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May 16, 2016
05/16
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adam: hemingway had been very involved with spain. novel that first really brought him to the world's attention "the sun also rises," was based on a trip to spain in the 1920's. he called a great love for the country. he was in some ways were of the most apolitical of american writers. he never even voted the in the election of 1930's six, or instance. he felt a great sense of out rage at the national war in spain. as if a country he really loved was having great violence done to it. because of the spanish republic. he combined that with becoming a reporter again. been a foreign correspondent in europe for a time in the 1920's he signed up to write a long series of pieces from spain for the north american newspaper alliance. which was a syndicate of papers. he made numerous long trips to spain during the war to write these pieces and he was fascinated by the new medium of film. a film crew put together this documentary called "the spanish earth" and originally orson welles had signed up to be the narrator. somehow he and hemingway got
adam: hemingway had been very involved with spain. novel that first really brought him to the world's attention "the sun also rises," was based on a trip to spain in the 1920's. he called a great love for the country. he was in some ways were of the most apolitical of american writers. he never even voted the in the election of 1930's six, or instance. he felt a great sense of out rage at the national war in spain. as if a country he really loved was having great violence done to it....
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May 16, 2016
05/16
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CSPAN
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adam: hemingway had been very involved with spain. the novel that first really brought him to the world's attention "the sun also rises," was based on a trip to spain in the 1920's. he called a great love for the country. he was in some ways were of the most apolitical of american writers. he never even voted the in the election of 1936, for instance, he felt a great sense of outrage at the nationalist coup in spain. as if a country he really loved was having great violence done to it. he did everything he could to attract attention and support for the caus of the spanish republic. he combined that with becoming a reporter again. he had been a foreign correspondent in europe for a time in the 1920's he signed up to write a long series of pieces from spain for the north american newspaper alliance. which was a syndicate of apers. he made numerous long trips to spain during the war to write these pieces and he was fascinated by the new medium of ilm. a film crew put together this documentary called "the spanish earth" and originally ors
adam: hemingway had been very involved with spain. the novel that first really brought him to the world's attention "the sun also rises," was based on a trip to spain in the 1920's. he called a great love for the country. he was in some ways were of the most apolitical of american writers. he never even voted the in the election of 1936, for instance, he felt a great sense of outrage at the nationalist coup in spain. as if a country he really loved was having great violence done to...
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May 15, 2016
05/16
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CSPAN2
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, hemingway in cuba, the ambassador from cuba to washington is dispatched and told hemingway to get out of cuba here he says they are using the word about you in washington. the word was trader. hemingway said i am not political. this is where i write. this is where i love to be, but that focus, that use of the word , many became concerned about his finances and his vision and inability to write and he would never write again. addiction. the power of addiction lines in the grip to be able to hold the same neural circuits. whenever we encounter a stimulus eight neural-- neural response conditions us to behave in the same way over and over again. certainly true for alcohol. here is cow-- carolyn, great writer talking about the effects of capture. really focus on the queue, not in the alcohol, but her attention to the cube. i loved the sounds, the slide of the cork as it eased out of the wine bottle, the distant glug glug of booze point into a glass, the clatter of ice cubes in a tumbler. it wasn't the drink itself, it was all the cues. in fact, capture is the, i mean, certainly in addicti
, hemingway in cuba, the ambassador from cuba to washington is dispatched and told hemingway to get out of cuba here he says they are using the word about you in washington. the word was trader. hemingway said i am not political. this is where i write. this is where i love to be, but that focus, that use of the word , many became concerned about his finances and his vision and inability to write and he would never write again. addiction. the power of addiction lines in the grip to be able to...
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May 23, 2016
05/16
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BLOOMBERG
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rose: if morley did ernest hemingway or mike did ernest hemingway, with therapist into very differentypes of stories? jeff: they would have been. that is a story that needed orally. -- morley. his ability to tell the story was the best of any with the exception of charles kuralt. you do a good interview. -- he could do a good interview. he did over 900 stories. all kinds of stories. those were the days. he did them all so well. andones you really remember there is a great paragraph at least in every one of them. is what you see his defining style. the storytelling. his command of the language. charlie rose: people come to 60 minutes from cbs news. and they were in 60 minutes. -- learn 60 minutes. what is the process of becoming cbs news correspondent.n in the london bureau or the los angeles bureau. jeff: morley was trained by the original people at cbs. and so was don hewitt. charlie rose: burroughs boys. jeff: dixieland was in charge. friendly was still around. those with the giants and cbs news. the way we tell stories which is really different. we could spend an hour talking about
rose: if morley did ernest hemingway or mike did ernest hemingway, with therapist into very differentypes of stories? jeff: they would have been. that is a story that needed orally. -- morley. his ability to tell the story was the best of any with the exception of charles kuralt. you do a good interview. -- he could do a good interview. he did over 900 stories. all kinds of stories. those were the days. he did them all so well. andones you really remember there is a great paragraph at least in...
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May 24, 2016
05/16
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BLOOMBERG
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charlie: if morley did ernest hemingway or mike did ernest hemingway, would they have done very differentypes of stories? jeff: they would have been. that is a story that needed morley. his ability to tell the story was the best of any with the exception of charles kuralt. he could do a good interview. he did over 900 stories. and he did everything well. if you look at that body of work -- charlie: 919. [laughter] jeff: a lot of stories. but they are all kinds of stories. the ones you really remember -- and by the way, there is a great paragraph at least in every one of them. where you see his defining style. jeff: yeah, the storytelling. it's really just his command of the language. charlie: people come to 60 minutes from cbs news. and i assume elsewhere. and they learn 60 minutes. jeff: yes. charlie what is the process of : becoming a cbs news correspondent in the london bureau or the los angeles bureau? jeff: it depends. came,ends on the time you by the way. morley was trained by the original people at cbs. and so was don hewitt. charlie: murrow's boys. jeff: that's very important. mor
charlie: if morley did ernest hemingway or mike did ernest hemingway, would they have done very differentypes of stories? jeff: they would have been. that is a story that needed morley. his ability to tell the story was the best of any with the exception of charles kuralt. he could do a good interview. he did over 900 stories. and he did everything well. if you look at that body of work -- charlie: 919. [laughter] jeff: a lot of stories. but they are all kinds of stories. the ones you really...
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May 14, 2016
05/16
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CSPAN2
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hemingway, the ambassador of cuba from washington is dispatched and told hemingway to get out of cuba. he says and they are using a word about you in washington and the word was traitor. hemingway said i am not political. this is where i write. this is where i love to be put that use of the word he became increasingly concerned about his finances and his inability to write and he would never write again. addiction, the power of addiction lies in the grip of being able to hold the same neurocircuits. whenever we encounter a stimulus and neuroresponse conditions us to behave in the same way over and over again. it's certainly true for alcohol. there is power in that. the great writer who talked about the effect of capture really focused on that queue, her attention to the queue. i love the sounds of drink, the slide of the court as it eased out of the wine bottle, the distant glug, glug of booze pouring into a class -- glass the clatter of ice cubes in the tumbler. wasn't the drink itself, it was all the cues. in fact capture is a result. certainly an addiction, the cues take over. queu
hemingway, the ambassador of cuba from washington is dispatched and told hemingway to get out of cuba. he says and they are using a word about you in washington and the word was traitor. hemingway said i am not political. this is where i write. this is where i love to be put that use of the word he became increasingly concerned about his finances and his inability to write and he would never write again. addiction, the power of addiction lies in the grip of being able to hold the same...
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May 17, 2016
05/16
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KPIX
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reporting in language, as spare and direct as hemingway's. reels.andscape. reels.>> there was a compassion,000 to what he was saying, there was a mel an k sadness. >> barely survived a helicopter crash on the edge of enemy territory. had plenty reminders of the random nature of death on the field. interviewing a young man whose tank was about to take a direct hilt. >> take care. >> second later the boy is dead. blown to bits when the tank exploded. >> tomorrow we are going on operation match stick. >> 51 years ago, joe stringham was army captain commanding a green beret. >> he was all business. reported what he saw. nothing staged. nothing phony. >> he won't out with the uniit. searching for the viet cong. >> there is so much as a safe patrol. no such thing as a routine day. >> it's dusty. hard work. there is one other thing. they were carrying a ton of equipment. lot more stuff than we were carrying. operation match stick, slogged through the streams with leaches. >> morely was right in back of me. every step of the way. i had to do it. he didn't. >> morely would
reporting in language, as spare and direct as hemingway's. reels.andscape. reels.>> there was a compassion,000 to what he was saying, there was a mel an k sadness. >> barely survived a helicopter crash on the edge of enemy territory. had plenty reminders of the random nature of death on the field. interviewing a young man whose tank was about to take a direct hilt. >> take care. >> second later the boy is dead. blown to bits when the tank exploded. >> tomorrow we...
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May 16, 2016
05/16
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WUSA
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hemingway became morley's hero. that he couldn't shake: living the life of a foreign correspondent. >> surrender. the great news of the century. and in canada, as across the world, both wild elation and sober thankfulness. >> kroft: after the war, morley took up sports in high school and read more hemingway. he went to college, but only for a few weeks. he dropped out. he had other things on his mind. >> morely safer: i wanted to be a reporter. i was young and i was restless and i wanted to get out and do it. >> kroft: he got a job on a small town newspaper, and bounced around the business for a few years, sharpening his skills, and learning the essentials of newswriting. >> safer: certainly respect for the language. keeping the mush out of the story. and getting to the heart of it very quickly. >> kroft: when he was 24, a door opened that would change his life. he was hired as a television news writer at the cbc, canada's premier broadcasting network. >> safer: they had trouble getting good people. because no one i
hemingway became morley's hero. that he couldn't shake: living the life of a foreign correspondent. >> surrender. the great news of the century. and in canada, as across the world, both wild elation and sober thankfulness. >> kroft: after the war, morley took up sports in high school and read more hemingway. he went to college, but only for a few weeks. he dropped out. he had other things on his mind. >> morely safer: i wanted to be a reporter. i was young and i was restless...
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May 13, 2016
05/16
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FBC
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katie pavlich, tom shillue and molly hemingway.'s not going to lose it's a new day and we are going to start with some trump twitter taunts. tweet number one. mitt romney is a mixed up man who doesn't have a clue. no wonder he lost. trump tweet, fact or fiction. tom is the only one who got that right. it was a real tweet from donald trump. kennedy: tom, you are in the lead. you have one on the ladies have nothing. tweet number two. john kasich is a nice man but looked like a dopey muppet and eats pancakes too fact. fact or fiction. everyone got that right. tom is still in the lead. here is tweet number three. rosie o'donnell is a mentally sick woman and dummy like danny difficuldevito without the tale. kennedy: wrong. what's muppet? it cause kasich. >> he looks like a happy muppet. he's not a dopey muppet. he's ohio' ohio's muppet. governor perry failed on the border. he should be forced to take an i.q. test before being allowed to enter the gop debate. katie and tomorrow got that one right. molly, you are in third place. tom is in
katie pavlich, tom shillue and molly hemingway.'s not going to lose it's a new day and we are going to start with some trump twitter taunts. tweet number one. mitt romney is a mixed up man who doesn't have a clue. no wonder he lost. trump tweet, fact or fiction. tom is the only one who got that right. it was a real tweet from donald trump. kennedy: tom, you are in the lead. you have one on the ladies have nothing. tweet number two. john kasich is a nice man but looked like a dopey muppet and...
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May 23, 2016
05/16
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CSPAN3
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said that as a woman writer, she could see things in hemingway's writing that his billions of other biographers had not seen. forsame can be said historians of african-americans. >> good afternoon, i am a graduate student studying cultural sustainability. first, let me say that i am in awe of the depth of knowledge and scholarship and passion and professionalism that i have heard over the past several days of this conference. i am hoping to going to go into public history in some way, shape, or form in terms of sustaining culture. i think that for the most part, on inwas a great dialogue the african-american past throughout these several days. a lot of questions and answers came up to give some really insightful dialogue. this is not a criticism, but a point of reference may be for future conversation. what i did not hear in the thread was the future. i am so impressed with the level of diversity in the room, race and ethnicity, but also generationally. what i did not necessarily see in the panels was representation from a younger generation, who are going to be stepping up to the p
said that as a woman writer, she could see things in hemingway's writing that his billions of other biographers had not seen. forsame can be said historians of african-americans. >> good afternoon, i am a graduate student studying cultural sustainability. first, let me say that i am in awe of the depth of knowledge and scholarship and passion and professionalism that i have heard over the past several days of this conference. i am hoping to going to go into public history in some way,...
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May 18, 2016
05/16
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FOXNEWSW
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bob, molly hemingway, thank you. we also want to hear from you. will donald trump's meeting with secretary of state henry kissinger help him win over the so-called gop establishment? our live chat is up and running. go to foxnews.com/happeningnow to join the conversation. melissa: facebook ceo mark zuckerberg will sit down with influential conservatives today after claims the social media site blocks conservative news from its trending topics. confirmed attendees include fox news cohost, former white house press secretary dana perino, also glenn beck, claudia callan is live with the latest on this. what do we expect? reporter: that's right melissa. the meeting here getting underway a bit later this afternoon, doesn't look like lunch is included and no press either.we are all being kept across the street but ceo mark zuckerberg has a lot riding on how things go today. both in terms of his company's reputation and its profits. zuckerberg needs to convince his prominent guests and everyone else that facebook does not deliberately press the conservati
bob, molly hemingway, thank you. we also want to hear from you. will donald trump's meeting with secretary of state henry kissinger help him win over the so-called gop establishment? our live chat is up and running. go to foxnews.com/happeningnow to join the conversation. melissa: facebook ceo mark zuckerberg will sit down with influential conservatives today after claims the social media site blocks conservative news from its trending topics. confirmed attendees include fox news cohost, former...
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May 19, 2016
05/16
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FOXNEWSW
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joining us from washington molly hemingway senior editor at the.al editor at bustle online women's magazine. do you consider that to be deceptive? >> you know, i wouldn't have included that line of focusing attack ad trump's use on women just because he provides plenty of evidence on his own and his misogynistic comments about women. it's important to put out to voters it raises questions about presidential temperament. completely game to have it evaluated. >> not in the context in the way they did it the ad featured all women and the ad was all of the other things in the ad were points that they believed priorities u.s.a. believe shows that trump is antiwoman and then you throw in that as a descepter. is that acceptable to you as a journalist? is it acceptable? >> i think it's acceptable because the comments are all fair game. >> so you are okay with that? see, i'm not. >> i don't think it's ineffective ad. >> that's aside. i don't want deceit, all right, in the public airways, am i wrong, miss hemingway? >> all quotes are going to be taken a litt
joining us from washington molly hemingway senior editor at the.al editor at bustle online women's magazine. do you consider that to be deceptive? >> you know, i wouldn't have included that line of focusing attack ad trump's use on women just because he provides plenty of evidence on his own and his misogynistic comments about women. it's important to put out to voters it raises questions about presidential temperament. completely game to have it evaluated. >> not in the context in...
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May 20, 2016
05/16
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CSPAN
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i read everything of hemingway's up until that point. he had been a foreign correspondent. also, a toronto star. he covered the spanish civil war. i knew that was exactly what i wanted to do. i tried to get a job here -- all the big metropolitan papers just laughed me out of their offices. i went to a place called woodstock, ontario. the editor there, a wonderful man named ralph berman, he said to me on my first day, safer, you have no experience at all at this, do you? i said, yes sir, i have no experience. you cannot even tell, can you? he said, you will learn to type. once you type in any kind of proficient way, you know what the first you will be typing is? i said, i do not know. he said, a letter of application to a bigger newspaper. he was almost right. i went from the woodstock paper to the london free press of london, ontario. that was in major metropolitan morning and evening. we have five or six editions in the paper. the days when papers put out five or six editions. they did everything. they would feature stories, breaking news, crime, overnight shifts. i had a
i read everything of hemingway's up until that point. he had been a foreign correspondent. also, a toronto star. he covered the spanish civil war. i knew that was exactly what i wanted to do. i tried to get a job here -- all the big metropolitan papers just laughed me out of their offices. i went to a place called woodstock, ontario. the editor there, a wonderful man named ralph berman, he said to me on my first day, safer, you have no experience at all at this, do you? i said, yes sir, i have...
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May 23, 2016
05/16
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KQED
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it was hooked on hemingway like a lot of other people. >> rose: oh. so by the time i was, i don't know, 18, 19, a freshman in college, i thought, you know, i'm learning about economics -- i want to see economics and i want to know about it. i haven't ti want to be feelingd i just dropped. i left and got a job on a newspaper called the woodstock central review which i describe as barely a daily paper, should have been weekly but we managed to put out a daily paper in woodstock, ontario. >> rose: so i was thinking about this, if in fact morley did earnest hemingway, if he had been available at the time or mike did, would there have been two very different kinds of stories? >> yeah, they really would have been. i think that's a story that really needed morley because his ability to express, to tell a story was, i think, the best of any with the exception of charles ca roe lt. >> rose: that was his core competence, telling a story. >> it was, he could do a good interview, and he did everything well, by the way. if you look at that body of work, 900-plus s
it was hooked on hemingway like a lot of other people. >> rose: oh. so by the time i was, i don't know, 18, 19, a freshman in college, i thought, you know, i'm learning about economics -- i want to see economics and i want to know about it. i haven't ti want to be feelingd i just dropped. i left and got a job on a newspaper called the woodstock central review which i describe as barely a daily paper, should have been weekly but we managed to put out a daily paper in woodstock, ontario....
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May 14, 2016
05/16
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CSPAN3
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ernest hemingway road in private, i'm writing some damn good stories. i wish you were here to tell me it.so i would believe you are the only guy who knows a writing. thing about in public, hemingway said, he has taught me more about how to write and how not to write than anyone else. the academic and literary community quickly divided into two caps. the first group who supported new critics.e in the 1930's, the new critics saw that on the one hand, english teachers and professors had no idea how to analyze a work of literature. it was rote memorization, learning about the author's biography, teaching civics. they also saw that in the 1930's, writers themselves were using and abusing literature for political ends, and that was wrong. literature is of value all on its own. plus, the moscow trials and the of 1939 provedac an embarrassment to these literary partisans. modernists joined others in the retreat from politics after that time period. new critics and other public became part of the academy because they wrote a series of best-selling books. a gloss
ernest hemingway road in private, i'm writing some damn good stories. i wish you were here to tell me it.so i would believe you are the only guy who knows a writing. thing about in public, hemingway said, he has taught me more about how to write and how not to write than anyone else. the academic and literary community quickly divided into two caps. the first group who supported new critics.e in the 1930's, the new critics saw that on the one hand, english teachers and professors had no idea...
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May 20, 2016
05/16
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CSPAN
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i had i was, like a lot of people of my era, i was hemingway bit. i'd read a -- i was always a great reader, my whole family was a family of readers, and i read everything of hemingway's up to that point. and he had been a foreign correspondent, kansas city star, also the toronto star. he covered the spanish civil war i think for the toronto star. i knew exactly what i wanted to do and tried to get a job here, the you know all of the all of the big metropolitan papers would just laugh me out of their offices. ended up in a place called woodstock, ontario, it was a daily newspaper, "woodstock sentinel review." my editor there was a wonderful man named alf berman and he said to me on my first day, "safer, you have no experience at all at this, do you?" and i said "yes, sir, i have no experience." "you can't even type, can you? " i said, "sir, i can't type." and he said "well you'll learn to type here. and once you are typing in any kind of proficient way, do you know what the first thing you're ng is?"o be typig i said, "no, sir, i don't know." he sai
i had i was, like a lot of people of my era, i was hemingway bit. i'd read a -- i was always a great reader, my whole family was a family of readers, and i read everything of hemingway's up to that point. and he had been a foreign correspondent, kansas city star, also the toronto star. he covered the spanish civil war i think for the toronto star. i knew exactly what i wanted to do and tried to get a job here, the you know all of the all of the big metropolitan papers would just laugh me out of...
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May 20, 2016
05/16
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MSNBCW
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scott fitzgerald brought hemingway here and they got very drunk, made passes at beautiful women and got beaten up in fistfights. in the corner cole porter scribbling music on a napkin. winston churchill sipping champagne. valentino and garbo being idoliz idolized. it was the literary and social mecca of the time and everyone seemed young and beautiful and rich. it was to hear that the lost generation came to laugh at the rest of the world. >> morley safer was 84 years old. >>> of course we continue to follow the breaking news this morning. the egyptian army saying it found wreckage believed to be from the egyptair 804. belongings from some passengers as well as parets of the fuselage. we'll stake a break and come back with the latest. what brand of makeup is better for your skin than wearing no makeup at all? neutrogena® cosmetics. with vitamins and antioxidants. now with foundations in shades for more skin tones. headache? motrin helps you be an unstoppable kind of mom. when pain tries to stop you, motrin works fast to stop pain. make it happen with motrin® liquid gels. also try motrin
scott fitzgerald brought hemingway here and they got very drunk, made passes at beautiful women and got beaten up in fistfights. in the corner cole porter scribbling music on a napkin. winston churchill sipping champagne. valentino and garbo being idoliz idolized. it was the literary and social mecca of the time and everyone seemed young and beautiful and rich. it was to hear that the lost generation came to laugh at the rest of the world. >> morley safer was 84 years old. >>> of...
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206
May 8, 2016
05/16
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CSPAN3
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eye 206
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ernest hemingway wrote, i am writing suggested stories. aboutlic, he taught me more to write than anyone else. everywhere as the early 20th , --y, in literary modernism so once the award was announced, the literary community quickly divided into two camps. i will talk about who supported him. 1930's, they are no idea how to analyze a work of literature. it was memorization. writers themselves worry losing and abusing literature for political ends. literature is a value all on its own. trials proved an embarrassment littered sure -- partisans. he joined others in the retreat from politics. he became part of the academy. this is a glossary of the criticism. understanding poetry to be the main text book read in college. they didn't like the traditional literature. inside on ryan, meter and celebrated paradox. they didn't care what a poet meant to say. selfto them was a referential. they also didn't care if someone was offended by a poem. had to be steeped in the whole literary tradition. modernist writers appreciated the new critics because t
ernest hemingway wrote, i am writing suggested stories. aboutlic, he taught me more to write than anyone else. everywhere as the early 20th , --y, in literary modernism so once the award was announced, the literary community quickly divided into two camps. i will talk about who supported him. 1930's, they are no idea how to analyze a work of literature. it was memorization. writers themselves worry losing and abusing literature for political ends. literature is a value all on its own. trials...
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May 25, 2016
05/16
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WRC
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chris gordon is live at hemingways near a bay bridge with more on what you can expect and what to do if you're heading out of town. >> reporter: pat, you can expect the heaviest holiday traffic in more than a decade. i've been told 377,000 vehicles will be crossing the bay bridge between now and monday midnight. that's a 6% increase from last year. road trips, that's the plan for the holiday weekend for million washington area residents. they will be traveling 50 miles or more from home on the first holiday weekend of summer. aaa mid atlantic and the police who patrol the state highways and the bay bridge teamed up today to warn us to expect the heaviest washington area traffic in 11 years. >> even with the slight recent uptick in gas prices, it is convenience for travelers. >> reporter: ahead at 5:00, what are the best of times and worst of times to cross the bay bridge. >>> we are just getting started here on news4. for those of you who plan to hit the road for the weekend, we'll tell you where you'll have to pay a higher price. >>> and i'm tracking a storm system that could effect
chris gordon is live at hemingways near a bay bridge with more on what you can expect and what to do if you're heading out of town. >> reporter: pat, you can expect the heaviest holiday traffic in more than a decade. i've been told 377,000 vehicles will be crossing the bay bridge between now and monday midnight. that's a 6% increase from last year. road trips, that's the plan for the holiday weekend for million washington area residents. they will be traveling 50 miles or more from home...
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May 12, 2016
05/16
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WTXF
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eye 142
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hemingway about love and jussie smollet says it was written before empire even existed.lassic love song that anyone can relate to even if they have never been in love. >> it is so perfect, that it is painful, you know, but you have no other option but to keep on loving it. >> ♪ >> no way he is going. >> please come out with a cd. >> he passes away, he is like tupac and music and holograms. >> i want real music, jussie come out with an album we're here for you. >> he needs to be on the show. >> thanks for coming. >> we will see you friday. >> also next week because we have to discuss finally tweet me alex holley fox 29. >>> lets go outside and do double dutch. >> i tried. >> it is happening this weekend. i have to tell but this. >>> run, go, go, go. >> you guys are with philly girl jump. how did this get started. >> we posted something on facebook to come out, a and expecting five to ten people we had over 2,000 people come out to join us. >> and great thing about this is, it is bringing together the community. >> yes. >> i think it is a very important part. germantown we
hemingway about love and jussie smollet says it was written before empire even existed.lassic love song that anyone can relate to even if they have never been in love. >> it is so perfect, that it is painful, you know, but you have no other option but to keep on loving it. >> ♪ >> no way he is going. >> please come out with a cd. >> he passes away, he is like tupac and music and holograms. >> i want real music, jussie come out with an album we're here for...
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May 20, 2016
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like a lot of people of my era, the hemingway bit. i was always a great reader. the whole family was a family of readers. i read everything of hemingway's up until that point. and he had been a foreign correspondent. also, "the toronto star." he covered the spanish civil war. i knew that was exactly what i wanted to do. tried to get a job here -- all the big metropolitan papers just laughed me out of their offices. ended up in a place called woodstock, ontario. and my editor there, a wonderful man named ralph berman, he said to me on my first day, safer, you have no experience at all at this, do you? and i said, yes, sir, i have no experience. you cannot even type, can you? he said, you will learn to type. once you type in any kind of proficient way, you know what the first you will be typing is? i said, i do not know. he said, a letter of application to a bigger newspaper. and he was almost right. i went from the woodstock paper to the "london free press" of london, ontario. that was in major metropolitan, morning and evening. i think we have five or six edition
like a lot of people of my era, the hemingway bit. i was always a great reader. the whole family was a family of readers. i read everything of hemingway's up until that point. and he had been a foreign correspondent. also, "the toronto star." he covered the spanish civil war. i knew that was exactly what i wanted to do. tried to get a job here -- all the big metropolitan papers just laughed me out of their offices. ended up in a place called woodstock, ontario. and my editor there, a...
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May 3, 2016
05/16
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reading aboutber writers and how they work and i think it was hemingway who talked about the fact that you are always writing. if something gets unlocked in an hour or a day or two. something we did not know we needed. we knew we would have this wait for it idea that we talked about, just as we talked about the idea for a washington-hamilton moment. that song felt right for a moment in acta two to see our two heroes come together and have this one last chance to express their affection, to speak to the country, to do all of these things. that is the one i kept saying, yeah. then there is the song with those guys. he would say, yeah, but look what i wrote. there was so much room to expand and to cover. when they come out, there is not a lot of shutdown in the writer part of him. then it is about unlocking. unlocked, it has a place to go. charlie: how important is it to have someone that can do that? lin: it is the whole ballgame. it is the whole ballgame. requires -- tommy has to know how to unlock when he is creating the costume. he has to know the right thing to say to paul when they
reading aboutber writers and how they work and i think it was hemingway who talked about the fact that you are always writing. if something gets unlocked in an hour or a day or two. something we did not know we needed. we knew we would have this wait for it idea that we talked about, just as we talked about the idea for a washington-hamilton moment. that song felt right for a moment in acta two to see our two heroes come together and have this one last chance to express their affection, to...
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May 31, 2016
05/16
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a run-down-looking takeout about two hours' drive out of charleston in hemingway, south carolina.: since i was 11. >> sean: that's crazy. >> rodney: i grew up doing this. my family started in 1972, so i grew up running around this place. >> anthony: it's hard. >> rodney: it is. >> sean: that's why no one does it, man. that's why there's nothing but bad barbecue 'cause in my opinion the only true way to make barbecue is the burned barrel and the pits and you gotta stay up all night. >> rodney: all night. >> anthony: rodney scott, a man sought after all over the world for some of the finest whole hog barbecue there is. rodney and his family have been doing it like this and only like this for 43 years. burn barrel, fresh coals, slow, slow, slow-cooked all night in the pit. there are no shortcuts. this ain't a craft, this is a calling. look at that. >> rodney: yes. >> anthony: oh, man. >> rodney: got to have a little bit of white bread with it. >> anthony: yeah, at least no doubt. see this is what everybody always gets wrong in new york. you serve cornbread with barbecue? which of cou
a run-down-looking takeout about two hours' drive out of charleston in hemingway, south carolina.: since i was 11. >> sean: that's crazy. >> rodney: i grew up doing this. my family started in 1972, so i grew up running around this place. >> anthony: it's hard. >> rodney: it is. >> sean: that's why no one does it, man. that's why there's nothing but bad barbecue 'cause in my opinion the only true way to make barbecue is the burned barrel and the pits and you gotta...
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May 15, 2016
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molly hemingway is from "the federalist." thank you both for being here. molly, let me start with you. we're in the middle of an extraordinary election season, and here's this report that facebook might be burying news favorable to conservatives. a, do you believe it? b, what are the ramifications for a website like yours? >> i think the reason why this story resonated so much is that it confirmed the suspicions that so many conservatives and conservative media outlets had going back quite some time about suppression of conservative news stories and sites and also elevation of other topics. we've certainly experienced this at "the federalist," not just in terms of the trending topics issue but other suppression where stories that are completely academic are deemed unsafe. we had a story on trigger warnings and microaggressions that couldn't be posted because it was deemed unsafe, which was ridiculo ridiculo ridiculous. or perhaps the worst example was when the planned parenthood story broke and went viral within minutes. it took a long time for facebook to
molly hemingway is from "the federalist." thank you both for being here. molly, let me start with you. we're in the middle of an extraordinary election season, and here's this report that facebook might be burying news favorable to conservatives. a, do you believe it? b, what are the ramifications for a website like yours? >> i think the reason why this story resonated so much is that it confirmed the suspicions that so many conservatives and conservative media outlets had going...
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May 14, 2016
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wered that if the ultimate test of presidential leadership, the american people should elect ernest hemingway. [laughter] mr. smith: he also said the job is to persuade, not publicize. stop and think, dwight eisenhower, i the time he became president of the united states, that was almost other motion. i mean, this was a man who didn't need to see his name in the paper or his picture on tv. that is a wonderful story his brother milton, who was president of the university of agreed toia, and they give the commencement address one year, and the weather was ominousing and rather and they were making small talk before the ceremony and milton eisenhower said, "do you think the rain will hold off?" "milton, i haven't worried about the weather since june 6, 1944." [laughter] mr. smith: enough said. the idea that a strong president, like eisenhower, could promote a smaller government, seemed contradictory at best. until ronald reagan undertook his own counterreformation to the washington-centric policies of his boyhood hero, fdr. if there is one constant in our national experience, one word that might
wered that if the ultimate test of presidential leadership, the american people should elect ernest hemingway. [laughter] mr. smith: he also said the job is to persuade, not publicize. stop and think, dwight eisenhower, i the time he became president of the united states, that was almost other motion. i mean, this was a man who didn't need to see his name in the paper or his picture on tv. that is a wonderful story his brother milton, who was president of the university of agreed toia, and they...
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May 3, 2016
05/16
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. >> and also, i remember reading about writers and how they work and i think it was hemingway who talked about the i fact that you are always writing. and lynn is always writing, it's just sometimes you have to have the soil prepared to accept the thing. but he's writing-- when something gets unlocked in 45 minutes or an hour or a day or two, that was eight and a half straight months of think being it even if it is something we didn't know we needed. there were some songs we knew we had this moment for burr, that we talked about and walked about. just like we talked about the idea for a washington hamilton moment, that song felt right for a moment in act two to see our two, you know, our two heroes come together and have this one last chance to express their affections, to speak to the country, to do all of these things. and that was the one i kept on saying yeah, yeah, yeah. and then there is that song with those guys, and he said yeah, but look what i wrote. luckily there was so much room to expand and to cover. but when they come out, you know, there's not a lot of shutdown, you know.
. >> and also, i remember reading about writers and how they work and i think it was hemingway who talked about the i fact that you are always writing. and lynn is always writing, it's just sometimes you have to have the soil prepared to accept the thing. but he's writing-- when something gets unlocked in 45 minutes or an hour or a day or two, that was eight and a half straight months of think being it even if it is something we didn't know we needed. there were some songs we knew we had...
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May 20, 2016
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all i knew was in 1945, it was liberated by earnest hemingway.nk. >> his pieces are poetry. >> i also learned that our good friend anand doesn't know how to pronounce his name. >> three syllables. giridharadas. keep practicing. >> he can put it in the hair. >> what did you learn today? >> i learned from two guests that the revolts can be a gift, and the democratic party, democratic establishment is not receiving the gift that bernie sanders is giving them, which is information that if they don't change they'll have a trump years for now. >> i learned how to fly out of midway. >> very practical lady you are. >> a great point about the democratic party. bernie sanders and all of his supporters are giving them a very strong, loud clear message. they're just not listening. >> i don't think so. >> interesting. that does it for us. steve kornacki and craig melvin are co-anchoring the next hour. >> we forgot to talk about stucky. >>> a good friday morning. i'm craig melvin live in paris, france, at charles de gaulle airport. a potential breakthrough int
all i knew was in 1945, it was liberated by earnest hemingway.nk. >> his pieces are poetry. >> i also learned that our good friend anand doesn't know how to pronounce his name. >> three syllables. giridharadas. keep practicing. >> he can put it in the hair. >> what did you learn today? >> i learned from two guests that the revolts can be a gift, and the democratic party, democratic establishment is not receiving the gift that bernie sanders is giving them,...
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May 1, 2016
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molly hemingway.e you. >>> coming up, michael bloomberg booed by liberals in college. wait, isn't he a liberal? he shows up and takes on political correctness on the college campus. wait until you hear the reaction. >>> it's national bike month. we are going for a spin on the plaza. this is not a no spin zone, it's a spin zone. stay tuned. before i had the shooting, burning of diabetic nerve pain, these feet learned the horn from my dad and played gigs from new york to miami. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. so i talked to my doctor and he prescribed lyrica. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs, and feet. don't drink alcohol while t
molly hemingway.e you. >>> coming up, michael bloomberg booed by liberals in college. wait, isn't he a liberal? he shows up and takes on political correctness on the college campus. wait until you hear the reaction. >>> it's national bike month. we are going for a spin on the plaza. this is not a no spin zone, it's a spin zone. stay tuned. before i had the shooting, burning of diabetic nerve pain, these feet learned the horn from my dad and played gigs from new york to miami....
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May 22, 2016
05/16
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annette gordon reed is professor of american university at harvard university and author of the hemingway's of monticello which won the pulitzer prize for history after it was published in 2008. peter onuf is author of jefferson's empire, among several works on jefferson and he is the thomas jefferson memorial foundation professor at uva. he is thomas jefferson professor at mister jefferson's university. no pressure there at all. "most blessed of the patriarchs," thomas jefferson and the empire of imagination. much conversation about jefferson is on the contradiction between the ideal he imagined for the nation and the details of his own life and one of the strengths of this book is it is not a defense and not an attack. jefferson's aspirations were inextricably linked to his limitations. the book explores his for self perception and does so in part by focusing on the action at monticello which reflects him as a few places can. i am excited to hear from them so i will get out of the way. they will speak 25 minutes and take your questions. it is my pleasure to introduce annette gordon reed a
annette gordon reed is professor of american university at harvard university and author of the hemingway's of monticello which won the pulitzer prize for history after it was published in 2008. peter onuf is author of jefferson's empire, among several works on jefferson and he is the thomas jefferson memorial foundation professor at uva. he is thomas jefferson professor at mister jefferson's university. no pressure there at all. "most blessed of the patriarchs," thomas jefferson and...
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liz: how about fixing the front page where everyone thinks they are ernest hemingway on the front paged the stories backwards. stuart: criticizing the editorial stage which criticizes economic failure, i digress. >> chicken is going to be served pink. stuart: last word to scott shelley. >> we found a way to get lazier than going through the drive-through, now it will be delivered at home by drones so it is generation couch nation is where we are headed. stuart: he just trademarked that. the dow industrial average is now down 15 points, not quite the selloff we thought we might see, down 12, down 10, any advance on that? down 11. here is a video that is angering a lot of parents. it shows a baby left to swim on its own in a pool. i don't know how you feel about that. i have six kids, my grandchildren, we will show you more about this later on the program. democrats split down the middle, hillary clinton the subject of huge protests in california. bernie sanders supporters vow never never never will we vote for hillary. more varney in a moment. stuart: friday morning the loss 11 points d
liz: how about fixing the front page where everyone thinks they are ernest hemingway on the front paged the stories backwards. stuart: criticizing the editorial stage which criticizes economic failure, i digress. >> chicken is going to be served pink. stuart: last word to scott shelley. >> we found a way to get lazier than going through the drive-through, now it will be delivered at home by drones so it is generation couch nation is where we are headed. stuart: he just trademarked...