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Have you checked it out yet?
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It is a podcast network, 20 different podcasts to choose from.
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One of the biggest is YA authors unplugged.
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Some of the biggest selling books on the planet today are written by YA authors, and guess
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It's not just young adults, it's all adults.
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Find out more about the authors that are bringing the stories to you.
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YA authors unplugged on Aero.net.
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Enjoy your exploration.
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Yo yo yo, it's me, that question guy, always asking questions because it's really fun
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to research for answers.
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Here's one of those questions.
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When did it become okay for a public figure, including the president, to drop the F-Bomb?
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Plus, what's this battle all about?
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Radio people or TV people who like or dislike their voice?
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Daily Writer, a silent wolf.
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That means I stand on the sidelines and do nothing but watch, listen, study, then activate.
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I happen to call it the daily mess because it's a chronological walk through an everyday
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It is my morning writing.
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As a receiver of thoughts and ideas, we as people tend to throw things to the side because
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oh, we're convinced we're going to deal with it later on, but you know us we're all
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When a subject arrives inside of me, I know it's time to dig in.
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It's still keeping that daily journal, but by doing that research, the picture will
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This is the daily mess.
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When did it become okay for public figures, including the president, to drop the F-Bomb?
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Such language was once considered off limits in formal settings.
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So why is it becoming okay at social events today?
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First, it hasn't just happened.
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It didn't happen overnight.
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Shockingly, it's tied to a few cultural changes.
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So in public, president's Eisenhower and Reagan came across as clean and well polished, but
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insider say it was a much different language platform behind those closed doors.
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Then came the media shift, which now includes the internet.
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Suddenly, vulgar curse words were blurred to the point of acceptance.
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That doesn't mean everyone agrees, especially when it comes to the public display of a U.S.
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It's love, the F-Bomb, because it's blunt language, which comes across as being honest.
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The theory of telling it exactly the way that it is.
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Did he really drop an F-Bomb?
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Coming up next, do radio and TV personalities like or dislike their voices?
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Welcome back to the daily mess.
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Do radio and TV personalities like or dislike their voices?
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Some of you watch them during the nightly news or just on TV shows, reality shows, or
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Do they like their voice?
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It's truly a complicated relationship.
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Broadcasters pretty much call it a love hate experience.
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In the beginning, it's tough for radio and TV people to adjust to hearing that voice
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through their headphones or IFB.
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But over time, the voice becomes a tool and less of an identity.
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People see their voices as instruments that can be shaped as well as controlled.
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The focus is put on clarity, pacing, tone, and emotion.
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There's nothing wrong with growing to love your voice.
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It's okay if you just can't get enough of it.
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Building a listening or viewing audience will do that for you.
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Our voices are tied to an identity which can feel pretty personal when the critics step
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You know, the program directors and the consultants, hey, we want you to say it this way.
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Remember the Howard Stern movie is W-E-N-B-C.
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Yeah, I was once with a radio station.
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It wasn't light 102.9.
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Broadcasters learn to force a shift, allowing the voice to serve their community.
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Yeah, radio and TV people are constantly studying how they sound.
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It is a true skill set and not that of self-judgment.
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We really do listen and make things sound a lot easier to digest on your side.
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In fact, speaking of your side, how do you like your voice?
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I'm Arrow and that's the Daily Mess.