67
67
Apr 12, 2014
04/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 67
favorite 0
quote 0
and so my husband, in fact, mentioned to me that he had run into charlie peters, who had said something about my book. so i called him and i said, "you know, i hope, charlie, you know that my book is embargoed." he was from west virginia and i didn't want him to send it to anyone down there because one, i didn't want my book coming out before my book was coming out. and he said, "well, i'm not going to do that, but i'm going to have to write him a letter" -- charlie has a very strong accent -- "and tell him that i think that this is really dangerous for him." and i said, "well, you know, i've already sent it to both rachael warby and gaston caperton, and they've both seen it. and you don't really need to do that." and he said, "well, this is just a bullet to his heart. he's going to have to divorce her." and i said, "well, that's totally a ridiculous thing to say. it's absurd and it's not true and it's outrageous." and he said, "well, i'm just going to have to send them a letter and tell them these things." and i didn't really think he would because it just seemed, on the face of it, st
and so my husband, in fact, mentioned to me that he had run into charlie peters, who had said something about my book. so i called him and i said, "you know, i hope, charlie, you know that my book is embargoed." he was from west virginia and i didn't want him to send it to anyone down there because one, i didn't want my book coming out before my book was coming out. and he said, "well, i'm not going to do that, but i'm going to have to write him a letter" -- charlie has a...
127
127
Apr 8, 2014
04/14
by
KQED
tv
eye 127
favorite 0
quote 0
nice to see you, charlie. >> charlie: peter mattheissen, the aw author died april 5.letters always seem to be of a different early era with universal spiritual and timeless concerns. matthiessen was an environmentalist, activist, explorer, founder of "the paris review," c.i.a. agent and buddhist teacher. first and foremost a writer, produced more than 30 books in his career and remains the only author to win national book award for fiction and nonfiction. his last work will be published april 8. he was born into a wealthy new york family, profess add life long unease about unearned privilege that fueled his need to explore the larger world. he moved to paris after graduating. he founded "the paris review." moved to new york in the '50s and spent the rest of his life writing about the natural world and humanity, the snow leopard, at play in the fields of the lord and trilogy of watson novels which he compressed into one long work, shadow country in 2008. matthiessen is survived which wife maria eckert, four children from two previous marriages two, stepchildren and six
nice to see you, charlie. >> charlie: peter mattheissen, the aw author died april 5.letters always seem to be of a different early era with universal spiritual and timeless concerns. matthiessen was an environmentalist, activist, explorer, founder of "the paris review," c.i.a. agent and buddhist teacher. first and foremost a writer, produced more than 30 books in his career and remains the only author to win national book award for fiction and nonfiction. his last work will be...
59
59
Apr 9, 2014
04/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> nice to see you, charlie. ♪ >> peter matheson --peter matthiessen, the author and naturalist, diedturday. he was 86 years old. he always seemed to be of a different, earlier era. he was an environmentalist, explorer, founder of the parish review, and cia agent. first and foremost, he was a writer. the only author to win for both fiction and nonfiction. his last work will be published on april 8. in 1927, he was born into a wealthy new york family. he graduated from yale and moved to paris. it is there that he and his childhood friend founded "the paris review." he moved back to new york and spent the rest of his life writing about the natural world and humanity. his work includes, "at play in the fields of the lord." he is survived by his wife, four children from previous two marriages, and grandchildren. your moments from his conversations on this program -- here are moments from his conversations on this program. >> what drove you to go to africa? >> my dad is a hunter. i used to hunt, too. i got interested in animal behavior. my brother did, too. he went to marine biology. it st
. >> nice to see you, charlie. ♪ >> peter matheson --peter matthiessen, the author and naturalist, diedturday. he was 86 years old. he always seemed to be of a different, earlier era. he was an environmentalist, explorer, founder of the parish review, and cia agent. first and foremost, he was a writer. the only author to win for both fiction and nonfiction. his last work will be published on april 8. in 1927, he was born into a wealthy new york family. he graduated from yale and...
135
135
tv
eye 135
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie gasparino and peter morici are back. we talked about bill gross lately. stats are staggering. 11 straight months of the outflows. his performance lagged 95% of the hess peers. in the midst of all this turmoil he dedicates his most recent letter to his dead cat. charlie. >> we think dr. keith ablow here. melissa: right. you're right. this is all wrong. >> okay, you want my, i'm kind after shrink. melissa: yeah, go ahead. >> you know, listen, i don't know. this is very perplexing. it, i mean i'm trying to be serious here. we should point out his cat bob, is a woman. melissa: not a woman. it's a female cat i think. very close though. on that note, let me move over to peter and move away from charlie as rapidly as possible. >> that will be on john stuart monday. melissa: i often ask her about a recommendation -- >> her, bob. melissa: this is the cat. she frequently responded one me yow! for no, two meows for you bet. less certain about interest rates but never hurt to ask. this is in his note to investors peter, yes, go ahead. >> if you still have money at pi
charlie gasparino and peter morici are back. we talked about bill gross lately. stats are staggering. 11 straight months of the outflows. his performance lagged 95% of the hess peers. in the midst of all this turmoil he dedicates his most recent letter to his dead cat. charlie. >> we think dr. keith ablow here. melissa: right. you're right. this is all wrong. >> okay, you want my, i'm kind after shrink. melissa: yeah, go ahead. >> you know, listen, i don't know. this is very...
83
83
Apr 16, 2014
04/14
by
FBC
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
peter is here. we have charlie gasparino and "wall street journal's" james freeman. a lot of fed stiff going on. this had a big impact on the market. what did you guys here that stood out to you? >> the economy is continuing to grow not we like, not reagan growth or clinton growth but pulling out of the winter. i don't know why janet yellen feels comfortable to say, okay, the money-printing era is ending. melissa: the quote from the economic conference saying normal employment is more than two years away. shows you how far we have to go. >> we should point out normal economic cycles, recoveries last about seven years. if you say at the bottom of the market or bottom of the recession was sometime in early to mid 2009, we're in, we're, at that point where we're hitting end of that cycle and the economy has not improved that much. i don't know -- melissa: are you saying we're way behind where we should be? >> what else do you have going for you if you have weak economic recovery and end of economic cycle but printing of money? melissa: peter, go ahead. >> there was noth
peter is here. we have charlie gasparino and "wall street journal's" james freeman. a lot of fed stiff going on. this had a big impact on the market. what did you guys here that stood out to you? >> the economy is continuing to grow not we like, not reagan growth or clinton growth but pulling out of the winter. i don't know why janet yellen feels comfortable to say, okay, the money-printing era is ending. melissa: the quote from the economic conference saying normal employment...
737
737
Apr 19, 2014
04/14
by
KQED
tv
eye 737
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie: what's unusual about them? what do they have? you're an advisor to them. >> well, one is an unbelievable original view of the world. they believe something, peter says what do you believe that nobody else does. >> charlie: great saying. it's a great interview question because even if you know it's coming, it's very difficult to answer. it's okay, if nobody else believes it, my interviewer doesn't believe it, what can i say? i can say marc answering that question. maybe you know something he doesn't know and now he'll know it. >> right. so you need someone with that original thinking and then the other side of that which is the courage to kind of both say it and then build a company around it and that's a tremendous amount of courage and, really, the underpinning of the leadership that you need to build a company. so aristotle said courage is the first virtue and the reason is you need it to activate any of the others. you may have integrity until, like, you're going to lose your job over your integrity, then you may lose your courage and your integrity. >> charlie: right. so courage is fundamental and what's required to build a company and is v
charlie: what's unusual about them? what do they have? you're an advisor to them. >> well, one is an unbelievable original view of the world. they believe something, peter says what do you believe that nobody else does. >> charlie: great saying. it's a great interview question because even if you know it's coming, it's very difficult to answer. it's okay, if nobody else believes it, my interviewer doesn't believe it, what can i say? i can say marc answering that question. maybe you...
57
57
Apr 30, 2014
04/14
by
FBC
tv
eye 57
favorite 0
quote 0
peter barnes, thank you so much. don't move. stay with us. let's bring in charlie gasparino. we have former dallas fed chief economist, michael cox. lpl investment strategist, anthony valari and economist steve moore. anthony valari, let me start with you, what did you think about that? >> pretty much as expected. i think this meeting wasn't going to produce many surprises. we got an acknowledgement of soft data. i think that is a positive for the markets. realize that the weather definitely played a role. this is, the bar for the fed to adjust its tapering is pretty high. i think this is a good vote of confidence for the economy. i think markets will ultimately like this statement. it, the vote of confidence on economy and stocks. melissa: steve moore, we're looking at stocks bounce around a little bit on this they dipped initially and popped back up. now they're falling again. what do you think the market thinks about this? >> the market is addicted to cheap money. i would say this. as i listen to the report that peter was just reading from, i think that fed is little more
peter barnes, thank you so much. don't move. stay with us. let's bring in charlie gasparino. we have former dallas fed chief economist, michael cox. lpl investment strategist, anthony valari and economist steve moore. anthony valari, let me start with you, what did you think about that? >> pretty much as expected. i think this meeting wasn't going to produce many surprises. we got an acknowledgement of soft data. i think that is a positive for the markets. realize that the weather...
95
95
Apr 16, 2014
04/14
by
KQED
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
charlie: and the biggest threat to it? >> the biggest threat to twitter seems to always have been itself. i mean, at least when i was there. the biggest threat -- one of our board members, peterf because, you know, the company's on to something, people -- it's proven it's of value to the world, and now it's just a matter of -- >> charlie: especially to the mobile world. >> it's built for mobile. mobile is in it's dna. we made it for mobile. so it's just a matter of trucking along. >> charlie: you still do the oxford lecture? >> i still do it. i've expanded that to not just the said school of business but exeter at oxford and the center for corporate reputation at o oxford as well. and berkeley and stanford and some other places. >> charlie: good to see you, business. >> pleasure. wonderful to talk to you. >> charlie: "things a little bird told me, confessions of a creative mind" by biz stone. thank you for joining us. see you next time. captioning sponsored by rose communications captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org larriva: it's like holy mother of comfort food.ion. woman: throw it down. it's noodle crack. patel: you have to be ready for the heart attack o
charlie: and the biggest threat to it? >> the biggest threat to twitter seems to always have been itself. i mean, at least when i was there. the biggest threat -- one of our board members, peterf because, you know, the company's on to something, people -- it's proven it's of value to the world, and now it's just a matter of -- >> charlie: especially to the mobile world. >> it's built for mobile. mobile is in it's dna. we made it for mobile. so it's just a matter of trucking...
278
278
Apr 2, 2014
04/14
by
CNBC
tv
eye 278
favorite 0
quote 0
peter, trying to get in there? >> no, that was me. gee, bullard said something dovish. >> go ahead. >> i was just saying what bullard said is typical bullard. charlie evans would say the same thing. i'm tell what you, the market and treasuries had nothing of the dovish mentality because if they were going to taper the taper, that means they would be buying more treasuries and continuing to manipulate interest rates when we are now at a five-year going to have the highest close since september of last year, highest close since the third week in january. 30-year bond not participating. there is the curve flattening and the reason is because it doesn't believe mr. bullard. >> if anything, doesn't it seem like this isn't really about the fed -- his remarks about tapering the taper. he also talked about what would happen on the precipice of strengthening growth which you have goldman out talking about that today. if you want to talk about more monetary easy, look to the european central bank this week. look what the yen is doing. it's really here in the u.s. where the thesis, to your point about the treasury market, seems to be things are looking better
peter, trying to get in there? >> no, that was me. gee, bullard said something dovish. >> go ahead. >> i was just saying what bullard said is typical bullard. charlie evans would say the same thing. i'm tell what you, the market and treasuries had nothing of the dovish mentality because if they were going to taper the taper, that means they would be buying more treasuries and continuing to manipulate interest rates when we are now at a five-year going to have the highest close...