64
64
Sep 25, 2020
09/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
the thing that tickled me about ethel, ethel was an immigrant from hungary. she talked about mackie and how she had influenced her to dress. she said mackie dressed her. she said she never addressed -- overdressed mean. she dressed me as a secretary. she spoiled me for cheap clothes. mackie took her on family visits twice a year to paris. she was treated to a finishing school. refined living. what was interesting about -- and that mackie understood the rule that fashion played in getting people -- including the reporters because that is what they want to report on. what mrs. mackie was wearing. >> imagine the press? >> i can't. she said the reporters never left one of our events without a statement from mrs. mackie about the women's suffrage movement. the other thing that was marvelous about listening to it instead of reading it is that the historian was interviewing ethel not because she had been mrs. mackie's secretary, but because leader and life she marries harry hopkins. harry hopkins, as many of you know went on to be fdr's key aides. a historian keeps
the thing that tickled me about ethel, ethel was an immigrant from hungary. she talked about mackie and how she had influenced her to dress. she said mackie dressed her. she said she never addressed -- overdressed mean. she dressed me as a secretary. she spoiled me for cheap clothes. mackie took her on family visits twice a year to paris. she was treated to a finishing school. refined living. what was interesting about -- and that mackie understood the rule that fashion played in getting people...
45
45
Sep 12, 2020
09/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 0
so i didn't connect it up to harvey's life, to ethel's life, to harold's life. i simply left it at he's a horrible person, which he is. so i don't want democrats to do that again. not to excuse his awe business mall, appalling, sewer-level character, but to make it about voters, not about trump. see, this is the trump trap that lissa referred to. every narcissist wants the conversation tonight to be about themself, and -- to be about themself, and what i falled to do is turn the camera away from trump and back to that farm family. the reason willie wrote in it is i wrote a whole chapter about rural america, and he loved it. and that meant a lot to me. we've got to reconnect with folks. i think now after four years people know trump's a big. >> right. >> but how does it affect me. >> so, look, 88 days, and you write in the book that trump would like to make this about him, but we need to make it about the voters. the trump trap, as you just mentioned. with covid a still major issue, can the democrats learn anything from 2016 and really focus on those issues that
so i didn't connect it up to harvey's life, to ethel's life, to harold's life. i simply left it at he's a horrible person, which he is. so i don't want democrats to do that again. not to excuse his awe business mall, appalling, sewer-level character, but to make it about voters, not about trump. see, this is the trump trap that lissa referred to. every narcissist wants the conversation tonight to be about themself, and -- to be about themself, and what i falled to do is turn the camera away...
11
11
tv
eye 11
favorite 0
quote 0
up who talks to people who follows her along the way maurice and critics alike joining us from ethel saw stops. in the other side of climate change. to suit. up some stupid people. what ideas do they have of their future. g.w. dot com can make a service for the meeting to give them some clue to the term. i was issued when i arrived here i slept with people in a room. it was hard i was free. i even got white hair. learning that shit man language never got this gives me a little bunch maybe 2 in truck loads of say you want to know their story muslims are fighting and reliable information for margaret. frankfurt. international gateway to the best connection self in road and rail. located in the heart of europe you are connected to the whole world. experience outstanding shopping and dining offers and try our services. biala dast transferred city managed by truck bought. this is it abuse lie from berlin breaking points to police officers shot after not a single officer was charged in the u.s. over the killing of brianna taylor unrest erupted in louisville and across the nation in the wak
up who talks to people who follows her along the way maurice and critics alike joining us from ethel saw stops. in the other side of climate change. to suit. up some stupid people. what ideas do they have of their future. g.w. dot com can make a service for the meeting to give them some clue to the term. i was issued when i arrived here i slept with people in a room. it was hard i was free. i even got white hair. learning that shit man language never got this gives me a little bunch maybe 2 in...
109
109
Sep 15, 2020
09/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 109
favorite 0
quote 0
i heard something to happen so iran outside and i saw ethel in the back of the ambulance.mbulance door. it was shocking to me to see what happened. it was clear but i didn't see the senator after that. this picture really made me feel bad. i was 21 years old when i did it and the idea of intruding on somebody's grief like that, that's not something i like to do or i don't think anybody likes to do, but i did it. many years, later i asked mrs. kennedy, i told ethel about i felt, she said don't worry, you were doing your job. she understood. those people have lived in the public life forever. 50 years after this day, the family invited me to be at the graveside with them to celebrate the life of robert kennedy on the day of his death. this is the picture i took a vessel. you can see, being a photographer about getting through the veneer of people souls. she had lived through so much. i caught this one moment and the sadness is evident. >> our theme really the hallmark of your career has been being at arlington, being in the room. what does that mean? >> it means to me that i
i heard something to happen so iran outside and i saw ethel in the back of the ambulance.mbulance door. it was shocking to me to see what happened. it was clear but i didn't see the senator after that. this picture really made me feel bad. i was 21 years old when i did it and the idea of intruding on somebody's grief like that, that's not something i like to do or i don't think anybody likes to do, but i did it. many years, later i asked mrs. kennedy, i told ethel about i felt, she said don't...
18
18
tv
eye 18
favorite 0
quote 0
to talk to people who followed her along the way the marist and critics alike joining us from ethel saw stuff for. some time. and smiling for. the next few days schonberg the most substance that. was so strong that it cannot be changed. we celebrated the 30th anniversary is reserved for cation october 3rd on d w. frank's food. international gateway to the best connection sells road and radio. located in the heart of europe connected to the whole world. experienced outstanding shopping and gunning offers triallists services. biala gassed at frankfurt airport city managed by from a bought. 50 w. news alive from birth that a devastating milestone in the united states the coronavirus pandemic a claims of more than 200000 american lives the highest death toll in the world what does that mean for the presidential election that in just 2 weeks away also on the show donald trump a lashes out at china at the u.n. a general assembly we want to hold accountable that they should switch but elise this plague onto the world china the u.s. president blames china for the spread of the coronavirus. and
to talk to people who followed her along the way the marist and critics alike joining us from ethel saw stuff for. some time. and smiling for. the next few days schonberg the most substance that. was so strong that it cannot be changed. we celebrated the 30th anniversary is reserved for cation october 3rd on d w. frank's food. international gateway to the best connection sells road and radio. located in the heart of europe connected to the whole world. experienced outstanding shopping and...
33
33
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
to talk to people and follow along the way maurice and critics would like to join us from ethel's law stops.
to talk to people and follow along the way maurice and critics would like to join us from ethel's law stops.
20
20
tv
eye 20
favorite 0
quote 0
to talk to people along the way maurice and critics alike joining us from ethel's la stuffs. it's hard to find an opening to my story. the tale of a small footnote in the history of our region. i can only write my own private memories of these 3 years of hope and anguish. is this a tale of triumph. or defeat. the ending to our story has not yet been written. was. the palestinian talks begin 40 days after the mexico in hamburg exactly the for peaceful morning was a full hour and when there are and you see blood on the streets and people are saying this is the peace that you promised us and you could not say don't forget it was only at the opi. wasn't there a ceremony we are all fun and rubbing and clean wasn't it beats. 1. 1 in march 94 we headed back to the negotiating table since the wave of suicide bombings is really close to border to 2 and a half 1000000 palestinians poverty was rising throughout the occupied territories and living conditions declined our people were losing faith in the peace process but i knew we must not give up. recently do the services see other son h
to talk to people along the way maurice and critics alike joining us from ethel's la stuffs. it's hard to find an opening to my story. the tale of a small footnote in the history of our region. i can only write my own private memories of these 3 years of hope and anguish. is this a tale of triumph. or defeat. the ending to our story has not yet been written. was. the palestinian talks begin 40 days after the mexico in hamburg exactly the for peaceful morning was a full hour and when there are...
291
291
Sep 7, 2020
09/20
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 291
favorite 0
quote 0
we believe at 20/20 the reason he killed the story he was best friends with ethel kennedy, the wife ofrious that i went public. i was the first million-dollar reporter in a very lucrative contract especially for 0 but i'd not yet signed the contract. >> i stuck my foot in my mouth. >> that's what makes a good reporter. >> i'm a good reporter but about employee. >> i knew i would not get hired by any of the other networks. i sailed my boat around the world. >> we were in the panama canal and i had been ejecting in and i had a phone call from chicago and i called sheldon cooper he had interesting project idea. he said we obtain the rights to the vault of al capone. we want to open the vault on "primetime" television life. >> th"the mystery of al capone'. >> the intense promotion was so ubiquitous that they were scarcely a person in this country that did not know the show was on. and they all watched. >> the show went on and i noticed we are digging in digging and not much is being turned up but i was still confident. i think when the vault turned out to be empty and everything crashed an
we believe at 20/20 the reason he killed the story he was best friends with ethel kennedy, the wife ofrious that i went public. i was the first million-dollar reporter in a very lucrative contract especially for 0 but i'd not yet signed the contract. >> i stuck my foot in my mouth. >> that's what makes a good reporter. >> i'm a good reporter but about employee. >> i knew i would not get hired by any of the other networks. i sailed my boat around the world. >> we...
177
177
Sep 6, 2020
09/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 177
favorite 0
quote 0
me,surprising thing to julius and ethel rosenberg get caught a few years later and they get executed.ars fuchs gets a sentence. happen?this nancy: they tried him for espionage. if it had been treason, he would have been hung. if he confessed, he thought maybe that would happen to him. they tried him for espionage, as far as i can tell. spying --ime he was he was spying for a friendly nation, they were allies, the russians were. it made a difference in their law and how they defined espionage versus treason. maximum for the espionage. he got out in nine for good behavior. our definitions are different and there were a lot of other politics involved. mccarthy had started. he did his west virginia speech -- he confessed and then they had out -- he had a week where they did not do anything with them. february, hemid went to west virginia. all of a sudden, there was all this information that came out at that moment just as mccarthy had this list of names was exactly when klaus was arrested. it was a tremendous whirlwind of communism. that had been going on for quite some time. u.s., and th
me,surprising thing to julius and ethel rosenberg get caught a few years later and they get executed.ars fuchs gets a sentence. happen?this nancy: they tried him for espionage. if it had been treason, he would have been hung. if he confessed, he thought maybe that would happen to him. they tried him for espionage, as far as i can tell. spying --ime he was he was spying for a friendly nation, they were allies, the russians were. it made a difference in their law and how they defined espionage...
74
74
Sep 13, 2020
09/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
so, what happened -- the surprising thing to me, you know, julius and ethel rosenberg get caught a few years later and they get executed. but klaus fuchs gets a 14-year sentence? nancy: yes. that is what it was. >> so why does this happen in british justice? fory: they tried him espionage, not treason. if it had been treason, he would have been hung. if he confessed, he thought maybe that would happen to him. but they tried him for espionage, as far as i can tell. because at the time he was spying, he was spying for a friendly nation. they were allies, the russians were. so, it made a difference in their own laws and how they defined espionage versus treason. so -- and 14 years was the maximum for espionage. he got out in nine for good behavior. whereas our definitions are different and there were a lot of other politics involved. as you said mccarthy had , started. he did his west virginia speech -- he confessed and then they had a week they did not do anything with him. on february 2.im mccarthy was mid-february, he went to west virginia. so it was just weeks. all of a sudden, there
so, what happened -- the surprising thing to me, you know, julius and ethel rosenberg get caught a few years later and they get executed. but klaus fuchs gets a 14-year sentence? nancy: yes. that is what it was. >> so why does this happen in british justice? fory: they tried him espionage, not treason. if it had been treason, he would have been hung. if he confessed, he thought maybe that would happen to him. but they tried him for espionage, as far as i can tell. because at the time he...
128
128
Sep 6, 2020
09/20
by
KNTV
tv
eye 128
favorite 0
quote 0
ethel carol in texas who just celebrated her 106th birthday.y to living a long life is to wake up every day and be grateful. we would be wise to listen. happy birthday. send us a photo with the #sundaytoday. you may see yourself next week even if you are not turning 106. . narrator: when you see this symbol you know you're watching television that is educational and informational. the more you know on nbc. narrator: today on "vets saving pets", an injury in the line of duty brings magnum to see dr. french. kevin: magnum has broken a rear molar on his lower jaw. dr. french: so, we have to pop those out and suture that closed. narrator: a dog struggles with some problematic parasites. james: my dog, electra, tested positive for heartworm. and it's a nasty, nasty parasite. narrator: and tiger's poor paws have come under fire. dr. boyd: he must've walked through the fire because he burned all of his footpads completely off. narrator: with over 20,000 patients each year, this is one of the busiest emergency animal hospitals in north america.
ethel carol in texas who just celebrated her 106th birthday.y to living a long life is to wake up every day and be grateful. we would be wise to listen. happy birthday. send us a photo with the #sundaytoday. you may see yourself next week even if you are not turning 106. . narrator: when you see this symbol you know you're watching television that is educational and informational. the more you know on nbc. narrator: today on "vets saving pets", an injury in the line of duty brings...
137
137
Sep 12, 2020
09/20
by
KGO
tv
eye 137
favorite 0
quote 0
we are back with that iconic lucy and ethel moment from "i love lucy."ights lucille ball's career and legacy, and we've got the details in "binge this" just ahead. black and white television. so when you made your news debut. [ laughter ] the good old days. >> yeah. when i made my news debut, the talkies were just starting. >> that's right. good morning and good luck. >>> okay, we do have a lot of other headlines to get to this morning. >> when i was first starting reading the news, there was a piano player in the background >> yes. >> yeah. >>> anyway, there's a lot of tough stuff going on in the news right now, and it includes -- and that includes the wildfire emergency in the west. fires in california, washington and oregon burning millions of acres leaving neighborhoods covered in ash and making for some really hazardous breathing conditions. the death toll climbing to at least 19 people, and that includes a 16-year-old boy, i'm sad to say. dozens of other people are missing. one man is under arrest. he is accused of intentionally starting one of the
we are back with that iconic lucy and ethel moment from "i love lucy."ights lucille ball's career and legacy, and we've got the details in "binge this" just ahead. black and white television. so when you made your news debut. [ laughter ] the good old days. >> yeah. when i made my news debut, the talkies were just starting. >> that's right. good morning and good luck. >>> okay, we do have a lot of other headlines to get to this morning. >> when i...
16
16
tv
eye 16
favorite 0
quote 0
also who talked to people and followed her along the way maurice and critics alike join us from ethel saw stocks. 5 years of conflict 5 years of hard hitting political and it was the closest i had like a effendi's like because that's where the free press stuff is you mean when you saw from him back to the list it's obama's that are you concerns for not concern to him sebastian and sarah shelley take himself off part of the matter and no he is just of the questions you believe couplets. d.w. . get hardpan that is hard work it's like being back in school the 63 year old has dictation today khana wants to finally be able to read street signs. it's hard for me. for decades he hid the fact that he can't read and write but he wants to change all that. way my dream is to write my daughter a letter. what does that say. you know use. the street sign up there it's really hard it's always difficult to read. and that. would be it of course it's different for people who can read. you. know i just can't. also about the numbers there but i can read them. every tuesday get hardpan that attends litera
also who talked to people and followed her along the way maurice and critics alike join us from ethel saw stocks. 5 years of conflict 5 years of hard hitting political and it was the closest i had like a effendi's like because that's where the free press stuff is you mean when you saw from him back to the list it's obama's that are you concerns for not concern to him sebastian and sarah shelley take himself off part of the matter and no he is just of the questions you believe couplets. d.w. ....
49
49
Sep 2, 2020
09/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 49
favorite 0
quote 0
what can martin's upbringing bring to the book area i give him that sort of page, what can ethel ring to the butch book and i get to that stage even though i do have a strong structure before i start i'll get to the open and obviously the process the book takes you and most short sections are very useful in terms of getting voice to how the book was evolving.>> anyone read the underground railroad as historical fiction ? >> if you are well-versed in historical fiction you'll know that this section didn't actually happen in 1815, i'm movingsomething from the late 19th century . i had the idea to make the underground railroad this metaphor into something real, that's what it stands for an idea i had on my couch years ago so fromthe conception , there's a fantastic element, it's not a straightforward historical novel which meant i could do a lot of different things in the book . have these different alternative america's and i think has the book power and successful consumption comes from having a fantastic structure . but no, it was not a straightforward historical novel . i take many l
what can martin's upbringing bring to the book area i give him that sort of page, what can ethel ring to the butch book and i get to that stage even though i do have a strong structure before i start i'll get to the open and obviously the process the book takes you and most short sections are very useful in terms of getting voice to how the book was evolving.>> anyone read the underground railroad as historical fiction ? >> if you are well-versed in historical fiction you'll know...
25
25
Sep 4, 2020
09/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
so this lost art of letter writing, ethel gorman writes this whole chapter about how to write your letters to your men. there's articles in women's magazines, mainstream newspapers, all these editorials about how women should write their letters. what do you think you want to put in a letter, if you're writing to johnny who's away in europe fighting against the germans, what do you want to put in your letter as you're writing from home? what would you put in there? >> don't worry about how things are going here, focus on getting the job done. >> right, right. don't worry about how things are, focus on getting the job done. go do your thing, we're good here. you have to realize they want you to write multiple letters a week. if you can write daily, that's best. imagine your soldiers going to get mail every day and if there's nothing there, how depressing that is. oh, i have to go fight my war and nobody at home cares about me. that's the guilt, right? the pressure is to write every day, three days a week, four, five days a week at a minimum. you write that once. and then what do you write?
so this lost art of letter writing, ethel gorman writes this whole chapter about how to write your letters to your men. there's articles in women's magazines, mainstream newspapers, all these editorials about how women should write their letters. what do you think you want to put in a letter, if you're writing to johnny who's away in europe fighting against the germans, what do you want to put in your letter as you're writing from home? what would you put in there? >> don't worry about...
559
559
Sep 13, 2020
09/20
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 559
favorite 0
quote 0
i understand ethel kennedy is demanding a civilian review board. >> all of that would, first, be the of a monologue. and then, often, the guests would talk about it. >> our bloodshed will be in our racial situation, not russia or any other country. >> you probably do, as most people do in the world today, have feelings on the vietnam situation. >> and the interesting thing about the tonight show was that the guests stayed on the couch. they didn't just make their appearance and leave. so, they sat together. >> i wish, now, i'd have been honest. >> so the tonight show now becomes kind of the national gathering place at night. and whatever's going on in pop culture, whatever's going on in politics, obviously what's going on in the news. it was a place for all those things to come together, in an entertaining way. >> 11:30 at night, eastern, was the most segregated hour in america because white people were watching white johnny carson in their white homes. black people were doing it separately. i had shingles. horrible. a young thing like me? [camera man] actually anyone 50 or over is a
i understand ethel kennedy is demanding a civilian review board. >> all of that would, first, be the of a monologue. and then, often, the guests would talk about it. >> our bloodshed will be in our racial situation, not russia or any other country. >> you probably do, as most people do in the world today, have feelings on the vietnam situation. >> and the interesting thing about the tonight show was that the guests stayed on the couch. they didn't just make their...
71
71
Sep 30, 2020
09/20
by
FBC
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
night on twitter i said it reminded me of the anxiety inducing episodes of trying to watch lucy and ethelted the sense of oh this makes me really uncomfortable i don't know if i really want to watch it that much, president trump was very effective when he talked about rebuilding the military help for veterans for both to punch through, make a statement those -- those moments few and far between, then joe biden whole thing of talking about the "green new deal," then oh i am not for the "green new deal" but are you for it or not? it was just -- that was where joe biden, where -- couldn't really express himself that well might have been, i wanted more of that moment, what is he talking about because he was trying to say i am the democratic party he acted like antifa not destroying cities destroying businesses all moments that didn't make a whole lot of sense. >> i agree with a lot what you just said i also think, mark, that this didn't change anybody's mind you know it was we didn't learn anything new, to say okay well, i like this person i like this going to change my vote do you agree with
night on twitter i said it reminded me of the anxiety inducing episodes of trying to watch lucy and ethelted the sense of oh this makes me really uncomfortable i don't know if i really want to watch it that much, president trump was very effective when he talked about rebuilding the military help for veterans for both to punch through, make a statement those -- those moments few and far between, then joe biden whole thing of talking about the "green new deal," then oh i am not for the...