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Mar 22, 2012
03/12
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LINKTV
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eye 138
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how you doing?" "oh, okay." "how's it going?" "oh"--you know these heavy conversations you have, yeah? but it turns out, we could just barely hear each other. but at nighttime, at nighttime-- [whistles] you could hear these guys whispering in their tents. you can hear them so clearly. i can remember that now why the-- "wow, at nighttime, i can hear those guys. "how come i can hear them so good at nighttime? in daytime, i can't." and i didn't know the answer to that. and it took me a long time to find the answer to that. has anyone ever experienced something like that? it's not all the time true, but under special conditions, sometimes you can hear a lot clearer over long distance than other times. let me tell you what happened, okay? it turns out that over here-- let's suppose over here, someone says, "hello. how are you?" and we get sound waves coming off like this. and the sound keeps going. now, it turns out, the direction of sound will always be at right angles to the waves. so, for example, like this, it's like that. and up
how you doing?" "oh, okay." "how's it going?" "oh"--you know these heavy conversations you have, yeah? but it turns out, we could just barely hear each other. but at nighttime, at nighttime-- [whistles] you could hear these guys whispering in their tents. you can hear them so clearly. i can remember that now why the-- "wow, at nighttime, i can hear those guys. "how come i can hear them so good at nighttime? in daytime, i can't." and i didn't...
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Mar 6, 2012
03/12
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LINKTV
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eye 209
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how many say... [laughter] how many say it's the same everywhere? how many are not quite so sure? how many say, "hewitt, i'm sure of everything. by gosh, count me in." okay? [laughter] well, it turns out, gang, it's gonna displace the same amount of water at which position? all. same everywhere. see? when i dunk this object in here, you see it lose some weight when it gets to here, right? does it lose more weight here? does it lose more weight here? isn't the weight that's lost the same at all points? isn't there more pressure when it's down here? if the pressure is greater than up here, true or false? true. so there's more pressure pushing up against the bottom down here? yup. there ought to be then more buoyancy? except down here, there's also more pressure pushing against the top-- right. --than when you're over here. - right. - and so guess what, gang? it's the pressure difference. the difference between the pressure pushing the bottom here and here, that difference is the same as the smaller pressure pushing here versus the even smaller pressure pushing here. so the differenc
how many say... [laughter] how many say it's the same everywhere? how many are not quite so sure? how many say, "hewitt, i'm sure of everything. by gosh, count me in." okay? [laughter] well, it turns out, gang, it's gonna displace the same amount of water at which position? all. same everywhere. see? when i dunk this object in here, you see it lose some weight when it gets to here, right? does it lose more weight here? does it lose more weight here? isn't the weight that's lost the...
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Mar 21, 2012
03/12
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WMPT
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eye 128
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realizing how they, how pina had achieved that impact on me. anybody else ever took, i mean took many tough cookies into a piece by pina and they all at first said no, do we have to go see dance. and i looked over and they were all of them were crying after. >> rose: all of them. >> everybody. i don't know a single one who resisted that language. >> rose: they were open to experience. >> oh yeah. that's at least if you're not open to experience, you're never going to enjoy any book, poem or music. >> rose: she died in 2009. >> summer of 2009. just shortly before we were ready to go. >> rose: what were the last conversations about. >> we had a conversation a week before she died. about how to shoot. about when we're going to be ready. about me finally showing her 3d. we had it all set up. she never actually watched it because she didn't want to see just anything. she wanted to see how one dances, and everything was set up so we could show it to her. finally the alaska the last cone test. >> rose: she became what to you. >> she became an incredib
realizing how they, how pina had achieved that impact on me. anybody else ever took, i mean took many tough cookies into a piece by pina and they all at first said no, do we have to go see dance. and i looked over and they were all of them were crying after. >> rose: all of them. >> everybody. i don't know a single one who resisted that language. >> rose: they were open to experience. >> oh yeah. that's at least if you're not open to experience, you're never going to...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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269
Mar 8, 2012
03/12
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SFGTV2
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eye 269
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how can we respond, as a community. ?e have had several murders since i have been in office, and every time i look at how i can support the family, victims, regardless of the situation. try to get people involved in talking with the police, helping the community feels safer. these are the ways that i would like to be able to respond, something that i would always like to be a part of, the effort, as supervisor. one thing that i am tackling and expect to be for a long time is looking at how muni operates in my district. the 14 bus is one of the busiest routes in san francisco. in my district, it is very well used. oftentimes, the muni bus does not go all the way to the end of the line. i am trying to work out how we can actually extend down to daly city. so if you want to get downtown, from my area, you can take the bart it, and then go downtown, and be there within 20 minutes. right now, you take the 14 bus 2 balboa station, and it will take you 40 minutes just to get to balboa station. that is one thing i am looking at,
how can we respond, as a community. ?e have had several murders since i have been in office, and every time i look at how i can support the family, victims, regardless of the situation. try to get people involved in talking with the police, helping the community feels safer. these are the ways that i would like to be able to respond, something that i would always like to be a part of, the effort, as supervisor. one thing that i am tackling and expect to be for a long time is looking at how muni...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 28, 2012
03/12
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SFGTV2
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eye 89
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how do we establish -- how do we know -- how to newspapers establish credibility? i saw this news reporter who put a piece on youtube about gavin newsom just walking away. so how did these organizations establish credibility? how are people able to see the problems with bias that will never come up? there is also a problem with advertisers, backers. a millionaire putting $500,000 or $1 million into a newspaper, and he will expect something in return. he may not want his coverage to be negative. so there are all these things. i wondered if anybody had any general comments about those. >> that is a really difficult problem. if we think about the way we understand journalism today, it really is an historical aberration. that is not cutting back. we had objective journalism, which created shared narratives, but the truth is what we only saw was the narrative from a particular perspective. now, we have chaos. i'm not saying that is not a problem, but on the other hand, we need to think about the fact that we have a lot more voices and a lot more information, and we need
how do we establish -- how do we know -- how to newspapers establish credibility? i saw this news reporter who put a piece on youtube about gavin newsom just walking away. so how did these organizations establish credibility? how are people able to see the problems with bias that will never come up? there is also a problem with advertisers, backers. a millionaire putting $500,000 or $1 million into a newspaper, and he will expect something in return. he may not want his coverage to be negative....
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Mar 8, 2012
03/12
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LINKTV
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eye 195
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how can atom have no looks? it turn out that atom have no looks because it's smaller than the wavelength of light, that which you look at it with, huh? smaller than the wavelength of light. let me show you what i mean. let's suppose we have a tank, a tank of water here. and all i have here is i have like maybe a rock. there's a rock and a tank and over here i have some sort of detector and over here i take a meter stick and i go flip, flip, flip, flip, flip and i make waves and the waves travel. here's the waves like this. when the waves hit the rocks, can you see the rock disturbs the waves? with this detector, which consists of a little thing there with a ping-pong ball with a little arm that will float up and down, will this detector detect the presence of that rock? will the waves come in differently to this detector if the rock weren't there? yes. can you kind of picture that in your mind, okay? it turns out that rock would disturb the waves. that's because the rock is bigger than the waves. here's the wave
how can atom have no looks? it turn out that atom have no looks because it's smaller than the wavelength of light, that which you look at it with, huh? smaller than the wavelength of light. let me show you what i mean. let's suppose we have a tank, a tank of water here. and all i have here is i have like maybe a rock. there's a rock and a tank and over here i have some sort of detector and over here i take a meter stick and i go flip, flip, flip, flip, flip and i make waves and the waves...
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Mar 8, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN3
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eye 99
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how much capacity is necessary? this is again why it's very difficult to do this by jurisdiction by jurisdiction. what if you get the outliar? are we not going to respond because we didn't have enough stuff or have a plan? so we're looking at very large events and going there's very basic things that have to be done in the first 72 hours, the first weeks, the first months to be successful. and then going back and going how much of that have we built? how much more we need to build. again, we're not necessarily looking at this is going to require that we're going to spend our way out of. this a lot of time it's looking at the private sector, looking at volunteers, looking at what the military provides and the fact that congress gave us the authority for secretary of defense to call out the reserves now and duel status kplanders to support uniform coordinated efforts. what are we planning against? what is our target? and where should we be investing to get to that? >> that's a very comprehensive answer. i thank you fo
how much capacity is necessary? this is again why it's very difficult to do this by jurisdiction by jurisdiction. what if you get the outliar? are we not going to respond because we didn't have enough stuff or have a plan? so we're looking at very large events and going there's very basic things that have to be done in the first 72 hours, the first weeks, the first months to be successful. and then going back and going how much of that have we built? how much more we need to build. again, we're...
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Mar 12, 2012
03/12
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CNNW
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eye 170
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how do you move?looking around for things that -- >> very carefully. >> yeah. >> we never went out when the bombardment was at its most intense. typically, i would start 7:00, 7:30 in the morning and carry through to anywhere between 12:00 and 11:00. >> reporter: the syrian activists dared to show the world that they were under siege. >> one of the biggest accomplishments for the media team here was getting up a live stream so that they could show the world exactly what was happening in realtime. and they believed that this really aggravated the syrian government. now, this is one of the live cameras that they had set up outside. and they're telling us that it was shot by a sniper's bullet, that went in right there and then came out the other end. this particular group that we were, the baba amr media team, they're young. they're all in their 20s, you know? they all had different lives a year ago, and they're so brave. they're so brave. [ explosion ] they crawl on their bellies to try to get that shot
how do you move?looking around for things that -- >> very carefully. >> yeah. >> we never went out when the bombardment was at its most intense. typically, i would start 7:00, 7:30 in the morning and carry through to anywhere between 12:00 and 11:00. >> reporter: the syrian activists dared to show the world that they were under siege. >> one of the biggest accomplishments for the media team here was getting up a live stream so that they could show the world exactly...
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191
Mar 13, 2012
03/12
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KQEH
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eye 191
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coaching me with how to have at a kid, how to walk, how to eat, what not to do and what to do. then your family members and the town people are out there with drums, drinking, and normally it is a big thing for three days. tavis: to the customs becking is supposed to adhere to, what are some of the things you can no longer do or things a to have to do differently because you are the king? you mentioned being in public. what are some of the things you can no longer do? >> when i am in ghana, i cannot speak in public. i cannot go into a restaurant. if i am walking and somebody says, what are you doing? i cannot say a word. i will smile and wave. tavis: you cannot eat or drink in public. " about a private? >> i might. [laughter] because my brother, i used to cuss at him in the room. he would say i am telling you what you are doing. i think it is better because you do not want to disrespect your family. you have to be dignified. there is a notion that maybe there are so many people with evil eyes, and maybe they will be jealous of you and somebody might choke you while you are swal
coaching me with how to have at a kid, how to walk, how to eat, what not to do and what to do. then your family members and the town people are out there with drums, drinking, and normally it is a big thing for three days. tavis: to the customs becking is supposed to adhere to, what are some of the things you can no longer do or things a to have to do differently because you are the king? you mentioned being in public. what are some of the things you can no longer do? >> when i am in...
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Mar 8, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN3
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now how did this one man do all this? how's he accomplished all this? he hadn't done it simply by his good lucks and easy charm. although he has both in ample measure. he hadn't done it simply because of the excellence of his scholarship, although his scholarship has opened up new vistas and new horizons and changed the standards of what legal writing is about. >> president barack obama, back in 1991 as barack obama citizen activist. he's a graduate of harvard law school and served as the editor of harvard law review in the 1980s and returned harvard in 1991 to protest hiring practices by harvard university. if you want to read more go to wgbh in boston or online at the hill.com. >>> we're back at 7:00 a.m. eastern time and we'll continue our conversation here on c-span radio. 4:00 for those of you on the west coast. thanks for being with us on this wednesday. enjoy the rest of your evening. >>> fema director craig fugate testifies about the president's 201 budget request of $10 billion for his agency, a 6% cut from this year. members also hear about lo
now how did this one man do all this? how's he accomplished all this? he hadn't done it simply by his good lucks and easy charm. although he has both in ample measure. he hadn't done it simply because of the excellence of his scholarship, although his scholarship has opened up new vistas and new horizons and changed the standards of what legal writing is about. >> president barack obama, back in 1991 as barack obama citizen activist. he's a graduate of harvard law school and served as the...
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Mar 4, 2012
03/12
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KNTV
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eye 73
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but what about the new tough and how do we get creative, how do we get innovative? and we were very stuck in some of our habits. and improv is a great way to both break you out of that and make you feel comfortable doing that. and that's what it's all about. >> it's not about hairy arms? >> well, it can be about hairy arms. but can i snuggle up in them? i mean, you've got to go with it. and the point is being flexible and being open with it. >> that's not the first time somebody said that on the show, by the way. >> hairy arms? >> yeah, and the snuggling. >> this is an exercise that i use sometimes. so put your hands together like this. >> i have no idea. >> you know where this is going? >> no, no. >> now take your hands apart and put them with the other thumb on top. right? you can do this at home. now, how does that feel? kind of uncomfortable, right? >> right. it's naturally the other way. >> it's not natural. and also you're looking and noticing your thumbs and feeling uncomfortable. it's just you won't even think about your thumbs like this. but this way you're
but what about the new tough and how do we get creative, how do we get innovative? and we were very stuck in some of our habits. and improv is a great way to both break you out of that and make you feel comfortable doing that. and that's what it's all about. >> it's not about hairy arms? >> well, it can be about hairy arms. but can i snuggle up in them? i mean, you've got to go with it. and the point is being flexible and being open with it. >> that's not the first time...
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Mar 11, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 123
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>> sarah, how are you? >> nice to see you. >> good to see you all. >> [inaudible] sends his regards. >> i can't help you. i don't do that kind of stuff. [laughter] >> how are you doing? >> haven't got me yet. [laughter] just pissing people off all over the country. >> you know, we were together at treasury, so we get together every once in a while and trade house stories. >> and he was one of my students -- >> oh, really in. >> and then he took the other -- [inaudible conversations] the guy on the radio who gets in the accident, rush limbaugh? [laughter] >> they don't know your voice. tell them -- [inaudible conversations] [laughter] >> wow, there could be a couple. >> we enjoyed your christmas card. you must be rambling the earth out west. >> we're actually coming again, we're coming to yellowstone around july 4th. >> well, let us know because -- give us notice. >> with okay. >> a lot of people come. sometimes i look at the driveway, and then i go into the basement. [laughter] and the doorbell rings, is an
>> sarah, how are you? >> nice to see you. >> good to see you all. >> [inaudible] sends his regards. >> i can't help you. i don't do that kind of stuff. [laughter] >> how are you doing? >> haven't got me yet. [laughter] just pissing people off all over the country. >> you know, we were together at treasury, so we get together every once in a while and trade house stories. >> and he was one of my students -- >> oh, really in. >>...
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194
Mar 18, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 194
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we didn't know how the war would turn out, how would the surge would impact the operations and so forth. so there was a uphigh uptempo to meet our deadline. i and i had applied for a visa and showed up in afghanistan and i sent general petraeus a note and he had been helping me with my dissertation thinking, you know, here's this benign doctoral student and nobody is not going to read hur dissertation and it's not a big deal. i don't think he realized i was writing it into a book until my fourth visit when i sent an email from the pakistan border and showing my odd sense of adventure. general petraeus, we're having a blast out here. we just got shot at. and he wrote back and general campbell who was his boss in the 101st airborne division commander and he realized i was out there sharing hardship with the troops and at least accepting some risks to get the story, to get the scoop and he then said to his staff let's try to accommodate her a little bit more. i spent about almost four months on a ground but in three-week doses at the time and it was helpful to see how things were changing
we didn't know how the war would turn out, how would the surge would impact the operations and so forth. so there was a uphigh uptempo to meet our deadline. i and i had applied for a visa and showed up in afghanistan and i sent general petraeus a note and he had been helping me with my dissertation thinking, you know, here's this benign doctoral student and nobody is not going to read hur dissertation and it's not a big deal. i don't think he realized i was writing it into a book until my...
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Mar 2, 2012
03/12
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LINKTV
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eye 59
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how many say the moon? stand up. how many say the sun? how did you guys know it's the sun? how do you know? where did you find it? how could you not read the chapter and be astonished by that? i always used to think that the moon pulled harder on the oceans because it's closer, and the sun's so far away that the pull is a lot less. that's what i used to think, and then i get into my physics and boom, sometimes in physics you find things that are kind of like counterintuitive, don't they kind of say, hey, wait a minute, what's this, huh? and what's going on? it turns out that sun is far away, but honey, it is big. let me put it this way. you know the sun's hot and when you step from the shade into the sunlight, you can feel the heat of that sun, right? and you might say, wow, it feels-- i can feel the hotness because the sun has got such a high temperature, but you know what gang? i can bring you to welding shops wherein the welding, the torches of some of those flames are hotter than the surface of the sun, hotter, and you walk by that welding shop and you don't, whoa, go l
how many say the moon? stand up. how many say the sun? how did you guys know it's the sun? how do you know? where did you find it? how could you not read the chapter and be astonished by that? i always used to think that the moon pulled harder on the oceans because it's closer, and the sun's so far away that the pull is a lot less. that's what i used to think, and then i get into my physics and boom, sometimes in physics you find things that are kind of like counterintuitive, don't they kind of...
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125
Mar 22, 2012
03/12
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KQED
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eye 125
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, how to get along with people he can't stand, how to think under fire, how to deal with your wife whenyou're overseas. and that once someone explains to you how to diagnosis habits, how to look at the worlds through this lens of habits that it transforms how you see everything. so i was just totally fascinated when i came back. i started looking up studies and wrote a book. >> rose: did you think this was a book when you first heard him tell this story to say this is a big idea, not a small idea. >> i actually thought i wonder if i can use this to lose weight. (laughter) because i would like to lose some weight. so. >> rose: you did. looks like you lost some weight. >> i lost 30 pounds since i started writing the book. i didn't realize it was a book but when i started talking to particularly neurologists what they told me was that our understanding of habit formation has been transformed in the last ten or 15 years because for the first time we have been able to understand how habits form in the brain and that's helped us know how to change habits and when i started learning you have t
, how to get along with people he can't stand, how to think under fire, how to deal with your wife whenyou're overseas. and that once someone explains to you how to diagnosis habits, how to look at the worlds through this lens of habits that it transforms how you see everything. so i was just totally fascinated when i came back. i started looking up studies and wrote a book. >> rose: did you think this was a book when you first heard him tell this story to say this is a big idea, not a...
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Mar 21, 2012
03/12
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LINKTV
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eye 184
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anything travels is simply the ratio of how far compared to how long. so, we're talking about wave speed. it's simply equal to-- is this true what i'm gonna say? no. [laughter] what's wrong? is that true? wave speed, distance over time? gang, any kind of speed is the ratio of how far you go compared to how long a time it takes, right? well, let's talk about this wave that we generated that was kinda walk and it runs blackboard here. coming out of blackboard, okay? the--what takes on the distance? divide by the time, i got it. let's take a distance of one wavelength. that's the distance to go from here to here or from here to here or from here to here. if i know the time that goes by during the time a wave goes one wavelength, then i can put that in here and i can have the wave speed. if i were interested in things like that, then we kind of are, aren't we? and what is the time it takes for a wave to go one-- whole cycle? what do we call that time? begins with the p. - period. - period. okay? and so all over here, we can say wavelength over the period of
anything travels is simply the ratio of how far compared to how long. so, we're talking about wave speed. it's simply equal to-- is this true what i'm gonna say? no. [laughter] what's wrong? is that true? wave speed, distance over time? gang, any kind of speed is the ratio of how far you go compared to how long a time it takes, right? well, let's talk about this wave that we generated that was kinda walk and it runs blackboard here. coming out of blackboard, okay? the--what takes on the...
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Mar 8, 2012
03/12
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KQEH
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eye 132
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how does this medicine work? if patients start getting interested in their health and our starting to be more skeptical. tavis: you tell some alarming stories about patients and the book. you mentioned the health-care debate a moment ago, which really, as we all know, is not over. if republicans have their way, they will turn this over, and some parts of this law are still being challenged in the court system as we know it now, but what most troubles you about that debate? >> that debate was on numbers, and it was devoid of the fact that there are human beings, there are people are hurting because they do not get enough health care. there are people who are dying in this country because of the health care. i partly wrote the book because i wanted to put a human face on this and get away from these broad concepts and make people actually realized that this health care debate is about people hurting and people dying because they are not getting the care that they need. >> -- tavis: to your point, there is a story i
how does this medicine work? if patients start getting interested in their health and our starting to be more skeptical. tavis: you tell some alarming stories about patients and the book. you mentioned the health-care debate a moment ago, which really, as we all know, is not over. if republicans have their way, they will turn this over, and some parts of this law are still being challenged in the court system as we know it now, but what most troubles you about that debate? >> that debate...
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but not everyone is ready to pull the trigger on president bashar al assad's regime really show you how a few congressmen are trying to strong arm their way into syria. and speaking of government crackdowns americans are singing bye bye to their first amendment rights the new national defense authorization after the so-called trespassing bill are we being stripped of our freedoms. and he may not have won any of the primaries last night around fall short of a good fight whoever it may be that they're pointing to this fantasy candidates even just to win the white house but perhaps change political discourse we're going to bring you more on that story in just a bit of. good evening it's wednesday march seventh five pm here in washington d.c. i'm lucy captain of you're watching our t.v. we begin in syria where an end to the violence is seemingly nowhere near in sight after almost a year of bloody offensives the government of president bashar al assad seems unable to regain control of the country meanwhile the opposition groups are too weak and too fragmented to overthrow his regime and amid
but not everyone is ready to pull the trigger on president bashar al assad's regime really show you how a few congressmen are trying to strong arm their way into syria. and speaking of government crackdowns americans are singing bye bye to their first amendment rights the new national defense authorization after the so-called trespassing bill are we being stripped of our freedoms. and he may not have won any of the primaries last night around fall short of a good fight whoever it may be that...
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141
Mar 31, 2012
03/12
by
KQEH
tv
eye 141
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and also how do i learn about nonviolent, direct action and how to do that, and how to engage in that. and out of those trainings, in many cases, people will then go do demonstrations. and then secondly, the build towards the shareholder meetings, there's a website called confrontcorporatepower.org. and people can go on there and learn, how can i engage in some of these 40 corporate campaigns focused on 40 corporations. all will have demonstrations at the shareholder meetings. how can i plug in and be a part of this fight to really restructure our relationship with the corporate sector? >> you've been doing this for a long time. why did you become an organizer? >> i'll give you the short version. but i had got in a little bit of trouble, and ended up at a soup kitchen. and didn't expect to be there. was a little surprised to be there. and went and ate. and when i was done, i felt a little uncomfortable about being there. so i asked if i could wash some dishes. and one thing led to another. and i actually got my act together and my life together at that soup kitchen. and thank goodness
and also how do i learn about nonviolent, direct action and how to do that, and how to engage in that. and out of those trainings, in many cases, people will then go do demonstrations. and then secondly, the build towards the shareholder meetings, there's a website called confrontcorporatepower.org. and people can go on there and learn, how can i engage in some of these 40 corporate campaigns focused on 40 corporations. all will have demonstrations at the shareholder meetings. how can i plug in...
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91
Mar 22, 2012
03/12
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WRC
tv
eye 91
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how is that?ually pretty good. >> you rock. go ahead. tell us what you're making. making a pb all dressed up. >> how do you make it? >> in here we have two tablespoons of honey peanut butter. two tablespoons of balsalmic vinegar. one-half cup of extra virgin olive oil. a pinch of salt. >> drizzle that on there. i'm going to give randy one to chew on. >> thank you, hoda. >> randy's our taste tester. how is that? mmm. mmm. that's great. come on down, randy. talk to us. we have more eating to do. what are you making down here. >> i'm making an egg sandwich with avocado, egg, lettuce and peanut butter. >> do your thing while we eat. randy, time to eat. time to eat again. peanut butter, avocado. >> lettuce. hot sauce. >> how did you come up with this? >> all my favorite foods. i added it together. >> how many times did you have to make a mix before you had it right? >> a couple. >> come on down here, randy. what are we making, mallory? >> a peanut barbecue chicken. >> how did you make it? >> well -- >>
how is that?ually pretty good. >> you rock. go ahead. tell us what you're making. making a pb all dressed up. >> how do you make it? >> in here we have two tablespoons of honey peanut butter. two tablespoons of balsalmic vinegar. one-half cup of extra virgin olive oil. a pinch of salt. >> drizzle that on there. i'm going to give randy one to chew on. >> thank you, hoda. >> randy's our taste tester. how is that? mmm. mmm. that's great. come on down, randy....
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big they can be blown and how. damaging they can be when they all pop now when it comes to making big bubbles and then watching the economy implode when it does pop no one did it better perhaps longer either than alan greenspan during his tenure as chairman of the fed from one thousand nine hundred seventy two thousand and six so much that he earned the nickname alan bubbles greenspan there's a headline there from the new york times about mr bubbles from two thousand and five one reason well he cut interest rates to one percent in two thousand and three and two thousand and four many credited his easy money policies for creating the housing bubble and he's also credited by critics with contributing to the sub prime crisis and the bus that it was look at this so to reportedly packed house in a speech back in two thousand and four when interest rates were still super low he said adjustable rate mortgages might be a better deal for homeowners let's pull out some quotes he said that americans preference for long term f
big they can be blown and how. damaging they can be when they all pop now when it comes to making big bubbles and then watching the economy implode when it does pop no one did it better perhaps longer either than alan greenspan during his tenure as chairman of the fed from one thousand nine hundred seventy two thousand and six so much that he earned the nickname alan bubbles greenspan there's a headline there from the new york times about mr bubbles from two thousand and five one reason well he...
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Mar 31, 2012
03/12
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WRC
tv
eye 146
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>> i do. >> how long should a washing machine last?ears, 12 years or 16 years before you replace it? >> at least 12. >> reporter: she's right. both washing machines and dryers last about 12 years. here's an everyday appliance. >> how long should a dishwasher last? seven, ten, or 13 years? >> ten? >> reporter: actually, it should last 13 years according to the appliance manufacturers. dish washers require very little maintenance as long as you run them regularly. next. >> how long should a furnace last? ten years? 20 years? or the life of your house? >> i think 20 years would be nice. >> actually, 20 years is right. >> reporter: the department of energy experts say furnaces should last between 15 and 20 years. furnace filters, however, only hold up one to three months. be sure to change them accordingly. >> how long should a coat of sealer last? three years, five years, or ten years? >> three years. >> reporter: he's right. water repellant deck stains and sealers generally last about three years. industry experts say it depends on expos
>> i do. >> how long should a washing machine last?ears, 12 years or 16 years before you replace it? >> at least 12. >> reporter: she's right. both washing machines and dryers last about 12 years. here's an everyday appliance. >> how long should a dishwasher last? seven, ten, or 13 years? >> ten? >> reporter: actually, it should last 13 years according to the appliance manufacturers. dish washers require very little maintenance as long as you run them...
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Mar 30, 2012
03/12
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CNN
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eye 88
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how has she talked to you? how has she transformed you? to peace with yourself? >> i don't know if i'm ever at peace with myself. i mean, you said that. >> how do you feel? do you still feel rages, occasionally? like you used to? >> periodically. not like i used to, of course. i may feel sorry for myself, and thank god, i'm not with my potentials could take me. but what i really want is my family unit. so i don't really strive for some great goals anymore, unless my family's able to come with me. >> when you look back at your life, what is the period you're most ashamed of? >> well, i don't know. a lot of them. so i don't know. pretty bad stuff. >> how much of it, do you think, was down to your upbringing? i mean, you were arrested 38 times before you were even 13. >> a great deal of it. a great deal of it. but, still, that same, that same emotion, that crudeness and stuff is the same fight of my success, and i can't separate the two at the time. they fed off one another. >> people wanted you. you were the most ferocious fighter i've ever
how has she talked to you? how has she transformed you? to peace with yourself? >> i don't know if i'm ever at peace with myself. i mean, you said that. >> how do you feel? do you still feel rages, occasionally? like you used to? >> periodically. not like i used to, of course. i may feel sorry for myself, and thank god, i'm not with my potentials could take me. but what i really want is my family unit. so i don't really strive for some great goals anymore, unless my family's...
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Mar 17, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN
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eye 139
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if you're trying to balance your budget you try to figure out how to make cuts and how to bring more money into the door. it begins by taking a look and see can we afford to continue the bush era tax cuts for the wealthiest 1% of americans billions of dollars that has created a hole in our budget that we need to have a discussion about whether or not that was helping the economy. host: is there a difference generationally? guest: how can you say it's a balanced approach when the president has put forth a budget that continues to add trillions of dollars of debt? running highest deficits in our nation's country? there's nothing balanced about the three largest deft sits and we have to get back to a balanced budget. we obviously support a balanced budget amendment. the idea of cut cap and balance is put forth and encourage everybody to see what we're talking about and understand that running a government at such a great deficit is not healthy for anyone. and in the upper chamber in the senate it's been a thousand days since the senate democrat have put forth a budget. one of the most f
if you're trying to balance your budget you try to figure out how to make cuts and how to bring more money into the door. it begins by taking a look and see can we afford to continue the bush era tax cuts for the wealthiest 1% of americans billions of dollars that has created a hole in our budget that we need to have a discussion about whether or not that was helping the economy. host: is there a difference generationally? guest: how can you say it's a balanced approach when the president has...
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Mar 8, 2012
03/12
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LINKTV
tv
eye 157
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how about--you make it longer? how about you take a snorkel like this. so i think i'll go a little deeper. i'm not into scuba tanks, honey. i'm just going to take this and go way down. now, can you go that deep? what happens you're that deep, gang? you get a lot of water pressure pushing in on you. and what's that water pressure pushing in your lungs. and what's that water pressure going to do to the volume of your lungs, scrunch them up, right? okay. so the pressure is gonna be more in there, right? now you've got more pressure in your lungs than up there. which way is the air gonna go? someone will go-- you can't go-- --get to a point down about this--this far. i get to about here. i could go this deep. and when i was that deep down here, that deep, i go... i could just just barely breathe, any deeper, augh. can't do it. so that's what that's all about. that's why you have to have pumps at the surface or you have to bring a scuba tank with you. and with that scuba tank, that's regulated so the deeper you go, the more pressure it feeds into your lungs.
how about--you make it longer? how about you take a snorkel like this. so i think i'll go a little deeper. i'm not into scuba tanks, honey. i'm just going to take this and go way down. now, can you go that deep? what happens you're that deep, gang? you get a lot of water pressure pushing in on you. and what's that water pressure pushing in your lungs. and what's that water pressure going to do to the volume of your lungs, scrunch them up, right? okay. so the pressure is gonna be more in there,...
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Mar 5, 2012
03/12
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FOXNEWS
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eye 126
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that is how he shines. don't think there is any doubt if you watch the debates, there is one person that has handled every issue that has been presented in several levels. he had a not only makes the surface argument and underlying principle argument. he can also go of after the president of the united states in that way. it's interesting to look at the ads but it bothers me like members of a family trying to distinguish themselves from one another when they really believe that most of the same things. as the time goes on, they keep hitting each other harder and harder with the real fight is the guy next-door. >> i think gingrich lost his luster when people found out how erratic he was. sitting on the couch talking to pelosi about global warming, traveling with al sharpton talking about the education agenda, the fannie mae and freddie mac. we were offended republicans that voted for the bailout, support for the bank bailout and support for fannie mae and freddie mac are complete non-starter for any candidat
that is how he shines. don't think there is any doubt if you watch the debates, there is one person that has handled every issue that has been presented in several levels. he had a not only makes the surface argument and underlying principle argument. he can also go of after the president of the united states in that way. it's interesting to look at the ads but it bothers me like members of a family trying to distinguish themselves from one another when they really believe that most of the same...
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romney's denied the nomination and i don't know how clutch is it. now there was a brief moment today where the super tuesday result covered stopped for a very important press conference and no one in the president's press conference that was yesterday guys today with another incredibly important leader. peyton manning and the indianapolis colts one of the greatest shows it and it will history ending after fourteen years and a super bowl championship and we are seconds away from what could be the end of an era in professional football colts owner jim irsay is expected to announce he's releasing the poor time m.v.p. quarterback this essentially is a business decision for superstar quarterback peyton manning and the fourth time m.v.p. winner peyton manning in the indianapolis colts divorced the team reportedly releasing him to avoid at least in part twenty eight million dollars bonus. yeah that's right the hard hitting cable news channels out there took some time out of the political horse race to talk about peyton manning's departure from the colts i
romney's denied the nomination and i don't know how clutch is it. now there was a brief moment today where the super tuesday result covered stopped for a very important press conference and no one in the president's press conference that was yesterday guys today with another incredibly important leader. peyton manning and the indianapolis colts one of the greatest shows it and it will history ending after fourteen years and a super bowl championship and we are seconds away from what could be...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 6, 2012
03/12
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SFGTV2
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eye 74
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you need to know exactly what you're looking for, how you are going to use the money, and how you will be paid the bank. part of the process is make sure you are prepared. the first thing you need to do is take a advantage of the resources that can help you develop your business plan and really be prepared to go to a lender. being able to answer the questions you know that they will be asking is part of what we do as well. i'm sure we will have lots of time for questions, but i will send it back to you. >> director of the office of small business with the city and county of san francisco. again, i also want to thank congresswoman pelosi for hosting this event, and with her staff, and her leadership around all the work she has done supporting small businesses. because she comes from san francisco, and, by our definition, is small business is a business with under 100 employees. that is almost 85% of all businesses in the city. because she is from here, she really understands what small businesses are about, and she articulates your needs in washington, d.c. in may 2008, san francisco op
you need to know exactly what you're looking for, how you are going to use the money, and how you will be paid the bank. part of the process is make sure you are prepared. the first thing you need to do is take a advantage of the resources that can help you develop your business plan and really be prepared to go to a lender. being able to answer the questions you know that they will be asking is part of what we do as well. i'm sure we will have lots of time for questions, but i will send it...
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55
Mar 18, 2012
03/12
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MSNBCW
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eye 55
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>> how are you doing?ar. >> you probably didn't think i was coming. >> i knew you were coming. they told me last night. she means the world to me. she's my reason for not giving up. you know, i was thinking this morning how much that i love my daughter. courage. and all the points i earned with my citi thankyou card. [ male announcer ] the citi thankyou card. redeem points for travel on any airline with no blackout dates. the passat is one of nine volkswagen models named a 2012 iihs top safety pick. not...that... we'd ever brag about it... turn right. come on, nine. turn left. hit the brakes. huh? how did that get there? [ male announcer ] we can't hide how proud we are to have nine top safety picks like the passat and jetta. so we're celebrating with our "safety in numbers" event. that's the power of german engineering. right now lease the 2012 jetta for $159 a month. lease the 2012 jetta over time, my lashes thinned. after 40, i didn't have enough lashes. i'd heard of latisse® but had questions. my docto
>> how are you doing?ar. >> you probably didn't think i was coming. >> i knew you were coming. they told me last night. she means the world to me. she's my reason for not giving up. you know, i was thinking this morning how much that i love my daughter. courage. and all the points i earned with my citi thankyou card. [ male announcer ] the citi thankyou card. redeem points for travel on any airline with no blackout dates. the passat is one of nine volkswagen models named a...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Mar 28, 2012
03/12
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SFGTV2
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how you doing? >> good. thanks. how are you? >> great. so we have here via skype, she's live from new york city. i always wanted to say that. [laughter] >> and mary is the author of a book about "to kill a mockingbird" that a she wrote last year, "scout, atticus and boo," and she's directed and produced a film about "to kill a mockingbird." we're going to watch a clip from that in just a moment. next, we have john j. osborn. if you went to law school, the one book you would have read before going to law school was "the paper chase," and this is a book that john j. osborn wrote. has really become a classic. and it, of course, spawned an oscar-award winning film, same name, and also a television series. he's also written an incredible article about "to kill a mockingbird," so we're going to ask him about that. next we have paulette frankl. and paulette is a courtroom sketch artist. now, how cool is that? that's a pretty cool job, and she spends a lot of time in the courtroom and that's how she came across tony serra. and she spent 17 years,
how you doing? >> good. thanks. how are you? >> great. so we have here via skype, she's live from new york city. i always wanted to say that. [laughter] >> and mary is the author of a book about "to kill a mockingbird" that a she wrote last year, "scout, atticus and boo," and she's directed and produced a film about "to kill a mockingbird." we're going to watch a clip from that in just a moment. next, we have john j. osborn. if you went to law...
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Mar 13, 2012
03/12
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 115
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how do you balance against the reduction in heel risk? >> the bottom line is we have to make sure that everybody on each plane in the u.s. that they had been thoroughly screened so there is not a terrorist on there who is wanted to blow up that airline. that being said, what we are doing with the risk-based model is to recognize that the vast majority of people traveling are not terrorists. how can we afford them some physical screening by doing more prescreening? part of that is shaped on my background as an fbi agent where any time i traveled i flew and we never go through security screening. i would go to the exit lane and sign a law enforcement officer's book and have credentials validated. clearly we differentiated between the persons because we trusted them for whatever reason. the idea is the same. just to extend that concept to say we already know something about people who shared information with us. we can make developments and decisions to expedite the screening because we have done more prescreening. >> how can travelers give
how do you balance against the reduction in heel risk? >> the bottom line is we have to make sure that everybody on each plane in the u.s. that they had been thoroughly screened so there is not a terrorist on there who is wanted to blow up that airline. that being said, what we are doing with the risk-based model is to recognize that the vast majority of people traveling are not terrorists. how can we afford them some physical screening by doing more prescreening? part of that is shaped...
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72
Mar 23, 2012
03/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 72
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but that route, it is how to survive a plate of -- it is a story of how we attack aids, not how aidsk us. and what it takes to do that and what it takes to come up with just the desire or the thought you could do that, and how to refine your techniques along the way to make a difference. >> david france, peter staley, thank you so much. the new documentary, "how to survive a plague." it will air saturday night at the walter reade theater and on monday at the museum of modern art in new york city, before the fall release. this on the 25th anniversary of act up, the aids coalition to unleash power. this is "democracy now!," democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. when we come back, what is happening with activism today on the six-month anniversary of occupy wall street. ♪ [music break] ♪ [music break] . >> this is "democracy now!," democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. last weekend marked six months since the launch of occupy wall street and here in new york and occupation may be taking root in union square park. dozens are camping out. some
but that route, it is how to survive a plate of -- it is a story of how we attack aids, not how aidsk us. and what it takes to do that and what it takes to come up with just the desire or the thought you could do that, and how to refine your techniques along the way to make a difference. >> david france, peter staley, thank you so much. the new documentary, "how to survive a plague." it will air saturday night at the walter reade theater and on monday at the museum of modern art...
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145
Mar 24, 2012
03/12
by
WBAL
tv
eye 145
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most importantly our tip for the home viewers is how to cook fish with skin on it and how to make ith do have you there? >> some nice southern california black rock cod. we're going to go down on that. this side, little salt and pepper right here. >> wow, look at your style. >> the idea behind here is you want to keep the skin tight and we don't want to cook it too fast. it is the old idea of the brick oven roasted chicken. we'll do saute pan. >> you stick the pan on top of the -- >> i'm not trying to squeeze the moisture out, just trying to squeeze the skin down. can you come it almost entirely all the way right here on the stove top. >> yeah! there we go. >> come on, fancy. >> then we're going to do a little butter right here, turn up the heat. i love your burners you got going on there. we just want to coat this fish with just a little bit of that butter. see that skin right there? >> that looks good. >> what's cooking in the other pan? >> right there, mushrooms, beautiful hedgehogs with black trumpets, oysters, we have a little spring onion, a little bit of garlic. now the idea i
most importantly our tip for the home viewers is how to cook fish with skin on it and how to make ith do have you there? >> some nice southern california black rock cod. we're going to go down on that. this side, little salt and pepper right here. >> wow, look at your style. >> the idea behind here is you want to keep the skin tight and we don't want to cook it too fast. it is the old idea of the brick oven roasted chicken. we'll do saute pan. >> you stick the pan on top...
559
559
Mar 19, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN
tv
eye 559
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how you guys doing? good. thanks. how you doing, buddy? how are you? good to be here today. i appreciate that. [laughter] hi, there. how are you? good to see you, today. oh my goodness. look at that funny guy. drew him while we were waiting. did he really? loook at that. see this? [applause] me.ooksl ik like [laughter] thank you. good to meet you. >> good luck, mitt. >> thanks a lot. i appreciate that. hi. hi, sweetie. how are you doing? there you go. thanks you guys. thank you. nice to see you. thanks you guys. oh, look at this girl over here. >> the next president of the united states. >> thank you. thank you so much. all righty. thank you. hi. how are you? >> good to see you. >> thank you. good to be here. good to be back. did did question this morning on >> -- "washington journal" ken blackwell joins us. also, discusses the nation's proposals for ending gridlock. francis mccarthy from the national research service and the disaster relief funding from fema. "washington journal" airs at 7:00 a.m. on c-span. the c-span networks will show several allied advance today. here a
how you guys doing? good. thanks. how you doing, buddy? how are you? good to be here today. i appreciate that. [laughter] hi, there. how are you? good to see you, today. oh my goodness. look at that funny guy. drew him while we were waiting. did he really? loook at that. see this? [applause] me.ooksl ik like [laughter] thank you. good to meet you. >> good luck, mitt. >> thanks a lot. i appreciate that. hi. hi, sweetie. how are you doing? there you go. thanks you guys. thank you....
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153
Mar 4, 2012
03/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 153
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how are you? >> how are you a? >> great. take care of yourself. hi, how are you? >> hello. >> my head was down. having fun? >> yes. >> nice to meet you. >> thank you so much. >> take care. >> how are you? >> thank you, take care. thank you. have a good one. how are you? how's it going? >> good. how are you? >> you will enjoy it, i promise. enjoy, listen to my speech, laugh. how are you doing? >> you got here tonight sorry. great to see you. >> how are you? >> glad you made it. >> i know. i'm sorry. good to see you. >> thank you so much for coming. >> thank you. sorry i'm so late. >> take care. hi, how are you, how is it going? >> good. >> here we go. nice to see you. how are you? >> good. how are you. i just want to say thank you for your radio show. >> e-mail our website. put in turn on the subject line. >> how are you? >> i wanted to meet you. >> thank you. watch me tonight. i'm hosting all right. hi, michael. how are you? thank you. it was a little hairy out there. how are you going? >> i'm doing fine. >> good to see. hello, how are you? >> i see you l
how are you? >> how are you a? >> great. take care of yourself. hi, how are you? >> hello. >> my head was down. having fun? >> yes. >> nice to meet you. >> thank you so much. >> take care. >> how are you? >> thank you, take care. thank you. have a good one. how are you? how's it going? >> good. how are you? >> you will enjoy it, i promise. enjoy, listen to my speech, laugh. how are you doing? >> you got here tonight...
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185
Mar 5, 2012
03/12
by
FOXNEWS
tv
eye 185
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how does he restore it?> i think he has to bring this back to the big principles that are at play in this election. he is someone who firmly believes that this is a country that hard work will be rewarded. it is a country where opportunity is unlimited. bringing it to those principles and the decision that what we stand for and all of us stand for which is a smaller accountable government that will be fiscally responsible. i think bringing it back thouo prose prin those principles. you work ward you earn your success the land where personal responsibility is what is primary not bigger government where the government makes decisions for you. those big picture principles he believes in firmly i think are what he has to convey to people. >> i like gingrich. my concern is his ethics record. whatever we think scandal occurred should not be in the court of public opinion or not part of the campaign it will. i am worried about this campaign imploding on that. democrats will love it. >> i don't think anybody is embe
how does he restore it?> i think he has to bring this back to the big principles that are at play in this election. he is someone who firmly believes that this is a country that hard work will be rewarded. it is a country where opportunity is unlimited. bringing it to those principles and the decision that what we stand for and all of us stand for which is a smaller accountable government that will be fiscally responsible. i think bringing it back thouo prose prin those principles. you work...
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166
Mar 12, 2012
03/12
by
CNN
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eye 166
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i was looking at this woman and wondering, how is it that she can form a cohesive sentence, how can sheogically? how is she not completely beside herself with grief and ripping her hair out? because she has to keep it together. she has kids and they're living in a bunker and she has no choice. i've just been given this book that has a list of all of the names of everyone here. there's 315 of them, marked next to each one of them are their age and whether they need basics like diapers and baby's milk, which is in short supply, of course. and this here is a list of the medicines that they need. and a lot of it is very basic, painkillers and things to deal with colds, flu, especially for the children. >> you feel helpless. you feel like you want to do something? >> yeah. i wanted to go back in there with a team of medical specialists with everything that we could carry to try to help support them. >> this woman is in complete fear. she doesn't want to speak. she doesn't want to show her face. another woman was holding her baby, who was just crying, crying, crying. she said, he has a fever,
i was looking at this woman and wondering, how is it that she can form a cohesive sentence, how can sheogically? how is she not completely beside herself with grief and ripping her hair out? because she has to keep it together. she has kids and they're living in a bunker and she has no choice. i've just been given this book that has a list of all of the names of everyone here. there's 315 of them, marked next to each one of them are their age and whether they need basics like diapers and baby's...
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171
Mar 12, 2012
03/12
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WTTG
tv
eye 171
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how did that get there? [ male announcer ] we can't hide how proud we are to have nine 2012 iihs top safety picks. so we're celebrating with our "safety in numbers" event. that's the power of german engineering. right now lease the 2012 passat for $219 a month. you can always expect more. like more on demand shows and movies than ever. and more ways to discover them too. plus more speed from america's fastest internet provider. so you can run more devices at the same time. ♪ feel a firework [ female announcer ] and best of all, it keeps getting better. no wonder more people choose xfinity over any other provider. ♪ love can be so mystical ♪ >>> people are talking about the red skins trading up to get robert griffin the third. >> who? >> right >> dave ross is back with one of the receivers who will catch passes from rg 3. >> can you believe it we are talking rg 3 we don't even sigh robert griffin the -- say robert griffin the third one gentleman catching passes from him, an though think armstrong in the house
how did that get there? [ male announcer ] we can't hide how proud we are to have nine 2012 iihs top safety picks. so we're celebrating with our "safety in numbers" event. that's the power of german engineering. right now lease the 2012 passat for $219 a month. you can always expect more. like more on demand shows and movies than ever. and more ways to discover them too. plus more speed from america's fastest internet provider. so you can run more devices at the same time. ♪ feel a...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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113
Mar 7, 2012
03/12
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WHUT
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eye 113
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that. >> how about anger? >> well, we found that depression, social isolation and anger are three of the factors that seem to have a bad effect on longevity and general health and brain health. >> does anger produce metabolic changes? >> absolutely. your blood pressure goes up, you get a flushed face. you can tell a person is angry because of the bodily changes, the body-mind connection we're talking about. >> well, we are rational animals, are we not? >> up to a point. >> you mean the rational side or animal side? >> i think the rational side. >> you think we're more animal than rational? >> i think sometimes we put too much time on rationality. i think there has been a lot of tests that show people are really not logical. >> when one is angry or raging -- >> yes. >> then the animal flight syndrome, i guess you would call. >> flight or fight. >> flight or fight comes into play. >> correct. >> and that produces bodily physiological behavior. >> correct. >> what is it? >> the changes in the heart. the heart rat
that. >> how about anger? >> well, we found that depression, social isolation and anger are three of the factors that seem to have a bad effect on longevity and general health and brain health. >> does anger produce metabolic changes? >> absolutely. your blood pressure goes up, you get a flushed face. you can tell a person is angry because of the bodily changes, the body-mind connection we're talking about. >> well, we are rational animals, are we not? >> up...
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Mar 30, 2012
03/12
by
KICU
tv
eye 79
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>> how do you end up with the crow? >> i think the possums were trying to help their buddies out, if you wait long enough, i'll open the door and you can escape. >> play dead, and maybe she throws everybody out and they're free. >> so the possums really aren't dead, they are just playing that way? >> they wanted to get the hell out of there. >>> how can you guys forget the video i showed you yesterday from brazil? during a news report, a reporter on the scene witnessed a man get shot in the head at pointblank range. [ gunshot ] >> i told you that the man somehow made it. he was alive in a hospital. well, today, "right this minute" has uncovered a video of the man already giving an interview. >> what? >> wait, he's talking? >> he's talking. >> you're kidding. [ speaking in foreign language ] >> in this video, you see the man, he's blurred, 24-year-old rodriguo ferrero silva. >> you can see the entry wound and bullet hole. >> he goes on to describe for this reporter there are bullets still inside his body. he is planning
>> how do you end up with the crow? >> i think the possums were trying to help their buddies out, if you wait long enough, i'll open the door and you can escape. >> play dead, and maybe she throws everybody out and they're free. >> so the possums really aren't dead, they are just playing that way? >> they wanted to get the hell out of there. >>> how can you guys forget the video i showed you yesterday from brazil? during a news report, a reporter on the...
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Mar 12, 2012
03/12
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KNTV
tv
eye 73
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i don't know how it works honestly.y focus is on the work and on the content. >> and on your new series. tell our viewers where they can see the new series, "lillyhammer" and how you came up with the idea. >> it actually wasn't my idea. he husband and writing team found me in bergen norway where i was mixing my all girl band of cocktail slippers who are a norwegian band and someone's here to see you. okay i will go see them and they said we have an idea for a show, gangster, witness protection, "lillyhammer." and i wasn't interested in playing a gangster again so soon but i couldn't resist it. it is a mono culture, 5 million people. no one knows anything about norway. so i wanted to make norway one of the characters. anything you see is new. but how well it is working in america we could not have anticipated. even people who don't like subtitles because the lead person is speaking english you become him. you know what i mean? you are peerp experiences things through his eyes which was an interesting autistic device. i'm
i don't know how it works honestly.y focus is on the work and on the content. >> and on your new series. tell our viewers where they can see the new series, "lillyhammer" and how you came up with the idea. >> it actually wasn't my idea. he husband and writing team found me in bergen norway where i was mixing my all girl band of cocktail slippers who are a norwegian band and someone's here to see you. okay i will go see them and they said we have an idea for a show,...