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94
Jul 31, 2014
07/14
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KQEH
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eye 94
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i was so out of it. t then i thought, well, i was still there because i knew i was a reporter. >> and not a bad interviewee. >> still looking for that silver lining. but those early days at the hospital, before knowing if sister sally cell's would take hold. there's something called graph versus host disease. lot of people suffer even after having a perfect match. so those early days were -- i was on these little -- i was on my bony knees praying constantly. >> yeah. i met your sister sally, know her fairly well down in new orleans, number of times over the years, what does a journey like this do for two sisters? >> i'm so thankful that my mother and father -- and they -- you know, my father was a tuskegee airman. he would clear his throat and we would clear the room. he was from that generation. and the famous words from momma, wait until your daddy gets home. >> that's right. >> right. wait until your daddy gets home. >> what you didn't want to hear. >> what did we do? why? but my folks wouldn't allow u
i was so out of it. t then i thought, well, i was still there because i knew i was a reporter. >> and not a bad interviewee. >> still looking for that silver lining. but those early days at the hospital, before knowing if sister sally cell's would take hold. there's something called graph versus host disease. lot of people suffer even after having a perfect match. so those early days were -- i was on these little -- i was on my bony knees praying constantly. >> yeah. i met...
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150
Jul 1, 2014
07/14
by
WHYY
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eye 150
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i was always hyper. i really got into dance when i was 12 years old. came home from school in memphis and in the living room, my sister was dancing. she was doing this crazy thing with her knees. it looked pretty cool. i had never seen her do this before. i asked her, what is this you are doing right now? .he was like, i am jookin' my friends from school taught me how to do this. that's when i got into it. we made up our first routine in the living room. we made up our first little jookin' routine. i really took it seriously when i turned 13 in next year. j-is: i should spell it, o-o-k-i-n. go ahead. you and your sister were hanging out. >> that's what happened. i saw her and i got inspired by her just doing that in the living room. that is when i jumped into it for fun, and i got serious with it when i was a teen. the next year i really started seeing it more in my school when i would go out of my friends two different skating rinks. they are places back in memphis where you would see a lot of this being done. you would see a lot of jookin' being done
i was always hyper. i really got into dance when i was 12 years old. came home from school in memphis and in the living room, my sister was dancing. she was doing this crazy thing with her knees. it looked pretty cool. i had never seen her do this before. i asked her, what is this you are doing right now? .he was like, i am jookin' my friends from school taught me how to do this. that's when i got into it. we made up our first routine in the living room. we made up our first little jookin'...
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home run my first six weeks so the seizing it was rough and i was looking myself and i was like you know i trust you you know me from sound to coming into solving california for raising i don't know why but i just rush you with everything and look at my year still and they don't hit it on wrong and a pro they don't hit a home in september and i still got one hundred. seven honoring a r.b.i. i hate to eighty eight to eighty five and thirty homers you know so i imagine the two months that i didn't hear any homers i would have still broken he had a forty plus omer's and. thirty more years i think he was testing me there were tests you know eyeing and something you know you just need to make sure that the end of the day who you represent when you take the field and somebody that he has to take me to a level that i feel you know trust and come to willing no matter what kind of challenge comes in my way i go to the lower embrace with my family and that's how we can this is one of the signs when we come back and ask about what's so special about the limits and look. at this. cross talk rule
home run my first six weeks so the seizing it was rough and i was looking myself and i was like you know i trust you you know me from sound to coming into solving california for raising i don't know why but i just rush you with everything and look at my year still and they don't hit it on wrong and a pro they don't hit a home in september and i still got one hundred. seven honoring a r.b.i. i hate to eighty eight to eighty five and thirty homers you know so i imagine the two months that i...
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322
Jul 4, 2014
07/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 322
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i was bleeding. i took my shirt off and held it up to my chin to stop the bleeding. >> the patrol officer arrives, gives lowery a field sobriety test, which he passes, and types up a report. and so begins a string of bad luck that will take years to untangle. the next day, lowery gets a call asking him to come down to the riley county police department. he meets detective harry malugani and detective doug johnson, and he's brought to a small interrogation room. >> i'm thinking, okay. i figured it was because of the car accident. >> detective malugani says he's here to talk about a rape. >> and right there i got defensive. i said, well, i don't know anything about no rape. all i was involved with was a car accident. >> eddie lowery, it seems, is in the middle of a coincidence. the night of his party just a few blocks down the street, an intruder enters the home of a 74-year-old woman. >> she was sleeping. she was in bed. the person came in and attacked her. >> the attacker hits the woman in the head wi
i was bleeding. i took my shirt off and held it up to my chin to stop the bleeding. >> the patrol officer arrives, gives lowery a field sobriety test, which he passes, and types up a report. and so begins a string of bad luck that will take years to untangle. the next day, lowery gets a call asking him to come down to the riley county police department. he meets detective harry malugani and detective doug johnson, and he's brought to a small interrogation room. >> i'm thinking,...
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66
Jul 20, 2014
07/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 66
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i decided i was going to do my report on harry truman, so i did mine in three days, and i was done, andd three months to go. and i had read in one of president truman's books one of the only obligations he felt he had as former president was to answer letters from young people. so i sent him my report. dear president truman, i got this report, read through it, tell me what you think and get back to me because i've got to turn it in in three months. [laughter] this was also, you know, young people, this was before the advent of, like, copying machines. i though you can't get your head around this -- [laughter] if you wanted to headache a copy of -- make a copy of something, you had to put a piece of carbon paper. i mailed this to harry truman, and it's just gone. three months later the day congresswomans to turn in -- comes to turn in my report, and my teacher says where's your report. i did mine three months ago, it was really good, and i sent it to harry truman, and he must like it, because he still has it. [laughter] but, you know, when i get it back, i'll turn it in, and everything w
i decided i was going to do my report on harry truman, so i did mine in three days, and i was done, andd three months to go. and i had read in one of president truman's books one of the only obligations he felt he had as former president was to answer letters from young people. so i sent him my report. dear president truman, i got this report, read through it, tell me what you think and get back to me because i've got to turn it in in three months. [laughter] this was also, you know, young...
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55
Jul 13, 2014
07/14
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MSNBCW
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eye 55
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i was anxious. i was excited. i was worried.ly high anticipati anticipation, high anxiety for me. it was all i could do to stay focused on the task at hand, capturing pedro's descent on tape. >> ben does just that. he catches pedro approaching the falls, goes over and disappears. >> i get a fairly steady handheld shot all the way to the base of the falls and then just had to wait and wait and wait. so for probably 20 seconds i'm just scanning the pool at the base of the falls waiting to see some sign of pedro, a paddle, a boat, just some color in the pool. i don't see anything. i get ready to put the camera down and repel to the base of the falls to help look for pedro and at that point another guide, another of the locals signals to him he sees pedro walking out from behind the falls. at that point he says in portuguese, here he comes from behind the falls. from that point, everyone erupts and just screaming. you know, in kind of laughter. >> yeah! >> oh god! >> ben says that when pedro emerges from the falls he's momentarily c
i was anxious. i was excited. i was worried.ly high anticipati anticipation, high anxiety for me. it was all i could do to stay focused on the task at hand, capturing pedro's descent on tape. >> ben does just that. he catches pedro approaching the falls, goes over and disappears. >> i get a fairly steady handheld shot all the way to the base of the falls and then just had to wait and wait and wait. so for probably 20 seconds i'm just scanning the pool at the base of the falls...
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30
Jul 26, 2014
07/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 30
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was there any comparison? >> guest: i watch these high-profile stories and that was a story that created a lot of buzz to explore that and the gender conversation about that has been significant about work style. i have found those conversations are incredibly important and there is a real issue about the standards women are set to in terms of how they compare with the guys and all that and we are getting better and still have a lot of conversations to have. i do say that opens up a work place, the new york times and other immediate and -- i am of the mine data leader needs to be very careful, man or woman because you are the one in power. if you are the one in power and using a particular style that is negative it will roll down the organization and you will never begin to get back to that. i learned things and might belong to be capable but the culture will be one of fear and i am of the mind that a leader style is as important to culture as anything so i think about that with her story, what style and a messages they'r
was there any comparison? >> guest: i watch these high-profile stories and that was a story that created a lot of buzz to explore that and the gender conversation about that has been significant about work style. i have found those conversations are incredibly important and there is a real issue about the standards women are set to in terms of how they compare with the guys and all that and we are getting better and still have a lot of conversations to have. i do say that opens up a work...
37
37
Jul 12, 2014
07/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 37
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i mean, it was what i should be doing. so after the election, mrs johnson called me and said that she had a present for the baby. the baby is now 50. his name is lyndon. when his brother was born, senator johnson called me in the hospital and said, i hear you had a boy. what did you name him? i told him -- [indiscernible] he said, too bad. if you had named him lyndon, i would have given him a cat. so we started thinking about that. we thought, we are going to have 7 or 8 children, but that sounds like a good name. the next baby was lyndon. and then i did not have any more. after he was in the white house, i was there a lot. he was always coming around with a pad or a cocktail napkin and a pen. i think this would be a good name for lyndon's cat. you know a lot more about brands than i do. i told him, i guess your cat died. it's hard to see if she had any more cats. but i-i was -- for the johnsons. i loved them.i loved them. there were tough times, but there were wonderful times. i think most first ladies spend a lot of time.
i mean, it was what i should be doing. so after the election, mrs johnson called me and said that she had a present for the baby. the baby is now 50. his name is lyndon. when his brother was born, senator johnson called me in the hospital and said, i hear you had a boy. what did you name him? i told him -- [indiscernible] he said, too bad. if you had named him lyndon, i would have given him a cat. so we started thinking about that. we thought, we are going to have 7 or 8 children, but that...
862
862
Jul 25, 2014
07/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 862
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wasn't sure what the smoke was. i didn't know if it was transmission or whatever. i didn't know if it was coming from his car. >> the limousine's transmission blows and it seems the culprit has finally run out of options, but just when the troopers think the chase is over, the driver finds another gear that works -- reverse. >> yeah, he did it backwards. >> the people on the road, i don't know what was going through their mind. you would think you're filming an episode of "bullitt" or some type of cop show. >> his way out at that point was to utilize the entrance ramp to exit the interstate. that's what he did. >> we were closing in on him, and he had nowhere to go. >> the limo finally loses control and crashes. the troopers apprehend the driver and then realize there's also a passenger along for the wild ride. and when police ask the driver the reason he fled? >> he just thought that he had a suspended license and that's why he took off. >> now, instead of facing a minor offense, the suspect, dane christian, is convi
wasn't sure what the smoke was. i didn't know if it was transmission or whatever. i didn't know if it was coming from his car. >> the limousine's transmission blows and it seems the culprit has finally run out of options, but just when the troopers think the chase is over, the driver finds another gear that works -- reverse. >> yeah, he did it backwards. >> the people on the road, i don't know what was going through their mind. you would think you're filming an episode of...
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98
Jul 31, 2014
07/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 98
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i figured i was going to jail. e been to jail a few or times for base jumping over 25 years. >> jester tries a peace offering. shake your hand. >> he wanted to see it as much as i wanted to jump. if he wanted to stop me, he could have yanked me off the ledge. he made no effort. >> jester jumps. 15 seconds later he makes a perfect landing on the beach. >> you did good, buddy. now you're going to jail. >> when i got on the beach, i could see the police officer racing to the other side of the bridge. figured they would give me a ticket and send me down the road. that wasn't the case. they slapped the cuffs on me before i was out of my gear. >> jester goes to trial and is convicted of disobeying that police officer and driving under the influence among other charges. he could have faced up to three years in jail the influence among other charges. he could have faced up to three years in jail >>> due to mature subject matter, viewer discretion is advised. >>> there are 2 million people behind bars in america. we open the
i figured i was going to jail. e been to jail a few or times for base jumping over 25 years. >> jester tries a peace offering. shake your hand. >> he wanted to see it as much as i wanted to jump. if he wanted to stop me, he could have yanked me off the ledge. he made no effort. >> jester jumps. 15 seconds later he makes a perfect landing on the beach. >> you did good, buddy. now you're going to jail. >> when i got on the beach, i could see the police officer racing...
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46
Jul 20, 2014
07/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 46
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the reason i did is because i was in the seventh grade and my teacher, and i can say this, he was really just a horrible guy and just terrible, a terrible teacher and i didn't like him. and he gave us an assignment and said this is my first long-term assignment that i've ever had and you have to pick someone in history and you have to type a paper and asked to be seven or eight pages long and you have three months to do it. i know that you don't know what this says, but this is back in the days where he wanted to type something, you would have to put your anger on a key and jam it down and if you made a mistake you had to start all over. so it was a big deal and we needed three months to do this. and i decided that i'm going to do my report on harry truman and i had all these books on presidents. so i did mine in three days and i was done and i had three months ago and i had read one of his books that the only obligation he felt that he had as a former president was to answer letters from young people and so i sent him my report. and i said dear president, tell me what you think and get
the reason i did is because i was in the seventh grade and my teacher, and i can say this, he was really just a horrible guy and just terrible, a terrible teacher and i didn't like him. and he gave us an assignment and said this is my first long-term assignment that i've ever had and you have to pick someone in history and you have to type a paper and asked to be seven or eight pages long and you have three months to do it. i know that you don't know what this says, but this is back in the days...
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78
Jul 6, 2014
07/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 78
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i was mad.nyone out there seeing this -- >> he intended to blame other people for his problems, but the fact of the matter was he was exposing himself to nurses and to people and then he would talk about it, which in a way, it's an affront to most inmates. >> the exposures, i know for a fact, that were forced upon me, forcing me to be in my cell nude in rtu without clothing. every unit my clothes were either stolen or getting lost. the problem is starting to be fixed. i'm proud of staff here. it is continuing to be corrected. >> we would try to conduct an interview and he would just keep going. the manner in which he spoke and conducted himself, it was draining. it was absolutely draining. it was hard to keep him focused. >> you see i was dressed for yous when you came. i don't have any other clothes in here. you see there is no sheet. i got one blanket. i don't have any clothes. that is not something i'm worried about because the lord, in his word, says we don't have to worry about clothes, he'
i was mad.nyone out there seeing this -- >> he intended to blame other people for his problems, but the fact of the matter was he was exposing himself to nurses and to people and then he would talk about it, which in a way, it's an affront to most inmates. >> the exposures, i know for a fact, that were forced upon me, forcing me to be in my cell nude in rtu without clothing. every unit my clothes were either stolen or getting lost. the problem is starting to be fixed. i'm proud of...
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it like what does a camp look like i was terrified the fear was alive felt they all had beards turbines on their heads armed with rifles yelling at me in their language the first things they showed me in the village were the bodies of soldiers and officers they had executed just lying there in the square i couldn't understand what they were seeing but i knew from the gestures that they were telling me that the same thing would happen to me so yes that is the end of your life and yes i thought i was going to die but then they started moving me from village to village at night and i started thinking that perhaps they won't kill me behalves they would ask for ransom . and where do they keep you. initially when they captured me in parwan province they kept me in a shed i. am sometimes they would put me in a pit and then they took me to punch air and then. they took me to a village called. that's where i met their leader masoud. they brought me to him and i was standing there exhausted bleeding with dirty and bloody bandages my teeth broken. they took
it like what does a camp look like i was terrified the fear was alive felt they all had beards turbines on their heads armed with rifles yelling at me in their language the first things they showed me in the village were the bodies of soldiers and officers they had executed just lying there in the square i couldn't understand what they were seeing but i knew from the gestures that they were telling me that the same thing would happen to me so yes that is the end of your life and yes i thought i...
1,007
1.0K
Jul 31, 2014
07/14
by
KNTV
tv
eye 1,007
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i was like -- and i am shaking. i was shaking. i was like, "i just met jodie foster. do this." and i did it. and now i am dominated for an emmy. [ applause ] >> seth: yeah! always remember to breathe. always remember to breathe. >> always remember to breathe. >> seth: congratulations once again. laverne cox everyone. [ cheers and applause ] "orange is the new black" is available on netflix now. we'll be right back with big data and joywave. ♪ [ shelly ] as a graduate of devry university and keller graduate school of management, a business career was my goal. this was my career training camp... my professors... they were also my coaches. and my biggest supporters. their guidance from start to finish... helped me get my latest promotion...at microsoft. [ male announcer ] get started now with our merit based career catalyst scholarship. new students could qualify for up to $20,000. funds are limited. to be considered you must apply by august 29th at devry.edu. funds are limited. yo,move fast fruit flavor,fe, watermelon, blue razz green apple. your taste buds dancing. it'
i was like -- and i am shaking. i was shaking. i was like, "i just met jodie foster. do this." and i did it. and now i am dominated for an emmy. [ applause ] >> seth: yeah! always remember to breathe. always remember to breathe. >> always remember to breathe. >> seth: congratulations once again. laverne cox everyone. [ cheers and applause ] "orange is the new black" is available on netflix now. we'll be right back with big data and joywave. ♪ [ shelly ]...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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36
Jul 29, 2014
07/14
by
SFGTV
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eye 36
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i was given access to the k case file on june 6. immediately before a hearing was scheduled on june 20 that later had to be postponed for other reasons because the developer didn't give proper notice but when i got access of that file i opened it up and there is a failed shadow study performed by the planning department for this file and they had sent a letter to the developer stating we cannot approve this projected because it will cast shadows on franklin square park. this building will be the secondest highest on the avenue and near the hospital and we're talking about a sizable building as it is but the fact that the planning department issued a negative declaration of the compliance with the california environmental quality act and only referencing this shadow study that was given access to, so then an order of determination is issued and out of vote of majority of the sunshine ordinance that was there at the first hearing just immediately prior to issuing a motion of determination that the planning department was to comply -- e
i was given access to the k case file on june 6. immediately before a hearing was scheduled on june 20 that later had to be postponed for other reasons because the developer didn't give proper notice but when i got access of that file i opened it up and there is a failed shadow study performed by the planning department for this file and they had sent a letter to the developer stating we cannot approve this projected because it will cast shadows on franklin square park. this building will be...
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and i was concerned i was just thinking that i was going to move to new york and there was this or i didn't give you additional they my agents convinced me they were like look we think this show's going to be a huge hits they were right but they were like you know it just it's going to be good just audition go get seen by these people you're still you just graduated it's important for you to go out and get your sea legs and i went in and i read the script i thought it was interesting i knew the character because i was an overachiever in school and i thought i definitely know this girl but i thought they'll never cast me in a million years so i just went in and had fun in the end they gave me a callback and i was like really and then they gave me another one and another one and and then i got the part but i still sort of completely disbelief i was like you guys are totally wrong you don't want me this is wrong you still want to do theater absolutely who joins who in the woods. i was on my hiatus which is rather small and so i don't get to do any other work which is kind of why i start
and i was concerned i was just thinking that i was going to move to new york and there was this or i didn't give you additional they my agents convinced me they were like look we think this show's going to be a huge hits they were right but they were like you know it just it's going to be good just audition go get seen by these people you're still you just graduated it's important for you to go out and get your sea legs and i went in and i read the script i thought it was interesting i knew the...
91
91
Jul 6, 2014
07/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 91
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i did. all right. that was a lot of fun. okay. where was i? >> parro went on to tell us that in order to survive in corcoran he had to understand corcoran. >> you know, at the beginning, when i was facing the 41 months i thought how in the hell am i going to make it? i didn't see myself as being a part of this community. it is a community. no matter how dysfunctional it is. no matter how bizarre and asinine and ridiculous and stupid. it is very stupid. there's a lot of rules here that are enforced by inmates. >> many of those inmate-enforced rules revolve around racial politics. >> a lot of people here have affiliation with gangs. they ask me who i run with? i run with teachers and librarians usually. when i find them, i will run with them. i haven't found too many of them yet. >> parro must also deal with racial politics in his prison job as a housing clerk. >> i got a message you called over here. usually i come in in the morning, see who paroled, if there have been any roll-ups in the last 24 hours and beds open. i got 109 up, 242 up. those
i did. all right. that was a lot of fun. okay. where was i? >> parro went on to tell us that in order to survive in corcoran he had to understand corcoran. >> you know, at the beginning, when i was facing the 41 months i thought how in the hell am i going to make it? i didn't see myself as being a part of this community. it is a community. no matter how dysfunctional it is. no matter how bizarre and asinine and ridiculous and stupid. it is very stupid. there's a lot of rules here...
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eleven i got my license he was twenty one i was twenty one he was out so. we were always at different stages but i'm a professional level i never felt that i think we're always really genuinely excited for each other and then just recently directed an episode of girl meets world and it was very important to fred that he was there to support ben and it was it was very sweet to see because we were in the middle of our tape night and fred arrived and didn't want anybody to pay any attention to him he hung back he just wanted to be there to watch mentioned you want to do movies. i think i want to focus on directing i think i want to focus on writing producing directing and staying in the t.v. realm i think that's that's my home and that's where i'm comfortable oh you've done twenty two episodes twenty one and one is it what's it like being back in the swing again. who. join answer well for me personally i absolutely love the work on set and the acting and working with the kids that we work with and being back on set with ben every day that's my favorite part bei
eleven i got my license he was twenty one i was twenty one he was out so. we were always at different stages but i'm a professional level i never felt that i think we're always really genuinely excited for each other and then just recently directed an episode of girl meets world and it was very important to fred that he was there to support ben and it was it was very sweet to see because we were in the middle of our tape night and fred arrived and didn't want anybody to pay any attention to him...
27
27
Jul 1, 2014
07/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 27
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i was also then 99. i was little at that point. definitely true that we saw anybody that helped albanians in that time and during those troubles those being our friends so it was a very welcome change for our country. i did have one question pertaining to your career and the way your work unraveled. do you think it had anything to do with maybe they're wrong decisions or the lack of success, if you may raise it that way, the sense that international officials seem to offer a while, at least, feel very invincible and all-powerful? we witnessed on the other side of our glorifying the international a ministration in particular cause about and later on have been critical of their mission or lack of successful reform or maybe partnering to closely with political elites that were more harmful to the wrong people and beneficial. would you consider this as sort of a misjudgment of individual internationalist issues are more weaknesses of the system? >> i think i would maybe try and stay away from characterizing the senior leaders. i came to
i was also then 99. i was little at that point. definitely true that we saw anybody that helped albanians in that time and during those troubles those being our friends so it was a very welcome change for our country. i did have one question pertaining to your career and the way your work unraveled. do you think it had anything to do with maybe they're wrong decisions or the lack of success, if you may raise it that way, the sense that international officials seem to offer a while, at least,...
113
113
Jul 20, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 113
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[inaudible conversations] >> when i was growing up i read a lot of biographies. interested of historical figures the computer field was young but already there were those who had done incredible work. >> there is a wonderful story that has done a great thing and i happen to believe the computer is the greatest invention ever. >> i liked history even before my machine that i had barely heard of with physical size is to look at the nomenclature of the switches. >> the industry has made bigger changes in a few decades than printing has over a few centuries. >> when i was a student at m.i.t. the computer took up half a building and caused tens of millions of dollars of the computer in your cellphone is 1 million times cheaper than 1,000 times more powerful. >> we are recording the events of this extemporaneously. rarely in history do you have a chance to do that wouldn't you love to hear michelangelo talk about what it was like for the sistine chapel? >> it is important. >> that is what the museum is about to understand the history of what has been happening and it to
[inaudible conversations] >> when i was growing up i read a lot of biographies. interested of historical figures the computer field was young but already there were those who had done incredible work. >> there is a wonderful story that has done a great thing and i happen to believe the computer is the greatest invention ever. >> i liked history even before my machine that i had barely heard of with physical size is to look at the nomenclature of the switches. >> the...
127
127
Jul 20, 2014
07/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 127
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i was impressed. s award. >> i was not all that surprised. >> it was, one, either for the use of tampons or, two, they made up an award for us waus beer not getting anything else. >> it was just a pity award. >> but then carl hayden was called again. this time for the quality of the technical report. >> i was surprised when we won the technical report. >> i kept thinking it was a mistake, they added up the points wrong or something. >> and then they began announcing the winners of the overall competition. >> we were kind of hoping that we would be up in the upper quarter and maybe, maybe we had a shot at third place. the only scores we knew was the underwater mission. so we were sitting there and they announced that the third place award goes to -- >> cape fear community college. >> and i thought, oh, crap. we were probably fourth. the year before, cape fear had won. >> it was kind of a huh, interesting. >> there's only two spots left. we're going, well, we probably got this. >> and then second place w
i was impressed. s award. >> i was not all that surprised. >> it was, one, either for the use of tampons or, two, they made up an award for us waus beer not getting anything else. >> it was just a pity award. >> but then carl hayden was called again. this time for the quality of the technical report. >> i was surprised when we won the technical report. >> i kept thinking it was a mistake, they added up the points wrong or something. >> and then they...
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Jul 17, 2014
07/14
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. >> i was like, oh, my god. you're kidding me. >> thieves and thugs caught in the act. >> it's bullying in america at its worst. it's caught on video. >> sometimes stopped in their tracks by everyday people. >> i didn't care if he had a gun. >> the crimes are cruel. >> i'm angry at what they did to me. >> the criminals calculating. >> you definitely want to do this? >> i'm positive, like 5,000% sure. >> and cold blooded. >> she says we'll stab the bitch, kill her. >>> "caught on camera: crimes and crime stoppers." hello. i'm contessa brewer. welcome to "caught on camera." you see a crime unfolding before your very eyes. the law breakers are armed, so what do you do? run for help? call 911? or would you try to stop the bad guys yourself? it's one thing to get involved if you are young and able. but in the story you are about to see, one of the unlikeliest of people says not on my watch. northampton, england. it's a bold and brash robbery in broad daylight as three sledgehammer-wielding thugs wail away at this jewe
. >> i was like, oh, my god. you're kidding me. >> thieves and thugs caught in the act. >> it's bullying in america at its worst. it's caught on video. >> sometimes stopped in their tracks by everyday people. >> i didn't care if he had a gun. >> the crimes are cruel. >> i'm angry at what they did to me. >> the criminals calculating. >> you definitely want to do this? >> i'm positive, like 5,000% sure. >> and cold blooded....
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were separated i was interrogated i was interrogated all day i was called a terrorist i was told i had a russian passport i was a russian spy they were telling me all day that i had entered ukraine through ukraine and entered it through russia it's all completely completely falls through accusing me of working for terrorists all of these accusations and interrogations and then they took my computer they took my things and i've just go are just recently been released and i was on the train to warsaw coming from the polish border and i just recently discovered that the now all of my accounts are going to happen so i want to go to recount my e-mail account my you tube account which is obviously money in livelihood someone has deleted two thousand videos from every single account i have facebook contact the time that ukrainian forces have had my computer it was held by the s.p. you as well they've taken that they've stripped all the passwords are now basically been cyberattacks and i'm just fighting now to try and get my life back i mean being kicked out of the country of ukraine my car wa
were separated i was interrogated i was interrogated all day i was called a terrorist i was told i had a russian passport i was a russian spy they were telling me all day that i had entered ukraine through ukraine and entered it through russia it's all completely completely falls through accusing me of working for terrorists all of these accusations and interrogations and then they took my computer they took my things and i've just go are just recently been released and i was on the train to...
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Jul 27, 2014
07/14
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i was not going to fall. >> i could hardly see heather at that moment. i was terrified. s please, please make it, heather. >> at the bottom of the mountain with his camera trained on heather, ben sparling looks on in horror. >> when she dropped in and the avalanche triggered, it went from riding as high as you can be to instant fear. >> go, go, go, go, go! >> if heather falls, disaster is all but guaranteed. >> straight, straight! >> but heather has set her mind on making it down the mountain. >> i didn't have time to worry. i just knew that the mountain was coming down. you just went into survival mode almost. >> incredibly heather's able to build up enough speed and get down the hill, leaving the snow mass behind her. >> i outran this avalanche. and i just remember my friends had their hands in the air and they were hooting and hollering. i just was like -- i was overwhelmed. >> i was able to see heather come out of the bottom of the slope. and when i saw she was ahead of the avalanche, i knew she was safe. >> nice job, nice job. >> i was really happy to be walking away
i was not going to fall. >> i could hardly see heather at that moment. i was terrified. s please, please make it, heather. >> at the bottom of the mountain with his camera trained on heather, ben sparling looks on in horror. >> when she dropped in and the avalanche triggered, it went from riding as high as you can be to instant fear. >> go, go, go, go, go! >> if heather falls, disaster is all but guaranteed. >> straight, straight! >> but heather has set...
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Jul 4, 2014
07/14
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WCAU
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didn't do it when i was young. not going to start now." then, bill clinton said, "i wish i had a nickel for every time i heard that." [ laughter ] some international news. today, the president of ukraine issued a cease-fire after having a phone call with vladimir putin. even more embarrassing for the president of ukraine -- when he hung up, he accidentally said, "okay, love you, bye." [ laughter ] "i think i just said 'i love you' to vladimir putin." meanwhile, on the other end, vladimir putin was like, "i just have heard something i've never heard." [ laughter ] someone has touched vladimir. [ laughter ] [ with russian accent ] vladimir, why are you crying? i have been told something i've never been heard before. i also am crying because i don't think this is a very good russian accent. [ laughter ] [ cheers and applause ] i find a good way to make vladimir putin less scary in my brain is to make him sound like the count. [ laughter ] more international news. over the weekend, afghanistan held its presidential elec
didn't do it when i was young. not going to start now." then, bill clinton said, "i wish i had a nickel for every time i heard that." [ laughter ] some international news. today, the president of ukraine issued a cease-fire after having a phone call with vladimir putin. even more embarrassing for the president of ukraine -- when he hung up, he accidentally said, "okay, love you, bye." [ laughter ] "i think i just said 'i love you' to vladimir putin."...
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Jul 3, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN3
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i was isolated ov ed on the hil. you don't know what's going on in the rest of the country, but i remember aiken kept worrying, was -- it wasn't was the bill pass and would america be great? it was, was the amendment going to get out of subcommittee, and the amendment was exempt all bbs in vermont from the public accommodations, and that amendment would sweep all the way through the small hotels and bbs in new england, and that was -- i don't know whether that got through or not. >> i think under 50. >> under 50, yes. >> one other thing about covering is that -- i know andy will bring it up unless i do. back then cbs paid its reporters in addition to their base salary, $25 every time they were on the radio, and $50 every time they were on television. so here i am five times on television, ten times on the radio, and my weekly salary went up from about $400 a week to a little more than $2,000, and when i realized this, my wife and i were then -- started a little remodelling well before the filibuster started, and in th
i was isolated ov ed on the hil. you don't know what's going on in the rest of the country, but i remember aiken kept worrying, was -- it wasn't was the bill pass and would america be great? it was, was the amendment going to get out of subcommittee, and the amendment was exempt all bbs in vermont from the public accommodations, and that amendment would sweep all the way through the small hotels and bbs in new england, and that was -- i don't know whether that got through or not. >> i...
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which i was so proud of honestly. but no it was it was banned and so i was in new zealand for a week straight and so by the time i shoot up and i was a cook islander so i was very comfortable and lily and nina showed up in the surrounding yes when i was a band. it was a little risque for passengers of air new zealand i mean you're seeing some super models and i found it to be very catchy and fun and adorable but clearly i'm biased and they found it to be a little pay you to be called the no no how you know you i would pay them to be on the cover of what does it did for the career i mean it brings you to a level that you can imagine i'm sure you've spoken to heidi clue more tyra banks and you know just been very sadly i love brooklyn but you talk to them the world brooklyn you love that right from their brooklyn. i know she has which is so funny because brooklyn is so. not brooklyn you're not kidding. but i mean you have that notoriety for the rest of your life people still say heidi klum sports illustrated swimsuit cov
which i was so proud of honestly. but no it was it was banned and so i was in new zealand for a week straight and so by the time i shoot up and i was a cook islander so i was very comfortable and lily and nina showed up in the surrounding yes when i was a band. it was a little risque for passengers of air new zealand i mean you're seeing some super models and i found it to be very catchy and fun and adorable but clearly i'm biased and they found it to be a little pay you to be called the no no...
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Jul 15, 2014
07/14
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MSNBCW
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i was happy. it was just a great feeling. it seemed like at the time one of the happiest moments in my life. i had got this guy stopped. and i survived it. >> as davis' shooting spree comes to an end, one of his victims, michael carroll, is struggling to survive. >> my son had just turned 5 two days ago. like he could not have a dad all of a sudden. like that was a really powerful thing for me. >> to everyone's surprise, carroll pulls through, as do the five others who survived the shooting in ennis but there's a long road to recovery for carroll. >> getting shot was easy. the really hard part was recovery. >> before the shooting, carroll weighs 165 pounds. after his recovery, he's down to 112 and his rage is overwhelming. >> the more i sat there and hated him, even though he was in a small jail cell and i was out in the open, it was still giving him the power over me. >> on the day the 46-year-old davis is sentenced to life in prison without parole, carroll confronts him in the courtroom. >> i made sure to tell him that if he
i was happy. it was just a great feeling. it seemed like at the time one of the happiest moments in my life. i had got this guy stopped. and i survived it. >> as davis' shooting spree comes to an end, one of his victims, michael carroll, is struggling to survive. >> my son had just turned 5 two days ago. like he could not have a dad all of a sudden. like that was a really powerful thing for me. >> to everyone's surprise, carroll pulls through, as do the five others who...
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Jul 27, 2014
07/14
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i hope i didn't write fiction when i was a judge. i hope it was a little better than fiction. maybe nonfiction then. more questions please? >> what writers influenced you or what you like to read? if i could attempt to write something that good i would be happy. i went to sci-fi thing last weekend and he said his favorite book of all times was lonesome dove and i never would have expected that. growing up i think like a lot of us growing up "to kill a mockingbird" was a major influence on my life and it still is. robert penn warren's book about louisiana politics is one of the great political novels of all time. but now there is a great mystery writer from canada. she is wonderful. i recommend her to anybody. she is just fantastic. my wife introduced me to louise penny and got me to start to read her books and she writes beautifully. i have read every john grisham that has ever been written. even his sports books, few of those. i read a lot. i think every writer, every good writer needs to read more than he writes because you learn from everybody good or bad. i usually when i g
i hope i didn't write fiction when i was a judge. i hope it was a little better than fiction. maybe nonfiction then. more questions please? >> what writers influenced you or what you like to read? if i could attempt to write something that good i would be happy. i went to sci-fi thing last weekend and he said his favorite book of all times was lonesome dove and i never would have expected that. growing up i think like a lot of us growing up "to kill a mockingbird" was a major...
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Jul 20, 2014
07/14
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i couldn't. the smoke was way too much. >> stuck outside the window, he can't reach the child and with smoke enveloping them he knows the boy desperately needs oxygen. >> i told him, just breathe. breathe outside and make sure you keep breathing. >> things aren't looking good. but to his relief, firefighters soon arrive on the scene. >> i see a ladder setting in place and bringing up one of the firefighters. as soon as he came up i let him know. i said, there is a baby inside of the apartment. you could see him right at that window. try to get him out. >> but relief quickly turns to despair when he suddenly hears the unthinkable. >> all of a sudden i heard the firefighter saying, boy, where did you go? i said, where did he go? he was just right there. what happened? >> in the midst of the rescue he believes the child may have been frightened by the noise and now he's run straight back into the smoke-filled apartment. seconds could mean the difference between life and death so he heads back over to help the fir
i couldn't. the smoke was way too much. >> stuck outside the window, he can't reach the child and with smoke enveloping them he knows the boy desperately needs oxygen. >> i told him, just breathe. breathe outside and make sure you keep breathing. >> things aren't looking good. but to his relief, firefighters soon arrive on the scene. >> i see a ladder setting in place and bringing up one of the firefighters. as soon as he came up i let him know. i said, there is a baby...
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Jul 19, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
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so i was surprised. this was the first time i'd ever seen what dead people looked like if no 'em walling was done -- embalming was done, what they looked like without makeup and a nice suit of clothes. they were just dead, lying in a tangle of limbs under a blue u.n. tarp on a trailer that only a week before had carried peppers and corn to the market, only parts of their body were visible. be i couldn't see all of their faces. one had an armresting across her forehead, one had a bandage covering host of her head. -- most of her head. one of the dead was missing, an 18-month-old child. we'd seen some dogs on the way up the trail. the dauntless u.s. refugee field officer, who'd led us to the scene, said what all of us were hiking. the dogs probably got -- thinking. the dogs probably got the body. she was right, of course, but none of us wanted to be the one to sea -- to say it. we'd just seen the mother resting a couple miles away. she had a bullet in her upper arm. the father said the baby was killed insta
so i was surprised. this was the first time i'd ever seen what dead people looked like if no 'em walling was done -- embalming was done, what they looked like without makeup and a nice suit of clothes. they were just dead, lying in a tangle of limbs under a blue u.n. tarp on a trailer that only a week before had carried peppers and corn to the market, only parts of their body were visible. be i couldn't see all of their faces. one had an armresting across her forehead, one had a bandage...
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Jul 19, 2014
07/14
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was in shock. iut of danger. he struggles to get free of the wreckage before dripping fuel can ignite the helicopter. >> i'm going to die if i don't get out of this quickly, if it catches on fire. >> he quickly shuts off the fuel lines, then amazingly, he crawls out of the chopper, shaken but only slightly hurt. >> he actually wasn't even hurt that bad. a few cuts on the face and couple of teeth knocked out, i understand. >> the chopper has not fared as well. >> the helicopter was totaled, completely totaled. unusable. >> within an hour, a rueful dennis is not just walking and talking, he's giving the news conference he had always hoped to avoid. dennis, the safety evaluator, has to assess his own performance and realizes where he had gone wrong. he had forgotten one adjustment to his program and had fallen victim to the high density altitude at the airfield that day. >> as soon as i started the maneuver, i thought this helicopter is performing fairly normally so i ran in at the normal height, at the
was in shock. iut of danger. he struggles to get free of the wreckage before dripping fuel can ignite the helicopter. >> i'm going to die if i don't get out of this quickly, if it catches on fire. >> he quickly shuts off the fuel lines, then amazingly, he crawls out of the chopper, shaken but only slightly hurt. >> he actually wasn't even hurt that bad. a few cuts on the face and couple of teeth knocked out, i understand. >> the chopper has not fared as well. >>...
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first i was actually stand travelcard cast and ryan kwanten got cast and then i think i was the third one and then we were still looking for a bill so i came in to read opposite him for his you know studio audition is. all. so what happens while i mean they they do these chemistry it's to make sure that you guys are going to click. so then i always find it funny when people are shocked that like oh you guys are together it's like whoa whoa you know. we did it was it right away you know i mean you know we're both professionals and i was signing up for very long job and obviously you don't know like you know ruin things for everybody else if you're a little fling go sideways so you know we're relatively so as being sexual scenes with your husband was i mean. was it good was it was anything weird but i mean. really. i mean all the stuff that we shoot sort of all the sex stuff is always quite sort of melodramatic and there's fangs and there's blood and there's all kinds of stuff that just you know i mean i don't know about your bedroom but doesn't happen on mine. so there's a huff of how
first i was actually stand travelcard cast and ryan kwanten got cast and then i think i was the third one and then we were still looking for a bill so i came in to read opposite him for his you know studio audition is. all. so what happens while i mean they they do these chemistry it's to make sure that you guys are going to click. so then i always find it funny when people are shocked that like oh you guys are together it's like whoa whoa you know. we did it was it right away you know i mean...
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Jul 20, 2014
07/14
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CNNW
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i was suspicious about the investigation. >> what's the word? day from the ntsb. >> there was a lot of wreckage there -- >> explaining what was going on and these meetings, we would get different stories. they would change what they were saying. >> there they are. and i said i would like to have a copy of the flight data recorder tape. >> the interior boxes were smashed a bit. i said i would like to have these analyzed independently. i want to believe what you're saying but i'm having a great deal of difficulty doing that. >> the tapes were in good condition. >> after i received the copy of the flight data recorder, i sent that copy to my expert to analyze this for a living. and he said there are at least two seconds purposely deleted from that tape. >> as far as the ntsb purposely deleting anything, i don't believe we've ever done that. >> the one piece of damage -- >> i looked at the data. i looked at that little blip. there is a space in the information and we did look at it. we talked about their being an event, something, that the data was
i was suspicious about the investigation. >> what's the word? day from the ntsb. >> there was a lot of wreckage there -- >> explaining what was going on and these meetings, we would get different stories. they would change what they were saying. >> there they are. and i said i would like to have a copy of the flight data recorder tape. >> the interior boxes were smashed a bit. i said i would like to have these analyzed independently. i want to believe what you're...
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felt that way i got it i got a lot for that but the thing was i felt the interviewer was steering me to talk obama and i wasn't ready to do that just yet. he had only been in office for four months and i don't know what it is to be a president i don't know how long change takes to happen but so i was like i'm waiting it out i'm not here to like. bash anyone who becomes president i was trying to see if maybe some could happen. but. no i don't think i'm very pleased with the direction things have been taken. and i still don't know all of what it is to be president because i did feel like he had it in him should change things for the better and like i said the downward trend is just continuing that happens you can hear all day until you're blue in the face about don't buy from this company and you see that they own about a million companies and it's like what the hell it was doing and getting sucked into this election cycle every four years and nothing changes and i think it's just mobilization grass roots and hoping we can try to create some alternative here let's talk about your new a
felt that way i got it i got a lot for that but the thing was i felt the interviewer was steering me to talk obama and i wasn't ready to do that just yet. he had only been in office for four months and i don't know what it is to be a president i don't know how long change takes to happen but so i was like i'm waiting it out i'm not here to like. bash anyone who becomes president i was trying to see if maybe some could happen. but. no i don't think i'm very pleased with the direction things have...
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Jul 14, 2014
07/14
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KQED
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i was young and impressionable as a kid but it was always pele for me. today, i think that you have got to look at messi and ronaldo. they are unbelievable. the best today. they are fantastic - absolutely. >> charlie: the best have what in common? >> the best have the courage and i say this all the time. the courage to take the ball all the time, the courage to make sure that they are not going to be intimidated by their opponents, and the courage to express themselves at all times and i think that all the great players have got that. >> charlie: are they born with it? >> possibly, yes. you can develop them through coaching, but i don't think that you can ever develop the courage. >> charlie: it's like the best basketball players want the ball in the last 15 seconds. >> when we assessed teams, we looked at who was their player who wanted the ball all the time, who is the one who wants to take the free-kicks all the time, who wants to dominate, and he's the one that you concentrate upon. >> charlie: because that's the winner. >> absolutely. >> charlie: thi
i was young and impressionable as a kid but it was always pele for me. today, i think that you have got to look at messi and ronaldo. they are unbelievable. the best today. they are fantastic - absolutely. >> charlie: the best have what in common? >> the best have the courage and i say this all the time. the courage to take the ball all the time, the courage to make sure that they are not going to be intimidated by their opponents, and the courage to express themselves at all times...
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grove in texas i think. it was definitely hard being gay i knew probably when i was about five that i. had the feelings and knew that i was interested in guys but i didn't know what exactly it was and as a went through high school and stuff i started to realize more that i just wasn't the same as anyone else and so i kind of was in the closet all during my high school years and through the college years just because i didn't know what to expect i didn't want of the stigma of there's gay john and i feel like in the south that's kind of what happens with the g.l.b. teach immunity is they get that label on and in massachusetts when i came up here and started telling my friends and stuff that i was gay they said ok what's your point like you're still john to us so i think that being in massachusetts you're able to be a little bit more free with who you are you're able to walk down the streets with the person that you love and basically being able to hold their hands where even in the big cities in texas i feel like you
grove in texas i think. it was definitely hard being gay i knew probably when i was about five that i. had the feelings and knew that i was interested in guys but i didn't know what exactly it was and as a went through high school and stuff i started to realize more that i just wasn't the same as anyone else and so i kind of was in the closet all during my high school years and through the college years just because i didn't know what to expect i didn't want of the stigma of there's gay john...
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i. was pretty good either. and the people who are gathered that adopted a resolution condemning this writes i think. the outcome of the joker was a big success because it allowed people to come together to listen to stories and come to a common resolution. then we went to get the terai and tariq aziz traveled there with us. travel towards the rally and tariq sat next to me he seemed relaxed he was walking with his friends terry and everybody else got out and they went to the rally. i. i i have to danny's came to support a giant rally on sunday the protest against the united states going to back in office not. i i i i i i. i. i. i i i to back tariq aziz and you know the attendees return to their homes the return money your future years and years you feel you were. you somebody was your husband all right it. should be a mission that i look at a thing a look at they say a thing about the body which might i thought with that. that got to go to those who are in the into the going or didn't want to know that i'm so go
i. was pretty good either. and the people who are gathered that adopted a resolution condemning this writes i think. the outcome of the joker was a big success because it allowed people to come together to listen to stories and come to a common resolution. then we went to get the terai and tariq aziz traveled there with us. travel towards the rally and tariq sat next to me he seemed relaxed he was walking with his friends terry and everybody else got out and they went to the rally. i. i i have...
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out but i was wondering what was going to happen and i felt like i was put on i was red listed as red flags and it's on my flyer goes elsewhere and the tape and they go through all my stuff for years still to this day you said in back in two thousand and ten on our t.v. actually that you were come to what the direction obama was taking the country i wanted to see if you still felt that way i got it i got a lot for that but the thing was i felt the interviewer was steering me to talk obama and i wasn't ready to do that just yet. he had only been in office for four months and i don't know what it is to be a president i don't know how long change takes to happen but so i was like i'm waiting it out i'm not here to like. bash anyone who becomes president i was trying to see if maybe some could happen. but. no i don't think i'm very pleased with the direction things have been taken. and i still don't know all of what it is to be president because i did feel like he had it in him should change things for the better and like i said the downward trend is just continuing that happened you can
out but i was wondering what was going to happen and i felt like i was put on i was red listed as red flags and it's on my flyer goes elsewhere and the tape and they go through all my stuff for years still to this day you said in back in two thousand and ten on our t.v. actually that you were come to what the direction obama was taking the country i wanted to see if you still felt that way i got it i got a lot for that but the thing was i felt the interviewer was steering me to talk obama and i...
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Jul 19, 2014
07/14
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and i was trying to get up. across the counter and helped me get up. but like i say, i didn't realize what happened until i did get up. >> after he was pushed up against the wall, kenny just politely reaches down, picks his hat up, puts it back on his head and he starts climbing out. but he's looking for his cigarettes. he wants to know where his cigarettes is at. >> i never did find my cigarettes. >> miraculously, his injuries are just minor. >> well, the doctor, he checked me three times. he couldn't believe that i didn't have a broken bone. he said it's just amazing. but they did x-rays and a c.a.t. scan and everything, but they never found any broken bones. just cuts and bruises. >> i was really shocked he wasn't hurt at all. the good lord was looking after everybody that day. >> the driver was also very fortunate. >> the lady that come through the building wasn't hurt. it's amazing neither one of them was hurt. she hit three vehicles and wasn't hurt and come through a brick building and she wasn't hurt eith
and i was trying to get up. across the counter and helped me get up. but like i say, i didn't realize what happened until i did get up. >> after he was pushed up against the wall, kenny just politely reaches down, picks his hat up, puts it back on his head and he starts climbing out. but he's looking for his cigarettes. he wants to know where his cigarettes is at. >> i never did find my cigarettes. >> miraculously, his injuries are just minor. >> well, the doctor, he...
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i was a cancer surgeon i was a general question just style surgeon but really. i wanted to take on the challenge of the bankers which is what is your specialty called i should. i think that's my problem i think there's no box and i don't look at life in in these little boxes these siloed boxes in these labels at the end of the day i consider myself a scientist looking at the wonders of biology of matters of your body and trying to figure out how we can actually improve health is uncovered just so i've interviewed almost every type of specialist in ontology must be the hardest because you dealing with so many people who you know are dying oh what is that very hard you know in especially in children so you know one of my earliest decision was i was going to become a pediatrician and i decided i just couldn't do it because it's very difficult especially with a young child and the family member to be able to tell them that your child is going to die so they go there are cured we are close and ever in the history of cancer to understanding what's causing it and how we
i was a cancer surgeon i was a general question just style surgeon but really. i wanted to take on the challenge of the bankers which is what is your specialty called i should. i think that's my problem i think there's no box and i don't look at life in in these little boxes these siloed boxes in these labels at the end of the day i consider myself a scientist looking at the wonders of biology of matters of your body and trying to figure out how we can actually improve health is uncovered just...
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Jul 14, 2014
07/14
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MSNBCW
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when i was beating the [ bleep ] out of him. i was talking to him. mother [ bleep ]. i was doing the beating. jimmy was doing the talking. anything i do, jimmy does, too, you know what i'm saying? that's what people fail to realize. i don't believe i'm taking medication for myself. i believe i'm taking it for jimmy. jimmy is a [ bleep ] right now. you know? >> corey's brother william has also had a setback. while working his job detail, he was caught entering another inmate's cell. >> yes, sir, there is. >> he has now lost his chance to an early release to a halfway house. >> when he entered the other inmates cell, it was 3:00 in the morning. in the particular housing unit that inmate allen was in, those doors are not secured. they are not locked due to the nature of what kind of housing unit that is. they are not supposed to be going into another inmate's cell at that point. at the time when he was in that particular housing unit, he was on a detail that detail was the night detail, that's why he was awake at 3:00 in the morning. however, he chose to
when i was beating the [ bleep ] out of him. i was talking to him. mother [ bleep ]. i was doing the beating. jimmy was doing the talking. anything i do, jimmy does, too, you know what i'm saying? that's what people fail to realize. i don't believe i'm taking medication for myself. i believe i'm taking it for jimmy. jimmy is a [ bleep ] right now. you know? >> corey's brother william has also had a setback. while working his job detail, he was caught entering another inmate's cell....
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Jul 28, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
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and i was educated enough to know that what i was going to find was not necessarily going to be pretty. but that is all i had to go on. it was just that one statement from my grandfather. and some old newspaper clippings of obituaries. so, what i didn't know were the details. didn't know to the extent they were involved. and in lynchings, in the klan, all the things would later discover. so, it was kind of expected. i really kind of expected it. i didn't expect to find the oral history that my great-grandfather gave in 1936 as part of their works progress administration. where he bragged about his first lynching, where he bragged about how the whites in 1872 prevented the blacks from voting and helped usher the end of reconstruction and the beginning of jim crow. that kind of bald-faced pride in ethnic violence, that was really surprising. i also didn't understand the power of the klu klux klan in texas politics in the 1920s, or that my great-grandfather was involved in that political movement. so, i wasn't really surprised to find out that they were involved in these things, but the d
and i was educated enough to know that what i was going to find was not necessarily going to be pretty. but that is all i had to go on. it was just that one statement from my grandfather. and some old newspaper clippings of obituaries. so, what i didn't know were the details. didn't know to the extent they were involved. and in lynchings, in the klan, all the things would later discover. so, it was kind of expected. i really kind of expected it. i didn't expect to find the oral history that my...
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172
Jul 29, 2014
07/14
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WHYY
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i peed in the bed until i was 14. it's one of the things because you don't understand what is happening. you can't control your situation. there is a lock of control creates all kind of other problems. so but once i got to be an adult, and not only an adult, a big adult, a strong adult, and he did it one more time, i called my brother. i said oh, it's on. now i'm going to get all this that's been in me for years and we're going to do it. let me tell you something, i felt nothing afterwards. there was not one bit of redemption. there was not one bit of that's what he gets. i felt empty. i was in tears. because you ain't supposed to do that. >> he is begging for mercy. >> he's begging for mercy. >> you're dad is in the corner begging you to stop. >> and it made no sense. and i realized einstein said you can never solve a problem at the level of thinking in which it was created. so his violence cannot be met with that same kind of violence. it just what happens is it goes back and forth. you got him back. i got you back.
i peed in the bed until i was 14. it's one of the things because you don't understand what is happening. you can't control your situation. there is a lock of control creates all kind of other problems. so but once i got to be an adult, and not only an adult, a big adult, a strong adult, and he did it one more time, i called my brother. i said oh, it's on. now i'm going to get all this that's been in me for years and we're going to do it. let me tell you something, i felt nothing afterwards....
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Jul 21, 2014
07/14
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MSNBCW
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>> i was hurt and sad that my dad was in prison, but then i was angry because i felt alone. >> she thoughtbout how her dad was in prison and the rough life she had. i would ask her about it and she would come out more and more, and she finally came out and told me the whole thing and i was hoping that i could help her through it. >> and this is me with my uncle tommy when i was very little. makes me miss him. he was my favorite uncle. i always wish that i could have a normal life. >> during the 13 years wrinkles was on death row, lindsay had very little contact with him. >> some of the letters that he would write were not nice. this is a letter that my dad had wrote me. "lindsay, for the life of me, i can't fathom why you are now so damn hateful and disrespectful to me. did i, a, beat you, b, molest you, or c, pimp you out? if not, how was i so mean to you? think about it. eric." >> i kind of felt bad for lindsay when i read it, because that was someone that she loves, that was her dad, and i know she, even though she distanced herself from him, she still loved him because that was her dad
>> i was hurt and sad that my dad was in prison, but then i was angry because i felt alone. >> she thoughtbout how her dad was in prison and the rough life she had. i would ask her about it and she would come out more and more, and she finally came out and told me the whole thing and i was hoping that i could help her through it. >> and this is me with my uncle tommy when i was very little. makes me miss him. he was my favorite uncle. i always wish that i could have a normal...
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Jul 26, 2014
07/14
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KQED
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what i really cared about was people. i cared about the viewer, and they were the ready-made and people, their flaws, their perfections, that they are perfect. and i was freed. it was a tremendous experience, i made michael jackson and bubbles. upon i made all of these works that tried to communicate very clearly to people that their own cultural history was perfect it's renaissance sculpture, the triangle, and i thought about it as the piata. it has an egyptian call the quality to it. a little bit like king tut. >> rose: here's one we saw, we talked about "made in heaven" with you and elena. >> after banality, i had a huge success with that show, and people would way it was equivalent tolicaten stein's shoi. so i really became an art star, but at the same time, culturally, not feeling participating in that culture. so the entertainment industry has been kind of looked at as being culturally significant. and i thought maybe i could put another star on my shoulder and the easiest way would be film. the whitney asked me if i
what i really cared about was people. i cared about the viewer, and they were the ready-made and people, their flaws, their perfections, that they are perfect. and i was freed. it was a tremendous experience, i made michael jackson and bubbles. upon i made all of these works that tried to communicate very clearly to people that their own cultural history was perfect it's renaissance sculpture, the triangle, and i thought about it as the piata. it has an egyptian call the quality to it. a little...
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Jul 4, 2014
07/14
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MSNBCW
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>> i was 9. i was at school. yeah. i got in a fight. i grabbed a chair and i threw it at the teacher. and he tried to grab me. and i grabbed his watch and i split his wrist open. so they locked me up. sent me to juvenile. >> when it comes to kids and punishment, the question needs to be answered. do kids no matter what the crime belong in adult prison? mike dempsey is in charge of all juvenile services for indiana department of correction. >> it's a complicated issue. and just because of the fact that they are still juveniles. so they're still young in mind and body and spirit and everything. and yet they have committed some pretty serious crimes against society. the natural reaction, particularly for a kid who is going into an environment like that, they learn survival skills. and it's not a positive learning environment either. >> you just got to basically rely on somebody in here that you can halfway trust, because you don't trust anybody in here, nobody. other than that, you're on your own. >> we're standing by whenever you're clear
>> i was 9. i was at school. yeah. i got in a fight. i grabbed a chair and i threw it at the teacher. and he tried to grab me. and i grabbed his watch and i split his wrist open. so they locked me up. sent me to juvenile. >> when it comes to kids and punishment, the question needs to be answered. do kids no matter what the crime belong in adult prison? mike dempsey is in charge of all juvenile services for indiana department of correction. >> it's a complicated issue. and just...