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Oct 19, 2013
10/13
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uh, dean. >> okay. red's the only man i know who ever went to the salvation army and never got a dinner. >> you see how good it is when your hitman's an italian? >> we only roasted the ones we love. >> it's unusual to have the guy sitting there while you're crucifying him. >> i don't think there were any comedians at the time who were anyone who were not on these roasts. >> to think that all these lovely people flew all the way to las vegas and got all dressed up and came down here just to insult me. >> grab a seat on the dais for the hottest, mt hilarious party in town. introducing the dean martin celebrity roasts from starvista entertainment and time life. when dean called, the biggest stars in hollywood put on their tuxedos, caught the next flight to vegas, and left their egos at home. >> don rickles always reminds me of a blindfolded massage lady. >> a blindfolded massage lady? >> you never know where she's gonna strike next. >> i would like to say to you, bob, i've never liked you. you've always an
uh, dean. >> okay. red's the only man i know who ever went to the salvation army and never got a dinner. >> you see how good it is when your hitman's an italian? >> we only roasted the ones we love. >> it's unusual to have the guy sitting there while you're crucifying him. >> i don't think there were any comedians at the time who were anyone who were not on these roasts. >> to think that all these lovely people flew all the way to las vegas and got all...
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Oct 28, 2013
10/13
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MSNBCW
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dean. >> dean is only two weeks away from completing his sentence. but his release will be jeopardized if the jail discovers he's responsible for the shank and choose to file new criminal charges. >> what do you know about the weapon? >> i didn't know anything about it. >> why were you back there opening boxes? >> i wasn't back there opening boxes the only time i went back down when i was stocking freezer and i was asked to go help. >> who asked you? >> a c.o. i had an inmate that's incarcerated with me in there, gary valentine, he's the one that found it and didn't think of it and tried to throw it away and the officer asked what it was and that's when it was discovered. >> how long have you been a kitchen trustee? >> roughly 70 days. >> have you had any problems down there? >> no, ma'am, i have not been any problems or any lockup, this is my first time to the hole. >> anything else you would like to tell me. >> i wouldn't jeopardize myself to have anything in my possession or in my room or anything because i know what will happen about it. i'm goin
dean. >> dean is only two weeks away from completing his sentence. but his release will be jeopardized if the jail discovers he's responsible for the shank and choose to file new criminal charges. >> what do you know about the weapon? >> i didn't know anything about it. >> why were you back there opening boxes? >> i wasn't back there opening boxes the only time i went back down when i was stocking freezer and i was asked to go help. >> who asked you? >>...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 21, 2013
10/13
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. ♪ >>dean: hi and welcome back to hometime.n the show today we have a couple more steps we're working on to get the house and yard all dried in. >>miriam: yup, we're at the creekside home project, and we also have windows going in. so we'll be talking about proper flashing and weather protection as those go in. last we'll be digging in the french drain, with fabric, rock, and some eco- friendly pipe that should keep things dry well into the next century. >>dean: first time we done that on the show so make sure to stick around and see how it all turns out. >>miriam: should be interesting right? >>dean: yup >> man. what we need is some elbow grease. >> yeah, you can... are you kidding me? >> gmc. proud to lend a helping hand to hometime. ♪ >>miriam: if you've seen any of the other shows on this project, you know that we've pretty much covered everything right from the start. and that includes framing, a lot of which happened off sight. we worked with a framing contractor, who designs and builds their walls back at the factory the
. ♪ >>dean: hi and welcome back to hometime.n the show today we have a couple more steps we're working on to get the house and yard all dried in. >>miriam: yup, we're at the creekside home project, and we also have windows going in. so we'll be talking about proper flashing and weather protection as those go in. last we'll be digging in the french drain, with fabric, rock, and some eco- friendly pipe that should keep things dry well into the next century. >>dean: first time...
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Oct 5, 2013
10/13
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CSPAN
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mele howard dean pat buchanan both made splashes but failed in the end. do you have a reason for that? >> that's a good question. i mean, i think part of that comes down to the dynamics of the american electorate about running caucuses in iowa and primaries in new hampshire to choose leaders. any person questions the wisdom of that. i also think there's a significant -- i'll probably get plenty of e-mails and tweets from angry people, but i think the dynamics of our political process of the presidential primary selection process, both is part of the reason this populous didn't do well, but i think also americans have some sense what they want out of their leaders. and the pop hreufpl is a vehicle for an anger at what a bad job the institutions are doing. that doesn't mean that americans necessarily want the populous leader but they have a great deal of frustration at where the country's at. if you're under 40 in this country, you probably make less money than your parents did at your age. you probably won't be able to afford a home or at least not nice a
mele howard dean pat buchanan both made splashes but failed in the end. do you have a reason for that? >> that's a good question. i mean, i think part of that comes down to the dynamics of the american electorate about running caucuses in iowa and primaries in new hampshire to choose leaders. any person questions the wisdom of that. i also think there's a significant -- i'll probably get plenty of e-mails and tweets from angry people, but i think the dynamics of our political process of...
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Oct 18, 2013
10/13
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WTTG
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like this, dean. >> that's true. that's true. >> this graphic artist from reynoldsburg has an eye on most of the population. still, you never guess he took up the carvings recently, like last year after he saw some. >> wow. those are cool. i wonder if i could do that. >> he grabbed his clay carving tools and the rest is history. just about every one of his pumpkin personalities is born in his garage where dean gets the really messy stuff out of the way. what's cool is when he puts the door up, you can sometimes watch him work. he says the kids on the bus and their driver got a kick out of it. >> when she pulls up, she sees this and she'll pull up. i'll spin it around. and the kids all go, yay. >> and to think he typically isn't finished at that point. when it's time to fine tune details, dean migrates to the kitchen. >> it's like a potato peeler. >> where he showed me the craft. >> do your hands get tired? >> oh yeah. pumpkin palooza, i was wearing a brace. >> you put halloween in jeopardy. >> luckily, he heals fast
like this, dean. >> that's true. that's true. >> this graphic artist from reynoldsburg has an eye on most of the population. still, you never guess he took up the carvings recently, like last year after he saw some. >> wow. those are cool. i wonder if i could do that. >> he grabbed his clay carving tools and the rest is history. just about every one of his pumpkin personalities is born in his garage where dean gets the really messy stuff out of the way. what's cool is...
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Oct 20, 2013
10/13
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MSNBCW
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was beating on my child is the same dean that call me.me, i asked him. i said what happened at school today? and he start telling me, but i said to him the school gave me one story and now you give me a different one. so i don't know who to believe. you don't think the school is going to lie to you. >> according to diane, the principal calls a few days after the dean to discuss the problem. >> the principal call and she told me there was an incident that happened in the school with christoph. she was going to look into it and get back to me. she never call me back. >> it's not until the reporter shows diane the beating that she realizes what happened. >> i was like, oh, my god. i can't believe this. i am pissed. that was my words. nobody have no right to do that to anybody's children. i don't care if my child was rude to you. you have no right putting your hand on him. >> christoph refuses to return to school for his sophomore school and moves to the native country of grenada to live with family. >> i know my child. i saw the change in hi
was beating on my child is the same dean that call me.me, i asked him. i said what happened at school today? and he start telling me, but i said to him the school gave me one story and now you give me a different one. so i don't know who to believe. you don't think the school is going to lie to you. >> according to diane, the principal calls a few days after the dean to discuss the problem. >> the principal call and she told me there was an incident that happened in the school with...
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Oct 17, 2013
10/13
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WJZ
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a police officer shot and killed 40-year-old sean dean him after investigators say dean drag the officer alongside his car for several blocks after traffic stop. gunshot.d a iran and checked on my grandchildren and i heard him yelling, screaming, saying you killed my dad. >> neighbors say dean's adult daughter was a passenger in the car at the time. neighbors say incidents of crime and violence are becoming more common. disrupting their formerly peaceful neighborhood. >> you are always aring ambulance sirens. 10 years ago you did not really hear that. >> there is a difference in the last few years. belair road has a lot of noise and a lot of young people, a lot of problems. >> the wednesday night incident happening so close to their homes was still shocking and frightening. >> i just want to live to see another day. i'm afraid to even sit on my porch because there is no telling what is going to happen next. >> kim dacey, wbal-tv 11 news. >> we have a follow-up to an i- team investigati on accusations in a baltimore city district court. bonnie ferguson junior, an administrative clerk is s
a police officer shot and killed 40-year-old sean dean him after investigators say dean drag the officer alongside his car for several blocks after traffic stop. gunshot.d a iran and checked on my grandchildren and i heard him yelling, screaming, saying you killed my dad. >> neighbors say dean's adult daughter was a passenger in the car at the time. neighbors say incidents of crime and violence are becoming more common. disrupting their formerly peaceful neighborhood. >> you are...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 22, 2013
10/13
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WHUT
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>>dean: yup >> man. what we need is some elbow grease. >> yeah, you can... are you kidding me?> gmc. proud to lend a helping hand to hometime. ♪ >>miriam: if you've seen any of the other shows on this project, you know that we've pretty much covered everything right from the start. and that includes framing, a lot of which happened off sight. we worked with a framing contractor, who designs and builds their walls back at the factory they have set up just for that purpose. there's a guy named jake crowley who takes the architects plans and lays out all the walls on his computer. each one is sized exactly with openings for doors and windows. and they're all numbered for reference at the factory and out at the home sight. down in the factory floor, the built the walls in a series of stations inside where it's always warm and dry, which is good because the creekside walls went through the coldest part of a minnesota winter. once the foundation was ready, they sent the walls out to the home sight, where a crew led by ted hilgendorf put them all together. and working with a crane, go
>>dean: yup >> man. what we need is some elbow grease. >> yeah, you can... are you kidding me?> gmc. proud to lend a helping hand to hometime. ♪ >>miriam: if you've seen any of the other shows on this project, you know that we've pretty much covered everything right from the start. and that includes framing, a lot of which happened off sight. we worked with a framing contractor, who designs and builds their walls back at the factory they have set up just for that...
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Oct 21, 2013
10/13
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. >>> dean arnold's pumpkin has gone a long way from your daddy's jack o lantern. >> everybody carves jo lanterns. >> not everybody carves like there dean. >> that is true. >> this graphic artist has an edge and an eye on most of the populations. still you would never guess he took up the 3-d carvings reese septemberly, like last year, after he saw some. he grabbed his clay carving tools and the rest is history. just about every one of his pumpkin personalities is born in his garage where dean gets the really messy stuff out of the way. what is cool is when he puts the door up watch him work. he says the kit and their driver get a kick out of it. i can't she'll pull up and i'll spin it around and the kids all go yes. >> reporter: to think he typically isn't finished at that point. when it is time to fine type details dean migrates to the kitchen where he showed me the craft. >> reporter: do your hands get tired? >> oh yeah. i was wearing a brace. >> reporter: luckily, he heals fast and was back at his pumpkin a day. he keeps cranking them out because, as you can see, they have a prett
. >>> dean arnold's pumpkin has gone a long way from your daddy's jack o lantern. >> everybody carves jo lanterns. >> not everybody carves like there dean. >> that is true. >> this graphic artist has an edge and an eye on most of the populations. still you would never guess he took up the 3-d carvings reese septemberly, like last year, after he saw some. he grabbed his clay carving tools and the rest is history. just about every one of his pumpkin personalities...
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Oct 17, 2013
10/13
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joining me now, howard dean, former dnc chairman. sam stein, huffington post political reporter, and we will soon, i believe, have like russert. we don't have him yet. sam stein, this came at a -- at the end of a day that now seems inevitable. there was no one, absolutely no one saw a way for republicans to win in this fight when they started it. >> yeah, i mean -- what's remarkable is that after two weeks, 2 and a half weeks time, we are ending up where we thought we would be. we wasted -- $24 billion in economic activity along the way. a lot of people had to suffer. we are ending up where the debate wouldened end up. we will fund government for a short period of time. lifting the debt limit with extra ordinary msh urz aeasures. house republicans could have seen this one coming. they should have seen this one coming. they didn't do anything about it. >> howard dean, this comes after an overwhelmingly positive vote in the senate. 81 senators voting in favor. casting the reasonable vote in favor. 18, casting the unreasonable vote agai
joining me now, howard dean, former dnc chairman. sam stein, huffington post political reporter, and we will soon, i believe, have like russert. we don't have him yet. sam stein, this came at a -- at the end of a day that now seems inevitable. there was no one, absolutely no one saw a way for republicans to win in this fight when they started it. >> yeah, i mean -- what's remarkable is that after two weeks, 2 and a half weeks time, we are ending up where we thought we would be. we wasted...
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Oct 11, 2013
10/13
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KPIX
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dean reynolds reports. a cbs news investigation bm axelrod becomes a congressional hearing on dangerous prescriptions for veterans. and the source of a salmonella outbreak is found, so why did we find suspect chicken on supermarket shelves? john blackstone has the answer. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening, in the battle over the budget, every clock in washington is ticking towards the first government default in u.s. history. every clock but this one. the ohio clock, as it is known, has stood in the senate for two centuries, but it stopped because the people who wind it have been furloughed by the government shutdown. that shutdown started nine days ago when republicans in the house refused to fund the government unless they could roll back obamacare. next week, the government will not be able to borrow enough money to pay its bills unless congress raises the so-called debt ceiling. these two crisis-- the shutdown and the debt ceiling-- wer
dean reynolds reports. a cbs news investigation bm axelrod becomes a congressional hearing on dangerous prescriptions for veterans. and the source of a salmonella outbreak is found, so why did we find suspect chicken on supermarket shelves? john blackstone has the answer. captioning sponsored by cbs this is the "cbs evening news" with scott pelley. >> pelley: good evening, in the battle over the budget, every clock in washington is ticking towards the first government default in...
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Oct 15, 2013
10/13
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FBC
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martin. >> dean martin. >> deano. >> dean, you're a phenomenon.ook like cary grant and u smell like ed mcmahon. >> srvista entertainment and time life present the dean mtin celebrity roasts. >> dean and i have been on more floors than johnson's wax.
martin. >> dean martin. >> deano. >> dean, you're a phenomenon.ook like cary grant and u smell like ed mcmahon. >> srvista entertainment and time life present the dean mtin celebrity roasts. >> dean and i have been on more floors than johnson's wax.
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>> maybe. >> thanks to howard dean and jesse ventura. we'll be right back. ♪ [ male announcer ] may your lights always be green. [ tires screech ] ♪ [ beeping ] ♪ may you never be stuck behind a stinky truck. [ beeping ] ♪ may things always go your way. but it's good to be prepared... just in case they don't. toyota. let's go places, safely. i'm on expert on softball. and tea parties. i'll have more awkward conversations than i'm equipped for, because i'm raising two girls on my own. i'll worry about the economy more than a few times before they're grown. but it's for them, so i've found a way. who matters most to you says the most about you. at massmutual we're owned by our policyowners, and they matter most to us. ready to plan for your future? we'll help you get there.
>> maybe. >> thanks to howard dean and jesse ventura. we'll be right back. ♪ [ male announcer ] may your lights always be green. [ tires screech ] ♪ [ beeping ] ♪ may you never be stuck behind a stinky truck. [ beeping ] ♪ may things always go your way. but it's good to be prepared... just in case they don't. toyota. let's go places, safely. i'm on expert on softball. and tea parties. i'll have more awkward conversations than i'm equipped for, because i'm raising two girls...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 17, 2013
10/13
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here's dean prevost. dean prevost, here's what the press has to say about you.ust taking this from a recent article. "allstream is seen as an asset that's in transition, with president dean prevost viewed as a star who is doing all the right things to turn the company around". now, so, therefore we needn't worry about allstream from now on. - i guess so. - but it was a source of worry for quite a while. let's just start with that. you were handed, really, a poison chalice at some point. you were already in the company then known as at&t canada. - correct. - and it was hitting the wall. and you inherited that. how did you feel? - yeah. it was... well, so, we had kind of a relatively fast but pretty traumatic run through bankruptcy in the early 2000s, and that was pretty rough. we were a much larger company going in than we were coming out, and far larger at the time than we are today. we had 6,000 people plus at the time; we're now just over 2,000 people, and had to really restructure the business to come out successfully from that. and there's a lot of danger in
here's dean prevost. dean prevost, here's what the press has to say about you.ust taking this from a recent article. "allstream is seen as an asset that's in transition, with president dean prevost viewed as a star who is doing all the right things to turn the company around". now, so, therefore we needn't worry about allstream from now on. - i guess so. - but it was a source of worry for quite a while. let's just start with that. you were handed, really, a poison chalice at some...
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Oct 30, 2013
10/13
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CNNW
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dean is saying in massachusetts? >> well, totally different situation. had a much lower level of uninsured. you have very few people who had to buy into this. i think in massachusetts it was in the low single digits of people who didn't have health insurance. that's not the case. >> okay. >> in the united states as a whole. it's apples and oranges and you shouldn't try to have a command and control system. >> we got to leave it there. dr. dean good to have you. thank you very much. >> thanks. >> for more go to cnn.com. let me know what you think. let's talk about it on twitter #ac360. >>>. >>> spying on each other, is that true? we'll see what glenn greenwald says about it. >>> daring or completely crazy but record-setting. i talked to a brazilian surfer that rode that giant, giant monster wave. female narrator: the mattress price wars are ending soon the mattress price wars are ending soon at sleep train. we've challenged the manufacturers to offer even lower prices. now it's posturepedic versus beautyrest with big savings of up to $400 off. serta icomf
dean is saying in massachusetts? >> well, totally different situation. had a much lower level of uninsured. you have very few people who had to buy into this. i think in massachusetts it was in the low single digits of people who didn't have health insurance. that's not the case. >> okay. >> in the united states as a whole. it's apples and oranges and you shouldn't try to have a command and control system. >> we got to leave it there. dr. dean good to have you. thank you...
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Oct 26, 2013
10/13
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MSNBC
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joining me now former vermont governor howard dean.ho knows something about health care and progressive columnist sally company 00. thank you. >> thanks. >> governor, i want to start with you and hypocrisy of medicare part d, you know, you had the -- i thought the joe barton comparison was one of the best that we saw and why is it that now all of a sudden the republicans -- i know why but i want you to say why, the republicans are changing their tune essentially? because it is just partisan nonsense. you know, one of the things that the republicans are scurrying away from is they have some responsibility for all of this. i mean the rollout is clearly the president's team, should have done a better job. one of the reasons they have -- are having trouble is because the republicans didn't just vote against obama care 44 times. they put some stuff in various bills that did pass and did take some money away and, ftry to defund some of the money gone to improving the website. while you can give the majority of the responsibility to the obama
joining me now former vermont governor howard dean.ho knows something about health care and progressive columnist sally company 00. thank you. >> thanks. >> governor, i want to start with you and hypocrisy of medicare part d, you know, you had the -- i thought the joe barton comparison was one of the best that we saw and why is it that now all of a sudden the republicans -- i know why but i want you to say why, the republicans are changing their tune essentially? because it is just...
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Oct 17, 2013
10/13
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that's john boehner. >> was that you, howard dean? >> this is sam. >> go ahead. >> i wanted to say this internal republican caucus mellow drama, they don't exist in a vacuum. i understand he needed to solidify his control over the house and maybe playing this out was the way to do it but in the process many thousands of lives were disrupted and many people were hurt in their personal lives and professional lives. we talked to a number of scientists whose research may have been damaged because they couldn't operate in the government run facilities they normally use. these are not things you should take as power struggling or political manipulation there are costs to these decisions. s & p said it was $24 billion in lost economic activity. was this worth playing this out? >> those are tough -- >> let's go to gene robinson on this. what is the country's verdict going to be on the $24 billion cost of the lesson that john boehner had to teach young republicans? >> well, look, the country's verdict is clear. every poll we've seen shows that
that's john boehner. >> was that you, howard dean? >> this is sam. >> go ahead. >> i wanted to say this internal republican caucus mellow drama, they don't exist in a vacuum. i understand he needed to solidify his control over the house and maybe playing this out was the way to do it but in the process many thousands of lives were disrupted and many people were hurt in their personal lives and professional lives. we talked to a number of scientists whose research may...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 13, 2013
10/13
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WHUT
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here's dean prevost. dean prevost, here's what the press has to say about you.ust taking this from a recent article. "allstream is seen as an asset that's in transition, with president dean prevost viewed as a star who is doing all the right things to turn the company around". now, so, therefore we needn't worry about allstream from now on. - i guess so. - but it was a source of worry for quite a while. let's just start with that. you were handed, really, a poison chalice at some point. you were already in the company then known as at&t canada. - correct. - and it was hitting the wall. and you inherited that. how did you feel? - yeah. it was... well, so, we had kind of a relatively fast but pretty traumatic run through bankruptcy in the early 2000s, and that was pretty rough. we were a much larger company going in than we were coming out, and far larger at the time than we are today. we had 6,000 people plus at the time; we're now just over 2,000 people, and had to really restructure the business to come out successfully from that. and there's a lot of danger in
here's dean prevost. dean prevost, here's what the press has to say about you.ust taking this from a recent article. "allstream is seen as an asset that's in transition, with president dean prevost viewed as a star who is doing all the right things to turn the company around". now, so, therefore we needn't worry about allstream from now on. - i guess so. - but it was a source of worry for quite a while. let's just start with that. you were handed, really, a poison chalice at some...
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in that week so how much as the government shutdown affected unemployment numbers here to discuss dean baker co-founder of the center for economic and policy research thank you for joining us a certain you know you being here now dean right off the bat how has this latest government shutdown influenced the october jobs numbers well it's really hard to say i mean i think the direct impact will be fairly modest are probably going to be twenty thirty thousand fewer jobs because of that from the government sector will be some indirect effect that this will be a little hard to pick up but you can have things you know we had national parks being shut down where you had areas where a lot of people would go in there for the national parks we have hotels restaurants or the businesses related to that some of those will you know that might have otherwise been hiring some shut down altogether so you'll see an indirect impact there so we might see a falloff in told sixty seventy eighty thousand jobs less than what otherwise would have been there and these are part time not part time part time layof
in that week so how much as the government shutdown affected unemployment numbers here to discuss dean baker co-founder of the center for economic and policy research thank you for joining us a certain you know you being here now dean right off the bat how has this latest government shutdown influenced the october jobs numbers well it's really hard to say i mean i think the direct impact will be fairly modest are probably going to be twenty thirty thousand fewer jobs because of that from the...
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Oct 23, 2013
10/13
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CNNW
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we have howard dean and chris chocola. i am beyond frustrated that democrats are in this defensive crouch over a crappy website. i'm frustrated that republicans seem content to sit back and throw rocks. i think for all americans, the whole thing is just ridiculous. they also don't want -- they want this leaders in both parties to come together to fix obama care, to upgrade it. in fact right now we could already have a giant bipartisan upgrade obama care coalition if anyone actually wanted to solve the problems. i hope with kell talk about that tonight. so to you. here's the headlines. health spending rises at blistering pace. it could spend many -- health ware plans are dwindling in the united states. headlines from 2006 and 2005. before obama was elected, before there was obama care, before the shutdown, before the glitchy website, this system was in disarray. can you give us a solution that's not a repeal the whole thing? is there any lucien you can lead us on? >> speaker gingrich has done a lot of work. to read his book
we have howard dean and chris chocola. i am beyond frustrated that democrats are in this defensive crouch over a crappy website. i'm frustrated that republicans seem content to sit back and throw rocks. i think for all americans, the whole thing is just ridiculous. they also don't want -- they want this leaders in both parties to come together to fix obama care, to upgrade it. in fact right now we could already have a giant bipartisan upgrade obama care coalition if anyone actually wanted to...
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Oct 31, 2013
10/13
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FBC
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welcome, dean hubbard. >> thank you.tag line and why you came out of the new campaign. >> applications are up% year-over-year. our plan to focus who we are which is at the very center of business. this is a place where academic excellence meets real world every day, all the time. that is the plan. david: now i was reading an article by the way where they had been plunging 19%. that was last year. >> correct. david: but they have come back which is gratifying. however i'm wondering to what extent is the current environment with occupy wall street, all administration's attacks on business profits and insurance business and elsewhere, did, does that affect, you think the overall climate towards business schools? >> it might, but i think the real issue that more people are interested in entrepreneurship, in tech, in innovative parts of our economy and we like many of our peers are really retooling to do that we have a great on the on theship story to tell right into this market. liz: at the very center of business is your ne
welcome, dean hubbard. >> thank you.tag line and why you came out of the new campaign. >> applications are up% year-over-year. our plan to focus who we are which is at the very center of business. this is a place where academic excellence meets real world every day, all the time. that is the plan. david: now i was reading an article by the way where they had been plunging 19%. that was last year. >> correct. david: but they have come back which is gratifying. however i'm...
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Oct 8, 2013
10/13
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, thank you, dean.ree americans won the nobel prize in medicine today. james walkman of yale, randy scheckman of the university of california and thomas sudhof of stanford were recognized for discovering how cells discovering how cells transport hormones such as insulin, delivering them to the right place at the right time. their work could lead to new medicines for diabetes and epilepsy. a suspect in a road rage attacked a mitts he bashed the window of an s.u.v. now his lawyer explains why when we come back. explains why when we come back. as you correct skin tone over time. goodbye, spots, hello, beautiful. cc creams from covergirl + olay. get 'em on the spot. they're about 10 times softer and may have surface pores where bacteria can multiply. polident kills 99.99% of odor causing bacteria and helps dissolve stains so dentures are cleaner, fresher, and brighter. [ male announcer ] polident. you want a way to help minimize blood sugar spikes. support heart health. and your immune system. now there's n
, thank you, dean.ree americans won the nobel prize in medicine today. james walkman of yale, randy scheckman of the university of california and thomas sudhof of stanford were recognized for discovering how cells discovering how cells transport hormones such as insulin, delivering them to the right place at the right time. their work could lead to new medicines for diabetes and epilepsy. a suspect in a road rage attacked a mitts he bashed the window of an s.u.v. now his lawyer explains why...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 14, 2013
10/13
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>>dean: boy its going to be good to get that basement poured. >>miriam: no kidding! man 1: what we need is some elbow grease. >> man 2: yeah, you can... oh, are you kidding me? >> man 3: gmc, proud to lend a helping hand to hometime. ♪ >>miriam: we usually like to kick things off with a quick review of what's going on here. today we're gonna talk about the basement, cause that's were there's a lot of activity right now. it all started with some excavation, of course, to dig out an area for the foundation. then the concrete sub came in to pour the footings, set the insulated concrete forms, and fill those with concrete so now we have some really strong, really well insulated foundation walls. once the concrete cured, we covered the outside walls with two layers of moisture protection. one was a peel and stick adhesive membrane that goes right over the icf, and the other was the dimple drain board we put over the membrane to serve as a buffer between the soil and the wall. then after water proofing we had the drain tile laid out around the foundation, and we did some b
>>dean: boy its going to be good to get that basement poured. >>miriam: no kidding! man 1: what we need is some elbow grease. >> man 2: yeah, you can... oh, are you kidding me? >> man 3: gmc, proud to lend a helping hand to hometime. ♪ >>miriam: we usually like to kick things off with a quick review of what's going on here. today we're gonna talk about the basement, cause that's were there's a lot of activity right now. it all started with some excavation, of...
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Oct 13, 2013
10/13
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dean peas, a challenge for one of the best quarterbacks in the game. >> it really is. they've done a great job running the ball this year. with a couple of different backs. got a bunch of weapons outside but the guy that makes it all go is rodgers. he is a fantastic quarterback and unbelievably quick release, sees the field. he's great. >> he's a good one. >> tom clemens their canadian leader giving them with a lot more at the line of scrimmage. as we go to the video, we survey the field and he has that run down. >> he does. and on this first play, they have a good designed play here too in the fact they are going to run the ball, but at the same time, what you see out here is you see the receivers actually running a route. so the quarterback comes off the fake, and he's looking out here at a little bubble pass that he can throw to -- which they have. well what happens is, as you remind, as i rewine it -- rewind it here, they get a little run and now you have no backside backer. you can see it from the end zone. you see 58 is lined up here on number 3. he is not sure w
dean peas, a challenge for one of the best quarterbacks in the game. >> it really is. they've done a great job running the ball this year. with a couple of different backs. got a bunch of weapons outside but the guy that makes it all go is rodgers. he is a fantastic quarterback and unbelievably quick release, sees the field. he's great. >> he's a good one. >> tom clemens their canadian leader giving them with a lot more at the line of scrimmage. as we go to the video, we...
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Oct 18, 2013
10/13
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CSPAN
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he said, i have dean on tape. so the lawyers went to nixon and tape.o, there was not a i have a dictatorial which was his daily memoir that he would summarize that day. then he said i can't find it. why don't i make a new one. and in the great tradition of the law, we don't have the evidence being requested. it set off all kinds of alarm bells. when you look at the record, and in fairness to a and garment they are all deceased. , particularly, it was 17 times. they knew and were conducting not just a legal defense, but they would argue that he was trying to ease nixon over time. and that once the tapes became public, nixon would voluntarily resign. >> phil hyman, when alexander butterfield acknowledged that there were tapes during the watergate hearing. this is like a bombshell being dropped in the investigation. inside the special prosecutor's office, what were the problems you saw getting those tapes? this was a separation of powers, a nightmare for cox, was in that? >> cox was always very respectful of the pres
he said, i have dean on tape. so the lawyers went to nixon and tape.o, there was not a i have a dictatorial which was his daily memoir that he would summarize that day. then he said i can't find it. why don't i make a new one. and in the great tradition of the law, we don't have the evidence being requested. it set off all kinds of alarm bells. when you look at the record, and in fairness to a and garment they are all deceased. , particularly, it was 17 times. they knew and were conducting not...
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Oct 24, 2013
10/13
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in the crossfire, howard dean, a doctor and form head of the democratic party.rmer congressman who's a critic of the president. what's the best strategy for selling obama care? is there a plan b? is there a plan b? tonight on "crossfire." -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com >>>ing with to. >>> welcome to "crossfire. >>> in the crossfire tonight howard dean and chris chacola. today the head of almost every major insurance company was summoned to the white house for a closed door meeting with the president's closest advisers. you know, we used to think that ceos of the same industry plotting together could only mean bad things for competition and higher prices for the consumer. now these meetings are actually organized and hosted in the white house. welcome to government-run health care. the achievement has been to take the insurance bureaucrats who we're all mad at and add to them the government bureaucrats so they can now both conspire against the individual. doesn't that bother you? come on, a secret meeting in the white house like this? >> i tell you, i'm al
in the crossfire, howard dean, a doctor and form head of the democratic party.rmer congressman who's a critic of the president. what's the best strategy for selling obama care? is there a plan b? is there a plan b? tonight on "crossfire." -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com >>>ing with to. >>> welcome to "crossfire. >>> in the crossfire tonight howard dean and chris chacola. today the head of almost every major insurance company was summoned to the...
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Oct 28, 2013
10/13
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>>dean: so stick around and see if we get it all done. ♪ >> man.t we need is some elbow grease. >> yeah, you can... are you kidding me? >> gmc. proud to lend a helping hand to hometime. ♪ >>miriam: now out here at the house, we're making some really good progress. we do want to talk a little a bit about what it takes to keep a garage dry and warm, but first, let's give you a back story of how we got to this point. i'm talking about stuff like the icf foundation which consists of polystyrene forms that you stack up and fill with concrete to create a really strong and energy efficient basement. the system is pretty resistant to moisture, but we added a peel and stick membrane to the outside walls, and covered that with a dimpled drain board to really seal the deal against moisture. then for the garage floor and the front entry, we had a couple sets of precast hollow-core structural panels laid in on top of the icf walls to support traffic above and create some useable living space below. in the meantime, our framing sub was assembling all the interio
>>dean: so stick around and see if we get it all done. ♪ >> man.t we need is some elbow grease. >> yeah, you can... are you kidding me? >> gmc. proud to lend a helping hand to hometime. ♪ >>miriam: now out here at the house, we're making some really good progress. we do want to talk a little a bit about what it takes to keep a garage dry and warm, but first, let's give you a back story of how we got to this point. i'm talking about stuff like the icf foundation...
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Oct 1, 2013
10/13
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. ♪ >>dean: hi, welcome back to hometime.e've been covering the construction process here on the creekside house and we're finally kind of getting out of that muddy frost coming out of the ground stage. >>miriam: that's true, it's still a little bit muddy but we have had some dryer warmer days so i think we finally turned a corner. today we're going to get a closer look at the natural stone going up in and around the house as well as take a side trip to see where it all comes from. >>dean: we're also drilling into concrete for a couple of different fasteners we want to talk about today. >>miriam: and i want to see what the interior designer does for the first batch of selections. >>dean: and we're going to need some of that stuff before you know it so we better get ready. >>miriam: yeah and we'd like some company so i hope you can stick around. ♪ >> man 1: what we need is some elbow grease. >> man 2: yeah, you can... oh, are you kidding me? >> man 3: gmc, proud to lend a helping hand to hometime. ♪ >>miriam: sometimes it can
. ♪ >>dean: hi, welcome back to hometime.e've been covering the construction process here on the creekside house and we're finally kind of getting out of that muddy frost coming out of the ground stage. >>miriam: that's true, it's still a little bit muddy but we have had some dryer warmer days so i think we finally turned a corner. today we're going to get a closer look at the natural stone going up in and around the house as well as take a side trip to see where it all comes...
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Oct 7, 2013
10/13
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the dean campaign. and our work involves helping organizations navigate the digital world both kind of technical advice, but also helping them think through the implications of radical connectivity on their work. >> host: in the subtitle of your book, "the end of big," you have the word goliath. if you were to speak to a comcast, to a washington post organization -- two goliaths in our current world -- what would you tell them? >> guest: i would tell them they have to reimagine their customers, tear -- their audience as having more power than they do. this is what is so hard for leaders and big institutions to imagine, is that the people you're leading are more powerful than you are, you know? in the case of "the washington post," it's not the audience, it's the former audience. and you need to figure out how to engage that audience, how to tap into their power, how to help use them to accomplish your goals and ends. i mean, certainly comcast got a taste of this around the sopa/pipa fight last year wher
the dean campaign. and our work involves helping organizations navigate the digital world both kind of technical advice, but also helping them think through the implications of radical connectivity on their work. >> host: in the subtitle of your book, "the end of big," you have the word goliath. if you were to speak to a comcast, to a washington post organization -- two goliaths in our current world -- what would you tell them? >> guest: i would tell them they have to...
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Oct 30, 2013
10/13
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dean -- did howard dean think that in 2010 which was an historic loss for the incumbent party after a major piece of legislation was passed? in 2010 the democrats lost more seats than any other party had lost in a first-year mid-term. i don't know what changes all of a sudden for him the calculation that we found out that the president told you something that is not true so now vote for them? >> they were saying in 2010 they were getting people to vote against them. obama and his people were completely outmaneuvered in 2010 which the tea party people who sent out a lot of misleading information. >> the tea party people who said don't believe the president who said you could keep your plan. >> the tea party is now right. i can understand how howard dean is maybe making that point to spin it if the website were working, and this is one thing we're not even talking about. all of these states that are taking all of these new medicaid patients that cost people nothing to sign up. single guys living at their girlfriend's apartment or living with their parents or on their own, before you nee
dean -- did howard dean think that in 2010 which was an historic loss for the incumbent party after a major piece of legislation was passed? in 2010 the democrats lost more seats than any other party had lost in a first-year mid-term. i don't know what changes all of a sudden for him the calculation that we found out that the president told you something that is not true so now vote for them? >> they were saying in 2010 they were getting people to vote against them. obama and his people...
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Oct 8, 2013
10/13
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i joined howard dean's presidential primary campaign. i joined very early in late april of 2003 and was on the campaign from most exactly 12 months from the early days to the very bitter end. my experience as a working for an insurgent candidate led me to think a lot about the role of technology and empowering insurgencies against the establishment. so it's really kind of where my folks started. in 2007 and early 2008 we watched the astonishing democratic primary where hillary clinton who was the party standard error, indeed she and bill clinton built the modern democratic party. she lost in the primaries to a manhood in in public life less than a decade. that was a dramatic moment of the insurgent challenging the establishment and winning. the last couple of cycles we have seen a similar dynamic in the republican party with tea party insurgents challenging successfully a number of sitting u.s. senators in their own primaries as well as other establishment republican candidates. and so the book started with my interest in the role techno
i joined howard dean's presidential primary campaign. i joined very early in late april of 2003 and was on the campaign from most exactly 12 months from the early days to the very bitter end. my experience as a working for an insurgent candidate led me to think a lot about the role of technology and empowering insurgencies against the establishment. so it's really kind of where my folks started. in 2007 and early 2008 we watched the astonishing democratic primary where hillary clinton who was...
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Oct 29, 2013
10/13
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and dean is a serious guy.d a phrase in there that said that dean was a little bit troubling to epidemiologists because dean was the first example of such a syndrome happening in the very state. now, because he's -- from vermont. that was obviously a clue that this was meant to be tongue-in-cheek. but on the serious issue, which is that there were people who were so opposed to anything that bush had done, yes, it applies to obama. yes, it applied to reagan. and i think it applied -- generally speaking to most presidents. and there are people who will not accept anything that a president has done. i thought it was rather acute when the -- in the bush years because especially because of the wars, and because of the expansion of the state which really handled a lot of conservatives. i think the general issue is a president is always a target and oftentimes the target is overused and overabused. >> it is a great book of some of your most provocative and interesting essays. one final question. in 1994 you wrote a co
and dean is a serious guy.d a phrase in there that said that dean was a little bit troubling to epidemiologists because dean was the first example of such a syndrome happening in the very state. now, because he's -- from vermont. that was obviously a clue that this was meant to be tongue-in-cheek. but on the serious issue, which is that there were people who were so opposed to anything that bush had done, yes, it applies to obama. yes, it applied to reagan. and i think it applied -- generally...
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Oct 6, 2013
10/13
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he was the dean of the school of social work at atlanta university and later became the head of the national urban league. there was another man by the name of james farmer. farmer had attended a college in texas, and he was part of the debating team. this little school, this little debating team debated harvard, and they won. later he did graduate study at harvard university and became very involved with the naacp and later was one of the founders of the congress of racial equality.
he was the dean of the school of social work at atlanta university and later became the head of the national urban league. there was another man by the name of james farmer. farmer had attended a college in texas, and he was part of the debating team. this little school, this little debating team debated harvard, and they won. later he did graduate study at harvard university and became very involved with the naacp and later was one of the founders of the congress of racial equality.
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Oct 30, 2013
10/13
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dean is saying in massachusetts. >> totally different situation.h lower of uninsure asked very few people who had to buy into this. i think in massachusetts it was in the low single digits of people who didn't have health insurance. that's not the case. >> okay. >> in the united states as a whole. it's apples and oranges and you shouldn't try to have a command and control system. >> we got to leave it there. dr. dean good to have you. thank you very much. >> thanks. >> for more go to cnn.com. let me know what you think. let's talk about it on twitter hash tag "anderson 360." >>> let's see what glenn greenwald says. >>> daring or completely crazy but record-setting. i talked to a brazilian surfer that rode that giant, giant monster wave. is what makes us different. we take the time to get to know you and your unique health needs. then we help create a personalized healthcare experience that works for you. and you. and you. with 50 years of know-how, and a dedicated network of doctors, health coaches, and wellness experts, we're a partner you can rel
dean is saying in massachusetts. >> totally different situation.h lower of uninsure asked very few people who had to buy into this. i think in massachusetts it was in the low single digits of people who didn't have health insurance. that's not the case. >> okay. >> in the united states as a whole. it's apples and oranges and you shouldn't try to have a command and control system. >> we got to leave it there. dr. dean good to have you. thank you very much. >>...