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Feb 14, 2015
02/15
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FOXNEWSW
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dean if you can find a tea party in greenwich village, we have a movie ticket for you. >> a hit to theuthors of the broken windows theory of policing. just this week we've learned that the first ten days of february, new york city has not had a single murder. murder in new york since 1993, it's down 80%. robbery down 82%. all because of a policing theory they came up with, implemented by giuliani and bill bratton. >> thanks to my panel and all of you for watching. i'm paul gigot. hope to see you right here next week. >>> a fox news alert. the security as much as in denmark now calling a shooting at a meeting about freedom of speech a likely terror attack. one person confirmed dead three others were hurt. shots rang out at the cafe in copenhagen. where the event was being held and police are now on the lookout for the shooters who sped away in a car. the free speech event was put together by the controversial swedish artist lars vilks. he's fine, but one organizer thinks vilks was the target. he's faced death threats for his cartoons depicting t
dean if you can find a tea party in greenwich village, we have a movie ticket for you. >> a hit to theuthors of the broken windows theory of policing. just this week we've learned that the first ten days of february, new york city has not had a single murder. murder in new york since 1993, it's down 80%. robbery down 82%. all because of a policing theory they came up with, implemented by giuliani and bill bratton. >> thanks to my panel and all of you for watching. i'm paul gigot....
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Feb 16, 2015
02/15
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CNNW
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he got his first taste of stand-up at the bitter end in greenwich village. >> he bombed and most people said i'm never doing this again. it's too humiliating, but he kept going back. >> it's the lowest form of show business. there's, you know, i think, stripping, the guy with the organ and the monkey, stand-up. >> persistence paid off. he scored a nightly 2:00 a.m. gig at the comedy cellar. >> it's always about the distinctive voice. >> caroline hirsch is the longtime owner of caroline's on broadway. >> you know, it takes years of experience and jon had that certain something. >> stewart landed his first tv job as a writer for hirsch's a & e show caroline's comedy hour. >> here is my good friend, jon stewart. >> and finally caught fire on the comedy circuit. >> it took me five or six years to get good enough to do five minutes of stand up on letterman. >> here is your host, he makes his own gravy, jon stewart! >> then in 1993, we have a great show, a big break. his own talk show on mtv. >> i can't believe you actually have your own show. >> wait a minute! you are boldly going where no m
he got his first taste of stand-up at the bitter end in greenwich village. >> he bombed and most people said i'm never doing this again. it's too humiliating, but he kept going back. >> it's the lowest form of show business. there's, you know, i think, stripping, the guy with the organ and the monkey, stand-up. >> persistence paid off. he scored a nightly 2:00 a.m. gig at the comedy cellar. >> it's always about the distinctive voice. >> caroline hirsch is the...
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183
Feb 27, 2015
02/15
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CNNW
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>> he has been on "saturday night live," and he walked the greenwich village parade.ew things. >> are they known to escape? >> oh, yeah. they like to run. pierre likes to run if he can. and you always have to have a catch pin. that is an open gate lead-in. i set them up, and i have a gate open and he has to go through, and that is the catch. >> what did they do wrong today, how did the llama escape? did they do something wrong? >> well, they might have left the gate open or a fence down i don't know how theirs escaped. >> how fast can they go? >> they are fast. >> up to 35 miles per hour? >> maybe. they are fast. >> at first they thought it was an alpaca, but it is not. what is the difference? >> the alpaca is smaller, and fiber is thinner. >> are they mean animals? >> no they have very docile. >> pierre is cute. >> and they are natural guard animals for sheep. >> all right. thank you. are we done? are we out of time. all right. we will be right back. bye, pierre. thanks for coming in. >> he is happeny to come. ah! come on! let's hide in the attic. no. in the basement
>> he has been on "saturday night live," and he walked the greenwich village parade.ew things. >> are they known to escape? >> oh, yeah. they like to run. pierre likes to run if he can. and you always have to have a catch pin. that is an open gate lead-in. i set them up, and i have a gate open and he has to go through, and that is the catch. >> what did they do wrong today, how did the llama escape? did they do something wrong? >> well, they might have...
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Feb 16, 2015
02/15
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CNNW
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so the greenwich village movement was there to celebrate people's culture. >> if you like the music,really signing on for their ways of looking at the world, too. ♪ and then, eventually, one guy emerges as being special. ♪ ♪ a bullet from the back of a bush took medgar evers' blood ♪ >> during that time in the '60s, as that cultural revolution was slowly bubbling and kids were starting to question authority, question what was happening in their country, they're looking for answers. >> bob dylan thought that folk music was poetry. he took beat energy and mixed it with folk culture, and it's more lyrical intensity than anybody's put to song before. ♪ and the negro's name is used, it is plain ♪ ♪ for the politician's gain as he rises to fame ♪ >> up until the time of bob dylan, there were the songwriters and there were the singers. dylan started writing his own music. >> he says, i am going to comment on the world, i'm going to comment on the nature of this human experience. bob dylan was sort of in this white-hot moment of saying more in the popular song than anyone ever had before. ♪
so the greenwich village movement was there to celebrate people's culture. >> if you like the music,really signing on for their ways of looking at the world, too. ♪ and then, eventually, one guy emerges as being special. ♪ ♪ a bullet from the back of a bush took medgar evers' blood ♪ >> during that time in the '60s, as that cultural revolution was slowly bubbling and kids were starting to question authority, question what was happening in their country, they're looking for...
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188
Feb 16, 2015
02/15
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CNNW
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june of 1969, the police staged a raid, just a routine raid on a gay bar, the stonewall inn in greenwich villagehis case, men fought back. >> stonewall was a watershed moment in really the development of civil rights for the lgbt community. within four years of stonewall, the american psychiatric association removes homosexuality from its list of mental disorders. in four years. this was a movement that could not be denied. with each decade, the glass ceiling gets chipped away at, and ultimately, one would hope, broken. >> so much of the '60s is now draped in nostalgia, but the things that were important and that were so controversial then, whether it was the movement for civil rights, the environmental movement, or the women's movement, much of that work became cornerstones for the world we currently live in. >> i no longer accept society's judgment that my group is second class. >> women began running for office, being able to open up their own businesses. you now have women doctors and scientists and astronauts, things that were unheard of. >> after the '60s, people began to take a more holis
june of 1969, the police staged a raid, just a routine raid on a gay bar, the stonewall inn in greenwich villagehis case, men fought back. >> stonewall was a watershed moment in really the development of civil rights for the lgbt community. within four years of stonewall, the american psychiatric association removes homosexuality from its list of mental disorders. in four years. this was a movement that could not be denied. with each decade, the glass ceiling gets chipped away at, and...
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90
Feb 24, 2015
02/15
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MSNBCW
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does it mean he loves alabama even if he's never been there, harlem greenwich village? texas?ause the most famous texas republicans flee texas every summer to get as far away as they can. in maine, because they apparently don't love texas in the summer. they love maine in the summer. they cheat on texas every summer. poor texas sits there in the sweltering heat of summer waiting and waiting for the presidents bush to give up their summer mistress and start loving texas again. if they love texas at all. when a republican politician says he loves america, does it mean he loves the american people? all of them? including the ones who don't vote for him? or the ones who don't vote at all? does it mean he loves the people who hate him? because every american politician is hated by someone and many are hated by millions of people. the american people understand that love is complicated and that love of country isn't easily defined and might not even be necessary. last year a pew poll showed that only 28% of americans think that the u.s. stands above all other countries in the world.
does it mean he loves alabama even if he's never been there, harlem greenwich village? texas?ause the most famous texas republicans flee texas every summer to get as far away as they can. in maine, because they apparently don't love texas in the summer. they love maine in the summer. they cheat on texas every summer. poor texas sits there in the sweltering heat of summer waiting and waiting for the presidents bush to give up their summer mistress and start loving texas again. if they love texas...
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Feb 15, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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york, columbia lou there's gene tunney who beat t the great dempsey, a native new yorker from greenwich village it was always the big hitters, the outsiders, the ruths and the dempseys who captured the crowds. others came in with a lot of money. joejoe paterson from chicago, he's a breakaway. a one-time socialist, the rebel in the family. he comes to new york city in 1919, and he found the daily news on a shoe string. six years later it's the best-selling newspaper in the world, not just in new york city, and new yorkers are learning about sports and movie characters and everything else in a new way and reading it in a new way. and the tabloids, of course have never gotten away. and what i tried to do with these characters -- and this is important, i think, for the story -- knowing the future, knowing what's going the happen can be a tremendous liability for a writer of history. because then you slant your whole story toward that. if i write the story on the '20s knowing that the depression's on the horizon, the whole story becomes a prelude to the depression. but nobody in the '20s knew the de
york, columbia lou there's gene tunney who beat t the great dempsey, a native new yorker from greenwich village it was always the big hitters, the outsiders, the ruths and the dempseys who captured the crowds. others came in with a lot of money. joejoe paterson from chicago, he's a breakaway. a one-time socialist, the rebel in the family. he comes to new york city in 1919, and he found the daily news on a shoe string. six years later it's the best-selling newspaper in the world, not just in new...
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505
Feb 14, 2015
02/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 505
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york, columbia lou there's gene tunney who beat t the great dempsey, a native new yorker from greenwich village it was always the big hitters, the outsiders, the ruths and the dempseys who captured the crowds. others came in with a lot of money. joejoe paterson from chicago, he's a breakaway. a one-time socialist, the rebel in the family. he comes to new york city in 1919, and he found the daily news on a shoe string. six years later it's the best-selling newspaper in the world, not just in new york city, and new yorkers are learning about sports and movie characters and everything else in a new way and reading it in a new way. and the tabloids, of course have never gotten away. and what i tried to do with these characters -- and this is important, i think, for the story -- knowing the future, knowing what's going the happen can be a tremendous liability for a writer of history. because then you slant your whole story toward that. if i write the story on the '20s knowing that the depression's on the horizon, the whole story becomes a prelude to the depression. but nobody in the '20s knew the de
york, columbia lou there's gene tunney who beat t the great dempsey, a native new yorker from greenwich village it was always the big hitters, the outsiders, the ruths and the dempseys who captured the crowds. others came in with a lot of money. joejoe paterson from chicago, he's a breakaway. a one-time socialist, the rebel in the family. he comes to new york city in 1919, and he found the daily news on a shoe string. six years later it's the best-selling newspaper in the world, not just in new...
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75
Feb 22, 2015
02/15
by
CSPAN3
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eye 75
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wrote his wife i have found a room in a farmhouse in the wonderful village a mile and a half north of the city. it is called greenwich. a mile and a half north of new york city. well that resolution in december of 1784 to move to new york city also contained the creation of a three-man committee to oversee the building of one federal town on the delaware, in the environs of trenton, on either side of the river. seven states were willing, as they had been a year earlier, to vote that way. but it is going to take nine to appropriate the money. george washington, the only comment he has on paper about the location of the seat of government was when he wrote to congressman grayson from virginia and said i don't have to be someone who sees into the future to know that location will never satisfy the united states of america. grayson led the fight in congress to block appropriation. it took nine votes. they only had seven. money was never appropriated. this federal town on the delaware was not built. the issue kind of goes to sleep until 1787 when the new constitution is written. believe me, it was a counterrevolution led
wrote his wife i have found a room in a farmhouse in the wonderful village a mile and a half north of the city. it is called greenwich. a mile and a half north of new york city. well that resolution in december of 1784 to move to new york city also contained the creation of a three-man committee to oversee the building of one federal town on the delaware, in the environs of trenton, on either side of the river. seven states were willing, as they had been a year earlier, to vote that way. but it...