64
64
Apr 5, 2020
04/20
by
CNBC
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
based on the strength of their resumes, lillian and steve selected five for interview. the successful candidate will be someone highly organized, extremely detail-oriented, with excellent math skills. this interview is their one and only chance to impress. - sign in for an interview? - yeah. - yes, please. hi. how are you? - hi there. how are you? - i work as a staff accountant. the current company i'm at is a big company bought out by a bigger company, and they are moving their accounting services overseas, so our whole department has end dates. it can be tough, but you take the punches as they come. - right here with "detail- oriented with the ability to multitask with great follow-up." look how it's off a half a space. there's some typos. there's spacing issues. - hi. - hi. how you doing? - good. in the past month and a half, i've been on eight interviews. you have to go in with a positive attitude, and it is frustrating when you don't hear back from a company when they tell you that they will call you back, but you just have to keep on plugging, because in reality,
based on the strength of their resumes, lillian and steve selected five for interview. the successful candidate will be someone highly organized, extremely detail-oriented, with excellent math skills. this interview is their one and only chance to impress. - sign in for an interview? - yeah. - yes, please. hi. how are you? - hi there. how are you? - i work as a staff accountant. the current company i'm at is a big company bought out by a bigger company, and they are moving their accounting...
88
88
Apr 5, 2020
04/20
by
CNBC
tv
eye 88
favorite 0
quote 0
lillian: hi, i'm lillian. lemonis: nice to meet you. lillian: yeah. peter. peter: hi, marcus. i'm peter. lemonis: nice to meet you. peter: nice to meet you. lemonis: i'm marcus. lemonis: how are you? hannah: hi, hannah. lemonis: nice to meet you. taylor: i'm taylor. lemonis: nice to meet you. max: who's for tea? i'm making some. oh, you're here! lemonis: hi. taylor: this is max. amber: "oh, you're here." lemonis: she's like, "oh, you're here." i was meeting the company mascots. max: oh, yes, our fur babies. lemonis: they normally have this kind of disposition? max: yes, they're very calm. lemonis: do they take on their owner's disposition? max: probably not. lemonis: okay, and so why did you start this business? max: i had a young 18-month-old who was born with eczema, asthma and allergies and allergic sensitivity. so when i was cleaning the house, it would exacerbate them, and i thought, "i'm just gonna make my own." i would get, like, plant-based cleaners. it was absolutely non-toxic. lemonis: and that's the cleaning agent? max: yes. lemonis: wow. i did like the fact that sh
lillian: hi, i'm lillian. lemonis: nice to meet you. lillian: yeah. peter. peter: hi, marcus. i'm peter. lemonis: nice to meet you. peter: nice to meet you. lemonis: i'm marcus. lemonis: how are you? hannah: hi, hannah. lemonis: nice to meet you. taylor: i'm taylor. lemonis: nice to meet you. max: who's for tea? i'm making some. oh, you're here! lemonis: hi. taylor: this is max. amber: "oh, you're here." lemonis: she's like, "oh, you're here." i was meeting the company...
62
62
Apr 21, 2020
04/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
[applause] >> thank you for that lovely introduction, lillian. i very much appreciate it. i'm so happy to be with you here today, though i am based in washington, d.c. for this first quarter at northwestern, i have been here at evanston learning all about evanston and northwestern and chicago, and it's been a lot of fun and am so happy to be here to be talked about this book project. let me tell you why this book that started. .. very loud disco music playing in the background and he had had enough but i ended up having a conversation with a woman we were dealing with we never met before. she was a lawyer from the us department of justice and over this long, unexpected conversation, robin gold start telling me about this little-known unit deep inside the us justice department that had spent three decades hunting nazi war criminals on us soil and no way -- spent a decade on staff at the washington post. i knew little about this unit and i remember thinking two things. asking myself two questions after this two our conversation. number one, how is it possible that so many ye
[applause] >> thank you for that lovely introduction, lillian. i very much appreciate it. i'm so happy to be with you here today, though i am based in washington, d.c. for this first quarter at northwestern, i have been here at evanston learning all about evanston and northwestern and chicago, and it's been a lot of fun and am so happy to be here to be talked about this book project. let me tell you why this book that started. .. very loud disco music playing in the background and he had...
50
50
Apr 21, 2020
04/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
my name is lillian and i'm the director public programs. i get the privilege under regular basis. we thank you so much for being here with us today. we hope you overturn on other occasions. usually i play a game with the audience and i will do it very quickly. is this your first visit? please raise your hand. raise it higher so i can see it they thank you, thank you, thank you. over here too. thank you. in the interest so the rest of you can exercise one of your arms if you are a regular and if you attend programs all the time and if you are one of our members please raise your hand. thank you so much. thank you. the folks who raised her hands the first time around these don't take my word for it alone. ask anyone elset around you whoe hand went up a second time why they support this institution and why they come here on a regular basis and why i'd know many of them by their first names. those whose first names i haven't learned i will do my best to learn them. alsoil i'm going to suggest for those of you who are not familiar with the organization to pick up one of our quarterly c
my name is lillian and i'm the director public programs. i get the privilege under regular basis. we thank you so much for being here with us today. we hope you overturn on other occasions. usually i play a game with the audience and i will do it very quickly. is this your first visit? please raise your hand. raise it higher so i can see it they thank you, thank you, thank you. over here too. thank you. in the interest so the rest of you can exercise one of your arms if you are a regular and if...
165
165
Apr 13, 2020
04/20
by
KNTV
tv
eye 165
favorite 0
quote 0
so o far lillian has created dozens of face covers. her son appreciates her efforts. >> i feel proud of her because she's doing good. >> the family is one of 10 in the area who have band together to help people they know. the masks were handed out to field laborers, their families and other essential workers in the community. >> right now i think we've distributed about a thousand masks with less than a week. >> he keeps pouches of the masks to pass out to workers he knows nay need one. >> i think employers and everyone's trying to get the best that they can to their staff but there's -- they're hard to fine. >> the first batch of mask was just a start. they plan to make lots more. >> they have run into one problem. >> we run out of elastic. the elastic, it's needed. >> until the seal stresses can get their hands on more elastic, they're >> food is rotting in the fields while many californians are going hungry because of the coronavirus crisis. a new report show many dairies have a milk surplus because the restaurants and bars who serv
so o far lillian has created dozens of face covers. her son appreciates her efforts. >> i feel proud of her because she's doing good. >> the family is one of 10 in the area who have band together to help people they know. the masks were handed out to field laborers, their families and other essential workers in the community. >> right now i think we've distributed about a thousand masks with less than a week. >> he keeps pouches of the masks to pass out to workers he...
83
83
Apr 22, 2020
04/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
nora afrin about a musical called imaginary friends based on the rivalry between mary mccarthy and lillian hellman. i remember this piece and you saying to nora in the middle of the piece how do you want to be remembered and she kind of laughed and said remembered? these two women were incredibly famous. they have been gone 10 or 12 years and no one knows who they are. i don't expect to be remembered at all. cut to last year when i was working on the podcast for audrey hepburn. i wanted to use a piece of the interview i had done, where she had a great story. a small group of people who work on the podcast but all the people under the age of 35, really smart people had no idea who nora efrain was and she had only been dead for five years. everyone is forgotten and i find that kind of liberating in a way. >> you are doing your job for these great figures. you have this weird ability to make us care about things we never thought we cared about. >> especially with the people, not so much for things, but pressure and the station wagon. >> which have so much in common. >> imagine otto von bismar
nora afrin about a musical called imaginary friends based on the rivalry between mary mccarthy and lillian hellman. i remember this piece and you saying to nora in the middle of the piece how do you want to be remembered and she kind of laughed and said remembered? these two women were incredibly famous. they have been gone 10 or 12 years and no one knows who they are. i don't expect to be remembered at all. cut to last year when i was working on the podcast for audrey hepburn. i wanted to use...
304
304
Apr 14, 2020
04/20
by
KGO
tv
eye 304
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> even though she's cooped up in her small apartment life is very business right now for lillian argetta. she has been sewing almost non-stop since last week. she wants to make as many masks as she can. >> we are in quarantine, she snas spanish but they can't rest. she is talking about farm workers, even though they are considered low-skilled workers their labor is essential. >> reporter: we must take care of the health in our community, she says. farm workers face an increased risk of those from the drives working around dusty fields and around pesticides puts them at an increased risk for respiratory problems like asthma and bronchitis. more than a third are uninsured and half undocumented so they are not getting any relief from the kards act. they were recruited last week by half moon bay to make masks, hundreds of them. >> we hear the families really wanting masks and workers really wanting masks but there's no way to find them. >> reporter: in a week volunteers were able to make and give away 500 masks. the masks are being handed out to farm workers along tteco >> everybody is glass
. >> even though she's cooped up in her small apartment life is very business right now for lillian argetta. she has been sewing almost non-stop since last week. she wants to make as many masks as she can. >> we are in quarantine, she snas spanish but they can't rest. she is talking about farm workers, even though they are considered low-skilled workers their labor is essential. >> reporter: we must take care of the health in our community, she says. farm workers face an...
95
95
Apr 6, 2020
04/20
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
there is you, sarah dowd, standing outside harlem hospital, and lillian udell at lincoln hospital.alk about how your organizing, the four of you, with so many others. you are all women. , the relationship that we have with each other has really helped to strengthen as, particularly now. we have always been a group of nurses that believe in our coworkers, in rank-and-file nurses in their ability to run health care system and our ability to run our unions effectively from the ground up, not from the top down. we believe both the union and the health care systetem should work that way. now has been ay time w where we can look to each other for ideas, for support. out here nowy are with me. and the solidarity from all of them has been incredible and given me so much strength. amy: sarah, can you talk about your access to tests? both patients s d also youou as nurses? , weou have covid symptoms are now continually learning from thehe chief doctors of thts country that the majority of people who come down with covid are transmitted the disease by an asymptomatic person. so what happens w
there is you, sarah dowd, standing outside harlem hospital, and lillian udell at lincoln hospital.alk about how your organizing, the four of you, with so many others. you are all women. , the relationship that we have with each other has really helped to strengthen as, particularly now. we have always been a group of nurses that believe in our coworkers, in rank-and-file nurses in their ability to run health care system and our ability to run our unions effectively from the ground up, not from...
46
46
Apr 13, 2020
04/20
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 46
favorite 0
quote 0
in the short-term, it has been a particular issue surrounding lillian and -- surrounding bullion andability. i think that is largely out of the way and gold looks somewhat more favorable. fiscal stimulus and monetary stimulus going on globally. haslinda: guy, thank you. .lobal head of market analytics plenty more to come. the biggest lockdown to contain the spread of the coronavirus. more on that, next. this is bloomberg. ♪ haslinda: india is said to expand the world's biggest lockdown to contain the coronavirus. what is the government's plan now? >> india is all set to extend its 21 day shutdown. in march, -- modi is expected to make a formal announcement on the extension today. absolutely no business activity from any industries in the country. rishaad: we have got data out later. inflation figures in the evening, how are they likely to be reacted to buy the reserve ? >> this time, the headline data could be incomplete. it was suspended in march due to the lockdown. headline data probably slowed in march due to a survey. driving towards the lower end of the 2-6 percent target and.
in the short-term, it has been a particular issue surrounding lillian and -- surrounding bullion andability. i think that is largely out of the way and gold looks somewhat more favorable. fiscal stimulus and monetary stimulus going on globally. haslinda: guy, thank you. .lobal head of market analytics plenty more to come. the biggest lockdown to contain the spread of the coronavirus. more on that, next. this is bloomberg. ♪ haslinda: india is said to expand the world's biggest lockdown to...
85
85
Apr 23, 2020
04/20
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 85
favorite 0
quote 0
centralized approach closer to those used in china or south korea which keep starter on the central server lillian edwards is professor of law innovation and society at newcastle university she joins us from edinburgh in the u.k. good to have you with us 1st of all the 4 we get into perhaps the legal and ethical nitty gritty from what we know of the information that's out there how effective is it in the 1st place is that as a tool the kind of you know trace where people have been in terms of their health risk. well it's difficult to say with that though is that details are the app in question that the u.k. n.h.s. x. appen although we've now seen pictures of it being tested was still a little bit in the dark about how it's being coded there are a number of problems we know about from the experience in other countries and in the past you have to get a very high percentage of the population to install the app pretty useful epidemiologists have estimated that about 80 percent of the smartphone using population about 20 percent of the population in the u.k. doesn't use smartphones so you're talking ab
centralized approach closer to those used in china or south korea which keep starter on the central server lillian edwards is professor of law innovation and society at newcastle university she joins us from edinburgh in the u.k. good to have you with us 1st of all the 4 we get into perhaps the legal and ethical nitty gritty from what we know of the information that's out there how effective is it in the 1st place is that as a tool the kind of you know trace where people have been in terms of...
76
76
Apr 22, 2020
04/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 76
favorite 0
quote 0
musical called imaginary friends which was wesed on the story the rivalry between mary mccarthy and lillianble] and i remember this piece and you say into nora in the middle of the peace how do you want to be remembered and she laughed and said remembered, these two women were incredibly famous and they had been gone for ten, 12 years and no one news who they are. she said i don't expect to be remembered at all. cut to last year when i was working on the podcast for audrey hepburn, episode for audrey hepburn, i wanted to useh a piece of an interview i had done with nora efron where she had this great story about edith and audrey hepburn and it's a small group of people to work on the podcast but all the people under the age of 35 really smart people, with smart, had no idea who nora efron was and she'd only been dead for about five years. so, everyone is forgotten and i find that liberating. [laughter] >> you are doing your job to revive some of these great figures. >> i hope. >> and to make us care about things that you have this weird ability to make us care about things that we never tho
musical called imaginary friends which was wesed on the story the rivalry between mary mccarthy and lillianble] and i remember this piece and you say into nora in the middle of the peace how do you want to be remembered and she laughed and said remembered, these two women were incredibly famous and they had been gone for ten, 12 years and no one news who they are. she said i don't expect to be remembered at all. cut to last year when i was working on the podcast for audrey hepburn, episode for...
69
69
Apr 27, 2020
04/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
positively mellow lillian it's amazing. it was virtually completely ignored.t was celebrated by the likes of auden and frank commode and people like that. but doctors, generally didn't believe it. it wasn't double-blind it was an quantitative charged. it wasn't peer-reviewed. it was this weird thing of case studies of stories of these people. this is not what neurology was in those days, it was very sideload and very quantitative and so forth very rigorous. many people, to the extent that the doctors of the medical community knew of him they either ignored him or just actively disbelieved him. then what happens we are now and 73, by the way, to give you an idea, years later in 1982 to 83 when i interviewed the publisher in london of awakenings he said that the first edition had had the first edition of the hardcover had 1500 copies they had not yet sold through it 12 years later. after the disappointment of this oliver does something completely dumb and in reeling and dismay his mother dies shortly thereafter this. he goes on a walk on the mountains of norway
positively mellow lillian it's amazing. it was virtually completely ignored.t was celebrated by the likes of auden and frank commode and people like that. but doctors, generally didn't believe it. it wasn't double-blind it was an quantitative charged. it wasn't peer-reviewed. it was this weird thing of case studies of stories of these people. this is not what neurology was in those days, it was very sideload and very quantitative and so forth very rigorous. many people, to the extent that the...
63
63
Apr 7, 2020
04/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 63
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm lillian stadler i'm with the program with the wilson center. my question is really a sort of response to your talk and the question from the gentleman on the other side, which essentially relates or evolves around realist theory, i was wondering if you could engage with it a little bit more, because essentially if i were a realist, i might respond to your -- you noted in your talk that you think u.s. foreign policy is generally viewed as realist. but that it rests on the assumption that the other side is inherently expansionist. now if i were a realist, i'd probably say something along the lines of, aren't you supposed to distrust in a situation where you have neither evidence for nor evidence against that claim, and being the fundamentalist realist theory, and that giving any measure i take that's defensive might be interpreted by the other side as being offensive and as a response to that deterrence, which essentially eliminates the distinction between offensive and defensive measures wouldn't that be a response to the security dilemma and wo
i'm lillian stadler i'm with the program with the wilson center. my question is really a sort of response to your talk and the question from the gentleman on the other side, which essentially relates or evolves around realist theory, i was wondering if you could engage with it a little bit more, because essentially if i were a realist, i might respond to your -- you noted in your talk that you think u.s. foreign policy is generally viewed as realist. but that it rests on the assumption that the...
198
198
tv
eye 198
favorite 0
quote 0
we caught up with one of the lucky shoppers lillian roberts from my college hometown hammond, louisiana so we went and made our groceries and we got to the register. we're getting ready to pay for it, and a girl said, oh, your groceries are being paid for by tyler perry. really? you're kidding me. i been on top of the world all day, just that simple act of kindness from tyler perry. >> yeah. >> you know, he made them happy, but kroger said he also paid for nearly 3,000 shoppers across atlanta, and you can see the gratitude on their faces as well, and he didn't comment on the donations, but he told kroger said it was paid for by an anonymous angel. he's an angel, but he's not anonymous anymore. >> no. >> he always steps up. so great to see. >> yep. >> doesn't he? >> we'll be right back. anonymous anymore. >> he always steps up. so great to see. >> yep. >> doesn't he? >> we'll be right back. step by step, we're going to figure this out. we're gonna find a way through this. we're working really, really hard in hospitals, our nurses, our techs, all the docs. it's about staggering when peopl
we caught up with one of the lucky shoppers lillian roberts from my college hometown hammond, louisiana so we went and made our groceries and we got to the register. we're getting ready to pay for it, and a girl said, oh, your groceries are being paid for by tyler perry. really? you're kidding me. i been on top of the world all day, just that simple act of kindness from tyler perry. >> yeah. >> you know, he made them happy, but kroger said he also paid for nearly 3,000 shoppers...
1,185
1.2K
tv
eye 1,185
favorite 0
quote 0
lillian bonsignore, thank you so much for joining us this morning. eva just gave a sense of the kind of sacrifices your people are making every hour of every day, thanks to you and all your troops for that, as head of the mission just give us a sense from your perspective of what they're going through. >> thank you for having me this morning. it is -- they are unbelievably courageous out there and we've seen an unprecedented increase in our call volume. we normally operated at a level of about 4,000 jobs per day and we are now up around 6,500 per day, over 6,000. so they are working very, very hard and they are on the front lines of this mission. they believe in this mission and i believe in them. they're doing an incredible job but they're seeing a lot of sick people all day every day. >> this dwarfs even what you all saw during 9/11, doesn't it? >> yeah. you know, 9/11 was a different situation, but this is certainly one of the biggest things we've ever seen and the fact that it's a prolonged operation makes it even that much more difficult. so we
lillian bonsignore, thank you so much for joining us this morning. eva just gave a sense of the kind of sacrifices your people are making every hour of every day, thanks to you and all your troops for that, as head of the mission just give us a sense from your perspective of what they're going through. >> thank you for having me this morning. it is -- they are unbelievably courageous out there and we've seen an unprecedented increase in our call volume. we normally operated at a level of...
202
202
Apr 21, 2020
04/20
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 202
favorite 0
quote 0
could donate these funds to feed the front line a local nonprofit organization run by a neighborhood lillian front line don't united states meals and supplies to jersey shore medical center in monmouth county. and i ordered my first 75 and we were off from the beginning. steve: that is fantastic. you ordered 7 75 from a local printer to help your local businessman who is struggling, no doubt as small businesses are right now. how many signs are you up to so far? >> so currently we are about -- we are about up to 1700. which is great, great number. steve: you are kidding. >> that's a lot of signs. it's great. i'm ecstatic about it. steve: no kidding. i heard governor murphy of new jersey gave you a shoutout for what you are doing. which is fantastic. and it's a real tip of the hat to you. he mentioned you are a business major. most business majors try to figure a way to make money for themselves. but you are taking your business acumen and figuring out how to make money for these heros to salute the heroes and help them out. what's the reaction been, liam? >> the reaction ha has been gre. i w
could donate these funds to feed the front line a local nonprofit organization run by a neighborhood lillian front line don't united states meals and supplies to jersey shore medical center in monmouth county. and i ordered my first 75 and we were off from the beginning. steve: that is fantastic. you ordered 7 75 from a local printer to help your local businessman who is struggling, no doubt as small businesses are right now. how many signs are you up to so far? >> so currently we are...
74
74
Apr 27, 2020
04/20
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
lillian's dad john, was a loving father to three.of crown green bowling. his love of bingo and crib and dominos gave him a better social life than that of his kids! he will be sadly missed but at least now him and madge, his wife of over 50 years, can be reunited. goodnight dad, although you leave us sad we have comfort from the fact that you are reunited with your beloved wife madge." khalid jamil was a health care assistant at watford general hospital. his daughter sent us this tribute. "he was the epitome of a kind hearted selfless family man in a profession that suited his personality. ourfather enriched us with the greatest gift anyone could every give — unconditional love and a lifetime of memories. his legacy will live on forever. our nhs hero." and we'll be hearing some more tributes from family members of nhs workers a little later on in the programme. thank you to all those who sent those in. the british medical association has criticised the new online system for booking coronavirus tests, saying they shouldn't be issued o
lillian's dad john, was a loving father to three.of crown green bowling. his love of bingo and crib and dominos gave him a better social life than that of his kids! he will be sadly missed but at least now him and madge, his wife of over 50 years, can be reunited. goodnight dad, although you leave us sad we have comfort from the fact that you are reunited with your beloved wife madge." khalid jamil was a health care assistant at watford general hospital. his daughter sent us this tribute....