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In 1932, Maxwell House put out a Pesach Haggadah as a marketing promotion. It's been continuously in print since then. They've printed over 50 million copies. Pesach is the most observed of all the Jewish festivals. Even whenJews become secular, and all the other festivals fall by the way, Pesach still hangs in there. Why is that? What is it about Pesach that is so deeply rooted in the Jewish psyche? Chag Kasher v'Sameach! In 1972, Rabbi Yaakov Asher Sinclair opened SARM Studios the first 24-track recording studio in Europe where Queen mixed “Bohemian Rhapsody”. His music publishing company, Druidcrest Music published the music for The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1973) and as a record producer, he co-produced the quadruple-platinum debut album by American band “Foreigner” (1976). American Top ten singles from this album included, “Feels Like The First Time”, “Cold as Ice” and “Long, Long Way from Home”. Other production work included “The Enid – In the Region of the Summer Stars”, “The Curves”, and “Nutz” as well as singles based on The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy with Douglas Adams and Richard O'Brien. Other artists who used SARM included: ABC, Alison Moyet, Art of Noise, Brian May, The Buggles, The Clash, Dina Carroll, Dollar, Flintlock, Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Grace Jones, It Bites, Malcolm McLaren, Nik Kershaw, Propaganda, Rush, Rik Mayall, Stephen Duffy, and Yes. In 1987, he settled in Jerusalem to immerse himself in the study of Torah. His two Torah books The Color of Heaven, on the weekly Torah portion, and Seasons of the Moon met with great critical acclaim. Seasons of the Moon, a unique fine-art black-and-white photography book combining poetry and Torah essays, has now sold out and is much sought as a collector's item fetching up to $250 for a mint copy. He is much in demand as an inspirational speaker both in Israel, Great Britain and the United States. He was Plenary Keynote Speaker at the Agudas Yisrael Convention, and Keynote Speaker at Project Inspire in 2018. Rabbi Sinclair lectures in Talmud and Jewish Philosophy at Ohr Somayach/Tannenbaum College of Judaic studies in Jerusalem and is a senior staff writer of the Torah internet publications Ohrnet and Torah Weekly. His articles have been published in The Jewish Observer, American Jewish Spirit, AJOP Newsletter, Zurich's Die Jüdische Zeitung, South African Jewish Report and many others. Rabbi Sinclair was born in London, and lives with his family in Jerusalem. He was educated at St. Anthony's Preparatory School in Hampstead, Clifton College, and Bristol University. A Project Of Ohr.Edu Questions? Comments? We'd Love To Hear From You At: Podcasts@Ohr.Edu https://podcasts.ohr.edu/
The Maxwell House Haggadah is the most popular haggadah in history, with over 60 million printed, and another million copies every year. For Americans, it is the epitome of what a haggadah should be.So how did a Tennessee coffee company come to produce the greatest haggadah of all time?In this class I answer these questions and more:How did Maxwell House coffee come to be associated with a Haggadah?How has the Maxwell House Haggadah changed over the years?How do different editions of the Maxwell House Haggadah reflect the changing dynamic in American Jewry?
Opening music courtesy of Harpeth Presbyterian Church, closing courtesy of Banjo HangOut (Come the fount of every blessing) used with permission.The dirty little secret about soliable coffee, (the trade name for what we know as instant coffee) is it's made from higher-grade beans.Generally, mass-market roasters like Maxwell House use robusto beans, which are more widely & easiest to grow. These beans respond well to a light or city roast. It's careful roasting that delivers that elusive ingredient we know as flavor or taste.But the added process of dehydration requires the more exotic Arabic or varietal beans.Regardless of the process, the coffee we consume is still just three things — beans, water, and time. Those are the ingredients, how they come together is the receipt.
Maxwell House Good News 37-12-30 (09) Guest - Myrna Loy
It's @ASelby0372 4 favorite segments of 2024/ @ByJohnLMicek @Owens_abc27 are here/New bit: Overrated or Not/ @Frank_Sko/Bad quotes: Biden or Trump?/Podcaster Tim Hamilton here/Tim Time: POTUS blame/@BritCrampsie @tonywlepore are back/Maxwell House wife
2024-009_The OTRNow Radio Program3 hours of classic old time radio.The Shadow Of Fu Manchu. May 31, 1939. Program #11. Radio Attractions syndication. Sponsored by: Music fill for local commercial insert. Sir Nayland vs. "The Curse Of Siva!". Hanley Stafford, Gale Gordon. 10991. The Shadow Of Fu Manchu. June 02, 1939. Program #12. Radio Attractions syndication. Sponsored by: Music fill for local commercial insert. Fu Manchu escapes, the Dacoit strikes!. Hanley Stafford, Gale Gordon. Maxwell House Coffee Time. December 10, 1942. NBC net. Sponsored by: Maxwell House Coffee, Log Cabin Syrup. The first tune is, "The Pennsylvania Polka." The first appearance by Frank Tours as the program's orchestra leader, replacing Meredith Willson (who has possibly entered military service). Frank Morgan (the Englishman) tries to impress Frank Tours. The Maxwell House commercial is based on, "Melancholy Baby." Daddy takes Baby Snooks duck hunting!. John Conte (host), Fanny Brice, Hanley Stafford, Frank Tours (conductor), Frank Morgan, Phil Rapp (writer), Harlow Wilcox (announcer). Stars On Parade. June 22, 1951. Program #558. Army and Air Force syndication. "Miss Turner Retires". Sponsored by: Army and Air Force recruiting. A fifty eight year old spinster English teacher is nearing the end of her career, and it won't be an easy transition. Flora Robson, Charles Wilkes (director), Helen Christian (writer), Joe Ripley (announcer), Johnny Guarnieri (composer, conductor). WILD BILL HICKOK - In this second episode of WILD BILL HICKOK from 1951, he encounters The Missouri Wild Bill Hickok. June 03, 1951. Program #2. Mutual net. Sponsored by: Kellogg's Corn Pops. Wild Bill and Jingles are nearly killed in the old "Skeleton" mine when the entrance is blown up! The system cue is added live. Guy Madison, Andy Devine, Paul Pierce (director), David Hire (producer), Charles Lyon (announcer), Richard Aurandt (music). OBSESSION "Ebb Tide" Gale Page and Elliott Lewis stars in a mystery show about human beings in conflict with themselves. MYSTERY IS MY HOBBY "Allan Fisher (Faithless Wife)" Glen Langan is Barton Drake in Mystery is My Hobby. In an unusual move for a crime show, the show is played before a live audience. This is the premiere episode. Lights Out. January 05, 1943. CBS net. "The Fast One". Sponsored by: Ironized Yeast, Molle Shaving Cream. A story about two men with a mighty power, the ability to move very, very rapidly. Excellent radio writing. The story is also known as, "Speed." This is a network, sponsored version of cat. #11279. Arch Oboler (writer, host), Frank Martin (commercial spokesman)
@BritCrampsie @tonywlepore are back/JC's shirt/Maxwell House wife/Trump trial/@DavetheDemocrat schools Tony, Brit on how to be a Democrat/Kidney for Ken/What We're Watching/Brit's rental clothes #LaTorreLive
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 1189, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Bill Clinton 1: Clinton won first chair in this instrument in the Arkansas state band. the saxophone. 2: His birthplace; it's where he lived the first 7 years of his life. Hope, Arkansas. 3: The day before taking office, Clinton prayed at this president's Arlington, Va. grave. John F. Kennedy. 4: Bill Clinton met Hillary Rodham while both were attending this law school. Yale. 5: Clinton got his bachelor's degree at this D.C. school, the only college he applied to. Georgetown. Round 2. Category: Song Of Poets. With Song in quotation marks 1: William Blake published this collection in 1789; "Experience" would come a few years later. Songs of Innocence. 2: Sections of this 1855 poem include "The Peace Pipe", "The White-Man's Foot" and "Blessing the Corn Fields". The Song of Hiawatha. 3: Read during Passover, it's also referred to as the "Canticle of Canticles". Song of Songs. 4: Before the 1881 edition, it was simply titled "Poem of Walt Whitman, an American". "Song of Myself". 5: An insignificant battle between Charlemagne and the Basques at Roncesvalles is the basis for this French epic poem. The Song of Roland. Round 3. Category: Rewriting Hamlet 1: Fair one, thy dad had thee repel my letters and deny me access to thee... but a restraining order? What is uppeth with that?. Ophelia. 2: Zounds! I saw thee not behind that arras! Denmark needeth a new minister to the king! My bad!. Polonius. 3: Though I did say of thee "Frailty, thy name is woman", Mother, I hope thou acceptest my wedding gift from Pottery Barn. Gertrude. 4: 'Tis okay ye killed Dad and wed Mom--thou said thy "offence is rank, it smells to heaven", but I'm a live and let live kind of guy. Claudius. 5: You "two-school-fellows, whom I will trust as I will adders fanged" ...Aw, I ain't mad atcha! Giveth me hugs!. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. Round 4. Category: The 19Th Century 1: Much of the fighting in this war, 1853 to 1856, took place on a peninsula in the Black Sea. the Crimean War. 2: In 1893 this labor leader founded the American Railway Union. (Eugene) Debs. 3: In 1825 patriots crossed the Rio de la Plata from Argentina to fight for this country's freedom from Brazil. Uruguay. 4: King John VI of this country died in 1826 and left his throne to Dom Pedro of Brazil who became Pedro I. Portugal. 5: This family was restored to power in the 1870s when Alfonso XII ascended the Spanish throne. the Bourbons. Round 5. Category: Ad-Jectives 1: In other words this common pair of advertising adjectives could be "novel as well as ameliorated". new and improved. 2: In a slogan almost a century old, Maxwell House coffee is this "to the last drop". "good". 3: In other words, this common pair of adjectives could be "novel as well as ameliorated". new and improved. 4: Taking this adjective literally, the ads say that BMW is the last driving machine that'll be made. ultimate. 5: Since 1975 BMW has been touting its vehicles as this kind of "driving machine". "ultimate". Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/ AI Voices used
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 1149, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Coffees All Around 1: This "Good to the last drop" brand lets you choose among smooth, rich and bold. Maxwell House. 2: At Starbucks, a "shot" is typically a shot of this coffee brew. espresso. 3: The press you can use to infuse your coffee bears the name of this country that invented the infusion method. France (a French press accepted). 4: If you feel a chill in Chinchina, Colombia, you may be passing the factory where instant coffee is made this way. freeze-dried. 5: This "heavenly coffee", a New York institution, is the official coffee of Radio City Music Hall. Chock Full O' Nuts. Round 2. Category: BottomS Up. With Bottom in quotation marks 1: This type of boat lets you view undersea life while keeping your feet dry. Glass-Bottomed. 2: It's your net profit or loss as shown on an income statement. Bottom Line. 3: This '60s TV series was set aboard the Seaview, an atomic sub built by Harriman Nelson. Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea. 4: Miners first adapted this term for a hard place to mean as low as one can get. rock bottom. 5: Contadicting its foreboding name, this feature of Mammoth Cave is only 105 feet deep. Bottomless Pit. Round 3. Category: College Life 1: To be "official", this detailed academic record should be sent from the school in a sealed envelope. a transcript. 2: This 2-word Latin phrase means you graduated with distinction. cum laude. 3: Classes in the semester system last 15 to 18 weeks; in this other system, they run about 10 weeks. the quarter system. 4: grammarly.com has a program that can compare an essay against academic databases to detect this dishonest act. plagiarism. 5: The 2 major learning management systems for American colleges are canvas and this, another name for a slate. blackboard. Round 4. Category: The Family Business 1: In 1990 they became the first father and son to be Major League teammates. Ken Griffey Jr. and Sr.. 2: The first half of this greeting card company's name is the family that founded it in 1910. Hallmark. 3: In 1985 Bob Haas took this jeans company founded by his great- great-granduncle from public back to private. Levi Strauss. 4: In 2006 the new CEO of this beverage company was August IV, great-great-grandson of co-founder Adolphus. Anheuser-Busch. 5: Donna Wolf Steigerwaldt is in the "Saddle" at this underwear maker. Jockey. Round 5. Category: Turkey, The Bird 1: Turkey carving step 1: Cut the band of skin holding the legs which are known as these. Drumsticks. 2: This 19th C. British author is credited with making the turkey a popular choice for Christmas dinners. Charles Dickens. 3: A male turkey's snood hangs directly over this part of its body. Beak/nose. 4: Turkey that joined Henny-Penny's "Sky is Falling" campaign. Turkey-Lurkey. 5: This top-selling U.S. turkey brand turned 45 in 1999. Butterball. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/ AI Voices used
ABOUT BO BASKORO:Bo Baskoro is a passionate alt/pop artist from the Pacific Northwest, his music is known for its percussive ear candy, honest lyrics, and energizing production. Exuding an heir of nostalgia, he has worked closely with co-producer Justin Abel to create a unique sound that seamlessly captures his core identity. His Indonesian heritage comes through in his unique musical perspective. The Portland native has always marched to the tune of his own drum. Inspired by the fictional horn-playing character Lanky Kong of Donkey Kong 64, Baskoro's creativity gravitated toward the trombone, and continued to study and play throughout his earlier years. During recovery from a tumor and labrum tear surgery, international brand Maxwell House® commissioned a mini-documentary of Bo's experience, and his artistic drive amidst his trials. Bo was flown to Los Angeles to meet producer Harvey Mason Jr. (Tori Kelly, Justin Timberlake, Michael Jackson) and have one of his singles ("High") produced for a Maxwell House® marketing campaign. Bo is now featured as one of the faces of MAX by Maxwell House®, appearing in ads all over YouTube, Instagram, Spotify, and other media platforms. CONNECT WITH BO BASKORO:Instagram - TikTok - Twitter - YouTube - SpotifySUPPORT THIS SHOWSUBSCRIBE TO YOUR LIFE THE MIXTAPE MAGAZINE
Maxwell House Good News 37-11-04 (01) Guest - Judy Garland
We have bougie brews then we have old school brews my dad and father-in-law liked such as Yuban, Maxwell House, and Folgers. This episode is a tribute to the not-so-bougie brews and one of my favorite comedians, Jeff Foxworthy, and the importance to not take ourselves so seriously while still learning about leadership. For more sips and tips, connect with me on social and follow @LeaderSips @Leadspirations and @LifeisGrit on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook and Pinterest. Learn more about me at karlynnholbrook.com
What defines compelling innovation? Novel ingredients? Esoteric flavors? Unusual packaging? The hosts discussed how strategic and entrepreneurial companies are attempting to innovate in food and beverage and what's moving the needle for consumers. They also riffed on two new celebrity coffee brands, one launched by a “Yellowstone'' star and the other known for her status as a “teen mom.” 0:35: Late Night Radio. Coke's Latest Cocktail. Mushroom Coffee & Cognitive Shots. Ray's Famous Celebrity Rankings. – Ray kicked off the show by getting an NKOTB classic stuck in Mike's head before the hosts spoke about The Coca-Cola's Co's continued foray into beverage alcohol and a spicy line extension, whether a Jenelle Evans' new functional coffee brand will resonate with her fans and “B+ list celebrity” Cole Hauser's cowboy java. Jacqui praised a brand of plant-based sushi and a tree-bark infused drink line, Ray sipped on a brain-boosting smoothie shot and shared hummus, crackers and iced latte powders with John and Mike, the latter of whom didn't bring any coconut yogurt for the group. Brands in this episode: Sprite, Absolut Vodka, Coca-Cola, Jack Daniels, Simply, Topo Chico, Fresca, Free Rein Coffee, Time Of The Day, Juvenescence, Little Sesame, Konscious, You Need This, Twrl Milk Tea, Fly By Jing, Mabi, St. Agrestis, Maxwell House, The Coconut Cult
Send us a Text Message.We are seeing the end of Bob Crane's acting career here, in that he was real-life murdered a few months after this dark and confusing episode. Yes, that Bob Crane - from Hogan's Heroes - whose life was later dramatized in the movie Auto Focus with Greg Kinnear and Willem Defoe. Look it up. Yikes. Creepy.His Jerry Springer-style plotline ultimately is another study of inappropriate affection between two passengers: a long-lost father and his adult daughter. It's strange writing, and we couldn't help but feel baffled. Also, Airplane's awesome Robert Hayes is underused in an unfortunately small role here. Next, things take a wild turn as a younger lower-income couple finds themselves in a luxury Presidential suite, thanks to Julie and Gopher's scheming. Then, they must navigate a dangerous game of pretending to be marketing experts and avoid their arch-nemesis on the boat. Also confusing."Hey, poor people, here's an upgrade. Enjoy this upgrade.! But one condition. You have to pretend to be these marketing company people.'"— Producer Caleb"It's not really that hard to pretend like you're in marketing. You literally just throw out a few key terms like "KPI," "point of view" and "demographics" and they're like, yes, we believe you. Literally, anybody can do it."— CharlotteIn another Love Boat scene, a woman is referred to as "a little lady," which causes us to briefly examine how many women were treated/portrayed "back in the day." Next, we show the ultimate example: we roll a 1968 Maxwell House TV commercial that shows women as completely and aggressively subservient. Boo.BONUS SHOW QUOTE !! (unrelated to anything) "I could have walked away with every dude in Montana at that point. I could add a ranch, cows, horses, cowboy hats, whatever the f--- I wanted. I was literally a star in Montana." — CharlotteInternational waters: a playground for mischief, discrimination, and even illicit activities? Yup, so dive into the dark underbelly of the Love Boat on Crime Cruise: Love Boat Exposed, where the line between pleasure and crime gets blurred in the vast sea. #LoveBoatExposed #CrimePodcastVisit LoveBoatExposed.com to dive deeper, and connect with the show; send us a message or record a voicemail for air. Make sure to subscribe - we're on all your favorite podcast platforms! rsmedia.group creationsFair Use Act DisclaimersInformation contained on this podcast and all related materials is for criticism and commentary, as well as for research and educational purposes. Under section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing.
William Gargan appeared in more than fifty films in the 1930s. In between, he and Mary's second son, Leslie, was born on June 28th, 1933. The Gargans bought the late Jean Harlow's house at 512 North Palm Drive for twenty-seven thousand dollars. They'd live there for the next quarter century. Bill's parents passed away in the middle of the decade. Gargan soon signed a Warner Bros. two-year contract that paid him one-hundred-thousand dollars, turning down the role of Duke Mantee in Robert Sherwood's The Petrified Forest on Broadway to sign. The role went to friend Humphrey Bogart. For more info on Bogie, tune into Breaking Walls episode 140. Bill made his Lux Radio Theater debut on March 6th, 1939 in an adaptation of One Way Passage. Gargan hated working for Warner Bros. He likened it to sleeping on a bed of nails. The press labeled him “Bill Gargan, King of the B movies.” He later broke his contract. Perhaps his most famous role was as Joe in the 1940 RKO film, They Knew What They Wanted. Gargan received third billing behind Carole Lombard and Charles Laughton and was nominated for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar. The plot is: while visiting San Francisco, Tony Patucci — played by Laughton — an aging illiterate winegrower from the Napa Valley, sees waitress Amy Peters — played by Lombard — and falls in love. Tony gets his foreman Joe, a womanizer, to write her a letter in Tony's name. Tony's courtship culminates with a proposal. When she requests a picture of him, one of Joe is sent. Amy goes to Napa to be married, only to find that Joe isn't her husband-to-be. She decides to go through with the marriage. However, while Tony is in bed after an accident, Amy and Joe have an affair. Two months later Amy discovers she's pregnant. Upon learning of the infidelity, Tony pummels Joe, but forgives Amy, insisting they still be married. Unable to forgive herself, she leaves with the priest. Meanwhile, Gargan did more radio. He appeared on the January 4th, 1940 episode of The Good News with his former co-star Ann Sothern. Good News aired Thursdays at 9PM eastern time over NBC's Red Network. Its 16.9 rating was twelfth overall. Good News was the first major collaboration of a movie studio and a broadcasting system for a commercial sponsor.” The idea was, simply put, to “dazzle 'em with glitter.” MGM produced. Every star except Garbo was available. There would be songs, stories, comedy, and drama. In short, it promised an intimate glimpse of Hollywood with its hair down. The result cost Maxwell House $25,000 a week. Gargan was back on the program the following week in a one-act play opposite Lurene Tuttle. Bill was nominated for a best supporting actor Oscar, won by good friend Walter Brennan for The Westerner. He later joked that Brennan spent ninety minutes spitting and Gargan lost to a spittoon. The joking was short-lived. Gargan would soon begin work on another film with the appropriate title, I Wake Up Screaming.
First, we delve into the recent scandal that's rocked the heart of American politics - traces of cocaine found within the hallowed halls of the White House. We dissect the reactions from both the White House Press Secretary and former President Donald Trump, leaving no stone unturned in this exhilarating whodunit. Then, we steer the conversation towards an uncanny encounter of the digital kind. Reports of an artificial intelligence humanoid, masquerading as a reptilian entity aboard a commercial airliner, have made waves across the globe. This peculiar incident has been the fuel for countless conspiracy theories, some even suggesting the involvement of Mexican drug cartels using social media platforms like TikTok. Our final destination takes us to the controversial tale of Pat Tillman, a former NFL player turned US Army Ranger, whose mysterious death still ignites debates. Did Tillman fall victim to friendly fire, or was his death part of a more elaborate military coverup? We explore the eerie circumstances surrounding his demise, questioning the inconsistencies that hint at a potential conspiracy. Immerse yourself in these captivating narratives with Austin Adams, as we question the reality around us. Subscribe to the Adams Archive and leave us a 5-star review. Connect with Austin on Instagram and Threads, the new platform by Meta's Mark Zuckerberg, to stay updated on the latest episodes and exclusive content. Visit austinadams.ck.com for more engaging discussions. Every review and subscription helps us to keep shedding light on the stories that truly matter. All Links: Https://linktr.ee/theaustinjadams Merchandise: Https://antielite.club Substack: Https://austinadams.substack.com ----more---- Full Transcription: The Adams archive. Hello, you beautiful people and welcome to the Adams Archive. My name is Austin Adams and thank you so much for listening. Today on this podcast, we are going to be discussing the White House, having found remnants of cocaine within the White House. And I wonder just who that could have been from. We will discuss the White House Press secretary's response to that as well as Donald Trump's response to that, and I only wonder who that could have came from. So we will discuss my theories, then we will jump right into the federal judge ordering the Biden administration to stop their efforts to censor social media companies, which is a huge win, huge win. Understated not being talked about. Huge win for freedom of speech. We will discuss that, then we will move into TikTok, allowing Mexican drug cartels to post help wanted ads for human smugglers. After that, if you recall, there was a left wing liberal influencer who had said some wild things, why absolutely wild things during the affirmative action hearing, which the Supreme Court ruled on, which we have not talked about yet. So maybe we can discuss a little bit about the Supreme Court hearings that happened. But there was a influencer, Erica Marsh, allegedly on Twitter who had tweeted some pretty, I don't know, pretty racist stuff. And so so but she was a liberal defending affirmative action. And so we will, apparently she does not. Exist. So we'll talk about that. After that we are going to jump right into some conspiratorial stuff, which will be Pat Tillman's death. If you recall, pat Tillman was a former NFL player who became a US Army Ranger after nine 11 who mysteriously died with some pretty crazy things happening around his death that we will discuss as well, which kind of points to a coverup by the US military. And then finally, last but not least, there was a woman on a airliner who said that she saw a reptile humanoid on an airplane and just ran off the airplane. And she didn't seem drunk when she was talking. She didn't seem like high. She didn't seem to be on any crazy substances in the way that she was speaking. She was just terrified. And there was some weird reports about that. So we will look at that. And then a Reddit conspiracy thread around it may be being a, a artificial intelligence humanoid. Hmm. All of that more. So stick around with me the later we get, the deeper we get stick around. Thank you so much for listening. Go ahead and subscribe. Leave a five star review. I would appreciate it. From the bottom of my heart. I say it every single week. I would love to see it. Hit that five star review, write something nice. It just helps me get through the rankings. Lets me know, you know, I'm not taking any money for this right now. There's no ads on here. Nothing. The only currency that I ask from you is just leaving a five star review at this point. All right, so again, hit that five star review button, subscribe. Head over to the ck austin adams.ck.com. And then head over to Instagram, the Austin J. Adams. Follow me there. And then follow me on a new social media platform called Threads, which just dropped today by Mark Zuckerberg at the in the Meta team, which is a Twitter rival. Very interesting. So you can find me there as well. Alright, thank you guys so much for listening. Let's jump. Into it. The Adams archive. All right, let's jump into it. The very first thing that we're gonna discuss today was the White House Security Team. All right. The Secret Service seemingly found some sort of weird white substance, some powdery substance with some nose hairs in it inside of the White House, and we can only fathom what that would be, especially after the, you know, the, the. Crazy response from the White House Press secretary saying, we have no idea what happened here. We must get to the bottom of this. Who could have been this person in the White House snorting cocaine? We don't know anybody that's a part of this family, a part of the presidential family, a part of a part of anybody that would be in the White House that maybe has a cocaine addiction. So this article says, white House Press Secretary says Biden wants to get to the bottom of the cocaine found at the White House. I bet you do. Joe Biden. And here it goes. Says, during Wednesday's, Wednesdays White House press conference, press Secretary Kareem Jean Pierre said, Biden thinks it's incredibly important to get to the bottom of how cocaine found its way to the White House over the weekend. I wonder if he's really curious about looking into, you know, how a seemingly, you know harmless laptop got dropped off at a. Laptop fixing place without his consent says, how determined is the president to get to the bottom of this? So here, here's the actual quote itself. Let's go ahead and listen then, and turning to some breaking news. We have just learned that a formal lab has confirmed the suspicion that that white powdery substance found in the West Wing on Sunday was in fact positive for cocaine. The discovery led to a big evacuation at the White House Sunday night. Joining us now is NBC White House correspondent Mike. Me. So I'm like, where do things stand now? This is so unusual. You and I have covered the White House for years. I can't even fathom anything like this having been found before in the West Wing and. I go back to the seventies at the White House, so this is pretty, pretty wild. It's absolutely extraordinary. Andrea and this new conclusive test confirms what had been the preliminary field test conducted by DC fire personnel who were called in on Sunday night after the discovery of this suspicious substance by a uniformed officer in the Secret Service that was conducting a routine patrol of the White House. And so to recap on the developments from that we've been reporting on yesterday, this was found we understand in a highly trafficked common area of the West Wing. It's an area where individuals, especially visitors, individuals who may be coming for, for instance, a private tour, might have been asked to leave some of their personal belongings before heading into more sensitive areas of the West Wing, which of course includes the president's, the vice president's office, some of the most senior officials. Offices as well as the press. You know, it's a totally public area that you, you know, just so happen to go into that has absolutely nothing to do with Joe Biden's son, who seemingly has a cocaine and crack addiction. And here's j, here's the White House press secretary responding to this stating how, how willing and, and eager they are to get to the bottom of who this could be. Thanks. One more on cocaine. How One more on cocaine resident to get to the bottom. Who brought illegal drugs into the White House? So secret services. Getting to the bottom of this. I wonder how many questions at the White House has started it with this One more question on cocaine. It's what matters and it's under, but it was, listen to this cocaine. One more question on cocaine. It's fake. One more on cocaine. How determined is the president to get to the bottom, who brought illegal drugs into the way. Secret Service is getting to the bottom and that's what matters, and it's under their purview. But it was, the question was, how determined is the President? The President thinks it's very important to get to the bottom of this. That's why Secret Service, which is under their purview, is looking into this and they're gonna look into what happened this weekend. So the President thinks as the Secret Service shows up, and it's a man who looks seemingly much like Hunter Biden, just with a mustache. I have no idea how this happened, sir. Let me go ahead and clean that up for you, man. What a mess. Could you imagine? I'm pretty sure they were on some sort of vacation when this happened. Could you imagine the conversation between Hunter Biden and his father when they found out that the day before they left for vacation, there was cocaine found in the White House? Could you imagine that conversation? Not that I would think Joe Biden would, you know, remember the fact that his son is a cocaine and crackhead, but. I guess meth, right? He smokes a lot of meth. It was a meth or crack. I'm pretty sure it's methamphetamine, but I dig grass. I wonder how that conversation went. This goes, we went pressed further of how determined Biden was. We just listened to that. It says reporter asked the White House practice secretary, whether the White House would be, would support the prosecution of whoever brought the cocaine into the building. And she says, yeah, thank you. If the secret Service determines the, who brought the cocaine into the White House, does the White House support the prosecution of this individual? I'm just not gonna get into hypotheticals from here. Let let the Secret Service do their job. It's under their purview. We are confident that they'll get to the bottom of it. I'm just not gonna get it ahead of it. It's right this time. And then the next question was the president and the first lady, she says, and their family we're absolutely not here this weekend. And secondly, per the entry, go to the holiday. Can you give any more details on where the Secret Service found the cocaine in the West Wing and how it got, so, as you know, this is under the preview of the Secret Service. They are currently investigating what happened over the weekend. So I would have to refer you to the Secret first, the Secret Service on all of this. But one thing that I can share that I'll, that I'll share a little bit or more information, as you know, the, the, the president and the First Lady and their family were not here this weekend, as you all reported on this. And as you also know that they left on Friday. And returned just yesterday. Where where this was discovered is a heavily traveled area where many White House west Wing, I should be even more specific west Wing visitors come through this particular area. And not only can you underst, can you imagine the conversation between Joe Biden and Hunter Biden, but can you imagine the job of John, whatever, St. Pierre, her name is what is her name? John Pierre. Could you imagine what she has to, to deal with when she comes in and gets a briefing on a daily basis about what she has to talk about and what's in her notes? And she sees that Hunter Biden very likely left cocaine in the White House, and now she not. Joe Biden, of course, who doesn't answer any questions. Not, not Jill Biden, not Hunter Biden. She's the one who has to deal with the after effects of this. So I would be, I would just imagine the look on her face when she realizes that she's the one who has to answer for Hunter Biden's crack addiction. Alright, let's jump into Trump's response to this and see what he has to say here. Here's the response, although this might be just the first the first clip and turn. Yep, that's the first clip. So it says, does anybody really believe that co the cocaine found in the west wing of the White House? Very close to the Oval Office is for the use of anyone other than Hunter and Joe Biden. Trump wrote, here's here's the tweet or the truth that came from truth social and it says, does anybody really believe that the cocaine found in the west wing of the White House very close to the Oval Office is for the use of anyone other than Hunter and Joe Biden? But watch the fake news. Media will soon start saying that the amount found was very small and it wasn't really cocaine, but rather common ground up aspirin and the story will vanish, has deranged Jack Smith, the crazy Trump hitting special prosecutor been seen in that area in the area of the cocaine? He looks like a crack head to me is true. He goes on to say, where are the White House security tapes, like the ones I openly and happily gave to, to deranged Jack Smith, which will quickly show where the cocaine in the White House came from. They already know the answer, but probably don't like it. Yeah. What do you know how many cameras are in the White House and you believe that we can't find out whose cocaine was sitting on the table in the Oval Office? Really? There's gotta be more cameras in there than there is in a fricking target in la, right? Like it's crazy that they think we're so stupid that they don't have video evidence showing who is snorting cocaine Off of the counter, it says this is by Kelly O'Donnell. It says The Secret Service said the investigation remains ongoing, that they have not yet determined the owner of the bag of cocaine. They're reviewing surveillance footage and entrance logs as a part of the investigation. It has not yet been revealed how long the bag of cocaine was in the West Wing. Hmm. It says We have also reported that the Secret Service investigation will review security camera footage and entrance logs to try and figure out when the cocaine baggie was left and by whom. Hmm. It says, here is what I've already reported. Substance was confirmed as cocaine. Small baggie was found. Sunday inside the common area at the West Wing entrance where staff slash visitors leave personal items like phones. President Biden was at Camp David with his son Hunter Biden when the cocaine was discovered and the White House evacuated. Hunter Biden, who is at the White House just two days prior to the discovery, has a long history of drug abuse, which has been revealed through his infamous abandoned laptop. The cocaine was initially identified as unknown item. Now we probably don't even have to wait for this security footage to come out because, you know, if this was Hunter Biden, he's absolutely going to be standing there with a selfie snorting this cocaine with a, some type of prostitute in the room with him. So it's only a matter of time, even if the Secret Service doesn't come out with this, that we know really for a fact who this was like, I'm pretty sure every single time ever. Ever. The Hunter Biden's done drugs. He photographs it with a prostitute, so it won't be too long. That's great. All right. Now moving on. Let's go ahead and move on from that. It says that a federal judge ordered Biden's administration to stop efforts to censor social media companies. Now this is a landmark decision by a federal judge. Now, this isn't a longstanding decision. This is, was done as an initial decision awaiting the full trial of this decision. But this was the initial decision as a result. So Here we go. This is from the post-Millennial. It says, on Tuesday, a federal judge ruled that the Biden administration likely violated the First Amendment in its contact with social media companies to censor content and criticism. During the Covid Pandemic US District, judge Terry Dowdy of Louisiana in a 155 page ruling, blocked officials within the White House and multiple federal agencies from contacting social media companies with the intention of censoring political views in other speech protected under the First Amendment. According to the Wall Street Journal, the evidence produced thus far depicts an almost dystopian scenario, wrote Judge Dowdy during the COVID 19 pandemic a period perhaps best characterized by widespread doubt and uncertainty. Though United States government seems to have assumed a role similar to the in Orwellian Ministry of Truth, which they, if you recall, actually tried to put together a Ministry of Truth. You remember that kind of went away, but they tried, right? They tried to actually put together a, a entity within the government that would decide what was fact and what was not fact and push that out to the social media companies. It says the attorney generals alleged that the Biden administration was using a federal censorship enterprise and pressured social media platforms to remove post questioning covid 19 health policies. The origin of the pandemic questions regarding the results of the 2020 election, the Hunter Biden laptop story among other topics, which again, I was a part of that for eight months. My, my account was shadow banned on Instagram, eight months of the 16 months that it's been around. It was completely shadow banned for since four months into it where it grew like crazy. And then shadow banned for eight full months where I couldn't get 2000 views on my videos with 35, 40,000 followers. And it was because I posted a video that came from infowars that broke down the Barisma deal that we are just figuring out. They have 17 audio recordings now, but I posted that over a year ago and I got shadow banned into oblivion by Instagram for that one singular post for over eight full months where I got zero traction on anything. And this isn't somebody complaining like, oh, they shadow banned. No. Like they, you could not search my name on Instagram. Could not search me, could not find me. All because I spoke the truth, which is coming out today in all of these hearings about Hunter Biden Barisma, the recordings with Barisma, Joe Biden, the big guy that all of these federal indictments that are going on around us, but the cia, the government, Joe Biden's administration, actively reached out to social media companies. The fbi, as Mark Zuckerberg came out and said that they were actively shadow banning people and banning them outright. It says that if the allegations made by the plaintiffs are true, the present case arguably involves the most massive attack against free speech in United States history. The injunction ads according to Fox News, in their attempts to suppress alleged disinformation, the federal government, and particularly the defendants named here, are alleged to have blatantly ignored the first amendment's right to free speech. Dowdy also wrote that censorship, in this case almost exclusively targeted conservative speech, but added that the issues raised the case extended beyond party lines. Viewpoint discrimination is in the especially egregious form of content discrimination. Dowdy wrote, the government must obtain from regulating, must abstain from regulating speech when the specific motivating ideology of the perspective of the speaker is in the rationale for the restriction. So in what have been, might have been the single largest win for freedom of speech today, to date over the last, I don't know, decade, easily, is this federal or judge. So thank you very much, judge. Dowdy because again, the all speech happens on these platforms when, when we talk about freedom of speech, we're not sitting in a circle singing kumbaya at some bar like we were back in 17, 17 76. Freedom of speech today does not mean standing in front of somebody and speaking. It extends to the platforms where 95% of speech happens, which is on social media platforms constantly. That's where, that's where civil discourse happens today. That is the, the watering hole. That is the bar that people meet at. That is the community, that is the groups, and when you censor people from speaking out on topics about the government, you are an authoritarian that is authoritarianism. When you actively censor the opposing opinion, that type of shit is what starts revolutions. Not saying that that's what should happen. And I, I hope to God it doesn't have to and, and, and if we keep winning this culture war, it won't have to because we are winning. We are absolutely winning. Target moved all of their tucket pride stuff to the back of the store. Bud Light literally fired all of the executives that were a part of those decision makings with the Dylan Mulvaney situation. Now we have social media not allowing any input from the government due to this ruling. On top of that, bud Light closed down several of its manufacturing plants. As a result of this, we are actively winning the culture war, which could not have been said about conservatism or the right in, I dunno, fricking ever conservatives have been losing the culture war. They lose it when it comes to music, when it comes to entertainment. It's all owned by liberals. Even the news. For the very first time that we've seen in my lifetime, in our generation and probably the last 150 years, a hundred years, at least I can speak to, we are winning the culture war and we can't let up. And people are starting to realize that it's cool. It's cool to be to, to, to not wanna dye your hair purple and run around naked at a, at a children's event. People think it's cool that you have conservative values and maybe you wanna raise a family and maybe you wanna raise a family, right? Maybe you want to have multiple children on, on a piece of land with chickens and self-sustaining lifestyles and homeschool your children because you don't want the, the government teaching them propaganda that's built into the education system that's bought and paid for by the very same companies who are shoving and pedaling the, the, their own profit or their own products down your throat, which are poisoning you for profitability. For the very first time, people are waking up to this and people are realizing it, and at the same time, we are winning the culture war with our dollars. And you see these things come out about the c e I scores and you see these things come out about, you know, the what is it, cgi and like all, all of these like woke ideologies that are being pushed in, into shoved into the sphere of commercial corporatism through trying to make companies push these woke ideologies for investments from companies like BlackRock, right? That's why the c e I score was even, even became a thing, was because they wanted to have these companies push the ideology and have incentive to do so despite lack of profitability from their decision making. Because if every time that target pushes something to the back of the store, they lose money, they're gonna stop pushing this ideology, capitalists. Capitalism does not care about your feelings. It does not care about your political leanings. It does not care about, you know, what your sexual orientation is. It shouldn't, it doesn't. Profitability has no sexual orientation. Profitability has no political orientation. So when you realize that, and, and we are a, a community, a group who can then put our dollars together and go, we are no longer going to take this, we are not going to allow you to shove sexual books down our children's throat at Barnes and Noble when I walk in the door. We are not going to allow you to put swimsuits on the rack in front of my children. That shows a tucket area for boys acting like they're girls. We're not gonna handle, we're not gonna, we're not going to accept this. Right. And we're, again, we're seeing that bleed over into the education system where homeschooling is up like an unbelievable percentage since, since the Covid pandemic, right? You see people starting to take ownership, take ownership of their parenting, take ownership of their, their children, and realize that all of these organizations from the pharmaceutical industries, to the medical industries, to the to the military industrial complexes, to the mil educational industrial complex to all of these organizations, the, the food industries, all of it does not have your best interest in mind. It doesn't have your children's best interest in mind. And as parents, it is our job to protect our children. And whether it's easier to give them a, a, a, a Lunchable than it is to make a homemade healthy meal, or whether it's easier to send them off to public school than it is to sit at home with them and, and teach your child the, the proper way of our, the proper histories that we have and not what's being pushed through, you know, the, the organizations and, and And educational entities that are pushing books that are li literally the same organizations that are owned by Ghislaine, Maxwell's father, was it Maxwell House? Remember Maxwell House, the education system, the, the, the the books that went to your schools. Maxwell House was owned by Ghislaine Maxwell's dad, a alleged maad spy. And so when you start to connect all of these dots and you realize that all of these, these corporations do not have your best interest in mind, and not just the corporations, but the government too, the public school system is designed for obedience, not education. Our food is designed to poison you, not make you healthy. And the reason they poison you is because they need to feed you the pharmaceutical drugs. And the reason they feed you those pharmaceutical drugs is because they make ungodly profits off of your sickness. And it all starts by educating you to believe that the government is daddy, not you, and the corporations are mommy, not you. And so as you start to unwind the fabric of our society, unwind the fabric of our government and realize that none of these institutions have you or your child's best interest in mind ever, ever. And the only thing they wanna do is profit off of you. And sometimes that means poisoning you so that they can feed you the antidote. I don't know how we got there. Let's move on. But on that note, subscribe, leave a five star review. I appreciate you, Austin Adams do sub stack.com. All right, we're gonna move to the next topic here. Which is that TikTok allows Mexican cartels to post help wanted ads for human smugglers. So the cartel is literally posting on TikTok, asking for help smuggling people across borders, and TikTok is allowing it. They're posting advertisements to people to hire them, to smuggle people across the border that's trafficking. And it's still happening right at this moment. Okay. Again, this comes from the post-millennial. It says, this week I had the opportunity to ride along with the Kinney County Sheriff's Department. Kenny Texas is a hotspot for human smuggling facilitated by the cartels, high speed chases, rollovers, and witnessing graphic deaths are regular occurrence for deputies Inkin County. While riding with Deputy Molan, a veteran deputy from Kidney County, he informed me how cartels are advertising smuggling jobs to Americans. He showed me one example of an ad on TikTok and within minutes of for looking myself, I found more than a dozen ads that were blatantly advertising smuggling jobs for the cartel. As I was engaging with these ads, or really one had an information label from TikTok that read, participating in this activity could result in you or others getting hurt. And this ad said some shit in Spanish that I can't read, but if you can read Spanish, I'll try my best ato. Conductor Radian and in Texas, Soro Gente in Terra Ana. Paga 10 mil or a 20 mil dollar in three Auras. Houston, Texas, Dallas, Texas, San Marcos, San Antonio, Texas, Austin, Texas, Waco, Texas. Message US or some shit like that. I don't speak Spanish, but maybe you do. So there you go. And I'm probably sure you couldn't have understood what I said anyways, even if you did. As you'll see, the video with the label is a very obvious example of human smuggling and even shows the process of smuggling migrants past border patrol chats between the smuggler and the organization and the reward that comes after. And here's the video. It's a video of like three Mexican dudes looking around saying some stuff, showing some people literally in the back of a car messages taking them over the border in a vehicle. Oh my gosh. And then some money on the table. Whoa. And that's literally on TikTok right now. Now, this doesn't surprise me. It does not surprise me at all that TikTok would allow the cartel to advertise human trafficking on their platform because the fentanyl that's being produced, that's going to the cartel, that's coming up through the United States of America, as Trump has spoken on before, is coming from China. Now we know for sure that the CIA has sold cocaine and crack into the ghettos of the United States at certain points for profitability that they can fund their deep underground black ops projects that we're not allowed to know about, so that they don't have to worry about it being funded by US tax dollars and it coming back to them. So we know that for sure. There's been plenty of documentaries that have happened on that. The Cocaine Cowboys documentary all about the CIA's funding cocaine endeavors, you know, even, even, and that kind of goes back to the Tillman stuff that we're gonna talk about later. He got mad. The NFL player that we're gonna talk about in a little bit got mad because he found out that we were, we were sitting in protecting opium fields in Afghanistan, and that was our j their jobs there. So, we'll talk about that in just a minute, but it goes on in this conversation. And in the text messages that I was talking about, it says the translation is, let me know, when do y'all arrive? And it says, 40 says the smuggler is there traffic a little bit. No more than 23 minutes. The individual accountant amongst the countless others are allowed to post recruitment videos with the intent of two employ American citizens to engage in human smuggling on behalf of cartels. Instead of removing these illegal advertisements, TikTok allows cartel recruiters to stand the platform and organize human smuggling operations. TikTok is well known for being the platform with some of their strictest censorship, but despite that, they seem to be more concerned about Americans voicing their political opinions than organized cartel recruiting Americans to commit multiple felonies via human smuggling. Yeah. Oh, by the way, talking about censorship, my account got completely banned on TikTok and you guys hear the stuff I'm talking about here. It's not that wild. It's not that crazy. I'm not inciting violence like we're sitting here talking shit, drinking beer. Not that crazy, right? So I get banned off of TikTok, but not the cartel. Employing human traffickers through advertising. It says we're seeing all walks of life. We've had those that are hurting for money, they're in a bind financially and are looking to make an easy buck. We've picked up a couple of attorneys that have been smuggling recently. We caught two girls from active duty and at this point in time, I think they were National Guard or active duty smuggling. What National Guard smuggling? So we've seen it all. I ran a check on one kid. He was out of the Dallas Fort Worth area. Check to see where he lived, did a little background looking, and of course he's living at home. His folks are living on 600 like a $600,000 house. So I don't think he has, he was here for the money. I think he was here for the thrill. And then there are those who wanna make a name for themselves or try to join a gang or do whatever to get part of the click to make easy money. It's not worth it. And here it is. Well, I never thought of myself as being outspoken about this. I'm just saying what a. What, what I'm seeing here, trying to protect a, my county, my city, my state, and the country in general, but somebody has to say it. There's a guy in the back, the rear, the car, the cargo really put money on it. He opens the back of his truck and sees people in the back area of this vehicle. We've always seen more human smuggling than drugs. Always because of the way we sit. Yes, we are a border county. We've got 16 miles of border with Mexico, but because of international trade, because of ports of entry, Del Rail and eagle Pass have ports of entry. We don't, on one hand, on one side of the coin, it's still Mayberry. Like everybody, I can still walk the streets at night. The women actually can go out and walk the streets, get their exercise, whatever, without being harassed, without having to be worried about being kidnapped or shot or run over On the other side of the coin, the traffic that comes through here, because the way we sit. Makes it a volatile place. We have prosecuted close to 6,000 people for criminal trespass and 15, 1800 for human smuggling. So we are at the epicenter of this. 99.9% are American citizens, and we're seeing all walks of life pretty wild. It shows five other examples of people showing their advertisements on TikTok to smuggle people. Wow. Hmm. And it goes on and on and on. You can again read more about this on the post-Millennial which is an exclusive article that they found themselves talking about the human trafficking that's going on there. Pretty crazy stuff. All right, the next thing that we're gonna talk about, so I posted something on Instagram and Twitter a little bit ago. There was a girl that was posting called Erica Marsh and Erica Marsh posted something after the affirmative action ruling by the Supreme Court, but there was something fishy about her account. I. That some people picked on and some picked up on and some people didn't. But after just about a week or so, her account has now been suspended and it is believed that she was a fake bot the entire time. And this article says, an infamous left-wing Twitter influencer who has been routinely accused of rage baiting conservatives, has been suspended from Twitter. Erica Marsh amassed over 130,000 followers after joining this site in September of 2022, and regularly sparked outrage for her views on race abortion and for celebrating the death of January 6th. Protestor Ashley Babbitt, the self-proclaimed proud Democrat and former field organizer to elect President Biden. Had her Twitter suspended on Sunday after numerous reports surfaced online saying that she doesn't even exist. It says, in the days leading up to the suspension, mark provoked or marsh provoked outrage with a tweet reacting to the Supreme Court. Affirmative action ruling. Tweeting Today's Supreme Court decision is a direct attack on black people. No black person will be able to succeed in the merit-based system, which is exactly why affirmative action based programs were needed. Today's decision is a travesty. Probably one of the most racist things that you could ever say is that somebody could, like, if you could think of one of the worst insults that you could tell me is with like intelligently, it's that I could not succeed in a merit-based system. And then to say, you cannot succeed in the merit-based system, specifically off of the color of your skin. So that sparked a pretty big outrage. I mean, she had 27 million views on this one tweet and she was called racist by a bunch of people. A lot of big influencers reached out to her and said it. And then, you know, after a little bit, so here's a conservative political commentator, Dinesh de Soza. He was the one who headed the 2000 Mules movie. Said it was among many prominent voices con condemning her, saying, isn't this racism pure and simple? Vernon Jones, who's a former congressman, said the most racist, degrading, offensive, and downright insulting comment ever made about black people and. Pretty close, not too far off. It says in the wake of Marsha's suspension experts who spoke to the Washington Post ruled Erica Marsh isn't even a real person, with no record of her existing and her profile photo likely being an AI generated image. One expert John Scott Walton, a senior researcher at the University of Toronto said, I strongly suspect that this person doesn't exist. Additionally, there is no trace of Martian any phone and voting records in the Biden campaign, which she claimed to have worked for, has no record of her working for them. Her Twitter bio also referenced that she previously volunteered at the Obama Foundation. However, the foundation has also said that there is no record of her on their volunteer database says, according to Twitter's misleading and deceptive identities, policies, accounts that are using a deceptive identity may be suspended for violating terms of service. However, the policy also states that users may have their accounts reinstated, that the discretion of Twitter staff, if they provide government issued identification to prove that they are real. The latter option to provide ID to regain access to the suspended account may prove impossible from Marsh, given that many Allen analysts. Are saying she doesn't even exist. Who, how crazy. But how do you say that? You know, I, I, I hope that's a parody account because gosh, what a terrible, stupid thing to say, but what a, well, you know, if she's just trying to gain attention I, I can't imagine building a Twitter following of 130,000 people and then having it stripped from you and having it not even have your name on it. Like you might as well just put your face on it and own that shit because is more value in building your own reputation, whether it's as a crazy racist or, or, you know, something more useful. But to create the account with no reasoning at all, unless you're a, you know, Russian bot just trying to stir shit up. Which may be the case too. Who knows? Will we ever, probably not. All right, let's move on from that. And we are going to move into the the situation that's coming out of pat Tillman's death. So this came up recently on conspiracy Reddit, and it talks about the murder of a real hero. Okay? Now I remember this. I remember this story, and I'm sure you do too. A former N F L player decided to quit the N F L and go serve as a US Army Ranger after nine 11. And the story ended in tragedy because at a certain point in his time over there, he was shot with three nato 5 56 rounds in his skull that was eventually declared friendly fire. Now, they didn't say why. There wasn't too much of an investigation, but we're going to jump into it. All right, so Pat Tillman's Death and Coverup, and this comes from npr says, the latest book from John Crocker, author of Into the Air and Into the Wild, focuses on the life of tragic death of former NFL player Pat Tillman, who left a lucrative contract with the Arizona Cardinals to join the US Army. Rangers Crocker talks to NPRs Melissa Block about his investigation in the Tillman's Death by Friendly Fire and the US Army's subsequent effort to cover up the circumstances of that death. It says at least a half of the members of the platoon traveling through Afghanistan in OCT in April 22nd, 2004 had never been in the firefight before, but on this day, the enemy attacked. In response, the American soldiers sprayed thousands of rounds from their machine guns, M fours, and Grenade launchers. Not far away was Tillman accompanied by another American soldier in an Afghan milit militia fighter who had been firing his weapon in the opposite canyon wall where he suspected enemy fighters would be when from a distance. The leader of one of the US platoons Humvees saw the Afghan militia fighter. He reacted, he testified that the Afghan guy had on in the American uniform, but in the panic of the moment, he reflexively put the guy in the sights of his M four and put seven rounds into his chest. The shots by the leader of the Humvee were followed by a spray of bullets from the rest of his men. It was an attack that ended in Tillman's death. Said what happened next was an effort from the government to suppress the circumstances of Tillman's death. With hours certainly, and probably less the ranger regime officers, high ranking officers back in the States were co conspiring. To cover this up, crocker says, A recommendation to award Tillman this silver star medal, one of the US military's highest honor, immediately began moving through the Army rinks, something that has not done for dust by friendly fire. And Crocker says, when a soldier is killed in combat, you should put his uniform, his weapon, everything. Anything that can be considered for forensic evidence should be sent back to the states with the body, so the medical examiner could determine the cause of death. In the case of Tillman, none of that happened. Tillman's uniform and body armor were burned in his weapon helmet, and even part of his brain, which fell to the ground After the attack disappeared. Army officials told the medical examiners that Tillman had been killed by the Taliban, and they stuck by the story when they reported the death to his family. The Army intentionally lied. Cracker says they just broke regulation after regulation, one soldier Russell Bearer was sent back to the United States with instructions not to reveal to the Tillman family that their son had been killed by friendly fire. After attending the funeral, cracker said he was so upset at having to lie to Pat's mother that Russell Bearer went awol through the death of Pat Tillman and the subsequent congressional inquiry into it had been covered up closely by the news media. Crocker says there are many details that have yet to be exposed. The author uncovers several new aspects of the story by combing through the more than 4,000 pages of documents related to the government's investigation of Tillman's death. In conversations with his fellow soldiers, crocker points out that the Gen General Stanley McChrystal, now the US commander in Afghanistan, signed off in this Silver Star recommendation, even though he knew the Tillman's death was, was the result of friendly fire. In confirmation the hearings earlier this year, McChrystal acknowledged that the Army had failed the Tillman's family and had apologized for his part in it. But he maintained that he didn't see any activities by anyone to deceive, and that he absolutely believed the Tillman's earned the silver star. Now, here is where it gets interesting but this book is called excerpt From Where the Men Win Glory, the Odyssey of Pat Tillman. So that's the book that you can go read on this. However, this came up in conspiracy Reddit, and here's what they had to say about it there. Hi, I'm Pat Tillman. I was an NFL star turned army ranger. After the events of nine 11, I went to Afghanistan and I Iraq to fight for my country. Soon after my deployment, I realized we were guiding Oppi or we were guarding opium fields with big pharma and the cia. So I decided that I was going back home and led the anti-war effort. Three days after my decision, I was found dead with three nato 5 56 rounds into my skull, declared friendly fire. They burned his body and his equipment. They burned his journal to this says, but the NFL is sure to include him in all of their pro-war praise the troops Special thanks for, for before big games. Other comments go on and say, and then they mock him and the general public by making a spectacle out of him in his service, knowing that the basic NFL watcher would never look into his death. That is wild. So this man left an NFL career to go into the military to serve after nine 11 became a special forces operator in the Green Berets or the Army Rangers, sorry, in the army. Rangers then sees that they're guarding opium fields for the cia. Go back to our conversation earlier, talking about how they pedal drugs for black operations, then decides he wants to go home and lead an effort that's anti-war. Three days after that decision. He's killed. Okay. Now, I can't give validity to a couple of those statements without doing further due due diligence. One, which is they were guarding opium fields. I need to see more evidence on that. I know that to be true. I've seen discussions on that before that are that, that have talked about that. However, whether that's the reasoning, and you know, what he said, I, I need to see where the evidence is coming from for that. Second is that he went home to lead a war effort. However, you know this is gaining pretty significant traction through conspiracy Reddit. So it says that this guy talks about being there when it happened. Here's a video. But they know we're the guys that you don't shoot because we shoot back. Right. Like we will take the fight to you. My name is Brad Jacobson. I was an Army ranger for four years, from 2001 to 2005. I was a morman in the second Ranger battalion. Yeah. So I, I grew up in Washington State. I was raised lds, so I was a Mormon kid. So I had with an i d and not a small one. I mean, we're talking a hundred feet in the air was, it was a supply truck, toilet paper, you know. So this is an hour video. The name of it is Army Ranger Veteran. Brings up a, brings us inside Pat Tillman's death and Coverup. So we'll go to the points where most people are watching it. The people that had combat experience, like Command Sergeant Major, oh, I forget his name, but he was the command Sergeant Major of Ranger Regiment was in my Humvee. When that first started, he had hopped out. I mean, he, this is an old Delta force guy, you know, used to have a huge beard, you know, big burley dude. And he's just like, calmly walking down the road just looking. He's not shooting anything cause he doesn't say anything, you know? And so like, that's, that's who you want to be, right? But who we were was like very anxious trapped. Like, you know, think about it, like you're trapped because this guy keeps stopping. You got small arms fire coming down so you can almost think like you're, you're a ticking time bomb of anxiety. You know, like the, the driver that ran, did you guys let him go or did you go after him? Yeah, eventually, like, eventually we ran him down and drug him back through him in his truck. Eventually gets to a spot in the canyon where it kind of opens up a little bit wider. And so all the vehicles start going past him. And by this time, I mean, several minutes have gone by the, the sun had set behind the mountains and so there was this, there was this weird like contrast where the sky was super bright. But the canyon was super dark. Like as we were coming out, it was very dim. It was very hard to see. It was too light to use night vision, but it was too dark to really like, identify people, you know? Well. And so the first, the first the, the first Humvees, like, let's back up. The, the first cereal that had gone through the canyon before us had heard us getting ambushed and they had parked their vehicles, gotten out and set up blocking positions right as we were coming out of the canyon. And so the canyon, basically, it's super narrow but eventually starts to kind of like, you know, drop down and elevation and kind of flatten out a little bit. And they were kind of set up on one of the spurs. As the canyon was flattening out, they were set up on one of the spurs and the first vehicle in the convoy. I don't know if they were just like freaking out or what, but they were literally shooting anything and everything that, that they could identify as a possible living target. And. And so, so anyways, they're, they're just lighting everybody up and I'm in my Humvee, I'm about three back from the front and I'm driving and I'm freaking out too. I don't know where serial one is. I didn't even know they, they stopped. Right. Nobody knew they stopped cuz we didn't have comms with them. And so we're coming out of the canyon and I hear my sergeant, Sergeant Horning rest in peace. Sergeant Horney is like, Hey, those are, those are friendlies up there. Those are Friendlys. Hey those are friendly. They're shooting at friendlies. Like I could hear him like kind of exasperating yelling. And so eventually we all get up to where serial one's vehicles were, which was an obvious stop point. Cause you're like, well there's our guy's trucks. So we pull off to the side of stop, I have a radio and I hear somebody calling like, you know, we have tango down, or we have an eagle down tango, Eagle down tango. And then an eagle down is like, you know, k i a on the battlefield. And I'm thinking Tango, like, who the fuck is tango? Like from Alpha Company, right? And my first, in, my first inclination was, I forget the guy's name was like Truo or something. I was like, man, Truo fucking died. Like, no dude, that's a good dude. And they were like, we need a S Scco. We need a S Scco, which is like a plastic sled that you can, you know, wrap bodies in. So I immediately run up and I cut the s scco off the back of my truck. Cuz I'm like, everybody's like shellshocked around me. They're just kinda like standing there like with their weapons and nobody really knows what's going on. So I run up, cut the Scco because I don't know, for some reason, like I'm just a person of action. Like if, like, I have to be doing, that's why, that's why I had that inclination, you know, with Jay Blessing, where it was like, I just like, I have to like, I want to go like just start executing people to figure out who killed our guy, you know? And so I'm like, when I hear somebody like, Hey, do this. I'm like, boom, cut the S Skid coast. So I run it up the hill, drop it off, I'm pulling security and they wrapped the bodies of the dead people into the, into the s skid coasts and we carried 'em down. And it was at that point, I think when I was at the top of that hill and I had passed the edco off. I was like, well, who is it? They said, it's Pat. I'm like, pat. Oh, it's Pat. Like Tillman. Like, and I didn't know what had happened at that point be, you know, because I was driving and stuff. But I eventually, we packed him up and we brought him down, loaded their bodies onto helicopters that came in and, and, and took 'em out. And it was just like this. I just remember because Pat's brother Kevin was in our cereal, the second one that got ambushed, but he was at the very back. And so by the time they'd gotten out of the canning and stopped you know, we had already packaged up his brother and man, he was like, he, he was distraught, obviously, you know, and he was like, well, who is it? Like who is it? Who is it? And eventually, like they ended up telling him, and I remember, I'll never forget it to this, to this day, like I'm, I'm in, I'm pulling security and I just hear this blood curdling scream. And it's like, it's the most haunting sound you'll ever hear. It's probably the same sound of a, you know, if a mother like watches her kid get ran over by a car, I mean, you can imagine just like the hair pulling, screaming and it haunts me like to this day just to, just to reflect on that, you know, like what that must have been like for him because they weren't just brothers. They were like, they were like the same person, you know, like they were almost like twins, right? Mm-hmm. So anyways, like that night, I mean, just the next day or two was just awful. You know? I mean, obviously doesn't sound like he's gonna get into too many details because he wasn't actually at the point of the shooting. So not much to bring validity to this, but a pretty crazy, nonetheless, I'd like to see somebody come in with the information that actually shows that he was. About to leave based on the opium fields. But it goes somebody responded to this and said it goes way deeper than this. He did join after nine 11 to fight the war on terror, giving up tens of millions of dollars in the Hall of Fame n f NFL career, and he was tasked with guarding an opium field owned by Purdue Pharma, which is for Oxycontin. He never publicly voiced his thoughts about the war. He wrote in his diary and talked to a couple of soldiers about it. They told his commanding officer and his diary was confiscated in red. Shortly after that, he was killed from within 25 meters in a non-combat zone by an American soldier using an M 16 rifle. It was conveniently set to three round bursts, so he will only pull the trigger once accidentally and sent three rounds into his abdomen. The incident was then attempted to be covered up. These are all the facts. A lot of this stuff posts leaves out and gets wrong. These pictures are short caption posts tend to do so. He was such a great man. My mom knew him in college. He was the nicest man she knew at Syracuse. Everyone loved him and he loved his country. It is disgusting what they did to him. And it edits for some clarification. It says the poppy field did not have Purdue Pharma employees directly working there, but they did buy a majority of their crop from this field. I remember him being shot in the abdomen, but the article linked above said it was in the head. Also said that it was an M 2 49. But I remember it being an M 16 very clearly. Article also says from 10 meters away, which is basically point blank, they burned his uniform and belongings as a part of the coverup. As for the Syracuse thing, he didn't play there. But my mom was friends with his girlfriend. Hmm, interesting. So an interesting theory nonetheless. Moving on. So the next thing that we'll get into here is a video that's circulated of a woman screaming on a airplane. Maybe screaming is an an exaggeration, but yelling nonetheless that she's was sit, sitting next to somebody who wasn't human. This woman gets up, you neither believe it, or this woman gets up in this plane, and probably the craziest video that you'll see this week. If there's any validity to this at all, this woman gets up in the middle of this airplane. Decides she's going to leave the airplane, like I said earlier, doesn't seem like she's on drugs. Doesn't seem like she's drunk. Says if you guys wanna stay here, that's perfectly fine, but I'm getting away from that reptilian species back there. So let's watch this and then we'll discuss it. Or they cannot believe it. I don't give, but I am telling you right is so it's just going on to say it. She's, the incident happened as the flight was preparing for de to depart Dallas Fort Worth International Airport. So was this woman next to a reptilian, was she next to a AI robot or was she just drunk? Says I did 16 years as a police officer, and I can say this was the sounding is what sounding an alarm looks like. You are not going to be cool, calm, and collected. This is the response of somebody who can't immediately process what they just experienced. Hmm, interesting. So what this goes on to say, and this comes again from Reddit so take it with a grain of salt, but we all know that the elites want to phase humans out and replace us with AI and robots. It says it could be possible that they're in the process of test driving these AI humanoids right under our noses in certain industries such as the airline in catering hidden and played in sight. What if the woman experienced an uncanny valley moment where she saw through the humanoid and freaked out over him not being real? I think the advancements they show us in the AI robots are decades old and they actually have been behind closed doors. In a far more advanced way. There are theories that military technologies is 50 years ahead of what they actually present to us in public. And they're essentially drip feeding us technology so as not to scare and intimidate people. Interesting. The very first comment on this says, I wish we could get a pick or a video of the person that's not real. Yeah. So do we buddy? It says, I just want the, per i I just wanna see the person she said wasn't real. The next thing says she was on a flight with Mark Zuckerberg. Oh man. That's a good one. All right. The And then somebody comments. And this is pretty wild. This is when I was seven years old. I lived on the military base in the Philippines and had a weird thing happen. This would've been about 1987. I was at a friend's house. The parents weren't home. It was just me and my friend and my friend's, older sister. We were in their bathroom singing in the Hairbrushes and others eighties girls' activities. When I had to go to the bathroom when I was little, I had really paranoid about people's showers. I was afraid somebody was in there washing me. So I would always check. I pulled the curtain back and there was a woman crouched down really still. She didn't say anything or move. I ran back into the bedroom and said, there's a woman in the shower. The older sister says, that's a robot. Don't worry about it. And my friend starts crying hysterically. The sister says, yeah, she's afraid of it. I'm so embarrassed because there's dirty pictures on the clothes. Hmm. I didn't notice this last part. And even as a child, I remember thinking, if you are so embarrassed, why bring it up if I didn't say anything first? They both leave the room and I'm guessing that they're calling their parents. The sister comes back into the room and says that they are on their way back and they're going to take the robot to their grandparents' place. Keep in mind, we are on a base. No grandparents are anywhere near unless they have been living with the family, and I'm not even sure that's allowed. They basically tell me that I have to stay in the bedroom until this happens. I'm alone for what seems like hours and I still haven't managed to pee. I don't remember ever playing over there after that. I don't really know what to make of this. I think that the least likely explanation is that I was an ac, that it was an actual robot. I've tried to piece it together as an adult. I thought maybe sex trafficking or something like that. Maybe the older sister was messing with both of us, but the younger one seemed to know what she was talking about and those were real tears. The opposed pornographic material mentioned Maybe question if I, if it was a real doll, the person did look Filipino, so maybe the dad was having an affair and told the kids that it was a robot to throw them off. But I don't know why you would have told you have your booty call over when you aren't there. I don't know. The whole incident was strange, but it's hard to gauge these things happen as a kid because you are trying to re-remember it and decipher it from a childhood brain to an adult brain. The other thing that happened on the space, I started sleepwalking suddenly, maybe it was a reaction to the radar equipment nearby, but alle allegedly, I was going outside during this, which is terrifying. Somebody said in toes. Hmm. All right, so was this a robot in an airplane? Was this lady drunk or was she taking too much Xanax? Who knows? But. Maybe one day we will see robots on the airplanes next to us and we will will call this day and remember the very first time that we heard about it. All right guys. That is all I have for you today. Thank you so much for listening from the bottom of my heart. Go ahead and subscribe, leave a five star review. I appreciate it. Austin Adams dot sub stack.com. Go ahead and sign up and then have a great day. That's all I got for you. Thank you very much.
As designers and business owners, we are often managing a lot at once and using multiple different programs to do it all. In this episode, Erinn Valencich, founder of StyleRow, joins us to talk about this amazing platform that every designer can benefit from having. As a designer herself, Erinn realized that all of us were using 5 or more different programs to interact with our teams, vendors, and clients—there was no program that did it all. And so she brought together a team and built one! We talk about the StyleRow platform and why streamlining our processes through one program is valuable and essential—not just for our experience as the business owner, but also for our client's experience.The Design Coven will be doing a virtual workshop with Erinn on Friday, July 7, where she'll talk more about the program and how she's built her career in the industry. If you'd like to join us, become a member at designcoven.com/join. The recording will be available to Pro members.About ErinnErinn Valencich, better known as Erinn V, is an entrepreneur who started her entrepreneurial career at an early age. Graduating from high school early, she skipped college and went straight to work, garnering an incredible professional resume in the lifestyle space with brands such as eBay, Maxwell House, Oprah, Betty Crocker, The Today Show, The View and HGTV all before the age of 24. She then founded a design firm, a furniture brand, has six licensed collections and is the visionary founder behind a software company to streamline and power the luxury furnishings industry, StyleRow. Featured in this episodeFeatured deck: Radiant Crystal CardsConnect with ErinnStyleRow WebsiteStyleRow InstagramErinn on InstagramAre you an interior designer or are you interested in Holistic Interior Design? Check out my membership program, the Design Coven! This program is a real-world industry mentorship for Holistic Interior Designers that has everything you won't find in traditional design school curriculum. You'll learn from practicing interior designers working on real life projects, and get access to cutting edge vendors, suppliers, furniture makers, textile designers, and design resources that I've curated over my 17 years of design experience. As a member, you'll have the opportunity to build valuable relationships of your own. Learn more.Connect with Rachel LarraineWebsiteInstagramPatreonInterior Design ServicesInterior Design ResourcesHouzz (Affiliate Link)
On this episode of Headliners Greg is joined by singer-songwriter BO BASKORO to talk about his new song HOLDING YOU OVER (Out Now).ABOUT BO:Bo Baskoro is a passionate alt/pop artist from the Pacific Northwest, his music known for its percussive ear candy, honest lyrics, and energizing production. Exuding an heir of nostalgia, he has worked closely with co-producer Justin Abel to create a unique sound that seamlessly captures who he is at the core. His Indonesian heritage comes through in his unique musical perspective. The Portland native has always marched to the tune of his own drum. Inspired by the fictional horn-playing character Lanky Kong of Donkey Kong 64, Baskoro's creativity gravitated towards the trombone, and continued to study and play throughout his earlier years. During recovery from a tumor and labrum tear surgery, international brand Maxwell House® commissioned a mini documentary of Bo's experience, and his artistic drive amidst his trials. Bo was flown to Los Angeles to meet producer Harvey Mason Jr. (Tori Kelly, Justin Timberlake, Michael Jackson) and have one of his singles ("High") produced for a Maxwell House® marketing campaign. Bo is now featured as one of the faces of MAX by Maxwell House®, appearing in ads all over YouTube, Instagram, Spotify, and other media platforms. "High" has since amassed over 2 million streams on Spotify.CONNECT WITH BO BASKORO:Instagram - TikTok - Twitter - YouTube - SpotifySUPPORT THIS SHOW
Dale Earnhardt Jr. and co-host Mike Davis sit down with the man behind the famed #22 Caterpillar NASCAR Cup ride, Bill Davis. After helping Mark Martin as he came through the American Speed Association ranks, Bill went on to form a long-running race team that fielded cars in all of NASCAR's top-three divisions. On the back of his successful Arkansas-based trucking company, Bill first entered the Xfinity Series ranks on a limited basis with Martin behind the wheel. Their quick success proved he had what it took as an owner, and despite Martin having to focus on his Cup racing endeavors, he convinced Bill to move to North Carolina and pursue a full-time chauffeur.Bill explains that the driver he sought out came in the form of Jeff Gordon, who was making the transition from the sprint car world as a promising prospect. He also gives insight to how Gordon's 1993 departure from the team led to a young Bobby Labonte inquiring about the ride, and how he came to end up fielding the well-known #22 Maxwell House car that was forever associated with Junior Johnson. Download listeners will get a master course in what it is to own a large-scale operation in NASCAR, as Bill details the ebb and flow of his organization and why it came to an end after the 2008 season To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Dale Earnhardt Jr. and co-host Mike Davis sit down with the man behind the famed #22 Caterpillar NASCAR Cup ride, Bill Davis. After helping Mark Martin as he came through the American Speed Association ranks, Bill went on to form a long-running race team that fielded cars in all of NASCAR's top-three divisions. On the back of his successful Arkansas-based trucking company, Bill first entered the Xfinity Series ranks on a limited basis with Martin behind the wheel. Their quick success proved he had what it took as an owner, and despite Martin having to focus on his Cup racing endeavors, he convinced Bill to move to North Carolina and pursue a full-time chauffeur. Bill explains that the driver he sought out came in the form of Jeff Gordon, who was making the transition from the sprint car world as a promising prospect. He also gives insight to how Gordon's 1993 departure from the team led to a young Bobby Labonte inquiring about the ride, and how he came to end up fielding the well-known #22 Maxwell House car that was forever associated with Junior Johnson. Download listeners will get a master course in what it is to own a large-scale operation in NASCAR, as Bill details the ebb and flow of his organization and why it came to an end after the 2008 season To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Debbie and Kerri get emotional during the season finale, but not in the way you think! Their emotion comes from the SUPER inappropriate commercials from the 60s and 70s that WROR's Lauren Beckham Falcone shared: Loves Baby Soft and the “sexy baby,” Nestea's tasting the “taste of wetness” and Maxwell House's captain, “me captain, you wife.” The unraveling is slow and steady as they delve into Aldi's Easter bunny-dicks, inappropriate Passover Seder behavior (and surprisingly, not JUST Debbie!), and two new shows they're “developing” called Colonoscopy Queenz and Couples' Colonoscopy. Finally, they eulogize /roast each other that will definitely send them off with a bang. Kerri and Debbie will have you giggling your way to the end of Season 5. Thank you for a great season! Enjoy!
We all sing them but most of us don't know where they came from. Well, Eric will clear that up for you in this episode of Listen To This. Heinz, Maxwell House and more. You will be smarter after you listen to this episode.@SinatrasRatPack#ThisIsFunner #FunnerFamily #FunnerNetwork #ListenToThis https://twitter.com/ThisIsFunnerhttps://www.facebook.com/ThisIsFunner/
Adam and Drew get into Phil Silvers' appearance on 'The Love Boat' before checking out some classic commercials from Gillette and Maxwell House. Next, Adam shows Drew a clip of Sunny Hostin on 'The View'. Please Support Our Sponsors: ZipRecruiter.com/ADS
The OTRNow Radio Program Easter Celebration (01)Fibber McGee and Molly. March 23, 1948. NBC net, WMAQ, Chicago aircheck. Johnson's Wax. Molly has won the Wistful Vista "I Like To Patronize Local Merchants Because..." contest. The prize is an Easter frock. This is a network, sponsored version of cat. #12034. Jim Jordan, Marian Jordan, Harlow Wilcox (announcer), Billy Mills and His Orchestra, The King's Men, Sandra Gould, Bill Thompson, Arthur Q. Bryan, Gale Gordon, Don Quinn (writer), Phil Leslie (writer). The Great Gildersleeve. April 25, 1943. NBC net. Kraft Pabst-Ett. Leroy's going to make big money raising rabbits. Kay Francis makes an appeal for the Second War Loan. The president of the Kraft Cheese Company, J. L. Kraft, delivers his annual Easter message. Ben Alexander, Earle Ross, Harold Peary, James L. Kraft, John Whedon (writer), Kay Francis, Ken Carpenter (announcer), Lillian Randolph, Lurene Tuttle, Richard LeGrand, Sam Moore (writer), Shirley Mitchell (?), Walter Tetley. The Jell-O Program Starring Jack Benny. April 09, 1939. Red net. Jell-O. Kenny sings, "I'm Building A Sailboat Of Dreams." The cast does a nursing drama called, "Four Girls In White." The patient turns out to be Shlepperman!. Jack Benny, Don Wilson, Mary Livingstone, Phil Harris and His Orchestra, Kenny Baker, Sam Hearn, Harry Baldwin, Ed Beloin (writer, performer: doubles), Bill Morrow (writer), Blanche Stewart (doubles).The Lucky Strike Program Starring Jack Benny. April 13, 1952. CBS net. Lucky Strike. A stroll down Wilshire Boulevard for the Easter Parade. Jack and Mary sing! One of the commercials features a message from "The National Tobacco Tax Research Council," praising the industry for supporting many farm families and financing the federal, state and local governments. The script is similar to the one used on April 17, 1949. The show was recorded on April 6, 1952. Artie Auerbach, Bea Benaderet, Del Sharbutt (commercial spokesman), Dennis Day, Don Wilson, Jack Benny, Mary Livingstone, Mel Blanc, Phil Harris, Eddie Anderson, Sara Berner, Sheldon Leonard, The Sportsmen, Arthur Q. Bryan, L. A. Speed Riggs (tobacco auctioneer), Stuffy Singer, Mahlon Merrick (music director), Hilliard Marks (producer), Milt Josefsberg (writer), Sam Perrin (writer), George Balzer (writer), John Tackaberry (writer). The Gulf Screen Guild Theatre. April 09, 1939. CBS net. Revue. Gulf. A revue and a skit titled "We're Taking Off." Mickey shows Rudy and Joan how to play a love scene. Rosemary Lane, Rudy Vallee, Mickey Rooney, Joan Bennett, The King's Men, Everett Freeman (writer), A. Edward Selton (? director), George Murphy (m. c.), Oscar Bradley and His Orchestra, John Conte (announcer), Frank Loesser (special lyrics). Maxwell House Coffee Time. April 03, 1947. NBC net. Maxwell House. There's only two more shopping days until Easter. Gracie not-too-subtley hints for a new hat. "The Beverly Hills Uplift Society" tries to help. George Burns, Gracie Allen, Meredith Willson and His Orchestra, Bill Goodwin, Paul Henning (writer), Keith Fowler (writer), Mel Blanc, Elvia Allman, Verna Felton, Lurene Tuttle. The Shadow. March 24, 1940. Mutual net. "The Plot That Failed". Blue Coal. The Shadow is tricked into aiding two "scientists" place six strange machines around the city. A melted steam shovel gives Lamont the clue to the purpose of the mysterious machines. As "The Shadow" prevents the entire city from being melted, Margo plans to boil four hundred Easter eggs! The system cue has been deleted. Ken Roberts (announcer), William Johnstone, Jerry Devine (writer), Marjorie Anderson, Everett Sloane, Edwin Jerome, Kenny Delmar, Alan Reed, Wilson Tuttle (producer, director), Elsie Thompson (organist), Paul Huber (commercial spokesman).
In this eye-opening episode of the Adams Archive, we delve into the recent tragic events that have shaken our society to its core. We begin by exploring the harrowing Nashville shooting perpetrated by a trans woman driven by hatred, uncovering the underlying issues that fueled this horrendous act. Then, we shift our focus to the controversial TikTok ban bill that has sent shockwaves through the nation. We reveal the hidden, tyrannical aspects of this legislation that could potentially strip away our privacy and personal freedoms, and discuss the heroic actions of Rand Paul in stopping its fast track. Finally, we examine the bombshell news of Donald Trump's indictment in the Stormy Daniels NDA hush-money case, dissecting the legal implications and what this could mean for the former president's future. Join us as we navigate through these turbulent times, exposing the truth behind the headlines and providing our unique perspective on the world's most pressing issues. Don't forget to subscribe and leave a five-star review to help us reach more people with our thought-provoking discussions. Together, let's shed light on the darkness that surrounds us. All links: https://linktr.ee/theaustinjadams Full Transcription: Hello, you beautiful people. My name is Austin Adams, and welcome to the Adams Archive. This week we are going to be discussing Donald Trump's indictment. It happened just hours ago. Donald Trump was indicted in the stormy Daniels n d a hush money case. So we will discuss that. We will also talk about the Nashville shooter, a woman who identified as trans, who thought she was a. Lo and behold, uh, ended up going to a Catholic school and shooting, I believe six or more people at this point, including, uh, several children. So a horrific tragedy all stemming from the divisiveness and division in the emboldenment by our mainstream media, by our government, by the corporations that are out there. It's disgusting. And what do you expect? So we will talk about that. And then last but not least, we're going to talk about the TikTok ban, uh, bill that was, uh, proposed and then, uh, at least the fast track of it was shot down by Rand Paul today. But we'll talk about what's actually in that bill. Cause it's far more concerning than the headline sounds right. A lot of people have rallied around the idea of banning TikTok. Which I can argue a point for, right? But not when you stuff the bill with everything possible to be able to surveil your own people, find them, put them in jail just for going onto a website and allow you to even look at people's home cameras to, to track all of this. So it's, it's, it's horrific. Very glad Rand Paul put a stop to the fast tracking of this bill. Uh, it was, I believe 11 Republicans and 11 Democrats were on board as a bipartisan bill. It's terrifying. So we'll go through all of that and more today. But first, I need you to hit that subscribe button. Leave a five star review. I would appreciate it from the bottom of my heart, like I've said before and many times before , there's not much you can do to get some good karma, uh, right now in your life. But I am asking you, please, from the bottom of my heart, leave a review, uh, and write something nice if you could, that would really help us get through the rankings, uh, get out of the way, the craziness that is going on in the world and show it to more people. So please leave a five star review and subscribe. Other than that, go to the CK Red Pill. Revolution is the old one, force of habit. The new one is Austin dot Adams, uh, or Austin Adams dot.com. Austin Adams dot.com. Even if you go to red pill revolution.dot com, I believe it'll, it'll forward you there. So either one works for now. So go ahead and do that. Um, and. Let's jump into. All right, so the very first thing we're going to discuss is Trump has been indicted. Just hours ago, a grand jury decided to indict Donald Trump in the Stormy Daniels case. Okay, we'll go ahead and read this article from the Hill. It says that former Donald or former president Donald Trump was indicted on criminal charges in New York on Thursday for his role in organizing hush money payments. As we discussed last time, not hush money, uh, made to an adult film star during his 2016 campaign. The history making indictment marks the first time, the first time a president has been charged in a criminal matter and comes as several law enforcement entities are investigating Trump's conduct in numerous probes. The very. First time in history a president has been charged in a criminal manner. How many criminal things do you think presidents have done? Let's talk about Watergate. Let's talk about, you know, George Bush getting us into, you know, the, the war in Afghanistan and Iraq and, you know, George Bush, senior George Bush, George Bush's Junior. Let's, let's talk about the, the Clinton body count as we talked about last time, right? How many things have happened almost, I guarantee you almost every president has something in their history that was far more worthy, including probably Donald Trump. Like the fact that this is the only thing that they could get on this man. tells you what you need to know about how far they have to. For straws on this one. Uh, it's truly wild that this is the only thing that they could come up with. Right? And, and you, the, the word hush money has been thrown around so much in almost every single article that you will find because it is not a hush money scandal, right? It is, it is not that. As we discussed last time, it was an NDA that was signed between Donald Trump's lawyer, I believe Michael Cohen was the name of the lawyer. And, uh, and Stormy Daniels regarding the 2016 campaign. Can catch you up to speed real quick. So this is a all-encompassing podcast for you. Uh, Donald Trump was basically accused of, uh, $130,000 payment to Michael Cohen, um, which was made to Stormy Daniels. Now the problem with this was in the way that the money was moved, it wasn't even like it's illegal to pay a porn star $130,000 to not talk about you having sex with them. Uh, It's a, apparently in some way illegal to use this the way that he moved money around, which was using some sort of like home equity line in order to pay off the lawyer who paid off her. And now they're gonna have to tr to prove that. Now I've even seen left-leaning news publications that have come out and called this case extremely, extremely weak. I, again, I said it before and I'll say it again. I will stand behind my statement. This is bullshit. There is nothing that is gonna come out of it. If you think that Donald Trump's gonna find himself in jail over paying an NDA off through a home equity equity line through his lawyer, through this, through, like, again, if that's the best thing that you can come up with, you're not going to indict a former and potential future president, the, the front runner of the Republican party. So, um, now the district attorney that is doing this is funded by none other than George Soros. Who would have guessed, especially when we see Soros starting to back Ron DeSantis. Right now, I'm not saying anything negative about Ron DeSantis here. I have, uh, moments of being a fan of Ron DeSantis. I, I literally ca cannot think of one negative thing about DeSantis currently. I just, right off the top of my head, don't have any huge complaints that stick out in my mind about DeSantis, uh, other than nothing, can't think of it. Okay. So, um, it's no surprise that somebody who George Soros is going to be pumping massive amounts of money. A da who, that same person who's wanting DeSantis to win funded Alvin Bragg, the Manhattan District Attorney, who's going after Trump, the front runner of the Republican Party, no coincidence at all that that is happening. Okay? So, I, I don't see any way that this is actually gonna have anything come of it. Trump's goes on to say that Trump's company labeled Cohen's reimbursement of the payment as a legal expense and did not disclose them in campaign expense reports. Cohen pleaded guilty in 2018 and served time for his role in the matter on charges related to campaign finance violations and tax fraud. He claimed that Trump directed him to make the payment and that Trump reimbursed him in monthly installments that included a bonus. The payment was made as a part of a non-disclosure agreement as Daniels was prepared to go public, as she claims a sexual relationship for Trump. So if you wanna get into the de details of all this, feel free to go back and listen to the last episode we did. The comparison between Trump's body count with Stormy Daniels, a sexual one , and the Clinton body count, where we go through some of the, uh, weird little cases about that. So, I want to see if we can find out what the next steps are. I heard that there's really not anything that's gonna come up with this until at least next, the following week from now. Uh, um, but there was something like 37 charges of financial fraud or whatever the word is that they're using for that. Uh, it says that the, um, they went after him from Mar-a-Lago, all this stuff. All right, so let's, let's go on to the next article here, which, which talks about everything in a little bit, um, more detail. So, so the next article that we're gonna look at here is actually, let's, let's skip that. Let's go ahead and let's look at what Trump himself actually has to say about this. But before we do that, I, I think that this is worth noting this, if, if a former president was convicted on something serious, right? If a former president. Gotten into a, an extremely dark financial, uh, ties with a foreign entity, let's say China or Ukraine, biolab companies. I think that would be a fair thing to indict somebody over, right? At least. Well, let's hear it. Let's, let's work it out, right? They're just trying to air trump's dirty laundry, right? They're just trying to disparage his character, make him look bad, because he had sex with some extremely good looking porn star at some point. So I don't know if that gives him clout points or , I don't know. Uh, but. I, I don't, the only thing that this is gonna do is, is embolden the, the Trump, the Republicans to come out and vote to know that everything that they've been fighting for up until this point is real, right? There's absolutely a deep state. There's absolutely George Soros funded district attorneys who want to go after people, specifically for the, for the improvement of profitability for elitist, right? There, there is absolutely a thing. Okay? Now, here is what Trump has had to say about this since this came out, and here it is. Um, Trump, the very first thing that he said was roughly, let's see, three hours, five hours. Let's see what the very first thing, so his official statement was this, it says, If I can zoom in far enough here to read it. The political persecution and election interference, interference at the highest level in history from the time I came down to the golden escalator at Trump Tower, and even before I was sworn in. As your president of the United States, the radical left Democrats, the enemy of the hardworking men and women of her country have been engaged in a witch hunt to destroy the Make America Great again. Movement. You remember? I just, um, it just like I do. Russia, Russia, Russia. The Mueller Hoax. Ukraine. Ukraine, Ukraine, impeachment hoax, uh, one impeachment hoax. Two, the illegal and unconstitutional Mar-a-Lago raid. And now this, the Democrats have lied. He said cheated and str, uh, and stolen. In their obsession with trying to get Trump, but now they're done. They've done the unthinkable, indicting a completely innocent person in the act of blatant election interference. Never before in our nation's history has this been done. The Democrats have cheated contr or countless times over the decades, including spying on my campaign and weaponizing our justice system to punish a political opponent who just so happens to be a president of the United States. And by far the leading Republican candidate for president has never happened before, ever. He goes on the state that Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg, who has was handpicked and funded by George Soros is a disgrace. He said, rather than shopping the unprecedented, stopping the unprecedented crime that was taking over New York City, he's doing Joe Biden's dirty work, ignoring the murders and burglaries and assaults he should have focused on. This is how Bragg spends his time. , I believe this witch hunt will be, will backfire massively on Joe Biden. The American people realize exactly what the radical left Democrats are doing here. Everyone can see it. So our movement and our party, United and Strong will first defeat Alvin Bragg, and then we will defeat Joe Biden and we are going to throw every last one of these crooked Democrats out of office so we can make America great again. So that was his official response. Now following that, he said these thugs and radical left monsters have just indicted the 45th President of the United States and the leading Republican candidate by far for the Depublican nomination. This is an attack on our country, the likes of which has never been seen before. It is likewise a continuing attack on our once free and fair elections. The USA is now a third world nation, A nation in serious decline. So sad. I mean it really is. You know, you think of the, the corruption in third world countries, the weaponization of the judicial system, the. Corruption within the, the, the halls of the police forces in Mexico and the judges are paid off by the cartels. I mean, you look at all of those things in, in, and Mexico is not even a third world country, but it's far from the United States. But we see those things every day, right? The, the cartel in our country just so happens to have a, a little bit more money and a little bit less, and, and maybe not even, but may a little bit less actual consistent gun violence because they just weaponize their own military to do their deeds by lobbying hard enough in staging things like what's going on in Ukraine, right? So, I, I don't, I do not see 100% do not see this going anywhere at all. He's not going to be charged, he's not going to be arrested, right? He, he's not. None of that's going to happen. But what is going to happen is this is going to go down in history books. And that's what they want, right? They want all of the articles, they want, they want the history books to show because they're the ones who write them, right? Remember Maxwell, uh, what is it? Maxwell House, I believe writes, wrote the books that were in school when I was there. You know who owned that? Ghislaine, Maxwell's dad, look that one up. Crazy, right? The same people that they, they want to write the history with these types of BS things. This indictment is going to go nowhere, absolutely nowhere. Um, Kevin McCarthy spoke out about it, said Alvin Bragg was, has a rapidly damaged our country in an attempt to interfere in our presidential election. As he routinely frees violent criminals to terrorize the public, he weaponized our sacred system of justice against President Trump. The American people will not tolerate this injustice, and the House of Representatives will hold Alvin brag his unprecedented abuse of power accountable. I really hope so. I, I don't know if we'll see anything like that, but I would hope that there's some sort of. backlash judicially. This is a, a vast overreach of power. This is a, as, as I've seen several people say a, a dark day in history when, when our judicial system can't even be trusted to, and, and, and here's one thing that I heard too that talked about is like, no president is above the law. It's like, wow, , I'm pretty sure almost every president ever was responsible for, for killing people. Um, they just called it war, right? I'm pretty sure almost every president was responsible for overseeing the IRS who steals from everyday Americans. I, I, I'm pretty sure almost every president in history had the power to pardon people. So the way that our judicial system is set up is that many of the presidentials, uh, positions and, and that they hold, have the opportunity to be used this way and, and, and they are above the law. . And, and so to see that, to see that even, I believe Nixon was even pardoned by the president who followed him even, even following Watergate, right? It's, it's unbelievable to see that this is, this is the direction that we're going, but I, I don't wanna harp on that. We did a whole episode about it. So go listen to that if you want to. Let's move on. He's been indicted. We'll keep you updated on it. And the next thing that we're gonna talk about here, let me go ahead and pull this up, is going to be the, the shooting that happened in Nashville. All right. Now I want to tread respectfully in this light. It's a sad day, right? Anytime you have children dying. Nine, I believe it was three nine year old children and 360 year old adults that died just in the span of a few minutes. One of which of those children died while pulling the fire alarm to alert their classmates and the rest of the school. as to what was happening. It's tragic, it's horrible, and we're already seeing the politicization from, from both sides. To be fair, I think there's some conversation to be had, which we will have about mental health, but the various first thing that, that Biden does in this case is run to talk about gun control and, and to see the way that our, our mainstream media almost completely, I, I don't even know how to describe it. They, they don't even know what to do in this case with the, with this person being trans. Right. This is a woman who said she was a man, wore men's clothing, I guess, I don't know, and wanted to be called, he. Now what we end, end up finding out is that this person was very mentally ill. According to their, one of their closest friends they suffered from, well, I don't know if suffered the word, but they, they had autism, high functioning autism. They wrote a manifesto, drew pictures that were horrific apparently, that we haven't had access to yet, uh, about this. But the amount of articles that I've seen, the New York Post talk about, uh, the, um, the Vice News articles coming out is unbelievable to see people actually coming to the, coming to the defense of trans groups now, no, I don't think that you call out trans as a whole. Now, I. Tend to agree with the idea of affirming somebody's mental health issues. Gender dysphoria is a real thing. It has been for a very long time. It's generally a, a, a before the time where it became cool to do so, so you can post TikTok videos. It was something that was affecting people who generally had lower levels of testosterone or higher levels of testosterone, people who had actual chemical imbalances within their bodies compared to their normal gendered counterparts. So I, I, I sympathize with people who go through mental health issues. I sympathize with somebody who grew up with autism. I sympathize with, with a, a group of people who feel dispossessed. I obviously do not sympathize with somebody who went into a school and shot six people for no reason. No reason whatsoever. Even Joe Biden came out the very next day and said that transgender people shape our nation's soul. Just days after the trans person killed six different Christians in a school massacre. Now what I find infuriating about this is that they will not call this what it was. This was a hate crime. Absolutely 100% a hate crime. This was somebody who carried out a massacre against children because they did not like that. They went to a Catholic school. They embodied everything that they hated about whatever, like themselves, about the projection of of their insecurities. This woman attacked children for these beliefs, and so when, when we see articles come out from Vice that. Things like the right is using the Nashville shooting to declare war on trans people vice. I want to ask you a question. Vice has become the biggest clickbait liberal, cesspool bullshit ma news company out there. Almost 100%. They are so far left leaning in almost every single article. It's disgusting. The right is using the Nashville shooting to declare war on trans people, or do you mean that a trans person declared war on children and mercilessly killed them at their school for having a religious belief that their parents probably gave to them that they inherited and potentially not even. Right? Just because you go to a Catholic school doesn't mean that you are consistently practicing your faith. So we have articles coming out like this. I'll even read you some of this article almost as soon as details starting to emerge about the shooter in Nashville, Tennessee, who people or who killed six people, pundits, and politicians on the right started exploiting the tragedy to spread anti-trans hate through investigations on Mondays. Shooting at the Covenant School in Nashville are ongoing. Early reports have identified a 28 year old shooter as a transgender person. Predictably right wing personalities immediately started falsely blaming trans people in general for the fault, for the mass shooting. How much hormones like testosterone and medications for mental illness is the transgender Nashville school shooter taking Marjorie Taylor Green? Everyone can stop blaming guns now. That was their big quote. Now, here's the problem with this that I have, the problem with this is that this has been something that has been brewing for a fairly long time. This is the, this is the first shooting that we can actually point to systemic governmental policies, consumerist, capitalistic companies who have caused this shooting. 100% absolutely no excuse, no, no reason that you, there's no argument against that. They have taken a group of, of mentally ill people, people who have bipolar, who are autistic, like this woman who, who have sicknesses in their head, and they've emboldened them through em. Empowering rhetoric by pointing at half of the country or however much of the country, percentage wise you want to call it, in, in calling them the enemy, telling them that these people hate you. Stop trans hate. They hate you. You're, they think you're a bad person. They have been constantly pushing this narrative, constantly causing this divisiveness, and constantly making these people far more extreme, starting by indoctrinating people at the school system level into believing that this is something that should be celebrated and not medicated or, or psychologically evaluated. They've been taking a, a group of dispossessed people, of mentally ill people. Statistically, it is factual that a great percentage of people who identify as trans have mental illness going into it. There's a whole book written about it where a woman talks about how the, the percentage of, of children who identified as anorexia correlates almost immediately with a, a drop off as they are identifying now as having trans or gender dysphoria, uh, uh, belief. There's a sickness inside of people's head that the, the government, that capitalism is, is throwing tampon ads at men and giving them money to promote this ideology, and then telling them that there's a group who hates them. That, that wants nothing more to them to see them, whatever, right? They, they're, they, they're causing such a dis divide in our country that what do you, it's obviously going to come to an head, and that's where it comes to our next article where there's this trans day of vengeance. On the same day that Biden, or I guess the day after, Joe Biden now says that there's a trans, uh, I wonder how many times, like, let's, let's talk about people with mental illness, right? How many times has it been somebody who's severely depressed and they go shoot up a school and then all of a sudden the president comes out and gives them a celebratory day as a result of that? In, in, in remembrance of the six people who died from this school shooting. Let's give the the persons the who shot them a, a holiday, nationally recognized day of visibility for trans people. And on the back of that, we're now seeing that, that there's a movement towards Trans Day of Vengeance. This says that Antifa affiliated group, our rights DC and the Trans Radical Activist Network, has been planning what they are calling a Trans Day of Vengeance in Washington, DC for April 1st. The event is reportedly still going forward, despite the recent deadly vengeance carried out by a trans person on Monday. Evidence of the action was seen on Twitter as the publicizing of the event continues on social media. Despite Twitter's lockout of accounts reporting on the intention towards violence, the protest event has been scheduled for some time. And throughout March, the fire was circulating online. The event is planned for Saturday at the Supreme Court. Ironically, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of employment protections for trans persons. In the Bo Bostock case, Tran will be hosting an event in DC and this is in quotes on the website, it says, R Rights DC in Tran are horrified at the acts of violence committed at the Covenant School on March 27th. We are outraged by this tragedy. We grieve for the names of these people they say and their loved ones. We also reject any connection between the horrific event and. Vengeance means fighting back. With Fahema, we are fighting against false narratives, criminalization, and eradication of our existence. It is also a call to our allies to stand up and fight for us to bring down the forces that try to divide and subjugate us all. T D O V has created for exactly this. It is about pu pushing back against the unjust and inhumane systems that are responsible for the loss of life, rights and joy. They are the enemy, not individuals. To do nothing is to accept. We choose to fight for change and progress to ensure a better life for all people. There is power in numbers. Together we will change suffocating legislation, find strength, create bonds, and share in all this happiness life has to offer us. That's what they posted on their website. Now I saw, I I, I've been looking at, you know, I'm, I mean, I live in a fairly, somewhat liberal city surrounding me, and I've been seeing some things that's like, What, what did it say? It's like, um, there, there's like these signs on these stores around here that says, uh, hate not welcome here, or L G B T Q, uh, uh, friendly. It's like I have yet to see a sign outside of any store that I've gone to that says, trans people not allowed, gay people not allowed. Right. The, the, the idea that there's like, even just the way that they phrased that is that there's, how do they put it? The false narratives, criminalization and eradication of our existence. That's what they're calling this, that's what they feel about this, and that's where we're getting these narratives shoved to these people through our government, through corporations. This, this radicalization and it's absolutely radicalization. Radicalization of the lit, the, the, the extremists left. To believing that they are justified in going to castrate children in sexualizing our children and doing drag shows like stripper events in front of them, waving dollar bills in their face. How many videos have you seen now? My, my feed is like disgustingly inundated with, with examples after examples of these drag shows and every single time I see them, it's not a story reading hour, it's people shaking their ass in bikinis with a, a, a penis flopping between their legs in front of children. Now again, nobody's calling for the criminalization and eradication of their existence. We're calling for you to stop targeting our children. I don't give a flying fuck what you believe about yourself now, just because you think that you are a. , and you're a woman, or you think that you're a woman and you're a man, does not mean that I have to engage in your mental illness and play the part of somebody who agrees with you. If you believe that you're a woman and you're a man, and you believe that you're a man and you're a woman so much, great, that's fine, do you? But I'm not gonna call you whatever you want just because you, you, you want to have some sort of special feeling in your heart that everybody plays into your mental illness. Now, I hope that you go and you get help. I hope that you speak to somebody. I hope that you find a way to be comfortable in your body. I hope that you find peace in your own heart about yourself, so that you are not so self, self-conscious about who you are. That you can't just boldly be who you were meant to be, and that was the gender that you were given at birth. Sorry. But again, I'm not calling for the eradication of anybody. I'm not calling for the criminalization of anybody unless you're grooming children. Sexualizing children at story hours where you're shaking your ass in front of their faces and making them hand you dollar bills like it's a strip club. And unless you're mutilating children and castrating them with drugs before they would even have the ability to vote, let alone cut their own dick off. Yes. That should be criminalized. You thinking you're whatever you are, nobody gives a shit do it. Who cares. But the second you wanna push it on to children is the second. You want to groom them into believing that, that they have to also be confused about who they are in order to feel special instead of just feeling special about who they were born to be in the first place. Right. It's crazy. So we've seen several articles about this, Joe Biden seeing that, saying that they shape that, that trans people shape our nation's soul. Like, that's probably not a soul that we want embodying our nation . Now there's been several conspiracy theories that, conspiracy theories that have come out of this, uh, this shooting. Now, I can't speak to the factuality or ridiculousness of these cuz I haven't do dove extremely deep into them. A pretty consistent one that I've seen talks about this shooter's shoes. And what they said is that the, the shoes that they walked in with were not the shoes that they left with. The shoes that they walked in with were like vans. And they were black. And they were white. And then when they left, they were in like, I don't know, converse or Adidas that had like flames down the side of them. So like two different separate pairs of shoes. They walked in and then later they didn't walk out cause they got killed. But, um, they were wearing separate types of shoes. They, they seemed, people seemed to believe on. That, that means that for some reason this was a, you know, actor or this was some sort of like, setup from the FBI or something like that. Now again, I, I don't know if this person changed shoes, if they were wearing different shoes, but I did just what I called it out. That's an interesting one. I don't seem to find any evidence that is compelling enough to justify giving any merit to that. Um, there is an interesting one, which during Fox News, a woman takes over the microphone after the mass shooting in Nashville. Let's see if I can get this actual clip rolling for you guys, because this was a interesting one. So let's watch this clip right here. And you see this woman that you will hear talking that like kind of takes over this news clip. Um, let's see if we can get it going here. All right, here we go. Violence. Yeah. Ashley Beasley, uh, Ashby Beasley rather, who survived the Highland Park Parade shooting happened to be in Nashville when this shooting happened. How is this still happening? How are our children still dying? And why are we failing them? Beasley spoke on CNN last night saying she was about to get lunch with a friend when she heard about the shooting. My heart broke and I, this is where we're at. We have children living through multiple mass shooting incidences. What are we doing? Illinois Senator Dick Durbin is also talking about this. The senator says, this school shooting shows more work needs to be done on gun control. For the fact that this is a daily occurrence in America is unconscionable. I urge my colleagues to come together on a bipartisan basis. We can't say that we've solved this problem or even addressed it seriously. We need to pass more reform to keep guns out of dangerous hands and to keep our children safe. Still heard from Governor JB Pritzker on the tragedy. He tweeted something that was it The Girl that they talk about, Ashley Bees. B is the case that we're talking about. Uh, she was in Nashville on Monday when a shooter killed three adults in three students at an elementary school. The reason that this becomes interesting is because Reddit seems to believe that she's a crisis actor. Somebody says that she's an anti-gun lobbyist. She just happened to be vacationing near a mass shooting event and just happened to walk up as MSM was going live. This said, I am definitely getting a David Hog vibe from this chick for sure. She's going to be making the rounds, I bet. So don't be surprised if you see her on CNN very shortly. And then you go to her Twitter and she's obviously very liberal in the way that she is. She even like, it's just all click bait. Uh, there was a clip going around of these people who went to the, uh, the capitol building in, uh, I believe in, uh, Tennessee, and were rushing in and, and a police officer, they were like rushing the doors trying to push for gun control, but they're, they're actually like, looked like the, you know, January 6th videos that had the bad stuff in it, right? And this cop grabs this younger man around by his shoulder and, and they're like a choke hold. Why is he being put in a choke hold bitch. This is not a choke hold. , A choke hold does not involve grabbing somebody's shoulder. Now if you creep that up a little bit, you know, you can, you can make it happen. But what, what it abso so it just showed me her hand, right? She's just, she's just calling things and inciting, uh, inciting some sort of narrative so that she can look like somebody that people want to follow. Um, but, okay, so here, here's where it gets interesting. She works for the Democratic party. . Okay. Uh, this, the first comment on this, the top comment. Let's go ahead and let's change it from best to top comment, as you always should. On Reddit, the very top comment says yes. Again, she was at the shooting. Now she is here for this one thing. Anyone catch the Dupers Delight? The news reporter whose daughter teachers teaches at the school happen to be on break or something. Anyway, I try to find it. I don't know. That doesn't mean anything. Um, it says that she also gets to somehow sit in very small press conferences to rail on late term abortions because she needed basically, this person's either a clout chaser who runs after these events. That's like, uh, what are they called? Like ambulance chasers is either that or people seem to think that she's some sort of crisis actor because she works for the Democratic party. Um, she seems to have, uh, some sort of relation and, and how many of these types of events. And they posted all of these different times that she was standing behind Biden crying. Uh, she was standing next to Nancy Pelosi. Uh, and then somebody said, oh, it gets even better. She's seen on camera before this interview chatting and laughing with a lady named Seandell Brooks. Brooks's daughter was one of the victims of the 2018 Waffle House mass shooting in Nashville. And her son is apparently a student at the Covenant School and was on lockdown. They then go on to do another interview together. What are the chances that both of your children are involved in the mass shooting, and what are the chances that both of these women know each other and are both on the scene moments after the shooting? Interesting. So some people think, seem to think that there's some sort of crisis actor situation going on. Now, again, I don't know if I agree with that, but it seems awfully fishy that this lady has several pictures next to Biden, several pictures next to Pelosi she's been involved in, in these types of things before, and now all of a sudden she's like, bum rushing a camera directly on scene. Kind of weird, but he, here's here's the, the, the, the real discussion. The real discussion is, this is horrible, this is tragic. It should never happen. Is gun controlled? The answer, personally, I do not believe. So. When you have somebody who's mentally ill, which is almost a, a very large percentage of people who identify as trans, in this case, this person also happens to be autistic. How many drugs? When you, when you combined the inciting of political divide, the, the pointing out of a direct enemy, who's according to this own, this own, uh, activism corporation, hoping for your elimination. Like they're saying that they want to, they, they think that people want to murder them, and then you mix that with testosterone, which makes you more aggressive statistically. Then you mix that with antipsychotics, then you mis mix that with antidepressants. Then you mix that with all of the other things that this woman was probably taking, and you get a recipe for disaster, especially when the mainstream media, when the, the largest corporations in the country are sitting there telling you that everybody hates you and you're on the right and that, you know, we, we just need to keep pushing for, for, you know, all of this extremism, ideology. It's the classic, classic breakdown of what a cult seems like, right? Indoctrinating kids from a young age, uh, not allowing people to speak against them in any way, shape or form. Um, calling for, for the divisiveness through an identified enemy. Like there, there's, there's so many, so many things that look and smell like a cult here. And so you, you mix that with antipsychotics, you mix that by specifically targeting people with mental illness. Then you mix that with, with having a social media culture that emboldens these people to become part of echo chambers. Right now, I, I probably in, in speaking of echo chambers, I, I probably have a little, somewhat of an echo chamber myself, but I, I go out of my way to listen to long form conversations that make me disagree. I think that's important. I think you should absolutely go out of your way to listen to people that you disagree with. Otherwise, like, it's, it's almost like the, the thing of like, if you're talking to somebody and you don't listen, you're never gonna learn anything. You already know everything that you're gonna say, even if you hadn't said it yet. But to hear somebody out and hear their position only makes you better, right? And, and if nothing else makes you, emboldens yourself using the word a lot, but emboldens yourself to hold your position even, even more so, because you understand and you can steelman the case yourself. So I think it's important. I just listened to a podcast with Sam Harris and Lex Friedman, where they talked about for four hours. And I, I had to grit my teeth listening to everything that Sam. Sam Harris said about Donald Trump and the right, and the conspiracy theorists and the, the covid, this and the, you know, but I think it's important to feel those uncomfortable things, right? And I have respect for Sam Harris. I've, I've read some of his books. Uh, I've listened to his podcast. I've, I've had his app on my phone. Like, I have respect for the man. And because of that, I gave him four hours of my life to, to hear him say nothing that I could agree with. But I think that's important, right? So, so get yourself out of your own echo chamber, including if you're a part of these types of communities, and including if you're in the community of your own, if you're a conservative, if you're a libertarian, you should get uncomfortable listening to somebody who's on the opposite side. So, so, as far as these shootings go, again, I do not think that getting rid of access to weapons, if, if you, all of the gun reform conversations never address this, if you. Are willing to murder people. Do you think access to weapons illegally is going to stop you because you're already willing to murder somebody? That's the worst, most egregious act that you can take. That is very, very illegal. You're willing to die. Do you think finding a gun is gonna stop you because it's illegal? No. The only thing that this is, this is a Trojan horse, just like every other mass shooting. Now, I, if, if you could tell me that getting rid of guns from citizens, right? People are like, oh, why do we need AR fifteens? It's like, okay, why does the government need AR fifteens? Well, we didn't have the, the, the rules have changed. The amendments were made back in the, you know, 18 hundreds. 17 hundreds. Like things changed. They didn't have multiple rounds per weapon. It's like either did the government, so if the government has access to it, so should the citizens. That's what allows for checks and balances. There's checks and balances between the population and checks and balances against the government. And, and the reason is not because now, obviously, being able to hunt and those things are important. Every, every population ever in the history of every country, city, state, whatever it is, ever, has always had to fight its own government. Find me one example, find me a single example of, of, of a citizenship that hasn't had to fight its own government. You can't, every single population, every country, every city, state, since Roman times and before, since Egyptian times, since Sumerian times likely, like almost every single population. And I would just say every, there's, there's no population that hasn't had to fight its government. Now the only way to fight your government. Is not by carrying sticks and daggers when they have tanks. No. You need access to the similar weaponry as they have. And like I said before, you saw in Afghanistan, it takes guerrilla warfare and, and decent amount of weaponry to fight back against the American government. We lost the war in Afghanistan against a country, uh, against people who did not have any of the weaponry that we had besides rifles, and we lost, right? That's why they are holding 80 billion worth of military equipment of ours right now. So I don't think that's the answer. I think the answer is addressing mental health issues. Every p no person goes and shoots children and kills them without having. Fucking screw loose without, without being a sickly person with, with pharmaceutical drugs, a bad relationship with no very little friends. Reclusive probably on social media all day, probably getting, you know, and, and so you, you have to find the similarities. This, sure, you can point to guns, but you could also point to knives. You could also point to people being ran over with cars in North Carolina. You can point to all these things for mass murders. Another thing that we saw called out was like four different people have been mass shooters that identify as trans or non-binary in the last five years. Four of the large scale notorious mass shootings. Now, they'll point to statistics that says, well, there's been 2000 since, you know, 2018. Yeah, well get rid of the gang related ones. Get rid of the ones find, find the ones where they're actually people. Specifically going somewhere without any ties to that the, the people that they're shooting, right. Not gang related, which is how they classify mass shootings in order to make it seem far more than it is, but look at notorious mass shootings in the news that weren't gang related in the last five years. And a good portion of them, especially when you'd taken into consideration the small percentage of people that actually identify as trans in the country are, they're far more trans people are far more represented in mass shootings over the last five years than they statistically should. And the reason for that is our government and our, our companies, the, the capitalistic companies in our country have emboldened them, have radicalized them, have empowered them, and have pointed at an enemy. And that enemy is me and you. The enemy is this Catholic school. The enemy is your children because they represent the very people that the government is pointing their fingers at, telling trans people that we hate them, telling them that we wanna eradicate them according to these, these organizations, which is obviously not the case. So you get a bunch of mentally ill people that almost strictly people with mental illness. Otherwise, you're not identifying as trans by, by definition, by the DSM five. You are mentally ill if you think you were put in the wrong body. Right? That's a dissociation disorder. That's gender dysphoria. That's generally mixed with depression and anxiety and angst and. Paranoia. Like, there's so many things that come with that. And then those things come with pharmaceutical drugs. And then you mix that with, with hateful rhetoric and divisiveness and extremist ways of, of indoctrinating people into this ideology. And literally there's trans flags up all around. Like it's some country being trans is not a country. Like there's no reason we should have flags being flown. Like, like it's some, like subculture. It's nothing other than a cult that they're trying to indoctrinate people into. Just like Scientology, only in Scientology, you don't have to cut your boobs off to be a part of it or your children's. So I, I don't know what the answer is, but I, I do know that it's not guns. It's not guns. Now there's other countries that don't have this. But those other countries also don't have a pharmaceutical industrial complex, which is pedaling, antipsychotics, anti-depressants, amphetamines to every woman, man and child that ever gets put into a clinic with any sort of, uh, uh, angst about their lives. That should probably be fixed with behavioral, uh, psychology, not pharmaceutical drugs that make profit. So let's talk about this TikTok band real quick and then we'll wrap it up. All right. So TikTok, there was a bill to ban TikTok. Now this band was 50. This bill was 55 pages long, and I read through all of it, right? I've seen many people call it, it's the, it's called the restricting, the emergence of security threats, that Risk Information in Communications Technology Act, or the Restrict Act. R for restricting, E for emergence, S for security, T for threats, R for risk. I for information, C for Communications Technology Act. I wonder how many, how long that took to come up with a name . But this, this ban on TikTok bill should be called the Ban on Freedom bill. And let me tell you why. Alright. It's, it's, it's difficult to find any real reference detailing the, the legal analysis on this. Um, but the, the A C L U says, the bill known as the Restrict Act would significantly expand the executive branch power to control what apps and technologies Americans can access while limiting Americans' abilities to challenge those actions in court. It would also impose civil and criminal penalties for violating bans imposed pursuant to the legislation. Many people are sounding the alarm about this saying it is Patriot Act 2.0 for the internet. The Libertarian party has raised its concerns. And this goes on to say that this bill definitely isn't just about TikTok. TikTok isn't even mentioned in the bill at all. It does mention US citizens. A person as defined in the ACT itself appears 32 times in the restrict act in persons an additional 15 times. So this is not a ban on TikTok. This is a ban on American citizens from accessing information in places that the government doesn't want you to think. Think Russia, think, think the way that we think of North Korean television, right? That's what they want. They don't want you to be able to access things that, that give you narratives that they don't like. Now, the the, in this, it says that the term person means a natural person, including a citizen or national of the United States or any other foreign country. Okay? Now under section three it says, addressing information and communication technology, products and services that pose undue or unacceptable risk. Now the quote from this is, is authorized to and shall take action to identify, deter, disrupt, prevent, prohibit, investigate, and otherwise mitigate any risk rising from any covered transaction by any person or with respect to any property, subject to the ju jurisdiction of the United States that the secretary determines otherwise poses an undue or acceptable risk to the national security of the United States or the safety of the United States persons. Now it says, enforcements gives broad powers for federal agencies to initiate and conduct investigations. Gives federal agencies enforcement powers to enforce the provisions of the act and the language includes inspect, search, detain, seizes, or impose temporarily denial orders of any items, presumably electronic digital media and writings, and require, inspect and obtain books, records, and any other information from any person. The penalties for this is civil forfeiture of any real property. Intangible property money or proceeds used to commit violations or associated with violations. Now we'll talk about this, but there's a fine of $250,000 per violation. Criminal forfeiture finds up to a million dollars in imprisonment for up to imprisonment for up to 20 years. Now what this is, this bill is saying is basically that you can't have a modem, router, mobile network, or VPN are now banned if used to con contact any foreign adversaries such as China, Korea, Cuba, Iran, and then this is also subject to change, meaning that any country that they deem necessary in the future could also be deemed that way. Right? So if you want to go look up Russian news sources, right? If you want to go f, use TikTok. , right? You want to go watch some people dance. Let's say they ban TikTok, but you circumvent that with a vpn, right? You use a proxy, you use a vpn n you place yourself in Russia, which is very easy to do. They now want to be able to find you $250,000 or 20 years in jail, or even a million dollars if you knowingly used a method. So even if you unknowingly do it, it can be a $250,000 fine or 20 years in jail. Because the bill bill is vague. It means anything from a VPN to proxy or something else entirely. If this bill is passed, the government has liberty to appoint a secretary of communication to create a small group that can ban or deem anything inappropriate or a risk to security. Voters have no access to this voters. We don't get to vote on what they deem to be a risk to security, right? We don't have any, any say in that at all. They can go through your emails, your text messages, your direct messages on Instagram, anything that they want if they deem appropriate. The gi, the bill gives our government the power to monitor any activity used by the devices listed buff, including home cameras, meaning they can access your cameras and spy on you at any time if they deem necessary. Now, if you want to go check out this bill yourself, it's congress.gov/bill/one 18th dash congress slash senate dash bill slash 6 8 6. That is where you can find the information, but this is terrifying, right? You see all of the things that came out of the patriarch, including the January 6th people who, who are still for, for many of them, sitting in jail cells right now with no due process, right? This, this basically is a sweeping bill that allows the go. To, to invade your privacy, to, to throw you in jail. Specifically if you use any app or website that they don't like. This is not the, the word TikTok is not mentioned a single time in this bill yet they're trying to coin at that so that you get behind it. Now, as I said earlier, I'm not against banning TikTok now. Well, I guess I am. I, I don't think the government should be able to ban any access to anything. Honestly. I think that if there's a security concern, then there should be advisories. There can be things placed between, I, I, I don't even know how to put it, but I don't think that our government should be able to restrict the things that my eyeballs get to view who the, who are they to say that. But at the same time, I understand military concerns. I understand identity, privacy concerns. , but I honestly don't think that our government has our best interest in mind. I think that this was a, a cheap attempt at grasping for more power by using TikTok and the movement behind the privacy concerns surrounding it to invade your privacy, to lock you up if you are somebody that is dissenting against the government. That's what I think. But what do you think head over to, uh, the Instagram, the Austin Jadas or the Adams Archive? Head over to the sub Austin Adams dot.com and, uh, I will be announcing a new pretty awesome thing next week. So stay tuned. In the meantime, I hope you have a wonderful day. Um, my heart truly goes out to the families in Nashville. I lived in Nashville for a fairly long time. I love Nashville. Uh, it's a terrible, terrible tragedy. I, I have children. I, I, I cannot imagine being one of those parents and, and this absolutely should stop, and this is absolutely should be called what it is. This was a hate crime. A hate crime against people who, who went to a, a religious institution. And the mainstream media is failing to call it what it is to the point where the New York Post, I believe, let me go Jack here. I I had something up about this cbs, sorry, not New York Post. New York Post is what? Who posted about it? Cbs BS executives bar the word transgender from reports on Nashville shooter. They told, they said that they, they have banned staffers from using the word transgender women reporting on the Nashville shooter. The shooter's gender identity has not been confirmed by CBS News. It said, yeah, so stay safe. I love you guys. I hope you have a wonderful week, and again, my thoughts and prayers go out to the families and those people that are affected, even the, just the children at that school. It's a terrible tragedy. Um, yeah, not much else to say, but that, uh, but head over to the ck austin adams.ck.com. Uh, find me on social, the Austin J. Adams, and I hope you have a great week. Thank you.
Brendan Schaub joins Adam in the studio after just buying his mother-in-law a new house. The two discuss LA's new “Mansion Tax” and their desire to leave the city before hearing from a caller that wants to pitch Arkansas as an option. They take a deep dive into old Maxwell House commercials and Adam plays another round of March Madness Madness. Chris reports the news. They hear about swimmer Riley Gaines speaking out about ESPN's celebration of Lia Thomas and a University paying a $14M settlement to the family of a man who died from a heat stroke during a workout. Adam learns about the potential retirement of Justin Bieber which makes him wonder why people would ever retire young. Next, they learn about a Porsche exec filing for divorce over his wife's dementia and a potential U.S.-Mexico gun and fentanyl deal. PLUGS: See Brendan Schaub live: Pasadena, CA - The Ice House - Saturday Atlanta, GA - The Punchline Comedy Club - April 13th to 15th For more dates visit: ThicccBoy.com Listen to Brendan Schaub's podcasts ‘The Fighter and the Kid' and the ‘The Golden Hour' wherever you listen to podcasts And follow Brendan Schaub on Twitter & Instagram: @BrendanSchaub THANKS FOR SUPPORTING TODAY'S SPONSORS: OreillyAuto.com SimpliSafe.com/ADAM Babbel.com/ADAM
We just expereinced yet another glorious Sunday! Thanks be to God! Prophetic words, missional prayers, time to lift up our friends at Maxwell House ... just so much good! Thank you for being all in on this experiment in deeper worship. Friends, the Lord is doing a new thing. Can you sense it? This Sunday, we close our series on The Art of Worship with a message on how to carry all we've learned into our homes and families. We will take time to pray for families and we'll share in communion. And yes, I anticipate yet another powerful move of God, and look forward to joining you in watching Him work. P.S. - The Asbury Revival continues! This is day six of continuous prayer and worship on the campus of Asbury University. Several of our staff team are traveling to Wilmore this week to soak in the goodness and power of God. Keep praying that this move of the Spirit will catch fire across the nation! More, Lord!
In this episode of The Real Estate Excellence Podcast, host Tracy Hayes welcomes Kurt Stein, the owner, and founder of House Scan Inspections. Kurt graduated from Penn State with an engineering degree and managed a factory at Maxwell House for several years before branching out into real estate investments. He eventually founded House Scan Inspections. Today, he is being welcomed as a guest on The Real Estate Excellence Podcast to discuss his experience managing people, running an operation, and building a successful business. As an expert in home inspections and owner of a successful professional home inspection company, Kurt knows exactly what to look for when you want make make a thorough assessment of the state of a property, and he understands the balance between taking care of the details and focusing on the money. And, as a successful real estate business owner, he knows the ins and outs of marketing, giving agents advice on how to use cross-platform marketing. Whether you're a real estate agent looking to learn how to boost your ROI and increase the satisfaction of your clients, or you're lookin to buy your next property, this episode will give you some valuable insights on what to look for when inspecting and negotiating a house for the best possible deal. Tune in to gain valuable insight from a seasoned professional with years of experience in home inspections! [00:00 - 06:56] Kurt Stein, Owner of House Scan Inspections, Shares His Journey to Real Estate Excellence Kurt Stein is the owner and founder of House Scan Inspections. He has grown to be a force in home inspections in Northeast Florida. He graduated from Penn State with an engineering degree. He was voted most artistic of his senior high school class. Kurt grew up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania He grew to manage a 70-80 employee shift at Maxwell House Afterwards, he was poached by a head hunter to manage another facility in Jacksonville Then, he invested Invested in real estate and entered the real estate business. [06:57 - 13:35] Taking Advantage of Opportunities and Zoning Changes to Create Wealth House hacking is a popular trend in real estate, which consists of buying a house and using it to generate an income to cover its own mortgage. The demand for housing is high and there is a need for duplexes and zoning changes to allow for mother-in-law suites. Kurt started a home inspection business after hearing complaints from his family. He focused on hiring people with high character and good communication skills. Home inspections require knowledge of houses, customer service, and presentation of findings. Kurt works with high-producing teams to get more at-bats. [13:35 - 20:15] Digging Into the Hiring Process: Finding the Right Person for Home Inspections Hiring people requires trial and error. Questions need to be asked to find the right person. People hired don't come from the home inspection world. Look for character and communication skills, verbal and written. Backgrounds of team members are wildly different. You need a very organized person to be able to run a team. Kurt hired a person called Jillian, who is perfect for the job. [20:15 - 26:57] Navigating Home Inspections and Avoiding Common Mistakes Jillian was brought on to turn a group of 3 inspectors into a company. However, they shy away from construction backgrounds, as they can be alarmist and nitpicky. Training process is steps 1-100 with handholding for up to 6 months. 200 inspections are usually enough to see 99% of what you'll see in houses. There are training facilities like House of Horrors in Miami and Denver. Complaints come when expectations are too high or too low. Home inspectors have to check one item per room at the bare minimum. [26:57 - 33:23] Discovering Major Safety Issues and How to Handle Them Focus primarily on major safety issues rather than spending too much time on minor ones. Separate your report into minor, moderate, and major items. Major safety risks include floor water damage and the risk of falling through the floor. Minor safety risks include missing cover plates from walls. Use the technology available to fix foundation issues. [33:23 - 40:18] Home Inspection: Common Sense, Function, Safety, and Pool Tips It takes money and time to make a decision on the condition of a house. Home inspections can be highly subjective, and it's good to keep that in mind. Inspectors should present information in a matter-of-fact way without sugarcoating or alarming clients. The home inspection industry is changing with fresh eyes focusing on the consumer and real estate agent. Home inspectors should be able to explain what they do in 30 seconds or less. Home inspections don't require citing code, but common sense should be used. [40:19 - 46:58] Team Training, Marketing, and Other Specific Details of House Inspection Pool inspections should be outsourced to a pool-specific inspector. Leak detection is included with pool inspection for $289. Small details, such as a door latch, can be life-changing. Marketing is done through Instagram, engaging with realtors, and sharing findings. Realtor relationships are maintained by keeping inspectors close to home and training them to be consistent. Quality control of inspection reports is done by reading each one. [46:59 - 53:40] Horror Stories of New Home Construction Quality control person reads every report to ensure accuracy. Pre-listing inspections can be beneficial for older homes or those needing to sell quickly. Home inspections are the best money spent during a real estate transaction. Horror stories of new construction mistakes, such as incorrect piping and toilet distances. 35 miles per hour winds can blow shingles off if not properly installed. [53:40 - 01:00:20] Avoid Costly Home Repairs with Comprehensive Home Inspection and Insurance Reports Mistakes in construction are common, even in brand-new homes. Home inspection services should include wind mitigation and four-point inspections. Infrared scans can detect moisture behind walls and other anomalies. An example of a costly mistake was a $3 million house with water leaking in for the first 3-4 years due to improper window flashing. Home inspections can help avoid costly mistakes. [01:00:20 - 01:06:46] Uncovering the Red Flags: How to Spot Significant Issues During a Home Inspection The importance of getting a home inspection done before purchasing or selling a home. Difference between a basic home inspection and one that includes wind mitigation, four-point inspection, and infrared scan. How to stay up to date with industry regulations and standards. Red flags or warning signs that a home may have significant issues during an inspection. Testing every door and window for proper alignment. [01:06:46 - 01:13:35] Avoiding Common Misconceptions of Home Inspections Codes are not part of home inspections. Things behind walls or underneath the ground are not included in a home inspection. Home inspectors should provide honesty and integrity when giving information to buyers. There are always things wrong with every house, so setting expectations is important. Agents should look at Google reviews when choosing a home inspector. Stop asking about the interest rate and cost of the home inspection. [01:13:35 - 01:17:33] Join the Real Estate Excellence Community and Take Your Skills to the Next Level! Kurt's team is one of the best in the industry. Real estate agents should stay out of interest rate talk and focus on service. Kurt appreciates his team for their hard work and dedication. Hire people who have internal skills, not necessarily experience. Post content across multiple platforms to reach a wider audience. Quotes: "if you aren't making mistakes, you aren't doing enough of what you're doing." -Kurt Stein “Communication is the key in this business, and the ability to communicate often separates those who succeed from those who don't.” -Kurt Stein "We can do a lot of things such as podcasts and social media but, ultimately, the people who are out there, being on the field and putting in the work, are the ones who are truly selling the next house.” -Kurt Stein "Expectations are crazy high in our industry. So, if you don't put every single thing in that inspection, the buyer's gonna call you out. We have to be incredibly thorough and always give it our all, no matter how big or small the deal is" -Kurt Stein "It's all about your people. You want to make sure that you're hiring the right people who have your ideology, your culture, and your focus. You make sure to treat them right so that they're driven, and you'll have a great product.” -Kurt Stein Learn more from Kurt's business and make contact with him to do business and get the best possible deal on your next property purchase: https://housescanfl.com/ https://www.instagram.com/housescanfl https://www.facebook.com/HouseScanFL/ If you want to build your business and become more discoverable online, Streamlined Media has you covered. Check out how they can help you build an evergreen revenue generator all powered by content creation! SUBSCRIBE & LEAVE A 5-STAR REVIEW as we discuss real estate excellence with the best of the best.
Eddie Cantor bought George a $110 smoking jacket for Christmas. Why would he be so generous, and what could possibly be more enticing that would make Gracie exchange the gift?To download, right-click here and then click SaveJoin the Journey Into Patreon to get extra episodes and personal addresses, plus other extras and rewards.George Burns and Gracie Allen started out in radio as guest stars in other radio shows, such as The Guy Lombardi Show, but got their own spot on CBS with The Adventures of Gracie beginning September 19, 1934. The title of their top-rated show changed to The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show on September 1936. In 1941, they moved from comedy patter into a successful sitcom format, continuing with shows on NBC and CBS until May 17, 1950. As in the early days of radio, the sponsor's name became the show title, such as Maxwell House Coffee Time (1945–49).Theme music: Liberator by Man In SpaceTo comment on this or any episode:Leave us a voicemail at 77-JINTO-107 (775-4686-107)Send comments and/or recordings to journeyintopodcat@gmail.comTweet us us TwitterPost a comment on Facebook here
NBC Maxwell House Coffee Time 1940-11-21 Thanksgiving
AMBS, Dave, Will, & Sal start with Deion Sanders and his viral locker room rant- we need more coaches holding kids accountable. The Yankees depleted bullpen, the Mets rotation looks mortal ... and the Braves culture and training seem to have them peaking at the right time. Teddy BallGame's war time training and Rick Pederson's thoughts on the basic role of the pitcher. AMBS busts out the percolator (literally) as he goes old school with his Fabreware and Maxwell House this morning. The guys concern over consistency of the playoff teams leaves them scratching their heads over who will emerge.
George Burns and Gracie Allen was one of the funniest duos in the history of American comedy. Both came from vaudeville, where they performed from childhood, honing their skills. When they met and decided to work together, they created an act that is unforgettable. While their earlier shows continued their standup vaudeville act, they gradually transformed their format to create one of the earliest situation comedies.
Les actualités du jour, mardi 28 juin 2022 En prenant votre café, c'est ici: https://bit.ly/3bBdzVe Les grands titres: Actualités: - Prof d'université suspendu - Transparence sur le prix du lait - L'heure parlante - Une pub dans le WSJ de youtube - Vol de montre à l'arrachée Au Québec: - Le gala des Oliviers - Plus d'argent pour la filière batteries Êtes-vous tombé sur la tête? - Maxwell House et le café déjà préparé Finance: - Les Canadiens et leur compte de banque - La GreenFlation - L'heure est à la productivité Insolite: - Courir un marathon sur son balcon - La maladie de TMAU - Les abeilles font aller leurs ailes - Qu'est ce que le Koala a en commun avec nous? [00:00] Intro [02:46] Chanson du jour [04:10] Actualités [12:30] Au Québec [15:30] Êtes-vous tombé sur la tête [17:45] Finance [22:50] Insolite [26:49] Conclusion Est-ce que je vous ai déjà dit que l'érable, c'était plus qu'une canne? www.francoislambert.one
Introductory audio identifies the 3 skits edited back-to-back on this track from June 4, 11, and July 2, 1942. Fanny Brice (Baby Snooks) and Hanley Stafford (Lancelot Higgins or "Daddy") appeared almost every week on the Maxwell House Coffee Time program with a variety of announcers over the years. John Conte is the announcer on these shows. In 1944 Fanny Brice got her own show... "The Baby Snooks Show" which she starred in until her untimely death by a stroke at the age of 59 in 1951. Thankfully many of her shows were preserved. This and other tracks featuring Baby Snooks are now in the new playlist by the name of .... "Baby Snooks"
#137.With Elie Rosenfeld (CEO of Joseph Jacobs Advertising) discussing the Maxwell House HaggadahWe discussed the origins and how it started, old editions and translation, updated translation, covers, does the guy on back cover have 6 fingers, and more To purchase a copy of the Haggadah: MAxwellhousehaggadah.com or JosephJacobsAdvertising.com
Doug Weekes has been in the consumer products industry for 25 years. He spent most of his early career working for Nabisco and Kraft Foods and Henkel, a German consumer products company. Doug has managed brands ranging from LifeSavers, Starbucks, Maxwell House, Capri Sun, Dial, Right Guard, and Core Water. Doug co-founded Kadenwood in 2019 to create and bring to market exceptionally high-quality brands using CBD as a key ingredient. Kadenwood was formed in 2019 to create high-quality consumer brands using CBD (cannabidiol) as a key ingredient. Brands today include Level Select, Social CBD, Healist, Purity Organic, and Purity Pet. Kadenwood sells its brands at many of the largest retailers across the US as well as via its own website for direct to consumer sales Level Select CBD Offer: 30% off Level Select CBD Shop: levelselectcbd.com Code: SAVE30 ➡️Have you seen my latest video:
Dick Powell's company, Four Star Television, produced the television version of Richard Diamond, Private Detective, which premiered in the summer of 1957 on CBS. It returned to CBS in January 1958 for the second season and in February 1959 for the third season, again on CBS. In the fall of 1959, the fourth and final season aired on NBC. David Janssen, before The Fugitive, starred as Diamond, a former officer of the New York Police Department and a hard-boiled private detective in the film noir tradition. Don Taylor played the title role in a 1956 television pilot, broadcast as an episode of the anthology series Chevron Hall of Stars. The first two television seasons followed radio's characterization the most closely (several episodes were adapted from the radio series). Diamond, known for his charm and wisecracks as much as his virility, was still based in New York, though Janssen never sat at a piano and sang, as Powell had typically ended most of the radio episodes. In the noirish opening sequence, clad in hat, suit, and tie, he walks down a dimly lit street toward the camera and lights up a cigarette, the light revealing his face. After the first season when the sponsor was Maxwell House, the show was sponsored by Kent cigarettes, and Frank DeVol's playfully mysterious theme was heard underneath an announcer hawking either "Maxwell House – Good to the Last Drop" or “Kent with the Micronite filter.” In syndicated rebroadcasts of the series, the revised title, Call Mr. D., flashes on the screen, and DeVol's music is replaced by Pete Rugolo's far more recognizable theme—although that did not appear until Season 3. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/dwight-allen/message
Dick Powell's company, Four Star Television, produced the television version of Richard Diamond, Private Detective, which premiered in the summer of 1957 on CBS. It returned to CBS in January 1958 for the second season and in February 1959 for the third season, again on CBS. In the fall of 1959, the fourth and final season aired on NBC. David Janssen, before The Fugitive, starred as Diamond, a former officer of the New York Police Department and a hard-boiled private detective in the film noir tradition. Don Taylor played the title role in a 1956 television pilot, broadcast as an episode of the anthology series Chevron Hall of Stars. The first two television seasons followed radio's characterization the most closely (several episodes were adapted from the radio series). Diamond, known for his charm and wisecracks as much as his virility, was still based in New York, though Janssen never sat at a piano and sang, as Powell had typically ended most of the radio episodes. In the noirish opening sequence, clad in hat, suit, and tie, he walks down a dimly lit street toward the camera and lights up a cigarette, the light revealing his face. After the first season when the sponsor was Maxwell House, the show was sponsored by Kent cigarettes, and Frank DeVol's playfully mysterious theme was heard underneath an announcer hawking either "Maxwell House – Good to the Last Drop" or “Kent with the Micronite filter.” In syndicated rebroadcasts of the series, the revised title, Call Mr. D., flashes on the screen, and DeVol's music is replaced by Pete Rugolo's far more recognizable theme—although that did not appear until Season 3.
As a kid... I still remember the aroma of dark roasted coffee every morning. I'd run downstairs and pour a bowl of cereal while my dad was on his second (or fourth?) cup. He was a Maxwell House guy. And sometimes a Folger's fan too. I used to ... (Read more).
G'morning fellow weirdos! And we mean that in the kindest way! This week we kick it with the eternal ray of caffeinated sunshine, Vegan Level 9000 Warlock, Master of Social Work, Licensed Independent Clinical Social Worker and co-host of the MNtersectional Podcast, Norine! We discuss coffee and Darien's presumed bad taste in coffee, our youth and the times our parents and our family just didn't get us. The friction, the times when our expression landed on deaf ears, the pieces we let go of, and the few pieces we're still working on. ...you also get to hear Norine mess with Darien, to Sam's delight. Find and listen to Norine on the MNtersectional Podcast here: Episodes on Spotify // Instagram: @mntersectional This episode of the Food For Worms Podcast is sponsored by Better Help. #Sponsored Use our referral link and get 10% off your first month of Better Help at: https://betterhelp.com/foodforworms FFW GRAB BAG (Topic Submissions & Questions): https://bit.ly/FFWGRABBAG Recorded and Mixed by Sam Sarver. Executive Producers are Darien Washington and Sam Sarver. Theme Music is “Muffins” by Dresden, The Flamingo Find up on Apple, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher or wherever you get your podcasts. Social Media: @foodforwormspodcast - IG @foodforwormspod - Twitter @foodforwormspodcast - Facebook You'll find us on most socials at: @legendarien & @noshirt_noshoes_ Inquiries: foodforwormspodcast@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/food-for-worms-podcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/food-for-worms-podcast/support
How is the food industry leveraging micro-influencers? Food Institute CEO Brian Choi speaks with Robyn Carter of Jump Rope Innovation and Brooke Stewart of Power Moms Media about how food companies are leveraging these everyday people with strong social media followings in niche categories to enhance and promote their brands. The conversation covers the growing importance of influencer marketing, how celebrities are being integrated into brands, the differences between inauthentic and authentic marketing, and the emergence of the micro-influencer in the advertising space. Hosted By: Brian Choi More About Robyn Carter Carter is the founder and CEO of Jump Rope Innovation, a trends and innovation consultancy that brings consumer and category trends together in service of smart innovation. Carter is also co-founder of IT! Factor, a tool that brings social media Influencers together with brands for future-forward research and idea development. Jump Rope serves some of the world's top CPG companies— including Unilever, Mondelez, and Mars Wrigley—as well as clients in other industries such as nutritional supplements and foodservice. Carter founded Jump Rope Innovation in 2005, shortly after her son was born, so she is well versed in some of the parent-while-you-work challenges that many are facing today. Before founding Jump Rope Innovation, Carter's previous life was spent in advertising, working in both Account Management and New Business, helping to create and implement communications strategies for some truly iconic brands such as Capri Sun, Red Stripe, and Maxwell House. She graduated from Cornell University with a BS in Industrial & Labor Relations. For more information, please visit: http://www.jumpropeinnovation.com/ More About Brooke Stewart Brooke Stewart is a marketing and advertising executive with over 20 years of experience working with top consumer package goods, fashion and retail brands. From snack foods to fashion, from NASCAR to hip hop, Brooke helped find creative ways to make brands shine. Early on, Brooke carved out a niche for herself and the brands she represented by clearly identifying with the targeted consumer. As a teen expert, she created and led a series of teen panels that identified emerging trends and interpreted them into actionable opportunities for her clients. She scouted key event partnerships and managed the relationships with ESPN X Games, NASCAR, and World Championship Wrestling to name a few. These sponsorship programs helped her clients stand out in the competitive teen marketplace. Next, Brooke left the agency world to tackle the client-side at Lugz Shoes. There she managed all aspects of the urban fashion brand's marketing efforts. Marketing to a young, fashionable, urban male meant turning on a dime when it came to implementing programs and advertising initiatives. This skill certainly came in handy in Brooke's next job as wife and mom to two boys. Seeing the opportunity to bring influential moms together with well-respected brands, Brooke founded Power Moms Media in 2009. Today, Brooke has cultivated a network of influencers that she works with to customize content creation for brands large and small resulting in increased brand awareness and customer loyalty. For more information, please visit: http://www.powermomsmedia.com/about.html
Robyn Carter, founder and CEO of Jump Rope Innovation, returned to the Food Institute Podcast to discuss the popularity of plant-based products during Veganuary. Carter shares insights on why a customer would purchase a plant-based product, ranging from health-focused eaters to social media influencers to environmentally-conscious consumers. Additionally, Carter shares what types of plant-based products will increase in popularity during 2021, what new entries will reach consumer shelves and plates, and what plant-based products (if any) may lose some market share in the new year. Hosted By: Chris Campbell Recorded: Jan. 15, 2020 More About Robyn Carter: Carter is the founder and CEO of Jump Rope Innovation, a trends and innovation consultancy that brings consumer and category trends together in service of smart innovation. Carter is also co-founder of IT! Factor, a tool that brings social media Influencers together with brands for future-forward research and idea development. Jump Rope serves some of the world's top CPG companies— including Unilever, Mondelez, and Mars Wrigley—as well as clients in other industries such as nutritional supplements and foodservice. Carter founded Jump Rope Innovation in 2005, shortly after her son was born, so she is well versed in some of the parent-while-you-work challenges that many are facing today. Before founding Jump Rope Innovation, Carter's previous life was spent in advertising, working in both Account Management and New Business, helping to create and implement communications strategies for some truly iconic brands such as Capri Sun, Red Stripe, and Maxwell House. She graduated from Cornell University with a BS in Industrial & Labor Relations. When she's not working (and sometimes when she is, as her husband joined her at Jump Rope as Managing Partner in 2018), Carter enjoys spending time with her family, which includes her husband John, five kids, and a dog who thinks he's human. She loves travel, cooking and fitness, and in spite of her admittedly questionable athletic ability, she's completed three half-marathons with her daughter, Catherine (all three in her hometown, Brooklyn, NY). To learn more about Jump Rope Innovation, please visit: http://www.jumpropeinnovation.com Connect with Robyn on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robyn-carter-72b4391/
The Adventures of Topper is a radio situation comedy in the United States. It was broadcast on NBC June 7, 1945 - September 13, 1945, as a summer replacement for Dinah Shore's program. Format The 30-minute program was based on characters created by novelist Thorne Smith. Cosmo Topper, a businessman, bought the house that had been inhabited by George and Marian Kerby before they died. He had no idea that the Kerbys' ghosts haunted the house. Confusion arose because only Topper could see the ghosts, leading his wife to wonder why he spoke to people who apparently were not there. David C. Tucker, in his book, The Women Who Made Television Funny: Ten Stars of 1950s Sitcoms, cited the program's ghost-based premise as one reason for its lack of success: "As noted by Variety's reviewer, however, a comedy centered on the antics of appearing and disappearing ghosts 'reads good on paper and was even enhanced in the film treatment,' but played less well on radio, resulting in a show he found 'singularly unfunny.'" The program was sponsored by Post Toasties cereal and Maxwell House coffee. Personnel Characters in the program and the actors who played them are shown in the table below. Character and Actor: Cosmo Topper: Roland Young Malvena Topper or Henrietta Topper; Hope Emerson George Kerby: Paul Mann / Tony Barrett Marian Kerby or Marion Kerby: Frances Chaney Heliatrope: Bob Corley Mr. Borris: Ed Latimer
Robyn Carter, founder and CEO of Jump Rope Innovation (JPI), discusses how retail and CPG companies can start preparing for a pandemic fall. Carter shares her insight into trends retailers and CPG companies could leverage to better reach a set of consumers looking for nostalgia in challenging times. She addresses the upcoming holiday season and the increased focus on health and wellness among consumers. In preparing for a pandemic fall, Carter also looks at the renewed importance on family dinners and how both CPG and retailers can create shared experiences for consumers to enjoy at a time when those experiences were previously in short supply. Hosted By: Chris Campbell Recorded: Sept. 1, 2020 Join the Food Institute Today! More About Robyn Carter: Carter is the founder and CEO of Jump Rope Innovation, a trends and innovation consultancy that brings consumer and category trends together in service of smart innovation. Carter is also co-founder of IT! Factor, a tool that brings social media Influencers together with brands for future-forward research and idea development. Jump Rope serves some of the world's top CPG companies— including Unilever, Mondelez, and Mars Wrigley—as well as clients in other industries such as nutritional supplements and foodservice. Carter founded Jump Rope Innovation in 2005, shortly after her son was born, so she is well versed in some of the parent-while-you-work challenges that many are facing today. Before founding Jump Rope Innovation, Carter's previous life was spent in advertising, working in both Account Management and New Business, helping to create and implement communications strategies for some truly iconic brands such as Capri Sun, Red Stripe, and Maxwell House. She graduated from Cornell University with a BS in Industrial & Labor Relations. When she's not working (and sometimes when she is, as her husband joined her at Jump Rope as Managing Partner in 2018), Carter enjoys spending time with her family, which includes her husband John, five kids, and a dog who thinks he's human. She loves travel, cooking and fitness, and in spite of her admittedly questionable athletic ability, she's completed three half-marathons with her daughter, Catherine (all three in her hometown, Brooklyn, NY). To learn more about Jump Rope Innovation, please visit: http://www.jumpropeinnovation.com Connect with Robyn on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robyn-carter-72b4391/
Key Takeaways And Actionable Insights In episode 60, we are joined by Rory Sutherland, Vice Chairman of Ogilvy, one of the world's largest advertising and marketing agencies, one with a long tradition of customer insights. His latest book is titled Alchemy, which explores how a deep understanding of subjective value can lead to outstandingly effective creative marketing. But he doesn't use the term subjective value — instead, he calls it psycho-logic. One of the key planks in Rory's argument in favor of psycho-logic is that it deliberately follows the path of Austrian economics, and rejects the mainstream economists' unrealistic assumptions about the quantified logic and cold, rational calculation of homo economicus. Please listen to the podcast, in which Rory as a raconteur delivers great fun and entertainment as well as helping entrepreneurs to think more incisively about customer motivations. There is a “black box” in the human mind between objective reality and behavioral choices. The “black box” is subjective value. According to Rory, only Austrian economists understand that when entrepreneurs change the way a product or service is described or change the form of attention, they are able to synthesize new value by making customers think differently about any offering. He offers many examples. One is the way we consume technology. Mainstream economists view technology through the reductionist lens of efficiency: it replaces human agency and reduces work. Austrians — and advertising agencies — view technology through the humanistic lens of augmentation: it makes us better, gives us alternatives and improves our satisfaction. Changing the form of attention changes perceived value. Another, even more human, example is about our perception of waiting. If waiting (e.g. in a hospital waiting room) is viewed as delay, it is frustrating. If it is viewed as special treatment (e.g., “We want to assign you exactly the right specialist, so please step into our special waiting room until the doctor is available”) it may be valued as privileged attention. The shallow kind of quantified logical explanation mainstream economics gives to customer choices completely freezes out the question of subjective perception and emotion. Austrian economics offers entrepreneurs a significant advantage in a better way to think about the mind of the customer — the “black box”. Psycho-logic elevates the subjective value of meaning over objective reality. One of Rory's insights is that “How we behave and how we feel is much more a product of meaning than it is of objective circumstance. Our behavior is mostly driven by emotions, and our emotions are mostly driven by meaning rather than objective information.” One of the consequences is the endorsement of the Austrian method: to observe behavior and work backwards to deduce the emotions and the subjective meaning and individually-specific contextual perceptions that drive behavior. You can't rely on market research because a large part of the reason customers might give for their behavior is post-rationalization. Rory says that customers change their behaviors for emotional reasons, and rationalize them with logic later. The Austrian method of individual analysis is gloriously scalable for entrepreneurs as a result of its fractal characteristics. The behavioral science of searching for individual motivations in the emotions of subjective value might appear to be un-scalable. But the opposite is true, says Rory. “It's gloriously scalable. It's kind of fractal.” In this context, fractal refers to the existence of similar patterns recurring at smaller scales that can be infinitely self-similar and iterative in processes and over time. Fractal describes what otherwise appear to be partly random or chaotic phenomena — like the spontaneous order that Austrians discern in economic systems. For entrepreneurs, says Rory, it is possible to learn lessons from the psycho-logical analysis of one customer that can be applied to many more. You can learn something in one business sector and apply it to another, or learn something in a huge organization and apply it to something tiny. Context is important to customer choice because perception tends to be comparative versus absolute. Rory is a student of evolutionary psychology. He quotes Don Hoffman in The Case Against Reality: Why Evolution Hid The Truth From Our Eyes: Evolution doesn't care about accuracy, it cares about fitness. We've evolved to develop perceptual mechanisms that are not necessarily designed to present objective reality to us, but to help us survive. The great mistake mainstream economists make is to think humans are trying to optimize the world as though we are engineers or physicists — trying to map objective reality onto behavior — without understanding the “black box” that comes between perception and behavior. Customer perception price is a relevant example of comparative logic and context at work. Is Nespresso expensive coffee? Yes, if it is compared to Maxwell House or Folgers. No, if compared to visiting a Starbucks store. The frame of reference for comparison changes the behavioral outcome. There is no objective standard. The most important comparison customers make is with their own expectations. Rory cites the effect that Yelp restaurant reviews can have on the expectations of prospective diners who read them. If they choose to go to the restaurant, their expectations are shaped in such a way that the actual experience is evaluated against that expectation, not in any absolute way. Depending on a customer's frame of comparison and their expectation, the same experience can be perceived as brilliant or terrible. Entrepreneurs can manage customer's expectations and frame their comparisons. That's often the role of advertising and marketing. These provide the context in which customers can appreciate and enjoy their experience. Until both the good and its communication are optimized, there is no value. When entrepreneurs shape the customer's expectations through advertising, marketing and branding, they are not just adding value for the customer, they are multiplying it. According to Rory, “Marketing doesn't add value, but multiplies it. (And bad marketing, by the way, destroys it.)” The good — the product or service offered by the entrepreneur — and the perception of it are interdependent and we should use multiplicative dynamics not additive dynamics. If you have a product but you can't work out a way to sell it, you have an invention, not an innovation. Marketing takes invention to innovation, or, as Peter Drucker said, the only two things that create value are marketing and innovation. Rory describes it this way: “Entrepreneurs can discern what people want and find a really clever way to make it, or discover what they can make and find a really clever way to make people want it.” Either or both are fine as paths to profit. Brands are an excellent technique for expectations management. They represent an exercise in what Austrians call uncertainty and Rory calls outcome variance. Brand preferences are smart behavior on the customer's part because of the trust and reliability that they perceive in their favorite brands. Choosing an alternative might risk missed expectations. In the multiplicative dynamics of marketing, entrepreneurs must aim high. “It's perfectly possible that what is constraining the United States' economic growth is actually the level of the speed at which consumers' tastes can change rather than the speed at which producers can manufacture exciting things for them to buy.' It's rational for customers to follow habit, to do what others do, in order to avoid outcome variability — to maintain their expectations. There is a cost to early adoption of new innovations. Therefore, entrepreneurs seeking new customers must pay attention to multiplicative dynamics to elevate customers' value expectations to a sufficiently high level that they will change their behavior. As Curt Carlson said, this requires an innovation to offer a 2X to 10X better experience. Because of multiplication of perceived values, Rory advises that it is often effective to focus marketing on one aspect, or one feature, of an offering so that it becomes the key multiplier. It might be the camera on an otherwise industry-average smartphone, or the Uber feature that manages the expectation of when your ride will arrive. Experimentation and iteration are important tools in the entrepreneur's effort to unlock psycho-logic. Counter-intuitiveness is crucial. Because value is subjective and entirely contained in the customer's mind, it's hard to unlock. That's why entrepreneurs are the drivers of economic growth. Entrepreneurs, says Rory, do not have to appear logical to everyone else. Entrepreneurs' freedom to make counterintuitive bets means that, when they succeed, they're disproportionately successful, because they represent a biased correction mechanism. Rory cites James Dyson as a counter-intuitive entrepreneur: “Who needs a $7000 vacuum cleaner?” Experimentation and iteration are the right technique to get to the successful outcome. And there is nothing more joyful than when a final iteration succeeds! The language of magic and alchemy is appropriate to describe the entrepreneurial process, subjective value, and the management of expectations and perception. Mises recognized it (see Human Action, Chapter XVI, "Prices," Section 5). Rory Sutherland captures it in his book, Alchemy: The Dark Art And Curious Science Of Creating Magic In Brands, Business and Life. Additional Resource "Rory Sutherland's Black Box" (PDF): Mises.org/E4E_60_PDF
Join the coffee klatch of Jonathan and David, this quiet weekend, reviewing the coffee commercials of the past! Coffee Achievers, Maxwell House, Folgers, and finally, International Coffees. Grab a cup and spike it! Follow us: @aspecialpresentationpod (@asppodcast on twitter) @thedavidcrabb @jonathanbwelch
Serial entrepreneur Randy Scott founded Novamin, a toothpaste using the bio-glass technology invented by Larry Hench (featured on “Glass that Grows,” 9/25/18). Bio-glass is a ceramic that essentially fuses with bone and cartilage in your body. Randy says the key to starting a biotech company is “to fall out of love with the science” and instead understand the economic model that makes the invention relevant. His father, “a prototypical entrepreneur,” sometimes did well and sometimes did not, but his mother successfully ran a small business. Probably as a result, Randy as a child was always “inventing fictional businesses in my head.” TRANSCRIPT: Intro: 0:20 Inventors and their inventions. Welcome to Radio Cade, the podcast from the Cade Museum for Creativity and Invention in Gainesville, Florida. The museum is named after James Robert Cade who invented Gatorade in 1965. My name is Richard Miles. We’ll introduce you to inventors and the things that motivate them. We’ll learn about their personal stories, how their inventions work, and how their ideas get from the laboratory to the marketplace. Richard Miles: 0:39 Glass that Grows part two. Welcome to another episode of Radio Cade in which for my guest today is Randy Scott, who’s the founder and CEO of a company called Novamin and also partner at Health Quest Capital. Welcome, Randy. Randy Scott: 0:53 Thanks, Richard. Richard Miles: 0:54 So listeners who have been with us for awhile will remember that we did a show with David Greenspan called Glass that Grows. It was the technology invented or discovered by Larry Hench, who was a material science researcher at the university forward back in the sixties and seventies. And there’ve been various applications of that. So David Greenspan talked about one application and Randy you are involved with another one. So before we get into anything else for maybe our listeners who didn’t catch the David Greenspan episode, if we could go back over, what was it that Larry Hench discovered kind of in real simple terms and then maybe just a little bit about why is there more than one way to use this core technology? Randy Scott: 1:39 Yeah, sure. So the material that Larry Hench invented, was called bioactive glass or just bioglass for short. And the, the thing that makes us different than regular glass is we think of regular glasses, something that is sort of permanent and nonreactive and what have you, bioactive class is different in that it reacts in the presence of anything that’s aqueous, including body fluids. And it doesn’t stay permanent like window glass or you know, something you’d drink a beverage out of or whatever. It actually reacts and it releases calcium and phosphorus and some other things into the environment around it. And then it actually attracts those things back to itself. And it forms a crystal structure that is essentially the same as what bones and teeth are made out of and the body. And so you could imagine if this process takes place inside the body, then the resulting crystals that form to the body just looks like it’s part of the body. And that’s what made bioglass unique was that once it got put in the body and it went through this reaction, which happens very quickly then the body did not distinguish between its own tissue and this new material. So it became the first material that was not just invisible but was actually recognized by the body as this is part of myself. Richard Miles: 3:11 Interesting. So when, when Larry Hench developed this, did he right away know that there was gonna be multiple ways in which this could be used or you know, at what point did Larry or other people say, hey, this can be used for a lot of different things. Cause there are several different applications where, when did that Aha moment come in terms of application of the technology? Randy Scott: 3:31 Yeah. And that actually did come later. So when Larry first kind of started working on this, he was trying to solve the problem of how can we make new bones to put into the body. So replacing whole femurs or whatever, right? You know, the whole bones and it was all born out of a conversation that I think David referenced in his interview with a Vietnam War general that Larry met on a bus and said about all these, you know, soldiers that were victims of land mines and that kind of thing. And so that was the problem he set out to solve because you can’t just put a piece of metal in there or piece of plastic in the body or whatever. And that kind of large piece and expect it to be successful residing in the body for a long time. Didn’t really work out for that very well though, because glasses at the end of the day, one of the things we all know about glass is that it breaks easily. So you put it in a load bearing large situation like that, it’s going to break eventually. But somewhere later down the road, some other researchers also at University of Florida got the idea of what if we ground this up and to… you know, just kind of granules, think like salt or sugar or something like that. And could we put it into bony defects and have those have the material convert in such a way that the body would then heal around it as if they were bone chips or something that the body might normally remodel into new healthy bone. And sure enough, that worked. Uh, and so that really became the first viable commercial application for it. And then somewhere later down the road, a researcher at the University of Maryland who had done just some animal studies for Dave Greenspan and Larry Hanson and some of the other folks that were doing some work in the area, he got to thinking, he was a dentist by training, although he was to sort of pay his bills or whatever he was running animal studies, and he got to thinking, well, you know, teeth get these tiny little defects in them. And I wonder if we grounded up, instead of being, you know, the size of a salt crystal or a sugar crystal, what if we ground it up into super fine powder, then we put it into those defects somehow. Would it cause the teeth to also kind of regenerate themselves or heal or whatever. And so he experimented with that and sure enough it did work and there were some other challenges that came to using it in that way, but conceptually it did work in the laboratory at least. And that was more or less like I think where I came into the story, which was thinking about the kind of dental applications and in particular thinking about, you know, incorporating this into toothpaste and how might it improve the performance of toothpaste. Given that one of the things we want our toothpaste to do is to prevent us from getting, getting cavities or even better fill the cavity that has already happened in these kinds of things. Richard Miles: 6:39 So Randy, so you said that this professor is the one who thought it might apply to teeth. And at that point you sort of got in the mix and you’ve had since then had a distinguished career in sort of identifying companies and helping entrepreneurs. So with all that you’ve learned now, you know, as you started Novamin, kind of walk us through what were some of the first things you had to figure out as you’ve got this, this technology that you believe works and believe has an application. And what was the first thing that you did? Did you call up your parents, say “I’m rich.” You know, “Hey, I’m buying your house and car. I’ve got it all figured out.” Or what are, what are kind of the first initial steps you took and then if you can sort of summarize what were those early years like in terms of, of getting a good idea into the marketplace and starting to grow that. Randy Scott: 7:30 Yeah. So the key on any of these things is to fall out of love with the science and instead trying to understand the economic model that makes whatever the invention is or whatever relevant. And that’s one of the pitfalls I think a lot of inventors, and especially I would say academic inventors kind of fall into because they’re scientists by nature. And so they love the beauty and the elegance of the science. And I would say the early folks with what became Novamin with the bioactive glass had you know, some of those same kind of challenges of just trying to set the science and the beauty of the science aside and think about the economic part. So, um, you know, in our case it was figuring out that, okay, the really, the only way this was going to make a difference to the population as a whole but also to the business world was if we could figure out a way to incorporate it into something like toothpaste where he could use large volumes and it would touch lots of people. And so we, you know, kind of stopped spending time and energy and money on, on the science of the Novamin so much and started more figuring out on how to solve the problems of using this in a toothpaste formula and have it feel right and taste right and not go bad on the shelf and all those kinds of things. But anyway, to come back to your question for, you know, entrepreneurs, one of the biggest mistakes or whatever shortcomings that I see as a venture capitalist is that they are completely in love with the science and they’re not yet in love with the economic model because, you know, at the end of the day, investors like VCs want to invest in businesses not in science or an idea. Richard Miles: 9:18 Interesting. We’re going to come back to that. I’m sort of fascinated by that initial stage and then, you know, even after that. Sort of how do you get to the next stage of attracting serious capital and getting it into big markets. But let’s, let’s circle back and talk a little bit about you, Randy. Sorta, what were you, let’s go back to pre success Randy. Right. Let’s go. What were you like as a kid? Did you already… were you four years old and you had the best damn lemonade stand on the block outselling all your competitors or what, at what point did you figure out you had some sort of skill or attraction to business or you know, making things work, that sort of thing? Randy Scott: 10:00 Yeah. So I was kind of a business junky actually as a kid and that I was always inventing fictional businesses that I was running. I wasn’t so good at the follow through, maybe of… Richard Miles: 10:16 Where were you in 1980s and tech. Okay. Alright. Randy Scott: 10:20 But, yeah I would just, one week I’d be had to have my own newspaper and the next week I’d have my own boat dealership or something. It just kind of each week I kind of invented a new business idea in my head. Richard Miles: 10:37 And what age are we talking about roughly? Randy Scott: 10:39 Oh, this would be pretty young. I mean, this would be elementary school kind of ages. And so I was always sort of daydreaming around these types of things. Richard Miles: 10:49 But then that series A round for the boat never took off in the first… And so what were you like in high school. Did you join like the junior achievement or those sort of business type clubs or what were you drawn to it at that age? Randy Scott: 11:06 Yeah, in high school I finally actually started paying a little bit of attention in class, which helped some later so I actually got into college and that kind of stuff. But yeah, you know, I was the editor of the newspaper. I was editor of the yearbook. I guess I was kind of a natural leader, you know, a couple of clubs. If I got in a club, I usually ended up being the president of the club or something like that. Not by design necessarily, but I think I’m by nature, you know, I’m pretty good at figuring out what needs to be done and then just going off and doing it as opposed to you know, waiting for instructions. And I think that’s one in the context of a club or something like that in high school that almost automatically makes you a leader. Cause most of the people aren’t there to do anything other then socialize I guess. But it’s also probably the traits of a good entrepreneur. Richard Miles: 11:58 So any of this sort of genetic or from family background, do you have a long line of successful sort of business types in your family or what did, what did your folks do for instance? Randy Scott: 12:07 Sure. Yeah. So my dad was very much… both of my parents were small business people. Well, my mom had a store now that she started from scratch that was successful in the little town we were in but then my dad was more of the sort of prototypical entrepreneur, which was, you know, every couple of years it was a different business. Sometimes they would not do very well and maybe we’d have to move into a smaller house or something like that and then of course something would do really well and we’d have new cars and all that kind of stuff for a year or two. And he was very active in the kind of environmental sort of stuff, which is interesting cause you don’t think about that so much back in the 70s or even late 60s, but he invented a device for recycling industrial wastewater for example, that was installed in the Maxwell House coffee plant up in Jacksonville. I remember as a kid, we always had to have Maxwell house coffee in the, in the household, which became awkward when my first job out of college was with Folgers coffee. Somehow my parents didn’t disown me despite that. But he was also into paper recycling, built the first municipal waste to energy plant in the United States up in Ohio. So, yeah, he was always doing something. Also built a lobster processing plant. So there was random stuff built in here in between all the other stuff too. Richard Miles: 13:31 So it sounds like you kind of grew up in an environment where taking risk or sort of that sort of, it was not, at least not strange to you. I don’t know if it was pleasant, but it was not strange. Randy Scott: 13:43 Yeah, absolutely. In fact, the strange thing if anything was I got out of school and I went to work for Procter and Gamble, which was this big, you know, Fortune 15 company or whatever. And I think that was weird to my parents because they sort of just didn’t really understand the idea that you’re going to go work for a big company where you’re expected to work for your whole career and whatever. Of course, I didn’t work there for my whole career, obviously, but that was a bigger adjustment than the idea of starting a business and taking the kind of risk. Richard Miles: 14:12 And if I remember correctly you had a stint in the Caribbean with a distributor ship, a beverage distributors, is that correct? Randy Scott: 14:21 Yeah. Close. Yeah. So after P&G I worked for a brief time with Lenscrafters when it was a startup and left with one of the founders there and we went down to Grenada. Where you spent some time, Richard also might’ve even overlapped at the same time? I’m not sure if we figured that out and went down to Grenada, you know, a few years after the American invasion with the idea that we would, um, help, uh, you know, do the patriotic thing and help them build their economy and have a little fun at the same time. And we went down with the intention of buying a rum distillery that was for sale down there. And, uh, we actually got outbid on the distillery by some British rockstar. I don’t actually remember who it was. And so we just bought a bottle of the local rum at the store and went to the beach to drown our sorrows before flying out the next morning and we cracked open the bottle and we thought, “Wow, this stuff tastes better than anything we could have made ourselves anyway.” So the next day we delayed our flight. We went and we met with the old family that owned the distillery and had been there for, you know, a hundred years or 200 years. I have no idea. And I got the rights to it and we kind of created a new brand called Webster Hall Plantation Rum. And it was going to be the first super premium rum in the US it’s kind of mid eighties. And started importing it. And then I immediately went to my then girlfriend, now wife and told her that we were going to be multimillionaires cause I only needed half a percent of the US rum market to be rich. Richard Miles: 15:53 It’s the oldest line in the book right now. Randy Scott: 15:55 And I get reminded of it every day, almost. It didn’t work out. Richard Miles: 16:00 But so it seems like our careers have had similar trajectories. We’ve done a lot of really different things, which means either we’re really good at a lot of stuff or were good at nothing. We got to keep finding a new job. So I’m a little ADHD perhaps. Randy Scott: 16:14 Exactly. Richard Miles: 16:14 So let’s come back to Novamin, and I remember you telling me a story that I still tell people about what it’s like to build a new company, a small company, and you’re starting to take on more employees. And you told me the story of how when you first started you thought it was sort of your duty to share every jot and tittle of information with all of your employees. You want to be transparent, let them know what’s going on. And finally at one point, one of them came to you and said, “Randy, stop! This is exhausting to know, you know, every, every twist and turn in the company’s history.” And then that’s when you learned, you know, maybe some things I need to keep to myself for a while as the CEO and founder. Can you describe a little bit what that’s like after you sort of pass through that initial valley of death in terms of you got your initial financing, you’re trying to grow the company to the next stage, but you still got a ways to go before you’ve developed a company DNA or a culture within that. What is that like? Randy Scott: 17:14 Yeah. One of the things that that particular episode taught me was that not everybody is geared to ride the roller coaster of a startup and, you know, until a company gets to be, I would say maybe, you know, 20 or $30 million in revenue or something like that, the companies are very sensitive to any kind of little event feeling at least like an existential crisis. You know, one customer bailing out on you can be fatal in a lot of cases or whatever. So every piece of bad news tends to create a bad day and every piece of good news creates a giddy day. And so you really do end up with this, you know, big rollercoaster ride and you have to be able to, uh, kind of control that emotion if you will. And not everybody can do that. And you know, if you’re building a company, you’re going to have to hire people that are good at being in a startup and people that maybe aren’t good at being in a startup, but you need them anyway. And so you have to manage them differently. And you have to recognize that they’re not like you. They don’t necessarily feed off of that roller coaster. They actually get beat down by that roller coaster. Richard Miles: 18:32 Now, Novamin had a successful exit. Right? It did well. Randy Scott: 18:36 Yeah. Richard Miles: 18:36 Does having taken part in that sort of life cycle of starting the company and extinct successfully, uh, I imagine that it helps you in your current job, right, where you’re trying to pick winners and losers. You’re evaluating companies every day or at least every week, I imagine. And you’re trying to decide where’s the best place to put your fund’s money. Um, do you recognize yourself in some of these business owners that you talk to? And if you could develop that a little bit and tell me, you know, what are you looking for without giving away your trade secrets? So I don’t start a fund of my own right. Um, what are the basic core elements that you’re looking for, you think to yourself, “This could be a good deal.” And, conversely, what are sort of the red flags where if you see him, it’s like “check please,” you know, “I’m done with this conversation.” Randy Scott: 19:22 Yeah. Right. Um, so I definitely do see myself and sort of the Novamin situation in a lot of the companies that we look at. So, uh, in that sense, it definitely plays into how I think about companies. I think that, uh, yeah, a couple of things that we look for. Uh, first off is, uh, you know, if I think about the Novamin experience, for example, one of the things that I think really worked for us in terms of being able to exit successfully was we had a technology that was going to be potentially very valuable to a, um, a relatively short list of, uh, of existing players in the space. So it was kind of an oligopoly if you will, of, you know, kind of four or five major toothpaste companies. And we knew more or less from the beginning that we were going to have to get one of them to buy the company. And, uh, but we also knew that we could create conditions where all of them could look at it as a real potential game changer, both up and down, meaning it could damage their business or really help their business and that would make it sort of irresistible, we believe, to get one of them to come in and buy, which is exactly what happened when glaxosmithkline bought it against bids from Procter and Gamble and Unilever and others. And so, um, you know, we’d love to find those kinds of situations because as investors ultimately just investing in a business keeps it successful and grows. But if it remains private and all that, it’s very difficult for us to then create returns for our investors, which are pension funds and that kind of stuff because we have to be able to exit our investment typically in three to five years for the economics of the whole situation to work out. And that means that there has to be an MNA event, somebody has to buy the company or it has to be an IPO or something like that. And if you look at it, IPOs are sexy, but there really aren’t very many IPOs relative to the number of venture investments that get made. So it’s going to have to be this MNA thing in most cases. So we spent a lot of time looking at that back end of the deal, coming into it. Um, and then I’d say, you know, it’s something that is the kind of the quick turn off as the entrepreneur. That’s in it for the CEO because it’s not always the original founder, but that’s in it for their deal. And so if they start negotiating their own deal before you’ve even made the commitment to invest, then you know, pretty much they’ve got the wrong mindset for this and it’s not going to be a pleasant relationship and that one will end it pretty quick. Richard Miles: 22:01 So that sounds like the ones you’re looking for, are the ones really ready to let it go, negotiate a price and, and walk away from it. Or is there something else here that I’m missing? You’re saying negotiate their deal. What does that mean? Randy Scott: 22:13 I mean negotiate their personal deal. Like, yeah they’re focused on their salary and all that kind of stuff at the early stages. You know, we, we are looking for, you know, the CEO’s and the entrepreneurs that, you know, their first priority is the success of the company. Uh, and that ideally believe that whatever they’re doing is actually important to the world, even if they didn’t make or nobody made money on it, that it’s still somehow important to the world. You know, we are, we’re focused exclusively on healthcare for a reason because, you know, we’re not just trying to come up with the next sort of fun, entertaining Chotsky or something like that. Uh, we’re, you know, doing all this work so that we can also have some residual benefits or, you know, additional benefits beyond the profits that are made. Richard Miles: 22:56 So Randy, I usually offer all of my guests an opportunity to dispense wise sage advice. So, uh, if you want to end right here, we can, but… if you saw, you know, a young Randy Scott, uh, and there are plenty of those in Gainesville, sort of, you know, the type, right? We both seen them, they’ve got a great idea. They’re full of enthusiasm. Uh, you know they’re sleeping on somebody’s couch or somebody floor, and they are convinced they’re going to make it. And you have given advice to those folks, but what do you tell them, uh, what are the, you know, the three things you say, “Hey, here’s what you really need to be doing now.” And then are there things you say “And here are the things you need to quit doing?” How do those conversations go with sort of young entrepreneurs, uh, in Gainesville or anywhere where you deal? Randy Scott: 23:48 Some of them are things we’ve already talked about. “Hey, you know, you’ve got to focus on the, you know, how’s this going to be a business as opposed to, uh, you know, this has great science or great idea that needs a home.” Uh, so, you know, really getting them to understand what I, what I described to them frequently as “follow the money.” And in fact, I do a little kind of a Jerry Maguire riff sometimes off of that that you may have seen before. But, uh, you know, it’s really about following the money and if you can follow the money all the way from, you know, both the ends of the entire business chain and you understand everybody that has to touch the product, touch an element of the product, pay for the product, sell the product, all that kind of stuff, and understand everybody’s economic motivation and the deal. And after thoroughly understanding that, then you’re going to be able to understand your place in that ecosystem, if you will. And a lot of things I think will come into focus, uh, at that point once you do that exercise. And it’s amazing the number of entrepreneurs that have never thought about it beyond, you know, the little sliver of the ecosystem so to speak, that they’re occupying. So I think that’s the main thing. Another thing is just being patient and recognizing that no matter how bad things might look at a given moment in time, they can turn around 180 degrees in a very short period of days or hours or whatever sometimes. That it can all happen very quickly in a positive way. And you’ve got to just kind of keep the faith and um, stick with it. Richard Miles: 25:22 Sounds like good advice. So, Randy, thanks very much for joining me today. You know, reminding listeners that the companion episode to this one is Glass that Grows with David Greenspan, which we also talk about the same technology but a different application. But I’m glad that you could complete the picture for us today, man. Randy Scott: 25:39 Great. Thanks, Richard. Great to be here. Richard Miles: 25:41 Thanks for listening. I’m Richard Miles Outro: 25:46 Radio Cade would like to thank the following people for their help and support. Liz Gist of the Cade Museum for coordinating and inventor interviews. Bob McPeak of Heartwood Soundstage in downtown Gainesville, Florida for recording, editing and production of the podcasts and music theme. Tracy Collins for the composition and performance of the Radio Cade theme song featuring violinist Jacob Lawson. And special thanks to the Cade Museum for Creativity and Invention located in Gainesville, Florida.
DOWNLOAD: PP Ep. 10 “Benjamin’s” Join Bryan and me the ~Z~ as we discuss what we love about pizza, what’s in the Maxwell House can, drug pushing wives, and I fat shame BIG time (Get it?) Enjoy!
After Pepsico's earnings release this week, it becomes apparent that diversification is the key to the company's modest growth, even if management doesn't buy into the anti-sugar trend among consumers. We also discuss new plans for re-expansion at an original fast-casual burger chain, Maxwell House's efforts to attract millennials, and more acquisition for Campbell Soup.
As a bonus episode, The Royal Podcast of Oz presents this old time radio production. Maxwell House's Good News would feature actors from MGM's films, often as promotion for those films. The June 29, 1939 episode featured the upcoming film The Wizard of Oz, including appearances by Judy Garland, Ray Bolger, Bert Lahr, Frank Morgan, E.Y. "Yip" Harburg, and the original Broadway Scarecrow, Fred Stone. It's also noteworthy that this was the first time the public heard many of the songs that would become so beloved in the classic film. Please note that most of the behind the scenes stories heard are not accurate to life.