SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 17, 2013
02/13
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that's how i found out how he got started. he said it was more and better than a drug. so, when i hear it's an addiction, i'm 100% behind that because everybody i've ever interviewed has told me they're addicted to it and they can't stop. >> [speaker not understood]. >> what's that? >> [speaker not understood]. >> yeah, the whole graffiti diversion program. whatever, i know what it is. i know how it is and that's what i'll attest to for as long as i do this job. but, yeah, he's addicted to it, couldn't stop. man, you should have seen him. he's 27, 28-year old man balling his eyes out to me about how he couldn't stop doing t. he can't stop thinking about it. every day he got up, every day he went outside. you see the canal they're on there? he he would walk the canal all day back and forth just tagging. >> [speaker not understood]. >> facebook. it started out with facebook and then -- the way we do things first, this is how it all starts. i always see jugs come across my desk time and time again. i keep a little log for myself every year of all the taggers that come thro
that's how i found out how he got started. he said it was more and better than a drug. so, when i hear it's an addiction, i'm 100% behind that because everybody i've ever interviewed has told me they're addicted to it and they can't stop. >> [speaker not understood]. >> what's that? >> [speaker not understood]. >> yeah, the whole graffiti diversion program. whatever, i know what it is. i know how it is and that's what i'll attest to for as long as i do this job. but,...
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85
Feb 20, 2013
02/13
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LINKTV
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more, how much more? how many say that tells me how much more? make one of those twice on the top, the force becomes twice. you see that? so you become twice as massive. i mean twice the weight. so people that are twice as massive, weigh twice as much. do you see there's a difference between the two ideas? some people don't. they say, are you saying the same thing? no, no, no, no, how much mass you have is altogether different then how hard it's being pulled by gravity? but you can take the same mass, take your same mass and go to the top of the mountain, at the top of a mountain, strictly speaking, you weigh more less, same, same, or there's no way to say? what is it? begin with an l end with an s. less and why do you weigh less? because you made the distance greater. want me to give you a type of question that wipes out about half the students on an exam that has to do with equation reading? let me show you what it is. here's a ladder. the girl right here weighs 400 newtons, it's about 90 pounds. she climbs a ladder that is just as tall as the
more, how much more? how many say that tells me how much more? make one of those twice on the top, the force becomes twice. you see that? so you become twice as massive. i mean twice the weight. so people that are twice as massive, weigh twice as much. do you see there's a difference between the two ideas? some people don't. they say, are you saying the same thing? no, no, no, no, how much mass you have is altogether different then how hard it's being pulled by gravity? but you can take the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 10, 2013
02/13
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SFGTV2
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eye 78
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how do we get started? one other thing i need to let you know, things that, you know, i'm letting you know my experiences and things. don't do this facebook account if you can on your own computer because we all have ip addresses. sometimes they can find out where you live and where you are. you can pay a little bit of money and do that. the other thing is if you do do it at work, try to get a dedicated computer just for that. we have a dedicated laptop that we use that they scrambled it or whatever so they can't really find us as well. so, if that's at all possible and feasible, do that. does anybody have a fake facebook account? tell me some stories about yourses. wait, i have to do this thing right here. [laughter] >> i don't know how to get this thing out of here. do you feel important now? >> i feel very important. what you're saying for intel mainly, we'll see who is active, who is moving around. and one key is -- that i found is helpful is don't be from where you're actually working. >> exactly. that
how do we get started? one other thing i need to let you know, things that, you know, i'm letting you know my experiences and things. don't do this facebook account if you can on your own computer because we all have ip addresses. sometimes they can find out where you live and where you are. you can pay a little bit of money and do that. the other thing is if you do do it at work, try to get a dedicated computer just for that. we have a dedicated laptop that we use that they scrambled it or...
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Feb 27, 2013
02/13
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LINKTV
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eye 108
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we'll talk about how big, how small atoms are. anyway, we have all the atoms arranged in our textbook. open to the front cover and you will see the periodic table, periodic chart of the elements. and this is the periodic chart, gang. you guys have gotta memorize that by next time. will you learn any physics at all if you do memorize that? no. you'll learn no physics, none. all you'll know is a lot of names and a lot of chart, okay? but what is this chart? this chart is an enormous detective story, put this together. what it does is it lists all the atoms by atomic number, starting off number one with hydrogen, jump over to the page, helium, then lithium, beryllium, boron, carbon, what comes after carbon, gang? nitrogen. guess which is heavier, carbon or nitrogen? nitrogen. see, they keep getting heavier than ever, then oxygen, fluorine, neon and so forth. let's talk about those atoms. let's talk about some nomenclature for those atoms. consider hydrogen. hydrogen consists of a central nucleus and it turns out they put that plus si
we'll talk about how big, how small atoms are. anyway, we have all the atoms arranged in our textbook. open to the front cover and you will see the periodic table, periodic chart of the elements. and this is the periodic chart, gang. you guys have gotta memorize that by next time. will you learn any physics at all if you do memorize that? no. you'll learn no physics, none. all you'll know is a lot of names and a lot of chart, okay? but what is this chart? this chart is an enormous detective...
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Feb 11, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN
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how did he, and it wasn't a foregone conclusion. how was he chosen? >> how was coolidge chose? this is very important. imagine now we have the problem of public sector unions. we might like the people in them but they are asking for a lot. reagan had the air traffic controllers. they were in a union. they were good guys but asking a lot. in the case of reagan, they were jeopardizing public safety. planes are important. they can crash. coolidge had an analogous situation as governor of massachussetts. governor had a say in the police story in boston. the police women of boston went on strike after world war i. they were nice guys, they were underpaid. there was a terrible inflation nobody was acknowledging. their station houses had rats. little rodents chewed on their helmets. 18 ways they deserved a race and better treatment. nonetheless they walked off and this is a very rough time in american history. there was chaos and violence and rioting in looting in boston. so coolidge was on the team, the leader of it that fired these policemen. they went in a union. not even a radical
how did he, and it wasn't a foregone conclusion. how was he chosen? >> how was coolidge chose? this is very important. imagine now we have the problem of public sector unions. we might like the people in them but they are asking for a lot. reagan had the air traffic controllers. they were in a union. they were good guys but asking a lot. in the case of reagan, they were jeopardizing public safety. planes are important. they can crash. coolidge had an analogous situation as governor of...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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81
Feb 12, 2013
02/13
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WHUT
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eye 81
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how did the story stay buried? >> demon and i discovered the story, i thought it was very important. the impact that these women and on what we wearan impac .oday the story rises to the top in certain parts but it never comes full circle with models playing the big roles. tavis: i don't want to make you overtly political, but what does this story say to us, and guide us? tell me what the message here is for the tragedy today? i noted fashion week is going on as we speak. this is not my area of expertise but i watch a little bit of everything and i still don't see the number of african american models on the cover of magazines. i don't see them to the extent that they ought to be. what is the unfinished business in this industry given what we know? >> the unfinished business is to show people that all races can be beautiful. all people can be beautiful so you need to use the people that can make your clothes look the best, regardless of color. there should not be a blueprint for what a model can look like. you can a
how did the story stay buried? >> demon and i discovered the story, i thought it was very important. the impact that these women and on what we wearan impac .oday the story rises to the top in certain parts but it never comes full circle with models playing the big roles. tavis: i don't want to make you overtly political, but what does this story say to us, and guide us? tell me what the message here is for the tragedy today? i noted fashion week is going on as we speak. this is not my...
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Feb 16, 2013
02/13
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KQEH
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the focus is very much about how to fine voice, how to be healthy, but as many of us do after coming back from the realization you have to keep your eyes on your own paper, amy does that by deciding she is going to change her mother, change her company, make it a better place, i think that is what happens, but as it rose, she believes she can take this energy and make the world a better place, and she gets doors slammed in her face constantly. at the end of the season she makes a decision to burn it to the ground symbolically. now this season starts with what is amy going to do. the question is what is a whistle-blower. uni spoke the last time about the cultural apathy who going -- you and i spoke the last time about the cultural apathy that is going on. where are our voices, and does it take someone who is crazy enough and overtly emotional that she will lose her job, lose her marriage, moved back with her mom at 40 just to make sure justice is seen and that we heal. >> i know you are a producer. this is your project. how cool is it -- what is the challenge where you want to enterta
the focus is very much about how to fine voice, how to be healthy, but as many of us do after coming back from the realization you have to keep your eyes on your own paper, amy does that by deciding she is going to change her mother, change her company, make it a better place, i think that is what happens, but as it rose, she believes she can take this energy and make the world a better place, and she gets doors slammed in her face constantly. at the end of the season she makes a decision to...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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57
Feb 18, 2013
02/13
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SFGTV2
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we've been doing a lot, how are we doing, how is edmonton really doing? what we found when we started the program, i was thrown in, in 2008, they said come up with a graffiti program. i know nothing about graffiti, i'm a communications director and i manage projects so how am i going to come up with what we are doing. we had someone on light duty from the corporate properties department going around in neighborhoods in our business revitalization zones trying to count and tell us how much graffiti was there. well, that was all very well and good but the graffiti we could find was only, the numbers were only significant to the capabilities of the person that was finding it. it wasn't giving us any real sense of whether we were increasing in graffiti vandalism, whether it was decreasing. we had been working with mgm management on our litter audits, we had been doing capital city clean up starting in 2007 started doing litter audits where we hired mgh management -- mark is the auditor who do our litter audits and now was doing our graffiti audits. basically,
we've been doing a lot, how are we doing, how is edmonton really doing? what we found when we started the program, i was thrown in, in 2008, they said come up with a graffiti program. i know nothing about graffiti, i'm a communications director and i manage projects so how am i going to come up with what we are doing. we had someone on light duty from the corporate properties department going around in neighborhoods in our business revitalization zones trying to count and tell us how much...
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Feb 28, 2013
02/13
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CNNW
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how many people were murdered in britain last year, by guns, how many?kes much more sense to talk about murder rates. >> tell me how many people were -- we are talking about guns, guns. >> i don't memorize number of murders -- so you don't care about the total number of people who died. >> in 2011. >> you don't care about the total number of people that died? >> the same year in america, 11,000 were murdered with guns, 18,000 killed themselves with guns, the statistics -- >> the statistics about the united states since you bring this up. do you know that 78% of the counties in the united states have zero murders in any given year, and that 3% of the counties account for over 70% of the murders? where do you think the gun ownership is heavier? the gun ownership is heavier in the 78% of the counties that have zero murders. the gun ownership is lowest -- >> do you believe in universal background checks for everybody in america? >> in theory if they could fix the problems with the current background system. that would be great. unfortunately, about 95% of th
how many people were murdered in britain last year, by guns, how many?kes much more sense to talk about murder rates. >> tell me how many people were -- we are talking about guns, guns. >> i don't memorize number of murders -- so you don't care about the total number of people who died. >> in 2011. >> you don't care about the total number of people that died? >> the same year in america, 11,000 were murdered with guns, 18,000 killed themselves with guns, the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 10, 2013
02/13
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SFGTV2
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how to get there in the hours that they're operating? a smart phone application for all of our events in recreation and park department, that to me is going to be invaluable to visitors and to our neighborhoods. bronwin who is working with us on data information from neighborhoods in our city, growth trends, that kind of data certainly is going to help a department like city planning who is trying to kind of figure out where the new neighborhoods in our city, what do we do from a planning and zoning effort, prioritizing. is it small businesses now in pier 70 area or do with we go high-rises downtown? what kind of people trends and business trends and constituent trends are happening in our neighborhoods * ? that data is there to be shared with our city planning. so we can plan for the future and make sure when we're not planning to limit the kind of growth that we want to encourage. >>> and then we've got another exciting one. chris haug is here and the company hundred-plus is here today. they have worked on, for many years, health relat
how to get there in the hours that they're operating? a smart phone application for all of our events in recreation and park department, that to me is going to be invaluable to visitors and to our neighborhoods. bronwin who is working with us on data information from neighborhoods in our city, growth trends, that kind of data certainly is going to help a department like city planning who is trying to kind of figure out where the new neighborhoods in our city, what do we do from a planning and...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 1, 2013
02/13
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SFGTV2
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eye 64
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how would you handle privacy? how would you let people use it for only that purpose? that form of innovation as it spreads here and elsewhere i think leads to a whole lot of new possibilities and applications. and this great cross trading between the private second for and public sector is just now taking off. in many ways san francisco has a special responsibility here. lots of cities are investing in opening data. that's a lot of supply. you need the demand side to prove to the city it's worthwhile and to prove to the public you can build an ecosystem there. we can do things with that whether bottom up activities, gray area or private companies. so, it's a moment of real burst of innovation and the landscape changes as the public and private sides come together. >> i very much agree with everything that was said. i'll add that in addition to the public sector, at the city level for open data disclosures and the private sector i can also speak to how important this is at the federal government level as well as we continue to work with cities across america to get mor
how would you handle privacy? how would you let people use it for only that purpose? that form of innovation as it spreads here and elsewhere i think leads to a whole lot of new possibilities and applications. and this great cross trading between the private second for and public sector is just now taking off. in many ways san francisco has a special responsibility here. lots of cities are investing in opening data. that's a lot of supply. you need the demand side to prove to the city it's...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 4, 2013
02/13
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SFGTV2
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eye 66
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we can pass laws but how do they get enforced, how do they get actualized, how do we have the accountability? more than that, as tony smith was talking about, creating caring climate, a culture of trust and respect. and that's hard and needs to, top down but also bottom up. i just recently viewed the movie bully and brought back a lot of memories, it brought back a focus on just the cruel course of bullying and the insensitivity, the interviews with administrators and school personnel. i don't know if any of you have seen the movie or a preview of it, it's just an appalling, republic prehence sibl, the ignorance . my beloved niece took her own life a couple miles from here. she was a special needs child and it's hard to know what happened, but this story of grief and then the turn around in the movie was really positive because it emphasized the positive that was coming out of the tragedy. so for rob and for the mom over here who grieves, you have the idea i am somebody. in the movie there's tee shirts, i am somebody, everything starts with one. we got to go from here forward and replacing h
we can pass laws but how do they get enforced, how do they get actualized, how do we have the accountability? more than that, as tony smith was talking about, creating caring climate, a culture of trust and respect. and that's hard and needs to, top down but also bottom up. i just recently viewed the movie bully and brought back a lot of memories, it brought back a focus on just the cruel course of bullying and the insensitivity, the interviews with administrators and school personnel. i don't...
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Feb 20, 2013
02/13
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CSPAN2
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ago how one of your employees asked how yahoo!'s going to compete if it doesn't have one of these four key distribution technologies. there's the mobile operating system, mobile hardware, the browser and social. i don't know that we got an answer. >> yeah. well, it's funny, because one of my employees asked that, and they said, you know, given that we don't have mobile hardware, a browser or a social network how are we going to compete? >> and it's not just a question for yahoo!, clearly, it's a question for every company that seeks to compete with those others that have those key enabling technologies. >> sure. and, you know, of the four horsemen of the internet, that analogy, republican all of them are -- almost all of them are playing in one, if not several, of those medium. but i think the big piece here is it allows us to partner. yahoo!'s always been a friendly company, it's always been because of our focus on technology and media, it ultimately means there's really an opportunity for strong partnerships, and that's what we'l
ago how one of your employees asked how yahoo!'s going to compete if it doesn't have one of these four key distribution technologies. there's the mobile operating system, mobile hardware, the browser and social. i don't know that we got an answer. >> yeah. well, it's funny, because one of my employees asked that, and they said, you know, given that we don't have mobile hardware, a browser or a social network how are we going to compete? >> and it's not just a question for yahoo!,...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 7, 2013
02/13
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SFGTV2
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how should it be used? how should this information be used to? i use it to dole out treatment. that is how i thought we would kick start this seminar. i am happy to answer any other questions. i did not do this all by myself. i had a lot of individuals who helped me with this data. this research is all funded by the national research of health, your tax dollars. thank you for your attention. i will turn over to our moderator. thank you. [applause] >> actually, i would like to, i'm going to ask a few questions, but i was hoping we could get a debate going here rather than with me trying to ask intelligent questions and just have the very smart people just talking amongst themselves to educate us. so one of the questions that we're wanting to talk about today was the idea of free will in terms of the criminal justice system. and i would like to ask each of you, is there a definition of free will in the context of your individual work? we'll start with you, doctor. >> i would punt that one right over to david who is the expert in free will, and then we actually spent all last nigh
how should it be used? how should this information be used to? i use it to dole out treatment. that is how i thought we would kick start this seminar. i am happy to answer any other questions. i did not do this all by myself. i had a lot of individuals who helped me with this data. this research is all funded by the national research of health, your tax dollars. thank you for your attention. i will turn over to our moderator. thank you. [applause] >> actually, i would like to, i'm going...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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73
Feb 4, 2013
02/13
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WHUT
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eye 73
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tavis: how did you find him, and how did he receive you?> he was a notorious for playing with his back to the audience theory good -- to the audience. tavis: so did miles davis. >> the industry said, who is this guy amazo? tavis: what was his reasoning? >> i asked him, and he said, it is for a hearing. when we started a film, when i got to detroit, his family said, you can come here. you can meet us. you can read his daughters. you can meet him, but you're not going to be able to film him, because he does not do that. i said, that is a problem. him he was veryto friendly. we like to meet in places with a lot of noise where we knew we could not film because it was noisy. every time the camera came into the room he was very wary. he did not like the camera. the first time there was no interview. i filled him while he walked in the street. the second time he came to sweden, and he said to me in stockholm, and the third time we met was in the winter of detroit, and that is the first time i try to make an interview, and it was very hard. after t
tavis: how did you find him, and how did he receive you?> he was a notorious for playing with his back to the audience theory good -- to the audience. tavis: so did miles davis. >> the industry said, who is this guy amazo? tavis: what was his reasoning? >> i asked him, and he said, it is for a hearing. when we started a film, when i got to detroit, his family said, you can come here. you can meet us. you can read his daughters. you can meet him, but you're not going to be able to...
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the coalition of how i. now find our house things going. on i'm going to take a nap in the back seat. of. the winter road takes them along the ice bound linna river thousands of years ago the ravines on its banks provided shelter. there are lots of rock paintings really curious here but they haven't yet been studied properly of. the rocks a crumbling away from erosion causing many paintings to disappear. nobody knows when they were made. most of the rough cart features the elk master of the siberian tiger are another animal to pick is the bison one of the main targets for hunters according to archaeologists primitive humans killed off the last bison you could hear some six thousand years ago scientists of. numerous bones of magnificent beasts the ancient nomad camps. that. but recently direct descendants of the siberian bison reappeared here in the early twenty first century. these large mammals have an excellent sense of smell bison love that an area because they always smell of hay they keep the bison in good health communicate with them
the coalition of how i. now find our house things going. on i'm going to take a nap in the back seat. of. the winter road takes them along the ice bound linna river thousands of years ago the ravines on its banks provided shelter. there are lots of rock paintings really curious here but they haven't yet been studied properly of. the rocks a crumbling away from erosion causing many paintings to disappear. nobody knows when they were made. most of the rough cart features the elk master of the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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40
Feb 19, 2013
02/13
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SFGTV2
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torrez, how are you holding up? >> i'm fine, thank you. >> how's mr. torrez >> he's doing his best, still trying to raise bail. >> first they murder and then on the very same day. >> that was no accident. my husband shot that poor boy down in cold blood when he bought that gun he carried it with him everywhere hoping something would happen. he had so much rage. now he just sits there and barely speaks. he knew that boy. the one they call ill, he knew him since he was a small boy. but it was dark and all he could see was someone coming through the window. why must there be so many guns? >> i don't know. i don't know. >> and then those boys, paul, the one they call pratt, falling to his death from a freeway overpass. what was he doing out there so late at night. >> the kid was climbing up the freeway sign to tag it and lost his footing. they said he was hit by two cars. >> does life mean nothing any more? what can be done? (music). >> all right, listen up. this ain't kid stuff any more. this is war. everybody attack, all the gangs beating on us, now it's
torrez, how are you holding up? >> i'm fine, thank you. >> how's mr. torrez >> he's doing his best, still trying to raise bail. >> first they murder and then on the very same day. >> that was no accident. my husband shot that poor boy down in cold blood when he bought that gun he carried it with him everywhere hoping something would happen. he had so much rage. now he just sits there and barely speaks. he knew that boy. the one they call ill, he knew him since he...
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Feb 8, 2013
02/13
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LINKTV
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how many people be knowing how far underneath? or how many people said, "i don't know." i mean, at six kilometers per second, i don't know that one. come on, how far underneath, gang? - five. - five meters. okay, so it's really gonna be like this. so i gotta dig. i gotta dig a hole. i gotta get that shovel again. now we're gonna dig. notice i don't have to dig so deep? now the path it takes is like this. let's suppose i fire it at 7 1/2 kilometers per second. it's fractions. can you do fractions, 7 1/2 per second? how far downrange at the end of one second? - 7 1/2. - 7 1/2. that's about here, right? is it really gonna be up there? it's gonna be underneath. how far underneath? i still gotta dig. i wonder, maybe there's some speed i could fire whereby i don't be needing a shovel anymore. how many people in this room can calculate in their head how fast a satellite has to go to stay in close earth orbit? how many have made that calculation that newton made in your head right now? can i have a show of hands? eight kilometers per second, right? you're holding a book and a ki
how many people be knowing how far underneath? or how many people said, "i don't know." i mean, at six kilometers per second, i don't know that one. come on, how far underneath, gang? - five. - five meters. okay, so it's really gonna be like this. so i gotta dig. i gotta dig a hole. i gotta get that shovel again. now we're gonna dig. notice i don't have to dig so deep? now the path it takes is like this. let's suppose i fire it at 7 1/2 kilometers per second. it's fractions. can you...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 23, 2013
02/13
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SFGTV2
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eye 56
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it will change how we do things. it's also, we've been told for years that it's 72 to 96 hours before help arrives. we know there's a forward leaning capability and strategic thinkers throughout the whole chain and various levels of response and command on this that will bring those resources to bear as quickly as can possibly be arranged and properly handled. that kind of coordination and communication is going to make all the difference. we
it will change how we do things. it's also, we've been told for years that it's 72 to 96 hours before help arrives. we know there's a forward leaning capability and strategic thinkers throughout the whole chain and various levels of response and command on this that will bring those resources to bear as quickly as can possibly be arranged and properly handled. that kind of coordination and communication is going to make all the difference. we
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 23, 2013
02/13
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SFGTV2
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this time that we didn't have in the past, how do we get through that and how can we improve getting folks to the facility and making sure we know where everybody is at at all times. >> thank you. mr. boland. >> one of the major challenges that we have incurred all the way from 2003 till now, is credentialing or badging of utility emergency responder personnel trying to gain access into a secure zone that needs their services. as a prepop drapbs of the heavy equipment sometimes falls under a contractor's jurisdiction and a local officer at a local roadblock does not always know or understand the necessity to get that kind of equipment in there to restore the grid, the water system, for the telecom it is something we are still struggling with and we are working with on a daily basis. >> thank you, mr. brig. >> every exercise i've been involved with, managing information and communication is easily no. 1 or 2 on the list. in the heat of an event, information is flowing in, there's usually no shortage of information rtion it's translating that to something credible that is the challenge
this time that we didn't have in the past, how do we get through that and how can we improve getting folks to the facility and making sure we know where everybody is at at all times. >> thank you. mr. boland. >> one of the major challenges that we have incurred all the way from 2003 till now, is credentialing or badging of utility emergency responder personnel trying to gain access into a secure zone that needs their services. as a prepop drapbs of the heavy equipment sometimes...
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127
Feb 13, 2013
02/13
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LINKTV
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eye 127
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how many people feel energy? how many people wish they had more? we'll be talking about such thing now. but before we talk about energy, i wanna talk about something that is somewhat related. we talked before about the idea of momentum. remember momentum? momentum is inertia in motion. and how do you get something moving if it's not moving? how do you change the momentum of something? you push on it, and you provide what's called an impulse. impulse, right? impulse is not only force. it's not how hard you push only that will tell you how much momentum change you'll get. it's how long you push. and we talked about how long in terms of time, didn't we? we said force multiplied by time would be numerically equal to. you multiply the force that you exert on something, huh? multiply it by the time that you exert on something, you get a numerical quantity. and that quantity is exactly equal to, not the momentum, but the change in momentum that you produce by pushing, huh? and so we talked about this, you know? and we called this idea here how hard you pu
how many people feel energy? how many people wish they had more? we'll be talking about such thing now. but before we talk about energy, i wanna talk about something that is somewhat related. we talked before about the idea of momentum. remember momentum? momentum is inertia in motion. and how do you get something moving if it's not moving? how do you change the momentum of something? you push on it, and you provide what's called an impulse. impulse, right? impulse is not only force. it's not...
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how about there?i-r-e... ♪ hotwire.com i played a round of golf.id in the last five hours? then i read a book while teaching myself how to play guitar; ran ten miles while knitting myself a sweater; jumped out of a plane. finally, i became a ping pong master while recording my debut album. how you ask? with 5-hour energy. i get hours of energy now -- no crash later. wait to see the next five hours. ♪ you're all i need, my love, my valentine ♪ >> we're back with "today" celebrates valentine's day, and crafts for kids. for a lot of kids exchanging treats with their friends is one of the most exciting parts of valentine's day. >> here with some diy cakes, crafts and cards that are sure to impress their classmates is elaine griffin of better homes & gardens. >> hey, girl. >> hello. >> you have a lot of helpers. >> yes. >> we're so excited. >> what are we making? >> first of all, hoda, i'm smelling something. awfully good. >> isn't it fantastic. >> valentine's day is the sweetest day of the year for kids o
how about there?i-r-e... ♪ hotwire.com i played a round of golf.id in the last five hours? then i read a book while teaching myself how to play guitar; ran ten miles while knitting myself a sweater; jumped out of a plane. finally, i became a ping pong master while recording my debut album. how you ask? with 5-hour energy. i get hours of energy now -- no crash later. wait to see the next five hours. ♪ you're all i need, my love, my valentine ♪ >> we're back with "today"...
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Feb 1, 2013
02/13
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KQEH
tv
eye 152
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how do you navigates that it? -- how do you navigate that? >> i feel like life is what it is. be at the shipyard unloading cargo, and i would sing. they would say, you should be on tv with smoke. i said, i have got a family to feed. when it is time to get out of this whole, i will get out. it was a hit record. i got a few dollars and nothing else. they said, and you are not bitter. i ain't got no reason to. it happens for a reason. >> how do you get a hit as huge and you end up in gold? -- in the hole? >> i think god has been guiding me. i looked up, and he was not even aware. i was 25. i might not have been here. i am here. tavis: how did you keep faith during that time when you have got guys telling you you should so they recognize the artistry, but you have a family to feed. i respect that, because a lot of guys once they get a hit they think they belong on stage and they are not going to do anything but get on stage, and if they do not the bills are going to get paid. you handled your business, but how you process that when you know you are gifted enough to be on stage? >>
how do you navigates that it? -- how do you navigate that? >> i feel like life is what it is. be at the shipyard unloading cargo, and i would sing. they would say, you should be on tv with smoke. i said, i have got a family to feed. when it is time to get out of this whole, i will get out. it was a hit record. i got a few dollars and nothing else. they said, and you are not bitter. i ain't got no reason to. it happens for a reason. >> how do you get a hit as huge and you end up in...
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Feb 28, 2013
02/13
by
CNNW
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eye 229
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see how that opened up?hat is the story look at this massive cavity in this area. >> that is the difference between handguns and assault rifles. >> i think many people don't realize the difference between handgun injuries and assault rifle injuries. i wish i could have given more testimo testimony. when it is an assault weapon's injury the bullet explodes inside the person's body. while it would be in appropriate to discuss the injuries related to the newtown children's injuries. when i go to symposiums every year and i talk about these things, yes, there is a huge difference between a handgun and an assault weapon's injury. >> i heard today vice president biden saying that he had seen material that was simply too strong for the american public to tolerate if they heard about it. when these kids were hit by 3 and 11 bullets they were creating holes the size of baseballs. let's spell this out. this is what this person did. >> people have regular handgun injuries most of them make it to the hospital and they h
see how that opened up?hat is the story look at this massive cavity in this area. >> that is the difference between handguns and assault rifles. >> i think many people don't realize the difference between handgun injuries and assault rifle injuries. i wish i could have given more testimo testimony. when it is an assault weapon's injury the bullet explodes inside the person's body. while it would be in appropriate to discuss the injuries related to the newtown children's injuries....
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 27, 2013
02/13
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SFGTV2
tv
eye 64
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how are we doing for time? any other questions? >> i might have missed this in the beginning, but i was curious, how do you guys get funded for this program. >> capital city clean up is a city of edmonton program. it started in 2005 as a litter reduction program and when our bylaw changed in 2008 our city council was very thoughtful in determining they needed to put their mouths were. basically they were going to require the property owners clean their graffiti, then they needed to put some effort into cleaning their own graffiti as well as supporting property owners in those efforts. >> so you have steady funding? >> yes, i have steady funding for the audit and the clean up program. >> how often do you share your data with other departments? >> always. mark and i just finished finalizing it last week, but we will be holding a press conference basically when i get back, so we will be sharing the information with all the city departments as well as the city in general and going through that. we're very open about the results. the on
how are we doing for time? any other questions? >> i might have missed this in the beginning, but i was curious, how do you guys get funded for this program. >> capital city clean up is a city of edmonton program. it started in 2005 as a litter reduction program and when our bylaw changed in 2008 our city council was very thoughtful in determining they needed to put their mouths were. basically they were going to require the property owners clean their graffiti, then they needed to...
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Feb 14, 2013
02/13
by
CNN
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let's look at how we got to this moment, how the final chapter began. gary tuchman has that. >> reporter: 12:22 p.m. on tuesday. that's when a 911 call came in with the first real sighting of fugitive christopher dorner in days. two people who were hired to clean houses in the big bear area run into a man who looks like dorner. he ties them up and then takes off in their purple nissan. one of the cleaners is able to escape. that's when she calls police. it turns out they were tied up in a house right across the street from the san bernardino sheriff's command center. 12:45 p.m., fish and wildlife officials spot a purple car driving on california 38. they begin to pursue him. >> the suspect realized he had been identified. >> reporter: dorner tries to evade them, at one point crashing and taking to the woods on foot. with the officers still in pursuit, he stops a truck driven by a resident. dorner pulls a gun on him but allows him to leave unharmed with his dog. donor is now behind the wheel of a silver pickup truck and gets back on the highway and passe
let's look at how we got to this moment, how the final chapter began. gary tuchman has that. >> reporter: 12:22 p.m. on tuesday. that's when a 911 call came in with the first real sighting of fugitive christopher dorner in days. two people who were hired to clean houses in the big bear area run into a man who looks like dorner. he ties them up and then takes off in their purple nissan. one of the cleaners is able to escape. that's when she calls police. it turns out they were tied up in a...
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547
Feb 19, 2013
02/13
by
KRCB
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so eileen, if you have made the decision, how do you begin to decide how to give. like cash, time or maybe some other asset? >> it depends on what kind of assets you have. if you haveash that's the oy thing you v you might want to write a check or go on-line, do an on-line contribution. but a lot of people who are giving especially large amounts are over age 65 and a lot of those people have acquired closely held stock, appreciated securities and gifts and there are a lot of appreciated publicly traded securities. if that's what you have and you've had it for more than a year and a day it's called long term appreciated assets and you can gift those and it's a effective taxing vehicle. >> tom: when you give that other asset like a security who inherits the capital gains? >> you actually get capital gains for giving. so if you have capital gains you've got something for $10 a share it's now worth $100 a share you don't pay any capital gains. so you actually have to gift the stock to the charity in kind. so you don't want to sell it yu want to gift it. >> tom: you're
so eileen, if you have made the decision, how do you begin to decide how to give. like cash, time or maybe some other asset? >> it depends on what kind of assets you have. if you haveash that's the oy thing you v you might want to write a check or go on-line, do an on-line contribution. but a lot of people who are giving especially large amounts are over age 65 and a lot of those people have acquired closely held stock, appreciated securities and gifts and there are a lot of appreciated...
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Feb 19, 2013
02/13
by
WBAL
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eye 186
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i want to tell you how i became a good investor and how i continue to learn every day. and that is the goal of "mad money". my love of stocks started back in 4th grade. you see my dad would bring home the old "philadelphia bulletin" when he returned home from work every single night. back then, the only thing i would change, i would have made it that i would have been a yankee fan. i was a curious kid. it has been a blessing and a curse of mine there was a solid chunk of the paper that seemed inpenetrable to me. they were the other tables. different than the tables and box scores. they made no sense to me. open, range, closed. what were these strange things and what did they matter? i asked my dad because i would hear him get mad. buy buy buy when he would hear prices mentioned on the radio. he would get angry when i heard the name, national video on the radio. i did know of -- i don't know if pop did know what it did. but i wanted to find out more of what these things are that made him react with such fury. where the stock opened on the new york stock exchange on the o
i want to tell you how i became a good investor and how i continue to learn every day. and that is the goal of "mad money". my love of stocks started back in 4th grade. you see my dad would bring home the old "philadelphia bulletin" when he returned home from work every single night. back then, the only thing i would change, i would have made it that i would have been a yankee fan. i was a curious kid. it has been a blessing and a curse of mine there was a solid chunk of the...
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Feb 19, 2013
02/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 77
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how is this possible?t's possible because the way you reverse as you can get this kind of care but not this kind of care. and when we talk about health care, we talk about health care. we don't say there's too many spinal fusions, there's too many hip replacements, there's too many people on pills, there's too many -- we talk about health care as if it's one thing, as if it's a cheeseburger. but even cheeseburgers go up. and my fear is what we are missing in our system is this. we are driving care decisions based on these economic incentives. it's not as simple as the island, which isn't this great, we are making private insurers bear more of the costs. i want to spend one more second on customer service -- consumer service. 50 years ago, there were 20,000 computers in the world. and 10 years from that incident was there were 250. there are probably 100,000 people who knew how to use them. computers were extraordinarily complex. today, almost all of us are tearing at least one on us. several have to, three
how is this possible?t's possible because the way you reverse as you can get this kind of care but not this kind of care. and when we talk about health care, we talk about health care. we don't say there's too many spinal fusions, there's too many hip replacements, there's too many people on pills, there's too many -- we talk about health care as if it's one thing, as if it's a cheeseburger. but even cheeseburgers go up. and my fear is what we are missing in our system is this. we are driving...
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Feb 24, 2013
02/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 104
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i think it was logistical, but also, you know, there was some, you know, how do we -- how do we maintain -- how do we keep the white middle class happy in this situation? >> host: right. activists pushed back were less concern with the white middle class plight. based on the argument, that might have been okay with them. >> guest: yeah. >> host: not for funding, but the stability of the community. >> guest: right. >> host: part was the tradition of the school itself, no? >> guest: absolutely. it was a tradition -- it was a tradition of black empowerment, i think, and that we built this school ourselves, that we did this largely without a lot of help from the school district, without a lot of resources. we had to fight for every penny, and so i think, a lot of the people that i talked to saw the way that busing happenedded or just the attitude of desegregation as saying that, that black people basically failed, and they needed the help, they needed their kid to sit next to a white kid. i heard that a loot. >> host: from the community or outside critics? >> guest: i heard it from the activ
i think it was logistical, but also, you know, there was some, you know, how do we -- how do we maintain -- how do we keep the white middle class happy in this situation? >> host: right. activists pushed back were less concern with the white middle class plight. based on the argument, that might have been okay with them. >> guest: yeah. >> host: not for funding, but the stability of the community. >> guest: right. >> host: part was the tradition of the school...
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Feb 14, 2013
02/13
by
KTVU
tv
eye 68
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he recognizes how dangerous this is because you never know how the glider will react. in a competition like this, they're following a specific course they have to fly around and the winner is basically the guy who flies the fastest around the course. i don't know if this is something that sped him up, helped him win, but something he did on purpose. you see other paragliders around him and in the fields below you can see other fires burning. i would think if you're a power glider and looking for the gust of hot air to lift you up that's as good as it gets. >> sizable fire. >> i bet that was quite a rush for him. >> why not just a hot air balloon? >>> somebody totally went off the road right there. >> and the doors -- >> guarantee that's what happened. >> laura lee davis posted this video on her facebook page. she said her husband and two sons went up to angeles oaks. >> near big bear. they believe that was kris ter dorner's car, the ex-fugitive. they believe that he died in a fire after a gun fight with poli police. >> bunch of cops. >> and more coming. i can hear them
he recognizes how dangerous this is because you never know how the glider will react. in a competition like this, they're following a specific course they have to fly around and the winner is basically the guy who flies the fastest around the course. i don't know if this is something that sped him up, helped him win, but something he did on purpose. you see other paragliders around him and in the fields below you can see other fires burning. i would think if you're a power glider and looking...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Feb 1, 2013
02/13
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WHUT
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when you get to new mexico, how do you navigate your way through? how do you make this work? >> all right, first, i studied english as a second language. the connections to the homeland, i knew i could not go back. i knew i had to stay here. i stayed with my english teacher so that i could learn more english quickly, and then i observed that my english teacher could not find a job with a ph.d. in literature. tavis: that is not funny, but it is. >> so i thought i was going to study comparative literature, and i did not have enough english, either, so i thought i had to study something with marketable skills, so i asked someone what i could steady since i did not have a formal education. i did not have math or science. and someone said to check out this new field of computer science. and he said it was a man-made language. and i thought, great. i am good with language, and i know how to make stuff. fortunately, that was a great and rising newfield. tavis: what do you make a looking back on it now? what do you make of how it came to be, the burgeoning growth of computer technolo
when you get to new mexico, how do you navigate your way through? how do you make this work? >> all right, first, i studied english as a second language. the connections to the homeland, i knew i could not go back. i knew i had to stay here. i stayed with my english teacher so that i could learn more english quickly, and then i observed that my english teacher could not find a job with a ph.d. in literature. tavis: that is not funny, but it is. >> so i thought i was going to study...
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Feb 18, 2013
02/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 91
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how did they do it? >> guest: well, there was really a bunch of very interesting and eclectic people but they came at it from different -- very different places. although a lot of them had been friends from -- one of them was a very gregarious football coach and he had been a gadfly, and had writtennedder toals to the newspaper, and they kind of knew what they were doing when it came to community activism. another had been part of the black nationalist movement in the '70s and was involved in that. so they'd grown up from that and they were of the civil rights movement in some ways, of that time period, but also sort of on the outside and critiqueing it but learning from it. they knew what they were could go. fran thomas is one of my favorite people, just a wonderful lady, and she was -- she got very involved in protesting the first iraq war, in the '9s, and she was very involved and that is how she got pulled in. because she wanted to save the school she had gone to. so they knew what they were doing bu
how did they do it? >> guest: well, there was really a bunch of very interesting and eclectic people but they came at it from different -- very different places. although a lot of them had been friends from -- one of them was a very gregarious football coach and he had been a gadfly, and had writtennedder toals to the newspaper, and they kind of knew what they were doing when it came to community activism. another had been part of the black nationalist movement in the '70s and was...
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65
Feb 22, 2013
02/13
by
WMAR
tv
eye 65
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are you thinking about how you will grab the next hold, where you will place your foot and how you wille upwards. >>> the car chase seen in a million different movies looks cool and you can do-it-yourself in miniature. >> always awesome. >> this is a youtube channel final cut, king, they have a whole city built out of cardboard boxes and a couple of guys drifter guys with the mustang rc cars racing through the streets. here is a mini helicopter that takes off. they rise up over the building. you see the helicopter. through a set of cafe chairs and tables. >> look at the attention to detail. >> right. >> i am mesmerized. it really does look like an actual city, like an urban landscape. >> evencardboard buildings they good job and it is really well done. that always appears, you crash through the barriers. >> the end scene is pretty funny. check it out. >> no. are you kidding me? they be they got really run over by a real van. >> lots of neat stuff in the behind the scenes video as well. if you want to see that go to "right this minute".com and click on best. >> let's end the week by givi
are you thinking about how you will grab the next hold, where you will place your foot and how you wille upwards. >>> the car chase seen in a million different movies looks cool and you can do-it-yourself in miniature. >> always awesome. >> this is a youtube channel final cut, king, they have a whole city built out of cardboard boxes and a couple of guys drifter guys with the mustang rc cars racing through the streets. here is a mini helicopter that takes off. they rise up...
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47
Feb 4, 2013
02/13
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 47
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how could i forget ?so, victor, are you ready to announce the big winner of your contest tomorrow ? mr. bradford's contest not mine. you don't seem very happy, victor. what's the matter ? i don't know, my friend. i am not so sure about all this. why don't you join me for another episode of "word play" ? wasn't that a tactful way to make a suggestion ? we'll begin with the phrase, "why don't you ?" the phrase "maybe you should" is also used in making suggestions. what was that you said ? why don't we get back to the story ? i'd say that's a good suggestion. all right, both groups did very well. lots of good ideas from everybody. that's it for tonight. your exams are in two weeks, and your term papers are due two weeks after that. so, study hard and i'll see you next week. should we move the chairs back ? no, i'll take care of it. good night, everybody. is this all right ? yeah, that's fine. thank you. good night. so, how are you doing with your paper ? pretty well. good. good. did you register for next sem
how could i forget ?so, victor, are you ready to announce the big winner of your contest tomorrow ? mr. bradford's contest not mine. you don't seem very happy, victor. what's the matter ? i don't know, my friend. i am not so sure about all this. why don't you join me for another episode of "word play" ? wasn't that a tactful way to make a suggestion ? we'll begin with the phrase, "why don't you ?" the phrase "maybe you should" is also used in making suggestions....
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119
Feb 9, 2013
02/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 119
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how's this possible?t's possible because the way to reimburse says you can get this type of care but not this type of care. when we talk about health care we talked about health care. we don't say there's too many spinal fusion, two hip replacements, too many people on bills, there's too many -- we talk about health care as if it's a cheeseburger. but even cheeseburgers go up. my fear is what we are missing and a system is this. we are driving care decisions based on these economic incentives but it's not as subtle as the island is a this great come we're making private insurance more money. i want to spend one more second on consumer service. 50 years ago there were 20,000 computers in the world. 10 years before that this was there were 250. there are probably 100,000 people who knew how to use them. computers were extraordinarily complex. today, almost all of us are carrying at least one on us. several have two, three, four, ma five. all of us, everywhere on earth. what happened as we all know is that e
how's this possible?t's possible because the way to reimburse says you can get this type of care but not this type of care. when we talk about health care we talked about health care. we don't say there's too many spinal fusion, two hip replacements, too many people on bills, there's too many -- we talk about health care as if it's a cheeseburger. but even cheeseburgers go up. my fear is what we are missing and a system is this. we are driving care decisions based on these economic incentives...
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189
Feb 26, 2013
02/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 189
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we're going to get a good lesson here in this country of how -- what the government does and how it affects people. but they're completely unconcerned about this. john boehner said in april 2011 he got 98% of what he wanted. i'm not sure that a lot of that caucus is not just delighted with this. i really believe that. i think they're actually excited about this. beats me why. it's going to really hurt middle class people a lot. macroeconomic advisers out of st. louis, probably the most respected in the country say this is going to shave 6/10 a percentage off gdp. >> if you have a $3.5 trillion budget for the year and yank $85 billion out of it over a seven-month period, obviously it's going to have an affect. republicans don't even seem to be on the sage page with their message. some of them say the cuts are president obama's fault, and the others are saying the cuts are no big deal. here it is. >> i would say balderdash. it's true. unfair, dishonest, disingenuous, the president is making stuff up. >> why are they having so r such a hard time with their message? >> well, the truth of the ma
we're going to get a good lesson here in this country of how -- what the government does and how it affects people. but they're completely unconcerned about this. john boehner said in april 2011 he got 98% of what he wanted. i'm not sure that a lot of that caucus is not just delighted with this. i really believe that. i think they're actually excited about this. beats me why. it's going to really hurt middle class people a lot. macroeconomic advisers out of st. louis, probably the most...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Feb 28, 2013
02/13
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 55
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to focus our soaforts with that, happy to answer any questions. >>> so how did it go with the meeting that you were scheduled to have with the advocates. >> we have very good deliberation over the mast week on wednesday alone we have four hours of meetings one and-a-half will with the stakeholder and is very helpful input and i know there has been discussions subsequent to to that, very helpful, i have provided all of these materials as well to the advocate and is many of us share the same goals we would love to seat a lot of the same jobs come out of this and i don't think anybody can argue against that and it comes with the idea that we have to borrow a lot of money and those are the grade trade-off that is we have to comfort and it has been very productive and i would like to thank the stakeholder and is as well as lp i and the leadership. >> what has emerged from those discussions. >>> what has emerged is that we are at a critical junction tour that the ideas that have been put for the require a lot of money to be borrowed and a very large scale roll out and that would provide a g
to focus our soaforts with that, happy to answer any questions. >>> so how did it go with the meeting that you were scheduled to have with the advocates. >> we have very good deliberation over the mast week on wednesday alone we have four hours of meetings one and-a-half will with the stakeholder and is very helpful input and i know there has been discussions subsequent to to that, very helpful, i have provided all of these materials as well to the advocate and is many of us...
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looks at how such measures could power up a national security. the main area of concern surrounds this the draft communications data bill and proposals in it that critics say see the public left wide open to having their facebook accounts or twitter e-mails read anything that they visit online the websites that they gate logs by the government now understandably those plans to prevent hugely controversial with critics labeling it the snoop is charter now perhaps more concerning is the latest report by the intelligence and security committee and they'd like to see a nationwide surveillance regime implemented now the government say that they need to do this to catch criminals and stop terrorism but there's lots of the members of the public saying where are safeguards when it comes to what we do online will seek more about this i'm now joined by professor and sneakily of the director studies security and intelligence studies at the university of akron thank you very much for joining us you're in support of the draft communications data bill i heard
looks at how such measures could power up a national security. the main area of concern surrounds this the draft communications data bill and proposals in it that critics say see the public left wide open to having their facebook accounts or twitter e-mails read anything that they visit online the websites that they gate logs by the government now understandably those plans to prevent hugely controversial with critics labeling it the snoop is charter now perhaps more concerning is the latest...