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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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piece of fiction. and so i will speak of the touchstones in my life whom, family, church, school, not because i am certain of how this shape mist writing but because i know they must have shaped it. i am the daughter of a professor, and are me to be in a university anywhere in the world today is to feel immediate sense of familiarity. i grew up on the campus of the university of nigeria, a small town in southeastern nigeria. the campus was spread across undulating grounds, houses on tree-lined streets, red dust, well-tended hedges. it was a slow, small, and lovely place. its decline would come starting with military dictatorship that stopped funding education, but my childhood in the early 1980s was the last gasp of the university's sparkling age. at the main entrance of camp put was large gate with security guards in uniforms, complete with berets. many of them elderly men with gentle demeanors and before each car drove through, the driver stopped, got out of the car and open the trunk, or boot, as we
piece of fiction. and so i will speak of the touchstones in my life whom, family, church, school, not because i am certain of how this shape mist writing but because i know they must have shaped it. i am the daughter of a professor, and are me to be in a university anywhere in the world today is to feel immediate sense of familiarity. i grew up on the campus of the university of nigeria, a small town in southeastern nigeria. the campus was spread across undulating grounds, houses on tree-lined...
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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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fate is a form of fiction, and fiction requires faith. both have no need for proof.i asked questions about catholicism am about doctrine, religion, about god. at questions were asked of adults in my family, in class and that confession, all in the service of defending catholicism. but soon as a young teenager my questions became more about understanding, about doctrine that seem to me to contradict the idea of a just and loving god. this kind of questioning made adults uncomfortable. often was met with sears strategies of silencing. when i did get answers i found many of them unsatisfactory, too simplistic, or quite simply nonsensical. and i did not understand the stop and refusal on the part of adults to admit ignorance or incompleteness on matters of faith. i began then to recognizing myself a string of resistance, a distrust of whatever seemed glib. and i think that this would looking at the world has deeply informed my writing. on campus all the catholic children went to catechism classes three times a week until such a time as they took the examination. it was v
fate is a form of fiction, and fiction requires faith. both have no need for proof.i asked questions about catholicism am about doctrine, religion, about god. at questions were asked of adults in my family, in class and that confession, all in the service of defending catholicism. but soon as a young teenager my questions became more about understanding, about doctrine that seem to me to contradict the idea of a just and loving god. this kind of questioning made adults uncomfortable. often was...
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Nov 25, 2017
11/17
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about their friendship about crime fiction, to write about theirfriendship and about crime fiction,out their friendship and the ups and downs, particularly in the context of this novel where josephine's gift forfriendship is more needed than ever, is quite an interesting thing to look at. it's a pretty gruesome bookin to look at. it's a pretty gruesome book in the sense that the crimes that we are dealing with in two parallel series of events, leave nothing to the imagination, thai got a modern sensibility, if that is the right word, about them, particularly the first one. do you ever feel relu cta nce the first one. do you ever feel reluctance or distaste to go so near the edge in what people will do to each other? i think everybody who writes crime fiction has a line and you don't know what that line is until you're nearly at it and, i agree with you very much that the first murder in this book comes close. i think also what is important to me and has been throughout all my books, is to make those murders very, very relevant to the victim, to the life they lead before they became
about their friendship about crime fiction, to write about theirfriendship and about crime fiction,out their friendship and the ups and downs, particularly in the context of this novel where josephine's gift forfriendship is more needed than ever, is quite an interesting thing to look at. it's a pretty gruesome bookin to look at. it's a pretty gruesome book in the sense that the crimes that we are dealing with in two parallel series of events, leave nothing to the imagination, thai got a modern...
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Nov 23, 2017
11/17
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BBCNEWS
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you talked about merging fact and fiction. one particular way thatis fact and fiction.articular way that is relevant to this novel, and the six preceding it. the character ofjosephine tay, acting as an investigator, for the police. at the scene, realising thing, adding insights. she was a practitioner of the detective novel in the golden age. writing eight books. what was it that attracted you to her? it was particularly her novel, way back in 1948 particularly her novel, way back in 19118 summer was brave enough to write a story about two women abusing younger. i love she picked up abusing younger. i love she picked up the golden age rule book are tearing it to shreds in front of our eyes. no murder, no real puzzle, no brilliant detective. it was a book that can be read on many levels. that is what i loved about it. reading it now, about an england thatis reading it now, about an england that is gone for better or worse. you feel the sunshine on your face would you pick it up. there is a depth, a darkness convey more than this, way ahead of time. that is what appealed
you talked about merging fact and fiction. one particular way thatis fact and fiction.articular way that is relevant to this novel, and the six preceding it. the character ofjosephine tay, acting as an investigator, for the police. at the scene, realising thing, adding insights. she was a practitioner of the detective novel in the golden age. writing eight books. what was it that attracted you to her? it was particularly her novel, way back in 1948 particularly her novel, way back in 19118...
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that you have an independent state that it set up and it's in the active whatever you call it a fiction moment well i'm sure your question you taking what i heard from from one of the political scientists at the autonomous university here our real bartimaeus said yesterday i don't know if the same quote other scientists who say other things actually says i don't know if the separatists can keep up this fiction of being a real independent republic for much longer well you see that sounds very much like the spanish government's view because they say exactly that i wouldn't call it a fiction in the sense that when little mania was declared for instance the independence of lithuania it looked pretty much like that's it took one year and a half to get an important recognition more than when you to get any recognition at all from other countries they were it was a very different situation lithuania had been illegally annexed and it was accepted the only one expired the soviet union yes completely different situ even more so even more so i mean obviously in that case the united states were kin
that you have an independent state that it set up and it's in the active whatever you call it a fiction moment well i'm sure your question you taking what i heard from from one of the political scientists at the autonomous university here our real bartimaeus said yesterday i don't know if the same quote other scientists who say other things actually says i don't know if the separatists can keep up this fiction of being a real independent republic for much longer well you see that sounds very...
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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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you talk about merging fact and fiction and there is one particular way in which that is relevant tond the six that preceded it in the series as it were. that is the character ofjosephine tay who acts as an investigator and assistant to the police. she's on the scene, realises things and has insights. but of course she was a practitioner of the detective novel in the golden age, wrote i think eight books. what was it that attracted you to her as a character? it was in particular her novel the franchise affair which when i read it, i loved the fact that way back in 1948 someone was brave enough to write about two women abusing a young girl. she picked up the golden age rule book and seemed to rip it to shreds. no murder, no puzzle, no brilliant detective. it was a book that could be read on many levels. that's what i love about her. although reading it now, it's about an england that for better or worse is gone and you feel the sunshine on your face when you pick it up, it's nostalgic. there is a depth, modernness and darkness of it way ahead of her time and that is what appealed to m
you talk about merging fact and fiction and there is one particular way in which that is relevant tond the six that preceded it in the series as it were. that is the character ofjosephine tay who acts as an investigator and assistant to the police. she's on the scene, realises things and has insights. but of course she was a practitioner of the detective novel in the golden age, wrote i think eight books. what was it that attracted you to her as a character? it was in particular her novel the...
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Nov 13, 2017
11/17
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but it's fiction. everybody describing the future war is writing fiction because there are works of imagination from factual basis, but there are works of fiction. they just do it. in the book, and the atlantic project. they are prone towards a particular modern hero and actually quite classic certs appears except for a male or, all incredibly smart, ivy league. whatever they're doing, they're absolutely competent, but a bit of a battle as well. they don't like authority, the deeply feature added. it is actually, these sorts of heroes. but the violence is not there. they are very tacky. more and more of a role. the sort of routine violence tends to get forgotten and people get killed in her row at sort of ways whereas in those, you know, the everyday experience of war is not that different to the everyday everyday experience of grandparents and great grand parents, et cetera. you know, mortar shells or whatever, so i think that is my concern and there's not many books written like that. >> that is some
but it's fiction. everybody describing the future war is writing fiction because there are works of imagination from factual basis, but there are works of fiction. they just do it. in the book, and the atlantic project. they are prone towards a particular modern hero and actually quite classic certs appears except for a male or, all incredibly smart, ivy league. whatever they're doing, they're absolutely competent, but a bit of a battle as well. they don't like authority, the deeply feature...
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Nov 24, 2017
11/17
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fiction? non—fiction. you will come back. sit in a room this is spectacular and talk about it. dan brown, thank you for being on hardtalk. hello there. no sign of the mild air returning anytime soon. it is going to stay cold during the week into the weekend and the start of next week as well. now, overnight, more cloud and rain in southern and south—eastern areas. less cold on friday. the north of the uk, lengthy clear spells and cold and frosty. wintry showers affecting north and west scotland. ice patches to greet us first thing on friday morning. the best of the sunshine in sheltered and eastern parts of scotland. north and west, plenty of showers. wintry in nature. significant snow on the higher ground. a few showers in north—west england. east of the pennines and south, a largely dry start. some sunshine. chilly in southern britain. more cloud. one or two showers. less cold. temperatures, 7—8 degrees around eight o'clock in the morning. that is how it is looking to start on friday. through the day, we lose the showers fo
fiction? non—fiction. you will come back. sit in a room this is spectacular and talk about it. dan brown, thank you for being on hardtalk. hello there. no sign of the mild air returning anytime soon. it is going to stay cold during the week into the weekend and the start of next week as well. now, overnight, more cloud and rain in southern and south—eastern areas. less cold on friday. the north of the uk, lengthy clear spells and cold and frosty. wintry showers affecting north and west...
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Nov 27, 2017
11/17
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fiction? non—fiction. you will come back. when it is out there?will sit in a room this spectacular and talk about it. dan brown, we have to end it there, but thank you for being on hardtalk. hello once again. after a pretty chilly weekend quite widely across the british isles we are goign to see a change of weather tonight, albeit for a little while. it is thanks to an area of low pressure throws a great veil of cloud down across all parts of the british isles. first thing on monday there will be a wet and windy start to be had across the south. but not many of you will be scraping your cars first up. there will be other concerns, i suspect, if you are commuting across the southern counties of england and wales. in the first part of monday, simply because it is going to be really quite wet. even that little bit further north will have had rain overnight. quite windy too. so, tricky conditions. a lot of surface water and spray. into the northern half of the british isles, well, persistent rain in the very far north of scotland. elsewhere, a supply
fiction? non—fiction. you will come back. when it is out there?will sit in a room this spectacular and talk about it. dan brown, we have to end it there, but thank you for being on hardtalk. hello once again. after a pretty chilly weekend quite widely across the british isles we are goign to see a change of weather tonight, albeit for a little while. it is thanks to an area of low pressure throws a great veil of cloud down across all parts of the british isles. first thing on monday there...
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Nov 28, 2017
11/17
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fiction? non—fiction. you will come back. we will sit in a room this is spectacular and talk about it. dan brown, thank you for being on hardtalk. hello there. monday brought some of us something a little bit milder. that is not a sign of things to come. during tuesday, and indeed the rest of the week, we are back into this feed of northerly winds, all the way from the arctic. cold air sweeping southwards right across the country. quite a few showers, as well, and where the showers have been falling through the early part of the morning, there is certainly the risk of some icy stretches across parts of northern ireland and into scotland. take it easy on untreated roads and pavements. some of the showers across scotland will be wintry. some rain, some sleet, some hail, and some snow, the snow mostly over high ground at this stage. showers beginning to push into the east coast of england. but, through north—west england, down in the midlands, a cold and frosty start in places, with temperatures ofjust one or two degrees at 8:00
fiction? non—fiction. you will come back. we will sit in a room this is spectacular and talk about it. dan brown, thank you for being on hardtalk. hello there. monday brought some of us something a little bit milder. that is not a sign of things to come. during tuesday, and indeed the rest of the week, we are back into this feed of northerly winds, all the way from the arctic. cold air sweeping southwards right across the country. quite a few showers, as well, and where the showers have been...
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Nov 23, 2017
11/17
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fiction? non-fiction. you will come back.t it. dan brown, thank you for being on hardtalk. hello. a significant change on the way in our weather for the next few days. it will turn considerably colder, especially through the weekend. that said, the cold air is already moving into scotland and this morning there is a risk of some disruption, particular conditions on the road thanks to snow. radio scotland is a great place to keep up with conditions local to where you are. 25 centimetres of snow likely to lower levels this morning, 2—5 centimetres of snow likely to lower levels this morning, up to ten centimetres across highlands and the grampians. by windy start to the day and it goes without saying, a pretty chilly one as well. for northern ireland, early showers for the north—west england as well. further south, a quieter picture. still quite windy but some early morning sunshine was a bit of cloud and rain through east anglia in the south east quite quickly. a few more isolated showers for the south—west and wales. in the m
fiction? non-fiction. you will come back.t it. dan brown, thank you for being on hardtalk. hello. a significant change on the way in our weather for the next few days. it will turn considerably colder, especially through the weekend. that said, the cold air is already moving into scotland and this morning there is a risk of some disruption, particular conditions on the road thanks to snow. radio scotland is a great place to keep up with conditions local to where you are. 25 centimetres of snow...
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Nov 22, 2017
11/17
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KQEH
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the question is do you ever feel like writing fiction in a moment where the non-fiction is so real in lives? do you ever feel out of place doing stuff like "the golden house"? >> you know, fiction is one of the great ways of telling the truth. if you think about "war and peace" as the most brilliant portrait of napolean's russian campaign, et cetera, so fiction itself is just another road to the truth. what i do think has happened, to me certainly, i can't speak for other writers but to me, is it has made me question and set aside some of the ways i was writing, you know, because i mean, i had been very associated with the kind of fantasy fabulist what is called magic realism. in fact, my previous november set in new york was a novel that had that. i thought what you were saying, i thought in a world where it is so much untruth out there, so much make-believe being propagated every day that maybe not fantasy, you know, maybe not hold the flank up. maybe there is a role for artists so at least i feel a role for an artist like me to start resteve nashi reestablishf the writer, and let's
the question is do you ever feel like writing fiction in a moment where the non-fiction is so real in lives? do you ever feel out of place doing stuff like "the golden house"? >> you know, fiction is one of the great ways of telling the truth. if you think about "war and peace" as the most brilliant portrait of napolean's russian campaign, et cetera, so fiction itself is just another road to the truth. what i do think has happened, to me certainly, i can't speak for...
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Nov 1, 2017
11/17
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but in your view it is fiction?re quite right, there are things we should worry about now. we need to worry aboutjobs, we need to worry about weaponisation of ai and we need to worry about standards in driverless cars and care robots, in medical diagnosis ais. there are many things that are here and now problems in the sense that are kind of more to do with the fact that al is not very intelligent so we need to worry about artificial stupidity. that is a neat way of ending. alan winfield, thank you very much. hello. mixed fortunes in our weather during the day ahead. southern areas should see more in the way of sunshine than they did on tuesday. a feed of drier air from the near continent around area of high pressure. but up to the north, it's all about this weather front, a weather front bringing a slow—moving band of rain, heavy rain for a time time across southern and south—western scotland during the first part of the morning. to the north of the frontal system, there will be a mixture of sunny spells and shower
but in your view it is fiction?re quite right, there are things we should worry about now. we need to worry aboutjobs, we need to worry about weaponisation of ai and we need to worry about standards in driverless cars and care robots, in medical diagnosis ais. there are many things that are here and now problems in the sense that are kind of more to do with the fact that al is not very intelligent so we need to worry about artificial stupidity. that is a neat way of ending. alan winfield, thank...
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Nov 6, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN2
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with the fiction writers. academics write about revolutions because they are keen on those but they don't write about civil wars. so in a desperate attempt with the policy community to be behind the curve and then they capture so by the time they screw up dave think of how they can do things better. so with that story of the developing attempt and to understand the intervention of the consequences so with was next in terms of the threat and were the people there really want to look at the future. is needed to get those signatures. that is one of the threats through the book with a good fiction writers have been able to imagine things. is one of those great advantages if you want to write about sex. [laughter] but because you have to make a receiver crow with that over reliance on the most devious technologies. sodas to conclude is looking for work that big issue of how that technology will work. but if we do so on the ground what is the agenda? because we don't want to shape the outcome also with nuclear weapo
with the fiction writers. academics write about revolutions because they are keen on those but they don't write about civil wars. so in a desperate attempt with the policy community to be behind the curve and then they capture so by the time they screw up dave think of how they can do things better. so with that story of the developing attempt and to understand the intervention of the consequences so with was next in terms of the threat and were the people there really want to look at the...
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Nov 19, 2017
11/17
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i just love this book. >> host: historical fiction?. >> caller: yes. the family is intertwined david is also a mystery. >> doesn't actually take place during the war?. >> part of that does. >> guest: they give for sharing that. >> host: thanks for calling. we want to continue to hear from you. so with historical fiction inil the trilogy. >> we do so lot of architecture books but it is remarkable that he could do what he t did with that trilogy. but historical a fiction is when it is well but you are just transported back. >> mashing against nonfiction but when that happens the taken interest?. >> i do but the difference of these two is that both of them were selling very, very well. so this just added a supercharges to it. they are both fine remarkable books. >> host: we appreciate you coming over to chat with our viewers in the movies. >> guest: keep up with what you do it and is keeping both the live. >> host: books and books and co-founder of the miami book fair. we will get him out of the chair. chris matthews is coming now to take your calls from
i just love this book. >> host: historical fiction?. >> caller: yes. the family is intertwined david is also a mystery. >> doesn't actually take place during the war?. >> part of that does. >> guest: they give for sharing that. >> host: thanks for calling. we want to continue to hear from you. so with historical fiction inil the trilogy. >> we do so lot of architecture books but it is remarkable that he could do what he t did with that trilogy. but...
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Nov 20, 2017
11/17
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he earned the right to have them into fiction with its micro scales.ispensable silver lining, the families reconciled about reported for the treasures uncovered. the neighbors mending their way in thto good names restored, thy were married off to the other hemisphere is for it is the documents cost down the stairs. prodigal sons called home and drenched the reconciliations, general celebration and the dog gone astray in the first chapter. [applause] [cheering] [applause] bad news for everyone who was black-tie outfits are already restraining. it's time to eat. we will break for dinner and for those of you watching the live stream of the ceremony on facebook, highlights from last night's finalist reading where all presented passages from the nominated books will now be shown. we will be back to announce the winners of the national book award. [applause] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ everything but foundation does is designed to connect readers and books, and everything we do start that the national book award. we celebrate literature. we celebrate great books. we h
he earned the right to have them into fiction with its micro scales.ispensable silver lining, the families reconciled about reported for the treasures uncovered. the neighbors mending their way in thto good names restored, thy were married off to the other hemisphere is for it is the documents cost down the stairs. prodigal sons called home and drenched the reconciliations, general celebration and the dog gone astray in the first chapter. [applause] [cheering] [applause] bad news for everyone...
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that you have an independent state that it set up and it's in active whatever you call it a fiction moment well i'm sure you question you taking what i learned from from one of the political scientists at the autonomous university here are real bad to males who said yesterday i don't know if the same quote other scientists who say other things actually says i don't know if the separatists can keep up this fiction of being a real independent republic for much longer well you see that sounds very much like the spanish government's view because they say exactly that i wouldn't call it a fiction in the sense that when little mania was declared for instance the independence of lithuania it looked pretty much like that's it took one year and a half to get an important recognition more than when you to get any recognition at all from other countries they were it was a very different situation lithuania had been illegally on next and it was accepted that don't tell you how it's by the soviet union yes completely different situ even more so even more so i mean obviously in that case the unit
that you have an independent state that it set up and it's in active whatever you call it a fiction moment well i'm sure you question you taking what i learned from from one of the political scientists at the autonomous university here are real bad to males who said yesterday i don't know if the same quote other scientists who say other things actually says i don't know if the separatists can keep up this fiction of being a real independent republic for much longer well you see that sounds very...
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109
Nov 19, 2017
11/17
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KNTV
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eye 109
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not entirely fictional.here were--all the instances in the book were real, and the only things that have been changed are the names and some of the details where i couldn't really remember have been filled in with my imagination. that part would be fictional. robert: so, you're protecting the innocent, but still telling the true story. jeanette: yes, exactly. robert: and it was interesting to me reading the book. i mean, first and foremost, i'm used to a lot of firsthand accounts of internment. and it really focuses a lot on internment. what was really interesting about "the little exile" to me was the impact on a child, and the experiences and things that are happening were being relayed through a person's reactions and things like that. it was very interesting. did being--writing through a character help open you up to be able to talk about those kind of things? 'cause some were very personal. jeanette: yes, on some of the situations that i describe were things that i've never shared with anybody before, y
not entirely fictional.here were--all the instances in the book were real, and the only things that have been changed are the names and some of the details where i couldn't really remember have been filled in with my imagination. that part would be fictional. robert: so, you're protecting the innocent, but still telling the true story. jeanette: yes, exactly. robert: and it was interesting to me reading the book. i mean, first and foremost, i'm used to a lot of firsthand accounts of internment....
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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN2
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to look at t fiction inspiration. it was biblical transcends it.sh offering their i was thinking of the panelists gathered here today with whom i've have the privilege to work with for 19 years at norton. by the way i have to say i have not so fired referred to theirr biographies or how they mere such redemptive themes. having never written a biography. this talk is not devoted to craft i should state some of them will recognize themselves here. even the most practiced biographers about bound to have false starts. until they rely too heavily on research. that hijacked the biography. it takes a biographer one false start at least to announce it in december that an umbilical cord and produce a narrative that does not mimic the subjects of language. with the themes of justice in redemption. but only later on. the and how such bigotry is if you really care to examine what is behind the dog whistle i am convinced that race, more than economics at all comes together as evidenced by this. as a child growing up amidst the tid
to look at t fiction inspiration. it was biblical transcends it.sh offering their i was thinking of the panelists gathered here today with whom i've have the privilege to work with for 19 years at norton. by the way i have to say i have not so fired referred to theirr biographies or how they mere such redemptive themes. having never written a biography. this talk is not devoted to craft i should state some of them will recognize themselves here. even the most practiced biographers about bound...
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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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so recently a friend asked that you have a look of disdain do you plan to write fiction? as a fictional biography but said aisle is believed in some way for what he called the deadliest space in between and bob really taught me a great deal how to track that dangerous path of that narrative from that research. so the thinking for [applause] >>. >> of course i share everything that has been said about bob we have only done two books together but it seems to me it feels like we have done many more because we have known each other well before i became one of your clients. i thought since i knew what we had said that we are indebted to him for his is corrections and suggestions of our manuscripts and his range of knowledge it is historical and cultural is a gift and his personality is hard to assisting but at the same time it is priceless. he is manic, obsessive, he is a workaholic and actually doesn't listen because he is so intense on correcting and helping his author. so let me stipulate that i hope i can read a kind of love letter to bob weil on the 24th of october in 201
so recently a friend asked that you have a look of disdain do you plan to write fiction? as a fictional biography but said aisle is believed in some way for what he called the deadliest space in between and bob really taught me a great deal how to track that dangerous path of that narrative from that research. so the thinking for [applause] >>. >> of course i share everything that has been said about bob we have only done two books together but it seems to me it feels like we have...
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Nov 29, 2017
11/17
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ALJAZ
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these people are becoming more and more dangerous at this point there are based on as you said a fictional queen various fringe groups are saying that the queen is being disrespected in the spill and they want the filmmakers head on a platter they have announced bounties on the actresses nose and this is the leading man's legs should be broken and this is all being said while the government isn't doing nothing about it in fact ministers from the raiding party the b j p have actually gone on record to say these things that are totally totally wrong that this is a fictional character we have a history supporting it and let me tell you we made the history by making sacrifices of our lives by bleeding and now movie makers and critics like you come in sitting and i think things that this is the fringe group you cannot live with the sentiments of the people there is a will to handle these things mr bhansali should have consulted when he did promise that he's going to at least please scream with the company say well this should have been some understanding instead what he chose he chose to get fr
these people are becoming more and more dangerous at this point there are based on as you said a fictional queen various fringe groups are saying that the queen is being disrespected in the spill and they want the filmmakers head on a platter they have announced bounties on the actresses nose and this is the leading man's legs should be broken and this is all being said while the government isn't doing nothing about it in fact ministers from the raiding party the b j p have actually gone on...
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Nov 30, 2017
11/17
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ALJAZ
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j p have actually gone on record to say these things rather totally totally wrong that this is a fictional character we have a history supporting it and let me tell you we made the history by making sacrifices of our lives by bleeding and now movie makers and critics like you come in sitting and allies and things that this is the fringe group you cannot live with the sentiments of the people there is a will to handle these things mr bhansali should have consulted when he did promise that he's going to at least scream with the company say well this should have been some understanding instead what he chose he chose to get some journalist without our involvement and let me tell you it is not about the money partly it is about women their their. respect and justice to the women can't we can't we can't let around we so much respected in the community and not respect her and go to fight. allowed him. we need him to one of the littlest just like nine eleven you really fired them under the us. mr miller interrupt you. i've been listening to both roger and you i must add that first to dodge that i
j p have actually gone on record to say these things rather totally totally wrong that this is a fictional character we have a history supporting it and let me tell you we made the history by making sacrifices of our lives by bleeding and now movie makers and critics like you come in sitting and allies and things that this is the fringe group you cannot live with the sentiments of the people there is a will to handle these things mr bhansali should have consulted when he did promise that he's...
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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
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WCAU
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eye 187
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how do you sort out what's truth and what's fiction? and we don't have, you know, some fabulous arbiter who can say, "this is true and this is false." lauren: but we have things like social media. frank: and social media exacerbates the problem because it's an open platform for anybody who wants to foment any kind of false information, and we're seeing it all over america today. are the russians interfering what's going on with wikileaks, you know? is misinformation being spread for all sorts of nefarious purposes, et cetera. lauren: and is there some also sort of an attraction to the familiarity of it? we've heard it--we heard it from--you know, maybe we heard it when we were a kid, we're hearing it again, and we're just sort of attracted to that. is there anything to that? frank: oh sure, of course. we grow up with a lot of myths, you know, fairytales. and we learn a lot from those fairytales, you know? they're not of the real world, but we learn things about the real world from them. and we learn some problem solving, we learn some g
how do you sort out what's truth and what's fiction? and we don't have, you know, some fabulous arbiter who can say, "this is true and this is false." lauren: but we have things like social media. frank: and social media exacerbates the problem because it's an open platform for anybody who wants to foment any kind of false information, and we're seeing it all over america today. are the russians interfering what's going on with wikileaks, you know? is misinformation being spread for...
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Nov 30, 2017
11/17
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BBCNEWS
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fundamentally you want to write fiction and that is not bad way to start.rt, and one other thing is the short listing has done for me is allowed me to be more daring in the future. there is an issue with who gets to write, the sort of fiction that different people get to write and feel entitled to write and this short listing allows me to be brave in the future, i hope. fiona mozley, author of elmet, thank you very much. thank you. we tried to give you a bigger detail on the shorter term of whether and then we looked long—term and we try to pick out the trends —— we try macro. it is the wintry feel that will win out, a bright and crispy start for many central and western areas. but you get the sense that maybe there is something of a change just waiting in those northern and western wings by weight of relatively mild air and relatively compared to what we have seen, the early taste of winter for many, and many of the showers in the east were urged by a keen win but they will be watery rather than wintry on friday. signs of more rain on the west of scotland.
fundamentally you want to write fiction and that is not bad way to start.rt, and one other thing is the short listing has done for me is allowed me to be more daring in the future. there is an issue with who gets to write, the sort of fiction that different people get to write and feel entitled to write and this short listing allows me to be brave in the future, i hope. fiona mozley, author of elmet, thank you very much. thank you. we tried to give you a bigger detail on the shorter term of...
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and partner of the real producer but apparently it's mostly fiction so it's useful to play a bit of an idiot you have to say someone. so naive and crazy stupid to go for such a young girl i wouldn't do that i don't think and in the film i'm called last but really under all son. of. a high octane midlife crisis with just a nod to the tokyo based classic lost in translation. nation program works after. but after mom i know it's likely to buy. a few minutes of in the form of one. shy nobody tossed in kabul is also the real life superhero knox who spends his time helping the disadvantaged young filmmaker discovers locks and decides to make a documentary about his every day fight to make a better world. but the click based on ratings obsessed produces soon demands more action. where knox is encouraged to fight crime the line between truth and fiction becomes blood with catastrophic consequences. with a great central performance and cult potential. and that's just about it for this special festival edition from the home of films hoff everything has an end only the famous horse has to so it's
and partner of the real producer but apparently it's mostly fiction so it's useful to play a bit of an idiot you have to say someone. so naive and crazy stupid to go for such a young girl i wouldn't do that i don't think and in the film i'm called last but really under all son. of. a high octane midlife crisis with just a nod to the tokyo based classic lost in translation. nation program works after. but after mom i know it's likely to buy. a few minutes of in the form of one. shy nobody tossed...
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308
Nov 15, 2017
11/17
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KQED
tv
eye 308
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you're used to praise and criticism for the fiction.s this feel different, putting this out into the world, this slice of your real self? >> yeah, i wrote this thing so spontaneously and i didn't get to edit it in the way that i wanted and it feels very raw, it feels too new. so it's not a criticism about the writing so much as about privacy, and misinterpretation of who i am, and it's almost as though i can't bear to hear people talking about me. >> brown: you're the one who put it out there. you did it yourself. >> i know, it's a contradiction. it's a contradiction i have in myself to be very private, and then i write about privacy. i'm uncensored in a way and contradictory as a writer and so i'm very ambivalent about this book. it's out there. i told my editor i hate it. it's too early to be out there. i'm still the kid, i haven't grown up yet. >> brown: all right, well, it's out there. it's called "where the past begins: a writer's memoir." amy tan, thank you very much. >> thank you. >> woodruff: finally tonight, remembering someone
you're used to praise and criticism for the fiction.s this feel different, putting this out into the world, this slice of your real self? >> yeah, i wrote this thing so spontaneously and i didn't get to edit it in the way that i wanted and it feels very raw, it feels too new. so it's not a criticism about the writing so much as about privacy, and misinterpretation of who i am, and it's almost as though i can't bear to hear people talking about me. >> brown: you're the one who put it...
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Nov 20, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN3
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i think it will show how fact and fiction is hard to separate. and we get a bit of that today here. nobody thought that was funny. ok. [laughter] anyway, kevin's book "churchill and the bomb in war and cold war" is timely today. it covers the close relationship with lord chartwell. like i wasslightly, a fly on the wall because he was often there. he did not relate much to the children, or the children did not relate much to him. he had a much more fun time with monty. field marshal montgomery, who would play croquet and took a real interest in people. the prof was an important person for grandpapa because grandpapa could bat ideas back and forth with him on and it wasn't the house of commons. he could try to work out his own ideas and what he felt and understood. prof was a very important person, and it is one of the things i have been interested in in this book. so now, i give you the wonderful kevin ruane, who will tell us some things about his book. [applause] kevin: thank you, edwina. is this mic ok? thank you, a very generous introduction. it is great to be back again, so thank
i think it will show how fact and fiction is hard to separate. and we get a bit of that today here. nobody thought that was funny. ok. [laughter] anyway, kevin's book "churchill and the bomb in war and cold war" is timely today. it covers the close relationship with lord chartwell. like i wasslightly, a fly on the wall because he was often there. he did not relate much to the children, or the children did not relate much to him. he had a much more fun time with monty. field marshal...
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Nov 20, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN3
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the churchill who as a teenager was devouring science-fiction, particularly the work of hg wells. "the time machine" -- before i get the quote, i know gary oldman. i think the oscar is safe, i hope, after that magnificent performance. but churchill's speech pattern was so idiosyncratic, i cannot quote him without trying a little churchillian rumbling. if you would allow me that. "the time machine", churchill said, is one of the books i would like to take with me to purgatory. and in 1931, he went on to say he had read all of hg wells' books with such closeness that i could take examination in them. beyond this, i discovered a churchill of striking scientific vision who, in the war years, was regularly publishing on scientific themes. mass circulation newspapers like "news of the world." from this interwar scientific writing, two things emerge. churchill recognized that scientific programs would be ongoing. it was probably going to be a force for good. it was the new enlightenment. it would bring betterment to the masses. but at the same time, churchill also worried that mankind mi
the churchill who as a teenager was devouring science-fiction, particularly the work of hg wells. "the time machine" -- before i get the quote, i know gary oldman. i think the oscar is safe, i hope, after that magnificent performance. but churchill's speech pattern was so idiosyncratic, i cannot quote him without trying a little churchillian rumbling. if you would allow me that. "the time machine", churchill said, is one of the books i would like to take with me to...
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18
Nov 7, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN2
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it's a fiction. the invention of the gun lobby designed to make this place feel as if there's nothing that can be done to make sure they can make obscene amounts of profits. there are things we can do. despite the popularity of background checks of the public are probably not going to get a vote on it. let's work together to make sure that automatic weapons can't be in the hands of civilians. >> were going to break away from this recording and take it back live to capitol hill to the house ways and means committee continuing to two of their market of the geode pd tax plan. of course, you can always watch any of these hearings, many of the markups on her website or listen on the c-span radio at. live coverage of the markup is not c-span2. >> [roll call] [roll call] [rol] [roll call] [roll call] [roll call] [roll call] [inaudible] [inaudible] [roll call] mr. chairman. >> the clerk will report the vote. >> 15 yeas. >> 23 no space. >> the amendment is not agree to. we will consider postponing amendments.
it's a fiction. the invention of the gun lobby designed to make this place feel as if there's nothing that can be done to make sure they can make obscene amounts of profits. there are things we can do. despite the popularity of background checks of the public are probably not going to get a vote on it. let's work together to make sure that automatic weapons can't be in the hands of civilians. >> were going to break away from this recording and take it back live to capitol hill to the...
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Nov 26, 2017
11/17
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 64
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you talk about merging fact and fiction and there is one particular way in which that is relevant to course, she was a practitioner of the detective novel in the golden age, wrote, i think, eight books. what was it that attracted you to her as a character? it was in particular her novel, the franchise affair. when i read it, i loved the fact that way back in 1948 someone was brave enough to write about two women abusing a young girl. she picked up the golden age rule book and seemed to rip it to shreds. no murder, no puzzle, no brilliant detective. it was a book that could be read on many levels. that‘s what i love about her. although reading it now, it‘s about an england that, for better or worse, is gone and you feel the sunshine on your face when you pick it up, it‘s nostalgic. there is a depth, modernness and darkness to it way ahead of her time and that is what appealed to me. she had a life in the theatre, wrote great plays in the west end that ran for over a year. she worked withjohn gielgud. importantly, for her as a character, there were lots of gaps in her life. a bold thin
you talk about merging fact and fiction and there is one particular way in which that is relevant to course, she was a practitioner of the detective novel in the golden age, wrote, i think, eight books. what was it that attracted you to her as a character? it was in particular her novel, the franchise affair. when i read it, i loved the fact that way back in 1948 someone was brave enough to write about two women abusing a young girl. she picked up the golden age rule book and seemed to rip it...
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49
Nov 22, 2017
11/17
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KYW
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eye 49
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it's not science fiction. how it works and how much it cost >> all eyes on the forecast, we're tracking rain as holiday travel kicks into high gear. good evening, i'm jessica dean >> i'm ukee washington. whether by car, plane or train, the thanksgiving travel rush is starting but we have some wet weather to talk about. >> meteorologist kate bilo timing it all out. >> that's right jess and unique, a lot of people getting ready to leave their homes or waiting for folks to arrive and want to know how the weather will impact the travel. the good news is there's really only a short window of time that the weather looks to impact negatively the holiday travel rush and that is tomorrow morning, you can see right now clouds overhead but here comes our next front. it's just moved into the northwestern corner of pennsylvania and this front advancing rapidedly but pulling in moisture from the south, so we'll see steadier rain develop by the time it reaches the eastern sea board and that will be early tomorrow morning. te
it's not science fiction. how it works and how much it cost >> all eyes on the forecast, we're tracking rain as holiday travel kicks into high gear. good evening, i'm jessica dean >> i'm ukee washington. whether by car, plane or train, the thanksgiving travel rush is starting but we have some wet weather to talk about. >> meteorologist kate bilo timing it all out. >> that's right jess and unique, a lot of people getting ready to leave their homes or waiting for folks to...
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Nov 25, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN2
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eye 105
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these categories are young people's literature, poetry, nonfiction and fiction.o the stage the panel chair for young people'ses literature, and i'm going to say her name but don't clap because i'm going to tell you a little about her first. medina is a 2012 new writers winner and a winner for do [inaudible] the novel burn baby burn named the 2016 book of the year was long listed for the 2016 national book award and was a finalist for the prius and the los angeles book prize and in 2014 she was named one of cnn's visionary women of america. it gives me great pleasure to introduce meg medina. ♪ good evening everyone. this is going to be two minutes because i timed it. you're welcome. i was cursed like to acknowledge my fellow judges that are sitting at table 54 came to the task of reading hundreds of books with their signature building and good nature and thoughtfulness they have my most heartfelt thanks forever and they are susannah herman, depend entirely and alec sanchez. [applause] [cheering] the books that we read as young people are sacred because they guide
these categories are young people's literature, poetry, nonfiction and fiction.o the stage the panel chair for young people'ses literature, and i'm going to say her name but don't clap because i'm going to tell you a little about her first. medina is a 2012 new writers winner and a winner for do [inaudible] the novel burn baby burn named the 2016 book of the year was long listed for the 2016 national book award and was a finalist for the prius and the los angeles book prize and in 2014 she was...
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i've learned a lot about nano cars science fiction and a remarkable researcher. but i still can't quite get the knack of this. this week we asked on twitter and facebook where the you found the idea of a nano car driving through your body fantastic he reflected. in a tender folks sees nanotechnology in the service of medicine and points out that if nano robots repaired cells repeatedly we could live forever. periodic it would prefer to see nano robots that can build anything he needs by as him. and full who've never been the idea of nano rabbits creeping around in her veins makes her skin crawl. through it and the latest when he wants to get married to her it's common in many countries for him to buy her a ring bearing a precious stone as a sign of his love and devotion. but you are once to give all where a stone that someone's paid for with their life. in switzerland researchers have now come up with a way to track stones from where they were in mind all the way to their point of sale. basel world is one hundred and fifty thousand square meters of sparkle and gl
i've learned a lot about nano cars science fiction and a remarkable researcher. but i still can't quite get the knack of this. this week we asked on twitter and facebook where the you found the idea of a nano car driving through your body fantastic he reflected. in a tender folks sees nanotechnology in the service of medicine and points out that if nano robots repaired cells repeatedly we could live forever. periodic it would prefer to see nano robots that can build anything he needs by as him....
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122
Nov 10, 2017
11/17
by
KGO
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. >> reporter: pompeo knows how to be convincing in a fictional operating room. >> put the gown on, putancing. >> yep, uh-huh. yeah, you go like this. then you say "10 blade." with authority. "10 blade." >> 10 blade. >> uh-huh, like that. then whoop, and you tcut. >> i was good up until the whoop cutting part. >> you're hired. >> i'm hired! >> reporter: like pompeo, jesse williams had become a breakout star. >> we are officially a -- >> reporter: but real life is stranger than fiction. >> a flight attendant has looked at me when they needed a doctor and began to ask me or expected me to do it. i had to check one once, "you know i'm not a doctor. the one thing you know about me is i'm not a doctor." >> reporter: just the actors are convincing, so are props used in the surgeries which are remarkably life like. >> we have like a model, like a reproduction of scott foley's head. because he played a character on the show many years ago. and his character unfortunately passed away. we still occasionally use that from time to time. so sometimes we're operating and we look down at scott foley's
. >> reporter: pompeo knows how to be convincing in a fictional operating room. >> put the gown on, putancing. >> yep, uh-huh. yeah, you go like this. then you say "10 blade." with authority. "10 blade." >> 10 blade. >> uh-huh, like that. then whoop, and you tcut. >> i was good up until the whoop cutting part. >> you're hired. >> i'm hired! >> reporter: like pompeo, jesse williams had become a breakout star. >> we...
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Nov 21, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN
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eye 29
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we believe that is entirely fictional. the evidence also points against this and rational market but on this. when you consider hbo is priced at $14.99, netflix is $11.99, amazon gives it to their prime customers at no additional charge. the idea that somehow because at&t, aned by inclination to charge higher, is nonsensical. market dynamics would not even allow for higher pricing even if you were to choose to do that and i think what you have seen by at&t's behavior in the past, when we brought -- but directv, to idea was to bring it mobile platforms and broad distribution platforms and within a year literally of acquiring directv we rolled out a product called directv now at $35 per month. the inclination is you push things to mobile, the price points come down. when you innovate, price points come down. our objective is to broaden distribution, not limit distribution. opposite effect on pricing as to what the government is alleging her. ?> do want to ask your question >> will you talk about what you were willing to offe
we believe that is entirely fictional. the evidence also points against this and rational market but on this. when you consider hbo is priced at $14.99, netflix is $11.99, amazon gives it to their prime customers at no additional charge. the idea that somehow because at&t, aned by inclination to charge higher, is nonsensical. market dynamics would not even allow for higher pricing even if you were to choose to do that and i think what you have seen by at&t's behavior in the past, when...
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is centrally a work of fiction it's the way that psychiatrists have of saying if if there are mental disorders if they exist in nature the ways illnesses like diabetes exist than disease or what they are changing the way we understand ourselves is intimately related to the development of the diagnostic and statistical manual the d.s.m. is often referred to as the bible of psychiatric disorders it is the quintessential diagnostic instrument over four hundred thousand mental health professionals in the united states use the d.s.m. and in order to get third party reimbursement one has to have a d.s.m. diagnosis so the d.s.m. is extremely instrumental in two thousand and five two respected academics lisa kos grove of you must boston and sheldon prim skee of tufts released their investigation into conflicts of interest between d.s.m. four panel members and the pharmaceutical industry i think the data really speak for themselves the strongest for the mood disorders and schizophrenia and psychotic disorders one hundred percent of those panel members and yes that's right every single panel m
is centrally a work of fiction it's the way that psychiatrists have of saying if if there are mental disorders if they exist in nature the ways illnesses like diabetes exist than disease or what they are changing the way we understand ourselves is intimately related to the development of the diagnostic and statistical manual the d.s.m. is often referred to as the bible of psychiatric disorders it is the quintessential diagnostic instrument over four hundred thousand mental health professionals...
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127
Nov 22, 2017
11/17
by
KYW
tv
eye 127
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it's not science fiction. how it works and how much it cost >> all eyes on the forecast, we're tracking rain as holiday travel kicks into high gear. good evening, i'm jessica dean >> i'm ukee washington. whether by car, plane or train, the thanksgiving travel rush is starting but we have some wet weather to talk about. >> meteorologist kate bilo timing it all out. >> that's right jess and unique, a lot of people getting ready to leave their homes or waiting for folks to arrive and want to know how the weather will impact the travel. the good news is there's really only a short window of time that the weather looks to impact negatively the holiday travel rush and that is tomorrow morning, you can see right now clouds overhead but here comes our next front. it's just moved into the northwestern corner of pennsylvania and this front advancing rapidedly but pulling in moisture from the south, so we'll see steadier rain develop by the time it reaches the eastern sea board and that will be early tomorrow morning. te
it's not science fiction. how it works and how much it cost >> all eyes on the forecast, we're tracking rain as holiday travel kicks into high gear. good evening, i'm jessica dean >> i'm ukee washington. whether by car, plane or train, the thanksgiving travel rush is starting but we have some wet weather to talk about. >> meteorologist kate bilo timing it all out. >> that's right jess and unique, a lot of people getting ready to leave their homes or waiting for folks to...
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51
Nov 21, 2017
11/17
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CSPAN
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eye 51
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we believe is entirely fictional. evidence points against this and rational market thought on this, when you consider age feel is priced at $14.99, , amazon gives.99 it to prime customers at no additional charge. the idea that there is somehow, -- marketo is owned dynamics would not even allow for higher pricing even if you were to choose to do that. i think we've seen by at&t's the past, the objective was to move the content to mobile platforms and broadest reach and platforms. directv, wequiring had a product called directv now. at $35 a month. you push things to mobile platforms, you innovate and broaden distribution prices. our objective with time warner and to take that content and broaden distribution, not to define and limit distributional. those have the opposite on pricing as with the government is alleging. about what youlk are willing to offer to the justice department that they weren't willing to accept? you said you were willing to make concessions. what are those? >> we don't comment on negotiations. but
we believe is entirely fictional. evidence points against this and rational market thought on this, when you consider age feel is priced at $14.99, , amazon gives.99 it to prime customers at no additional charge. the idea that there is somehow, -- marketo is owned dynamics would not even allow for higher pricing even if you were to choose to do that. i think we've seen by at&t's the past, the objective was to move the content to mobile platforms and broadest reach and platforms. directv,...