------------------------------------ ● For more on Dennis DeYoung visit http://www.dennisdeyoung.com ● To check out his new album “26 EAST – Vol. 2” https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08ZBHDZYV Visit the 'It's Only Rock And Roll PODCAST' online at: ° Homepage – www.ItsOnlyRockAndRollPodcast.com ° Facebook – facebook.com/ItsOnlyRockAndRollPodcast/ ° YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCFB7uJ3dg4IKSxsNny9Jiw/ ° Instagram - @itsonlyrockandrollpodcast Be sure to check out our all-new OFFICIAL IORR PODCAST STORE! (Just click the 'shirt' icon on our homepage)
Jeff Bezos launched into space https://nerdist.com/article/john-wick-spin-off-continental-prequel/ Clerks III goes into filming soon. It was just picked up by lions gate. Man Behind LinkedIn Scraping Said He Grabbed 700 Million Profiles 'For Fun' (9to5mac.com) 27 Posted by BeauHD on Monday July 19, 2021 @07:20PM from the kids-these-days dept. The man behind last month's scraping of LinkedIn data, which exposed the location, phone numbers, and inferred salaries of 700 million users, says that he did it "for fun" -- though he is also selling the data. 9to5Mac reports: BBC News spoke with the man who took the data, under the name Tom Liner: "How would you feel if all your information was catalogued by a hacker and put into a monster spreadsheet with millions of entries, to be sold online to the highest paying cyber-criminal? That's what a hacker calling himself Tom Liner did last month 'for fun' when he compiled a database of 700 million LinkedIn users from all over the world, which he is selling for around $5,000 [...]. In the case of Mr Liner, his latest exploit was announced at 08:57 BST in a post on a notorious hacking forum [...] 'Hi, I have 700 million 2021 LinkedIn records,' he wrote. Included in the post was a link to a sample of a million records and an invite for other hackers to contact him privately and make him offers for his database." Liner says he was also behind the scraping of 533 million Facebook profiles back in April (you can check whether your data was grabbed): "Tom told me he created the 700 million LinkedIn database using 'almost the exact same technique' that he used to create the Facebook list. He said: 'It took me several months to do. It was very complex. I had to hack the API of LinkedIn. If you do too many requests for user data in one time then the system will permanently ban you.'" Meet the Brutal Serial Killers of The Sims (wired.co.uk) 57 Posted by msmash on Monday July 19, 2021 @04:43PM from the closer-look dept. It's a game that encourages people to 'get a life' -- build a house, make a Sim and fulfil their dreams. So why are so many players intent on murder? From a report: The Sims has far evolved from its humble beginnings in 2000, where you created characters and tended to their needs, like a slightly more demanding Tamagotchi. As the games became more advanced, The Sims provided opportunities for the lives of your characters to more closely mirror reality: they now have lifetime goals and desires, can feel disappointment and joy, and now even do their own laundry. But whether they live a rich and fulfilling life, or an existence defined by endless suffering, the Sims' destiny is entirely in your hands. Of course many players choose not to be benevolent Gods in the Sims world -- and instead aim to kill and torture as many Sims as possible. Death has hugely evolved over 21 years of gameplay; we're no longer just sticking Sims in a swimming pool and selling a ladder to watch them drown. Instead, we're watching them explode in rocket ships, choke on pufferfish or even be eaten by the 'Cowplant' -- a mutant Venus flytrap with a cow head for a face. "The Sims see you controlling a little society, but that doesn't mean you're making it better. It reminds me of Bruce Almighty, where the role of God is handed over but that doesn't necessarily mean that's strictly a good thing. It's rather therapeutic just killing Sims, and being quite an irresponsible God," 26-year-old Dubliner RTGame (real name Daniel), who has 2.6 million subscribers on YouTube says. "I feel like a kid with a magnifying glass on the small ants. It sounds quite twisted but it's quite fun to do things like that in games like The Sims to see what happens. But yes, I do have a lot of Sims blood on my hands." He's far from alone. While many in the Sims streaming community focus their content on cutesy legacy-style playthroughs or intricate design challenges, there's an increasing interest in more boundary-pushing content. RTGame credits the popularity of his bizarre Sims series for helping him jump into streaming as a full-time career, while other YouTubers such as CallMeKevin and Plumbella count speed runs where they kill entire neighbourhoods among some of their most viewed content.
He was a disciple of St Peter, born in Antioch. St Peter took him to Rome (he was bishop of Antioch before being bishop of Rome, so Antioch is as much the 'see of Peter' as is Rome) and made him Bishop of Ravenna. In Ravenna, he healed the wife of the military governor of a grave illness, after which the governor and his household confessed Christ and were baptized. Apollinarius was able to form a house church in the governor's home, from which he labored for the Gospel for twelve years. Eventually, he was condemned to exile in Illyria for his faith, and began a life of missionary travel in the Balkans, travelling as far as the Danube. After twelve years of this work, he was driven back to Italy by the hostility of some of the pagans. He was received with joy by the people of Ravenna, which aroused the envy of the pagan elders, who denounced him to the Emperor Vespasian. When the elders asked permission to kill Apollinarius, the Emperor only gave them permission to drive him from the city, wisely saying 'It is not seemly to take revenge on behalf of the gods, for they can themselves be revenged on their enemies if they are angered.' But, in defiance of the Imperial decree, the pagan leaders attacked and killed Apollinarius with knives. His holy relics are preserved in Ravenna, in a church dedicated to him.
On 22 July 2011 Norway suffered its worst terror attacks in recent history. A far-right extremist, Anders Breivik, launched a bomb attack on government offices in Oslo, and then, two hours later, attacked a summer camp for young political activists on the island of Utøya, 38 kms from the Norwegian capital. In total 77 people were killed that day - the majority on the island. Mike Lanchin has been speaking to one of the camp's leaders Lisa Husby, who was 19-years-old at the time . Lisa hid under a bed in a small cabin as the gunman roamed the island looking for his next victim. 'It was 50-50 that day', she says. 'Either you found a good hiding place, or you didn't...it was just random'. Photo:A wounded young woman is brought ashore after the attacks on Utøya island. (Credit: Svein Gustav Wilhelmsen/AFP via Getty Images)
After more than 50 years of waiting, England fans saw their team reach the final of a major tournament on Wednesday after the Three Lions knocked off Denmark at Wembley Stadium. The soundtrack for this historic run is a song that debuted 25 years ago, the last time England hosted a European tournament, and produced a memorable slogan for English fans, 'It's Coming Home.' Today, The Athletic's Jack Pitt-Brooke joins us to talk about the origins of the song that led to the chant, why it's so divisive among some fans and players, and what Gareth Southgate has brought to the national team setup to get them back to the mountaintop.Read Jack Pitt-Brooke's story about the origins of The Three Lions: https://theathletic.com/2689661/2021/07/07/its-coming-home-dream-boast-or-way-of-life/ See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Simone Biles and Sunisa Lee Grab Spots on U.S. Women's Gymnastics Team for Tokyo Olympics (PEOPLE) Cardi B is pregnant, expecting second child with husband Offset (Page Six) Courtney Love accuses Olivia Rodrigo of copying Hole album cover: 'It was rude of her' (Entertainment Weekly) Harry Connick Jr. Is 'Fired Up' to Play Daddy Warbucks in NBC's Upcoming Annie Live! Special (PEOPLE) Tana Mongeau nabs multimillion dollar podcast deal (Page Six) The Morning Toast with Claudia (@girlwithnojob) and Jackie Oshry (@jackieoshry) Merch: https://shopmorningtoast.com/ The Morning Toast Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/themorningtoast Girl With No Job by Claudia Oshry: https://www.girlwithnojob.com/book