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Aug 10, 2019
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i think hitchcock wanted to make it simple.uld go on to things like north by northwest, which were epic. this is more simple, much more focused. and i really love the precision of it. i watch ited again and was just so pleasantly surprised by how precise and how neat the whole thing is. it really is him working at the peak of his powers. how do you think it ranks amongst all the hitchcock movies? i think it's one that actually perhaps we don't talk about quite so much because it is an espionage thriller. it is not the psychological thriller — or quite so obviously a psychological thriller like psycho. but when you watch it again, the performances are flawless and i think the direction is flawless as well. so romantic. some great kissing scenes in this. some of the most famous kissing scenes in hollywood history. i would love to see that. looking forward to seeing that once again. it's been ages since i saw that movie. now, blinded by the light. this is by the director of bend it like beckham, who we were interviewing in here a
i think hitchcock wanted to make it simple.uld go on to things like north by northwest, which were epic. this is more simple, much more focused. and i really love the precision of it. i watch ited again and was just so pleasantly surprised by how precise and how neat the whole thing is. it really is him working at the peak of his powers. how do you think it ranks amongst all the hitchcock movies? i think it's one that actually perhaps we don't talk about quite so much because it is an espionage...
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Aug 9, 2019
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how do you think it ranks among all the hitchcock movies?”ne that actually perhaps we don't talk about quite so much because it is an espionage thriller. it is not these ecological thriller, or quite so obviously a psychological thriller like psycho. but when you watch it again, the performances are flawless and i think the direction is flawless as well. some of the most famous kissing scenes in hollywood history. i would love to see that. looking forward to seeing that once again. ages since i saw that movie. now, blinded by the light. this is by the director of bend it like beckham. yet, and it is based on a true story, a journalist. about him growing up in the 805, a part of the british pakistani family, but loving the music of bruce springsteen. his family don't appreciate this. some of his friends at school don't appreciate this. there is something about this new jersey appreciate this. there is something about this newjersey rocker, a long way from luton, that appeals to him. let's have a look. music: born to run by bruce springsteen #
how do you think it ranks among all the hitchcock movies?”ne that actually perhaps we don't talk about quite so much because it is an espionage thriller. it is not these ecological thriller, or quite so obviously a psychological thriller like psycho. but when you watch it again, the performances are flawless and i think the direction is flawless as well. some of the most famous kissing scenes in hollywood history. i would love to see that. looking forward to seeing that once again. ages since...
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Aug 11, 2019
08/19
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i think hitchcock wanted to make it simple.ised by how precise and how neat the whole thing is. it really is him working at the peak of his powers. how do you think it ranks amongst all the hitchcock movies? i think it's one that actually perhaps we don't talk about quite so much because it is an espionage thriller. it is not the psychological thriller — or quite so obviously a psychological thriller like psycho. but when you watch it again, the performances are flawless and i think the direction is flawless as well. so romantic. some great kissing scenes in this. some of the most famous kissing scenes in hollywood history. i would love to see that. looking forward to seeing that once again. it's been ages since i saw that movie. now, blinded by the light. this is by the director of bend it like beckham, who we were interviewing in here a couple of weeks ago. gurinder chadha, yeah. and it is based on a true story, by the journalist sarfraz manzoor, about him growing up in the 80s, in luton, part of a british—pakistani family bu
i think hitchcock wanted to make it simple.ised by how precise and how neat the whole thing is. it really is him working at the peak of his powers. how do you think it ranks amongst all the hitchcock movies? i think it's one that actually perhaps we don't talk about quite so much because it is an espionage thriller. it is not the psychological thriller — or quite so obviously a psychological thriller like psycho. but when you watch it again, the performances are flawless and i think the...
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Aug 19, 2019
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hitchcock, can i ask you this?ntrol. >> working with him was just the opposite from the actor's studio. he doesn't talk about any feelings. he told me, don't use your hands. lower your voice. and look directly into cary grant's eyes. >> jack phillips, western sales manager for kingby electronics. >> no, you're not. your roger thornhill of madison avenue and you're wanted for murder on every front page in america. don't be so modest. >> hitchcock was one first of the directors to become a brand name, where you might show up because hitchcock directed it. and that feeling where people showed up for the director, that was about to become standard. >> you look back at classic hollywood in the 1930s through the '50s. this is the heart of american cinema. everyone who's working today has seen and was influenced by that classic era. >> stella! >> those were the building blocks, those were the templates of everything that came after it. you can go through those films again and again and again and they would live eternally
hitchcock, can i ask you this?ntrol. >> working with him was just the opposite from the actor's studio. he doesn't talk about any feelings. he told me, don't use your hands. lower your voice. and look directly into cary grant's eyes. >> jack phillips, western sales manager for kingby electronics. >> no, you're not. your roger thornhill of madison avenue and you're wanted for murder on every front page in america. don't be so modest. >> hitchcock was one first of the...
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Aug 11, 2019
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i think hitchcock wanted to make it simple.i really love the precision of it. i watched it again and was just so pleasantly surprised by how precise and how neat the whole thing is. it really is him working at the peak of his powers. how do you think it ranks amongst all the hitchcock movies? i think it's one that actually perhaps we don't talk about quite so much because it is an espionage thriller. it is not the psychological thriller — or quite so obviously a psychological thriller like psycho. but when you watch it again, the performances are flawless and i think the direction is flawless as well. so romantic. some great kissing scenes in this. some of the most famous kissing scenes in hollywood history. i would love to see that. looking forward to seeing that once again. it's been ages since i saw that movie. now, blinded by the light. this is by the director of bend it like beckham, who we were interviewing in here a couple of weeks ago. gurinder chadha, yeah. and it is based on a true story, by the journalist sarfraz man
i think hitchcock wanted to make it simple.i really love the precision of it. i watched it again and was just so pleasantly surprised by how precise and how neat the whole thing is. it really is him working at the peak of his powers. how do you think it ranks amongst all the hitchcock movies? i think it's one that actually perhaps we don't talk about quite so much because it is an espionage thriller. it is not the psychological thriller — or quite so obviously a psychological thriller like...
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Aug 16, 2019
08/19
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a reissue, bfi have reissued this, the classic hitchcock movie, ingrid bergman, cary grant.t at the bfi in london, so it ties in nicely with that, and restored as well, so looking sparkling, like it could have been made yesterday, and the chemistry as well between cary grant and ingrid bergman isjust still sparkling itself. so good together, this romance, she is undercover on a mission in rio, he is her government handler and they have a complex romance. still looks brilliant, immaculate, perhaps a simpler story than some other hitchcock movies, but so glad to see it on the big screen. it still has that brooding impending horror about it. the tension is ridiculous, there are classic moments, scenes that go on for a long time, you're at the edge of your seat because you don't know what is going to happen — you kind of do because you have seen it before. the tension is there, so even though it is 73 years old. 73 years old! 1946. yes, still works. just time for a look at a dvd, what is your favourite? benjamin. this is out on dvd. simon amstel wrote and directed this. stars co
a reissue, bfi have reissued this, the classic hitchcock movie, ingrid bergman, cary grant.t at the bfi in london, so it ties in nicely with that, and restored as well, so looking sparkling, like it could have been made yesterday, and the chemistry as well between cary grant and ingrid bergman isjust still sparkling itself. so good together, this romance, she is undercover on a mission in rio, he is her government handler and they have a complex romance. still looks brilliant, immaculate,...
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Aug 16, 2019
08/19
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BBCNEWS
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a reissue, the classic hitchcock movie, ingrid bergman cary grant.t so it ties in nicely with that and restored as well, so looking sparkling, and the chemistry as well between cary grant and ingrid bergman is sparkling itself. so good together, this romance, she is undercover on a mission, he is her government handler and they have a complex romance. still looks brilliant, immaculate, perhaps a simpler story than other hitchcock movies but glad to see it on the big screen. it still has that brooding horror about it. the tension is ridiculous, classic moment, scenes that go on for a long time because you don't know what is going to happen, you kind of do because you have seen it before, the tension is there, even though it is 73 years old. 73 years old. 46. yes, still works. just time for a look at the dvd, what is your favourite. benjamin. simon amstel wrote this. benjamin. simon amstel wrote this. benjamin is like simon, because he is sort of a neurotic vegan film director. this is a british film? yes, romantic comedy, this is what happens when ben
a reissue, the classic hitchcock movie, ingrid bergman cary grant.t so it ties in nicely with that and restored as well, so looking sparkling, and the chemistry as well between cary grant and ingrid bergman is sparkling itself. so good together, this romance, she is undercover on a mission, he is her government handler and they have a complex romance. still looks brilliant, immaculate, perhaps a simpler story than other hitchcock movies but glad to see it on the big screen. it still has that...
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Aug 18, 2019
08/19
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a reissue, bfi have reissued this, the classic hitchcock movie, ingrid bergman, cary grant.he bfi in london, so it ties in nicely with that, and restored as well, so looking sparkling, like it could have been made yesterday, and the chemistry as well between cary grant and ingrid bergman isjust still sparkling itself. so good together, this romance, she is undercover on a mission in rio, he is her government handler and they have a complex romance. still looks brilliant, immaculate, perhaps a simpler story than some —— a slightly simpler, more intimate study than some other other hitchcock movies, but so glad to see it on the big screen. it still has that brooding impending horror about it. the tension is ridiculous, there are classic moments, scenes that go on for a long time, you're at the edge of your seat because you don't know what is going to happen — you kind of do because you have seen it before. the tension is there, so even though it is 73 years old. 73 years old! 1946. yes, still works. just time for a look at a dvd, what is your favourite? benjamin. this is out o
a reissue, bfi have reissued this, the classic hitchcock movie, ingrid bergman, cary grant.he bfi in london, so it ties in nicely with that, and restored as well, so looking sparkling, like it could have been made yesterday, and the chemistry as well between cary grant and ingrid bergman isjust still sparkling itself. so good together, this romance, she is undercover on a mission in rio, he is her government handler and they have a complex romance. still looks brilliant, immaculate, perhaps a...
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Aug 22, 2019
08/19
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KTVU
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stomach and a handful of actors taking on thousands of roles in a spoof of an alfred hitchcock role. director between the 39 steps happening in mountain view. we are learrker first major televised performance her new will be her first time back in 2015 when she performed bad blood. she is tied for the mo to inclu the year and the year. it takes place next monday. stomach a new actor topping the chart the highest in the world. >> it is wayne the rock johnson. and $89.4 million right behind the jumanji start up have avengers chris hemsworth also known as door $76.4 million and robert danny junior came in with $69. >> matrix is ago with canneries and carry in my both returning it will become written and directed by the cocreator variety report production may start next year. >> theater work is bringing the 39 that to the stage at the mountain viema and we are happy to be joined by the director and one of the art of the show so welcome to the director and ron campbell you play not just a handful of character that you play doesn't. >> but counting wasn't like having to be semi-different p
stomach and a handful of actors taking on thousands of roles in a spoof of an alfred hitchcock role. director between the 39 steps happening in mountain view. we are learrker first major televised performance her new will be her first time back in 2015 when she performed bad blood. she is tied for the mo to inclu the year and the year. it takes place next monday. stomach a new actor topping the chart the highest in the world. >> it is wayne the rock johnson. and $89.4 million right behind...
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Aug 19, 2019
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. >> alfred hitchcock. >> hitchcock began working in the industry as an art director at the ufa studiosg. his first major film, "the longer" looks like german expressionism in a lot of ways. they be he went on to make these great british thrillers for which he became famous. best among all of them, 939 steps. by the end of the firts he's the leading artist of the british cinema but he understands that he's working in a very financially limited system. he also sees the war coming, and he's very happy to come to america and work for else is nick under is the six-film contract starting with "rebecca." >> that's it. that's mandalay. >> it was based on a novel by daphne due muiryer about a young innocent woman who moves into this old gothic house and they are life becomes entangled in mystery. >> how do you do. >> she feels like she can't possibly compete with rebecca. her husband max's dead wife. >> do you think the dead come back and watch the living? >> i don't believe it. >> sometimes. i wonder if she doesn't come back here to manderly. and watch you and mr. due winter together. >> hitch
. >> alfred hitchcock. >> hitchcock began working in the industry as an art director at the ufa studiosg. his first major film, "the longer" looks like german expressionism in a lot of ways. they be he went on to make these great british thrillers for which he became famous. best among all of them, 939 steps. by the end of the firts he's the leading artist of the british cinema but he understands that he's working in a very financially limited system. he also sees the war...
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Aug 10, 2019
08/19
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we go back to the glory days of hitchcock, bergman and grant with the reissued thriller notorious.tles because blinded by the light is out.
we go back to the glory days of hitchcock, bergman and grant with the reissued thriller notorious.tles because blinded by the light is out.
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Aug 12, 2019
08/19
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it's really one of the creepiest movies ever made. >> hitchcock was great at where to put the camera.e the way i heard the way she spoke to you -- >> he really knew how to throw us off balance by putting his camera off balance. >> when psycho opened in new york city, the press sat upstairs in the balcony, 500 people, and the paying customers were downstairs, about a thousand people. when we got to the shower scene, i've never seen such a reaction. ♪ [ screaming ] >> the audience downstairs was screaming to such a degree that you did not hear the soundtrack. and it wasn't a scream like ahh, ahh, ahh. it was ahhh! they couldn't believe it. i couldn't believe it janet leigh was getting killed. she's the [ bleep ] star of the picture. >> suddenly we have no protagonist to attach ourselves to. there's no movie before that ever did that, and it was terrifying to be stranded there alone with a killer. and who is this killer? ♪ >> that invention is really something extraordinary, and it heralded a different kind of filmmaking. it felt more personal and more weird. he was truly a master of ter
it's really one of the creepiest movies ever made. >> hitchcock was great at where to put the camera.e the way i heard the way she spoke to you -- >> he really knew how to throw us off balance by putting his camera off balance. >> when psycho opened in new york city, the press sat upstairs in the balcony, 500 people, and the paying customers were downstairs, about a thousand people. when we got to the shower scene, i've never seen such a reaction. ♪ [ screaming ] >>...
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Aug 12, 2019
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at the time people thought hitchcock had thrown his career away. >> sam, this is the last time. >> for from the beginning of the film. a woman is having an illicit affair. she steals money from her office to go meet the guy and run away. that's film noir. >> marian, what in the world -- what are you doing up here? of course i'm glad to see you. i always am. >> then all of a sudden, she meets this guy in a lonely motel, and, man, it becomes something else. >> dirty night. >> you have a vacancy? >> oh, we have 12 vacancies. 12 cabins, 12 vacancies. >> when i first saw "psycho," i was horrified. it's really one of the creepiest movies ever made. >> go tell her she'll not be appeasing her ugly appetite with my food or my son. >> hitchcock was great at where to put the camera. he helped tell the story. >> if anyone ever talked to me the way i heard the way she spoke to you -- >> he really knew how to throw us off balance by putting his camera off balance. >> when "psycho" opened in new york city, the press sat upstairs in the balcony, 500 people, and the paying customers were downstairs, ab
at the time people thought hitchcock had thrown his career away. >> sam, this is the last time. >> for from the beginning of the film. a woman is having an illicit affair. she steals money from her office to go meet the guy and run away. that's film noir. >> marian, what in the world -- what are you doing up here? of course i'm glad to see you. i always am. >> then all of a sudden, she meets this guy in a lonely motel, and, man, it becomes something else. >> dirty...
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Aug 18, 2019
08/19
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this is a reissue, bfi have reissued this, the classic hitchcock movie, ingrid bergman, cary grant.s in nicely with that, and restored as well, so looking sparkling, like it could have been made yesterday, and the chemistry as well between cary grant and ingrid bergman is just still sparkling itself. so good together, this romance, she's undercover on a mission in rio, he's her government handler and they have a complex romance. still looks brilliant, immaculate, perhaps a simpler story than some other hitchcock movies, but so glad to see it on the big screen. and it still has that brooding impending horror about it. so brooding. the tension is ridiculous. there are classic moments, scenes that go on for a long time, where you're at the edge of your seat because you don't know what is going to happen — you kind of do because you have seen it before. but the tension is there, so even though it's 73 years old. 73 years old! 1946. ‘46, yes, still works. just time for a look at a dvd, what is your favourite? benjamin. this is out on dvd. simon amstel wrote and directed this. stars colin
this is a reissue, bfi have reissued this, the classic hitchcock movie, ingrid bergman, cary grant.s in nicely with that, and restored as well, so looking sparkling, like it could have been made yesterday, and the chemistry as well between cary grant and ingrid bergman is just still sparkling itself. so good together, this romance, she's undercover on a mission in rio, he's her government handler and they have a complex romance. still looks brilliant, immaculate, perhaps a simpler story than...
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Aug 17, 2019
08/19
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CSPAN2
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i will talk very briefly about my book while bill which is about while bill hitchcock. it was a book i had no intention of writing. it sort of snuck up on me. i had done a book that came out a couple years ago called dodge city about white hurt and matt masterson when they were young lawmen together in dodge city kansas and when the book came out it was successful and i've been working on a different book a world war ii story but my editor looking at the bottom line said is there another iconic western figure you can think of who may be deserves to have some treatment? i said the name that popped into my head was while bill because it was a name i think we all recognized while bill hitchcock. we all recognize that name but the only thing you might think about him was he was a gunfighter i said if that's all he was a gunfighter and not really that interested i said let me do some research. the book that came out of that portrays while bill hitchcock as a gunfighter, fervent abolitionist, spy behind confederate lines during the civil war, deputy u.s. marshall, marshal of
i will talk very briefly about my book while bill which is about while bill hitchcock. it was a book i had no intention of writing. it sort of snuck up on me. i had done a book that came out a couple years ago called dodge city about white hurt and matt masterson when they were young lawmen together in dodge city kansas and when the book came out it was successful and i've been working on a different book a world war ii story but my editor looking at the bottom line said is there another iconic...
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Aug 12, 2019
08/19
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what steven spielberg did was made this the kind of shark movie that alfred hitchcock would make. >>ear that something might happen or is about to happen. but nothing does happen. and then you catch him off guard when something does happen. >> the john williams theme from "jaws" mean i'm going to scare the shit out of you and come get you. >> when he saw my cut on jaws, he went to the piano. took a couple of fingers and went da, da, da, da. da, da, da, da, da, da. and i thought, oh, my god. he's going to wreck my movie. oh, my god, it's over. i thought the film had almost wrecked my life it was so impossible to make and suddenly i'm getting a score with three fingers on the low keys? i came to the first day of scoring, and i realized that if this film was going to be successful, 50% of the success of the film is going to be because of what i just heard. and that's exactly what happened. the first time you get a sense of how big the shark is, you're immediately worried about those guys on the boat. they're going to die. >> you're going to need a bigger boat. >> jaws hit me when i was
what steven spielberg did was made this the kind of shark movie that alfred hitchcock would make. >>ear that something might happen or is about to happen. but nothing does happen. and then you catch him off guard when something does happen. >> the john williams theme from "jaws" mean i'm going to scare the shit out of you and come get you. >> when he saw my cut on jaws, he went to the piano. took a couple of fingers and went da, da, da, da. da, da, da, da, da, da....
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Aug 18, 2019
08/19
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. >> another reason he was unique is that james butler hitchcock one - - hickok came down to be farmers in illinois and they came and brought with them their abolitionist views and they believed it so much that it was a station on the underground railroad. it would not be unusual for young james to go to the basement with a family of escaped runaway slaves waiting until the next night or two nights later throw them in the back of the wagon and throw hay over them and take them to the next station. so when the civil war broke out he joined the union army and was a sharpshooter but he always had coolness under pressure in one of the things that made him effective that the bullet was not manufactured that could kill him so when confronted, he believed he would persevere. but in the civil war they actually infiltrated the staff and then they would strategize and get the information back to the alliance and that other aspect made him a renegade at any point where he could be unmasked or shot and when he was found out so there was that running gait aspect that others could not do assertively
. >> another reason he was unique is that james butler hitchcock one - - hickok came down to be farmers in illinois and they came and brought with them their abolitionist views and they believed it so much that it was a station on the underground railroad. it would not be unusual for young james to go to the basement with a family of escaped runaway slaves waiting until the next night or two nights later throw them in the back of the wagon and throw hay over them and take them to the next...
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Aug 18, 2019
08/19
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KPIX
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. >> as i mentioned once or twice offered hitchcock famously filmed the birds in bodega bay. but, a guy across the country, in florida, just shot some equally scary scenes in his own backyard. >> it really just removes those walls of what skateboarding is and isn't. >>> >> defined bay area expectations, the camp teaching girls a lot more than just skateboarding. >>> we are in the middle of a very welcome cooldown, no doubt you noticed your part of the bay area got a lot better today, tomorrow more of the same, then i need to talk about the next warm up because that is showing up in the seven day forecast. i will have the coming up, after the break. >>> summer is the perfect time for enjoying time by the pool but one family in florida is dealing with a flock of uninvited guests. anthony custom on his backyard pool in west palm beach has been overrun by vultures. the birds ripped out screening to get in. they have forced him and his family to leave their own home and good and you are >> i have a 10-year-old daughter that i can't 10-month- old daughter they can have down there w
. >> as i mentioned once or twice offered hitchcock famously filmed the birds in bodega bay. but, a guy across the country, in florida, just shot some equally scary scenes in his own backyard. >> it really just removes those walls of what skateboarding is and isn't. >>> >> defined bay area expectations, the camp teaching girls a lot more than just skateboarding. >>> we are in the middle of a very welcome cooldown, no doubt you noticed your part of the bay...
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Aug 17, 2019
08/19
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enjoying some food at the beach one moment and the next you're in the middle of a scene out of alfred hitchcock new jersey mayor is fighting these birds with other birds. ted greenberg from our philadelphia station wcau has the story. >> not long ago, valerie marachi and her kids wouldn't dare let their guard down after buys pizza on the ocean city board walk but now no sign of seagulls anxious to steal their slices. >> it is very quiet. i don't see them screaming and i don't see them flying all over the place. >> she and others we spoke, with believe the birds of prey, brought in nearly two weeks ago to scare the see gulls away from the boards and beach are making a difference. >> and a very large decrease in the amount of time that the seagulls will actually steal the food. >> just their presence, they basically clear out. >> complaints this summer about hungry seagulls becoming more aggressive prompted ocean city to pay lodi, new jersey-based east coast falcons, $2100 a day to use the team of falcons, hawks, and an owl, to help send the seagulls elsewhere. >> we're pushing them out to, you k
enjoying some food at the beach one moment and the next you're in the middle of a scene out of alfred hitchcock new jersey mayor is fighting these birds with other birds. ted greenberg from our philadelphia station wcau has the story. >> not long ago, valerie marachi and her kids wouldn't dare let their guard down after buys pizza on the ocean city board walk but now no sign of seagulls anxious to steal their slices. >> it is very quiet. i don't see them screaming and i don't see...
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Aug 10, 2019
08/19
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FOXNEWSW
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in the alford hitchcock movie the man who knew too much, i agree with what you said. the man who knew too many. names of been mentioned, i don't want to mention those names because those people are innocent but the real question is what happens as far as them if any of them were committing, having sex with underage girls? you do not need corroboration to prosecute that as a practical matter you do because you can't -- difficult to prove the case against one individual or one individual beyond reasonable doubt without some corroboration but that could be in the emails that were just discovered. it be in the form of other witnesses who might make a deal but something nobody is talking about. deal, only the way the new york post could do it, a sweetheart deal, new york post headline was born that is, worst deal in the history of deal so with that background there is more in terms of what happened and on the civil side. these victims still can go against his estate they still need to prove it. victim or victims have to prove their claims so whether or not they will get ju
in the alford hitchcock movie the man who knew too much, i agree with what you said. the man who knew too many. names of been mentioned, i don't want to mention those names because those people are innocent but the real question is what happens as far as them if any of them were committing, having sex with underage girls? you do not need corroboration to prosecute that as a practical matter you do because you can't -- difficult to prove the case against one individual or one individual beyond...