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Dec 18, 2010
12/10
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WFDC
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una caja que hay energia, entonces de ahi tomo energia para aca" inquilinos del complejo bedford station en la avenida 15, se quejan por la falta de calefaccion y electricidad... "uno lo que hace es embolsarce, taparse con sus ponchos, pero no es suficiente" dicen que usualmente la corriente se interrupte en las tardes.... y se han visto obligados a hacer sus propias conecciones... conecciones que podrian ser un peligro... "yo lo hago practicamente por mis sobrinos, por los niños, pues uno de grande se abriga bien, uno es mas resistible a cualquier enfermedad, pero por mis niños que me arriesgo a hacer eso" rosaria, madre de dos niÑos, dice que el frio en su apartamento es insoportable. .. "los niños a veces se ponen a temblar del frio, entonces lo que queremos es que vengan a arreglar todo para que venga caliente aqui" por dias, las velas... han do la unica opcion de estos inquilinos para alumbrarse... "los problemas no solamente es la falta de calefaccion y electricidad, si no tambien estos apartamentos se encuent
una caja que hay energia, entonces de ahi tomo energia para aca" inquilinos del complejo bedford station en la avenida 15, se quejan por la falta de calefaccion y electricidad... "uno lo que hace es embolsarce, taparse con sus ponchos, pero no es suficiente" dicen que usualmente la corriente se interrupte en las tardes.... y se han visto obligados a hacer sus propias conecciones... conecciones que podrian ser un peligro... "yo lo hago practicamente por mis sobrinos, por los...
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Dec 12, 2010
12/10
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KNTV
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. >> reporter: the town's a lot like bedford falls, the fictional hometown in "it's a wonderful life." the museum opened in 1995 when stewart was 87. officials say the first five years were the busiest. most visitors have been senior citizens who grew up watching stewart on the silver screen. but attendance has dropped dramatically, and like george bailey in the movie, the museum needs money bad. >> please help me, mr. potter. help me, won't you, please? >> were there a vilt lan in the story -- >> the vilt lan would be time. it's the pro greption of the generations that are no longer with us that supported the museum. >> reporter: and so like stewart's character in the movie, the museum is looking for help. maybe even a little help from above. >> who are you then? >> as2. >> what's as2? >> angel second class. >> we are welcoming any and all clearances, john. >> reporter: harley is hoping for a hollywood happy ending. >> it would be gratd fig to mr. stewart and his family that many people contributed what they could. >> to my big brother george, the richest man in town. >> reporter: jo
. >> reporter: the town's a lot like bedford falls, the fictional hometown in "it's a wonderful life." the museum opened in 1995 when stewart was 87. officials say the first five years were the busiest. most visitors have been senior citizens who grew up watching stewart on the silver screen. but attendance has dropped dramatically, and like george bailey in the movie, the museum needs money bad. >> please help me, mr. potter. help me, won't you, please? >> were...
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Dec 18, 2010
12/10
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FOXNEWS
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in that moment, wilmington, ohio, was to become pottersville or bedford falls.n, ohio, chose the latter. people banded together, having rotating dinners at each other's homes. no one was going to let their neighbor go hungry. they supported each other. they still do. they became self-reliant. this is a town that turned hopelessness into hope. they took homeless into their homes. they redefined worthless and made it in to worthy. we showed you earlier this week, what was just the beginning, what we had planned in wilmington. i want to show you now more. take a look at the stage show. we put on for the town. [ applause ] >> merry christmas! ho, ho, ho, ho! [ coughing ] oh. i had the pancakes at the hotel. oh. ahhh. ohhh. i have some presents. mr. al gore. it's coal. this is for barack obama. it's a mop. it's a socialist mop. this is for congress. tickets to hell. [ applause ] this one is for john boehner. kleenex. [ laughter ] what a damn crybaby that guy is, huh? never trust a girly man that cries like that. what a kick he is. this one is for george soros. it's a
in that moment, wilmington, ohio, was to become pottersville or bedford falls.n, ohio, chose the latter. people banded together, having rotating dinners at each other's homes. no one was going to let their neighbor go hungry. they supported each other. they still do. they became self-reliant. this is a town that turned hopelessness into hope. they took homeless into their homes. they redefined worthless and made it in to worthy. we showed you earlier this week, what was just the beginning, what...
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Dec 14, 2010
12/10
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FOXNEWS
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eye 162
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i believe in bedford falls, i believe in "it's a wonderful life," and "smith goes to washington," i believe those people. they existed then and they exist now. i don't think norman rockwell was the best painter but he saw the best in people. this is today, a man who has lived his life with ethics and it is important to share it with each other. we will get back to some of the other things that can change your life and some of the things that are special about christmas. buddha, >> welcome back to my favorite thing. these are different ideas you can give for christmas. i cannot say because we are a news program i am not supposed to say would makes these things so i put them out on glenn glennbeck.com, the best coast, ever, ever made. see why my families loves me? is that unbelievable? that is great, isn't it? my family loves me. they give me that. my wife says, these are the people who want you to die. and i said we are all going to die soon, anyway. i might as well go out with candy if -- in my wife. did you know when dr. adkins died after he fell down the stairs on his head the last thing
i believe in bedford falls, i believe in "it's a wonderful life," and "smith goes to washington," i believe those people. they existed then and they exist now. i don't think norman rockwell was the best painter but he saw the best in people. this is today, a man who has lived his life with ethics and it is important to share it with each other. we will get back to some of the other things that can change your life and some of the things that are special about christmas....
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Dec 14, 2010
12/10
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FOXNEWS
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i think you are going to see bedford falls. we are going to learn a lot from the people of wilmington, ohio. we brought a studio audience in today because i want to have them join in a conversation. how many people here believe things now that you thought was crazy a year ago? yeah. how many people are comfortable with the things that you now believe? you are like, yeah! i'm comfortable with that. a couple, right? how many of you -- how many of you see things on this show or elsewhere and you read and you think: oh, i don't want that to be true. please, i hope that's not true. right? so the point is here, if i may... we are no different from each other. i don't want to believe the things that i believe, quite honestly, i can't believe i'm the guy national television that comes to you every night and says, there is some big effort afoot and it's all about global rule. that doesn't -- that doesn't even sound reasonable. it really doesn't. when i come to you and say, we could be looking at the end of our sovereignty as we know it.
i think you are going to see bedford falls. we are going to learn a lot from the people of wilmington, ohio. we brought a studio audience in today because i want to have them join in a conversation. how many people here believe things now that you thought was crazy a year ago? yeah. how many people are comfortable with the things that you now believe? you are like, yeah! i'm comfortable with that. a couple, right? how many of you -- how many of you see things on this show or elsewhere and you...
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389
Dec 13, 2010
12/10
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FOXNEWS
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you will see bedford falls and learn a lot from the people of wilmington, ohio. we brought in a studio audience . i want them to join in conversation. how many of you believe things now if you thought was crazy a year ago. yeah. how many people are comfortable with the things you now believe? yeah, i am comfortable with that. highway many of you see things on this show and elsewhere and you read and you think, oh, i don't want that to be true. please, i hope that that is not true. right. so the point is here if i paying we are no different than each other. i don't want to believe the things that i believe, quite honestly i can't believe i am a guy on national television hey, there is a effort on fought and our members of government are part of it and it is all about global rule. that doesn't sound reasonable does it? we could be looking at the end of our sovereignty and thind of the republic as we know it, i know how that sounds. and i wouldn't nor i couldn't come on to television every day and tell you that if we hadn't done our homework. we do draw conclusions
you will see bedford falls and learn a lot from the people of wilmington, ohio. we brought in a studio audience . i want them to join in conversation. how many of you believe things now if you thought was crazy a year ago. yeah. how many people are comfortable with the things you now believe? yeah, i am comfortable with that. highway many of you see things on this show and elsewhere and you read and you think, oh, i don't want that to be true. please, i hope that that is not true. right. so the...
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from bedford, texas, are the co-founders of the daystar television network.and joni lamb. good morning to you both. thank you for being with us. >> good morning. >> good morning, robin. >> thank you for allowing me to call you marcus and joni. let's talk about the extortion first. can you tell us when you were first approached? and how you were approached? did you get a phone call? was it an e-mail? a letter? how? >> well, a couple of weeks ago, the information came to us that three people were demanding $7.5 million in order to keep from going to the media. they were trying to turn our pain into their gain. so, we were both shocked and outraged that they would demand this much of god's money. >> and did you ever, for a second, joni, consider paying the money so you wouldn't have to go public like this? >> not ever. we would never, ever do that. and even though this was a private affair that we were healing, from when we were faced with these threats, we knew at some point that we may tell our story. but we wanted our healing and restoration to be complete fi
from bedford, texas, are the co-founders of the daystar television network.and joni lamb. good morning to you both. thank you for being with us. >> good morning. >> good morning, robin. >> thank you for allowing me to call you marcus and joni. let's talk about the extortion first. can you tell us when you were first approached? and how you were approached? did you get a phone call? was it an e-mail? a letter? how? >> well, a couple of weeks ago, the information came to...
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Dec 12, 2010
12/10
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CSPAN2
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he retires in 1801 to his farmn in bedford where he lives ofe hl very quiet retired life, the remainder of his years.f so much for a brief sketch ofo b the public life. a word or two about the privateh man. in the same year that he became a delegate to the conduct of congress he married sally or sarah livingston.ed, an they were often separated. their separations from a biographers' perspective are ahy wonderful thing because theyledt brought frequent detailed another. cosi sally was, i think, considered something of a -- maybe not thea world's most intellectual young, woman when she married, but shee proved her metal during the revolution when she decided in husban hisshe would accompany her husband of his wartime mission to spain.oce becoming in the process f america's first diplomaticspous. thells. me danas not a decision without some danger. merely indeed she nearly pay for herwir decision with her life and thehi north atlantic when their ship was dismasted and all of them fear for their lives.ficuye after two difficult years in s spain she had to somewhat more pleasant years in par
he retires in 1801 to his farmn in bedford where he lives ofe hl very quiet retired life, the remainder of his years.f so much for a brief sketch ofo b the public life. a word or two about the privateh man. in the same year that he became a delegate to the conduct of congress he married sally or sarah livingston.ed, an they were often separated. their separations from a biographers' perspective are ahy wonderful thing because theyledt brought frequent detailed another. cosi sally was, i think,...
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729
Dec 17, 2010
12/10
by
WGN
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bedford falls? or pin call falls? if you said b., as we all did, it is bed ford falls. remember that. >> how could you not know that. it is such a great movie. >> thank our executive producer for giving us an easy one. >> it makes us feel smart at the end of the week and it is all good. >> thank you, monica. and happy friday, guys. >> and it is a little nippy out there, but the sun is out and that raises everybody's spirits. you see pretty cool weather across a good part of the united states now and we have some wind blowing from the west- northwest that will get up to 20 miles per hour at times. what is ahead for the next 10 days, here is an animation driven by the weather service's global modellened we moved up to saturday here. see the cold air and how much of the country is in its niche right there. you have warm air in the southwest, but we look for a plunge of cooler air to come in behind a weather system that could bring us snow late monday, monday night and tapering to snow showers and even lake effect snow on tuesday. then wednesday's nice, kind of moderately c
bedford falls? or pin call falls? if you said b., as we all did, it is bed ford falls. remember that. >> how could you not know that. it is such a great movie. >> thank our executive producer for giving us an easy one. >> it makes us feel smart at the end of the week and it is all good. >> thank you, monica. and happy friday, guys. >> and it is a little nippy out there, but the sun is out and that raises everybody's spirits. you see pretty cool weather across a...
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Dec 11, 2010
12/10
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KNTV
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." >> hello bedford falls!when stewart was 87. officials say the first five years were the busiest. most visitors have been senior citizens who grew up watching stewart on the silver screen. but attendance has dropped dramatically and, like george bailey in the movie, the museum needs money fast. >> please help me, mr. potter. help me, won't you, please? >> reporter: is there a villain in this story? >> the villain would be time, john. it's the progression of those generations that are no longer with us that supported the museum. >> reporter: and so like stewart's character in the movie, the museum is looking for help. maybe even a little help from above. >> well, who are you then? >> as-2. >> what is that as-2. >> angel, second class. >> we are welcoming any and all clarences, john. >> reporter: harley's hoping for a happy ending. >> it would be gratifying to mr. stewart and his family that many people contributed what they could. >> to my big brother george, the richest man in town. >> reporter: for "today,"
." >> hello bedford falls!when stewart was 87. officials say the first five years were the busiest. most visitors have been senior citizens who grew up watching stewart on the silver screen. but attendance has dropped dramatically and, like george bailey in the movie, the museum needs money fast. >> please help me, mr. potter. help me, won't you, please? >> reporter: is there a villain in this story? >> the villain would be time, john. it's the progression of those...
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Dec 6, 2010
12/10
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CSPAN2
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>> there is a whole heap was up about whaling from the bluster in new bedford and nantucket. don't want to sound as if i'm trying to sell this book, but i suppose that's what i am trying to do in the way. but there's a lot about everything. and in fact, under no affinity heard this morning on the morning edition program, looking at a nice interview by lynne married and looking at the comments, which i did on the train coming down to washington this evening, the first comment was an angry man named your racist and eurocentric, with which there is no discussion about the middle passage. but there is heaps in the book about the middle passage and slavery. so there's not very much about the titanic, quite a bit about the lusitania. but i try and cover all those. so yes, there is a chapter about the lover chapter is all about poetry and music and art, architecture. in the day writing about it, he lived in this place called name. and on the day that i was writing about extraordinary coincidence, and you may remember the story, a little girl from new york was standing on a rock, jus
>> there is a whole heap was up about whaling from the bluster in new bedford and nantucket. don't want to sound as if i'm trying to sell this book, but i suppose that's what i am trying to do in the way. but there's a lot about everything. and in fact, under no affinity heard this morning on the morning edition program, looking at a nice interview by lynne married and looking at the comments, which i did on the train coming down to washington this evening, the first comment was an angry...
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247
Dec 25, 2010
12/10
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KQED
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eye 247
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the interview took place just a few miles from the bedford stuyvesant neighborhood where he was born raised. we had done an interview a few years ago where he talked about himself but this is a moment when, after the publication of this book he was coming to the brooklyn museum, this giant and historic building that houses art in its grandeur, a place that seems far different from his life and his music, but it is a place that welcomed this hometown hero, that night, and as we walked through this building you got a sense of who he is. here is part of our conversation. i have in my hand jay-z "decoded." decoded because it's about decoding rap and it's about decoding what else? >> the central theme is about decoding these rap lyrics. but in order to really decode them, i had to tell the story of the generation and everybody that grew up around that time. i had to tell that story. so it's based on the lyrics but it's a lot more -- it's a very difficult book to explain in that way, but it's really the story of a generation of people that grew up during a era that was very difficult. >> c
the interview took place just a few miles from the bedford stuyvesant neighborhood where he was born raised. we had done an interview a few years ago where he talked about himself but this is a moment when, after the publication of this book he was coming to the brooklyn museum, this giant and historic building that houses art in its grandeur, a place that seems far different from his life and his music, but it is a place that welcomed this hometown hero, that night, and as we walked through...
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156
Dec 4, 2010
12/10
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CSPAN2
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eye 156
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>> there's a whole heap of stuff about whaling from glouster and new bedford, of course, nantucket. there is, there's a lot -- i don't want to sound as if i'm a shill trying to sell this book, but i suppose that's what i am trying to do in a way. [laughter] there's a lot about everything. in fact, i don't know if any of you heard this morning, i was on the morning edition program. looking at the -- there was a very nice interview by lynn neary, and looking at the comments as i did on the train coming down to washington this evening, the first content was an angry man saying you're a racist, there was no mention in your discussion on npr about slavery. but, i mean, there is heaps in the book about middle passage and slavery. there's not very much about titanic. there's quite a lot about the louis tape ya but not so much about the titanic. but i try and cover all bases. and so, yes, there's a lot about -- and wins low homer, of course, because there's a chapter -- the lover chapter is all about poetry and music and art and architecture. and the day i was writing about winslow homer or
>> there's a whole heap of stuff about whaling from glouster and new bedford, of course, nantucket. there is, there's a lot -- i don't want to sound as if i'm a shill trying to sell this book, but i suppose that's what i am trying to do in a way. [laughter] there's a lot about everything. in fact, i don't know if any of you heard this morning, i was on the morning edition program. looking at the -- there was a very nice interview by lynn neary, and looking at the comments as i did on the...
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533
Dec 17, 2010
12/10
by
FOXNEWS
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eye 533
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barney frank ironically, is the congressman from new bedford.y for the aquarium and he said, that's one of these earmarks that everybody is always complaining about. if you're complain being it, let's raise this private money for the aquarium? what is an earmark? generally it's pork and we hate them. but they, generally speaking, go to build a bridge or school or charlie rangel museum in harlem somewhere. >> steve: don't you think that the fact that harry reid couldn't get 60 votes, so there could have been a filibuster, ultimately this proves the tea party, the impact of it, will be felt beyond the midterm. >> and if it does, then that will be a seismic change in the way we do business. in this huge spending bill, mitch mcconnell got the republicans out of it and that's what you suggest quashed it. but in the end, he had his own earmarks. his earmarks, come on, steve. everybody is into this game and if you're going to make an absolute rule, which i totally support, if you want whatever it is in your jurisdiction, your kentucky jurisdiction, mak
barney frank ironically, is the congressman from new bedford.y for the aquarium and he said, that's one of these earmarks that everybody is always complaining about. if you're complain being it, let's raise this private money for the aquarium? what is an earmark? generally it's pork and we hate them. but they, generally speaking, go to build a bridge or school or charlie rangel museum in harlem somewhere. >> steve: don't you think that the fact that harry reid couldn't get 60 votes, so...
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Dec 13, 2010
12/10
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FOXNEWS
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eye 379
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. >> a high school student in bedford, new hampshire, so bothered by the book assigned in his personale, he asked his parents to home school him instead. the family says the book "nickel and dimed" promotes an anti-christian message. at one point is describes jesus as a wind guzzling vagrant and socialist. tonight, that boy's parents will get their chance to explain to the school board why they want the book pulled from the curriculum. dennis and andy taylor plan to address that meeting tonight and they join me from manchester, new hampshire this morning. good morning to both of you. >> good morning. >> this incident happened in early october, you found out your son had been assigned this book. part of the curriculum. i read a quote from the book. was that the only quote that you were upset with? >> oh, no. no. there are a number of quotes. the book is littered with obscenities. i don't know if you have one there at your studio. there are a number of heavy obscenities and also the jesus bashing is unacceptable. there are a lot of problems we have with the book. >> there's drug abuse me
. >> a high school student in bedford, new hampshire, so bothered by the book assigned in his personale, he asked his parents to home school him instead. the family says the book "nickel and dimed" promotes an anti-christian message. at one point is describes jesus as a wind guzzling vagrant and socialist. tonight, that boy's parents will get their chance to explain to the school board why they want the book pulled from the curriculum. dennis and andy taylor plan to address that...