SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 3, 2012
03/12
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SFGTV2
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stench rising from the evicted burrowed. men like dogs scoured the fields. saw in one cottage a royal of rats feasting on an infant. no one where i witnessed anything like it not in calcutta. the voiceless children silenced by hunger the bodies burned at night leaving i don't trace. descending the drum hills i turned off the main road following signs and i language lost before i was born. this was land observe the land was renamed and hushed. what was left for me, generations gone. a purfume of smoke freshened my nostrils. pastures reached to the head of the bay. thick roads where locals greeted with slowly raised hands or a nod of a cap to my car the postcard my eye framed in it's longing. moony's pub where i stopped for a pint and slipped my quest. so, you are a to bein accomodating my english. they're all about here. she showed the photograph with dark hair and features unlike my own but a resemblance of an uncle. what was the ring happened on my chance or grace. why not trace through lost norman crests or track dna to tribes 6,000 years gone from the ban
stench rising from the evicted burrowed. men like dogs scoured the fields. saw in one cottage a royal of rats feasting on an infant. no one where i witnessed anything like it not in calcutta. the voiceless children silenced by hunger the bodies burned at night leaving i don't trace. descending the drum hills i turned off the main road following signs and i language lost before i was born. this was land observe the land was renamed and hushed. what was left for me, generations gone. a purfume of...
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Mar 29, 2012
03/12
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WUSA
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. >> my name is edward burrows. >> reporter: and 19,ed ward burrotk who has already served -- burrowsho has already served. >> increased class sizes, cut reduced programs like reading recovery. >> we have a $1.6 billion budget and i don't think too many people have a good grasp of where it's going. i want to see that money is going where it can be most effective. i want to see an external audit of the school system budget, something that the current school board has been very opposed to. >> my no. 1 thing is communication. i personally feel like as a board member it would be my responsibility to go out and communicate with the different groups and organizations in the community. >> reporter: they are all campaigning hard in their respective districts. >> i'm running for the board of education district. >> reporter: and they routinely surprise voters. >> i turned 20 a couple days ago. >> well, congratulations. >> thank you. >> reporter: each of these young candidates represents a different district, so they're not running against each other and it's possible they could all win. if that
. >> my name is edward burrows. >> reporter: and 19,ed ward burrotk who has already served -- burrowsho has already served. >> increased class sizes, cut reduced programs like reading recovery. >> we have a $1.6 billion budget and i don't think too many people have a good grasp of where it's going. i want to see that money is going where it can be most effective. i want to see an external audit of the school system budget, something that the current school board has been...
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Mar 7, 2012
03/12
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LINKTV
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i had for the men who were fighting that war, the biggest influence on me was the photography of burrows. (clicking of camera) the camera is close to the ground. it tends to be behind the protagonists. in other words, it tends to be where it would be in reality. having been a documentary filmmaker, i try and put it in a safe place, where it would be if it were live ammunition. sir! what? your arm. oh. the vietnam film is impossible to understand unless you have all this other background about the world war ii film and the post-war celebration of world war ii on-screen. that hollywood feels complicit that it has told americans about war throughout the 40's, 50's, and 1960's. so when hollywood comes to make the vietnam cycle, they have to say, "forget everything we told you in those previous 30 years of war films. war is really something that is horrible and deadly and it can have no moral meaning." go! (man) go ahead. go ahead, nicky. (man) just do it! do it! (man) go ahead! (click) (laughter) (oliver stone) i wrote "platoon" in 1976, before the "apocalypse now" and "deerhunter" came out.
i had for the men who were fighting that war, the biggest influence on me was the photography of burrows. (clicking of camera) the camera is close to the ground. it tends to be behind the protagonists. in other words, it tends to be where it would be in reality. having been a documentary filmmaker, i try and put it in a safe place, where it would be if it were live ammunition. sir! what? your arm. oh. the vietnam film is impossible to understand unless you have all this other background about...
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Mar 2, 2012
03/12
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WUSA
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it was scoreless into the -- burrows drilled one off the pads of the goalie.ancouver added an empty net goal for a 2-0 win. they now lead the nhl in points. >>> whether we return, runway rampage. a driver of an suv triggers a security scare at a philadelphia airport. >>> here's a look at today's forecast in some cities around the country. washington, d.c., afternoon rain, 59. atlanta, isolated thunderstorms, 76. detroit, rain, 54. denver, you're going to see some morning snow, 35. and seattle, 47. >>> here's another look at this morning's top stories. another round of dangerous tornado-producing storms is expected in the midwest and south today. the area is still recovering from a tornado blitzed this week that killed 13 people. and classes resume today at chardon high school in ohio for the first time since monday's shooting. the alleged gunman, 17-year-old t.j. lane, is expected to be charged as an adult. >>> the head of the fbi is warning that cyber crime is on its way to becoming the number one threat against america. bureau director robert muller spoke ye
it was scoreless into the -- burrows drilled one off the pads of the goalie.ancouver added an empty net goal for a 2-0 win. they now lead the nhl in points. >>> whether we return, runway rampage. a driver of an suv triggers a security scare at a philadelphia airport. >>> here's a look at today's forecast in some cities around the country. washington, d.c., afternoon rain, 59. atlanta, isolated thunderstorms, 76. detroit, rain, 54. denver, you're going to see some morning snow,...
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Mar 22, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN3
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is they are burrowed deep into our society already. they've been around a lot longer than al qaeda and a lot longer than al shabaab and some of the other objects we're concentrating on now. i think that they understand how to use our financial system. they have an sba loan, a false loan. they bribed a loan officer. they had credit cards. they understood the financial system, how to exploit the immigration system. so they are well entrenched in society and well positioned to do something or facilitate someone else coming in and doing something and blending in. they can manufacture documents. it's all there and it's all in place. they don't have to make it happen. it's already well in place. the good news is there's 104 joint terrorism task forces across the country. you have 56 field intelligence groups. and you have a new preventative mind-set out there instead of reacting to what's going on. i think the intelligence community and the fbi and the nypd and other agencies are out there shaking that tree. i think we're well positioned to
is they are burrowed deep into our society already. they've been around a lot longer than al qaeda and a lot longer than al shabaab and some of the other objects we're concentrating on now. i think that they understand how to use our financial system. they have an sba loan, a false loan. they bribed a loan officer. they had credit cards. they understood the financial system, how to exploit the immigration system. so they are well entrenched in society and well positioned to do something or...
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Mar 25, 2012
03/12
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MSNBCW
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. >> after working into the night to bring the blaze under control, chief fred burrows begins an on-scenenterview with andrew about the fire. >> we had portions of the building collapse -- >> the chief thinks the explosions have stopped but right in the middle of the interview, the fire unleashes its biggest blast of the night. >> any injuries or -- >> not at this time. that was a bit warm. >> honestly, i thought we had pretty much ran out of material to burn at that point but apparently there was a couple waiting for us. >> the explosion caused by the last containers of methanol happens four hours after the fire begins, startling the chief and his crew. >> he was obviously concerned, as were we, because it was honestly quite a miracle that there was nobody injured in this, or killed. >> firefighters continue spraying water throughout the night. finally putting out the stubborn blaze. all that's left of the warehouse is rubble. coming up -- a street erupts like a volcano. >> i can't believe i'm alive. >> a tunnel blows up. and a gas leak destroys a shopping mall. >> the aftermath would be
. >> after working into the night to bring the blaze under control, chief fred burrows begins an on-scenenterview with andrew about the fire. >> we had portions of the building collapse -- >> the chief thinks the explosions have stopped but right in the middle of the interview, the fire unleashes its biggest blast of the night. >> any injuries or -- >> not at this time. that was a bit warm. >> honestly, i thought we had pretty much ran out of material to burn...
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Mar 29, 2012
03/12
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MSNBCW
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three if you count burrowing through the earth from the other side of the world, but that's very impractical. so you've got two choices. you can fly everything in on big cargo planes, which is somewhat doable, but fantastically expensive, and we do that, in part. the other option is driving. there are a lot of reasons that pakistan is very important to u.s. foreign policy and to u.s. policy around its war in afghanistan in particular. but the pact that for a decade we have been driving, about half the supplies for our war next door through pakistan is a big strategic deal. at least it was until this next november when a u.s. air strike killed 24 pakistani soldiers along the border. pakistan was furious. in response, they shut down the nato overland supply routes, completely. they turned off this major overland supply line, feeding the war in afghanistan. trucking supplies from pakistan and into afghanistan has been fraught for years. extremists have targeted truck con voice, bombing them, setting them on fire. and this isn't the first time that pakistan has shut the supply lines down in ange
three if you count burrowing through the earth from the other side of the world, but that's very impractical. so you've got two choices. you can fly everything in on big cargo planes, which is somewhat doable, but fantastically expensive, and we do that, in part. the other option is driving. there are a lot of reasons that pakistan is very important to u.s. foreign policy and to u.s. policy around its war in afghanistan in particular. but the pact that for a decade we have been driving, about...
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Mar 31, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN2
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and at one point tony burrows payment involved, a well known -- became involved, a well known genealogistns to have heritage in the same member of the woods. and so he mentioned that this was what he called thurmond territory. and that was sort of interest being but not particularly relevant at the time. but the journalist when i went and shared my initial findings was so intrigued, he said, okay, keep digging. what else are you going to find? so i went and did a little more sleuthing, because i wanted to find the paper trail. i wanted to find the paper trail to prove it. and one of the remarkable things that didn't get out there is, um, al sharpton's great grandfather, coleman sharpton, he was bought and sold three times by the time he was 4. and if you see the title in the book, it's called "half a negro boy," that's, again, part of the story that didn't attract much attention because of the unexpected connection. what i last discovered was his relatives had been related to strom strom think monday. he got inherited by a couple of brothers-in-law and then rather unexpectedly one of thos
and at one point tony burrows payment involved, a well known -- became involved, a well known genealogistns to have heritage in the same member of the woods. and so he mentioned that this was what he called thurmond territory. and that was sort of interest being but not particularly relevant at the time. but the journalist when i went and shared my initial findings was so intrigued, he said, okay, keep digging. what else are you going to find? so i went and did a little more sleuthing, because...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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80
Mar 12, 2012
03/12
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WHUT
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i've done a lot in retail in new york city, in the burrows. it's about people from my consumer background being able to buy things that are quality and less expensive. it's always for me about people. you know, i don't get as big a charge as people might think about the fact that i have built these buildings. i'm proud of it, yes. i always get wonderful feeling when i walk in my metrotech project and i see people on a summer day outside going to work. that's what makes me happy. so as long as i can keep doing buildings that people use in a good way and that contribute and that look good and are part of environment, that makes me happy. >> rose: we continue with a look at a new exhi business in philadelphia about vincent van gogh. >> our show is the last three and a half, four years. >> rose: very productive time. >> hugely just dying to paint, can't wait to get back in there as nature would often prevent, of course. but just these points of entry are, he has this no doubt of his absolute confi debs. this man is presented and famously so for al
i've done a lot in retail in new york city, in the burrows. it's about people from my consumer background being able to buy things that are quality and less expensive. it's always for me about people. you know, i don't get as big a charge as people might think about the fact that i have built these buildings. i'm proud of it, yes. i always get wonderful feeling when i walk in my metrotech project and i see people on a summer day outside going to work. that's what makes me happy. so as long as i...
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510
Mar 18, 2012
03/12
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KPIX
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. >> reporter: years later he founted out from james burrows who directed episodes of both friends and as he thought to getting the part. >> i said, you know, i was up for that role in friends. and he said, "oh, honey, you were wasting your time. they wrote that part for david." >> reporter: that's very funny thinking you came this close. >> "you never had a chance." you want me to talk you through it. >> reporter: just a few years later came will and grace. mccormack got the big part he didn't know he was looking for. >> you funny lady. >> and you gay fellow. >> reporter: mccormack, a straight actor would play network tv's first gay leading man. >> john wayne. >> wour your parents' marriage. >> things that are dead. >> reporter: he believed the show helped change attitudes toward gay people, a shift he witnessed over eight seasons of talking to fans. >> i would see, you know, women come up and say, i love my show. the boyfriend would be hanging back. i don't watch that show. in a couple of years it was like, my girlfriend likes your show. you know by season 5 it would like my wife and
. >> reporter: years later he founted out from james burrows who directed episodes of both friends and as he thought to getting the part. >> i said, you know, i was up for that role in friends. and he said, "oh, honey, you were wasting your time. they wrote that part for david." >> reporter: that's very funny thinking you came this close. >> "you never had a chance." you want me to talk you through it. >> reporter: just a few years later came...
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. >> all based on a classic novel by edgar rice burrows. at times. a good mix of other sci-fi movies that have been out there. so worth a look. $250 million. can't be too bad. >>> so "friends with kids," it's basically about a group of friends, they're all pretty much married and having kids except for there's two remaining singles. and they decide, hey, let's just kind of join the group. let's have a kid but let's date other people. so they decide to have a kid together, but clearly they have no idea what they're in for. take a look. >> so great we're all here. >> i know. [ kids screaming ] >> can you believe this? 100 bucks a plate and they bring in toddlers? >> are they even allowed in here? >> people, it's manhattan. we're here to live the dream. leave the kiddies at home. >> we're pregnant. >> oops. big foot in mouth moment there, obviously. adam scott and jennifer westfeldt not pregnant at the time and foot in mouth from them when their other friends announce they're prego. but pretty decent rating. 59% average rating on rotten tomato
. >> all based on a classic novel by edgar rice burrows. at times. a good mix of other sci-fi movies that have been out there. so worth a look. $250 million. can't be too bad. >>> so "friends with kids," it's basically about a group of friends, they're all pretty much married and having kids except for there's two remaining singles. and they decide, hey, let's just kind of join the group. let's have a kid but let's date other people. so they decide to have a kid...
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Mar 3, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 163
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here we see in a letter this fear of american anti intellectualism burrowed deep into the imagination, this notion that he was a genius and we could have never produced one here. our cultural flow justice tuesday draw to produce this kind of genius. and so these letters document that the longing for intellectual engagement, the reverence for ideas, even if that is to be corporate capitalism or mass culture was not a sesotho professional intellectuals. led to long to inhabit the world created in the body. and so the letters, and this was just a sampling of the letters that i talk about, but they stuck to signal some of the ways in which american readers and list in the image and ideas to contemplate themselves into a critique their america. and that like to end now with one i think as a nice job of pulling together many of the leitmotifs of american devotion. the two page typed letter from the san francisco-based td cretin and it is a pseudonym for a greek name that i will say because i can't pronounce it, but its chairman for plates as crypto, so this is a pseudonym that he is taking.
here we see in a letter this fear of american anti intellectualism burrowed deep into the imagination, this notion that he was a genius and we could have never produced one here. our cultural flow justice tuesday draw to produce this kind of genius. and so these letters document that the longing for intellectual engagement, the reverence for ideas, even if that is to be corporate capitalism or mass culture was not a sesotho professional intellectuals. led to long to inhabit the world created in...
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Mar 7, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN
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burro -- burrow, for five minutes. mr. burr he yo -- mr. burrow: thank you, mr. speaker. i rise today on the 47th anniversary of bloody sunday to recognize the courage of our colleague, congressman john lewis, and the many forgotten heroes of the civil rights movement. nearly 50 years ago in selma, alabama, some 600 demonstrators marched for equal voting rights for african-americans. they got only as far as the edmund pettus bridge where state and local law men attacked them with clubs and tear gas and drove them back into selma. journalists captured the brutality of these attacks sparking the public outrage that eventually led to the passage of the voting rights act of 1965. this sunday congressman lewis returned to that very bridge that changed history, again he was met by a large group of police, but this time they served as his congressional escort. mr. speaker, we have come a long way in the last 50 years, but we still have a long way to go in order to ensure quality and justice for all. i ask in a my colleagues join with me -- i ask that my colleagues join with me i
burro -- burrow, for five minutes. mr. burr he yo -- mr. burrow: thank you, mr. speaker. i rise today on the 47th anniversary of bloody sunday to recognize the courage of our colleague, congressman john lewis, and the many forgotten heroes of the civil rights movement. nearly 50 years ago in selma, alabama, some 600 demonstrators marched for equal voting rights for african-americans. they got only as far as the edmund pettus bridge where state and local law men attacked them with clubs and tear...
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Mar 4, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN2
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and so here we see in the letters this fear of american anti-intellectualism were burrowed deeply into the imagination of general readers, this notion that nietzsche was a genius, and we could have never produced a nietzsche here, that our cultural soil just is too thin to produce this kind of genius. and so these letters document that the longing for intellectual engagement, the reverence for ideas even as a stick to beat corporate capitalism or mass culture with was not exclusive to professional intellectuals. average americans long to inhabit the world of thought that nietzsche created and embodied. and so the letters -- and this was just a sampling of the letters i talk about in the book -- but i think they start to signal some to have ways american readers enlist the ideas to contemplate themselves and to critique their america. and i'd like to end now with one that i think does a nice job of pulling together many of the light no tiffs of american nietzsche devotion. the two-page, typed letter from the san francisco-based t.d. createn is a pseudonym for a greek name that i won't s
and so here we see in the letters this fear of american anti-intellectualism were burrowed deeply into the imagination of general readers, this notion that nietzsche was a genius, and we could have never produced a nietzsche here, that our cultural soil just is too thin to produce this kind of genius. and so these letters document that the longing for intellectual engagement, the reverence for ideas even as a stick to beat corporate capitalism or mass culture with was not exclusive to...
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Mar 22, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 155
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is they are burrowed deep into our society already.hey've been a lot longer than al qaeda and al-shabaab and the other shining object or concentrating on now, and i think we need to understand -- the understand how to use our financial system and have an sba false loan and the bride the loan officer. the credit cards, they understood the financial system how to exploit the immigration system so they are well entrenched in society and well positioned to do something or facilitate someone else coming in and doing something and blending in they can manufacture documents. it's all there and it's all in place. they don't have to make it happen. it's all pretty well in place. the good news is there's 104 joint terrorism task forces across the country and the field intelligence groups and you've got a new preventive mind set out there instead of reacting to what's going on. i think the intelligence community and the fbi and the nypd agencies are now they're shaking the tree and we are well-positioned to know what they are doing. >> michael ch
is they are burrowed deep into our society already.hey've been a lot longer than al qaeda and al-shabaab and the other shining object or concentrating on now, and i think we need to understand -- the understand how to use our financial system and have an sba false loan and the bride the loan officer. the credit cards, they understood the financial system how to exploit the immigration system so they are well entrenched in society and well positioned to do something or facilitate someone else...
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Mar 15, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 78
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ask so that it is a matter of record for consent that the statement of professor john coffey, adolf burrow, professor of law from columbia university law school at a hearing before the senate banking committee on december 1, 2011, be made a part of the record. the presiding officer: without objection, so ordered. mr. durbin: thank you, mr. president. i want my colleagues, many of whom have just read a few press accounts of this bill, to consider carefully the statement made by professor coffey. he has analyzed this bill and raised some important questions about whether it goes too far. now, i will be joining some of my colleagues here in offering a substitute which improves the law for start-up companies but also makes certain that we protect investors and make certain as well that at the end of the day we don't end up with egg on our face. how many times has congress been called on when the private sector runs amok, goes too far and starts failing in every direction to bail them out? we saw it most graphically with the bailout of the major banks not that many years ago. we have seen it in
ask so that it is a matter of record for consent that the statement of professor john coffey, adolf burrow, professor of law from columbia university law school at a hearing before the senate banking committee on december 1, 2011, be made a part of the record. the presiding officer: without objection, so ordered. mr. durbin: thank you, mr. president. i want my colleagues, many of whom have just read a few press accounts of this bill, to consider carefully the statement made by professor coffey....
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45
Mar 2, 2012
03/12
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LINKTV
tv
eye 45
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on the earth, you went half as close and you got-- you weighed a half as much burrowing inside. that's because the ground is pulling the other way, but over here now it increases because you're getting closer and there's no other mass pulling you off, so it increases. if you understand that, you can answer this question. let's suppose this star collapsed and you rolled on it and you're right here and it collapsed as to 1/10 the size, so it's d/10 of the radius, 10 times closer. how much more you're going to weigh? check your neighbor. what's it going to be, gang? it turns out 100 times as much. you would weigh 100 times as much at the surface of that star and it would become harder and harder to throw things into orbit, harder and harder. later on, we're going to learn that the surface of the earth to throw something away from the grav-- to escape, to escape the locality of the earth and to keep--to outrun gravity, you would have to throw something at 11.2 kilometers per second. that's called escape speed and we're gonna learn that on the sun for something to be ejected off the
on the earth, you went half as close and you got-- you weighed a half as much burrowing inside. that's because the ground is pulling the other way, but over here now it increases because you're getting closer and there's no other mass pulling you off, so it increases. if you understand that, you can answer this question. let's suppose this star collapsed and you rolled on it and you're right here and it collapsed as to 1/10 the size, so it's d/10 of the radius, 10 times closer. how much more...