82
82
Jun 3, 2016
06/16
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 82
favorite 0
quote 0
so the fbi decided that if they were going to take king off his pedest pedestal, it was a part of their task to find and bring into prominence a new, quote, national negro leader. >> after the march on washington, there was an acceleration. he was defined because of his speech in that demonstration in washington as the most dangerous and effective leader in the country and there was a paper battle within the bureau as to how best to attack him and he was attacked. after "time" magazine named him as man of the year, again the bureau finds that reprehensible, believes it must attack and destroy. when he was given the nobel prize, again they seek to discredit dr. king with the persons who welcomed him back from that award. when he began to speak out against the vietnam war there's a new crescendo of efforts by of the bureau to discredit and destroy dr. king. when the poor people's campaign took place, once again they go after dr. king. and their activity to go after dr. king didn't even cease when he died. because, as congress began to consider the question of whether or not dr. king's bir
so the fbi decided that if they were going to take king off his pedest pedestal, it was a part of their task to find and bring into prominence a new, quote, national negro leader. >> after the march on washington, there was an acceleration. he was defined because of his speech in that demonstration in washington as the most dangerous and effective leader in the country and there was a paper battle within the bureau as to how best to attack him and he was attacked. after "time"...
505
505
Jun 20, 2016
06/16
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 505
favorite 0
quote 0
she kept them on the pedestal. him on that pedestal. he came to need what his mother had done which was to tell me was perfect and fabulous. mr. ward: i think that's why he ran four times. the worldl order of was with franklin roosevelt in the white house. he had been raised to believe that. and it happened. leslie: i pulled out a quote that i was loved. a quote from churchill. franklin roosevelt with his iridescent personality. openinghim was like your first bottle of champagne. knowing him was like drinking it. >> my name originally was sara delano roosevelt. name for quite a long time. we didn't see a whole lot of him when we were children. he did go on and marry other people. from the perspective of a grandchild, which you have described fully and well. milton student at mill academ academy. mrs. roosevelt was coming to give the graduation address. she came to our boarding house. and i had a chair been pulled aside for a moment by the headmistress to say hello to her in a private room. which was basically a kiss on the cheek. i sat
she kept them on the pedestal. him on that pedestal. he came to need what his mother had done which was to tell me was perfect and fabulous. mr. ward: i think that's why he ran four times. the worldl order of was with franklin roosevelt in the white house. he had been raised to believe that. and it happened. leslie: i pulled out a quote that i was loved. a quote from churchill. franklin roosevelt with his iridescent personality. openinghim was like your first bottle of champagne. knowing him...
143
143
Jun 26, 2016
06/16
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 143
favorite 0
quote 0
i think it took a while to get it off the pedestal. but i think it's going to be placed on museum on campus. so this and the other statues are being removed from public display -- removed from their places of prominence and placed, -balled right?moth , or placed in a context that shows them as artifacts of curiosity, artifacts of history but not public symbols that would be interpreted of deserving reverence. one other option would be to recontexturalize, adding explanatory plaques or maybe building more monuments, right? figuring out ways to celebrate other figures. in the american south, alongside -- this is, although there's not been any kind of policy that anybody has talked about in richmond, virginia. but that is really what you are starting to get. in the 1990's, i mentioned .lready monument avenue robert e. lee being the key figure. but they started building up more and more monuments so there are five different confederate generals now. jeff stewart is on monument avenue and we have stone wall jackson, other guys as well. but
i think it took a while to get it off the pedestal. but i think it's going to be placed on museum on campus. so this and the other statues are being removed from public display -- removed from their places of prominence and placed, -balled right?moth , or placed in a context that shows them as artifacts of curiosity, artifacts of history but not public symbols that would be interpreted of deserving reverence. one other option would be to recontexturalize, adding explanatory plaques or maybe...
536
536
Jun 22, 2016
06/16
by
WCAU
tv
eye 536
favorite 0
quote 0
storage for all your toiletries organized in a nice way but it opens up like this so it fits on a pedestalt. it creates real estate. >> very clever. >> about 40 bucks. >> reinventing the wagon there. >> everythingorgo.com. >> it's listerine, hoda! >> for your boo-boo. your boo-boo is kissing fresh. from here this is called violife. this is for the germaphobes out there like tammy and matt. you put your toothbrush in here, you close it up, it has a uv light. >> so the uv light kills the germs. >> and i like it has a suction cup so it can dry. >> that's smart. >> should have that? >> $19.95. >> that's going home with me. >> it can. next these are run lights. easy to pack, throw it into a suitcase, put them on for biking or jogging or whatever, you wear this and it gives you light so you can see what you're doing, people can see you, cars can see you. >> can i help you with that? >> it's really a smart way to go. it sells for about 35 bucks. >> you need those, hoda. >> it doesn't take up a lot of seuss cases. i always worry about how much space i have. >> fantastic. >> so run lights, this was
storage for all your toiletries organized in a nice way but it opens up like this so it fits on a pedestalt. it creates real estate. >> very clever. >> about 40 bucks. >> reinventing the wagon there. >> everythingorgo.com. >> it's listerine, hoda! >> for your boo-boo. your boo-boo is kissing fresh. from here this is called violife. this is for the germaphobes out there like tammy and matt. you put your toothbrush in here, you close it up, it has a uv light....
722
722
Jun 20, 2016
06/16
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 722
favorite 0
quote 0
the pedestal, paid for by americans, $270,000, now worth many millions more. >> i got to go by it on i have something to tell you about the daughters of the american revolution. you might have heard about the group. a lineage based service for women who are directly descended from a person involved in united states fight for independence. how cool is that? they are constantly giving back. the organization set a guinness world record for the most letters collected in one month. guess what the goal was? 10,000. guess what they hit? >> 30. >> no, 100,000 letters to military personnel. fantastic. god bless them for giving back. they go out wednesday or thursday this week. >>> set your dvr so you never miss an episode of "the five." that's it for us. "special report" is next. >>> donald trump's unpredictable campaign lives up to its reputation with a shake up ahead of the gop convention. this is "special report." >>> good evening. welcome to with washington. i'm in for bret baier. it's monday and there have been plenty of fireworks for the gops presumtive nominee. trump doubles down on hi
the pedestal, paid for by americans, $270,000, now worth many millions more. >> i got to go by it on i have something to tell you about the daughters of the american revolution. you might have heard about the group. a lineage based service for women who are directly descended from a person involved in united states fight for independence. how cool is that? they are constantly giving back. the organization set a guinness world record for the most letters collected in one month. guess what...
44
44
Jun 20, 2016
06/16
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 44
favorite 0
quote 0
she kept him on that pedestal. he came to need what his mother had done which was to tell me was perfect and fabulous. mr. ward: i think that's why he ran four times. the natural order of the world was with franklin roosevelt in the white house. he had been raised to believe that. and it happened. lesley: i pulled out a quote that i loved. a quote from churchill. franklin roosevelt with his iridescent personality. meeting him was like opening your first bottle of champagne. knowing him was like drinking it. >> i'm one of those silent grandchildren that you are looking out for. >> my name originally was sara delano roosevelt. i carried that name for quite a long time. i want to say it was moving to hear about our father and that you had spoken to him. we didn't see a whole lot of him when we were children. he did go on and marry other people. from the perspective of a grandchild, which you have described fully and well. i was a student at milton academy. mrs. roosevelt was coming to give the graduation address. she
she kept him on that pedestal. he came to need what his mother had done which was to tell me was perfect and fabulous. mr. ward: i think that's why he ran four times. the natural order of the world was with franklin roosevelt in the white house. he had been raised to believe that. and it happened. lesley: i pulled out a quote that i loved. a quote from churchill. franklin roosevelt with his iridescent personality. meeting him was like opening your first bottle of champagne. knowing him was like...
93
93
Jun 20, 2016
06/16
by
WRC
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> he had her on a pedestal. he always said such wonderful things about her. >> this is don's wife, rebecca. we would talk maybe once or twice a week on the phone. probably for hours, her and i. we just hit it off. we were family. >> jane was there by dave's side as he became a national and then world competitor. and the world championship meet in 1983, he talked to nbc sports about the benefits and costs of weight training. >> it ccan tighten a thrower up >> the 1984 games, but after his career fade ed quickly. he kept trying, but knee injuries. he didn't make the olympic team in 1988. >> he was disappointed, but he knew. it's a point of your career when you know something is done. it's okay. you know you've done -- you've gone as far as you can and that door closes. >> and another door opened. dave became a high school biology teacher, coach, and athletic director. >> he was even better at being a teacher and koechl than he was at throwing. >> he missed his former glory, his family said. he never showed it and
. >> he had her on a pedestal. he always said such wonderful things about her. >> this is don's wife, rebecca. we would talk maybe once or twice a week on the phone. probably for hours, her and i. we just hit it off. we were family. >> jane was there by dave's side as he became a national and then world competitor. and the world championship meet in 1983, he talked to nbc sports about the benefits and costs of weight training. >> it ccan tighten a thrower up >> the...
65
65
Jun 16, 2016
06/16
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> and we as humans put these people on pedestals and they when they make a mistake, they're like whatbama at times is like, guys, you got me. he's doing his best. i so appreciate it. but that's a big thing to carry. >> you've played these two roles that are incredibly funny. they're also like the lowest status characters that you could possibly imagine. do you ever think of yourself you want to like play, like, i don't know, some, like, imposing and terrifying bad guy at some point? >> that would be nice. the thing is it's really -- i've been very thankful to play these two characters. there's a lot of similarity in anxiety. buster with lucille as his mom, he would never stand up for lucille, he'd be rocking in a corner somewhere. as where gary will stand up. >> that's right. gary has a spine. >> and i think gary could counsel buster. he would love to take buster as a project and befriend him. if they were in a restaurant, he'd probably put them in a corner with stimulus so he could focus. but there are differences but there are similarities. it's fun to be outside the show and play o
. >> and we as humans put these people on pedestals and they when they make a mistake, they're like whatbama at times is like, guys, you got me. he's doing his best. i so appreciate it. but that's a big thing to carry. >> you've played these two roles that are incredibly funny. they're also like the lowest status characters that you could possibly imagine. do you ever think of yourself you want to like play, like, i don't know, some, like, imposing and terrifying bad guy at some...
342
342
Jun 14, 2016
06/16
by
KPIX
tv
eye 342
favorite 0
quote 0
up in ♪ impregnable fog that's why it's odd to see ♪ a pile of imperfections and flaws ♪ ascend a pedestalit's baffling god almighty chop an ivory tower ♪ to piano keys play your own dirge ♪ on the way to surfin' maggot beach ♪ you ( bleep ) dorks ain't a source of the art ♪ you can't be cooler than the corner ♪ where you source all your parts ♪ the poker-faced, all it takes a couple sordid ♪ remarks we let the manticore out, ♪ we make the sorcery bark ♪ life is so unfair, party over here, ♪ i'll be over there don't need no help, all by ♪ myself don't need no help, all by ♪ myself don't need no help, all by ♪ myself don't need no help, all by ♪ myself i view the rattling of sabres ♪ like a show to expose insecurities exploding in ♪ emotional code with braggadocio to go from ♪ mostly jokey to gross corrode a homie til his probity ♪ is notably ghost before the hobby was a jobby ♪ was a miniature hell you would wobble round your ♪ momma like an infant gazelle ♪ the disillusionment has truly been a difficult pill ♪ but you as anything menacing is a difficult sell ♪ in a whistle-and-bellorama,
up in ♪ impregnable fog that's why it's odd to see ♪ a pile of imperfections and flaws ♪ ascend a pedestalit's baffling god almighty chop an ivory tower ♪ to piano keys play your own dirge ♪ on the way to surfin' maggot beach ♪ you ( bleep ) dorks ain't a source of the art ♪ you can't be cooler than the corner ♪ where you source all your parts ♪ the poker-faced, all it takes a couple sordid ♪ remarks we let the manticore out, ♪ we make the sorcery bark ♪ life is so...
221
221
Jun 7, 2016
06/16
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 221
favorite 0
quote 0
he has been putting donald trump on pedestal and platform for weeks now, alluding to and talking about in different speeches. this is what trump supporters can look forward to. the president elevating his status by default talking about him. it could be very positive. >> look, this is what obama does well. he is a fantastic campaigner. he is not such a great president in my opinion but when he gets out there and supports somebody, this is what he does best. i think -- liz: can i say something? the president consistently misled the american people about blaming basically the financial collapse, he inherited worst situation ever. no. ronald reagan inherited just as bad, first of three banking collapsing at citigroup went under in 1980-81. it was severe recession reagan inherited. what did president obama do? doubled down on government regulation and taxes making it the worst recovery since the great depression. tell you something time and again this president is misleading american people. government spending added to gdp numbers showing growth. you take out government spending. about dp
he has been putting donald trump on pedestal and platform for weeks now, alluding to and talking about in different speeches. this is what trump supporters can look forward to. the president elevating his status by default talking about him. it could be very positive. >> look, this is what obama does well. he is a fantastic campaigner. he is not such a great president in my opinion but when he gets out there and supports somebody, this is what he does best. i think -- liz: can i say...
186
186
Jun 17, 2016
06/16
by
CNNW
tv
eye 186
favorite 0
quote 0
seemed to put it on a pedestal kind of thing. >> and when you describe him as an aggressive person, what about him was so aggressive? >> just his mannerisms, the way he talked. he very much held on to a grudge. he very much -- even if there wasn't a slight and he perceived it as a slight, he would take that to heart. it was something he would hold on to for weeks to months. >> and when you heard or foresaw his face on tv, i don't know which came first, michael. how did you find out that it was him. you heard his name, saw his face. what was your initial reaction? >> i mean, as anybody, i was shocked that i knew someone who would do this. i was shocked that, you know, this person i spent months working next to. of all of the people i know, he's the one i'm least surprised did it. >> all right. michael, thank you very much for. i appreciate your time. >> thank you for having me. >>> "outfront" next, a revolt against trump, but the convention is the presumptive nominee fires back live this hour. an outrage over a alabama official's decision refusing to lower the flag in honor of the orlando
seemed to put it on a pedestal kind of thing. >> and when you describe him as an aggressive person, what about him was so aggressive? >> just his mannerisms, the way he talked. he very much held on to a grudge. he very much -- even if there wasn't a slight and he perceived it as a slight, he would take that to heart. it was something he would hold on to for weeks to months. >> and when you heard or foresaw his face on tv, i don't know which came first, michael. how did you...
274
274
Jun 12, 2016
06/16
by
WUSA
tv
eye 274
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> lin-manuel miranda: i think we take great pains to knock all these guys off their pedestals. >>ew york. that's a quote. this is jefferson and hamilton squabbling. >> george washington: the issue on the table! >> rose: the tenor of their politics will sound familiar too. hamilton's debate with jefferson over how to pay off the revolutionary war debt was so intense, miranda stages it as a rap battle. >> washington: are you ready for a cabinet meeting? >> rose: with washington as referee. >> thomas jefferson: ♪ in virginia, we plant seeds in the ♪ ground. we create. ♪ you just want to move our money around. ♪ this financial plan is an outrageous demand and it's too ♪ many damn pages for any man to understand ♪ stand with me in the land of the ♪ pray to god we never see hamilton's candidacy ♪ look! when britain taxed our tea, ♪ we got frisky imagine what's gonna happen when ♪ you try to tax our whiskey >> washington: thank you, secretary jefferson! >> alexander hamilton: ♪ thomas, that was a real nice ♪ declaration welcome to the present, ♪ we're running a real nation would you like
. >> lin-manuel miranda: i think we take great pains to knock all these guys off their pedestals. >>ew york. that's a quote. this is jefferson and hamilton squabbling. >> george washington: the issue on the table! >> rose: the tenor of their politics will sound familiar too. hamilton's debate with jefferson over how to pay off the revolutionary war debt was so intense, miranda stages it as a rap battle. >> washington: are you ready for a cabinet meeting? >>...
163
163
Jun 12, 2016
06/16
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 163
favorite 0
quote 0
daunting to approach the monument of lincoln, but what i've tried to do is to bring him down from his pedestald have him walk among us and examine him as breathing, living, person, who becomes a incredibly skillful politician, and to show how he developed step-by-step along that way, and as well at the same time develops intellectually. self-educated, having spent on a few weekness the formal school -- weeks in a formal school, called the blab school. memorizing things and repeating them. his reading was both sporadic and systemic, as he developed. originally he was a wandering labor boy in indiana and discovered men who had long libraries. that's how the discovered the law. read the constitution, declaration of independence, first history of the united states, and developed from there. so, i thought i had something to contribute. also wanted to use my own experience as a journalist, who had journalistic skills and having been in washington, and having come from illinois, and having served in the white house, and worked closely with a president, and been involved in campaigns and elections, i
daunting to approach the monument of lincoln, but what i've tried to do is to bring him down from his pedestald have him walk among us and examine him as breathing, living, person, who becomes a incredibly skillful politician, and to show how he developed step-by-step along that way, and as well at the same time develops intellectually. self-educated, having spent on a few weekness the formal school -- weeks in a formal school, called the blab school. memorizing things and repeating them. his...
119
119
Jun 1, 2016
06/16
by
CNBC
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 0
really i'm saying the under armour stock price is assuming already they are going knock nike off the pedestalis morgan stanley with a downgraded nike saying the whole category is weakening while competition is increasing. even though under armour has been a catalyst, is it just now a maturation phase? >> i think there are pockets of weakness. we've seen weakness in basketball. the basketball category, which obviously nike dominates that category. but in general we're dealing with a longer term trend in athletic apparel that is going to persist. it plays well with demographic changes we're seeing. so i'm not ready to call athletic apparel or footwear a slowing trend but i do think nike has a lot more to risk than under armour. >> what about the impact of the bankruptcy of sports authority. if i remember correctly that was 25% of under armour's sales right there out the door. so they have lost a huge outlet for them. so what happens now? how do they make that up again? >> it wasn't 25% of their sales. it was something much less. i think somewhere around 3% but maybe a larger portion of their wh
really i'm saying the under armour stock price is assuming already they are going knock nike off the pedestalis morgan stanley with a downgraded nike saying the whole category is weakening while competition is increasing. even though under armour has been a catalyst, is it just now a maturation phase? >> i think there are pockets of weakness. we've seen weakness in basketball. the basketball category, which obviously nike dominates that category. but in general we're dealing with a longer...
182
182
Jun 10, 2016
06/16
by
WTTG
tv
eye 182
favorite 0
quote 0
having hav beiber's employee the latest edition of billboards.bill he calls justin a quote clown on a pedestal mean.ha i was honest but not tt'hat mea. >> you just put him in time out. >> h seeems to defend him a bitb the pair have actually collaborated on few songsew sons andying in you were 18 or 19 can any, k have any girl you want,ou have all the money you what happened, expletive i would be o lot expletive crazier than him.n i mean i'm 37 and i'm just jt finally maturing now. >> okay. all right.l r maybe it's maturity thing. t >> kind of what we were talking about, too. a lot of yeses.of a lot of access.ccess. a lot of success.ucce. >> right. >> >> i understand the behavior bui come on. come we're better than that.bett he's also a peon of faith. esche focus on that and find tht goodness.odness. >> absolutely. president obama wasn't the only tonigha t show guest causing bu online last night.online last n pop icon madonna brought down d the house with amazingng performance of borderline. >> borderline? >> borderline? >> what? >> kicking it it old school.l. >> ♪ >> all right.>> all r she sti
having hav beiber's employee the latest edition of billboards.bill he calls justin a quote clown on a pedestal mean.ha i was honest but not tt'hat mea. >> you just put him in time out. >> h seeems to defend him a bitb the pair have actually collaborated on few songsew sons andying in you were 18 or 19 can any, k have any girl you want,ou have all the money you what happened, expletive i would be o lot expletive crazier than him.n i mean i'm 37 and i'm just jt finally maturing now....
318
318
Jun 10, 2016
06/16
by
WRC
tv
eye 318
favorite 0
quote 0
and begin to be placed on a pedestal. i am great. too often they do.element is when you mentioned, the racial aspect of it. especially important in los angeles. but it's nationwide. >> ezra, this is one of the cases that everybody thinks they know everything about. revealing things that are in this documentary. we followed this trial, as did a lot of people. when you lost the $33 million civil case, you have footage backing up trucks. hiding some of o.j.'s assets. >> it is impossible to know what is new. there is sort of the last part of the doc, is that period of time after the trial. i think no one focuses on after everything else. after the acquittal in 1995, we all o.d.'d on o.j. and we forgot about him. anyone, what i have heard, people watched the hour and a half of the dumd, and said, i had no idea this happened. >> you made headlines because of this interview, because you said, i think -- tell me if i'm not getting the quote right, that there wasn't enough to prosecute the case, that bill hodgman was. did you think thepr >> i think they did an
and begin to be placed on a pedestal. i am great. too often they do.element is when you mentioned, the racial aspect of it. especially important in los angeles. but it's nationwide. >> ezra, this is one of the cases that everybody thinks they know everything about. revealing things that are in this documentary. we followed this trial, as did a lot of people. when you lost the $33 million civil case, you have footage backing up trucks. hiding some of o.j.'s assets. >> it is...
877
877
Jun 10, 2016
06/16
by
KNTV
tv
eye 877
favorite 0
quote 0
treats young boys who seemingly have this incredible athletic ability to begin to be placed on the pedestalt, ki get away with anything. too often they do. the second element is the one you mentioned the racial aspect of it. especially important in los angeles. but it's nationwide. >> ezra, this is one of the cases that everybody thinks they know everything about. tell us about some of the new and revealing things that are in this documentary. we both followed this trial, as d a lot of people, one of which was interesting, when you lost the civil case, you have footage of family and friend backing up trucks. they are basically hiding assets, things like. that. >> it's impossible for what is actually new. there is sort of the last part of the doc part 5 is set in a period of time after the trial, which i think nobody focuses on more than anything else. i feel after the acquittal in 1995, it was on oj. since then, we forget about them. so i think from what they heard, half the documents said i have no idea it was happening. >> when you were making headlines recently because of this interview,
treats young boys who seemingly have this incredible athletic ability to begin to be placed on the pedestalt, ki get away with anything. too often they do. the second element is the one you mentioned the racial aspect of it. especially important in los angeles. but it's nationwide. >> ezra, this is one of the cases that everybody thinks they know everything about. tell us about some of the new and revealing things that are in this documentary. we both followed this trial, as d a lot of...