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the only major player in the international arena, or anyone who sold otherwise had to be wake, cynthia cynthia, to union itself, is no mold. this is a victory for democracy and freedom. these events clearly fell on national interest . george bush was. i'm good. dance of it on you. one anguish v. i'm janet she leash, took off tim. zip on and tablet block on my most of the you know enough per diem. andes milan sounds. i know saucen men monsanto advising in noisy on it was on because he had to say that i completed true to know jesus landis. mm. united states became the indispensable country. i worth the exceptional people whose obligation was to lay down the path for all the countries. and so it became a new i renewed justification for american aggression in the world. it was the justification for the 20 years of war and the 21st century. and the middle east for the attack, so on 7 countries does not return fanny's ton, this neil colon. yeah, that's also twins. julian is neo colonial on zillow, because i'm tired talking with him. none of the state, you honest already i get you hawkiss is neil col
the only major player in the international arena, or anyone who sold otherwise had to be wake, cynthia cynthia, to union itself, is no mold. this is a victory for democracy and freedom. these events clearly fell on national interest . george bush was. i'm good. dance of it on you. one anguish v. i'm janet she leash, took off tim. zip on and tablet block on my most of the you know enough per diem. andes milan sounds. i know saucen men monsanto advising in noisy on it was on because he had to say...
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the only major player in the international arena, or anyone who sold otherwise had to be like cynthia cynthia, to union itself is no more. this is a victory for democracy and freedom. these events clearly serve on national interest. george bush was, i'm just dan of it on you. one irish v. i'm jan ok. she leashed with tim zebulon and tablet block on mine was one of the dean and these milan sounds i know saucen when mine's a young child f. as in nancy on analyst on because he had to say that a competitor to know, jesus, london, a, united states became the indispensable country, are worth exceptional people, whose obligation was to lay down the path for all the countries. and so it became a new, renewed justification for american aggression in the world. it was the justification for the 20 years of war and the 21st century and the middle east for the attack. so on 7 countries, us between and afghan is ton, this neo colonial. that's also twin. julian is neil colon yacht on zillow because i'm tired talking with him. non awesome up to stay on this old idea. get you hawkiss is neo colonial iraq. thi
the only major player in the international arena, or anyone who sold otherwise had to be like cynthia cynthia, to union itself is no more. this is a victory for democracy and freedom. these events clearly serve on national interest. george bush was, i'm just dan of it on you. one irish v. i'm jan ok. she leashed with tim zebulon and tablet block on mine was one of the dean and these milan sounds i know saucen when mine's a young child f. as in nancy on analyst on because he had to say that a...
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cynthia got the invoice. after we inquired and fast-track waived the fee, >> cynthia was impressed.perience with government, which you usually do not have. >> fast-track tells us about 2% of the photos given uncertain results. two to manual review. of those 2% are wrong. mistakes are going to happen. you can share your story, from the good to the bad. just head to abc7news.com. it is a bright, pretty sunset. there is something making this one particularly special. say hello to high end stylings at prices you'll only find at lowe's. ♪ ♪ meet our collection of exclusive brands. quality home furnishings at an affordable price. only at lowe's. wanna help kids get their homework done? well, an internet connection's a good start. but kids also need computers. and sometimes the hardest thing about homework is finding a place to do it. so why not hook community centers up with wifi? for kids like us, and all the amazing things we're gonna learn. through project up, comcast is committing $1 billion dollars so millions more students can continue to get the tools they need to build a future of
cynthia got the invoice. after we inquired and fast-track waived the fee, >> cynthia was impressed.perience with government, which you usually do not have. >> fast-track tells us about 2% of the photos given uncertain results. two to manual review. of those 2% are wrong. mistakes are going to happen. you can share your story, from the good to the bad. just head to abc7news.com. it is a bright, pretty sunset. there is something making this one particularly special. say hello to high...
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Aug 9, 2022
08/22
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CSPAN3
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cynthia miller. i recognize this name one of our greatest fans. so cynthia miller says i am interested in the balls held at the powell house. could you possibly discuss a bit more about those? what was served what people wore who attended what was just discussed etc and i do want to say that the five plume hat. that's one of my favorites about the yeah. tell them about that and then i can shine and yep. um one thing that i have found in my research that that people wore at the palouse. there's a young woman named and ship and livingston who was a relative of elizabeth. she was a young woman same age as but fraud attended some falls at the powells during the 1780s early 1780s talks a lot about butcherod actually, but she describes one ball in detail her getting ready for the ball and it took all day and she showed up wearing a loomed hat so five giant feathers in the french style. so i love to imagine that outfit at the palo house. and and what kind of performance she was putting on and how she was portraying this gentile woman and as a young woman, too, so that's my little bit about what people were wearing so to speak a little bit about like what was being served. so elizabeth was well known for her dinners, and they were typically three course dinners and they were very very decadent. i guess the most famous example of this is john adams's diary where he writes about a most sinful feast again at the pals all of the things that could delight the eye and he goes on to describe. a lot of different sweets and syllabums and all kinds of alcohol and it's very decadent affair. i think the best part about that quote though to be honest is when they they drink all of the madeira and the port and then they head to christ church stephen and ideas, like what sort of parties but you haven't. also wrote about like giving a toast to elizabeth here, right? it was very embarrassing evidently, but we don't know what he said, but same very well. yeah, whatever. it was. it's funny because you comments. oh, she never did like me very much. so it's kind of funny, but another really important letter that we know of was from sarah franklin beige the the daughter of benjamin franklin to her father on her father's birthday evidently she danced with the general on 20th wedding anniversary at the house. so would imagine that would have been in the very room that i'm sitting in right? so it you know, it was what was discussed. i mean it was it could have been anything from just entertainment of the day i could have been absolutely was some kind of some political affairs since you know, they were often coming over after they had these deliberations but you know, it was really the epicenter of like social life and the pals were right in the center of it. so this was the place to be absolutely, absolutely. all right, susan mcgill says, how do we know that samuel edited elizabeth letter to gw urging him to run for another term. so the reason why we know that is that in this is just kind of basic in in all of my research. i have learned the powell's handwriting very well, and i was actually kind of a funny thing. i was actually going to put a screencap of the letter on our instagram and i was we have it scanned and i accidentally zoomed into clothes on the letter when i was trying to take a screenshot and all of a sudden i had looked at that letter so many times all of a sudden i saw on the inside page. there was a letter of a word written above one that was an edit and i realized that's not elizabeth's handwriting. that's samuel's handwriting. so i noticed throughout the rest of the letter. there's multiple. there's multiple edits in his hand. so so that's that's how we know by that's yeah. yeah, so it's funny what you can what you can discover after doing so much research things always pop up for me and that's that's what's very fun. i've so enjoyed the very multiple layers to the powell's story and all of their documents and and all that. so that's what we're very fortunate that elizabeth like to write yes indeed in that. she liked to make copies of her letters. she i don't know how she did all that especially with all the financial records. she left behind too. so she's busy woman with that desk. timmy hi, tammy, um does samuel powell's descriptions samuel palace description sound great. did he also describe the other washington family members who are present during that their visit? yes, he does and i meant to bring that up earlier bush rod washington comes to mount vernon to dine with them with his wife at that point. he briefly mentioned that the grandchildren are there and then actually they go to the ruins of belvoir plantation washington brings them to see the ruins. and if you're a virginian you might recognize the name belfar is now fort belvoir and that's where some of georgia's best friends in his early life lived george williams and sally fairfax. so samuel brings up the visiting the ruins. he doesn't talk about the fact that it's that it's george williams and sally's house, but i think that's kind of a cool. thing for washington to do it's very personal. it's a very glimpse into his life and then actually the other relatives that he brings up are not at mount vernon, but when they are down going down to westover they stop in fredericksburg and they have dinner with mary ball, washington and betty washington lewis, so i believe that's probably some of the only friends of the washingtons that ever met mary ball washington. so i think that's really cool when i was looking through that travel journal we have an excerpt of it at mount vernon, but i found the full travel journal and i saw that i was like wow yet another connection that they have so so yes. yes, they he does describe friends and family. did elizabeth tammy again did elizabeth ever write to fanny bassett and major, georgia, gustin, washington? no, she doesn't write to them directly. she talks about she talks about georgia augustine washington actually when they are at mount vernon, um samuel does but then elizabeth writes to martha after they've come back from mount vernon to philadelphia and she asks how fanny is doing and then i believe she says something briefly about george augustine washington. he actually he passed away when elizabeth was having her 50th birthday party. so the powell's not or the washingtons could not attend that birthday. so so yeah, so she did know they who they were. all right, cynthia miller again. all right. um, could you also talk about the writtenhouse clock in the house and it's significant to the house as well as how that clock came to reside in the house. thank you kayla. i will let you one even be able to answer all of that. so we do have spots clocks actually, so we have a david writtenhouse clock which is owned by the philadelphia museum of art and we've a benjamin so i'm not sure which one we're referring to but the david rittenhouse clock is actually downstairs in samuel's office or with what we're portraying a sandals office. it's interesting. um because if you're looking at george and philadelphia at the time the men are all very influenced by enlightenment period and they are interested in ways to control their environment. so the clock you know it has that one is that one has a metal face. so you might be talking about benjamin, which also has an astra ash. logical face astronomical phase and it's actually just behind me in the hallway, but it is bel
cynthia miller. i recognize this name one of our greatest fans. so cynthia miller says i am interested in the balls held at the powell house. could you possibly discuss a bit more about those? what was served what people wore who attended what was just discussed etc and i do want to say that the five plume hat. that's one of my favorites about the yeah. tell them about that and then i can shine and yep. um one thing that i have found in my research that that people wore at the palouse. there's...
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Aug 27, 2022
08/22
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cynthia, having a little bit of a connection problem here. keep on going cynthia. i'm sorry. >> -- i can hear you. >> you can hear me? sorry about that. clint, what's can you make about what frank is saying about that highly sensitive information, that's potentially making this case more difficult. because clint, obviously the goal for the doj is to obtain an indictment, and conviction. but if you can't actually use the evidence to prosecute a defendant, what is the point? >> yeah, that's gonna be extremely difficult, i agree with frank. the reason that redactions are there, part of, it is to protect any sort of witnesses, any informants, or any source of information that they've been told that the documents were down there and they needed to do a search warrant from the other party, the sensitivity of the documents that are there. for example, in the affidavit they would have to explain the documents to the judge of why they need you to go get it. we're not talking about the kim jong-un love letter, we're talking a very classified set of documents with the nation's top secrets. that they don't want out under any circumstances. if you were to take that into court, what would normally happen is some portion, or something related to those documents would have to be declassified. think of the damage that that could bring to the united states if you took that to trial. especially with some of these secrets. it would naturally give away what the sources were of those secrets. when we know what the sources were, or categorically. we don't know specifically. we're talking about human intelligence sources. we're talking about signals intelligence. we're talking about a foreign intelligence surveillance act. we're teleworking about things that are coming from overseas, particularly foreign sources. this is just the most, it's the most damaging information that came to the light of day. that would expose sources and methods. would hurt our relationships with allies. i think above all, it would just be a big stain on the u.s. and their ability to have any secrets under any circumstance. so it will be a big question to me whether they will actually pursue this any further, based on the sensitivity of the documents. and we don't know how sides that of the are due to the redactions. >> yeah, cynthiaunredacted portion of that affidavit was already particularly damning. it kind of makes you wonder, what's worse information could be contained underneath those blacked out portions. so what does it tell you that, if somebody like carl rove went on fox news and told trump to stop speaking about the case, do you think there is a concern from carl rove that trump is implicating himself criminally because he keeps on having people speak on behalf of his lawyers, or is issuing statements? >> well every time we turn around. there is another excuse. none is holding up. the thing about the affidavit is that it really does make out the violation of the documents of the espionage act. what doesn't tell us about is the obstruction. and that may be where there is room for prosecution that doesn't have to show secrets in the courtroom. and that may be the way. and we just don't know anything about the obstruction. obviously, it doesn't say anything that helps us understand that. so, recognize that
cynthia, having a little bit of a connection problem here. keep on going cynthia. i'm sorry. >> -- i can hear you. >> you can hear me? sorry about that. clint, what's can you make about what frank is saying about that highly sensitive information, that's potentially making this case more difficult. because clint, obviously the goal for the doj is to obtain an indictment, and conviction. but if you can't actually use the evidence to prosecute a defendant, what is the point? >>...
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cynthia got the invoice. after we inquired, they were quick to see the error and waive the fee. cynthiassed. >> it was a wonderful experience with government, which we usually don't have. liz: more so that it took michael finney getting involved to make that happen. fastrak tells us about 2% of the photos taken give an uncertain result and go to manual review and of those 2% -- and of those, 2% are wrong. clearly mistakes are going to happen. you can share your story with the 7 on your side team, from the good to the bad. it can be anything that has to do with money. just head to abc7news.com/7on yourside. next, it is a bright pretty sunset but something making this one particularly special. the natural wonder, next. check out this time space wormhole i creat how's it work? let me see your togo, and i'll show you. "poof" burt, you have my lunch. introducing togo's new pastrami cheese ste loaded with our world famous pastrami, sauteed mushrooms, roasted red peppers, and smothered with melty american cheese. the new pastrami cheese steak. try steak or chicken, too. now at togo's now you c
cynthia got the invoice. after we inquired, they were quick to see the error and waive the fee. cynthiassed. >> it was a wonderful experience with government, which we usually don't have. liz: more so that it took michael finney getting involved to make that happen. fastrak tells us about 2% of the photos taken give an uncertain result and go to manual review and of those 2% -- and of those, 2% are wrong. clearly mistakes are going to happen. you can share your story with the 7 on your...
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Aug 30, 2022
08/22
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ALJAZ
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cynthia watson about this. she's an independent asia pacific unless joining us from annapolis, maryland in the u. s. thank you very much, cynthia, for being with us on angie's there. what, why do you think this moratorium is coming into effects now? and how big of a setback is it for the us? well i, i think that those set back is more in public relations and politically, at this point has relatively minor implications. but it does go to the way we interpret what's going on. oh, i think there are 2 things that are largely being ignored, as people look at this at discussion of the solomons over the last. now almost 6 months. one is, everything has become defined as great power competition as if the solomons were not an independent actor in all of this. and this could be something as simple as domestic challenges to the regime where they've decided to default to bawling, to going back to what was says about visits. and prior acknowledgement of visits is not uncommon. so you don't think it plays into the, on the, sorry to interrupt. you don't think it plays into the tension between beijing and washington. it certainly plays into it, but i don't think that it's something that should be interpreted unless we want to make it into something. as a grandiose move on the part of beijing to force the solomon's to do something with it. that may in fact be what happened, but there are other plausible explanations as well that have a lot to do with internal politics within the solomons. and we are forgetting that as the idea of great power competition makes everything into a 0 sum equation. yeah, well the reason i ask is because of course shai, the white house has accused china of trying to, to bully and cor, as these a pacific island nation is in no pacific region of countries there of doing their bidding, basically. but china is facing its own economic problems right now. if, as you say, this is truly has tremendous. yes, china has tremendous issues right now. great. not the least of which is that they've announced as of today when the party congress will occur in october, which will become the primary focus of what happens within china for the next couple of months. right. so if i understand, you're absolutely right that the u. s. has made that accurate is harkins zation at the same time. china regularly accuses the united states of things and we don't accept that as gospel either. her. my point is simply that if every thing in the world happens as if it were soley driven by great power competition, that leaves out a lot of possible explanations. indeed. now coming back to china as he said, it's been facing problems, right. and if the relationship between beijing and the solomon islands is based on financial support, do you think this could back fire on, on, on the solomon islands? absolutely. because one of the things paging regularly does is manipulate the countries that it seeks to engage with. you're absolutely right about that accusations have flown because beijing regularly expects something back for his investment. so it could fall back on the solomon's as a negative. at the same time, we just don't know how it will play out, because paging frankly, could lose interest as the mounting toll of domestic challenges. whether it's the drought, whether it is the party congress, whether it's the jobs that are being lost and trying to, to the drought, the heat wave and all of the other implications we haven't even mentioned. all of those are things that are going to be front and center in china right now. thank you very much for talking to us about this. thank you for your insight, cynthia watson, asia pacific analysts, in annapolis, maryland. there now the search team that found the wreckage of a migraine boat that went down off the coast of lebanon, says it's unable to bring the vessel to the surface. the drivers also haven't recovered the bodies inside the trunk and boat families of the victims say they're living. the pain center holder has a story from tripoli in northern, never, not 4 months on, survivors are reliving the pain of losing family members at sea. they were hoping to make it to europe, but their boat was intercepted by the army off the coast of northern lebanon in circumstances disputed till today. no mckenna had of our goal is to know who is responsible for thinking the boat's. we still don't know. there have been contradictory statements. the army said the boat wasn't hit. if the captain of the submarine said it was hit from the front. a few days ago, a privately funded search team located the wreckage more than 450 meters beneath the surface. the arm
cynthia watson about this. she's an independent asia pacific unless joining us from annapolis, maryland in the u. s. thank you very much, cynthia, for being with us on angie's there. what, why do you think this moratorium is coming into effects now? and how big of a setback is it for the us? well i, i think that those set back is more in public relations and politically, at this point has relatively minor implications. but it does go to the way we interpret what's going on. oh, i think there...
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Aug 5, 2022
08/22
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CNBC
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cynthia li littleton and tom rogers i want to thank you for joining us cynthia, you know, i listened to the call i think a lot of people listened to the call last night the stock now down 10% much of the news was to be expected, but the forecast and pulling that forecast back is what tripped up the market here. >> we learned a lot yesterday about the state of warner bros. discovery and the state of the macro pay tv environment both are really influx it was an epic earnings call you have to give it to them. they took a lot of investor questions. i think the biggest take away, of course, they changed the forecast the biggest take away was we heard from david zazslav is the executives trying to transition businesses and we heard it loud and clear as david has a way of being plain spoken and they shifting back away from warner bros. and hbo like other outlets have taken 90-degree shifts in business models. it is meant foregone revenue and kept inventory on the shelf at a level television has never seen in the streaming era we heard david, there was virtue signaling going on there david was telling wall street what it wants to hear. we are not winning the spending wars he said we are going to go back. he indicated they will go back to business practices and selection content overseas and bringing in the third-party checks they have been missing an a lot of those over the last two years or so as everybody made the pivot to streaming we heard that there's limitations to that and david now they really got under the hood of warner bros. and hbo, they were surprised by what they saw. it was very interesting and i think it was interesting that they didn't try to hide their criticism of the previous management and decisions that were made. it was a really interesting call >> tom, how do you assess or handicap the prospects of success when you look at the deal at this point i think a lot of people are raising questions ultimately about that you've known david for a long time we've known david on the program for a long time. he obviously has had remarkable success over the years often times taking a very bad hand and playing it really well. >> well, he's got a very tough hand no doubt about it. conditions have really changed since david struck this deal the macro environment has changed. the streaming environment has changed. clearly what he thought at&t had done and what it turns out at&t had done sounded very different. and i think what the combined company now has going for it is quite a bit. it has david and not at&t. at&t probably never should have owned or managed this company. david has a track record that i think brings something special to the table yes, he's got a ton of debt, but it is fixed it is not going to explode on them in some way in the inflationary environment they have the biggest amount of content budget of any traditional company next to disney they have a lot of content spend to deal with although he clearly sent the signals they are not planning to win the war. in stterms of streaming value, they have the broadest streaming bundle with discovery plus and hbo max together they will have top notch en entertainment and they will have reality programming of discovery. they will have sports. they will have news. you know, disney has not consolidated hulu and paramount has not consolidated showtime. they have a lot going for them i think people are under estimating and unleashing hbo. hbo has always been a hard service to subscribe to. you have to pay for $100 bundle to be able to get the pay service. it was a lot that was in front of you to be able to do it to be able to directly get hbo and now broader hbo, not to mention the fact, it has more emmys. the quality as joe said the other day, surpassed everybody else in television they have a lot to work with their. on the bundle, which is obviously the cable/satellite bundle, which will face decline, do they have enough channels coupled with sports and news so leverage can increase affiliate fees at a faster pace than decline based on cord cutting. if they do that, they can hold on to the lineal cash flow to weave down the debt. >> cynthiaabout an issue with shelving "bat girl" and the spending and the like. questions of the deals in the future what is the feeling in hollywood? i ask because when he first, you know, when david first bought warner media, he spent a lot of time visiting with lots of people and trying to -- i think create goodwill. i wonder what the current feeling is now >> i think the honeymoon in hollywood ended on tuesday with the news they would shelf the movie "bat girl. yesterday on the call, they didn't try to hide it. they very much addressed it. they indicated the movie they just did not feel measured up to what they wanted to put out. even direct to streaming release. they where critical behind the economics. this was a big swing for a streaming movie. the creative community is very disturbed by this. this is seen as a black and white issue to them. this is telling people that spent a year of their life making a movie and this is not good enough. we would take a tax break. this was not good. tha
cynthia li littleton and tom rogers i want to thank you for joining us cynthia, you know, i listened to the call i think a lot of people listened to the call last night the stock now down 10% much of the news was to be expected, but the forecast and pulling that forecast back is what tripped up the market here. >> we learned a lot yesterday about the state of warner bros. discovery and the state of the macro pay tv environment both are really influx it was an epic earnings call you have...
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Aug 28, 2022
08/22
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cynthia ochsner. she is also a former prosecutor and msnbc legal analyst as well. welcome to both of. you cynthia, let's start with. you this is a two part or for you. why do you make, first, off of the intelligence community now having to conduct a review to identify potential national security risks, number one, let's start with that. >> i think it is very important they do that now and in a quiet time before the election. i feel we need to get all the information to them, and they probably have it by, now which is why this hearing is so ridiculous. they already have all the information. they do the analysis, everything can quiet down awhile before the election. and we can focus on row row row your boat, through the election. and then at some point after the election when the department will begin to file more, we will -- with what can be the fallout for trump hoarding all of these highly classified documents. >> the second part of that is what do you make of the second master approach that the trump team is taking, and apparently the judge's willingness to do that? >> i would call it pandering. i think that is a legal term for this from the garage. i do not think there will be a special master. he has requested a special master, basically, because rudy got. one in the attorney-client case. this is an attorney client privilege. case they started the wrong statutes as they are approaching a special master. there is no special master and executive privilege cases. and in the presidential records act, an executive privilege, cases those must be filed in d.c.. this is filed in florida so it is in the wrong jurisdiction. and there is no special master for classified information cases. so i think it is only a matter of time when the pandering and by the trump judge that there will not be a special master and this is a delay tactic. >> glenn, what about you what are your thoughts for understanding, there is a lot of shock going on in the special master. do you think it was odd for the judge to make up her mind so quickly? >> odd, i think, is an understatement, michael. i like that cynthia characterizes it is a federal judge pandering to one of the parties in the case before her. i think that pandering might be too nice a characterization. i went back and looked at judge alien hannon's order. and here is what she said. before i read this one sentence, michael, mind you that she entered this tentative border before the department of justice prosecutors even had an opportunity to weigh in on the issue. she, said quote, the court hereby provides notice of its preliminary intent to appoint a special master in this case, and she has only heard from trump's defense team. i have to tell you, i searched my memory for my 30 years as a federal prosecutor, trying to recall if i ever had a judge announce a ruling, even a tentative ruling, before one party even had its say. i've never seen that. i think this indicates a judge who has extraordinarily poor judgment at best, and at worse is biased in favor of donald trump. as a footnote, i think it is worth mentioning that she was conf
cynthia ochsner. she is also a former prosecutor and msnbc legal analyst as well. welcome to both of. you cynthia, let's start with. you this is a two part or for you. why do you make, first, off of the intelligence community now having to conduct a review to identify potential national security risks, number one, let's start with that. >> i think it is very important they do that now and in a quiet time before the election. i feel we need to get all the information to them, and they...
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Aug 8, 2022
08/22
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cynthia mcfadden they are there in the flood zone and have stories to share about the struggles people are having there. cynthia, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. well, jen and i spent the day yesterday meeting some remarkable people who have lost more than most of us can imagine. but what is clear is their community is strong and it is vibrant. robinson elementary is a total loss jennifer garner and i met up there yesterday with the perry county superintendent of schools, jonathan jett >> part of the roof has collapsed in the front part of the building >> reporter: garner grew up less than 200 miles from here in west virginia she and i were the first to get an inside look at the devastation. eight feet of water poured into the ironically named troublesome creek. >> is it safe to be in here? >> please be really careful. >> i have to get my eyes on that library. >> reporter: we head in to see what was, until about two weeks ago, the school library which save the children helped create. >> my little elementary school library totally shaped my life i wanted to be a school librarian. i wanted to work in a space just like this. >> reporter: so what happens next what are you going to do >> i wish i had an answer. i don't. my main focus is to get students in an environment as quickly as possible where we can make sure they're safe physically and emotionally. >> reporter: 260 elementary school kids who have battled through covid and now face the prospect of yet another mixed up school year. garner knows how much is at stake and though she's in the middle of shooting a film, flew across the country to bear witness. so how did you come to do this work in the first place? >> i grew up in a middle-class family my mom had grown up very, very poor my dad grew up poor and the fact that the two of them were able to go to college was so life changing so when i was in a position to be invited into people's homes it was rural america that really pulled me. >> reporter: it sounds like part of this work for you is really honoring your parents. >> oh, i mean, there's -- anything i could do to be able to honor my parents, i have incredible parents >> reporter: parents who gave her an early head start. this is rosie. >> rosie the readiness bus >> reporter: originally rosie was designed to be a mobile preschool for rural kids who didn't have one. >> and it went from rosie the reading bus to rosie the feeding bus. >> reporter: and for the past two weeks rosie has been hard at work again distributing food, water, and even toys from home to home. we were talking the dignity and the grace of the people that we met today who have lost so much. >> and the incredible intelligence, the work ethic, the nobility >> reporter: one family, the fugets the principal of the destroyed school we visited. am i crazy or is that the mud line up there? >> it was mud. it was about 16 feet >> reporter: he was out of town the night of the flood, but his wife and three children huddled at the top of the house. >> you see the window here, the kids and his wife came out that window >> reporter: their lives saved by a ladder, a boat, and a group of family and friends. but it was 13-year-old payton, who his mother credits with keeping them going through the long, cold, dark night >> this kid was amazing, and he was my rock. >> reporter: payton is still shaken, he says the rain brings it all back. >> i can't do that again >> reporter: for those whose lives were ripped apart by the flash floods it meant so much to have jennifer garner come to hear their story and celebrate their resilience >> how did i end up in a position to get to meet so many incredibly strong people and their beautiful strong kids? that is the one thing i have learned above all else every mom loves her baby as much as i love mine >> wow cynthiaove that you have gone to this area to shine a light. because when you go somewhere, people pay attention here we are on the "today" show talking about it what struck you? what do they need right now? >> well, they need everything. there's nothing they don't need. they need basic necessities. they need water. they need somewhere to live. they need schools to be up and running. these kids need to go to school. >> jen, the folks that you talked to there, we saw the principal. the folks that you met, what did you learn from them? what struck you about those people specifically? >> they just wanted to tell us over and over again how the community had come together to help them. how they hadn't had to hire help how people came to muck up their houses they were inundated with family and friends there just to help out, but that they need some help they need a little bit of help to get their kids back in school in a safe way and in a way that protects their education and their mental and socia
cynthia mcfadden they are there in the flood zone and have stories to share about the struggles people are having there. cynthia, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. well, jen and i spent the day yesterday meeting some remarkable people who have lost more than most of us can imagine. but what is clear is their community is strong and it is vibrant. robinson elementary is a total loss jennifer garner and i met up there yesterday with the perry county superintendent of schools,...
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Aug 15, 2022
08/22
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cynthia. jessica: ayer que estaba viendo el retador, pensÉ que ibas a decir—— raÚl: el actor alfredo adame respondiÓ como su relaciÓn con cynthia. carlos: el actor tuvo problemas con la actriz cuando Ésa tuvo un romance con el rey grupero. adame:ya no me pregunten de esa mentirosa, una persona mentirosa, alcohÓlica, drogadicta, que sale diciendo en un programa que yo la corrÍ con una pistola junto al mugroso del novio, no merece nada de mi. reportera: alfredo adame continÚa su enemistad con cynthiado no lo he dejado. reportera: sigue peleado con sus hijos varones a quienes le piden no asistir al funeral. adame: entrarÁ a mi hija a vanessa que es mi heredera de todo, mis nietos y santiago que por ciertomaÑana marÍa josÉ le regalÓ su coche , ya cumpliÓ los 17 aÑos. carlos: bueno, mÁs adame para ustedes. karla: es el lunes 15 de agosto, hoy en "despierta amÉrica", sigue la tormenta polÍtica, demÓcratas exige que se evalÚen las implicaciones para la segovia nacional de los registros clasificados incautados por el fbi el mar—a—lago, mientras trump dice que es clasificÓ los documentos sensibles. karla: con menos restricciones por el covid a esta hora los estudiantes regresan a clases en los Ángeles, pero el condado busca miles de estudiantes que abandonaron sus estudios en la pandemia. estamos en la escuela para aclarar sus inquietudes. alan: miembros de la cometa de uvalde recibe una especial invitaciÓn que busca traer consuelo. les tenemos imÁgenes. karla: va con ese si no lo ha hec
cynthia. jessica: ayer que estaba viendo el retador, pensÉ que ibas a decir—— raÚl: el actor alfredo adame respondiÓ como su relaciÓn con cynthia. carlos: el actor tuvo problemas con la actriz cuando Ésa tuvo un romance con el rey grupero. adame:ya no me pregunten de esa mentirosa, una persona mentirosa, alcohÓlica, drogadicta, que sale diciendo en un programa que yo la corrÍ con una pistola junto al mugroso del novio, no merece nada de mi. reportera: alfredo adame continÚa su...
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Aug 3, 2022
08/22
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cynthia no se escapo de ser parte de las declaraciones. adame: a mÍ no me interesa cynthia, el rey grupero no me interesa, es una chava que hasta su hija le ha dicho toda la serie de problemas que tiene, de alcoholismo, de drogas, de problemas personales, de problemas psicolÓgicos, para ser novia del rey grupero y mantenerlo se necesita ser una persona que le quedaban dos neuronas y se le suicidaron. y cynthia creo, tampoco. raÚl: vamos a hablar ahora de irina baeva que se come un limÓn con todo y cÁscara. en serio?! la actriz seÑalÓ, ahÍ estÁ, y estÁ comiendo, vamos a verlo. irina: nos comemos el limÓn con la cÁscara, es delicioso. raÚl: seÑalÓ que es una costumbre muy popular en rusia. quiÉn se atreve a comerse el limÓn con cÁscara? vÍa don francisco una vez. chef: ahora mismo van a probar el limÓn con cÁscara—— [hablan a la vez] carlos: estuve en rusia tres veces y nunca habÍa un ruso comerlo asÍ. chef: siempre hay una primera vez. raul: creo que usted lo ha picado muy grande. hablar a la vez] carlos: estÁ bueno, de hecho le quita un poco lo ha sido. chef: la buena es quien lo prueba sin arrugar la cara. [risas] chef: estÁ llorando, lo probÓ. karla: estamos en todas las redes sociales, sÍguenos en twitter, facebook e instagram, mantente informado y revive tu segmento favorito www.despiertaamÉrica.com el app de univisiÓn y en nuestra pÁgina de youtube. jessica:eres mitad ruso? carlos: est
cynthia no se escapo de ser parte de las declaraciones. adame: a mÍ no me interesa cynthia, el rey grupero no me interesa, es una chava que hasta su hija le ha dicho toda la serie de problemas que tiene, de alcoholismo, de drogas, de problemas personales, de problemas psicolÓgicos, para ser novia del rey grupero y mantenerlo se necesita ser una persona que le quedaban dos neuronas y se le suicidaron. y cynthia creo, tampoco. raÚl: vamos a hablar ahora de irina baeva que se come un limÓn con...