134
134
Jan 26, 2017
01/17
by
KGO
tv
eye 134
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> the unbridled ecstasy and passion of nailing it!is what's happened just moments before daniel bow dean went bananas in the snow. he's a red bull athlete. here we go on the snow mobile. that's one, two complete rotations and landing the snow mobile. double back flip on a snow mobile has been something that daniel has been going after for more than two years. he says he believed it's always been his trick. the reason he says because it's basically been a race to the moon between him and two other americans, coltin moore and steve frisby. >> i'm happy. i thought the guy lost a limb. the i thought pain was involved. >> he's won other world records as well. he's quite impressive. i'm going to call this next video impressive as well for very different reasons. ♪ >> what are you doing? >> keep going. >> they did keep going. you hear some crunching and crashing. from whaf on an billow -- what i've been able to discern, the doormat manage to stick to the throttle pedal and this could have been a test drive. the female behind the wheel managi
. >> the unbridled ecstasy and passion of nailing it!is what's happened just moments before daniel bow dean went bananas in the snow. he's a red bull athlete. here we go on the snow mobile. that's one, two complete rotations and landing the snow mobile. double back flip on a snow mobile has been something that daniel has been going after for more than two years. he says he believed it's always been his trick. the reason he says because it's basically been a race to the moon between him...
111
111
Jan 25, 2017
01/17
by
FBC
tv
eye 111
favorite 0
quote 0
i haven't seen so much unbridled joy since a dutchman asked this bold question. >> i am from holland.s a devil language, but they have great waffles. screw the germans. so they are number 2. sometimes i like to gamble on sports. i admit it. but this time i have got a shoo-in. i am putting a thousand bucks on a promising skier i met in broken ring. i think he will win the next olympic gold medal. let's see how he's doing. yeah well. i will have to loan him a thousand bucks to get his jaw wired. it's very bad. topic number 5. sibling rivalries are a same of society. sometimes blood is spilled. bones are broken and sometimes you just need to exchange a few harsh words. >> yeah! give it back. >> gift to him. >> i can't. can i just wear one [bleep] >> yeah. go for it jack. here is. >> the thing. with your mom and a crowbar. your mom, too. why not. thanks so much for watching the show tonight. email kennedyfbn@foxbusiness.com. tomorrow the show is fantastic already. i'm daying up all night in anticipation for brian kilmeade, dana perino. have a pleasant night. good-bye. uscle-bound heroes..
i haven't seen so much unbridled joy since a dutchman asked this bold question. >> i am from holland.s a devil language, but they have great waffles. screw the germans. so they are number 2. sometimes i like to gamble on sports. i admit it. but this time i have got a shoo-in. i am putting a thousand bucks on a promising skier i met in broken ring. i think he will win the next olympic gold medal. let's see how he's doing. yeah well. i will have to loan him a thousand bucks to get his jaw...
253
253
Jan 31, 2017
01/17
by
WUSA
tv
eye 253
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> unbridled hair growth. i think my head is too small for the proportion.ot be -- >> stephen: you're saying god gave you more eyebrow than your skull can handle? >> absolutely. my head would just sort of weigh forward if it was up to the heavens. ( laughter ) >> stephen: your dad was one of the creators and stars of sctv, one of the coolest comedy shows ever made. did that if my way make him cool to you as a way for a father to be cool? >> it was a very strange thing growing up, like, trying to sort of look at the show and look at, like, the schmengy's, for example, and look at my dad and try to reconcile how those two ever came to be because, in person, he is a very serious man, and then to see these characters, it's the weirdest, strangest, goofiest people. >> stephen: in any way undermine his authority as a child, like i can't listen to this guy because he's an idiot? >> he was a very serious parent and, when it came down to it, was trying to embarrass me as best he could, like any parent does often. >> stephen: did he succeed? yes, often. i was a very i
. >> unbridled hair growth. i think my head is too small for the proportion.ot be -- >> stephen: you're saying god gave you more eyebrow than your skull can handle? >> absolutely. my head would just sort of weigh forward if it was up to the heavens. ( laughter ) >> stephen: your dad was one of the creators and stars of sctv, one of the coolest comedy shows ever made. did that if my way make him cool to you as a way for a father to be cool? >> it was a very strange...
365
365
Jan 20, 2017
01/17
by
KQED
tv
eye 365
favorite 0
quote 0
so, in that sense, it was almost unique, at least in the speeches i've heard, and it was an unbridledthose presidents who spoke in william's piece sitting on the dais with him, having praised the obamas in one sentence to being magnificent, then saying this small group who profited in washington have been indifferent and almost cruelly so to the rest of the country. so i just stand in the midnight in america, american carnage, which is i think is a soon-to-be canceled tv series, but i've never heard language or tone quite like it in an inaugural address. >> woodruff: matt schlapp, you're so well dressed, i'm going to call on you next. what are you taking away? >> boy, what i would say to mark is that i think one of the things that was ironic is you had donald trump up on that dais, who hasn't been a republican for very long, and who is basically a function of the fact that both those parties and many of those party leaders and some of the former presidents did not listen to the american people. president obama will leave office with higher approval ratings, but still two-thirds of thi
so, in that sense, it was almost unique, at least in the speeches i've heard, and it was an unbridledthose presidents who spoke in william's piece sitting on the dais with him, having praised the obamas in one sentence to being magnificent, then saying this small group who profited in washington have been indifferent and almost cruelly so to the rest of the country. so i just stand in the midnight in america, american carnage, which is i think is a soon-to-be canceled tv series, but i've never...
246
246
Jan 24, 2017
01/17
by
KQED
tv
eye 246
favorite 0
quote 0
>> the reveling in what only movies can do, the sort of unbridled experimentation, the audacity, theion over anything else, the privileging of image and sound and telling a story that way. not just telling it through dialogue or through things that you could do in literature or in a play, but really just indulging in the possibilities of the medium. i just felt like musicals were the most liberating form for a filmmaker. ♪ as long as i can be with you, it's a lovely day ♪ >> the language of falling in love through dance, the fred and ginger model, especially in a movie like "top hat" or a movie like "swing time," a number like, "isn't it a lovely day to be caught in the rain?," which is one of the early numbers in "top hat." the bickering couple, where the dialogue is telling you that they're not in love, but they start to kind of sing and they start to dance, and the song and the dance is what tells you, "oh, actually, there's something underneath here." >> brown: you're also working here with actors ryan gosling and emma stone, who are not known for singing and dancing. >> yeah. pa
>> the reveling in what only movies can do, the sort of unbridled experimentation, the audacity, theion over anything else, the privileging of image and sound and telling a story that way. not just telling it through dialogue or through things that you could do in literature or in a play, but really just indulging in the possibilities of the medium. i just felt like musicals were the most liberating form for a filmmaker. ♪ as long as i can be with you, it's a lovely day ♪ >> the...
75
75
Jan 17, 2017
01/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
we've seen en masse, unbridled, unchecked liberalism for the first time in a long time.of commerce, the way cows and they are doing things that are horrifying people. that's my position and they make you see that in the country. >> kind of ironic that barack obama munich's public appearances come to cross as the likable outgoing of the guy. we can see again and again that his likability quotient far outrun his polling numbers in job approval. so he still liked person in public. but that is his performance we are talking about is a public figure. in terms of his actual working in the government -- toward the governance of this country, and again and again i learned from republicans and democrats that he doesn't have the skill set that lyndon johnson not for instance who understood how to manipulate power in washington or ronald reagan who would get together at the end of the day with tip o'neill, democratic speaker of the house, have a drink with him, reminisce, tell jokes and then start working out how to get a bill passed. barack obama doesn't seem to know how to do tha
we've seen en masse, unbridled, unchecked liberalism for the first time in a long time.of commerce, the way cows and they are doing things that are horrifying people. that's my position and they make you see that in the country. >> kind of ironic that barack obama munich's public appearances come to cross as the likable outgoing of the guy. we can see again and again that his likability quotient far outrun his polling numbers in job approval. so he still liked person in public. but that...
61
61
Jan 26, 2017
01/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
country, secreta secretary chao's successes are not only a testament to the american dream but the unbridled spirit of kentucky also. having emigrated from taiwan at the age of with no background in the english language, she would copy all the words of her teachers on the blackboard so her parents could go over them daily when she arrived at home to improve her english skills. her father worked three jobs to support six children but they always expressed optimism for the future. the family was truly grateful to be in america. and despite the challenges, they seized the opportunity that this nation had to offer. secretary chao's parents' belief in education, service and hard work set the foundation for her success. which includes a degree from harvard business school and 36 honorary doctorate degrees from institutions around the world. but for the chao family, education is never the end. it is just the beginning. secretary chao's extensive background in both public and private sectors includes not only her previous stint as secretary of labor but also deputy secretary of transportation, chair
country, secreta secretary chao's successes are not only a testament to the american dream but the unbridled spirit of kentucky also. having emigrated from taiwan at the age of with no background in the english language, she would copy all the words of her teachers on the blackboard so her parents could go over them daily when she arrived at home to improve her english skills. her father worked three jobs to support six children but they always expressed optimism for the future. the family was...
66
66
Jan 11, 2017
01/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
it allows for unbridled discretion by an unelected bureaucrat to use that term that my friends like to use. but in this instance, i'm using it with respect to a newly bureaucratludocratic like, say, linda mcmahon, at the small business administration, a billionaire. give that to, you know, a bureaucrat such as that, and let them decide whether or not it has a significant economic impact, they're going to say, yes, it has a significant economic impact, they're going to do it every time. because that's their agenda. they support, they are a big pro-business, pro-big business agenda. that's what they represent. so that's how they would rule. when you add that the got to be a substantial number of small businesses, well, what is a substantial number? is that 10%, 20%, 50%? it's up to whoever the decision maker is. the unelected bureaucrat. so we see the set-up. i think the american people understand what this amendment seeks to do. it requires agencies to provide a detailed economic assessment of the economic impacts of a proposed or final rule prior to certifying that the rule will not ha
it allows for unbridled discretion by an unelected bureaucrat to use that term that my friends like to use. but in this instance, i'm using it with respect to a newly bureaucratludocratic like, say, linda mcmahon, at the small business administration, a billionaire. give that to, you know, a bureaucrat such as that, and let them decide whether or not it has a significant economic impact, they're going to say, yes, it has a significant economic impact, they're going to do it every time. because...
295
295
Jan 9, 2017
01/17
by
CNBC
tv
eye 295
favorite 0
quote 0
so completeness in reports from the intelligence community for public information is not an unbridledght at the edge of something you've got to be very, very careful about. >> i totally understand that position. but at the same time if you're making a big deal how to release something, how to explain to the public, it ends up being self-defeating. >> this was a reasonably detailed report reporting on that sensitive a subject. that 25 pages was, i thought, well done and made several points very well. it was walking the borderline trying not to reveal sources and methods and i think they probably succeeded. >> can i just go back to twitter for a second. you talked about him being a private citizen and feeling okay about it. i want to know, do you think he should stop tweeting once he's the president and doesn't represent a national security risk to the extent he does. >> i think it's very hard. let me put it this way. he used twitter extremely effectively in the campaign. a lot of people told him he was crazy, shouldn't do it, shouldn't try it, and it worked for him superbly. campaignin
so completeness in reports from the intelligence community for public information is not an unbridledght at the edge of something you've got to be very, very careful about. >> i totally understand that position. but at the same time if you're making a big deal how to release something, how to explain to the public, it ends up being self-defeating. >> this was a reasonably detailed report reporting on that sensitive a subject. that 25 pages was, i thought, well done and made several...
49
49
Jan 2, 2017
01/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 49
favorite 0
quote 0
we've seen en masse, unbridled, unchecked liberalism for the first time in a long time.of commerce, the way cows and they are doing things that are horrifying people. that's my position and they make you see that in the country. >> kind of ironic that barack obama munich's public appearances come to cross as the likable outgoing of the guy. we can see again and again that his likability quotient far outrun his polling numbers in job approval. so he still liked person in public. but that is his performance we are talking about is a public figure. in terms of his actual working in the government -- toward the governance of this country, and again and again i learned from republicans and democrats that he doesn't have the skill set that lyndon johnson not for instance who understood how to manipulate power in washington or ronald reagan who would get together at the end of the day with tip o'neill, democratic speaker of the house, have a drink with him, reminisce, tell jokes and then start working out how to get a bill passed. barack obama doesn't seem to know how to do tha
we've seen en masse, unbridled, unchecked liberalism for the first time in a long time.of commerce, the way cows and they are doing things that are horrifying people. that's my position and they make you see that in the country. >> kind of ironic that barack obama munich's public appearances come to cross as the likable outgoing of the guy. we can see again and again that his likability quotient far outrun his polling numbers in job approval. so he still liked person in public. but that...
88
88
Jan 1, 2017
01/17
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 88
favorite 0
quote 0
we've seen en masse, unbridled, unchecked liberalism for the first time in a long time.of commerce, the way cows and they are doing things that are horrifying people. that's my position and they make you see that in the country. >> kind of ironic that barack obama munich's public appearances come to cross as the likable outgoing of the guy. we can see again and again that his likability quotient far outrun his polling numbers in job approval. so he still liked person in public. but that is his performance we are talking about is a public figure. in terms of his actual working in the government -- toward the governance of this country, and again and again i learned from republicans and democrats that he doesn't have the skill set that lyndon johnson not for instance who understood how to manipulate power in washington or ronald reagan who would get together at the end of the day with tip o'neill, democratic speaker of the house, have a drink with him, reminisce, tell jokes and then start working out how to get a bill passed. barack obama doesn't seem to know how to do tha
we've seen en masse, unbridled, unchecked liberalism for the first time in a long time.of commerce, the way cows and they are doing things that are horrifying people. that's my position and they make you see that in the country. >> kind of ironic that barack obama munich's public appearances come to cross as the likable outgoing of the guy. we can see again and again that his likability quotient far outrun his polling numbers in job approval. so he still liked person in public. but that...
747
747
Jan 20, 2017
01/17
by
KQEH
tv
eye 747
favorite 0
quote 0
acted quickly to protect america's last great stands of white pine, spruce and fir, the forces of unbridledimes. so the solution was to regulate this unsettled land as a public domain that would then be governed by scientific informed bureaus, and this would allow us to conserve it, not lock it up, but to use it in some kind of rational regulated way. narrator: their progressive vision imagined a new kind of commonwealth-- national forests, controlled by an enlightened corps of rangers, overseeing not just the timber, but also the minerals, the water and the wildlife for the benefit of all americans. a national forest is not a pristine sanctuary, it is a utilized landscape. so, it's a different model than a national park. you can hunt on it, you can graze on it, you can mine on it. its purpose is to be managed. narrator: previous presidents had already set aside large swaths of public land, but roosevelt went much further, radically expanding america's national forests. then, in 1905, he placed them under the control of the bureau of forestry, now called the u.s. forest service, with pincho
acted quickly to protect america's last great stands of white pine, spruce and fir, the forces of unbridledimes. so the solution was to regulate this unsettled land as a public domain that would then be governed by scientific informed bureaus, and this would allow us to conserve it, not lock it up, but to use it in some kind of rational regulated way. narrator: their progressive vision imagined a new kind of commonwealth-- national forests, controlled by an enlightened corps of rangers,...