A list of puns related to "Jim Gibbons"
Game Title: Deathloop
Platforms:
Trailers:
Developer: Arkane Studios
Publisher: Bethesda Softworks
Review Aggregator:
OpenCritic - 88 average - 94% recommended - 98 reviews
ACG - Jeremy Penter - Wait for Sale
>"Deathloop is fun but it has a ton of problems identifying what it is, hedge wizard assassination game or slim wallet gun runner assassination game. nevertheless, the story is insanely good as it progresses."
Areajugones - VΓctor RodrΓguez - Spanish - 9 / 10
>βDeathloop is a video game that maintains the characteristic elements of Arkane games: an outstanding level design, exceptional gameplay, an interesting story and a spectacular artistic section. A work with very few buts that has hooked me and fallen in love from beginning to end.β
Ars Technica - Sam Machkovech - Unscored
>Deathloop may ultimately go down as my biggest gaming disappointment of 2021
Atomix - Alberto Desfassiaux - Spanish - 92 / 100
>βI think that despite having some rough edges here and there, Death
... keep reading on reddit β‘I will include in my email the issues I think the legislature should be working on during this session.
Senate: Julie.Adams@lrc.ky.gov Ralph.Alvarado@lrc.ky.gov Karen.Berg@lrc.ky.gov Jared.Carpenter@lrc.ky.gov Danny.Carroll@lrc.ky.gov Matt.Castlen@lrc.ky.gov Donald.Douglas@lrc.ky.gov CB.Embry@lrc.ky.gov Rick.Girdler@lrc.ky.gov David.Givens@lrc.ky.gov Denise.HarperAngel@lrc.ky.gov Jimmy.Higdon@lrc.ky.gov Paul.Hornback@lrc.ky.gov Jason.Howell@lrc.ky.gov Alice.Kerr@lrc.ky.gov Chris.McDaniel@lrc.ky.gov Morgan.McGarvey@lrc.ky.gov Stephen.Meredith@lrc.ky.gov Robby.Mills@lrc.ky.gov Gerald.Neal@lrc.ky.gov Mike.Nemes@lrc.ky.gov Dennis.Parrett@lrc.ky.gov John.Schickel@lrc.ky.gov Wil.Schroder@lrc.ky.gov Brandon.Smith@lrc.ky.gov Adrienne.Southworth@lrc.ky.gov Robert.Stivers@lrc.ky.gov Brandon.Storm@lrc.ky.gov Damon.Thayer@lrc.ky.gov Reginald.Thomas@lrc.ky.gov Johnnie.Turner@lrc.ky.gov Robin.Webb@lrc.ky.gov Steve.West@lrc.ky.gov Whitney.Westerfield@lrc.ky.gov Phillip.Wheeler@lrc.ky.gov Mike.Wilson@lrc.ky.gov Max.Wise@lrc.ky.gov David.Yates@lrc.ky.gov
House Shane.Baker@lrc.ky.gov kim.banta@lrc.ky.gov Lynn.Bechler@lrc.ky.gov Danny.Bentley@lrc.ky.gov John.Blanton@lrc.ky.gov Tina.Bojanowski@lrc.ky.gov Adam.Bowling@lrc.ky.gov Josh.Branscum@lrc.ky.gov Kevin.Bratcher@lrc.ky.gov Josh.Bray@lrc.ky.gov Randy.Bridges@lrc.ky.gov George.Brown@lrc.ky.gov om.Burch@lrc.ky.gov Josh.Calloway@lrc.ky.gov McKenzie.Cantrell@lrc.ky.gov Jennifer.Decker@lrc.ky.gov Jonathan.Dixon@lrc.ky.gov Jeff.Donohue@lrc.ky.gov Myron.Dossett@lrc.ky.gov Ryan.Dotson@lrc.ky.gov Jim.DuPlessis@lrc.ky.gov Daniel.Elliott@lrc.ky.gov Joe.Fischer@lrc.ky.gov Daniel.Fister@lrc.ky.gov Patrick.Flannery@lrc.ky.gov Ken.Fleming@lrc.ky.gov Kelly.Flood@lrc.ky.gov Deanna.Gordon@lrc.ky.gov Chris.Freeland@lrc.ky.gov Chris.Fugate@lrc.ky.gov Al.Gentry@lrc.ky.gov Jim.Gooch@lrc.ky.gov Derrick.Graham@lrc.ky.gov David.Hale@lrc.ky.gov Mark.Hart@lrc.ky.gov Angie.Hatton@lrc.ky.gov Richard.Heath@lrc.ky.gov Samara.Heavrin@lrc.ky.gov Thomas.Huff@lrc.ky.gov Regina.Huff@lrc.ky.gov MaryBeth.Imes@lrc.ky.gov Joni.Jenkins@lrc.ky.gov DJ.Johnson@lrc.ky.gov Kim.King@lrc.ky.gov Norma.KirkMcCormick@lrc.ky.gov Matthew.Koch@lrc.ky.gov Adam.Koenig@lrc.ky.gov Nima.Kulkarni@lrc.ky.gov William.Lawrence@lrc.ky.gov Scott.Lewis@lrc.ky.gov Derek.Lewis@lrc.ky.gov Matt.Lockett@lrc.ky.gov Savannah.Maddox@lrc.ky.gov MaryLou.Marzian@lrc.ky.gov Ed.Massey@lrc.ky.gov Bobby.McCool@lrc.ky.gov Chad.McCoy@lrc.ky.gov Shawn.McPherson@lrc.ky.gov David.Meade@lrc.ky.gov Michae
... keep reading on reddit β‘The current CEO of BNY Mellon is this guy.
I'll quote the relevant part
> Todd Gibbons currently serves as the Chief Executive Officer of BNY Mellon. Prior to that, Todd had been a Vice Chairman of BNY Mellon and CEO of Clearing, Markets and Client Management. In that role he oversaw the Pershing clearing business; the trading, financing, collateral and liquidity management solutions delivered through the Markets business; treasury services and commercial payment activities; the U.S. government securities clearance and U.S. tri-party repo businesses delivered through BNY Mellon Government Securities Services Corp; credit services; global client management; and regional area management.
Now we already know, BNY Mellon is holding millions of shares of $GME puts in Brazil... for who knows why and for whom no one knows, they filed the shit wrapped in confidentiality.
(October, 2020) > Mellon has hired a former Goldman Sachs senior director in a new role that centralises the leadership for the custodianβs capital markets businesses.
We know that Goldman made this in October of 2020 lining up with the new guy being hired at BNY Mellon, just so happens to take the old CEO's job. (then updated this filing in May 2021)
January sneezed
(April 2021) - BNY Mellon opens a line of credit with Citadel Europe
(April 2021) - Citadel Europe closes their Luxemburg office
(April 2021) - Goldman guy joins the unopened Citadel Paris > One of those understood to be joining isΒ Charles-Antoine Palcoux, a former macroΒ strategist/rates structurer at Goldman Sachs in London. Goldman insiders sayΒ Palcoux left Goldman after nine
... keep reading on reddit β‘Most people are aware of the significant disparities between blacks and whites in the U.S. with respect to a wide range of important outcomes, such as income, education, poverty, incarceration, etc. For nearly every measurable metric of important life outcomes, blacks perform significantly worse than whites. In this post, I will cite studies showing that many of these disparities are mostly or entirely eliminated after controlling for performance on standardized test scores.
Note: due to reddit length limitations, this is a shortened version of a post from my website. To see the full post with more context and graphs, click here. Also, this post is agnostic with respect to the cause of the test score gap.
The relation between youth test scores and life outcomes in the U.S. is perhaps best demonstrated with data from the National Longitudinal Surveys published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Most studies below rely on analyses of these surveys, so it will be worthwhile to explain this data. There were two separate longitudinal studies of two different cohorts: the 1979 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY79) and the 1997 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY97). Both surveys collected data on several thousands of subjects from a representative sample of the noninstitutionalized civilian population in the U.S. For both surveys, data was collected at the start of the survey when participants were in their youth (in 1979 or 1997). The participants provided additional information in repeated follow-up interviews about important life outcomes, such as wages, education, marital status, etc.
Both cohorts of the NLSY completed the Armed Forces Qualification Test (AFQT) during the first interview. The AFQT is comprised of the following subsections of the [Armed Services Vocational Aptitude Battery (ASV
... keep reading on reddit β‘I don't want to step on anybody's toes here, but the amount of non-dad jokes here in this subreddit really annoys me. First of all, dad jokes CAN be NSFW, it clearly says so in the sub rules. Secondly, it doesn't automatically make it a dad joke if it's from a conversation between you and your child. Most importantly, the jokes that your CHILDREN tell YOU are not dad jokes. The point of a dad joke is that it's so cheesy only a dad who's trying to be funny would make such a joke. That's it. They are stupid plays on words, lame puns and so on. There has to be a clever pun or wordplay for it to be considered a dad joke.
Again, to all the fellow dads, I apologise if I'm sounding too harsh. But I just needed to get it off my chest.
Previous Matchups:
August 5th: Winnipeg defeats Hamilton 19-6
Statistical Breakdown - Per CFL.Ca
This is the most dominant Winnipeg Blue Bomber team in generations and how Mike O'Shea, Kyle Walters and Wade Miller built this team up from scratch using a plethora of all-stars and Canadian talent should go down in CFL history as one of the most successful rebuilds ever. They are on top of the world and have been for 2 years, and in the 2021 season they've been a clear cut above the rest of the league and that level of dominance is further elevated by competent and excellent quarterbacking from Zach Collaros.
Zach Collaros has had a movie-esque career in this league to say the least. Collaros started his career in Toronto, backing up Ricky Ray (one of the greatest CFL quarterbacks of all time) and when Ricky Ray went down to injury in 2013, Collaros came in and absolutely balled out throwing for 2300 yards and 14 touchdowns in 8 games. That offseason he wasn't picked up by the expansion Redblacks and was subsequently released by Jim Barker when they couldn't come to terms on a new contract. Collaros signed with Hamilton in the 2014 offseason and was consistently one of the best quarterbacks in the league until his career began to be derailed by injuries, suffering an ACL injury in 2015 and a mulititude of concussions. Masoli became the starter in Hamilton and Collaros was traded to a rebuilding Saskatchewan Roughriders under Chris Jones. Concussions continued to hamper Collaros in Saskatchewan, knocking him out of the 2018 playoffs and most of the Riders 2019 season when he was speared by Hamiltonβs Simoni Lawrence on a dirty headhunting play. Collaros spent the majority of 2019 on injured reserve, with most football fans worried about his long-term health due to the amount of concussions he's suffered in his 7 year career at that point.
On July 31st, 2019 Zach Collaros was traded to the Toronto Argoanuts with the assumption that he'd start over McLeod Bethel-Thompson at some point during that season. He never had a chance to play for Toronto and he was traded once more to the Winnipeg Blue Bombers to start for the injured Matt Nichols when it became apparent that the offense was limi
... keep reading on reddit β‘Number | Team | How many managers they've had from 1992 to present | Managers from 1992 to present (in order) |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Cubs | 11 | Jim Lefebvre, Tom Trebelhorn, Jim Riggleman, Don Baylor, Dusty Baker, Lou Piniella, Mike Quade, Dale Sveum, Rick Renteria, Joe Maddon, David Ross |
2 | Marlins (1993--present) | 11 | Rene Lachemann, Jim Leyland, John Boles, Jeff Torborg, Jack McKeon, Joe Girardi, Fredi GonzΓ‘lez, Edwin RodrΓguez, Ozzie GuillΓ©n, Mike Redmond, Don Mattingly |
3 | Reds | 11 | Lou Piniella, Tony PΓ©rez, Davey Johnson, Ray Knight, Jack McKeon, Bob Boone, Dave Miley, Jerry Narron, Dusty Baker, Bryan Price, David Bell |
4 | Red Sox | 11 | Butch Hobson, Kevin Kennedy, Jimy Williams, Joe Kerrigan, Grady Little, Terry Francona, Bobby Valentine, John Farrell, Alex Cora, Ron Roenicke, Alex Cora |
5 | astros | 10 | Art Howe, Terry Collins, Larry Dierker, Jimy Williams, Phil Garner, Cecil Cooper, Brad Mills, Bo Porter, A. J. Hinch, Dusty Baker |
6 | Orioles | 10 | Johnny Oates, Phil Regan, Davey Johnson, Ray Miller, Mike Hargrove, Lee Mazzilli, Sam Perlozzo, Dave Trembley, Buck Showalter, Brandon Hyde |
7 | Mets | 10 | Jeff Torborg, Dallas Green, Bobby Valentine, Art Howe, Willie Randolph, Jerry Manuel, Terry Collins, Mickey Callaway, Luis Rojas, Buck Showalter |
8 | Blue Jays | 10 | Cito Gaston, Tim Johnson, Jim Fregosi, Buck Martinez, Carlos Tosca, John Gibbons, Cito Gaston, John Farrell, John Gibbons, Charlie Montoyo |
9 | Mariners | 9 | Bill Plummer, Lou Piniella, Bob Melvin, Mike Hargrove, John McLaren, Don Wakamatsu, Eric Wedge, Lloyd McClendon, Scott Servais |
10 | Nationals (Expos from 1990--2004, Nationals from 2005--present) | 9 | Felipe Alou, Jeff Torborg, Frank Robinson, Manny Acta, Jim Riggleman, Davey Johnson, Matt Williams, Dusty Baker, Dave Martinez |
11 | Tigers | 9 | Sparky Anderson, Buddy Bell, Larry Parrish, Phil Garner, Alan Trammell, Jim Leyland, Brad Ausmus, Ron Gardenhire, A. J. Hinch |
12 | Royals | 8 | Hal McRae, Bob Boone, Tony Muser, Tony PeΓ±a, Buddy Bell, Trey Hillman, Ned Yost, Mike Matheny |
13 | Rangers | 8 | Bobby Valentine, Kevin Kennedy, Johnny Oates, Jerry Narron, Buck Showalter, Ron Washington, Jeff Banister, Chris Woodward |
14 | Phillies | 8 | Jim Fregosi, Terry Francona, Larry Bowa, Charlie Manuel, Ryne Sandberg, Pete Mackanin, Gabe Kapler, Joe Girardi |
15 | dodgers | 8 | Tommy Lasorda, Bill Russell, Davey Johnson, Jim Tracy, Grady Little, Joe Torre, Don Mattingly, Dave Roberts |
16 | Padres | 7 | Greg Riddoch, Jim Riggleman, Bruce Bochy, Bud Black, Andy Green, Jayce Tingler, Bob Melvin |
17 | Diamondbacks (1998--present) | 7 | Buck Showalter, Bo |
Arizona Diamondbacks:
Buck Showalter (1999)
Bob Brenly (2001, 2002)
Bob Melvin (2007)
Kirk Gibson (2011)
Torey Lovullo (2017)
Atlanta Braves:
Lum Harris (1969)
Joe Torre (1982)
Bobby Cox (1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2010)
Fredi GonzΓ‘lez (2012, 2013)
Brian Snitker (2018, 2019, 2020, 2021)
Baltimore Orioles:
Earl Weaver (1969, 1970, 1971, 1973, 1974, 1979)
Joe Altobelli (1983)
Davey Johnson (1996, 1997)
Buck Showalter (2012, 2014, 2016)
Boston Red Sox:
Darrell Johnson (1975)
John McNamara (1986)
Joe Morgan (1988, 1990)
Kevin Kennedy (1995)
Jimy Williams (1998, 1999)
Grady Little (2003)
Terry Francona (2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009)
John Farrell (2013, 2016, 2017)
Alex Cora (2018, 2021)
California/Anaheim/Los Angeles Angels (of Anaheim):
Jim Fregosi (1979)
Gene Mauch (1982, 1986)
Mike Scioscia (2002, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2014)
Chicago Cubs:
Jim Frey (1984)
Don Zimmer (1989)
Jim Riggleman (1998)
Dusty Baker (2003)
Lou Piniella (2007, 2008)
Joe Maddon (2015, 2016, 2017, 2018)
David Ross (2020)
Chicago White Sox:
Tony La Russa (1983, 2021)
Gene Lamont (1993)
Jerry Manuel (2000)
Ozzie GuillΓ©n (2005, 2008)
Rick Renteria (2020)
Cincinnati Reds:
Sparky Anderson (1970, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1976)
John McNamara (1979)
Lou Piniella (1990)
Davey Johnson (1995)
Dusty Baker (2010, 2012, 2013)
David Bell (2020)
Cleveland Indians:
Mike Hargrove (1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999)
Charlie Manuel (2001)
Eric Wedge (2007)
Terry Francona (2013, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020)
Colorado Rockies:
Don Baylor (1995)
Clint Hurdle (2007)
Jim Tracy (2009)
Bud Black (2017, 2018)
Detroit Tigers:
Billy Martin (1972)
Sparky Anderson (1984, 1987)
Jim Leyland (2006, 2011, 2012, 2013)
Brad Ausmus (2014)
Florida/Miami Marlins:
Jim Leyland (1997)
Jack McKeon (2003)
Don Mattingly (2020)
Houston Astros:
Bill Virdon (1980, 1981)
Hal Lanier (1986)
Larry Dierker (1997, 1998, 1999, 2001)
Phil Garner (2004, 2005)
A.J. Hinch (2015, 2017, 2018, 2019)
Dusty Baker (2020, 2021)
Kansas City Royals:
Whitey Herzog (1976, 1977, 1978)
Jim Frey (1980)
Dick Howser (1981, 1984, 1985)
Ned Yost (2014, 2015)
Los Angeles Dodgers:
Walter Alston (1974)
Tommy Lasorda (1977, 1978, 1981, 1983, 1
Do your worst!
I'm surprised it hasn't decade.
Cross-post from samharris
Most people are aware of the significant disparities between blacks and whites in the U.S. with respect to a wide range of important outcomes, such as income, education, poverty, incarceration, etc. For nearly every measurable metric of important life outcomes, blacks perform significantly worse than whites. In this post, I will cite studies showing that many of these disparities are mostly or entirely eliminated after controlling for performance on standardized test scores.
Note: due to reddit length limitations, this is a shortened version of a post from my website. To see the full post with more context and graphs, click here. Also, this post is agnostic with respect to the cause of the test score gap.
The relation between youth test scores and life outcomes in the U.S. is perhaps best demonstrated with data from the National Longitudinal Surveys published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Most studies in this post rely on analyses of these surveys, so it will be worthwhile to explain this data. There were two separate longitudinal studies of two cohorts: the 1979 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY79) and the 1997 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY97). Both surveys collected data on several thousands of subjects from a representative sample of the noninstitutionalized civilian population in the United States. For both surveys, data was collected at the start of the survey when participants were in their youth (in 1979 or 1997). The participants provided additional information in regularly scheduled follow-up interviews about important life outcomes, such as wages, educational attainment, marital status, etc.
Both cohorts of the NLSY completed the Armed Forces Q
... keep reading on reddit β‘Please note that this site uses cookies to personalise content and adverts, to provide social media features, and to analyse web traffic. Click here for more information.