135
135
May 4, 2013
05/13
by
KQEH
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why are things askew here in the world? god gave us instructions.e are not following the instructions on the box. the instructions on the box are all around us. look at nature, we think of nature because of the store we tell ourselves. everything is survival of the fittest, but it is not. it is a cooperative system that runs. it is all around us. the instructions are everywhere and we have not looked. we have not looked and seen the oak tree. the human body is a cooperative system. when it does not, when something is taking it more than a need, the body shuts down. the answer is right in front of us. this idea of god, all of this book -- a mystical tradition say god is and everything. god would be in that system all around us. that is what we talk about in the book. tavis: i did not mean to cast aspersions on anyone who happens to be a christian in this business, i do not know many folk to operate at the level who are so open about their beliefs. me ask this question without offending anybody. herdoes one own his or ethics, ineliefs, this business a
why are things askew here in the world? god gave us instructions.e are not following the instructions on the box. the instructions on the box are all around us. look at nature, we think of nature because of the store we tell ourselves. everything is survival of the fittest, but it is not. it is a cooperative system that runs. it is all around us. the instructions are everywhere and we have not looked. we have not looked and seen the oak tree. the human body is a cooperative system. when it does...
798
798
May 6, 2013
05/13
by
KNTV
tv
eye 798
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, and so people may have noticed that. >> askew versus askew. >> a little hidden thing. >> i like thens® lenses automatically filter just the right amount of light. so you see everything the way it's meant to be seen. maybe even a little better. visit your eyecare professional today to ask about our newest lenses, transitions vantage and transitions xtractive lenses. experience life well lit. ask which transitions adaptive lens is best for you. not giving a thought to their own satisfaction. like this woman here. hello! what's your name? linda. linda obviously sacrificed a good haircut so that her daughter could have a warm coat. it's windy. yeah. now you can help people like linda stop with the sacrificing. tell them about light & fit greek nonfat yogurt twice the protein and 80 calories. thick... creamy. taste satisfying, right? eat! light and fit greek! ♪ dannon! wow, why didn't they think smaof this sooner?ogy. oh benjamin, you have an absolute sea of treasures here. but that peculiar contraption there has caught my eye... ...would you indulge me? you see, the smart tube reaches t
, and so people may have noticed that. >> askew versus askew. >> a little hidden thing. >> i like thens® lenses automatically filter just the right amount of light. so you see everything the way it's meant to be seen. maybe even a little better. visit your eyecare professional today to ask about our newest lenses, transitions vantage and transitions xtractive lenses. experience life well lit. ask which transitions adaptive lens is best for you. not giving a thought to their...
356
356
May 5, 2013
05/13
by
KICU
tv
eye 356
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round in a faculty parking section of the north garage when he noticed a car that was parked slightly askew. he ran the plate and found that the registration sticker did not match the vehicle, which had been expired for three years. further investigation found that the registration sticker had beed stolen from a student's vehicle that was parked in the same garage. the owner of the faculty vehicle, joe pinheiro, is a peer mentor on campus. o officer van der hoek went to the student outreach department to question him. pinheiro claimed that he was short on money so he couldn't afford to register his vehicle and that a friend had given him the sticker. a $10,000 arrest warrant was set out for pinhiero, who was arrested on campus on the morning of april 5th. "university police department is here to protect the academic environment here on the university campus. we, uh, our goal is to protect students , faculty and staff from people who would prey on them."a after some crime and punishment, joseph pinheiro is back at work in the student outreach department. he never got back to me when i tried
round in a faculty parking section of the north garage when he noticed a car that was parked slightly askew. he ran the plate and found that the registration sticker did not match the vehicle, which had been expired for three years. further investigation found that the registration sticker had beed stolen from a student's vehicle that was parked in the same garage. the owner of the faculty vehicle, joe pinheiro, is a peer mentor on campus. o officer van der hoek went to the student outreach...
139
139
May 30, 2013
05/13
by
KQED
tv
eye 139
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once the software knows where all those features are, it uses a formula to convert the slightly askew photo into a three dimensional image. and that allows them to turn the suspects face directly toward the camera, virtually. >> now, we're using the frontal pose, called the normalization pose. we're going to enter it into the facial recognition software. we want to use this probe image of an unknown individual against to our gallery of known individuals, and we basically have close to four million images that we use within the n.y.p.d. >> reporter: the images are mugshots, but in this demonstration they are actually cops. police here say they don't look for a match by trolling through drivers license, passport or visa photos, much less facebook. >> now, in order to put that in, we input it into our facial recognition software. we want to line up the eyes as best as possible. try to center it. and you can see, even though this picture is not aesthetically nice to humans looking at it, you can see that it can work, though, within the software >> reporter: in the demo, the face is a matc
once the software knows where all those features are, it uses a formula to convert the slightly askew photo into a three dimensional image. and that allows them to turn the suspects face directly toward the camera, virtually. >> now, we're using the frontal pose, called the normalization pose. we're going to enter it into the facial recognition software. we want to use this probe image of an unknown individual against to our gallery of known individuals, and we basically have close to...
214
214
May 8, 2013
05/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 214
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there any indications at that point, looking back, any indications that something might have been askew>> looking back, i can only say that he hugged the father. the father hugged him. he knew the family. he helped get coffee and doughnuts to people who went out and looked for gina. so he was very much a part of it. you know, hooe's like a classic serial pedophile. gets imbedded with the family, the community, even though he has another thing going on. the only other thing i knew, i would see him sometimes at mcdonald's buying a lot of breakfast food. i didn't think he had a large family. i knew his wife had left him or whatever. i didn't ask him why he bought all that food, thought he was giving the dog some mcdonald's stuff. >> khalid suma, community organizer now. for a number of years, martin, worked with the city of cleveland. as you heard there, helped organize the search effort for gina dejesus who was reunited with her family earlier today. i want to show you something else that developed while we were talking, martin. the evidence response team that i mentioned, they have been
there any indications at that point, looking back, any indications that something might have been askew>> looking back, i can only say that he hugged the father. the father hugged him. he knew the family. he helped get coffee and doughnuts to people who went out and looked for gina. so he was very much a part of it. you know, hooe's like a classic serial pedophile. gets imbedded with the family, the community, even though he has another thing going on. the only other thing i knew, i would...
160
160
May 3, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 160
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"icons and idiots," the basic premise is the most successful leaders are mentally and emotionally askewnt, stubborn, opinionated and domineering and that is why they're successful. >> i would point out, strong leadership personalities are rarely nice, well-balanced, calm, reasonable people. they're always slightly off the wall, and you have to take the good with the bad and when i say, cons and idiots and i don't mean some are icons and some are idiots. i think every strong leader is probably a little bit of both and if he or she weren't slightly unbalanced like that they probably wouldn't be doing the job for the shareholders. i think people will enjoy the book. it's very funny and it teaches good leadership lessons. >> in the meantime, does it mean you will never get a really successful leader as president because they won't get through the political process? >> that's exactly the point. that's why when you get really strong leaders they don't come up through the democratic process. they're -- and they can be strong on the good side or on the negative side as we've seen in a number of
"icons and idiots," the basic premise is the most successful leaders are mentally and emotionally askewnt, stubborn, opinionated and domineering and that is why they're successful. >> i would point out, strong leadership personalities are rarely nice, well-balanced, calm, reasonable people. they're always slightly off the wall, and you have to take the good with the bad and when i say, cons and idiots and i don't mean some are icons and some are idiots. i think every strong...
115
115
May 4, 2013
05/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 115
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askewously avoided it because witness ounce of the tee deepest rabbit holes you can run down, and many of the people, i think it's quite extraordinary you're still standing here. many of them people who have gone down that rabbit hole never emerge again. they vanish. it always scared me and part of it, my belief that the evidence was collected in such a weird way, so much remained uncollected. and so much pressure from different diverse interest groups to believe one thing versus another. who knows how you could ever get at the truth. >> this is a rabbit hole i did go down beginning -- >> being famous for it, my undergraduate thesis, wrote a letter to earl warren, can i interview you, and she did me the greatest favor possible, he said, no, i promise node one can interview me so see the general counsel so i wrote the general counsel and said chief justice warren suggested i see you and that opened the doors to the rabbit hole. but you can have a coverup and not a conspiracy. the conspiracy could be the coverup. and when kennedy was killed, there were -- everyone had an interest in not
askewously avoided it because witness ounce of the tee deepest rabbit holes you can run down, and many of the people, i think it's quite extraordinary you're still standing here. many of them people who have gone down that rabbit hole never emerge again. they vanish. it always scared me and part of it, my belief that the evidence was collected in such a weird way, so much remained uncollected. and so much pressure from different diverse interest groups to believe one thing versus another. who...
586
586
May 18, 2013
05/13
by
KNTV
tv
eye 586
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quote 0
over, the pictures if somebody banged into the wall, it's likely that the pictures would have been askewved amber herself admitted as much in that heart to heart with her grandmother. over the objections of the defense, the judge ruled the jury could see and hear the entire taped conversation. he said the two women were not entitled to privacy in a police interrogation room. >> he was like messing with the tv right here. and the window is right here and i pushed him and he fell. oh, god. >> to the prosecutor, comments like that were a confession to murder. and she played more clips of that conversation for the jury, including this seemingly damming one. >> i killed him. >> in the moments right after a horrible accident or something horrible happened, during the excitement of an event, people are more likely to say true things. i think yes, that definitely goes to the fact that what she probably said after the event is probably very true. >> finally, the prosecution introduced two of the defendants former cell mates who testified that amber had called her late husband a bastard and made l
over, the pictures if somebody banged into the wall, it's likely that the pictures would have been askewved amber herself admitted as much in that heart to heart with her grandmother. over the objections of the defense, the judge ruled the jury could see and hear the entire taped conversation. he said the two women were not entitled to privacy in a police interrogation room. >> he was like messing with the tv right here. and the window is right here and i pushed him and he fell. oh, god....
274
274
May 31, 2013
05/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 274
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. >> something is askew. >> yes.you did. >> her problem was she went barefoot. >> what is she doing? >> we jumped in an ice bath so she took her shoes off and that just killed it. no traction. >> you've got to have shoes. >> but eventually everybody made it up to the top. those things are incredible. i've done one in real life, a spartan raid, like a tough mudder, they take the life out of you. really hard. that was fun yesterday. i talked to a doctor. i think the actual term is, the medical term is you broke your ass. >> yes i did. thank you for remembering. i quite literally broke my tail ban. >> that's not good. >> congratulations. >> well thank you. >> we're going to start with economic news. two days ago the dow hit, yet, another record high but according to a new analysis by the federal reserve that's nothing for most americans to cheer about. this is what we're talking about here. six years after the peak of the recession, american households have rebuilt less than half of the wealth lost during the slowdown.
. >> something is askew. >> yes.you did. >> her problem was she went barefoot. >> what is she doing? >> we jumped in an ice bath so she took her shoes off and that just killed it. no traction. >> you've got to have shoes. >> but eventually everybody made it up to the top. those things are incredible. i've done one in real life, a spartan raid, like a tough mudder, they take the life out of you. really hard. that was fun yesterday. i talked to a doctor....