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91
Jun 17, 2017
06/17
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BBCNEWS
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i was anxious, i think.en place. i was anxious, ithink. i and in an alien place. i was anxious, i think. i would go to the window and i would be calm and i looked down the rifle sight and be able to contain the world and people to just this very narrow focus. but it was a very dangerous thing, even with an unloaded rifle to be standing at a window pointing it at strangers. had i been seen, had the rifle barrel snagged on mum's pristine curtain and the trajectory of my life would have been altered, ina of my life would have been altered, in a small town, my dad was the cop. imean, i in a small town, my dad was the cop. i mean, i could have been shot! family is important to you and the book indeed is dedicated to your mum and dad and they make many appearances in the book, not all of them flattering. i wonder what they did make of reading it. they said, tim, did you have any idea what your dad will make of this, soiling himself in public? i said, you don't know my dad, he's going to love this. mum reads it to
i was anxious, i think.en place. i was anxious, ithink. i and in an alien place. i was anxious, i think. i would go to the window and i would be calm and i looked down the rifle sight and be able to contain the world and people to just this very narrow focus. but it was a very dangerous thing, even with an unloaded rifle to be standing at a window pointing it at strangers. had i been seen, had the rifle barrel snagged on mum's pristine curtain and the trajectory of my life would have been...
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27
Jun 11, 2017
06/17
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 27
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but i was always trying to lose weight. i just thought i was unusually disciplined. ollected that stuff i went in to see a doctor. first, saw nothing because they didn't even think to test me for what i had. they prescribed allergy medicine and then a couple of weeks later, it didn't go away so i took a full cat scan. that lit up like a christmas tree. so they called me and said i had lymphoma. david: when a doctor tells you, did they say you could treat it? it is just a matter of treatment, or did he say it was life-threatening? lloyd: life-threatening, for sure. there are 70 different kinds of lymphoma. hodgkin's, non-hodgkin's, different things. each one carries its own risks. i have the more aggressive type which is dangerous. more dangerous, obviously. but it is curable. david: so you had to go in three or four days for chemo? lloyd: the treatment that i had was six three-week cycles. so for three weeks, six times on a cycle basis. the first 4.5 days of the cycle, about 98 hours or so, i would be getting chemo night and day continuously. david: did you go for a s
but i was always trying to lose weight. i just thought i was unusually disciplined. ollected that stuff i went in to see a doctor. first, saw nothing because they didn't even think to test me for what i had. they prescribed allergy medicine and then a couple of weeks later, it didn't go away so i took a full cat scan. that lit up like a christmas tree. so they called me and said i had lymphoma. david: when a doctor tells you, did they say you could treat it? it is just a matter of treatment, or...
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155
Jun 25, 2017
06/17
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MSNBCW
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eye 155
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i thought it was -- i thought i was in a treatment center. why was i here? >> i think because of your charges. >> what charges? >> i believe you have murder charges. >> murder? oh, no, i think that was a mistake. they told me about that before but that's -- that's another robert hill. there's a lot of robert hills in the system and i don't -- i don't think that's me. i think that's somebody else. >> let me ask you just some basic things here. do you know the date today? >> no. >> well, you probably know most of it, you probably know the year. >> no, i honestly don't. >> a minute ago i asked you if you knew where this place was or -- >> i have problems with my memory right now, for some reason, man. >> what was the reason you went back down to the infirmary recently? >> because one of the orderlies told the nurses that i said i was going to shave my head off. i asked for a razor so i could shave my head and he thought i said to shave my head off. that's what i think happened. >> the last time i saw you was last week and it was down in the infirmary and that w
i thought it was -- i thought i was in a treatment center. why was i here? >> i think because of your charges. >> what charges? >> i believe you have murder charges. >> murder? oh, no, i think that was a mistake. they told me about that before but that's -- that's another robert hill. there's a lot of robert hills in the system and i don't -- i don't think that's me. i think that's somebody else. >> let me ask you just some basic things here. do you know the date...
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117
Jun 25, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 117
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i was in germany. when i came out of the army -- she was catholic. and pretty serious. she went to a convent school, sisters of the sacred heart. when i first met her she would go to mass and carry around a missile. but when she married me, she dwindled. our religious control, our minds and bodies diminished. and in those days you see, i'm talking the 1950s. most of what you did was sinful. premarital sex was premarital. it was sinful and we were having premarital sex. it is not that we had guards from bishop francis breaking our door down. but still, the rules of the church, birth control was sinful. so they made us into criminals spiritual criminals. so we just left it. and i remember we have two daughters. and i remember neither of the two daughters were baptized. does that mean that they are cursed? maybe so, but they are not baptized. we never joined another church. we exercise a kind of restrained intolerance and we like to think godliness. honor, obedience. but we are not under the rules of the church. i mean francis as the pope, certainly much more acceptable per
i was in germany. when i came out of the army -- she was catholic. and pretty serious. she went to a convent school, sisters of the sacred heart. when i first met her she would go to mass and carry around a missile. but when she married me, she dwindled. our religious control, our minds and bodies diminished. and in those days you see, i'm talking the 1950s. most of what you did was sinful. premarital sex was premarital. it was sinful and we were having premarital sex. it is not that we had...
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community to the because i was under the. it was a known community where you knew that one of the two bodies in the hospital and you guys the and sit on was on the. other though. we are all sizes all those of us all. who says i was a bunch of old as it was overall a lot of us at the time not. always enjoyed enjoyed thought i was no good as all. or else i start us on our own or in the long. haul i was also all there as well though they're close close and local you also know they'll. tell how many people with us love. that. is easier. to debug if. we did. it was. zero. c. . you. didn't . see. who was. coming communal jones are you on and who not on chill call who is going to call la by journalists no. thank. you. thank. god. because i'm on the wrong. channel to sold on those at all. can you. show the real show. if you should. post these recent girlfriends. i'll. do ya i. hope. you believe both of those i'll give it to you. if you. just. have to leave the last but you can be the barbecue or not the bar. was i don't know that my f
community to the because i was under the. it was a known community where you knew that one of the two bodies in the hospital and you guys the and sit on was on the. other though. we are all sizes all those of us all. who says i was a bunch of old as it was overall a lot of us at the time not. always enjoyed enjoyed thought i was no good as all. or else i start us on our own or in the long. haul i was also all there as well though they're close close and local you also know they'll. tell how...
132
132
Jun 7, 2017
06/17
by
KQEH
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eye 132
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i was a practical guy. i mean in the campaign of '60, organizing the peace corps, those were administrative and managerial jobs. and i had never even been in the white house and i was standing at the back of that plane, saying, "how can i be helpful?" and when he went back into the bedroom of air force one security had closed all the portholes, but he had opened the one in that inner office, inner bedroom, inner sanctum and he was looking out. quietly, very calmly, and i said, "mr. president what are you thinking?" and he said, "are the missiles flying?" here we're in the midst of a cold war, the cuban missile crisis was not long behind us, and i realized then that he had things on his mind he had never had on his mind before. and i just started filling in with the small details. calling the speaker of the house, just functional things, and i was good at that, and one reason he came to trust me was because i had that sense of doing the details and not being conspicuous about it. but there were no great and n
i was a practical guy. i mean in the campaign of '60, organizing the peace corps, those were administrative and managerial jobs. and i had never even been in the white house and i was standing at the back of that plane, saying, "how can i be helpful?" and when he went back into the bedroom of air force one security had closed all the portholes, but he had opened the one in that inner office, inner bedroom, inner sanctum and he was looking out. quietly, very calmly, and i said,...
628
628
Jun 8, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN3
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eye 628
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>> in why i was fired? >> yes. >> yes, because i've seen the president say so. >> let's go to the flynn issue. senator risch outlined, i hope you can see your way to letting flynn go, he's a good guy, i hope you can let this go. but you also said in your written remarks and i quote, that you had understood the president to be requesting that we drop any investigation of flynn in connection with false statements about his conversations with the russian ambassador in december, end quote. please go into that with more detail. >> well, the context and the president's words are what led me to that conclusion, as i said in my statement, i could be wrong, but flynn had been forced to resign the day before. and the controversy around general flynn at that point in time was centered on whether he had lied to the vice president about the nature of his conversations with the russians, whether he had been candid with others in the course of that, and so that happens on the day before on the 14th the president makes spec
>> in why i was fired? >> yes. >> yes, because i've seen the president say so. >> let's go to the flynn issue. senator risch outlined, i hope you can see your way to letting flynn go, he's a good guy, i hope you can let this go. but you also said in your written remarks and i quote, that you had understood the president to be requesting that we drop any investigation of flynn in connection with false statements about his conversations with the russian ambassador in...
108
108
Jun 3, 2017
06/17
by
WCAU
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eye 108
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i was a firefighter. rst responder team up in ogdensburg, wisconsin, and i was a first responder for quite awhile in oshkosh. >> you're, like, action woman? >> well, i -- like to help people. >> reporter: she says physical strength and fitness have always been important to her. >> you were a body builder? >> yes. i was always into weight lifting. so i did a body building competition and a fitness competition. and it taught me a lot. >> safe to say, you can protect yourself? >> i think that's safe to say. >> reporter: but back in 2006, betsy says she was feeling vulnerable. her marriage of twenty years was falling apart. >> it was hard 'cause my husband and i were best friends. we just did everything together. >> reporter: then, as she boarded a flight home from a business trip one morning, a twist of fate. >> the stewardess came back and said -- "there's a man that's upgraded you to first class. >> and that only happens in, like, romance novels? >> right. right. so i walked up there and this man stood up a
i was a firefighter. rst responder team up in ogdensburg, wisconsin, and i was a first responder for quite awhile in oshkosh. >> you're, like, action woman? >> well, i -- like to help people. >> reporter: she says physical strength and fitness have always been important to her. >> you were a body builder? >> yes. i was always into weight lifting. so i did a body building competition and a fitness competition. and it taught me a lot. >> safe to say, you can...
116
116
Jun 5, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 116
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i was depressed a lot. when i started to learn how to write i became obsessed with the idea of writing being a religion. if you really get into it, you can never really complete the task of being perfect at it so you have to constantly try to practice getting better and better and i became addicted to it at a young age. i wanted to be a comic novelists. my heroes were funny writers people like stalky and nick ogle and people who wrote hardwood dog and books like that, catch-22. evelyn law. these were the things i wanted to do when i grew up. i spent a lot of my early years in my teens trying to do that kind of thing and didn't work out. but, you know, journalism has been great in a different way. i think it is an amazing profession because it allows you to see the whole world and meet this extraordinary range of people and you know, it has been great, in a way that probably is more fulfilling than sitting at home and being a fiction writer would have been. .... >> host: you said you were depressed a lot. why
i was depressed a lot. when i started to learn how to write i became obsessed with the idea of writing being a religion. if you really get into it, you can never really complete the task of being perfect at it so you have to constantly try to practice getting better and better and i became addicted to it at a young age. i wanted to be a comic novelists. my heroes were funny writers people like stalky and nick ogle and people who wrote hardwood dog and books like that, catch-22. evelyn law....
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103
Jun 18, 2017
06/17
by
CNNW
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eye 103
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. ♪ if i told you i was down, i was down, would you help me ♪ ♪ told you ways down, i was down, wouldist me up ♪ ♪ i need the strength, i'll be yours someday ♪ ♪ if i told you i was down, ways down, would you help me up ♪ ♪ >> good evening i'm dr. sanjay gupta. over the next hour we'd like to introduce to you some remarkable people. they saw a need and stepped up and are truly make a difference. 11 anchors and if out across the united states to meet them and spend some time with those whose lives they've changed. i'm also going to take to a place that has special meaning to me, to meet someone i consider a true champion for change. let's start with my colleague and friend anderson cooper. you've probably never heard of spike's k-9 fund it's a small organization with a very big goal to protect the lives of police dogs nationwide buying them bullet proof vests. anderson's going to join me in just a moment but first he'd like you to meet a man named jimmy hatch. >> she's fast. >> she's an athlete, man. >> i first met jimmy two years ago when i interviewed him for a story. he served in th
. ♪ if i told you i was down, i was down, would you help me ♪ ♪ told you ways down, i was down, wouldist me up ♪ ♪ i need the strength, i'll be yours someday ♪ ♪ if i told you i was down, ways down, would you help me up ♪ ♪ >> good evening i'm dr. sanjay gupta. over the next hour we'd like to introduce to you some remarkable people. they saw a need and stepped up and are truly make a difference. 11 anchors and if out across the united states to meet them and spend some...
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96
Jun 8, 2017
06/17
by
FOXNEWSW
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eye 96
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when i was appointed f.b.i. director in 2013, i understood that i served at the pleasure of the president. even though i was appointed to a 10-year term which congress created in order to underscore the importance of the f.b.i. being outside of politics and independent, i understood i could be fired by a president for any reason or for no reason at all. on may 9th when i learned that i had been fired, for that reason i immediately came home as a private citizen. but then the explanations, the shifting explanations, confused me and increasingly concerned me. they confused me because the president and i had had multiple conversations about my job both before and after he took office. and he had repeatedly told me i was doing a great job and he hoped i would stay. i had repeatedly assured him i did intend to stay and serve out the remaining six years of my term. he told me repeatedly that he had talked to lots of people about me, including our current attorney general, and had learned i was doing a great job and tha
when i was appointed f.b.i. director in 2013, i understood that i served at the pleasure of the president. even though i was appointed to a 10-year term which congress created in order to underscore the importance of the f.b.i. being outside of politics and independent, i understood i could be fired by a president for any reason or for no reason at all. on may 9th when i learned that i had been fired, for that reason i immediately came home as a private citizen. but then the explanations, the...
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59
Jun 4, 2017
06/17
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MSNBCW
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eye 59
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and i was kind of tired. so i let my guard down like this. that's when he came across and he punched me. >> hit him with two punches, two solid punches. and he's staggering, stumbled a little bit. >> my reaction was to come back at him. >> so charges me again. and now the little dude has had time to get his hands on his gas. >> you want me to gas him? i said, yes, gas him. so, he pulled out his mk-4, sprayed him. >> he sprayed, they sprayed me in my eyes and that's what slowed me down. >> had he had a weapon, there was many times i was open, and where any kind of vital body parts i had were, could have been, attacked, you know? i could have been killed, you know? i don't want to be theatrical. but if he had something that we had not found, he could, could have hurt us severely. >> penn, now placed in the spit mask, will be escorted to a hearing with the institutional classification team. they will decide if penn should be reclassified as a close management one inmate, meaning he will be housed alone in the prison's most restrictive high-securi
and i was kind of tired. so i let my guard down like this. that's when he came across and he punched me. >> hit him with two punches, two solid punches. and he's staggering, stumbled a little bit. >> my reaction was to come back at him. >> so charges me again. and now the little dude has had time to get his hands on his gas. >> you want me to gas him? i said, yes, gas him. so, he pulled out his mk-4, sprayed him. >> he sprayed, they sprayed me in my eyes and that's...
121
121
Jun 9, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN2
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eye 121
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>> why i was fired? >> yes. >> yes, because i've seen the president say so. >> let's go to the flynn issue. you u senator rische outlined -- i hope you can see your dui letting flynn go. he's good guy. hope you can let this go.. but you also said in your written remarks, and i quote, you had understood the president to be requesting that we drop any investigation of flynn in connection with false statement about his conversations with the russian ambassador in december, end quote. please go into that with more detail. >> the con desk and the president's words let know that conclusion.ll i said in my statement could i be wrong but flynn had been forced to resign the day before, and the controversy around general flynn at that point in time was centered whether or not he had lied to the vice president about the nature of this conversations with the russians, whether he had been candid with others in the course of. that that happened the day before. on the 14th the president makes specific refer treasons --
>> why i was fired? >> yes. >> yes, because i've seen the president say so. >> let's go to the flynn issue. you u senator rische outlined -- i hope you can see your dui letting flynn go. he's good guy. hope you can let this go.. but you also said in your written remarks, and i quote, you had understood the president to be requesting that we drop any investigation of flynn in connection with false statement about his conversations with the russian ambassador in december,...
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i was waiting. ere there any jokes like-- because, i did it many, many, many years ago. and there were some jokes i cut on the fly. i was like, "they don't want to hear any more of these." were there any jokes you decide not to tell in the moment or just hold to? >> i did every joke i wanted to do. i was just shocked by how much people love "usa today." >> stephen: what do you mean? >> i did this "usa today" joke. warm up, throw some softballs. i love when a "usa today" slides underneath my door, it's like they're saying, "hey, you're not that stock market right?" and everyone was in room was like "ooooo!" i thought i was on "world star." i did this huffington post joke at the end and this lady screamed. she was like, "hey!" i just called steve bannon a nazi but you draw the line at huffpo? >> stephen: was it ariana huffington. >> maybe. >> stephen: how long have you been a correspondent at "the daily show"? >> three years. >> stephen: everybody who has been a correspondent has a horror story, chased
i was waiting. ere there any jokes like-- because, i did it many, many, many years ago. and there were some jokes i cut on the fly. i was like, "they don't want to hear any more of these." were there any jokes you decide not to tell in the moment or just hold to? >> i did every joke i wanted to do. i was just shocked by how much people love "usa today." >> stephen: what do you mean? >> i did this "usa today" joke. warm up, throw some softballs. i...
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77
Jun 18, 2017
06/17
by
MSNBCW
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eye 77
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whether i was innocent or not, just by looking at me, i was guilty. and i was pissed. there was no way i was going to let the system give me life in prison unless i earned it. so -- oh, i owned it all right. >> we listened to tapes of a jailhouse admission to a murder christian committed. >> it was an individual from my area. he had put himself in the wrong position by -- if i'm going to get life for a murder/robbery on the streets, and i'm in here. i'm sure going to make sure it's going to take me somewhere. a political hit like that, you know, that has juice behind it. at the same time, if i'm going to do something, i'm going to do it to the extreme. i invite the individual in, i have a pretense of hey, i want to get high. he came inside the pad, shot dope. i walk up to him, hook his leg. throw him in a bare naked choke hold, bring him down, choke him out and snap his neck. when his neck snapped you feel it here, pop. i pulled out my piece, stabbed him in the neck, let him have it in the chest and he started making noises. and i pulled out a pipe and bashed his head
whether i was innocent or not, just by looking at me, i was guilty. and i was pissed. there was no way i was going to let the system give me life in prison unless i earned it. so -- oh, i owned it all right. >> we listened to tapes of a jailhouse admission to a murder christian committed. >> it was an individual from my area. he had put himself in the wrong position by -- if i'm going to get life for a murder/robbery on the streets, and i'm in here. i'm sure going to make sure it's...
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you broke tony. >> and i was like, "no, but i got tickets for you. want to go with me, then i'm just going to give you the tickets and can you take anybody you want." and he was like, "no, no, no, no." and then he just kept drinking coffee. [ laughter ] and so tony and i went to the world series. >> seth: look at how happy tony is. >> that's my guy. [ audience aws ] [ applause ] yeah. >> seth: here's -- here's who i feel really bad for. the next actor that tony drives. >> right. >> seth: because there's no way they're ever going to do anything that nice. [ light laughter ] and i feel like he'll drop it a lot. he's like, "you know, sophia bush took me to a cubs game." >> she took me to the world series. >> seth: world series, no big deal. yeah. >> it was really special, though. he was like, "that's where i sat at my first game when i was four with my parents." and it was like -- it was a cool thing to be a part of through sort of the lens of a lifelong fan. >> seth: something else cool you're doing. tell me about this pen pals organization. >> yes, so
you broke tony. >> and i was like, "no, but i got tickets for you. want to go with me, then i'm just going to give you the tickets and can you take anybody you want." and he was like, "no, no, no, no." and then he just kept drinking coffee. [ laughter ] and so tony and i went to the world series. >> seth: look at how happy tony is. >> that's my guy. [ audience aws ] [ applause ] yeah. >> seth: here's -- here's who i feel really bad for. the next...
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122
Jun 29, 2017
06/17
by
KQEH
tv
eye 122
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i was lucky as it turned out. i didn't realize that the sport was exploding. i mean i got wind of it when i started playing on the professional tour. and i was proud to be part of that. but that was, i mean, i'm biased i admit, but that felt like the heyday of tennis and a lot of pernt, a lot of talk, even though federer and nadal are the greatest player that ever lived, you don't hear about it so much. we haven't had a tbie win a maijer in 14 years. >> rose: 14 years an american. >> 2003,. >> rose: 14 years no american has won. >> that's correct. >> i mean if it wasn't for serena, bringing it back to her, i don't know where it would be. because at least she's gone on and become the greatest female player ever and venus has done a great job too but we haven't, look at their story, two sisters from compton, california. and we haven't been able to sort of take advantage of that in the way i think we should have. >> rose: how responsible is their father for what has happened thoam within i think that fair tear seemed to have backed off in the last couple of years.
i was lucky as it turned out. i didn't realize that the sport was exploding. i mean i got wind of it when i started playing on the professional tour. and i was proud to be part of that. but that was, i mean, i'm biased i admit, but that felt like the heyday of tennis and a lot of pernt, a lot of talk, even though federer and nadal are the greatest player that ever lived, you don't hear about it so much. we haven't had a tbie win a maijer in 14 years. >> rose: 14 years an american....
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317
Jun 2, 2017
06/17
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KNTV
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like i was not eligible for sex at all. [ laughter ] i think my first kiss was in a school show likehe script made her kiss me. >> seth: yeah. [ light laughter ] >> so, yeah. so the idea of adventurous sex is outside of my -- >> seth: that's funny that if your parents -- if you give the sex talk too early then the kids thinks, "wait, am i way behind?" >> yeah. [ laughter ] yeah. >> seth: oh, i didn't realize i was even adjacent to having sex. >> yeah, my dad was like tick-tock. [ laughter ] >> seth: many have said, and what i think is one of the most endearing things about the show, you guys are not a classic hollywood cast. and, so there's a second teams on all shows. >> yeah. >> seth: explain what a second team cast is, and what the "silicon valley" second team cast is like. >> well a second team is the stand in. so, when they're setting up a shot so that you can learn your lines or get ready for the scene, they bring in people to stand in the place where you're going to stand during the shoot. i don't know why i'm explaining it to you, you know. but -- to stand there so they can s
like i was not eligible for sex at all. [ laughter ] i think my first kiss was in a school show likehe script made her kiss me. >> seth: yeah. [ light laughter ] >> so, yeah. so the idea of adventurous sex is outside of my -- >> seth: that's funny that if your parents -- if you give the sex talk too early then the kids thinks, "wait, am i way behind?" >> yeah. [ laughter ] yeah. >> seth: oh, i didn't realize i was even adjacent to having sex. >>...
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i was prepared to defend my children with the help of this. in two thousand and seven when lucas was still a little strange man visited the neighbors and asked about a white child and where he was living but they didn't tell him anything. you want to and never came back but i was so terrified so worried that i used to keep my spear a machete at my side at all times. in addition to the head hunters in which doctors also face another eternal enemy the sun. because of the lack of pigmentation desk and has no protection from harmful ultraviolet light. statistically eighty five percent of wellbeing those will die before reaching the age of forty. most will fall victim to skin cancer. for me the disease started a few months ago first it was no more than a small tumor a bit like a mall i barely even noticed it at first and then it started growing really fast and now as you can see it's turned into this lump i went to see the local doctors and. they only said it was some kind of information it was only a few months after that that they finally told me
i was prepared to defend my children with the help of this. in two thousand and seven when lucas was still a little strange man visited the neighbors and asked about a white child and where he was living but they didn't tell him anything. you want to and never came back but i was so terrified so worried that i used to keep my spear a machete at my side at all times. in addition to the head hunters in which doctors also face another eternal enemy the sun. because of the lack of pigmentation desk...
59
59
Jun 4, 2017
06/17
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 59
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was there. you could see it. i don't think anyone knew what was going on. y shouted that, that is when people started running. a fair few people ended up staying in the pub, but i don't know what happened to them. i think they were all fine. all right. thank you for being with us. joshua and robbie, a couple of eyewitnesses. we are just buy one of the many police cordons around london bridge and borough markets. let us talk tojohn —— tom symonds. this is a picture of one of the assailants lying on the ground which has been released. alarmingly, he has canisters strapped to his body, it seems. this fits a description i had from an eyewitness in the area who saw three men. he said to me very clearly that one of them had, canisters, i can't clearly say what they are, i can see from the picture, but they were taped to his body. it maybe they were just an effect. it maybe they had something dangerous to the public. clearly they did not go off if there was some sort of explosive there. one eyewitness took this picture. he said one of these two men on the ground wa
was there. you could see it. i don't think anyone knew what was going on. y shouted that, that is when people started running. a fair few people ended up staying in the pub, but i don't know what happened to them. i think they were all fine. all right. thank you for being with us. joshua and robbie, a couple of eyewitnesses. we are just buy one of the many police cordons around london bridge and borough markets. let us talk tojohn —— tom symonds. this is a picture of one of the assailants...
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Jun 4, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN
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[laughter] i was kind of irritated, i didn't think it was that obvious. [laughter] his insights got even deeper. thaty, i have a sense you're wondering why you came here. wow, i didn't realize i was that transparent. then, he gave me this incredible gift. he said i have an answer for you. you came here for one reason doctor. you came here for me. even now, all these years later, i get a chill when i think of that moment. what a remarkable experience. two individuals who cannot be more different in their culture and geography, their ethnicity, background, and that young man gave me theand he healing gifts are money me what this is really all about. it's about love between individuals that makes no sense. that agape love that one tries to give. once you have the experience of realizing that it happened, it is the sweetest joy. experience that told me that i had my framework messed up. how, but thethe why. the god of love and assess that is the god of love manifested in this farmer and i will cling to that every time i start to get mixed up about the where, h
[laughter] i was kind of irritated, i didn't think it was that obvious. [laughter] his insights got even deeper. thaty, i have a sense you're wondering why you came here. wow, i didn't realize i was that transparent. then, he gave me this incredible gift. he said i have an answer for you. you came here for one reason doctor. you came here for me. even now, all these years later, i get a chill when i think of that moment. what a remarkable experience. two individuals who cannot be more different...
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Jun 21, 2017
06/17
by
KGO
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eye 148
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i like the old hummus. it wasreamier, and you didn't have to mix the oil in with a spoon. >> jimmy: okay. you know, i don't really need all this extra information. i just wanted -- >> would you like to sign up for whole foods prime? it's $600. along with your hummus you'll get a free streaming service from the dupe las brothers. >> jimmy: i'd like just to take the hummus although i don't see any hummus on your table. >> here comes a hummus drone. >> jimmy: wow. [ applause ] this is a terrible idea. thank you very much. >> that's actually our slogan. amazon whole foods. "a terrible idea." >> jimmy: oh. [ cheers and applause ] you can take your things. why does it have to be in the thing that wheel it off? [ laughter ] by the way, i could use a hummus drone. that could be the key to peace in the middle east. a hummus drone. [ laughter ] i'm not sure if they have these at whole foods. have you seen the unusually shaped deep sea creature that's been online? this is an animal that's been -- it was discovered by a team
i like the old hummus. it wasreamier, and you didn't have to mix the oil in with a spoon. >> jimmy: okay. you know, i don't really need all this extra information. i just wanted -- >> would you like to sign up for whole foods prime? it's $600. along with your hummus you'll get a free streaming service from the dupe las brothers. >> jimmy: i'd like just to take the hummus although i don't see any hummus on your table. >> here comes a hummus drone. >> jimmy: wow. [...
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Jun 14, 2017
06/17
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WRC
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i thought it was a cicada, i went -- you know?ghter and applause ] thank you! >> seth: well done. [ cheers and applause ] well done. >> thank you for indulging me in that. >> seth: one last thing. because obviously you are someone who you -- you are great, you're a great sketch performer, you get sketches on every week. but there are still -- even kate mckinnon has a sketch that she has not been able to get on "snl." >> oh, i have my white whales. >> seth: you have your white whales. >> yes. >> seth: then give me -- what's a white whale? 'cause i feel like this is one that you were trying when i was there. >> yeah. you know, it's -- what would you -- it's appropriate to bring back a sketch that doesn't work the first time. >> seth: i would -- >> once that year. >> seth: i would argue twice a year is the max. >> maybe the next year once. >> seth: yeah. >> and then you gotta let it die. >> seth: and then you gotta let it go. if it doesn't work three times at read through, it's time to let it go. >> yeah, yeah. so i have this scottis
i thought it was a cicada, i went -- you know?ghter and applause ] thank you! >> seth: well done. [ cheers and applause ] well done. >> thank you for indulging me in that. >> seth: one last thing. because obviously you are someone who you -- you are great, you're a great sketch performer, you get sketches on every week. but there are still -- even kate mckinnon has a sketch that she has not been able to get on "snl." >> oh, i have my white whales. >>...
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Jun 1, 2017
06/17
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WUSA
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i was the candidate. i was the person who was on the ballot, and i am very aware of, you know, the challenges, the problems, the, you know, the shortfalls that we had. >> stephen: so she made mistakes, publicly recognized them, and owned up to her shortcomings. no wonder she lost. that's totally unpresidential. but i'll say this, the presidential campaign was so brutal-- remember, long, brul? one of the nice things about having trump in office is knowing that it's all behind us. >> the countdoo wn t2020 is already on. >> stephen: today, president trump out with his first campaign ad, the earliest one that has ever aired in a first term. ( laughter ) ( applause ) ( cheers and applause ) ( laughter ) >> stephen: kill me. now, listen, this is very important. i have a message for our president-- no new elections until you finish your wars.
i was the candidate. i was the person who was on the ballot, and i am very aware of, you know, the challenges, the problems, the, you know, the shortfalls that we had. >> stephen: so she made mistakes, publicly recognized them, and owned up to her shortcomings. no wonder she lost. that's totally unpresidential. but i'll say this, the presidential campaign was so brutal-- remember, long, brul? one of the nice things about having trump in office is knowing that it's all behind us. >>...
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Jun 26, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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i was inspired by then. d i not go to talk to you because i could not speak english by then, and i was inspired to continue grad school and nowdays i'm a scientist, and i'm a -- we are with you. we're part of the first high seas mission on mars, and we are here with you to inspire. >> i'm here with you. >> como esta? that's what it is about, having people coming together as a community, figuring out how to get other people inspired, and i had that, and i mean that's a testament to my father and my mother of their legacy and what they did and i want to carry that on. so thank you for sharing that. >> yes, sir. >> my name is dylan morris, and my question is, what inspired you to write the book "chasing space"? >> i'm going to share this journey with the world. and then also just going through my life and having all these things happen it would be best to share that. i wasn't an a student. was perfect as everything i did. i had -- almost went to jail. it was a time when i -- after graduated from high school i al
i was inspired by then. d i not go to talk to you because i could not speak english by then, and i was inspired to continue grad school and nowdays i'm a scientist, and i'm a -- we are with you. we're part of the first high seas mission on mars, and we are here with you to inspire. >> i'm here with you. >> como esta? that's what it is about, having people coming together as a community, figuring out how to get other people inspired, and i had that, and i mean that's a testament to...
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Jun 7, 2017
06/17
by
BBCNEWS
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my thoughts, even when i was getting rescued, my reaction was different. did not want to leave my gun, i wanted to come back to war. i am going to this white woman's country, i thought i will learn how to steal a plane and then come back to war. i became a different soldier. so, now we come to what is going on now. you say that you are related to riek machar, but you're not related, you are from the same part of south sudan as he is. so three years ago, south sudan votes for independence, it gets it and now look at it. in the midst of another conflict. 10,000 killed since december, maybe more. do you think everybody knows what is going on now in your country? not everybody knows because it depends on who is putting the message out. the government has their own propaganda, speaking out. the people in the oppositions have their way of putting out but as i can put a perspective on what actually happened was a political situation. 0ne party, party members asking the president to democratise our party. we have to make it accountable. we have to make things trans
my thoughts, even when i was getting rescued, my reaction was different. did not want to leave my gun, i wanted to come back to war. i am going to this white woman's country, i thought i will learn how to steal a plane and then come back to war. i became a different soldier. so, now we come to what is going on now. you say that you are related to riek machar, but you're not related, you are from the same part of south sudan as he is. so three years ago, south sudan votes for independence, it...
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Jun 4, 2017
06/17
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WPVI
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. >> i was thinking -- >> jimmy: what do i know?ight on our game two game night special ironman and spiderman. nba michigan alum from uconn alumina battle called college knowledge. stick around. >> we'll be right back. ♪ break through your allergies. try new flonase sensimist allergy relief instead of allergy pills. it's more complete allergy relief in a gentle mist experience you'll barely feel. using unique mistpro technology, new flonase sensimist delivers a gentle mist to help block six key inflammatory substances that cause your symptoms. most allergy pills only block one. and six is greater than one. new flonase sensimist changes everything. we, the device loving people want more than just unlimited data. we want unlimited entertainment. so we can stream unlimited action. watch unlimited robots. watch unlimited romance. if you are into that. but we also want more like... unlimited hbo. can i stop dying now mark? no can do mi amigo. it's unlimited. besides you are really good at it james. don't settle for any unlimited plan. ge
. >> i was thinking -- >> jimmy: what do i know?ight on our game two game night special ironman and spiderman. nba michigan alum from uconn alumina battle called college knowledge. stick around. >> we'll be right back. ♪ break through your allergies. try new flonase sensimist allergy relief instead of allergy pills. it's more complete allergy relief in a gentle mist experience you'll barely feel. using unique mistpro technology, new flonase sensimist delivers a gentle mist...
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Jun 25, 2017
06/17
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 50
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and i was the grandson he adored, and he was the grandfather i worshipped.o 22 mitchell way in dublin, where he lived in the most spartan of circumstances. and he sat me down on the chair and i was terrified because the book was there on the table. and he said, you f... ending with an r. i never heard him curse. i mean, he was a soldier. he said, "how did you know these things?" and we never spoke again until the day he died. you talked about your own childhood being a singular mess. and i wondered if you would ever write about that. i thought i had this happy childhood, then, to be honest, i found out something. this sort of retrospectively dropped a bomb on my childhood, this discovery, which of course i cannot discuss — you will forgive me for saying that. i'm saying this as buoyantly as i can, but it was as if all the things i valued, and all the work i had done for 30 years, had vanished away and i had got everything wrong. and then i had the comfort of this incredible dublin protestant woman who has been my wife for 32 years. how did she put up with th
and i was the grandson he adored, and he was the grandfather i worshipped.o 22 mitchell way in dublin, where he lived in the most spartan of circumstances. and he sat me down on the chair and i was terrified because the book was there on the table. and he said, you f... ending with an r. i never heard him curse. i mean, he was a soldier. he said, "how did you know these things?" and we never spoke again until the day he died. you talked about your own childhood being a singular mess....
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225
Jun 24, 2017
06/17
by
CNNW
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eye 225
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>> asia: since i was a kid. it as a child, it's comforting. >> anthony: food the same, more or less? nothing changes? >> asia: always the same. yes, that's the thing. that's why i keep coming back. the grandma makes it. it's always her cooking. she cooks every time and she makes fettuccine fresh. >> anthony: rome is a city where you find the most extraordinary of pleasures in the most ordinary things. like this place, which i am not ever going to tell you the name of. asia's been coming here regularly forever. she brings her kids still, so i'm not gonna screw it up for her. >> anthony: oh, that's good. >> asia: that's good. children's food. isn't it comforting? >> anthony: is it possible to look at rome in a non-cinematic way? i mean, it's a city that, kinda, demands it. >> asia: to me it's how to shoot it the way that it has never been shot. there's sides of rome that, pasolini, for instance, who wasn't from rome but would shoot here and he would do the suburbs and he had this real sense of the real rome. [ wom
>> asia: since i was a kid. it as a child, it's comforting. >> anthony: food the same, more or less? nothing changes? >> asia: always the same. yes, that's the thing. that's why i keep coming back. the grandma makes it. it's always her cooking. she cooks every time and she makes fettuccine fresh. >> anthony: rome is a city where you find the most extraordinary of pleasures in the most ordinary things. like this place, which i am not ever going to tell you the name of....
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Jun 24, 2017
06/17
by
WRC
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i was like to hell with this. i need to speak my mind. i didn't kill my wife. there's just no way. of and i didn't. that's why there is no proof. you know, this is just a big injustice. >> reporter: the judge had heard that before. the sentence he imposed? 16 years to life. crushing for conrad and his family sitting behind him including sister colette. >> you want to believe that things turn out the way that they're supposed to. and that's just not always the case. >> reporter: in prison conrad did what many do -- he retraced the steps that led him there. and he thought a lot about the night heidy died. as conrad saw it, the police rush eto judgment began precisey when officers first rushed through his front door. >> this guy's drinking, there's so he must have shot her. >> reporter: why couldn't it be exactly that simple? this wouldn't be the first time that mixing alcohol, an argument and a handgun led straight to a prison sentence. conrad told us what he told police. it isn't that simple. sure, he and heidy had been drinking and, yes, they had been arguing, but he said neither wa
i was like to hell with this. i need to speak my mind. i didn't kill my wife. there's just no way. of and i didn't. that's why there is no proof. you know, this is just a big injustice. >> reporter: the judge had heard that before. the sentence he imposed? 16 years to life. crushing for conrad and his family sitting behind him including sister colette. >> you want to believe that things turn out the way that they're supposed to. and that's just not always the case. >>...
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131
Jun 19, 2017
06/17
by
CNNW
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one was arrested. i believe it was the criminal. >> a friend of yours was with someone that was hit, we understand? >> sorry. >> reporter: i'm being told that a friend of yours was with somebody who was hit by this van? >> my friend, her brother was injured. i couldn't talk to her because police moved me. >> reporter: what do you know about those people who are injured and were they all people from the mosques? >> yes. they're all of them from mosque when they were leaving. >> reporter: did you see how many people were on the ground na may have been injured? >> well, at that time there were four people and one of them, i believe, was dead. the rest were badly injured. >> we're expecting more updates from the police. the next one is going to be in about an hour. they're not going to take questions, thoef. they there's a lot of concern there, isn't there. we'll talk about thachl we just spoke to. the fact that the police officer is going to be taking questions that we're going to get that as well. in the a
one was arrested. i believe it was the criminal. >> a friend of yours was with someone that was hit, we understand? >> sorry. >> reporter: i'm being told that a friend of yours was with somebody who was hit by this van? >> my friend, her brother was injured. i couldn't talk to her because police moved me. >> reporter: what do you know about those people who are injured and were they all people from the mosques? >> yes. they're all of them from mosque when...
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Jun 26, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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>> well, i was in political intelligence. quite honestly, i never personally handed any state secrets, handled any state secrets or handed them over. i was not in a position to do so. one of my tasks was to identify individuals who might be candidates for recruitment. i never be knew what happened -- i never knew what happened those, whether people were being recruited, successfully recruited. no idea. i would occasionally, not periodically, send reports on, you know, the mood of -- reaction of the american public to is certain things. -- to certain things. because i was in, in the, i was living in society rather than looking at it from the outside. isso that, and then i did a few, like, one-off tasks. and towards the end of my ten years, they asked me to also see if i can get my hands on some technology. i did send over a collection of computer programs. that's pretty much it. so, you know, if people ask me were you successful, probably not very. >> you did set up a dead drop you might want to mention. >> yeah. so if you -- a
>> well, i was in political intelligence. quite honestly, i never personally handed any state secrets, handled any state secrets or handed them over. i was not in a position to do so. one of my tasks was to identify individuals who might be candidates for recruitment. i never be knew what happened -- i never knew what happened those, whether people were being recruited, successfully recruited. no idea. i would occasionally, not periodically, send reports on, you know, the mood of --...
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44
Jun 17, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN2
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eye 44
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i was. i did not question the propaganda i was fed but ultimately i chose to swallow it and eventually i let it become a part of me because i wanted to belong so badly with the search of identity and community and purpose. so two years after i was recruited as 16 years old the man who recruited me went to prison for a series of vicious and happiness hate crimes the final was going to the apartment of another skinhead girl who was seen standing at a bus stop with a black man. they went to her apartment, the whole group and a pistol whipped her until she was hidden 1 inch of her life and in the pages swastika of her blood of the wall they thought she was dead there were sentenced to prison but of but before we that propelled me into a position of leadership. i learned how to recruit, i was fully immersed in to the rhetoric and ideology, is bringing in kids younger than me often it was the bully is so now because there was a full weight of leadership everybody recruited after me now looked to m
i was. i did not question the propaganda i was fed but ultimately i chose to swallow it and eventually i let it become a part of me because i wanted to belong so badly with the search of identity and community and purpose. so two years after i was recruited as 16 years old the man who recruited me went to prison for a series of vicious and happiness hate crimes the final was going to the apartment of another skinhead girl who was seen standing at a bus stop with a black man. they went to her...
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47
Jun 23, 2017
06/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 47
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i was promoted. i was able to help people. i have worked for 45 years, and in those 45 years i've mentors probably a couple hundred people and elyse ten-15 people i got to go back to schools at night either to complete their two-year associate degree or their four-year bachelor degree. on top of that we moved to virginia and the company i worked for was so impressed that they offered me to go to james madison university.ition in and they paid for my tuition, books. i went to another five years of night school to complete my bachelors degree. and i just want to thank you guys, because i can see you take the same interest in the youth in trying to develop this to really help our country. i ended my last ten years and like remaking a six-figure salary.ea so this goes to show you, if you take the initiative, if you have the opportunity you can be successful and this is what our country needs. >> host: all right, bob. >> guest: i definitely want to hear congressman thompsons, it's because of early this gentlemen may have come from h
i was promoted. i was able to help people. i have worked for 45 years, and in those 45 years i've mentors probably a couple hundred people and elyse ten-15 people i got to go back to schools at night either to complete their two-year associate degree or their four-year bachelor degree. on top of that we moved to virginia and the company i worked for was so impressed that they offered me to go to james madison university.ition in and they paid for my tuition, books. i went to another five years...
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i think differentiates it from stand it was a. credibly hard an incredible as well but i love that idea you've written a book about dating or you brood or better that. to learning from you still date yes of course ever going close to marriage not close to marriage but i've have been with people that i cared about a great deal of the book is called things you should already know about dating and it's all it spurred from the idea of i was dating someone and i kind of realize that there's some chivalrous stuff that is lost between generations and mowen eels now may not know these things and that will bring because that's truly one of the basics that i don't do i don't believe it's at done as much or all those things and then in my head as i will what else don't i know personally and i was of my friend laura moses and she goes what else don't i know it has to be a great book and so what it is it's a tip and then a guy and a girl talking about the tip going back and forth saying why it's great or why it's bad or something that would do
i think differentiates it from stand it was a. credibly hard an incredible as well but i love that idea you've written a book about dating or you brood or better that. to learning from you still date yes of course ever going close to marriage not close to marriage but i've have been with people that i cared about a great deal of the book is called things you should already know about dating and it's all it spurred from the idea of i was dating someone and i kind of realize that there's some...
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3.5K
Jun 5, 2017
06/17
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MSNBCW
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was going to. when they told the jury all rise, i saw that that was my opportunity and i stabbed him in the chest. teele's candor was short-lived. >> in terms of what you did, what was your goal? honestly, you're not going anywhere. what was -- >> stop him from breathing. >> so you were going to kill him? >>> coming up -- >> when i got incarcerated, i declared war on the state of indiana. they gave me the excessive sentence as a result of my crime? well, i'm giving you excessive violence as a result of my anger. so i decided to just rage. >>> how long do you expect me to be on msnbc with this camcorder in my hand in a night cell doing night vision recording and talking to you guys? i wasn't expecting any of that. but that's how life is. life is full of surprises. life is full of change, abrupt changes, you know, unexpected changes. >> unexpected changes would come to describe our relationship with darren bailey. an inmate we met at indiana state prison. he was one of a handful of inmates allowed to use a personal camera supplied by our crew used to record intimate thoughts in the privacy of his cel
was going to. when they told the jury all rise, i saw that that was my opportunity and i stabbed him in the chest. teele's candor was short-lived. >> in terms of what you did, what was your goal? honestly, you're not going anywhere. what was -- >> stop him from breathing. >> so you were going to kill him? >>> coming up -- >> when i got incarcerated, i declared war on the state of indiana. they gave me the excessive sentence as a result of my crime? well, i'm...
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i started my transition the t.v. world keyword wasn't even the l g t sign. there was no tea in that sign transfer and greeted jules always said last year that only trans people should play trend characters do you agree yes. i mean there's different there's different levels of that i mean you haven't done so i am actually i did like a day walk on with alexandria billings i played one of her friends at the pool and it became oh my god they get to you know how many there are no i mean there's no there's i mean there's certain you know there's certain kind of statistics but they're very vague because a lot of the trans community disappears because of you know homophobia and transphobia so i don't know there really is so much is there are gays statistics what eight percent. is that a guess well we would like to now but apparently this year we're being. taken out of the census cell who's to now i guess is the irrepressible candace came when discussing trans rights and president trump two after the break and the book is high gorgeous that cover. this is a book of tips for ev
i started my transition the t.v. world keyword wasn't even the l g t sign. there was no tea in that sign transfer and greeted jules always said last year that only trans people should play trend characters do you agree yes. i mean there's different there's different levels of that i mean you haven't done so i am actually i did like a day walk on with alexandria billings i played one of her friends at the pool and it became oh my god they get to you know how many there are no i mean there's no...
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100
Jun 5, 2017
06/17
by
CSPAN3
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eye 100
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sometimes it was not. i think in terms of the long-term economic impact, it was mostly the 50's and 60's and early 70's, the long-term economic impact was limited. you're not going to get 10% economic growth the way the united states was getting in places like south korea or taiwan. there were also a lot of internal dynamics in the african countries. it inhibited growth. i think the fact that these economic aid projects didn't produce long-term prosperity in africa, i'll think the chinese completely got the blame for it. i think some africans became completely disillusioned with aid. i have one quote that i found in the book, i think i found it in the new york times. there was the story going around, the chinese will supply the labor, the soviets will supply the technicians and the u.s. will supply the capital and the guineans will make sure that none of it works. you have a lot of stories like that as well. countries are becoming general disillusioned with economic aid. not necessarily saying this is becaus
sometimes it was not. i think in terms of the long-term economic impact, it was mostly the 50's and 60's and early 70's, the long-term economic impact was limited. you're not going to get 10% economic growth the way the united states was getting in places like south korea or taiwan. there were also a lot of internal dynamics in the african countries. it inhibited growth. i think the fact that these economic aid projects didn't produce long-term prosperity in africa, i'll think the chinese...
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51
Jun 18, 2017
06/17
by
BBCNEWS
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i was approached by number 10 on... i can't remember which day it was. yesterday, i think it was. i have been a volunteer the entire week. and the town approached me saying, could we pull together a group of representatives from the local area to have a conversation with the prime minister? and we worked very closely with st clements church, which is very well—connected in the local area, and brought together a group of people who were not representing anybody in particular, but people who were affected by the tragedy. there were people there who were survivors from grenfell tower itself, evacuees, local residents, there were volunteers, community leaders, and that was a group that was there. there has been a lot of discussion about the government understands people's needs here. are you more confident that they do, after theresa may's reaction? i am certainly hopeful that she listened. we all came away feeling that she listened very carefully. it was a robust conversation with forceful emotion in the room. people were able to say what they wanted to say. and we felt that that was
i was approached by number 10 on... i can't remember which day it was. yesterday, i think it was. i have been a volunteer the entire week. and the town approached me saying, could we pull together a group of representatives from the local area to have a conversation with the prime minister? and we worked very closely with st clements church, which is very well—connected in the local area, and brought together a group of people who were not representing anybody in particular, but people who...
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Jun 19, 2017
06/17
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MSNBCW
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i was too afraid of dying. t also i felt like i had been jilted with the whole health care specialist, it sounded real pretty. >> prior to his deployment, fish requested a discharge and was denied. so he went awol. he was eventually caught and did time in a military jail. >> while i was in jail i had time to think and i said, this doesn't become me or my family to be sitting here in jail, i'm too afraid to go to iraq. i said my dad was in vietnam. i can do this, too. so i decided, i'm going to do it. and so that was my second chance. so they sent me to iraq. >> in iraq, fish was assigned to an air force base hospital where wounded soldiers arrived daily. >> the only thing i remember specifically is the first guy i treated, he's dead now. and he was a marine. he came in and his arm was damaged. it was totally wrapped up. they're sticking needles and stuff in him and doing procedures on him and i'm helping the nurses as much as i can there. and then the nurse says, hey, if you want to do something for him right no
i was too afraid of dying. t also i felt like i had been jilted with the whole health care specialist, it sounded real pretty. >> prior to his deployment, fish requested a discharge and was denied. so he went awol. he was eventually caught and did time in a military jail. >> while i was in jail i had time to think and i said, this doesn't become me or my family to be sitting here in jail, i'm too afraid to go to iraq. i said my dad was in vietnam. i can do this, too. so i decided,...
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229
Jun 24, 2017
06/17
by
WRC
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eye 229
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>> jimmy: i was your -- i was your travel agent. >> no, i was like, were you selling drugs? hey, reeves. >> jimmy: i look like chuck spedina is what i look like. [ laughter ] let me see if i can put a >> are you gonna draw a a mustache? you gonna give yourself horns? >> jimmy: no, no, no. this -- this -- i think this is all i need. and then this is totally -- >> there it is. there it is. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> jimmy: what is -- what is going on with this -- wow. man oh man, what a -- >> it's style, man. >> jimmy: and you probably totally remember any -- doing that. taking that photo. >> yeah. >> jimmy: your face is like, who is this idiot? get me -- i'm in the wrong room. i'm in the wrong room is what your face is saying. >> no, it looks like i'm in "the matrix" world in there. >> jimmy: you are. this is matrix style. absolutely. >> yeah, it's matrix time. >> jimmy: yeah, this is -- this is neo. >> yeah. well i'm not -- i'm not -- i'm not like that anymore. >> jimmy: no, no. >> i'm a little older. >> jimmy: no, what are you talking about? you're everything. this is --
>> jimmy: i was your -- i was your travel agent. >> no, i was like, were you selling drugs? hey, reeves. >> jimmy: i look like chuck spedina is what i look like. [ laughter ] let me see if i can put a >> are you gonna draw a a mustache? you gonna give yourself horns? >> jimmy: no, no, no. this -- this -- i think this is all i need. and then this is totally -- >> there it is. there it is. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> jimmy: what is -- what is going on...
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72
Jun 22, 2017
06/17
by
KQEH
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eye 72
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i was painting when i wrote that song. i was painting. on a portrait or something and this voice says, write this down. no, no, don't bother me. i don't want to mess with song writing. you'd better write this down. i walked over to a table and went, black lives matter -- i couldn't write it fast enough. and i sang it all at the same time. so realizing that the song was there, i mean that fast. i just picked up my phone. there is a memo thing on your phone now. i just sang it into the phone. put it down. took three, four, five minutes, went back to painting. found the song a couple days later and said wow, when did i write that? really. i had forgotten that i had even written the song. >> you know i'm hating you in this moment right now. >> get in line. get in line! >> that just seems, i'm being funny. obviously you're a vessel and you're open to receiving it. but it seems so unfair that something so good can pour out of you in five minutes. >> and i would degree if you're elvis costello. which is what happened to him. he was a kid. give m
i was painting when i wrote that song. i was painting. on a portrait or something and this voice says, write this down. no, no, don't bother me. i don't want to mess with song writing. you'd better write this down. i walked over to a table and went, black lives matter -- i couldn't write it fast enough. and i sang it all at the same time. so realizing that the song was there, i mean that fast. i just picked up my phone. there is a memo thing on your phone now. i just sang it into the phone. put...
65
65
Jun 30, 2017
06/17
by
KQEH
tv
eye 65
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i always wondered that. >> a lot of it is, specifically-- was taking an approach that i think was more humanistnd sort of cutting through, i guess, sort of the fake aura of what people were like and how they truly were. and you know, his whole goal i think to some extent was sort of taking these people that we assume are these like high fall outin religious people and ultimately showing that there was a certain amount of hypocrisy and pent up repression that is didn't really have a chance to be discussed in his time. >> was that your goal too. >> yeah, pretty much so. >> let's talk about the nuns in this film, aubrie. they are sort of like these mean girls, medieval mean girls in a way. >> i mean i guess you could describe them that waway. they are, you know, they're girls and women that were kind of forced, you know, into being nuns back in that day. not everyone that was a nun was religious. so they definitely have a lot of pent up aggression for those reasons. >> your character especially. she seems pretty salty, and saucy. >> yeah. sister fer nanda yes. she, i think she sees hersel
i always wondered that. >> a lot of it is, specifically-- was taking an approach that i think was more humanistnd sort of cutting through, i guess, sort of the fake aura of what people were like and how they truly were. and you know, his whole goal i think to some extent was sort of taking these people that we assume are these like high fall outin religious people and ultimately showing that there was a certain amount of hypocrisy and pent up repression that is didn't really have a chance...
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57
Jun 21, 2017
06/17
by
WCAU
tv
eye 57
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and i was like, "what?" t laughter ] then i realized even when he answers questions on camera, i'm still like -- "what?" [ laughter and applause ] then i heard bill cosby's trial was over. and i was like, "what? [ laughter ] bill cosby's in jail." then my friend was like, "no, he is not." and i was like, "whaaat? [ light laughter ] did he pass?" then i found out it was a mistrial. and i bet when his accusers heard that, they were like, "what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what? [ cheers and applause ] what, what, what, what?" and then like 40 more times. yesterday was juneteenth, the holiday that celebrates the emancipation of slaves! but my white friends are not familiar with that holiday. so i was like, "hey, it's juneteenth." and they were like, "what is that? can i go?" [ light laughter ] and i said, "google it, and no." [ light laughter ] and everyone heard jared kushner's voice for the first time. and people were like -- "whaat?!" [ applause ] hilarious! he's going to the m
and i was like, "what?" t laughter ] then i realized even when he answers questions on camera, i'm still like -- "what?" [ laughter and applause ] then i heard bill cosby's trial was over. and i was like, "what? [ laughter ] bill cosby's in jail." then my friend was like, "no, he is not." and i was like, "whaaat? [ light laughter ] did he pass?" then i found out it was a mistrial. and i bet when his accusers heard that, they were like,...