43
43
Oct 11, 2019
10/19
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
what his or she will jordan if children do not you while mukerji up she went on the weaker one charlie charlie when i succumbed to join me and when going a privilege what he terms with his chin was so on was in congress going to one so only for his mobile to see to the room so clearly a quarter mile the walk. the local leaders have what i'm saying with knew what. to do but you. will touch a g. chord if we're going to how do you know what to do with one of your toes. grannie. it's a deal but in the nonpublic make sure to be honest and. it's many of the tunes in the mix. too. but if you look at is the cliff is that what you think it means that. the gunnison up. there they need to look at a little bit and i'll go non-blocking i told people. to build an economy that it was. good that will tell what it was still in a stock then that isn't all that. good about. just. tell me about. the iraq. oxygen somebody's. going to have much to tell me if i do find it. too to be let into the job or how should i know. how he came undone look look look young look to their. i'm just going to. do a month i do. you k
what his or she will jordan if children do not you while mukerji up she went on the weaker one charlie charlie when i succumbed to join me and when going a privilege what he terms with his chin was so on was in congress going to one so only for his mobile to see to the room so clearly a quarter mile the walk. the local leaders have what i'm saying with knew what. to do but you. will touch a g. chord if we're going to how do you know what to do with one of your toes. grannie. it's a deal but in...
41
41
Oct 10, 2019
10/19
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 41
favorite 0
quote 0
it is to is on the weaker one charlie charlie when i succumb to join me and when i'm going to it for the knowledge of what he terms it was james who on gear was in congress going to. turn the palms mobile to see if there is room so clearly a quarter mile the walk. the local leaders have what i'm saying with no one group on boards or 2 but you. will touch a g. chord if you're going to how do you know what to do with one of your toes. to. me. yes. it's you know but in the nonpublic sure to be honest and. it's many of the jews in the. 2. seats hope it will that is the hope but it's not what you think it is that. the gunnison up. that i need to look at a little bit and i'll go non-blocking i told people in egypt to build an economy that it was. good that will over the stillness that to them that isn't the . road to damascus. just. tell me about it. was. oxygen somebody if. i had he called me up i'd like to tell much if you do find it. to do you let into the child what should i know. leap a moon doesn't look look look young look to there. i must not. do to a monk i do. you know i don't mi
it is to is on the weaker one charlie charlie when i succumb to join me and when i'm going to it for the knowledge of what he terms it was james who on gear was in congress going to. turn the palms mobile to see if there is room so clearly a quarter mile the walk. the local leaders have what i'm saying with no one group on boards or 2 but you. will touch a g. chord if you're going to how do you know what to do with one of your toes. to. me. yes. it's you know but in the nonpublic sure to be...
65
65
Oct 23, 2019
10/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie turt. charlie -- charlie hurt. we thank you for joining us tonight.us tomorrow. see you tomorrow night. good night from new york. trish: tempers running high in the gop as frustrated republicans on capitol hill storm earn intelligence committee meeting. they are accusing democrats of going to extraordinary lengths to hide their so-called impeachment investigation into the president of the united states. house republicans trying to gain access to a closed door hearing. they wanted to listen to testimony from a pentagon official. their frustration stems from concern that democrats are trying to effectively build their own narrative with planted leaks from these closed door hearings. >> behind those
charlie turt. charlie -- charlie hurt. we thank you for joining us tonight.us tomorrow. see you tomorrow night. good night from new york. trish: tempers running high in the gop as frustrated republicans on capitol hill storm earn intelligence committee meeting. they are accusing democrats of going to extraordinary lengths to hide their so-called impeachment investigation into the president of the united states. house republicans trying to gain access to a closed door hearing. they wanted to...
2,279
2.3K
Oct 12, 2019
10/19
by
KGO
tv
eye 2,279
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie adelson not charged? prosecutors point the finger at him as the mastermind. charlie adelson should not be resting comfortably tonight. >> while it remains to be seen if the adelsons will ever have to answer to law enforcement, we caught up with charlieel? before the shooting, did you ever discuss hiring a hitman? >> hours ago, charlie adelson's attorney sent out a statement, saying in part, "the prosecution couldn't prove its theory on katie after three years of really thorough investigation and preparation. this is why they have not charged charlie and his family. the case simply isn't there. after the hung jury, their prospects have gone down, not up." >> now, attorneys for the entire adelson family strongly deny any involvement and just yesterday we received a new statement from wendi's lawyer, saying, "the presentations by the prosecution and the defense, as well as wendi's own testimony, have demonstrated beyond any doubt that she had no involvement in this terrible tragedy." >> the central irony or tragedy s stilalive, which is his kids moving back down to miami, this is precisely what has happened. >> in her podcast, wendi talks about how happy they have been with the adelson family. >> my children are thriving and happy. we
charlie adelson not charged? prosecutors point the finger at him as the mastermind. charlie adelson should not be resting comfortably tonight. >> while it remains to be seen if the adelsons will ever have to answer to law enforcement, we caught up with charlieel? before the shooting, did you ever discuss hiring a hitman? >> hours ago, charlie adelson's attorney sent out a statement, saying in part, "the prosecution couldn't prove its theory on katie after three years of really...
253
253
tv
eye 253
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie. charlie, what month is it? >> october. >> jimmy: okay. what's your favorite cereal, charlie? at-a-bix. >> jimmy: i don't know that one, but sounds healthy, though. i'm going to i'm sal. going to go crazy and going with mellecia. are you high? >> maybe. >> how about them cowboys. >> jimmy: see that? >> yeah. [ applause ] >> jimmy: so, sal, we have prizes for the group. >> we have pumpkin spice spam, jimmy. >> jimmy: charlie, you're going to love that. ginbrha england and tell everyone about it. let's move the group out and get another group in he tin. >> jimmy: hello, group, hello. what is your name? >> rob. >> michelle. >> jimmy: michelle, where are you from? >> toronto. >> jimmy: you're canadian. >> i'm canadian, aye. >> jimmy: weed is legal up there, right? >> yep. >> jimmy: where are you right now? >> i'm in l.a. >> jimmy: ak, gookay, good, all. next, let's meet? >> khandler. >> jimmy: this is how you spell chandler? >> yes. i guess so. r jimmy: this must makeou y >> all the time. >> jimmy: no one has ever spelled your name correctly. >> or said it correctly. >> jimmy: did
charlie. charlie, what month is it? >> october. >> jimmy: okay. what's your favorite cereal, charlie? at-a-bix. >> jimmy: i don't know that one, but sounds healthy, though. i'm going to i'm sal. going to go crazy and going with mellecia. are you high? >> maybe. >> how about them cowboys. >> jimmy: see that? >> yeah. [ applause ] >> jimmy: so, sal, we have prizes for the group. >> we have pumpkin spice spam, jimmy. >> jimmy: charlie,...
288
288
Oct 19, 2019
10/19
by
KGO
tv
eye 288
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie. >> jimmy: how are you. >> i'm great, thanks. >> jimmy: where are you from? >> i'm from england. >> jimmy: naturally, charlie would be the person i might suspect. would you mind removing your glasses so i can see your eyes? her eyes look pretty clear, but that could be a ruse as well. all right, charlielie, what month is it? >> october. >> jimmy: okay. what's your favorite cereal, charlie? >> wheat-a-bix. >> jimmy: i don't know that one, but sounds healthy, though. i'm going to sal. i'm going to go crazy and i'm going with mellecia. are you high? >> maybe. >> how about them cowboys. >> jimmy: see that? >> yeah. [ applause ] >> jimmy: so, sal, we have prizes for the group. y.'rim: a to love that. bring that home to england and tell everyone about it. let's move the group out and get another group in there. >> come on in. >> jimmy: hello, group, hello. what is your name? >> rob. >> michelle. >> jimmy: michelle, where are you from? >> toronto. >> jimmy: you're canadian. >> i'm canadian, aye. >> jimmy: weed is legal up there, right? >> yep. >> jimmy: where are you right now? >> i'm in l.a. >> jimmy: okay, good, all right. next, let's meet? >> khandler. >> jimmy: this is how you spell chandler? >> yes. i guess so. >> jimmy: this must make your life hard. >> all the time. >> jimmy: no one
charlie. >> jimmy: how are you. >> i'm great, thanks. >> jimmy: where are you from? >> i'm from england. >> jimmy: naturally, charlie would be the person i might suspect. would you mind removing your glasses so i can see your eyes? her eyes look pretty clear, but that could be a ruse as well. all right, charlielie, what month is it? >> october. >> jimmy: okay. what's your favorite cereal, charlie? >> wheat-a-bix. >> jimmy: i don't know that...
115
115
Oct 23, 2019
10/19
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 115
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie, what do you make of this? they are really pushing. this is a superseding indictme indictment. they added this charge on because apparently they won't cut a deal. >> charlie: it's a crazy story and i don't really understand it. failure for kids is the best way to learn things. my parents want to step in and fix things or do things for their kids and not let them find their own way is just baffling to me. it's appalling. >> how do you feel, full city have been behind bars. she's been photographed quite a lot. in her jumpsuit. she owned it but they are fighting it. it might end up worse. >> it doesn't shock me that she didn't do what felicity huffman did. felicity huffman was $15,000 versus half a million dollars for lori loughlin. take the deal. if you did that thing. you've set such a poor example for your children. own it and apologize to the court and to the children who spots you talk by putting your kid on a rowing machine in your basement and saying that they were a champion or throwing them in a pool and saying they are water polo champions. >> lisa: i think that's what makes it more egregious, what lori loughlin did. they have those staged photos. also as someone who played sports in high school and went on to college, it strikes me as odd. you would think that these coaches would have an understanding of who's going to be part of the incoming class. they go out and recruit. they know full well that the people incoming, i know there have been people charged at various schools. i find it shocking that every single coach would not be aware of who these people are and have some sort of role in the recruiting process. >> it's about the ego of the parents they were somehow embarrassed by their kids, that the kids couldn't get into a good school. i don't want the people at the cocktail party to think my kids are stupid. >> charliebad parenting. >> good to see you. right now it's all about terrorists. we are back here tomorrow at noon. >> harris: thank you. fox news alert. president trump lifting sanctions on turkey after announcing a permanent cease-fire he hopes in northern syria. while reaffirming more and might be called the trump doctrine. "outnumbered over time." i am harris faulkner. the president claiming success while ripping critics of his new to pull out troops from syria, leaving the kurds, some of them are our allies, without the protection of u.s. forces. watch. >> after all the precious blood and treasure america has poured into the deserts of the middle east, i am committed to pursuing a different course, one that leads to victory for america. today's announcement validates our course of action with
charlie, what do you make of this? they are really pushing. this is a superseding indictme indictment. they added this charge on because apparently they won't cut a deal. >> charlie: it's a crazy story and i don't really understand it. failure for kids is the best way to learn things. my parents want to step in and fix things or do things for their kids and not let them find their own way is just baffling to me. it's appalling. >> how do you feel, full city have been behind bars....
38
38
Oct 6, 2019
10/19
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 38
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie cook, the editor, the founder, publisher, and they've been very good to the hill center, by the way. charlie was here a few years ago. jennifer duffy and david wasserman, who cover the senate and the house for charlie have been here with us. and coming into 2020, we are already in the middle of it, we thought it was a good time to have charlie took back and he generously agreed to come back with us again. so charlie, good to see you and thank you for coming back. >> my pleasure, bill. and i talked about this evening, it was as if -- some weeks ago. something big has happened since then. looming over the political landscape so i just want to ask you and get it out of the way, the impeachment inquiry, what impact do you think this will have on the 2020 campaign? primary and general? >> sure, first let me say -- 1980 was an interesting experience for me. i learned actually i did know something about politics and i should never be a manager. it was a real educational experience. it steered me the right way. it's a pleasure to be here. we talked earlier about let's not let this thing focus entirely on impeachment because there is an election out there. i'm glad we are approaching it this way. everybody
charlie cook, the editor, the founder, publisher, and they've been very good to the hill center, by the way. charlie was here a few years ago. jennifer duffy and david wasserman, who cover the senate and the house for charlie have been here with us. and coming into 2020, we are already in the middle of it, we thought it was a good time to have charlie took back and he generously agreed to come back with us again. so charlie, good to see you and thank you for coming back. >> my pleasure,...
52
52
Oct 20, 2019
10/19
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 52
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie taft so if you ever get tolook at those papers , you can see charlie cast notations and you can almost feel his anger because if somebody's testimony was deleted, he would go into the transcript. it's a dark pencil mark through the transcript and he writes out,like this person's testimony is out . it is an amazing story area i like to think of that little episode between george and imogene as a grotesque dance because people who were there watching it didn't know what was going on. there was rush-hour in 1927 in cincinnati and that was the epicenter of rush-hour traffic. people are hearing screeching tires, they were hearing bumpers. people rear-ended one another so many people didn't even hear this muffled gunshot . there were children playing nearby near the gazebo. there were families. when you start to piece all this together you see this grotesque dance where imogene is coming out and sheesh shot and bleeding and she gets, crawl through the taxi she had taken, flagged down a passerby. they head off to bethesda hospital and she is dead shortly thereafter. i think she probably died in the backseat of the car who picked her up but her daughter said she was still speaking but i think she did that just to be kind to the family members. so remus goes from one of the criminal masterminds of the 20th, early 20th century to a murderer . and it's an amazing story. he loses his temper area he's a temperamental guide, you can imagine some buddy who carries brass knuckles around and runs a criminal empire is going to be temperamental and he had created a plea called temporary maniacal insanity and he created that for an air named william cheney ellis when he defended him in chicago . ellis killed his wife in a hotel in chicago area remus was his attorney so he had traveled quite a bit to cincinnati. he determined i'm going to use the same thing defending myself so he defends himself when he goes up on trial against charlie taft. charlie taft is the son of william howard taft. william howard taft is chief justice of the supreme court and there are letters in which william howard taft tells his golden boy immaculate son who is supposedly, maybe a future presidential candidate, don't do it. don't let remus get the best of you. he will try every trick in the book because what people in cincinnati didn't realize in chicago, attorneys either loved or hated remus. the ones that loved him called him napoleon of the bar again takes to the air that he puts on. this charismatic overtone. the people that didn't like him called him weaving, pleading remus cause remus made the law a joke. he would do anything to manipulate a jury. i like to think of him as kind of the johnny cochran of the early 1900s chicago. he would wildly gesticulating and throw his arms up in the air. he would have his clients passed out. he would pull his hair out. there are accounts wherehe would pick a fight with the occult opposing counselor
charlie taft so if you ever get tolook at those papers , you can see charlie cast notations and you can almost feel his anger because if somebody's testimony was deleted, he would go into the transcript. it's a dark pencil mark through the transcript and he writes out,like this person's testimony is out . it is an amazing story area i like to think of that little episode between george and imogene as a grotesque dance because people who were there watching it didn't know what was going on....
30
30
tv
eye 30
favorite 0
quote 0
another argument attempt to subvert democracy joining me is going underground deputy editor charlie cook charlie haven't seen you for a while it must be really really serious u.k. news not so interested in the issues we've been covering in this show they're interested in an imminent general election here in britain what have you uncovered well i've been looking into voter id because the next election the government's planning on introducing widespread voter id across all polling stations and this means you have to take a photo id with you when you cast your ballot now boris johnson's team said it's going to tackle electoral fraud and protect our democracy labor leader jeremy corbyn however has called the policy a blatant attempt to rig the result of the next general election now for me 3 questions arise one how will the new system walk to how much is it going to cost and $3.00 how much electoral fraud actually is there in. u.k. so number one it's seemingly going to be as simple as you take your i.d. with you and if you don't have an id then you'll be given a local electoral identity document how
another argument attempt to subvert democracy joining me is going underground deputy editor charlie cook charlie haven't seen you for a while it must be really really serious u.k. news not so interested in the issues we've been covering in this show they're interested in an imminent general election here in britain what have you uncovered well i've been looking into voter id because the next election the government's planning on introducing widespread voter id across all polling stations and...
71
71
Oct 11, 2019
10/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie, charlie is also a tough guy. i don't know if you ever met him. >> i have, yes. >> i feel ill prepared when i meet charlie i feel likeled me he likes to school people. >> yeah. >> a lot of these hard core industrials get a lead, parker, hannafin. >> hope springs eternal, right >> right. >> fastenal, they had good numbers. this is an example of somebody thinking the industrials can have good numbers. i had emerson on david farr, i think they're too china. there is, like, too china versus not that much china. too china. 3m is too china. >> united technologies. >> a lot of china. but diverse foversifdiversified. all the growth it so smart for greg hayes to say, listen, otis, isn't going to happen. i want it off my balance sheet the merger with raytheon, we don't talk about that. raytheon up 30 points, very quietly. >> a special case. >> defense is -- look, everybody needs -- it is amazing how when you look at what the saudis have, you look at what the turks have, the kurds is hard to understand our great ally, the turks have tremendous military, and they have universal -- by the way, universal participation in the milit
charlie, charlie is also a tough guy. i don't know if you ever met him. >> i have, yes. >> i feel ill prepared when i meet charlie i feel likeled me he likes to school people. >> yeah. >> a lot of these hard core industrials get a lead, parker, hannafin. >> hope springs eternal, right >> right. >> fastenal, they had good numbers. this is an example of somebody thinking the industrials can have good numbers. i had emerson on david farr, i think they're...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
21
21
Oct 28, 2019
10/19
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
the gentleman from poe day charlie -- poder charlie is he here in the audience? overflow room? i had a question for him. one of the -- what kept getting brought up over and over and over was people in the neighborhood can't afford -- i see him coming through the window. is that him? no? oh, it is. okay. i have a question for you. so when we talked yesterday probably a little longer than i needed too i was late for my medical appointment, we stood at the site for like an hour and a half i think we talked about the neighborhood ami and we went over numbers median numbers. do you have any information on -- more information on what the stratification of those numbers are? because we had a lot of claims here today around nine of the 48 units to be afforded by the family of four that makes the $76,000 which puts you into that 60 percent ami which gives you the nine family-sized units. i was looking for stratification on what the units are. because the neighborhood is big. do you have that data? >> i don't have the neighborhood ami data available but that's data we could easily look u
the gentleman from poe day charlie -- poder charlie is he here in the audience? overflow room? i had a question for him. one of the -- what kept getting brought up over and over and over was people in the neighborhood can't afford -- i see him coming through the window. is that him? no? oh, it is. okay. i have a question for you. so when we talked yesterday probably a little longer than i needed too i was late for my medical appointment, we stood at the site for like an hour and a half i think...
33
33
Oct 2, 2019
10/19
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie cook back, and he with usly agreed to come us, again. so, charlie, good to see you. hank you so much for coming back. charlie: thank you. my pleasure, bill. i talked you and about this evening, it was some hree weeks ago, maybe, and something big has happened since then. ooming over the american political landscape. so i just want to ask you and way.t out of the the impeachment inquiry, what impact do you think this will on the 2020 campaign? primary and general? sure.e: first, let me say that john -- 1980 was an interesting experience for me. i learned, a, that actually i id know something about politics. b, i should never be a manager. o it was a real educational experience. so it steered me the right way. here.re to be you know, we talked earlier about -- let's not let this focus entirely on impeachment because there is this election out there, so i'm it from e approaching this way. because everybody's got an opinion and nobody's going to mind. anybody's i personally don't -- you know, f i were a democrat, i don't think i would do this because i lived here through two of them. i was in college during the nixon impeach
charlie cook back, and he with usly agreed to come us, again. so, charlie, good to see you. hank you so much for coming back. charlie: thank you. my pleasure, bill. i talked you and about this evening, it was some hree weeks ago, maybe, and something big has happened since then. ooming over the american political landscape. so i just want to ask you and way.t out of the the impeachment inquiry, what impact do you think this will on the 2020 campaign? primary and general? sure.e: first, let me...
105
105
Oct 25, 2019
10/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 105
favorite 0
quote 0
went to the bank and financed all of the car loans i had and i spoke to charlie, the vice president, charlie and i spoke to charlie, honey, they won't lend me the money to get to you college. i'm so damn ashamed. i'm ashamed. why in hell should he be ashamed? how many people sat at the kitchen table today and had the conversation saying, we have to drive on those four tires for another 10,000 miles. we can't afford a set of tire this is month. we have to wait. or who will tell her she can't go back. we just don't have the money. what are we going to do about that insurance? this administration has no idea what hard work and decent ordinary americans are going through. you know, a parent -- how many of you either grand-pops or mom or dad and dropped off your grandchild first day of school or first, second, third, fourth, fifth grade, knowing around america they would have to learn how to duck and cover. building schools telling kids the way you get behind this pillar here if someone comes in. the greatest concern i've spoken to the international psychiatric association and american psychiatric association in london
went to the bank and financed all of the car loans i had and i spoke to charlie, the vice president, charlie and i spoke to charlie, honey, they won't lend me the money to get to you college. i'm so damn ashamed. i'm ashamed. why in hell should he be ashamed? how many people sat at the kitchen table today and had the conversation saying, we have to drive on those four tires for another 10,000 miles. we can't afford a set of tire this is month. we have to wait. or who will tell her she can't go...
137
137
Oct 11, 2019
10/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 137
favorite 0
quote 0
think you should buy it because i like the stock, it's a good one let's take one from charlie in pennsylvania charlie caller: booyah, jim. >> i'll take that. >> caller: your old partner larry legend and your newer partner. i'm here, i bought teradyne. >> it's a really good stock. it's an up stock i like semicast. and i like what he has to say and that, ladies and gentlemen, is the conclusion of the lightning round. >> the lightning round is sponsored by t.d. ameritrade ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ high protein. low sugar. tastes great! high protein. low sugar. so good! high protein. low sugar. mmmm, birthday cake! pure protein. the best combination for every fitness routine. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. i wish i could shake your hand. granted. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ in the human brain, billions of nefor people with parkinson's, some neurons change their tune, causing uncontrollable tremors. now, abbott technology can target those exact neurons. restoring control and harmony, once thought to belost forever. the most personal t
think you should buy it because i like the stock, it's a good one let's take one from charlie in pennsylvania charlie caller: booyah, jim. >> i'll take that. >> caller: your old partner larry legend and your newer partner. i'm here, i bought teradyne. >> it's a really good stock. it's an up stock i like semicast. and i like what he has to say and that, ladies and gentlemen, is the conclusion of the lightning round. >> the lightning round is sponsored by t.d. ameritrade...
45
45
Oct 1, 2019
10/19
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie cook, the editor, the founder, publisher, and they've been very good to the hill center, by the way. charlie was here a few years ago. jennifer duffy and david, who covers the senate and the house, they've been here with us. , we are in the0 middle of it. this is a good time to have charlie cook back and he generously agreed to come with us. good to see you and thank you for coming back. charlie: my pleasure. bill: you and i talked about this evening, it was as if -- some weeks ago. something big has happened since then. looming over the political landscape. way,t to get it out of the the impeachment inquiry. ont impact will this have the 2020 campaign? first let me say john knows, 1980 was an interesting experience for me. i learned actually i did know something about politics and i should never be a manager. it was a real educational experience. it steered me the right way. it is a pleasure to be here. we talked earlier about, let's not let this thing focus on impeachment because there is an election. i'm glad we are approaching it this way. everybody has an opinion. , if i were adon't democrat, i would not do this. ofe lived here through two them. i was in college during the nixon impeachment and the clinton impeachment. forget what the president is alleged to have sa
charlie cook, the editor, the founder, publisher, and they've been very good to the hill center, by the way. charlie was here a few years ago. jennifer duffy and david, who covers the senate and the house, they've been here with us. , we are in the0 middle of it. this is a good time to have charlie cook back and he generously agreed to come with us. good to see you and thank you for coming back. charlie: my pleasure. bill: you and i talked about this evening, it was as if -- some weeks ago....
35
35
Oct 21, 2019
10/19
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 35
favorite 0
quote 0
independence referendum 2 years ago for more let's go live to barcelona correspondent charlie angela is there charlie what are you seeing where you are. where in barcelona's come marshals and thousands of probe independence demonstrations have gathered here earlier they tried to get as close as they could to the spanish central government headquarters here in barcelona but they were blocked by police so instead they threw bags of rubbish over the barricades that way of showing that discussed at the central government who they see as being on willing to come to the table on this issue of independence and there's also a lot of anger at the national police who they blame for the violence that we've seen in the last few days in jail a lot of protest is not actually blinded for them in one eye from rubber bullets now you can see it's a very peaceful demonstration at the moment earlier they were chanting catalonia against fascism and free the civil prisoners and while there are the chances the streets are earlier today i was at another demonstration of a very different kind of the pro unionist side also ve
independence referendum 2 years ago for more let's go live to barcelona correspondent charlie angela is there charlie what are you seeing where you are. where in barcelona's come marshals and thousands of probe independence demonstrations have gathered here earlier they tried to get as close as they could to the spanish central government headquarters here in barcelona but they were blocked by police so instead they threw bags of rubbish over the barricades that way of showing that discussed at...
204
204
Oct 13, 2019
10/19
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 204
favorite 0
quote 4
charlie kirk is here to break it down. charlie, i saw what was going on outside of the rally in minnesota, and i have got to tell you, if i were coming out of that rally which was a peaceful rally. you come outside with people cursing, throwing things. taking maga hats, burning them, if we did that, forget it. everyone would be in jail. why is there two standards. >> judge, you are exactly right. you talk about this brilliantly in your book. there is a left wing mob growing throughout our country that is targeting decent americans. imaginew if those rioters were wearing maga hats. people were getting spit on. they were screaming things sat police and burning flags. this is borderline domestic unrest. they are closing down streets in downtown minneapolis. there is such an unbelievable double standard. remember when barack obama won two elections. you know what cons did the next d you know would conservatives did the next day? they went to work. a once great american city, minneapolis, it does not feel like this is a country we love. judge jeanine: the night that the president won. i remember there were people in new york city who were lined up and just cursing us out. i remember some guy cursing me out. he was like 6'7". he was huge. i talk about the intimidation. when you think about it. it is the left's plot to remake america. it is the intimidation of those of us on the right who want to express free speech and support for our president. then it went to taking us off twitter and facebook, and antifa beating us up and the police sanding down. this is unbelievable. this is the america our founding fathers gave up everything for. i think we are in a bad place right now. >> i agree. the narrative is america has never been more divide. there is only one side picketing in the streets and going after the other side. that's the left. for all the narrative about america becoming further and further apart. you don't see conservative antifa. remember the incident of andy ngo who got beaten in the streets in seattle. zero people have been arrested. he had a brain bleed for what happened in the streets portland and zero people have been arrested since then. i'm afraid, judge. because if this social unrest goes without social repercussions, when are they going to stop. >> there is no accountability or sanctions. i remember at berkeley when they were objecting to conservatives and republicans speaking. for 12 hours they rioted, broke down the windows. no one was arrested and the guy insisted on being arrested because he wanted the street creds. they need to get into local races for school board as well as other races to make sure the laws apply equally. >> i could not agree more. unfortunately, we as conservatives have allowed the left to take over local municipal elections. this is not the america -- i group and i have seen it changing in real-time. we see this cultural turn where this social unrest is being accepted and law enforcement is not allowed to do their job. the left, they hate the idea that there are other ideas. they can't stand the fact that president trump had 25,000 people in the arena and 20,000 people outside. the only way they can cope with that is to smash windows and burn flags? that's the decline of decency. judge jeanine: stay here. i want you to hear this interview with donald j. trump right after the break. 1958. back to "justice with judge jeanine." judge jeanine: welcome back to justice. within the last hour i had the opportunity to speak by phone with the president of the united states. donald j. trump. take a listen. thank you so much for being on "justice" this evening. i know you had a busy night. having already spoken at the values voters conference. but my viewers are thrilled to have you on tonight. let me start by asking you about reports that rudy giuliani is under investigation. involving the ukraine. and there is some confusion whether you still consider them your attorney. president trump: yes. and he's a great gentleman. a great mayor. maybe the greatest mayor in the history of new york. he was a fantastic prosecutor. i know nothing about him being under investigation. i heard a report today. i can't imagine it. he's a man that looks for corruption, and whatever he does, i believe he's a totally honorable man. you know him well, too, jeanine. judge jeanine: i do, and i worked with him when i was a prosecutor. you stand behind hip in spite of this investigation. president trump: i don't know if there is an investigation. i just heard it. i find a lot of things you hear, they should look at other people. they should be looking at really bad people doing bad things to our country. so no i stand behind rudy giuliani. again, he was a crime fighter from day one. judge jeanine: what's interest being this, the inspector general referred andrew mccabe one year and six months ago to the department of justice. now the new york types is saying rudy giuliani is under investigation for lobbying effort as it relates to the ukraine. within minutes after we hear ukraine, in light of what's going on with the bidens. but what do you know about those two men who have been just arrested who allegedly were working with rudy giuliani. they said they had dinner with you at the white house. president trump: i don't know who they are. maybe i met them or took pictures with them because i saw a picture of me with them and others. but i take pictures with a lot of people. i don't know who they are, jeanine. you will have to figure that one out for yourself, i guess. i know they are donors. they made political donations to a lot of different people. a lot of politicians over the years so they are donors. but i have thousands and thousands of donors. judge jeanine: this marie yovanovich testified behind closed doors. she defied state department orders and attended the deposition. do you expect she'll keep her job in the state department or will you fire her. president trump: i don't know the status. i don't know what she said because the democrats keep that under the vest. they don't tell us anything. we literally have no rights, no anything. it's a very unfair situation, i think. i don't now very much about her. i know supposedly she was very partisan and a clinton-type person. but whether she keeps the job, i leave that up to mike pompeo. judge jeanine: you have a choice in terms of who your ambassador is to a particular country. president trump: it's absolutely my choice. she may be a fine person. i just don't know. but even if you listen to the very good conversation i had. no pressure, congenial conversation with the new president of ukraine, he had some things that were not flattering to say about her. and that came out of the blue. so it would be nice to have somebody that he liked because he's going -- the person will have to deal with the president of ukraine. but she may be very good. i just don't know much about her. i don't think i ever met her. judge jeanine: the european ambassador sondland is going to test fayette we are not entitled to that information. what is the white house plan given the fact that the democrats don't seem to want to call a vote? president trump: you take a look at it adam schiff made up a phoney, fraudulent statement and he read it as if i read it. my phone call was a perfect call with the president of ukraine. it was congenial, friendly, no pressure. no blackmail, no nothing. they don't even understand. people that read it don't know what the problem is because there was no problem. what the problem is, adam schiff didn't read that. he read something -- he made up something, fraudulently made up a conversation and he read it to congress and he head it to the american people and it was horrible. and it was a fraudulent thing out of thin air he made up. it was a terrible thing he was allowed to do. that's where we are right now. very strong action should be taken against this guy. because i never heard of a thing like that. where we upset the apple cart, i released the conversation. you had stenographers. it was a call that was taken very accurately taken. when i released the call, that turned things over. because they start with a perfectly fine call. it was a very standard, very nice call. and that's the way it is, jeanine. it's a fraud that's being perpetrated on the american people by adam schiff and nancy pelosi. she was on george stephanopoulos and she tried to say i made that call the way schiff had it. even stephanopoulos said he didn't say that, that was made up by adam schiff. the whole thing is a hoax it's a terrible thing. it's a fraud on our country and it's so bad for our country. judge jeanine: why isn't she calling a vote. if she'd called a vote these hearings would be open. then your counsel would be there. you would be able to seen a witnesses. president trump: that's probably why she is not calling it. she can't get the votes. thursday i was in minnesota. we had an arena the side of madison square gardens that was packed. last night i was in louisiana, we had a fantastic arena, we could have sold it out many times it was packed. it was also 0 broadcast and. we had a call from pastors saying enthusiasm in the air. people are joining the church. they have never seen anything like what's happening. everybody knows the russian witch hunt was a phoney fraud and we got rid of that. then they came up with this ukrainian story that was made up by adam schiff. i guess he was a screenwriter failed. he made up my conversation. how can you be worse than that. thin they say he has immunity from prosecution because he delivered it in congress. i don't think he should have immunity for that. i never heard of a fraud like that. joe biden has joined the chorus for impeachment. he apparently has no fear about what he or his son or any of the other democrats were doing in the ukraine. why do you think that is? >> it's incredible, the way the hide yeah sticks up for him. they say it's unsubstantiated. yet it's not. i guess the new number is 168,000 a month between him and his friend. but whether it's that or 50,000 a month. i hear there was a payment of $3 million and he knows nothing about energy and nothing about oil. nothing. zero. you know more than he does. and he walked away with millions of dollars because of -- it's just illegal. you can't do it. then he goes into china. i just finished a great negotiation. hopefully it gets papered down for our farmers and bankers and everybody. but the farmers it's so incredible. i dealt with very powerful people in china, great negotiators. they don't give you a billion five for nothing. i said these are not the same people i have been dealing with. he takes $1.5 billion. i asked wall streeters if it's possible and they all said it's not possible it's a total payoff, and the press doesn't want to pick it up. then you have joe biden on television -- i can't imagine yes said this, talking about how he got rid of a prosecutor. and if they didn't get rid of a prosecutor they wouldn't get this vast amount of money. that is called quid pro quo. jean requirements an admission you can use in a criminal case where he's openly admitting what he did. i want to ask a question i haven't heard you answer. where is barack obama in all this? why haven't we heard from him? in the beginning of your administration he wouldn't stop talking. now he's nowhere to be heard, where is he? president trump: i think he's hiding. i think he knows all about it. we are talking about investigate the investigators. it was before i took office, it was -- if you look at the insurance policy with strzok and page just in case she should lose, we have an insurance policy. that's what this has been about, the insurance policy. these are bad people, the evil people. the two lovers strzok and page. it's a terrible thing they are doing to this country. but we are winning. and the american public knows it. they want to stay away. they can do whatever they want. but they want to stay away. if you look at what's happening, jeanine, the electricity for the republican party, they are so angry at what's taken place. as an example. everybody knows schiff, he made up the story. he made up my phone call. and based on that phone call this what this whole thing is about. and the call is perfect. i have given that call to everybody to read it. lindsey graham made a statement web said i never knew you were so nice. judge jeanine: this is happening in our congress. it seems when the republicans are in office answer they have the power, nothing like this ever happens. but when the democrats get into power, it is -- you know, it's scorched earth. do the republicans not node how to fight in the -- not know how to fight? president trump: i think they are more honest. i think they don't stick together as well. i have a 92% approval rating with the people in the republican party. but they don't fight dirty. subpoenas. you take a look at paul ryan when he was speaker. he wouldn't give them. he wouldn't give them. he thought it was inappropriate to give them. jim jordan, mark meadows, all of the guys wanted. matt gaetz, all of them. i can name 25 incredible people. they wanted subpoenas to investigate all of the corruption that they found, horrible krowption. paul d horribling corruption. paul ryan would say slow down. come back next week. she hands them out like it's cookies. judge jeanine: why do you think that is? president trump: maybe a difference in philosophy? maybe they don't do it because they think it's bad for the country. what she is doing is bad for the country. they committed a fraud. they made up a phoney conversation and got caught. the reason they got caught because they never thought i would release the transcript of my conversation with the president of ukraine. because it's something you don't want to do. weed called up ukraine, mike pompeo. called up ukraine to get permission to do it. they thought it was even unusual request, but they said sure. they probably look at us and say what's going on, ways that all about. because i would have to do that. not legally have to. but i would feel badly doing that. everybody that speaks now to the president of the united states is going to say i wonder if i'm going to be broadcast all over the world. my little conversation. judge jeanine: i want to turn to the middle east because i know you are busy and you are on to another event. but there is you are ski is now launched an incursion into syria. president trump: i have known by the for a long time. i know the subject better than anybody. a lot of people disagree. but in the end i'll be right. the kurds have been fighting with turkey for a long time of. the kurd are some very good people and some very bad people. pkk, they are a tough group of people. i didn't fight. i told them i won't get involved when iraq -- about a year and a half ago was going to fight against the kurds. i said we spent all the trillions of dollars we fight with iraq, should have never went in middle east by the way in were no weapons of mass destruction. but iraq was going to fight the kurds and i said no we are not going to take either side. we were fighting for iraq now they want to us fight against iraq. the kurds left. they never took up the fight. it looks like they may leave a third time and that's okay. maybe they will get somebody else to go in and fight with them. if they do that would be okay with me. but we want to get out of the endless wars. we'll be stuck there forever. we have to get out of the endless wars. they say i'm a disrupter. let me disrupt. i see our incredible soldiers at walter reed hospital. i gave out purple hearts friday to people who were decimated. i speak to parents that have lost their children. i give letters. it's time. it's 7,000 miles away from the united states. i want to protect our borders. judge jeanine: let me ask you, how is it the removal of 50 troops -- that's my understanding -- we are talking about 50 troops. >> it had nothing to do with it. he was going to go in anyway. he was going in anyway. it wasn't the 50 troops. we basically -- those troops were gone anyway. we defeated isis. we did a favor. then i said to europe. take your isis fighters back, germany, france, u.k. they didn't want to take them back. i said we are not going to hold them. they are so used to treating the united states so badly. i said take your fighters back. we did you a big favor, we kp tiewrd them. they didn't want to take them back. i said somebody is going to have to take them. we are not bringing them to guantanamo bay. we are not going to take them. detook 100% d we took 100%, defeated 100% of the isis caliphate. i also rebuilt our military. but we are not going to stay in these areas forever. x were supposed to be in syria for 30 days, that was 10 years ago. we are bringing our soldiers back home. if somebody else wants to fight with the kurd against turkey or if the kurd want to move awrd. right now they are doing what they did with iraq. turkey wants to create a border. turkey also knows because i got back pastor brunson. i did a lot of damage to their currency to get him back. if turkey is out of line in what they are doing, really out of line, i will do something because our economy is so powerful now. when i took over this country 2 1/2 years ago, almost 3 years ago, we would have been second to china in a short period of time. now we are so far ahead of china you wouldn't believe. we picked up trillions in worth and china has gone down' trillions. we'll use our economic force if we have to against turkey. judge jeanine: people say the win against isis is short-lived if we take off. but more importantly my issue is about nato. turkey is a member of nato since 1951, i believe. where are all the other nato countries. why is the united states the only nato country that's supposed to be there to make sure 11,000 isis prisoners stay there. president trump: that's a good question. the other thank you to countries are not paying their bills. 20 are delinquent. secretary-general sultanberg said they weren't paying their bills. nato protects europe. say what you want. nato protects europe. we pay 4.3% and germany pays 1%. and germany is supposed to be paying 2%. we protect all of these countries in europe and on top of everything else they are delinquent and they don't want to take back the isis fighters. jane: when they are their citizens to went to fight and were captured they don't want them back. have you spoken to president erdogan recently? president trump: yes. i know he has been building up for a year on his border. they have a tremendous unlimited amount of soldiers. turkey is right there. it's their border. they have been fighting with the kurds or centuries. some people go to lunch. that's what they do, they fight with the kurds. it's time for to us leave. if the kurds can find somebody else or if the kurds move around -- with iraq everybody wanted me to fight with the kurds against iraq. i said we just had a war where we spent all of this money on iraq, in my opinion largely wasted because there were no weapons of mass destruction. but now we are supposed to fight against them? i said no let them fight. the kurd left, they didn't fight. then they left a second time. i got no credit for it and that's fine. now i'm making a similar decision. we have given them tremendous weapons and ammunition. but it's time for to us go home. we want to defend our country. we also have to be very strong. we'll have a good relationship with russia and china. you see the trade deal, that's an indication. but we have to be prepared for that, the bigger picture. we have to. we are rebuilding our military, jeanine. i spent $2.5 trillion on rebuilding. when i came in we had no ammunition. the general told me, sir, i'm who arey, we have no ammunition. no president should ever be in that position. judge jeanine: do you think the democrats will impeach you? president trump: i think it's a hoax. i think if they do they will suffer at the ballot box. the only thing impeachable is the fraud adam schiff committed on the american people because he made up a conversation that didn't exist. he never thought in a million years i was going to release the veelt conversation. and -- release the real conversation. and when it did, the whistleblower turned out to be totally inaccurate. they say a lot of things about the whistleblower, they protect him. i think we have to find out who the which the blower is who would give all this false information. adam schiff zooms how can somebody stand up before standing word for word reading my conversation and it's a fraud. he made it up himself. judge jeanine: you were in louisiana and before that i believe you were in minnesota. and you were just another event and you are talking to me and you are going to go to another event. do you take vitamins? president trump: no, i just enjoy doing it. we are doing so great for merit can people. we have the strongest economy we ever had. even china said congratulations on the incredible job you have done with the economy. i'm telling you, jeanine, china was going to catch us in a short period of time. now we are so far ahead of china. he knows it and he respects it frankly it's one of those things. but we rebuilt our military and cut everybody's taxes, our vets are happy we got them choice can accountability where you can fire people that mistreat them. these are things that couldn't be gone the for five decade. i got them all. nobody has done what i have done why it had this horrible cloud where these people, these horrible people, these really dishonest people that have to hate our country because the russian witch hunt was a hoax, and the ukraine thing is a hoax. what they have done to justice kavanaugh is a disgrace. they want to impeach him. and they have nothing. these people, they just want to influence him. they don't want to impeach him. judge jeanine: you have a great, great story to tell. mr. president on behalf of my viewers and myself, thank you for taking the time to join us on "justice." good night and god bless. president trump: thank you very much. judge jeanine: live reaction on my interview with the president from charliek and me next. judge jeanine: charlie kirk is back with plea life. three things struck me. rudy giuliani the president's loyalty in full force. i support him. he also stands behind him, and he doesn't file anything he has done is problematic or that he's even under investigation. your thoughts. >> with the whole mayor giuliani thing, i find it puzzling there are reports he's being investigated but there aren't reports hunter bind is being investigated. as the story progresses we'll find out more and more whether rudy giuliani is under investigation or not. story after story of this double standard of justice where it seems as if you are close to this president, you have this extraordinary amount of pressure and investigation that goes on. and so time will tell. it won't be the first time one of these reports has been incorrect. in the mueller investigation there were reports, michael cohen. this wouldn't be the first time. so i was struck by that. feign was glad the president is standi
charlie kirk is here to break it down. charlie, i saw what was going on outside of the rally in minnesota, and i have got to tell you, if i were coming out of that rally which was a peaceful rally. you come outside with people cursing, throwing things. taking maga hats, burning them, if we did that, forget it. everyone would be in jail. why is there two standards. >> judge, you are exactly right. you talk about this brilliantly in your book. there is a left wing mob growing throughout our...
47
47
Oct 21, 2019
10/19
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 47
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie works in a supermarket. 18—year—old dan is training to be a chef. there's charlie's 6—year—old daughter, poppy. and finally lizzie's big brother, andrew, who's charliendrew started work early, and dan is still in bed. charlie is getting daughter poppy ready for school. i make breakfast for a couple of times a week when i'm before they all moved in together, the family lived in three separate homes scattered around margate. lizzie, richard and dan lived in one. andrew lived on his own, and single mum charlie and poppy had their own place. juggling poppy's school times and her own work hours was a challenge for charlie before moving into this house. my hours do change sometimes from week to week so it does make it a little bit difficult with school runs, but with a bit of help on hand now... it's nice that she's still getting picked up by a family member. thanet council, who were behind the project, wanted to see if a multigenerational home would save money on things like social care and would reduce the impact on the environment of everyone living separately. andrew has learning difficulties. he's always lived an independent life but, before moving h
charlie works in a supermarket. 18—year—old dan is training to be a chef. there's charlie's 6—year—old daughter, poppy. and finally lizzie's big brother, andrew, who's charliendrew started work early, and dan is still in bed. charlie is getting daughter poppy ready for school. i make breakfast for a couple of times a week when i'm before they all moved in together, the family lived in three separate homes scattered around margate. lizzie, richard and dan lived in one. andrew lived on...
77
77
Oct 31, 2019
10/19
by
CNNW
tv
eye 77
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie dent, former republican congressman, is here as well as alice stewart. hello to both. let's see. charlie, you first. hello. charliee republicans who are speaking out on impeachment are focused on the process, not the substance, right? >> right. >> will that strategy work after tomorrow's first full house vote? >> no, don, i don't think so. i learned a long time ago in politics if i'm arguing process, it means that the policy is working against me, or in this case they're arguing -- they're arguing process and procedure because the facts are simply against them. i mean, yeah, you can storm the scif. you can introduce meaningless resolutions in the senate complaining about the house, which is a first by the way. it's usually the house complaining about the senate being too slow and the filibuster rules. this is kind of interesting. bottom line is those are meaningless gestures and at some point they're going to have to address the facts and the substance of the issue, and the facts are bad for president. >> pelosi says she's gotten a good report from her whip on the vote tomorrow. any reason to doubt that she has th
charlie dent, former republican congressman, is here as well as alice stewart. hello to both. let's see. charlie, you first. hello. charliee republicans who are speaking out on impeachment are focused on the process, not the substance, right? >> right. >> will that strategy work after tomorrow's first full house vote? >> no, don, i don't think so. i learned a long time ago in politics if i'm arguing process, it means that the policy is working against me, or in this case...
36
36
Oct 30, 2019
10/19
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie is very healthy. so lovely in factjoyce charlie is very healthy. so lovely in fact joyce wanted charliey? i want one, can we have them in the studio please? hello there. is going to turn milder and more unsettled towards the end of the week, but for now it looks like high pressure willjust hold on keeping things dry and settled for northern and central parts of the uk. this feature in the southwest we continue to bring bricks of rain in southwest england and southern wales, but will also hold the temperatures appear in the figures as well with clear spells and temperatures dipping away from a chilly but bright starts across scotla nd chilly but bright starts across scotland in northern england where we can see a touch of the frost. the risk of winter showers in the northeast, or the brightness of the cloud increasing across northern ireland remained fairly cloudy across wales and southwest of england, the overnight rain will tend to ease here. temperatures generally between eight and 14 degrees. more unsettled is moving to friday, the temperatures in around 16 celsius in cardiff and lon
charlie is very healthy. so lovely in factjoyce charlie is very healthy. so lovely in fact joyce wanted charliey? i want one, can we have them in the studio please? hello there. is going to turn milder and more unsettled towards the end of the week, but for now it looks like high pressure willjust hold on keeping things dry and settled for northern and central parts of the uk. this feature in the southwest we continue to bring bricks of rain in southwest england and southern wales, but will...
121
121
Oct 16, 2019
10/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 121
favorite 0
quote 0
at 1-800-743-cnbc, if you remember the charlie the tuna, the fish with good taste from the starkistadss, in every ad, charlie the tuna got shot down sorry charlie. starkist did not want tuna with good taste, they wanted tuna that tasted good i dredged it up because today the market rejected charlie. and they went with tuna that just plain tastes good solid real, clean copies with no flaws and consistency. if you look at the averages, this would have seemed like a sedate day nasdaq declining 2.30% when you dig deeper, there was a major rotation out of the charlie the tuna stocks. and in to plain old albacore packed in water. it started yesterday when the banks reported better than expected especially with the curb of them being able to make money off of your deposits. the banks have so many other robust earning streams that we don't have to fret about the yield curve as much as we once thought. there was an 8% revenue growth and the stock roared from 116-121, it was a bank to be it was pointed out the consumer continues to be quite strong, end quote. hey, gloomers and doomers, listen to jamie. the market gave back some of the gain today even gol
at 1-800-743-cnbc, if you remember the charlie the tuna, the fish with good taste from the starkistadss, in every ad, charlie the tuna got shot down sorry charlie. starkist did not want tuna with good taste, they wanted tuna that tasted good i dredged it up because today the market rejected charlie. and they went with tuna that just plain tastes good solid real, clean copies with no flaws and consistency. if you look at the averages, this would have seemed like a sedate day nasdaq declining...
21
21
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie x.e. joins me from geneva welcome to the africa charlie let's start off by establishing who is responsible for these detention centers and and who what is the policy around who should be housed in them well 1st of all i think we have to make a distinction between this is tensions and says we have the official detention centers and the unofficial detention centers 1st of all the official detention centers these are run by the offish to libyan authorities and typically this is where people are brought off to being intercepted see by the libyan coast guard and he. has some access to the senses it's not on restricted we are limited into which parts of these since his we can go to and for how long but we are able to at least provide some assistance on the other hand the un officials and we know there are many of these as well these are run by smugglers and traffickers and they operate on an unofficial capacity outside the usual structures of the state and here is where we see the real most horrific abuse is taking place and you in a start of the humanitarian agencies we simply have no access because of the dangers involved so many migrants as is the u.n. has saved hope to get into the detention centers that the u.n. h.c.r. can access to some degree their hope is that they will be resettled to fit country is there any appetite from from other countries to take on some of these people. well the fact that this phenomenon is taking place a tall i think really speaks to the desperation of the current situation inside syria we know that inside the detention centers there are appalling conditions there have been widespread reports of human rights abuses taking place so i think we can really be in no doubt that this is a option of desperation for the people who take it they feel they have no other choice in terms of the evacuations and the resettlements the do take place this is done people are given priority based on vulnerability criteria so typically the kind of profiles that might be selected are often or maybe survivors of torture rule or sexual abuse it's the people most at risk. china who is responsible for migrants that are stranded in libya today. well it's the responsibility of the state to ensure the protection and safety of refugees and migrants the same as it's their responsibility for the protection of civilians in the country but of course when you have a war like situation that can become very difficult and is becoming increasingly difficult as the fighting that began in april intensifies at the same time we know the conditions in libya right now to some degree i think there is also a collective responsibility amongst the international community to come to the assistance of people who've not only fled war in violence in their home countries have also ended up in this situation in libya often as a result of putting their lives in the hands of smugglers and traffickers who made them false promises of onward servile to europe that's the u.n. h.c.r. is charlie x c talking to us from geneva thank you. the tech world is still a man's world and that's very true in africa where women say they've had a hard time getting into the industry and once they're in it doesn't get easier women often don't get the same opportunities as men now take companies have been talking about closing the gender gap but you're about to meet one woman who isn't waiting for them and is doing it herself. a laptop on the internet was all. needed to start her company gets. it's an online learning platform that is specially designed to teach women detest science and computer programming and also connects them to potential employers every student has an accountability partner and success coach pretty much to help them go through the program so like you asked we only meets maybe once in 2 months once in 3 months so that they can work on a project together but it just helps for start to give the community for ha this kind of community is important to encourage more women to g
charlie x.e. joins me from geneva welcome to the africa charlie let's start off by establishing who is responsible for these detention centers and and who what is the policy around who should be housed in them well 1st of all i think we have to make a distinction between this is tensions and says we have the official detention centers and the unofficial detention centers 1st of all the official detention centers these are run by the offish to libyan authorities and typically this is where...
80
80
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie gasparino. charlie is not running for president of the united states. doug, you know, you are still kind of an ad hoc adviser to michael bloomberg. so he must be keeping the powder dry. >> i think he's pretty much ruled out a race. if nothing else, the calendar makes it very very difficult, this late in the process, for he or really anybody else to get in. neil: but to beat a general election candidate -- >> still. neil: is it really? >> it is. >> he hasn't disbanded his office. mike bloomberg never had a big campaign team, as you know. he had about six, aside from doug, six people working full-time on it. neil: doug was the most important. >> well, that's what he says. sorry. but those six people are still working for him. they are not doing -- they are in that office, i'm told. i've gotten this confirmed. now, does that mean he's running? the way it was described to me by people over there is the door is open about that much. neil: you always wait for the opportunity, right? who would have guessed biden would be potentially imploding, right. you've got to plan for contingencies. >> maybe. with respect, doug -- neil: got to watch that. >> bloomberg would have to go through a de-jerking process before he could ever run for the highest office in the land. neil: whoa. >> getting elected mayor of new york city -- >> the bar is kind of low, isn't it? >> no, but you know, here's the deal. i will say this about elizabeth warren. what people missed during 2016 was president trump on the campaign trail interacting with regular folks, and he found that he loved it and he was great at it. elizabeth warren is experiencing the same thing right now. mayor bloomberg, having interacted with him here and there over the years, as he was new york city mayor, he's a jerk. he just acts like a jerk. >> a jerk? neil: he did get elected three times. >> he doesn't act like a jerk. mike bloomberg acts like -- >> he did to me. >> mike bloomberg acts as a normal human being. listen -- >> to new yorkers. to new yorkers. neil: let me switch gears a little bit. this is an interesting argument, whether that likability, approachability, say what you will about donald trump, he had it in 2016, hillary clinton didn't. george bush had it against al gore. gore didn't. it's an intangible but it's a real issue. >> but here's the thing. if donald trump wasn't a jerk, he would have higher approval ratings. neil: you are a little extreme. >> i'm just telling you, his approval ratings are all related -- neil: what do you think of the likability? it's become authenticity. mike bloomberg in his own way is an authentic mayor, business leader, philanthropist. donald trump in his own way is, too. >> i will say something nice about mayor bloomberg. 12 years of balanced budgets, i don't think i'm wrong with that, that he's managed this city through two financial crises, one after, you know, in the years after 9/11. neil: you started out with the bad. you focused on the negative. >> then 2008, the financial crisis. he made some hard decisions. he is very strong -- neil: you don't consider him likeable. >> he is not likeable. >> that doesn't make him a jerk. >> he has acted like a jerk in front of me. >> okay. neil: here's what i want to know. a lot of people say if joe biden were to stumble and elizabeth warren emerges, that she will get much more scrutiny on that intangible likability. is it that important? or authenticity? with politicians, that's an oxymoron. >> her bigger problem is running as far to the left as she is, because she's largely rejecting the principal tenets of capitalism and free markets. the democratic party has always been a capitalist party. she's effectively advocating for redistribution of wealth and power. neil: she is so far left she can hop into the middle. >> it will be very difficult for her to do. that i think is her problem. >> there's no pivot on her. biden, i know he's proposing a wealth tax -- neil: he's going her way. >> but he's leaving enough daylight to pivot. these others aren't. i think that's the problem. trump, for better or worse, i like him personally, just so you know, i know the guy, most people don't find him likeable, okay? that's a negative on him. neil: a lot of people say the same about you but you're good at what you do. >> is he good at what he does? we don't know. neil: look at the economy. >> i met him at the victoria secret fashion show and he was with melania. but that was before he even shook hands with people. it was when he still had germophobia and he got over that. neil: could he beat elizabeth warren if it came to that? >> yes. he could because -- neil: charlies to take 180 million people's health insurance away. >> as much as the country believes donald is a jerk, because they do, she's a socialist. i just don't think we are going there. >> she wants to destroy energy. she wants to wipe out millions and millions of jobs. neil: outside of that, perfectly fine. all right. thank you all very, very much. we have offended pretty much everyone. we have a few seconds to see if we can add the pope. -all ground personnel... ...or trips to mars. $4.95. delivery drones or the latest phones. $4.95. no matter what you trade, at fidelity it's just $4.95 per online u.s. equity trade. . . if you have medicare listen up. the medicare enrollment deadline is only weeks away. choosing the right medicare plan is no laughing matter. pick the wrong one and you might end up with a doctor you're not so comfortable with. or even worse being forced to pay thousands in medical expenses due to coverage limitations. that'll be how much? don't get stuck with a plan that'
charlie gasparino. charlie is not running for president of the united states. doug, you know, you are still kind of an ad hoc adviser to michael bloomberg. so he must be keeping the powder dry. >> i think he's pretty much ruled out a race. if nothing else, the calendar makes it very very difficult, this late in the process, for he or really anybody else to get in. neil: but to beat a general election candidate -- >> still. neil: is it really? >> it is. >> he hasn't...
201
201
Oct 18, 2019
10/19
by
KPIX
tv
eye 201
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie joins us tonight from dohuk. so, charlie, where does this thee the u.s. military in the r: reporter: well, norah, cbs news has learned the pentagon has had no change to their withdrawal plan and no direction on how the removal of kurdish forces will be implemented. t> o'donnell: great reporting there, charliethank you. tonight, there are fears of another possible collapse at the hard rock hotel under onstruction in new orleans. part of the building crumbled on plturday, killing three people. omar villafranca now with a newly posted video that shows workers had serious concerns about the safety of the structure. >> reporter: this grainy video is now being examined by investigators, potential evidence that may help determine what went wrong. ay oh, my god. >> reporter: two days before the accident, a concerned worker filmed an upper floor of the 18- story hotel under construction. he points to a series of red flags, like this floor-to- ceiling temporary beam supporting concrete slabs. " spanish he says, "they was in too bent.s "s one because failures. >> reporter: civil engineer norma jean mattei watched the tideo. >> it makede was the brace damaged? was the concrete placed not of eqequate strength? was the concrete just not strong enough? >> reporter: governor jon bel edwards said the possi
charlie joins us tonight from dohuk. so, charlie, where does this thee the u.s. military in the r: reporter: well, norah, cbs news has learned the pentagon has had no change to their withdrawal plan and no direction on how the removal of kurdish forces will be implemented. t> o'donnell: great reporting there, charliethank you. tonight, there are fears of another possible collapse at the hard rock hotel under onstruction in new orleans. part of the building crumbled on plturday, killing three...
108
108
Oct 16, 2019
10/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 108
favorite 0
quote 0
of eyebrow raising on charlie evans as you are charlie is a voter, we know rosen grand doesn't want to cut rates, we know george doesn't. we could be set -- i don't think charlied to guess so i still think powell has the votes and i think powell wants to cut one more time but it is possible given what charlie said today he could do so with three dissents against cutting rates. that would start to get to the edge where the fed might not act. i think the market, though, what i saw today, scott, was 85% probability still on those cuts and that came after evans so the market is -- thinks the fed is going to do this and they would be most disappointed if it didn't happen. >> it's going to be so interested in the couple weeks ahead. steve, thank you steve liesman at the fed for us in d.c. >>> out in vegas the annual gaming event is taking place and contessa brewer is there at the sands hotel looking at the rise of sports betting and why companies are looking to mobile to capitalize on it. >> reporter: it's the talk of the global gaming expo, scott, 18 states plus the district of columbia have legalized sports betting, but they are really focused on partnerships here
of eyebrow raising on charlie evans as you are charlie is a voter, we know rosen grand doesn't want to cut rates, we know george doesn't. we could be set -- i don't think charlied to guess so i still think powell has the votes and i think powell wants to cut one more time but it is possible given what charlie said today he could do so with three dissents against cutting rates. that would start to get to the edge where the fed might not act. i think the market, though, what i saw today, scott,...
50
50
Oct 29, 2019
10/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
liz: charlie, thank you. good stuff, charlie gasparino. we are coming right back.ave red on the screen. the dow still down, not by much, is a point -- 15 points, stay tuned. so employees like sarah can achieve what they're working for. . . driverless cars, or trips to mars. no commission. delivery drones, or the latest phones. no commission. no matter what you trade, at fidelity you'll pay no commission for online u.s. equity trades. liz: now we have more on the johnson & johnson situation regarding the baby powder. yes the shares are still halted. as we told you right before the break the company came out and said 15 new tests of the baby powder that had previously been tested by the fda, that had initially found asbestos in those bottles, have now showed no asbestos. the company now going on to say they brought in an additional 48 tests from the same samples that had initially tested positive for asbestos and all of those tested negative. now it turns out they say, that when the original testing was done. the testers used an auxiliary room in the lab that d.v. --
liz: charlie, thank you. good stuff, charlie gasparino. we are coming right back.ave red on the screen. the dow still down, not by much, is a point -- 15 points, stay tuned. so employees like sarah can achieve what they're working for. . . driverless cars, or trips to mars. no commission. delivery drones, or the latest phones. no commission. no matter what you trade, at fidelity you'll pay no commission for online u.s. equity trades. liz: now we have more on the johnson & johnson situation...
167
167
Oct 16, 2019
10/19
by
KPIX
tv
eye 167
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> o'donnell: charlie joins us tonight from dohuk. and, charlie, how long are you hearing it will take for u.s. forces to leave syria? >> reporter: well, they say it's going to take somewhere between 15 and 30 days. but, norah, kurdish commanders that we spoke to say the u.s. military in kobani have actually asked for their help in providing safe passage. >> o'donnell: that's how complicated this is. wet b imargarrar of "faheation" so, margaret, th president, and the secretary of state, are going to turkey to call an end to the bloodshed, yet the turkish president said he will never agree to a cease-fire. so what is the president's strategy? >> reporter: norah, there is no broader strategy. officials i have spoken with have told me that the president doesn't appreciate the implications of his decision to quickly pull back, pull out of syria. and, in fact, some members of his national security team described it as a demolition of gis. power in the region. that only benefits russia, the assad regime, iran, and isis dcause it further destabilizes the
. >> o'donnell: charlie joins us tonight from dohuk. and, charlie, how long are you hearing it will take for u.s. forces to leave syria? >> reporter: well, they say it's going to take somewhere between 15 and 30 days. but, norah, kurdish commanders that we spoke to say the u.s. military in kobani have actually asked for their help in providing safe passage. >> o'donnell: that's how complicated this is. wet b imargarrar of "faheation" so, margaret, th president, and...
59
59
Oct 27, 2019
10/19
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie works in a supermarket and 18—year—old dan is working to be a chef. there is six—year—old daughter poppy and big brother andrew, charlie and dan's uncle. brea kfast. richard and lizzie have the day. dan is still in bed. charliekfast a couple of times a week. when imi time. —— when i am at home. previously i have been cooking forjust me and liz, not a house of six people. it would have been just the two of us. before, they lived in three households scattered around margate. andrew lived alone. single mum charlie and poppy had their own place. juggling poppy‘s school times and her own work hours was a challenge for mum, charlie, before moving into the house. my hours change week to week. it makes it a little difficult with school runs but with some help, it is nice that she has been picked up by a family member. this morning, lizzie is taking her granddaughter to school. bag, please? you are going to be late! lizzie spotted the advert for taking part in the housing experiment because her landlord at the time was selling up. shall i go the back way? thanet council behind the project wanted to see if a multi—generational home would save money on things like social care and reduce the impact on the environment wi
charlie works in a supermarket and 18—year—old dan is working to be a chef. there is six—year—old daughter poppy and big brother andrew, charlie and dan's uncle. brea kfast. richard and lizzie have the day. dan is still in bed. charliekfast a couple of times a week. when imi time. —— when i am at home. previously i have been cooking forjust me and liz, not a house of six people. it would have been just the two of us. before, they lived in three households scattered around margate....
57
57
Oct 2, 2019
10/19
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 57
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie, when did you start the cook political report? charlie: 1984. bill: 1984. a lot of people feel today that politics is broken. it is too divisive. too much hate and ugliness. are you still a believer? have you given up on politics? and, is it broken? can we fix it? what is your overall feeling? charlie: oh geez, i wish we did not do this one. my entire -- ever since i was a freshman in college, i've worked on campaigns, on capitol hill. worked as a pollster. i started the newsletter in 1984. my entire adult life has been watching and loving capitol hill and politics. but, this really is broken. it is really broken. it is disheartening to see what is happening. the toughest thing is when i go on college campuses, and tomorrow, i'm spending the day at the naval academy. one of the cardinal rules when talking to students is don't bum them out about politics. [laughter] well, it is hard to put a happy face on what is happening. you think about during president clinton's administration, we thought things were acrimonious, partisan. those are the good old days. you know? things have progressively gotten more acrimonious. you can blame redistricting, you can blame it on the different media structure. you can blame it on the sorting out. where suddenly, you use to conservative moderate demo
charlie, when did you start the cook political report? charlie: 1984. bill: 1984. a lot of people feel today that politics is broken. it is too divisive. too much hate and ugliness. are you still a believer? have you given up on politics? and, is it broken? can we fix it? what is your overall feeling? charlie: oh geez, i wish we did not do this one. my entire -- ever since i was a freshman in college, i've worked on campaigns, on capitol hill. worked as a pollster. i started the newsletter in...
103
103
Oct 14, 2019
10/19
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie savage. washington correspondent. charlie, thanks for joining us on this. you wrote a piece that really details the kurd's role in keeping these isis prisoners. give us a sense of who these fighters are and their ability to mobilize. >> right. so the first thing to -- you have to understand to think clearly about this is that there's two buckets of detainees. there's men, foreign fighters they're generally called. and then there's women and children. some of whom could be the adult women quite radicalized isis supporters themselves. but fundamentally, a different kind of threat. the women and children have been held in internally displaced persons camps along with other internal refugees. and the bulk of the people that have gotten out as it were so far have been the women and the children. especially, out of the camp because turkish air strikes were hitting the ground very near that camp and we think that the camp directors decided it was no longer safe and essentially opened the gates and said save yourself, save your kids. so that's scary in a way. but also, sort of sad and messed up as opposed to they're going to come get us. but we are also starting to get scattered reports of some men fighters who are going free. at that point, this is -- at this point, i would say that's still unconfirmed and seems to be very small numbers rather than the hundreds that is associated with the women and kids. >> so what is -- what is ahead for these women and children, charlieing -- they were already in a very dire situation in these overburdened refugee style camps and hated by the people around them. many of whom lost their own family members to isis. pariahs they always say the kids are in particular. so now, they're going to be out wandering around with bombs falling around them. at the same time, it's clear that isis sort of shadow networks, fighters who are never caught and underground are coming to the surface now to take pot shots at people and cause mischief where they can. it's basically just a hell scape that's getting worse for everybody. >> is it too late? is it too late to keep a hold on these isis prisoners? >> well, the thing your question is getting at is that the government had an aspiration, a contingency plan of sorts, to try to get the four or five dozen of the very worst of the 11,000 male fighters who are in detention out. so they had -- they had identified 40, 50, 60 of the very worst sort of leaders, strategic planners, bomb makers,
charlie savage. washington correspondent. charlie, thanks for joining us on this. you wrote a piece that really details the kurd's role in keeping these isis prisoners. give us a sense of who these fighters are and their ability to mobilize. >> right. so the first thing to -- you have to understand to think clearly about this is that there's two buckets of detainees. there's men, foreign fighters they're generally called. and then there's women and children. some of whom could be the...
250
250
tv
eye 250
favorite 0
quote 0
it's like lucy pulling the football away from charlie brown, only in this case, charlie brown is donnierange, and we are, i don't know what we are, i guess we're the dirt. and if that all wasn't enough, the inspector general of the state department called an urgent meeting with members of congress. he scheduled it yesterday for this morning. all we knew it was highly unusual. after the meeting, jamie rask held a strange little chat with the press. >> and he wanted to give as you packet of information, which is unclassified. which originally arrived at the department of state addressed to secretary pompeo and looks like this. so it's in calligraphy. says secretary pompeo, attention, and it says the white house. so it may have come from the white house. it may not. we don't know. and there is a series of folders, which all come from trump hotels. so folder after folder that say trump hotel. now i haven't had time to thoroughly scrutinize everything that's in here. but it's essentially a packet of propaganda. >> jimmy: right, so they got a packet of propaganda which is apparently full of s
it's like lucy pulling the football away from charlie brown, only in this case, charlie brown is donnierange, and we are, i don't know what we are, i guess we're the dirt. and if that all wasn't enough, the inspector general of the state department called an urgent meeting with members of congress. he scheduled it yesterday for this morning. all we knew it was highly unusual. after the meeting, jamie rask held a strange little chat with the press. >> and he wanted to give as you packet of...
401
401
Oct 22, 2019
10/19
by
KNTV
tv
eye 401
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie the dog? >> charlie is not with us anymore but i have walter and i have a couple of other bassets running around. >> the whole crew is like savannah, how could you ask that. >> no, it's okay, charlie white sauce and i started with the roux and it has cream and milk and so you cook and cook and cook. >> you're trying to thicken it up, right. >> thicken it up >> is that thick enough or not really. >> this looks great. this isn't quite there, but i have already finished. i'm going to have you help me build a rollup >> okay. >> this is the filling you just stirred together take about a generous third cup and put it on the end. >> it's the whole thing is in here, our shrimp, our everything >> these are cooked lasagna noodles. i cook them about half the time that the package says, and then just roll it up. hence the name, lasagna rollup >> they're so cute and pretty. >> amazing. >> are you dying. >> yes, i'm dying. >> between this and a lasagna. >> good point, that's exactly what it is, and then i always put the seam side down. >> to make it look pretty. >> i poured the white sauce in the bottom of the dish, and i'll let you pour the rest of it all over. >> am i pouring or drizzling >>
charlie the dog? >> charlie is not with us anymore but i have walter and i have a couple of other bassets running around. >> the whole crew is like savannah, how could you ask that. >> no, it's okay, charlie white sauce and i started with the roux and it has cream and milk and so you cook and cook and cook. >> you're trying to thicken it up, right. >> thicken it up >> is that thick enough or not really. >> this looks great. this isn't quite there, but i...
41
41
tv
eye 41
favorite 0
quote 0
liz: charlie, thank you very much. charlie gasparino.asdaq taking it on the chin down 1.9 5%, a lot of 112 points. we are coming right back. don't go away, ten minutes before the closing bell. ♪ ♪ but allstate actually helps you drive safely... with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast... ...and brake too hard. with feedback to help you drive safer. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. unfortunately, it can't do anything about that. now that you know the truth... are you in good hands? liz: orthodontic disrupter, ipo disae direct club is now down 15%. gerri willis, what's happening? >> so orthodontists are disrupting smile direct club, that's what's happening. they're pushing back on this company, all kinds of talk about lawsuit against the company, so now they are the worst performing its po of the year, down 50% from their ipo price, and this despite lots of support from analysts. they've got all kinds of great news coming out of analysts, even so the stock down yesterday and today. liz: thank you so much, gerr
liz: charlie, thank you very much. charlie gasparino.asdaq taking it on the chin down 1.9 5%, a lot of 112 points. we are coming right back. don't go away, ten minutes before the closing bell. ♪ ♪ but allstate actually helps you drive safely... with drivewise. it lets you know when you go too fast... ...and brake too hard. with feedback to help you drive safer. giving you the power to actually lower your cost. unfortunately, it can't do anything about that. now that you know the truth......
96
96
Oct 21, 2019
10/19
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 96
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie savage and jill wines bank. >> charlie, tell us what you know and how it has gone unnoticed until now. the state inspector general suddenly came to congress and turns out he was turning over dozen of paeges of conspiracy types of documents. nbc got their hands-on those documents. what we are seeing from these is eventhough the whistleblower and his complaint dated this conspiracy theory by john solomon, the conservative opinion writer at "the hill" that appeared in march about a biden supposedly getting this prosecutor fired to help his son when the opposite is true. rudy giuliani and his aides who are under indictment. the one over the phone was the one they're trying to get visas for them to come to the united states. look like rather ths like rathe to the solomon's article in march. it is a product of something rudy giuliani and these other guys up to six weeks earlier. >> joe, we can't hammer this point enough. rudy giuliani has nothing to do with the united states government. he is a private citizen, he's the president's attorney, not a government employee. why on earth is he dipping his toes into so many dealings with foreign officials and why is it allowed? >> well, it should not be allowed but it is because the trump administration does not care about it and thinks it is benefiting from all of his activities. >> hold on. it is or is not allowed. >> it is not allowable. it is impropeimproper. he has a right to represent clients but not to lobby without registers which seems to be the case that his clients often thought he was a lobbiest. they hired him because of his connection to donald trump and they thought he could be a liaison to the trump's administration, he never tr registered as a foreign agent which is illegal and he should have done. he's been vofrinvolved in turke and not just ukraine and all over the world in doing things, clients, some of his clients feel he did a good job. many did not feel he did a good job. some of his clients have said he was lobbying on our behalf which contradicts i am just acting as a private attorney. but, when he gets into asking favors like getting a visa for the ousted prosecutor general who had not been doing a good job of investigating corruption in ukraine, that crosses as line, that's something should be done within the state department and not by a private attorney who's using his relationships to trump to get things done. >> what are the consequences for crossing that red line. could you be disbarred? >> well, possibly disbarred. he could be charged with violating the federal agency act for not registering on behalf of that. he could start losing business because he's not forthcoming. as you mentioned earlier that the justice department is stepping back from its relationship with him. they announced in a very strange announcement because normally they would not comment but they now announced that they would not met with him on behalf of a client of his if they had known that he and his associates were under investigation. two have been indicted and arrested. he has not yet been, we don't know why his associates are being treated differently than he has been. i don't know what the evidence is of the guilt the associates for fruman and parnas. he seems to be equally implicated in it. and so he could be the next. so there are a number of crimes that he may have been a participant in the election campaign violations that his associates were arrested for. we just don't have the evidence. and i would think that disbarment is the last thing on his mind. he should be worried about criminal cases. he had a criminal attorney. he no longer has that criminal attorn attorney. he should have one. he should not be representing himself, as he said he is doing. >> all right, then. charlie, before we go, firman and parnas were arrested for campaign finance violations. that's a long walk from being central figures in the impeachment inquiry. is that where they're headed? >> well, there's a lot of byzantine trails that this once simple story of extorting ukraine to gin up dirt on the bidens has taken. the number of people and countries and former officials from different countries who are at war with each other and now these short of shady figures like firman and parnas that are now complicating this story means there's a lot more that democrats who are conducting this investigation are going to have to be trying to uncovered. that's some of the questions they're going to be asking this week with a lot of witnesses still slated to come in for depositions although it remains open whether the trump office of management and budget and nsc will let some of those most important witnesses come in to answer questions like the ones you just asked. >> charlie savage, jill wine-ban
charlie savage and jill wines bank. >> charlie, tell us what you know and how it has gone unnoticed until now. the state inspector general suddenly came to congress and turns out he was turning over dozen of paeges of conspiracy types of documents. nbc got their hands-on those documents. what we are seeing from these is eventhough the whistleblower and his complaint dated this conspiracy theory by john solomon, the conservative opinion writer at "the hill" that appeared in march...
2,347
2.3K
Oct 25, 2019
10/19
by
KGO
tv
eye 2,347
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie, i had a blue one, charlie had a green one. they jumped us at the bus stop and stomped our beavers. they were so jealous. >> jimmy: it's a weird thing, they wouldn't even steal stuff. on my block they'd steal your sneakers, tie the laces together and throw them up on the power line and you'd have to walk by your own shoes all the time. especially humiliating. when did you start doing ventriloquism? [ laughter ] >> that was actually the first thing i asked my mother for when i was about 8 years old. i asked for a ventriloquist doll. >> jimmy: was it a charliee was looking straight out. >> jimmy: and would you do who? like friends and stuff like that? >> i would try to talk and not move my lips. >> jimmy: could you do that? talk without moving your lips? >> i was pretty good. >> jimmy: you were? >> not good enough to follow it, but. >> jimmy: yeah, right, probably a good idea that you didn't follow it, but do you do that anymore? do you entertain your children with this sort of stuff? >> i have two ventriloquist dummies now. >> jimmy: you do? >> yes. but they're of people that i know. i have a couple of friends that are characters. c i could do their voice. i have a friend val young. i have a ventriloquist made that looks just like her. we'll go and trip sometimes. i'll pull the dummy out, she'll be talking. >> jimmy: does val like the dummy? >> she loves it. she doesn't call it a dummy, though. she'll say go bring out the val doll. it's not a doll. it's a ventriloquist dummy. where's the val doll. >> jimmy: who's the other dummy? >> paul m
charlie, i had a blue one, charlie had a green one. they jumped us at the bus stop and stomped our beavers. they were so jealous. >> jimmy: it's a weird thing, they wouldn't even steal stuff. on my block they'd steal your sneakers, tie the laces together and throw them up on the power line and you'd have to walk by your own shoes all the time. especially humiliating. when did you start doing ventriloquism? [ laughter ] >> that was actually the first thing i asked my mother for when...
34
34
tv
eye 34
favorite 0
quote 0
initially cynical can you tell me sally could charlie star who conditional trust. only could charlie star who conditional trust. showed him a bullish for sure to keep. him a bullish for sure to keep your. years on yes not just book good night is about autumn. years and years not just good night is about autumn. when you get. when you we get. chicken check mama mama if you know not. looking child mama mama. and no not such a. government but almost no little not a lot about. government but almost no little not a lot about. the subject. into that because that is. the subject. into thugs that you operate the was a national. op or what i thought at one time. what that the president. discussed. there was that better than i would like it because i wish that there was protection like nick it was. new to the like it will look like it's me it would need to the way like it will be at. so let's feel scottish in that produces consumer i was spit that's not going. to shit in there produces consume or i will spit that's not going away like it the good book can you look at or you lets you suddenly b
initially cynical can you tell me sally could charlie star who conditional trust. only could charlie star who conditional trust. showed him a bullish for sure to keep. him a bullish for sure to keep your. years on yes not just book good night is about autumn. years and years not just good night is about autumn. when you get. when you we get. chicken check mama mama if you know not. looking child mama mama. and no not such a. government but almost no little not a lot about. government but almost...
66
66
Oct 17, 2019
10/19
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie state... no, ijust meana beckham, charlie state... no, ijust mean a regular blue peter badge. —— charlielue peter presenter. so we know the lineups now. yes, this is where they pin their hopes on the team who will get them over the line at the quarterfinal stage. but these guys are best friends. owen farrell on the right, george ford on the left. george ford has been starting fly half throughout the whole tournament, but he has been dropped and owen farrell will come in and replaced him at fly half. imagine what that dynamic must be like for those guys, best friends, and yet one guy will get it. don't care, you want to be on the team. there has to be a little bit of that. am i right in thinking they don't use the word dropped? they call them starters and finishes. yes, everyone plays their part. so eddiejones restoring owen farrel to his preferred position. unfortunate perhaps for george ford, who has been one of england's standout players so of far. butjones going for the trio of farrell, tuilagi and slade he selected in the six nations. i think the great thing about the world cup is th
charlie state... no, ijust meana beckham, charlie state... no, ijust mean a regular blue peter badge. —— charlielue peter presenter. so we know the lineups now. yes, this is where they pin their hopes on the team who will get them over the line at the quarterfinal stage. but these guys are best friends. owen farrell on the right, george ford on the left. george ford has been starting fly half throughout the whole tournament, but he has been dropped and owen farrell will come in and replaced...
188
188
Oct 17, 2019
10/19
by
KPIX
tv
eye 188
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie d'agata is following developments from neighboring iraq and, charlie, what do we know now about the pace of the s.s. withdrawal? >> reporter: well, norah, cbs news has learned that all u.s. bases have now been drawn down to the main airfield at kobani where a major airlift is now currently under way. as quickly as the u.s. military pulled out, russian forces have moved in, now patrolling the key city of manbij once dominated by by american presence. u.s. military bases are now under new management of the syrian regime. and despite demands for a ceasefire, intense fighting is under way between turkish forces und kurdish fighters, who are not giving up without a fight. now, president trump's accusations that some kurdish factions "are more dangerous than isis" will be met with outrage here, norah, considering they lost 11,000 men and women fighting isis right beside u.s. forces. >> o'donnell: outrage about that, indeed. thank you, charlie. and more than 60 million americans are in the path of a dangerous nor'easter hitting tonight. about 8.5 million could get the worst of it, torrential rain and powerful gusts. meteorologist jeff berardelli is t ght in the middle of it. jeff, i understand the storm is moving quite fast. >> reporter: it's moving really fast. and this is going to be a record-breaking storm. it's really early in the season for this to happen. let's show you the radar. ins moving very quickly to y the north and east. but let me tell you why this will be such a strong storm. we have one storm in the great onkes. we have another storm making its way up the eastern seaboard. these two are merging into what is going to be a historic and record-breaking storm in terms m pressure. this is going to be the lowest pressure that we've seen in new england during the month of october. and in terms of meeting the definition for bombogenesis, it's intensifying at a rate e ice as fast as it needs to. so this is technical
charlie d'agata is following developments from neighboring iraq and, charlie, what do we know now about the pace of the s.s. withdrawal? >> reporter: well, norah, cbs news has learned that all u.s. bases have now been drawn down to the main airfield at kobani where a major airlift is now currently under way. as quickly as the u.s. military pulled out, russian forces have moved in, now patrolling the key city of manbij once dominated by by american presence. u.s. military bases are now...
50
50
Oct 21, 2019
10/19
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie works in a supermarket. 18—year—old dan is training to be a chef. there's charlie's six—year—old daughter, poppy. and finally lizzie's big brother, andrew, who's charlieing daughter poppy ready for school. i make breakfast a couple of times a week when i'm home and not at work. previously i would have just been cooking for me and liz. not a house of six. it would have been just the two of us, and maybe the boy, daniel, if he's home. before they all moved in together, the family lived in three separate homes scattered around margate. lizzie, richard and dan lived in one. andrew lived on his own, and single mum charlie and poppy had their own place. juggling poppy's school times and her own work hours was a challenge for mum charlie before moving into this house. my hours do change sometimes from week to week so it does make it a little bit difficult with school runs, but with a bit of help on hand now, it's nice that she's still getting picked up by a family member. this morning, lizzie is taking her granddaughter to school. bag, please, because you're going to be late. it was lizzie that spotted the advert for taking part in the housing experiment, be
charlie works in a supermarket. 18—year—old dan is training to be a chef. there's charlie's six—year—old daughter, poppy. and finally lizzie's big brother, andrew, who's charlieing daughter poppy ready for school. i make breakfast a couple of times a week when i'm home and not at work. previously i would have just been cooking for me and liz. not a house of six. it would have been just the two of us, and maybe the boy, daniel, if he's home. before they all moved in together, the family...
102
102
Oct 31, 2019
10/19
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 102
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie and saturday outside, stay tuned to the weatherforecast. charlie and naga. thank you very much. tomorrow marks one year since the change in the law one year since the change in the law on medicinal cannabis. allowing doctors in the uk to prescribe it under certain conditions. it followed high profile campaigns from families of children with severe epilepsy — but now it seems some families still aren't receiving the drugs without having to pay thousands of pounds to go private. matt and ali hughes from norwich say they're spending nearly one and a half thousand pounds a month to help their son charlie'sd this medicine, it has changed this life and hours of dig our whole family. it has been marvellous. you could call it a miracle. i would marvellous. you could call it a miracle. iwould really like boris johnson to intervene for us parents and sort out. i no-one woman who has to sell her house because she cannot afford to pay for her daughter's medication. it is awful, in the uk in 2019.. . joining us now is harry sumnall who's a professor of substance use at liverpool john moores university. charlie there, he has gone from 122 under ten seizures a day. but the family, next month, will be unable to privately for the treatment. it seems extraordinary that they are left in those circumstances. the law was changed one year ago and that would enable doctors to potentially be able to prescribe medicinal cannabis products. but that does not mean that it would —— they would. so at the time the law was changed, many professional bodies, some of the associations, were worried there was not enou
charlie and saturday outside, stay tuned to the weatherforecast. charlie and naga. thank you very much. tomorrow marks one year since the change in the law one year since the change in the law on medicinal cannabis. allowing doctors in the uk to prescribe it under certain conditions. it followed high profile campaigns from families of children with severe epilepsy — but now it seems some families still aren't receiving the drugs without having to pay thousands of pounds to go private. matt...
83
83
Oct 7, 2019
10/19
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie was violently shaken. i came out of the shower to find charlie grey, lifeless, not breathing, in his father's arms with no explanation. charlie'sent because he had been shaken that violently. charlie's father was jailed for four years after causing grievous bodily harm. he left his son brain—damaged, blind and with restricted movement. to assess the scale of the problem, we manually checked every serious case review on the nspcc‘s website for the past decade. what we have found is that one in six cases relates to shaken baby syndrome. many parents that do shake their baby don't do it intentionally, are doing it in the spirit of the moment when something has just broken or gone wrong. this woman was convicted of the manslaughter of her three—month—old baby boy. she maintains her innocence to this day but in sentencing her, the judge attributed the death to a momentary loss of self—control. he would wake up and start crying. i tried to make him calm down, like, cuddling him and things like that. for a few seconds it was happening and then he stopped breathing. it feels like i was just shocked. the death of my son is going to be r
charlie was violently shaken. i came out of the shower to find charlie grey, lifeless, not breathing, in his father's arms with no explanation. charlie'sent because he had been shaken that violently. charlie's father was jailed for four years after causing grievous bodily harm. he left his son brain—damaged, blind and with restricted movement. to assess the scale of the problem, we manually checked every serious case review on the nspcc‘s website for the past decade. what we have found is...
36
36
Oct 9, 2019
10/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie, vice chairman of ariel investments. charlie, i'll begin with you it was suggested earlier in the week by dan clifton if we're in a longer term standoff with china, market multiples need to come down, that's what happened during the cold war with the soviets. what are the ways to think through the longer term implications of everything playing out here >> i think it's always important in one of these situations to figure out what the market is pricing in and then compare possible outcomes to that. i think right now, the institutional investors, the commentators on your show, are pretty bearish and forecasting a recession, they're forecasting continued trade tensions, and i think that's factored in so when you get just a little bit of good news, like we got today, you get a couple hundred point rally in the market. if we get a substantive agreement, just better than where we were with some intellectual property protections, with some reductions on the need for partnerships with a little bit of extra agricultural purchases and don't poo-poo that, there are a lot of soybean growers in iowa and important states in the midwest -- >> but is $10 billion going to make a difference? our support for them was $16 billion, so i understand that's some chunk of it, but i also wonder if it's telling us the chinese need access to that product as opposed to really giving us something? >> i think that's a negotiating point. i think they know how important farmers are to trump and they think they can quote/unquote buy a little bit of support and take some pressure off for that the point of all this, i think there's a lot of bad news baked into the market and if we get some kind of progress we could get massive move up in the market. >> paul, what about you? do you agree that seems to be the stance everybody is kind of braced for these bad outcomes here >> yeah. we agree there hasn't been really any optimism priced in for months on the u.s./china trade dispute. and if you do get some sort of deal, you are likely to see a positive market reaction, but we don't see how you can get anything but the skinniest of deals out of this. as you pointed out, $10 billion in soybeans is not much. they could still buy through the brazilians and frankly, if they just got the u.s. to withhold the october and december tariffs that's not that big of a deal. those could always come back on. the president has imposed all the tariffs that he's threatened so far we think there are much bigger rockses to break up here and you're not going to get that deal on partnerships you're not going to get that deal on intellectual property. >> let's boil down quickly, paul, your top three places to be in this market? >> we like cyclicals, still have more growth, information technology, consumer discretionary and financials >> charlie >> small and mid cap value stocks our flagship traded less than 12 times forward earnings very good opportunities in small and mid sized. >> you are a brave man paul and christopher joining me today. >>> here's what else is ahead on "the exchange. >>> coming up, it's setting up to be another blowout year for venture capital investments. where the money is flowing and if it will continue into 2020. plus, the nba china drama continues to unfold. is the nba's position getting weaker or will they find way to keep the billions from china flowing. and it's a new reality ahead for apple. n bc is "the exchange. ocn >>> welcome back here's a surprise, despite disappointing high ipos this year, u.s. venture capitalists are on pace to pour $100 billion for the second year in a row who is getting that money? i'm joined by bobbie franklin, president and ceo of the national venture capital association and duncan davidson partner at bull pen capital. bobbies you have the numbers here do tell. what a
charlie, vice chairman of ariel investments. charlie, i'll begin with you it was suggested earlier in the week by dan clifton if we're in a longer term standoff with china, market multiples need to come down, that's what happened during the cold war with the soviets. what are the ways to think through the longer term implications of everything playing out here >> i think it's always important in one of these situations to figure out what the market is pricing in and then compare possible...