95
95
Jan 9, 2018
01/18
by
MSNBCW
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eye 95
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i really agree with dick. i think we get the one thing done and then we go into comprehensive the following day. i think it will happen. yes. let's wait one second. thank you all very much. i hope we gave you enough material. this should cover you for about two weeks. >> indeed it will. we have just been watching quite the remarkable meeting between president trump and congressional leaders from both parties at the white house. they were called there to try and hammer out some sort of deal on immigration. what you just got was a rare, arguably unprecedented look h e heretofore at this administration behind the curtain. the president there appearing quite engaged. asking questions. calling on congressional leaders. offering solutions. encouraging bipartisanship. several times the president encouraged lawmakers on both sides of the aisle to reconsider the idea of earmarks. some call them earmarks. others might call them pork. but the president said he was thrilled to be in that room of distinguished republicans a
i really agree with dick. i think we get the one thing done and then we go into comprehensive the following day. i think it will happen. yes. let's wait one second. thank you all very much. i hope we gave you enough material. this should cover you for about two weeks. >> indeed it will. we have just been watching quite the remarkable meeting between president trump and congressional leaders from both parties at the white house. they were called there to try and hammer out some sort of...
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42
Jan 25, 2018
01/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 42
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well i mean the reason that i wasn't really doing a lot of my homework is because i was really busy running different stuff like i started my systems programming i was like working on teaching that i was mentoring the middle school's robotics that i started when i was in middle school i'd go back and mentor that i just had a lot of stuff that i was working on that was it was really interesting to be it's a lot more interesting than you know the homework that they get for math class because i mean the homework that i got for misfires was just like just like drills on this is just like to. get into this equation and just you know calculate is just like lation and that's that's really not what that's about there was no room for creativity or anything all right you've got some support from live on you change let me just show you this if i can see if this kid can cause a calculator he can code a computer someone sending to succumb valley i will pay for it we'll save that. and tracking him down really can go ahead so i wanted to bring that to comment on the same theme the first one is from early
well i mean the reason that i wasn't really doing a lot of my homework is because i was really busy running different stuff like i started my systems programming i was like working on teaching that i was mentoring the middle school's robotics that i started when i was in middle school i'd go back and mentor that i just had a lot of stuff that i was working on that was it was really interesting to be it's a lot more interesting than you know the homework that they get for math class because i...
421
421
Jan 9, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN3
eye 421
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quote 8
i really believe that when you talk about the subject that we're all mentioning right now, i think they had -- how many people came in, 22 to 24 people came in through him, he was a killer. he's a guy who ran over many people. eight died. ten to 12 are really badly injured. so i really think that a lot of
i really believe that when you talk about the subject that we're all mentioning right now, i think they had -- how many people came in, 22 to 24 people came in through him, he was a killer. he's a guy who ran over many people. eight died. ten to 12 are really badly injured. so i really think that a lot of
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965
Jan 13, 2018
01/18
by
WCAU
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eye 965
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i really, i just wanted -- [ light laughter ] so, sorry. spader in the 100th episode of "the blacklist." take a look at this. >> everyone loves hidden treasures. yamashita's gold. the oak island money pit. hell, even d.b. cooper, which was more of the mystery and less of a treasure hunt. really? >> that's what you love? the mystery. >> mystery. you know why? >> robert louis steveson. >> yes, edgar allan poe. "the gold bug" oh, what a a story. has everything. a delirious search for treasure, the descent into madness, along with ciphers and bugs. a skull nailed to a tree. what a yarn. if he actually has the locations of the other coins, this could be a massive discovery. [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: i did not see that coming at all. james spader, everybody. "the blacklist" airs wednesdays at 8:00 p.m. on nbc. set your dvr. james spader, everybody. we'll be right back with camila cabello. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ mary had a little lamb whose fleece was white as snow. but after an electrical fire from faulty wiring, mary's vintage clothin
i really, i just wanted -- [ light laughter ] so, sorry. spader in the 100th episode of "the blacklist." take a look at this. >> everyone loves hidden treasures. yamashita's gold. the oak island money pit. hell, even d.b. cooper, which was more of the mystery and less of a treasure hunt. really? >> that's what you love? the mystery. >> mystery. you know why? >> robert louis steveson. >> yes, edgar allan poe. "the gold bug" oh, what a a story....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
31
31
Jan 3, 2018
01/18
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 31
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i was really -- immigrant. i was really nervous and participating in his class. but i can attest to the fatherly figure i want to speak of when he was the one that encouraged me to come out of my shell and talk in front of people. i can't imagine speaking to this large audience. but a lot of things he did encourage me. to fill out college applications as well as being my fatherly figure in a way that he changed my life. and i think there are countless children, including his students, that he has yet in the future to be this positive figure. and i really believe that george washington high school will not be the same without lau. i think in a way that i think all of you guys heard that there's so many things he did for his students. he would spend his weekends tutoring us to help us pass ap economics or be our coach and mentor us. i think a lot of that is because he had faith in his students and that -- everyone whose heart he touched will become a better person. and i believe that just as he has faith for his students, i have faith in lau and what he did was a mi
i was really -- immigrant. i was really nervous and participating in his class. but i can attest to the fatherly figure i want to speak of when he was the one that encouraged me to come out of my shell and talk in front of people. i can't imagine speaking to this large audience. but a lot of things he did encourage me. to fill out college applications as well as being my fatherly figure in a way that he changed my life. and i think there are countless children, including his students, that he...
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44
Jan 10, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 44
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i think, i really agree with dick. i think we get the one thing done and then we go into comprehensive the following day. >> mr. president. president trump: i think it will happen. thank you all, very much. i hope we gave you enough material. this should cover you for about two weeks. [inaudible conversations] >> following the white house immigrant meeting with president trump, lawmakers spoke with reporters on the daca og
i think, i really agree with dick. i think we get the one thing done and then we go into comprehensive the following day. >> mr. president. president trump: i think it will happen. thank you all, very much. i hope we gave you enough material. this should cover you for about two weeks. [inaudible conversations] >> following the white house immigrant meeting with president trump, lawmakers spoke with reporters on the daca og
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Jan 10, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 53
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i think, i really agree with dick. i think we get the one thing done and then we go into comprehensive the following day. i think it will happen. >> thank you all. >> thank you all very much. i hope we gave you enough material. this should cover you for about two weeks. >> live here on c-span3, a discussion of the new america in washington, d.c. about race, policing, and criminal justice in the u.s. we'll be hearing from authors, attorneys, and historians about possible new ways forward. you're watching live coverage on c-span3. expected to get started any moment.
i think, i really agree with dick. i think we get the one thing done and then we go into comprehensive the following day. i think it will happen. >> thank you all. >> thank you all very much. i hope we gave you enough material. this should cover you for about two weeks. >> live here on c-span3, a discussion of the new america in washington, d.c. about race, policing, and criminal justice in the u.s. we'll be hearing from authors, attorneys, and historians about possible new...
50
50
Jan 22, 2018
01/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 50
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i really struggle with what ifeed enough. i really struggle with what i feed my enough. really struggle with what ifeed my children. my little enough. i really struggle with what i feed my children. my little girl has had one of those horrible letters at five saying she is overweight even though to the average person. . . overweight even though to the average person... from the school? it comes from the public health authority. they do random testing of children at the beginning of primary school and the end. to most people she seems to look perfectly healthy. but i will be the first person to admit that i struggle with what i feed my children. because is so much of what we give them is marketed as something healthy. it says it has one of your five a day in it. but it doesn't say that it is twice as much fat and loads of sugar. the ukip story has been our main story most of the day. the newspaper not making too big a plate of it. the political correspondents have been having a ball with this story all day. we have had resignation after resignation of all of the spokespeo
i really struggle with what ifeed enough. i really struggle with what i feed my enough. really struggle with what ifeed my children. my little enough. i really struggle with what i feed my children. my little girl has had one of those horrible letters at five saying she is overweight even though to the average person. . . overweight even though to the average person... from the school? it comes from the public health authority. they do random testing of children at the beginning of primary...
34
34
Jan 21, 2018
01/18
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 34
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my mom, i think, really taught us. d say the lesson i learned is never let someone else define who you are. she was never going to let that situation define who she was. david: you were the babysitter for your three -- ginni: i was. i was. i have been to pta meetings, you know, bugle lessons. all sorts of things. david: did you get paid anything for the babysitting? ginni: no, no, i did not get paid. i probably should go sum that up. david: you had a scholarship to go to northwestern? ginni: i did. i did. actually, i'm proud of my brothers and sisters all. we always said -- my mom never complained. she never said much, but we all watched by what she did. and they sometimes say i am the underachiever. my brothers and sisters have been incredibly successful, and that really is that work ethic my mom instilled in us. and so, that to me is -- so when i went to northwestern that -- and i did have a scholarship, because we all looked for ways to do that and put ourselves through school. david: now your mother is still alive.
my mom, i think, really taught us. d say the lesson i learned is never let someone else define who you are. she was never going to let that situation define who she was. david: you were the babysitter for your three -- ginni: i was. i was. i have been to pta meetings, you know, bugle lessons. all sorts of things. david: did you get paid anything for the babysitting? ginni: no, no, i did not get paid. i probably should go sum that up. david: you had a scholarship to go to northwestern? ginni: i...
36
36
Jan 1, 2018
01/18
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
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and i think, um, people forget that ibm is 106-years-old. and so, you reallyt that feeling of -- you wake up that morning realizing you are a steward of something. so, a different feeling. david: at some point when i was growing up in the 1960's and 1970's, ibm was the dominant technology company in the world. and it just -- ginni: still is, david. [laughter] david: ok. ok.y: david david: all right. do you think it has the same strength in the computer world that it had in the 1960's? ginni: to me, i would answer that ibm is great, but for a reason that you did not mention. i think the greatness of a technology company is if you can reinvent yourself over and over. and i say, we will watch and see, because it is one thing to reinvent yourself once, then twice, but do it three or four or five times. this is a really competitive industry that we are in, and i think we do something very unique. because it is one thing to have technology. it is another to have the know-how on how to use it. all right? so i feel what has made us distinctive in, while while we have
and i think, um, people forget that ibm is 106-years-old. and so, you reallyt that feeling of -- you wake up that morning realizing you are a steward of something. so, a different feeling. david: at some point when i was growing up in the 1960's and 1970's, ibm was the dominant technology company in the world. and it just -- ginni: still is, david. [laughter] david: ok. ok.y: david david: all right. do you think it has the same strength in the computer world that it had in the 1960's? ginni: to...
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51
Jan 7, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 51
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and i think those are actually two really important attributes. well, i'll save another one because i know you're going to ask me about it at the end. >> okay. >> but i do think that that is quite important. the other thing that i would really point to is i think that right now, like this book is called "troublemakers," and i think that it's easy to mistake the means for the end sometimes. these people were making trouble not because that was their goal in life, but because there was something that they needed to do or wanted to do that they couldn't do inside these structures that existed at the time. so anytime you're pushing against the existing structures, you are making trouble for everyone around you. and i think that that recognizing that you aren't just being reckless or trying to cause disruption for the sake of doing it -- which sometimes it seems like it's a badge of honor, you know, that people talk about now. this was just an incidental effect of the larger purpose that people had in mind. >> in the book you talk about sort of myths th
and i think those are actually two really important attributes. well, i'll save another one because i know you're going to ask me about it at the end. >> okay. >> but i do think that that is quite important. the other thing that i would really point to is i think that right now, like this book is called "troublemakers," and i think that it's easy to mistake the means for the end sometimes. these people were making trouble not because that was their goal in life, but...
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32
Jan 4, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 32
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i think that's a really great thing. it does k'nex only people. i was adding beating yesterday talking to one of our coordinators, , interns, and she said there's about 1200 or so interns issue which really is -- their spread across a different departments doing different types of research for their government representatives, for foreign service officers, individuals like that. i have nothing but positive things to say about it, and like will connect, google, skype, use different digital media platforms to kennedy research or provide research to again ss owes, government representatives for them to then go and compiled information or put it in such a way to where they can distill it in the location whether it's domestically or internationally. that's a fantastic program. going into 2018 and beyond i think it's important for sure with the rise of technology and how we are approaching digital diplomacy to kind of keep that up and it just ensure that a high quality level of communications being used by state actors, nonstate actors, by the student in
i think that's a really great thing. it does k'nex only people. i was adding beating yesterday talking to one of our coordinators, , interns, and she said there's about 1200 or so interns issue which really is -- their spread across a different departments doing different types of research for their government representatives, for foreign service officers, individuals like that. i have nothing but positive things to say about it, and like will connect, google, skype, use different digital media...
691
691
Jan 9, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 691
favorite 0
quote 8
i think, i really agree with dick. i think we get the one thing done and then we go into comprehensive the following day. >> mr. president. >> i think it will happen. >> thank you all. >> thank you all very much. i hope we gave you enough material. this should cover you for about two weeks. >> later today, the international spy museum here in washington, d.c. and "the new york times" will host a discussion on media coverage of the investigations into russia's interference in the 2016 election. it gets under way at 6:45 p.m. eastern. you'll be able to watch it live here on c-span3. >> the deadline for c-span's student cam 2018 video documentary competition is right around the corner. it's january 18th. we're asking students to choose a provision of the u.s. constitution and create a video illustrating why it's important to you. students across the country are in the final stretch, and sharing their experience with us through twitter. these students participated in a student cam film festival. this group wrapped up an int
i think, i really agree with dick. i think we get the one thing done and then we go into comprehensive the following day. >> mr. president. >> i think it will happen. >> thank you all. >> thank you all very much. i hope we gave you enough material. this should cover you for about two weeks. >> later today, the international spy museum here in washington, d.c. and "the new york times" will host a discussion on media coverage of the investigations into...
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52
Jan 7, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 52
favorite 0
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the really interesting thing to talk about. i had been asked some really strange and hard questions. one person asked me silicon valley good, or evil. you can't answer that question simply start picking that. and they are taking them for pocket money. of cupertino california. getting a job on the manufacturing lines. the silicon valley companies that it was a really exciting for this book. and being able to talk about rome. they can't seem to be on the manufacturing she didn't care where. she ends up the chief of staff. i talked to sandy. i talked to a lot of women as well. the story is very complex because from the inside there were women videogame they have a lot of women in positions of relative power. they were treated just one of the boys. at the same time they were still operating in the remarkably sexist world and i mean this on the level of the laws. it was in 1974 before a woman could get a married woman could get a credit card without her husband's approval. and it was 1980 before the eeoc exercise that. this is an envi
the really interesting thing to talk about. i had been asked some really strange and hard questions. one person asked me silicon valley good, or evil. you can't answer that question simply start picking that. and they are taking them for pocket money. of cupertino california. getting a job on the manufacturing lines. the silicon valley companies that it was a really exciting for this book. and being able to talk about rome. they can't seem to be on the manufacturing she didn't care where. she...
31
31
Jan 10, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
i think, i really agree with dick. i think we get the one thing done and then we go into comprehensive the following day. >> mr. president. president trump: i think it will happen. thank you all, very much. i hope we gave you enough material. this should cover you for about two weeks. [inaudible conversations] announcer: sunday on c-span's president:ccidental harry s truman and the four months that changed the world." saturday andl was sunday. truman was terrified to give the speech. he laid in bed and prayed to god he would not mess up. he climbed the stairs to the pulpit, looked and saw his wife in the crowd and she was crying. she was crying because roosevelt was dead. the nation was in shock. she never wanted to be the first lady, she never wanted to have him be the president. she is frightened. meanwhile, he is trying to r will continue. announcer: sunday night on c-span. the houses back for morning hours business. in the afternoon, debate on changes for water rights in arizona. the senate returns at 9:30 a.m. east
i think, i really agree with dick. i think we get the one thing done and then we go into comprehensive the following day. >> mr. president. president trump: i think it will happen. thank you all, very much. i hope we gave you enough material. this should cover you for about two weeks. [inaudible conversations] announcer: sunday on c-span's president:ccidental harry s truman and the four months that changed the world." saturday andl was sunday. truman was terrified to give the speech....
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62
Jan 8, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
another area i would personally really like to see, i would like to see an expansion of english social media presence and also really dedicated staff across all platforms. we have twitter, , always twitt, facebook, youtube, unit, the list goes on and on. i think there had been some inroads made, doing very well in facebook. there's a korea foundation initiative in a restaurant guidebook app. just that update works now in english but also very much appreciate that. but i think this could be an area moving forward when we can see, has a more growth in. in my last kind of point, i would like to try phone is that it may be a bit for sumptuous of me as as a young person speakin this panel, but it do think we are talking about digital diplomacy there is, young people do seem to go hand in hand with that. to us, these digital tools are not so much new. we grew up with this. we have different way of viewing how these things can be used and we are very familiar with it. so i would like to see for south korea taking vantage of the generation gap, putting more trust in younger people. i think thi
another area i would personally really like to see, i would like to see an expansion of english social media presence and also really dedicated staff across all platforms. we have twitter, , always twitt, facebook, youtube, unit, the list goes on and on. i think there had been some inroads made, doing very well in facebook. there's a korea foundation initiative in a restaurant guidebook app. just that update works now in english but also very much appreciate that. but i think this could be an...
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54
Jan 4, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 54
favorite 0
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i really like lindsay, can you believe that? i never thought i would say that but i do like him a lot. >> me, too. >> we all know that. >> obama couldn't do it. bush couldn't do it. there's a deal he had, if you want it bad enough we'll get it and it would be good for the country. i've never been more optimistic about the immigration reform proposal, making it to the president desk that i am right now. >> we have a good chance. tom cotton. >> thank you, mr. president. as was said there's a deal to be had. the president has made clear he wants to provide some kind of protection for those who received daca work permit at the same time with to do with the negative consequences. we have to end chain migration to prevent a future set of new chain migrants, and secure our border. we have to enforce our laws on the interior as well to decrease the illegal immigration that will inevitably encourage. the president at our group have been clear on that from the very beginning. and help democrats will stand with us and finally take yes for a
i really like lindsay, can you believe that? i never thought i would say that but i do like him a lot. >> me, too. >> we all know that. >> obama couldn't do it. bush couldn't do it. there's a deal he had, if you want it bad enough we'll get it and it would be good for the country. i've never been more optimistic about the immigration reform proposal, making it to the president desk that i am right now. >> we have a good chance. tom cotton. >> thank you, mr....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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43
Jan 12, 2018
01/18
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
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and i really appreciate the attention that you give to your constituents when we do this because some of us had waited hours to be here, to have our little moment of being heard. so i would like to associate my remarks with those who have earlier spoken about the need for a fair process. and i would urge you, even after -- at the end of a long meeting, when it's hard to listen. it takes a super human effort to focus in, but please give us the respect of listening to us when we wait till the end of a meeting and speak. i really do hope you have a fair process. we witnessed, in the past year, the unfortunate effects of an unfair process, when a finger was on the scale, a thumb was on the scale, and the people are tired of it. i think it should start here, in san francisco, where you do actually have the conscience and the guts to have a fair process. thank you very much. >> supervisor: thank you for your comments. next speaker, please. >> good evening. my name is lindy park. i am a resident of city of san francisco, and i am also here with the center for biological diversity. i'm here t
and i really appreciate the attention that you give to your constituents when we do this because some of us had waited hours to be here, to have our little moment of being heard. so i would like to associate my remarks with those who have earlier spoken about the need for a fair process. and i would urge you, even after -- at the end of a long meeting, when it's hard to listen. it takes a super human effort to focus in, but please give us the respect of listening to us when we wait till the end...
25
25
Jan 8, 2018
01/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
one day when i got married what my husband ok but. i'm not really know my islam outside of being married. when he grateful that i did meet someone who compatible with you know so let me be an artist never been so he's been uncomfortable with or to men say it's buy or anything because he's also an artist. yeah i'm sorry but i don't want to fish something you don't need not want you know but i have to cook and it's a lot of trouble with the house of oil let's get the whole head of. the ball who are a bit and you're right. i enjoyed living with sakineh mohammadi that was like ok to be a year because music you know worked with each other was like you know best friends are like little bits of it i think was a little bit much to both of us as well so this is good. and sometimes unfortunately when you convert to islam. is that you get married now i've had situations where you know i was speaking to barbers and they quite clearly said if you quit what you do to now marry you it is it's harder but i mean it's just like if i wasn't on stage i probably wouldn'
one day when i got married what my husband ok but. i'm not really know my islam outside of being married. when he grateful that i did meet someone who compatible with you know so let me be an artist never been so he's been uncomfortable with or to men say it's buy or anything because he's also an artist. yeah i'm sorry but i don't want to fish something you don't need not want you know but i have to cook and it's a lot of trouble with the house of oil let's get the whole head of. the ball who...
82
82
Jan 25, 2018
01/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 82
favorite 0
quote 0
i was really impressed —— with the umpire. h how he has come out of his shell. i think he will have a really good career. astonishing to think that if he had won, he would have become the british number one. that shows how far he has come, and guess how far andy has fallen the light of his injury. how close is he to shifting balance of power in the british men's game? it'll be interesting. if andy comes back, you'll be shooting up andy comes back, you'll be shooting up the rankings, no question about that. but, for him now, being ranked around 25 or whatever it will be, on monday, it will mean getting into bigger tournaments, which means more points, getting seated at the grand slams, which protects him from meeting the big names until later on. he will be accumulating a lot of points, so here's an upward scale at the moment, but i do feel, andy is a different class. that was sue barker and john lloyd speaking to the earlier. there has been no shortage of support for edmund over the fortnight. and as you can imagine there was p
i was really impressed —— with the umpire. h how he has come out of his shell. i think he will have a really good career. astonishing to think that if he had won, he would have become the british number one. that shows how far he has come, and guess how far andy has fallen the light of his injury. how close is he to shifting balance of power in the british men's game? it'll be interesting. if andy comes back, you'll be shooting up andy comes back, you'll be shooting up the rankings, no...
27
27
Jan 23, 2018
01/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 27
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but i really. i mean i will show you this paycheck here it's a production photograph the matthys team took and there's so much blue in color brass it's really hard to tell where the sea ends and where the sky begins but this is i'm not even exaggerating here an apple apocalyptic story matthew how did you convey that this is potentially the end of the world for the people who live in care of us they can see it coming how do you do that. so you know i really focus on the photograph yeah i think. the iranians themselves want character i mean i really it showed some grins ireland to to bring that to the chances in happening there but they go in for the most stunning photographic options really to portray as art and building a very strong sense capel so to just having and we can sense of what's happening there it's really it's an amazing experience to do risky bets because you hands are told is basically seen in you know just separate things according to news of the pacific it's just it's just it's just
but i really. i mean i will show you this paycheck here it's a production photograph the matthys team took and there's so much blue in color brass it's really hard to tell where the sea ends and where the sky begins but this is i'm not even exaggerating here an apple apocalyptic story matthew how did you convey that this is potentially the end of the world for the people who live in care of us they can see it coming how do you do that. so you know i really focus on the photograph yeah i think....
53
53
Jan 14, 2018
01/18
by
CNBC
tv
eye 53
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i really do.t has changed my outlook on life. [ nemeth ] with over 900 experts across north america and backed by 40 years of amazing results, hair club provides exclusive technologies and proven solutions for every stage of hair loss. at hair club, we understand what it's like to lose your hair, and we understand what it's like to get it back, and we would like you to have that experience. based on my need for immediate results, hair club customized the right solution for me. it's called xtrands. it's new and only available through hair club. i walked in with a bald spot, and that same day, walked out with a full head of hair. just call or go online now to receive your free information kit and dvd at no obligation. you'll hear more about our full range of solutions, including exclusive non-surgical xtrands and xtrands plus. now i look in the mirror and i just can't believe that's me. this is my hair, and it feels great. it feels natural. it's growing. it's strong. i leave my house. i'm not thinki
i really do.t has changed my outlook on life. [ nemeth ] with over 900 experts across north america and backed by 40 years of amazing results, hair club provides exclusive technologies and proven solutions for every stage of hair loss. at hair club, we understand what it's like to lose your hair, and we understand what it's like to get it back, and we would like you to have that experience. based on my need for immediate results, hair club customized the right solution for me. it's called...
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44
Jan 21, 2018
01/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 44
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to find a solution so united nations does not impose itself on any of the of the situations and i really believe that we have a lot of trust in mediation efforts and i encourage to my partners in kuwait to continue business as well the only issue of imposing maybe actually there is a much more pressing conflict that isn't far from from the g.c.c. that the g.c.c. is playing a role in which would require you to actually impose and that is the war in yemen that's been led by saudi arabia and also orchestrated by the iraqis and according to the u.n. it's transformed yemen into the worst humanitarian crisis of our time children are either killed by the bombs or they're killed by color or by starvation why has the general assembly not pushed for an end to this war how much more suffering has to happen for the u.n. to. restart put its foot down and say this has to stop now because it's not for the general assembly to do so this is the primary priority for all responsibility of the security council which according to the charter is the body responsible for maintenance of international peace and
to find a solution so united nations does not impose itself on any of the of the situations and i really believe that we have a lot of trust in mediation efforts and i encourage to my partners in kuwait to continue business as well the only issue of imposing maybe actually there is a much more pressing conflict that isn't far from from the g.c.c. that the g.c.c. is playing a role in which would require you to actually impose and that is the war in yemen that's been led by saudi arabia and also...
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85
Jan 14, 2018
01/18
by
KNTV
tv
eye 85
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i tried to take the photos 'cause i really felt that it was necessary. t i first did a black and white series with film back in the day, and then i started taking the pictures, starting making the portraits. and then after a while, i thought, "okay, maybe try and do another series." that series was a color portrait series. and that color portrait series, i tried to also incorporate a different style, where the photos looked like they were part of world war ii because when i first started to take these photos, they didn't come across as veterans, yes. and people didn't relate to them, these senior citizens at that time, to be the veterans. so, when i took some more photos and i did some tests, and when i used these pictures in the uniform, then people could really understand and relate to them. and then when we started to work with that, we thought, "oh, robert's doing so many of these oral histories that maybe we should try and incorporate some of the stories." robert handa: almost a natural kind of collaboration in a way, huh robert? robert horsting: yea
i tried to take the photos 'cause i really felt that it was necessary. t i first did a black and white series with film back in the day, and then i started taking the pictures, starting making the portraits. and then after a while, i thought, "okay, maybe try and do another series." that series was a color portrait series. and that color portrait series, i tried to also incorporate a different style, where the photos looked like they were part of world war ii because when i first...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 6, 2018
01/18
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 33
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i really -- i wonder about issues of longevity and ten your in these numbers. we get and we're observing the real life. what happens is people get to their 30s and they partner with someone else and they have a couple of kids and if they're in a b.m.r. unit with a one-bedroom, it's really hard to, like, you know go on to the next step of your life because you can't have two kids. you can't have more income. i'm wondering how our current production is kind of skewing the demographic changes in terms of families and all of that. that is another thing that was not in the presentation but i know you have it because i know [inaudible]. what the distribution is by five. how many of them are family units. that is interesting and we had tracked it in previous years and i know that it colored the conversation that we had when we had a supervisor yee who came to present about his family housing initiative so that would be really interesting to see as well. yeah. so, the question that i had for you was about the change -- the only decrease that i saw in the presentation w
i really -- i wonder about issues of longevity and ten your in these numbers. we get and we're observing the real life. what happens is people get to their 30s and they partner with someone else and they have a couple of kids and if they're in a b.m.r. unit with a one-bedroom, it's really hard to, like, you know go on to the next step of your life because you can't have two kids. you can't have more income. i'm wondering how our current production is kind of skewing the demographic changes in...
281
281
Jan 31, 2018
01/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 281
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i really felt close to it because i feel also like. i'm palestinian but like so many of us in the diaspora so many of us who had to leave. i speak also as somebody from a far away land. and somebody who who feels this great nostalgia whenever i return and also i feel that the poem is really speaking about the experience of somebody like my father who had to leave. as a child and. he feels he has been living in exile his whole life but every day dreaming of palestine every day has his heart is in palestine so i feel that this poem really speaks beautifully about this experience of exile as the palestinian. leak. proof. was. read oh oh. did. you. know but to see him know what. i let me. out of the. that. was. another one to find out. for us out. of a little. well as a failure of history has had a role. because if the how we talk about how we as voters that are invalid then you hear from us the in hoc no no as if i'm in. academia. or we had a few nor would we said this one phone call or human foreseen said we need a bomb or in a bad thoug
i really felt close to it because i feel also like. i'm palestinian but like so many of us in the diaspora so many of us who had to leave. i speak also as somebody from a far away land. and somebody who who feels this great nostalgia whenever i return and also i feel that the poem is really speaking about the experience of somebody like my father who had to leave. as a child and. he feels he has been living in exile his whole life but every day dreaming of palestine every day has his heart is...
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Jan 13, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 74
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of the other thing i really like about al's story is that everyone knows the story of nolan bush now and it nolan was the ideas guy in a lot of ways behind atari, but again, i mean, is concert pianist without fingers fair to say about nolan? he had some real engineering skills, but he leaned on our incredibly heavily to make all of this work and our is a very generous and talking about this because he feels like nolan needed him to actually build this stuff and he needed nolan to push him to try to do things that al thought were completely absurd, i mean, there were a couple times when al tells the story saying i'm going to do this for the pleasure of having a blowup in my face and telling nolan i told you you couldn't do it and then it works. al said is like the dog puppet car, now what you do, so i like that story because so many things that happened in the valley happened in these teams that have these complementary skill sets and you really see that there. >> we have talked about almost all of the main figures in your book, but what we have one more to talk about and that's bob sw
of the other thing i really like about al's story is that everyone knows the story of nolan bush now and it nolan was the ideas guy in a lot of ways behind atari, but again, i mean, is concert pianist without fingers fair to say about nolan? he had some real engineering skills, but he leaned on our incredibly heavily to make all of this work and our is a very generous and talking about this because he feels like nolan needed him to actually build this stuff and he needed nolan to push him to...
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61
Jan 4, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 61
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i really like lindsey. i never thought i would say that, but i like him a lot. >> i like lindsey too. >> obama couldn't do it. bush couldn't do it. i think you can do it. there's a bill to be had, if you want it bad enough, we'll get it for the country. everybody's got to give a little bit. but i have never been more enthusiastic about an immigration proposal making it to the president's desk than i am right now. >> i think we have a good chance. tom cotton? >> as senator graham said i think at least a deal to be had here. the president's made it clear he wants to provide some kind of protections for those who received the daca work permits, but we have to end chain migrations to prevent a future new chain of migrants coming, and we have to enforce our laws on the boarder as well, to limit immigration. the president and our group have been clear on that from the very beginning, i hope the democrats will join with us in getting a bill together. >> when you think about the obama administration, when you had th
i really like lindsey. i never thought i would say that, but i like him a lot. >> i like lindsey too. >> obama couldn't do it. bush couldn't do it. i think you can do it. there's a bill to be had, if you want it bad enough, we'll get it for the country. everybody's got to give a little bit. but i have never been more enthusiastic about an immigration proposal making it to the president's desk than i am right now. >> i think we have a good chance. tom cotton? >> as...
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37
Jan 11, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 37
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i think that is really critical. and the other point, and this is certainly what i ran up against, how do we define the ideal worker in the way that it is not just mask -- masculine. but somebody that could work all of the time and has no time tor family so somebody else is taking care of the family or they have no family. and we are a human species. we do need to reproduce if we want to survive and so we need to figure out what is the ideal worker in a way that opens up possibility to men and women or anyone across the gender spectrum. what is good work look like? and so then what does home life look like? we talked about gender roles. women in the united states have been graduated from college in greater numbers than men since the 1980s. getting more graduate degrees than men and when you look across every single industry, women are stuck in the middle to the bottom layers. it is really a pyramid. they are very, very few women that rise to leadership and when you look at why, that is because in addition to the ideal
i think that is really critical. and the other point, and this is certainly what i ran up against, how do we define the ideal worker in the way that it is not just mask -- masculine. but somebody that could work all of the time and has no time tor family so somebody else is taking care of the family or they have no family. and we are a human species. we do need to reproduce if we want to survive and so we need to figure out what is the ideal worker in a way that opens up possibility to men and...
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86
Jan 21, 2018
01/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 86
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and i really do, i really do like him. and by the end i really liked him. i've read, i love history and reading presidential biographies, and i've read a lot about teddy roosevelt, and teddy can roosevelt is one of the more extraordinary people you could ever imagine. if there's anybody -- you know, that perennial question who would you want to have a wheel, might be, dead or alive, i would say teddy roosevelt. but with all due respect to my friends, i don't have any friends that remind me of teddy roosevelt. [laughter] chester arthur's a very human character. i think we all have friends like chester arthur even be they don't have the facial hair. [laughter] and i think that's, i mean, he's a likable person. he's certainly imperfect, and he wasn't necessarily an extraordinary person like teddy roosevelt was in terms of his skills and interests and energy, but he was, he was, i think, a good person who strayed off the right path as many people do and then found his way back when he had tremendous responsibility thrust upon him. and, again, i think he was surp
and i really do, i really do like him. and by the end i really liked him. i've read, i love history and reading presidential biographies, and i've read a lot about teddy roosevelt, and teddy can roosevelt is one of the more extraordinary people you could ever imagine. if there's anybody -- you know, that perennial question who would you want to have a wheel, might be, dead or alive, i would say teddy roosevelt. but with all due respect to my friends, i don't have any friends that remind me of...
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49
Jan 13, 2018
01/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 49
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i mean, he was so apologetic afterwards, etc, and he really was... d got into a state. i don't think they're aware. he did not know... they don't realise it's happening, do they, probably until the last minute. not everyone who has parkinson's will see behaviour changes like john, ivan and les. and les, in particular, also suffered from dementia, but what these women want is an open discussion of everything that can happen, to make sure families get support and the disease is spotted early. the kind of person he was, i know that he would have felt very embarrassed about it all, but at the same time, if he thought, by disclosure, one was going to be able to influence people who are having early signs, which are being ignored — or they are ignoring, as our husbands did... that's true. they ignored the early signs, i think if he thought it could do some good, he would say, "right, go for it." yes. les‘s last six weeks, he started writing. he did it because he wanted medicine to know what had happened to him, and he knew they didn't. the repercussions of
i mean, he was so apologetic afterwards, etc, and he really was... d got into a state. i don't think they're aware. he did not know... they don't realise it's happening, do they, probably until the last minute. not everyone who has parkinson's will see behaviour changes like john, ivan and les. and les, in particular, also suffered from dementia, but what these women want is an open discussion of everything that can happen, to make sure families get support and the disease is spotted early. the...
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43
Jan 5, 2018
01/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 43
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other agencies that build in thank you for that won't be seen for five ten years so i really think you should look at the situation definitely definitely in separate lenses rather than to get a no no definitely definitely from about i would like also to thank you very very much indeed david seventy and stephen hall just for the time you took to answer my questions thank you really appreciate that. and thank you too for watching you can see the program again and it's by visiting a web site dot com for further discussion go to our facebook page that's facebook dot com for was last a.j. inside story you can also join the conversation on twitter. a.j. inside story from the house about obama and the whole team here by phone. i. in the philippines millions live in overcrowded slums but some of another place to call home public cemeteries. meets those living among the dead at this time on al-jazeera january. african heads of state and government. the african union. seventeen met. with brand new episodes updating some of the best documentaries from over the years the biggest names in politics
other agencies that build in thank you for that won't be seen for five ten years so i really think you should look at the situation definitely definitely in separate lenses rather than to get a no no definitely definitely from about i would like also to thank you very very much indeed david seventy and stephen hall just for the time you took to answer my questions thank you really appreciate that. and thank you too for watching you can see the program again and it's by visiting a web site dot...
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208
Jan 16, 2018
01/18
by
KGO
tv
eye 208
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>> i wish. >> jimmy: they do not. >> i wish. >> jimmy: really? interesting. ? >> yeah. of course it is. >> jimmy: what's the best part of it? >> i mean, i get to fly. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: but is flying -- like i think it would be fun to watch yourself later fly. but it seems like flying wouldn't be so great when you're pretending to fly. >> yeah, it's hard work. i'm essentially attached to a fork in the air. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: how do you decide what your flying style is? because your flying style's with a fist. >> that's the thing. there's sort of this almost superhero physicality school you that kind of have to go to. at least we did on the d.c. shows. where a stunt team will teach you like how to walk like a superhero or how to come up with an idea of how my heat vision looked and what freeze breath looks like. and really it just looks like a staring contest and i'm blowing out my birthday candles. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: yeah. so there's someone who considers themselves to be an expert on -- >> yeah. and they're awesome. and they really helped me. my p
>> i wish. >> jimmy: they do not. >> i wish. >> jimmy: really? interesting. ? >> yeah. of course it is. >> jimmy: what's the best part of it? >> i mean, i get to fly. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: but is flying -- like i think it would be fun to watch yourself later fly. but it seems like flying wouldn't be so great when you're pretending to fly. >> yeah, it's hard work. i'm essentially attached to a fork in the air. [ laughter ] >> jimmy:...
248
248
Jan 26, 2018
01/18
by
WPVI
tv
eye 248
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just last night, i thought i was really good. ar. >> jimmy: well, i would rather go to jay-z's house than sit in the audience. that would be a better way to watch the show, wouldn't it? >> they're going to show an afterparty. i'd rather go to the show -- >> jimmy: and go after? >> yeah. >> jimmy: that makes more sense. wow, that's something else. have you ever met jay-z? and not to rush past that, but you're in a movie with all these basketball players. what's the name? >> uncle drew. >> jimmy: yes. and who is in the movie with you? >> kyrie irving is uncle drew. chris webber, reggie miller, shaq. >> jimmy: shaq is a great actor. that's a great call. you know, when shaq is in a movie, you'll probably get nominated for another academy award for this one. you know you're in good hands when shaq -- >> i was joking with somebody. if i went back in time and told little kid me, yo, you gonna be in a movie with chris webber, shaq, reggie miller, i'd be like, come on, man, we seen kazaam. don't do that, brother. don't lie too me. shaq was
just last night, i thought i was really good. ar. >> jimmy: well, i would rather go to jay-z's house than sit in the audience. that would be a better way to watch the show, wouldn't it? >> they're going to show an afterparty. i'd rather go to the show -- >> jimmy: and go after? >> yeah. >> jimmy: that makes more sense. wow, that's something else. have you ever met jay-z? and not to rush past that, but you're in a movie with all these basketball players. what's the...