Podcasts about Jima

  • 96PODCASTS
  • 193EPISODES
  • 48mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Apr 25, 2026LATEST

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Best podcasts about Jima

Latest podcast episodes about Jima

Okiem Deva
Zostałem zwolniony, bo nie słuchałem Jima Ryana...

Okiem Deva

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2026 19:57


Zostałem zwolniony, bo nie słuchałem Jima Ryana czyli Wielki Skrót Wiadomości 2026.04.25 

Hosť Rádia Regina
Barbora Vuová - členka OZ Ganryu Jima Dojo, ktoré sa venuje kendžucu a šíreniu japonskej kultúry a histórie (18.3.2026 12:30)

Hosť Rádia Regina

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2026 25:28


Nedávno mala v múzeu v Trnave prednášku o „ženských samurajkách“. Barboru Vuovú a rovnako jej kolegov o OZ Ganryu Jima Dojo fascinuje Japonsko, jeho história a aj kultúra. Organizujú rôzne prednášky, vystúpenia a sú súčasťou podujatí, kde ukazujú čo vedia – a to je boj s japonským mečom kendžucu. Barbora Vuová nám povie aj to, koho by v OZ privítali vo svojej spoločnosti, čo nám môže dať umenie japonského meča a aké predispozície k nemu potrebujeme. | Hostka: Barbora Vuová. | Moderuje: Hana Rapantová. | Talkshow Hosť Rádia Regina Západ pripravuje Slovenský rozhlas, Rádio Regina Západ, RRZ

Eleva Tu Visión
Te Presento a Tu Prójima

Eleva Tu Visión

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 29:26


Escúchanos todos los jueves a las: 9:00 pm (hora del centro de México), por Radio Esperanza, 1140 AM (www.radioesperanza.mx) y los domingos 9:00 pm (hora del centro de México), por Radio Formula 1230 AM en Monterrey, Nuevo León, México (www.radioformulamonterrey.com.mx), y 11:00 pm por Radio Esperanza Para escuchar más de nuestras prédicas puedes visitarnos en, www.elevatuvision.com Si deseas comunicarte con nosotros puedes escribirnos a elevatuvisionmonterrey@gmail.com o info@predicascristianas.mx

Ranní klub
Co přinese letošní Apple Experience? Proč si internet myslí, že Jima Carreyho nahradil klon?

Ranní klub

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2026 26:45


Baláž & Hubinák
Nový album Gorillaz, filmy Jima Jarmusha aj dvakrát Pink (27.2.2026 18:00)

Baláž & Hubinák

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2026 52:28


Program s autorskou dvojicou Daniel Baláž a Pavol Hubinák. Zábava, recesia, glosovanie aktuálnych udalostí a atypická hudobná dramaturgia. Pravidelné rubriky a interakcia s poslucháčmi. Čokoľvek, čo nečakáte.

.týždeň podcast
.týždeň vo filme: Rodina Jima Jarmuscha, vzostup Putina a vrieskanie

.týždeň podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2026 21:47


Jim Jarmusch sa vracia vo výbornej forme, Olivier Assayas mapuje zákulisie Putinovej cesty k moci a Vreskot sa dožíva už siedmej časti. Čo z toho si zaslúži vašu pozornosť? Pustite si nový diel .týždňa vo filme.

Radio BOLD News Daily
Catskills News Daily - Tuesday. 12/2/25

Radio BOLD News Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2025 3:00


A winter storm warning is in effect with the possibility of several inches of snow coming our way… JIMA man from Poughkeepsie has been indicted on attempted murder charges.The Sullivan County Manager says since there are so many budget cuts or added spending happening in Washington impacting state finances, county governments need to watch closely. The State Comptroller says they're still running into issues getting people with disabilities hired across the state.The Holden Dam in Newburgh is coming down. 

Radio Paranormalium - archiwum
Najlepsze z Paranormalium: Zagadkowe zniknięcie Jima Thompsona

Radio Paranormalium - archiwum

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2025


Zniknięcie Jima Thompsona, amerykańskiego przedsiębiorcy i architekta, to jedna z najbardziej intrygujących tajemnic Malezji. Po zniknięciu w 1967 roku podczas spaceru po malowniczej wyżynie Cameron, Thompson stał się tematem licznych spekulacji i teorii. Mimo ogromnej akcji poszukiwawczej, w której uczestniczyło setki osób, jego los pozostał nieznany. Z okazji czterdziestej rocznicy zaginięcia, temat ten zyskał nowe zainteresowanie, a analizy wydarzeń podjęli się m.in. znany dziennikarz William Warren. Co tak naprawdę wydarzyło się tamtego feralnego dnia?

SHUT UP & SKATE
EPISODE 76: KEN GOTO

SHUT UP & SKATE

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2025 82:06


EPISODE 76: KEN GOTOBrought to you by Magical Mosh Misfitsスケートについて言いたい放題のトークショー“SHUT UP & SKATE”。今回のゲストは、Thrasherの表紙を飾ったことでも知られる写真家のケン・ゴトウ。'90年代後期に単身サンフランシスコへ渡り、スケート写真の最前線で活躍するまでの軌跡を深掘り。JIMA(@jimabien)MxMxM SBのチーマネ兼S&Sの司会進行。GOTO(@datgoto)埼玉出身SF在住のフォトグラファー。Sound design by Stone'd(@stonedisd)※収録内容はあくまでもパーソナリティの記憶に拠るもので、事実を保証するものではありません。出演者の発言についてのお問い合わせは本人までお願いします。聞き苦しい箇所、間違いや未確認情報など多々ありますので予めご了承ください m(_ _)mhttps://www.vhsmag.com/shut-up-skate/episode-76/

Al'adun Gargajiya
Yadda al'adar bikin cika ciki ta jima tana cin kasuwa a ƙasar Hausa

Al'adun Gargajiya

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2025 10:18


Shirin na wannan mako ya yi duba ne kan al'adar nan da ta jima tana cin kasuwa a ƙasar Hausa, wato Sallar cika ciki da ake gudanarwa bayan Sallar layya. Tsawon shekaru da wannan al'adar ta dore,ake kuma ci gaba da gudanar da ita a wurare da dama. Al'ummar Hausa da dama a birane da karkara a duk ranakun tara da goma ga watan farko na shekarar musulunci  wato Muharram, sukan gudanar da azumin da kuma raya al'adar nan mai suna cika ciki wato dai sai kaci ka koshi kuma abinci mai dadi, wasu kan amfani da iya abinda suke da shi, yayinda wasu suke karawa da hidindimu. Wani abin lura shine, yadda a yankunan karkara, idan wannan lokaci ya ƙarato, jama'a musaman mata na dukufa ne ɓangaren girki, inda a wajen gida yara matasa kan ɗora sanwa wasu lokutan su kan yi amfani da haka wajen raya al'adar nan da aka sani da  aci a cika ciki sannnan ga nishaɗi.  Shiga alamar sauti, domin sauraron cikakken shirin.

SHUT UP & SKATE
EPISODE 75: 中野サンプラザ

SHUT UP & SKATE

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 30, 2025 102:20


EPISODE 75: 中野サンプラザBrought to you by Magical Mosh Misfitsスケートについて言いたい放題のトークショー“SHUT UP & SKATE”。今回は、中野サンプラザ(通称サンプラ)のスケート黎明期について。アド街ックスケート天国への裏ガイド。JIMA(@jimabien)MxMxM SBのチーマネ兼S&Sの司会進行。WATASHI(@fesboy)元サンプラクルーで現在は磨き隊の隊長。KE(@vhsmag)元サンプラクルーで現在は自称アンバサダー。Sound design by Stone'd(@stonedisd)※収録内容はあくまでもパーソナリティの記憶に拠るもので、事実を保証するものではありません。出演者の発言についてのお問い合わせは本人までお願いします。聞き苦しい箇所、間違いや未確認情報など多々ありますので予めご了承ください m(_ _)mhttps://www.vhsmag.com/shut-up-skate/episode-75/

Podcast motoryzacyjny Overdrive
Podcast motoryzacyjny Overdrive | Odcinek 223 | Chiński tydzień II

Podcast motoryzacyjny Overdrive

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2025 31:23


W dwieście dwudziestym trzecim odcinku Podcastu motoryzacyjnego Overdrive, ponownie rozmawiamy o wielkiej ofensywie Chińczyków. Dzisiaj na tapecie: MG EHS PHEV, czyli jak to robią Chińczycy, elektryczne auta Xpeng i pożegnanie pewnego Jima, który też z Chinami miał coś wspólnego. Posłuchajcie!Zapraszamy także na naszą stronę ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://overdrive.pl⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ oraz na ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠nasz kanał na YouTube⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.youtube.com/@overdrive_com_pl⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Gdybyście chcieli postawić nam przysłowiową kawę, to możecie to zrobić ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠tutaj⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://buycoffee.to/overdrive⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ a jeśli podoba Wam się to, co robimy i chcielibyście nas wspierać systematycznie małymi kwotami, to możecie także ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠zostać naszym Patronem na Patronite⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://patronite.pl/overdrive⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Z góry dziękujemy! :-)

Kentucky Edition
February 21, 2025 - Bill Ending Telework for State Government Workers Advances

Kentucky Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 27:30


Thousands of state government workers would have to return to the office under legislation up for consideration, school districts could soon have more flexibility for making up missed days, a Kentucky State Park continues to house dozens of families displaced by flooding, state lawmakers reflect on Sen. McConnell's achievements, and exploring Kentucky connections to the raising of the American flag on Iwo Jima. 

SHUT UP & SKATE
SHUT UP & SKATE - EPISODE 69: BEST OF 2024

SHUT UP & SKATE

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2024 123:14


EPISODE 69: BEST OF 2024 Brought to you by Magical Mosh Misfits スケートについての言いたい放題のトークショー“SHUT UP & SKATE”。 今回のゲストは変態フィルマー石井ちゃんとドットコネクターのMr. KE。 日本人のベストスケーターやベストパートなどを独断と偏見で決める会。 題して“日本スケビアカデミー2024”。 JIMA(@jimabien) MxMxM SkateboardsのTM 石井ヒデキ(@hideki0823) The Stump Boysのフィルマー KE(@vhsmag) スケートボード原理主義者 Sound design by Stone'd(@stonedisd) ※収録内容はあくまでもパーソナリティの記憶に拠るもので、事実を保証するものではありません。出演者の発言についてのお問い合わせは本人までお願いします。聞き苦しい箇所、間違いや未確認情報など多々ありますので予めご了承ください m(_ _)m https://www.vhsmag.com/shut-up-skate/episode-69/

Sin Maquillaje, Altagracia Salazar
Echando el pleito por el arroz dominicano

Sin Maquillaje, Altagracia Salazar

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2024 29:24


No se había secado la tinta del decreto con el que el gobierno dominicano pretende proteger la producción local de arroz, cuando grupos de comerciantes hicieron circular un documento advirtiendo de las penas  y sanciones que podía afectar el país por esa decisión. Yo supongo que el gobierno de Abinader consultó ampliamente las fuentes de derecho antes de tomar la decisión que es técnicamente una salvaguarda. Ya dijo Carlos Marx hace más de cien años que el comercio era lo más atrasado de una sociedad capitalista. Contrario al industrial que transforma una materia prima o al agricultor que siembra una semilla y la convierte en fruto, el comerciante compra a 10 y vende a 12 y si es en RD compra a 10 y vende a 20. No genera desarrollo y solo riqueza individual. Para quienes andan dando clases de derecho comercial internacional hay que decir unos cuantos datos. El Consumo local de arroz es de unos 15.7 millones de quintales y la producción nacional es casi la misma. Dependiendo de factores climáticos un millón más o un millón menos. 14 provincias producen arroz. Duarte es la mayor productora con casi 400 mil quintales seguidos de Montecristi, La Vega, Sanchez Ramírez, María Trinidad Sánchez y Valverde. Si quieren saber por municipio el mayor productor de arroz es Jima en La Vega. El arroz es uno de los grandes distribuidores de riqueza y es por eso que los municipios con mayor producción son los menos pobres en el país. Es una producción que requiere de mano de obra especializada y a pesar de que la alta mecanización que el país exhibe sigue siendo una gran fuente de empleo, insisto en la región más próspera del país. En un régimen de libre empresa, ganar dinero es un derecho. Ahora bien pretender que en aras del beneficio personal se sacrifique a miles de familias que viven de la producción local, a empresas importantes que son grandes empleadores y a comunidades que viven exclusivamente de la producción arrocera es casi un atentado contra sus economías y medios de vida. Hay una generación de dominicanos y dominicanas que no saben que en una época producimos todas las grasas comestibles que consumimos y que eso se lo llevó un programa llamado PL 480. Ojalá que la campaña que ya inició no se lleve la producción nacional de arroz.

SHUT UP & SKATE
SHUT UP & SKATE - EPISODE 68: スケートボードと美術

SHUT UP & SKATE

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 73:29


EPISODE 68: スケートボードと美術 Brought to you by Magical Mosh Misfits スケートについての言いたい放題のトークショー“SHUT UP & SKATE”。 今回のゲストは現代美術家・文身師の野坂稔和とグラフィックデザイナーの堀内俊哉。 代官山で開催された移動型アートショー#weeeelsの会場、Gallery Kichiから公開収録でお届け。 JIMA(@jimabien) MxMxM Skateboardsのチーマネ/MC 野坂稔和(@toshikazu1) 野坂稔和美術研究所主宰 堀内俊哉(@toshiya_horiuchi) 7STARS DESIGNファウンダー Sound design by Stone'd(@stonedisd) ※収録内容はあくまでもパーソナリティの記憶に拠るもので、事実を保証するものではありません。出演者の発言についてのお問い合わせは本人までお願いします。聞き苦しい箇所、間違いや未確認情報など多々ありますので予めご了承ください m(_ _)m https://www.vhsmag.com/shut-up-skate/episode-68/

SHUT UP & SKATE
SHUT UP & SKATE - EPISODE 67: 草木ひなの

SHUT UP & SKATE

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2024 98:32


EPISODE 67: 草木ひなの Brought to you by Magical Mosh Misfits スケートについての言いたい放題のトークショー“SHUT UP & SKATE”。 今回のゲストはパリ五輪スケートボード女子パーク日本代表の草木ひなの。 コーチである冨川蒼太とローカルパークAxisの仲間たちも友情出演。 JIMA(@jimabien) MxMxM Skateboardsのチーマネ/MC 草木ひなの(@hinano_kusaki) ニックネームは鬼姫。現在彼氏募集中!? 冨川蒼太(@sota_tomikawa) Fiends日本代表。趣味は車の改造 田中憲治(@underdogdistribution) 輸入代理店Underdog Distribution代表 Sound design by Stone'd(@stonedisd) ※収録内容はあくまでもパーソナリティの記憶に拠るもので、事実を保証するものではありません。出演者の発言についてのお問い合わせは本人までお願いします。聞き苦しい箇所、間違いや未確認情報など多々ありますので予めご了承ください m(_ _)m https://www.vhsmag.com/shut-up-skate/episode-67/

SBS Bosnian - SBS na bosanskom jeziku
Interventna pomoć Vijeća bosanske zajednice NJW postradalim područjima u Bosni i Hercegovini

SBS Bosnian - SBS na bosanskom jeziku

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2024 18:01


4. oktobra katastrofalne poplave pogodile su Hercegovačko-neretvanski i Srednjobosanski kanton. Brojni ljudi ostali su bez krova nad glavom, a veliki broj naselja i dalje je odsječen jer su oštećeni i odneseni putevi. Ipak, najstrašniji bilans ove nesreće je 25 smrtno stradalih osoba. Od tada su oči bosanskohercegovačke javnosti, i u zemlji, i inostranstvu, uprte na postradala područja, a svakodnevno svjedočimo brojnim akcijama pomoći koje pokreću organizacije, pojedinci i udruženja. I ovdje u Australiji, Bosanci i Hercegovci u mnogim udruženjima zdušno traže nacčne da pomognu pogođenima katastrofom, a tim povodom nedavno se oglasilo Vijece BH zajednice NJW iz Sydneya, koje je pokrenulo akciju prikupljanja interventne pomoći za postradale u katasrofalnim poplavama u BiH. O akciji Udruđenja i budućim inicijativama govori Safet Alispahić, predsjednik.BCC-a NJW.

od bcc pomo bosni bih ipak jima hercegovini udru australiji njw vije sydneya
Trauma Queen
Emergency Session: the sky is falling

Trauma Queen

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2024 4:55


This has been a wild week. In this emergency session, Jima has a bit of a share and a check-in for folks. If you are feeling connected or whatever, please comment. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/traumaqueen/support

SHUT UP & SKATE
SHUT UP & SKATE - EPISODE 63: KNTHW

SHUT UP & SKATE

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2024 77:09


EPISODE 63: KNTHW Brought to you by Magical Mosh Misfits スケートについての言いたい放題のトークショー“SHUT UP & SKATE”。 今回はKNTHWのライダー2名とフィルマーがゲスト出演。 謎のビスブランドの全貌に迫る。 JIMA(@jimabien) MxMxM Skateboards TM/名MC。 KENTO YOSHIOKA(@japanese_super_rat) KNTHWの主宰者にしてEvisenのプロ。 YUDAI HOSHINO(@yufuckingdie) 青梅の特攻野郎。最近はDJ活動も。 MASANAO TAKEUCHI(@8ml_tokyo) KNTHWの撮影&編集を担当。 Sound design by Stone'd(@stonedisd) ※収録内容はあくまでもパーソナリティの記憶に拠るもので、事実を保証するものではありません。出演者の発言についてのお問い合わせは本人までお願いします。聞き苦しい箇所、間違いや未確認情報など多々ありますので予めご了承ください m(_ _)m https://www.vhsmag.com/shut-up-skate/episode-63/

Black Women in Science Podcast
34. Finding Love as a Black Person with Michelle Jima (co-founder of MM Dating)

Black Women in Science Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2024 52:00


Michelle Jima is the CMO and co-founder of MM Dating, which is a dating and events tech app for Black people. Their mission is to build lasting relationships and connections within the Black community to foster a sense of togetherness. We talk about what dating is like in the UK and how other dating apps often lack specific insight into cultural nuances and experiences of the African and Caribbean community, such as tribes, language and even Sickle Cell Anaemia. Michelle explains the differences between online dating, having a personal matchmaker and real-life events. She gives her perspective on how technology affects our perception of choice and how our impatient society affects our ability to be patient and give people a chance to redeem themselves from awkward messages.  Host: Tulela Pea, from ⁠⁠Black Women Science Network⁠⁠  Download the MM Dating App here: Android iOS Website (for their events) More information:    Check out our ⁠⁠⁠website⁠⁠⁠.   Follow us on social media @bwisnetwork   We want to hear your feedback! Fill out this ⁠⁠form⁠⁠.   Check us out on this list for Top Women in Science Podcasts on Feedspot - ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://blog.feedspot.com/women_in_science_podcasts/⁠⁠

Unreached of the Day
Pray for the Jima Oromo in Ethiopia

Unreached of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2024 1:07


Episode Description Episode Description Sign up to receive this Unreached of the Day podcast sent to you:  https://unreachedoftheday.org/resources/podcast/ People Group Summary: https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups//19653/ET #PrayforZERO is a podcast Sponsor.         https://prayforzero.com/ Take your place in history! We could be the generation to translate God's Word into every language. YOUR prayers can make this happen.  Take your first step and sign the Prayer Wall to receive the weekly Pray For Zero Journal:  https://prayforzero.com/prayer-wall/#join Pray for the largest Frontier People Groups (FPG): Visit JoshuaProject.net/frontier#podcast provides links to podcast recordings of the prayer guide for the 31 largest FPGs.  Go31.org/FREE provides the printed prayer guide for the largest 31 FPGs along with resources to support those wanting to enlist others in prayer for FPGs

SHUT UP & SKATE
SHUT UP & SKATE - EPISODE 61: アレックス・リー・チャン

SHUT UP & SKATE

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2024 124:52


EPISODE 61: アレックス・リー・チャン Brought to you by Magical Mosh Misfits スケートについての言いたい放題のトークショー“SHUT UP & SKATE”。 今回のゲストは、'90年代から洗練されたスタイルとトリックセレクションで時代を牽引したアレックス・リー・チャン。 JIMA(@jimabien) MxMxM Skateboards TM/名MC。 ALEX LEE CHANG(@alexanderleechang_official) SF生まれ東京育ちの独創派。 NEWプロジェクトLeeMake: https://alc.theshop.jp/categories/5763946 Sound design by Stone'd(@stonedisd) ※収録内容はあくまでもパーソナリティの記憶に拠るもので、事実を保証するものではありません。出演者の発言についてのお問い合わせは本人までお願いします。聞き苦しい箇所、間違いや未確認情報など多々ありますので予めご了承ください m(_ _)m https://www.vhsmag.com/shut-up-skate/episode-60/

SHUT UP & SKATE
SHUT UP & SKATE - EPISODE 60: 冨川蒼太

SHUT UP & SKATE

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2024 133:38


EPISODE 60: 冨川蒼太 Brought to you by Magical Mosh Misfits スケートについての言いたい放題のトークショー“SHUT UP & SKATE”。 今回のゲストは、昨年Creatureよりパートを公開した冨川蒼太と、早くから蒼太の才能を見出した田中憲治をフィーチャー。 JIMA(@jimabien) MCで引っ張りだこのMxMxM Skateboardsのチーマネ。 SOTA TOMIKAWA(@sota_tomikawa) 北の大地が育んだトランジションマスター。只今骨折中。 KENJI TANAKA(@underdogdistribution) Blood Wizardなどを取り扱う輸入代理店Underdog代表。 Sound design by Stone'd(@stonedisd) ※収録内容はあくまでもパーソナリティの記憶に拠るもので、事実を保証するものではありません。出演者の発言についてのお問い合わせは本人までお願いします。聞き苦しい箇所、間違いや未確認情報など多々ありますので予めご了承ください m(_ _)m https://www.vhsmag.com/shut-up-skate/episode-60/

F-14 Tomcat ATG Radio show/Podcast
Tomcat University Ep 8 NAF Atsugi/Iwo Jima

F-14 Tomcat ATG Radio show/Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2024 93:29


We welcome Lcdr John CHIMPO O'Neill E-2D Hawkeye CAG5 PADDLES & CDR Tom JEETER Bush F-14 Tomcat VF-84,VF-32 & F/A-18 Hornet VFA-27.They discuss being forward deployed at NAF Atsugi and also CQ's on IWO JIMA..HOST: SMOKIN" Joe Ruzicka VF-154 Black Knights, F-14 Tomcat DEMO Team, Lt Pat SMOKHOUSE Casey VF-102 Diamdbacks & USS America Rob Todd CAT 3..Produced by F-14 Calverton ATG.Editor: Lorenzo Bencini

Franck Ferrand raconte...
Le drapeau d'Iwo Jima: histoire d'une photographie de guerre

Franck Ferrand raconte...

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2024 23:08


A l'occasion de l'exposition du Musée de l'Armée Photographies en guerre, retour sur l'histoire controversée d'un des plus célèbres clichés de la Seconde Guerre mondiale : celui du drapeau d'Iwo Jima. Mention légales : Vos données de connexion, dont votre adresse IP, sont traités par Radio Classique, responsable de traitement, sur la base de son intérêt légitime, par l'intermédiaire de son sous-traitant Ausha, à des fins de réalisation de statistiques agréées et de lutte contre la fraude. Ces données sont supprimées en temps réel pour la finalité statistique et sous cinq mois à compter de la collecte à des fins de lutte contre la fraude. Pour plus d'informations sur les traitements réalisés par Radio Classique et exercer vos droits, consultez notre Politique de confidentialité.

Bloomberg Surveillance
Bloomberg Surveillance: A 'Golden Buying Opportunity'

Bloomberg Surveillance

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2024 36:44 Transcription Available


Torsten Slok, Apollo Global Management Chief Economist, says the Fed's easing of financial conditions could pose risks to the US economy. Cameron Dawson, NewEdge Wealth Chief Investment Officer, suggests that a potential repricing of rates would be a pain trade. Dan Ives, Wedbush Sr. Equity Research Analyst, says Apple's growth potential makes the stock a 'golden buying opportunity.' Gerard Cassidy, RBC Capital Markets Large Cap Bank Analyst, advises incorporating bank stocks into investor portfolios and believes we'll see further consolidation in the industry. Norman Roule, Center for Strategic & International Studies Senior Adviser, discusses the latest in the Middle East after a senior Hamas official was killed in Beirut. Get the Bloomberg Surveillance newsletter, delivered every weekday. Sign up now: https://www.bloomberg.com/account/newsletters/surveillance  Full Transcript: This is the Bloomberg Surveillance Podcast. I'm Tom Keane, along with Jonathan Farrow and Lisa Abramowitz. Join us each day for insight from the best and economics, geopolitics, finance and investment. Subscribe to Bloomberg Surveillance on demand on Apple, Spotify and anywhere you get your podcasts, and always on Bloomberg dot Com, the Bloomberg Terminal, and the Bloomberg Business app. Right now, our conversation of the day. Synthesizing all this together. Torson Stock is chief economist at Apollo Global Management. Torson I'm going to pull in here a whole bunch of threads. The Bloomberg Financial Conditions Index is showing massive accommodation, and yet I look at the old liboard, the news, Sofa, sofr and I'm seeing huge restriction within the short term paper market tensions on Wall Street and the ill liquidity on Wall Street. How urgent is it for the FED to make some direction on a March cut or dare I even say a January first cut? Well, it has a number of different dimensions. First, there is a dimension on the real economy. It's clear that the FED pivot has eased financial conditions dramatically, and this begins to run the risk that we might see a repeat of what happened at the citycon Valley Bank. Remember Chris Waller just said a few weeks ago the easing of financial conditions in Q two that boost the GDP growth to five percent in Q three. Could we see the same now where the easing of financial conditions after the fat pivot might actually be boosting the housing market, the label market, services inflation, goods inflation. We are not out of the woods when it comes to battling inflation. So on the real economy, absolutely, the easing of financial conditions is very supportive. There are some issues when it comes to the plumbing when the tightness as you're highlighting in very short term markets, and the FED for sure has to play this difficult talk of wall between do we want to ease financial condition on the rial side or how much can we ease financial conditions in the very front end of the curve. But this is the challenge for the FED. At the moment that you're highlighting, Torsten, you didn't listen. They didn't respond to the idea of financial conditions. They didn't seem to think it mattered at all at the last press conference. Why should it matter now? I mean we're going to actually hear them come back and say, actually, just kidding about that financial conditions question. Well, they were debating in October and September, well maybe financial conditions have done a lot of the work for us, and now they're saying, well, maybe financial conditions it doesn't really matter because it can fluctuate so much. So I still think that it's a little bit inconsistent what they're saying when that data dependency, it only talks about the real data, whereas the financial conditions impulse. If you take the easy and financial conditions that we've had since the fit pivot and stuff it into furpose the fed's model of the US economy, you will get a boom of up to one and a half percent growth over the next slevel quarters in GDP. It's going to be very supportive as a tailwind to the economic outlook. Although we did have Ganadi on earlier of TD securities, and he said even with this idea that inflation could remain stickier, that we could get this ongoing growth, the FED could still cut rates and still be restrictive. Given the positive real rate. Do you ascribe to that kind of thing or do you think that just means many fewer rate cuts going forward for the Fed. I think that's absolutely right that we have. Of course, for the better part of the last year, we have talked about higher for longer. Now the conversation is more restrictive for longer, because they can still be restrictive if inflation is coming down, because real interest rates is what matters. So if real interest rates are still positive as inflation comes down, the fact and according you also gradually begin to lower rates. But note also that if you look at the outlook for sofa futures, as also Tom was mentioning, you still have that the bottom will still be around three and a half four percent. So one very important conclusion for as an allocation is that we are not going back to zero. We have still higher for longer, in the sense that the level of interest rates, the level of the free rate on page one in your finance textbook, will be significantly higher for the next several years than where it was from the period from twosand and eight to twenty twenty two. Let's try and get to the half of what we're discussing. Care the interest rates sensitivity of the US economy exactly. And now what we've seen over the last two years is rates go up aggressively and not slow down the economy. And what you're suggesting is that as rates start to come in and financial conditions ease, that the economy picks up again. Can you help explain that to people why higher rates haven't slowed the economy down but easy find financial conditions will boost it. Ye. But what's very important in that debate, and that's also taking place on Twitter and X of course here at the moment, is that my lift very critically sophisticate. Important to remember that that is significantly a function of whether you talk about the interest rate sensitive components of GDP or the non interest rate sensitive components of GDP. If you split GDP into the cyclical components and the non signal components, the main component that is sensitive to interest rates is housing. And housing did respond dramatically to higher rates. So this whole idea that the economy didn't respond to higher rates, that's just completely wrong. Of course, the economy responded to rates. It was the interest rate sensitive parts that responded to rates going up. Housing started slowing down. But the non interest rate sensitive components, in this case travel, restaurants, hotels. After COVID had such a long tailwind that that more than dominate the slow down in the housing market. So splitting that debate away from the academic textbook, which we all love, is so important because it becomes so critical to think about did the parts of the economy that are sensitive to interest rates did they actually respond? And absolutely, in particular housing Kapix also of COMMERCIALI state things that are sensus of two interest rates they did absolutely respond to when interest rates window. This is a fantastic explanation. So let's build on it. Let's project this out. What are the forecasts now for you for GDP in the next couple of quarters. We heard from the likes of Max Kanner of HSBC who said, the biggest risk right now is that we have to reprice rates again higher because exactly of what you're talking about, what are you looking for in the data? Well, if I type ECFCG on my Bloomberg screen, I will see that over the next six months we are very close to zero, zero point four and zero point five on GDP for Q one and Q two. So the consensus answer to your question is GP growth is continuously slowing as a result of the fat's campaign of hiking rates. The new risk that has emerged is that because of the fit pivot, that means that the interest rates sensitive components that we're dragging down GDP for the better part of last year, they might now begin to rebound. Housing most importantly, case SHILLA is now up five percent. Case SHILLA is a very important leading indicator for the OEI, meaning the shelter components of the CPI, and shelter makes up forty percent of the index, So that means that if something that makes up forty percent of the index is about to rebound, we could come back to that discussion about maybe the rates markets we'll have to reprise to higher for long gun and more restrictive for longer. I just looked at the two year inflation adjusted yield. I haven't looked at it since time began Nixon was president, and I can use the word never over twenty years, the integran, or the duration of a high two year real rate, we've never seen. We had a spike in eight with a great financial crisis, but these sustained high two year real yields are absolutely unprecedented for global Wall Street. How unstable are we right now? I would say, at least from a fet perspective. If you just take the economic textbook out and think about what matters, it is absolutely as you're highlighting real rates, So real rates being at these levels would tell you that we're still in very restrictive territory. So the challenge here for the FIT is that they still want to have the soft landing, and we all want to have the soft landing. That will be the best outcome, of course, from so many dimensions. But what is beginning to matter is that they have now sucked so much liquidity out. We've gotten to a point where we are beginning to see some strains in the plumbing that you're highlighting. And that's why real rates it has a very significant different impact on the long end and what it means for the real economy relative to what high real rates means for the front end and what it means for financial markets as host. And this has been an absolute Cameron Dawson joins US now chief investment Officer at New Edge Wealth Camic and morning and happy New year, Good morning, Happy nowear are you sitting on the fence because I'm written this first line in your work. It says we could have a scenario where both bulls and hairs are right this year, which one is it? Well, I think that we have to be nimble because I believe that there is going to be a scenario where you could very easily see people get drawn even further into this market. We think positioning is overweight, but not quite as is extreme as it was in times like twenty twenty one or twenty eighteen. So you could see some pain get pulled in. But the other reality is that you could see a rationalization of the fact that sentiment is very extended and that valuations are extended. So it's how you react to market rallies or market corrections, I think is how you will win. In twenty twenty four we mentioned that HSBC. So let's talk about the work coming from Max Kentna this morning. Here's this line, biggest risk another repricing and rights. Do you agree with that one hundred percent? That's the pain trade. The pain trade is that everybody thinks that inflation is fully vanquished and then gets surprised if things like oil prices move higher. Wages end up being stickier than expected rates move higher, and then all of those stocks that rerated in the last two months up thirty forty percent because now they're not worried about their balance sheets anymore. Balance sheet risk becomes an issue again, and you get a reversion of a lot of the names that were lower quality that happened to lead at the end of last year. The modeled out earnings are nine percent ten percent. Dare I say double digit eleven percent earnings growth for this year? Is that in the price now or is that going to develop out in the first half of next year. It is in the price now, and I think that we always have to think about the path of twenty four will be pricing in what actually happens in twenty twenty five. So if a recession looks more likely in twenty twenty five, that's when you'll start to see those earning estements get cut into the out years. The thing that's the biggest challenge for us for earning estments in twenty four is the expectation that top line growth will re accelerate in a year where nominal growth because of inflation is expected to decelerate. Can you see that happen at the same time where we get less inflation, less pricing power, and yet we get a big acceleration in top So away for the romance of Apple and Microsoft. If you look at Staples and discretionary and all, you've got to model out there, what you go back from a six percent wonderment of growth back to four percent revenue growth? Yeah, very likely. And there are idiots and pockets where you're going to see improvement. You know, healthcare had its earnings down almost twenty percent last year, that will flip positive this year just because of easy comps. So that's where we're trying to look outside of just the macro drivers, Staples being a great example of one that can't get away from this inflationary dynamic, and look instead to the more idiotsyncratic opportunities our banks to douse syncratic opportunities. And I ask with JP Morgan at new record high, Yeah, I mean you've seen such a huge rerating. Of course, there's pockets of banks where there is still inexpensive areas. You know, banks do have the tailwind of a less inverted curve, hopefully a reopening of capital markets. But then we have to consider things like BTFP, does it get re extended Basil three in game, all of these things that could be big drivers of bank earnings or at least appetite for bank risk as we go through twenty twenty four. It sounds like you're not buying the rotation story. I am buying the rotation story. Yeah. I think that we have to have an open mind that even great companies with great balance sheets, with monopolies could still underperform simply because positioning is so crowded and because valuations are so elevated. That's the smartest insight I've heard in the last forty eight hours. Are we going to have rotation or not? That's a really, really undersaid cool question. I think that that was really some of the anks behind the sell off that we've seen that was living, that was really led by big tech. We were talking about this yesterday with Apple, and I guess that you know, how much does that have legs versus what we saw last year, which was a headfake and everyone came in saying, all right, this is the year to sell tech, and by the end of the year of them was saying in Nvidia Magnificent seven, it's going to change the world. Kumba Yah it's going to save the United States, I mean, et cetera, et cetera. And what a different setup because at the very end of twenty twenty two you had record outflows from tech ETFs. You look at the course of twenty twenty three, you had forty billion dollars of inflows into technology compared to twenty billion dollars of outflows out of things like energy and financials and healthcare. So really this could just be about positioning and pain trades and the fact that you already re rated tech because now it's already just one turn away from its twenty twenty one peak valuation, so you're hitting a ceiling. Let's put a couple of stories together. You said, maybe the biggest paying trait the risk here is high, right, so reprice give rights again at Lisa brought up banks. How woud the banks respond to that given what we saw last year? Yeah, I mean it would raise balance sheet risk again. It probably puts into sharp focus again issues with commercial real estate because we've all kind of breathed this collective sigh of relief that higher for longer is dead if it's not dead, and the path of the cost of capital instead of the last forty years of being down is actually marching slightly higher and in a choppy path. Could mean that we have to reprice some of the risk in some of these balance sheets. Is it just JP Morgan then everyone else? When we talk about the banks, is that what we're talking about? JP Morgan then everybody else? We actually just are looking very deeply at some of the regional banks. Some of the regional banks are underpriced. We think if we look at the balance sheets, they're not as extended as or as issued as some parts of regional banks that some don't have as much commercial real estate exposure, have great presence in their local areas, so they're trading at very discounted valuations. If we're going down in value, that's one of the areas we're actually looking. Yeah, it's somebody at you know, the last five six, seven days at JP Morgan's capturing one out of five profit dollars in American banking. If that isn't the third or fourth or fifth national bank of the United States, I don't know what is. There is nothing else. It's JP Morgan versus everyone else. That's been a story the last year. I'll refer to our guests done this. But yeah, I mean they're capturing some twenty percent of profits according to the source. I'm sorry you don't have a source in front of me to side. I think it's it's the it's the Bramow newsletter. You know that newsletters. It's a muster r. It's a muster reader. Camic. Thank you got to leave this. It's going to catch up. It's going to say a happy new Year, Cameron Dawson, the new h wel let's get right to it. This is so important right now. Dan Ives joins us. He is a bull on any number of technology companies. We wait for him to come out on controlled data here and with a birecommendation at some point. That's a little bit of history there. Dan Ives with webbush Dan, what's a channel check? What exactly is a channel check? I just I just don't see it. Yeah, and look for us in terms of our easier supply gene checks, really trying to focus on what demand looks like in terms of the suppliers for iPhones. There have been no cuts from an iPhone perspective as of data, and I think that's that's bullets and ultimately that shows demand through howadays season has actually been on part, actually better than expected. And to me, that's what I focus on rather than the haters continue, Okay, but data tell Okay, you've been gracious about this, and they've been gracious about your twenty twenty three ganormous success. But when you do a channel check, are you counting iPhones? Are you over in China guessing the manufacturing line? Are you in the store on Madison Avenue looking at how many people from Lisa's family are buy an Apple loot? What's a channel check? Yeah? All above time. I mean, we feel we're in Apple stores around the country, around the world. We're also talking to suppliers basically trying to triangulate to what we think units is going to look like for the quarter and for the year. And that's how we've done it from the beginning, I mean, over the last decades so. And it's one of you're always gonna have different opinions. You just talk about the Barclays downgrade. We continue to stick with our checks. That that has navigated us, you know, a lot more right than wrong. I think when you look at I from fifty, it's easy to take shots, you know, relative to maybe some of the fears out there, especially fire and a crowd theater first day at the trading you know a year I it's a groundhog day. You know, we saw it last year as well. It's underestimated. Two hundred and fifty million. Is the install based upgrade cycle that's due in that window has an upgrade in four years, Dan, let's get into it. You mentioned Barkleys, Tom mentioned it too. I mentioned this, so let's get to that line. The continued period of weak results coupled with multiple expansion not sustainable in that it is a statement of fact, and then there's an opinion of the end. The statement of fact is iPhone cuts. They haven't been great for the last twelve months. That's the fact. Yet it's been coupled with multiple expansion, also a fact. The opinion piece is they're saying it's not sustainable. Are you suggesting that it is? Yeah, So what I'm suggesting is that the next three to four quarters you're going to have iPhone growth. You have growth coming out in China despite the fears and abs are the bare noise, and I think the most important thing is services, and I think services is going to be teenager type of growth. That's key to the multiples Manson story. And then we go into later this year, there's gonna be more monization from an AI as we talked about. That's gonna be the next layer. I think it all results and this is gonna be viewed as more of a golden buying opportunity rather than the start to hit the elevator exit. How much Dan, is your bullish call predicated on this idea of rate cuts, the idea of rates coming down as much as people think, yeah, look, that's probably five ten percent from multiple perspective. I mean, as we saw twenty two to the disaster twenty three in terms of now popcorn movement, in terms of FED gonna cut in twenty four. Look, it speaks to our overall bull tech thesis, right that the soft landing Killsberry do a boys soft landing. You're starting to see now more and more focus on tech. I do think now. You know, as Pharaoh's talked about multiple expansion twenty three, I think the numbers show it in twenty four. That's the difference. Twenty four is where the numbers come through, and tech twenty three was more than multiple expansion. Well, you mentioned China and how China demand is going to pick back up, But I wonder if it's going to be for iPhones. And I know we've been talking about this for a long time, but yesterday this caught my attention. The Chinese automaker BYD surpassed Tesla in terms of deliveries for the first time. You're seeing that really start to be a main theme. People said that that was never going to happen. People say that it's never going to happen, that Chinese consumers are going to throw out their iPhones. What makes you so confident that we're not going to see the same thing happen in the iPhone cycle that we're seeing right now in the electric vehicle one? Yeah, great question. And look, when you focus on Tesla, I mean that's essentially two horse race between TESTSA and BID. Tests actually beat numbers and China was strong for them. But I think it does speak to look domestically BID they're beast. I mean, they've done a phenomenal job, but Tessa is always going to be aware there in China. When you look at what's happening within the China market from an idphone perspective, it speaks to just a massive and all bays that they built in China. You have one hundred million iPhones in China right now, window of an upgrade opportunity, and the irony is despite geopolitical the last eighteen months, Apples gained three inch books of market share because the average high end, as in middle income Chinese consumer, they want an iPhone despite government basically trying to push WAWE. And I'm so pleased to Lisa brought up the EV comparison because I think that industry right now has the potential to be the industry story of twenty twenty four and beyond byd beyond Tesla. How much of a reality check are we getting for the industry for the likes of GM and Ford, I think a big reality shacka. That's why you've seen Farley. I think Mary they pull back, you know, in terms of a bit from the EV strategy in Detroit. And the problem here is do consumers want EV or they just want to tessel And I think that that's really the issue that's really starting to play out. And at this point, Tesla's doubling down on evs, but no doubt there's been I think much more moderate demand that we're seeing across the board, and you know, I think as that puts out, you're going to see others peel back while others go more aggressively, like the likes of the Tesla. I wonder what you think the endgame actually is. If you speak to the leadership at GM of thought, they've been generous with that time we've had this conversation with them. They talk about a change in execution, maybe not a change in strategy. Would you expect to see a change in strategy this year and what would that look like? I think slight changing strategy where maybe they pull back on some of their long term numbers in terms of EV when they expect to go fully EV you know, as a two thousand and thirty four thirty five. Look, the UAW also put their back against the wall. It's a different cost structure and they're trying right now to it's a tight balancing act that they're trying to get to in Detroit. And I think also it's tough going up against the likes of Tesla and some of these other evs. That's been a big part of the problem that they're focused on, especially now with the UAW. Increase in the cost structure, well said Dan. Going to hear from your happy new year, Sir Dan is Wetbush. Jere Cassidy, Large Camp Bank analyst that RBC Capital markets rights in this. After a tumultuous twenty twenty three, we believe the banks are our positioned for investors to warn outsize returns in twenty twenty four and investors should overweight the sector in their portfolios. Jer Cassidy, I'm pleased to say join us. Now let's go straight to it. Number one question. This is a question for me, and I know it's a question for Lisa. Is this off the back of high yields or lower yields? I would say John that we're expecting that the yields gravitate lower, especially at the front end of the curve when you take a look at what the Fed has done. If we truly are at the terminal rate for FED funds in the past four tightening cycles when they started to cut rates, it's always been a catalyst for bank stocks. And think what we're expecting as the market is that at some point in twenty four the Fed could cut your term interest rates. Is this for bank stops or is this for JP Morgan at least a very good question, because JP Morgan has been the risk off trade and it's been spectacular, as you guys mentioned, record highs. And so if we're going into a risk on environment, which I believe we are, if the FED is finished tightening, then actually JP Morgan is probably going to be a source of funds for many investors. It is a stock that is owned everywhere. It's been a great stock, but risk on may be the better way to go with a Bank America or City Group or others like that a source of funds. I love that it's a euphemism for it gets sold, so that you could raise money to buy something you think is going to return more the fact that you think it's going to be Bank of America. Do you also lean into the Mic Mayo idea that City Group and its whole revamp with some of its streamlining, hutting units, massive job cuts is going to be the real winner over time is going to be certainly an opportunity to be a winner. They've still got a lot of heavy lifting. Jane Frasier's leading the charge here, of course, and I think it's a very big, complicated job. It's turning around the notion liner. There's early progress, a lot of heavy lifting, as I said to do. But if she can succeed in the management, succeed this stock is definitely undervalued and it has great upside, but it's been a value trapped for many years, so we'll have to wait and see. Jarred I went to a seminar once at a firm long ago called Tucker, Anthony and Rlday, and I was lectured that banks are supposed to return nominal GDP plus a little bit. I'm going to center tendency. Is that make an eight, nine, ten percent once in your lifetime? JP Morgan has turned that upside down. You didn't see this coming. You're the expert, nor did anybody else. The returns of ten years, of twenty years or fifteen percent or so. Their thirty year return is solid double digit return. What did Harrison? What did Diamond get right? Tom? It's really Jamie Diamond. I think you could get give Harrison credit, I guess for merging with Bank one when Jamie Diamond was their CEO. And of course Diamond has taken over since then, and it's been his steadfast focus on delivering for shareholders, both through expansion and growth, but at the same time controlling expenses. They also have done a very good job in diversifying their revenue. Their consumer banking business, similar to Bank America, is very very profitable. On top of that, they've got a very strong capital markets business. The bear Stearns acquisition, which was very difficult in early years because of the reputational problems that came along with it, has worked out extremely well for them. So I would say the diversity of revenue, Tom and the focus on leading or delivering for shareholders. But back to Andrew Jackson, who you covered, you know years ago, Girardi, I mean, are they the fifth bank of the Uni United States? Over the holidays, somebody said one out of five profit dollars comes to JP Morgan. They're building their palace on fifth on Park Avenue right now. I mean to the Butch Cassidy idea, who are these guys? Are they the Bank of the United States. I don't think they're the Bank of the United States. But they have done a great job in delivering for their shareholders and for their employees and their communities as well. It's been a big growth engine for the company. This economy, the global economy as well. And again it's this leadership that they have under Diamond and his executive management team. And Tom, you know, many of his senior folks have left JP Morgan and are now CEOs of other banks, like Charlie Sharp at Wells Fargo, and so he's got a very deep bench and they execute. And that's the key. Tom. You know, banking is a commodity business. As you well know, it's all about execution. And JP Morgan is that you executed extremely well. What is the business model though, that you want to execute as a big US bank? Chard And this, I think is one of the key questions that we had during last year when the rise of private capital, private equity, private debt really was challenging the capital markets activity of certain big financial institutions. Can the JP Morgans, the Bank of Americas, the city groups get into the private debt world that in some ways has been stealing their lunch? I think it Ken, Lisa, And when you think about it, and you're right, the private equity private debt area is certainly growing much faster than the banks. But believe it or not, the shadow banking industry has been taking the bank's market share for forty years you go back to the early eighties and you look at the market share that the banks had of lending into the United States, it was well over forty percent. The private or shadow banking market was in the low twenties. Today it's completely flip flopped. The bank's market share now is in the low twenties and the shadow banking is in the fifty over fifty percent. So the banks have done it through consolidation. You know, when Tom and I were young, we had over eighteen thousand banks in the United States in the early nineteen eighties. Today there's forty six hundred. JP Morgan has been a big beneficiary of that, and they've been able to create those efficiencies. So yes, they can compete. They will compete, and I don't think that the banks are going to be put out of business, but certainly they don't have the market share that they used to have. But we have to remember too, the economy has grown dramatically in forty years, and they have the smallest slice of the pie, but they're more profitable than ever, not just JP Morgan, but other banks as well. What about the smaller banks, Given the fact that you're talking about a bigger slice of just overall activity. You haven't seen that so much in the smaller banks, and with rates forbading high, you're going to have real commercial real estate pressures as well. It's interesting, it depends on you know how small the bank is and who owns it. I've always maintained this banking system we have in the United States is obviously very polarized. You got the very small banks at one end and the very large banks at the other end. And if it's a non if it's if the owners of the smaller banks, private banks, or mutual savings banks or another group of banks, if their owners are comfortable with earning returns on equities of four or five percent, and they're not going to sell the bank as long as they have FDIC insurance, they're going to remain in business indefinitely. On the other end, if you do have a bank with thirty billion in assets and it's not earning up to what its shareholders want it's to earn, then they're going to have to consolidation. Consolidation is going to continue. We're in a pause right now, but the long term trend has been consolidation in the industry will continue to consolidate in the future and argue, Jared, let's finish on Washington if we can. I was speaking to your colleague Amy with Silverman just yesterday and were reflected on a line that came from Lori Cavasina, who I think described presidential politics in the election on the horizon like staring at the sun. I just wonder if that's what it's like for you. Have you given any thought to changes in leadership in Washington and what might mean for the companies to fall under your cover? John, It's a good question because it's going to be the topic du jour this year, of course, with the election coming. And what we can say is that under the current administration there's been more regulation of banks, particularly with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. We don't know who's going to be running, you know, just yet in November, but if Trump is the candidate for the other party, the Republican Party, and if he was to win, his administration had less regulation for banks. So if that administration was to come back, you would have to expect they would change the heads of different regulatory agencies in twenty twenty five, and it probably would be less regulation for the banks as we move forward, you know, Johnny. I think Bloomberg Radio is missing it today because we're seeing the fireplace with your dacity here on Bloomberg Television talks about inflation South Paris, Maine. Three hundred and twenty five dollars per cord of red oak that's delivered to Shake Cassidy and he's he's popping like eight night cords of winter. He used a thing about that. I mean, it's adding up. It's expensive. But don't you love the smell. The smell's great. The damn dog is over by the fireplace. The smell you know, this dog's called Elizabeth. We won't call Aaron. We want to thank you, Joe Capital of Marcus, Thank you, sir. Let's get to it, and we do it with an authority that we have had through Auto Tournament of the Eastern Mediterranean. Norman rule joins us now senior advisor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and the courses work for the nation in intelligence. Norman. When I say Lebanon, for all of us of a certain persuasion, we are completely formed by something frankly is stunning forty years ago, which is the Beirut Barracks bombing. When we lost marines at accountable iwo Jima level. Where are we now with Lebanon, with Hesbela, Do we have a relationship? Was it forever fractured forty years ago? That's an excellent point, and I regret I remember that incident well and lost friends. The event of forty years ago actually had a different message for the world. The US pulled out of Lebanon at that time, and Osama bin Laden later stated that watching the withdrawal of the United States from Lebanon was one of the motivators for him to undertake his operations because he realized the West could be pushed back out of the region. Are we being pushed back now? I mean within the multiple fronts at Lisa Abramowitz's outlined this morning Gods of the West Bank and again up to the border with Lebanon as the West is America being pushed out now? No, we have a very different profile, and indeed, diplomacy is likely going to increase in intensity and come out weeks because we need to come up with a way to move. Lebanese has belowed north of the Israeli border so that Israeli citizens can return to their homes. The thousands tens of thousand of Israeli citizens to open their businesses, go to school, and also so that tens of thousands of Lebanese can return south to that border which has become such a flashpoint in recent weeks. Yeah, hundreds of thousands of people have been misplaced or displaced as a result of some of the fighting on both sides. But Norman and I'm curious whether this is an escalation the fact that Israel did attack according to Hamas, but also with a wink, wink, nod nod from Israeli officials to kill this is Mamas executive. Well, to be clear, Israel has stated from the beginning of the October seventh massacred that it would eradicate the Hamas leadership responsible for that action, and therefore this is no surprise. I think what you have to look at is this drone attack, which Israel has not admitted but is understood to have undertaken, took place in an incredibly secure, prey conscious neighborhood, and it demonstrates an exquisite and dynamic intelligence capacity. So as Hesbula thinks about it's connor its response to this, it's got to think about what is known around us and what can we get away with and what will happen to the people who might be involved in that attack against Israel. Do you have any sense, Norman, of what the conversations are like with Hamas, with Hesbelah, with the Iranian leadership, given the fact that a lot of people think that they're taking some cues from Iran, that there has been funding from Iran, that you have the Iranian warship going to the Red Sea, and the huthis also Iranian fact making noise and trying to interrupt Western shipping lines. Iran It's proxies have no strategic drivers to involve themselves more fully in this conflict. It would impact multiple strategic equities for a game that is uncertain that they have multiple incentives to continue and perhaps raise the intensity of attacks against Israel to show that they have skin in the resistance game. I should also note that today, the January third, is the fourth anniversary of the killing of Cossum Solomoni, and that's a day when one would expect Iranian proxies to attack US or Israeli versus just for that symbolic anniversary. Exactly where I wanted to go normally let's talk about it, the assassination of the major General. It's easy to forget that it ever happened because several weeks later, many weeks later, we were all drowning in a global pandemic. What has happened since then with the relationship between the United States and Iran, between two different white Houses, very little. The indirect engagement that took place did produce the possibility of some sort of engagement, a hostage released by the Iranians in exchange for the release of personnel. But Iran's regional activities did not change, and I don't think the White House expected them to change. More So, Iran's nuclear program has continue to expand. And here's the important point. Iran is now producing enriched uranium at level that no state that is not pursued a nuclear weapon has ever produced. It has no civilian use for the nature of its current enrichment. So you have to ask yourself the question, has the West de facto recognized the Iranian military nuclear program? The White House would say no. The facts do raise the question. Norman a tough way to Segui here, but I'm going to do it as one final question. Taiwan continues to come up within our first of the year conversations. Do we have good intelligence on mainland China? The United States intelligence program against China, has stated by Central Intelligence Agency had Bill Burns, is robust and works significantly. I won't comment on those operations to the extent that I know of them, but I will say that this remains such a priority that it's an all source intelligence programs at all imagery and a variety of different aspects. We're going to have a good understanding of some of China's activities that will provide the warning policy maker's need for the update. You're insights so valuable, Norman Roll there for the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Thank you, sir. Subscribe to the Bloomberg Surveillance podcast on Apple, Spotify and anywhere else you get your podcasts. Listen live every weekday starting at seven am Eastern. I'm Bloomberg dot Com, the iHeartRadio app, tune In, and the Bloomberg Business app. You can watch us live on Bloomberg Television and always I'm the Bloomberg Terminal. Thanks for listening. I'm Tom Keen, and this is BloombergSee 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From Boise
S1E54 - December 21, 2023: Things To Do In Boise Over The Holiday Weekend

From Boise

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2023 21:01


** Idaho Sleigh Rides in Garden Valley** Read the newsletter: fromboise.com Join the BFFs: fromboise.com/bffs TONIGHT:Solstice Sober Banger: An Open Heart Conscious Dance at Lounge at the End of the Universe.  TONIGHT:Barbarian Brewing Krampus Krawl Winter Solstice Party Fri Dec 22:Yule Fest at Mad Swede Brewing This weekend + next weekend: Christmas movies at The Egyptian Theatre  Sat Dec 23: Procrastiganza: A Holiday Pop-up Market at Mad Swede Brewing Sat Dec 23: Indoor Farmers Market at Shrine Social Club Sat Dec 23: last day of Merry Makers Market  Sun Dec 24:Sagebrush Collaborative weekend artist pop up  Ideas to entertain family & friends Go see Christmas lights. Here's theBoise Christmas Lights map . There's also the drive-thruChristmas in Color at Expo Idaho,Wintry Garden aGlow at Idaho Botanical Garden, orWinter Wonderland at Indian Creek Plaza. Go hiking. Here's theinteractive trail map   Check out theOld Boise Model Railroad Club - here's my story about it Play arcade games atRealms orSpacebar (21+).  Get a yummy breakfast atTrailside Bakery ,Good Times Bagels ,Certified Bakery ,Java ,Sunshine Spice ,The Griddle ,Sunrise Cafe ,Broadcast Coffee , orPrimal Coffee . Go out for dinner atEight Thirty Common ,The Wylder ,Stagecoach Inn ,Alyonka's ,Wepa ,10 Barrel ,Percy ,Anthony's ,Kibrom's ,The Modern ,Bar Gernika ,Coa de Jima ,Andrade's ,Black Moon ,Tavolata , or the newAcero Board & Bottles . Grab a drink atThick as Thieves (make a reservation),Pengilly's ,Hap Hap Lounge ,Water Bear Bar ,KIN ,Suite 104 ,Ochos ,Atlas Bar , and if you are like me and like dive bars, go toLittle Dutch Garden orSymposium Out of town tip: visitsouthwestidaho.org/fromboise Hap & Florence Sleigh Rides in Donnelly Send us your feedback online: https://pinecast.com/feedback/from-boise/e23134f0-8929-4d5f-8ed9-10d8db2b49be

Developing Classical Thinkers
Reflections on Pearl Harbor

Developing Classical Thinkers

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2023 6:05


On this date, at 7:55, December 7, 1941, Imperial Japan launched their surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. Their goal was to keep the U.S. military from supporting American possessions like the Philippines and Guam or British outposts like Singapore and Hong Kong. Such territories Japan attacked within hours of striking Pearl Harbor, annexing them all as part of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, the name Japan had given to their empire.Check out reflections on Pearl Harbor from Winston Brady, available in two forms: on our podcast Developing Classical Thinkers and at the American Spectator.Theme music is from John Harrison and the Wichita State Players.

nagle, ostatniej nocy.
Czy Elvis Presley żyje? cz. 2 | Spiski Hollywood #4

nagle, ostatniej nocy.

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2023 130:30


16 sierpnia 1977 – dzień śmierci Elvisa Presleya zszokował wszystkich fanów i nie tylko. Tyle że już chwilę później niosły się głosy, że to wszystko było jednym wielkim oszustwem. Elvis od tamtego czasu mieszkał już na Hawajach, żył pod imieniem swoje3go brata bliźniaka, stołował się w Burger Kingu, dawał się fotografować na własnej posiadłości, a nawet kupił ciało człowieka, który miał go udawać w trumnie. Ile jest prawdy w teorii, że Elvis żyje? ______ Spiski Hollywood to zamknięta seria podcastu „nagle, ostatniej nocy.” dotycząca najpopularniejszych teorii spiskowych związanych z celebrytami. Poprzednie odcinki z serii: #1 James Dean: https://bit.ly/3zZ1ItQ #2 Brandon Lee: https://bit.ly/3Q6yTkC #3 Grace Kelly: http://bit.ly/3Mmp42g  ______ Źródła   Książki i prasa R. West, S. West, D. Hebler, Elvis What Happened? (1977) W. Jima, Elvis Presley Dead or Alive (1977) Gazeta „National Enquirer”, 1977-1978 B. Battle, artykuł „Graceland: Palace or Prison” w magazynie “Hit Parader Presents The Immortal Elvis” (1978) G. Brewer-Giorgio, Orion (1978) S. Chanzes, 1935? Where Are You? (1981) A. Jeffries, Elvis, Where Are You? (1982) B. Smith, Memphis Mystery (1987) G. Brewer-Giorgio, The Most Incredible Elvis Presley Story Ever Told (1988) retitled as Is Elvis Alive? Gazeta „Weekly World News” 1988 G. Brewer-Giorgio, The Elvis Files: Was His Death Faked? (1990) J. Parker, Elvis Presley: Kto zabił króla? (1995) T. Fensch, The FBI Files on Elvis Presley (2001) B. Beeny, Elvis' DNA Proves He's Alive (2005) P. Lacy, Elvis Decoded: A Fan's Guide to Deciphering the Myths and Misinformation (2006) R.S. Denisoff, G. Plasketes, True Disbelievers (2018)     Dokumenty i reportaże telewizyjne: Geraldo Rivera, The Elvis Cover-Up, ABC 20/20 TV (1979) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8akomiF0YXk&ab_channel=jaygordon1033 Wywiad z doktorem Nickiem, Elvis: His Doctor Speaks Out (1983) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K5rlvSCD-q4&ab_channel=jaygordon1033 The Elvis Files a TV special (1991) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O09eOxp1H8A&t=1965s&ab_channel=ajgherts2 Elvis Presley - The last 24 hours (2005) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ZR2ViKtbkA&ab_channel=KR-M Zbiór materiałów Fox 8 News https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nANf_Lj73kg&ab_channel=LindaHoodSigmon David Darlock w programie Geraldo Riviery (1989) https://youtu.be/WzhzdX09D_o?t=1576  Program Larry King Live – konfrontacja G. Brewer Giorgio z Joe Esposito (1988) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CofdoHdXQxY&ab_channel=jaygordon1033 The Elvis Conspiracy TV Secial (1991) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-XQNpc61EE&t=1367s&ab_channel=SnugglepawDigitalStudios  Wywiad z Priscillą Presley (The other day) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XeEpN7fOvdY&ab_channel=ElvisStillAliveYouDecide  Strony internetowe: http://www.elvisinfonet.com/conspiracy.html https://elvisdecoded.com/ http://elvisownia.blogspot.com/ https://fbiretired.com/retired-fbi-agents-talk-about-opfopen-case/ https://www.theguardian.com/culture/interactive/2013/oct/12/elvis-presley-richard-nixon-letter (treść listu Elvisa do prezydenta Richarda Nixona) https://vault.fbi.gov/Elvis%20Presley%20 (akta FBI Elvisa Presleya) https://lindahoodsigmonstruth.com/ (strona Lindy Hood) https://www.youtube.com/@lindahoodsigmon1625/videos (kanał na YT Lindy Hood) https://www.probatelawyerblog.com/elvis-presley/ (sprawa Elizy Presley, blog prawnika) _______ Fragmenty utworów należą do ich prawnych właścicieli i zostały wykorzystane wg prawa cytatu (art.29 ust.1 ustawy o prawie autorskim i prawach pokrewnych). _______ Posłuchaj na: Spotify: https://bit.ly/nagleostatniejnocySpotify YouTube: https://bit.ly/nagleostatniejnocyYouTube _______ Intro Cool Vibes - Film Noire by Kevin MacLeod https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3553-cool-vibes https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Fragment filmu “Dom na Przeklętym Wzgórzu”, 1959 _______ Muzyka: Unanswered questions by Kevin MacLeod You have doubts by Kevin MacLeod I knew a guy by Kevin MacLeod Walking Along by Kevin MacLeod Dreams become real by Kevin MacLeod https://incompetech.com/ License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Sacred - Haunting Atmospheric Soundscape by CO.AG Music _______ Kontakt: kinolityka@gmail.com

nagle, ostatniej nocy.
Czy Elvis Presley żyje? cz. 1 | Spiski Hollywood #4

nagle, ostatniej nocy.

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2023 140:43


16 sierpnia 1977 – dzień śmierci Elvisa Presleya zszokował wszystkich fanów i nie tylko. Tyle że już chwilę później niosły się głosy, że to wszystko było jednym wielkim oszustwem. Elvis od tamtego czasu mieszkał już na Hawajach, żył pod imieniem swoje3go brata bliźniaka, stołował się w Burger Kingu, dawał się fotografować na własnej posiadłości, a nawet kupił ciało człowieka, który miał go udawać w trumnie. Ile jest prawdy w teorii, że Elvis żyje? ______ Spiski Hollywood to zamknięta seria podcastu „nagle, ostatniej nocy.” dotycząca najpopularniejszych teorii spiskowych związanych z celebrytami. Poprzednie odcinki z serii: #1 James Dean: https://bit.ly/3zZ1ItQ #2 Brandon Lee: https://bit.ly/3Q6yTkC #3 Grace Kelly: http://bit.ly/3Mmp42g  ______ Źródła   Książki i prasa R. West, S. West, D. Hebler, Elvis What Happened? (1977) W. Jima, Elvis Presley Dead or Alive (1977) Gazeta „National Enquirer”, 1977-1978 B. Battle, artykuł „Graceland: Palace or Prison” w magazynie “Hit Parader Presents The Immortal Elvis” (1978) G. Brewer-Giorgio, Orion (1978) S. Chanzes, 1935? Where Are You? (1981) A. Jeffries, Elvis, Where Are You? (1982) B. Smith, Memphis Mystery (1987) G. Brewer-Giorgio, The Most Incredible Elvis Presley Story Ever Told (1988) retitled as Is Elvis Alive? Gazeta „Weekly World News” 1988 G. Brewer-Giorgio, The Elvis Files: Was His Death Faked? (1990) J. Parker, Elvis Presley: Kto zabił króla? (1995) T. Fensch, The FBI Files on Elvis Presley (2001) B. Beeny, Elvis' DNA Proves He's Alive (2005) P. Lacy, Elvis Decoded: A Fan's Guide to Deciphering the Myths and Misinformation (2006) R.S. Denisoff, G. Plasketes, True Disbelievers (2018)     Dokumenty i reportaże telewizyjne: Geraldo Rivera, The Elvis Cover-Up, ABC 20/20 TV (1979) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8akomiF0YXk&ab_channel=jaygordon1033 Wywiad z doktorem Nickiem, Elvis: His Doctor Speaks Out (1983) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K5rlvSCD-q4&ab_channel=jaygordon1033 The Elvis Files a TV special (1991) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O09eOxp1H8A&t=1965s&ab_channel=ajgherts2 Elvis Presley - The last 24 hours (2005) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ZR2ViKtbkA&ab_channel=KR-M Zbiór materiałów Fox 8 News https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nANf_Lj73kg&ab_channel=LindaHoodSigmon David Darlock w programie Geraldo Riviery (1989) https://youtu.be/WzhzdX09D_o?t=1576  Program Larry King Live – konfrontacja G. Brewer Giorgio z Joe Esposito (1988) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CofdoHdXQxY&ab_channel=jaygordon1033 The Elvis Conspiracy TV Secial (1991) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-XQNpc61EE&t=1367s&ab_channel=SnugglepawDigitalStudios  Wywiad z Priscillą Presley (The other day) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XeEpN7fOvdY&ab_channel=ElvisStillAliveYouDecide  Strony internetowe: http://www.elvisinfonet.com/conspiracy.html https://elvisdecoded.com/ http://elvisownia.blogspot.com/ https://fbiretired.com/retired-fbi-agents-talk-about-opfopen-case/ https://www.theguardian.com/culture/interactive/2013/oct/12/elvis-presley-richard-nixon-letter (treść listu Elvisa do prezydenta Richarda Nixona) https://vault.fbi.gov/Elvis%20Presley%20 (akta FBI Elvisa Presleya) https://lindahoodsigmonstruth.com/ (strona Lindy Hood) https://www.youtube.com/@lindahoodsigmon1625/videos (kanał na YT Lindy Hood) https://www.probatelawyerblog.com/elvis-presley/ (sprawa Elizy Presley, blog prawnika) _______ Fragmenty utworów należą do ich prawnych właścicieli i zostały wykorzystane wg prawa cytatu (art.29 ust.1 ustawy o prawie autorskim i prawach pokrewnych). _______ Posłuchaj na: Spotify: https://bit.ly/nagleostatniejnocySpotify YouTube: https://bit.ly/nagleostatniejnocyYouTube _______ Intro Cool Vibes - Film Noire by Kevin MacLeod https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3553-cool-vibes https://filmmusic.io/standard-license Fragment filmu “Dom na Przeklętym Wzgórzu”, 1959 _______ Muzyka: Unanswered questions by Kevin MacLeod You have doubts by Kevin MacLeod I knew a guy by Kevin MacLeod Walking Along by Kevin MacLeod Dreams become real by Kevin MacLeod https://incompetech.com/ License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Sacred - Haunting Atmospheric Soundscape by CO.AG Music _______ Kontakt: kinolityka@gmail.com

Threads of The War
(S7E4) Flare-Up

Threads of The War

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2023 12:30


You can become a patron of this work here.This episode and all my other stories can be found here.You can sign up to receive all of Threads of The War, Volume 1 for free here.All of my books are available for purchase here.If you'd like to support Threads of The War consider using Wise for your banking needs: www.tinyurl.com/threadswise

SBS Croatian - SBS na hrvatskom
IPI poziva na pomoć novinarima u potresom pogođenim područjima Turske

SBS Croatian - SBS na hrvatskom

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2023 10:45


Međunarodni institut za novinarstvo (International Press Institute), ugledna nevladina organizacija, uputila je apel za pomoć novinarima u razorenim područjima Turske, kako bi im se omogućilo da nastave s radom. O problemima s kojima se suočavaju turski novinari nakon potresa i važnosti njihove uloge u zajednici u ovom trenutku govori Frane Maroević, izvršni direktor Instituta.

SBS Bosnian - SBS na bosanskom jeziku
United Communities in Australia work to send aid to the areas affected by the earthquake - Ujedinjene zajednice u Australiji rade na slanju pomoći područjima pogođena potresom

SBS Bosnian - SBS na bosanskom jeziku

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2023 9:19


The whole week we are facing a huge tragedy due to the devastating earthquake in the south of Turkey and the north of Syria, and the final number of victims, unfortunately, is still uncertain. Aid to the affected areas is coming from all over the world. Here in Australia, in Melbourne, the Turkish and Syrian communities quickly organized themselves and, with the help of the Bosnian community, managed to fill three huge containers with blankets, tents, and sleeping bags, as the most necessary aid. The Bosnian activist with a big heart, Mrs. Sanela Maaki, talks about the upcoming aid action in the BH community. - Cijelu sedmicu suočavamo se s ogromnom tragedijom zbog razornog zemljotresa na jugu Turske i sjeveru Sirije, a konačan broj nastradalih, na žalost još uvijek je neizvjestan. Pomoć nastradalim područjima stiže iz cijelog svijeta. Ovdje u Australiji, u Melbourneu turska i sirijska zajednica su se brzo organizovale, te potpomognute bosanskom zajednicom uspjele napuniti tri ogromna kontejnera dekama, šatorima i vrećama za spavanje, kao najnužniju pomoć. O predstojećoj akciji pomoći u BH zajednici, govori bosanska aktivistica velikog srca, gospođa Sanela Maaki.

Kanban przy kawie
49. Jeśli potrzebujemy zespołu, to jak go budować?

Kanban przy kawie

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 39:14


Jak zbudować efektywny zespół profesjonalistów? A co to właściwie znaczy "profesjonalista"? Zapraszam do drugiego odcinka poświęconego koncepcji zespołu. Jeśli widzimy wartość w pracy zespołowej, to powinna ona prowadzić do osiągnięcia wspólnego celu (ang. collaboration), a nie jedynie współpracy w celu realizacji osobnych celów (ang. cooperation). O tym, kim są profesjonaliści, jak budować z nich zespoły, jak może pomóc w tym wizualizacja i jakie często popełniamy przy tym błędy zapytałem Jima Bensona. Możecie kojarzyć Jima z odcinka o Personal Kanban (Odcinek 14. Personal Kanban - gość: Jim Benson). Tym razem okazją jest temat współpracy, który zbiega się w czasie z premierą jego nowej książki pt. "The Collaboration Equation" (The Collaboration Equation), w której opowiada o swojej formule na solidny profesjonalizm, zespoły i dostarczanie wartości. Jim dzieli się kilkoma ciekawymi historiami oraz wskazówkami również dla zespołów pracujących w rozproszeniu czy modelu hybrydowym. Link do wpisu: https://www.tinyurl.com/4epe7bw9

RUMFAR AFRICA | ADPlus Hausa
E04 RUMFAR AFRICA | HONYOYIN INGANTA JIMA'I | DR. ADAM AHMAD BUNKAU | PODCAST

RUMFAR AFRICA | ADPlus Hausa

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2022 145:30


E04 RUMFAR AFRICA | HANYOYIN INGANTA JIMM'A | DR. ADAM AHMED | PODCAST SHIRIN YA TATTAUNA BATUN TASIRIN INGANTANCEN JIMA'I (SADUWA) TSAKANIN MA'AURATA DA SAMUN ZAMAN LAFIYA DA KYAUTATA ZAMANTAKEWAR AURE (MUTU KA RABA), WANE LOKACI YA DACE A KOYI ILMIN JIMA'I?, SHIN DAN ADAM YANA BUKATAR SAI AN KOYA MASA YADDA ZAI YI SADUWA?, HAKA AN TATTAUNA BATUN SHAN MAGANIN KARIN KARFIN JIMA'I GA MATA DA MAZA ILLARSA DA AMFANIN SA, ALAKAR AUREN DOLE DA NA SOYAYYA A WAJAN SAMUN INGANTACCEN JIMA'I, DA SAURAN BATUTUWA MASU MAHIMMACI KAN ILIMI JIMA'I, TARE DA MASANI KUMA KWARARRE A HARKOKIN ZAMANTAKEWAR AURE, DR. ADAM AHMAD BUNKAU

Glave
Prestol tetanusa

Glave

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2022 62:52


V 132. Glavah se Tomo in Pižama z malce zamude lotita Zmajeve hiše in v enem grižljaju pogoltneta štiri dele. Kralj Bobby Baratheon bi bil fovš takšnega zalogaja. Skupaj skušata razvozlati rodbinsko drevo Targaryenov, a je še bolj zapleteno kot izgovorjava imena Rhaenyra. Jima pa uspe, da se ne porežeta na ajzentronu, ki ga po […]

Unreached of the Day
Pray for the Jima Oromo in Ethiopia

Unreached of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2022 1:01


Sign up to receive podcast: https://joshuaproject.net/pray/unreachedoftheday/podcast People Group Summary: https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/19653/ET Join us for the International Day for the Unreached on May 23, 2021 as thousands experience #AThirdofUs https://athirdofus.com/ Listen to "A Third of Us" podcast with Greg Kelley, produced by the Alliance for the Unreached: https://alliancefortheunreached.org/podcast/ Watch "Stories of Courageous Christians" w/ Mark Kordic https://storiesofcourageouschristians.com/stories-of-courageous-christians God's Best to You!  

Free To Bmore Podcast
Healing Youth Alliance Ambassadors, Sydney Johnson & Jima Chester

Free To Bmore Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2022 37:38


Healing Youth Alliance Ambassadors, Sydney Johnson & Jima Chester join the Free to Bmore Podcast to share the trauma-related challenges that our youth face today and the work they are doing to break the cycle of generational trauma for the future of Baltimore.

Conspiracy Realists
012: Yonaguni Jima AKA "Japan's Atlantis"

Conspiracy Realists

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2022 42:43


On this week's episode, Austin and Nick travel across the Pacific Ocean and back in time 10,000 years to uncover the mystery surrounding Yonaguni Jima, a ziggurat-like stone structure found submerged off the coast of Yonaguni Island in Japan. While some naysayers believe the forms are natural, some researchers think they may be evidence of an old Yamatai city or perhaps even The Lost Continent of Mu.Yonaguni Monument PicturesIf you enjoy the episode, give us a 5-star rating!Check out our website: conspiracyrealists.ghost.ioEmail us: 2guys1truth@gmail.comInstagram: @TheConspiracyRealistsTwitter: @RealistsPodMusic and SFX by ZapsplatOther Music by Purple PlanetSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/2guys1truth. Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/2guys1truth. Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Franck Ferrand raconte...
Le drapeau d'Iwo Jima: histoire d'une photographie de guerre

Franck Ferrand raconte...

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2022 23:08


A l'occasion de l'exposition du Musée de l'Armée Photographies en guerre, retour sur l'histoire controversée d'un des plus célèbres clichés de la Seconde Guerre mondiale : celui du drapeau d'Iwo Jima. Mention légales : Vos données de connexion, dont votre adresse IP, sont traités par Radio Classique, responsable de traitement, sur la base de son intérêt légitime, par l'intermédiaire de son sous-traitant Ausha, à des fins de réalisation de statistiques agréées et de lutte contre la fraude. Ces données sont supprimées en temps réel pour la finalité statistique et sous cinq mois à compter de la collecte à des fins de lutte contre la fraude. Pour plus d'informations sur les traitements réalisés par Radio Classique et exercer vos droits, consultez notre Politique de confidentialité.

Podkast amerykański
72. Prawa Jima Crowa 2.0, czyli o przepisach wyborczych, filibustrze i ustawie sprzed 135 lat.

Podkast amerykański

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2022 64:26


Demokraci niby mają większość w Senacie, ale po raz kolejny w izbie tej przepadły ambitne plany legislacyjne Joego Bidena – tym razem dwie ustawy dotyczące przepisów wyborczych. Nie udało się znaleźć dziesiątki Republikanów, którzy poparliby Freedom to Vote Act, ustawę wprowadzającą ogólnokrajowe standardy wyborów, oraz John Lewis Act, przywracający federalny nadzór nad przepisami wyborczymi w niektórych stanach. Czy ustawy te są konieczne, żeby zastopować „nowe prawa Jima Crowa” przyjmowane na Południu, jak twierdzą Demokraci, czy jest to wszystko wydumany problem, sztuczny kryzys itd., jak zapewniają Republikanie, oburzeni „graniem kartą rasistowską”, choć jeszcze piętnaście lat temu jak jeden mąż popierali to, co dziś znajduje się w John Lewis Act – na tak głosował wówczas np. Mitch McConnell. Nie udało się też zreformować nieszczęsnego filibustru, który pod hasłem „nieograniczonej debaty” zazwyczaj uniemożliwia jakąkolwiek debatę. Zgodnie z przewidywaniami Joe Manchin i Kyrsten Sinema po raz kolejny strzelili w stopę swojej partii. Dlaczego zatem kierownictwo Demokratów postanowiło zrobić coś z góry skazanego na porażkę? Czy stała za tym jakakolwiek strategia, a jeśli tak, to jaka? Czy w sprawie praw wyborczych da się jeszcze cokolwiek zrobić? W tym celu cofamy się do niesławnych wyborów roku 1876 i mówimy o Electoral Count Act – kontrowersyjnej, ale przez długi czas zapomnianej ustawie o której jednak wszyscy przypomnieli sobie w styczniu 2021 roku. Możecie nas słuchać m.in. w: Spotify, Podtail, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts i YouTube. Jeśli chcecie nas wesprzeć, zapraszamy na patronite.pl/podkastamerykanski

History with the Szilagyis
HwtS: 041: The Battle of Iwo Jima

History with the Szilagyis

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2021 11:10


Jason gives you a quick overview of The Battle of Iwo Jima.Read the essay here: https://historywiththeszilagyis.org/hwts041 Thanks to Kris Hill for the topic suggestion! Find us on Twitter:The Network: @UFPEarth. The Show: @SzilagyiHistory.Chrissie: @TheGoddessLivia. Jason: @JasonDarkElf.Join us in the Federation Council Chambers on Facebook. Send topic suggestions via Twitter or to hwts@ufp.earth. History with the Szilagyis is supported by our patrons: Susan Capuzzi-De ClerckEd ChinevereLaura DullKris HillPlease visit patreon.com/historywiththeszilagyis Notes and/or Suggested Reading James Bradley. Flags of Our Fathers.James Bradley. Flyboys.Ryuho Okawa. The Battle of Iwo Jima: A Memoir of Japanese General Tadamichi Kuribayashi.Daniel Wrinn. Operation Detachment: 1945 Battle of Iwo Jima.United Federation of Podcasts is brought to you by our listeners. Special thanks to these patrons on Patreon whose generous contributions help to produce this podcast and the many others on our network! Vera BibleJosh BrewingtonTim CooperChrissie De Clerck-SzilagyiTom ElliotVictor GamboaAlexander GatesPeter H.Thad HaitWilliam J. JacksonJim McMahonAnn MarieGreg MolumbyJoe MignoneCasey PettittJustin OserMahendran RadhakrishnanKevin ScharfTom Van ScotterJim StoffelVanessa VaughnDavid Willett You can join this illustrious list by becoming a patron here: www.patreon.com/ufpearth

The Phantom Marine
08.) Imposters I

The Phantom Marine

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2021 27:11


What does the most famous imposter case of all time tell us about the mystery of the phantom marine? Natalie Zemon Davis joins to tell us.

The Phantom Marine
07.) Iwo Jima III

The Phantom Marine

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2021 27:23


Marine Corps veteran and Iwo Jima expert Robert Burrell takes us into battle through William Langston's eyes.

The Phantom Marine
06.) Iwo Jima II

The Phantom Marine

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2020 35:13


It is believed that only ten men survived the battle of Cushman's Pocket, Iwo Jima. We talk to one of them, Jim Earl, who was part of William Langston's Fox Company on the day he officially died.

The Phantom Marine
05.) Iwo Jima I

The Phantom Marine

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2020 28:17


Number one New York Times bestselling author of Flags of Our Fathers James Bradley joins us to discuss the Battle of Iwo Jima, a secret the Marine Corps tried to keep, and what the most famous photograph of all time tells us about William Langston.

The Phantom Marine
04.) Sulfur Island

The Phantom Marine

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2020 32:39


Interview with William Langston's niece, a search of his military files, and the FBI report on Marion Langston.

IT in the D
Episode 330 – Caston Thomas, Internet Advisor, Dave Sucks at Event Scheduling

IT in the D

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2020 64:35


IMPORTANT NOTE: due to Dave not paying attention, the networking event this month is on the 23rd at Detroit City Distillery.  We know, it’s always 3rd Thursday… he screwed up, it’s a thing, move on.  That being said, tonight we’re joined by Caston Thomas to chat about our recent appearance on the Internet Advisor show, as well as an upcoming seminar series he’s doing about securing iOT devices and networks that you probably want to pay attention to… Happy patch Tuesday. This a special recording of the IT in the D show recording a day late. But that’s all right. We’ve got a special guest in the studio Caston Thomas in the house. We’re going to be talking about all of the fun stuff that you, a and security that we just got off on. WJR to go home and home are thrilling experience on am radio. Yeah, yeah. We were talking about that and talking about security and property security. Uh, you know what, Dave, you may fire when ready going on. Thanks for hanging out. This is the one and only it in the D show. Broadcasting live here in studio three and podcast. He traded beautiful Royal Oak. Michigan has chaos. May have it happens. They say, is Bob the sales guy? That was Dave the geek. Randy. I do. The Twitters is doing the Twitters. Find a some ways. Find us online it in the D. dot com. Do us a favor, give us a like on the socials and subscribe to us everywhere. Fine podcasts are sold. And so because I’m an idiot and I freely own it and I admit it. Uh, so the meetup for this month was not set up for the third Thursday. It was set up for the fourth Thursday. So it is not this Thursday. It is next Thursday, the 23rd. Uh, it will be at Detroit city distillery. Come on out. Hang. Should be a fun night. Love the venue. Love the liquor. It’s a good time. I’m not gonna lie, it’s big coming. Extremely difficult to book a venue in this town. It is, and we’ve talked about this for two years now. We’re like, you know, places that, you know, we went for, you know, six, seven, eight years when nobody cared about them and nobody went there. All of a sudden now they want, they got the a, they got the no, because they’ve got somebody booked a holiday play there and now they think everybody’s got 1000 bucks an hour. My ass Russell, they booked an M and M video and how they think they can get top dollar, but like I called a, it’s a new retro bowling alley in Royal Oak. That’s shall not be named that has pull in the name. Um, I’m only like 200 bucks an hour just to show up. No food. No, I’m good. Thanks. It’s kind of like, Hey, and I said, we can always just crash a joint. Right? Yeah. But I don’t want to do that because then we, you know, the people ask, the thing is you need to have buy in from the front desk. Like, Hey, I’m here for it in the day. True. Whoa. What? Yeah. Um, so like I go, Hey, there’s going to be like 30 to 50 and flash mobs or so, 2001 we don’t, do they need to die? Well, they know. I say this is the way I set it up. I go, we don’t charge because here’s the thing, I can understand what the venue is when you charge. Like, Hey, I’m going to use your 50 bucks to walk in the door and then I charge you 20 bucks. Like kiss my ass. Yeah. But I’m saying, Hey, we don’t charge cover. We don’t take sponsors. There’s no speakers. Everyone’s on their own for food and whatever they want to order. Um, we just need someplace to hang out. Yeah. Okay. It’ll be 200 bucks an hour. Like for, for, for, for what? Bye-bye. Yeah, exactly. Cause you’re so crowded on a random Thursday night that you can’t use the additional business, you know, then smell you in the window. You know, if you’re, if you’re, if you know someone that’s a bar owner, like literally that would want us reach out to us. Please. We’re glad to hear about it. These phone calls, it’s ridiculous. Like, or we’ll just keep doing all of our events at whiskey in the jar. It’ll be that simple. We’ll just be there every, we don’t have, do we have friends at Ember anymore? No. No. Rusty’s still there. Rusty’s, you’re going to pork around. Um, uh, I don’t know. Maybe I just don’t like that venue that I think it’s, you know, nobody plays pinball, but it’s just cool to have them in the background. Exactly. It’s a fun spot. I’m sure we can find someplace. So the baby, I mean it’s not anywhere convenient, but like dude, that arcade place and Frazier would like cut off their arm to have us come to that. Yeah. And speaking of that like major magic is making a comeback. They are, they’re right there. Right around the corner from me. Here’s an interesting, I never really, I don’t think I ever talked to you about this. Um, when major magics said they were coming back and I happened to pop up my note on, on LinkedIn or Facebook saying, Hey, you know, invested in a brewery in the past didn’t work out. I see you’re coming back. Want to know what you’re doing with it. You wanted to see if you wanted to like maybe adult it. Yeah. Make major magics you know, for the nostalgia crowd. I mean Chuck E cheese serves beer. Yeah. And he’s like, what’s your intention? Like it was really bizarre conversation. Like, I wish I saved it. I wish you could read it. And I’m like, ah, I just want to talk to you. Like maybe we can have a cup of coffee. Well, what, what do you want out of it? Well, I know how much you were looking to. I go, I don’t know what it is yet or what it wants to be, and I can’t really give you a business proposal when nothing’s, I’m not just sitting here on a bag of money looking to do something with like [inaudible] furnace here. I’ve already done that once. That’s why we don’t own a brewery anymore. But then low and behold, maybe like six months ago, four months ago, he’s like, Hey, are you still interested in? And I’m like, ah, ignore like you’re such a weirdo. Like I didn’t want nothing. So now apparently it’s opening in like Chesterfield or something. No, dude, it’s right around the corner from me. Oh, it’s on, it’s on gross back. It’s 15 and gross back. It’s in. So do you remember the, there was the taco bell, there was the abandoned taco bell and then the other building. So the, it’d be a crime. Yeah. So the other building was the old Riviera restaurant and that’s where they was the Ram’s horn. That was the, it was a, it’s called Riviera. No, but it was a rent like long time ago, back in the old taste back when I was dragging the day when I hung out on the East side when I was stumbling at a chaplains and went to get French toast. Uh, ya know, so that’s, yeah apparently in there, I think they’re opening in February if I recall correctly. Like not too long from now. They’re probably just, they pay you. The thing is it’s probably going to be just a Barcade and he’s got like six of the stupid dolls and he’s going to set them up. No, apparently it’s again I’m just going off the articles I read in that kind of stuff cause I was, I was curious cause I like I’ve heard you guys, cause it wasn’t here when I was here, but I’ve heard you guys talk about it enough that I’m just curious to grasp it next to the star theater. And apparently like everything that was in that old one was put into storage and they have pulled everything out of storage and, and loaded up the place except for like skee-ball and like, it smelled like, was like jeepers, it smells like feet and piss. Like it’s not theirs. They should just call it that. Phoenix. Nice pizza. That’s actually probably a website. I’m quite sure. Smell the feet and Piz pizza then in the tokens. Um, but Hey, jumping in, uh, obviously today was patched today. We’re, we’re recording on Tuesday. If you haven’t figured that out yet, today’s patch Tuesday. And if you’re working in a data center tomorrow, it’s gonna be patch Wednesday. What’s, you know what, I’m just gonna throw this out there. Can we talk about the windows? Windows 10 flaw for 10 seconds? Sure. Yeah, I know. Right? So here’s this. No, this is, to me, this is interesting because the NSA came out with this and the NSA hasn’t done this in the past. The NSA has held things for themselves. So apparently there is a pretty wicked windows 10 security patch. Uh, they just basically can expose users to surveillance or, uh, I believe it’s with authentication. Yep. Um, but it’s funny that back in the day, uh, they did, they did not, they held it back. They, they used it because they wanted that access. Right. So, you know, uh, wanna cry an external blue, uh, basically NSA exploited those for years and didn’t say shit. Um, they basically, they develop hacking tools to exploit these holes. Um, and then they gave them to, or they were then found by Russian hacker groups called shadow brokers. Um, eternal blue still use to this day. Well and I think we all know that when we do something fine, but when the Russians do it, no, nah, no, no. Um, but apparently no, this was a even like at work, this is a big deal where it’s all hands on deck first thing in the morning. Uh, security teams, all the server teams. Um, you know, this is, yeah, this is like all hands on deck. So yeah, if you’re in a data center and, uh, you know, tomorrow should be fun. Hey, I mean Sam a broadcaster just updated and added a new notepad function. So, I mean that was pretty cool cause that’s something that everyone’s been dying for. I’m just dried mouse. No to like add notes while you’re, cause you don’t have notepad or WordPad or anything on the computer. You’re running it on, you need a notepad in the stupid, just stupid. Speaking of that, there was um, I was thinking, I don’t know why I think this is funny all the time, but they did doodle for Google. Yeah. And you can, um, so here’s the thing. I don’t know why this is funny. So here’s the thing. I work, we have a thing at work called brilliant ideas and people could submit a brilliant idea and it goes in front of a panel and they either move forward with it and it could be something really simple. Like, Hey, we should do a dial by extension, not by name. Like, or you know what I mean, or whatever. Gotcha. Or five extent, um, or spelled my name anyway, the new hotness now is to do something completely the stupidest thing you could possibly think of and to get the politest answer back. Um, so now, now it’s all about getting eyeballs. So now they have this thing doodle for Google and they want, you have to enter a doodle and then it might get used as a logo. And so I want to do a Dick button. So what you want to or you already have? Cause I haven’t because no I’ve been to be looking at like the butt cheeks. The O’s. No. Oh see rainy. That’s why. That’s why I bring it up. I need better ideas. So there’ll be a panel, there’ll be someone on a panel at Google that is going to get a Dick. But with butt cheeks, his owes that they have to go. Thank you for your submission. I was like I don’t like dragging the Dick boy decided to go in another direction. Oh you know what, I don’t think it doesn’t meet our community standards. Right. You get the nice little legal ease and I don’t without the Wiener too cause I just want the O’s. Cause if the, you know, cause there’s usually a winner in the Dick pot in the back part. Just put little dots on the O’s and make it Google part of Dick buck. Yes. So just, just, but I want him Unix. Yeah. I don’t like drug cause we always got a unit that’s a concerto, you know, come and cut. Don’t know why. It always makes me laugh. Oh my God, this was on a whiteboard next to like the hotel desk with like a dry erase board with markers. Like who thinks while a comic con is going on and people are getting just falling down drunk, let’s leave the markers on the white board overnight. So every time in the morning, I mean giant Dick blended. So I would have to go erase it. And I tried again. I sorta like, Oh I know you did. I don’t know. Like seriously, I’m 46 years old and I still go to friends houses that have alphabets on their fridge and I still have to spell hard. Like I can’t not pass those things by the inner 11 year old game is strong indeed. Indeed. But doodle for Google if you haven’t seen it. Um, let’s do, let’s do a bunch of Dick butts submissions. I’m game all the artists listening. Hello Eric. UTRs. Yeah, you guys all, we’ll talk. We’ll totally rally the troops. So I don’t mind a more serious, serious note. Uh, the deep fake stuff just started. And if they’re kind of creepy and there’s other videos, like when people doing impersonations and they kind of deep fake the face. And then we saw some other stuff with George Lucas. I don’t know that it’s started it like, it’s not that it just started, it just started getting a lot better, right? Words unnoticeable. Well now Facebook announces it’s going to ban deep fakes, but it won’t ban political ads, fake news, any place like it, it’ll let that, well, whatever. Um, and how are they going to know? Well, first thing I said was, cause the whole point of deep fakes is that it’s hard to tell, strengthen his policy towards misleading, manipulated videos. But like again, how do you know it’s like the Joe Rogan when they cut up his pot, the podcast, and he was talking about, uh, gorillas being the, the alter monkeys being the greatest. No, dude, that wasn’t, they didn’t cut it up. That was the AI that generated that. I know. I thought they’d like clipped his voice. No, that was the AI that Lake listened to all of his episodes and then generated a new episode from them all his claims. Right, right. But how can you like, Nope, it’s fake. Like, and that was a thing you couldn’t tell Joe Rogan’s vote. There was like one, like an inflection was weird, but if you do, if you put some time into it, it would sound completely flawless. We’ll do that one with George Lucas. Uh, reacting to the latest movie was his head looked a little weird. Like you could tell something was wrong, but if you’re just sitting there listening to it and only half ass watching it, it looked legit. Or if you scroll down in Facebook puts the little window up in the corner where you just see like three pixels of the video or whatever, but they won’t pull down videos that are, you know, the easy way edited. You know, where if you just slow down the video a little bit to make it seem like a politician is slurring her. Yeah, they won’t pull that down cause that’s not high tech enough of a video. Well I never forget how they do it with pictures. Like I’ll never forget the picture I went like you can see Trump does enough dumb stuff on his own where you don’t need to manipulate him doing dumb stuff usually true. And him and like him and his wife and the Obamas or like going to dinner or going into a thing and Trump rushed front and opened the door for everyone and then walked in last. Okay. Well the picture was, you know, Trump walks like bully, like walked in first and he’s rude like he’s not a gentleman. Well then if you watch the video, like he held the door open and then walked in last and it’s like, it’s out of context. Well that time, by that point it gets to Buzzfeed and it becomes a thing. And if you Google it now, you’d probably, Randy, if you like, if you Google, you’ll probably find that like Trump doesn’t open door for Obama’s and it’s probably, it’s like, I’m sure. Well, like so like, so you’re banning deep pigs but you’re not banning fake political edge. You’re not banning. Yeah, like propaganda, like bullshit. Like where do you draw and who again and how do you, like I said, how are you going to figure out if they’re fake or not? It’s the river. It’s booger yelling and revenge there. It’s too. And who determines the standards? Well, send it. Remember? Do I remember correct? Elected board? No, dude. Remember I got to think it was two years ago we were talking about, okay, so it’s easy enough to fake audio clips. What’s it going to take to prove somebody actually said something? Oh, well video. All right. Now that’s not the answer anymore cause yeah, deep fake video to make them say whatever the hell you want to say. So yeah, we talked about that. We’ve been on, we’ve been doing this for six years. Um, we probably said every word to humanly like, dude, they did the pipe. My AI Brogan was 200 episodes, if I recall correctly. Was that only the toilet word? Tonight’s three 30, he goes for six hours in episode trope when he smokes aardvark esophagus, incandescent. I was like, what are you doing? Just throw some extra words out there for the AI. They would do like discombobulated. David has a vocabulary of like 4,000 words. Bob 140. We can make Bob say anything we want as long as it has to do with fart. Yes. Yeager it’d be be. So we always, we’d like talking about the, the, the mighty, uh, over, uh, the, the company’s worth way too much money. Um, do Uber, Uber, uh, released their first ever, uh, safety report. Uh, this is actually updated version. So we talked about this two months ago when it was first released. So they’ve, they’ve updated it. So they’re just plain plain tag. They did the numbers change their 3045 sexual assaults and nine murders in 2008. Yes. And that includes, they admitted to well, and that includes both passengers and drivers. Right. Um, there was 5,500 other is incidents of groping, unwanted sexual touching in those two years. Uh, basically those attacks were, then they’d have to throw this one out. Those attacks, representative point, uh, three zero, 2%, like 0.0, zero zero 2% of the 1.3 billion rides, theF  facilitated last year. And I the, cause I remember when we talked about it last time, they tried to compare, they tried to make it sound like that number was statistically insignificant. Um, Hey, you can tell I haven’t been really drinking cause I can say it’s statistically insignificant surgery. It’s shorter shoot, traditional shish don’t, uh, know. And, and so they, they put that out there and then the New York subway system, uh, transit authority came out and said, okay, our numbers like a 10th of that. So, and we have, I think it was like they have, God, what was it, 20 X, the passengers and their incident rate was one 10th of that. See, here’s the thing though, that’s apples and oranges because if you look at mass transit, you have 50 people in a subway cars. And you know, it’s a one to one thing in an Uber, usually chances are different than you’re not going to commit a crime when you have 49 people staring at you. I can remember I told this story on the intranet, uh, but so one of the show hosts here, and I got into a rather interesting conversation where he got into an Uber one night after being in a bar. And I’m disclaimer, this is not me. Uh, cause it sounds like it could be me, but it is not me. But a friend of mine totally shows you’re not gonna even tell you who it was. Uh, but he got, he got drunk, uh, got an Uber and passed out. Um, he is a gentleman of color. Uh, and so the driver is so, and he’s looking back. So number one, the driver did not drive him home. The driver drove him to the police station that was less than a half mile from his house and insisted the police come get him out. So he got dragged out of an Uber by three cops. Um, Uber, backseats, my safe place it’s supposed to be. And then like, so the next morning he’s like, do the Uber driver like racked and he put them in a drunk tank? Yeah. Oh yeah. Wouldn’t let him walk home the short leg. Like literally it was like less than a half a mile to his house. Come on. And you give him a five star rating. No. So here’s the best part. So the driver not only did that to him, but drove all over to Helen gone while he was passed out jacking up the fare. Oh shit. So yeah, I mean it’s, it’s one of those Scott, like it doesn’t track you and when you’re separate tomorrow, that’s how he knew, uh, any, any wound up getting like, you know, the, the ride fare refunded and that kind of shit. But I mean that’s, that’s still, dude, that’s an ugly set of circumstances, but it’s just like, can you imagine, can you imagine like getting hauled out of an Uber by three cops cause you passed out. I’m like, dude, I, I done good dude. I like, exactly, this is what I’m supposed to do. Like that’s the thing that like, that always bothers me. Like I was supposed to, who was it? The police? Is it the police chief? Uh, out there in Michigan? They got busted for a DUI and ice. He’s just getting probation. I mean, he, Hey, he was super drunk. I mean, he was, he was like literally more than three times the limit. But Hey, we’re just going to put him on probation and he’s still employed. He’s still the police chief. He used to, yeah. Yeah, we’re a little lenient. Ah. Um, so here, this was an interesting one and I remember we went nuts, what was it, two or three years ago at penguin con when they were implementing our food? They were doing. They were, no, they were, they were doing, they were installing or implement or implants for RFID implants in your hand? Yes. And somebody was actually doing that at penguin cotton and we were like, you are out of your effing mind. A story came out on LinkedIn, basically the title. Would you let your boss chip you? Well, it seems like this accelerates every year because there was like one company in Wisconsin, if I recall correctly, that was doing this like a year ago. Yeah, that sounds familiar. Yeah. And, and but like now apparently it’s becoming more like, it’s, it’s like this is the new company ID badge. So I’m like, so here’s the thing, I’m in a secure building, I have an ID badge, I swipe it to get out. I can’t walk in. Otherwise there’s glass things and they move and then there’s a security person behind the desk and my face comes up on a screen and then they greet me. Good morning Robert. Right? Like I don’t like what else do you want or need? Like what were the point? Are you really going to have dude, what’s the average life expectancy at a job now? Three years? It depends on what you’re doing, but yeah. So what, you’re just going to wind up with scars everywhere from all the various, like is that, is that going to be like, Oh yeah, so this is the scar from when I worked at Cisco. This is the scar from the RV. This is the one. But then they’re talking about, they’re doing it for like offsite construction workers when they get on site. So like they’re going to have sensors so you don’t even have to badge in. So like it’s going to be a smart to know. What, what’s your exit interview like? Is it in an operating room to pull it out? I don’t know. Hey, you’re getting fired. We’re going to cut you open. Well, I remember like five years ago, um, I in Canada and my cousin’s best friend was implementing an app for the snowplow industry. Uh, it puts sensors around parking lots and basically when that, when the, the billing started, as soon as the trucks pulled in and they stopped building bill, you know what I mean? And they would show their path and their trajectory. Right. Um, good. That’s that to me, fine. If you want to track drivers, you want to know, they already do what GPS with with ups and all the FedEx and all that. But like working on site, like could you imagine like, Oh, you’re going off site to the switch data center in grand Rapids. And by the way, um, we’re going to track your every movement while you’re in the data center and when you, when you get there and when you, you know, when you leave, not just badging in or we’re not going to trust you that you, you know, people are either gonna like, I don’t know what they’re going to do. Well, and I’m sorry, but like the weird, like one of the weirder stories that I thought came up was that Airbnb acquired a company, um, that essentially let them now run an AI based on information other than what you give Airbnb. Um, like looking up your job, your social profiles, all this other stuff to determine whether or not you are a quote unquote acceptable fit for the property that you were looking to acquire. Is this China? This isn’t China, is it Danny? I’m just saying like, so you know, and so you know, there’s, there, there according to them, you know, they’re, they’re trying to STEM some of the issues they’ve had where like somebody runs an Airbnb, throws a party, destroys the house or you know, sex workers, you know, porn filming, that kind of stuff. I get it. It’s still creepy as hell. It’s creepy. A sale’s sleeping in someone’s bed with their steak, but like the day before and then you’re going to stay there all weekend. Go to a Marriott. That’s, yeah. I don’t forget crying out loud. We were, we were going down to Florida with friends and they wanted an Airbnb. And I go, Hey, I don’t want to cook breakfast B. I want to get coffee downstairs at like a coffee shop. I don’t want to like have to like go to the grocery store. See, I don’t want to poop on someone else’s stinkbug toilet. Like it’s no for real. Like it’s gross and you’re, you’re wondering if they got hidden cameras and see that that’s always the thing I wonder about when it comes to people staying in Airbnbs carries and shit there, you know what I mean? Cams or whatever. Right. And then all of a sudden now, you know, and you could see it, they could see in the dark. So is there a one over your bed? Uh, you know, if, uh, you know, you’re watching the dirty movie on channel 12, he goes, are you the dirty movie next? Right on channel 11. Right. So very a very minority report ish. The story about Delta and they’re parallel reality. I like this one still very minority report issue. Cause, like we’ve talked about like whenever you can use those powers for good, you can write like, would you, you know, walk into a Kroger and they go, you know, Jaeger Meisters unseal Mr. Walton schpiel ILA eight, right? Like wow, thanks. It’s like the Facebook ads with my stupid tee shirts, right? I’m not, I look at a Facebook ad and like unless it’s a wish ad, nine times out of 10, I’m like God damn what I want it. Right. You know, so, so Delta. So I keep wanting to send a, like a note to the wish team just asking them if they’re okay. Did you see, uh, I posted it on the football forum and it was like a wish thing and I didn’t even realize what was on the right of the cause. It was like a pair of pants and there was like a puff coming [inaudible] and I’m like, what in the world would that be? Is it like carbon filtered pants? But there was Wiener lipsticks to the right of it. Of course. It’s basically your search history Bible. I’m like, no nice clothes. I go, but Dave’s getting at the parallel reality. It’s basically there’s going to be like one giant screen for your departing flights and let’s say like Caston sitting next to me and I’m staring at it and it’s gonna show me my flight and it’s gonna show him his flight at the same time. I, yeah, I got to see, I don’t know how I got to show this in action. Right. And I don’t know how it’s going to work. Um, like I understood like minority report, it was based on basically contact lenses they had in, but right. They scan your Iris basically zap, you know, each individual gets his app while you’re walking through. We’ll see. Um, and they go, they think it’s 10 20 years away, but it’s like literally their PO seeing right now. Yeah. Um, and I don’t know what the big deal is. All I got to do is go like Denver, Denver, Denver, Detroit, 10 40 gate a 42. It’s like, is this a problem for which we need an additional solution? I guess I want to figure it out that I could bring my bottle of water. And that’s what I would have framed it exactly. Is it four, can I give to my four ounce bottle of shampoo going to get thrown away or, uh, so speaking of throwaways and I do love this, apparently there’s a database sitting on a Chinese IP address, uh, with the details of 56 million Americans just hanging out publicly open and accessible. Uh, thanks to a website called check people.com is apparently where it was pilfered from. I love the, uh, the th this is the response. No, the subtext of the, uh, of the headline. If check people could take a look at this, that would be great. That would be great. Yeah. So yeah, it’s apparently it’s names, addresses, employment. Yeah. Good, good, good types. Thanks. Thanks for that. However that happened. That’s a male relatives, criminal records and basically they just skimmed public records. Yeah. Good time. You put it in a database and a white hat hacker. They had to found it. They had to, they had to list that out cause Hey, that’s why I said it’s not the individual breaches you have to worry about. It’s the people that are out there aggregating this. Yeah. It was personal data and metadata. Um, yeah, they were all scraped and, and it’s just sitting out there and uh, yeah. Nice. At this point. It’s funny cause we were talking about like 23 and me and all that crap at work and the guy goes, I don’t do that crap. I go, man, I go, go to activity.google.com. He goes, I delete that stuff. I go, Oh yeah, that’s cause it’s gone. You know. And he’s like, yeah, and Snapchat actually deletes the pictures, you know. But it’s a, it is a sad day though. Um, and I didn’t realize how people, like we know when they forced windows 10 and everybody with windows, windows seven was a good, OSA was, there wasn’t really many bad Microsoft OSS, you know, a change. I hate it. Um, but apparently I always like the, the big bang theory. Sheldon when he was like, when windows eight came out and he was like, windows eight is you, it’s so much more user friendly than windows seven. I don’t like it. Um, but apparently a Microsoft dropping support a seven today and they’re not going to, they as of today, it is end of life. 26% of all PCs 26 that number blew my mind right now because they for, no, because as we sat in WJR on Saturday looking at the windows XP screen, Oh my God, I know windows XP and they were making fun of it and I go that screen right there, I tell CRT monitor, Oh my God. But not because they were forcing 10 upgrades. Yup. So like windows seven 26% I think about that one in four PCs. Yeah. That’s insane. But it’s one of the things, it’s again, if it’s functioning and it works cool, still get windows 10 if you want, if you’re still running windows seven or windows eight you can still get windows 10 it, they stopped pushing it for free, but they’re still supporting it. So we go down the media, download the media creation tool from the Microsoft website, run it, and then check the activation and it’ll use your eight or seven key to activate the windows 10 version. Yep. Yup. Cool. Well, Hey, we’re going to take a speaking of, uh, I, I got nothing. I was gonna use it. Speaking of activating, they’ll try and sense either, uh, speaking of cats, we’re going to take a quick break. We’re going to be back with Cason and Thomas. We’re gonna be talking about, uh, being on WJR this weekend and a bunch of other stuff. This is the it in the D show. They, he’ll be, Hey, welcome back. Segment two, episode three, 30 of the it that he show broadcasting live here. Studio three podcast. He traded beautiful Royal Oak, Michigan. Bob the sales guy, Dave the geek. Randy. I do the Twitters is doing the Twitters. Find us online it in theD  dotcom. You want to know why? Cause we all right, Tina and you, you’re, you’re still not, but we still love you. And as a reminder, again, I am a moron and I scheduled the event for next Thursday, not this Thursday. My apologies. We’ll have that fixed moving forward in future months. But Hey, capital one knows life doesn’t alert you about your credit card. That’s why they created, you know, the capital one assistant to catches things that might look wrong with your credit card, like over tipping duplicate charges or potential fraud. Then sends an alert to your phone and helps you fix it. It’s another way. Capital one is watching out for your money when you’re not capital one. What’s in your wallet? See capital one.com for details that CAAP I T a L O N e.com. But Hey, we are very, very lucky to be joined by the illustrious one, the one and only the 13th time on the it in the D show. I wanted to do like a Rick flair thing, like the 16 time world champion. But Hey Caston Thomas, welcome. Thank you for joining us. Glad to be here. Oh yeah, absolutely. We uh, we haven’t seen you in days. I don’t of fact. No, we haven’t been on jr it feels like a couple of years. Um, it wasn’t that long. I thought it was since the last time we were on, I don’t know, it’s was about a year ago. We were then co-hosting for two and a half years. And this is the first time I’ve been in the studio with you. That’s what I thought we were on once with Jeff and we, uh, were on one trip and now, yeah, I know. Caston’s on 13 times here. We’re on three times on jr. um, it’s probably for the best, let’s be honest. No, you guys were great. No, but so like we always like talking about the differences between podcasting and radio and you know, you kind of cut your teeth, you know, guesting here talking about security and, and all that. You made it all possible guys. That’s in fact, Oh wait, is that jazz music right here? We’ll be back with a quick word from plumbers with a Z in the geek or.studio. I wanted to say, I’m so kicking myself for not saying that. And you’re like, yeah, I’m really proud to be here in the geek or Don studios. Now we might have to do the seven second button on that one. Ah, you just don’t mess with the host. And here’s the thing. You didn’t even, you didn’t even introduce me yet. And I’m already ragging on you cause you’re talking about like a microwave with like a clipboard screen on it. I’m like, yeah, we need to have a conversation about that. By the way. Why go into the long explanation? Because we only had seven minutes on that segment to get real content because you need recipes for Kraft dinner. And I’m like, that’s not it. I’ll talk to you after this riveting. I can’t wait to hear more about the microwave with a clipboard. Yay. CES. Now hang on, hang on. Let me hijack this for just a minute. Uh, and I told you I was going to do it, but you know, our last time together was with foster, uh, coming in and that was a must listen show because it was intense. It was beautiful. Uh, and yet it was still having a little of that irreverence that you guys have and fun. But, uh, I’d like to just stop for a moment and say thank you. I mean, not just for me, but for everybody who’s listening. The impact that it in the D and you, Bob and Dave have had on the it community on Detroit and on all your listeners. I mean, there are guys out in some remote desert listening to this show looking at the beautiful stars because they’re a hundred or a thousand miles away from any city light and you bring sanity into an insane world. Or, wait, did I mean insane? I was like, I don’t, I don’t know that that’s accurate. I don’t, Oh yeah, I’ll tell you. I’ll take it. Yeah. You know, there’s just something that you bring to people’s lives every week. And I enjoy the show and I know thousands if not tens or hundreds of thousands of people, really appreciate the work you do. Thanks, man. I’ll slip you the a hundred hours. No, right. No slipping me anything. Well, here’s the thing, and we’re going to, if we’re going to butter each other’s bread, I mean, uh, I know you’ve only been a part of internet adviser, not for a couple of years, but that you guys are celebrating your 23rd anniversary now you think about and you know, and there’s still like a couple of people that have been on since day one talking about, yeah, Gary Baker’s been on state one talking about technology for 23 years. It’s as long as I’ve been in it. That was before XP. That was before windows 90 that’s, yeah, that’s 1997 so you’re still in the windows 95 brother printer era. Yeah. Elaborate with Dave just said there’s one of our favorite, so the internet adviser shorts, a two hour show on WJR every Saturday an hour now. It’s one hour now, but it used to be a two hour show and the first hour was talking about kind of like what we do, talk about going through the news. Second hour was taking calls and it was fixing people’s stuff and they had the patience of saints. It was the most amazing show of restraint and help knit and helpfulness. Google that, you know. No, cause that was, Oh every answer was let me Google that for you. Yeah, throw it out. That was the guy who [inaudible] my brother printer will not talk to windows. Okay. Printers are 50 bucks. Throw it away by anyone. One bell. We got to fix that. It’s not a correct way. So I started saying in foster love this, I’d say, you know, we’re always smarter after the break. Right. Well we’ll hope, you know, hold on just a minute, we’ll get back to you after the break. And then we had all the answers. It guys don’t know everything. We just know how to Google really, really well. That was maybe one of the best memes with like that stuffed animal. Like it’s like a chimpanzee and it was like doctors, like you can’t go to what the web MD does. Programmers are like, um, but no, two weeks ago my mom calls me after every show and gives me her critique and one one time about, Oh no, you know what, my mother is like stepping back in to leave it to Beaver. She’s that 1950s Southern Belle mother who, you know, I go down to Atlanta and uh, we go into a store and she goes, I raised you better than that. And I’m like, Ooh, sorry. And I take my hat off. Oh geez. Wow. Suddenly I’m 13 again. Sorry Bob. I’m sorry. Sorry. Calls me. And she goes, you’re not going out drinking with those nice boys. Ah, no, no. Mom, go, they went home. I brought a flask, ma. No, but you, you kind of dropped something. I mean like that show is hurt. You said what? 28 States, 38 States, States sun goes down and Canadia and all, all provinces in Canada. [inaudible] pro. Yeah. They cause at sundown many stations shut down. So that’s why the seven 60 band is clear channel across the nation. And I always thought it was fascinating hearing it because we went to Cleveland and you could like where we would go to Cedar point like that. Like I always, for some reason I still have that, like when we used to go up North and the first day she’d pick up as jr we had the blessing of Kettering university on and he goes, it’s really great to be here in the jr studios. He said when I was 12 years old, I erected a 20 foot antenna. I lived about 10 miles outside of Orlando and I would listen to jr at night. Oh my God. So that’s crazy. And another guy came on, he goes, my father is so excited that I’m on the show because he remembers driving to Iowa with me and we drove all the way to Iowa and listen did jr the whole time. That’s what we always talk about. Listening to Ernie Harwell. I like, I probably heard Ernie Harwell speak to me more than my own father. Wow. Like, if you think about it, if you grew up in this town and you’re like baseball, like you would listen to him 162 times for what, two and a half hours a pop do the math like yeah, probably right. It’s a ritual. Yeah, exactly. And it was, it was religion. You know what I mean? So, and everyone’s odd, AM’s dead, no one heard you, you know, and they make fun of us for being on your show. Um, but like there’s, there’s, there’s, we got emails about it. We got picked up followers. There’s a charm to it. It’s, it’s, it’s a thing like I always, uh, I, I don’t think it’ll ever die because someone will do like a ham set up and make, you know, there are other podcast studios out there trying to buy a am radio stations to make that work. So yeah, there’s that. I wanna I still want to, I still have my dream in life cast and I don’t know if we’ve told you this as we went, there was an am radio station for sales, one of those like high school ones that like have like a mile of a reach and I wanted to do the WPI out of the back of somebody’s window, but I want to know non pirate radio. It was a, it was a legit, like it was, we actually got offered to take it over, um, that because we helped them build out a studio there and it was like a secondary education school. Um, and to help them build out the studio with like, you know, some soundproofing and some gear that we had. Um, and they had an old am transmitter that has like a Miley you could like, like [inaudible] for like two miles along one road. You could hear it. We do 38. Yeah, it was not yet, but I want it to be WBRD where every day the bird is the word and I want to play the Trashman Surfin bird on repeat all day. And Java, I think. No, no, no. Just Surfin bird, Java, surf bird Jack or it’d be the, um, the gamut. What was the droid and empire and Hoff, um, the, the probe droid. So, but just to what I originally hijacked to show it, I want to encourage people to get on iTunes, get on Google store, get on YouTube and rate the show. Say thank you. Tell these guys what they mean to you and what the show means to you. Don’t tell us what we mean to you. Might be surprised, but no, really. Um, you know, one of the things that I’ve given a lot of thought about is how do we create compelling radio versus compelling podcasting and we can’t get into the depth and radio. It’s like you said, you know, the jazz music comes on every seven to 10 minutes. And there was a relationship with drew him like that. I had, and I don’t know if it was just the era that I grew up in, like that was like every, it was part of my day every single day. And they actually, they gave them time to talk. I would listen to you guys every morning. You want to get up at fourth I am not getting now. The one thing I never understood is how Mike from Jerome, Mike could laugh at. Like, I’m just like just getting my seven 11 coffee down my down, my pie hole and this guy’s just cracking up laughing at fart jokes. And I’m like, well my eyes are happy. Step one. You would’ve had to gone to bed at eight o’clock the night before, right? Yeah. I mean when foster was doing the 6:00 AM morning show, he was talking about getting up at two 30 in the morning so that he could do a show prep, get into the studio, get everything set up. And it’s just, you know, it’s like taking the night, the night shift. Well, and that’s the thing, like, you know, I having their relationship with drew on Mike, I think people now have relationships with podcasters just cause they’re getting it. They’re getting it when they want, how they want. Right. So like there’s no, I had to, you know, if I wasn’t, if I took the day off that day or if I, you know what I mean? I wouldn’t get to listen to them. Yeah. It was just, it was that easy. I had to be six and 10. I had to be in my car. Usually it was I was going to school or whatever I was doing and I got to listen to them know, otherwise forget it. You know, millennials, you know, get this bad rap for attention span. And I was listening to Jordan Peterson, I think it was, and he was talking about the people who listen to his podcast or watch his two and a half hour videos and he goes, attention spans not the problem. It’s having compelling content. Indeed. You guys have compelling content. When present company did I have short attention span theater? Did it? If I click a video or something like that, man, it’s like the, all that, you know, if you build a great website, they will come. If you make them wait eight seconds, they will leave. I mean, it’s, it’s that simple. Like if I’m bored before you even get started getting rolling. See ya. And if you got a six minute intro, forget it. Four that’s over then. Oh my God, when I got so much grief, uh, when, when Jim Alison was on talking gaming, apparently his wife listened live and she’s like texting them the whole time going like, Jesus Christ. How long do they expect people to listen to this shit? Like she’s like just, just berating us. Like yes Jim, we just added 30 seconds. Exactly. That’s, that’s another 15 seconds that has to get right. That’s the rule. So I mean what are you learning from, I mean from am radio other than like seven seconds. Jazz music, you know, and then you get 12 seconds jazz music. There’s no screw ups. There’s no stopping. There’s no edit. I mean you just got to go and it’s, it’s tough. There’s pressure there. Uh, part of it is, and you’ve got all the FCC rules and restrictions. Well, yeah, not a problem for me because my mom makes me take off the hat. One I was worried about saying suck. Like, I really was, cause you know when we were talking about, uh, yeah, my brother wants to talk to you about that. [inaudible] tell her to watch our TEDx talk and it’s going to wash your mouth out. And no, because that was our thing. Suck. Listen, I, I thought about it, I thought about it. I go, Nope, I’m going to say it. Yeah, no, that’s an okay word. Yeah. Well, because you know, you’re referring to Becky vacuum cleaners and whatever. It’s all context. No, but like, you know, and the thing is too is you’re on payroll. It’s not like, just like you’re letting, it’s not like you’re paying for that time. Right. So, you know, you probably have people listening. You, I don’t know, do you guys have to go through like a a that was good, that wasn’t good. I think at this point, 23 years, you pretty much have carte blanche in there. No, no, no comment. Giga or Dodd didn’t like that bit about podcasts. The one thing I have to consider because sometimes I do, uh, talk about, uh, certain products and things and I have to give a second thought about, you know, am I going to be stepping on a sponsor and getting a call about that? Right? There’s, there’s so much freedom and podcasting and so many ways, uh, it’s difficult at times to, to interact on the radio, but there’s a charm about that real time nature of interacting with people because we do take Colin’s, and that’s part of my, that’s my favorite part of the show is when we actually get to interview or talk to somebody live, you know, they’ve got a problem and it may be really simple, it may be a head scratcher, right? But there’s, there’s something genuine and charming about that that I really enjoy. Well, I mean, we joke about just Google it for crying out loud, but there’s a, there’s kind of like a connection when you can help them. Oh, so two weeks ago, my mother calls in, her review was, you know, that was a very informative show. But what’s 5g again, one more. It’s not her world. It’s one more than four Jima. But what I mean, that’s when four people get in a room full idea. People actually being involved in the real world and they really didn’t even know it. Five G is where the connection to number one warn them about things that they don’t hear enough about. And I remember Nuri talking about having talked to your grandparents about tech day. Yeah, yeah, we’re doing that. Well. So I brought that up with a, there’s another show here that does like a security protection, that kind of stuff. And they started talking about, you know, you know, shredding documents and all that stuff. And I was like, dude, I’m like, cause you don’t know. You don’t even just say like when we’re not, when my wife’s grandparents died, they died within about three months of each other. Um, and cleaning out their house was a nightmare because they literally kept every piece of paper that they had ever gotten from anything ever, including all of their medical stuff, which up until about 20 years ago was just your social security number was everywhere like that. That was all that was there. So they were like literally just crates upon crates, upon crates, upon crates of this shit where we rented an industrial shredder and burned the sucker out a day and a half in and had to be like, Hey, broke it. Sorry. Need another one. Yeah. Amazing. I mean for me, I never thought about it. I’m like, Oh good. That folder of 2012 tech stuff I can actually finally tell us. Yeah. As I say, it sounds like it’s time to just hide it under a pile of leaves and light. The whole thing on fire, dude, like you don’t even know a dude. It would have triggered like a neighborhood fire if we, I mean I seriously, I cannot put into proper context exactly how much paperwork they had stored in their house. That was, I mean he had a garage, but I’ve got this problem. I’ll save things for 20 years and then I throw it out in the wind cleaner. I need it. Does anybody else have that as ask? Ask me for a windows 95 installed city. I have one asked me, ask me for, you know, dos six Oh, installation diskettes asked me if I have anything that would lead to mill serial converter. Right? Yep. Ask me if I have anything that’ll read a 3.44 floppy at this point. Uh, uh, yeah, no, God. I mean that dude, that’s me. Like I’m, I’m a huge fan. It’s, and it’s the, it’s the fear of, you know, in Bob lives, you know, loves to talk about my ego and my hero complex and that kind of stuff. And I admit I do have one, but it’s that. No, no. Well dude, cause it was Jeff who like, and he was like, Hey dude, I know this is a weird request, but my dad’s computer died. You don’t have a windows 95 install CD do yet. I’m like gimme a minute. Yeah. When are you coming over? I think I still have a dos one. I still got my pile. Oh crap. And all these years you haven’t waived a magnet over it accidentally now. No, he talks he, it’s funny he talks about it is I got the Iomega drive too. Oh yeah, I got it. Oh yeah. Here’s the thing. If you put it in a certain place and you never go into that place again and it just sits like that’s my, I think yours is probably organized minded just because I’d even thrown it away. No, not really. No. Just really, I opened a box that I am convinced I have, like I’m convinced the box has moved with me from when I, that the townhouse in DC that I had through every house that I’ve lived here. And I’ve never looked at it because when I opened up this box, dude, my alphanumeric SkyTel pager was in this box. My light just shit that I haven’t even touched or even thought about since I was living in DC. Uh, you know, an old star tack, you know, flip phone. I just, and I’m like, even I was like, why? Why got all my old phones, all my kids, my kids, I was their toy phones. Oh yeah. My Nokia, my flip. Well, I like the nice, you ever have a problem Edward L who’s on her show? He can answer questions on all that. Exactly. Yeah. Start that TARDEC phone, the one that’s connected to the Verizon network, but only show number a Y. Oh, okay. But also, I mean I do, I think it’s cool. I mean that’s a, that’s that’s one of the cause you to you guys, you guys take a a little bit different approach with that kind of stuff than we do. I mean we’re, we’re a little bit more, we’re a lot more irreverent than you are. No, no, but I mean, but that’s, but that’s the thing. I mean that was, that was our taken our approach when we decided that we wanted to do this is, you know, there was already enough and not that you guys were this bad, but there were, there were, there was, there were already enough today on this technology podcast, we’re going to be on the port God Mark corner then Mark. Yeah. Like we’re not, we’re going to review this five port, this Linux distro onco six. Dot. Oh yeah. [inaudible] commandos. Not the Hottie. She once was these guys the wayside. But yes, I mean it’s, it, you know, it is. I mean, and you know, and I do like if I, if I happen to be out driving around and when I know you guys are on, I’ll throw it on and listen. Um, so I mean keep an eye on you and then drive home on the drive home from jr. I was like, Oh, I want to listen to the second hour that I’m doing tech support and it’s Ben Shapiro. And I’m like, Oh, I want, I want to see if anyone was listening to us on there that I know they’re like cringing right now. Call them. Well, you know, we, we try to keep that down-home effect because we know where our audience and you gotta be real, but you also have to know your audience at the same time. And so a little thing that Cal Carson did, you know, one of the coppos was he brought Bob’s daughter up to the microphone and she brought, brought it in and she was really shy and kind of intimidated by all the studio stuff. But that just one, it resonates with our audience. But when you saw the kindness that Cal exhibited with Bob’s daughter, it was just an amazing thing to watch. She nails welcome to the internet advisers show and she doesn’t know her damn name. And I’m like, God, come on kindergarten, you should nail this stuff. All right, so switching gears, uh, there is apparently a workshop that you were doing. Yeah, we wanted to talk about, you know, last time I was on, we were talking about edge computing and uh, sensor-based networks and the way that smart cities and smart cars and smart hospitals and smart factories are building out. Uh, and uh, I’m doing work with this incredible team from [inaudible] solutions group. Well, what’s evolved out of that is we saw a real need for developing a program for securing IOT. And one of the things that, that I’ve been saying over and over and over, almost a mantra is that if we try to apply the same security and support models to IOT that we did to it, we’re going to fail. Catastrophical I says in securing IOT. Isn’t that like an oxymoron at this point in the game? Well it can be, but the difficulty is, is that there’s all this complexity around it. The barn door is open, the horses out, but hasn’t found a gate through the fence yet. A lot of the door horses out, like what are you going to do with it? Yeah, you can assemble them and do nasty things and create DDoS attacks. But the really sophisticated kind of things, the hackers haven’t quite gotten to that point to shut down a massive number of factories or a hospital. We’ve seen incidents of that and occurrences, you know, the Saudi, a refinery got shut down, a manufacturing plant in Germany got totally shut down by malware. And then, uh, you know, you had a couple of outbreaks where not intentionally, but ransomware impacted some really expensive and, uh, really important medical devices over in Europe didn’t spread to the United States. So, uh, we are behind the eight ball. So what we’ve done is we’ve created a half day workshop that we’re going to be going around. I’m going to be going to about 20 cities this year, uh, conducting a half day workshop. The first, uh, the morning’s going to be medical devices. The afternoon’s going to be industrial controls call, internet of industrial things, building automation, those kinds of things because there are step-by-steps and a lot of resources that are out there. I mean, Mayo clinic’s done eight years of securing medical devices. I can’t hear that without going airplane. Give me him on five, hold the mail. There you go. Yeah. The letter that the one guy wrote, there’s a book and he’s like, wrote a, like a really polite dissertate. Like it’s really cool that you guys have a clinic dedicated to the mayonnaise. I just go into Mayo. Yeah, no. So, so we’re taking the best, this is for people who’ve already been or organizations that have already been down this path. We’re packaging it up with the resources, the methodologies, and the construct of a workshop with uh, forms and worksheets and team building exercises so that we can either take in one of these metropolitan based, uh, many people from different organizations, but a slight spin on that is going into a hospital or into, uh, an industrial complex or utility and facilitating, bringing them through the steps to make sure that they’ve checked all the boxes for securing IOT, uh, whether that’s medical devices or industrial or utilities, smart grid, smart network. And so the idea is that we can accelerate the development of, of a comprehensive cybersecurity programs specific to IOT and just a couple of weeks instead of the six months of all the organizational things and defining the structures of why IOT is different, why you support it differently. Because if you’ve got a clinical engineer, a plan engineer who’s got to spend 30 minutes and in order to just to get a device on the network because they’ve got to call the help, right? Got to call the network. You got to provision this guy [inaudible] well is it going to get, is it going to get to the point with IOT that there’s going to be either a standard or a compliance that they need, uh, companies need to comply to cause right now it’s wild, wild West. You know, what come to the early days of the internet, come to find out right here. No, the uh, this has done a lot of good work, uh, particularly in the area of medical devices and organization called MITRE. M. I T R E has uh, I E T F E is an even has a guide on the important factors. These organizations had done a lot of really good work. A lot of it is F the role and conceptual, not real world. We’re trying to bring that real world experience that other organizations have put in. Then our, uh, our expertise in going through this with organizations to put down something that’s efficient and economical. And a buddy of mine who did an IOT security deployment of over a million devices says, yeah, it looked at the NIST requirements. And if we did that in our organization, it would only cost us $8 billion billion. Yeah. [inaudible] the numbers. He’s a numbers guy. Used to work for Google and built data centers, but what’s the in what? And then he had to look at what’s the penalty for not doing it and if it’s less than a billion, that’s the route they were going. Yeah. Yeah. But you know, there aren’t a lot of penalties for this. It’s really looking at the differences in how IOT devices are different than IOT devices. As an example, IOT devices are typically not manned, are they? They may be in remote areas. That idea of being able to patch a thousand devices in an oil pipeline, it ain’t going to happen because if one of the sensors goes down for a couple of minutes, they got to shut down the whole pipe. Right? That’s why you have unpatched devices in industrial controls. That’s why you have all of the sensors that are running, uh, universities and hospitals that haven’t been updated. What about the new consumer Alliance that was just announced though? Can I get home over IP? Apple, Amazon, Google, ZigBee. Gee, I really wish I knew about home. There’s a laser focused, they actually have one called chips chip. You, well they’re not calling it a chip, but everybody else is bringing me punch and John, I’m glad ZigBee still exists. That was like Samsung and I was working with it like an Oh four and I thought I’d died and then Bluetooth became a standard and then, yeah, no I’m glad. I’m happy to hear that cause I used to work in like home club. The home blog Alliance. Yeah, like back in that was Oh four Oh my God. If I’m not mistaken I think Kroger is doing some things with ZigBee throughout all their stores. That may be old information, but yeah. Is that their shopping thing where you go pick up the scanner or is it something these are old brain cells. I’ve already cleared cash. Sorry. Yeah, I was like, Hey, where do people find out more about this seminar and like sign up for it or like is it out yet? Is it, yup. Yup. I’m doing one in Cleveland. We did our first one on medical devices in San Francisco was very well received back at the end of last year. He didn’t step any poop on the street. Did you? A no comment. Okay. I can’t say badly. She totally does. Everyday stepson. Uh, find me on LinkedIn. Caston Thomas sounds like it’s spelled or spelled like it sounds. And uh, uh, you can also go to [inaudible] S G [inaudible] solutions group.com and find out more and uh, click through there. Fill out a form. You can get to me. Awesome internet advisers on a six o’clock on Saturdays on WJR 70, 67. As long as the lions and the Spartans aren’t playing football or basketball, uh, we’re generally generally on live and uh, in color. Nice. Nice. Not really cause it’s a M so you’re not in HTS. Everybody listens to it in the D. just tell your parents to listen. There you go. There you go. Now we’ve got some guys that qualify. We gotta go get some, we get an older crowd that comes around. Yeah. Right. So lucky 13 you know, it’s always a joy to be here with you. Thanks for coming out again man. I appreciate it. Sure. It’s always a good chat. Yeah. Good senior cast. Another always. Hey, we’re going to wrap things up for episode 330 of the it and that he sure would like to thank Caston Thomas for spending time with us. Hosted the internet advisers show and security consultant Xtrordinair on behalf of a Bob David Randi, do us all a favor. Get your trick up, drinks, get your phone numbers. You don’t get to go home. You just got to get the hell out of here. See you next week. Drive careful. Beat it. So you guys.   IT in the D On the web: http://www.ITinTheD.com On Meetup: http://www.meetup.com/ITintheD/ On LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/groups/IT-in-D-91763 On Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/ITintheD On Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/ITintheD Podcast Detroit is at: On the web: http://www.podcastdetroit.com/ On Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PodcastDetroit On Twitter: https://twitter.com/PodcastDetroit On Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/podcastdetroit

The Detroit History Podcast
Season 2, Episode 2- Remembering The Anchor, Detroit's Most Famous Newspaper Bar

The Detroit History Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2019 25:02


The Anchor Bar, situated on the western end of downtown Detroit, was once one of the country's best-known newspaper bars. As one of the city's most notorious watering holes, it was also the site of a federal raid because the feds thought one of its patrons was running a $15 million-a-year bookie operation (uh, it did have four telephones). After 60 years, the place has just changed ownership. We look at the bar's history. We talk with Vaughn Derderian, son of Leo Derderian, who created the place's mystique; former Detroit News columnist Pete Waldmeir; Berl Falbaum, who wrote a book about the place; and Julie Altesleben, a Detroit News copy editor/page designer, who brings us into the 21st century. Warning: Explicit Language, F Bombs Galore.