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89
Dec 26, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN
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dr. king. and to talk about dr. martin luther king is to talk about hope. the first time i met him in the early 1960's, when i was about 12 -- [laughter] i was really struck by what a quiet man he was. always seemed quiet, but the first time i heard him speak, suddenly, it was is it if he was bringing up fire of hope over all of us -- it was as if he was bringing a fire of hope over all of us. we all needed, desperately, a man like dr. king to turn our hopes and dreams into action. he aroused in us a total commitment to his dream, which drew 1/4 of a million of us here in 1963. in those days, i must confess that i was afraid to come to washington, because it was the south and it operated like the south. i was of little girl from new york, and not always scared the hell -- i was a little girl from new york and that always scared the hell out of me. i can remember good reason for it feeling that way. taking the train from new york to visit my grandmother in north carolina -- and it was here
dr. king. and to talk about dr. martin luther king is to talk about hope. the first time i met him in the early 1960's, when i was about 12 -- [laughter] i was really struck by what a quiet man he was. always seemed quiet, but the first time i heard him speak, suddenly, it was is it if he was bringing up fire of hope over all of us -- it was as if he was bringing a fire of hope over all of us. we all needed, desperately, a man like dr. king to turn our hopes and dreams into action. he aroused...
135
135
Dec 28, 2011
12/11
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WETA
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eye 135
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dr. king the man was really about and so i think the play inspires young people to make a difference in our country. and it brings a smile to my face most nights when i see young people coming out of the theater >>nd i feel sometimes we have a very simplistic idea of dr. king. that he s just this perfect man who was supposeed to stay on the wall, and he's not. he's an inspiration. like john lewis said, an idol, but at the end of the day he went into the grod as a man. >> rose: we ntinue with chef jacques pepin who talks about cooking and teaching cooking. >> you know, when i did that book, the conundrum for me was do i leave those recipe it is way i did them 30 years ago, 35 years ago to show a moment in time or then do i make it so that it's simpler, more usable? and i chose the second option which actually then was more work than doing a book from the beginning. >> rose: the broadway play "the mountaintop" and the chef jacques pepin, nex. captning sponsored by rose communications from o
dr. king the man was really about and so i think the play inspires young people to make a difference in our country. and it brings a smile to my face most nights when i see young people coming out of the theater >>nd i feel sometimes we have a very simplistic idea of dr. king. that he s just this perfect man who was supposeed to stay on the wall, and he's not. he's an inspiration. like john lewis said, an idol, but at the end of the day he went into the grod as a man. >> rose: we...
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156
Dec 10, 2011
12/11
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MSNBCW
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eye 156
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dr. tracey corey and her team decipher some mysterious deaths. >> the body is that of a normally developed, normally nourished white male. >> with rare access -- >> it is fractured. there's no question it's fractured. >> -- we'll show how coroners, medical examiners and death investigators -- >> there's a disk that normally goes in there. >> -- bring the truth to light. and they do it by letting the dead do the talking. >> the only way the victim can speak at that point is through the autopsy examination. that's really the last chance the victim has to speak. >> "dead men talking -- trail of evidence." february. it's midday and cold. a hunter and his dog are tracking game on deserted strip mining land southwest of louisville. >> buddy, here! buddy! >> suddenly, in the field, a scene from a horror movie. >> i stumbled up on a skeleton. there was a skull. in my heart i knew it was human. but you know, i didn't want to believe that. it definitely freaked me out, that's for sure. >> the skele
dr. tracey corey and her team decipher some mysterious deaths. >> the body is that of a normally developed, normally nourished white male. >> with rare access -- >> it is fractured. there's no question it's fractured. >> -- we'll show how coroners, medical examiners and death investigators -- >> there's a disk that normally goes in there. >> -- bring the truth to light. and they do it by letting the dead do the talking. >> the only way the victim can...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
62
62
Dec 1, 2011
12/11
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SFGTV2
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eye 62
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dr. clark, what is trauma-informed care? well, listening to dr. harris and dr. gillece, but the most important thing is care that takes into consideration the traumatic experiences that a person may have had. it is care that recognizes that trauma is a very real possibility. when you take a look at the statistics and you find a lot of people who present for treatment, whether it's traditional mental health treatment or substance abuse treatment or a combination, or people who enter the criminal justice system, a significant number have had traumatic experiences. so, if we're going to intervene in a positive way, we have to take into consideration, and the very strategies that allow us to take into consideration. but the most important part of it is the beginning, acknowledging the trauma that could have happened in that person's life. and dr. gillece, how do we screen for that? well, i think when you do trauma-informed care, i think what's really important too is to create environments of care that do no more harm. there are many different screenings that we can
dr. clark, what is trauma-informed care? well, listening to dr. harris and dr. gillece, but the most important thing is care that takes into consideration the traumatic experiences that a person may have had. it is care that recognizes that trauma is a very real possibility. when you take a look at the statistics and you find a lot of people who present for treatment, whether it's traditional mental health treatment or substance abuse treatment or a combination, or people who enter the criminal...
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215
Dec 26, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN
tv
eye 215
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dr. king, former cbs news anchor dan rather, interior secretary ken salazar and civil-rights leaders like jesse jackson, al sharpton, julian bond, joseph lowery, and congressman john lewis. there were musical performances by a wreath at franklin and stevie wonder. from the national mall in washington, d.c., this is a little over three hours. ♪ >> o say can you see, by the dawn's early light, what so proudly we held at the twilight's last gleaming whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming and the rockets' red glare the bombs bursting in air gave proof through the night that our flag was still there that stars spangled banner yet wave o'er the land of the free and the home of the brave. ♪ home of the brave ♪ [applause] [drum roll] ♪ [choir singing] [choir singing] [choir singing] [choir singing] [choir singing] [choir singing] [choir singing] ♪ [choir singing] [choir singing] [choir singing] [choir singing] ♪ [applause] >
dr. king, former cbs news anchor dan rather, interior secretary ken salazar and civil-rights leaders like jesse jackson, al sharpton, julian bond, joseph lowery, and congressman john lewis. there were musical performances by a wreath at franklin and stevie wonder. from the national mall in washington, d.c., this is a little over three hours. ♪ >> o say can you see, by the dawn's early light, what so proudly we held at the twilight's last gleaming whose broad stripes and bright stars...
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Dec 10, 2011
12/11
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MSNBCW
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eye 91
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dr. tracy corey. chief medical examiner for the state of kentucky. she's one of several investigators who work to unravel the mysteries behind the deaths of the victims who arrive in her autopsy room. >> i like puzzles, and every single case presents its own mystery to try to figure out. >> you'll see all that it takes to solve one of those mysteries. a horrific crime. two lovers found shot to death in this car in an alley. our cameras are allowed rare access to the death scene. the investigation, the autopsies, and wherever else the clues and leads take the police. as in the tv drama "csi" there is a cast of fascinating characters who join forces to solve this crime. there's dr. corey, the medical examiner. a doctor of forensic pathology, she performs autopsies on all suspicious and unexplained deaths. >> my job is to let the victims speak to me. let the victim tell me what they can tell me through the physical evidence. >> there's the coroner. ron holmes, an elected law enforcement offi
dr. tracy corey. chief medical examiner for the state of kentucky. she's one of several investigators who work to unravel the mysteries behind the deaths of the victims who arrive in her autopsy room. >> i like puzzles, and every single case presents its own mystery to try to figure out. >> you'll see all that it takes to solve one of those mysteries. a horrific crime. two lovers found shot to death in this car in an alley. our cameras are allowed rare access to the death scene. the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
70
70
Dec 16, 2011
12/11
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SFGTV2
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eye 70
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and dr. harris, is that typical? is that a typical scenario of some of the folks that experience trauma? well, i think what happens is that trauma breaks out of the normal expected life trajectory, and you're kind of going along and you don't expect the men who come to your house to rape you. you don't expect your mother to go out on a drunk binge and leave you alone. what you think is "normal life" just doesn't happen to you. so you adapt. and you adapt by drinking. you adapt by getting into relationships that may be destructive. you adapt by finding some way to physically or psychologically run away. and dr. clark, this happens, i suspect that because of this dynamic there are an awful lot of people, and we're going to get back to miss cain's experience that end up in our jail systems, that end up in our justice system. is that correct? that is true. there are a lot of people as a result, as miss cain indicated. you start using drugs that are illegal, and as a result of that you wind up get
and dr. harris, is that typical? is that a typical scenario of some of the folks that experience trauma? well, i think what happens is that trauma breaks out of the normal expected life trajectory, and you're kind of going along and you don't expect the men who come to your house to rape you. you don't expect your mother to go out on a drunk binge and leave you alone. what you think is "normal life" just doesn't happen to you. so you adapt. and you adapt by drinking. you adapt by...
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dr hartman sees me does an e.k.g. duplicative not hugely expensive but you multiply that by millions of times a year fee for service and it adds up he's going to and he's going to unquestionably do a stress test much more now than in the past twenty years because now they do stress tests at doctors' offices in the cardiologist's office fee for service and they have a cardiology office visit so the cardiologist is paid for reading the k.g. being the stress test and the cardiologist office visit. she dr hartmann let's say decide this is probably reflux and so then decides to do what. everybody in my audience everybody that i ever talked with has sent him to a g.i. doc but let's say this let's just say doctors are all right it's over in docility or stomach acid right but let's say dr hartman sensible and sends me back to primary care doc dr tom three weeks later i'm back with dr tom and you maybe have gotten a note from dr hartman maybe not that says thank you for saying peter beyond saying he doesn't have heart problems
dr hartman sees me does an e.k.g. duplicative not hugely expensive but you multiply that by millions of times a year fee for service and it adds up he's going to and he's going to unquestionably do a stress test much more now than in the past twenty years because now they do stress tests at doctors' offices in the cardiologist's office fee for service and they have a cardiology office visit so the cardiologist is paid for reading the k.g. being the stress test and the cardiologist office visit....
136
136
Dec 3, 2011
12/11
by
MSNBCW
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eye 136
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dr. joseph spellman, who is dead, that he believed the noes had been responsible for their children's deaths. >> the doctor says the diagnosis of crib death just wasn't possible in several children from the same family. >> you don't get two and three cases in a family. it's not part of the nature of that phenomenon. with our present knowledge now. the medical examiner would not call a second one in a family a sids. >> richard firstman co-wrote "death of innocence," the book that started stephen fried's quest. >> it doesn't run in families. there are no studies suggesting that it is genetic. when you put all the factors together and you have two, and certainly three and four in a family, you need to look very hard at the possibility of homicide. >> coming up, is it sids or is it murder? >> lots of people were going, what is going on here? ♪ it's easy to see what subaru owners care about. that's why we created the share the love event. get a great deal on a new subaru and $250 goes to your
dr. joseph spellman, who is dead, that he believed the noes had been responsible for their children's deaths. >> the doctor says the diagnosis of crib death just wasn't possible in several children from the same family. >> you don't get two and three cases in a family. it's not part of the nature of that phenomenon. with our present knowledge now. the medical examiner would not call a second one in a family a sids. >> richard firstman co-wrote "death of innocence,"...
40,029
40K
Dec 21, 2011
12/11
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WJZ
tv
eye 40,029
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♪ i'm dr.meow meow meow meow meow! ♪ love, love, love-love love, love, love-love ♪ that's it. our collaboration is over! humph! finally, we agree! uhh, where are we? and why are we in handcuffs? whoops! whoops! ha! looks like they were the ones having quite a skirmish! ah, reminiscing is fun. ha ha! yes. see how i--anyway. seriously, though. you make defeating dr. two brains look so easy! you want easy? one time two brains was defeated by nothing more than a simple coincidence! oh, by the way, i have you outnumbered again! ha ha ha ha! oh, you guys look so cute! well, are you henchmice or henchmen? get her! oof! ow! great job, huggy. oh, word girl. aaahh!!! was that a lighting fixture that just fell on him? narrator: do i even have to say it? coincidence! coincidence! coincidence! coincidence! here, check this out! aah! [rewinding] aah! [rewinding] aah! ahem! ahem! [laughter continues] uh-oh. well, that got your attention. both: dr. two brains! what are you doing here? what am i doing here? you
♪ i'm dr.meow meow meow meow meow! ♪ love, love, love-love love, love, love-love ♪ that's it. our collaboration is over! humph! finally, we agree! uhh, where are we? and why are we in handcuffs? whoops! whoops! ha! looks like they were the ones having quite a skirmish! ah, reminiscing is fun. ha ha! yes. see how i--anyway. seriously, though. you make defeating dr. two brains look so easy! you want easy? one time two brains was defeated by nothing more than a simple coincidence! oh, by the...
726
726
Dec 25, 2011
12/11
by
WBFF
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eye 726
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. >> hi, i'm dr. share with you a breakthrough in skin care technology for women of color that's over 20 years in the making. it's called rx for brown skin, and if you've dealt with uneven skin tone, dark marks from sun damage or acne, even hyperpigmentation, then stay tuned to see how my skin care line can work for you. >> the first time i used it, i just thought, "this is gonna be something different." >> within a week, the spots that i would obsess about started to disappear, and... that was awesome. >> the fact that my skin is so much more even has just taken such a big insecurity away from me that i've always had over the years since i was younger. >> my sister who was closest to me said, "you're glowing!" and i said "really?" [♪...] >> brown skin is unique, not just in tone, but in its very makeup, with far more melanin production than lighter skin that can spread throughout the tissue layers, causing dark marks, uneven skin tone, and hyperpigmentation. >> i've battled the brown skin my whole li
. >> hi, i'm dr. share with you a breakthrough in skin care technology for women of color that's over 20 years in the making. it's called rx for brown skin, and if you've dealt with uneven skin tone, dark marks from sun damage or acne, even hyperpigmentation, then stay tuned to see how my skin care line can work for you. >> the first time i used it, i just thought, "this is gonna be something different." >> within a week, the spots that i would obsess about started...
737
737
Dec 22, 2011
12/11
by
WBFF
tv
eye 737
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dr. travis, dr. lisa, dr. dr. ordon, and dr. sears.u can be. >> you can see the entire audience is working out today, loving it! >> because it -- when it comes to your health we is the answers. >> get fit. >> today we are teaching you to crave things good for you. >> have fun . to crave things good for you. >> ha[ male announcer ] it's simple physics... a body at rest tends to stay at rest... while a body in motion tends to stay in motion. staying active can actually ease arthritis symptoms. but if you have arthritis, staying active can be difficult. prescription celebrex can help relieve arthritis pain so your body can stay in motion. because just one 200mg celebrex a day can provide 24 hour relief for many with arthritis pain and inflammation. plus, in clinical studies, celebrex is proven to improve daily physical function so moving is easier. and celebrex is not a narcotic. when it comes to relieving your arthritis pain, you and your doctor need to balance the benefits with the risks. all prescription nsaids, like celebrex, ibuprofe
dr. travis, dr. lisa, dr. dr. ordon, and dr. sears.u can be. >> you can see the entire audience is working out today, loving it! >> because it -- when it comes to your health we is the answers. >> get fit. >> today we are teaching you to crave things good for you. >> have fun . to crave things good for you. >> ha[ male announcer ] it's simple physics... a body at rest tends to stay at rest... while a body in motion tends to stay in motion. staying active can...
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85
Dec 2, 2011
12/11
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CSPAN
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eye 85
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dr. phil roe, from the great state of tennessee, and dr. scott dess jar less, who is like me, a family physician. and we'll be talking tonight. i thought i would give just a brief introduction about medicare and how that fits into the budget. i know that dr. roe is going to talk in more detail about that. well, no speaker would be complete without a chart. and i have several tonight. and this is one i think it's important for everybody to understand. this pie chart breaks up spending for the federal budget. and if you'll notice, the vast majority of this pie is in what we call permanent mandatory or so-called entitlement spending and interest. and what makes up a large part of mandatory spending is social security, medicare and medicaid and the size of this pie, this section of the pie is growing. in fact, if you recall that back in the 1990's we actually balanced the budget, the last time we balanced it i think was in the late 1990's. it it was a lot easier to do back then because entitl
dr. phil roe, from the great state of tennessee, and dr. scott dess jar less, who is like me, a family physician. and we'll be talking tonight. i thought i would give just a brief introduction about medicare and how that fits into the budget. i know that dr. roe is going to talk in more detail about that. well, no speaker would be complete without a chart. and i have several tonight. and this is one i think it's important for everybody to understand. this pie chart breaks up spending for the...
503
503
Dec 23, 2011
12/11
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KRCB
tv
eye 503
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it is a way to connect dr.ivins to that crime, to the location where the letters were mailed. >> narrator: at fbi headquarters, they had something they believed was even stronger- - they thought they had caught ivins intentionally misleading them about the alleged murder weapon, rmr-1029. >> it just showed us his willingness and deliberate attempt to mislead us, and actually tell us mistruths. >> narrator: the fbi had found matches between the anthrax in the letters and one particular source. >> samples start coming back positive. and all of those samples that turn out positive have all been drawn up originally from bruce ivins' 1029 flask. >> narrator: but the sample bruce ivins gave them from rmr- 1029 did not match. to investigators, it was proof ivins was trying to mislead them. >> this is the only one we know of that wasn't right, that didn't come back to what it was supposed to be. >> and so, they instantly began to wonder if this wasn't an attempt to obscure the fact that rmr-1029 was the source of the a
it is a way to connect dr.ivins to that crime, to the location where the letters were mailed. >> narrator: at fbi headquarters, they had something they believed was even stronger- - they thought they had caught ivins intentionally misleading them about the alleged murder weapon, rmr-1029. >> it just showed us his willingness and deliberate attempt to mislead us, and actually tell us mistruths. >> narrator: the fbi had found matches between the anthrax in the letters and one...
11,579
12K
Dec 21, 2011
12/11
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WJZ
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narrator: dr.n experiment with a vicious lab mouse named squeaky went horribly wrong, leaving him with a tiny mouse brain stuck to his head, and an evil new identity-- dr. two brains! wow! an evil scientist with a mouse brain attached to his head! he seems invincible.
narrator: dr.n experiment with a vicious lab mouse named squeaky went horribly wrong, leaving him with a tiny mouse brain stuck to his head, and an evil new identity-- dr. two brains! wow! an evil scientist with a mouse brain attached to his head! he seems invincible.
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458
Dec 22, 2011
12/11
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WMPT
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eye 458
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dr. kimble? yes, it is. sorry to bother you, sir, but dr. stevens just went into emergency o.r. and asked if you could give him a hand. all right, call him back and tell him i'll be right there. thank you, doctor. yep. thank you. good night. i'll wait up for you. i'll wait up for you. ...wait up for you. all right, guys, what do we got here? richard, thanks for coming. a 58-year-old guy. just pulled his hot gall bladder. bleeding. big time. it's all in the liver bed. what are his coags? they're all messed up. p.t.'s 36, and the rest are off the wall. where did he come from? where'd we get this guy? lentz's name's on the chart. we paged him, but no answer. ok, guys, let me in there. just give me some room. maria, give me a clamp. give me some suction in there. have you been getting any threats at work? co-workers, staff at the hospital, anything like that at all? no. anything unusual going on as far as phone calls, people hanging up, uh, people coming to the door, tradespeople? not that i know of. now, doc, uh, on this fight with this guy with the one arm, did it happen upstairs
dr. kimble? yes, it is. sorry to bother you, sir, but dr. stevens just went into emergency o.r. and asked if you could give him a hand. all right, call him back and tell him i'll be right there. thank you, doctor. yep. thank you. good night. i'll wait up for you. i'll wait up for you. ...wait up for you. all right, guys, what do we got here? richard, thanks for coming. a 58-year-old guy. just pulled his hot gall bladder. bleeding. big time. it's all in the liver bed. what are his coags? they're...
422
422
Dec 24, 2011
12/11
by
WETA
tv
eye 422
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(sighs) (knocking on door) dr. holt. dr. sykora.m sorry to bother you at home, but, um... you weren't returning my calls. and i don't blame you. what can i do for you? accept my apology for acting like a jerk the other day. and come and run your clinic because your first choice turned you down? yeah. so i'm offering you the job. okay. great. no, i'll think about it. good night, michael. (door closes) (elevator bell dings) rita? it's late. what are you doing here? since when do i have a life? handball with bax at 8:00 tomorrow morning. a spina bifida repair at 10:30. then lunch with your investors. usual time and place? yeah. how's carol? no change. she's still unconscious. night, michael. not yet. (sighs) welcome back. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org c'mon, michael! get in the game! [ male announcer ] don't have the hops for hoops with your buddies? lost your appetite for romance? and your mood is on its way down. you might not just be getting older. you might have a treatable cond
(sighs) (knocking on door) dr. holt. dr. sykora.m sorry to bother you at home, but, um... you weren't returning my calls. and i don't blame you. what can i do for you? accept my apology for acting like a jerk the other day. and come and run your clinic because your first choice turned you down? yeah. so i'm offering you the job. okay. great. no, i'll think about it. good night, michael. (door closes) (elevator bell dings) rita? it's late. what are you doing here? since when do i have a life?...
545
545
Dec 24, 2011
12/11
by
WETA
tv
eye 545
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tavo: dr. mike, i need your help! tavo, actually i'm just leaving. rafe, this is dr. holt. oh. what happened to you? he shattered the backboard. i was showing off for the kids, trying to slam-dunk, and think i broke my arm. did you make the shot at least? (suppressed groan) ah! yeah, you dislocated your shoulder. tavo: come on, let dr. holt take care of your dad. tavo, honestly, i gotta... it's cool. i got donuts for him. (hiccups) i got these hiccups, too. oh, it's not uncommon after a shock to your system. now, what's going on here? let's take a look. right here. hold still. (hiccups) kind of old to being doing slam dunks. i run a youth league for troubled kids. i'm the only dad most of them got. (hiccups) boys like that will eat you alive if you don't walk the walk, right? how are you doing over there? it's done. clean up those cuts. (rafe hiccups) sorry, i was lancing a mother of a boil. about time. (rafe hiccups) michael: all right, finished. you're in good hands with dr. mike here. he's a top-notch surgeon. sedate him with some midazolam. we'll pop that shoulder back into
tavo: dr. mike, i need your help! tavo, actually i'm just leaving. rafe, this is dr. holt. oh. what happened to you? he shattered the backboard. i was showing off for the kids, trying to slam-dunk, and think i broke my arm. did you make the shot at least? (suppressed groan) ah! yeah, you dislocated your shoulder. tavo: come on, let dr. holt take care of your dad. tavo, honestly, i gotta... it's cool. i got donuts for him. (hiccups) i got these hiccups, too. oh, it's not uncommon after a shock...
546
546
Dec 31, 2011
12/11
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 546
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why dr. barton corbin might have wanted his wife dead. >> we determined that barton corbin was involved in a long-term sexual relationship. oh it's clearance time! yeah, our low prices are even lower. we need to teach her how to walk. she is taking up valuable cart space. aren't you, honey? [ male announcer ] it's our biggest clearance event of the year where our prices are even lower. save money. live better. walmart. an accident doesn't have to slow you down. with better car replacement, available only from liberty mutual insurance, if your car's totaled, we give you the money to buy a car that's one model-year newer... with 15,000 fewer miles on it. there's no other auto insurance product like it. better car replacement, available only from liberty mutual. it's a better policy that gets you a better car. call... or visit one of our local offices today, and we'll provide the coverage you need at the right price. liberty mutual auto insurance -- responsibility. what's your policy? >>> jennif
why dr. barton corbin might have wanted his wife dead. >> we determined that barton corbin was involved in a long-term sexual relationship. oh it's clearance time! yeah, our low prices are even lower. we need to teach her how to walk. she is taking up valuable cart space. aren't you, honey? [ male announcer ] it's our biggest clearance event of the year where our prices are even lower. save money. live better. walmart. an accident doesn't have to slow you down. with better car...
136
136
Dec 18, 2011
12/11
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 136
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both dr. sperber and dr.ampbell testify. >> i thought the evidence that i presented was so overwhelmingly negative for the prosecution side that i thought it had gone very well. >> the dna and physical evidence excluding krone is also presented by krone's lawyers. the shoe prints, fingerprints, and blood samples found at the scene. >> i was feeling good because the truth was coming out. the facts were being told, and the evidence was pointing to someone else. it wasn't matching me. >> after seven weeks, the case goes to the jury. they deliberate for three days. >> i said, i have a bad feeling about this. they've been out too long. >> april 12th, the jury has reached a verdict. their decision is a huge blow. ray krone is guilty, again. as the jury is polled, the victim's mother cries in relief. krone remains stoic. >> everything just dropped out of me. everything -- i mean i've never been hit that hard emotionally, physically, i mean, just to stop breathing. i'm like, whoa, back up, rewind, let's start this ov
both dr. sperber and dr.ampbell testify. >> i thought the evidence that i presented was so overwhelmingly negative for the prosecution side that i thought it had gone very well. >> the dna and physical evidence excluding krone is also presented by krone's lawyers. the shoe prints, fingerprints, and blood samples found at the scene. >> i was feeling good because the truth was coming out. the facts were being told, and the evidence was pointing to someone else. it wasn't...
220
220
Dec 11, 2011
12/11
by
KRCB
tv
eye 220
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she met dr. brenda, as the staff calls her, when she was in jail a year ago. >> i mean, we've come a long ways, and you know, i have to give number one credit to god, but if it weren't for dr. brenda and dr. joe, i wouldn't be blessed with this house right now. >> amanda is now a member of what is known as the do right crew, mostly former inmates who meet with the do right kids, youngsters dr. brenda has recruited, to do community service and talk about the problems of growing up. >> you know whenever i do, i guess, want to relapse or think about going back to my old ways, i think, you know, well i'm accountability to the do right kids, you know. and i don't want to have to go to them and say, "hey, listen, i screwed up, i'm back in jail." >> i need you to sign up. here's lime-green paper, it says do right, do right, do right. if you're part of the do right crew, there's so many benefits that come along with being part of the do right crew. >> even these prisoners are eligible for a free home, an
she met dr. brenda, as the staff calls her, when she was in jail a year ago. >> i mean, we've come a long ways, and you know, i have to give number one credit to god, but if it weren't for dr. brenda and dr. joe, i wouldn't be blessed with this house right now. >> amanda is now a member of what is known as the do right crew, mostly former inmates who meet with the do right kids, youngsters dr. brenda has recruited, to do community service and talk about the problems of growing up....
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and in a moment, dr. oz and our dr.esser will weigh in together on what this means and what to do. but first, abc's linsey davis breaks down the new findings. >> reporter: dr. oz was first to raise the alarm. >> some of the best known brands in america have arsenic in their apple juice. >> reporter: he was quickly shot down by our own dr. besser, backed by the fda, which said arsenic levels were low and that what oz found was a mostly harmless form of arsenic. >> getting those results confirmed by other labs. no good scientist would ever do that kind of work. >> reporter: but today, new tests and fresh alarms. consumer reports tested 88 samples of juice and found 10% had arsenic levels higher than the government allows for drinking water. not the harmless form, but most the dangerous form. and it's not just found in apple juice. they also tested grape juice, actually a large number of fruit juices list apple juice as their primary ingredient. because of the sugar in juice, pediatricians already recommend that infants un
and in a moment, dr. oz and our dr.esser will weigh in together on what this means and what to do. but first, abc's linsey davis breaks down the new findings. >> reporter: dr. oz was first to raise the alarm. >> some of the best known brands in america have arsenic in their apple juice. >> reporter: he was quickly shot down by our own dr. besser, backed by the fda, which said arsenic levels were low and that what oz found was a mostly harmless form of arsenic. >> getting...
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Dec 18, 2011
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i work with dr. oz and others to get healthy. it's wonderful the amazing stories, and we're using the same 10 principles of the amen solution. saddleback church is connected to 25,000 churches around the world. so we're going to get this country healthy. but you can also do it from your business, from your school up, from your family. now is the time to get healthy, not tomorrow, tonight. today is the time to get healthy. so please, call and get these great gifts, we'll teach you how to do it in a fun way that is about abundance, never about deprivation. it's not about 10 pounds, this is not a program to lose 10 pounds in 10 weeks, there's a lot of programs to do that. this is a program to get control of your brain and your body for the rest of your life. >> and not only changing your life but actually those around you. i really love that idea, that it's not just a personal issue but actually it's the ripple effect of what happens around you. while making a contribution to weta is just like that. your pledge is a personal pledge
i work with dr. oz and others to get healthy. it's wonderful the amazing stories, and we're using the same 10 principles of the amen solution. saddleback church is connected to 25,000 churches around the world. so we're going to get this country healthy. but you can also do it from your business, from your school up, from your family. now is the time to get healthy, not tomorrow, tonight. today is the time to get healthy. so please, call and get these great gifts, we'll teach you how to do it...
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Dec 31, 2011
12/11
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when dr. king said find his moral center, when him to our cause, this was in the of not even knowing the man. -- in lieu of not even knowing the man. we did not meet on the corner, we did not have a social engagement. we were in a world, a society that was fiercely adversarial from the point of view of race. distractedthat was scarcel by the lust for power and greed -- buthe central to our culture. with all these forces coming at you, if you are the oppressed, you have to find a way in which to work through this. you can do it violently, or you can do it as dr. king suggested. to find this methodology through nonviolence, to try to find a way in which to redeem relations with individuals. i did not much believe in the idea of nonviolence. after all, non-violence was the teachings of christ, the most powerful institution to rise up from the legacy was the church. i did not find a place more oppressive or more crowells, not just from a large sense of violence but in the daily since the violence.
when dr. king said find his moral center, when him to our cause, this was in the of not even knowing the man. -- in lieu of not even knowing the man. we did not meet on the corner, we did not have a social engagement. we were in a world, a society that was fiercely adversarial from the point of view of race. distractedthat was scarcel by the lust for power and greed -- buthe central to our culture. with all these forces coming at you, if you are the oppressed, you have to find a way in which to...
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lee because as dr lee quickly the i.m.f. there is talk that they may play a larger role in that kind of a solution do you think that there could and should be a larger role for some of the big emerging economies like you mentioned china that have such huge growth and kind of a solution for you. yeah i think china definitely will play a larger role i think that they'll make bigger investments in europe they certainly have the resources over three trillion dollars in foreign exchange reserves and yeah i mean europe is important to everybody europe represents about twenty trillion dollars of the world's product that's the largest single chunk. anybody represents so it's certainly in the interest of china it's in the interests of the us that's why they're i mean but you know it's so important that even as a last gasp i think our federal reserve would probably end up buying european bonds that's not a prediction but it's saying that we just can't let europe fail and everybody from germany to the united states to china knows they
lee because as dr lee quickly the i.m.f. there is talk that they may play a larger role in that kind of a solution do you think that there could and should be a larger role for some of the big emerging economies like you mentioned china that have such huge growth and kind of a solution for you. yeah i think china definitely will play a larger role i think that they'll make bigger investments in europe they certainly have the resources over three trillion dollars in foreign exchange reserves and...
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for tonight's conversations with great minds of honored to be joined by dr harriet washington dr washington is a medical ethicist who has written extensively about bioethics the history of medicine african-american health issues and the intersection of medicine ethics and culture actual washington spent seven years as an award winning newspaper editor to metropolit new york dailies ultimately as health and science editor and has contributed to several dozen publications throughout her career winning several journalism awards for her investigative coverage of the health industry dr washington's two thousand and six book medical apartheid the dark history of medical experimentation on black americans from plone times to the present is the first social history of medical research with african-americans and won a national book circle critics circle award her latest book deadly monopolies is an exposé of the medical industrial complex is rush to own and exploit the raw materials of human life itself including your body tissue and d.n.a. dr washington has been a research fellow in ethics at harva
for tonight's conversations with great minds of honored to be joined by dr harriet washington dr washington is a medical ethicist who has written extensively about bioethics the history of medicine african-american health issues and the intersection of medicine ethics and culture actual washington spent seven years as an award winning newspaper editor to metropolit new york dailies ultimately as health and science editor and has contributed to several dozen publications throughout her career...
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david graber in that interview dr graber gives the long story on debt not just in america but around the world. a few weeks after this interview aired dr graber went on to be one of the early organizers of the occupy wall street movement so tonight we take another look at what he had to say just before all that began. for tonight's conversations with great minds i'm joined by dr david graber graber teaches anthropology at goldsmiths university of london and has written a half dozen books that examined issues of culture politics economics and history and as a regular contributor to some of the country's leading magazines including harper's the nation and the new left review in two thousand and six he delivered the melon kosky memorial lecture at the london school of economics an annual talk that honors outstanding anthropologists who have fundamentally shaped the study of culture and this past spring he was honored by the anthropology department at u.c. berkeley his latest book debt the first five thousand years chronicles how the concepts of debt and credit have defined human history
david graber in that interview dr graber gives the long story on debt not just in america but around the world. a few weeks after this interview aired dr graber went on to be one of the early organizers of the occupy wall street movement so tonight we take another look at what he had to say just before all that began. for tonight's conversations with great minds i'm joined by dr david graber graber teaches anthropology at goldsmiths university of london and has written a half dozen books that...
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world dominance and dr hudson as always it is such a pleasure to have you on our show today so let's start with some of the recent things you've been writing because you wrote two recent articles on the economic crisis in europe that we were looking at where you made a connection between what's going on the nationally and countries like greece and italy and the type of political turmoil we have seen there with unity governments in the prime minister's stepping down and you saw a civically sided aristotle and aristotle's observation that societies move in a cyclical pattern through various forms of government from democracies invariably to all of darkies and tyrannies. back to democracy so in your view is what we're seeing in europe an attempt by elites to turn democratic nation state into something more resembling oligarchy enroll by thea what is interesting that you showed president obama's address at your beginning of the show because in his show he said this is make or break time for the middle class and what he meant is make or break time for democracy the fact is we're in a tran
world dominance and dr hudson as always it is such a pleasure to have you on our show today so let's start with some of the recent things you've been writing because you wrote two recent articles on the economic crisis in europe that we were looking at where you made a connection between what's going on the nationally and countries like greece and italy and the type of political turmoil we have seen there with unity governments in the prime minister's stepping down and you saw a civically sided...
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Dec 26, 2011
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dr. travis -- loves best. dr. travis, dr. lisa, dr. ordon, and dr. sears. be. >> our entire audience is working out today! loving it! >> when it comes to your health -- >> we have the answers! >> get fit! >> today's all about teaching you how it crave things good for you. >> have fun! [ applause ] >> oh, no. we have run out of towels. >> with "the doctors" month of medicine. coming in january! [ crowd cheering ] [ applause ] [ male announcer ] osteo bi-flex with 5-loxin advanced. shows improvement in joint comfort within 7 days. osteo bi-flex. the #1 doctor and pharmacist recommended brand. the #1 doctor and pharmacist a swilegs like pure silk... that's easy! pure silk shave cream. ♪ looks like, feels like legs like pure silk ♪ how are you doing?ne. hi, evelyn. i know it's been a difficult time since your mom passed away. yeah. i miss her a lot, but i'm okay. wow. that was fast. this is the check i've been waiting for. mom had a guaranteed acceptance life insurance policy through the colonial penn program, and this will really help with the cost of her fina
dr. travis -- loves best. dr. travis, dr. lisa, dr. ordon, and dr. sears. be. >> our entire audience is working out today! loving it! >> when it comes to your health -- >> we have the answers! >> get fit! >> today's all about teaching you how it crave things good for you. >> have fun! [ applause ] >> oh, no. we have run out of towels. >> with "the doctors" month of medicine. coming in january! [ crowd cheering ] [ applause ] [ male...
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dr. sanjay gupta. a man who helped design president obama's health care law and mitt romney plan in massachusetts is getting angry. >>> a woman who thought she faced a choice between beating cancer and having kids. >>> plus, dr. andrew weil, on how to beat the holiday blues. >>> first, i have an update on a little boy named youssif. he's become a friend of mine. his story began in iraq and began with some of the most unimaginable cruelty i've heard. it struck a chord as a father and a journalist and struck a chord with millions around the world. masked men came to his home, covered him with kerosene, and set this little boy on fire. it's hard to imagine that anyone could do that to a child. you know, youssif's story isn't so much about cruelty. it's about strength, it's about healing and courage. here's our story. >> reporter: now 9, it's hard to believe that this is the same youssif we met in baghdad four years ago. there's no trace of the sullen, with drawn, and angry boy he was once. n
dr. sanjay gupta. a man who helped design president obama's health care law and mitt romney plan in massachusetts is getting angry. >>> a woman who thought she faced a choice between beating cancer and having kids. >>> plus, dr. andrew weil, on how to beat the holiday blues. >>> first, i have an update on a little boy named youssif. he's become a friend of mine. his story began in iraq and began with some of the most unimaginable cruelty i've heard. it struck a chord...