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Dec 19, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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and was in, was unaware, was getting water warnings from washington.as was short, the army general who is in charge of the garrison, walter short. but they come in the days after pearl harbor, scapegoats were frankly needed. and dublin was either going to go towards, because there were calls for congressional investigation. the media wanted to know what happened, and, how did this happen? how were we caught with our pants down? and quite frankly the blame was either going to go to roosevelt, going to go to stimson and hall in the navy, or was going to go to husband kimmel and short. so as kind of a political calculation, that people in washington are more public assistance given these two military men and that access to media and is not amended have access to. so eventually they were replaced by fdr and actually both left the military and janet of 1942 spent if i remember right you do say that kimmel was obsessed about perl and it being a target? >> yes, he was. and he had recorded it and he had taken some preparations, obviously not enough, but he was
and was in, was unaware, was getting water warnings from washington.as was short, the army general who is in charge of the garrison, walter short. but they come in the days after pearl harbor, scapegoats were frankly needed. and dublin was either going to go towards, because there were calls for congressional investigation. the media wanted to know what happened, and, how did this happen? how were we caught with our pants down? and quite frankly the blame was either going to go to roosevelt,...
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Dec 25, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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>> gorbachev knew the reid was going to take place, but he was told it was to try to persuade them to keep the soviet union in an intact for a new treaty. but they agreed to collapse the soviet union, three republics had been set up the soviet union , so now they could collapse it. from that moment on the soviet union was finished. they went to the other republics and got them to sign on. three is before december 25th all of the leaders of the republic civilian, they all agree to that there would set up vons independent states but would have no common center, no center, nobody in charge of their foreign policy : note : each policy. it would be which early no role for gorbachev anymore. but interestingly read up until a few days before that he still fall that he could maintain the soviet union in some form and it would alcee sense. he wrote a long letter. there would alcee sense and agree he should stay in the kremlin at least in charge of foreign policy. >> the national standing. >> absolutely. >> this of an expanding of the possibilities of the soviet union, some role in the world. a
>> gorbachev knew the reid was going to take place, but he was told it was to try to persuade them to keep the soviet union in an intact for a new treaty. but they agreed to collapse the soviet union, three republics had been set up the soviet union , so now they could collapse it. from that moment on the soviet union was finished. they went to the other republics and got them to sign on. three is before december 25th all of the leaders of the republic civilian, they all agree to that...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 12, 2011
12/11
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SFGTV2
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that was their plan. it was a very nice square grid.the south side of the sunset is called the park side. i think it would be closer to golden gate park, but it was sort of a realty bargaining scheme because it was mostly sand dunes. the first announcement was that it was much warmer than you would imagine. it is beautiful. there are trees. you could get away from the wind. it is sunny. they were just trying to make it sound good. >> there was a row house down there -- there is still a row house down there. >> you could rent that for your wedding. the boss of san francisco, who was dethroned after the earthquake, he was arrested. they tracked it down there. he was hiding out. >> was it still county land at that time? >> city lead. >> this is after it was subdivided into standard lots? >> they are big. anyone who live there, you might have a backyard twice as long as your house. smaller home builders started taking root with larger ones. a lot of times, it was like this. a guy would buy a couple of lots and essentially build two houses a
that was their plan. it was a very nice square grid.the south side of the sunset is called the park side. i think it would be closer to golden gate park, but it was sort of a realty bargaining scheme because it was mostly sand dunes. the first announcement was that it was much warmer than you would imagine. it is beautiful. there are trees. you could get away from the wind. it is sunny. they were just trying to make it sound good. >> there was a row house down there -- there is still a...
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Dec 18, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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eye 189
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she was terrified and she was depressed. given birth but part of because she thought it would wreck their family life. the osha such a fishbowl and tommy pressures. and she was amazed to find as she said that it had the opposite effect. during their marriage since 1953, john kennedy had run for vice president, run for reelection in the senate. and so was gone she said almost every weekend. very much a part. the first time now they were there in that house he worked in the oval office. they were together in physical proximity a lot more. so i think there was an acceleration contrary to what she expected that there really weren't their happiest years spent we heard about her interesting spell of campaigning in washington -- wisconsin. >> she really loved wisconsin. >> these proceedings were being televised but i don't know a lot of pro-wisconsin speak she's extremely fond of wisconsin. everyone in wisconsin please tell me that part of laughing. >> there's a a word in the transcript i did not how to spell. it was eww. >> i thin
she was terrified and she was depressed. given birth but part of because she thought it would wreck their family life. the osha such a fishbowl and tommy pressures. and she was amazed to find as she said that it had the opposite effect. during their marriage since 1953, john kennedy had run for vice president, run for reelection in the senate. and so was gone she said almost every weekend. very much a part. the first time now they were there in that house he worked in the oval office. they were...
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Dec 31, 2011
12/11
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MSNBCW
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he was muzzled, worried, was there a second murderer? even christensen mother and sister had their doubts. >> at the time we didn't connect it. she wasn't found in the green river, she was found in maple valley. >> what matters to us right now is the evidence that's left behind. >> what was left behind would later link christensen's murder to that of the other young victims dragged to the green river the year before. there were suspects, of course. the fbi did a profile, a profile that was so general it could have fit half the young men in seattle. what's more, the sketches the police were using were pretty much useless, too. >> there was one magazine that came out, a picture of me, a picture of this artist drawing, and the author of this article makes a comment, it's as plain as the nose on your face. the lead detective is the killer. >> there were 40,000 tips and that was the problem. there were hundreds, even thousands of suspects. >> i was amazed at the number of people that matched the profile that was given to us. so i was always s
he was muzzled, worried, was there a second murderer? even christensen mother and sister had their doubts. >> at the time we didn't connect it. she wasn't found in the green river, she was found in maple valley. >> what matters to us right now is the evidence that's left behind. >> what was left behind would later link christensen's murder to that of the other young victims dragged to the green river the year before. there were suspects, of course. the fbi did a profile, a...
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Dec 10, 2011
12/11
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i was talking about why it was a bad idea. if you make more than $70,500 a year, you are now in the same tax bracket as h.r. perot. i then added, comma, who makes more than $1 million a year. i made the fatal journalistic care, i did not check. the next day the guys at our business desk in dallas laughing and saying, ross perot makes $1 million a day. [laughter] then a from the rank and there was an operator saying ross perot calling collect for molly ivans. it really is funny. i like the guy. i am sure he is politically incorrect to an extent it would make people's teeth heard around here. i do like ross perot. he is a hard guy to dislike. basically guys who have made a lot of money and business have a hard time working in a system of checks and balances. the other guys party is a bit paranoid which is a slight bit like being slightly pregnant. >> our guest here in washington d.c. is douglas brinkley, presidential historian and. and in dallas, carolyn barta. begin your telephone calls starting what rolf watching us in chicago
i was talking about why it was a bad idea. if you make more than $70,500 a year, you are now in the same tax bracket as h.r. perot. i then added, comma, who makes more than $1 million a year. i made the fatal journalistic care, i did not check. the next day the guys at our business desk in dallas laughing and saying, ross perot makes $1 million a day. [laughter] then a from the rank and there was an operator saying ross perot calling collect for molly ivans. it really is funny. i like the guy....
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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59
Dec 9, 2011
12/11
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SFGTV2
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i hadn't heard about that and it was perfect. it was exactly what i was looking for. i can go off and preach about the fact they think so many of us asian american authors and asian authors in general tend to go back and write about our ancestors and write about things in our past not our specific past but may be of of ancestors and mothers and grand mothers. we have been telling their story. i think the generation to come, will be telling stories of living here. it will be different stories. but the oppression of our voices have been for so many, many years, if you think back the first writer who was read in terms of asian american was maxine kingston. i read her in high school and was greatly affected by reading about the woman warrior. before her there were few. there were some but didn't make that economic splash. they were never read in a large way. maxine was the first one we read her in school we knew of her. she was not out there like anny tan was when she wrote the joy luck club. so much of it is timing. it meant all the history and the voices before then had
i hadn't heard about that and it was perfect. it was exactly what i was looking for. i can go off and preach about the fact they think so many of us asian american authors and asian authors in general tend to go back and write about our ancestors and write about things in our past not our specific past but may be of of ancestors and mothers and grand mothers. we have been telling their story. i think the generation to come, will be telling stories of living here. it will be different stories....
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Dec 27, 2011
12/11
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KQEH
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>> i was scared. i was very scared. somehow, when you're that age, you think you're immortal, slightly anyway. and i just felt, "this is defining of who i am, and i... i have to do this." >> susie: after graduating from bryn mawr, faust received her ph.d in american civilization and became a professor at the university of pennsylvania, where she won two major teaching awards. she was also gaining a reputation as a historian's historian, writing highly regarded books that took a fresh look at central questions about the civil war. at penn, she was offered a variety of high-level administrative jobs, but she turned them all down. >> i did not want to be a university administrator. i wanted to be a scholar and a teacher. and when i was asked to consider jobs that took me out of the classroom and away from my scholarship, i said, "no, i don't want to do that." >> susie: but in 2001, harvard president neil rudenstine came calling. the university had been co-ed for years and its famous sister school, radcliffe college, was be
>> i was scared. i was very scared. somehow, when you're that age, you think you're immortal, slightly anyway. and i just felt, "this is defining of who i am, and i... i have to do this." >> susie: after graduating from bryn mawr, faust received her ph.d in american civilization and became a professor at the university of pennsylvania, where she won two major teaching awards. she was also gaining a reputation as a historian's historian, writing highly regarded books that...
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Dec 24, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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it was a ploy. it was a faint. he wasn't quitting. he was just saying, to them, look, i'm not president. i have presidential powers. if i quit as leader of the communist party, you can't do anything about that. i would still be president and you won't have the same connection with me. >> he wanted them to say, please, don't quit. >> he was fully aware that the caliber of these people who were trying to hold him back and that's when he made his remark that they're a rabid dog and i have to keep them on a leash. if one wants to take a positive view of gorbachev's actions, that explains a lot, that he allowed the hard-liners to stay close to him so he could bring them forward to the point when they couldn't succeed in staging a coup, which happened in august of 1991. in retrospects of suspect that -- retrospect that was his response. i was there in early 1991 and was among correspondents who were cid cal of gorbachev and could see yeltsin was doing the right thing, the courageous thing, which is stopping the crackdown in the baltics. yel
it was a ploy. it was a faint. he wasn't quitting. he was just saying, to them, look, i'm not president. i have presidential powers. if i quit as leader of the communist party, you can't do anything about that. i would still be president and you won't have the same connection with me. >> he wanted them to say, please, don't quit. >> he was fully aware that the caliber of these people who were trying to hold him back and that's when he made his remark that they're a rabid dog and i...
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121
Dec 24, 2011
12/11
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KRCB
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just the person he was in love with was gone and he was trying to... he's trying to... struggling desperately to keep his life together and family together and help his kids through that transition while he going through it. and there was something that seemed really heroic about that and wonderful and resonated with me. >> reporter:. >> rose: we conude with ali soufanny who interrogated key al qaeda detainees. >> if you look at the efficacy. it said padilla was caught in may of 2004. so if you brief anyone in washington about the time line of waterboarding it makessense. we start waterboarding in abu zubaydah in may, 2002. we arrest padilla in may, 2003. however the kaefsy memo is wrong. padilla was arrested in mae of 2002. months before waterboarding. so date brs r being changed. >> rose: matt damon, cameron crowe d ali soufan when we continue. captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. >> rose: in 2006, a journalist named benjamin me moved his family to a house in the british countryside. it had 12 bedrooms an
just the person he was in love with was gone and he was trying to... he's trying to... struggling desperately to keep his life together and family together and help his kids through that transition while he going through it. and there was something that seemed really heroic about that and wonderful and resonated with me. >> reporter:. >> rose: we conude with ali soufanny who interrogated key al qaeda detainees. >> if you look at the efficacy. it said padilla was caught in may...
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Dec 17, 2011
12/11
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CNNW
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i was in los angeles. i was doing a recording. i was 22.hotel. and i saw her walk by. i recognized her. and introduced myself. and asked her if she wanted to have lunch with me. and she says, i can't, you know, i'm late to a photo shoot. and i said, please? ten minutes? and she said all right. and i couldn't believe i was sitting across the table from this girl. i just couldn't get over it. she was from texas. and she likes bud. you know, and she was laid back and just funny. and she had a strong handshake. and i said, man, this is too good to be true. and we just fell in love with each other. we've been together 20, 22 years. >> and you are hopelessly in love with you because every interview i read with you -- i read a q & a with you yesterday you did with a british newspaper. there were 30 questions. your answer to half of them involved your wife. >> oh, is that right? >> yeah. and i was very moved by that. >> i think it's pavlovian at this point. i just -- i'm afraid i'm going to get in trouble. >> i actually read like you meant it. like
i was in los angeles. i was doing a recording. i was 22.hotel. and i saw her walk by. i recognized her. and introduced myself. and asked her if she wanted to have lunch with me. and she says, i can't, you know, i'm late to a photo shoot. and i said, please? ten minutes? and she said all right. and i couldn't believe i was sitting across the table from this girl. i just couldn't get over it. she was from texas. and she likes bud. you know, and she was laid back and just funny. and she had a...
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Dec 26, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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he was sorted this professoriat of befuddled guy. that was was maybe within. he was a big hit. he was aloof. he was utterly unconcerned with anything at that point in life except his own legacy, which he thought was the league of nations. so he ignored it. he had stomach trouble at the time. he's laying in bed with gunshots going outside. people are being beaten outside of the white house. this is all over washington. he does nothing. in his district commissioner keeps pleading with him. you know, my police can handle this. they were overwhelmed. and so he aptly does nothing. finally, after four or five days of mayhem, he finally calls and the troops. the troops are there and within an hour shutdown. and this is an important point because throughout the summer and i think this speaks to the 60s as well, the reasons for writing a manifold and we can talk on and on about them. but stopping the riot is pretty easy. we can discipline sort impartial point guns at people write in and say go home. and if you do that, people go home because a mob does not want to attack disciplined tro
he was sorted this professoriat of befuddled guy. that was was maybe within. he was a big hit. he was aloof. he was utterly unconcerned with anything at that point in life except his own legacy, which he thought was the league of nations. so he ignored it. he had stomach trouble at the time. he's laying in bed with gunshots going outside. people are being beaten outside of the white house. this is all over washington. he does nothing. in his district commissioner keeps pleading with him. you...
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and i was told she was sick. and two weeks later we got a call from this latin teacher very distraught because she had wanted to be at phoebe's funeral, and she was told by the principal that he had decided not to invite her because it was not about her. >> so before, during and after, phoebe was just constantly let down by people who should have been there to protect her, really. >> yeah. when i enrolled phoebe in august -- >> august 2009? >> yes. >> let's just go back to the start here, anne. let's get this in chronological order. i think it's important to do that. i want to know how you feel about every step of the way here. you bring a family from ireland to america in the summer of 2009. why did you do that? what was the motivation? >> i was taking a career break. and teaching -- i was going -- well, i did, teach in the states. and i thought the girls would get a taste of america. it could be a fantastic year for them. >> describe the area in ireland that you were living before. very rural. very quiet. >> oh
and i was told she was sick. and two weeks later we got a call from this latin teacher very distraught because she had wanted to be at phoebe's funeral, and she was told by the principal that he had decided not to invite her because it was not about her. >> so before, during and after, phoebe was just constantly let down by people who should have been there to protect her, really. >> yeah. when i enrolled phoebe in august -- >> august 2009? >> yes. >> let's just go...
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Dec 28, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN
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it was not a $52,000 check. it was a $100,000 -- it was $100,000 in cash. it was more outrageous. i think today, one of the ways that members of congress get around feeling horrible about these things is that they are trying to make it out to be something other than what it is. i am having a fund-raiser next tuesday night. if you happen to be in the room and there is extra money falling at of your pocket. so there are more subtle. that make it easier to feel good about yourself. >> so they are asking for money for things i do not directly benefit them. is it your perception that it shifts away from the kind of blagojavich or cunningham type of corruption -- what we do for my personal checking account? add more toward how do we exercise influence for these things that benefit me? >> cunningham and blagojavich and bob ney, even, who have their hand at and want you to actually put money there -- that kind of stuff is rare. but the fact is that these members are not asking for contributions to something that they're interested in. this is for charity. oftentimes, these charities will
it was not a $52,000 check. it was a $100,000 -- it was $100,000 in cash. it was more outrageous. i think today, one of the ways that members of congress get around feeling horrible about these things is that they are trying to make it out to be something other than what it is. i am having a fund-raiser next tuesday night. if you happen to be in the room and there is extra money falling at of your pocket. so there are more subtle. that make it easier to feel good about yourself. >> so...
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Dec 29, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN
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that was very nice, was it not?e] this is a wonderful evening because we will emphasize our national defense, our veterans, and our military, which is, of course, very important. as has been said, the constitution is a rather important document and that we should uphold it. [applause] the constitution is very clear. the constitution is very clear on what the responsibilities are at the federal level. the defense is a vital function of the government. [yelling and screaming] [applause] [no audio[inaudible] [yelling and screaming] >> there are a lot of problems. the problems are manifested by a lot of people being upset in this country. we are all upset and we want to change it in washington. as a matter of fact, that is what our purpose is. >> i am a veteran, too! [screaming] >> if we get the diagnosis right, i will get the treatment right. right now, most people in this country know that there is seriously wrong. there's something seriously wrong with our foreign policy. [screaming] >> of course, we all know that th
that was very nice, was it not?e] this is a wonderful evening because we will emphasize our national defense, our veterans, and our military, which is, of course, very important. as has been said, the constitution is a rather important document and that we should uphold it. [applause] the constitution is very clear. the constitution is very clear on what the responsibilities are at the federal level. the defense is a vital function of the government. [yelling and screaming] [applause] [no...
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Dec 10, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN
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but i think that he was as the caller said before, he was quirky. he was mercurial. and as people got to know more about him, that they were -- they questioned whether or not he was temperamently suited to be in the white house. and i'm not sure even that perot thought that he was suited to be in the white house. and perhaps the sentiment that's been expressed that he didn't really want to be president, he wanted to stir up the american people, he wanted to be the nation's civics teacher. he wanted to make democracy work again for the people. so i think that he resisted traditional politics in many ways. and for good reason. he thought that the way that political campaigns are run today are really silly. i mean, flying around from place to place trying to get a sound bite on network tv. a plane of press following you around. essentially in a bubble. listening to the same speech over and over again. what are they going to learn? he thought that the press should be out talking to the people. what are their concerns of the people? and then how are the candidates address
but i think that he was as the caller said before, he was quirky. he was mercurial. and as people got to know more about him, that they were -- they questioned whether or not he was temperamently suited to be in the white house. and i'm not sure even that perot thought that he was suited to be in the white house. and perhaps the sentiment that's been expressed that he didn't really want to be president, he wanted to stir up the american people, he wanted to be the nation's civics teacher. he...
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Dec 31, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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was doing? >> it was a hybrid of social engineering and technical attacks and for example let's say i use a technical exploit to get into a large company and looking for a piece of code. i wanted to examine that code because if i got access i could break into that type of operating system. i would use social engineering once i got into find out what server the coat i was interested in was on. it would be much faster than me sitting on the network looking for it. i use social engineering and technical exploitation but we focus more on the social engineering side because it was more interesting. frank abigail reviewed the book and liked it. he called me a master social engineer. the know what that means in his category but i guess it is a compliment. i was very happy that he did because he never reviewed the book. was a great honor to have my book reviewed by him. any other questions? [inaudible] >> you follow me on twitter. jon markoff is the new york times reporter who wrote about me back in the
was doing? >> it was a hybrid of social engineering and technical attacks and for example let's say i use a technical exploit to get into a large company and looking for a piece of code. i wanted to examine that code because if i got access i could break into that type of operating system. i would use social engineering once i got into find out what server the coat i was interested in was on. it would be much faster than me sitting on the network looking for it. i use social engineering...
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Dec 10, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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it was great. i was--i was thrilled. i was--i felt like i was pressing up against the frame of my life every day, and i think that's what i needed at that point. c-span: who is new--and i--you say that... >> guest: yeah. c-span: ...there are some 130 authors overall, that they come in and out of this "great books"... >> guest: in the liter-in the literature course, at one time or another, in different combinations, yeah. i think at any--in any year, there were 25 texts. but... c-span: i mean, of all the ones that you've read... >> guest: right. c-span: ...the new ones that got you excited that you hadn't thought about. >> guest: boccaccio. i'd never read boccaccio. we only read rabelais. there was a--there was a pes... c-span: who was boccaccio? >> guest: boccaccio was a great humanist, comes after dante in florence, and--and did everything. he wrote early kind of psychological novels, and he was a scholar of dante. and he also--during the--he wrote this extraordinary collection of stories, "the decameron," about young a
it was great. i was--i was thrilled. i was--i felt like i was pressing up against the frame of my life every day, and i think that's what i needed at that point. c-span: who is new--and i--you say that... >> guest: yeah. c-span: ...there are some 130 authors overall, that they come in and out of this "great books"... >> guest: in the liter-in the literature course, at one time or another, in different combinations, yeah. i think at any--in any year, there were 25 texts....
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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493
Dec 3, 2011
12/11
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WHUT
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and what it was was it was an extreme case of dyslexia. i could not keep words in focus. they skipped and inverted and all the problems we face. nobody knew what that was. it measured against my appearance, i did not seem to be living up to my potential. i was living up to my native intelligence appeared to be as opposed to the failure of my academic pursuit. in that context, when i got to school, i was struggling desperately to cope. e it. and i left. that broke my mother's heart forever. tavis: it is hard to know -- there is not enough time. it is hard when, and i do not do this often. it is hard to take a book of this dance and a life of this rich and try to make sense out of it in 30 minutes. even 60 minutes from last night and tonight. i have chosen to not focus so much of our conversation on your entertainment life because people know that so well. these parts of it. the part i think people did not know which i find fascinating reading your detail of it in the book is how this raspy voice of yours came to be. we all know you from day-o. yo go to nba games and at som
and what it was was it was an extreme case of dyslexia. i could not keep words in focus. they skipped and inverted and all the problems we face. nobody knew what that was. it measured against my appearance, i did not seem to be living up to my potential. i was living up to my native intelligence appeared to be as opposed to the failure of my academic pursuit. in that context, when i got to school, i was struggling desperately to cope. e it. and i left. that broke my mother's heart forever....
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Dec 7, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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the cameraman was arrested while he was filming. do you remember how many people were arrested in moscow? thank you. >> we've time for one more question. no more questions? that's good. okay, to questions. what do the russian voters really want and the second one coming people are arrested. >> the short answer is no. it doesn't mean they don't want more interference. as david already indicated, the only choices they saw on the ballot for those approved by the regime they were not allowed on the ballot including for instance we don't know if the party of the popular freedom party which stands for the freedom for democracy for integration of europe we don't know how many because it wasn't there either the boycott this movement began it was referenced here it was called anything but united russia so they were calling on people to go and choose any. the people were saying flip a coin or something. it wasn't a conscious choice. it wasn't all for the communists. it was against vladimir putin the only way people could make because there wa
the cameraman was arrested while he was filming. do you remember how many people were arrested in moscow? thank you. >> we've time for one more question. no more questions? that's good. okay, to questions. what do the russian voters really want and the second one coming people are arrested. >> the short answer is no. it doesn't mean they don't want more interference. as david already indicated, the only choices they saw on the ballot for those approved by the regime they were not...
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Dec 29, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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she was not silent. she was not docile.g the muslim women are supposed to be and then there was the research i felt on the islamist perspective of nonviolence and the christian perspective of no violence that i exploited. [laughter] [applause] >> but it was that kind of thing that we used. so by the time when we decided to do this it had called on and then the women sat close and look at me on a normal day this is the way that we address. we continue to dress like this no one would take us seriously. nicely dressed and everything so we have to go back. we all recognize we have a role to play the violence of the communities are facing. the work for peace, the hertog was to cover the hair, no shoes, no jewelry, no makeup and god has a sense of humor and that time we discuss how did our time of prayer i had one of the funkiest bearcats. [laughter] in all of liberia. and i had to cover my hair. now i have to redo my hair. [laughter] that is how the christian women approach to and the muslim women just bought into. >> so there y
she was not silent. she was not docile.g the muslim women are supposed to be and then there was the research i felt on the islamist perspective of nonviolence and the christian perspective of no violence that i exploited. [laughter] [applause] >> but it was that kind of thing that we used. so by the time when we decided to do this it had called on and then the women sat close and look at me on a normal day this is the way that we address. we continue to dress like this no one would take...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 27, 2011
12/11
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and he was thankful that the process was coming to a close. and he stated, that he was not guilty. >> innocent people go to death row and more of them die. this was enough to cause any government to stop and take stock of where this was regard to the death penalty. in regard to that question, it always comes down to the morality of it all. >> let's start with questions for the panelists. george, thank you for being here. i know that we welcome and appreciate you being here. the remarks that you made, this has caused concerns for many opponents of the death penalty to have celebrated the fact that san francisco moved away from this and did this rather convincingly, and i want to put the question out there. are you in favor of the death penalty? >> the answer, this is no. but it is important to recognize the role that i play. i think it would be inappropriate for me to say, categorically -- if you look at this, clearly, and understandably, when she was rewarded, there are other death penalty incidents. we know that the death penalty -- 60% of ev
and he was thankful that the process was coming to a close. and he stated, that he was not guilty. >> innocent people go to death row and more of them die. this was enough to cause any government to stop and take stock of where this was regard to the death penalty. in regard to that question, it always comes down to the morality of it all. >> let's start with questions for the panelists. george, thank you for being here. i know that we welcome and appreciate you being here. the...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Dec 7, 2011
12/11
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WHUT
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hart was religion. a beautiful -- art was religion. explaining how he finally came to appreciate the gift. >> he wanted -- when he was young, his father was a pastor. he desperately wanted to bring the kind of the -- he would follow his father out when he was helping poor people in the dutch countryside. the level of consolation and appreciation that those people had for what his father did, he said, to lead had a wife liked -- life like paul's. he could not stay in school long enough to become a creature. you had to have a lot of academic education. >> he also was not good with people. >> he had a lot of difficulties with people. tavis: difficulty being around people. >> he could not interact with them. there was a group of people would then the dutch protestant community who had these ideas. artists could see into the beauty of nature in a way that them ministers. that is what he did. when you finally decided he could not be a minister, he decided he would use his art. tavis: you all right in such a way that i could never accept it.
hart was religion. a beautiful -- art was religion. explaining how he finally came to appreciate the gift. >> he wanted -- when he was young, his father was a pastor. he desperately wanted to bring the kind of the -- he would follow his father out when he was helping poor people in the dutch countryside. the level of consolation and appreciation that those people had for what his father did, he said, to lead had a wife liked -- life like paul's. he could not stay in school long enough to...
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Dec 26, 2011
12/11
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what was it about what was happening on that bridge that made you realize, this is really it. >> it was the sheer number of people. i have seen demonstrations against mubarak and others. it was a handful, maybe 100 or maybe 200. the bridge was full. we are taking thousands and thousands of people. and i think what became apparent that day, the regime was outnumbered by the people. i think that realization spread so quickly that three days later, basically the regime gave up and handed over the country to the army. >> people died on the bridge. you were beat up, pushed around near that bridge, weren't you? >> that was on the 28th. >> on the 2th. >> in cairo you get shoved around quite a lot by the security forces. >> be more specific which day. >> okay, yeah. yeah, on the 28th, we were filming and this was clearly the day when it was all going to come down and sort of with finality. we were with tommy evans and mary rogers. we were surrounded by plainclothed policemen and hired thugs. they looked like they were under the influence of narcotics. they were insisting on taking away the came
what was it about what was happening on that bridge that made you realize, this is really it. >> it was the sheer number of people. i have seen demonstrations against mubarak and others. it was a handful, maybe 100 or maybe 200. the bridge was full. we are taking thousands and thousands of people. and i think what became apparent that day, the regime was outnumbered by the people. i think that realization spread so quickly that three days later, basically the regime gave up and handed...
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a plus and it was a plus for the really really good richard it was a plus it was a plus no question about it and it was a plus for the russian people and it was a reply plus for people who lived under the autocracies for years russia is a rich country but they had a reason to kill a system that just cannot work and now these people have a second chance and we wish them well ok ron the differing of you last were in the program going along because it's too early to sell. i forgot as of this moment i agree with stephen there's a lot of the sons against the breakup of the soviet the one forgets i personally i regret. to fight off the soviet union as a multinational state but just because i wanted to nationalise a multinational doug those kind of countries which bring together people different people different nations together which attempt it's gratian and separate a common identity as the whole kind of pluralistic mix that's my my ideals so to that extent i think that the break up of the soviet union was about the same time i have to cite this is my father what i don't think that the f
a plus and it was a plus for the really really good richard it was a plus it was a plus no question about it and it was a plus for the russian people and it was a reply plus for people who lived under the autocracies for years russia is a rich country but they had a reason to kill a system that just cannot work and now these people have a second chance and we wish them well ok ron the differing of you last were in the program going along because it's too early to sell. i forgot as of this...
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Dec 4, 2011
12/11
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i was scared to death. i was scared to death. i had to get out of there. >> nell turns to question barton about the noise she's heard coming from the office. one look at his face tells her something is terribly wrong. >> and his eyes met mine and for a moment we just locked in mutual communication, and he seemed very, very sad. for a moment i felt incredible sadness in this person. and then suddenly he broke eye contact. i just gasped and pulled back just as the bullet passed right in front of my forehead and smashed into my computer screen. >> with barton's attention focused in the main room, brent doonan, wounded and bleeding on the office floor, uses the opportunity to make his escape. >> i knew if i lay there, that i was going to die. i just charged him and pushed him -- pushed him away as i went, and luckily he didn't cap me as i was going across. maybe he was just stunned. but i made it past him and out the conference room and down to the end of the hallway. >> barton keeps firing relentlessly as people run and duck for cov
i was scared to death. i was scared to death. i had to get out of there. >> nell turns to question barton about the noise she's heard coming from the office. one look at his face tells her something is terribly wrong. >> and his eyes met mine and for a moment we just locked in mutual communication, and he seemed very, very sad. for a moment i felt incredible sadness in this person. and then suddenly he broke eye contact. i just gasped and pulled back just as the bullet passed right...
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Dec 27, 2011
12/11
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>> i tell you, it was about six months, and that was in las vegas, it was when the underworld, who inventedegas, gave it over to the big corporations, because it made so much plun. las vegas made so much money, they bought caesar's palace, they bought the hilton hotel, they bought everything, and that's when that change came about, and it wasn't just my career but everybody in vegas had to take a step down before they got re-evaluated. >> how did all that success, period make you feel? >> i don't feel like ever retiring. i'm only as good as my next show. the other one is gone you see. >> in your autobiography published in 1998, you shed light on a darker time you had in hollywood mainly in the '70s and you said this about drugs. "cocaine flowed as freely as champagne and it seemed like the hip thing to do but as time went on it got harder to refuse it. i overindill unlged and quickly realized i was in trouble." you were going through what almost every hollywood star goes through at some stage when you see the younger stars these days or younger entertainers, not called necessarily stars but
>> i tell you, it was about six months, and that was in las vegas, it was when the underworld, who inventedegas, gave it over to the big corporations, because it made so much plun. las vegas made so much money, they bought caesar's palace, they bought the hilton hotel, they bought everything, and that's when that change came about, and it wasn't just my career but everybody in vegas had to take a step down before they got re-evaluated. >> how did all that success, period make you...
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Dec 11, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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but he was proud of who he was. and not only was he proud of who he was coming he was proud to let black people know that they should be just as proud as who they are. he was talking them about respect for yourself, respect for your neighbors. fight for your dignity and the dignity of your community. i love that. so i began to go to the meetings every saturday and i would make it a point to stay after the meeting so i could run with him and say, ask, can i go with you to your next location? he said if he can keep that. i had the job to keep up with them, but i would feed on the knowledge. i left malcolm down the line god called him and as we get closer to the olympic games, i get a call on the telephone. i left east texas state. the school was integrated one year before it got there. i'm coming off lenox avenue in new york. it's like putting vinegar and alcohol together, some combustible thing. it was just bad. so i came back and i'm hoping my mother paint the kitchen on the phone rang. she says johnny, someone on t
but he was proud of who he was. and not only was he proud of who he was coming he was proud to let black people know that they should be just as proud as who they are. he was talking them about respect for yourself, respect for your neighbors. fight for your dignity and the dignity of your community. i love that. so i began to go to the meetings every saturday and i would make it a point to stay after the meeting so i could run with him and say, ask, can i go with you to your next location? he...
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Dec 18, 2011
12/11
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it was too costly. >> saddam hussein was otis, because the regime was so awful in his particulars and, that can't but yield the exact same thing you say it yields, and that's would we be better off without saddam hussein? and that's what seduced us into thinking the war was a good idea. ann marie? >> no, when we asked would we be better off without saddam hussein, we were assuming it would be at low cost and quickly and the iraqi people would rise up in the way lots of nations have now, and if you would have said would we be better without saddam hussein at the cost of ten years of war and all those deaths, we would have said no way. >> i am thinking on the premise that's an inappropriate question to ask? >> no, if people were looking at america at the time, and saying the world would be better off without president bush, what would we do -- that's so arrogant. >> i would not have supported the iraq war if the idea was we were not going to knock out the regime. it was framed. the entire u.n. supported condemnation and sanctions against iraq in november, and most members of the u.n. st
it was too costly. >> saddam hussein was otis, because the regime was so awful in his particulars and, that can't but yield the exact same thing you say it yields, and that's would we be better off without saddam hussein? and that's what seduced us into thinking the war was a good idea. ann marie? >> no, when we asked would we be better off without saddam hussein, we were assuming it would be at low cost and quickly and the iraqi people would rise up in the way lots of nations have...
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Dec 11, 2011
12/11
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CNN
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it was fun.e to work and i'm glad i went ton to make movies like "cloout" and "coming home" and "on golden pond." i'm glad i didn't get stuck in the barbarella mode. >> why wouldn't you be that keen to be a sex symbol? >> i'm 74 years old. i think it would be inappropriate. >> i don't mean now. when you look back to that period of your life, you don't seem that happy that you were this global sex figure if you'd like, the idol of millions of men. >> if you want it know, i wouldn't. it did not do well at the box office. it's become a cult film but it was not a big deal at the time and, you know, i came back and pretty soon after i did "they shoot horses don't they" so that window of time when one could have slotted me into sex symbol didn't really last because at heart i'm a serious actress who much preferred being in "they short horses doesn't they" and shortly after that "clute" because being stuck with a label like sex symbol could be very limiting. if a man i care about finds me sex eep, that'
it was fun.e to work and i'm glad i went ton to make movies like "cloout" and "coming home" and "on golden pond." i'm glad i didn't get stuck in the barbarella mode. >> why wouldn't you be that keen to be a sex symbol? >> i'm 74 years old. i think it would be inappropriate. >> i don't mean now. when you look back to that period of your life, you don't seem that happy that you were this global sex figure if you'd like, the idol of millions of men....
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Dec 25, 2011
12/11
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CNNW
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he was a green beret, he was a jungle expert, he, you know, he was pretty scary, you know, when i wasyou know, you know, i love my father dearly. and at the end of his life, we became closer than ever. but it wasn't always that way. >> well, your parents divorced. >> yes. >> how old were you when that happened? >> i was 21. >> what effect did that havon you? >> it had a very deep effect on me. it had a very deep effect on me. i was a momma's boy. and i loved my mother. we were best friends. we were really, really close. and, you know, my father had his infidelities and so forth. and they came out, they were quite deep. but my mother always taught me that that's your father regardless of what he did to me. he's your father. and you have to honor him. you have to love him. you have to respect him. she would always refer to the bible and say it says, you know, honor thy mother and thy father. it doesn't say but or unless or if. it says honor them. so that's what you have to do. her thing was always you do what you're supposed to do. don't worry about everybody else. so i was taught to be
he was a green beret, he was a jungle expert, he, you know, he was pretty scary, you know, when i wasyou know, you know, i love my father dearly. and at the end of his life, we became closer than ever. but it wasn't always that way. >> well, your parents divorced. >> yes. >> how old were you when that happened? >> i was 21. >> what effect did that havon you? >> it had a very deep effect on me. it had a very deep effect on me. i was a momma's boy. and i loved...
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i was dying. it was over. i was going to die. it didn't matter. but i didn't want to die. >> this is "piers morgan tonight." >>> good evening! i've got to know donald trump pretty well over the last few years, and i can tell you he's a man who's used to being number one. now he's getting flak from members of the republican party who are saying he's dumbing down the political dialogue in this country. tonight i'll give him a chance to respond. his latest book, "it's time to get tough: making america number one again." and i'm delights to say donald trump joins me again now. donald, you're getting it in the neck a bit from your own people, really, the republican candidates, who seem to be cueing up to have a pop at you. why is that and do you care? >> well, i don't really care, but i don't think i'm getting it too much. i think most people are totally in favor. we've had a great response. i have millions and millions of people on my websites, and they all want me to do something. and they want me to have debates. and as you know, a
i was dying. it was over. i was going to die. it didn't matter. but i didn't want to die. >> this is "piers morgan tonight." >>> good evening! i've got to know donald trump pretty well over the last few years, and i can tell you he's a man who's used to being number one. now he's getting flak from members of the republican party who are saying he's dumbing down the political dialogue in this country. tonight i'll give him a chance to respond. his latest book, "it's...
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Dec 31, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN
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it was different. it was fresh. it was young. it is also experienced. he had been governor for a long time. it was renaissance time in the democratic party. a lot of the older democrats had to be brought around. they had to be converted and convinced. here we are. we're celebrating. [applause] >> by the time you get to the announcement speech in 1991, and you read that speech today, there are a lot of notes the will be familiar and traditional democrats about expanding opportunity and economic fairness. there are new notes about responsibility and mary in opportunity and responsibility. talk about the process of that speech, that landmark moment in the campaign and to what extent there was a poll about how far you went in a traditional direction versus how far you went in challenging the party. >> one of the things you need to remember in that time it is that bill clinton had been on the front lines for 10 years in education reform and health care reform, doing the hard work in a tough state, by the way. so, he had a better understanding of how to commu
it was different. it was fresh. it was young. it is also experienced. he had been governor for a long time. it was renaissance time in the democratic party. a lot of the older democrats had to be brought around. they had to be converted and convinced. here we are. we're celebrating. [applause] >> by the time you get to the announcement speech in 1991, and you read that speech today, there are a lot of notes the will be familiar and traditional democrats about expanding opportunity and...
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with all they had was just a cucumber and a slice of bread so that was that was one meal actually.on top of this was also the fear of radiation because the situation to be seen was just going from bad to worse and i was always in my mind it was a very real fear you could see. amongst everyone else also. there was in any visible panic it seemed like it wasn't in japanese culture to panic and such but more there was certainly fear this is a town over what i around halfway between tokyo and fukushima i'm still under fifty kilometers south of the nuclear power plant but already the radiation levels here over double that of those in tokyo began to mimic meeting one young fan. one young couple with a newborn baby actually just. i think a week old also been born to cover they before the before the earthquake and. the mother wasn't particularly well some of the she was very weak and obviously she wanted to stay put there from sendai that they had left they just didn't trust what the government was saying that the sister situation in fukushima was under control and they just wanted to get o
with all they had was just a cucumber and a slice of bread so that was that was one meal actually.on top of this was also the fear of radiation because the situation to be seen was just going from bad to worse and i was always in my mind it was a very real fear you could see. amongst everyone else also. there was in any visible panic it seemed like it wasn't in japanese culture to panic and such but more there was certainly fear this is a town over what i around halfway between tokyo and...
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suddenly there was there was panic i was outside of the car about to film the sound. and the police and the emergency workers suddenly just a sound saying. it was all in japanese but i could understand it was that you could see the fear panic and also they were shouting tsunami literally yelling in my face to get back into the car. this is. history in the making. testimony. ten stories that shapes two thousand and eleven on our t.v. . well there's been a global condemnation of the christmas day bombings in nigeria that have killed nearly forty people the attacks have targeted christian worshippers the deadliest bombing was in a suburb of the capital where an explosion struck a packed congregation in a church as they left morning mass a second attack followed shortly afterwards outside of a church northeast of a buddha a series of other explosions were also reported elsewhere radical islamist sect boko haram admitted responsibility for the attacks the militants there have been involved in prolonging the bloody fighting with government forces in recent days claiming mor
suddenly there was there was panic i was outside of the car about to film the sound. and the police and the emergency workers suddenly just a sound saying. it was all in japanese but i could understand it was that you could see the fear panic and also they were shouting tsunami literally yelling in my face to get back into the car. this is. history in the making. testimony. ten stories that shapes two thousand and eleven on our t.v. . well there's been a global condemnation of the christmas day...
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Dec 10, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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it was rough, it was ugly. who didn't want the data, who wanted the data, were they able to actually use the day? it took us about a year to get about 90% clean. when we did operation b107, we actually had a 50% reduction in the first, like, 45 days or something like that. so we're getting better. is that a long-term solution? no. we need to figure out what is the longer-term solution that we can really have more impact. but we kind of come up against we're the good guys, we can't push code to that machine like the bad guys, what other mechanisms are available. so we have robust debates. >> so one of the things that mark did that was just so good, at least compelling to me, was in describing your patching process and when that patch went out, sort of you being prepared, realizing that there was an instruction manual that you'd given to the black hats out there and, you know, you had alerted them to a vulnerable. to me -- vulnerability. to me, how do you get around that as, you know, just a structural problem th
it was rough, it was ugly. who didn't want the data, who wanted the data, were they able to actually use the day? it took us about a year to get about 90% clean. when we did operation b107, we actually had a 50% reduction in the first, like, 45 days or something like that. so we're getting better. is that a long-term solution? no. we need to figure out what is the longer-term solution that we can really have more impact. but we kind of come up against we're the good guys, we can't push code to...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Dec 22, 2011
12/11
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SFGTV2
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i was like, oh, yeah. ok. it was pretty cool. i tried it a couple times. after about a day of that my shoulders were hurting and everything. i said, this is a repetitive stress injury waiting to happen. so i kind of scratched that. i think the point is, though, technology can be really important no matter where we are at whatever age and that's something that's always changing so you have to kind of really utilize that. but at the same time certain things stay the same and we have been talking about partnership, right? and what is a partnership with the leading agency which is the local government and the communalt? -- community? it's people. people connecting with people. it's one thing to talk about something in the abstract and it's another thing to actually figure out how to do it in real time with all sorts of things happening at once. and it's tricky. so what i'm going to do -- first of all, i want to say by reference people ask me what recovery is about, and basically what i've decided now is it starts as a sprint and it ends as a marathon. only whe
i was like, oh, yeah. ok. it was pretty cool. i tried it a couple times. after about a day of that my shoulders were hurting and everything. i said, this is a repetitive stress injury waiting to happen. so i kind of scratched that. i think the point is, though, technology can be really important no matter where we are at whatever age and that's something that's always changing so you have to kind of really utilize that. but at the same time certain things stay the same and we have been talking...
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. >> i was having fun. i was laughing. i had a great time. it was captain lou made it so much fun.was very -- he was just a funny fellow. >> so it was a time in the '80s you were really at the vanguard of pop video with mtv and everything else. what told you this is the way to go? this is the future? >> i think all of us at the time when video happened, you know, i view what i do as a performance art. i think it is the same for a lot of artists of my time and when you saw a video, you knew we would never listen, just listen to music again. we would always see it. and for me, i spent my whole life one foot in art and one foot in music. so, this was a great, you know, a great opportunity for me. >> the '80s, were they good fun for you as i imagined they had to be? >> you know, when i went to london for the first time. >> you were huge in london. >> it was so much fun. because i had never been to london and i didn't know anything, you know. i turned on the tv and there was a program with, you know, two people walking cows. and it seemed like they had backyards and they were just walki
. >> i was having fun. i was laughing. i had a great time. it was captain lou made it so much fun.was very -- he was just a funny fellow. >> so it was a time in the '80s you were really at the vanguard of pop video with mtv and everything else. what told you this is the way to go? this is the future? >> i think all of us at the time when video happened, you know, i view what i do as a performance art. i think it is the same for a lot of artists of my time and when you saw a...
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451
Dec 24, 2011
12/11
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MSNBCW
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i was confused and i was afraid.he thing i remember the most was the cold concrete floor underneath my bare feet. and it just sitting on the edge of that bunk, man, and i just broke down and started crying and crying for all the people that i hurt crying for justice crying for my mother. you know what i mean and during those three years, seven men, you know were executed they lost their lives. >> a change in indiana's capital punishment laws saved stroud from joining them. his sentence was commuted to three life terms without the possibility of parole. but stroud's salvation did not immediately make him a better inmate. >> i was the thug of them all. i was a chief among all sinners. i was the bullies' bully. i could make things move how i wanted to make them move. that was just a gift that i had. >> that all changed when he found himself sharing a cell with mcgrown who is serving 40 years for armed robbery and criminal confinement. >> when i first came over he was rough around the edges. me being a mellow type guy. i
i was confused and i was afraid.he thing i remember the most was the cold concrete floor underneath my bare feet. and it just sitting on the edge of that bunk, man, and i just broke down and started crying and crying for all the people that i hurt crying for justice crying for my mother. you know what i mean and during those three years, seven men, you know were executed they lost their lives. >> a change in indiana's capital punishment laws saved stroud from joining them. his sentence...
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Dec 6, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN2
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>> that was really the saving grace. that was what was going to get us out of the crisis. dynegy was going to merge with enron, and i was going to shore up our balance sheet and everything would be fine. and i'm sure ken lay thought in a couple of years will either split again or he would be head of the new enron. and so then the focus became on we've got to face the company and this is how we do it. so we focus on intel can we put together package of communications. how are we going to convince them that this is a good thing. and then how are we going to can get it external he. >> you say that if that can lay thought that somebody is going to still be emerged from this impact. and this is an attitude we've also seen 2008 and 2009 with a lot wall street titans that just sort of still believed that they somehow were going to get by no matter what. lehman brothers, gene kane at bear stearns, et cetera. can you tell which is a little bit about, both of you about what your impression of what ken lay was thinking and how he was doing this at this time. >> i worked closely with
>> that was really the saving grace. that was what was going to get us out of the crisis. dynegy was going to merge with enron, and i was going to shore up our balance sheet and everything would be fine. and i'm sure ken lay thought in a couple of years will either split again or he would be head of the new enron. and so then the focus became on we've got to face the company and this is how we do it. so we focus on intel can we put together package of communications. how are we going to...
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Dec 15, 2011
12/11
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KQED
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that was clear particularly where the autocracy was against the leaders and no one knew what it was for with the exception of the muslim brotherhood. >> crlie: syria how long can asad stay in power? >> we talked to the syrian immigire be in power? >> charlie: somebody came in. >> it won't happen here. >> charlie: does that lead to the conclusion he'll be able to tough it out as long as there's intervention from outside. >> in syria what the arab league has done in getting in strong on sanctions and making him syria a p pariah it wouldn't have happened. >> charlie: bahrain remains to be seen. >> there's a change in the arab world and some places want to hang on and where the government is powerful and control over the people. i do think syria is the place where 're witnessing day in and day out the most incredible bravery of the people protesting whe every one of them is risking his or her life. >> charlie: what are the implications of the occupy movement and implications of 2012. >> kurt talks about in the story and they went into hibernation and we talked to some including kurt's nephe
that was clear particularly where the autocracy was against the leaders and no one knew what it was for with the exception of the muslim brotherhood. >> crlie: syria how long can asad stay in power? >> we talked to the syrian immigire be in power? >> charlie: somebody came in. >> it won't happen here. >> charlie: does that lead to the conclusion he'll be able to tough it out as long as there's intervention from outside. >> in syria what the arab league has...
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Dec 21, 2011
12/11
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i think it was.n monitoring these guys were doing deals with in monitoring these guys were doing deals with you, you start getting nervous. you cut them off. in earlier october. mr. ketchum is nervous about things over the course of the summer, through august, maybe the books are getting cooked. i mean, we're to regulators over there. and, finally, the bankruptcy trustee comes in, boom, blocks of downtown is able to return $4 billion which is 72% as of today. i'm curious going to support mr. capuano was going. you know, databanks come in, and if they did they were doing their job, and sweep all the cash that then left the customers holding the bag? >> let me review some of -- >> i said a lot there, i apologize. >> and i hope i don't replicate that. let me review some of the activities of the new york fed during the week of october 24, which was the week preceding the bankruptcy. and it started with a downgrade on monday the 24th, the next day there was a large loss declared by mf global. and already
i think it was.n monitoring these guys were doing deals with in monitoring these guys were doing deals with you, you start getting nervous. you cut them off. in earlier october. mr. ketchum is nervous about things over the course of the summer, through august, maybe the books are getting cooked. i mean, we're to regulators over there. and, finally, the bankruptcy trustee comes in, boom, blocks of downtown is able to return $4 billion which is 72% as of today. i'm curious going to support mr....
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Dec 30, 2011
12/11
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WHUT
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he was very happy. he was...ou know, this stuff that i talk about in our competitiveness with one another it has had its severe moments, but on serious issues, never this light farehat i'm talking about. but sidney was always very supportive. he questioned what happened when we tried to find parts in the theater because we struck a bargain with one another. in many ways it was more silent based upon what our emotional and spiritual nuances fed us. it was what we had to do. we had to be responsible for an image of black culture. it was not abundant. the parts we selectedere testimy to our masculinity, was a testimony to our manhood, was a testimony to our blackness was a testimony to our oppression. was a testimony to our feistiness in the hunt for liberation and whatever hollywood calle, these were the litany of things we had to address to see what accommodated and embraced these goals. if you didn't, we just didn't do it. and to a great degree we had to walk through this minefield and as hard as i tried to deal
he was very happy. he was...ou know, this stuff that i talk about in our competitiveness with one another it has had its severe moments, but on serious issues, never this light farehat i'm talking about. but sidney was always very supportive. he questioned what happened when we tried to find parts in the theater because we struck a bargain with one another. in many ways it was more silent based upon what our emotional and spiritual nuances fed us. it was what we had to do. we had to be...
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Dec 19, 2011
12/11
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WUSA
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i knew that i was a good player. but i still was afraid of nature. i still was afraid. and i realized that you really don't need to be afraid. for all the kids out there, one of the biggest lessons that i've ever learned-- and i learned in from skateboarding of all things-- is how to fall down and how to get back up. if you can learn how to fall down in a graceful and humble bel way, you can get back up and do it again. for me, trust me, falling down in front of millions and millions and millions of people, when i have that pressure-- i know everybody here is going to give me the money if i can make it there. i know everybody out there-- not everybody. i'm sure there are a lot of people not rooting for me-- but a lot of people rooting for me and that weight on me was just too much. >> jeff: one guy who wasn't rooting for you was cochran in the sweater vest. any regrets about how that played out? that was, obviously, a major turning point in the game. >> it was. i mean, the only rebrett i could possibly have had is maybe just not giving cochran the idol at that point. i
i knew that i was a good player. but i still was afraid of nature. i still was afraid. and i realized that you really don't need to be afraid. for all the kids out there, one of the biggest lessons that i've ever learned-- and i learned in from skateboarding of all things-- is how to fall down and how to get back up. if you can learn how to fall down in a graceful and humble bel way, you can get back up and do it again. for me, trust me, falling down in front of millions and millions and...
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the reality stokoe was i was on the show because somewhere i was absolutely fascinated from a. world we cannot. see. or have on windows to have a. t.v. anchorman false life and i said well let's take a look at what the simulated flight to mars was all about in reported by spotlights you live and they see me there are. thousands of volunteers wanted to take part but only six which chosen for the experiment the simulation of a flight to mars they were locked inside the mock spacecraft for seventeen months and although they didn't have to experience the takeoff of the weightlessness of real space they had to survive the monotony of more than five days in isolation and without sunlight what made the most flight more realistic was the forty minute do in communication with the outside world which imitated the communication lag between mars and the emergency situations were staged to see how the team would cool the crew strip climaxed in the simulated landing on mars but the experiment wasn't so much about plane cosmonaut but about trying to cool would be cut off from the rest of the
the reality stokoe was i was on the show because somewhere i was absolutely fascinated from a. world we cannot. see. or have on windows to have a. t.v. anchorman false life and i said well let's take a look at what the simulated flight to mars was all about in reported by spotlights you live and they see me there are. thousands of volunteers wanted to take part but only six which chosen for the experiment the simulation of a flight to mars they were locked inside the mock spacecraft for...
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was. in a strange turn of events incumbent party officials quickly joined nationalists in declaring that the u.s.s.r. was a prison of peoples men who only yesterday cried themselves hoarse defending soviet ideology found themselves among the most active critics of the soviet system. when demonstrations were held had been preplanned. we knew in advance how many times we were supposed to say long live the soviet ukraine the soviet union. all of that was written down everything was absolutely pre-determined the law everybody had to keep within certain boundaries and whenever someone tried to exceed them they were immediately slapped on the wrist. to get rid of the so called big brother that was always controlling them personally was the dream of the leaders of many soviet republics and the eyes of their people they put it like this i will liberate you from the kremlin oppression but by the time of gorbachev that oppression had long since gone. this archive footage shows typical propaganda of
was. in a strange turn of events incumbent party officials quickly joined nationalists in declaring that the u.s.s.r. was a prison of peoples men who only yesterday cried themselves hoarse defending soviet ideology found themselves among the most active critics of the soviet system. when demonstrations were held had been preplanned. we knew in advance how many times we were supposed to say long live the soviet ukraine the soviet union. all of that was written down everything was absolutely...