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which i is his biggest plates carolyn new york and rita it can inspire people to pause for a moment both those in the photos and those who look at them. and now onto a young a dutch talent who is trying to get the general masses excited about art laying on care counts as one of the most important three d. street artists in the world and as you'll see in our next report there is much more to his images than meets the eye. artworks that keep you guessing they play with the viewers perception sometimes appearing so real that it's uncanny these are all works by dutch street artist play on cheer he's built a fan following all over the world despite the fact that he has no formal training he primarily follows the rules of mathematics. and that school was very good in that and that's what i never knew what i could do it and i find it the kind of use this dinner and all these kind of forming us and all these kind of techniques of mathematics but now if you see this. they see this author again you obviously with the way you feel look i know that you know that you also need it aside from mathemati
which i is his biggest plates carolyn new york and rita it can inspire people to pause for a moment both those in the photos and those who look at them. and now onto a young a dutch talent who is trying to get the general masses excited about art laying on care counts as one of the most important three d. street artists in the world and as you'll see in our next report there is much more to his images than meets the eye. artworks that keep you guessing they play with the viewers perception...
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Jun 18, 2018
06/18
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joining us now to talk about this is new york democratic congresswoman carolyn maloney. she was part of a group of lawmakers that visited a new jersey detention facility on sunday. congressman -- congresswoman, it's good to see you. thanks for joining us. i want to start with your visit to that detention facility. what did you see? who was there? >> well, we, we had authorization both from five of the fathers that were in the facility and their lawyers, that we could speak to them. when we arrived, they would not let us in. at one point they started putting paper on the window in front of us. they finally removed that. they made us wait 90 minutes, and then finally they allowed us to go in and we spoke in a, sort of a lawyers room, a small room with five of the fathers on fathers day. of the five, four of them came legally to the country. they came through the immigration centers and pled asylum. one came in illegally because he said there was violence at the border and he immediately turned himself in to immigration officials. they told heart breaking stories. two of the
joining us now to talk about this is new york democratic congresswoman carolyn maloney. she was part of a group of lawmakers that visited a new jersey detention facility on sunday. congressman -- congresswoman, it's good to see you. thanks for joining us. i want to start with your visit to that detention facility. what did you see? who was there? >> well, we, we had authorization both from five of the fathers that were in the facility and their lawyers, that we could speak to them. when...
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Jun 5, 2018
06/18
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two of those advocates join me, actress alyssa milano and democratic congresswoman from new york carolynank you so much. alyssa milano, first of all, you've been a leader in a number of movements. why is the e.r.a. important to you? >> well, look, i think in the last year, we've witnessed a president in the white house who maybe had some abuses towards women, and i think it terrified us as women, and i think that we've systemical seen the party roll back some women's rights and i think that that's what made me too happen and so we have said as a sex, as women, we have said me too. we have said time's up. but all of those are veryw words if there's no protection in the constitution for women. >> congresswoman, what is the challenge here? because it's been years since the 36th state ratified. now you've got illinois. you need one more state. where are you looking? and then what happened? >> well, we need one more state. there are a number of possibilities. virginia, north carolina, utah. >> arizona. >> there are a number. but we are now focused on getting it ratified and then beginning tha
two of those advocates join me, actress alyssa milano and democratic congresswoman from new york carolynank you so much. alyssa milano, first of all, you've been a leader in a number of movements. why is the e.r.a. important to you? >> well, look, i think in the last year, we've witnessed a president in the white house who maybe had some abuses towards women, and i think it terrified us as women, and i think that we've systemical seen the party roll back some women's rights and i think...
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Jun 7, 2018
06/18
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joining us to discuss, carolyn -- caroline hyde in london. dan in new york.t controversy in new that they facebook, shared information with chinese device makers. as you have talked about, the stock has recovered since pre-cambridge analytica. will investors care about this latest take up? -- latest hiccup? t. zuckerberg navigated i there was significant nervousness you would see regulatory issues, major damage to the advertising franchise, and users leaving by droves. instead, we have seen it contained. we think maximum $1 billion to $2 billion of revenue is at risk this year in advertising. we have seen minimal defections. they have navigated with flying colors. you get this last chinese news. this is not the news you want to see. investors are a little more immune to this in trying to make sure it was on the phones and not the servers. i think you see the initial reaction, it looks like the bark is worse than the bite, at least so far what we see. emily: we spoke with u.s. congressman greg walden about this, who is very concerned. take a listen to what he
joining us to discuss, carolyn -- caroline hyde in london. dan in new york.t controversy in new that they facebook, shared information with chinese device makers. as you have talked about, the stock has recovered since pre-cambridge analytica. will investors care about this latest take up? -- latest hiccup? t. zuckerberg navigated i there was significant nervousness you would see regulatory issues, major damage to the advertising franchise, and users leaving by droves. instead, we have seen it...
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Jun 22, 2018
06/18
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she's the gentlelady from the 12th congressional district of new york, a member of the congressional progressive caucus, the honorable carolyn maloney. mrs. maloney: thank you. i want to thank my good friend and colleague from the great for of york, ms. clarke, organizing this incredibly important special order. her mother and i served together on the city council. she was one of my best friends there. she's one of my best friends here. i'd say that they have been major leaders in the immigrant community, thrick from the caribbean -- particularly from the caribbean where her mother was born and been a leader n all forms of social justice 20 -- a leader in all forms of social justice in the 20th century. throughout history we have been a nation in which the -- the world's oppressed and vulnerable look to for hope, a beacon of light signaling a better life. the zero tolerance policy put forth by the trump administration utterly violates that tradition of values in this country. families are fleeing unspeakable danger and oppression only to arrive at you are o borders and be torn away from each other. yesterday president trump
she's the gentlelady from the 12th congressional district of new york, a member of the congressional progressive caucus, the honorable carolyn maloney. mrs. maloney: thank you. i want to thank my good friend and colleague from the great for of york, ms. clarke, organizing this incredibly important special order. her mother and i served together on the city council. she was one of my best friends there. she's one of my best friends here. i'd say that they have been major leaders in the immigrant...
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Jun 15, 2018
06/18
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national security reporter for nbc news, mike the schmidt with the "new york times" and msnbc national security contributor, mimi rocah, and carolyn poly zee a criminal defense attorney. thank you for being with us. ken, let me start with you. in terms of the bottom line now, paul manafort's in jail. he's probably till september at least now. explain what exactly it was that caused the judge to make that decision today. >> sure, steve. it was paul manafort's reckless decision in february to reach out to some potential witnesses in the case against him that involved allegedly illegal lobbying. and he reached out by phone and through encrypted apps. one of those witnesses was so rattled by this he immediately called the fbi and turned over the encrypted messages to prosecutors and said i think he was trying to tell me to lie. that was essentially the basis for these allegations. not only did the prosecution file a motion to revoke bay, they filed a separate indictment. they charged him today with obstruction of justice. he pled not guilty in court. that led judge jackson to say look, the prosecution has already met the standard that
national security reporter for nbc news, mike the schmidt with the "new york times" and msnbc national security contributor, mimi rocah, and carolyn poly zee a criminal defense attorney. thank you for being with us. ken, let me start with you. in terms of the bottom line now, paul manafort's in jail. he's probably till september at least now. explain what exactly it was that caused the judge to make that decision today. >> sure, steve. it was paul manafort's reckless decision in...
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Jun 4, 2018
06/18
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. >> i'm joined by matt apuzzo with "the new york times" who helped break the story about the memo, and carolyn. let's start with the journalism here. it comes out now that trump really did design the cover-up. he said the whole meeting at trump tower was about adoption of russian babies and all that. fine. that's not what they were saying before. why did they change the story, do you know? >> well, let's be clear. they didn't change the story. we had to get the legal memo and publish it for anybody to figure it out. >> right. >> if you go back to last year -- >> they didn't intentionally let the word out that they had changed their story? >> no. nobody was going to correct the record force. if you go back to last year in july when the times first broke this story, we reported that the president had personally signed off on this statement. and you ran the clips. no, no, no, that's wrong. "the new york times" is wrong. and "the washington post" goes even further. no, he didn't just sign off on that, he personally dictated that. and the response was, no no, no, that's wrong, that's wrong. only no
. >> i'm joined by matt apuzzo with "the new york times" who helped break the story about the memo, and carolyn. let's start with the journalism here. it comes out now that trump really did design the cover-up. he said the whole meeting at trump tower was about adoption of russian babies and all that. fine. that's not what they were saying before. why did they change the story, do you know? >> well, let's be clear. they didn't change the story. we had to get the legal memo...
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Jun 23, 2018
06/18
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new york. >> i went upstairs and i found the sculpture in pieces all over the floor. >> reporter: carolyn riccardellie the day in 2002 when a sculpture named adam took a terrible fall. >> he was in 28 large pieces and hundreds of small pieces. >> it's a crime scene. >> it was. >> reporter: the conservator for the metropolitan museum of art says the 6'3" adam was gravely damaged after his plywood pedestal buckled. >> this is one of the most important sculptures from the early renaissance, certainly in the western hemisphere outside of italy. and when something like this breaks, we couldn't accept the loss. >> reporter: adam is one of the pieces author and art historian noah charney examined in his new book about the vulnerability of the world's treasurers. what would a museum of lost art look like? how big would it be? >> well, it would be bugger than all the museums of the world combined. >> reporter: take 15th century painter roger vander weiden. >> we focus on his deposition painting which is a very beautiful work. it's an all intro to art history book and it's the museo del prado in madrid. but du
new york. >> i went upstairs and i found the sculpture in pieces all over the floor. >> reporter: carolyn riccardellie the day in 2002 when a sculpture named adam took a terrible fall. >> he was in 28 large pieces and hundreds of small pieces. >> it's a crime scene. >> it was. >> reporter: the conservator for the metropolitan museum of art says the 6'3" adam was gravely damaged after his plywood pedestal buckled. >> this is one of the most...