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100
Jan 27, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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eye 100
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there was no way in the world i could get it go. about the real nicholas barclay, interviewing the neighbors, trying to find out what i could about that boy and about that family, and what's going on. you know, why would nicholas have left? >> the police used to come, like, maybe twice or three times a month. either was argument with the kids or with the boyfriend or with the other son. >> i spoke to everyone. they all said that nicholas had caused trouble, had come home late at night. we've all had arguments in our family. but it's rare that we call the police, they're so bad that they have to come. it made me think there was something going on more than meets the eye. of course it did. >> i knew that dna samples would prove that he wasn't nicholas barclay. hi, this is my son. i don't have to provide blood samples for you for dna. and she laid down on the floor, literally laid down on the floor and said no, and you can't pick me up and you can't make me. >> i did not want to go anywhere with the fbi. but i don't remember refusing.
there was no way in the world i could get it go. about the real nicholas barclay, interviewing the neighbors, trying to find out what i could about that boy and about that family, and what's going on. you know, why would nicholas have left? >> the police used to come, like, maybe twice or three times a month. either was argument with the kids or with the boyfriend or with the other son. >> i spoke to everyone. they all said that nicholas had caused trouble, had come home late at...
59
59
Jan 11, 2014
01/14
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MSNBCW
tv
eye 59
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i couldn't get him out. just could not pull him out. >> when "caught on camera, dash cam diaries" continues. when you only have one hand, you're not doing anything as fast as you used to, which is funny, 'cause i still do it better than her. you know, i don't think i was meant to sweep. it's a little frustrating. look. [ zach ] i can't help out as much as i used to. do you need help? [ doorbell rings ] let's open it up. it's a swiffer sweeper. it's a swiffer dusters. it can extend so i don't have to get on the step stool. i don't know how it stays on there. it's like a dirt magnet -- just like my kids. [ afi ] this is a danger zone. that is crazy. ah-ha-ha! [ zach ] yeah. no, this definitely beats hanging out on a step ladder. what's up, baby? is your tv powered by coal? natural gas? nuclear? or renewables like solar... and wind? let's find out. this is where america's electricity comes from. a diversity of energy sources helps ensure the electricity we need is reliable. take the energy quiz. energy lives here. suddenl
i couldn't get him out. just could not pull him out. >> when "caught on camera, dash cam diaries" continues. when you only have one hand, you're not doing anything as fast as you used to, which is funny, 'cause i still do it better than her. you know, i don't think i was meant to sweep. it's a little frustrating. look. [ zach ] i can't help out as much as i used to. do you need help? [ doorbell rings ] let's open it up. it's a swiffer sweeper. it's a swiffer dusters. it can...
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183
Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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eye 183
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i could see her. she seemed translucent to me. of thought i was dead. >> you can imagine outside how parents and teachers and the students who were able to pick their way out of the rubble were traumatized. >> she's out? she's out? okay. >> a local photographer took this picture of steve and ladonna and two of their daughters in shock after the funnel hit. ladonna was trying to learn the extent of the injuries. >> i broke my cheek bone, this side of my face is still numb. i had a gash in my head, i had 16 staples. >> oh, that probably scared the kids too, didn't it? >> my middle daughter was screaming, somebody help my mom, my mom's going to die. i just kept saying i'm hurt, baby, but i'm alive. i'll be okay. i'm here. >> amazingly, nobody died at briarwood elementary. but just a mile away at plaza towers elementary, seven children did die. >> i can't even imagine the amount that plaza towers lost. and how hard that is for them. >> today, both schools are being built with fema-approved safe areas. >> now it's hope, i think, hope o
i could see her. she seemed translucent to me. of thought i was dead. >> you can imagine outside how parents and teachers and the students who were able to pick their way out of the rubble were traumatized. >> she's out? she's out? okay. >> a local photographer took this picture of steve and ladonna and two of their daughters in shock after the funnel hit. ladonna was trying to learn the extent of the injuries. >> i broke my cheek bone, this side of my face is still...
102
102
Jan 3, 2014
01/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 102
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i could go back to the back of the bus and i would sing up a storm. i would get downtown and i would bug the people on the streets. i was down at the penny arcade in beaumont. it was a sunday. there is nobody downtown on a sunday. i got up on the shoeshine stand, the fellow was there shining shoes. i was playing and singing and all of a sudden, one or two people come by, three or four getting out of church or a movie. they would stop and listen for a minute. all of a sudden, people started throwing nickels and dimes and quarters and pennies and a dollar bill or two. when it was all over with, i had $24. i had never seen that much money in my life. i went crazy. the arcade was right behind me. i had a ball. that is what happened to me a lot. >> what ever happened to the money? early on, you found out that you could earn your way by singing. >> it grew into a religion for me, country music. i loved it so much. when i knew that people like to hear me as much as i like to sing to them, i could make a living at this. >> did you know what you had? johnny ca
i could go back to the back of the bus and i would sing up a storm. i would get downtown and i would bug the people on the streets. i was down at the penny arcade in beaumont. it was a sunday. there is nobody downtown on a sunday. i got up on the shoeshine stand, the fellow was there shining shoes. i was playing and singing and all of a sudden, one or two people come by, three or four getting out of church or a movie. they would stop and listen for a minute. all of a sudden, people started...
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112
Jan 3, 2014
01/14
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BLOOMBERG
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>> he knew it a lot better than i ever could have. he guided us along. .e understands timing >> he understands comedy. said, you do not want them to last here because it breaks the tension. >> i come from this very visceral point. i started to learn a lot. >> he would call anywhere from midnight to 3:00 in the morning, depending on what time zone he was in on the campaign. i would be asleep sometimes. it was a ritual. at some point, the phone would ring. i think i slept next to the phone. , the old manohn wants to talk to you. the candidate wants to speak to you. , that veryon theniar baritone voice, the conversation would go along for 6, 7, 8 minutes. he was doing the talking. up.voice would be mixed if he wasld sound as going off the deep end. next morning, he was up bright. >> this was his way of going to sleep? >> years after the campaign, i said, what was that all about? he could not sleep, he was an insomniac. i would give him scott -- scotch . .nd then you would have to talk some type of monologue and that was his ritual. >> whe
>> he knew it a lot better than i ever could have. he guided us along. .e understands timing >> he understands comedy. said, you do not want them to last here because it breaks the tension. >> i come from this very visceral point. i started to learn a lot. >> he would call anywhere from midnight to 3:00 in the morning, depending on what time zone he was in on the campaign. i would be asleep sometimes. it was a ritual. at some point, the phone would ring. i think i slept...
105
105
Jan 1, 2014
01/14
by
CSPAN2
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eye 105
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that is the best thing i could never do for you. to leave the job much more power less when i come in. it is to be representative government. that was the idea >> we have a few copies of the author's book here today "life inside the bubble" and available readily at the amazon in bookstores we appreciate your attendance and we will continue the conversation after we adjourned. thank you. [applause] we would like to hear from you. tweet us your feedback. twitter.com/booktv. >> romance in the mob. those who are match -- mafia afish nad doughs. there's a level of brutality that is just terrible. okay. all right. you can never -- you know, as a writer, by the way, people say like i'm being interviewed. peter, don't you get captured by this? don't you get lost in who they are? and the term moral capture what a federal prosecutor later used to describe what he thought happened. he would wear pinky ring and dress like a wise guy. it every other word in the have lab was an f word. i had to get with them and be like them to convince them to tr
that is the best thing i could never do for you. to leave the job much more power less when i come in. it is to be representative government. that was the idea >> we have a few copies of the author's book here today "life inside the bubble" and available readily at the amazon in bookstores we appreciate your attendance and we will continue the conversation after we adjourned. thank you. [applause] we would like to hear from you. tweet us your feedback. twitter.com/booktv....
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278
Jan 1, 2014
01/14
by
CNBC
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eye 278
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i put a few dollars away when i could. not long after i applied to and got a job at the now-defunct los angeles herald examiner. making $179 a week. it was in a town about four times as expensive as living in tallahassee. i found a bungalow apartment in the fairfax district. pretty sketchy. nicer now. around the corner from pioneer chicken, which was way too expensive for me to go to. a few weeks later i was stalked and broken into repeatedly, something the cops were helpless to stop. at the time i was assigned a story at san diego, a horrible school shooting. when i returned everything was gone. everything i had. so it began. my terrible but thrilling six months of living in my car, basically trying to get by, the only upside being when you might have met a women, it was pretty easy to figure out the end of the night query, your place or mine. as much as i knew my ultimate goal was to save enough to get an apartment, people would take me in now and then so i could get a shower, change, get a good night's sleep. i still nev
i put a few dollars away when i could. not long after i applied to and got a job at the now-defunct los angeles herald examiner. making $179 a week. it was in a town about four times as expensive as living in tallahassee. i found a bungalow apartment in the fairfax district. pretty sketchy. nicer now. around the corner from pioneer chicken, which was way too expensive for me to go to. a few weeks later i was stalked and broken into repeatedly, something the cops were helpless to stop. at the...
110
110
Jan 3, 2014
01/14
by
CSPAN2
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eye 110
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they told me i could pick my next position. i chose afghanistan. sounded like a good place for a break. all that was left for the phone to ring. i played online trivia against my united states friends. i was sitting in boxers and a shirt sweating off the heat. name a human body part for every alphabet of the body. i heard a rumbling outside. then the bed started to vibrate. i heard plates vibrating, medicine bottles and bug spray shook. there had been a rumble before on the island. i felt nothing when i stood up. the roar outside was louder and then the floor moved. the vibrations were thicker. christ what do you do in one of these? a doorway. something about a doorway. i walked toward it but kept going into the hall. i lowered myself or maybe a fell then a shove and another and another. suddenly the house was appear airplane in a storm. everything was falling. a framed photograph barely missed my head. there was a contest between the up and down and side to side. who was going shove harder and they were both winning. the world turned gray and ever
they told me i could pick my next position. i chose afghanistan. sounded like a good place for a break. all that was left for the phone to ring. i played online trivia against my united states friends. i was sitting in boxers and a shirt sweating off the heat. name a human body part for every alphabet of the body. i heard a rumbling outside. then the bed started to vibrate. i heard plates vibrating, medicine bottles and bug spray shook. there had been a rumble before on the island. i felt...
36
36
Jan 28, 2014
01/14
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 36
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i could recognize the new ones by the look in their eyes. the survivors who are new have dead eyes, like shark eyes. there's no depth and no life, and i knew i still looked like that. i knew i had choices to make. i could choose to let the anger destroy me, or i could conquer it and strike some blows as far as changing attitudes. so it was a conscious choice for me, and i can look back and see the girls and i have made it. we weren't happy about it, but it feels good to turn a negative experience into a positive action, and we'll keep making it. [horns honking] [jackhammer] [siren] captioning performed by the national captioning stit inc. captions copyright 1991 alvin h. perlmter annenberg media ♪ for information about this and other annenberg media programs call 1-800-learner and visit us at www.learner.org.
i could recognize the new ones by the look in their eyes. the survivors who are new have dead eyes, like shark eyes. there's no depth and no life, and i knew i still looked like that. i knew i had choices to make. i could choose to let the anger destroy me, or i could conquer it and strike some blows as far as changing attitudes. so it was a conscious choice for me, and i can look back and see the girls and i have made it. we weren't happy about it, but it feels good to turn a negative...
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63
Jan 6, 2014
01/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 63
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so my thought was, if i could land in that space, the cars behind me will stop and the cars in front of me will keep going so i ought to be able to stop before i get to them. >> on the ground, troopers receive a call of a road rage incident. >> we were pulling out into traffic to go to that other call when this all happens. >> they pull out on to the highway and right in the middle of bill leff's makeshift runway. they can't believe their eyes as the plane glides overhead. >> basically we just saw the underneath of it. there was no engine noise. its engine had seized up. it was completely silent. >> my first thought was he's going to crash and we're going to have a huge mess. people are going to get hurt out of this. >> the plane speeds toward trooper linak's cruiser up ahead. >> it was almost an instant reaction to kind of duck and brace. when i looked out the windshield, all i saw was the bottom of the airplane. >> the pilot's wheels touch down and he lands the plane on the highway. >> so you are just standing on the brakes trying to stop and hope you don't hit something. i was wait
so my thought was, if i could land in that space, the cars behind me will stop and the cars in front of me will keep going so i ought to be able to stop before i get to them. >> on the ground, troopers receive a call of a road rage incident. >> we were pulling out into traffic to go to that other call when this all happens. >> they pull out on to the highway and right in the middle of bill leff's makeshift runway. they can't believe their eyes as the plane glides overhead....
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329
Jan 5, 2014
01/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 329
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i could see the cement truck coming. veling eastbound, and the suspect vehicle was traveling southbound. all i was thinking was, please make it through the intersection. and before i knew it, there was a collision with the cement truck. 31-32. situation. collision. collision. >> watch again as the cement truck barrels through the intersection and sideswipes the fleeing pickup. the force of the collision flips the cement truck on its side and demolishes the pickup. >> collision. the suspect's truck was actually completely smashed on the passenger side. it looked like half the truck was left. >> the suspect is still alive. you can see his shadow here as he gets out of the truck. but he only gets a few feet before he collapses. >> when i approach the suspect, he was pretty badly injured. i was hoping that there was something i could do for him, but there was nothing i could do for him at that point except wait for the paramedics to respond. >> within minutes, paramedics arrive and the cement truck driver and suspect are both
i could see the cement truck coming. veling eastbound, and the suspect vehicle was traveling southbound. all i was thinking was, please make it through the intersection. and before i knew it, there was a collision with the cement truck. 31-32. situation. collision. collision. >> watch again as the cement truck barrels through the intersection and sideswipes the fleeing pickup. the force of the collision flips the cement truck on its side and demolishes the pickup. >> collision. the...
86
86
Jan 20, 2014
01/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 86
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do. >> i could do anything. ? >> because i have the electrodes running into my brain. that's why it's called deep brain stimulation. >> you had a surgical procedure device. >> that's right. >> how did you learn about the procedure or decide to do it. >> my body decided to do it. i heard a little about it. i was propelled by it. the chance - a frankenstein monster. it will challenge your ability to function. so at the beginning of it i was not responding to medication. everybody, you know, you find out everybody is an individual. i tried a variety. >> tell me the difference between who i'm seeing sitting in front of me for half an hour and a year ago. now, looking at you, i'm not sure i could detect. >> you would detect, because i would be fighting that and that is more than just the trem junior you were fighting. because it's tremor, you are all the time conscious of it, trying down. >> i can move and do things about 100% of who i was. i'm 71 though. >> so the deep brain stimulation procedure. >> i was in my '60s by that point. i'm 71 now. and there was there was this
do. >> i could do anything. ? >> because i have the electrodes running into my brain. that's why it's called deep brain stimulation. >> you had a surgical procedure device. >> that's right. >> how did you learn about the procedure or decide to do it. >> my body decided to do it. i heard a little about it. i was propelled by it. the chance - a frankenstein monster. it will challenge your ability to function. so at the beginning of it i was not responding to...
86
86
Jan 21, 2014
01/14
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 86
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and if i could get down, i would just want to burrow my way deep into the earth. have you ever felt anything like that? no. i dream that i'm lying under a high tree in a dark wood, and i wanna climb up, up to the top and look around the bright countryside where the sun is shining, plunder the birds' nests up there where the golden eggs lie. and i climb and i climb, but it's so far to the first branch. yes? and i climb and climb, but the trunk is so thick. and i climb and i climb, but the trunk is so thick and slippery. and it's so far to the first branch. but i know if i could just reach that first branch, i would go up that tree, as if from a ladder. i haven't reached it yet, but i will reach it, even if it only is in a dream. why do we stand here talking about dreams? come now. just into the park. we must put nine midsummer flowers under our pillow tonight, miss julie, and then our dreams will come true. there's something in your eye? oh, it's nothing. it's only a speck of dust. it would be gone in a moment. my sleeve must have brushed it. come. sit down and i'l
and if i could get down, i would just want to burrow my way deep into the earth. have you ever felt anything like that? no. i dream that i'm lying under a high tree in a dark wood, and i wanna climb up, up to the top and look around the bright countryside where the sun is shining, plunder the birds' nests up there where the golden eggs lie. and i climb and i climb, but it's so far to the first branch. yes? and i climb and climb, but the trunk is so thick. and i climb and i climb, but the trunk...
96
96
Jan 20, 2014
01/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 96
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no, i could not. but there were definitely some signs of stress. so as a result of that i was in no rush to get another large bank into that. you can oftentimes get into these large banks, but it's very difficult to actually get back out of them because they put these golden handcuffs on you. so is afforded the opportunity to leave jpmorgan, which i took to start pursuing entrepreneurial activities, both from a business and not-for-profit standpoint. and then the world melted down. a friend of a friend here in washington dc asked me to explain to his audience on his blog what happened with the lehman brothers. and so i wrote a commentary. fifty people responded to the commentary. to me, that was indicative of the appetite and the demand for explaining to us what is going on on wall street. so i wrote some more commentaries and i got a number of responses when i realized that if i really want credibility as a writer, i need to put my name out there. i cannot just be ld or another pseudonym. if i really want the readers to say that i believe in this i
no, i could not. but there were definitely some signs of stress. so as a result of that i was in no rush to get another large bank into that. you can oftentimes get into these large banks, but it's very difficult to actually get back out of them because they put these golden handcuffs on you. so is afforded the opportunity to leave jpmorgan, which i took to start pursuing entrepreneurial activities, both from a business and not-for-profit standpoint. and then the world melted down. a friend of...
67
67
Jan 1, 2014
01/14
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 67
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so i did the best that i could. and i slung with the best that i could. you know? i still got my butt whooped. i was still busted up in the face and all sore the next day, but i was part of the hood now. i belonged to something. and i loved it. i'm not going to lie. i loved it. >> having abandoned his family for gang life, kirkpatrick turned to other crimes. when we met him, he was serving his second prison term, eight years for burglary. >> i know right from wrong. i'm not a stupid individual. i might make stupid decisions, but i'm not a stupid individual. >> during his time in prison, kirkpatrick still had his gang to fall back on, but like his biological family, he eventually left his gang family, though not totally on his own accord. >> i was holding contraband, and i was holding something, and i lost it. yeah. i had lost it. >> any specific enemies, names, numbers? >> no. >> kirkpatrick explained the contraband was a packet of gang information including a roster of current members. when he realized it was gone, he was afraid the gang might order a hit on him as
so i did the best that i could. and i slung with the best that i could. you know? i still got my butt whooped. i was still busted up in the face and all sore the next day, but i was part of the hood now. i belonged to something. and i loved it. i'm not going to lie. i loved it. >> having abandoned his family for gang life, kirkpatrick turned to other crimes. when we met him, he was serving his second prison term, eight years for burglary. >> i know right from wrong. i'm not a stupid...
143
143
Jan 1, 2014
01/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 143
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i did it because i knew that i could never make that fatal cut across his name. and when i fought through the crowds in grand central station while trying to find a place to eat. a place where i could sit in the corner alone and disappear to the wall behind me. while i walked past women after men felt all the people touching and crowding me while making me realize that i never been so lonely. so alone. even though i was surrounded by young men in suits and older women in black coats, and sticky faced children. i fantasized cutting the right wrist. get another tattoo any brother's handwriting on the inside of my right wrist. love brother is how he signed one letter he wrote me while i was in college. love brother is what the tattoo says. after i left new york, i found the adage about time healing all wowbdz to be false. grief doesn't fade. grief scabs over like my scars and pools to new painful configuration. it hurts in new ways. we're never free from grief. we are never free from the feeling that we have failed. we are never free from self-loathing. we are never
i did it because i knew that i could never make that fatal cut across his name. and when i fought through the crowds in grand central station while trying to find a place to eat. a place where i could sit in the corner alone and disappear to the wall behind me. while i walked past women after men felt all the people touching and crowding me while making me realize that i never been so lonely. so alone. even though i was surrounded by young men in suits and older women in black coats, and sticky...
105
105
Jan 7, 2014
01/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 105
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i went by and every time i could the cabinet met. i thought it was necessary for me to know what was going on. so that i could explain to people in the country as i toured around. >> did you received criticism for attending those meetings and for being the president's emissary? >> i do not think i ever received criticism from the west wing. they knew how close we were. and how interested i was. but there was all kind of criticism. i learned while jimmy was in the state senate. that is the hardest because you know everybody criticizes you. then you expect when you become governor. when i went to the governor i knew it was coming. you have to accept that. i think you almost have to in public life. you have to know what your husband does, if what he thinks is the best possible thing for our country. what i am doing i think is the best possible thing for this country. he sat me down and said, if you don't think i am doing the best job i can do, then worry about it. you have to just accept that. my feeling was if they reported things in a
i went by and every time i could the cabinet met. i thought it was necessary for me to know what was going on. so that i could explain to people in the country as i toured around. >> did you received criticism for attending those meetings and for being the president's emissary? >> i do not think i ever received criticism from the west wing. they knew how close we were. and how interested i was. but there was all kind of criticism. i learned while jimmy was in the state senate. that...
194
194
Jan 28, 2014
01/14
by
CNNW
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eye 194
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hat, which prompted neil patrick harris to tweet, only pharrell could fight forest fires. >> all of a sudden i want a roast beef sandwich. ac 360 starts right now. >>> good evening, everyone, tonight my interview with the state senator from virginia whose son stabbed him multiple times and how the tragedy could have been prevented. >>> will tomorrow's state of the union address be president obama's last chance to shape his agenda? what is it like aboard the latest nightmare cruise ship where only the germs appear to be going first class. this afternoon, i was about two hours south of here in richmond, virgin virginia. the pain for this father is still raw. virginia state senator creed deed's was slashed and stabbed and almost killed by his mentally ill son gus who took his own life. he talked about it a little last night on 60 minutes, tonight we go indepth in a way he's never spoken about it before. >> people have been so kind to me, they reach out and they don't understand sometimes that i just have to be left alone, because i have to focus on the good things. these pictures and the facebook
hat, which prompted neil patrick harris to tweet, only pharrell could fight forest fires. >> all of a sudden i want a roast beef sandwich. ac 360 starts right now. >>> good evening, everyone, tonight my interview with the state senator from virginia whose son stabbed him multiple times and how the tragedy could have been prevented. >>> will tomorrow's state of the union address be president obama's last chance to shape his agenda? what is it like aboard the latest...
118
118
Jan 5, 2014
01/14
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 118
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if i saw her, i could just wind one up and i'd just pop her. d then i think well, what good does that do, you know? to heck with it. let it go. keep living your life because all's it's doing is aging us, you know? it's not really how we had things, you don't have a baby and you don't raise your children to become drug addicts. you just don't do that. then i'll say have you had enough of this roller coaster ride, ready to get off this merry go round? yes, mom, i'm ready. and i think we're right on track and everything caves in again. >> i've been wanting to get off the streets, and i have every opportunity in the world. i have a big support system, i have a wonderful family. it's never the right time to go. i keep looking for the perfect ending and there's not going to be a perfect ending. i'll be dead before there's a perfect ending. >>> coming up. >> when i first got to the car, he was an older white man, most of the gentlemen on division are older white men and they have money. >> brandee nyp gets a visit from a man she met on the streets. and
if i saw her, i could just wind one up and i'd just pop her. d then i think well, what good does that do, you know? to heck with it. let it go. keep living your life because all's it's doing is aging us, you know? it's not really how we had things, you don't have a baby and you don't raise your children to become drug addicts. you just don't do that. then i'll say have you had enough of this roller coaster ride, ready to get off this merry go round? yes, mom, i'm ready. and i think we're right...
98
98
Jan 25, 2014
01/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 98
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i could see if i could get more followers. i could target people that live in san francisco. i could tell that based on their tweets, or what it says in there profile. another way to do it is to promote tweets. one of the things i have done, i wrote a tweet about my book. and then i putnk a photo of the book cover. i tweeted that. i can go in and take that tweet and promote it. i can say, people who search on twitter will see this tweet. twitter orwork on facebook will see this tweet. people will click on the link. >> will kind of revenues do they have? how many employees? >> they have just over 2000 employees. the revenue is around $640 million. next year is expected to go around $1 billion. they are not profitable yet. they had a moment last year were they skirted profitability. but then they decided to purchase a company. they could be profitable today if they wanted to leave. they are getting money from the ipo. they are reinvesting it in the company to hire more employees. >> what is your personal opinion about the ipo? in the fact smart that they undervalued the company
i could see if i could get more followers. i could target people that live in san francisco. i could tell that based on their tweets, or what it says in there profile. another way to do it is to promote tweets. one of the things i have done, i wrote a tweet about my book. and then i putnk a photo of the book cover. i tweeted that. i can go in and take that tweet and promote it. i can say, people who search on twitter will see this tweet. twitter orwork on facebook will see this tweet. people...
505
505
Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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there are so many clips i could share with you tonight about his career, but i decided to take this one from 1967. ♪ tavis: congrats on the's 80 years, for starters. >> thank you. tavis: what do you make of this journey so far? >> i was telling someone at my birthday party that i am eight. the same kind of feeling that i had at eight years old, i'm collecting these little statues of captain marvel and wonder woman. [laughter] does it feel to still have the pipes to do what you do at 80? now, thatess oxygen is why it helps not to have the that hasand read music been written because you have played long lines with a lot of wind. i have to find another way to andess with improvisation have a lot of room for the other musicians to have a voice, too. blessing that i don't have that much wind. tavis: alan iversen, practice? what are you talking about, practice? mean you don't spend as much time or her sing -- rehearsing? is mostly about improvisation. how do you rehearse the unknown? miles used to say that when you are practicing something, you will go on stage and do variations of what you p
there are so many clips i could share with you tonight about his career, but i decided to take this one from 1967. ♪ tavis: congrats on the's 80 years, for starters. >> thank you. tavis: what do you make of this journey so far? >> i was telling someone at my birthday party that i am eight. the same kind of feeling that i had at eight years old, i'm collecting these little statues of captain marvel and wonder woman. [laughter] does it feel to still have the pipes to do what you do...
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Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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i could barely get it on my pinky. .. we live in a world of inequality. i'll tell you as a historian it's hard to think about too. i felt, and turning point for me aside from my fraternities in passing was we really adds a community, as a people really need to understand inequal they lot better. historians ought to be able to help us. i think that's a good place to close. thank you very much. [applause] former secret service agent talking about his life and his experiences protecting presidents bush and obama. he also discusses his decision to lead the secret service and run for congress. this 45-minute program is next on booktv. [applause] thank you, all. thank you for coming, i appreciate it. especially on this sunday material weather. but i woke up this morning i expected it to be worse. it wasn't that bad. 1:30 wake-up call, which is the the "not going sleep call." i was on the radio this morning. it wasn't too bad out there, thank god. thank you for coming. thank you to heritage, and special thank you for my friend for providing sage advice over the l
i could barely get it on my pinky. .. we live in a world of inequality. i'll tell you as a historian it's hard to think about too. i felt, and turning point for me aside from my fraternities in passing was we really adds a community, as a people really need to understand inequal they lot better. historians ought to be able to help us. i think that's a good place to close. thank you very much. [applause] former secret service agent talking about his life and his experiences protecting presidents...
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Jan 28, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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i had done everything i could the day before. i had taken him to the med -- you know, it's not like he's my son so i can automatically enroll him in a hospital somewhere. he's an adult. >> right. >> everything i had done the day before, you know, we tried and had been rejected. my son was allowed to suffer. >> and he was suffering for a long time. >> he was suffering for a long, long time. i mean, that's -- at least he's at peace now, but it's a price to pay. >> so, you know, i think -- i always feel like if somebody has cancer, they're suffering from cancer, somebody's suffering from, you know, leukemia -- >> that's it. i mean -- >> people -- you get help. >> there's a real disparity in this country between mental illness and what we consider as physical illness. and physical illness we treat. mental illness we hide behind the cause of, we sweep it under the rug. >> there's still such a stigma about it. people don't talk about it. >> they don't talk about it, they're embarrassed about it. people that are mentally ill don't, you k
i had done everything i could the day before. i had taken him to the med -- you know, it's not like he's my son so i can automatically enroll him in a hospital somewhere. he's an adult. >> right. >> everything i had done the day before, you know, we tried and had been rejected. my son was allowed to suffer. >> and he was suffering for a long time. >> he was suffering for a long, long time. i mean, that's -- at least he's at peace now, but it's a price to pay. >>...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 30, 2014
01/14
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SFGTV
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and i don't know if i could maybe offer a little friendly amendment, but in the result i think we should thank melanie, maybe not only for her contributions to the city and county of san francisco, but also maybe to the environment. >> already did. >> our impact is felt beyond the city. and i think that's one of the really exciting things about our department here, is that what we do is felt beyond the city not just in terms of the direct impacts, but also in term of setting an example for the rest of the state and the rest of the country and the rest of the world. and i think you've done a great job as an ambassador, and your work will be felt beyond just this city. so, thank you. >> commissioner wald. >> well, i want to second the thought of -- the suggestion of commissioner josefowitz. and i also want to thank melanie particularly for one of the accomplishments that she had on her watch, and that is the move to the new location where many of the years which i had the privilege to serve on this commission, we have discussed again and again the need for moving from our former location t
and i don't know if i could maybe offer a little friendly amendment, but in the result i think we should thank melanie, maybe not only for her contributions to the city and county of san francisco, but also maybe to the environment. >> already did. >> our impact is felt beyond the city. and i think that's one of the really exciting things about our department here, is that what we do is felt beyond the city not just in terms of the direct impacts, but also in term of setting an...
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Jan 24, 2014
01/14
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BLOOMBERG
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i don't think the taliban could take over. i don't think they are strong enough, but i think there is a tremendous amount of uncertainty and the afghan people are plagued by the what happens next question. >> what kind of mistakes did the allies make in afghanistan? >> a number. i am going to include afghans in our allies. we go back just to 9/11 and say we went in unexpectedly after the al qaeda elements that were there, we suddenly found ourselves having toppled the taliban government without having really thought what next. now we have a country that had been through about 20 years of war at that point. it was badly damaged and very little infrastructure or into humanpital, capital in terms of government or whatnot, and we thought we could do things more cheaply than we did. we thought the germans would do the police, the italians would do the courts, the americans would do the army and a few other things and we would slide out. that was not realistic. it was going to take a huge effort. in our haste and sometimes our ignora
i don't think the taliban could take over. i don't think they are strong enough, but i think there is a tremendous amount of uncertainty and the afghan people are plagued by the what happens next question. >> what kind of mistakes did the allies make in afghanistan? >> a number. i am going to include afghans in our allies. we go back just to 9/11 and say we went in unexpectedly after the al qaeda elements that were there, we suddenly found ourselves having toppled the taliban...
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Jan 25, 2014
01/14
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KQEH
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i never said to myself, i wish i could do that. it never occurs to me. ays consider myself lucky that i can actually cry listening to some music. i think, oh my gosh, it is amazing. i wonder if anybody else can feel the music when i listen to a brahms piece and the tears start to come? that makes me special. i can actually react to something like that. tavis: i'm just curious now -- i'm out on a limb -- i wonder if there is any parallel or parallels in your mind between what you see when you watch the artistry of sport and the artistry of music. >> yes, absolutely. there are several. first, there is if you want to call it energy -- when you see a person, whether it is a basketball player or baseball player or a tennis player, the kind of energy that they have, whether you hit the ball or whether you throw the ball, whatever it is that you do, i , when- another thing is you watch michael jordan, for example, you see a ballet dance. that is something that can be a very musical thing. is energy.t a lot of it is energy. a lot of it is what you are actually he
i never said to myself, i wish i could do that. it never occurs to me. ays consider myself lucky that i can actually cry listening to some music. i think, oh my gosh, it is amazing. i wonder if anybody else can feel the music when i listen to a brahms piece and the tears start to come? that makes me special. i can actually react to something like that. tavis: i'm just curious now -- i'm out on a limb -- i wonder if there is any parallel or parallels in your mind between what you see when you...
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Jan 12, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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. >> i wish i could go back and have someone tell me one little thing about how it works out. i would do thing differently, 100%. i'm christina georgie, 26, and we are in oakland california. i was going to university in virgin. i went there for a year. i was studying fashion design. looked like i was going to finish fast. i was thinking maybe three years i'd graduate. i felt like i wanted to go somewhere where someone would notice me so i could get a job out of school. i told my mum two weeks before i left, "hey, i'm moving to san francisco to go to school." i went to classes and i remember the first class i went to they gave me a list of supplies this long and everything was 50 to 100, so i covered all my living expenses with loans. i was like, "i can pay for all this stuff and i'll get an awesome job and pay it back like that." i have five messages, you have loans past due. >> my mum took out the initial first loan. she was, like, "this is expensive, you have to take out the rest", that's when i was uh-oh. when i got the loan i thought i'd finish school. two years later, it s
. >> i wish i could go back and have someone tell me one little thing about how it works out. i would do thing differently, 100%. i'm christina georgie, 26, and we are in oakland california. i was going to university in virgin. i went there for a year. i was studying fashion design. looked like i was going to finish fast. i was thinking maybe three years i'd graduate. i felt like i wanted to go somewhere where someone would notice me so i could get a job out of school. i told my mum two...
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Jan 12, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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>> the remaining stories i could not tell here, there are many issues i could not come, how big can a book be? so many things had to be -- besides that, it was a book published by simon & schuster, written by an israeli writer and journalist who discussed these trials and detailed -- in details. it was a hard trial, and it was not easy to come over here and try to prove to this empire, "time" magazine was and is an empire, in their own backyard, but i told them that when they publish that report, when my last day in the ministry, and when i read that that, i decided i had to start fighting. to try and show improvement was a lie. it was not an easy thing. it was a very long trial. it was summer when the trail started, and autumn, the leaves were red, and then the winter came, and i even remember a beautiful girl sitting there, and she talked about getting married, and then she talked about getting pregnant. it was a long struggle, legal struggle, it was very hard -- it is very hard to conduct a trial in the u.s. >> what did it cost you? >> the law firm, very nice, very good, they took
>> the remaining stories i could not tell here, there are many issues i could not come, how big can a book be? so many things had to be -- besides that, it was a book published by simon & schuster, written by an israeli writer and journalist who discussed these trials and detailed -- in details. it was a hard trial, and it was not easy to come over here and try to prove to this empire, "time" magazine was and is an empire, in their own backyard, but i told them that when...
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Jan 10, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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i could not get it all done yesterday. as i said, if there is more information that i uncover i , will act accordingly in terms terms of releasing it to the public and taking whatever net -- taking whatever action is necessary. given there is an oig investigation and legislative investigation. later today i am going to be going to fort lee and asked to meet with the mayor to apologize to him personally, face to face. also to apologize to the people of fort lee in their town. i think they need to see me do that personally, and i intend to do that later on today. people of those communities for four days were impacted in a completely callous and indifferent way. i'm going to go and apologize for that. let me conclude with this -- this is not the tone that i have set over the last four years in this building. it is not the environment i have worked so hard to achieve. we saw just a few months ago, and i have seen over the the course over the last four years, republicans and democrats working together. not without arguments, bu
i could not get it all done yesterday. as i said, if there is more information that i uncover i , will act accordingly in terms terms of releasing it to the public and taking whatever net -- taking whatever action is necessary. given there is an oig investigation and legislative investigation. later today i am going to be going to fort lee and asked to meet with the mayor to apologize to him personally, face to face. also to apologize to the people of fort lee in their town. i think they need...
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Jan 26, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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i could get it assigned to me. here is how. it breaks down 4-4. how do i get it to me, which i certainly did not want. i said, i am not sure. they have to assign it to me. that will determine the outcome. i better be more certain than that. nonetheless, he has to try to get the court, do it by the numbers, and that he has some discretion. then we sit down, we write, i get my law clerk to write a long draft or memo, and then i will go read it. i will sit down and then write my draft. i often say, i know you think yours was better. then she will go in give me another draft, and i will probably do another draft. i was a law professor. i am picky. then we go back and forth and get a draft and circulate it. i hope i pick up before you are more votes. if i do that, it is the opinion of the court. i am always willing to change, even when i have the majority. when i have the majority signed up, i am a little less willing. nonetheless, somebody may write a dissent or concurrence. eventually everyone either joined or writes his own. and the opinion comes out
i could get it assigned to me. here is how. it breaks down 4-4. how do i get it to me, which i certainly did not want. i said, i am not sure. they have to assign it to me. that will determine the outcome. i better be more certain than that. nonetheless, he has to try to get the court, do it by the numbers, and that he has some discretion. then we sit down, we write, i get my law clerk to write a long draft or memo, and then i will go read it. i will sit down and then write my draft. i often...
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Jan 27, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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i could afford the best lawyer in town. the reason why things worked out fine for me was because i had legal skills. i literally prosecuted people in the courtroom where i was being prosecuted. there are and the other reason why things worked out fine more me was because i was innocent. but when i thought about all those reasons, that didn't seem like the most important one. so, again, there was this evolution in my thinking about the unfairness of what i was doing day-to-day, but then that one dramatic thing, and the chapter in the book where i talk about that, i call it "the hunter gets captured by the game," because i got captured by the game. you know, maybe it was the come to jesus moment that i needed to make me kind of change my life's course. so i wouldn't wish that on anybody, but, you know, i learned from it. it made a man out of me, as i say in the book with. it made a black man out of me. >> host: you also say that after your trial you went home and cried. >> guest: after the day i was arrested. because, again, i
i could afford the best lawyer in town. the reason why things worked out fine for me was because i had legal skills. i literally prosecuted people in the courtroom where i was being prosecuted. there are and the other reason why things worked out fine more me was because i was innocent. but when i thought about all those reasons, that didn't seem like the most important one. so, again, there was this evolution in my thinking about the unfairness of what i was doing day-to-day, but then that one...
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Jan 30, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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i could hear them talking. so i walked up and i looked, and i could see that the baby was just about to come on out. so i went back and got my first aid kit. and i walked back up there. and the dad was real calm. and the mom was a super trouper. she was doing awesome. >> how long had they been there, do you know? >> that i don't know. i didn't really get to talk to them much because by the time i got there, about a minute after i arrived the baby was being born. >> wow! >> so i didn't get a chance to talk. i could hear a 911 dispatcher talking to him walking him through, doing a great job. >> have you ever delivered a baby before? is this something you're trained to do? >> no. there is no training, but with this call and i've been doing it for awhile, i have actually delivered before but never on the side of the interstate in an ice storm. >> i can imagine, yes, it's a pretty unique circumstance. >> but the father did -- the mom did all of it, really. because that baby was definitely coming no matter what, who
i could hear them talking. so i walked up and i looked, and i could see that the baby was just about to come on out. so i went back and got my first aid kit. and i walked back up there. and the dad was real calm. and the mom was a super trouper. she was doing awesome. >> how long had they been there, do you know? >> that i don't know. i didn't really get to talk to them much because by the time i got there, about a minute after i arrived the baby was being born. >> wow!...
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Jan 2, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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i could barely walk up the stairs. i was staring down the road of medications and a host of illnesses coming with age. so i took my health very seriously in order to change my life. and it paid off. my cardiologist was just so impressed by my blood work, and he said you know, if everybody did what i did, health care costs would be incorporate near where they are these days. -- nowhere near where they are these days. >> bennett and grono are part of the wave of the quantified self movement. people who have made a lifetime out of chronicling their personal data from those obvious things like fitless health and nutrition, to aspects of our lives you wouldn't expect to be quantifiable, movements, even love. >> spent 50% of my life surviving in this world, sleeping, eating, other stuff. >> dozens more convening by the thousands at international conferences from africa, asia, europe, growing qsers, gary wolf is the founder of the quantified self movement, an editor for the technical industry's wired. >> tracking something lik
i could barely walk up the stairs. i was staring down the road of medications and a host of illnesses coming with age. so i took my health very seriously in order to change my life. and it paid off. my cardiologist was just so impressed by my blood work, and he said you know, if everybody did what i did, health care costs would be incorporate near where they are these days. -- nowhere near where they are these days. >> bennett and grono are part of the wave of the quantified self...
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Jan 12, 2014
01/14
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MSNBCW
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not for the better, i mean, it could have gone worse. was, i was really lucky. >>> a car thief falls right into a police trap when she takes off in a bait car. >> she decided she was going to take a car that day and picked our. >> come on, open up the door. keep the hands visible. >> but it's the suspect who catches the police by surprise. >> i was a little taken back on the operator of the vehicle. totally out of the norm. >> july 28th, 2008. arlington, texas. detective jesse minton of the arlington police department auto and theft unit is alerted that a bait car has been broken into. bait cars rigged with cameras and gps tracking equipment are used by police departments nationwide to catch thieves in an area where it's a problem. >> we pick a car that looks like cars that are most stolen. we lock the doors remotely. record everything inside with video cameras and microphones. then we deploy them to a place where we have a crime problem or persons stealing cars in the area. we're basically fishing with the bait. >> the bait car, a red ch
not for the better, i mean, it could have gone worse. was, i was really lucky. >>> a car thief falls right into a police trap when she takes off in a bait car. >> she decided she was going to take a car that day and picked our. >> come on, open up the door. keep the hands visible. >> but it's the suspect who catches the police by surprise. >> i was a little taken back on the operator of the vehicle. totally out of the norm. >> july 28th, 2008. arlington,...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 8, 2014
01/14
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SFGTV
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try that one >> i could speak really loudly. like i said i don't know whether this goes in 6 or 7 but follow-up items last year roberta if i could have east side ear for the moment. last year, we had talked about a followup hearing on the minnesota metro service as a rider i certainly noticed that service in my opinion has gotten a great deal better. some of the items have been fixed there's still the occasional thing. i want to hear from mr. haley so the folks know we're paying attention to this so i lived with some permission in from the chairman request that be done through a hearing with mr. haley here >> we have that skeleton for the february 4th. >> the second thing we talked about was some sort of you follow-up on the cat companies providing information because it's more appropriate to report on that. we're coming up to our deadline. it's good to get some information >> so we were planning on giving you an update on the february 4th workshop. i don't have the information now but i'll check with the director. i think that i
try that one >> i could speak really loudly. like i said i don't know whether this goes in 6 or 7 but follow-up items last year roberta if i could have east side ear for the moment. last year, we had talked about a followup hearing on the minnesota metro service as a rider i certainly noticed that service in my opinion has gotten a great deal better. some of the items have been fixed there's still the occasional thing. i want to hear from mr. haley so the folks know we're paying attention...
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Jan 17, 2014
01/14
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FBC
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. >> i thought howow could i be regulated. >> he can't get out anymore, too bad. >> marty has entertained kids for 30 years, and then like many ma. >> s he uses a rabbit. >> yes! >> a birthday child willmake the rabbit magic include --ly appear. >> i was signing autographs and taking pictures. suddly a badge was thrown into a mix and the inspector saying, let me see your license, license for a rabbit and she said from now on you cannot use your rabbit until you fill out paperwork, fi out theline phoenix, inspect your home. i'm subject to surprise inspections of momentum. >> is not embarrassed. >> very serious. >> marty was in violation of the animal welfare act. ten times regulateyears have shown up, unannounced at marty's house. >> cannot argue with them. you can't even talk logically with them. >> she would love it if everybody said, ah. >> i got a new inspector and i said, did my first one retire? she said, no, good news, we increased our budget and we have more spectors now. we can visit you more often. >> you got this letter. deere dear members of our regulation community. sounds lik
. >> i thought howow could i be regulated. >> he can't get out anymore, too bad. >> marty has entertained kids for 30 years, and then like many ma. >> s he uses a rabbit. >> yes! >> a birthday child willmake the rabbit magic include --ly appear. >> i was signing autographs and taking pictures. suddly a badge was thrown into a mix and the inspector saying, let me see your license, license for a rabbit and she said from now on you cannot use your rabbit...
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i thought if i could get a laugh in the tragic story maybe i could get something worth watching. >> jonat is the incredible -- it's, man, it's a moving story. it's a dark story at times. it's powerful. there are a ton of laughs in it. you know this, if you want to talk about serious topics and you want to win over an argument or make your point, you if you get people laughing they let their guard down and they are more open to the argument they are putting. so putting laughs into serious stuff a good thing. >> jon: how hard was it for you. there's moments in the film where i'm watching you be serious and earnest, the comedian in me, my heart wants to reach out and go, "do a dick joke. ". [laughter] yp don't you fart? >> i was tempted. [laughter] there are plenty of jokes in there. but sometimes you have to have the balls to say no jokes now. you should practice that sometime. >> jon: i wouldn't be able to. i'm uncomfortable. i'm a typical repressed brit. it's how i am. [laughter] you do something about this -- it's this woman's story. the catholic church. there's controversy now about t
i thought if i could get a laugh in the tragic story maybe i could get something worth watching. >> jonat is the incredible -- it's, man, it's a moving story. it's a dark story at times. it's powerful. there are a ton of laughs in it. you know this, if you want to talk about serious topics and you want to win over an argument or make your point, you if you get people laughing they let their guard down and they are more open to the argument they are putting. so putting laughs into serious...
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589
Jan 31, 2014
01/14
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KGO
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if i had a contract, could i do this? gotcha. if i had a contract, i couldn't do my own stunts.ad a contract, i wouldn't be with all you fine people tonight. you might want to hold on to those doughnuts. i've accomplished so much. [ speaking a foreign language ] even fulfilled a childhood dream. uh-oh. bottom line, contracts hold you back. am i right, iceland? you know what i'm talking about. >> switch to t-mobile and we'll buy you out of yours. >> all right. >> nice. >> thank you, thank you. >> hollywood is calling. >> the arabic, what is that again? can we get that back again? >> world peace. [ speaking a foreign language ] just a little bit of world peace out there, you know? >> that's a real dream. >> a little bit of everything, you know, dabble a little bit here, a little bit there. >> fun. was it fun to do? >> absolutely. >> looks terrific. now this is what we want you to do, it looked like it all sort of came together and made sense. >> it was. it was so much fun. everyone at t mobile was awesome and the director was so much fun. and all those different vignettes were awe
if i had a contract, could i do this? gotcha. if i had a contract, i couldn't do my own stunts.ad a contract, i wouldn't be with all you fine people tonight. you might want to hold on to those doughnuts. i've accomplished so much. [ speaking a foreign language ] even fulfilled a childhood dream. uh-oh. bottom line, contracts hold you back. am i right, iceland? you know what i'm talking about. >> switch to t-mobile and we'll buy you out of yours. >> all right. >> nice. >>...
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80
Jan 31, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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i felt like there was no barriers into what -- where i could poke my head. i have a chapter of the book about how good it is to be a big fish in a little pond. and canada is one of the great little ponds out there. and i think i was -- i got to be a big fish in a little pond. >> not too far south from you was the united states where your parents' marriage in some cases wouldn't have even been legal. >> when they got married, interracial marriages were still illegal in some american states. >> did that -- was racism an element of your thinking when you were growing up? >> when i came here, to america, first thing that happens is you become aware of how much race dominates american life. >> your father didn't want you to become a journalist, at least -- do whatever you want -- >> i'm making fun of him a little bit with this. in truth my father was quite happy with whatever i wanted to do. but in his experience as an englishman, journalism isn't a high profession. he thought i would be on fleet street tabloid chasing -- i tweak him by reminding him of that fact.
i felt like there was no barriers into what -- where i could poke my head. i have a chapter of the book about how good it is to be a big fish in a little pond. and canada is one of the great little ponds out there. and i think i was -- i got to be a big fish in a little pond. >> not too far south from you was the united states where your parents' marriage in some cases wouldn't have even been legal. >> when they got married, interracial marriages were still illegal in some american...
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873
Jan 17, 2014
01/14
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COM
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i have to lose. he going to cut me done to 10. >> stephen: he could take away your extra crispy. the way, i have to ask all my guests this, original recipe or extra crispy? >> original, baby. >> stephen: all right, the movement is move forward. we'll be right back. >> welcome back, everybody. folks, before we go tonight, you know, i don't really like to brag but i know how to read. that's why i formed the colbert book club, a place with book lovers of all stripes can come together and drink their way to cheap chardonnay. fire up your reading glass, folksing time for another installment, which author this time? well, we had curious george all lined up but sadly last week he flew into a rage and savagely disfigured the man with the yellow hat. artists, so we'll just have to settle for my next favorite literary giant, earnest hemingway and his classic, a farewell to arms. we'll discuss it next tuesday, january 2 is with special guest famed author michael shabon and earnie's granddaughter marrial hemingway and time permitting, a herd of angry bulls. get reading, nation captioning
i have to lose. he going to cut me done to 10. >> stephen: he could take away your extra crispy. the way, i have to ask all my guests this, original recipe or extra crispy? >> original, baby. >> stephen: all right, the movement is move forward. we'll be right back. >> welcome back, everybody. folks, before we go tonight, you know, i don't really like to brag but i know how to read. that's why i formed the colbert book club, a place with book lovers of all stripes...
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117
Jan 25, 2014
01/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 117
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but with the training i had i was able to react to the situation before i could even think about what was haling. i had been trained to look for patterns of behavior that weren't right. >> how would you flesh that out. in this case it's what didn't fit. the two were having a domestic argument. she should have been talking to the context of the situation. she was not. she was walking towards the individual that she was trying to attack and myself, but she was looking at me instead of him. that was abnormal. she's angry at him so why is she looking at me? she's ready to attack a police officer who has a gun an she's very focused on what those things were. but at the time i could not tell you, i just reacted. >> you were able to see what was about to go down. >> the brain is good at something called pattern matching recognition. >> pattern matching recognition. >> yes, they were able to lower the rate of death of cardiac patient. they say if a patient is not acting right we want to you alert a rapid response team. if you have physical symptoms like blood pressure and pulse, they want you
but with the training i had i was able to react to the situation before i could even think about what was haling. i had been trained to look for patterns of behavior that weren't right. >> how would you flesh that out. in this case it's what didn't fit. the two were having a domestic argument. she should have been talking to the context of the situation. she was not. she was walking towards the individual that she was trying to attack and myself, but she was looking at me instead of him....
56
56
Jan 5, 2014
01/14
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 56
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they did what they could. itely interesting. >>> coming up -- >> my mom asked me what my job was. i'm a baker. i bake cakes. oh, that sounds fun. >> the cake baking partnership comes to an end. >> hi, daddy, it's me, elijah joe, your little boy. you seem to have forgotten about me and mommy. >> ricky mckaskle gets a letter. . the sleep number bed conforms to you. i wake up in the morning with no back pain. i can adjust it if i need to...if my back's a little more sore. and by the time i get up in the morning, i feel great! if you have back pain, toss and turn at night or wake up tired with no energy, the sleep number bed could be your solution. the sleep number bed's secret is it's air chambers which provide ideal support and put you in control of the firmness. and the bed is perfect for couples because each side adjusts independently to their unique sleep number. here's what clinical research has found: 93% of participants experienced back-pain relief 90% reported reduced aches and pains 87% fell asleep faster
they did what they could. itely interesting. >>> coming up -- >> my mom asked me what my job was. i'm a baker. i bake cakes. oh, that sounds fun. >> the cake baking partnership comes to an end. >> hi, daddy, it's me, elijah joe, your little boy. you seem to have forgotten about me and mommy. >> ricky mckaskle gets a letter. . the sleep number bed conforms to you. i wake up in the morning with no back pain. i can adjust it if i need to...if my back's a little...