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Nov 20, 2014
11/14
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WJLA
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a place were all, especially the eccentrics, have always been welcome. you call yourself eccentric.s like new orleans is the right place for this. >> i do fit in here. people aren't afraid to let their freak flags fly. >> reporter: and film it at the same time. for "nightline," byron pitts, in new orleans. >>> coming up, jennifer aniston, about her role in "horrible bosses," and why she was a little scared to play a sex addict. i took mucinex to help get rid of my mucusy congestion. i'm good all day. [announcer:] mucinex keeps working. not 4, not 6, but 12 hours. let's end this >>> be careful now. not that there's anything that's going to get you in trouble. but if you've ever thought about getting revenge on your bosses, you by sympathize with the characters in "horrible bosses." >> reporter: jennifer aniston, reprising her role as the sex-addicted dentist in "horrible bosses 2." ♪ >> there was embarrassing. >> reporter: as the three employees looking to take back their lives. what was it like coming back to set? >> we're 20-plus years knowing each other. so we've got that on our s
a place were all, especially the eccentrics, have always been welcome. you call yourself eccentric.s like new orleans is the right place for this. >> i do fit in here. people aren't afraid to let their freak flags fly. >> reporter: and film it at the same time. for "nightline," byron pitts, in new orleans. >>> coming up, jennifer aniston, about her role in "horrible bosses," and why she was a little scared to play a sex addict. i took mucinex to help get...
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115
Nov 20, 2014
11/14
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KGO
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a place were all, especially the eccentrics, have always been welcome. you call yourself eccentric. new orleans is the right place for this. >> i do fit in here. people aren't afraid to let their freak flags fly. >> reporter: and film it at the same time. for "nightline," byron new orleans. >>> coming up, jennifer aniston, about her role in "horrible bosses," and why she was a little scared to play a sex addict. i took mucinex to help get rid of my mucusy congestion. i'm good all day. [announcer:] mucinex keeps working. not 4, not 6, but 12 hours. let's end this mblankie that gets filthy but he's got such sensitive skin that you worry about what you use in the laundry so i use new tide pods free & gentle to get a deep clean that's gentle on skin. ohhh new tide pods free & gentle you use tide pods? yeh. that little guy cleans, brightens and fight stains so now i can focus on more pressing matters woo your sweet peppers aren't next to your hot peppers. gasp tide pods three times the stain removal power available at target which means it's time for the volkswagen sign-then-drive event.
a place were all, especially the eccentrics, have always been welcome. you call yourself eccentric. new orleans is the right place for this. >> i do fit in here. people aren't afraid to let their freak flags fly. >> reporter: and film it at the same time. for "nightline," byron new orleans. >>> coming up, jennifer aniston, about her role in "horrible bosses," and why she was a little scared to play a sex addict. i took mucinex to help get rid of my...
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Nov 15, 2014
11/14
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KYW
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the killing of the olympic wrestler dave schultz by the eccentric millionaire john dupont came to theig screen. fox catcher is out in limited release tonight. before you see it find out what really hammed. we now go deep inside this case as our natasha brown talks exclusively with key players who were in the middle of it all. >> reporter: in january 1996 john dupont an hair to the dupont company chemical fortune drove to the guest house on his sprawling estate known as fox catcher farm in newton square and shot and killed 36 year old david schultz. schultz an olympic res leng gold med list lived there with his family and had trained like hundreds of other athletes at the estate run by dupont. it's a moment that brought richard show berg a swimming coach to his niece. >> he said, dick, john dupont shot and killed dave schultz and i fell to the ground. >> reporter: stunned to collapse richard spent 10 years coaching at the world class athletic facility built by dupont. a team fox catcher banner still hangs on the wall at germantown academy where he's coached swimming for four decades. >
the killing of the olympic wrestler dave schultz by the eccentric millionaire john dupont came to theig screen. fox catcher is out in limited release tonight. before you see it find out what really hammed. we now go deep inside this case as our natasha brown talks exclusively with key players who were in the middle of it all. >> reporter: in january 1996 john dupont an hair to the dupont company chemical fortune drove to the guest house on his sprawling estate known as fox catcher farm in...
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Nov 25, 2014
11/14
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WUSA
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she's a little eccentric. uh-huh. six cats is eccentric. anything over ten-- that's, uh, certifiable. she's lonely. uh-huh. wonder why. yo. check this out. maybe helen had a green thumb after all. why are they keeping us here like caged animals? i think it's for our own safety. they think one of us killed helen. i thought helen killed herself. helen? she used to catch spiders in the kitchen and let them go outside. she wouldn't hurt a fly. did any of you know her well? i did. she was really nice. she used to bake things and bring them into us all the time. i can't believe she's gone. does she have a boyfriend? why are you even here, beale? what did you do to get booted from your ivory tower? nothing. he's probably a plant... here to spy on us. no, i'm not. it's about time. are we free to go? not yet. we gotta get some dna samples first, from each of you. oh, come on. let's just get it over with, unless you have something to hide. it's the principle. open wide. you're up, man. i'm doing so under protest. oops. sorry. that's quite all right.
she's a little eccentric. uh-huh. six cats is eccentric. anything over ten-- that's, uh, certifiable. she's lonely. uh-huh. wonder why. yo. check this out. maybe helen had a green thumb after all. why are they keeping us here like caged animals? i think it's for our own safety. they think one of us killed helen. i thought helen killed herself. helen? she used to catch spiders in the kitchen and let them go outside. she wouldn't hurt a fly. did any of you know her well? i did. she was really...
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Nov 25, 2014
11/14
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KYW
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she's a little eccentric. uh-huh. six cats is eccentric.nything over ten-- that's, uh, certifiable. she's lonely. uh-huh. wonder why. yo. check this out. maybe helen had a green thumb after all. why are they keeping us here like caged animals? i think it's for our own safety. they think one of us killed helen. i thought helen killed herself. helen? she used to catch spiders in the kitchen and let them go outside. she wouldn't hurt a fly. did any of you know her well? i did. she was really nice. she used to bake things and bring them into us all the time. i can't believe she's gone. does she have a boyfriend? why are you even here, beale? what did you do to get booted from your ivory tower? nothing. he's probably a plant... here to spy on us. no, i'm not. it's about time. are we free to go? not yet. we gotta get some dna samples first, from each of you. oh, come on. let's just get it over with, unless you have something to hide. it's the principle. open wide. you're up, man. i'm doing so under protest. oops. sorry. that's quite all right. we
she's a little eccentric. uh-huh. six cats is eccentric.nything over ten-- that's, uh, certifiable. she's lonely. uh-huh. wonder why. yo. check this out. maybe helen had a green thumb after all. why are they keeping us here like caged animals? i think it's for our own safety. they think one of us killed helen. i thought helen killed herself. helen? she used to catch spiders in the kitchen and let them go outside. she wouldn't hurt a fly. did any of you know her well? i did. she was really nice....
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Nov 7, 2014
11/14
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MSNBCW
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so james inhoff may seem like an eccentric to avoid climate catastrophe.ng me now, political blogger for esquire.com. charlie, your rea to james inhof reclaiming the gavel in that committee? >> i don't know if it's a gavel el as much as a whoopi cushion at this point. this is now the position of the republican party. it is now an untenable position to accept the fact of climate change. you can't do it. in fact, to me, on tuesday night, when it comes to issues and leaving the minimum wage ref ren da aside, the big issue was voter suppression. scott walker elected, and chris kovach got reelected in kansas. the big loser was climate change. >> yeah, and the thing i find frightening about 245 committee chairman ship is they actually have the entire sort of fossil fuels industry and actually had their siets set on two concrete targets. they're already talking about the first big bipartisan to compromise. they're going to have the ability to do that through appropriation bills who seems like a ridiculous characterer, but is kind of go going to be the point of th
so james inhoff may seem like an eccentric to avoid climate catastrophe.ng me now, political blogger for esquire.com. charlie, your rea to james inhof reclaiming the gavel in that committee? >> i don't know if it's a gavel el as much as a whoopi cushion at this point. this is now the position of the republican party. it is now an untenable position to accept the fact of climate change. you can't do it. in fact, to me, on tuesday night, when it comes to issues and leaving the minimum wage...
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Nov 26, 2014
11/14
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KQEH
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for two bars where i would change the time signature so to do it in notations, it was excite eccentricand instrumentalist that you fell in love with. >> first of all, he could play with me. you have to know what those time signatures are. you're basically playing in a groove and you go through a shuffle. i found it very interesting what he said because it is so articulate from a drummers point of view. for him it was a piece of cake. he sailed through it like a champ. i said to henry, set me up facing the drummer. he was real cute. i fell in love, yeah. >> i want to get right to the project. you say joni that this box set is rising from the phoenix of the ashes of two dead projects. a ballet and a horrendous il conceived box set. tell me how this ends up being the project of those two failed projects. >> i got put no a back contract and then i got sick. with management trying to keep putting money into my pocket, they send a burglar into my stash where i keep my outsteata. i had to budget and be comical. if it was a good take. i'd put them on. there weren't a lot of outtakes. the thing
for two bars where i would change the time signature so to do it in notations, it was excite eccentricand instrumentalist that you fell in love with. >> first of all, he could play with me. you have to know what those time signatures are. you're basically playing in a groove and you go through a shuffle. i found it very interesting what he said because it is so articulate from a drummers point of view. for him it was a piece of cake. he sailed through it like a champ. i said to henry, set...
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Nov 17, 2014
11/14
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WCAU
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but eccentric is not -- >> it was a weird mike, says natalie.here. >> what does that mean? >> really what it means is we probably all have about 80 million. that's why it's called swapping spit. it all evens out. >> they say that, actually, having that other person -- your mate's germs can actually boost your immune system. >> see? >> so, you know -- >> there you have it. >> -- there's benefits to that. >> that's what i said in college and nobody believed me. boosts your immunity. it's the science. >> was that your move, willie? >> it never worked. >> christina since high school, right? >> yes. >> you guys have been forever for -- >> are we supposed to stop kissing? now you know and what do you do with that information? >> there's nothing really harmful. if you were sick, then it would be. >> why do the study? why? we're the only species that really french kisses, too. >> is that true? >> yeah. >> is that science also? >> we're the only species that french kiss? >> you don't see monkeys french kissing. >> they don't speak french. >> my dog tries
but eccentric is not -- >> it was a weird mike, says natalie.here. >> what does that mean? >> really what it means is we probably all have about 80 million. that's why it's called swapping spit. it all evens out. >> they say that, actually, having that other person -- your mate's germs can actually boost your immune system. >> see? >> so, you know -- >> there you have it. >> -- there's benefits to that. >> that's what i said in college and...
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Nov 2, 2014
11/14
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WCAU
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we later learned dupont was mentally ill and very eccentric. he drove his cars into ponds.ots of people helped him spend his money. he was a generous friend to area law enforcement, but he was also paranoid and jealous with his wrestlers, and he snapped. >> january 26th, 1996. >> i remember the police scanner blairing in our newsroom, and my editor saying to me, there's something going on at foxcatcher. >> reporter: jeff blumenthal was a young newspaper reporter at the time. he went to foxcatcher where he learned dupont shot and killed champion wrestler john schultz. he held police at bay until they captured him two days later. blumenthal is now a reporter. he remembers the international coverage of the shooting, the trial, and all the bizarre behavior that is now captured on the soon-to-be released film. >> he never shaved, to his beard got progressively longer and longer and he wore the same sweat suit if i remember every single day. >> there's a screening of "foxcatcher" on monday night in philadelphia. dave schultz's widow is going to be there. on november 21st, the phi
we later learned dupont was mentally ill and very eccentric. he drove his cars into ponds.ots of people helped him spend his money. he was a generous friend to area law enforcement, but he was also paranoid and jealous with his wrestlers, and he snapped. >> january 26th, 1996. >> i remember the police scanner blairing in our newsroom, and my editor saying to me, there's something going on at foxcatcher. >> reporter: jeff blumenthal was a young newspaper reporter at the time....
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Nov 30, 2014
11/14
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WJLA
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. >> clearly, a disruptor, willing to put yourself out there, willing to risk being called eccentric. clearly brilliant and still running a publiclcly traded company that keeps growing. what do your shareholders say when you are pushing the envelope like this? byrne of them are named -- >> that helps. >> another 35% are a canadian company, fairfax, an insurance company, sort of the warren buffett of canada. thatare quite unique in they share my feelings about wall street. i think -- it's not why they invested in us -- but as this flight route, ey stood behind me 100%. their attitude is frankly go get those bums. >> a man with many ideas and passions and not willing to settlele for one. patrick byrne, thank you for joining us on "washington business report." >> straightahead, our small business spotlight. anlook at a woman who was innovator 26 years ago and continues to be today. we will be right back. >> in our small business spotlight, a vision, plan, and a whole lot of determination. back in 1998, the nonprogrammers were rare, but fran craig did not let stereotypes or label slow her
. >> clearly, a disruptor, willing to put yourself out there, willing to risk being called eccentric. clearly brilliant and still running a publiclcly traded company that keeps growing. what do your shareholders say when you are pushing the envelope like this? byrne of them are named -- >> that helps. >> another 35% are a canadian company, fairfax, an insurance company, sort of the warren buffett of canada. thatare quite unique in they share my feelings about wall street. i...
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Nov 15, 2014
11/14
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CNNW
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but your new movie, "fox catcher j you do play the eccentric millionaire john due pontd. he basically lures some elite level olympian wrestlers in, and it ends very badly. but your character is struggling for credibility and he thinks being associated with these olympians, the glory of the sport, that's going to give him the identity he was looking for. >> he wanted to find himself through his athletes because he wanted some of their greatness to rub off on him. and it's absurd because he set himself up as a coach to these premier athletes and he wasn't. and he didn't really know much about it at all. and when we were shooting, i honestly tried to learn as little as i could about wrestling because they did show me a few moves and i learned them and our coach said, no, no, you're already better than dupont was. >> do you remember seeing the scenes from your most popular movies that would not really sync up with this film. why the change of pace? >> because it was a change of pace. and he's a great, great director and i wanted to work with him. >> plus you got to wear that
but your new movie, "fox catcher j you do play the eccentric millionaire john due pontd. he basically lures some elite level olympian wrestlers in, and it ends very badly. but your character is struggling for credibility and he thinks being associated with these olympians, the glory of the sport, that's going to give him the identity he was looking for. >> he wanted to find himself through his athletes because he wanted some of their greatness to rub off on him. and it's absurd...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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WJLA
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others describe you as eccentric. >> i get that a lot. >> how do you marry your two worlds?you are still growing this company, innovating, and yet you are a disruptor. >> when i became the ceo, i thought people expected me to give up my first amendment rights. i have a lot of ideas of how things could be improved. being around wall street since 2002, but figured out a lot. ias up there in the mix with the brokers and hedge funds. it became very obvious there was a lot of criminality going on. some hedge funds were working together to do illal things. guys got indicted and go to jail. i arted thinking about how that couldld be exposed. eventually i decided that washshington does not really do its job protecting us. i started thinking about ways we could approach the problem. the technology presented itself, with bitcoin. not cryptoit is currency, but creating a crypto finance system, a stock market based on this technology, rather than wall street as it exists. >> let's talk about overstock. you have got 1500 colleagues or more at your company. you seem to say that you would
others describe you as eccentric. >> i get that a lot. >> how do you marry your two worlds?you are still growing this company, innovating, and yet you are a disruptor. >> when i became the ceo, i thought people expected me to give up my first amendment rights. i have a lot of ideas of how things could be improved. being around wall street since 2002, but figured out a lot. ias up there in the mix with the brokers and hedge funds. it became very obvious there was a lot of...
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Nov 27, 2014
11/14
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COM
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. >> jon: he plays this character dupont who is sort of a twisted eccentric, rich, plays it, it's not even acting. it's being. >> does he disappear. >> jon: let me tell you something, i'm watching it, with pacino, al and i went to the movie. al turns to me in the middle of it, i don't know who that guy is, but i'm quitting. because that guy is so acting. what would they call t good. >> acting-- good acting. it is ridiculous, dude. did you have any-- when you watch it, does it even feel like you? >> do you answer remember it? it is an incredible performance. >> i will admit t was weird. it was weird. we wept away for three months and that was three hours every day getting into that stuff. and it was strange. this real guy, and we modelled after this real guy. >> jon: the gestures, the voice, everything. and it doesn't feel, you know i'm talking you watch a movie and go oh, look at that guy, actoring, doesn't feel like that at all. >> thanks. >> jon: it's like inhabiting. and you were here for years and i never thought you were talented. you were, you know, we-- we would have you out th
. >> jon: he plays this character dupont who is sort of a twisted eccentric, rich, plays it, it's not even acting. it's being. >> does he disappear. >> jon: let me tell you something, i'm watching it, with pacino, al and i went to the movie. al turns to me in the middle of it, i don't know who that guy is, but i'm quitting. because that guy is so acting. what would they call t good. >> acting-- good acting. it is ridiculous, dude. did you have any-- when you watch it,...
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Nov 29, 2014
11/14
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KQED
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his eccentric behavior was born out of the things we've seen in those days which were illegal. he manages to turn challenges into the good even in the throws of his body being racked by the injections. >> charlie: we get to know him when he's a mathematician and enigma is the machine the nazis use and they have been ukesful and it was having a devastating effect. they could communicate within the nazi empire without any fear of detection. >> we can all hear it. there's a line in it that any school child with an am radio could pick up the signals because you couldn't translate it. every day they changed the code and there are 159 million and more possible variations and he took an idea from the cryptographers and adapted it in a speck tar lar way it needed to be to beat the enigma machine. >> charlie: and there was rejection at first and somehow he got churc churchill to sign n letting him do what he wanted to do. >> i can't imagine the phrasing but you can't imagine the kind of strong command from the commander-in-chief. it was complete support. >> charlie: this is alan turing
his eccentric behavior was born out of the things we've seen in those days which were illegal. he manages to turn challenges into the good even in the throws of his body being racked by the injections. >> charlie: we get to know him when he's a mathematician and enigma is the machine the nazis use and they have been ukesful and it was having a devastating effect. they could communicate within the nazi empire without any fear of detection. >> we can all hear it. there's a line in it...
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Nov 21, 2014
11/14
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KCSM
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britain has a long tradition of fringe parties, but mainstream politicians who dismissed the party as eccentrics are now seriously worried. voters in a local election seems set to hand victory to nigel for roger and his anti-european u.k. independence party. ukip wants to see britain leave the european union and impose tougher restrictions on immigration and migrants. today's vote could put a second defector into parliament for ukip. >> they're the only party that have a nondiscriminatory system which we want to people outside of the eu. they should be treated fairly and equally rather than having a system which discriminates in favor of europeans. >> the main political parties are showing the strain. not only are they hemorrhaging voter support, they are also talking to up -- talking tough on ukip themes. >> i believe people should come here to work and contribute, and we need to take more action on people being able to claim benefits. >> ukip has already succeeded in pushing established parties into more populist positions on immigration, and conservative minister david cameron has promised a
britain has a long tradition of fringe parties, but mainstream politicians who dismissed the party as eccentrics are now seriously worried. voters in a local election seems set to hand victory to nigel for roger and his anti-european u.k. independence party. ukip wants to see britain leave the european union and impose tougher restrictions on immigration and migrants. today's vote could put a second defector into parliament for ukip. >> they're the only party that have a nondiscriminatory...
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Nov 7, 2014
11/14
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MSNBCW
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so james inhofe may seem like an eccentric uncle you can politely nod at and change topics, but he'sl blogger for esquire.com, and a longtime inhofe chronicler. charlie, your reaction to the once and future king, james inhofe, reclaiming the gavel in that committee. >> well, i don't know that it's a gavel so much as a whoopee cushion at this point. but as you said, chris, this is now the position of the republican party. it is now an untenable position in the republican party, to be, to accept the fact of anthro anthropogenic climate change. scott walker got elected, john houston got re-elected, over nina taylor, who ran specifically on that. and chris killback got re-elected in kansas. the big loser among the issues was climate change. >> and the thing i find frightening about inhofe in that committee chairmanship is that they actually have their -- the entire sort of fossil fuel industry on the right had their sights set on two real concrete targets. they want the keystone pipeline built. and they want to go after these epa regulations and they're going to have the ability to do th
so james inhofe may seem like an eccentric uncle you can politely nod at and change topics, but he'sl blogger for esquire.com, and a longtime inhofe chronicler. charlie, your reaction to the once and future king, james inhofe, reclaiming the gavel in that committee. >> well, i don't know that it's a gavel so much as a whoopee cushion at this point. but as you said, chris, this is now the position of the republican party. it is now an untenable position in the republican party, to be, to...
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Nov 8, 2014
11/14
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KCSM
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it was probably a very eccentric little establishment by most standards. but i was taught very optimistically in the sense that people always conveyed the idea that they were giving me something really of value, something that would make me richer no matter what i did, you know, in life. that, you know, giving me my mind, you know? and i think that this is a spectacularly efficient model of education. i think that these assumptions that, you know, making everybody teach to a test, and so on, is valuable in some way. we're just destroying what's the best impulse, the most successful impulse in our educational system. >> so what's happened to that old impulse you once described, that lay behind, and i'm quoting you, "the dissemination of information and learning, the will to ensure that the public will be competent to make the weightiest decisions and to conform society to its best sense of the possible." what's happened to that impulse? >> i don't know. i think that people, you know, it was, it's always been a human temptation. but it has been an ethics and
it was probably a very eccentric little establishment by most standards. but i was taught very optimistically in the sense that people always conveyed the idea that they were giving me something really of value, something that would make me richer no matter what i did, you know, in life. that, you know, giving me my mind, you know? and i think that this is a spectacularly efficient model of education. i think that these assumptions that, you know, making everybody teach to a test, and so on, is...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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KCSM
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and he is working with two very eccentric men, sadat, longed for peace. >> yeah. >> israel had captured the sinai in 196 and sadat tried to recapture it in '73 and scared the israelis, you know, just was a -- took them out of their sense of smugness, and that they had -- the sinai, they were at that point, you know, they were setting up dive shops on the red sea and so on, pretty much annexed sinai and suddenly the egyptian army comes pooring across and reshapes the thinking but not necessarily toward peace. you know, in the thinking of a lot of israelis, we can't afford to give up sinai. >> yep. >> that's our 100-miles of sand between us and the main egyptian forces where would we be in the egyptians had started at the edge of our border? he was -- sadat was really unusual in his determination to seek peace and went in november of '77 to address them in jerusalem. you can't imagine what an earth shaking thing this was. >> of course. >> an arab going to -- israel wasn't even on the arab maps. didn't talk about it. and flew from cairo and the egyptians didn't know what to think. they wer
and he is working with two very eccentric men, sadat, longed for peace. >> yeah. >> israel had captured the sinai in 196 and sadat tried to recapture it in '73 and scared the israelis, you know, just was a -- took them out of their sense of smugness, and that they had -- the sinai, they were at that point, you know, they were setting up dive shops on the red sea and so on, pretty much annexed sinai and suddenly the egyptian army comes pooring across and reshapes the thinking but not...
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Nov 28, 2014
11/14
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CNNW
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like the whole meal, it's eccentric and delicious.ome. >> i haven't had so much fruits and nuts since altaban. i told, mick, this is a bad crowd. back of the shop, but he's like, man, we can't disappoint the fans. ah, memories. alright, so this tylenol arthritis lasts 8 hours but aleve can last 12 hours. and aleve is proven to work better on pain than tylenol arthritis. so why am i still thinking about this? how are ya? good. aleve. proven better on pain. ♪ just look at those two. happy. in love. and saving so much money on their car insurance by switching to geico... well, just look at this setting. do you have the ring? oh, helzberg diamonds. another beautiful setting. i'm not crying. i've just got a bit of sand in my eyes, that's all. geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. >>> "in tangier, i lived in one room in the native quarter. i have not taken a bath in a year nor changed my clothes or removed them, except to stick a needle every hour in the fibrous gray wooden flesh in terminal addicti
like the whole meal, it's eccentric and delicious.ome. >> i haven't had so much fruits and nuts since altaban. i told, mick, this is a bad crowd. back of the shop, but he's like, man, we can't disappoint the fans. ah, memories. alright, so this tylenol arthritis lasts 8 hours but aleve can last 12 hours. and aleve is proven to work better on pain than tylenol arthritis. so why am i still thinking about this? how are ya? good. aleve. proven better on pain. ♪ just look at those two....
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Nov 16, 2014
11/14
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KGO
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hurricanes home game with eccentric energy echos of the old orange bowl tonight, expected to reignite rivalry with undefeated florida state. espn saturday night football on abc a presentation of the acc on espn. tonight's game between undefeated number three florida state and the miami hurricanes. the seminoles are the only power five unbeaten. mississippi state fought back but lost to alabama. how far will they
hurricanes home game with eccentric energy echos of the old orange bowl tonight, expected to reignite rivalry with undefeated florida state. espn saturday night football on abc a presentation of the acc on espn. tonight's game between undefeated number three florida state and the miami hurricanes. the seminoles are the only power five unbeaten. mississippi state fought back but lost to alabama. how far will they
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112
Nov 20, 2014
11/14
by
WRC
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. >>> why she was considered as eccentric as she was wealthy. plus, adding a little latin flavor to your thanksgiving turkey with a help of one of the country's most successfu you used to sleep like a champ. then boom... what happened? stress, fun, bad habits, kids, now what? let's build a new, smarter bed using the dualair chambers to sense your movement, heartbeat, breathing. introducing the sleep number bed with sleepiq™ technology. it tracks your sleep and tells you how to adjust for a good, better and an awesome night. the difference? try adjusting up or down you'll know cuz sleep iq™ tells you. give the gift of amazing sleep, only at a sleep number store. find our best buy rated c2 queen mattress with sleepiq. know better sleep with sleep number. >>> you're going to be paying a little more to put the big bird on the table with all the fixings this thanksgiving. dinner's going to cost you about $49.41. th 37 cents more than last year, 2013. whipped cream, coffee, sugar, eggs and sweet potatoes are at least 20 cents more than last. foods suc
. >>> why she was considered as eccentric as she was wealthy. plus, adding a little latin flavor to your thanksgiving turkey with a help of one of the country's most successfu you used to sleep like a champ. then boom... what happened? stress, fun, bad habits, kids, now what? let's build a new, smarter bed using the dualair chambers to sense your movement, heartbeat, breathing. introducing the sleep number bed with sleepiq™ technology. it tracks your sleep and tells you how to adjust...
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77
Nov 16, 2014
11/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 77
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. >> robert graham, an eccentric millionaire who believed the brain power of the human race was in declinentelligence. >> it was called the repository for germinal choice. and the press got wind of it and people went up in arms, this is tampering with god. >> hidden amongst us are over 20chil
. >> robert graham, an eccentric millionaire who believed the brain power of the human race was in declinentelligence. >> it was called the repository for germinal choice. and the press got wind of it and people went up in arms, this is tampering with god. >> hidden amongst us are over 20chil
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60
Nov 28, 2014
11/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 60
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you're free to behave as eccentric or normal a fashion as you wish. >> you can be the freak that youyour day talking to a tree, you can do that without being frowned upon. >> they are in local government, such as it is. >> he has been here for some 40 years. it was a military area that was abandoned and then occupied by squatters and hippies, despite the fact that the different governments didn't really appreciate what was going on here, nobody actually had the will or strength to put people out. >> who makes up the traction? >> we do. >> what about the essentials, electric, water. >> we buy it from providers. but we do it as a commune as a collective. we pay only one bill. >> but i like the fact that my kids get to walk around the streets without worrying about being run over by a car. >> there's no hot trucks and no cars running in the streets. it's like a little village. it's very secure. >> are you a hippie? >> he is. >> two eggs smoking now. >> yes, chef. >> right down there, we have pusher street, probably the most famous part. >> the green section, right? >> yeah. >> buy weed
you're free to behave as eccentric or normal a fashion as you wish. >> you can be the freak that youyour day talking to a tree, you can do that without being frowned upon. >> they are in local government, such as it is. >> he has been here for some 40 years. it was a military area that was abandoned and then occupied by squatters and hippies, despite the fact that the different governments didn't really appreciate what was going on here, nobody actually had the will or...
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65
Nov 15, 2014
11/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 65
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. >> robert graham, an eccentric millionaire who believed the brain power of the human race was in decline had a solution. selectively breeding for intelligence. >> press got wind of it. people went up in arms. this is tampering with god. >> hidden amongst us are over 200 children that carry a secret buried deep in their dna. the genetic make up for academic excellence. >> we, as a species do need to make sure we are not slipping into on id rock si. >> did it work? >> are you a genius? >> tonight we meet and explore the legacy robert graham left behind. >> what is it like to try and create a better version of you? >> super weird. >>> so, nine years ago, i met this guy. he was 6'4" a doctor and as it turns out, a pretty good cook. i was instantly interested. i admittedly thought to myself, this guy could make a good baby daddy. paul and i got married. several years later, decided to start a family. but, the journey wasn't easy. after two miscarriages, we were finally successful. in 2013, we gave birth to our baby girl, jet. >> are you going to help daddy cook? all we cared about was having
. >> robert graham, an eccentric millionaire who believed the brain power of the human race was in decline had a solution. selectively breeding for intelligence. >> press got wind of it. people went up in arms. this is tampering with god. >> hidden amongst us are over 200 children that carry a secret buried deep in their dna. the genetic make up for academic excellence. >> we, as a species do need to make sure we are not slipping into on id rock si. >> did it work?...
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696
Nov 21, 2014
11/14
by
WGN
tv
eye 696
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in this true story, he plays eccentric millionaire, john du pont, who established a wrestling facility in the 90's at his "foxcatcher" farm, where he trained and mentored young amateur athletes. dean says, "foxcatcher" has oscar written all over it. it's a deans list "a." the stick of the forecast. >> today's high temperature warmer than what we have had but still cooler than normal. sun and clouds, clouds will increase. freezing rain advisory goes into effect tonight. tomorrow, high-temperature 47. good old rain for saturday and sunday. >> a quick update the car that ran into a house on oak lawn very close to 93 still has police on the scene. the stretch of construction on the jane addams still in place heading west bound from barrington to 72. both great plains will be closed until 6:00 a.m.. >> coming up and shooting at a restaurant. >> and the latest reaction to the present immigration overhaul and a surprising discovery on the moon. oh, i love game night. ooh, it's a house and a car! so far, you're horrible at this, flo. yeah, no talent for drawing, flo. house! car! oh, raise the
in this true story, he plays eccentric millionaire, john du pont, who established a wrestling facility in the 90's at his "foxcatcher" farm, where he trained and mentored young amateur athletes. dean says, "foxcatcher" has oscar written all over it. it's a deans list "a." the stick of the forecast. >> today's high temperature warmer than what we have had but still cooler than normal. sun and clouds, clouds will increase. freezing rain advisory goes into...
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55
Nov 16, 2014
11/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 55
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quote 0
. >> robert graham, an eccentric millionaire, who believed the brain power of the human race was in decline. >> it was called the repository for germinal choice, and the press got wind of it and people went up in arms. s
. >> robert graham, an eccentric millionaire, who believed the brain power of the human race was in decline. >> it was called the repository for germinal choice, and the press got wind of it and people went up in arms. s
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67
Nov 17, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 67
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he was known for all sorts of eccentric things like reciting the "iliad" in the middle of campus aretelling his friends the history of every church they passed. after college, he settled in new york. it was there he entered the map trade. he started at this department store which no longer exists, but had a small division that sold rare maps analysis. it was located just a dozen blocks from the new york public library. that is where his real education in maps began. he became so fascinated looking at the different maps and comparing them and realizing which mapmaker had copied from that he could not get enough of this topic and became incredibly knowledgeable in a short time. own as at out on his dealer, he was quite successful. the late 1980's was a very good time to become a map dealer because the prices were increasing exponentially. even wealthy people were no longer able to afford a lot of fine art. the prices had become unattainable. maps became a new way of collecting for folks who were wealthy but not billionaires. wall streetyers, types who would buy these rare maps, put the
he was known for all sorts of eccentric things like reciting the "iliad" in the middle of campus aretelling his friends the history of every church they passed. after college, he settled in new york. it was there he entered the map trade. he started at this department store which no longer exists, but had a small division that sold rare maps analysis. it was located just a dozen blocks from the new york public library. that is where his real education in maps began. he became so...
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221
Nov 16, 2014
11/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 221
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quote 0
. >> robert graham, an eccentric millionaire, who believed the brain power of the human race was in declinead a solution, selectively breeding for intelligence. >> it was called the repository for germinal choice, and the press got wind of it and people went up in arms. this is tampering with god. >> hidden amongst us are over 200 children that carry a secret buried deep in their dna. the genetic makeup for academic excellence. >> we as a species do need to make sure that we're not slipping into an idiocracy. >> did the experiment work? >> are you a genius? >> tonight we'll meet the prog againy of the experiment to create genius us and explore the legacy robert graham left behind. >> what is it like to try and create a version of you? >> super weird. >>> so nine years ago i met this guy. he was 6'4", a doctor, and as it turns out, a pretty good cook. i was instantly interested. i thought this guy could make a good baby daddy. paul and i got married, and several years later decided to start a family, but the journey wasn't easy. after two miscarriages, we were finally successful. when in 201
. >> robert graham, an eccentric millionaire, who believed the brain power of the human race was in declinead a solution, selectively breeding for intelligence. >> it was called the repository for germinal choice, and the press got wind of it and people went up in arms. this is tampering with god. >> hidden amongst us are over 200 children that carry a secret buried deep in their dna. the genetic makeup for academic excellence. >> we as a species do need to make sure...
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43
Nov 12, 2014
11/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 43
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quote 0
and i want to see if we can tell it in a way that did not limit it to just the eccentricities of oneme in one part of the world. >> you're a journalist who covers other people's stories, you go to prison, you write a book, you have a movie, what's this been like for you? >> it has been a little bit -- to put it mildly, because usually when they make films about nelson mandel a. they're usually dead to start with, and then the good thing is that i'm not dead. i'm not mandela. >> your father was imprisoned, your sister imprisoned in iran, and didn't you worry about the fact that you might get into trouble. >> yes, you're worried, and you're thinking about it sometimes, but it cannot stop you from doing your job. i was very cautious. the people i worked with knew that i was very cautious, and i always respected the law, but i couldn't do anything when they had a scenario for me, when they had a plan. >> john, why did you decide to do this? >> well, i think that part of the reason, maziar's ability, as he spoke earlier, he was trained to distance himself, so his observations in the memoi
and i want to see if we can tell it in a way that did not limit it to just the eccentricities of oneme in one part of the world. >> you're a journalist who covers other people's stories, you go to prison, you write a book, you have a movie, what's this been like for you? >> it has been a little bit -- to put it mildly, because usually when they make films about nelson mandel a. they're usually dead to start with, and then the good thing is that i'm not dead. i'm not mandela....
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54
Nov 17, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 54
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furor in -- furthermore, they're also expressing in a very eccentric and bizarre way, an unease with the nation state, which served us well during our industrialization period, and mobilizing the country for warfare, about it -- but it also -- it's not so good now that our society is becoming more global, whether we like it or not, we are inextricably combined with one another. economically, when one market goes down, the other markets through the world plummet that day. what happens in the middle east will have a blowback in canada, or the other west. we cannot live without one another, and yet our nationalistic ideologies encourage to us focus too anywhere rely on the nation and that's particularly true in the mideast, where the nation state set up by the british and the french 100 years ago were arbitrary, bizarre, and put together a whole lot of incompatable peoples, with -- and tell them to create a nation. very, very difficult to do. almost set up to fail. and so -- and also they're modern, too, and their very successful economic handling of all the loot and oil they've been ac
furor in -- furthermore, they're also expressing in a very eccentric and bizarre way, an unease with the nation state, which served us well during our industrialization period, and mobilizing the country for warfare, about it -- but it also -- it's not so good now that our society is becoming more global, whether we like it or not, we are inextricably combined with one another. economically, when one market goes down, the other markets through the world plummet that day. what happens in the...
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41
Nov 16, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 41
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quote 0
furthermore they are also expressing in a very eccentric and bizarre way and unease with the nation-state which served us well during industrialization period and mobilizing the country from warfare but also it's not so good now that our society is becoming more global whether we like it or not. we are inextricably combined with one another. economically when one market goes down the other markets throughout the world plummet that day. what happens in the middle east will have a blowback in canada or in the west. we cannot live without one another and yet our nationalistic ideology is focused too narrowly on the nation and that is particularly true in the middle east where the nation-state set up by the british and the french 100 years ago where an arbitrary bizarre and put together a whole lot of incompatible peoples and told them to create a nation. very very difficult to do. you are set up to fail. also in their very successful economic handling of all the oil that they had been acquiring. they will work a very successful corporation in the modern sense. so going back to the dark ages
furthermore they are also expressing in a very eccentric and bizarre way and unease with the nation-state which served us well during industrialization period and mobilizing the country from warfare but also it's not so good now that our society is becoming more global whether we like it or not. we are inextricably combined with one another. economically when one market goes down the other markets throughout the world plummet that day. what happens in the middle east will have a blowback in...