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Nov 23, 2011
11/11
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KQEH
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freud gave her a footnote. christopher hampton, who wrote this script for this movie, discovered all of this and started to put together a play based on the three of them. it was the first time -- reading the play was the first time i had ever heard of her. i thought, wow, this is an incredible structure you could use to explore freud and the birth of psychoanalysis and that whole era before the first world war that was so crucial. tavis: is is a question i hate to ask, but i do want to get to this point, which is, when we get a chance to see this film, what is the take away for the audience with regard to psychoanalysis and freud's contribution to the subject matter? >> i think it might be very revealing in terms of the potency of freud and what he created. i think we are not through with freud now. a lot of people say, well, you study psychology now and they hardly mention him. in fact, freudian analysis is apparently huge in china now. now that there is a middle- class evolving in china and people are starti
freud gave her a footnote. christopher hampton, who wrote this script for this movie, discovered all of this and started to put together a play based on the three of them. it was the first time -- reading the play was the first time i had ever heard of her. i thought, wow, this is an incredible structure you could use to explore freud and the birth of psychoanalysis and that whole era before the first world war that was so crucial. tavis: is is a question i hate to ask, but i do want to get to...
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Nov 27, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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freud was famous. he would say this from dreams, i often love and hate the same person not necessarily at the same time. really rancorous fights with his former teachers and colleagues, karl jung, most famous, on and on and on, disruptive behaviors. and could never say at the moment, maybe i had something to do with that. maybe my substance abuse had something to do with that. so he had all these layers of denial and explanation to compartmentalize that way, which is death to the attic. put it away, and only take it out in secret causes a lot of problems. he was the irony. a man known in history as the search of herself truth passionate searcher herself truth, was never able to delve into that particular truth. >> i read somewhere that it was observed addiction coming the of course treated gladiators and then under marcus are really as he was the real doctor for the roman army. i can number his exact words, but he said something to the fact that it's better for people to endure pain than to become addi
freud was famous. he would say this from dreams, i often love and hate the same person not necessarily at the same time. really rancorous fights with his former teachers and colleagues, karl jung, most famous, on and on and on, disruptive behaviors. and could never say at the moment, maybe i had something to do with that. maybe my substance abuse had something to do with that. so he had all these layers of denial and explanation to compartmentalize that way, which is death to the attic. put it...
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Nov 27, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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so freud missed that. whether he was too high or too anxious or what, or he wasn't attuned to that issue because he wasn't a surgeon. but a friend of his, carl kohler, who freud used to call coca kohler, the idea that you could have a local anesthetic that would numb you effectively was, literally, front-page news around the world. it wasn't just medical school school stuff or doctor stuff. and the man who read about that across the ocean shortly after it was reported was a man named william halstead, and that's probably not a name that is familiar to you. he became the greatest surgeon ever. he was then the boy wonder of new york. he was working at bellevue as what is now columbia college of physicians and surgeons as well as several other hospitals. he had brilliant ideas about wound healing, about antisepsis and operating under a clean circumstance which seems, well, yeah, of course, but back then surgeons were wearing old frock coats smeared with blood and pus, they were draping or dripping their elbow
so freud missed that. whether he was too high or too anxious or what, or he wasn't attuned to that issue because he wasn't a surgeon. but a friend of his, carl kohler, who freud used to call coca kohler, the idea that you could have a local anesthetic that would numb you effectively was, literally, front-page news around the world. it wasn't just medical school school stuff or doctor stuff. and the man who read about that across the ocean shortly after it was reported was a man named william...
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Nov 27, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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her sigmund freud and william halsted both for reading at max the shrieking at six. he approaches this not only from the point* of view but also can tell an extraordinary story. he approaches a scholar the history of medicine but also a clinician with experience if you will of the seduction of the wonder drugs with a means to work in a clinical culture where when new drugs and new techniques are discovered, people feel a sense of trying to use them wisely how far they can go and what they will do. when radiology was first brought into being, what it produced was a raging said of disaster is. radioactive and could not get through airport security any more. we that as of me, the fact of the matter is a very few people could combine a real clinical experience for the desire for cure with a sense of new technology of wonder drugs in the real history of the archives and a dam a wonderful storyteller combined to give us all the not just my dollars these things and planning for the department of defense. and then serves as the principal historical consultant on in for this
her sigmund freud and william halsted both for reading at max the shrieking at six. he approaches this not only from the point* of view but also can tell an extraordinary story. he approaches a scholar the history of medicine but also a clinician with experience if you will of the seduction of the wonder drugs with a means to work in a clinical culture where when new drugs and new techniques are discovered, people feel a sense of trying to use them wisely how far they can go and what they will...
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Nov 26, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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well, you walk in there with a book like "freud's future of an allusion" in which freud's the crankivity and least sympathetic atheist who ever lived and says what's religion? religion is the longing for the father? we want to go back to the time when dad was omnipotent and give us complete protection and love. so we create religion to restore those things. this causes a near riot sometimes. >> what was your own relation with your dad? >> my father was a remote, difficult, highly intelligent person. and the things i gained -- got from him, the sense of independence and determination, i greatly treasure the energy he had and conveyed to me. i hope that i'm a little bit less stubborn and unreachable by argument than he is, and maybe a little softer. >> do you change anything about the way you relate to your own boys? because of your own experience. >> sure. it's something of a generational thing, of course. there's a shift in child rearing in general. no corporal punishment, a lot more talk than punishment at all , an attempt to be not only an authority figure, but an ally, could quite say
well, you walk in there with a book like "freud's future of an allusion" in which freud's the crankivity and least sympathetic atheist who ever lived and says what's religion? religion is the longing for the father? we want to go back to the time when dad was omnipotent and give us complete protection and love. so we create religion to restore those things. this causes a near riot sometimes. >> what was your own relation with your dad? >> my father was a remote, difficult,...
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Nov 30, 2011
11/11
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WBAL
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he thinks a lot about, like -- >> freud? >> yes. >> freud. okay. >> freud, okay.eud. >> you guys are the champs. molly and jesse win. [ cheers and applause ] go see jesse eisenberg's play, "asuncion," at the cherry lane theater, here in new york city. piper perabo joins us next you guys. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ i wouldn't do that. get married? no, i wouldn't use that single miles credit card. nice ring. knock it off. ignore him. with the capital one venture card you earn... double miles on every purchase. [ sharon ] 3d is so real larry. i'm right here larry. if you're not earning double miles... you're settling for half. really? a plaid tie? what, are we in prep school? [ male announcer ] get the venture card at capitalone.com and earn double miles on every purchase every day. what's in your wallet? i was gonna say that. uh huh... what's in your wallet? look what denny's left for my dad, santa! christmas cookie pancakes. milk & cookies shake. i think santa needs a helper. come try arthur christmas's favorites. only at denny's. and see arthur christmas only in th
he thinks a lot about, like -- >> freud? >> yes. >> freud. okay. >> freud, okay.eud. >> you guys are the champs. molly and jesse win. [ cheers and applause ] go see jesse eisenberg's play, "asuncion," at the cherry lane theater, here in new york city. piper perabo joins us next you guys. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ i wouldn't do that. get married? no, i wouldn't use that single miles credit card. nice ring. knock it off. ignore him. with the capital one...
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Nov 27, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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hall tadd verse freud. my impression is freud's problem was relatively prime derivative, and hallstad said it was lifelong episode or problem. and you mentioned there hey have been differences in the root of administration they used. >> i said it clearly. >> there's a large literature at which the way drugs get to the brain, not only influences their cute effects but thunder e their long-term effect in changing the brain. so might that be a factor that can'ts for their nature history? >> absolutely. the great thing for using cocaine as your drug of abuse, if you're writing about it, it's guaranteed -- almost guaranteed to be a dramatic story because the window from abuse to addiction to bad stuff is very small. alcoholism, on the other hand, you can be using for quite some time before everything goes crazy, and even heroin abusers and opium users can go for quite some time, but cocaine, no. the root of administration is very important. i had no medical ethics and a lot of rope and a lot of drugs i could mak
hall tadd verse freud. my impression is freud's problem was relatively prime derivative, and hallstad said it was lifelong episode or problem. and you mentioned there hey have been differences in the root of administration they used. >> i said it clearly. >> there's a large literature at which the way drugs get to the brain, not only influences their cute effects but thunder e their long-term effect in changing the brain. so might that be a factor that can'ts for their nature...
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Nov 21, 2011
11/11
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WUSA
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the movie tells the story of gung and freud. >> we are all supposed to behave in a certain way with one another. but you know, that is all right in theory, but what actually happens in practice is something else. >> reporter: the film also stars morten son as freud. the desent dance is now open in theaters and is already bringing in awards for the star george clooney. the palm springs festival will present clooney with its award in february. the chairman said clooney can do it all. actor, director, writer, and producer. >>> for movie fans who prefer the home theater spy kids comes out on dvd on tuesday. jessica alba stars as a retired secret agent and new pom. >>> also out on dvd, kristen scott thomas starring in sarah's key. the film looks back at the brutal round up of french jews during the holocaust. an american journalist stumbles on to a trail of secrets. sandra hughes, cbs news, hollywood. >>> good morning. and thank you for watching 9news now at 5:00 a.m. this monday morning, i'm andrea roane. >>> thanks for joining us, i'm mike hydeck. 56 degrees, balmy. >> for this time of yea
the movie tells the story of gung and freud. >> we are all supposed to behave in a certain way with one another. but you know, that is all right in theory, but what actually happens in practice is something else. >> reporter: the film also stars morten son as freud. the desent dance is now open in theaters and is already bringing in awards for the star george clooney. the palm springs festival will present clooney with its award in february. the chairman said clooney can do it all....
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Nov 27, 2011
11/11
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halsted -- freud probably contained to about a 12 year period. spirit i want to recommend to you all this marvelous book, "an anatomy of addiction: sigmund freud, william halsted, and the miracle drug cocaine" by doctor and professor howard markel. i want to thank you for coming and i want to thank c-span. and a half of the institution of humanities and the ann arbor book fair and the hatcher library, thank you, howard markel. [applause] >> for more information visit the author's website, howardmarkel.com. >> we would like to hear from you. tweet us with the book, twitter.com/booktv. >> and now i booktv, joseph mccartin recounts the professional air traffic controllers organization called for an illegal strike in august of 1981 and the subsequent firing of the strikers by president ronald reagan. this lasts an hour and 10 minutes. it took place at the jimmy carter presidential library and museum in atlanta, georgia. >> hey, everybody, thank you for coming tonight. before i introduce joseph mccartin i would like to say a few words about what led t
halsted -- freud probably contained to about a 12 year period. spirit i want to recommend to you all this marvelous book, "an anatomy of addiction: sigmund freud, william halsted, and the miracle drug cocaine" by doctor and professor howard markel. i want to thank you for coming and i want to thank c-span. and a half of the institution of humanities and the ann arbor book fair and the hatcher library, thank you, howard markel. [applause] >> for more information visit the...
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Nov 26, 2011
11/11
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CNNW
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story of carl jung and his relationship with sigmund freud.he patient that comes between them. great performances in it. karaing knightly is the standout actress. very bold, daring performance that she turns in here. the movie gets sideline spots but for the most part it's good. i think kara knightly will get an oscar nomination. if you are the history of violence he transformed himself. he's not in horror movies. he's got a bit more dramatic. >> real quick your grade on that one? >> i give at it b. i think this is another one definitely worth seeing. >> another one getting oscar buzz, george clooney starring in "the descendants." let's take a quick peek at it. >> okay. what's going on this week is really a family matter. do you understand. sid will not be interested in meeting your grandparents. >> dad, i told you he was going to be with me. i'll be a lot more civil with him around. >> okay. so this one, this is a case of george clooney's character, his wife dies and is re reunited wi his kids. >> this is family drama. relatively heavy. famil
story of carl jung and his relationship with sigmund freud.he patient that comes between them. great performances in it. karaing knightly is the standout actress. very bold, daring performance that she turns in here. the movie gets sideline spots but for the most part it's good. i think kara knightly will get an oscar nomination. if you are the history of violence he transformed himself. he's not in horror movies. he's got a bit more dramatic. >> real quick your grade on that one?...
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Nov 17, 2011
11/11
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WMPT
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and the crack down on protesters, it gave the government until freud hold the violence against the protesters or face violence. one said france should be able to put aside their other policy differences in deciding a course of action against syria. >> they are both in the forefront of countries now who insist the president has to go. the world has to move on now to plan the post era. i think they will be seeing eye-to-eye particularly because of the diplomacy that should be pushed through the yoited nations. because options are still not that good. nobody really believes the economic sanctions will bring -- it seems determined to hold on. and it could probably with stand economic sanctions for a long time, presenting syria that if it's -- dwhrooned, they also have to plan for what happens if syria continues to slide into civil war and if the asset regime crumbles, how are they going to hold the opposition forces together? at least where syria is at the moment. >> here with the business news. northern iraq soon to become part of -- >> probably important to remind our viewers around the world t
and the crack down on protesters, it gave the government until freud hold the violence against the protesters or face violence. one said france should be able to put aside their other policy differences in deciding a course of action against syria. >> they are both in the forefront of countries now who insist the president has to go. the world has to move on now to plan the post era. i think they will be seeing eye-to-eye particularly because of the diplomacy that should be pushed through...
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capital punishment but what can you give then i have to take back the kid i'm from oregon and our freud davis is living because you know he didn't do it but the argument and said now i'm going to capital punishment there's no way you can play a game with you know create peace here hitler here was going to execute you i would be against you not going to send you've been upset you know somebody killed our family and i protested in my life i'd be protesting against me that's the most you know. but the last person standing will be the one for a state to have moral authority it can be had in the murder you cannot and you know she pointed out you were also arrested september third you mentioned b.p. just a second ago blocking the entrance to protest against b.p. in fact i think you went to court yesterday i was in court you think you know what's this is this is you were you were concerned about the with their handling this twenty billion dollars victims compensation fund is that you know all the poor people. poor white women black towards mexican normally their hair dark the statement they fi
capital punishment but what can you give then i have to take back the kid i'm from oregon and our freud davis is living because you know he didn't do it but the argument and said now i'm going to capital punishment there's no way you can play a game with you know create peace here hitler here was going to execute you i would be against you not going to send you've been upset you know somebody killed our family and i protested in my life i'd be protesting against me that's the most you know. but...
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freud a. protest in tahrir square but they did not participate after. this is. a political dimension for the readers of this movement not to participate in or do they have said not to cause any deterioration of relations between egyptians or between egyptians and the supreme military council can i just ask one final question about relations between. the former chief is now said that he will agree to give up his presidential aspirations and instead act for the interim government how does he get on with the muslim brotherhood if they come to power in the dominating parliament what are the chances that they can work effectively with one another. i think you see poor political dealings. or to be held in the interest of the huge shame people. if the muslim brotherhood won. this election is these elections i think they will try to. present accepted. by them which will carry out with their. relations their program so if they see that mr bradbury which. was the. director of the international atomic energy agency is the best. place we need to talk so thanks for being on
freud a. protest in tahrir square but they did not participate after. this is. a political dimension for the readers of this movement not to participate in or do they have said not to cause any deterioration of relations between egyptians or between egyptians and the supreme military council can i just ask one final question about relations between. the former chief is now said that he will agree to give up his presidential aspirations and instead act for the interim government how does he get...
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Nov 20, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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this is the curse of fraught -- the curse of freud. what fucked did you up so badly you turned out the way that you did. [laughter] the answer is nothing. with the possible exception of when i was eight or nine might bedtime story was dr. jekyll and mr. hyde. [laughter] that is true. and what i remember, almost like the basis of what i do, not on purpose but i am drawn that way but when people say when you choose to do what you do what makes you assume i had any choice? with dr. jekyll mr. hyde period coming he walks along the side of the road and a mother and a young girl are walking. and he walks right over her and her bones are breaking and snapping in a little girl screaming and he turns around in walks over her again. i have never forgotten that. maybe that twisted me a little bit but who could say for sure? [laughter] my mother used to say this is the basis of it the of the worst thing that could have been. then whatever happens is better than that. [laughter] only somebody from new england thinks that way but it became my a mant
this is the curse of fraught -- the curse of freud. what fucked did you up so badly you turned out the way that you did. [laughter] the answer is nothing. with the possible exception of when i was eight or nine might bedtime story was dr. jekyll and mr. hyde. [laughter] that is true. and what i remember, almost like the basis of what i do, not on purpose but i am drawn that way but when people say when you choose to do what you do what makes you assume i had any choice? with dr. jekyll mr. hyde...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Nov 11, 2011
11/11
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WHUT
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you don't need freud to tell you that that is a disturbance because hamlet tells you it's a disturbance. "don't let him put his reachy fingers on you. don't plant reachy kisses on your lips" he says about... says to his mother about the uncle. he's obsessed with the mother's sexual life d as i say there the play itself this is not an imposition. >> rose: plon i can't say, why does he get... who is he and why does he get the great line. >> the great line being to yourself be true? >> rose: above all, to thine own self be true. >> it's not clear. you would go two ways with this and you can play this in... at least two ws. one a polonius is a nattering old fool and if you play it that way, polonius is a nattering old foolou emphasize the fact that most of these chestnuts-- to thine own sell bf true maybe foremost among them-- a good things to say but they don't correspond to living experience, let alone the livingxperience of hamlet who doesn't even know what his true self is and can't figure out what his relationship is to himself. the whole play is about the fact that it's impossible to
you don't need freud to tell you that that is a disturbance because hamlet tells you it's a disturbance. "don't let him put his reachy fingers on you. don't plant reachy kisses on your lips" he says about... says to his mother about the uncle. he's obsessed with the mother's sexual life d as i say there the play itself this is not an imposition. >> rose: plon i can't say, why does he get... who is he and why does he get the great line. >> the great line being to yourself...
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Nov 4, 2011
11/11
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WUSA
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. >>> good morning and welcome back to 9news now, it's 5:14 this freud morning. it is going to be a great crisp weekend for all the walkers and runners taking part in the numerous causes that are happening. >> yes. >> you're involved in one of those specifically. >> the heart walk at nationals park, the channel 9 tent right there at the center field gates. we'll be walking arnold, it's a 5 k walk. >> it is along the riverfront. we did that with oh my goodness, i hadn't been that route. it's gorgeous. >> if you don't want to join us downtown, maybe between that and the alzheimer's walk and everything else. head on over to st. mark's orthodox church. the big festival. >> baklava, cookies and brownies. >> that's on river road from bethesda, today, tomorrow and sunday. we go to the weather graphics, this the weekend we fall back. that's right. we go from daylight saving time to standard time. do that saturday night or if you're up sunday morning, if you just want to be really exact we go from 1:59:59 to 1:00 a.m. standard time there on sunday morning. so might sort o
. >>> good morning and welcome back to 9news now, it's 5:14 this freud morning. it is going to be a great crisp weekend for all the walkers and runners taking part in the numerous causes that are happening. >> yes. >> you're involved in one of those specifically. >> the heart walk at nationals park, the channel 9 tent right there at the center field gates. we'll be walking arnold, it's a 5 k walk. >> it is along the riverfront. we did that with oh my goodness, i...
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Nov 4, 2011
11/11
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MSNBC
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and so there is a bit of shodden freud on the street to not only see him lose the gubernatorial electionome back and now things have gone terribly badly. >> ah, shaddenfreud. thank you, bertha. "the daily rundown" will be back in 30 seconds. >>> bottom of the hour now. here's a quick look at what's driving the day. president obama will head back home tonight after a full day of meetings in france. he'll speak alongside president sarkozy on the sidelines of the g-20 summit. >>> the national restaurant association will decide whether to lift a nondisclosure agreement that bars a former employee from discussing sexual harassment allegations she made against herman cain in the 1990s. >>> and a california jury will go behind closed doors today to deliberate the fate of dr. conrad murray who prosecutors say delivered a fatal dose of propofol to michael jackson. >>> other stories making headlines this friday. if you have plans to travel over the holidays, be prepared to pay up. the major airlines are raising their minimum prices. in some cases by as much as $10 per round-trip. airlines are also
and so there is a bit of shodden freud on the street to not only see him lose the gubernatorial electionome back and now things have gone terribly badly. >> ah, shaddenfreud. thank you, bertha. "the daily rundown" will be back in 30 seconds. >>> bottom of the hour now. here's a quick look at what's driving the day. president obama will head back home tonight after a full day of meetings in france. he'll speak alongside president sarkozy on the sidelines of the g-20...
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Nov 17, 2011
11/11
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KPIX
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driver's license and an assault rifle were found in a car band on the near the white house after freud'sriday's shooting. he was apparently obsessed with president obama. >>> an attorney says his client will testified that he was sexually assaulted by jerry sandusky one of the latest developments in the scandal involving the former assistant football coach at penn state. the attorney says he expects other sandusky accusers to come forward. sandusky is accused of raping eight boys. others have come forward, as well. mother of one of the alleged victims says her son's school questioned the boy after she complained about sandusky taking him out of class without her permission. she spoke by phone with her voice altered to cnn. >> i said three times, i'm going to call the police right now. he said i needed to think about the ramifications of what would happen if i did that. >> what do you think they meant by that? >> i don't know. i guess -- i'm assuming what we're going through now. i don't really know. >> sandusky is awaiting a preliminary hearing next month on 40 criminal counts. >>> 5:22
driver's license and an assault rifle were found in a car band on the near the white house after freud'sriday's shooting. he was apparently obsessed with president obama. >>> an attorney says his client will testified that he was sexually assaulted by jerry sandusky one of the latest developments in the scandal involving the former assistant football coach at penn state. the attorney says he expects other sandusky accusers to come forward. sandusky is accused of raping eight boys....
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Nov 14, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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tremendous occupation and all of the media and i would call it the next generalization but contained and freud spoke of his aggressive drive and you can identify with people who were suffering to say they got it is not be. but even more important, i can fantasize i have done this murder but somebody else will be discovered and i can go conscience three. >> i agree pledge your take and is great for human experience but i don't believe them with a huge expansion of violent video games has been accompanied with the great american in crime decline and also not convinced by the hydraulic model if you did it out to buy entertainment you are much less likely but i think it is day guilty pleasure and if you look at the old testament there is some gruesome stuff and people enjoy it for interesting reasons. >> but i would think very few people watch the execution in terms of the population but part of the population. >> people can amount to money stomach turn came public execution-- execution with disembowelled and in the past was possible to be overcome by a collective sadism. >> i notice there was lau
tremendous occupation and all of the media and i would call it the next generalization but contained and freud spoke of his aggressive drive and you can identify with people who were suffering to say they got it is not be. but even more important, i can fantasize i have done this murder but somebody else will be discovered and i can go conscience three. >> i agree pledge your take and is great for human experience but i don't believe them with a huge expansion of violent video games has...
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Nov 12, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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he tries to spit it out, it's everywhere, it's in freud and marx. the great haunting in our life and it has to do -- it's not only this, but it has to do with this extraordinary move of cutting out the motivation and the throwing away. then he did this again and again. many years a afterward, he discovered he could do this. if you look at the many great plays that followed at king lear at othello, you find he does the same thing. >> born in 1564, died in 1616, what year would he have written hamlet? >> he wrote hamlet in 1601. >> where was that in the context of the poems that he wrote and the plays that he had wrote? >> he hadn't written -- this iss if, the first -- he had written "romeo & juliet" the one major tragedy before. and then the outpouring of major tragedies follows. he had written 2/3 of what he would eventually write. he written most -- >> how do you teach this? i don't want to accuse you of using techniques, but in a classroom, how do you approach your students and when do you see them getting interested? >> lots of different ways of
he tries to spit it out, it's everywhere, it's in freud and marx. the great haunting in our life and it has to do -- it's not only this, but it has to do with this extraordinary move of cutting out the motivation and the throwing away. then he did this again and again. many years a afterward, he discovered he could do this. if you look at the many great plays that followed at king lear at othello, you find he does the same thing. >> born in 1564, died in 1616, what year would he have...
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Nov 20, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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in addition to some of the meanings that freud gave them too narrowly, i think, dreaming have a prospective dinegligence my view. that's why so many cultures see them as predicting the future. they don't predict the future but they have certain feelings or direction you experience yourself as moving in from the immediate present. and in that sense they are prospective. in the dream of the -- infernal cho chorus, it became a very important dream. there was a chorus, like a barber shop quartet and i was singing in it but it was an infern chorus and i knew in the dream and when i woke up infernal meant hell, death all the things that infernal means and i woke up very upset that i was talking to these people and felt tainted by it, and it was time i felt strongly to leave that chorus. to stop having the interviews and to go home and have my say about them and what i saw them to be and what to have done. in a way it was a signal that i was ready to wind up the work in the field and go home and do -- and i also, you know, talk about i knew i couldn't clear my desk of those interviews, of them unt
in addition to some of the meanings that freud gave them too narrowly, i think, dreaming have a prospective dinegligence my view. that's why so many cultures see them as predicting the future. they don't predict the future but they have certain feelings or direction you experience yourself as moving in from the immediate present. and in that sense they are prospective. in the dream of the -- infernal cho chorus, it became a very important dream. there was a chorus, like a barber shop quartet...
789
789
Nov 24, 2011
11/11
by
WRC
tv
eye 789
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freud, please call your office. >> reminder, catch the macy's thanksgiving day parade starting at 8:00 right here on nbc. >>> let's get a check of the top stories. natalie has the holiday only jeff rossen is at the news desk. >> happy thanksgiving to you and everybody else. >>> we begin with a plane crash near the mountains of phoenix that happened late last night in apache junction, arizona. the aircraft, a small twin engine with three adults and three children on board, headed to a thanksgiving get together, just after the impact as you can see in this video, a huge fireball and flames that burned overnight. search teams still on the scene, but no sign of survivors. firefighters are back on the front lines near reno, nevada, fighting a dangerous wildfire there. it's still burning at this hour. 2,500 acres of brushland have been destroyed. luckily, no buildings damaged yet, but firefighters trying to get the wildfire under control before it reaches homes nearby. >>> shocking new developments this morning in the sex abuse case at penn state against former coach jerry sandusky. two new
freud, please call your office. >> reminder, catch the macy's thanksgiving day parade starting at 8:00 right here on nbc. >>> let's get a check of the top stories. natalie has the holiday only jeff rossen is at the news desk. >> happy thanksgiving to you and everybody else. >>> we begin with a plane crash near the mountains of phoenix that happened late last night in apache junction, arizona. the aircraft, a small twin engine with three adults and three children on...
226
226
Nov 28, 2011
11/11
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 226
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>> well, it's a film about freud and the patient that brought them together.e perhaps a bit too risque. what was it about the script that was too risque? >> i they said, okay, david wants to offer you a part and i thought, wow, i've been such a fan of his for years and i pretty much 95% decided to say yes before i even read the script and they sent it to me and i loved it and i thought it was fascinating. the character that i play is a masochist and there were scenes in the script and i thought that it was very important that they should be there, but i didn't know whether i particular lly wanted to play them, particularly in the age of internet and all of that. do i really want to put that out there? i phoned david up and said i love you, i love your work but i just don't think i can do this. he said, look, i think it would be a complete travesty if you don't play the part because of them, we'll take the scenes out. i said, all right, well, let's talk about it. we talked about it a lot and we just sort of talked about the character and the way that he saw tho
>> well, it's a film about freud and the patient that brought them together.e perhaps a bit too risque. what was it about the script that was too risque? >> i they said, okay, david wants to offer you a part and i thought, wow, i've been such a fan of his for years and i pretty much 95% decided to say yes before i even read the script and they sent it to me and i loved it and i thought it was fascinating. the character that i play is a masochist and there were scenes in the script...
252
252
Nov 16, 2011
11/11
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 252
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>> i'm just giving you the freud background. >> oh, lord. it's often disturbing with you. really love what you have done with it. under leslie's jurisdiction. this is a great issue. >>> up next, stephen king's new novel rewrites a defining moment in american history. we're going to talk to him about that, next. ♪ ♪ [ multiple sounds making melodic tune ] ♪ [ male announcer ] at northrop grumman, every innovation, every solution, comes together for a single purpose -- to make the world a safer place. that's the value of performance. northrop grumman. how about making it brighter. more colorful. ♪ and putting all our helpers to work? so we can build on our favorite traditions by adding a few new ones. we've all got garlands and budgets to stretch. and this year, we can keep them both evergreen. more saving. more doing. that's the power of the home depot. make your season even brighter with 300-count icicle lights for just $7.48. yeah. it's his thing... i don't even participate. boom! here it comes. bring it back! bring it... [ male announcer ] some parties need a bowl of que
>> i'm just giving you the freud background. >> oh, lord. it's often disturbing with you. really love what you have done with it. under leslie's jurisdiction. this is a great issue. >>> up next, stephen king's new novel rewrites a defining moment in american history. we're going to talk to him about that, next. ♪ ♪ [ multiple sounds making melodic tune ] ♪ [ male announcer ] at northrop grumman, every innovation, every solution, comes together for a single purpose --...