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of i was a row i was nothing i meant nothing i was not loved so the first guy that walks by and says i love you that was it that wow somebody loves me and now it was all i needed and i was so blinded by that that i couldn't see all the other little what signs that were there and then as we got into marriage and i had a child all of a sudden you know it happens things change when you get pregnant you have a child well i breast fed and the first thing you know i was like oh those are my breasts not my son's and i'm like i'm breastfeeding him so he lives and he was threatened and felt jealous. no one gives you necessarily the rules i mean of when you get married this is the rules of being a wife and a lot of times and even now a a mindset is when you say i do oh well you supposed to perform sexual acts in bed and but as with consent and that's where the difference really lies is that. i wasn't consenting i mean i would say now and i would say no and i would say now and it didn't matter. where we would call it a dead fish engine imagine being married to somebody. here bedroom church show
of i was a row i was nothing i meant nothing i was not loved so the first guy that walks by and says i love you that was it that wow somebody loves me and now it was all i needed and i was so blinded by that that i couldn't see all the other little what signs that were there and then as we got into marriage and i had a child all of a sudden you know it happens things change when you get pregnant you have a child well i breast fed and the first thing you know i was like oh those are my breasts...
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you know what i was born. to my birth mother again went to join father taking me along follow the division with the baggage train and thus reached very today's a clinic where i grew up. at the. beginning where my father was the military commander i will go to bed after koenig's back became kaliningrad and the germans were removed my father was sand for the service to saxony. was grown up in germany tonight and fifty eight mama my mother well educated person was fond of the german romantic soul and. that was the joan dramatics writings localized hoffmann their favorite tales influence in my mind. and know what it is not they were brothers they were actually the green brothers two they're not quite in the romantic category well favorite tales are cruel. and there is little romanticism and them and much fantasy that. you handle many productions including its very theatrical designer. based on the political scores the schools what is your attitude to more than music you seem to be a man who'd rather use something c
you know what i was born. to my birth mother again went to join father taking me along follow the division with the baggage train and thus reached very today's a clinic where i grew up. at the. beginning where my father was the military commander i will go to bed after koenig's back became kaliningrad and the germans were removed my father was sand for the service to saxony. was grown up in germany tonight and fifty eight mama my mother well educated person was fond of the german romantic soul...
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Aug 25, 2011
08/11
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KQED
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i was so upset. i went out to the practice to hit a couple drives and they called me. >> charlie: you kept the driver in your hand. >> now i'm going to tell you something maybe you do know, maybe you don't know. that driver was a hogan driver. >> i was arnold palmer, i was with wilson sporting goods and we were talking about clubs and everything and gave me two drivers. that was one of them. and of course i doctored them, you know. >> charlie: right. [laughter] >> i went with the tee. i drove it 336 yards. and i two putted,for a birdie almost three putted. i made three birdie's. i knew things were happening and i knew people were talking and the crowd was getting bigger and bigger. and who comes walking down the middle of the fair way, bob drum. [laughter] i said what the hell are you doing here. and he looked at me and he says you're playing pretty good, aren't you. then i wouldn't even talk to him. i walked by him. what did i do? >> charlie: what did you do. >> i bogied the hole. [laughter] i pitche
i was so upset. i went out to the practice to hit a couple drives and they called me. >> charlie: you kept the driver in your hand. >> now i'm going to tell you something maybe you do know, maybe you don't know. that driver was a hogan driver. >> i was arnold palmer, i was with wilson sporting goods and we were talking about clubs and everything and gave me two drivers. that was one of them. and of course i doctored them, you know. >> charlie: right. [laughter] >>...
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Aug 17, 2011
08/11
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KQED
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i knehe was dying. what i hoped was that by playing this character with me, where we exchanged words that were so relevant to our real relationships that it was somehow -- it would heal the breach before the end came. i'm not sure it did. i think it d it certainly did for me. >> who was it like to see him going in to bed. >> i described him when he was dying and i described getting there too late. he died about a minute before i got to hospital. >> before he died, like when you told him you would take care of his wife. >> he became -- i told him i loved him. i told him that i knew he had done his best and that i hoped he would forgive me and he cried. it was clear that he was very uncomfortable, that i could see that. and i left and some time later, shirley, his wonderful wife came and found him and hewas still crying. i don't think that anyone had really expressed to him they knew that there wasn't much time left and they wanted to have closure and i think it moved him. but watching him die taught me th
i knehe was dying. what i hoped was that by playing this character with me, where we exchanged words that were so relevant to our real relationships that it was somehow -- it would heal the breach before the end came. i'm not sure it did. i think it d it certainly did for me. >> who was it like to see him going in to bed. >> i described him when he was dying and i described getting there too late. he died about a minute before i got to hospital. >> before he died, like when...
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under its terms i was supposed to do as i was told. i had to give up my quest in the area of metaphysical synthetics as i was only allowed to do gallons scenes and still lives because they were sold better than anything so on and so forth. do you mean you. refused to sign your contract. if you know i gave out the chateau de up when i returned and three days later after reading the contract i said to my dear girls. my wondrous creature my sweet roly poly i'm giving you back the key. blue and dreams of us travelling in india me seeing the world and not for me. i want exchange a plane or a gilded one. left for the great wide world to the screams about any crawling back in three days on my knees. for him she was yelling i was a soviet but not in the west jungle i would soon learn what it was like. but i said to her proudly precisely because i'm a soviet my pride is a special one that i won't come back to you either on my knees or otherwise. you. will be back shortly. stay with. twenty years ago just country. to certain places. but how did y
under its terms i was supposed to do as i was told. i had to give up my quest in the area of metaphysical synthetics as i was only allowed to do gallons scenes and still lives because they were sold better than anything so on and so forth. do you mean you. refused to sign your contract. if you know i gave out the chateau de up when i returned and three days later after reading the contract i said to my dear girls. my wondrous creature my sweet roly poly i'm giving you back the key. blue and...
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Aug 6, 2011
08/11
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MSNBCW
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hey, i was -- i didn't do it but i was the one they thought did it. us i lost jenny that day. >> it's hard. every time i see these guys it's really hard because you're always thinking, i mean, it's like, i did something that completely damaged them, that will never go away, ever, for any of us. >> i remember, i said to you, i want to hear you say that you killed jenny. and i realize how hard that was for you but you did it. and for you -- and so everything just changed, because mark's reaction and he didn't try and act like, i didn't do it or it was your fault or -- but, no, i had to know. did jenny suffer? and from what mark told me, i believe that it was very quick. and so that has given me peace. >> when i walked out of there, i was probably 80 pounds lighter. you know? and i never since that day have ever had that same recurring dream. i don't think about mark the way i did. and it was a great release. >> thank you. you guys are so great. >> while the s.a.v.e. program has helped eliminate the nightmares, it can't reverse the past for the victims, n
hey, i was -- i didn't do it but i was the one they thought did it. us i lost jenny that day. >> it's hard. every time i see these guys it's really hard because you're always thinking, i mean, it's like, i did something that completely damaged them, that will never go away, ever, for any of us. >> i remember, i said to you, i want to hear you say that you killed jenny. and i realize how hard that was for you but you did it. and for you -- and so everything just changed, because...
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Aug 3, 2011
08/11
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KCSM
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eye 56
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.3 i, i was so appreciative. g frrm texas, i think when i first started, there was an episode they were working on my first day, which was this episode called new cowboy on thh block. and greg daniels, too, i can't, an'ttforget greg because ggeggwas actually the one who brought me in that day. >> yeah. >> .to that episode they wweee they were rewriting it. and when i had met with greg for the shoo, prior to getting hired, one of the things we talked about was when i lived in dallas i lived across the street from this guy named oug onnelly who was a special teams player for the cowboys for one season. that's all, and you know was cut after that. but he was the goddof the dallas cowboy. >> right. and so this episode new cowboy on the block, hank and the guys, there's a guy, a dallas cowboys player who moves in. >> yeah. >> .acrrss from them. and so when they were doing the rewriteeof this greg brought me in and it was this very crazy thing. like greg daniels of the simpsons aad you know and now king of the hill and
.3 i, i was so appreciative. g frrm texas, i think when i first started, there was an episode they were working on my first day, which was this episode called new cowboy on thh block. and greg daniels, too, i can't, an'ttforget greg because ggeggwas actually the one who brought me in that day. >> yeah. >> .to that episode they wweee they were rewriting it. and when i had met with greg for the shoo, prior to getting hired, one of the things we talked about was when i lived in dallas...
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Aug 20, 2011
08/11
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CNNW
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>> i mean, i thought it was odd that she walked off, but what i saw was someone doing what i see toot in time a kind of thing i've talked about in the past no longer serves me, no longer interests me, so i'm going to divert the conversation a completely different way. we've recently seen michele bachmann say my views are known about questions like gay marriage that she's engaged in the past, because it's not convenient for her to talk about them now. that's what christine o'donnell was doing. it's not convenient for me now, it's not what i want to do now, so i'm not going to do it. i was particularly amused when she said you're the host, i'm the guest, i get to do what i want to do. it's not a dinner party, it's a news show. >> well, exactly, and i felt that was a particularly fatuous argument of many. i felt in the moment she didn't want to give any comment about same-sex marriage for the precise reason that it's no longer quite a bigger vote winner for a republican tea party candidate as it may have been two years ago. and i think they're beginning to realize this, that bigotry is
>> i mean, i thought it was odd that she walked off, but what i saw was someone doing what i see toot in time a kind of thing i've talked about in the past no longer serves me, no longer interests me, so i'm going to divert the conversation a completely different way. we've recently seen michele bachmann say my views are known about questions like gay marriage that she's engaged in the past, because it's not convenient for her to talk about them now. that's what christine o'donnell was...
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Aug 19, 2011
08/11
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CNNW
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when i was a kid, i was so big -- i mean i was really big that i literally could not wear blue jeans.ave to go down -- my mother would take me to sears and they didn't make blue jeans that would fit me. so i wore like pleated pants in the first grade. and a commercial came on the air when i was about 5 or 6 years old from levis was poor, fat marvin can't wear levis. >> you were still called marvin at the time? >> no, i was called meat, but after that, nobody called me marvin. and i went before a judge in connecticut in 1984, and i told him this story. and he said -- and that's what he said to me, if it was today, you'd own the company. and i said -- he goes, so that's why you want to change your name to michael? and i went, yes, sir. and he said, well, normally the process is about six weeks, but in your case, i understand completely, and he turned to his clerk and said give me the stamp. and he stamped it and he handed it to me and said, michael, have a great day. >> that's a great story. meatloaf? are you now legally called meatloaf? >> i had meat loaf on my passport when we first t
when i was a kid, i was so big -- i mean i was really big that i literally could not wear blue jeans.ave to go down -- my mother would take me to sears and they didn't make blue jeans that would fit me. so i wore like pleated pants in the first grade. and a commercial came on the air when i was about 5 or 6 years old from levis was poor, fat marvin can't wear levis. >> you were still called marvin at the time? >> no, i was called meat, but after that, nobody called me marvin. and i...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 30, 2011
08/11
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SFGTV2
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that was a wonderful time. i knew there was going to be a lot of things coming out of that summit because it was the hottest ticket in the city. those of you who are around, you were fighting for those tickets, and i just gave up. i said tommy what i have to do. as we look back at the videotapes, as we look at the press events that followed, we were blessed with a lot of great insights, the encouragement of women from international stature coming from all over the world, attending the summit. that makes it easy for me to say that the things i am doing now and the things i have done are credited to the press assessor's -- are credited to the predecessors who came before. it is great for me to introduce someone who has earned this title, dear to me and all of san francisco, this year's man of the year award, will the brown jr. -- willie brown jr. [applause] >> mr. mayor, thank you very much. i am just delighted that you were in position to be able to present this to me, and i will work and see if i can win it next
that was a wonderful time. i knew there was going to be a lot of things coming out of that summit because it was the hottest ticket in the city. those of you who are around, you were fighting for those tickets, and i just gave up. i said tommy what i have to do. as we look back at the videotapes, as we look at the press events that followed, we were blessed with a lot of great insights, the encouragement of women from international stature coming from all over the world, attending the summit....
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Aug 7, 2011
08/11
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loved violence when i was little. i never had a father, so that's probably where i didn't have enough discipline. i love fighting. that's just me. >> gangs weren't a problem for andrew huff. anger was. >> it's like when you're building up stress, it's like a bomb exploding. as soon as somebody gets you to a point, you explode. i fall down in tears and realize what you done was wrong. >> we don't ever want to send somebody back into the community that we don't feel can be successful. that's the ultimate goal. sometimes we're successful, and other times we just fail. >> andrew, are you ready? >> yeah. >> you're nervous? >> why don't you go ahead and talk to us about why you're in prison. >> i'm here for arson, breaking and entering, theft, and resisting arrest and probation violation. >> relax, okay? >> what we're doing here today is all about you. you said that you have anger issues that boil up inside of you. and that's what happened. that's what happened in the community. that's why you set a fire. that's why you thre
loved violence when i was little. i never had a father, so that's probably where i didn't have enough discipline. i love fighting. that's just me. >> gangs weren't a problem for andrew huff. anger was. >> it's like when you're building up stress, it's like a bomb exploding. as soon as somebody gets you to a point, you explode. i fall down in tears and realize what you done was wrong. >> we don't ever want to send somebody back into the community that we don't feel can be...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 12, 2011
08/11
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it was bryonn bain, aka bostick. i did not know who that was. they have given up my information and i've done myself in jail again for a crime i did not commit. this time i said, hell no, i am suing everybody. the police, the state of new york. the public defender came to me -- this is the craziest part of the situation. the public defender who is there to defend your constitutional rights -- she came in to see me with plastic cause and a surgical mask. i saw her walking around with all the rest of the brothers. i thought maybe she had something that she did not want to give us. [laughter] that is righteous. i respect that. whenever you have to do. then she got me into the interrogation room and she said to me, you say you have education. where did you go to school, high school? public-school of new york. this does that add up. i skipped two grades before college. where did you go to college? how did you pay for college? you went to grad school? how did you pay for law school? what did that have to do with my case? i was just going with the flow.
it was bryonn bain, aka bostick. i did not know who that was. they have given up my information and i've done myself in jail again for a crime i did not commit. this time i said, hell no, i am suing everybody. the police, the state of new york. the public defender came to me -- this is the craziest part of the situation. the public defender who is there to defend your constitutional rights -- she came in to see me with plastic cause and a surgical mask. i saw her walking around with all the...
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Aug 14, 2011
08/11
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CSPAN2
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i was nervous. i didn't know what to expect. murderers, robbers, and carjackers. 75 percent of them was not coming of an all. but i thought there was not going to sit there and listen. that was the quietest people say heard them kids. they sat there and listened to everything i said. they asked me questions afterwards. i mean, so inspired by the story. schick everybody's hand. i'm not getting out till 26. ♪ , but your story inspired me. i want to change exactly the way you did. that test me so much. i had these teenagers, not coming home, i inspired them. that wasn't done, there was smart. they just made the wrong decision. they're right palms. the palms the ride is so lovely, so touching. i was touched by what there was doing. and there was -- after words that came up to me. i know i'm going here. i'm trying to keep writing. i'm like, look, keep writing. i know you sang in never coming home. never say never. you might do end up coming home. they asked me, they want me to come back. they want me to be a part of them. i'm like, wo
i was nervous. i didn't know what to expect. murderers, robbers, and carjackers. 75 percent of them was not coming of an all. but i thought there was not going to sit there and listen. that was the quietest people say heard them kids. they sat there and listened to everything i said. they asked me questions afterwards. i mean, so inspired by the story. schick everybody's hand. i'm not getting out till 26. ♪ , but your story inspired me. i want to change exactly the way you did. that test me...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 4, 2011
08/11
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SFGTV2
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want to make clear, when i was having my conversations with ms. conway, i made that same offer. instead, she requested that we put her up and a hotel while the work was being done. we did not find that that was an appropriate remedy in light of the fact that she would not be paying rent and the expense of putting in a bathroom, $12,000 unanticipated made that not financially reasonable. she said that her comment was filed before she let contractors in to remove the bathtub and the same. i want to put a permanent appear, the appeal of their. please note that it was filed as i said on may 16 after the cut and the sink had been removed. i also want to call your attention to the notice as exhibit 1 attached to my brief, it says very clearly to review the scope of the work, the contractor to demolish every install bathroom as required. work is expected to take three weeks. this is the noticed that was placed on her door on the morning of may 10. so when she permitted the contractors into her unit, on may 13, to do the work, not on a 11 when i was there to inspect, she newhall when the
want to make clear, when i was having my conversations with ms. conway, i made that same offer. instead, she requested that we put her up and a hotel while the work was being done. we did not find that that was an appropriate remedy in light of the fact that she would not be paying rent and the expense of putting in a bathroom, $12,000 unanticipated made that not financially reasonable. she said that her comment was filed before she let contractors in to remove the bathtub and the same. i want...
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543
Aug 19, 2011
08/11
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COM
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i was a prankster by heart. and as the phone company became more computerized, i wanted to get access to phone company systems to pull banks. one of my favorite ones was to change the class of service of a friend's phone to a pay phone so whenever he or his parents tried to make a call it would say please deposit 25 cents. (applause) so what did you actually do that got you arrested? >> well, i hacked into a lot of systems. can you talk about it you seem hesitant to reveal the contents of your book. >> no, it's all there. but i hacked into a lot of systems. and i actually was a fugitive from the government for a number of years. >> stephen: for three years. >> for three years and playing this cat and post game with the fbi because i must have been a little bit crazy. >> stephen: were you actually taunting them. >> not taunting them but i was watching them through the cellular phone system as i was able to work out their telephone numbers and i hacked into the cell phone system so i could keep track of where they
i was a prankster by heart. and as the phone company became more computerized, i wanted to get access to phone company systems to pull banks. one of my favorite ones was to change the class of service of a friend's phone to a pay phone so whenever he or his parents tried to make a call it would say please deposit 25 cents. (applause) so what did you actually do that got you arrested? >> well, i hacked into a lot of systems. can you talk about it you seem hesitant to reveal the contents of...
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154
Aug 25, 2011
08/11
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KQEH
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eye 154
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from baltimore and i was working as a busboy in a restaurant and one day i was busing dishes and i passed the sous chef who was smeeg cigarette. he had -- smoking a cigarette. he had the radio playing, the disc jockey playing records. qut ain't nobody's business" which got me. i thought to myself. i can do that. [laughter] tavis: it is fascinating that "boogie woogie" hit boat of you at different times but it got to both of you. >> the strongest music at that time was "boogie woogie." >> it is amazing to me that both of you were impacted by that long before you ever came together. it is fascinating. in coming together, what cemented to relationship was finding out that we shared that and it took a while to figure out that we shared it because jerry called me, he got my phone number from a schoolmate of his who was a drummer and i played piano at a dance in east l.a. and the drummer took my phone number. and i thought i was going to get some more $3 gigs, you know? but he gave, fortunately, he gave my phone number to jerry who was looking for somebody to write notes on paper. tavis: so tel
from baltimore and i was working as a busboy in a restaurant and one day i was busing dishes and i passed the sous chef who was smeeg cigarette. he had -- smoking a cigarette. he had the radio playing, the disc jockey playing records. qut ain't nobody's business" which got me. i thought to myself. i can do that. [laughter] tavis: it is fascinating that "boogie woogie" hit boat of you at different times but it got to both of you. >> the strongest music at that time was...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 29, 2011
08/11
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SFGTV2
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. >> i think it is our national novel. if there was a national novel of week, this would be it for the united states. i think it's the favorite book of almost everybody you meet. >> the first time in my life that the book had sort of captured me. that was exciting. i didn't realize that literature could do that. >> i remember reading a copy of my aunt's in jamaica queens. it was the first book ever written by a white writer that discussed racism in ways that was complicate and sophisticated. -- complicated and sophisticated. >> a touchstone in american literary and social history. it's a story gently tugged at the issues of racism. >> she was a champion of people who helped us get liberated from racism in this country. >> harper lee's first and only novel. >> a masterpiece is masterpieces not because they're flawless but because they tap into something essential to us, at the heart of who we are and how -- >> a masterpiece and a mystery. >> of course, one kept hoping and waiting for the next novel. sadly, that never came. >> i cannot i
. >> i think it is our national novel. if there was a national novel of week, this would be it for the united states. i think it's the favorite book of almost everybody you meet. >> the first time in my life that the book had sort of captured me. that was exciting. i didn't realize that literature could do that. >> i remember reading a copy of my aunt's in jamaica queens. it was the first book ever written by a white writer that discussed racism in ways that was complicate and...
523
523
Aug 6, 2011
08/11
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MSNBCW
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eye 523
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i was a professional escort. i was running my ads in "play time" magazine and "sex action" magazine. >> charges with murder, a former call girl makes peace. >> yes, i had nice cars, living like a star with the bling-bling and the dress code and my gun on lock and load on a long dark road going nowhere. hi. you know, i can save you 15% today if you open up a charge card account with us. [ male announcer ] identity thieves never stop coming up with ways to steal from you. they can open up an account in your name and go on a serious spending spree. do you have cufflinks? mm-hmm. gold ones? [ male announcer ] not on our watch. we're lifelock. go to lifelock.com and learn how our patented billion point database can help protect you. call 1-800-lifelock today. lifelock. relentlessly protecting your identity. >>> prison is tailor-made to fit anybody. whether you're young, old, professional, non-professional, on skid row, white collar, blue collar, it's tailor-made to fit anybody. so don't think it won't happen to you. yo
i was a professional escort. i was running my ads in "play time" magazine and "sex action" magazine. >> charges with murder, a former call girl makes peace. >> yes, i had nice cars, living like a star with the bling-bling and the dress code and my gun on lock and load on a long dark road going nowhere. hi. you know, i can save you 15% today if you open up a charge card account with us. [ male announcer ] identity thieves never stop coming up with ways to steal...
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93
Aug 25, 2011
08/11
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 93
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and then i had another epiphany. it wasthis, hey, if there are civil rights, then, by golly, there must be civil rights for women too. and i took some inspiration from a woman who had figured that out a long time ago, sojourner truth. sojourner truth was born a slave, again, someone who started at a point of less than no power. but she became a leading abolitionist, a leading women's rights leader and a methodist minister. and you can see her attitude, i think it's attitude we all need to have. so that leads us to the question, imagine what would the world be like if women held equal positions of power and leadership? we can perhaps talk about that in the q&a a little bit. are we there yet? no? well, let's look at the numbers. you know, it is easy, i think, particularly for young women to think that we are there because, after all we have seen a woman first almost everything. didn't i tell you that if something could go wrong, it will with technology? if young women have seen a woman first almost everything, and every door
and then i had another epiphany. it wasthis, hey, if there are civil rights, then, by golly, there must be civil rights for women too. and i took some inspiration from a woman who had figured that out a long time ago, sojourner truth. sojourner truth was born a slave, again, someone who started at a point of less than no power. but she became a leading abolitionist, a leading women's rights leader and a methodist minister. and you can see her attitude, i think it's attitude we all need to have....
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i knew i was on the street. i knew i was at katsui. home, i'm going to drop in and say hello to howie. if you walk into katsui on a saturday night, it's packed with celebrities and everything. this is a true story. i walk in and it's packed. it's like ten deep to the bar. i try to get his attention. i'm going, howie, howie. and he sees me. i go -- like that. and then i turn around. i walk out. i did my -- the manager comes running down the street. he goes, if you want a table, just ask me. so they assume that i was standing in the middle of this crowd going, howie, howie. how come nobody's taking care of me? it wasn't -- i just want to point out. i was just saying hello. >> jimmy: the only person who does that is regis i think. regis, regis is here. you don't refer -- >> i've never referred to myself as regis. mostly howie. it wasn't that. i was just saying hello to howie. but i get embarrassed a lot. >> jimmy: we talked about you saying hello to howie in a different way just moments ago. >> oh, yes. the greeting. shaking hands. yes. >
i knew i was on the street. i knew i was at katsui. home, i'm going to drop in and say hello to howie. if you walk into katsui on a saturday night, it's packed with celebrities and everything. this is a true story. i walk in and it's packed. it's like ten deep to the bar. i try to get his attention. i'm going, howie, howie. and he sees me. i go -- like that. and then i turn around. i walk out. i did my -- the manager comes running down the street. he goes, if you want a table, just ask me. so...
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and i was handed handed some nod things like that. you would indulge me, i have a few things i need to say. first shout out to gi jew in kandahar. [laughter] [cheers and applause] by the way good luck with that nickname out there. kandahar air field, when people say -- and by the way this is writing that i did on the plane i can blairly read my -- blurry. when people talk about war and they say they are in the (bleep) i didn't realize that the (bleep) came in pond form. or would be placed close to your dining hall. to bagram air force base i'll never forget our night at the clam shell or the fact that one of your soldiers told me that my mets hat was considered an unacceptable risk and that's why i was given this one. i very much appreciate that. [cheers and applause] to the period to operating base dbir ron mow it was the best cho in town, no question. it would be nice if someone warned me that it could get hot enough there for my ass cheeks to fuse together. [laughter] to the pilot of the osprey would have been nice if we closed tha
and i was handed handed some nod things like that. you would indulge me, i have a few things i need to say. first shout out to gi jew in kandahar. [laughter] [cheers and applause] by the way good luck with that nickname out there. kandahar air field, when people say -- and by the way this is writing that i did on the plane i can blairly read my -- blurry. when people talk about war and they say they are in the (bleep) i didn't realize that the (bleep) came in pond form. or would be placed...
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Aug 13, 2011
08/11
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CNNW
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-- i mean it wasn? >> i mean i do. i absolutely do. but i -- my hope is that -- that i'm at least -- i'll have that much more awareness that i need to get help. i mean i waited so long to get help with my depression and i mean that's just -- that was unnecessary. it totally was. >> the joy you've been experiencing with young theo, i would imagine is very helpful to avoiding feeling depressed next time around. >> yeah. >> because you can see what it's all about, i guess. >> yeah, yeah, and just kind of knowing -- knowing that it is -- if it does happen, it is chemical and there is treatment and then it will be over, you know? and like i said in the beginning, when i said it was kind of a more difficult challenging second pregnancy but i think that was good. i think it is good to know that sometimes it is tougher. it might be really tough afterwards and i might go through that again, but just to know that -- that i can handle it and is just very comforting for me. >> that you're married to a fellow acto
-- i mean it wasn? >> i mean i do. i absolutely do. but i -- my hope is that -- that i'm at least -- i'll have that much more awareness that i need to get help. i mean i waited so long to get help with my depression and i mean that's just -- that was unnecessary. it totally was. >> the joy you've been experiencing with young theo, i would imagine is very helpful to avoiding feeling depressed next time around. >> yeah. >> because you can see what it's all about, i guess....
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but i was so angry i still wanted it to. be what it was. and i have great remorse sometimes for us most of the thinking about it it's done it's done deal done and over the years i've not had to worry goods what if this doesn't happen what if it gets out it's not the mayor worry that things did goods i had no worries seniors got closure. lorna no well we're not the only ones present a chance execution that night there were also those who had tried to save him. thank. jones execution left scars on his lawyer steve press and. steve still lives in the little town of norman near oklahoma city. specializing in final appeals of a condemned he has lost eleven of the men he has defended and succeeded in saving only two of them. and we hear so many people who support the death penalty say well it's part of our system we have it you know the only reason that we have it as part of the of the system is because they won't act to change it and they they support the system and it's wrong and they don't know why it's so they don't know first hand. or even se
but i was so angry i still wanted it to. be what it was. and i have great remorse sometimes for us most of the thinking about it it's done it's done deal done and over the years i've not had to worry goods what if this doesn't happen what if it gets out it's not the mayor worry that things did goods i had no worries seniors got closure. lorna no well we're not the only ones present a chance execution that night there were also those who had tried to save him. thank. jones execution left scars...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 13, 2011
08/11
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in march of this year i was faced with a choice. could stay in the united states with might call-year-old daughter in a shared custody arrangement or i would have to leave her behind to go into exile with my same-sex spouse and our four-year old. our nightmare involves navigating the complex immigration system to keep our family together. had we not been of the same sex, we would have not had any problems. after receiving help from senator feinstein, i led the drive to introduced private bill 867. when my advocacy became public, scores of bi-national couples began contacting me for help. not a day goes1/ request. i testified before the california state assembly, judiciary committee, and provided written testimony to senator leahy for the uniting of american families act. the irc, in making their recommendations to the mayor and board of a supervisors, to improve and enhance the quality of life into the participation of all the grim immigrants in the city and county of san francisco must include the plight of same-sex couples and by-
in march of this year i was faced with a choice. could stay in the united states with might call-year-old daughter in a shared custody arrangement or i would have to leave her behind to go into exile with my same-sex spouse and our four-year old. our nightmare involves navigating the complex immigration system to keep our family together. had we not been of the same sex, we would have not had any problems. after receiving help from senator feinstein, i led the drive to introduced private bill...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 23, 2011
08/11
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i watched 12 then be executed while i was there -- i watched 12 and then be executed while i was there. i'm not in a position to say whether either of them -- whether any of them were guilty or innocent. mr. d.a., i am asking you, truly consider leaving the death penalty along. let that be in god's hands, what that person goes through or deals with. there are too many flaws in our system that we cannot control and we cannot trust a man. i am asking you to consider that, to take the consideration of that. the question we did not answer was it one of these guys were in this and that was executed by a prosecutor that had evidence that was clearly convincing that that person was innocent, what would you do? that was a simple question to me. that was not a tricky question. it was a straight up question dealing with innocence and the prosecutor doing something that was considered murder or attempted murder. you could answer that. you faded around that question, and to me, that is enough to make me think you should consider not dealing with the death penalty and joining in the fight to abolis
i watched 12 then be executed while i was there -- i watched 12 and then be executed while i was there. i'm not in a position to say whether either of them -- whether any of them were guilty or innocent. mr. d.a., i am asking you, truly consider leaving the death penalty along. let that be in god's hands, what that person goes through or deals with. there are too many flaws in our system that we cannot control and we cannot trust a man. i am asking you to consider that, to take the...
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taunts of just tired i was tired of always getting second to. no more. it's when i basically got really focused. on my story changing a lot of things in my die in my. pool and i mean it just has made me just a better story. and finally one of the world's highest paid ice hockey stars they're getting out and celebrated his twenty fifth birthday on sunday here in the russian capital all recovering after serious knee injury and constance in lansing congratulate him and wish him a speedy recovery. game market stanley cup winner and russian household name is now going through one of the longest and toughest periods in his life then a child star nicknamed geno suffered a serious knee injury after a collision with a defenseman in general and was sidelined for the rest of the season. to go ok it was really hard for me as it's the first time i've been in such a situation you can't get away without injuries in hockey you just have to put up with it and don't let it play on your mind so it was more of a mental challenge for behavior however the surgery went well and
taunts of just tired i was tired of always getting second to. no more. it's when i basically got really focused. on my story changing a lot of things in my die in my. pool and i mean it just has made me just a better story. and finally one of the world's highest paid ice hockey stars they're getting out and celebrated his twenty fifth birthday on sunday here in the russian capital all recovering after serious knee injury and constance in lansing congratulate him and wish him a speedy recovery....
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 26, 2011
08/11
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i will tell you up front it was a book i thought that may be they wouldn't publish. first book was women of the silk. i knew that i was writing about something that was a little bit different because i didn't know about the women of the silk until i wanted to write something telling their story much the second book is the test book for us writers you hear that a lot where the publishers are wondering if the author has a second book. everybody here i feel sitting here all of you have one book in you. whether it's a family story or your story whether it's ancestors whether it's your history you want to write about. but it's the second one that's hard. i felt that when i turnod the computer and thought, now i have to write book number 2. i had in mind that i wanted to write something very different from women of the silk that was strictly about the feminist chinese women during the turn of the century and i wanted to write about my japanese culter. i didn't have the story or the culture unfortunately because i was born in san francisco, half chinese and half japanese but
i will tell you up front it was a book i thought that may be they wouldn't publish. first book was women of the silk. i knew that i was writing about something that was a little bit different because i didn't know about the women of the silk until i wanted to write something telling their story much the second book is the test book for us writers you hear that a lot where the publishers are wondering if the author has a second book. everybody here i feel sitting here all of you have one book in...
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Aug 31, 2011
08/11
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FOXNEWSW
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i think i was discouraged for a very long time. ♪ knowing that i could smoke during the first week wasnt to me. [ male announcer ] chantix is a non-nicotine pill proven to help people quit smoking. [ jeff ] chantix reduced my urge to smoke, and personally that's what i knew i needed. [ male announcer ] some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. if you notice any of these, stop taking chantix and call your doctor right away. tell your doctor about any history of depression or oth mental health problems, which could get worse while taking chantix. don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if you develop these, stop taking chantix and see your doctor right away as some of these can be life-threatening. if you have a history of heart or blood vessel problems, tell your doctor if you have new or worse symptoms. get medical help right away if you have symptoms of a heart attack. dosing may be different if you have kidney problems. until y
i think i was discouraged for a very long time. ♪ knowing that i could smoke during the first week wasnt to me. [ male announcer ] chantix is a non-nicotine pill proven to help people quit smoking. [ jeff ] chantix reduced my urge to smoke, and personally that's what i knew i needed. [ male announcer ] some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. if you notice any of these,...
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Aug 24, 2011
08/11
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KQED
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i was 15. i had no choice. >> rose: we were talking before we started this conversation about israel. how do you see israel in the midst of the arab spring and the most recent demonstration of a large number of people in the streets all over the country? >> the exciting news for the week, for this week, is that the arab spring has been contagious. 150,000 israelis are marching, as we speak, all over tel aviv, jerusalem, haifa. thousands of tents this all -- >> asking for what? >> they're asking for social justice, social contract. they're asking for good schools, decent medicine, return to the welfare state, the-- against the polarization of income where 15 families own most of the country. and so on. so they are challenging, and they're saying things that have political implications -- we don't want all the money to be spent for 4% of the population. the settlements. we don't want money to go to the religious sector, to all these people who don't work because that's at our expense. we're carryi
i was 15. i had no choice. >> rose: we were talking before we started this conversation about israel. how do you see israel in the midst of the arab spring and the most recent demonstration of a large number of people in the streets all over the country? >> the exciting news for the week, for this week, is that the arab spring has been contagious. 150,000 israelis are marching, as we speak, all over tel aviv, jerusalem, haifa. thousands of tents this all -- >> asking for what?...
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going to stop that i was there to help that person and so i was i would minister to the person i would talk to them i cannot do this any longer i can't put words in god's mouth but i don't think he would want the death penalty i think he would want us to share a laugh and how to have life in christ. do you believe in god. much do you fear his judgment you know what well more so. and so rush or him. using it as a chance that god is against death penalty. six years after sean's execution the supreme court at long last ruled against capital punishment for minors. today three thousand three hundred prisoners are waiting on death row throughout the united states. in oklahoma the mortal remains not claimed by family are buried in the little cemetery in front of the penitentiary. twenty years ago the largest country in the world to do so too easy to. fix some of what had been more extraordinary to teach began to judge. where did it take them. wealthy british scientists scientists and that's what i was. all. markets finance scandal. find out what's really happening to the global economy with m
going to stop that i was there to help that person and so i was i would minister to the person i would talk to them i cannot do this any longer i can't put words in god's mouth but i don't think he would want the death penalty i think he would want us to share a laugh and how to have life in christ. do you believe in god. much do you fear his judgment you know what well more so. and so rush or him. using it as a chance that god is against death penalty. six years after sean's execution the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 26, 2011
08/11
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i was--not raised on the weavers, but when i came into music, i was musically raised by the weavers. they were the first person who struck me as a force. they eventually became the form from which i wanted to be-- the kind of band i wanted to be in. and when we started our band, this was the template that, unconsciously, anyway, i said, "well"--marty asked me the first night he met me-- he said, "you want to start a band?" i said, "yeah, we could do that. but there has to be a woman in it." 'cause i had always been swept away by the work of ronnie gilbert, the woman singer in the weavers. and we just went uphill from there. the weavers had a great combination of both hedonism on the lee hays side all the way through the social responsibility and the powerful singing and into the total aesthetic, almost amish approach of pete seeger to life. so i was talking to ronnie about it once before, and i said, "it looks to me that your band, like our band, "all combined together to make "one sort of complete human being, you know, with all their faults and all their vices and virtues." they com
i was--not raised on the weavers, but when i came into music, i was musically raised by the weavers. they were the first person who struck me as a force. they eventually became the form from which i wanted to be-- the kind of band i wanted to be in. and when we started our band, this was the template that, unconsciously, anyway, i said, "well"--marty asked me the first night he met me-- he said, "you want to start a band?" i said, "yeah, we could do that. but there has...
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because i was what you were in the festival. and i think that was enormously important turning point for soviet society in fact and by the time my. but my my father my father came to moscow several times firstly as a researcher in the british embassy briefly in ninety fifty eight and then again as and a i could emerick in one hundred sixty three and then it was actually it was dangerous for people with something to lose to meet with foreigners because you could get in trouble with your job but my mother was a point of working as a young librarian so actually she and the university actually the institute of marxism and leninism. how do you how how did he a young british guy go to the market is a. they how they met somewhere somewhere or they met through a mutual friend my father knew from the first and how i see the connection was the bolshoi theater and the there was sort of brother to march so my mother loved the ballet and this mutual friend of the ballet and he said and then you see each other but in fact even when they were i
because i was what you were in the festival. and i think that was enormously important turning point for soviet society in fact and by the time my. but my my father my father came to moscow several times firstly as a researcher in the british embassy briefly in ninety fifty eight and then again as and a i could emerick in one hundred sixty three and then it was actually it was dangerous for people with something to lose to meet with foreigners because you could get in trouble with your job but...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 28, 2011
08/11
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but one of the shows that i really enjoyed was "l.a. law." the reason i liked "l.a. law" was that it was about the kind of business of law. you know? a lot of it was about the real, you know, business. you have to work hard in that context to get drama. it's harder to write a show like "l.a. law" because you have to find drama almost in the ordinary practice of law. to my way of thinking, you know, doing a crime show or even a criminal defense show, that's the easy stuff to do. you know? there's drama that's inherent in it. the hard stuff to do is say, like "the paper chase" where they're going to the library. really. so you've got to figure out a way to make that interesting. we did a show called "scavenger hunt," a massive search through all the libraries. and it's actually a very exciting show. but when we went to the network, they said, what are you shooting? we said we're shooting an episode with seven libraries. and they were like, we got to cancel this. how did osborn get here? you know? that's the hard kind of stuff for television. i'd like to see more of that
but one of the shows that i really enjoyed was "l.a. law." the reason i liked "l.a. law" was that it was about the kind of business of law. you know? a lot of it was about the real, you know, business. you have to work hard in that context to get drama. it's harder to write a show like "l.a. law" because you have to find drama almost in the ordinary practice of law. to my way of thinking, you know, doing a crime show or even a criminal defense show, that's the easy...
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Aug 21, 2011
08/11
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CNNW
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he told me how he did it. >> i was lucky i didn't die. eart attack. >> reporter: former president clinton, like too many people, was busy. and for years, he ignored warning signs of his heart. but in 2004, during an exhausting book tour, there was something different. >> i had a real tightness in my chest when i was getting off the airplane and it was the no pain, but tight, only time i had it unrelated it to exercise. i immediately went down to our local hospital and they did a test and said you got real problems. they hustled me down to columbia presbyterian and they confirmed the determination that i had serious blockage and needed surgery. >> reporter: the doctors immediately knew, options were limited. the 58-year-old clinton needed to have his chest opened, his heart stopped, and surgery performed. >> there's no medical treatment for reversing the obstructions that already formed in his blood vessels. >> so, i got hillary and chelsea there and all i remember it was happening fast and everybody who cared about me was scared and i felt
he told me how he did it. >> i was lucky i didn't die. eart attack. >> reporter: former president clinton, like too many people, was busy. and for years, he ignored warning signs of his heart. but in 2004, during an exhausting book tour, there was something different. >> i had a real tightness in my chest when i was getting off the airplane and it was the no pain, but tight, only time i had it unrelated it to exercise. i immediately went down to our local hospital and they did...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 20, 2011
08/11
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i was detailed to senator kennedy's office. i worked on the immigration bill. when it was time to go back to dhs -- i decided i needed to be more engaged in the public debate. there's some things you cannot do as a public servant that you can do on the outside. that's how i ended up at the immigration policy center. we're all about trying to provide the kind of facts and information that helped shape the debate in the way that it supports the idea that immigration is important to america. we are part of the american immigration council, formally known as the american immigration law foundation. we work very closely with lawyers, including one of the sponsors of tonight's events. when i talk about compehensive immigration reform to people, i often like to move away from the movie analogy to the game analogy. think about it as a rubik's cube. if you get one side right, it probably means the other sites are screwed up. you cannot think about immigration as the one issue. there are so many that interact with each other. we often focus on legalization because it's su
i was detailed to senator kennedy's office. i worked on the immigration bill. when it was time to go back to dhs -- i decided i needed to be more engaged in the public debate. there's some things you cannot do as a public servant that you can do on the outside. that's how i ended up at the immigration policy center. we're all about trying to provide the kind of facts and information that helped shape the debate in the way that it supports the idea that immigration is important to america. we...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 19, 2011
08/11
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when i cannot hear, and was not initially involved politically. -- when i came out here, i was not initially involved politically. i helped to build the lgbt community center. i started doing campaigns. i gradually got involved in democratic party politics. i got involved in the alice b. toklas democratic club. i ran for the democratic central committee in 2004. i ended up sharing the committee. it was a gradual process for me. by the time i started thinking about running for supervisor, it made sense because of my involvement in the community and in politics. >> what did you learn from campaigning for supervisor? >> i learned a lot. i knocked on about $15,000. -- i knocked about 15,000 doors. i met a huge number of people. that is the best way to learn about the neighborhood, the city, and what people want and what their concerns are. i feel i can do so much more than before and started campaigning. -- i feel like i know so much more than before i started campaigning. we're all part of the left on the national standard. i am a good liberal democrat. in the san francisco spectrum, and probab
when i cannot hear, and was not initially involved politically. -- when i came out here, i was not initially involved politically. i helped to build the lgbt community center. i started doing campaigns. i gradually got involved in democratic party politics. i got involved in the alice b. toklas democratic club. i ran for the democratic central committee in 2004. i ended up sharing the committee. it was a gradual process for me. by the time i started thinking about running for supervisor, it...