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Oct 27, 2018
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carol: how come? market?ight labor peter: as unhappy as they are about the fact of someone free-riding on them, they have no alternative but to provide some of their own training. doing what are companies that is working when these plans are in place? peter: people learn better when they do stuff, this idea of an apprenticeship. it's rotations. bloomberg has that. you rotate through various jobs and gain a variety of skills. harnessing be computer assisted learning. there is sometimes a bit of a classroom aspect that can be done in a computer assisted method. today kids are graduating it to's responsibility is enter the workforce successfully? is it up to the university, or the employer? peter: there is constantly a clash. companies complain. employees are coming to them unprepared. according to a survey, millenials in the united states 22nd in literacy and tied for the bottom in nume racy. jason: a true crime stories centered on the murder of an unconventional billionaire and his wife. carol: this cover stor
carol: how come? market?ight labor peter: as unhappy as they are about the fact of someone free-riding on them, they have no alternative but to provide some of their own training. doing what are companies that is working when these plans are in place? peter: people learn better when they do stuff, this idea of an apprenticeship. it's rotations. bloomberg has that. you rotate through various jobs and gain a variety of skills. harnessing be computer assisted learning. there is sometimes a bit of...
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Oct 7, 2018
10/18
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carol: i am carol massar. also listen to us in new york and boston. 99.1 fm in washington, d.c. jason: in the bay area and in london and on the bloomberg business app. after months of dramatic negotiations, president trump and the leaders of canada and mexico marked a new free trade agreement meant to pull the three economies together. carol: it finally got done and it was quickly recognized as a win for the white house. investors liked it and the deal also served as a bit of a warning for china. jason: president trump's economic advisor larry kudlow spoke with alix steel in washington, d.c. larry: regarding china, we have made it clear, the president has made it clear that china has got to change its ways. unfair trade practices. high tariff barriers, high nontariff barriers are not acceptable. american firms cannot own their own operations. you have to go through joint ventures with the chinese where they own the majority. that is where the technology is stolen and transferred right there. that puts us at a
carol: i am carol massar. also listen to us in new york and boston. 99.1 fm in washington, d.c. jason: in the bay area and in london and on the bloomberg business app. after months of dramatic negotiations, president trump and the leaders of canada and mexico marked a new free trade agreement meant to pull the three economies together. carol: it finally got done and it was quickly recognized as a win for the white house. investors liked it and the deal also served as a bit of a warning for...
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Oct 20, 2018
10/18
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♪ carol: welcome to "bloomberg businessweek." i'm carol massar. jason: i'm jason kelly.e're joining you from headquarters in new york. carol: this week, the future of retail. e-commerce giants amazon and walmart are after global expansion. next stop on the battleground, india. jason: plus, sears files for bankruptcy. why eddie lampert couldn't keep the retail giant afloat. carol: first, to the politics section. it is a story that has dominated the conversation this weekend that is disappearance and the suspected killing of a journalist in istanbul, which has set off a geopolitical reaction as governments are looking for answers from riyadh. jason: it is a fast-moving story. reporters on the ground throughout the region. the story is titled "damage control in the kingdom." riad hamade was here in new york this week and helped us put into perspective. riad: right now, i think it is in limbo in the sense of the plan, vision 2030, that the prince has espoused. he wanted to transform the country economically and socially. i think that a lot of people are now questioning wheth
♪ carol: welcome to "bloomberg businessweek." i'm carol massar. jason: i'm jason kelly.e're joining you from headquarters in new york. carol: this week, the future of retail. e-commerce giants amazon and walmart are after global expansion. next stop on the battleground, india. jason: plus, sears files for bankruptcy. why eddie lampert couldn't keep the retail giant afloat. carol: first, to the politics section. it is a story that has dominated the conversation this weekend that is...
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Oct 28, 2018
10/18
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carol: your must-read?istine harper went to write this book with volcker, i was so excited, and it delivers and it is so timely given everything happening right now with the federal reserve. carroll: very relevant. you can find more stories on bloombergbusinessweek.com. on saturday, we have a story about a small dna technology company originally founded to make pharmaceuticals, but shifted its focus briefly to solving old murders. jason: and check out our daily business week podcast. last week we talked to retired general bristol about the difference between myth and reality. also, a new lacrosse league was all the talk in my house this week. carol: more bloomberg television starts now. ♪ ♪ emily: i'm emily chang in san francisco. this is the "best of bloomberg technology." we bring you the top interviews from the week in tech. coming up, what a week it was for big tech earnings. we break down the highlights and low lights. plus, truly historic is how elon musk is describing tesla's third quarter. the compa
carol: your must-read?istine harper went to write this book with volcker, i was so excited, and it delivers and it is so timely given everything happening right now with the federal reserve. carroll: very relevant. you can find more stories on bloombergbusinessweek.com. on saturday, we have a story about a small dna technology company originally founded to make pharmaceuticals, but shifted its focus briefly to solving old murders. jason: and check out our daily business week podcast. last week...
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Oct 27, 2018
10/18
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carol: your must-read?hristine harper went to write this book with volcker, i was so excited, and it delivers and it is so timely given everything happening right now with the federal reserve. carroll: very relevant. you can find more stories on bloombergbusinessweek.com. on saturday, we have a story about a small dna technology company originally founded to make pharmaceuticals, but shifted its focus briefly to solving old murders. jason: and check out our daily business week podcast. last week we talked to retired general bristol about the difference between myth and reality. also, a new lacrosse league was all the talk in my house this week. it was all the talk in my house this week. carol: were bloomberg television starts now. ♪ eric: for generations, men and women have risked everything in the pursuit of a better life. through hard work and perseverance, these individuals have turned an opportune idea into a successful process of -- prosperous business. roberts andt, eric this is "the american dream."
carol: your must-read?hristine harper went to write this book with volcker, i was so excited, and it delivers and it is so timely given everything happening right now with the federal reserve. carroll: very relevant. you can find more stories on bloombergbusinessweek.com. on saturday, we have a story about a small dna technology company originally founded to make pharmaceuticals, but shifted its focus briefly to solving old murders. jason: and check out our daily business week podcast. last...
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Oct 28, 2018
10/18
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carol: your must-read?en christine harper went to write this book with volcker, i was so excited, and it delivers and it is so timely given everything happening right now with the federal reserve. carroll: very relevant. you can find more stories on bloombergbusinessweek.com. on saturday, we have a story about a small dna technology company originally founded to make pharmaceuticals, but shifted its focus briefly to solving old murders. jason: and check out our daily business week podcast. last week we talked to retired general stanley mcchrystal about the difference between myth and reality. also, a new lacrosse league was all the talk in my house this week. it was all the talk in my house this week. >> more bloomberg television starts right now. ♪ . . comcast business built the nation's largest gig-speed network. then went beyond. beyond chasing down network problems. to knowing when and where there's an issue. beyond network complexity. to a zero-touch, one-box world. optimizing performance and budget. b
carol: your must-read?en christine harper went to write this book with volcker, i was so excited, and it delivers and it is so timely given everything happening right now with the federal reserve. carroll: very relevant. you can find more stories on bloombergbusinessweek.com. on saturday, we have a story about a small dna technology company originally founded to make pharmaceuticals, but shifted its focus briefly to solving old murders. jason: and check out our daily business week podcast. last...
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Oct 27, 2018
10/18
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♪ carol: welcome to "bloomberg businessweek." i am carol massar. jason: i am jason kelly.arol: as donald trump criticizes the u.s. central bank again, here help paul volcker dealt with presidential pressure. jason: tom barrack went all in for donald trump's campaign but now he has been shut out of the white house. carol: the investigation into the death of a saudi arabia journalist continues to stir up international outrage. the crisis has gone beyond the single incident, now impacting the political order. the senior reporter for europe and middle east wrote about it. he joined us from london to talk about it. >> he was the president of turkey, a country that has more journalists in jail than any other, which articulated this. it was not as one might have expected, the president of the united states and the white house making this kind of statement about the "washington post" columnist that was killed in what is still unclear but rather grim circumstances. carol: what are people saying about that flip of the role, the u.s. speaking up for human rights and then to have turk
♪ carol: welcome to "bloomberg businessweek." i am carol massar. jason: i am jason kelly.arol: as donald trump criticizes the u.s. central bank again, here help paul volcker dealt with presidential pressure. jason: tom barrack went all in for donald trump's campaign but now he has been shut out of the white house. carol: the investigation into the death of a saudi arabia journalist continues to stir up international outrage. the crisis has gone beyond the single incident, now...
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Oct 6, 2018
10/18
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carol: i'm carol massar.the of the u.s. dollar. is it time for regime change? jason: speaking of regime change, how amazon and netflix are raising the stakes against traditional tv studios. carol: the first, general motors and honda are teaming up to promote self driving cars. will take a 6% stake in gm's self driving unit, another $2n spend billion on deploying autonomous vehicles with jim. with: gm's president spoke bloomberg's david westin. thisr mission is to deploy technology safely on a massive scale and having another partner on board that brings tremendous resources is another big step in that direction. point $25nvested two billion, honda is bringing $2.75 billion to the table and huge amount of resources. talked after the softbank investment, you set your goal was to have a real autonomous vehicle deployed in calendar year 2019. what does this deal due to that date? does it move it up at all? dan: that remains the goal. we are working as fast as we can to get to that point. the main item to deployme
carol: i'm carol massar.the of the u.s. dollar. is it time for regime change? jason: speaking of regime change, how amazon and netflix are raising the stakes against traditional tv studios. carol: the first, general motors and honda are teaming up to promote self driving cars. will take a 6% stake in gm's self driving unit, another $2n spend billion on deploying autonomous vehicles with jim. with: gm's president spoke bloomberg's david westin. thisr mission is to deploy technology safely on a...
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Oct 13, 2018
10/18
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carol: absolutely.llion that goes toward the american prison system every year, about half of that to some estimates is at least private companies. carol: do we have an idea how expensive this is, this service to digitize mail? how expensive it is for the present system in pennsylvania? jeff: they are already experiencing -- experimenting with smaller systems in individual prisons in other states. pennsylvania was not the first. but for pennsylvania alone, the contract amounts to $360,000 a month. jason: they are pretty happy with it so far is what i get from the story. what is your take? jeff: the prisons seem to be happy with it. the prisoners, less so. the story opens with a prisoner who has been in jail for 26 years, who says that the handwritten letters and cards she was getting from family were a key lifeline, and it is not the same to get a print out when you can no longer tell what the design on the card used to be, if it was mashed onto that scanner, and you cannot feel the handwriting of your
carol: absolutely.llion that goes toward the american prison system every year, about half of that to some estimates is at least private companies. carol: do we have an idea how expensive this is, this service to digitize mail? how expensive it is for the present system in pennsylvania? jeff: they are already experiencing -- experimenting with smaller systems in individual prisons in other states. pennsylvania was not the first. but for pennsylvania alone, the contract amounts to $360,000 a...
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Oct 14, 2018
10/18
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carol: what percentage is that roughly? mindy: about 30%. carol: can you continue that? the more we can recruit by getting people to understand how meaningful we can be in their lives, retention is very important as well. carol: right. mindy: and our ability for people to continue to have success on the program. and what we are also seeing in terms of that retention is not only are people inspired, but they want to inspire other people to lead healthier lives. carol: where is the most demand? mindy: if you look at our subscribers, they all have the app. about 1.6 million of those also choose to go to face-to-face meetings. but the community called connect is also in the app. that is like our facebook, instagram digital community. we believe that is very much responsible for our retention being at an all-time high, because people want to share. we also know that when people share and they do things together, they have that much more success. carol: got to ask you about oprah. it has been a big factor for the company in terms of her investment into it, but you have obvious
carol: what percentage is that roughly? mindy: about 30%. carol: can you continue that? the more we can recruit by getting people to understand how meaningful we can be in their lives, retention is very important as well. carol: right. mindy: and our ability for people to continue to have success on the program. and what we are also seeing in terms of that retention is not only are people inspired, but they want to inspire other people to lead healthier lives. carol: where is the most demand?...
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Oct 26, 2018
10/18
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carol: i'm curious. a lot of the ultra high net worth individuals pe, moving into alternative investments. what are they doing with the money? >> in the u.s., philanthropy is really big. you are getting into generation two and three and it is very important. these are all self-made first-generation billionaires. over the next decade, what you see will be dramatic in terms of philanthropy. in terms of investments, absolutely. many use ubs because we are a global bank and we have a network of other clients like them all over the world and they want the opportunity to invest typesy-side and do direct of investments with the global capabilities that they don't have in the country they live in. we it is a network and what will see is a massive wealth transfer and the legacy planning super important going on. david: john matthews, thank you for being with us today, john. coming up, an exclusive interview with robert kaplan, dallas fed president. coming up right here. this is bloomberg. ♪ website continues, u.s
carol: i'm curious. a lot of the ultra high net worth individuals pe, moving into alternative investments. what are they doing with the money? >> in the u.s., philanthropy is really big. you are getting into generation two and three and it is very important. these are all self-made first-generation billionaires. over the next decade, what you see will be dramatic in terms of philanthropy. in terms of investments, absolutely. many use ubs because we are a global bank and we have a network...
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Oct 29, 2018
10/18
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which is when carol's search began. own investigation filled with danger and surprise and troubling discoveries. >>> one discovery so disturbing that angie's mother reached out for help. coming up -- >> the anger just serged through me. the search for the truth would hold some chilling surprises. >> still brings the hair up on the back of my neck. >> when "the confession" continues. t, just hit me on the old horn. man: tom's my best friend, but ever since he bought a new house... tom: it's a $10 cover? oh, okay. didn't see that on the website. he's been acting more and more like his dad. come on, guys! jump in! the water's fine! tom pritchard. how we doin'? hi, there. tom pritchard. can we get a round of jalapeño poppers for me and the boys, please? i've been saving a lot of money with progressive lately, so... progressive can't protect you from becoming your parents. but we can protect your home and auto when you bundle with us. but we can protect your home and auto ♪ when the moon hits your eye ♪ like a big pizza pie
which is when carol's search began. own investigation filled with danger and surprise and troubling discoveries. >>> one discovery so disturbing that angie's mother reached out for help. coming up -- >> the anger just serged through me. the search for the truth would hold some chilling surprises. >> still brings the hair up on the back of my neck. >> when "the confession" continues. t, just hit me on the old horn. man: tom's my best friend, but ever since he...
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Oct 8, 2018
10/18
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carol: not many.ut we do think you will see upper single-digit numbers going into next year as well. it is the party line on the house. vonnie: we start with that on friday. talk to us about financials, where that heads into the abbott downing view? carol: we like financials. we like industrials. we like the growth oriented sectors of the markets health care. we are more neutral on some of the other ones. we have recently, as a firm, pulled back on our technology overweight to a more neutral weight, based on valuation. that makes change if you see more pullbacks like you have had in the last three days. vonnie: exactly. on that note, how much does the bond selloff concerning? carol: i think the bond selloff doesn't. we have been looking for a steeper yield curve which would imply more optimism around intermediate longer-term growth. we are getting this bird -- steeper yield curve. it has been a long time since we have been at the normalized level of 2.5%, 3%. vonnie: we stay in these ranges? aroundi t
carol: not many.ut we do think you will see upper single-digit numbers going into next year as well. it is the party line on the house. vonnie: we start with that on friday. talk to us about financials, where that heads into the abbott downing view? carol: we like financials. we like industrials. we like the growth oriented sectors of the markets health care. we are more neutral on some of the other ones. we have recently, as a firm, pulled back on our technology overweight to a more neutral...
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Oct 16, 2018
10/18
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we go to georgia this big with professor carol anderson. her new book "one person, no , vote: how voter suppression is destroying our democracy." then to flflorida, where a a bat initiative could resestore votig rights to 1.4 million felons. >>>> you havave an american citn waiting over 1717 years after he has cocompleted his sentence,, after he h has repaid hihis debo societety, but yet he still l ct acachieve citizenship status. and that is against democracy. amy: we will speak with desmond meade, a voting rights advocate who is leading the charge. we will also speak with mother jones senior writer ari berman about ballot initiatives that would ease voting restrictions in seven states. all that andnd more, coming up. welcome to democracy now!, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. saudi officials are preparing to say that after nearly two weeks of denials, prominent saudi journalist jamal khashoggi was killed by mistake during an interrogation gone wrong. the change in the official saudi narrative over khashoggi's d
we go to georgia this big with professor carol anderson. her new book "one person, no , vote: how voter suppression is destroying our democracy." then to flflorida, where a a bat initiative could resestore votig rights to 1.4 million felons. >>>> you havave an american citn waiting over 1717 years after he has cocompleted his sentence,, after he h has repaid hihis debo societety, but yet he still l ct acachieve citizenship status. and that is against democracy. amy: we...
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Oct 6, 2018
10/18
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primary, quote, a dixon aide took carol moseley-braun to lunch. i don't exactly know what the lunch was for. i can imagine. i'm not sure the wisdom of letting local reporters know that you're doing that, you're having your staff try to talk this would-be primary challenger out of what she is thinking about doing. but the lunch apparently did not work. alan dixon voted yes on clarence thomas' supreme court nomination in october, 1991, mid-october. by the following month, november, 1991, carol moseley-braun had entered the race to run against him in the democratic primary that would follow several months later in march of 1992. now, again, at this point, alan dixon had won 29 state elections. he had never lost. he was the number three democrat in the united states senate. he had the support of every element of the democratic power structure. he was sitting on millions of dollars to run ads and to run his get out the vote operation which was finely honed after decades in illinois politics, accruing friends and allies and people who owed him favors an
primary, quote, a dixon aide took carol moseley-braun to lunch. i don't exactly know what the lunch was for. i can imagine. i'm not sure the wisdom of letting local reporters know that you're doing that, you're having your staff try to talk this would-be primary challenger out of what she is thinking about doing. but the lunch apparently did not work. alan dixon voted yes on clarence thomas' supreme court nomination in october, 1991, mid-october. by the following month, november, 1991, carol...
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Oct 6, 2018
10/18
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primary, quote, a dixon aide took carol moseley-braun to lunch." i don't exactly know what the lunch was for. i can imagine. i'm not sure the wisdom of letting local reporters know that you're doing that, you're having your staff try to talk this would-be primary challenger out of what she is thinking about doing. but the lunch apparently did not work. alan dixon voted yes on clarence thomas' supreme court nomination in october 1991, mid-october. by the following month, november 1991, carol moseley-braun had entered the race to run against him in the democratic primary. that would follow several months later in march of 1992. now, again, at this point, alan dixon had won 29 state elections. he had never lost. he was the number three democrat in the united states senate. he had the support of every element of the democratic power structure. he was sitting on millions of dollars to run ads and to run his get out the vote operation which was finely honed after decades in illinois politics, accruing friends and allies and people who owed him favors aro
primary, quote, a dixon aide took carol moseley-braun to lunch." i don't exactly know what the lunch was for. i can imagine. i'm not sure the wisdom of letting local reporters know that you're doing that, you're having your staff try to talk this would-be primary challenger out of what she is thinking about doing. but the lunch apparently did not work. alan dixon voted yes on clarence thomas' supreme court nomination in october 1991, mid-october. by the following month, november 1991,...
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Oct 28, 2018
10/18
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what are you saying there carol? >> carol: a lot. and so what -- i start with they say mark twain said it but this time i don't know.ma but history may not repeat itself, but it sure do rise -- and so it's looking at those riems that i'm seeing historically but disfranchisement. so i start the book with the mississippi plan of 1890, and that's where mississippi looks at the 15th amendment, which arose after the civil war during reconstruction, and said, the right to vote shall not be a bridge by the state. on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. and so mississippi's looking up and i know you're all shocked it was mississippi. [laughter] and mississippi's looking up saying, they have that thing called the 15th amendment, so we can't really write a law saying we don't want black people to vote. how do we get black people not to vote and stay on this side of the 15th amendment? and they saidf we're going to go after the societally imposed condition on african american's and make that the litmus test. societally im
what are you saying there carol? >> carol: a lot. and so what -- i start with they say mark twain said it but this time i don't know.ma but history may not repeat itself, but it sure do rise -- and so it's looking at those riems that i'm seeing historically but disfranchisement. so i start the book with the mississippi plan of 1890, and that's where mississippi looks at the 15th amendment, which arose after the civil war during reconstruction, and said, the right to vote shall not be a...
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Oct 14, 2018
10/18
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so, with that said, i'd like to welcome carol adams and thank everybody. [applause] >> it's truly an honor to be here and be part of red emma's, we have been meaning to do something at the baltimore book despair be at the radical book shop pavilion. i mean, my year has been made. so thank you for that and for those who don't know consolidated, the sexual politics is on youtube and when it came out it was my older son who is here with four and a half, and we can hear my voice and then you can hear this other voice, and i was trying to figure out what is the other voice and my son said, it's whales. so, i'm hon a ct and my other singers are whales. it's like pretty cool. it was pretty cool in 1991, that's for sure. so, probably like a lot of you, november of 2016 was a very depressing month, and i woke up one morning and i thought, we need to do an anti-trump die yet book. let do an anti-trump diet and show people how veganism is part of the progress and if radical response to the resurgence of right-waning repressive values in the united states. we wrote up
so, with that said, i'd like to welcome carol adams and thank everybody. [applause] >> it's truly an honor to be here and be part of red emma's, we have been meaning to do something at the baltimore book despair be at the radical book shop pavilion. i mean, my year has been made. so thank you for that and for those who don't know consolidated, the sexual politics is on youtube and when it came out it was my older son who is here with four and a half, and we can hear my voice and then you...
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Oct 20, 2018
10/18
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i did not understand how carol whenan ox -- how carol --heroin and oxycontin were connected. if people were prescribed addicted,nce they are and they get cut off, they get them to, which fuels get more. when the pills got hard to get into thousand 10 and the early teens2010 and the early the drug cartels brought carol whenin. -- heroin in. >> each week, "american artifacts, takes you to museums and other historic places to learn about american history. we go to arlington, virginia, -- alexandria, virginia to see civil war related sites where women aided communities of newly freed slaves. rachel vogelstein: the museum is dedicated to ensuring the distinctive contribution is americanbution of women are written into the national narrative. has achieved this goal for 20 years. we currently exist as an online museum. the goal is to build a physical museum on our national mall. in 2014, congress passed a bipartisan act to create a congressional commission to investigate the feasibility of a national women's history in -- museum in washington dz. commission -- >> period commission t
i did not understand how carol whenan ox -- how carol --heroin and oxycontin were connected. if people were prescribed addicted,nce they are and they get cut off, they get them to, which fuels get more. when the pills got hard to get into thousand 10 and the early teens2010 and the early the drug cartels brought carol whenin. -- heroin in. >> each week, "american artifacts, takes you to museums and other historic places to learn about american history. we go to arlington, virginia,...
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Oct 18, 2018
10/18
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it's due to caroll and his talent. >> bravo. >> cheers to caroll and to big bird for making so many of new york. >> well done, mr. spinney. he's actually a friend to our show. get this, our own polka master barry mitchell had the privilege of interviewing spinney at the bronx zoo 15 years ago. >> he said in recent years just some of the physical demands of the job, the dancing, the suit, kind of took a toll on him. you can see he brings a smile to everyone's face as david mentioned. >> he plans to be an ambassador of "sesame street" and when he's 100 years he'll still be doing this, quote, puppet stuff. >> sunny days ahead. >> well-deserved on that retirement. asthma. this one? contaminated food. this one? west-nile virus. this? five billion dollars in property damage. and how about this one? lime disease. [male announcer] once you know the serious threats they pose, you'll never see household pests the same way again. learn more at pestworld dot org. >>> good morning. i'm kenneth moton. >> and i'm erielle reshef. kendis and diane are off today. here are some of the top headlines we're
it's due to caroll and his talent. >> bravo. >> cheers to caroll and to big bird for making so many of new york. >> well done, mr. spinney. he's actually a friend to our show. get this, our own polka master barry mitchell had the privilege of interviewing spinney at the bronx zoo 15 years ago. >> he said in recent years just some of the physical demands of the job, the dancing, the suit, kind of took a toll on him. you can see he brings a smile to everyone's face as...
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Oct 20, 2018
10/18
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. ♪ ♪ carol: welcome to "bloomberg businessweek." i'm carol massar. jason: i'm jason kelly.oining you from bloomberg headquarters in new york. carol: this week, the future of retail. e-commerce giants amazon and walmart are after global expansion. next stop on the battleground, india. jason: plus, sears files for bankruptcy. why ceo eddie lampert couldn't keep the retail giant afloat. carol: first, to the politics section. it is a story that has dominated
. ♪ ♪ carol: welcome to "bloomberg businessweek." i'm carol massar. jason: i'm jason kelly.oining you from bloomberg headquarters in new york. carol: this week, the future of retail. e-commerce giants amazon and walmart are after global expansion. next stop on the battleground, india. jason: plus, sears files for bankruptcy. why ceo eddie lampert couldn't keep the retail giant afloat. carol: first, to the politics section. it is a story that has dominated
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Oct 29, 2018
10/18
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early folks who were in, carol and lyman casey. carol's family has been supporting the art ms. this city in so many ways with affection and tremendous investment. carol was one of the first people who walked in my office and we were talking about this, and she said this needs to happen, and she continued the investment and continued the investment. carol i want to thank you for all that you've done for us. thank you so much. [applause] >> along the way, every project has a patron saint, actually, and the fact is i will talk about this a bit more today, but we lost bill bose early on, and when that happens, that laefshs kind of a vacuum in leadership. barney osher stepped in and made this thing happen. he not onlily invested in this, but i can't tell you what it meant to this being accomplished. and so this brings us down to the finish line. we were in raping of getting this done. jim was prepared to give us a loan, but frankly we were short and we needed a gift and a bridge that was crossed, and a colleague and a friend of mine who was a wonderful composer, but i have to tell y
early folks who were in, carol and lyman casey. carol's family has been supporting the art ms. this city in so many ways with affection and tremendous investment. carol was one of the first people who walked in my office and we were talking about this, and she said this needs to happen, and she continued the investment and continued the investment. carol i want to thank you for all that you've done for us. thank you so much. [applause] >> along the way, every project has a patron saint,...
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Oct 26, 2018
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inside the family's greenhouse, roby explained his support for carol miller. >> carol miller is ttomea job creator. r husband several car dealerships. she has a bison farm. she employs people through there. >> alcindor: like ojeda, roby is but they disagree on politics. b >> he's makiically the usual politician promises. i'm going to this, i'm going to do that, i'm going to do this. how? severance tax? i mean how are you going to pay for all these grand ideas? >> alcindor: polls show only single-digits separating ojeda and miller. democratic strategist mike plante says this race should send a message ahead of 2020. >> democrats forgot how to tell a compelling narrative along with the data. you look at trump's message. you know make america great again very simple very compelling aspirational tords fight like hell and let your constituents know that's what you're doing. >> that's what i believe in, that's why i'll die a democrat. >> alcindor: in less than two weeks, west virginians will have than answer as to whether strategy succeeds. for the pbs newshour, i'm yamiche alcindor in yett
inside the family's greenhouse, roby explained his support for carol miller. >> carol miller is ttomea job creator. r husband several car dealerships. she has a bison farm. she employs people through there. >> alcindor: like ojeda, roby is but they disagree on politics. b >> he's makiically the usual politician promises. i'm going to this, i'm going to do that, i'm going to do this. how? severance tax? i mean how are you going to pay for all these grand ideas? >>...
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carol g: estoy muy emocionada porque lo soÑÉ desde hace mucho tiempo. la primera fue el new york en donde cantamos juntos y tu impresionante. reportera: el vÍdeo que hiciste con noel incrementa los rumores de que estÁn enamorados. carol g: es que me paso con todo el mundo y con Él no serÍa la excepciÓn. yo tengo una gran relaciÓn con todos. anoel es de ustedes y yo estoy trabajando en lo mÍo. reportera: te vimos en la primera gala de la primera temporada de " nuestra belleza latina", quÉ mensaje tienes para las chicas? carol g: primero quiero felicitar al canal porque me parece increÍble que este aÑo la temÁtica a cobije a tantas mujeres de tantas tallas, colores y edades. creo que ese es el mensaje mÁs bonito y tambiÉn por la seguridad y la actitud de cada mujer porque cada una tiene que creer en sÍ misma. reportera: por otro lado, carol g reaccionÓ a los comentarios sobre su tema " mi cama suena" en donde muchos aseguran que no empodera las mujeres. carol g: la letra es muy clara porque es la historia de una mujer que deja a sus extras enterarse de qu
carol g: estoy muy emocionada porque lo soÑÉ desde hace mucho tiempo. la primera fue el new york en donde cantamos juntos y tu impresionante. reportera: el vÍdeo que hiciste con noel incrementa los rumores de que estÁn enamorados. carol g: es que me paso con todo el mundo y con Él no serÍa la excepciÓn. yo tengo una gran relaciÓn con todos. anoel es de ustedes y yo estoy trabajando en lo mÍo. reportera: te vimos en la primera gala de la primera temporada de " nuestra belleza...
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Oct 23, 2018
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carol, i saw you on our 4:00 p.m. broadcast and we agree on one central point that we can't get beyond. how did roger stone know to predict that clinton's campaign chairman was about to have his turn in the barrel, tony podesta? >> six weeks before the amazing podesta e-mails are leaked. >> how did he know that? >> how did he know that? he says -- he's said a lot of different things but one thing roger stone has said more consistently than others is that he had some research that was provided to him by a conspiracy theorist who passed on something to a journalist and he received this information and it suggested wow, this trove of e-mails that were released about hillary clinton's campaign were missing materials from john podesta, that must be coming. it does seem a also prescient, and people are straining to see how that could be true. >> joyce, if you're mueller, what does stone get you? what does stone bring you? >> stone brings 30 years of relationship with president trump. they've known each other for a long time
carol, i saw you on our 4:00 p.m. broadcast and we agree on one central point that we can't get beyond. how did roger stone know to predict that clinton's campaign chairman was about to have his turn in the barrel, tony podesta? >> six weeks before the amazing podesta e-mails are leaked. >> how did he know that? >> how did he know that? he says -- he's said a lot of different things but one thing roger stone has said more consistently than others is that he had some research...
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Oct 6, 2018
10/18
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i am carol massar. >> and i'm jason kelly. we have a business exclusive on an army of 16,000. -- in a subversive side five sci-fi movie, it is like the united states. it turns out women are not the play it safe investors that they have always been presumed to be. >> bloomberg businessweek has uncovered the most significant supply chain attack. >> the stunning discoveries are ace -- the subject of an investigation involving 30 companies including government contractors. >> and china is behind it. let us get to jordan robertson from washington. reporter: a special unit from -- ahina liberation army
i am carol massar. >> and i'm jason kelly. we have a business exclusive on an army of 16,000. -- in a subversive side five sci-fi movie, it is like the united states. it turns out women are not the play it safe investors that they have always been presumed to be. >> bloomberg businessweek has uncovered the most significant supply chain attack. >> the stunning discoveries are ace -- the subject of an investigation involving 30 companies including government contractors....
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Oct 9, 2018
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carol is at blenheim palace for us this morning. good morning, carol. good morning, all.has 2000 acres of parkland and also formal gardens —— quacking. landscaped i capability brown, and it is stunning, and if you are standing waiting for a train it feels cool. generally temperatures are milder and brighter than they were this time yesterday. the forecast for the day is a wet one across scotland and northern ireland, at times northumberland and cumbria. it will also be windy across the northern half of the country. but for much of england and wales when we lose this morning's cloud we will see some sunny spells. you can see why we have the rain and the pressure chart. a weather front draped across scotland and northern ireland is sinking south and moving northwards, the heaviest of the rain once again will be in the west of scotla nd once again will be in the west of scotland and the north—west of northern ireland, where we have already seen a lot dry totals. you may find that is problematic. not much rain in the east of northern ireland and the east of scotland and for m
carol is at blenheim palace for us this morning. good morning, carol. good morning, all.has 2000 acres of parkland and also formal gardens —— quacking. landscaped i capability brown, and it is stunning, and if you are standing waiting for a train it feels cool. generally temperatures are milder and brighter than they were this time yesterday. the forecast for the day is a wet one across scotland and northern ireland, at times northumberland and cumbria. it will also be windy across the...
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Oct 14, 2018
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professor carol anderson is the author. thanks for spending some time on booktv. >> you can watch this and all other booktv program from the past 20 years @booktv.org. type the author's name and the word book in the search bar at the top of the page. >> c-span launched booktv 20 years ago on c-span2 and since then we've covered thousands of authors and book festivals totaling more than 4000 hours of programming. sociology professor mike thiessen has appeared more than 25 times. in 2008 was a guest on a monthly call-in program in depth. >> he told david, i used to think which included here and will there. we have to have a complete overhaul of society. we have to have revolution of values. that martin luther king, jr. was at the major of his popularity. but the stench and foul felt of martin luther king, jr. resistance swept away by the sweet scent of partisanship. death has defined in as a great american as part of the pantheon of our re-founding father of this nation. >> you can watch this and all other booktv programs fro
professor carol anderson is the author. thanks for spending some time on booktv. >> you can watch this and all other booktv program from the past 20 years @booktv.org. type the author's name and the word book in the search bar at the top of the page. >> c-span launched booktv 20 years ago on c-span2 and since then we've covered thousands of authors and book festivals totaling more than 4000 hours of programming. sociology professor mike thiessen has appeared more than 25 times. in...
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Oct 12, 2018
10/18
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carol, thank you. we are now enjoying...you. if you like flying or not, either way this will interest you. the world's longest non—stop flight has taken off and sean has been tracking it for us. keeping a very close eye, still in the air, glad someone is doing it! that's right. the flight remember is going from singapore to new york and it is expected to take nearly 19 hours. let's have a look at how it's getting on. i can tell you it took off about 24 minutes late and right now sq—22, as it is known, has covered around 7,000 miles. it has got about 3,000 more to go and we can see from this radar it is just about over northern canada now. one man i'm surprised isn't actually on it is the travel editor of the independent, simon calder. but thankfully he's on the roof of our london studios looking out for it. did it sell out, that's the big question. they certainly did. there may have been one empty seat i understand but they will be happy with the payload on this. bear in mind, there are no cheap seats on this flight. mind, th
carol, thank you. we are now enjoying...you. if you like flying or not, either way this will interest you. the world's longest non—stop flight has taken off and sean has been tracking it for us. keeping a very close eye, still in the air, glad someone is doing it! that's right. the flight remember is going from singapore to new york and it is expected to take nearly 19 hours. let's have a look at how it's getting on. i can tell you it took off about 24 minutes late and right now sq—22, as...
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our guest tonight is an emery university professor and author carol anderson is joining us, everybody( cheers and applause ) she has a fascinating new book called "one person, no vote: how voter suppression is destroying our democracy." so we'll be talking about that. let's catch up on today's headlines. bad news, people. facebook has been hacked. so looks like your high school and mafia wars is no longer a secret you can take to your grave. >> facebook, the social media giant already under fire for not protecting users' private information now admitting it's been hacked again. >> 50 million users' personal data exposed including facebook c.e.o. mark zuckerberg's own page, names, gender, hometown and accounts on other sites where facebook is used to log in was revealed. >> trevor: hackers got access to people's names, gender and hometown? so they logged into facebook? what am i missing here? i get why people hack businesses and credit card companies but what value do you get from hacking facebook? susan henderson likes dave matthews band? we got her! pay us five dollars million or i'l
our guest tonight is an emery university professor and author carol anderson is joining us, everybody( cheers and applause ) she has a fascinating new book called "one person, no vote: how voter suppression is destroying our democracy." so we'll be talking about that. let's catch up on today's headlines. bad news, people. facebook has been hacked. so looks like your high school and mafia wars is no longer a secret you can take to your grave. >> facebook, the social media giant...
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Oct 23, 2018
10/18
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good morning, carol. good morning, carol. good morning.ly outside. a touch of frost for places like hampshire and kent. in the capital temperatures ranging between seven and 12. the highest temperature is in edinburgh, the lowest in london, so today is mixed fortunes. windy across scotland. in the south, we are expecting sunshine. that's because high pressure is firmly in charge of the weather. for some it will be similar to what we had yesterday. a weather front across scotland still producing that rain. windy across the north, but not as bad as yesterday, but across scotland we are still looking at gusts up to 50 miles to our. and similar gusts across the pennines. the england, wales, northern ireland, more cloud coming in this morning, thick enough to produce the odd spot of rain. in the sunshine, highs of about 16, 17 in aberdeen. to this evening and overnight, the rain weakens across the north and west. still a fair bit of cloud around. where it breaks it would be chilly. but not as chilly as the nightjust gone, perhaps. the chance of
good morning, carol. good morning, carol. good morning.ly outside. a touch of frost for places like hampshire and kent. in the capital temperatures ranging between seven and 12. the highest temperature is in edinburgh, the lowest in london, so today is mixed fortunes. windy across scotland. in the south, we are expecting sunshine. that's because high pressure is firmly in charge of the weather. for some it will be similar to what we had yesterday. a weather front across scotland still producing...
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Oct 21, 2018
10/18
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. ♪ ♪ carol: welcome to "bloomberg businessweek." i'm carol massar. jason: i'm jason kelly. you from bloomberg headquarters in new york. carol: this week, the future of retail. e-commerce giants amazon and walmart are after global expansion. next stop on the battleground, india. jason: plus, sears files for bankruptcy. why ceo eddie lampert couldn't keep the one-time retail giant afloat. carol: first, to the politics section.
. ♪ ♪ carol: welcome to "bloomberg businessweek." i'm carol massar. jason: i'm jason kelly. you from bloomberg headquarters in new york. carol: this week, the future of retail. e-commerce giants amazon and walmart are after global expansion. next stop on the battleground, india. jason: plus, sears files for bankruptcy. why ceo eddie lampert couldn't keep the one-time retail giant afloat. carol: first, to the politics section.
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peter baker, lanhee chen, carol lee.e away saudi arabia and say russia. >> the same thing. >> congress is united, the president is isolated. >> mds is a lot like early putin. there are moments when people found him to be a reformer, modernizer, hoping he could be a friend with the west. at home he was cracking down hard. the difference is when russia poisons a former russian agent on british soil we can unite against russia because russia is not an ally. saudi arabia is an ally. we're stuck between vary who has been a friend since the 1940s, it puts any president in a tough position. >> we shouldn't lose sight of the fact there's regional dynamics that are very complicated. we certainly have an important alliance with the saudis. let's not forget who benefits if we have a fracture of our rbis. the turks are ready to step in, qataris. if we believe the saudis did this, huge problem. we obviously have to do something about it. let's not forget there are other players in the region with interests as well. let's not be quick
peter baker, lanhee chen, carol lee.e away saudi arabia and say russia. >> the same thing. >> congress is united, the president is isolated. >> mds is a lot like early putin. there are moments when people found him to be a reformer, modernizer, hoping he could be a friend with the west. at home he was cracking down hard. the difference is when russia poisons a former russian agent on british soil we can unite against russia because russia is not an ally. saudi arabia is an...
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carol anderson, everybody.r enough to be fast. so it's no surprise that the company that led the charge to fast, who built the nation's largest gig-speed network, is already moving-beyond. beyond wifi that just connects. to wifi that thinks about what your customers want. helping you to compete. beyond the reliability you expect. to knowing that if the power goes out, business goes on. ♪ ♪ beyond chasing down network problems. ♪ ♪ to a network that shows you when and where there's an issue. beyond clumsy dial-ins and pins. to one-touch conference calls. ♪ ♪ beyond low-res surveillance video. to images so sharp, they can help protect your business. ♪ ♪ comcast business.
carol anderson, everybody.r enough to be fast. so it's no surprise that the company that led the charge to fast, who built the nation's largest gig-speed network, is already moving-beyond. beyond wifi that just connects. to wifi that thinks about what your customers want. helping you to compete. beyond the reliability you expect. to knowing that if the power goes out, business goes on. ♪ ♪ beyond chasing down network problems. ♪ ♪ to a network that shows you when and where there's an...