Podcast appearances and mentions of John Boehner

53rd Speaker of the United States House of Representatives

  • 483PODCASTS
  • 861EPISODES
  • 54mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Mar 21, 2025LATEST
John Boehner

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024

Categories



Best podcasts about John Boehner

Latest podcast episodes about John Boehner

The Dispatch Podcast
Abundance About-Face | Roundtable

The Dispatch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2025 74:25


Sarah Isgur is joined by Megan McArdle, Jonah Goldberg, and Steve Hayes to discuss the rise of “Abundance Democrats” and Donald Trump's attack on judicial independence. The Agenda: —Chuck Schumer falls into the John Boehner trap —What are “Abundance Democrats”? —Libs discover supply-side matters —People don't care about procedure —Did Vladimir Putin laugh at Trump? —Gaza ceasefire breakdown —NWYT: Sad beige homes The Dispatch Podcast is a production of The Dispatch, a digital media company covering politics, policy, and culture from a non-partisan, conservative perspective. To access all of The Dispatch's offerings—including members-only newsletters, bonus podcast episodes, and regular livestreams—click here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Barack Obama - Great Speeches
Barack Obama: News Conference on Congressional Gridlock

Barack Obama - Great Speeches

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 32:53


THE PRESIDENT:  Hello, everybody.  I am glad to see that all of you braved the weather to be here.  A little while ago I had a meeting with the Democratic and Republican congressional leaders, and it went very well.  In fact, I understand that McConnell and Reid are out doing snow angels on the South Lawn together.  (Laughter.)  Can you picture that, Chuck?  Not really?The meeting did go well, and I appreciate them making the trek.  We had a good and frank conversation and it's one that I hope we can continue on a more regular basis.We all understand that there are legitimate and genuine differences between the parties, but despite the political posturing that often paralyzes this town, there are many issues upon which we can and should agree.  That's what the American people are demanding of us.  I think they're tired of every day being Election Day in Washington.  And at this critical time in our country, the people sent us here expect a seriousness of purpose that transcends petty politics.That's why I'm going to continue to seek the best ideas from either party as we work to tackle the pressing challenges ahead.  I am confident, for example, that when one in 10 of our fellow citizens can't work, we should be able to come together and help business create more jobs.  We ought to be able to agree on providing small businesses with additional tax credits and much needed lines of credit.  We ought to agree on investments in crumbling roads and bridges, and we should agree on tax breaks for making homes more energy-efficient -- all of which will put more Americans to work.  Many of the job proposals that I've laid out have passed the House and are soon going to be debated in the Senate.  We spent a lot of time in this meeting discussing a jobs package and how we could move forward on that.  And if there are additional ideas, I will consider them as well.  What I won't consider is doing nothing in the face of a lot of hardship across the country. We also talked about restoring fiscal responsibility.  There are few matters on which there is as much vigorous bipartisan agreement, at least in public, but unfortunately there's also a lot of partisan wrangling behind closed doors.  This is what we know for sure:  For us to solve this extraordinary problem that is so many years in the making, it's going to take the cooperation of both parties.  It's not going to happen in any other way.I'm pleased that Congress supported my request to restore the pay-as-you-go rule, which was instrumental in turning deficits into surpluses during the 1990s.  I've also called for a bipartisan fiscal commission.  Unfortunately this measure, which originally had received the support of a bipartisan majority of the Senate and was cosponsored by Senators Conrad and Gregg, Democrats and Republicans, was blocked there.  So I'm going to be creating this commission by executive order.  And during our meeting I asked the leadership of both parties to join in this serious effort to address our long-term deficits, because when the politics is put aside, the reality of our fiscal challenge is not subject to interpretation.  Math is not partisan.  There ought to be a debate about how to close our deficits.  What we can't accept is business as usual, and we can't afford grandstanding at the expense of actually getting something done.During our meeting we also touched briefly on how we can move forward on health reform.  I've already announced that in two weeks I'll be holding a meeting with people from both parties, and as I told the congressional leadership, I'm looking forward to a constructive debate with plans that need to be measured against this test.  Does it bring down costs for all Americans as well as for the federal government, which spends a huge amount on health care?  Does it provide adequate protection against abuses by the insurance industry?  Does it make coverage affordable and available to the tens of millions of working Americans who don't have it right now?  And does it help us get on a path of fiscal sustainability?We also talked about why this is so urgent.  Just this week, there was a report that Anthem Blue Cross, which is the largest insurer in the largest state, California, is planning on raising premiums for many individual policyholders by as much as 39 percent.  If we don't act, this is just a preview of coming attractions.  Premiums will continue to rise for folks with insurance; millions more will lose their coverage altogether; our deficits will continue to grow larger.  And we have an obligation -- both parties -- to tackle this issue in a serious way. Now, bipartisanship depends on a willingness among both Democrats and Republicans to put aside matters of party for the good of the country.  I won't hesitate to embrace a good idea from my friends in the minority party, but I also won't hesitate to condemn what I consider to be obstinacy that's rooted not in substantive disagreements but in political expedience.  We talked about this as well, particularly when it comes to the confirmation process.  I respect the Senate's role to advise and consent, but for months, qualified, non- controversial nominees for critical positions in government, often positions related to our national security, have been held up despite having overwhelming support.  My nominee for one important job, the head of General Services Administration, which helps run the government, was denied a vote for nine months.  When she finally got a vote on her nomination, she was confirmed 96 to nothing.  That's not advise and consent; that's delay and obstruct.One senator, as you all are aware, had put a hold on every single nominee that we had put forward due to a dispute over a couple of earmarks in his state.  In our meeting, I asked the congressional leadership to put a stop to these holds in which nominees for critical jobs are denied a vote for months.  Surely we can set aside partisanship and do what's traditionally been done to confirm these nominations.  If the Senate does not act -- and I made this very clear -- if the Senate does not act to confirm these nominees, I will consider making several recess appointments during the upcoming recess, because we can't afford to allow politics to stand in the way of a well-functioning government.My hope is that this will be the first of a series of meetings that I have with leadership of both parties in Congress.  We've got to get past the tired debates that have plagued our politics and left behind nothing but soaring debt and mounting challenges, greater hardships among the American people, and extraordinary frustrations among the American people.  Those frustrations are what led me to run for President, and as long as I'm here in Washington, I intend to try to make this government work on their behalf.So, you know, I'm going to take a couple of questions, guys.Major.Q    After meeting with you, John Boehner came out and told us, "The House can't pass the health care bill it once passed; the Senate can't pass the health care bill it once passed.  Why would we have a conversation about legislation that can't pass?"  As a part of that, he said you and your White House and congressional Democrats should start over entirely from scratch on health care reform.  How do you respond?  Are you willing to do that?THE PRESIDENT:  Well, here's how I responded to John in the meeting, and I've said this publicly before.  There are some core goals that have to be met.  We've got to control costs, both for families and businesses, but also for our government.  Everybody out there who talks about deficits has to acknowledge that the single biggest driver of our deficits is health care spending.  We cannot deal with our deficits and debt long term unless we get a handle on that.  So that has to be part of a package.Number two, we've got to deal with insurance abuses that affect millions of Americans who've got health insurance.  And number three, we've got to make health insurance more available to folks in the individual market, as I just mentioned, in California, who are suddenly seeing their premiums go up 39 percent.  That applies to the majority of small businesses, as well as sole proprietors.  They are struggling.So I've got these goals.  Now, we have a package, as we work through the differences between the House and the Senate, and we'll put it up on a Web site for all to see over a long period of time, that meets those criteria, meets those goals.  But when I was in Baltimore talking to the House Republicans, they indicated, we can accomplish some of these goals at no cost.  And I said, great, let me see it.  And I have no interest in doing something that's more expensive and harder to accomplish if somebody else has an easier way to do it. So I'm going to be starting from scratch in the sense that I will be open to any ideas that help promote these goals.  What I will not do, what I don't think makes sense and I don't think the American people want to see, would be another year of partisan wrangling around these issues; another six months or eight months or nine months worth of hearings in every single committee in the House and the Senate in which there's a lot of posturing.  Let's get the relevant parties together; let's put the best ideas on the table.  My hope is that we can find enough overlap that we can say this is the right way to move forward, even if I don't get every single thing that I want.But here's the point that I made to John Boehner and Mitch McConnell:  Bipartisanship can't be that I agree to all the things that they believe in or want, and they agree to none of the things I believe in and want, and that's the price of bipartisanship, right?  But that's sometimes the way it gets presented.  Mitch McConnell said something very nice in the meeting about how he supports our goals on nuclear energy and clean coal technology and more drilling to increase oil production.  Well, of course he lik

Centered From Reality
Trump Rewarded the Performers (with Martin Benes)

Centered From Reality

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2025 64:53


In the first part of Alex's conversation with Martin Benes, the two allow reality to take the driver's seat as they talk about everything that has happened over the last week. They talk pardons, J6, hiring freezes in the government, performative deportation, foreign policy blunders, and some desires for people to realize this is bad. They also reflect on John Boehner smoking stooges with Barack Obama. 

Honestly with Bari Weiss
Inauguration Day with the Speaker of the House

Honestly with Bari Weiss

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2025 58:56


Being the Republican House leader is a little like marrying Henry VIII. At some point, you're getting your head cut off.  But for now, Mike Johnson remains not just physically intact—but in a position of incredible power. Two weeks ago, Johnson was reelected Speaker of the House on the first ballot. Despite having only the narrowest of House majorities—the Republicans control the House by four votes, 219 vs. 215 Democrats—Mike Johnson was able to unite the Republican Party's warring factions—moderates, the Freedom Caucus, the Raw Milk caucus, libertarians, hawks, doves, and whatever Lauren Boebert is—behind him.  It was tough to pull off, as it would've taken only a couple of No votes to send him off to that Republican Valhalla where John Boehner chain-smokes and chugs merlot, Paul Ryan does push-ups, and Kevin McCarthy throws darts at a photo of Matt Gaetz. Now, Donald Trump will become president of the United States and Mike Johnson will have the task of shepherding his agenda through Congress. And because the Republicans control the House by only four seats, the Speaker might have to get very close to some moderate Democrats—particularly those with constituents itching for a tax cut.  Today on Honestly, Speaker Johnson breaks down this challenge. He talks about how the party moves forward with two different visions for America; why he thinks Biden was “the worst president ever”; he recalls an eerie experience with Biden in the Oval Office; and he even gives us a taste of his uncanny Trump impression. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Elton Reads A Book A Week
"Short-isode!" Collateral damage of a personal war.

Elton Reads A Book A Week

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2024 25:06


This is my first ever "Short-isode", a shorter format episode that I did quickly. Please forgive me. Okay, okay, I'm behind. I tried to to reach for the sun and got burned. Luckily, I managed to get this together, so all hope is not lost. I promise I'll do better next time. Until then, this peace offering about weird taxes, and weird political promises, plus MUSIC! The next full episode about the book "American Carnage" by Tim Alberta, will be up very soon. Here are the lyrics to the song "American Carnage" (American decay): "From the ashes of Bush, the ratings slung low, Obama rose up, and stole the whole show G-O-P party's in ruins, no vision, no fight Their base fell asleep and has been there all night. [PRE-CHORUS] Bombs away, by progress on display, Change hit the right like a brick to the face. Factions at war, blood on the walls, A billonaire bullshitter grabbed them by the balls [CHORUS] American Carnage, for American decay, Marching to the edge, to throw it all away American Carnage, it's a G-O-P ride No place to run—no place to hide. [VERSE] Jordan and Cruz on absolutist fire, Boehner and Mitch try to hold the line. Coups and clashes, the rhetoric like acid, That's it! Impotence grew, and the base got flaccid. [PRE-CHORUS] Bombs away, on progress on display, Change hit the right, like a brick to the face. Factions at war, blood on the walls, A billonaire bullshitter grabbed them by the balls [VERSE] On a golden escalator, came a golden clown, He tore them to shit, and burned their house down. Trillion-dollar debt for a nationalist jerk-off, Morals and family values are sold off [CHORUS] American Carnage, for American decay, Marching to the edge, to throw it all away American Carnage, it's a G-O-P ride No place to run—no place to hide. [BRIDGE] Muslim bans, walls, and the families torn, The old guard's dead, now the new breed's born. Cultural shifts, tech disrupts, America's soul ripped and fucked up. [BREAKDOWN] How did we get here? Do we survive? Is this a death rattle, Are we alive? Decades of division, resentment, and greed, The roots of the party now strangled by sleaze. [CHORUS] American Carnage, for American decay, Marching to the edge, to throw it all away American Carnage, it's a G-O-P ride No place to run—no place to hide. [OUTRO] It's American Carnage, (AMERICAN CARNAGE!) Our American Carnage (AMERICAN CARNAGE!) We won't get very far with...(AMERICAN CARNAGE!) We'll all have to live with...(AMERICAN CARNAGE!)" APOLOGIES SECTION (The following section is reserved to apologize to the numerous people, places, and things Elton offended in this episode.): Oral sex, punk rock, elephants, people expecting whole episodes, people who dislike unintelligible lyrics in songs, etc. A special thanks to Jenna Fischer and Diedrich Bader

Pro Politics with Zac McCrary
Caleb Smith on Working for 3 GOP House Speakers

Pro Politics with Zac McCrary

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2024 62:18


Caleb Smith may be the only political operative who's worked for three consecutive US House Speakers. During over a decade on Capitol Hill, he worked with Speakers Boehner, Ryan, and McCarthy. In this conversation, Caleb talks his path to politics from managing a legislative race in small-town Kentucky to working in some of the most prime real estate at the US Capitol building. He goes in-depth on his time on the Hill - being in the early wave of digital political staffers, joining Speaker Boehner's staff, strengths and weaknesses of the last 3 GOP Speakers, witnessing the rise of Trump from within the walls of the GOP establishment, starting Drive Public Affairs, and much more from a participant in some of the most important political moments of the 21st Century.IN THIS EPISODEGrowing up in Paducah, KY at an important crossroads of American politics...Why a young Caleb trekked to DC to attend the memorial for Ronald Reagan...The skill set Caleb picked up managing a motorcycle shop between campaign gigs...Caleb spends a year working for prominent pollster & focus group maven Frank Luntz...Caleb manages a winning hometown Kentucky legislative race, the lone D to R legislative flip of the cycle...Caleb comes to the Hill as a "new media director" among the digital political revolution...Caleb's first impressions of working for Speaker John Boehner...Caleb's "GOP House Conference 101" of how House Republicans operate...The GOP member Caleb describes as a "snake in the grass" (it's not Matt Gaetz)...What sold John Boehner on embracing digital politics..John Boehner meets the pope...Caleb's memories of the chaos during the Boehner to Ryan Speaker transition and why Caleb stuck it out with Ryan...The "really unpleasant" first interaction Caleb had with Paul Ryan...Caleb on the unique skill-set that made Paul Ryan an effective House leader...Being a fly on the wall of the House GOP leadership during the 2015-2016 rise of Donald Trump...Paul Ryan's immediate Election Night reaction upon Trump's surprise victory...Inside the development of the 2017 "Trump Tax Cut" bill...Paul Ryan's reaction when John McCain scuttled Obamacare Repeal...Caleb's insights into the Donald Trump and Paul Ryan working relationship...Why Ryan steps down as Speaker and why Caleb stayed with new House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy...Caleb on McCarthy's habit of being a "risk taker"...Inside the toppling of Speaker McCarthy...Could Patrick McHenry have won the Speaker's Gavel...Caleb on one of Speaker Pelosi's strongest qualities...The controversial high-profile House member Caleb believes will be a future GOP Leader...Junior members Caleb finds especially impressive...Caleb on the fundamental difference between House Republicans and House Democrats...Why Caleb started Drive Public Affairs a few months ago...AND the American Conservative Union, American University, antiquated radio addresses, Sharron Angle, The Better Way Agenda, Stephanie Bice, Kevin Brady, Tim Burchett, George HW Bush, George W. Bush, CPAC, Dave Camp, Joe Cannon, Eric Cantor, The Capitol Rotunda, Centre College, Jason Chaffetz, Michael Cloud, country clubs vs. truck stops, cults of personality, Howard Dean, debating at Oxford, dial tests, Domino's Pizza, fall guys, famous smokers, fiscal cliffs, The Freedom Caucus, Matt Gaetz, Barry Goldwater, Jeb Hensarling, French Hill, Erin Houchin, Jack Kemp, Sue Lowden, Nancy Mace, John McCain, Mark Meadows, Steve Mnuchin, mopeds, Jack Nicklaus, normalizing ideas,  Ralph Norman, Rand Paul, Harry Reid, Marco Rubio, the SALT deduction, Tim Scott, sloven appearances, The Tonight Show.. & more!

TNT Radio
Gene Valentino, Louis Buller Gohmert Jr and Dr. John R. Lott, Jr on State of the Nation - 9 August 2024

TNT Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2024 55:52


GUEST OVERVIEW: The GrassRoots TruthCast, created by former Escambia County Florida Commissioner Gene Valentino, is a weekly broadcast from Pensacola, Florida.    Gene, an investment entrepreneur and avid pilot, is a founding member of VeriJet charter aviation and serves on the company's Board of Directors. When he's not in studio, Gene can usually be found in the skies over the Gulf of Mexico piloting his ICON A5.   GUEST OVERVIEW: Louis Buller Gohmert Jr.is an American attorney, politician, and former judge who was the U.S. representative from Texas's 1st congressional district from 2005 to 2023. Gohmert is a Republican and was part of the Tea Party movement. In January 2015, he unsuccessfully challenged John Boehner for Speaker of the House of Representatives In November 2021, he announced his candidacy in the 2022 Texas Attorney General election. He failed to advance to the Republican primary runoff, finishing fourth with 17% of the vote.   GUEST OVERVIEW: Dr. John R. Lott, Jr., is an economist and a world-recognized expert on guns and crime and also founder of The Crime Prevention Research Center (CPRC).  During the Trump administration, he served as the Senior Advisor for Research and Statistics in the Office of Justice Programs and then the Office of Legal Policy in the U.S. Department of Justice.

The Back Room with Andy Ostroy

Maura Gillespie is the founder and principal of Bluestack Strategies, and is a communications professional with expertise in strategic messaging and media training. She previously served 12 years on Capitol Hill as Press Advisor to former House Speaker John Boehner and as Deputy Chief of Staff to former Congressman Adam Kinzinger. She is a recurring guest on CNN, MSNBC, CBS, Bloomberg, and FOX News. Join Maura and I for a compelling discussion on the first presidential debate; the calls for President Biden to quit the race; the threats and dangers of Donald Trump; the broken Republican Party; VeepStakes; and the November election. Got somethin' to say?! Email us at BackroomAndy@gmail.com Leave us a message: 845-307-7446 Twitter: @AndyOstroy Produced by Andy Ostroy, Matty Rosenberg, and Jennifer Hammoud @ Radio Free Rhiniecliff Design by Cricket Lengyel

Bannon's War Room
Episode 3656: Johnson Is the Puppet For John Boehner

Bannon's War Room

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024


Episode 3656: Johnson Is the Puppet For John Boehner

TNT Radio
Doug Collins, Louis Gohmert & Pearson Sharp on State of the Nation - 23 May 2024

TNT Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2024 51:34


GUEST 1 OVERVIEW: Doug Collins Modeled public service after his father, a Georgia State Trooper, as he served his district for nearly a decade, becoming the Ranking Member of the U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary. In this role, Doug led his Republican colleagues on a wide breadth of issues, including fighting for our police officers, safeguarding the Second Amendment, protecting the lives of unborn children, defending religious liberty, and overseeing our law enforcement agencies. As a U.S. Air Force Reserve chaplain, Doug has ministered to our country's military since 2002. He completed a 2008-2009 deployment to Iraq while stationed at Balad Air Force Base. GUEST 2 OVERVIEW: Louis Buller Gohmert Jr.is an American attorney, politician, and former judge who was the U.S. representative from Texas's 1st congressional district from 2005 to 2023. Gohmert is a Republican and was part of the Tea Party movement. In January 2015, he unsuccessfully challenged John Boehner for Speaker of the House of Representatives In November 2021, he announced his candidacy in the 2022 Texas Attorney General election. He failed to advance to the Republican primary runoff, finishing fourth with 17% of the vote.  GUEST 3 OVERVIEW: Pearson Sharp is a show host and foreign correspondent for One America News. As an investigative reporter, he covers international conflicts and conducts on-the-ground reporting around the world—from the migration crisis in Sweden to the war in Syria. He is also a published author, with his first book, "The Sovereign," available on Amazon.com. Currently, he is working on the next three books in the series and plotting his escape from the big city to a little cabin in the woods.

The Daily Punch
Mitch McConnell's latest rift with the right

The Daily Punch

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2024 11:14


Anna Palmer goes over Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell's latest rift with the right; this time it's over foreign policy. Plus, Speaker Mike Johnson and former Speaker John Boehner plan to fundraise together. Want more in-depth daily coverage from Congress? Subscribe to our free Punchbowl News AM newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Downballot
The GOP Chaos Caucus grows larger

The Downballot

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2024 56:21


One key outcome of Tuesday's primaries in Indiana: House Republican leaders will have even more implacable crazies to contend with next year, and we're surveying the damage on this week's episode of "The Downballot." Marlin Stutzman, a tea party OG who helped push out John Boehner, narrowly won the Republican nod to reclaim his old seat while the erratic Victoria Spartz (who voted to oust Mike Johnson while we were recording) successfully managed to "un-retire" more than a year after saying she wouldn't seek another term. Expect even more "GOP in Disarray" headlines come 2025!We also have an in-depth discussion with Mark Hugo Lopez, the director of race and ethnicity research at Pew Research Center, about his studies of Latinos in America. Whereas the fastest-growing Latino group was once Mexicans, now it's Venezuelans. And while two-thirds of Latinos identified as Catholic not long ago, now less than half do—while the ranks of the religiously unaffiliated are soaring. Lopez zeroes in on the drop in support for Joe Biden among young Latino voters in particular but observes that it's still early: Just 25% of Latino adults tell Pew they're paying attention to the election. The show notes cannot do this conversation justice!

Sound On
US Delays Arms to Israel, Sen. Raphael Warnock Talks FAA Reauthorization

Sound On

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2024 42:40 Transcription Available


Watch Joe and Kailey LIVE every day on YouTube: http://bit.ly/3vTiACF. Bloomberg Washington Correspondents Joe Mathieu and Kailey Leinz deliver insight and analysis on the latest headlines from the White House and Capitol Hill, including conversations with influential lawmakers and key figures in politics and policy. On this edition, Kailey speaks with: Senator Raphael Warnock, Democrat from Georgia joins to discuss progress on FAA reauthorization, and he shares his thoughts on the importance of a ceasefire in the Middle East Philip Swagel, Director of the Congressional Budget Office takes a look at the fiscal outlook for the US Rep. Andy Barr, Republican from Kentucky, Chair of Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Monetary Policy joins to discuss the White House choosing to pause arms to Israel, and his thoughts on the FDIC probe Brad Howard, Corcoran Street Group Founder and President and Democratic Strategist & Maura Gillespie, Bluestack Strategies Founder, former-advisor to Speaker John Boehner, Rep. Adam Kinzinger join to talk about President Biden's trip to Wisconsin to champion a major Microsoft investment Doha Mekki, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General of the US joins to talk through some of the latest antitrust battles facing the US government, and her perspective on an increase in deal-making lately See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The RD2BE Podcast
The RD2BE Podcast - Susan Finn - Co-Author Nutrition Authority: Perspectives on Opportunity

The RD2BE Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2024 28:45


Susan Finn, PhD, RD, FADA, CEO of Finn/Parks & Associates, is a renowned figure in the food, nutrition, and health sector. She has held leadership positions in the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (Past President and Foundation Chair) and worked to promote nutrition support in healthcare during her 30-year tenure with Ross Products Division of Abbott Laboratories. Dr. Finn has received numerous accolades for her contributions to health and nutrition, including appointments by President George W. Bush and Speaker of the House John Boehner. She is also a prolific author and has published in professional journals and co-authored two books. In this episode, we highlight Nutrition Authority: Perspectives on Opportunity and hope you enjoy! Book info: https://www.eatrightstore.org/product-type/books/nutrition-authority-perspectives-on-opportunity

The Matt Locke Show
Senate Democrats shut down Mayorkas Impeachment

The Matt Locke Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2024 35:33


Democrats shut down Senate Trial for Mayorkas impeachment. The Government is getting bent over by defense contractors. Wisconsin Rep. Mike Gallagher decides to stick around a little bit longer so he can stick you with a Foreign Aid bill. Rep Thomas Massis wants Boehner type resignation from Speaker Johnson so GOP can pick successor. 

The News & Why It Matters
DA Alvin Bragg Attempts To Gag Trump | Massie & MTG Call for Rep Johnson to VACATE Speaker | 4/16/24

The News & Why It Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 50:01


New York City District Attorney Alvin Bragg is pushing for former President Donald Trump's hush money trial judge, Juan Merchan, to fine Trump $3,000 for allegedly violating a gag order by disparaging witnesses in the case. Meanwhile, Congressman Thomas Massie and Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene are urging Congressman Mike Johnson to step down from the Speakership, with Massie even suggesting that Johnson pre-announce his resignation akin to former Speaker John Boehner. Despite these calls, Speaker Johnson has firmly stated his intention not to resign. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has criticized House Republicans for impeaching Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas over "policy disagreements," cautioning that such actions set a concerning precedent for Congress. BlazeTV contributor Eric July joins the discussion to provide insights into the current turmoil in Congress. Today's Sponsors:   Relief Factor Visit https://relieffactor.com or call 1-800-4-relief.   Jase Medical Go to https://jasemedical.com and enter code SARA at checkout for a discount on your order.   Patriot Mobile Just go to https://www.patriotmobile.com/SARAor call 972-PATRIOT to get FREE ACTIVATION when you use the offer code SARA. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Real News Now Podcast
Ronna McDaniel Joins NBC as Political Commentator

Real News Now Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2024 4:07


Ronna McDaniel, the erstwhile chair of the Republican National Committee, is stepping across the aisle in a manner of speaking, now serving as a commentator for NBC and its affiliated cable network, MSNBC. This move comes hot on the heels of her stepping away from her leadership role within the Republican National Committee. It appears she will grace the NBC platform for the first time on the upcoming episode of 'Meet the Press'. Having previously functioned as the chair for the Republican National Committee, McDaniel's fresh enlistment with NBC comes in the wake of her resignation from the Republican institution this very month. NBC has publicly announced McDaniel's new position, which speaks much about the analysts that the network has been recruiting. The addition of McDaniel to NBC adds a hint of conservative insight to their team of political experts. NBC's audience can expect the she would offer informed commentary, not just on NBC but also on MSNBC, which is widely seen as a network with a left-leaning bent. This is a platform that has been criticized in the past by former President Donald J. Trump and his supporters for being a mouthpiece for the Democratic Party. Carrie Budoff Brown, the person responsible for NBC's political coverage, stressed the importance of adding someone with McDaniel's voice and perspective to the network, stating how vital it is to have her unique perspective as part of their lineup. The expectation is that she will provide a new angle, an insider's look at nationwide politics and the direction the Republican Party is headed. An interesting aspect is her involvement in the coverage of the 2024 election cycle. Chosen by the former President, Donald J. Trump, to helm the Republican Party following her instrumental role in securing his 2016 presidential election victory in Michigan, McDaniel has had an eventful tenure as the chairwoman. Her stint witnessed occasional disagreements with Trump. In particular, Trump expressed discontent last year regarding her decision to support multiple Republican presidential primary debates, one of which NBC hosted, a fact that drew attention as it featured the contenders to Trump. In the early stages of 2020, McDaniel appealed to Republicans to rally behind Mr. Trump following his win in the New Hampshire primary, a decision which met with less than warm response from Nikki Haley, considered a rival to Mr. Trump who had yet to withdraw from the race. Subsequent developments saw Mr. Trump assign his daughter-in-law and a trusted advisor to steer the Republican National Committee, further solidifying his hold over the Republican establishment. McDaniel joins a prominent roster of Republican commentators at NBC News which already features Marc Short, the previous chief of staff for Vice President Mike Pence, and Brendan Buck, who has been an influential aide to political figures such as Paul Ryan and John Boehner. Counterpart panellists bringing in the Democratic viewpoint include ex-Senator Claire McCaskill and Barack Obama's past campaign manager, David Plouffe. NBC and MSNBC have been expanding their team of expert commentators since the commencement of President Biden's tenure. Notable talent includes Jen Psaki, who performed the role of President Biden's original press secretary, and Symone D. Sanders, who has previously acted as the chief spokesperson for Vice President Kamala Harris. Eager observers are bound to be riveted by this development and its potential to shift the narration of contemporary political discourse. Undoubtedly, the vastly experienced McDaniel looks set to make her presence felt and exert a positive influence on NBC's political coverage, notably beginning with her first appearance on 'Meet the Press' this Sunday. Real News Now Connect with Real News Now on Social Media Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RealNewsNowApp/ X Twitter: https://twitter.com/realnewsapp Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/realnews/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@realnewsnowapp Threads: https://www.threads.net/@realnews/ Tumblr: https://www.tumblr.com/realnewsnow Truth Social: https://truthsocial.com/@RealNews YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@realnewsnowapp End Wokeness: https://endthewokeness.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Market Proof Marketing: New Home Builder Marketing Insights
#11 - Gold Award Winners: OSC & Rookie of the Year!

Market Proof Marketing: New Home Builder Marketing Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2024 39:33


Be sure sure to like and subscribe on your favorite platforms! Welcome to Online People Talking with Jen Barkan! In this episode, Jen is joined by Jessie Suggs and very special guests The Nationals Gold Award Winners Terrell Turner and Amberly Mioduszewski! Jen and Jessie talk all things International Builders' Show from close calls to their key takeaways and what topics took center stage for most conversations and sessions. Amberly shares what winning the Rookie of the Year award meant to her after a tough year and shares what she learned from IBS! Terrell won OSC of the year and encourages every to keep applying even when you get discouraged! He shares that his goal for 2024 took inspiration from Jessie's word of the year "less" and is implementing it in conversations with leads to talk less and listen more. To shake things up Jen and Jessie let the top OSC's in the nation give their skills check for the week: adaptability and coachability! Word On The Street: The International Builders' Show & The Nationals (03:57)ChatGPT and AI were HUGE topics!A lot of marketing and leadership conversations.Talking about AI as a human assistant not a replacement. Thinking about how online sales can use it!Topic Of Today: Gold Award Winners Amberly & Terrell! (08:10)Amberly shares more about her recent wins and why it meant so much to her to receive so many awards this year!Terrell reminds us why it is so important to never give up!Skills Check! (36:29)Adaptability: You've got to bend with the wind, not break from it.Coachability: There's always something to learn and you have to be ready to take insight. The next Online Sales Academy is happening April 3rd-4th! Be sure to secure your spot now by registering here!Online People Talking · #11 - Gold Award Winners: OSC & Rookie of the Year!Transcript:JenJesse, why is it that every time we travel together, some weird Uber situation occurs? Either somebody tries to abduct you. You get lost. I don't know. We even got, like, a gun pulled on us one time in an Uber in Austin.JessieIt's a true story.JenWhat in the world happened in Las Vegas last week? I don't know.JessieThere's a common denominator here it's me.JenJessie Suggs.JessieI listen to too many crime podcasts, too. So I'm like, you know, paranoid. I don't know. We left dinner and, you know, they took forever to get there. Jenn and Mike's Uber was coming up. Mine was coming up. They ordered it 15 minutes after me. There shows right up and I'm like, Okay. And then I'm texting in general like, okay, we're going in the wrong direction.JessieShe's like, What? Jenn comes out, she calls me. She's like, What do you need me to do? You need me to come get you? And I'm like, No, no, I just had to plug it in my the maps were crazy.JenLike, I'm going to just stay on with you until I know you are safe at your hotel.JessieI'm telling you, man.JessieLot of crazy stuff didn't happen.JenListen, stay safe out there, please. I don't need another kid to be worrying about. I my gosh. Well, me is on a cruise somewhere. I don't know. Like, Well.JessieShe was in my neck of the woods. She was just in Charleston.JenI know. It's like buddy system. Hold hands. Don't go nowhere alone. All right, let's. Let's get this party started. Okay. Today with me is the one and only Jesse Suggs, online sales coach extraordinaire. And, Jesse, we are back from International Builder Show. Well.JessieYes.JenHoly cow. Have you recovered?JessieYou know, that three hour time difference really didn't used to bother me, and I'm still catching up. So I'm finally there, I think. But it's like the the body tired and also all of the information that we got and all of the conversations that we had, you just kind of have to decompress from that. So, yeah, I'm finally caught up.JenWell, listen, five days in Las Vegas is like ten day. It feels like ten days in Las Vegas. And listen, let me just give you Jesse and I, we had a we had a debrief afterwards and we said, okay, what would we do differently? We would get there early on the first day versus coming in late at night and starting off.JenTired, right, Jesse?JessieYeah, I don't know. I booked my own flight. That was a terrible mistake. Got in late, left really early.JenYes. We need we need Kim Boykin. He's a former you know, Kim Boykin on our team. She actually was a flight attendant. We really should just have we should get her advice on whenever we have to book anything, because I feel like I screw it up every single time at the time, like, well, that's a good idea. We'll just get in Monday night.JenNot a problem. Right. And then we get to the show already exhausted. Okay. What are online people talking about? Well, they're talking about the Boehner show. This week. They're talking about the Nationals, which wait for it. We got some special guest. Yeah, but Jesse. What? So you attended. You know, several sessions. You were in sales Central listening to be talking with people.JenWhat were the buzzwords? What were your key takeaways.JessieYou know? Well, first of all, I forget not everybody's in our world. And so when I tell people that I just got back from IBS, they look at me funny. So now I feel like I have to say it all the way out. But since it's this podcast.JenYou weren't at the Bowel Syndrome convention.Jessiemy gosh. Buzz words. Jackie on our team was like, If we took a shot every time they said it, we would all be twisted. So chat tvt was the word on the street. Yeah, a lot of marketing conversations and more of leadership types of conversations and how to manage your team less on the online sales side of things.JessieA little bit different than years previous. But for me it was great to be able to make sure that I attended sessions that I wouldn't have otherwise been in. So that was a positive for me. So Chhatrapati marketing leadership were my kind of big take. Yeah.JenYeah, I agree. First of all, it was I think they said the most attended International Builder show in 15 years. Yeah. So that was cool. Saw lots of people that hadn't really seen in person in quite some time. Definite buzz words were a I chat see but one thing that stood out to me with regards to that was talking about a I as a human assistant, not a replacement.JenSo when we think about online sales, how can online sales use chat GPT as an assistant, use A.I. as an assistant? I think like that was a big like that hit home with me. And then also my son who is newly into in this industry. It was his first time attending and so me seeing it through his eyes, Jesse was so cool, like seeing Vegas for the first time.JessieI know.JenSeeing the show for the first time, shout.JessieOut to Sam because he paid his own money to come. So pito to come and to see younger professionals investing in themselves, to to be there and to learn and to meet people early on is just so impressive. It was really.JenWell, thank you for saying that. It was so cool and it just reminded me like back the first time that I attended the show, probably it's been probably ten plus years ago now that I went for the first time and just that feeling of, my gosh, I want to I want to implement everything right away. Like you're just a sponge and you go back and, you know, Jesse, he left with 15 pages of notes and came back and and had to work the next day.JenSo he was on site the next day, and he came home Saturday evening and he goes, while I'm pretty sure pretty sure I sold three homes today stock and I saw he goes, he goes, Mom, I helped them decide, not helped them. Look, that was a key takeaway I had from the sales rally that Jim Smith said, you know, like we got to help people decide to buy him, not just help them look.JenYeah. And he came home. I was telling me this and I was like, man, Sam, that's just awesome. You're just making me proud. So. All right, definitely. Listen, online sales, you know, if you have an opportunity to attend the Builder show, you absolutely should. You know, they are working on getting more education around the topic. I spoke on how to work with realtor partners from an online sales perspective, the very last session of the very last day.JessieSo I told and I said they did that because they needed to keep the best speaker for last to keep it cold.JenJessie, You know, that's why I love Jessie. She has such a great perspective on the way that she looks at things that a lot of it. my gosh. Jessie, we have some exciting guest.Jessiemy.JenGosh. So one of the our favorite things to do when we go to the builder show is attend the Nationals. And Jessie, what are the Nationals In case we have listeners listening that don't know what they are.JessieThe Nationals is an award ceremony nationally, recognizing just the top players or the top performance or the top websites or just across the industry, the top people and they award the top of the top, the silver. And then this award ceremony announces the gold. So the number one winner of that small selection of those. And so, you know, I myself, along with Dan and many other people, have been in the seat, you know, receiving or up for the award.JessieAnd it really is different when it's your people like it is.Jenmy God.JessieI mean it is. I could have cried. I didn't care about myself back in the day. But when I hear names that I see and I know and I watch their hard work, my gosh, it's amazing. So I can't wait for you guys to meet who we have on here.JenYeah. So we actually ran gold. The gold winning online sales rookie of the year and the gold winning online sales counselor of the year. On to this podcast today so they can drop some knowledge bombs and share their wisdom with you. So Jessie, let's let's introduce first Amber Lee Myo do sheskey I phonetically wrote it down Amberley my agent Sheskey from Malia homes Rookie online Sales Special list of the year.JessieI see that heard weekly back.Jenmy gosh. Show us your hardware. Come on, let's see it. Put it in the camera. Okay, guys, you can't if you're listening, you can't see this. But she has this beautiful gold award. It's like. It's like a it's like an Oscar.AmberlyYeah, it really is so funny, because when I got home and showed it to my younger siblings, they were like, What are you an actress now? What did you create music? And I'm like, I'm an online sales. Obviously it's it's truly an honor, though.Jenmy gosh. Did people look at you like you were like some famous person when you were walking through Caesar's Palace with joy?AmberlyBecause I got lost and started walking towards the forum shops. So I wasn't walking out of the palace. I was walking straight into the palace with people just cheering like congratulations and stopping me and saying, I just have to ask what is what is this for? You deserve it. I'm thinking you don't even know me, but thank youAmberlyCan I get a picture? Isn't like, I'm so. It was. It was so awesome. It was an amazing night.Jenman. Well, like Jesse said, we were so excited that you won. It was cool to be there and see you get this award at. First of all, rookie online sales. When I think a rookie, I think like, okay, brand new baby in the seat. How long have you been in this role?AmberlyI've been in this role for a year now. In February. Yeah. Yeah. A whole brand.JenNew brand new in the seat. One year. Really? Probably just figuring out what the heck is going on right now.AmberlyYeah, it's been quite the journey for sure. I mean, it's not a typical online sales first person a year in the seat either. And so I can dive into that a little later. But yeah, it was quite a journey and a beautiful one at that.JenYeah. So what has winning this award like meant to you in the last week since you won? I.AmberlyWell, I mean, winning this award was just such a monumental moment for me because, like I mentioned, this past year was the most challenging year that I've ever faced. And many may not know this, but for the first six months, I actually maintain all previous responsibilities as escrow and marketing. As I began my online sales journey. So that meant still managing over 100 escrows, trying to strategize for marketing efforts, training new salespeople or new team members, and even covering the sales for two.AmberlySo it was a lot. And then add online sales on top of that, it was it was a journey and different things. Yeah. Yep. Drinking from a firehose. And that's where it felt kind of like the story of David versus the Goliath, just because I'm like, I'm just this one person and all these things. And anyone knows who has had to implement an online sales process or one has not existed.AmberlyIt takes a lot of dedication and a lot of effort. So it was it was an exciting year for sure. There are some definite awesome moments. I mean, this award was incredible, but what others may not know is this is actually my fourth one this year, which is insanity.JessieAnd that.JenGives me so I.AmberlyKnow I did not I did not see any of this happening, especially just.JenRacking up awards over.JessieThere in the presence of greatness. What can we say?AmberlyThat's where it was. It was just truly an unforgettable year. And I have to give so much of all of the successes this year had to offer to being determined, having grit, perseverance, and most of all, for me, was having faith that God had a greater plan than what I could see, because there were some moments when I was like, this is too much.AmberlyI don't know if I could handle all of this. And instead of cowering and getting overwhelmed, I would just pray and just pray to be uplifted and pray that I could see in his perspective. And so that helped me tremendously. And that allowed me to smile through the pressure and be joyful in the chaos and to keep going.AmberlySo it's this award. It's just astonishing to me still. I'm a little bit in disbelief of how amazing this you are.JenThank you for sharing that. That's that's amazing. Now, I saw you not only at the Nationals, but I actually saw you sitting in some educational sessions, which is very cool. Do you have any key takeaways that you learned and that you were going to go back and implement?AmberlyYes. So there is so much that there was to learn at IBS, I think. I mean, you guys already know this, but real partnerships, they are realtors are out full force and inventories low for them. So really cultivating those partnerships with them is such a key opportunity for me. And it's just learning how to teach, connect and business with them, which I know is from your.AmberlyYes. To Jenn Burgundy.Jenmy gosh, guys, I swear. I swear. I did not tell her to say that.AmberlyNo, you're real good, you know. So, yeah, that was really incredible to take it. And there was a lot of talk. So learning how to harness AI and utilize it in our roles because it's here as well. So yeah, the more that you know how to utilize that, the easier, smaller tasks that can be handled by a personal assistant could be taken care of.AmberlyAnd to the rally with Jeff Shaw was really fun.JenYeah.AmberlyAlong with there was another seminar and I know it was about making the full VIP experience and it was just we take what we do so passionately. We were so on top of making sure that our leads feel as important as they are because we want to build that trust. But it was about building trust through every single department in our company.AmberlySo we should be cultivating that from the beginning with online sales, with sales, with construction just everywhere. And even after the home is sold and they're moved to making sure that their experience and their reputation with us or our reputation with them is something that is memorable and meaningful to them. It was huge. So I can't wait for me and my VP of Sales and Marketing Amber to discuss with our team just to really implement this new VIP experience all around.JenMan. Love it. Now, Jesse, you work pretty closely with Amberly. Do you have any questions for her?Jessiegosh, you put me on the spot. No, you know, I really. I don't have questions. I've watched her grow both personally and professionally every single time we meet, it's like, okay, noted, noted. Let me work on that in those steps. Or what leads you to being an award winner? That's what. Yeah, it's the next generation of the O.C. of the year or the team of the year if it grows.JessieAnd I just think, you know, if you position this as we've talked about this before, but if you position this as a career and not just a job, your opportunity, the path is straight. And if you put your mind to it, you can do it. And so it's just really fun. I mentioned this earlier, but it's just fun to watch the people grow and be rewarded for it.JessieSo I don't have any questions. No.JenI think. Well, yeah, Thank you. Amberly. The other thing I was thinking as you were talking was, okay, rookie new program, you know, in the scheme of things, right? Starting starting this from scratch, winning this award gives you so much street cred.Jessieyeah.JenWith your with your company, with your sales team. Like I am a national award winner. Like, check it four times. Double done it. Yeah. I mean, like, you're bringing it. So kudos to you. It's exciting to watch it.JessieIt is fun and it's fun to watch the last name. An ad is not everything goes perfectly like you are first launching a coming soon community and you've done it once and you go, okay, what worked? What didn't work? Now let's implement this for the next one. Let's fine tune it for the next one. And that's what just continues to sharpen your skills.JessieSo kudos to you.JenOkay, let's let's bring on Amberly. I have a special this is exciting. I going to bring on our special guest and next guest and you actually met him at the d convert online sales and marketing Summit.AmberlyNot only did I meet him, but I also sat next to him that.Jenokay, this is cosmic. You know, I did not know that it's magnetic. It's magnetic. Does greatness upon greatness is just coming together today. Okay. Our next guest, online sales specialist of the Year, National Association of Home Builders Sales and Marketing Council. Gold winner Tyrrell Turner, bring it all. Here is here. Yeah. Lower low. man. How. How are you feeling today?JenZero.TerrellLike it's now starting to like, sink in. It's been awake, like, my gosh. Like, this is real. I'm on online. People talking with these are incredible, incredible industry, ladies. And I could not be more excited and humbled. It's amazing.Jenman. When I saw you one, I was like, jumping up and down. So exciting because you actually won silver last year.TerrellI won silver last year. Yep.JenYeah. Okay. And so some people go, Well, I won silver, right? I'm not going to like, what's the point, Right. And trying again. I mean, seriously. Sure. The first year I won silver too, and I was mad as hell for about a month and then I got over myself and applied again. So why did you decide to apply again?TerrellCome the same thing, you know, I heard it's I mean, it is it's very, very difficult to being receiving silver is like, you know, celebrate that because it's such a momentous award and achievement. But, you know, gold is the top. That's the tier epsilon. And I'm like, you know, that's a goal of mine. It's the top. I want to go for it.TerrellAnd why not? So, you know, I had a great year, I thought, and put everything together, filled out the application, submitted myself again and, you know, keep going forward and keep going forward. I'm still not done right. Like we got to keep, keep improving, keep getting better, keep going, not settling. So absolutely.JenWell, I think it's absolutely fantastic. I think I think that's a great that's great advice for anybody that's listening that has applied previously and you're wondering, should I apply again? Absolutely. Absolutely.TerrellAbsolutely.JenAbsolutely. You should keep going for it. And we're not competitive, are we? Now? Not we're not we're not humbled by.JessieSo I'm just not going to answer.Jenyeah, we don't like awards or anything. Of course not. Well, I totally screwed up and forgot to tell everybody, like, where you're from, you know, and released from Williams Turell, tell everybody which company you're with, where in the world you are.TerrellYeah. So I work with Icon communities. We built a luxury style ranch home. We target that 55 plus demographic. I am based out of Charlotte, North Carolina, the QC, and but we're headquartered in Columbus, Ohio, so I've been with everyone for four years. But this month actually is my ten year anniversary as an online sales consultant. I've felt more wrinkles come on my face, thought about that.TerrellSo it's ten years. It's been an amazing journey.JenAmazing. So we got a ten year veteran and a rookie. Okay.AmberlySo your way of magic, Let me tell you, there's.TerrellAnother wrinkle here.JenBack and listen before we hopped on guys one when we were just just chatting, the two of them, Amberly and Tara, literally were having like a moment where they were like, I knew when I met you.Amberlyyeah. You know, I knew first. I know you think you probably knew. The moment I saw down, I was like, This guy is special. I can tell. I need to talk to him. I need to get to know him. And he called me out for saying totally, because I'm from I'm not from Southern California, but I live in Southern California.AmberlyAnd so you were like, I don't even know when I got my silver nomination. I want to say that on LinkedIn, you were like, I totally knew. Throw in that. And I'm like, I know you got to get it out of my vocabulary. Well, I've worked on it. It's not there anymore, but I'm totally proud of you.TerrellI'm sorry. I remember. No, because, Jenny, we're doing this session, and Amber is like, giving answers. I'm like, there's no way this girl, the rookie, like this girl, has got her stuff together, so it's really cool. And when I saw she, I'm like, Of course, you know, it's really cool again to be you see peers, you meet people, you make these connections.TerrellAnd even as I was here, you talk, you know, for those listening, you're not alone. You know, we all experience these ebbs and flows and the fire hose and, you know, I can't do this and all these down. So you're not alone and having the resources I do convert in Jen and Jesse, my, you know, that's why they're here to help us sift through it and and keep going and achieve our best.JenWell, I got chills when you said because I didn't even remember that you guys met at the. The summit.TerrellYeah.JenAnd I will tell you, like, I'm still friends with people. The first summit that I went to as an online sales specialist, I'm still friends with those people. So, you know, it is a big industry, but it's really small too, right? So connect with people, hang on to them. You know, they're your people that you can learn from them.JenYou can commiserate together. Martha Clifford and I, we we used to have this, you know, hashtag see problems. You know, we'd be working on something and like, you know, we'd, we'd text each other, like, problem, you know, like it's it's so good to have that support and community, which is what we're trying to create here with online people talking.JenOkay. So back to you tomorrow. What are you now as got this award? Okay. Like you're cream of the crop. What are you focusing on for 2020 or what's next? How are you going to get better? Like.TerrellAll right.JenHow are you doing?TerrellWhat am I doing? So I actually coincide with Jesse's word of less for the year. And it came from a coaching session with Jen, and that was the last one where you were like, you look in your call rail, look at your waveforms and are you talking, are you listening? And, you know, I'm known for creating great engagement on the phone and these relationships and connections.TerrellAnd I'm like, you know what? I'm talking way too much. And sometimes I'm giving information that you didn't ask for. And that's something that as I've been on the phone this past week, Jen, it's I've really focused on be quiet, let them talk, let them give me the goods and then use that for my appointments and.JenSee, I love that. Less. Less is more. Strip it down. Get naked. Right? Like, do the basic things really, really well. Right? And if we're talking, we're not listening and we're, you know, we get in that info dump mode, been there, done that actually had actually had a customer at one time say to me can you please be quiet?JenSo I can.TerrellI watch.JenYou? And I was like, you burn. I'm going to shut up now. I hate my life. I suck at my job. Okay, let's do this. We got a video mailbag. Guys, I would love for you to be a part of this. So we got somebody. Her name is Whitney with Level Home. She sent in a question and I think would be great if we if we listen to it together.JenYou guys up for that?TerrellLet's do it.JenThank you. Let's do it.JessieHydrate And Jesse. I'm Whitney Level Homes, one of the recent nominees for online.JenRookie of the year.JessieIn sales with the NAHB. I'm so excited. Just coming off my first year, I do want to ask this question for your podcast. Once you've finished your daily tasks and you're following your processes and you feel kind of caught up, what can an online sales counselor.AmberlyDo for the greater good to.JessieMaybe help.AmberlyStrategize with.JessieOnsite or your manager to kind of shake things up or maybe assist with conversions? What are some strategies you guys use to do in this seat in this role that would kind of bring back some new energy.AmberlyOr get.JessieA.AmberlyPositive motivation going.JessieTo kind of push the.AmberlyWheel forward? I would love to hear what you guys.JessieDid in addition to your normal processes and tasks. Thanks for doing online. People talking. I'm loving it so far. Keep being amazing.JenLove her and love that. Great question. Jesse, we'll start with you. What are your thoughts?Jessiegosh. Do you have like 4 hours? Okay, let me think about the two that come to mind. Things that are kind of outside of the box, something that maybe you're not expecting to hear. But one thing when you've truly caught up. So we know our first priorities. We know our second priorities. And then if you still have time with some of you are like, wait, you guys can catch up.JessieYes, you can catch up if you're efficient and you manage your time. But one thing that really helped me in the seat was shadowing different divisions within the organization to build my confidence and knowing what I can say to the customer, whether I relay that information to them or not, most of the time not. I'm not going to tell them what happens, you know, post contract and when their meetings are and how long that takes.JessieBut knowing that equipped me to feel like the expert that they were coming to to be able to disclose that. So my first one would be shadow the divisions like don't try and do them all at once Maybe pick one a month over the year and just kind of go in the order in which your buyer would experience that so that you can speak with confidence, because that's one of the biggest things is when a customer comes to you and they say, hey, you know, is this the right time to buy?JessieIs this the right market for me? Are you the right builder for me? And if you don't come with that confidence and that aura about you, if you seem a little bit uncertain, they go, okay, not for me, not the right time. I'll call you back when I'm ready. So that's one and then the second thing that I would say is pull like your smart lists in the CRM.JessieSo we all know prospecting is a first priority. It's not new lead engagement, it's older lead engagement, but it is quick and easy to feel like you're on the hamster wheel if you're calling, calling, calling and not getting anything in return. And so taking the time to learn how to use your systems so that you can create a list that will get you better engagement, that will then make you money, that will then get your company sales starts to light this fire that encourages you to want to do it as opposed to going, my gosh, now I got to go do that for you.JessieProspecting again for 2 hours today. So learning how to create smart lists and then the efficiency behind doing that. Yeah.JenSo I'm going to I'm going to chime in here real quick on something, but then I want to see if Terrelle and Amberley have any thoughts. You know, I think there's a way what Whitney was talking about. Yes. Like you guys should always do your first priorities first. And then if you have time, like what are some other things you can do?JenAnd I love Jessie Spot and getting out on site and doing some things out there is always good and content and helping marketing and things like that. But I think there's also a way that you can incorporate something that you're passionate about in to your work on a daily basis. You know, like even your first priorities, like if you're really passionate about writing, then beef up your follow up process.JenLike go like, take a look at what you're doing, get creative with what you're sending for prospecting, like add some, you know, jar it up, add some passion back into it if you're good. Like Terrell I know is really good at video like incorporate that into your first priorities when I was an online sales specialist, you know you guys probably no surprise anybody super passionate about animals animal rescue.JenSo I figured out how to take that passion and incorporate it into my work. Right. I would feature a dog from the SPCA with a new home of the week and I would do, you know, social content and post. And if the dog was adopted, I would the builder would pay the adoption fee. And that was a way that took, you know, like you can feel sometimes like day in and day out, you know, I'm doing my process of doing my thing.JenIt was a way that I could incorporate that passion into what I was doing. But that meant that I had to get really good and efficient with my day, my time, my process. I couldn't be in a bunch of meetings, you know, that's a time suck. Like, you got to really look at everything that you're doing and make sure that you're always doing lead conversion first and then how can you incorporate some passion into that?JenAmberly Any thoughts?AmberlyYeah, actually, piggybacking off of what you said, if you're passionate about writing or anything like that, when I began with Malia and I started as as grown marketing, I didn't realize that I had a passion for marketing. I didn't quite know what it included, but I love being creative. So that's where I found extra time. I would try to figure out different ways to make creative video content for video email just so it would be more fun during the time of year.AmberlySo for example, the holiday, how crazy it gets during December, I went to It's so embarrassing actually, now that I'm saying it out loud, but I went to a competitor's nearby community just to utilize the amenities and I was just going from scene to scene basically of, I'm here to help you find somewhere for the kids to play a spot that you can have or host a barbecue.AmberlyAnd I literally put my phone in the barbecue and like shut it for the transition. And it was a bit cringeworthy not going to lie, but it was so fun to send that out. And then the response back was even more exciting when they're like, that was really cool. Thanks for extending. We're going to wait until January, but I'll definitely be in touch.AmberlyYou're like looking forward to speaking with you soon. So that was a fun way if I had the extra time to do so. Yeah. And to I would say I love being able to connect with my on site sales just to make sure that we're speaking the same language, that whatever they're utilizing is benefits for inventory homes or for the community as a whole that I'm mirroring or complementing that before they get there.AmberlySo those are my two fun. We love it.JenTerrell, what about you?TerrellOkay, I'll do two things. The first one is, as you mentioned, I'm very passionate about video and I've got a background in production. So bringing that passion to this position and marketing is great. It's a great way to make connection. One of the ideas I came up with was on my outside of my work hours typically be like a 6 p.m. on a Sunday afternoon.TerrellI do a zoom call with my lead, so I would do a Zoom call where I would go over high level information about the builder, who we are, what we do to the communities in our city, whether it was the different divisions we have. And that wasn't a way for me to present, get on camera, and then typically I would get appointments out of that.TerrellSo that's the whole point is to get some response from that. So that's a great way to increase those conversions. And the question that was my buzzword, the greater good that means to me sales and then conversions. So to Jess's point, if you've caught up and you've got that, I guess spare time, the best list you can pull is your recent appointments.TerrellGo back through that. Who have come out in the last 30 days or last 60 days, who has the contract yet? Call them where are you in your process? How are you doing? You know what other questions you have, What's preventing you from moving forward that's going to help increase those conversions? What your company obviously is wanting get more.TerrellWe're trying to get better conversion. So that would be my most immediate thing of the greater good.JenLove it, love it. Now let's let's keep this party going in this direction because. Okay, now listen, Terrell, you guys can't see I'm okay. We're dancing. We're dancing when we sent Terrell an email and said, Hey, let's can you hop on online? People talking you awesome gold. When are you? He was like, Heck yeah, hands in the air raging anthem So we're we're party and and like my my homie Ice Cube says you got to check yourself before you reckless self so going to do a skills check and skills check we're going to do something fun.JenTerrell and Amberly as our guest. Here's the question what is rapid fire What is the one skill, utmost important skill that you have to have as an online sales specialist? Go.TerrellTERRELL gosh. Okay. Whole lot. But I would say the most important is to be adaptable. You know, the market's going to change. Your communities are going to change, your teammates are going to change. You know, environment is going to change. But you got to be adaptable. You can't be stuck in one mode of doing things, but you have to be able to bend with the wind and not break under the wind.TerrellSo if you're able to adapt and quickly change, I believe that's going to make you very, very successful.JenLove it and be dancing the whole time around. Reyna. Reyna Estrada just got to dance. Keep dancing. All right, Amberly, what about you? Go.AmberlyI would say coach ability is such a huge skill to have because there is always something to learn. Yeah, you're never going to know it all. And you have to have an open mind to just soak in all of the knowledge, all the insight that you can. Because even like with the online sales summit where we met, there were so many just key bombs dropped and I was like, I'm taking them back.AmberlyI'm taking them back. And I'm so excited because there's so many just extraordinary people in this industry and in our roles as well that want to share their insight, that want to show their wisdom. So taking in as much as you can and being coachable and being able to hear what someone that you value has to share the things that you can work on, things that you may not have known before.AmberlyIt's a huge asset to have.JenYou've heard it guys. You've heard it from the top online sales specialist in the country. Coach ability and adaptability. You can see you guys can see why they're so awesome, right? You can take it in, soak it in, soak it in. Terrell Soak it in and really enjoy, enjoy it, enjoy it. And we're just so proud of you.JenIt's it's so awesome. Last question as we wrap up, are you are you guys down with.JenYou guys got to say yeah. You know.JessieNo. Yeah.TerrellYou know me.JenHi. Thanks for joining, guys.TerrellThanks for having me, you guys. Someone.AmberlyThank you so much. Yeah. The post #11 - Gold Award Winners: OSC & Rookie of the Year! appeared first on Online Sales and Marketing for Home Builders - DYC.

The Drill Down with Peter Schweizer
Are Companies Investing In Getting Your Kids Addicted to Gambling?

The Drill Down with Peter Schweizer

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2024 28:45


Former House Speaker John Boehner is one of politicians who cash in after leaving office. In Boehner's case, he opposed all efforts to legalize cannabis while he was in Congress, then promptly went into business as a pro-marijuana lobbyist, earning millions pushing for legalized pot around the country. So, fresh off spending the holidays watching sports and all the commercial tie-ins for legalized sports betting, Peter Schweizer and Eric Eggers open the first episode of The Drill Down for 2024 by asking, “Who is the ‘John Boehner' of legalized sports betting?” Turns out it's . . . John Boehner. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

For The Win
Chaos on Capitol Hill: Navigating the Turmoil with Kevin Madden

For The Win

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2023 30:24


Congress is a mess. From ongoing threats of government shutdowns to turmoil around picking a House Speaker, it's clear that the People's House is in disarray. On our newest episode, Jasmine and Elliot sit down with Kevin Madden, a longtime aide to House Republican leaders Tom DeLay and John Boehner, and presidential nominees George W. Bush and Mitt Romney, to discuss Mike Johnson's recent appointment as Speaker, the current climate in Congress, and what it will take to save the GOP from itself.

On the Brink with Andi Simon
Julie Barlow and Jean-Benoit Nadeau—How To Be A Successful Freelancer? Rather Than Working Harder, Work Smarter.

On the Brink with Andi Simon

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2023 36:48


Learn how to be your own boss and the power of saying no   Those of you who are wondering whether it's time for you to leave that corporate life and start your own business, you're going to love my guests today, Julie Barlow and Jean-Benoit Nadeau. They're freelance writers and translators and the authors of the new book Going Solo: Everything You Need to Start Your Business and Succeed as Your Own Boss. Many aspiring entrepreneurs have plenty of skill and passion but don't have a sense of how to run a business, which makes their advice so valuable. Are you an entrepreneur or solopreneur? You really should listen in. Watch and listen to our conversation here According to Julie and Jean-Benoit, a good business plan is basically six questions: 1. What do you want to do? 2. Why do you want to do it? 3. What's the market? 4. What price do you want to offer? 5. What will you bring to people? 6. What's the purpose, the “what for”? To connect with them, visit their LinkedIn page or their website. Want to learn more about what makes successful entrepreneurs successful? Here's a start: Blog: 10 Qualities To Drive Your Success As A Female Entrepreneur Blog: The 5 Things You Need To Know To Successfully Scale Your Business Podcast: Marsha Friedman—How A Woman Entrepreneur Took A Little Idea And Turned It Into A Big Business Podcast: Sharon Cully—Great Ideas to Help Entrepreneurs Gain Time and Success Additional resources for you My two award-winning books: Rethink: Smashing The Myths of Women in Business and On the Brink: A Fresh Lens to Take Your Business to New Heights My third book, Women Mean Business: Over 500 Insights from Extraordinary Leaders to Spark Your Success, co-written with Edie Fraser and Robyn Freedman Spizman  Our website: Simon Associates Management Consultants Read the transcript of our podcast here Andi Simon: Welcome to On the Brink With Andi Simon. I'm Andi Simon, I'm your host and your guide. And remember, my job is to get you off the brink. So I want to bring to you people who are going to help you see, feel and think in new ways. You know, and this is always my starting speech, because what I want my audience, whether you're watching or you're listening, is to learn something new. And the best way to do that is to see it and feel it and begin to get the stories from someone else who has done it and say, Oh, I can do that too. So today I have a wonderful couple here to share with you their story and a new book. Let me tell you about them. Julie Barlow and Jean-Benoit Nadeau are the authors of Going Solo: Everything You Need to Start Your Business and Succeed as Your Own Boss. So those of you who are out there wondering whether or not it's time for you to leave that corporate life and start your own business, or you're already starting the business and want to know how to succeed at business, or you're really thinking about, I don't know, going back into business, it's a good time to listen in and think about your own purpose and passion and where you could really have a great trip. They are prize-winning authors and journalists. The husband and wife pair have been running a freelance writing business for over three decades. Look at the books behind them. I just love books and so many folks have no books. And I'm a book author and I love books. They've spoken across Canada, the US, Europe and Japan. Their work has appeared in The New York Times, USA Today, The International Herald Tribune, France's L'Express, and more. They've published 15 books, written over a thousand articles, won more than 30 journalism and literary awards. They're avid travelers, they've lived in Paris, which I love, where John Boehner was a fellow of the Washington-based Institute for Current World Affairs. They've been to Toronto and Phoenix, where Julie was a Fulbright Scholar at Arizona State University. They're trilingual in English, French and Spanish, and they are based in Montreal, where they live with their twin daughters. I've told you enough. It's enough for you to see that I got somebody really cool here for you today, and they're going to help you. Just like I want to see things through a fresh lens. Thank you, Jean-Benoit and Julie, thanks for joining me. Jean-Benoit Nadeau: Thank you. Thank you very much for having us. Andi Simon: Now Jean-Benoit has told me I can call him JB. Tell us about your own journey. It's one thing to read a bio, it's another thing to begin to think through, How did they get here? Why this book at this time? You certainly have written lots. Jean-Benoit, would you like to start about your journey? Jean-Benoit Nadeau: Okay. I began as a writer in 1987. As a journalist. I'd done some theater before that. I'd studied engineering, decided in the end that I wanted to earn a living writing, and began as a writer. And since I was not that employable because I had no experience, I started freelancing, which was my destiny as a creator. Anyway, I realized later that a couple of things went well. I got my degree in political science, and was freelancing, meanwhile, and in 1993 things were going well and a magazine in Montreal offered me a job. I took the job and I was employed 29 days and I quit. That's when I became self-employed by choice. My father is an engineer. He had his own consultancy, which became quite large eventually, but he was an entrepreneur, and he's the first person who told me, because I was telling him, I have no job, What am I? Oh, he said, you're self-employed. Oh really? He said, Yes. I know what it was. Andi Simon: Bravo to your father. Jean-Benoit Nadeau: And then we discussed frequently until he became sick at the beginning of the middle of the year 2005. He was a good mentor. He mentored us a lot. And we realized quite early that a lot of the problems we were going through were the same that he was going through as an engineer. Aside from writing, you know, how do you negotiate? How do you manage without losing time? How do you finance your business and all these things? And I gave seminars first for journalists because I had a certain amount of success as a writer. So I was giving seminars to journalists. And then in 1997, I published a book which is the original version of the book in French for the Quebec market. And I started giving speeches in Chambers of Commerce and associate trade associations and realized that I was right on the advice that we had developed, because I was already partnered with Julie. So the advice that we were developing applied to everybody who wants to be creative in their work, really. And then we never had good success. We sold like 30,000 copies of the book in the tiny Quebec market and in French. And Julie said at one point, That book is absolutely translatable. So we got the rights back from my publisher and she translated it, and here we are. Julie Barlow: So I had been thinking for years and years of translating it, but just got buried under other projects. My writing career began much like jazz. I stumbled into it, began writing music, music reviews when I was in university. And I lost my confidence. I didn't come from a background with a father who was an entrepreneur. I didn't come from a business background at all. I didn't even know you could really make a living as a writer. Andi Simon: Aha. Julie Barlow: And that's not unusual in our field, you know, for people to have a skill and develop it but not have any sense of how to run a business. So I finished my education, finished my master's degree, and then just started out. And, nevertheless, even with that help that we had, there's a number of skills you have to really develop in order to make your passion into a business. Basically, I felt very fortunate to have your dad. And of course, we developed our own, our own by trial and error. And over the decades we developed our skills and our tips, and I was very happy to translate the book. We have two editions of it: one for the United States and one for Canada. And it's just great to share with others, not just creative people, but people who want to live their passion. They want to do what they want to do. They want to leave a job, start out fresh, out of school or whatever. There's just some basic things that you need to understand to make it work so that you don't get drowned in frustrations. Andi Simon: You know, it's interesting while I'm listening to you. So I'm in business 22 years now, and I launched my business after being in corporate as an executive in two banks and as an executive in two hospitals. And prior to that, I was an anthropology professor. I got my tenure and I was a visiting professor teaching entrepreneurship. And I was on a journey because I knew I was an anthropologist. I like to apply it among businesses that are going through change because people hate change. And I sort of helped them see, feel and think in new ways. But when I launched it after 911, my PR firm said to me, Oh, Andi, you're a corporate anthropologist who helps companies change. And I went, Bingo. And so in a sense, he defined my passion, my purpose, the why. Then the question was, how? And I did what I used to do anyway, which was start to have lunch with people, you know, never eat alone. We started to network and network and network. And next thing you know, I had a half a dozen clients and I went, Oh, this is fun. This is free. And I'm having a great time being me. And I do think that part of the passion and purpose is knowing who you are, not just what you do, but it's sort of my story. I want to go back to yours. When you began to help people through the book, let's talk about a process, a way of thinking. Because remember, we live the story in our mind. And so now the question is, typically the people who are going to read this book, what kind of story, what are they trying to do? Give them the wisdom and the lessons learned that you have. So the book complements it in some fashion. Who would like to start it? Jean-Benoit Nadeau: I think that a very important moment in the process of thinking of ourselves as entrepreneurial was the realization that it's so hard to change. And as an anthropologist, you'll understand. Historically, people used to be all self-employed. And the people who were employed were at the bottom of the scale. They didn't own their means of production, and they were at the bottom of the scale. And around the 19th century, that scale shifted. The people who were employed moved up socially, and it became a goal of education to have a job. We all went to study in order to have a job. We don't say to people, Study well, you're going to have your own enterprise. We never say that to kids. We tell them to study well, you'll have a job. So then I realized I will never have a job. What am I going to do? Well, I'm going to have work. Yep. So that's what self-employed is. You don't have a job, but you have work and you don't have a boss. You have a client who is your equal because you are your own boss and you don't have a salary. You have income which you build. But you see, it took me about 4 or 5 years even to send a bill to my clients because I thought it was pretentious. I'm sorry, I was an artist. I was a writer. I came from the theater. So at one point they would look at their books and say, Oh, we haven't paid this guy, so let's send him a check. That's how I was paid. So of course, that was the big moment of understanding that that's too much work. I don't have a job. Andi Simon: So, you know, Julie, I'm going to let you pop in, but I want to just set the context because I've been coaching some young women in their 20s, some are graduating from college, some have graduated and have had a couple of jobs. But I'm not sure that they know who they are, what they're doing, or why they're doing it. But I will tell you that the education in college makes them seem as if they're fully competent at something. They just don't know what that something is or where to find a company that wants their something. And I'm disturbed at the disconnect between their job, work, passion, purpose. Julie, your turn please. I didn't want to cut you off, but I wanted to set the stage. Julie Barlow: One of the big places where you see this problem of flipping from feeling like somebody's in control of what you produce and what you do, comes in negotiating, which is something we talk a lot about with writers who tend to think there's a system that they fit into and there's a certain amount that they will get paid. And they tend not to think that they're in the driver's seat. And so they get exploited. And one of the big problems is that people who, and you see this sometimes when people who leave a job to start working freelance, they just think of their clients as their bosses. And they even use that term. They say well, the boss says, the bosses, and they don't start from a position of power, which is that they can sell or not sell, and sometimes it's just worth walking away. I mean, I have this discussion with fellow writers a lot. There are clients who are just not good clients, and they're hurting you and they're not paying you fairly and they're wasting your time. You could be using your means and whatever it is you sell or produce to make money from somebody who appreciates it, you know? So one of the big things is avoiding bad clients and learning to say no. So we have a little section in the book of 16 Ways to Say No. It's very popular with people. You have to learn when to say no and how to walk away from things. And sometimes saying no is what really radically, suddenly improves your condition. I mean, you need to be able to do that. It's tough for people. Andi Simon: Well, it's interesting because I remember my first client who I said, “I'm really not good for you and you're not good for me. So I think you should find somebody else for your sake.” And I remember that feeling of freeing myself, but allowing them to be free of me as well, because we were simply not going to make it. And it was for your sake. And I'm sure that because it was a perspective that it wasn't my problem but for your benefit, it's time to go. But I've learned that no is a good word. Julie Barlow: Yes, it is a good word. And it can even bring a bigger yes at the end of the day from somebody else. I recently, last year, said no to a really, really what could have been a very lucrative writing contract with somebody that I just knew we were not a good fit. You know, you have to, and we talk about this as well in the book, you have to explore fairly carefully with your client. Make sure they understand what they're getting, make sure they understand what you're giving them. Yes, you're on the same terms. Things have to be clear from the beginning or you have problems down the line. And I just could not get through to them. We just could not see eye to eye on the thing. But, we left on good terms and I said, I'm sorry, I'm just not going to do this anymore. The word about what I had done with them traveled back to his literary agent which came back to me in the form of another book contract. So I absolutely understood what I did. But, you know, these are the lessons that you learn as a business person, clients' expectations. And again, it's the boss-client mentality. You have to take the time to make sure that you understand their expectations and that they understand what they're getting or you just end up with problems with them. Jean-Benoit Nadeau: People make a lot of fuss about the business plan. We've got questions about that. And I say, yeah, I know, but we say, the business plan is basically five questions. What do you want to do? Why do you want to do it? What's the market? What price do you want to offer? What will you bring to people? That's just the basics. If you need financing or an associate, you may need to write almost a book business plan, a book-size business plan. But a good business plan can fit on 2 or 3 pages. But there's a sixth question, which I forgot, that I didn't mention, which I think is the most important: What for, the purpose? But your goal, your personal goal, where do you want to go with that? Do you want to teach social dancing? A lot of people want to turn their passion into a business, and that's good. That's often why people go with you. Self-Employment. Well, you're not going to once things start running and that can come pretty quickly. You'll go somewhere if you know where you want to go, and you will not even decide who your clients are. And if you want to start teaching for the purpose of creating a franchise of social dancing, or create a shoe for social dancing, you are not going to choose your clients in the same way. Your venues, the place where you're going to showcase them, etcetera. And it's the same with a writer. You are not going to do all the thousands of choices you have to do in your daily business. If you want to be a publisher or have an agency, or want to be an editor in chief, or move into book writing or film, these are all personal choices. There's nobody who's going to tell you which is right, but it's very important, it orients you. Andi Simon: But I also think, I can't tell you how many folks come in by referral. Sometimes they find us on the internet and they are trying to do what they did in the corporate world in an independent freelance business fashion, but they don't really understand that things are different. You know, they did this there and therefore I'm going to do this now. I said, But there you had the brand of the big company and you had a network and so forth. Why should somebody hire you now? And how are you going to actually build a revenue stream, a client base, have a business with it, as opposed to being an employed person who used to do something. This means the story changes, but they aren't thinking about how to do it actually and they have no idea. Very often your book is very valuable about how I think about myself now? Because when I said I'm a corporate anthropologist who helps companies change, to be honest with you, I knew people had to change, they didn't care how I did it, and I admitted I picked that one up. I knew that the whole sales process was about, you know, where are your gaps? Where's your pain point? How can I help? How I did it, they didn't care. But it's a very important piece. They really didn't know what an anthropologist would do, but it was interesting to watch the transformation. But many times they come and don't know how to turn an idea, an observation, into a business innovation. So your book comes at a very timely moment. When they get going, do you help them create scalability? A word I use often because, you know, there are 13 million women-owned businesses in the US. 10 million of them don't make solopreneurs. 5 million of those don't make more than $10,000 a year. And they're more like side hustles, which is fine. But there are a whole lot of solopreneurs, and I worry about the lack of scalability. Not being able to underwrite it with the right capital. Don't know how to use a bank to finance it. Don't use their credit cards with family and friends. I mean, there's a whole huge market of folks who need to make an income in a better way, but need to think differently about what they're doing and not simply celebrate the fact that they're not inside a company, which is often what they say. “I didn't like being there, so I'm doing this.” I say, “But you're not in business. You're just trying.” So, thoughts? Julie Barlow: So one of the ideas that we speak of is that between somebody making $25,000 a year as a solopreneur and somebody making $250,000 a year, the thing you have to understand is that you don't have to work ten times more. You make your choices in the function of things. In our case, writing that feeds other ways of making money. So for instance, we wrote a book about the French language and we turned that into speaking gigs on the French language, articles on the French language, a film script on the French language, a radio show on the French language. I mean, the book just keeps on giving us content that we use for other things. And we're not being paid to sit and produce new content every day. That's what we would do if we had a job, perhaps as a script writer at a company. But we are using our content to make money for us. The best way to be a writer is to sit and wait for the royalty checks to come to the door. You know, of course we have to write, but all of the choices that we make, we make sure that they are not dead end choices because they are choices that are going to feed that or feed other books or enable us to produce books using a gig, doing something that will feed us with content for something else. I mean, that's how we go from thinking like an employee to thinking like a business person. Jean-Benoit Nadeau: I recently read a biography of Charles Dickens and was fascinated that he was one of the first authors in history to do what he called “work the copyright,” which meant that earning a living was not just about writing, it was to use his intellectual property to work for him, and for a lot less work. And as writers, we have the benefit of having intellectual property created the minute we finish something. The costly part of the intellectual property is developing it into research. But if you choose your ideas very well for the purpose of reusing them, then things become a lot easier. That's just in the production side of it. But if you negotiate well, you can actually improve your productivity without raising your rate just because you understand better what the client wants or because you negotiate better the ownership of what you produce for them, because you keep that ownership for yourself or because you get better terms. That's just at the negotiating level. You can keep collecting. If you bill quickly, you collect quickly, and then you have less money on your credit card. There's all sorts of things like this at all levels of what it is to run a business that are productive. Andi Simon: And what you're saying though, is a mindset. And I do think that mindset isn't the narrow: I'm a freelance writer. It's the broad: I'm in business to take ideas and in multiple channels begin to bring them to market because my purpose is to share French and I need to do it on all the different channels. And I need to do that in multiple different ways. And the content keeps repurposing itself. I mean, people say to me, Did you sell a lot of books? I said, I brought in a lot of clients. I mean, you can bring in good clients. I was in Mexico three times off a book that someone found in a Hudson News in an airport, and got to give programs to CEOs down there three years in a row. Before the pandemic, I just loved the multiplier of the book. And I just had a podcast earlier today of a guy who I gave the On the Brink book to. He took it on his vacation, came back and was quoting it for me. I mean, you can't ask for much more than that. I love how what we do is designed not to be an end, but a beginning.  And I do think it opens the door. And the idea is, how many different doors can it open and how do we get to where we're really taking the message and helping spread it. Julie Barlow: To do that you kind of have to be agile. I mean, the word is a little overused, but you do. You need to be watching what's going on. You know, in the book, we encourage people who are starting out to be curious to contact their competitors, to sit down with people in their business and ask questions and figure things out. People can be very shy and a little bit locked into their own little universe. You can stay in front of your screen all the time, but it's important to get out and understand what's going on. And people are helpful. And they're happy to have somebody, I'm happy for young writers to approach me and to ask for me to sit down and explain things to them. When I don't have time to do a contract. I'd love to be able to keep my client happy by sending them somebody else who can. And you know, that happens fairly frequently. And it's sort of a win-win for everybody. But, you know, communication and being open to that and watching the industry change is really important. One of our early methods was to resell articles because we write in both languages and we would resell them in different markets. And that changed when the internet came. And we started writing before the internet when that all changed. And then it was very hard to keep our copyright over certain things and resell things. But we found new ways to do that. And one of them is translating and we don't necessarily get paid for our copyright, but we need to translate it. So we get paid for that. We're always looking to see where the soft spots are and how things are changing. And you always have to kind of be aware of what's going on and not get stuck in a way of doing things. And that, again, is something very particular to being sort of an entrepreneur, entrepreneurial state of mind, as opposed to thinking like an employee and doing what you're asked to do. Andi Simon: You're segueing into a topic that I always like to include, though, and you've been through many years of watching many different transitions and transformations, and often you pick up. I often talk about the future is here, we just haven't quite distributed it widely. But you pick up little signs, and the little signs are the tip of the iceberg of where things are going. Are there some signs that you're already beginning to watch happen and you're saying, there's something coming? I'm not quite sure what, but I'm really interested to see where and who, and I'm going to poke further, and anything you can share, because I do think the times are changing. Jean-Benoit Nadeau: Well, in Canada we have this problem right now. The Canadian government wants to control better. Well, wants to ensure that big companies like Facebook and Google share their publicity market with traditional media, and they created a law, a Facebook Australia-style law. And Facebook reacted by blocking all Canadian content on Facebook. And Google is threatening that. So that is raising a lot of questions on the future of writing as a writer in Canada. It's going to be a rocky year next year, I would say. Julie Barlow: So artificial intelligence is a big one. Yeah, AI is affecting us. Again, maybe back to what Jean-Benoit said about purpose. We as sort of high-end writers are right now kind of safe from AI. It can't really do what we're doing. So we're enjoying the benefits of it right now, which is transcribing automatic tools for transcribing interviews and translation tools that give us decent first drafts of translations and various different things, but all the writing community is a little on edge about what is going to do, because it's getting better at generative artificial intelligence. We can't afford to have our head in the sand. Andi Simon: I fell in love with AI. I say that gently because I use it in different kinds of ways. It writes great poems for me. And if I want to give a granddaughter a poem about a situation, I give it three facts and outcomes a great poem. And I went, I can't write that, but boy, that is a great poem, and I don't even know who I would ask to write it. But it is interesting to watch what we begin to use it for. I had a great big project and I said, Tell me, what are your thoughts, AI, about this project I'm working on? And it freshened up my thinking, not that I was necessarily going to use it, but as a solopreneur, it's often difficult to find open colleagues with conversations that can make intelligent insights into things you're thinking about. And so I'm finding all kinds of ways to make it my friend. And I say that because it's how you feel about it as opposed to being angry at it. Jean-Benoit Nadeau: You know, we use artificial intelligence a fair amount. We have an excellent character here called Antidote. It's pure artificial intelligence. And all the intelligence software that is there doesn't make a very good translation, but makes a good first draft. In fact, in Canada, where we translate a fair amount because we have two official languages, the number of people who are employed as translators has increased by 18% in the last seven years, when the labor force has increased by six. So it reduced the cost of entry to a lot of people who would not translate. And then they give it to a machine. They come out and they say, someone says, that's not very good, but let's hire someone who finishes the translation. Andi Simon: What is Grammarly? I mean, this whole book, I put every one of them through it. We have 102 women and I gave everyone to Grammarly and they made the corrections and I sent it back and they approved it. And man, it was efficient. And there were limits to how much creativity was going to go into it. But it got me comfortable that they would sound professional and it was even far better than the proofreader of the publisher. And so it was fun to test. I just needed a third third party. Jean-Benoit Nadeau: But one of the things about artificial intelligence is that it's a misnomer. It's an algorithm that processes a lot of information. And one of the problems for journalists, anyway, one of the issues with our AI is that, for example, ChatGPT is essentially a sociopath. It doesn't tell you it doesn't know what it doesn't know. It makes up things and it doesn't give you the source, which is contrary to any kind of ethics in journalism. And, I don't think it threatens journalism. It will be a tool like glasses or even the word processor. Andi Simon: You know, I'm in the schools, my daughter is a teacher. And she said back to me, I had to do a lesson plan for a student in special ed. So I went into ChatGPT and it came back and it was almost as good as I would have done. And in a minute I went, yeah, now use your time to teach the child and not write the lesson plan. You know, it's a perfectly good way to get going. Nothing is perfect, and even our own lesson plans may not be perfect. We think they're better than AI. But I'm enjoying the transition to the next stage of data and insights coming from intelligent stuff in different ways. So it'll be fun if we stay and make it happy, and then be wise and go back and check and make sure it's correct. But even this stuff on Google, I'm never quite sure it's correct either. You have to be knowledgeable enough to know. This has been such fun. I'm so glad that you're on our podcast today, and if folks would like to buy the book, where could they buy it? Julie Barlow: Amazon.com, Amazon.ca in Canada, Barnes and Noble. It should be available in any bookstore. Jean-Benoit Nadeau: It's widely distributed. Just make sure if you ever go, it probably won't happen, but the Canadian edition has a little maple leaf at the top. If it doesn't have that little maple leaf, it's an American edition. Andi Simon: The things that look great. Thank you so much. So it's going solo and if you want to go solo, you've been with us today listening to Julie Barlow and Jean-Benoit Nadeau. I do, as we are trying to really help you see, feel and think in new ways so that you can decide, how am I going to spend the next stage of my career doing a job, or do I want really interesting work? Am I going to be a creator of a whole new market space, or am I going to copy someone else and be another? And I do think it's a time for really rethinking who you are and where you're going and how to do it. So I want to thank you for coming. Thank you for coming today and speaking to our audience. As you know, our new book, Women Mean Business: Over 500 Insights from Extraordinary Leaders to Spark Your Success, just came out and it is doing gangbusters. And it too is on all the booksellers, Barnes and Noble and Amazon. It's the stories of 102 women, and they are really interesting stories because the women have five wisdoms they want to share with you, and each of them has a different background, history, and their own journey. And it's really quite fascinating. The reviews are: "I wasn't sure what I was going to find, but I went through the whole book and each of the women inspired me. So when you gave the book to me, man, this is a great book!" Who knew? And I said, I know. The whole idea is to share their wisdom with you so you can be inspired, you can aspire to greatness. You can begin to think about how other women have done it. One of my favorite quotes in there is, “Don't believe everything you're thinking.” And I said, I like that. We preach, turn a page and change your life. I really think women in business are here to help you do just that. So on that note, I want to thank everyone for coming. Keep sending me your ideas on who we should have on, share the podcast and I wish you well. Bye bye now.   WOMEN MEAN BUSINESS® is a registered trademark of the National Association of Women Business Owners® (NAWBO)

Ken Rudin's Political Junkie
Episode #404: Master Of The House (For Now)

Ken Rudin's Political Junkie

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2023 47:34


The ousting of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and replacing him, finally, with Mike Johnson, sets up two conversations this week: One, with a former California GOP lawmaker who bolted his party to vote for a Democratic House Speaker, only to be recalled for his efforts; and Two, a visit to the 1995 archives and a talk with a former Republican House leader analyzes the forced resignation of House Speaker John Boehner. The post Episode #404: Master Of The House (For Now) appeared first on Ken Rudin's Political Junkie.

MRCTV's Podcast -Public Service Announcement
Episode 471: Let's Call Jim Jordan a Terrorist, But Not Hamas

MRCTV's Podcast -Public Service Announcement

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2023 23:56


While some media outlets -- especially "public broadcasters" -- eschew using the word "terrorist" to describe Hamas and Islamic Jihad, PBS and NBC and MSNBC were enjoying describing Jim Jordan as a "terrorist," because bitter former Speaker John Boehner smeared him in 2021.

Hardball with Chris Matthews
Israel and Gaza on the brink

Hardball with Chris Matthews

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2023 42:47


Joy Reid leads this episode of The ReidOut with Israel and Gaza on the brink. Families, including Americans, wait at Egypt's border hoping to escape the hell that is Gaza, as Israeli troops amass for the expected Gaza invasion. Also in this episode, Judge Tanya Chutkan has slapped a partial gag order on Donald Trump. Our legal expert brings his analysis. Plus, Jim Jordan has never passed a single piece of legislation, and former House speaker John Boehner calls him a "legislative terrorist." Yet, Jordan appears to be on the verge of becoming the next Republican speaker of the House. All this and more in this edition of The ReidOut on MSNBC.

The Georgia Politics Podcast
SPECIAL: A (Brief) History of the Speakers of the U.S. House of Representatives

The Georgia Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2023 62:51


Welcome to another special episode of The Georgia Politics Podcast! In this episode, we turn our focus to the storied history of the Speakers of the House, a pivotal and often unsung role in the world of politics. Craig and Professor Stone cover the early days of the United States, with the first Speaker of the House, Frederick Muhlenberg, whose gavel-wielding presence in Congress laid the foundation for this prestigious office. We'll delve into the dynamic personalities and pivotal moments that have defined the role throughout history. From Henry Clay's legendary tenure during the "Era of Good Feelings" to Sam Rayburn's unmatched leadership during turbulent times, we'll explore the key figures who have shaped the Speakership and, by extension, the nation itself. But it's not just about politics; the Speakers of the House have been at the forefront of major historical milestones. Discover how Joseph Gurney Cannon, with his iron grip on power, changed the rules of Congress, and how Tip O'Neill's legendary camaraderie with President Ronald Reagan transcended partisan politics. Our journey through history wouldn't be complete without exploring the groundbreaking moments led by groundbreaking individuals. What impact did Nancy Pelosi, the first female Speaker of the House, have during her tenure? How did John Boehner navigate the tumultuous waters of the Tea Party movement, and what can we learn from his leadership style? Join us as we examine the power, influence, and challenges faced by these remarkable men and women who have held the Speaker's gavel. Along the way, we'll uncover the fascinating stories, anecdotes, and controversies that have made the Speakers of the House integral to the fabric of American democracy. Connect with The Georgia Politics Podcast on Twitter @gapoliticspod Megan Gordon on Twitter @meganlaneg Preston Thompson on Twitter @pston3 Hans Appen on Twitter @hansappen Proud member of the Appen Podcast Network. #gapol

HPS Macrocast
The race for House Speaker–understanding the implications at home and abroad

HPS Macrocast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2023 29:42 Transcription Available


On this episode of What's At Stake, Penta Partner Andrea Christianson is joined by fellow partners—and House leadership experts—Stacy Kerr and Kevin Madden to talk about the race for the next U.S. House of Representatives speaker. Stacy was a longtime advisor to Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi while Kevin served in communications roles for former majority leaders Tom DeLay and John Boehner.In addition to discussing some inside-baseball House dynamics, the trio break down the broader implications of the ousting now former Speaker Kevin McCarthy, including its potential impact on the 2024 presidential election and America's role abroad. Things are moving fast, so at the time of this recording the Republican conference had yet to meet to vote on a new Speaker. The two frontrunners are Rep. Jim Jordan and Rep. Steve Scalise, with McCarthy yet to announce his withdrawal from consideration.

The FOX News Rundown
From Washington: McCarthy Ousted In Historic House Vote

The FOX News Rundown

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2023 35:45


The other shoe finally dropped for Congressman Kevin McCarthy after a historic vote on the House floor to remove him as Speaker this week took less than an hour, as opposed to the days it took for him to win over the gavel on the 15th round of voting back in January. As much as the motion to vacate felt abrupt, it has long been threatened by both Democrats and Republicans alike. Republican Strategist and former Deputy Communications Director for former Speaker John Boehner, Mike Ricci shares why he believes Democrats did not bail the Speaker out, speculates the reasoning behind the lack of trust between representatives, and predicts that whoever fills this vacancy will face a multitude of competing priorities. With the future of Republican leadership in the House of Representatives up in the air, what could become of future aid to Ukraine in its fight against Russia? Many Republicans have voiced their opposition to further Ukraine aid in future spending bills, with the issue also driving a wedge between 2024 Presidential Candidates. Former U.S. Ambassador to NATO and Special Representative to Ukraine under former President Trump, Kurt Volker discusses why it is imperative that the U.S. continues aid to Ukraine, what European nations are doing to help with the war effort, and how America's political situation factors into Russian President Vladimir Putin's plans for the war. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

From Washington – FOX News Radio
From Washington: McCarthy Ousted In Historic House Vote

From Washington – FOX News Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2023 35:45


The other shoe finally dropped for Congressman Kevin McCarthy after a historic vote on the House floor to remove him as Speaker this week took less than an hour, as opposed to the days it took for him to win over the gavel on the 15th round of voting back in January. As much as the motion to vacate felt abrupt, it has long been threatened by both Democrats and Republicans alike. Republican Strategist and former Deputy Communications Director for former Speaker John Boehner, Mike Ricci shares why he believes Democrats did not bail the Speaker out, speculates the reasoning behind the lack of trust between representatives, and predicts that whoever fills this vacancy will face a multitude of competing priorities. With the future of Republican leadership in the House of Representatives up in the air, what could become of future aid to Ukraine in its fight against Russia? Many Republicans have voiced their opposition to further Ukraine aid in future spending bills, with the issue also driving a wedge between 2024 Presidential Candidates. Former U.S. Ambassador to NATO and Special Representative to Ukraine under former President Trump, Kurt Volker discusses why it is imperative that the U.S. continues aid to Ukraine, what European nations are doing to help with the war effort, and how America's political situation factors into Russian President Vladimir Putin's plans for the war. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Chris Stigall Show
The Truth Behind McCarthy's Ouster

The Chris Stigall Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 65:33


Stigall goes to a trusted source in the House of Representatives for the blow by blow truth of what was behind the Matt Gaetz, Kevin McCarthy spat. The attacks on both men - are they fair and warranted? What's real and what's gossip? You'll get the most thorough behind the scenes testimony of the state of House Republicans and where they go from here. Newsmax border correspondent Jaeson Jones reacts to blue state governors and mayors demanding the border be closed immediately. Chadwick Moore returns to discuss the growing fanbase of Tucker Carlson. Are they turing into the "Howard Stern" of old kind of fan? Maybe. Stigall has some evidence. -For more info visit the official website: https://chrisstigall.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/chrisstigallshow/Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChrisStigallFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/chris.stigall/Listen on Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/StigallPodListen on Apple Podcasts: https://bit.ly/StigallShowSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Chris Stigall Show
The Historic Ouster of The Speaker of the House

The Chris Stigall Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2023 66:33


Stigall pulls no punches in a complete analysis of yesterday's Washington D.C. earthquake and is joined by former Trump communications director Tim Murtaugh. Tim and Stigall also discussed the events on Tim and Hogan Gidley's new podcast "The Line Drive." -For more info visit the official website: https://chrisstigall.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/chrisstigallshow/Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChrisStigallFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/chris.stigall/Listen on Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/StigallPodListen on Apple Podcasts: https://bit.ly/StigallShowSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Sound On
Motion to Vacate

Sound On

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 35:28 Transcription Available


Bloomberg Washington Correspondent Joe Mathieu delivers insight and analysis on the latest headlines from the White House and Capitol Hill, including conversations with influential lawmakers and key figures in politics and policy.On this edition, Joe speaks with: Republican Congressman Ben Cline of Virginia about the effort to oust Kevin McCarthy as Speaker of the House. Bloomberg Politics Contributors Rick Davis and Jeanne Sheehan Zaino about the political calculus on Capitol Hill for both parties amidst the uncertain future of House leadership. Founder of Bluestack Strategies and Former Advisor to Speaker John Boehner and Rep. Adam Kinzinger Maura Gillespie about infighting in the Republican House caucus. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Daily Show With Trevor Noah: Ears Edition
Trevor Noah's Daily Show Debut

The Daily Show With Trevor Noah: Ears Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2023 21:44 Transcription Available


Trevor Noah debuted as Daily Show host on this day in 2015. In his first episode, Trevor discusses Pope emojis and John Boehner, interviews Kevin Hart, and gives a nod to Jon Stewart. He also introduces a new correspondent, Roy Wood Jr., who discusses NASA's discovery of water on Mars.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Untold Story with Martha MacCallum
Look For Me There: Luke Russert's Journey Of Healing

The Untold Story with Martha MacCallum

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2023 24:51


Former broadcast news correspondent Luke Russert joins Martha to discuss the legacy of his father, former Meet The Press Host Tim Russert, and how his death impacted his family and helped changed his perspective on life.   Luke talks about how the relationship between him and his mother was strengthened in the wake of his father's death and how a conversation with former Speaker of the House John Boehner influenced his decision to leave his broadcasting job. Later, Luke touches upon his book Look for Me There: Grieving My Father, Finding Myself.   Follow Martha on Twitter: @MarthaMacCallum Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

My Wakeup Call with Dr. Mark Goulston
Ep 509- Luke Russert

My Wakeup Call with Dr. Mark Goulston

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2023 56:03


 In this episode I speak with Luke Russert, author of, "Look For Me There: Grieving My Father, Finding Myself," an exploration of finding oneself and one's place in the world in the face of crushing expectations and grief. He is an author and an Emmy Award winning journalist who served as an NBC News correspondent from 2008 to 2016. Primarily covering American politics, he was seen on popular outlets such as NBC Nightly News, Today, NBCNews.com, and MSNBC. He is the son of the late Tim Russert of NBC's Meet the Press and Vanity Fair writer Maureen Orth. His wakeup call was prompted by a talk with House Speaker John Boehner who advised him to get out of the suffocating political bubble in Washington, D.C. to find out who he was and wanted to be. https://www.lukerussert.net/  

The Takeout
Author Luke Russert w/ Former House Speaker John Boehner

The Takeout

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2023 49:45


Author and former broadcast journalist Luke Russert joins Major at famed Capitol Hill watering hole Tune Inn for a discussion of Russert's new book, "Look for Me There," a memoir about losing his father and traveling the world. Russert recounts advice he got in 2015 from then-Speaker of the House John Boehner, who told him to leave network news and explore the world. Stick around for a chat between Major, Russert and Boehner on why the speaker offered that advice and why it was the right call for Russert. Boehner also offers his thoughts on the state of the Republican Party and its frontrunner for president, Donald Trump. Join us!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Odd Lots
On the Debt Ceiling, the White House Is Doing What It Said It Wouldn't Do

Odd Lots

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2023 43:49


In 2011, then-Vice President Biden had a front row seat to a bruising debt ceiling standoff between President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner. That fight arguably derailed the Obama presidency and the nascent economic recovery. After that experience, Biden and his team had insisted that this time they would not negotiate over a debt ceiling increase. Yet here we are, and the current administration is doing exactly that. According to the Treasury Department, we're just days away from the so called "X-date" (when a US default would occur) and both the White House and new House Speaker Kevin McCarthy have been debating what conditions a hike in the debt ceiling should come with. So how did they get into this situation? And what were the other options? On this episode we speak with Skanda Amarnath, executive director of Employ America, and Arnab Datta, senior counsel of Employ America, about the current state of play and how it might have been avoided.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Dividend Cafe
The DC Today -Thursday April 20, 2023

The Dividend Cafe

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2023 12:30


Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/3mP5Ad0 The talk is warming up for the debt ceiling debate to become a major market story for a time. As I was writing months ago, there is no leverage for the Republican House if they don't first pass their own debt ceiling bill (essentially, a bill they actually pass with 218 or more votes that does raise the debt ceiling but gives House Republicans what they want by way of spending cuts). It is what John Boehner first did in 2011 that then forced the Obama administration to have to take a stance against it, and then ultimately pushed that stand-off to the point of the “sequester” where hundreds of billions of dollars came out of the deficit. In this case, I (a) Do not know if Speaker McCarthy will get his 218 votes, (b) Do know that the Biden administration will oppose whatever that is, and (c) Do not know what the twists and turns will be when they find themselves at their version of a “Boehner-Obama” stand-off. I only know this: Without “A” – there is no “B” or “C.” So we shall see if the House GOP can pass a bill and then take it from there. A debt ceiling lift that comes with the spending cuts they want does force the White House into a tougher political play (they can't see the Republicans are forcing the government to default if the House has actually passed a bill to not do so). But these things have a way of moving and shaking quite a bit before we get to the end, and I can promise you media coverage of it all is going to be … unhelpful. Links mentioned in this episode: TheDCToday.com DividendCafe.com TheBahnsenGroup.com

POLITICO's Nerdcast
Why Kevin McCarthy thinks he's already won

POLITICO's Nerdcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2023 64:39


A small group of longtime Kevin McCarthy aides who decamped downtown to lobby are suddenly some of the most influential and sought-after people in Washington. They remain intensely loyal to the new speaker and serve as crucial sources of insight into his thinking and strategy. Ben Howard, now at the Duberstein Group, was McCarthy's floor director. He was with him through all of the fraught moments of the John Boehner era, including in 2015 when Boehner retired and McCarthy lost out on securing his job. Howard saw up close how driven McCarthy was to get a second shot at becoming speaker. “I used to sit in the office with Kevin,” Howard told Ryan Lizza, host of Playbook Deep Dive. “We would dream about this day. We would dream about it.”  But Howard has a bone to pick. He doesn't like the way that everyone is talking about his old boss. The conventional wisdom about the new speaker is that he gave up everything to secure the job and that he's one misstep away from losing it if he angers his restive Freedom Caucus colleagues. According to Howard, that bit of Washington C.W. is wrong. For this week's episode of the Playbook Deep Dive podcast, Playbook co-author Ryan Lizza talked to Howard in his Penn Quarter office to understand the view from McCarthy world. They had a wide-ranging conversation about the state of the House GOP, the impact of the rules changes McCarthy agreed to in order to win the gavel, the debt limit faceoff, and McCarthy's relationship with President Biden. Oh, and also about that time Howard was chewed out by GOP members for ruining the most famous episode of Game of Thrones. Ryan Lizza is a Playbook co-author for POLITICO. Ben Howard is a Partner for the Duberstein Group. Afra Abdullah is an associate producer for POLITICO audio. Kara Tabor is a producer for POLITICO audio. Alex Keeney is a senior producer for POLITICO audio. Brook Hayes is a senior editor for POLITICO audio. Jenny Ament is the executive producer for POLITICO audio.

David Feldman Show
Is America Really This Ignorant? Episode 1413

David Feldman Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2023 106:06


On today's show, David asks his listeners, "Is America really this ignorant?" David does The News Chapters: 00:00:00 Florida Congressman offers psychotic gifts to his colleagues 00:01:34 George Santos takes to the house floor to warn of rising crime 00:01:47 California police take out double amputee who, they claim, tried to run away from them 00:08:39 Manhattan prosecutors convene grand jury looking into Trump's hush money for Stormy Daniels 00:11:44 Trump pleads the fifth 400 times 00:14:08 New York Magazine says DeSantis beats Trump 00:15:51 West Virginia presidential candidate's pregnant wife hogs the spotlight 00:19:58 Don Junior finally getting his father's respect 00:22:02 Should parents elect school principals? 00:26:18 Donald Trump campaigns in South Carolina 00:29:38 The photograph Lindsey Graham doesn't want Republicans to see 00:32:12 Trump introduces Congressman Joe "You Lie" Wilson 00:34:54 The story of Obamacare 00:37:54 When civil discourse broke down at town hall meetings for Obamacare 00:44:57 How former Speaker John Boehner landed a cushy job with the tobacco companies 00:48:01 Mike Pence was also a creep back in 2009 00:54:45 What gave rise to Marjorie Taylor Greene? 01:04:33 Donald Trump told 30,573 lies as president 01:14:02 David exposes the lie Trump tells about the economy during his presidency 01:17:18 Trump added 7 trillion to the US Debt 01:21:04 Trump declared bankruptcy six times 01:23:31 Trump's lies about Antifa 01:27:06 White supremacy groups pose as Antifa on social media 01:31:13 Trump tells the truth about Steve Scalise 01:34:01 Dr. Frank Luntz sans toupee 01:37:14 The real reason Twitter wants Trump back 01:39:18 The real reason Facebook wants Trump back 01:40:11 Nick Clegg, who is he?

Mark Levin Podcast
Mark Levin Audio Rewind - 1/25/23

Mark Levin Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2023 113:48


On Wednesday's Mark Levin Show, it's remarkable how different Kevin McCarthy is treated by the liberal media than Nancy Pelosi was and continue to give President Biden a pass. McCarthy is standing up to them in a way that we never saw John Boehner or Paul Ryan do. A slew of hardcore conservatives has been named to many House committees, while Eric Swalwell, Adam Schiff, and Ilhan Omar are being ousted from their committees. Also, Biden is a serial classified document hoarder since his days in the Senate, where he took documents out of the Senate SCIF and avoided detection. If people are going to hide documents or just take them, how do we know the National Archives has them all given their track record with Biden's documents from the Obama Administration? Then, China and Iran are watching how Biden responds to Russia, because they know Putin wouldn't do this with Trump around. Ukrainians are dying but they're fighting for their homes and their liberty and aren't giving up – they're just asking for more armaments. Surrender and isolationism aren't the answers in the face of China gearing up for war. Later, it's amazing how mainstream the Marxist anti-American 1619 Project is, and how Ron DeSantis is being smeared for being against African American studies. The 1619 Project and its racist re-writing of our history is promoted by Good Morning America and pushed into our school's curriculum. Finally, Mark speaks with Mike Pompeo about his time in the Trump Administration and his new book Never Give an Inch: Fighting for the America I Love. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Majority Report with Sam Seder
3000 - The Meaninglessness Of This Republican Drama w/ Heather Digby Parton & Andy Kindler

The Majority Report with Sam Seder

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2023 169:14


It's the first Casual Friday of 2023! Sam hosts Heather Digby Parton, contributing writer at Salon.com and proprietor of the blog Hullabaloo, to round up the week in news. Then, Sam is joined by Andy Kindler, host of the Thought Spiral podcast! First, Sam runs through updates on the US' 50-year unemployment low, South Carolina's Supreme Court rejecting a 6-week abortion ban, and Kevin McCarthy racking up an even 12 losses for the Speakership since Tuesday, now looking to make it a baker's dozen. He also touches on the accessibility of the new abortion pill in red states, Biden's new authoritarian immigration policies, and dives into the importance of disallowing non-compete agreements in the fight for labor control. Digby then joins as they dive a little deeper into Kevin McCarthy's performance on the House floor this week, from pretending not to care about his repeated losses to not even being able to sell out correctly, and discuss parallels to his rise as John Boehner's heir apparent. Next, she and Sam get into the role that conservative media has been playing in the issue, and whether the Freedom Caucusers will get what they want (whatever that is) from this standoff. Andy Kindler joins next, as he and Sam talk liquor, Ryan Seacrest, and what it's like to be young guns in the comedy world, before parsing through Dave Rubin's reflections on DeSantis' nomination, the revealed abuse by Matt Schlapp, Chair of CPAC. And in the Fun Half: Sam covers the drama of talking about Marjorie Taylor Green acknowledging Jesse Jackson, and Glenn Greenwald cites trusted news source, Joe Rogan. Sam and the MR Crew then parse through two recent mishaps by said trusted news source, watching his and Eric Weinstein's recent misinformation scandal, and the YouTuber fight that duped him, plus, your IMs! Check out Digby's work at Salon here: https://www.salon.com/writer/heather_digby_parton Check out Hullaballoo here: http://digbysblog.net/ Check out the Thought Spiral podcast here: https://thoughtspiral.libsyn.com/ Become a member at JoinTheMajorityReport.com: https://fans.fm/majority/join Subscribe to the ESVN YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/esvnshow Subscribe to the AMQuickie newsletter here: https://am-quickie.ghost.io/ Join the Majority Report Discord! http://majoritydiscord.com/ Get all your MR merch at our store: https://shop.majorityreportradio.com/ Get the free Majority Report App!: http://majority.fm/app Check out today's sponsors: Aura: Go to my sponsor https://aura.com/majority to try 14 days free and let Aura go to work protecting your private information online Sunset Lake CBD: Sunset Lake CBD is a majority employee-owned business that pays a minimum wage of $20/hour. Use code “January” at sunsetlakecbd.com to get craft CBD Lotion shipped directly to your door! Also, Use code Leftisbest and get 20% off your purchases! HoldOn Bags: To shop plant based bags and replace single use plastics all over your home, visit https://holdonbags.com/MAJORITY or enter MAJORITY at checkout to save 20% off your order. Follow the Majority Report crew on Twitter: @SamSeder @EmmaVigeland @MattBinder @MattLech @BF1nn @BradKAlsop Check out Matt's show, Left Reckoning, on Youtube, and subscribe on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/leftreckoning Subscribe to Discourse Blog, a newsletter and website for progressive essays and related fun partly run by AM Quickie writer Jack Crosbie. https://discourseblog.com/ Check out Ava Raiza's music here! https://avaraiza.bandcamp.com/ The Majority Report with Sam Seder - https://majorityreportradio.com/

The Beat with Ari Melber
McCarthy loses 10th speaker vote

The Beat with Ari Melber

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2023 55:26


MSNBC's Ari Melber hosts "The Beat" on Thursday January 5 and reports on Kevin McCarthy's losing streak hitting a third day in the House and the lessons of John Boehner's fight for the speakership. Mark Leibovich, Libby Casey and Michael Moore join.

The Beat with Ari Melber
McCarthy loses historic three Speaker votes

The Beat with Ari Melber

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2023 40:58


MSNBC's Ari Melber hosts "The Beat" on Tuesday, January 3 and reports on Rep. Kevin McCarthy losing three votes for Speaker of the House, with GOP hardliners breaking with their party to vote against him. Brendan Buck, former aide to Republican Speakers Paul Ryan and John Boehner joins, along with Democratic strategists Chai Komanduri and James Carville.

Quite Frankly
"Trump Cards, WaPo Lay-offs, Old St. Nick, Questions of Faith" ft Timothy Gordon 12/15/22

Quite Frankly

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2022 127:02


Timothy Gordon (TimothyJGordon.com) returns to the show for another Christmassy appearance, and for him I have a story about the possible discover of St. Nicholas' tomb, the Euthanasia trend spreading through the Liberal West, and other questions of Faith. Other than that, Trump teases his base with a major announcement, John Boehner weeps again, and there's always more than the description lets on. Watch the full episode on Rumble: https://rumble.com/v20t9ms-trump-announcement-old-st.-nick-questions-of-faith-more...-ft-timothy-gordo.html Support Our Proud Sponsors: Blue Monster Prep: An Online Superstore for Emergency Preparedness Gear (Storable Food, Water, Filters, Radios, MEDICAL SUPPLIES, and so much more). Use code 'FRANKLY' for Free Shipping on every purchase you make @ https://bluemonsterprep.com/ Secret Nature CBD: 100% organic CBD rich cannabis flower bred so low in THC that they are legally certified as hemp and can be shipped nationwide. High-CBD, low-THC means all the benefits of full spectrum cannabinoids and terpenes without the high, or negative effects like anxiety and paranoia. Pre-rolls, Oils, Tinctures, and more - Promo Code 'FRANKLY' at SecretNatureCBD.com for 20% OFF SUPPORT the Show and New Media: Sponsor through QFTV: https://www.quitefrankly.tv/sponsor SubscribeStar: https://www.subscribestar.com/quitefrankly One-Time Gift: http://www.paypal.me/QuiteFranklyLive Official QF Merch: https://bit.ly/3tOgRsV Sign up for the Free Mailing List: https://bit.ly/3frUdOj Send Crypto: BTC: 1EafWUDPHY6y6HQNBjZ4kLWzQJFnE5k9PK LTC: LRs6my7scMxpTD5j7i8WkgBgxpbjXABYXX ETH: 0x80cd26f708815003F11Bd99310a47069320641fC FULL Episodes On Demand: Spotify: https://spoti.fi/301gcES iTunes: http://apple.co/2dMURMq Amazon: https://amzn.to/3afgEXZ SoundCloud: http://bit.ly/2dTMD13 Google Play: https://bit.ly/2SMi1SF Stitcher: https://bit.ly/2tI5THI BitChute: https://bit.ly/2vNSMFq Rumble: https://bit.ly/31h2HUg Watch Live On: QuiteFrankly.tv (Powered by Foxhole) DLive: https://bit.ly/2In9ipw Rokfin: https://bit.ly/3rjrh4q Twitch: https://bit.ly/2TGAeB6 YouTube: https://bit.ly/2exPzj4 CloutHub: https://bit.ly/37uzr0o Theta: https://bit.ly/3v62oIw Rumble: https://bit.ly/31h2HUg How Else to Find Us: Official WebSite: http://www.QuiteFrankly.tv Official Forum: https://bit.ly/3SToJFJ Official Telegram: https://t.me/quitefranklytv DISCORD Hangout: https://bit.ly/2FpkS11 Twitter: @PoliticalOrgy Gab: @QuiteFrankly Truth Social: @QuiteFrankly GETTR: @QuiteFrankly

The Michael Knowles Show
Ep. 1146 - Life, Liberty, And Being Super Duper Gay

The Michael Knowles Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2022 50:13


Click here to join the member exclusive portion of my show: https://utm.io/ueSElBiden rewrites the Declaration of Independence, John Boehner blubbers over his love for Nancy Pelosi, and MILFs take over TLC.- - - DailyWire+:Become a DailyWire+ member for 30% off by using code HOLIDAY at checkout: https://bit.ly/3SsC5seGet 30% off Jeremy's Razors Gift Bundles: https://bit.ly/3SsC5seGet your Michael Knowles merch here: https://bit.ly/3X6tlKY  - - - Today's Sponsors:Epic Will - Use Promo Code 'KNOWLES' for 10% off your Will: https://www.epicwill.com/ Ring - Live a little more stress-free this season with a Ring product that's right for you: http://bit.ly/3VnIQMK PajamaGram - Get a FREE matching Naturally Nude NIghty with your order: https://www.pajamagram.com/- - -Socials:Follow on Twitter: https://bit.ly/3RwKpq6 Follow on Instagram: https://bit.ly/3BqZLXA Follow on Facebook: https://bit.ly/3eEmwyg Subscribe on YouTube: https://bit.ly/3L273Ek Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Michael Knowles Show
Ep. 1146 - Life, Liberty, And Being Super Duper Gay  

The Michael Knowles Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2022 52:43


Click here to join the member exclusive portion of my show: https://utm.io/ueSEl Biden rewrites the Declaration of Independence, John Boehner blubbers over his love for Nancy Pelosi, and MILFs take over TLC. - - -  DailyWire+: Become a DailyWire+ member for 30% off by using code HOLIDAY at checkout: https://bit.ly/3SsC5se Get 30% off Jeremy's Razors Gift Bundles: https://bit.ly/3SsC5se Get your Michael Knowles merch here: https://bit.ly/3X6tlKY   - - -  Today's Sponsors: Epic Will - Use Promo Code 'KNOWLES' for 10% off your Will: https://www.epicwill.com/  Ring - Live a little more stress-free this season with a Ring product that's right for you: http://bit.ly/3VnIQMK  PajamaGram - Get a FREE matching Naturally Nude NIghty with your order: https://www.pajamagram.com/ - - - Socials: Follow on Twitter: https://bit.ly/3RwKpq6  Follow on Instagram: https://bit.ly/3BqZLXA  Follow on Facebook: https://bit.ly/3eEmwyg  Subscribe on YouTube: https://bit.ly/3L273Ek Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Bob Cesca Show
It's What We Have

The Bob Cesca Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2022 68:14


[Explicit Content] The Money Man That's Right Eddie Money arrives! Our PO Box is still a thing. Trump's major announcement turned out to be way more ridiculous than everyone predicted. What is an NFT? Trump kept most of the Save America PAC money for himself. Lauren Boebert and the most confounding immigration talking point ever. John Boehner ugly-cried at the ceremony for Nancy Pelosi's official portrait. Ken Paxton compiled a list of trans people in Texas. Elon Musk is quoting QAnon now. Former Twitter official had to flee his home. With Jody Hamilton, David "TRex" Ferguson, music by Gypsy Moths, Tim Mahoney, and more. Bob's Linktree.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The Howie Carr Radio Network
Cry Baby Boehner is Back plus an Omnibus Bill Breakthrough? - 12.15.22 - Grace Curley Show Hour 1

The Howie Carr Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2022 37:59


What are the only occasions when it's acceptable for a man to cry? Is talking about the tenure of Speaker Nancy Pelosi one of those times? Tune in for a misty moment from John Boehner and Grace's takes on the bipartisan omnibus bill that promises to be very expensive.

The Daily Zeitgeist
Jan 6th 2.0? Alaska's KNIFE Politics 08.16.22

The Daily Zeitgeist

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2022 62:41


In episode 1310, Jack and Miles are joined by MC, producer, and streamer Illingsworth to discuss… Jan. 6th 2.0, Will Sarah Palin Replace Alaska's (Knife-Wielding) Congressman? And more! Laura Ingraham Says Country Might Be Ready to Move Past Trump: Americans Exhausted By the ‘Constant Battle' ‘Fox & Friends' Begs Trump to Make Supporters Lay Off FBI Rand Paul calls for repeal of Espionage Act after Trump FBI search Will Sarah Palin Replace Alaska's (Knife-Wielding) Congressman? GOP lawmaker once held a knife to Boehner's throat Sarah Palin will advance in Alaska's wild House special primary election, CNN projects Alaska election tests weight of Sarah Palin's celebrity – and Trump's sway 'Another day in paradise. This is a strange day': Trump jokes about FBI raid at Mar-a-Lago while dialing in to 15-minute telephone rally for Sarah Palin's House campaign Trump bashed Alaska's ranked choice voting, but Republicans likely need those 2nd votes to win Check Out: https://illingsworks.bandcamp.com/ LISTEN: El arca de Mima by MimaSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.