78
78
Apr 7, 2017
04/17
by
WCAU
tv
eye 78
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> john: yeah. but your starters are averaging six a start, you don't need that many. >> tom: good point. 1-2 to drew. and way outside, two balls and two strikes. a line drive. that was a base hit to float up to top. he gets there quickly to hold stephen drew to a lead-off single. >> john: he doesn't hit it real hard. this doesn't do a whole lot. >> tom: is this turner's button here? >> john: yes. the way he's swinging it. there's one. they got a hurry in time. 5-4-3, double play. that's a good job all the way around. >> gregg: just knowing -- that's what i'm talking about. i thinking ahead, knowing the runner, maikel, big play. >> tom: adam eaton, he shows bunt. >> john: a pitch too late. >> tom: i thought he would. part of it is because of the way all of those guys are swinging right now. >> john: we're good managers up here, aren't we. >> tom: yeah, we are. >> john: you went from no sleeves to sleeves and a mask. >> tom: he's gotten older. >> john: what is he? a robust 25? >> tom: yeah. >> john:
. >> john: yeah. but your starters are averaging six a start, you don't need that many. >> tom: good point. 1-2 to drew. and way outside, two balls and two strikes. a line drive. that was a base hit to float up to top. he gets there quickly to hold stephen drew to a lead-off single. >> john: he doesn't hit it real hard. this doesn't do a whole lot. >> tom: is this turner's button here? >> john: yes. the way he's swinging it. there's one. they got a hurry in time....
78
78
tv
eye 78
favorite 0
quote 0
john john he cared about the poor.art to see the people who are suffering in venezuela and all these hollywood types don't seem to care or are blind to it. people like oliver stone, they don't want to see the truth. john: oliver stone called him a great hero. >> no. it's true that he was democratically elected the first time, but he rigged the system. they had total control over the media, they had total control of the electoral process. if you put your political opponents in prison, how democratic is that? john: but don king, the boxing promoter, he goes to venezuela and says to see what is happening here makes me feel good all over. you, he says to chavez, you are the one concerned about the poor. danny glover, a true man of the people. >> where are people going to? are they going to live in lovely venezuela, or are they coming here, right? are the cubans hanging out there or getting on ships or little boats trying to get here? the venezuelan economy, the people in control of it, are on some insane quest to repeat th
john john he cared about the poor.art to see the people who are suffering in venezuela and all these hollywood types don't seem to care or are blind to it. people like oliver stone, they don't want to see the truth. john: oliver stone called him a great hero. >> no. it's true that he was democratically elected the first time, but he rigged the system. they had total control over the media, they had total control of the electoral process. if you put your political opponents in prison, how...
133
133
tv
eye 133
favorite 0
quote 0
john: no, it's not. we'll show you the real heroes, most are not politicians, they're entrepreneurs. and parents like this mom who went to jail because she wanted to give her daughters a choice. >> holy batman, it's exciting. john: heroes of freedom. that's our show tonight. [ applause ] . john: who are your heroes, and what makes for a hero? a harris poll asked americans that question, and the person who came in first was jesus christ. i understand that. but after jesus many people picked politicians. ronald reagan was second. barack obama third. president obama ranked higher right after he was elected then placed first ahead of jesus. are any of those people your heroes? [ cheers ] >> some for jesus, but not the politicians, but the list is politicians, george bush is on the list. hillary clinton, fdr, elizabeth warren.ticians? what is so heroic about what they do? when i look at them i see self-serving panderers who say anything to win. and once elected dole out favors and money to their cronies. but
john: no, it's not. we'll show you the real heroes, most are not politicians, they're entrepreneurs. and parents like this mom who went to jail because she wanted to give her daughters a choice. >> holy batman, it's exciting. john: heroes of freedom. that's our show tonight. [ applause ] . john: who are your heroes, and what makes for a hero? a harris poll asked americans that question, and the person who came in first was jesus christ. i understand that. but after jesus many people...
66
66
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
john: right! young people sure know more about liberty and life than i did when i was their age. that's good news, that's our show. from the students for liberty conference, see you next week for another new episode in our new time slot, friday on fbn. good night! >> i'm bob massi. for 34 years, i've been practicing law and living in las vegas, the center of the recent real-estate crisis. lives were destroyed from coast to coast as the economy tanked. now, well, it's a different story. the american dream is back. and nowhere is that more clear than the sunshine state of florida. so we headed from the strip to the beach to show you how to live the american dream. i'm gonna meet real people who are facing serious problems, take you behind the gates of properties you have to see to believe and give you the tips that everyone needs to navigate the new landscape because information is power and the property man has got you covered. [ woman vocalizing ]
john: right! young people sure know more about liberty and life than i did when i was their age. that's good news, that's our show. from the students for liberty conference, see you next week for another new episode in our new time slot, friday on fbn. good night! >> i'm bob massi. for 34 years, i've been practicing law and living in las vegas, the center of the recent real-estate crisis. lives were destroyed from coast to coast as the economy tanked. now, well, it's a different story....
45
45
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 0
john: how?that the farmer who bought the city but bring my parents back but the guard did not like me. [laughter] so they would denounce me. i am hoping for the best that they are safe. >> do you consider yourself a hero? and rebecca i get discouraged a lot. people inspired me a free day -- every day. >> is there any point african americans will stop playing the slavery card? >> not to speak for the whole community but that victim card will never go away there is political value in it. with harriet tubman and could get in a time machine to come here and in 2015. >> harriet tubman time machine. >> great movie. [laughter] if she could read any tsa one dash essay about my progression, she would laugh her head scarf off. >> if you are in the black market how you get out? >> if they're caught they to get out or sometimes they are executed. they hate the americans. so my last problem to have the ambassadors but they don't like the ambassadors. [laughter] that our suffering is because people are starvi
john: how?that the farmer who bought the city but bring my parents back but the guard did not like me. [laughter] so they would denounce me. i am hoping for the best that they are safe. >> do you consider yourself a hero? and rebecca i get discouraged a lot. people inspired me a free day -- every day. >> is there any point african americans will stop playing the slavery card? >> not to speak for the whole community but that victim card will never go away there is political...
55
55
tv
eye 55
favorite 0
quote 0
john: fairness. before the rule was that workers who made less than $23,000 a year must be paid overtime. obama doubled that about $47,000. and this sounds good to people. you work longer, you make time and a half. that sound good to you, audience? they're nodding. my libertarian audience is nodding. this economist studies the hidden side effects of rules like that, and you say -- >> the whole issue with this reg slagz it doesn't look at effect of all various different sectors. john: meaning what? >> for example, the nonprofits have been vocal about the regulation, and the reason they've been vocal is it's a huge cost to them, they don't have the budget for that. nonprofits in higher education. >> i think in the nonprofit world or education, there are people who want to work long hours. >> they do. they believe in the vision of what they want to accomplish. the same thing is true for -- john: so now the government is saying if you want these people to work for you, you'll have to pay them 50% more, i
john: fairness. before the rule was that workers who made less than $23,000 a year must be paid overtime. obama doubled that about $47,000. and this sounds good to people. you work longer, you make time and a half. that sound good to you, audience? they're nodding. my libertarian audience is nodding. this economist studies the hidden side effects of rules like that, and you say -- >> the whole issue with this reg slagz it doesn't look at effect of all various different sectors. john:...
89
89
Apr 30, 2017
04/17
by
FBC
tv
eye 89
favorite 0
quote 0
john: laser pegs were invented by john.u can call it success by failure. >> ferguson when i grew up there ferguson missouri,. john: you dropped out of your school when you were a sophomore. >> it was a rough school with a lot of fights. john: you might have gone on welfare. >> i might have. >> i might have been said that i started by reading a lot of self-help books and finding out who i was and i had a knack for inventing better reflected that act over and over again. i invented a lot of things that weren't subtle. john: you invented a headache relief and what sounds like quackery so glad i wasn't successful. cell phone. cell phone ads that block callers. >> too many cell phones applications across to many platforms of that failed as well. john: a battery-operated shoelace, shoelaces. >> the reason they failed is the chinese knocked us off to. john: they sold well but you got ripped off by imitations. >> you can find the magnitude of them and you them and you see them and retail chains as well. john: you started submitting
john: laser pegs were invented by john.u can call it success by failure. >> ferguson when i grew up there ferguson missouri,. john: you dropped out of your school when you were a sophomore. >> it was a rough school with a lot of fights. john: you might have gone on welfare. >> i might have. >> i might have been said that i started by reading a lot of self-help books and finding out who i was and i had a knack for inventing better reflected that act over and over again. i...
86
86
Apr 30, 2017
04/17
by
FBC
tv
eye 86
favorite 0
quote 0
john: skylit. today for the first time most of the richest counties in america surround washington d.c.. two people know more about how they got rich than peter schweitzer the author of printing cache the book that exposed many of the clinton foundation sleazy dealings. so i feel sorry for you. your book was going to be big for four years and now she is not elected. nobody cares anymore. >> people care. washington d.c. is a target rich environment as far as exposing cronyism and corruption. never-ending source unfortunately of those kinds of stories in that kind of information. john: than let's show some more pictures that show how much money as is sloshing around the washington swamp. washington, once a sleepy part-time home for politicians now resembles versailles. powerbrokers work in buildings that look like palaces and after work they go home to castles. >> it all helps one understand why people spend millions to win jobs here and then. >> once people come to d.c. they never leave. johnthat wa
john: skylit. today for the first time most of the richest counties in america surround washington d.c.. two people know more about how they got rich than peter schweitzer the author of printing cache the book that exposed many of the clinton foundation sleazy dealings. so i feel sorry for you. your book was going to be big for four years and now she is not elected. nobody cares anymore. >> people care. washington d.c. is a target rich environment as far as exposing cronyism and...
68
68
Apr 30, 2017
04/17
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 68
favorite 0
quote 0
here is bloomberg editor-in-chief, john micklethwait. john: we're in toronto. prices are going up almost by a third over the past year. but huge growth in vancouver as well. and today, the ontario government announced a 15% tax on foreigners coming to buy houses here. so, i have two questions for you. one -- is this a bubble, and is this the way to fix it? the other one is, surely as a liberal, what is wrong with someone like me coming here to buy a house? p.m. trudeau: i encourage you to come and move to canada, and settle spend all of your money, , and invest, and hire more people. we are open to global investment. i think one of the challenges we are facing, and we certainly saw it -- john: you can't, with a straight face, say you are open to global investment on one hand, but then charge people 15% if they want to buy a house? p.m. trudeau: it depends on whether it is speculation, or whether it is living to move moving in to live. the challenge that we're facg is, and we saw this more acutely a year ago in vancouver, a dearth of data on exactly who's doing
here is bloomberg editor-in-chief, john micklethwait. john: we're in toronto. prices are going up almost by a third over the past year. but huge growth in vancouver as well. and today, the ontario government announced a 15% tax on foreigners coming to buy houses here. so, i have two questions for you. one -- is this a bubble, and is this the way to fix it? the other one is, surely as a liberal, what is wrong with someone like me coming here to buy a house? p.m. trudeau: i encourage you to come...
87
87
tv
eye 87
favorite 0
quote 0
john: what are you? [shouting] [applause] >> and now, john stossel. [applause] john: i'm
john: what are you? [shouting] [applause] >> and now, john stossel. [applause] john: i'm
48
48
tv
eye 48
favorite 0
quote 0
john: what are you? [shouting] [applause] >> and now, john stossel.ause] john: i'm in washington, d.c. this is the place that could use a lesson in liberty. we'll try to give them one because, i'm surrounded by students here, more than a thousand of them who traveled to join a conference called, students for liberty. because here in washington life is dominated by democrats, who want to take away our economic liberty, republicans who often want to take away our pennal liberty. there are a couple exceptions to that. one is congressman justin amash from mesh ban. [cheers and applause] -- michigan. he is unusual because he has an economics degree. he worries a lot about america's coming bankruptcy. we are probably going bankrupt. how many of you students think, when you're my age medicare will be here to pay for your heart problem? >> no. john: you're wise, i'm sorry. we will have spent all the money. but republicans are not talking about fixing it. a little bit, but not much. >> not enough. and there is a problem we face as a country. young people don't
john: what are you? [shouting] [applause] >> and now, john stossel.ause] john: i'm in washington, d.c. this is the place that could use a lesson in liberty. we'll try to give them one because, i'm surrounded by students here, more than a thousand of them who traveled to join a conference called, students for liberty. because here in washington life is dominated by democrats, who want to take away our economic liberty, republicans who often want to take away our pennal liberty. there are a...
54
54
tv
eye 54
favorite 0
quote 0
john: the man died.wo days later at the black lives matter rally in dallas a man killed five officers and wounded two others. how do we get more justice. former nypd detective bo dietl says support police officers more and get tougher on prime. but some say they need to let more people out of jail. >> the right number of people in jail is the right answer. but there are a lot of people in jail with mental health issues. police officers don't have enough time to chase the truely violent repeat offenders because they are distracted by so many things. john: isn't there some good reason for black lives matter protesters to be mad, some cops are bullies. 650,000 the cops in america. one-half of one percent is thousands of bullies out there. >> even if you take the structure of the clergy. you have got more than that in the surgery and doctors. john: but they don't have guns and the right to use them to take my life. >> a cop making $40,000 a year and is expected to be a psychologist or socialologist. john: le
john: the man died.wo days later at the black lives matter rally in dallas a man killed five officers and wounded two others. how do we get more justice. former nypd detective bo dietl says support police officers more and get tougher on prime. but some say they need to let more people out of jail. >> the right number of people in jail is the right answer. but there are a lot of people in jail with mental health issues. police officers don't have enough time to chase the truely violent...
56
56
tv
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 0
john: yes, sir?rself that you would have to foot the bill for somebody who isn't taking care of themselves. >> right. >> if we didn't have socialized medics, you wouldn't do, that they would take care of it on their own. >> we don't have socialized medicine, i pay insurance through my companies or through the government, and the cost of insurance rises because other people are less healthy than i am. >> but that's socialized medicine. the market of the medicine. >> i am paying for people who are eating five kit kats an hour or drinking ten sodas a day, or eating a couple of zeplys that you get around the corner. i have to pay for the guy through my private insurance now. the only thing that would stop that is single payer health care. john: why would you not have to pay for it? it's funded by taxes, so the fat smoker -- >> i guess i have to pay for it then, too. we need to all get in shape. john: thank you, chris, starlee, bob. >>> next, my stupid bad rules. . john: let's end the show with a couple o
john: yes, sir?rself that you would have to foot the bill for somebody who isn't taking care of themselves. >> right. >> if we didn't have socialized medics, you wouldn't do, that they would take care of it on their own. >> we don't have socialized medicine, i pay insurance through my companies or through the government, and the cost of insurance rises because other people are less healthy than i am. >> but that's socialized medicine. the market of the medicine. >>...
62
62
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
john: thank you both.join this debate, please follow me and use the hash tag innovation or like my facebook page and you can post on my wall as well. coming up, the dozens of things that have been creatively distorted and now fit inside my tiny cell phone. plus, selling a home. plus, selling a home. >> we have an agent no matter how the markets change... plus, selling a home. >> we have an agent at t. rowe price... our disciplined approach remains. global markets may be uncertain... but you can feel confident in our investment experience around the world. call us or your advisor... t. rowe price. invest with confidence. but when we brought our daughter home, that was it. now i have nicoderm cq. the nicoderm cq patch with unique extended release technology helps prevent your urge to smoke all day. it's the best thing that ever happened to me. every great why needs a great how. john: do you want to sell your home? real estate brokers offer to help you but they charge a 6% commission. 6%. the average home sel
john: thank you both.join this debate, please follow me and use the hash tag innovation or like my facebook page and you can post on my wall as well. coming up, the dozens of things that have been creatively distorted and now fit inside my tiny cell phone. plus, selling a home. plus, selling a home. >> we have an agent no matter how the markets change... plus, selling a home. >> we have an agent at t. rowe price... our disciplined approach remains. global markets may be uncertain......
71
71
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
john: laser pegs were invented by john.u can call it success by failure. >> ferguson when i grew up there ferguson missouri,. john: you dropped out of your school when you were a sophomore. >> it was a rough school with a lot of fights. john: you might have gone on welfare. >> i might have. >> i might have been said that i started by reading a lot of self-help books and finding out who i was and i had a knack for inventing better reflected that act over and over again. i invented a lot of things that weren't subtle. john: you invented a headache relief and what sounds like quackery so glad i wasn't successful. cell phone. cell phone ads that block callers. >> too many cell phones applications across to many platforms of that failed as well. john: a battery-operated shoelace, shoelaces. >> the reason they failed is the chinese knocked us off to. john: they sold well but you got ripped off by imitations. >> you can find the magnitude of them and you them and you see them and retail chains as well. john: you started submitting
john: laser pegs were invented by john.u can call it success by failure. >> ferguson when i grew up there ferguson missouri,. john: you dropped out of your school when you were a sophomore. >> it was a rough school with a lot of fights. john: you might have gone on welfare. >> i might have. >> i might have been said that i started by reading a lot of self-help books and finding out who i was and i had a knack for inventing better reflected that act over and over again. i...
44
44
tv
eye 44
favorite 0
quote 0
john: thank you ed stringman. john: thank you ed stringman.ber what your sdad and i taught you. about hands only cpr? yes. uh, kind of. if you see a teen or adult suddenly collapse, the first thing you do is...? call 9-1-1. and the second thing you do is? push hard and fast in the center of the chest at a rate of at least one hundred beats per minute. who even knows what one hundred beats per minute even sounds like? ♪ well, you can tell by the way i use my walk, ♪ ♪ i'm a woman's man: no time to talk. ♪ ♪ music loud and women warm, ♪ i've been kicked around ♪ since i was born. and now it's all right. ♪ ♪ it's ok. and you may look the other way ♪ ♪ we can try to understand ♪ the new york times' effect on man ♪ remember it's only two steps: call 9-1-1. and push hard and fast in the center of the chest to the beat of 'staying alive' until help arrives. ♪ ah, ah, ah, ah ♪ stayin' alive ♪ ah, ah, ah, ah ♪ stayin' alive ♪ ah, ah, ah, ah ♪ stayin' alive wow. college already yeah! we gotta go yeah (sfx:car starts, car door closes) ♪for all those time
john: thank you ed stringman. john: thank you ed stringman.ber what your sdad and i taught you. about hands only cpr? yes. uh, kind of. if you see a teen or adult suddenly collapse, the first thing you do is...? call 9-1-1. and the second thing you do is? push hard and fast in the center of the chest at a rate of at least one hundred beats per minute. who even knows what one hundred beats per minute even sounds like? ♪ well, you can tell by the way i use my walk, ♪ ♪ i'm a woman's man: no...
75
75
Apr 10, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
john: absolutely. we had three presidencies in a row. 100 years from now they will be grouped together as the cold war president and they will be ranked and how good they did. since we're sitting here and are not incinerated, radioactive ash, they did a good job. they protected us. they did horribly aberrational things like hiring the mafia, jack kennedy hiring the mafia to try to assassinate fidel castro. the full report of the committee that went into the history administration after administration spying on americans, opening their mail, their them, bugged telephones. and not just of the mob, peace activist like john glenn and even richard nixon when he was out of office was spied on by these programs. people will look back and say they were under tremendous pressure and there were these awful things to you know, lincoln suspended habeas corpus during the civil war. distance in the case of ferocity and morality, when you will get -- when you look at roosevelt, -- but in the case of just verbosity an
john: absolutely. we had three presidencies in a row. 100 years from now they will be grouped together as the cold war president and they will be ranked and how good they did. since we're sitting here and are not incinerated, radioactive ash, they did a good job. they protected us. they did horribly aberrational things like hiring the mafia, jack kennedy hiring the mafia to try to assassinate fidel castro. the full report of the committee that went into the history administration after...
87
87
Apr 10, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 87
favorite 0
quote 0
john: no.issinger has written probably five or six volumes on the nixon years and talked repeatedly, giving speeches, so there is a limit to what i could have asked him. should i have asked him one more time, are you a war criminal? , a hugeoger stone tattoo on his back of richard nixon's space, was here recently, talking about his own book. let's watch what he has to say about richard nixon and donald trump. [video clip] >> the first person to imagine a trump presidency was richard nixon. i was working with him in his postpresidential years, and he met donald trump in george theybrenner's docs, and hit it off, and he called me the next day and said, "well, i met your man. i have got to tell you, he has got it. he could go all the way." [end video clip] john: roger sat down and gave me a good interview about his experience with nixon. brian: what is the difference? man, he is more of a show but he can talk about nixon. i do not believe that. like i told you about clarence darrow, people over ti
john: no.issinger has written probably five or six volumes on the nixon years and talked repeatedly, giving speeches, so there is a limit to what i could have asked him. should i have asked him one more time, are you a war criminal? , a hugeoger stone tattoo on his back of richard nixon's space, was here recently, talking about his own book. let's watch what he has to say about richard nixon and donald trump. [video clip] >> the first person to imagine a trump presidency was richard...
74
74
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
john: technology?commission and then take on the taxis and require $100,000 to drive a taxi or the self-employed people to be the taxicab commissions. people decide i will be a small business personal but myself with airbnb. as the post office shrinks as people use e-mail and on-linea have broken own th competition and. john: thank you. we're all better off with americans for tax reform. maybe we should be optimistic because throughout history people have repeatedly been proven wrong. quit smoking. but when we brought our daughter home, that was it. now i have nicoderm cq. the nicoderm cq patch with unique extended release technology helps prevent your urge to smoke all day. it's the best thing that ever happened to me. every great why needs a great how. guests can earn a how cafree night when theypring book direct on choicehotels.com and stay with us just two times? spring time. badda book. badda boom. or... badda bloom. seriously? book now at choicehotels.com at angie's list, we believe there are cer
john: technology?commission and then take on the taxis and require $100,000 to drive a taxi or the self-employed people to be the taxicab commissions. people decide i will be a small business personal but myself with airbnb. as the post office shrinks as people use e-mail and on-linea have broken own th competition and. john: thank you. we're all better off with americans for tax reform. maybe we should be optimistic because throughout history people have repeatedly been proven wrong. quit...
71
71
Apr 30, 2017
04/17
by
FBC
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
john: gives examples.ay the housing -- ed: 10 years ago they were enacting a bunch of regulations and say we are going to prevent any downturn in the future. for example sarbanes-oxley act was very onerous on business. john: and the enron failure. we are born to fix these failures with sarbanes-oxley. ed: didn't do anything to prevent the next economic downturn. john: it added thousands of people -- pieces of paper to cost a ton. ed: didn't have the positive effect they were promising and now what did they do? they say we need more regulation so we now have the dodd-frank act which is 30 times longer. it's extremely onerous and i'm quite sure it's going to do nothing to prevent the next economic downturn. john: and it didn't end too big to fail. another example the war on poverty. they lifted some people out of poverty. ed: housing projects would have disincentives for working. there were maggots for crime, terrible places to live and what happens. [inaudible question] these years later they still exist in
john: gives examples.ay the housing -- ed: 10 years ago they were enacting a bunch of regulations and say we are going to prevent any downturn in the future. for example sarbanes-oxley act was very onerous on business. john: and the enron failure. we are born to fix these failures with sarbanes-oxley. ed: didn't do anything to prevent the next economic downturn. john: it added thousands of people -- pieces of paper to cost a ton. ed: didn't have the positive effect they were promising and now...
72
72
Apr 30, 2017
04/17
by
FBC
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
quote 0
john: as usual.f course not every loan recipit failed tough tesla motors got a loan d tesla is booming. tesla was founded by elon musk and the media loved musk. rock star savior, the incredible awesomeness of elon musk. why elon musk is my hero. but he is not my hero because lots of his money came from us taxpayers. i think he is a crony capitalist but an economics professor i respect says i'm wrong. he is a freeloader. >> john i love you but i think you are wrong on this. there are certain things that they get tax waivers on that other companies don't get that we have too differentiated tax waiver with a subsidy. when people say oh they got $5 million if you look into it a lot of it is nevada promising not to tax certain things for a few years or in other cases the customers can wave, lower their income taxes. these are not subsidies. they are not a direct subsidy for tesla got a $4.9 billion loan from the government. >> it's all wrong. they did get a half a billion dollar loan but they paid it back
john: as usual.f course not every loan recipit failed tough tesla motors got a loan d tesla is booming. tesla was founded by elon musk and the media loved musk. rock star savior, the incredible awesomeness of elon musk. why elon musk is my hero. but he is not my hero because lots of his money came from us taxpayers. i think he is a crony capitalist but an economics professor i respect says i'm wrong. he is a freeloader. >> john i love you but i think you are wrong on this. there are...
33
33
Apr 5, 2017
04/17
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
john: people that are not john , they may takets a second to review.e to go over it again with people. expecting everyone is on your mark every time you wake up -- charlie: did you do some of that in this album? john: not really. it was in "born and raised" a lot. i got a deeper thing. this was a different dive. this was into things a certain age, and there is a loss in relationship. there is always one relationship loss that takes you with it. -- youot just somebody are not just parting ways with somebody. there is always one that takes you down. charlie: you lose somebody. john: i lost somebody. this is this idea of being as beautiful as you can be. let whoever of the intelligent rock.- intelligensia i will be as beautiful as i can be about being sad. i was listening to the emoji of a wave, that is what this feels like. as an artist, musician, you don't normally get it all the time. come close. say, we will get it next time. 80% of how that feels. there are songs i listened to on the record that say, i did it. i am good enough musician now to transla
john: people that are not john , they may takets a second to review.e to go over it again with people. expecting everyone is on your mark every time you wake up -- charlie: did you do some of that in this album? john: not really. it was in "born and raised" a lot. i got a deeper thing. this was a different dive. this was into things a certain age, and there is a loss in relationship. there is always one relationship loss that takes you with it. -- youot just somebody are not just...
40
40
Apr 6, 2017
04/17
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 40
favorite 0
quote 0
john: they come from me. not have many titles in the bingo cage for this one, and when "the search for everything" came up in my mind, it sort of immediately cemented, and i thought, that will be hard to beat. it explained very well, looking back over my career and all of the different things i have done, what this sort of all is. it sums up the music and curiosity that is where i live. -- i live. charlie: and what is still feel like a man to sum up? john: it sums up musically first, trying to make a pop song that can be on par with anyone else's pop song, but also being in a sneaky way really hyper musical. if you listen to it across the surface of it, you go, that is a nice little groove. if you go into it and figure out the bass and drums and really, very clean, tidy, sharp staccato syncopation's of things, it is curve orrabolic something. it looks like a curve, but it is really a lot of very, very straight lines. you would not imagine that could swing. when i first came up with this riff on the guitar, i
john: they come from me. not have many titles in the bingo cage for this one, and when "the search for everything" came up in my mind, it sort of immediately cemented, and i thought, that will be hard to beat. it explained very well, looking back over my career and all of the different things i have done, what this sort of all is. it sums up the music and curiosity that is where i live. -- i live. charlie: and what is still feel like a man to sum up? john: it sums up musically first,...
47
47
Apr 23, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 47
favorite 0
quote 0
john yarmuth: it depends.hen they proposed their skinny budget last month, ask for $54 billion for defense and a 54 cut in -- $54 billion non-defense, if it comes at the cost of any reduction in non-dispense discretionary -- defense discretionary, that would be a starter. if there can be a proportionate increase in both defense and nondefense, but is something i can support. erik: one more thing, it looks like the border wall is a big issue. how do you see that getting solved? john yarmuth: i would doubt it. i really think at heart there is not a real big appetite for border funding even on the republican side eerie we have got a lot of border state republicans who are unenthusiastic about building a wall on their borders. i'm not sure that will be a sticking point. i don't the administration would like to see it, but i don't think congress is hungry for it. kristina: if i could go back to the cautionary reduction, aca payments, how long do you think democrats would see the payments appropriated, given the pre
john yarmuth: it depends.hen they proposed their skinny budget last month, ask for $54 billion for defense and a 54 cut in -- $54 billion non-defense, if it comes at the cost of any reduction in non-dispense discretionary -- defense discretionary, that would be a starter. if there can be a proportionate increase in both defense and nondefense, but is something i can support. erik: one more thing, it looks like the border wall is a big issue. how do you see that getting solved? john yarmuth: i...
230
230
Apr 7, 2017
04/17
by
WCAU
tv
eye 230
favorite 0
quote 1
they have nine hits today. >> john: i'm with you, tom. no matter how it ends up, it's nice that they're showing a lot of fight despite being down against a max scherzer. that's why you get 27 outs. >> tom: inside, 1-0. a ball o the gap. ball to the corner. we've got action with cesar leading off first. now time is called. >> john: even with two outs, you know, ryan zimmerman holds cesar on. you watch him coming off the base. he's trying not to come that far. he knows odubel will handle somethi something. >> tom: one ball, one strike. >> ben: how about a walk-off? >> john: don't threaten me with a good time. >> tom: it would be a nice way to wrap down opening day. >> ben: lefties like it down and in but i don't know if they a like it that down and in. >> john: murphy's away in the hole, second basic and trea turner is over there on the left shortstop side of second base. growner, routine scored. just gets through. he has to hit it first, right? >> tom: earlier in ball game he hit it. murphy wasn't shaded as far over. one ball and two strik
they have nine hits today. >> john: i'm with you, tom. no matter how it ends up, it's nice that they're showing a lot of fight despite being down against a max scherzer. that's why you get 27 outs. >> tom: inside, 1-0. a ball o the gap. ball to the corner. we've got action with cesar leading off first. now time is called. >> john: even with two outs, you know, ryan zimmerman holds cesar on. you watch him coming off the base. he's trying not to come that far. he knows odubel...
37
37
Apr 10, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 37
favorite 0
quote 0
john: the third. first two were about i did a biography of speaker tip o'neill and i did a biography of clearance darrell. i grew up in huntington, new york. i worked for the denver post twice, each time five years stents. i came back and worked for the denver post in washington. brian: how long have you not worked for a newspaper? >> since about 2003. the buyouts began and the newspaper industry began to crater. i decided that i would try to do this full-time. brian: you make a particular point of the importance of the following comment that richard nixon made in the david frost-nixon interviews in 1977. this is only 25 seconds. >> i don't go with the idea that what brought me down was a conspiracy, etc. i brought myself down. i gave them a sword, and they stuck it in and twisted it with relish. if i had been in their position, i'd have done the same thing. brian: how long did it take david frost to get to that point? john: that was almost to the end of the interviews. nixon opened up the interviews
john: the third. first two were about i did a biography of speaker tip o'neill and i did a biography of clearance darrell. i grew up in huntington, new york. i worked for the denver post twice, each time five years stents. i came back and worked for the denver post in washington. brian: how long have you not worked for a newspaper? >> since about 2003. the buyouts began and the newspaper industry began to crater. i decided that i would try to do this full-time. brian: you make a...
2,364
2.4K
tv
eye 2,364
favorite 0
quote 0
thank you, john. good job.anna and i will be right back right after this. [ applause ] free play again? who is this guy? wheel... of... fortune! always the host, never the player. well, my turn has finally come. it's your turn to spin. download the new "wheel of fortune: free play." ♪ we were just talking about identity theft, which i guess is a big, uh, a big problem. it is. you have your -- yours ever been stolen? yes. your identity? oh, well, no, not my identity. okay. mine was, and they -- then they gave it back. for some reason. they did. they didn't want it? they tried it out. they didn't care for it. uh, we'll -- we'll see you next time. so long. goodbye! like a month, then they said, "nah..." promotional consideration provided by... never pay for more wireless service than you need. consumer cellular makes it easy to stay in touch with family and stay within our budget. now our cellphone bill is only a fraction of what it used to be. announcer: stop paying too much for wireless service. our plans start
thank you, john. good job.anna and i will be right back right after this. [ applause ] free play again? who is this guy? wheel... of... fortune! always the host, never the player. well, my turn has finally come. it's your turn to spin. download the new "wheel of fortune: free play." ♪ we were just talking about identity theft, which i guess is a big, uh, a big problem. it is. you have your -- yours ever been stolen? yes. your identity? oh, well, no, not my identity. okay. mine was,...
112
112
Apr 22, 2017
04/17
by
WRC
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
>> john: we get ready for overtime in st. paul, minnesota. history, joel edmundson a hero and a goal scored game one in this series. jason zucker has tied the game how the wild have clawed their way back. >> brian: it was a full onslaught by the minnesota wild in that third period. after giving up that goal to make it 3-1, the wild came with all guns ablazing. this goal was disallowed but the tone was set. they were going to the net. they would not be denied. a power-play goal by koivu. fore-check pressure, all by the wild, led to another power play opportunity. at the end of that power play, jason zucker able to finish it off with speed. unbelievable third period effort by the wild to put themselves in this position to play for overtime. >> john: a chance to face elimination and get by it for the second time. this is the second time in the series we've had overtime. here we go. game six if needed will be monday night in st. louis. john forslund with brian buscher "inside the glass." mikael granlund. feeds it in on jake allen. jay bouwmeester
>> john: we get ready for overtime in st. paul, minnesota. history, joel edmundson a hero and a goal scored game one in this series. jason zucker has tied the game how the wild have clawed their way back. >> brian: it was a full onslaught by the minnesota wild in that third period. after giving up that goal to make it 3-1, the wild came with all guns ablazing. this goal was disallowed but the tone was set. they were going to the net. they would not be denied. a power-play goal by...
93
93
Apr 15, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
where is president numbered two, john adams -- as president number two, john adams? key is not there -- he is not there. that was a mistake of mr. bent. here is the original letter written by john adams to john bent complaining about the omission. when he received it, was horrified to find that his portrait was missing from the print. therefore, he returned it to john been along with this letter saying i'm returning this. please do not send another copy. in 1823, perhaps most important facsimile reproduction of the declaration of independence was issued. this is the so-called stone broadside. this print was actually taken directly from the original many that is nownuscript on display at the national archives. if you have seen the original, it is quite faded. one of the reasons it is fated ded was because of the treatment when it was prepared. it was dampened and pressed against the metal plate to ink from some of the the original. therefore, fortunately, a damaged the original -- unfortunately, it damaged the original. mr. small's copy is a very important copy of thi
where is president numbered two, john adams -- as president number two, john adams? key is not there -- he is not there. that was a mistake of mr. bent. here is the original letter written by john adams to john bent complaining about the omission. when he received it, was horrified to find that his portrait was missing from the print. therefore, he returned it to john been along with this letter saying i'm returning this. please do not send another copy. in 1823, perhaps most important...
48
48
Apr 14, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 48
favorite 0
quote 0
john, if you are looking for that job -- john: i am not. david: you are being generous, but i will leave it at that. john: one point on this. he didn't have a mandate. presidents have come in before having lost the popular vote or a narrow election and went out of their way to build public support. your boss did that. he lost the popular vote and famously contested the election. richard nixon in 1968 tried to move to the middle and unite people. president kennedy. in a very close election tried to rot in his appeal. what concerns me -- mercedes: stop right there. you didn't mention president obama. you know for a fact failed to have a relationship with speaker boehner or senator mitch mcconnell. the fact that they barely reached out to republicans -- john: i agree with all of that. i am talking about -- people in a very close election -- mercedes: but here's the deal. who was in charge of the house of representatives and senate and republicans? past then't get gridlock. i think, i'm not going to generalized, i think those voters out there w
john, if you are looking for that job -- john: i am not. david: you are being generous, but i will leave it at that. john: one point on this. he didn't have a mandate. presidents have come in before having lost the popular vote or a narrow election and went out of their way to build public support. your boss did that. he lost the popular vote and famously contested the election. richard nixon in 1968 tried to move to the middle and unite people. president kennedy. in a very close election tried...
59
59
Apr 29, 2017
04/17
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
here is john micklethwait. john: there has been huge growth in vancouver., the ontario government announced a 50% taxed on foreigners -- a 15% tax on foreigners. is this a bubble or the way to fix it? as a liberal, what is wrong with someone like me coming into by a house? p.m. trudeau: i encourage you to come and spend all of your money and invest and hire more people. we are open to global investment. one of the challenges we are facing, and we certainly saw it -- john: you are open to global investment, but turned people 15 percent if you want to buy -- the charge people 50% if they want to buy a house? p.m. trudeau: the challenge we data on who is doing what. one of the things they were calling on the federal planningt to do is some of the mortgage rules. in and cooperrket or toronto is somewhat different than in halifax. john: do you see the housing in toronto staying as a bubble? it looks that way on the outside. at. trudeau: we are looking a time of pressures on housing the need to be alleviated, which is why, instead of acting on the short-term leve
here is john micklethwait. john: there has been huge growth in vancouver., the ontario government announced a 50% taxed on foreigners -- a 15% tax on foreigners. is this a bubble or the way to fix it? as a liberal, what is wrong with someone like me coming into by a house? p.m. trudeau: i encourage you to come and spend all of your money and invest and hire more people. we are open to global investment. one of the challenges we are facing, and we certainly saw it -- john: you are open to global...
42
42
Apr 10, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 42
favorite 0
quote 0
john: is a nightmare.f i had gotten the contract three years earlier, i could research 30l the minutes from my house. everything was at the national archives in maryland. in those three years before i got the contract, everything was packed up and moved to california to the nixon private library. now it has become a national archives library. i spent lots of time and the extended-stay motel. brian: of all the things you got what either changed your mind or maybe biggest impact on you? john: the biggest news nugget was finding -- you had robert carroll on here, he does a great series of books on lyndon johnson -- he gave me some great advice, which is turn every page. when you get what you think could be a good vein, keep going even though you are finding nothing great. several years ago, i think about 2007, something that they sent fought for years to keep private had foughtg nixon for years to keep private, his paper from his campaign, or made public. if you go through them, is page after page of haldeman
john: is a nightmare.f i had gotten the contract three years earlier, i could research 30l the minutes from my house. everything was at the national archives in maryland. in those three years before i got the contract, everything was packed up and moved to california to the nixon private library. now it has become a national archives library. i spent lots of time and the extended-stay motel. brian: of all the things you got what either changed your mind or maybe biggest impact on you? john: the...
57
57
Apr 17, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 57
favorite 0
quote 0
carol: john? john: i think hamilton was -- because of the circumstances of his birth, was fiercely ambitious. he wanted to rise. washington was born what was called the middling sort of landowners and then became quite rich when he married martha. washington, while he was certainly ambitious in one way, he was less ferocious about it. there was a story i have always loved, at the end of the revolutionary war for the treaty of peace was signed in 1783, king george the third was being painted by benjamin west, the artist born in this country but who made his career in england, and as often happens with portrait painters, they were talking. george the third said, what is george washington going to do upon the signing of the peace treaty? west says, he is going to retire from the army and return to mount vernon. george the third is absolutely astounded and says, if he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world. and of course that is exactly what he did. george washingtons come very few and fa
carol: john? john: i think hamilton was -- because of the circumstances of his birth, was fiercely ambitious. he wanted to rise. washington was born what was called the middling sort of landowners and then became quite rich when he married martha. washington, while he was certainly ambitious in one way, he was less ferocious about it. there was a story i have always loved, at the end of the revolutionary war for the treaty of peace was signed in 1783, king george the third was being painted by...
104
104
Apr 16, 2017
04/17
by
WRC
tv
eye 104
favorite 0
quote 0
they've done that before, john. >> john: set play. now the strategy, being talked about. st. louis we're ready for that again, i'm sure. 1:41 left. game three. off the draw. spurgeon. suter. parise. ryan suter. zach parise. in the screen out of play. >> pierre: you like the white puckle ride, john? >> john: love it. >> pierre: time-out for minnesota. >> john: so minnesota now will burn it. each team has called a time-out. that's all you get. 92 seconds left. >> pierre: jake allen's faced 41 shots in this game. faced 52 in game number one. and look at him here this afternoon in st. louis. i mean he's been all over. he's been anchored. he's been solid. rebound control. more times than not he's been exceptional. and i think the biggest thing is more traffic for minnesota. harder game for them to play. i think he's handled it fantastically well, john. really solid. >> john: from the outside of this series. where he had 51 saves in game one. not as many shots in game two. but lots of quality. emerged as a top flight goaltender here in the late stages of his regular season and cont
they've done that before, john. >> john: set play. now the strategy, being talked about. st. louis we're ready for that again, i'm sure. 1:41 left. game three. off the draw. spurgeon. suter. parise. ryan suter. zach parise. in the screen out of play. >> pierre: you like the white puckle ride, john? >> john: love it. >> pierre: time-out for minnesota. >> john: so minnesota now will burn it. each team has called a time-out. that's all you get. 92 seconds left....
116
116
Apr 22, 2017
04/17
by
WCAU
tv
eye 116
favorite 0
quote 0
a good pace to the start of this overtime here. >> john: no doubt. off that draw, won back by paul stastny. st. louis organizing their breakout. 38 shots for minnesota, 25 taken by the blues. blues up three games to one. parayko. stastny. down for icing. the crowd loved that. >> brian: the st. louis blues are just throwing guys outside the zone and trying to stretch the minnesota wild but the wild fore-checkers are not going anywhere, not chasing anybody behind the net. and the st. louis blues defensemen who didn't want to skate it out of harm's way decided to throw it out. ends up being an icing call. >> john: martin hanzal, paul stastny powers it back for the blues. joel edmundson right out. ryan suter. martin hanzal at the line. parise with a chance. what a play by joel edmundson. parise back for suter. ryan suter a winder blocked by edmundson and controlled by jaden schwartz. tarasenko. suter. second chance, stopped by dubnyk. >> brian: good defensive play on one end by joel edmundson, a good play to find parise. nice little dump pass. parise on
a good pace to the start of this overtime here. >> john: no doubt. off that draw, won back by paul stastny. st. louis organizing their breakout. 38 shots for minnesota, 25 taken by the blues. blues up three games to one. parayko. stastny. down for icing. the crowd loved that. >> brian: the st. louis blues are just throwing guys outside the zone and trying to stretch the minnesota wild but the wild fore-checkers are not going anywhere, not chasing anybody behind the net. and the st....
205
205
Apr 23, 2017
04/17
by
WJLA
tv
eye 205
favorite 0
quote 0
she looked young, and that was fine for the clients or johns were there johns that specifically requestedause they knew you were a kid? lindsay whittaker: yeah. yeah, definitely, like that's, that's probably why a lot of them chose me anyways. um, obviously, we wouldn't broadcast that i was a minor, but it was very clear, like, when you're a child you look like a child. act like a child. lisa fletcher: do you remember how old you were the first time you were raped? lindsay whitaker: around that time when i first got on the streets, around like 12, 13. lisa fletcher: if you had to guess how many times you were raped, what do you think it would be? lindsay whittaker: oh, i can't even say a number. that's just a lot. lisa fletcher: more than a hundred? lindsay whittaker: yeah. a lot. a lot. i don't know, it's a sick world, that whole part that world, it's just horrible. and i don't want, i don't want any girls to ever have to go through that, you know what i mean? like, i would save every single one if i could. chad opitz: the main goal is if we get any minors, but the traffickers are the ot
she looked young, and that was fine for the clients or johns were there johns that specifically requestedause they knew you were a kid? lindsay whittaker: yeah. yeah, definitely, like that's, that's probably why a lot of them chose me anyways. um, obviously, we wouldn't broadcast that i was a minor, but it was very clear, like, when you're a child you look like a child. act like a child. lisa fletcher: do you remember how old you were the first time you were raped? lindsay whitaker: around that...
75
75
Apr 29, 2017
04/17
by
FBC
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
john: no, it's not.roes, most are not politicians, they're entrepreneurs. and parents like this mom who went to jail because she wanted to give her daughters a choice. >> holy batman, it's exciting. john: heroes of freedom.
john: no, it's not.roes, most are not politicians, they're entrepreneurs. and parents like this mom who went to jail because she wanted to give her daughters a choice. >> holy batman, it's exciting. john: heroes of freedom.
111
111
Apr 29, 2017
04/17
by
WRC
tv
eye 111
favorite 0
quote 0
but anderson read it perfectly. >> john: bone shot, now, hayes. off of the pad of anderson.arlsson. survives, hayes. he gets it out. bobby ryan swings it in. lundqvist, he'll move it. on the boards, grabner with his back to the play. brendan smith, back to the corner. fore-checked. hoffman is there. back out. ryan awaiting. bobby ryan, dumps it back in. puck was batted down with a high stick. seven minutes gone here in overtime. >> brian: for the senators, that was a convincing kill against the rangers. the rangers did not have much going on. they were able to keep everything to the outside. they got some critical clears, important times. and the one shot they did have was from a sharp angle that craig anderson had no trouble senators with that kill in overtime. >> john: great job. turris and stepan. will take the draw here. derek stepan attempting to take it off of the draw. vesey, for mcdonagh. ryan mcdonagh. in the zone. flushed out a bit by mark stone. cleaned up by ceci. now, stone. ottawa, back onside. dan girardi. will hinge it back out. here's mcdonagh. nash at the l
but anderson read it perfectly. >> john: bone shot, now, hayes. off of the pad of anderson.arlsson. survives, hayes. he gets it out. bobby ryan swings it in. lundqvist, he'll move it. on the boards, grabner with his back to the play. brendan smith, back to the corner. fore-checked. hoffman is there. back out. ryan awaiting. bobby ryan, dumps it back in. puck was batted down with a high stick. seven minutes gone here in overtime. >> brian: for the senators, that was a convincing kill...
53
53
Apr 20, 2017
04/17
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 53
favorite 0
quote 0
john: housing seems to be a big topic here.
john: housing seems to be a big topic here.
80
80
Apr 17, 2017
04/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
not john adams. he did leave a message for us. thanks to rose that franklin was about, harry truman, that message is still there in the white house, carved into a mantelpiece in the state dining room. on his first night in the white house, he wrote a letter to abigail, who are not been able to be with him yet. she was back home. in the letter, he wrote, i pray heaven to the star of the best of blessings upon this house and on all that shall hereafter inhabit it. may none but honest and wise men ever rule under this roof. may none but honest and wise men of the rule under this roof. what i like best about that is that he puts honest first. thank you. [applause]
not john adams. he did leave a message for us. thanks to rose that franklin was about, harry truman, that message is still there in the white house, carved into a mantelpiece in the state dining room. on his first night in the white house, he wrote a letter to abigail, who are not been able to be with him yet. she was back home. in the letter, he wrote, i pray heaven to the star of the best of blessings upon this house and on all that shall hereafter inhabit it. may none but honest and wise men...
424
424
Apr 26, 2017
04/17
by
KPIX
tv
eye 424
favorite 0
quote 0
john. i inducted dr. john into the hall of fame. >> jon-john-jon, ladies and gentlemen. you my friend. how are you, are you all right? >> stephen: the "the late show" is proud to present present, "john legend makes mundane things sound sexy." ( applause ) >> interesting. ♪ oooooh ooooh ♪ honey, i'm running out to costco ( cheers and applause ) ♪ there's no such thing as too many paper towels ( laughter ) ( applause ) that was pretty sexy. i like that. ( laughter ) okay, what's this one? let me change keys. ♪ baby, my beige turtleneck is pilling. ( laughter ) ♪ so please wash it inside ou ( laughter ) ( applause ) tumble dry low tumble dry low. ( cheers and applause ) >> thank you! >> stephen: john legend! "the darkness and light" tour starts may 12. john's going to do a song for us later in the show. stick around. "the darkness and light" tour a prince wants to give us 20 million dollars, he just needs our social security number we're gonna be rich!!! the first spam was sent by telegraph in 1864. put some flavor in your break. make time for snapple ♪ ♪ i'm dr. kelsey mcn
john. i inducted dr. john into the hall of fame. >> jon-john-jon, ladies and gentlemen. you my friend. how are you, are you all right? >> stephen: the "the late show" is proud to present present, "john legend makes mundane things sound sexy." ( applause ) >> interesting. ♪ oooooh ooooh ♪ honey, i'm running out to costco ( cheers and applause ) ♪ there's no such thing as too many paper towels ( laughter ) ( applause ) that was pretty sexy. i like that....
189
189
Apr 25, 2017
04/17
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 189
favorite 0
quote 0
>> john: i'm not confident. i've watched china over a long period of time do a two step on this saying yes, we don't want north korea to have nuclear weapons, but not exerting the pressure that they uniquely can bring against north korea. they're going through the motions right now. i think that there may be convinced that president trump has been very clear that either they solve the problem or we will solve the problem. if there were a reaction to have direct ramifications for china. based on 25 years of performance to date, i think i'll keep my powder dry for a while and judging china's performance. >> taya: militarily, there's a saying that if you can't be respected, then at least be feared. in a situation where we have a new president and i was talking to texas senator brian come over talk about the hostage situatio situation. he was thinking about how to get the hostages released? after 444 days of those prisoners being held, they release them because they know reagan was willing to do something that carte
>> john: i'm not confident. i've watched china over a long period of time do a two step on this saying yes, we don't want north korea to have nuclear weapons, but not exerting the pressure that they uniquely can bring against north korea. they're going through the motions right now. i think that there may be convinced that president trump has been very clear that either they solve the problem or we will solve the problem. if there were a reaction to have direct ramifications for china....