Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "We’re “"


4 mentions found


He runs a podcast and has attended over 100 presidential campaign events. I’ve asked presidential candidates pointed and respectful questions. At an “Our Great American Comeback” event in New Hampshire, DeSantis evaded responding to my question about the peaceful transfer of power. Gen Z journalists are often shut down by authoritative figures and officials, and student journalists across the country are not guaranteed complete constitutional First Amendment protection — discouraging active participation from students and rousing fear of litigation. While some might think we’re “too young” to be concerned about or understand national policy, these outcomes determine our future: a future that Gen Z is increasingly concerned about.
Persons: Quinn Mitchell, CNN —, Quinn Mitchell Kristopher Radder, I’ve, who’s, , , Ron DeSantis, DeSantis, , Nikki Haley, Haley, Young, Z Organizations: CNN, Trump, Republican, Democratic, Florida Gov, South Carolina Gov, Tufts, Twitter Locations: Walpole , New Hampshire, New England, Brattleboro, New Hampshire, Florida
A Rap Comedy Hits the Road
  + stars: | 2023-11-07 | by ( Leigh-Ann Jackson | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
If Season 1 was rooted in authentically representing Miami culture, what was the focus this time around? You’re close to the thing that you want, you can see it in front of you, but you’re not quite there yet. It’s watching how much they’re willing to compromise for this goal, which I think is relevant for Shawna, Mia and Chastity. We saw her start off as this person who was like, “I don’t even want people to look at me. We’re “on the road,” but we recreated Portland and Oakland.
Persons: , , Singleton, , You’re, you’re, Mia, “ I’m, We’re “ Organizations: Miami doesn’t, Downtown Locations: Miami, , Downtown Los Angeles, Los Angeles, Portland, Oakland, L.A
Quiet, Please: You Are Not Alone in Your Garden
  + stars: | 2023-05-31 | by ( Margaret Roach | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Spring unfolds each year in color, yes, but also in sound. And, regrettably, in noise — some of it emanating from our gardens. When Nancy Lawson, a Maryland-based naturalist and nature writer, speaks about the voices of frogs or birds, she uses the word “sound.” When she refers to humanity’s voice — the din of mowers, blowers and chain saws — she describes it as noise, specifically “anthropogenic noise.”Her definition: something that is “disrespectful of all the other sounds and runs roughshod over them,” she said, with “often unnecessary rudeness.”These days, we’re not just driving one another crazy with the racket that fills most neighborhoods. We’re “smothering some of the opportunities for animals to communicate through their senses,” she said, “to perceive the world through their senses.”
Persons: Nancy Lawson, , we’re, Locations: Maryland
But it also gave the fine wine and crypto industry a big boost as panicking investors rushed out of the financial sector and into alternative assets. Bittersweet banking: SVB lent over $4 billion to winery clients since 1994, with over 400 wine industry clients (including wineries, vineyards and vendors) working with the bank’s premium wine division, according to the bank’s website. Recent SEC filings, meanwhile, indicated SVB had about $1.2 billion in outstanding loans to high-end wine clients when the bank collapsed. Circle, the company behind popular stablecoin USDC, said it had about $3.3 billion of its $40 billion in reserves at SVB. The collapse of Signature Bank, a major crypto lender, also had serious implications for the industry.
Total: 4