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Feb 5, 2016
02/16
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WYFF
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a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true storygood morning... at 10:26 a groundbreaking for the i-85/ 385 gateway project will be held in greenville today. this is the official kickoff of the project... with a groundbreaking at noon on woodruff road. the cost of the project... is 231 million dollars. it involves creating a new interchange with new lanes, ramps, and bridges to help with traffic. in columbia ... state lawmakers may change the way law enforcement handles dash cam video. according to the bill...agencies would need a judge's approval to withhold dashcam footage from the public for more than 15 d
a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah! a true story? yeah!...
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Feb 27, 2016
02/16
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CSPAN2
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eye 47
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donald is a genius and they told their friends and the story is still alive 50 years later. dy actually counted the breaks. >> or asked him about its until we did a handful of years ago. he told us he had counted and that day. he just wanted them to like him. >> and it worked. they really admired him. >> there is a fantastic story about donald trump please and with the community embraced him and the way in which his potential was realized in an amazing fashion. the things that to meet our most stunning about the book and it is a beautiful story, is the history of the way mothers and parents were taught to think about children who we think of today as having autism. the word wasn't there but even when it was, topple little bit about this because this notion that somehow it is your fault if you are the parents, institutionalized and move on, i assume you didn't know before you started. >> there were sketches and when we fund history, really hadn't been written. you piece together fragments and things here and there. interviews and scattered medical writings, video tapes, radio
donald is a genius and they told their friends and the story is still alive 50 years later. dy actually counted the breaks. >> or asked him about its until we did a handful of years ago. he told us he had counted and that day. he just wanted them to like him. >> and it worked. they really admired him. >> there is a fantastic story about donald trump please and with the community embraced him and the way in which his potential was realized in an amazing fashion. the things that...
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Feb 14, 2016
02/16
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CSPAN2
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eye 33
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tell us a little about him and how you got to find him and develop that. >> long story short, we started to do a series called echoes of autism. at some point along the way john and i decided we needed to do something that would be more everlasting and really dig into the history of autism. in doing that digging -- >> we learn through the grapevine that the first person diagnosed with autism, what we learned he was not diagnosed until 1943. it is that recent. that person was still living somewhere in the united states many years later. i looking for clues of the reports that were written about him in 1930s and 19 forties, we found out what county he was living in. there is a little town of mississippi. we knew his first name was donald but in the literature they only gave the initial of his last name which with t. so karen who is a reporter but also knows how to dial a telephone went -- >> we went that we dial telephone. >> she started going through the tees in this county and she hit pay dirt one day. >> so a number of donald's, but not many in forest, mississippi. one day called and go
tell us a little about him and how you got to find him and develop that. >> long story short, we started to do a series called echoes of autism. at some point along the way john and i decided we needed to do something that would be more everlasting and really dig into the history of autism. in doing that digging -- >> we learn through the grapevine that the first person diagnosed with autism, what we learned he was not diagnosed until 1943. it is that recent. that person was still...
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Feb 29, 2016
02/16
by
WKRC
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eye 65
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it's a story that resonated with readers everywhere. that issue went through an unprecedented seven printings and was a new york times best-seller with over 20,000 copies. it also dealt with kamala's teen angst with humor sensitivity. (don & sana exchange- 011443)(cover partially w/ kamala at convenience store - "delicious, delicious infidel meat")sana: "the first page of the comic is her smelling a b.l.t. in the local convenience store and her saying i just want to smell islam and she's a muslim// it's a moment where you are trying to be not." (083601 gray) "i think diversity has always been really important in comics." (narr) john jay professor jonathan gray writes about comics and pop culture. (085138)"i think that marvel is representing this character at a time where we have some divisive political rhetoric i think that it shows that you know we can sort of embrace our diversity and not sort of be turned off by it."a sign of the character's importance to of the franchise series, the avengers, features kamala khan front and center.(na
it's a story that resonated with readers everywhere. that issue went through an unprecedented seven printings and was a new york times best-seller with over 20,000 copies. it also dealt with kamala's teen angst with humor sensitivity. (don & sana exchange- 011443)(cover partially w/ kamala at convenience store - "delicious, delicious infidel meat")sana: "the first page of the comic is her smelling a b.l.t. in the local convenience store and her saying i just want to smell...
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Feb 21, 2016
02/16
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ALJAZAM
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eye 59
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>> everyone has a story... and the only way to see all of america, is to see the human stories... one at a time. get to know the people, their struggles, their hardships and their triumphs. >> it gives me a lot of pride. >> our american story is written everyday. it's not always pretty, but it's real... and we show you like no-one else can. this is our american story. this is america tonight. >> these people have decided that today they will be arrested. >> i know that i'm being surveilled. >> people are not getting the care that they need. >> this is a crime against humanity. >> hands up... >> don't shoot. >> hands up... >> don't shoot. >> what do we want? >> justice. >> when do we want it? >> now. >> explosions going on... we're not quite sure - >> is that an i.e.d.? >> everyone has a story... and the only way to see all of america, is to see the human stories... one at a time. get to know the people, their struggles, their hardships and their triumphs. >> it gives me a lot of pride. >> our american story is written everyday. it's not always pretty, but it's real... and we show y
>> everyone has a story... and the only way to see all of america, is to see the human stories... one at a time. get to know the people, their struggles, their hardships and their triumphs. >> it gives me a lot of pride. >> our american story is written everyday. it's not always pretty, but it's real... and we show you like no-one else can. this is our american story. this is america tonight. >> these people have decided that today they will be arrested. >> i know...
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Feb 16, 2016
02/16
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KTNV
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eye 306
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now to a story you'll see only on 13-action news. a valley family is still searching for answers tonight after mysterous death of their young daughter. now.. the family of 12 year old maxine starmarie zepeda-lopez is consulting a lawyer because they feel something went wrong. they say maxine came from from school with a stomach ache and neck pain last week. 3-days later.. she was in the hospital dying. her parents say they originally took her to spring valley hospital where she was given nausea pills. hours later.. she was taken to umc by ambulance where her family was told it may be a virus.. but nothing more. 16 3524 to 1635 29 "they gave me no explanation for anything other than oh i think she caught a virus" 13 action news reached out to the nevada health district which syas it is not investigating the case. to the latest developments.... on the race for the white house!!! new battle lines are being drawn tonight.. republican candidate.... donald trump is unleashing.... on texas senator ted cruz.... calling him: a liar... unstable
now to a story you'll see only on 13-action news. a valley family is still searching for answers tonight after mysterous death of their young daughter. now.. the family of 12 year old maxine starmarie zepeda-lopez is consulting a lawyer because they feel something went wrong. they say maxine came from from school with a stomach ache and neck pain last week. 3-days later.. she was in the hospital dying. her parents say they originally took her to spring valley hospital where she was given nausea...
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Feb 23, 2016
02/16
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WTSP
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eye 54
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but first, parents a story you need to hear this morning. at 5:33, a shocking scandal at a bay area school over sexting continues. good morning, it's i'm allison kropff. good morning, it's i'm allison kropff. and i'm ian reitz.
but first, parents a story you need to hear this morning. at 5:33, a shocking scandal at a bay area school over sexting continues. good morning, it's i'm allison kropff. good morning, it's i'm allison kropff. and i'm ian reitz.
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Feb 28, 2016
02/16
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KNTV
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eye 82
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and make it a story for everybody? >> well, it was very difficult, as you can imagine. a father losing his adult son. and again not losing to car accident or a plane crash, but a very healthy, very extremely bright young man, you know, g because of his belief in a healthy lifestyle. >> was it easier to do the book and see it become a film? >> well, you know, the book i started writing it was part of my grieving process. and just, you know, going through my life -- >> what do you want to make sure that people get out of this filmsome what is your hope? >> what i definitely would like to see is what is already happening. the department of justice just snapped the manufacturers of the poison they're making. so what i, you know, would like to see is that a lot of, you know, a lot of people hear about this and learn more about this so they can be able to at least know they are not going to take all the supplements and stuff. >> something a film maker always wants. >> absolutely. one of the things present in the film is the
and make it a story for everybody? >> well, it was very difficult, as you can imagine. a father losing his adult son. and again not losing to car accident or a plane crash, but a very healthy, very extremely bright young man, you know, g because of his belief in a healthy lifestyle. >> was it easier to do the book and see it become a film? >> well, you know, the book i started writing it was part of my grieving process. and just, you know, going through my life -- >>...
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77
Feb 24, 2016
02/16
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WNYW
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eye 77
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bill: you are chasing a story about a company that i love that i use. sounds like a bit of a negative story. >> an uber driver in michigan has been arraigned on six murder counts.counts. closer to home i talked to a an impromptu girls night, heard good things. decided to download the app and give it a try. he showed up supposed to be driving a lincoln town car and he was in a different car. they proceeded about 8 miles more than halfway through hundred 38. saw flashing lights behind. >> freaking out texting my friends. getting arrested. i had the police officer say to him, you where you're driving on a suspended license. bill: her friend, she told in the whole ordeal. >> he expected to be delivered safely. got a strange call. asked to pick up the uber driver. he recorded the conversation. >> i didn't know that. >> a suspended license. >> they don't know yet. >> i reached out and asked them what the protocol is. we takewe take the safety of both riders and drivers very seriously. if you are choosing to use a service that is bringing better cost because o
bill: you are chasing a story about a company that i love that i use. sounds like a bit of a negative story. >> an uber driver in michigan has been arraigned on six murder counts.counts. closer to home i talked to a an impromptu girls night, heard good things. decided to download the app and give it a try. he showed up supposed to be driving a lincoln town car and he was in a different car. they proceeded about 8 miles more than halfway through hundred 38. saw flashing lights behind....
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24
Feb 14, 2016
02/16
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 24
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actually what was great is that the story -- is a legend that -- >> how many bricks are in the sight of the school building? >> 4,362. >> and they ran off and told their friends. they said the tell us the bricks story. so he told us and he said he hadn't counted them that they he just wanted them to like him. the way that his potential was realized at an amazing fashion. it was to think about children the children who we think of today as having autism. to talk about the notion that somehow it is your fault if you are the parent or if you institutionalize or moveon i'm sure you didn't know before you started. >> there was the interesting thing. >> they have fragments of things here and there. until 1970 or so when a mom took her child to an expert and said what's going on with my china but the answer was you did this by failing to love the child enough and karen has met some of the others who experience this today who are in their 80s and some in new york in fact did you spend hours with them and i will stop talking because the part that really impressed me it took hours because it wa
actually what was great is that the story -- is a legend that -- >> how many bricks are in the sight of the school building? >> 4,362. >> and they ran off and told their friends. they said the tell us the bricks story. so he told us and he said he hadn't counted them that they he just wanted them to like him. the way that his potential was realized at an amazing fashion. it was to think about children the children who we think of today as having autism. to talk about the...
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Feb 20, 2016
02/16
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CSPAN2
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eye 46
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there is a civil-rights turmoil going on and she tells the story looking back. >> guest: it's a lazy way of getting into the story. she takes take the train home, she is back home in the south again. she reminisces with her father who is elderly now about those bygone days. but go set watchmen comes from a theme in mockingbird which is atticus outside of the courtroom. i i atticus is the watch car standing guard. >> host: so what the editing process which was extensive and took more than a year or so. >> guest: more than two. >> host: so there is a lot work that when it. what emerged was a story and it was the childhood scout, precocious and it has a nice trick of sort of like mash was like the korean war but it was actually talk about the vietnam war. mockingbird is talking about the 1930s but what it was really talking about was the racial turmoil in the south of the 1950. that was the editing process. i was just fascinating and you can see this change you can see the voice is in third person that infers, this is for mockingbird. this is ostensibly 9-year-old, make him was an old to
there is a civil-rights turmoil going on and she tells the story looking back. >> guest: it's a lazy way of getting into the story. she takes take the train home, she is back home in the south again. she reminisces with her father who is elderly now about those bygone days. but go set watchmen comes from a theme in mockingbird which is atticus outside of the courtroom. i i atticus is the watch car standing guard. >> host: so what the editing process which was extensive and took more...
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Feb 5, 2016
02/16
by
ALJAZAM
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eye 69
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week on talk to al jazeera grammy winning cassandra wilson >> singing it from the heart, telling a story >>> she was in a home filled with jazz, she played the piano followed by the guitar and was working by the mid 70s >> there was something that was missing in my life >>> she incorporated folk music in her songs >> i bring disparate elements together and realising common ground. i think it is important to do that musically and i think it is important for us to do that in the world >>> she left jackson more than 30 years ago but says the delta is an important part of who she is >> there is a certain creative that you drop as a result of all of the pressure that there is in being and living here >>> she comes from the linage of billy ho already beening liday. she pay-- holliday. she has a touch of her own in her music. i caught up with her at jenny's supper club. so good to see you. >> thank you so much >>> we should share with the audience that we have a connection, same home town, a lot of same friends >> yes >>> and i'm a huge fan >> thank you >>> let's talk about home. what kind of m
week on talk to al jazeera grammy winning cassandra wilson >> singing it from the heart, telling a story >>> she was in a home filled with jazz, she played the piano followed by the guitar and was working by the mid 70s >> there was something that was missing in my life >>> she incorporated folk music in her songs >> i bring disparate elements together and realising common ground. i think it is important to do that musically and i think it is important for us...
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859
Feb 22, 2016
02/16
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WABC
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eye 859
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more on those stories in a moment. we begin with a developing story, a tragic story. the death of a 16-month-old boy. how did this happen and who's responsible? >> investigators say the child died while in the care of a babysitter. right now that sitter and her boyfriend are being questioned by police. >> the child died in the park hill section of staten island. eyewitness news reporter tim fleischer is there tonight with our lead story. >> the residents and the neighbors who live here also know this young boy and his family can't understand what's happened. >> we can't understand. i've seen the baby just the other day. and he was all running around and everything. >> 16-month-old anthony delgado seen here in an earlier picture found in cardiac arrest late sunday night. ems first responders found the baby here at this apartment building on stuban street in the park hill section. he was rushed to staten island university hospital where he died. eyewitness news is learning hospital doctors observed
more on those stories in a moment. we begin with a developing story, a tragic story. the death of a 16-month-old boy. how did this happen and who's responsible? >> investigators say the child died while in the care of a babysitter. right now that sitter and her boyfriend are being questioned by police. >> the child died in the park hill section of staten island. eyewitness news reporter tim fleischer is there tonight with our lead story. >> the residents and the neighbors who...
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90
Feb 21, 2016
02/16
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FBC
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eye 90
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for sawmills and commercial fishing, and just down the road is one man's strange inheritance and a storyith a hollywood ending. >> my name's barry martin. i inherited a tiny, hundred-year-old house from a little old lady. if there ever was a real-estate niche, this is one. >> hi, barry. i'm jamie. >> hi, jamie. nice to meet you. >> i meet barry in front of this little house. yep, this is it -- his strange inheritance. it's just 600 square feet, and it's now surrounded by a huge shopping mall -- a mall that the unlikely heir in this story helped build. >> who leaves this to somebody? >> well, edith left it to me. >> edith? >> yep. >> love to learn more. >> okay. come on. >> barry explains that when this house was built over a hundred years ago, ballard, washington, was the shingle-mill capital of the world, with 20 mills producing 3 million shingles a day. >> there was fishing on elliot bay there, and the shingle-mill industry, all along shilshole avenue here. >> cass o'callaghan from the ballard historical society tells me more. did the neighborhood really change over the years? >> in ab
for sawmills and commercial fishing, and just down the road is one man's strange inheritance and a storyith a hollywood ending. >> my name's barry martin. i inherited a tiny, hundred-year-old house from a little old lady. if there ever was a real-estate niche, this is one. >> hi, barry. i'm jamie. >> hi, jamie. nice to meet you. >> i meet barry in front of this little house. yep, this is it -- his strange inheritance. it's just 600 square feet, and it's now surrounded by...
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58
Feb 24, 2016
02/16
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WTXF
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eye 58
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. >> a story about a young woman.ou will understand. >> i was test -- i was texting my friend. >> spend your whole life avoiding germs, not biting your nails, avoiding door handles and most importantly washing your hand. do you ever go out of your way to clean the things that touch your face daily? i am talking about the stuff in your makeup bag. i take some products to have them tested for bacteria. and spoiler alert. ♪ >> that is what they found. that is bacteria. dr. and his assistant help me pick some items out to test. help me picked out some items. we have a reynolds picked out and we're going to label them and see which one has the most bacteria and take it from there. we will have an eyeliner. and then some cream blush. foundation brush. to choose of mascara. in the liquid eyeliner. the concealer). all right. let's see how it goes. next small samples were taken. >> did you write in. >> after all the samples were ready to risperidone separate petri dishes. >> there going to settle onto the surface. antibacteria
. >> a story about a young woman.ou will understand. >> i was test -- i was texting my friend. >> spend your whole life avoiding germs, not biting your nails, avoiding door handles and most importantly washing your hand. do you ever go out of your way to clean the things that touch your face daily? i am talking about the stuff in your makeup bag. i take some products to have them tested for bacteria. and spoiler alert. ♪ >> that is what they found. that is bacteria....
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79
Feb 7, 2016
02/16
by
KPTH
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eye 79
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is a great story. generation and it shines a light on what is going on now. >> anytime to do a movie with real-life heroes, there is a to see them, the first thing, it putting it all in perspective. >> it is about risk-taking and risking lives to save others. we appreciate that. >> it is great to support a group of men and women who do not get patted on the back. they are famously quietet and the job is no less important. it is to save people and that is what they dedicate their lives to do. while they would never actively seek it, it is a good job to do the storytelling for them. >> it is life-affirming and it is important that everyone is able to do that. it makes you feel like we could all do more and that is what life is about. it is very complex. >> she is a british star who became a disney princess and an actress who is the object of johnny depp's obsession. together, they are remakinin the twist. >> it began with the black plague. it began to rise. >> this can get the audience to watch pride and
is a great story. generation and it shines a light on what is going on now. >> anytime to do a movie with real-life heroes, there is a to see them, the first thing, it putting it all in perspective. >> it is about risk-taking and risking lives to save others. we appreciate that. >> it is great to support a group of men and women who do not get patted on the back. they are famously quietet and the job is no less important. it is to save people and that is what they dedicate...
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40
Feb 7, 2016
02/16
by
ALJAZAM
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eye 40
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it was fined an undisclosed amount and warned by the state's media watchdog ostensibly over a story onkraine. at that day it published a pies on the private life -- a piece on the private life and finances of vladimir putin's daughter. the times reported that she and her husband held corporate holdings of $1.3 billion. the magazine came under attack and crashed. the kremlin is suspected of using hackers to silence its critics. attacks against journalists in afghanistan seem to be spreading. last week we reported on the talt ban suicide bomber who killed 7 employees in kabul. since then, another was shot dead in the eastern province, a reporter for the local state-owned broadcaster. two days later men stormed the house of app freelance journal. >> he was beaten. afghan president ashraf ghani issued a decree to protect the workers, promising to find the attacks. >> there was a comment bit president abdul fatah al-sisi, briefly. islam was fan into custody for running a website without a licence. no one knows what the website was. we do know that the cartoonists' facebook page which secure
it was fined an undisclosed amount and warned by the state's media watchdog ostensibly over a story onkraine. at that day it published a pies on the private life -- a piece on the private life and finances of vladimir putin's daughter. the times reported that she and her husband held corporate holdings of $1.3 billion. the magazine came under attack and crashed. the kremlin is suspected of using hackers to silence its critics. attacks against journalists in afghanistan seem to be spreading....
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72
Feb 27, 2016
02/16
by
WTKR
tv
eye 72
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it's a story that resonated with readers everywhere. that issue went through an unprecedented seven printings and was a "new york times" bestseller, with over 20,000 copies. >> first page of the comic is her smelling a b.l.t. in a local convenience store. and fake bakeon is forbidden in islam. it's just a moment where you are trying to be something that you're not. >> diversity has always been really important in comics. >> reporter: john jay professor jonathan gray writes about comics and pop culture. >> that marvel is representing this character at a time when we have some, you know, divisive political rhetoric, i think it shows that we can sort of embrace our diversity and not sort of be turned off by it. >> reporter: "ms. marvel" has been a phenomenon, a sign of the character's importance to marvel, the most recent issue of the franchise series "the front and center. amanat says their intention was never political. >> we went in to try to tell a unique story, who muslims are and who muslims can be, but really about who a good person
it's a story that resonated with readers everywhere. that issue went through an unprecedented seven printings and was a "new york times" bestseller, with over 20,000 copies. >> first page of the comic is her smelling a b.l.t. in a local convenience store. and fake bakeon is forbidden in islam. it's just a moment where you are trying to be something that you're not. >> diversity has always been really important in comics. >> reporter: john jay professor jonathan gray...
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135
Feb 28, 2016
02/16
by
KPIX
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this will be a big story in 2016. ron, words to close, we have about a minute and a half. >> we often say and have heard that people are spiritual but not religious. i think the two go hand-in- hand. religion tells us how to do it. that is prayer, study, worship and service. spirituality tells us why we do it. for god, for christ, for the spirit. i think you cannot have one without the other. >> there we have it. that is the new year. we are out of time. ron swisher, i look forward to hosting you in 2016. why don't you get out and go to church. pick one around the corner. i'm cedric ford boroughs. thank you for watching mosaic. >> thank you for everyone who puts us on the air and supports us. happy new year. ,,,, [music] i love my sister. my heart doesn't see race. love is love. >>> hello everyone. welcome to bay sunday. i'm your host, frank mallicoat. if you would like to connect with us, we would love to hear from you. just go to our website, click on connect and you will get the information and the link to our socia
this will be a big story in 2016. ron, words to close, we have about a minute and a half. >> we often say and have heard that people are spiritual but not religious. i think the two go hand-in- hand. religion tells us how to do it. that is prayer, study, worship and service. spirituality tells us why we do it. for god, for christ, for the spirit. i think you cannot have one without the other. >> there we have it. that is the new year. we are out of time. ron swisher, i look forward...
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57
Feb 20, 2016
02/16
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 57
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it is a one-story brick rancher. you are going down the street and looking for harper lee's house and you pass it it. it is very simple. she has this simple straightforward life. it is not necessarily true she is a recluse. most of the time she was living in new york. >> guest: she said i want to be the jane austin of the south. meaning she wanted to write about a region and the people in that region. in her own life she kept close to people she group, went to church with and could say hello on the street. in new york her circle was small. friends wrote her from alabama and they wrote her we are coming up and would like to meet some authors and she said so would i. she loved architecture and was a hobby on pointing out when things were made. she was a baseball fan and had a friend from the new yorker she would pick up for lunch and they would go to ball games together. when something invited her to midtown or manhattan she said i never come down there. >> host: she is never living high on the hog. >> guest: she was n
it is a one-story brick rancher. you are going down the street and looking for harper lee's house and you pass it it. it is very simple. she has this simple straightforward life. it is not necessarily true she is a recluse. most of the time she was living in new york. >> guest: she said i want to be the jane austin of the south. meaning she wanted to write about a region and the people in that region. in her own life she kept close to people she group, went to church with and could say...
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75
Feb 27, 2016
02/16
by
WLTX
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eye 75
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we wanted to tell a story about a young individual coming >> reporter: to tell that story, amanat drew on her own childhood growing up as a muslim in new jersey. >> i had this one instance right after the world trade center bombing this kid came up to me and was like, "hey, um, can you tell your people to stop attacking us?" it was a big turning point in my life because it was the first moment where i realized i was the other. >> reporter: she found solace in comic books, like the "x-men", which features a band face of prejudice. in the first issue of "ms. marvel," a nod to an earlier series by the same name, kamala khan shape-shifts into a blond, blue-eyed hero before her father convinces her that she's perfect as she really is. it's a story that resonated with readers everywhere. that issue went through an unprecedented seven printings and was a "new york times" bestseller, with over 20,000 copies. her smelling a b.l.t. in a local convenience store. and fake bakeon is forbidden in islam. it's just a moment where you are trying to be something that you're not. >> diversity has always
we wanted to tell a story about a young individual coming >> reporter: to tell that story, amanat drew on her own childhood growing up as a muslim in new jersey. >> i had this one instance right after the world trade center bombing this kid came up to me and was like, "hey, um, can you tell your people to stop attacking us?" it was a big turning point in my life because it was the first moment where i realized i was the other. >> reporter: she found solace in comic...
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Feb 2, 2016
02/16
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KUSA
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we have an update to a story we brought you yesterday....about a police officer and his k-9 partner. lions and tigers, but no bears. into some unusual passengers. they stopped to help out a stranded driver near saw these guys hanging out in the back of the truck. like a little tiger scared them one bit. one officer even snapped a picture holding one of the they say the truck animals when it broke down. we have an update to a story we brought you yesterday....about a police officer and his k-9 partner. city leaders in marietta ohio said officer matt hickey couldn't keep the police pup named ajax because the dog was considered city property. ajax was set to be auctioned off. his friends set up a go fund me site so officer hickey could bid to keep his dog - but it never came to that. after the story went viral, the city decided to make hickey an auxiliary member of the department in retirement, so he can keep ajax. all dps schools closed. dougco... jeffco... adams 12 five star and littleton all closed... you can check the 9news app and 9news-dot-com for closures and delays. the alerts a
we have an update to a story we brought you yesterday....about a police officer and his k-9 partner. lions and tigers, but no bears. into some unusual passengers. they stopped to help out a stranded driver near saw these guys hanging out in the back of the truck. like a little tiger scared them one bit. one officer even snapped a picture holding one of the they say the truck animals when it broke down. we have an update to a story we brought you yesterday....about a police officer and his k-9...
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Feb 8, 2016
02/16
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WKMG
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this is not a story. >> reporter: in the one interview he did sit down for dehaven knows a lot more about what it takes to win at football. than what makes an important story. in terms of what happened to me, if i only got a limited amount of time left, why would i want to spend it feeling sorry for myself? >> reporter: last spring at the age of 66, bruce was diagnosed with an incurable form of prostate cancer. obviously, that diagnosis would have driven many people into retirement, but not bruce. in the end, i wanted to coach. >> reporter: why does coaching win out? >> i just love coaching. coaching is teaching. for whatever reason, it's in my blood. i mean -- i'll probably cry after this ball game just because -- we're not going to have another week of practice. >> reporter: in fact he loves practice so much he actually scheduled his cancer treatments around it. never missed a single day of work all season. living don't they? i find myself lingering after practice. thinking about, i want to make a little picture here in my mind. in case i am not doing this soon. >> reporter: he knows th
this is not a story. >> reporter: in the one interview he did sit down for dehaven knows a lot more about what it takes to win at football. than what makes an important story. in terms of what happened to me, if i only got a limited amount of time left, why would i want to spend it feeling sorry for myself? >> reporter: last spring at the age of 66, bruce was diagnosed with an incurable form of prostate cancer. obviously, that diagnosis would have driven many people into retirement,...
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Feb 25, 2016
02/16
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WFLA
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back to gene and gayle. >> thank you so much, leslee. of a story. a woman in washington state is planning to -- washington state is planning to make a brand new necklace after fining a rare pearl in her dinner. >> yeah, lucky lady here. she was out on a rare date night with her husband when she bit into a clam and found this. what is it? it's a purple pearl and it's so flawless, even a gemoologist was skeptical. he thought it was a joke but it's real. and it's worth $600. aapparently the clam lives along east coast is known for occasion. you think they just come from oysters but there you go. >> with my luck, i would bite in and get a broke pearl. >>> well it's a question many people have asked, what would it cost if you bought one of everything on amazon.com. of time on their hand, actually calculated how much money you would need to go on that shopping spree. >>> and next, the american astronaut about his year-long stay in space. when he is due back is just ahead. >>> he has just one more week left up in that awesome space station. >> american astr
back to gene and gayle. >> thank you so much, leslee. of a story. a woman in washington state is planning to -- washington state is planning to make a brand new necklace after fining a rare pearl in her dinner. >> yeah, lucky lady here. she was out on a rare date night with her husband when she bit into a clam and found this. what is it? it's a purple pearl and it's so flawless, even a gemoologist was skeptical. he thought it was a joke but it's real. and it's worth $600....
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Feb 19, 2016
02/16
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WAVY
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eye 25
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. >> plus everyone has a story and tonight we have a really special love story proving it's never too late to tie the knot. and we wrote a song called "never too late for love," and the glorious," victoria clark's going to sing it for us.us tony award-winning. >> you know what it is. it's a birthday. hannah kotb is 9. >> yes she is. >> happy birthday to hannah. wishing her a good one today. >> and equally important, it is national wine day. >> what do you mean, equally important? a child was born! into the world. >> well, this child was born many, many, many decades ago and national wine day is a good day. >> you know how many tweets i got about national wine day? what do people think? >> we were shooting a little thing on the street the other day and a big truck goes by and these guys lean out the window and say "where's my wine?" w that's not funny. >> almost as big as spanky tuesday. >> spanky tuesday's getting way too big. by the way, if you saw the well daily news"th today, check out the "daily news" column because it gives a great description of spanky tuesday.ti worth a read. >
. >> plus everyone has a story and tonight we have a really special love story proving it's never too late to tie the knot. and we wrote a song called "never too late for love," and the glorious," victoria clark's going to sing it for us.us tony award-winning. >> you know what it is. it's a birthday. hannah kotb is 9. >> yes she is. >> happy birthday to hannah. wishing her a good one today. >> and equally important, it is national wine day. >>...
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Feb 27, 2016
02/16
by
KLAS
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chris maathuis and there's a coming out of unlv. the story on one of our own ((dave courvoisier)) > got a problem? tell michelle. or just drop her name. ((paula francis)) our consumer advocate michelle mortensen joins us now with one way people are getting answers to their problems ... without much effort on her part at all. ((michelle mortensen)) yeah ... i really can't take credit for this one ... but it is an interesting story on how ... you .. yes you .. can solve your own problems. clay called us recently ... upset about a car he purchased. he claims the dealer added a security system to the deal .. even though he did not authorizie it and that it jacked up the price 700 bucks. he wanted my help getting his refund. ((michelle mortensen)) well, we called him back, and it turns he called me to get invovled ... they immediately gave him a refund. he told my team he was very appreciative for the help. ((dave courvoisier)) and tonight you're going to be helping even more folks out ... by giving us the secret to saving money on prescription dr
chris maathuis and there's a coming out of unlv. the story on one of our own ((dave courvoisier)) > got a problem? tell michelle. or just drop her name. ((paula francis)) our consumer advocate michelle mortensen joins us now with one way people are getting answers to their problems ... without much effort on her part at all. ((michelle mortensen)) yeah ... i really can't take credit for this one ... but it is an interesting story on how ... you .. yes you .. can solve your own problems. clay...
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Feb 8, 2016
02/16
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WUSA
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phil devils into a story that -- delves no a story that gripped our area. e murder of nicole lovell allegedly by two virginia tech students and dr. phil mcgraw joins us live from los angeles with a preview. good to talk to you. on wednesday, have you an exclusive with nicole lovell's father and i heard him say he tried to monitor his daughter's actions but doesn't do enough. what more could he have done? >> well, andrea, it is a powerful story and we will hear him say some things that could break this case in a very different direction. parents need to really not worry about invading the privacy of their children. they need to know where they are going. they need to know who they are talking to. children have the knowledge to use the internet, but they don't have the wisdom. we need to provide the wisdom. people just aren't who they say they are on the internet many times. and so these children can get suckered. they can get really pulled in to these false identities. and i guarantee you, he wishes that he had done much more. but are you going to hear some t
phil devils into a story that -- delves no a story that gripped our area. e murder of nicole lovell allegedly by two virginia tech students and dr. phil mcgraw joins us live from los angeles with a preview. good to talk to you. on wednesday, have you an exclusive with nicole lovell's father and i heard him say he tried to monitor his daughter's actions but doesn't do enough. what more could he have done? >> well, andrea, it is a powerful story and we will hear him say some things that...
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Feb 3, 2016
02/16
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WCPO
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julie o'neill"we're actually not doing a story on positive people in the workplace, but we wanted to find one because channel 9 is doing a special promotion. so i wonder if you would like to have a hundred dollars?"trishyup... that is much appreciated and i love the fact that the people here understand that i care about everybody. that i always want to see people smile even when they're having a bad day 'cause that makes it better, way." trish says she's going to use supplies.stay tuned for more free money surprises -- daily on nine on your side at six. today they signed on the dotted line. there was baseball hitters...and soccer kickers...but most of all, they were football players. it was national letter of intent day. it's a fun day for most....big kids not used to wearing ties check their hair....they get the thumbs up.-a lot of proud coaches on display as well. tom bolden of colerain getting all fired up as he proudly showed off his class.-moms and dads...beaming and taking pictures...proud of accomplishment....happy they have less college to pay for. was at elder...-they had a h
julie o'neill"we're actually not doing a story on positive people in the workplace, but we wanted to find one because channel 9 is doing a special promotion. so i wonder if you would like to have a hundred dollars?"trishyup... that is much appreciated and i love the fact that the people here understand that i care about everybody. that i always want to see people smile even when they're having a bad day 'cause that makes it better, way." trish says she's going to use...
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Feb 16, 2016
02/16
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CSPAN
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is a story about bill clinton back on the campaign trail. line.s a in his post white house years, he has become a democratic surrogate, but he seems to lose it. what are your impressions? guest: it?at do you think about >> you said that article and with other ve democrats and we saw that in democratic convention in charlotte bill clinton made the case for obama's re-election ore crisply than we heard from obama. when he's campaigning in a very emotional frame of mind which of he is whenever he's campaigning for hillary clinton sometimes the emotion is getting the better of judgment. certainly he was ineffective for her in aigned 2008. this year we haven't seen one of where he stepped it into his grievance, that he is angry on secretary clinton's behalf. he is probably not always it as effective in that contest p rise soon the line is tongue-in-cheek. . don't think he has lost it but we have seen him be more effective and less effective. host: republican line. caller: good morning. i used to love politico. i think you all lost credibility when
is a story about bill clinton back on the campaign trail. line.s a in his post white house years, he has become a democratic surrogate, but he seems to lose it. what are your impressions? guest: it?at do you think about >> you said that article and with other ve democrats and we saw that in democratic convention in charlotte bill clinton made the case for obama's re-election ore crisply than we heard from obama. when he's campaigning in a very emotional frame of mind which of he is...
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Feb 25, 2016
02/16
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KYW
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a and how the information we provide, can make an impact. well, yesterday we did the story on that viewer who became a patient, today we followed up with the brain surgeon. >> in this part it is all healed it extend up this far. >> reporter: john foreign is recovering from brain surgery and working on getting his strength back with the help of his girlfriend, january he will dell sandra who does a lot of cooking for him. >> here's to health, happiness. >> reporter: john, 63, lives in south jersey has no symptoms and was in great shape and experienced scubadivers and instructor, volunteer fire fighter and adventure and traveler. >> i was totally shock. >> about a million people living with brain tumors. >> reporter: john was watching cbs-3 in october and saw our story on a mobile mri offering free screenings in several cities. the as part of the columbia university research project, sponsored by the brain tumor foundation. >> so i strolled over and rest is history. >> reporter: follow-up testing revealed the deadly tumor that was successfully removed during a 14 hour operati
a and how the information we provide, can make an impact. well, yesterday we did the story on that viewer who became a patient, today we followed up with the brain surgeon. >> in this part it is all healed it extend up this far. >> reporter: john foreign is recovering from brain surgery and working on getting his strength back with the help of his girlfriend, january he will dell sandra who does a lot of cooking for him. >> here's to health, happiness. >> reporter: john,...
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Feb 26, 2016
02/16
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WUSA
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. >> this story has a sad ending, and it is a story about is a story about a place full of stories. >> we picked a a commodity that we thought would be around forever. >> reporter: they opened 25 years ago, before e-books were offered on candles and ipads. >> you cannot change the world. wouldn't happen is happening period >> the younger generation is not reading physical books anymore. but you are missing the touch, the field, the smell, the physical aspect of turning the page. this store has been our love. >> knows - - frills, the focus is on the books. >> they can tell you the section it is in but they won't actually walk you over and pluck it off the shelf for you . >> you can lose yourself. >> we have a really good selection and a great atmosphere. >> they spent 25 years in the good company of dickens and twain and the likes. > name. we know what is going on in their lives. we sit down and we chat you know and that is the aspect of mom and pop shops that america is losing. it is the end of a chapter. >> what a story it was. and it lives on in the people who continue to tell it. t
. >> this story has a sad ending, and it is a story about is a story about a place full of stories. >> we picked a a commodity that we thought would be around forever. >> reporter: they opened 25 years ago, before e-books were offered on candles and ipads. >> you cannot change the world. wouldn't happen is happening period >> the younger generation is not reading physical books anymore. but you are missing the touch, the field, the smell, the physical aspect of...
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48
Feb 29, 2016
02/16
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 48
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there has been a tightening of controls requiring news organizations and journalists and blockers to run stories about national security past military sensors. military censorship is nothing new in the country. the extent is. in parliamentary systems like israel, prime ministers will take on a second portfolio. some double as minister of defence and finances, depending where political priorities lie. binyamin netanyahu's decision to double as minister for communications provides an idea of how he sees the news media and how important the message is to the future of the government. the starting point this week is jerusalem. the israelian conflict is one of those stories that moves in conflicts. the war in 2008, 2012, and 2014 again. it goes through diplomatic stages, pauses for peace making. currently the conflict is in an intifada stage, palestinian rebelians against occupying israeli forces began in the late 1980s, flared up and has come to the holy city, the jerusalem intifada. that phase coincides with the foreign media covering the story becoming part of the story. >> any time there's re-ent
there has been a tightening of controls requiring news organizations and journalists and blockers to run stories about national security past military sensors. military censorship is nothing new in the country. the extent is. in parliamentary systems like israel, prime ministers will take on a second portfolio. some double as minister of defence and finances, depending where political priorities lie. binyamin netanyahu's decision to double as minister for communications provides an idea of how...
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Feb 16, 2016
02/16
by
KTNV
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a story.... you're all talking about. a -3- month old puppy.. weighing just -13 pounds... you had more questions... so when you ask... we investigate plus.. investigating police shootings the thin blue line between officers and civilians is getting thicker. you're concerned about whether they're going to be truthful, or whether they're going to get their stories straight. a 13 action news looks into the leniency provided to officers you and i will never see.. weather updates anytime.. just download the free ktnv mobile app for your smartphone or tablet. we'll be right back. narrator: for speaking truth women's rights are human rights. narrator: and having the fortitude to keep government out of women's personal healthcare decisions. planned parenthood action fund endorses hillary clinton. just like the league of conservation voters for her bold plan to attack climate change. and the human rights campaign fund... because hillary believes only love should decide which two people can marry. not just a progressive. a progressive who gets results. i'm hi
a story.... you're all talking about. a -3- month old puppy.. weighing just -13 pounds... you had more questions... so when you ask... we investigate plus.. investigating police shootings the thin blue line between officers and civilians is getting thicker. you're concerned about whether they're going to be truthful, or whether they're going to get their stories straight. a 13 action news looks into the leniency provided to officers you and i will never see.. weather updates anytime.. just...
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56
Feb 3, 2016
02/16
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 56
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it tells a story of an african prince who is enslaved and a commoner. i am the commoner.e're thrown together. we start talking on the boat and it ends with - i don't remember how it ends. nothing ends well in slavery >>> so true. i was astounded at the number of musicians who were born in or grew up in mississippi, these people, a lot, so many of them. what >> it's the water, i guess >>> what is it about there, do you think, that musicality. >> it is a strange place. we're at the bottom in many ways, metaphorically, physically. i think you have to develop a sort kind of curousity, eccentricity. there's pressure of being and living there >>> this is talk to al jazeera. when we come back, she talks about the legacy she wants to leave behind for future generations of jazz singers. >> this is al jazeera america live from new york. >> at 7:00 - "news roundup". tony harris gives you a fast-paced recap of the day's events. >> this is the first line of defense. >> we have an exclusive story tonight. >> then at 8:00 - john seigenthaler brings you the top stories from across americ
it tells a story of an african prince who is enslaved and a commoner. i am the commoner.e're thrown together. we start talking on the boat and it ends with - i don't remember how it ends. nothing ends well in slavery >>> so true. i was astounded at the number of musicians who were born in or grew up in mississippi, these people, a lot, so many of them. what >> it's the water, i guess >>> what is it about there, do you think, that musicality. >> it is a strange...