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166
Jun 30, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 166
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felt like i was-- i couldn't catch a break. it was another thing after another thing after another thing for me like to hear you can't play anymore and you have to let basketball go it was just like i could not believe it like no, no, no. if i can survive the congo-- and the thing going through my mind was like i walked close to 500 miles through the jungle, the congo and nothing like this happened it to me. i played basketball pre-much there in 110 degrees and nothing ever happened to me. i used to walk close to 15 miles so i just now? iven us, most beautiful's place in the world, so why now? it was very very hard for me and so i had to decide what am i going to do? like growing up in the congo i always like the naked that always dream big to do big things. was like i'm going to trust something big. people will be like wow. now basketball is over so what can i do? so, going to write my story and i want to inspire people and i'm going to learn-- i'm going to go back to theater. i pretty much like it thank you, that girl back in
felt like i was-- i couldn't catch a break. it was another thing after another thing after another thing for me like to hear you can't play anymore and you have to let basketball go it was just like i could not believe it like no, no, no. if i can survive the congo-- and the thing going through my mind was like i walked close to 500 miles through the jungle, the congo and nothing like this happened it to me. i played basketball pre-much there in 110 degrees and nothing ever happened to me. i...
62
62
Jun 1, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 62
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so that is how i got in. >> was there something in here, i guess it was jack, in a motorcycle gang at some point? >> he is from lancaster. when we met each other in vietnam, i found out afterwards that he had been through the same training group and everything that i was for ait and basic infantry training. i used to travel where he was from, two nights a week. trying to get an associates degree in architectural engineering, because that is pretty much what i did. used to go right through mountville. get over there and there's jack hurst from lancaster county. we would get talking, because he knows everywhere down there, like i do it -- like i did. finally found out he was divorced, had two children with his wife and rode with a motorcycle gang, which i think was a split off of a group in new jersey. i can't think what that is. >> that is interesting. tell me, where did you do your training? >> i did my basic training at fort benning, georgia. sent there the day i passed the physical, i was on a plane that day headed to georgia. >> how did you find training? >> it was pretty intense.
so that is how i got in. >> was there something in here, i guess it was jack, in a motorcycle gang at some point? >> he is from lancaster. when we met each other in vietnam, i found out afterwards that he had been through the same training group and everything that i was for ait and basic infantry training. i used to travel where he was from, two nights a week. trying to get an associates degree in architectural engineering, because that is pretty much what i did. used to go right...
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i can't really describe it and i said it was like. i just i was thanking. god our alison. you know and. i don't know if it's because of common sense to be innocent extremely violent environment that it actually i mean in some ways nominates and vomits i mean but it's different when someone right before your eyes gets shot shot in the head right i wasn't looking so i mean it was i got hurt i was looking out the car like this and i heard it. first i didn't know what happened. keep mom said rob a side door and this dude shooting into the core so i started because of a page and i didn't know what he was doing i didn't snap as i look we're going to do all i was like man. how likely is it because the two co-defendants who a lot of time they said that clinton was sitting here pulled his gun from his waistband and shot him twice in the head how how likely is that from that is it possible not just pulling you know they show me how to do it has this number here if you shot from right here yeah there's no way why would you hit me if i do this probably won't even hate you because you p
i can't really describe it and i said it was like. i just i was thanking. god our alison. you know and. i don't know if it's because of common sense to be innocent extremely violent environment that it actually i mean in some ways nominates and vomits i mean but it's different when someone right before your eyes gets shot shot in the head right i wasn't looking so i mean it was i got hurt i was looking out the car like this and i heard it. first i didn't know what happened. keep mom said rob a...
63
63
Jun 1, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 63
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i was -- i was afraid that the war would soon be over. if i didn't volunteer quickly, the war would just be over and i wouldn't get a chance to go fight. so, you know, as we know, it went on for 10 years. it shouldn't have been a worry. i enlisted at 17. my parents had to sign me in. i graduated from high school a little early. my parent his to sign me in and my dad was horrified and scared that i was going into the marine corps and he said you realize you could get your butt slot off. -- shot off. this is series stuff -- serious stuff. but i was convinced i was bulletproof. i went to basic training. there was a two-year enlistment. so we were warned we would be infantry soldiers or grunts. they told me that i was 17 years old and there was no way i could deploy to vietnam so i would be sent to the mediterranean. it probably saved my life. i spent six months of my enlistment dealing with guys that returned from combat in vietnam, the so-called west pac, western pacific returnees. you make assault landings and patrollings and ambushes. it w
i was -- i was afraid that the war would soon be over. if i didn't volunteer quickly, the war would just be over and i wouldn't get a chance to go fight. so, you know, as we know, it went on for 10 years. it shouldn't have been a worry. i enlisted at 17. my parents had to sign me in. i graduated from high school a little early. my parent his to sign me in and my dad was horrified and scared that i was going into the marine corps and he said you realize you could get your butt slot off. -- shot...
145
145
Jun 17, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 145
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and thought i was mexican and i was going to correct her, more than anything i thought she was lying. i rode my bike home and my grandfather worked the graveyard shift, home in the afternoon, garage cutting coupons, and that is what i found out what are you doing showing that 2 people, the green card? and this was in 1997, there was no internet. i couldn't look it up. i thought this was the power of media is so important. i convinced myself this was a mexican issue that was not about me at all and i found myself in a situation that i didn't know who to talk to, had no concept of what it was or why people like me have to be here illegally? >> that your life with that day? >> yes. it was part of growing up and thinking i thought my family, bake papers, why do they lie? that is when i found out the layers of the lies. my editor and i decided the structure of the book is three phases every undocumented person goes through, lying, passing and hiding, we lie and even if we don't know what the lie is, being brought here illegally is some part of a lie and then we learn how to pass and that m
and thought i was mexican and i was going to correct her, more than anything i thought she was lying. i rode my bike home and my grandfather worked the graveyard shift, home in the afternoon, garage cutting coupons, and that is what i found out what are you doing showing that 2 people, the green card? and this was in 1997, there was no internet. i couldn't look it up. i thought this was the power of media is so important. i convinced myself this was a mexican issue that was not about me at all...
148
148
Jun 23, 2018
06/18
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 148
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i was okay at what i did. i did research. my heart wasn't in it and i felt there was a world happening out there, outside the hospital walls but there was no way to get from here to there. and pure, shear blind certain diserendipitous luck. one of the professors at harvard i had written a paper on bipolar disease. out of the blue i got appointed by jimmy carter national institutes of health. the second i heard about it i went right to his office, i said jerry, i hear you are going to washington. he said yes. i said i also hear that if you go to washington without a right-hand man they are going to eat you alive. he said where did you hear that? i said i made it up but i really think you need somebody. he said okay. you got the job. i came to washington and jerry, my boss, and my professor was the only person i knew in d.c. for a radius of 200 miles. but i thought once i'm in washington, isn't that where they do politics? one thing will lead to another. i had been a reader of the new republic, a liberal magazine, very well-wri
i was okay at what i did. i did research. my heart wasn't in it and i felt there was a world happening out there, outside the hospital walls but there was no way to get from here to there. and pure, shear blind certain diserendipitous luck. one of the professors at harvard i had written a paper on bipolar disease. out of the blue i got appointed by jimmy carter national institutes of health. the second i heard about it i went right to his office, i said jerry, i hear you are going to...
43
43
Jun 2, 2018
06/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 43
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since i was young, i hated losing. that was the biggest thing for me. iously very close. he taught me everything i know when it came to sport and life itself. and, yeah, you know, you have to be tough, i think, especially in the sport game. you have to always strive to be the best version of yourself you can be and — and — for me, i have always hated losing. that's where it stemmed from, from a young age. clearly you were a football fan as a young boy. you could have been a professional footballer. who knows? but there was a moment when you decided football wasn't for you but swimming was. so how did that happen? i was very young. being from south africa, football, rugby, cricket, these were the mainstream sports. i think — my family came from a sporting background, a footballing background, i should say, and up until i was 13 or 14, just before high school, i was playing for the junior south african team. so... at the time i was going for provincial league or state or whatever you call it here. funnily enough — and this shows the greatest of my dad — he
since i was young, i hated losing. that was the biggest thing for me. iously very close. he taught me everything i know when it came to sport and life itself. and, yeah, you know, you have to be tough, i think, especially in the sport game. you have to always strive to be the best version of yourself you can be and — and — for me, i have always hated losing. that's where it stemmed from, from a young age. clearly you were a football fan as a young boy. you could have been a professional...
60
60
Jun 14, 2018
06/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 60
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good in front of the ball i think and i was and i i was. this time because when the low and it's up let's off we think this is it now that those are going to open there's a spot we're just might have to have a fifth of a rethink here. see see see if he was six. off you know the closest we've come with blown again in when i was in the dressing room look at the gym i was like one one two one. who was think that was crazy i've given up you know a creepy ass called the golden i was in i was in a book site i weigh in a box and sat down a bear out of the fluid. i thought of what i thought i want for my right cheek. when the goal went in equalizer this can be even worse people including myself thought it's going to be so cruel because since you're going to want gold away from winning the lakers you feel slighted i. didn't get. to see. you think. it. was. i. the ground we visit in the size of a town to shake it i mean everybody i'm still coming down every blow every man in that stadium were crying i did cry here at the age of. sixty. six. it's neve
good in front of the ball i think and i was and i i was. this time because when the low and it's up let's off we think this is it now that those are going to open there's a spot we're just might have to have a fifth of a rethink here. see see see if he was six. off you know the closest we've come with blown again in when i was in the dressing room look at the gym i was like one one two one. who was think that was crazy i've given up you know a creepy ass called the golden i was in i was in a...
77
77
Jun 23, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 77
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i went to mcgill until i was 20. i graduated in 1970 when i was 20. went to oxford and then i never returned to canada. i was always an american citizen because i was born here. i went to medical school in boston and then later i came down here. did you have a short time johns hopkins? -- brian: did you have a short time johns hopkins? charles: no. brian: somewhere i thought i read that. charles: no. brian: your whole medical experience was at harvard. charles: yes. and i was a student there and then i did a three-year residency in psychiatry at the massachusetts general hospital. in my last year i was one of the chief residents, published a few papers on bipolar disease and then came to washington in 1978. brian: so what year did you get out of medical school? charles: 1975. brian: if you're a psychiatrist, are you first a medical doctor? charles: yes. brian: when did you choose psychiatry for your early years? charles: i chose it when i went into medical school. i went into medical school coming out of a couple of years of political theory, and i tho
i went to mcgill until i was 20. i graduated in 1970 when i was 20. went to oxford and then i never returned to canada. i was always an american citizen because i was born here. i went to medical school in boston and then later i came down here. did you have a short time johns hopkins? -- brian: did you have a short time johns hopkins? charles: no. brian: somewhere i thought i read that. charles: no. brian: your whole medical experience was at harvard. charles: yes. and i was a student there...
31
31
Jun 17, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 31
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i was so scared. i felt it was about the republican debates and i did not feel confident at all and i felt like it was important to share that because so often we are called to do things that are out of our comfort zone and that is the reason we should do it sometimes. >> and we were all speaking out. >> the tv didn't add some pounds. >> i had a little connoisseur, highlights. >> you did amazing -- not nervous at all but you didn't look nervous and that was the introduction to the leveling up where months prior you were ready to give it up and all of a sudden when it felt it was over everything changed. you told me how much you were making, wow. >> that monetubey is n >> it was good. very good. i felt really fortunate the team believed in may because especially coming from the internet there is a huge stigma where we are working with friends and professionals who say you do that internet stuff and so i was in a room full of people who worked for stephen colbert, the daily show, larry will more, the off
i was so scared. i felt it was about the republican debates and i did not feel confident at all and i felt like it was important to share that because so often we are called to do things that are out of our comfort zone and that is the reason we should do it sometimes. >> and we were all speaking out. >> the tv didn't add some pounds. >> i had a little connoisseur, highlights. >> you did amazing -- not nervous at all but you didn't look nervous and that was the...
150
150
Jun 23, 2018
06/18
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 150
favorite 0
quote 0
i was okay at what i did. i did research.heart wasn't in it and i felt there was a world happening out there, outside the hospital walls but there was no way to get from here to there. and pure, shear blind certain diserendipitous luck. one of the professors at harvard i had written a paper on bipolar disease. out of the blue i got appointed by jimmy carter national institutes of health. the second i heard about it i went right to his office, i said jerry, i hear you are going to washington. he said yes. i said i also hear that if you go to washington without a right-hand man they are going to eat you alive. he said where did you hear that? i said i made it up but i really think you need somebody. he said okay. you got the job. i came to washington and jerry, my boss, and my professor was the only person i knew in d.c. for a radius of 200 miles. but i thought once i'm in washington, isn't that where they do politics? one thing will lead to another. i had been a reader of the new republic, a liberal magazine, very well-written
i was okay at what i did. i did research.heart wasn't in it and i felt there was a world happening out there, outside the hospital walls but there was no way to get from here to there. and pure, shear blind certain diserendipitous luck. one of the professors at harvard i had written a paper on bipolar disease. out of the blue i got appointed by jimmy carter national institutes of health. the second i heard about it i went right to his office, i said jerry, i hear you are going to washington. he...
84
84
Jun 11, 2018
06/18
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 84
favorite 0
quote 0
>> i was, yes. it sunk in more and more as the days passed. >> andrea's mom was worried, too, and wanted to protect her daughter. she did something unusual. she bought a phone recording device and used it the next time she talked to the comedian. >> why did you record it? >> because i was hoping to have his admission of what he had told me on the first call. >> i wanted to get back to you because -- >> but right away it seemed cosby wasn't willing to talk about what happened to andrea. >> i don't want to talk about anything except a mutual feeling for a friendship. >> and just as fast, gianna's plan started to unravel. cosby seemed to realize she was recording the call, so gianna tried to make an excuse for a sound he heard, blaming it on her pet. >> do you have a beeping going on on your phone? >> no. no, not at all. i have a parrot. >> i noticed a beep. >> no, no, i have a parrot, i mean, i don't have -- no. >> a parrot? >> cosby changed the subject and offered to financially help andrea if she wan
>> i was, yes. it sunk in more and more as the days passed. >> andrea's mom was worried, too, and wanted to protect her daughter. she did something unusual. she bought a phone recording device and used it the next time she talked to the comedian. >> why did you record it? >> because i was hoping to have his admission of what he had told me on the first call. >> i wanted to get back to you because -- >> but right away it seemed cosby wasn't willing to talk...
72
72
Jun 18, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 72
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i was alone there. i was the only diplomat. he went with me and we had to navigate through these roadblocks with armed students and so forth to deliver president johnson's respon so it was a pretty adventurous time. thankfully, we were able to get through the roadblocks without eing shot. >> do you recall approximately what the letters said? and what the president's response was? tuy-cam: i did not read them. >> was anybody lost in that attack on the consulate? james: no, except a couple of he students. as they were burning down the consulate, they didn't realize we had propane gas tanks. they blew up and blew up a couple of students along with hem. >> were they able to rebuild the consulate in the years that followed? james: no. it was decided to relocate it. hey moved to a much bigger city that was the i corps headquarters. that's where the marine assistance was located. that was a better place to have the consulate. it was a more important city by that time. it was re-established as a consulate general in late 1966. >> what d
i was alone there. i was the only diplomat. he went with me and we had to navigate through these roadblocks with armed students and so forth to deliver president johnson's respon so it was a pretty adventurous time. thankfully, we were able to get through the roadblocks without eing shot. >> do you recall approximately what the letters said? and what the president's response was? tuy-cam: i did not read them. >> was anybody lost in that attack on the consulate? james: no, except a...
279
279
Jun 23, 2018
06/18
by
KGO
tv
eye 279
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but i was an actor, and i was like oh, my god, dustin hoffman. i was into it. he's even better the second time. i was 6 or something. >> jimmy: you were an actor at 6 years old? >> yeah, i started when i was 3. >> jimmy: wow, when you were 3. i knew you were young but i didn't realize it was quite that young. how did you get started in acting when you were 3? >> my brother was an actor and he started because the kid across the street was an actor and that's kind of what you did in los angeles. in hollywood that's what you wanted to do. >> jimmy: what did you do, like tv shows and commercials? >> i did commercials and television and features. first feature i was 6. >> jimmy: what tv shows did you do? >> oh, my gosh. all of them. every bad '70s show. "nanny the professor" or "the partridge family." >> jimmy: wow. >> "bonanza." "gunsmoke." "adam 12." >> jimmy: were any of them shows you that watched and were excited to be a part of? >> oh, yeah. i was a full tv baby. >> jimmy: then as a kid when you were watching, because i just remember being a kid and really not
but i was an actor, and i was like oh, my god, dustin hoffman. i was into it. he's even better the second time. i was 6 or something. >> jimmy: you were an actor at 6 years old? >> yeah, i started when i was 3. >> jimmy: wow, when you were 3. i knew you were young but i didn't realize it was quite that young. how did you get started in acting when you were 3? >> my brother was an actor and he started because the kid across the street was an actor and that's kind of what...
86
86
Jun 9, 2018
06/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 86
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quote 0
yes, that is literally how i was. y started baking out of the blue. ijust found it really helpful. the whole thing of like, sieving the flour and rubbing in the butter, and i loved decorating them. my husband himself was finding things very difficult as well. and he used to photograph the cakes. i used to bake them and decorate them, and get great comfort out of them, and he'd photograph them in interesting locations. i remember baking a heart—shaped pink cheesecake, and he photographed it in a hedge. and it looked lovely! i will see if i can find the photographs. it was the one thing that we held on to, that kept us going. it was funny, i did it incessantly for 18 months, and i would come in to the kitchen and i would be gasping with the anxiety and the awful tight, hard stone in my chest. and then, as i started weighing stuff and getting things on the go, it would unwind. but after 18 months, the need to do it passed quite abruptly as well. now i can't even look at the sieve without getting ptsd, because it reminds m
yes, that is literally how i was. y started baking out of the blue. ijust found it really helpful. the whole thing of like, sieving the flour and rubbing in the butter, and i loved decorating them. my husband himself was finding things very difficult as well. and he used to photograph the cakes. i used to bake them and decorate them, and get great comfort out of them, and he'd photograph them in interesting locations. i remember baking a heart—shaped pink cheesecake, and he photographed it in...
50
50
Jun 17, 2018
06/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 50
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quote 0
i was. it's never been seen before now never ever be done again so when the last kick of the game you know i mean the last combat for me no one no down for the last kick of the game and win the league by goal difference against the enemy from a trust the road best moment in tripoli mr revelle shovel it out that was because that will never. you know be in the shadow view ninety four i did i mean yes for to be champion of the premier league i think it's things find the different food he does every down. i think he'll go down in history churchill desperately and you know if you turn around and say why was it through that period you did we have show much success i've got us a person a look at the i assure you it was populate from the middle of the field if i had to pick out one playa and i've been watching much the city for forty years who's made the difference to make much the city a big player on the world stage i know you could go for a go our own way you could go for sylvan or all the players
i was. it's never been seen before now never ever be done again so when the last kick of the game you know i mean the last combat for me no one no down for the last kick of the game and win the league by goal difference against the enemy from a trust the road best moment in tripoli mr revelle shovel it out that was because that will never. you know be in the shadow view ninety four i did i mean yes for to be champion of the premier league i think it's things find the different food he does...
39
39
Jun 10, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 39
favorite 0
quote 0
people as well. >> what was his injury? >> i don't know exactly what part of his body he was shot in. but he was perfectly lucid and talking and telling everybody to tell his family goodbye and everything else, and there wasn't a way that anybody could change his mind. he literally was not fatally wounded and died anyway. >> did you counterattack? >> hit and run, hit and run. they were gone. >> so there was no time. >> there was a situation, and this was a key point, i think, for us, in december -- let's see now. december 6, 1968, our squad leader, who is still with us, his name is dennis haines. dennis was out there on a listening post, which is a very small ambush. there were just two guys out there, and john miller was out there with him, the same guy that got to me when i was first wounded. and three viet cong snipers opened up on john and dennis. they were firing fully automatic, which means they put about 90 rounds at them in the space of about two seconds, one, two, three, like that. all but two of the bullets missed. joh
people as well. >> what was his injury? >> i don't know exactly what part of his body he was shot in. but he was perfectly lucid and talking and telling everybody to tell his family goodbye and everything else, and there wasn't a way that anybody could change his mind. he literally was not fatally wounded and died anyway. >> did you counterattack? >> hit and run, hit and run. they were gone. >> so there was no time. >> there was a situation, and this was a...
86
86
Jun 16, 2018
06/18
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 86
favorite 0
quote 0
i knew that ridgway was out, king was out, i knew that. hind me and very quick down the atlantic and slower in the southern ocean. he decided not to finish, changed course and headed to the pacific islands. than his boat was found abandoned. it later became known that he realised his boat couldn't have withstood the southern oceans and had faked his voyage. with the realisation that his deception would have been discovered he appears to have committed suicide. he's only left robin knox—johnston in the race. you were missing for 137 days, did you know you were missing? well i wasn't missing because i knew where i was. but the rest of the world i was missing. every time i saw a ship i tried calling up. i called up one off the equator when i was there and i thought boy, these will be the last humans i see. when i called them with the lamp, no answer. distress rockets, he just sailed straight past. how could you treat that appendicitis? well i didn't have the drugs you need to keep it under control so i went on a sloppy diet. didn't eat very mu
i knew that ridgway was out, king was out, i knew that. hind me and very quick down the atlantic and slower in the southern ocean. he decided not to finish, changed course and headed to the pacific islands. than his boat was found abandoned. it later became known that he realised his boat couldn't have withstood the southern oceans and had faked his voyage. with the realisation that his deception would have been discovered he appears to have committed suicide. he's only left robin...
23
23
Jun 2, 2018
06/18
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 23
favorite 0
quote 0
i think it was a mistake. anctions were beginning to bite iran, and i think if we were going to get into negotiations with iran, we should not have done it just on nuclear. we should have done it on nuclear and their support of terror in the region and gotten some promise on that. david: in your time as secretary of state, who was the one or two most impressive people you met outside of the united states is as foreign leaders? james: i dealt with outstanding leaders. i think of gorbachev, thatcher, a wonderful former soviet who changed entirely. david: you met gorbachev many times. james: many times. david: you were impressed with his intellect and abilities. james: yes. david: he seems to have done an incredible job of changing the course of the world. maybe unintentionally. james: much of it was unintentional. david: does president trump call you for your advice? james: no. david: for people who are watching who say, what are the words of advice for the congress or the administration from the him great former
i think it was a mistake. anctions were beginning to bite iran, and i think if we were going to get into negotiations with iran, we should not have done it just on nuclear. we should have done it on nuclear and their support of terror in the region and gotten some promise on that. david: in your time as secretary of state, who was the one or two most impressive people you met outside of the united states is as foreign leaders? james: i dealt with outstanding leaders. i think of gorbachev,...
72
72
Jun 24, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 72
favorite 0
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i was so scared. and i felt -- it was about the republican debates, and and i just did not feel confident at all. and i felt like it was so important to share that, because i think is so often we are called to do things that are out of our comfort zone, and that's the reason why we should to them sometimes. >> and you were amazing. >> thank you. >> and we were all freaking out. >> i was. >> and you were happy that the tv didn't add ten pounds, i remember. [laughter] >> you know, i had a little contour, a little highlight. [laughter] >> no, but you did amazing, you weren't nervous at all -- at least you didn't look nervous. and that, i think, was the introduction to the leveling up where just, you know, months prior you were ready to kind of, like, just give it all up. and then all of a sudden right when it felt like it was over, everything changed. especially when you told me how much you were maybing, i was -- making, i was like, okay, wow. [laughter] wow. >> yeah, yeah. that tv money is -- >> it's no
i was so scared. and i felt -- it was about the republican debates, and and i just did not feel confident at all. and i felt like it was so important to share that, because i think is so often we are called to do things that are out of our comfort zone, and that's the reason why we should to them sometimes. >> and you were amazing. >> thank you. >> and we were all freaking out. >> i was. >> and you were happy that the tv didn't add ten pounds, i remember....
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39
Jun 2, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN
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eye 39
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but there i was he saw me, i kept looking down. on his desk was a little -- about a 12 inch rectangle piece of board with a red. button in the middle of it i kept looking down. the president saw me looking at this red button. he said, it makes you nervous, doesn't it? [laughter] so, without me really commenting, he hits the red button. my eyes got really big, and i mean, wow. out of this closet, comes a marine dressed in full uniform with a diet coke in his hand, uniform with a diet coke in his hand, and he puts it for the president. [laughter] [applause] he said, you want to see it again? boom, and there was one for me! [laughter] so, i share about to say, you don't know what the story may be. i was there advocating for something that was very close and personal for me. advocating that we would move the embassy to jerusalem for israel. and i am here to tell you, in less than 48 hours, that will happen! [applause] cap i have -- that will happen. [applause] could i have ever picked out that i would be a very small part of the histori
but there i was he saw me, i kept looking down. on his desk was a little -- about a 12 inch rectangle piece of board with a red. button in the middle of it i kept looking down. the president saw me looking at this red button. he said, it makes you nervous, doesn't it? [laughter] so, without me really commenting, he hits the red button. my eyes got really big, and i mean, wow. out of this closet, comes a marine dressed in full uniform with a diet coke in his hand, uniform with a diet coke in his...
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285
Jun 15, 2018
06/18
by
WRC
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eye 285
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-- >> and i -- and it was just the craziest thing. nd applause ] >> jimmy: he did not know. >> didn't know. and i was li, honestly, i -- part of me in that moment was like, oh, crap. [ light laughter ] this is a dream. [ light laughter ] this whole thing's been a a dream. i'm going to wake up living in a tent. [ laughter ]le and this w0 years has been a dream. >> jimmy: yeah. >> a big fever dream. an awesome dream, i'd be so f i woke up and it was gone. >> jimmy: your dream is like, you got "parks and rec." >> i got "parks and rec," yeah. [ cheers and applause ] yeah, i moved to -- i moved to hollywood. >> jmy: moved to hollywood. >> the whole thing wouldn't -- it makes sense, it could still happen. you, i be like, the guy from "snl" was hosting the show that johnny carson used to host. >> jimmy: the guy that laughed at himself his entire life is now hosting "the tonight show." >> yeah, he's now hosting "the tonight show." [ laughter ] >>immy: i love that you created us. >> yeah. >> jimmy: i love that you created a back career for my c
-- >> and i -- and it was just the craziest thing. nd applause ] >> jimmy: he did not know. >> didn't know. and i was li, honestly, i -- part of me in that moment was like, oh, crap. [ light laughter ] this is a dream. [ light laughter ] this whole thing's been a a dream. i'm going to wake up living in a tent. [ laughter ]le and this w0 years has been a dream. >> jimmy: yeah. >> a big fever dream. an awesome dream, i'd be so f i woke up and it was gone. >>...
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646
Jun 15, 2018
06/18
by
KNTV
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eye 646
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and i went and made a speech, and it was fun and funny. ing all right chris, you have permission to say a minute worth of wisdom to the new generation. and honestly, like, right now, we were just talking about this back stage, there's like not -- you know, there's this mr. rogers documentary that just came out. >> jimmy: oh, it's fantastic. >> and there's like so -- i don't know. i think we need people to step up and share some positive -- positive light on this young, new, amazing generation, and it's me. so i'm your last hope. [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: you're the -- you're the new mr. rogers? >> i hope so. good luck. >> jimmy: you had such a great year, i know you have been all around the world, but you were in "avengers: infinity war." >> yeah. >> jimmy: which has crushed the box office. continues to crush. [ cheers and applause ] >> yeah. >> jimmy: and then all these -- whole lot of coincidences started happening. >> whoa. >> jimmy: here's you with the comic book. >> yeah, look at this. >> jimmy: can you explain this story, now?
and i went and made a speech, and it was fun and funny. ing all right chris, you have permission to say a minute worth of wisdom to the new generation. and honestly, like, right now, we were just talking about this back stage, there's like not -- you know, there's this mr. rogers documentary that just came out. >> jimmy: oh, it's fantastic. >> and there's like so -- i don't know. i think we need people to step up and share some positive -- positive light on this young, new, amazing...
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66
Jun 2, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN
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eye 66
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when i was seven years old, world war ii was just beginning in 1941. i went to georgia tech, where i joined the navy and i went on to the naval academy, which is where i began to teach bible lessons on sunday. as a matter of fact, i took the children of the families. i later served as a submarine officer, and this was during the korean war. i served in the navy for 11 years, and i came back to georgia for farming. one of the most memorable occasions i had was the volunteer of what they called a "pioneer missionary program." i would go somewhere every year assigned by the convention to bring other people to christ. one of my most memorable ones was to massachusetts and i had a leader there who is from new york. he was a cuban-american and his eloy cruz. i would read a few verses from the bible using a different vocabulary then i was using in the navy, and he would give the final salvation to followers of christ. he was more than successful in winning those souls to be christians. when we got through with our assignment in massachusetts and begin to leave
when i was seven years old, world war ii was just beginning in 1941. i went to georgia tech, where i joined the navy and i went on to the naval academy, which is where i began to teach bible lessons on sunday. as a matter of fact, i took the children of the families. i later served as a submarine officer, and this was during the korean war. i served in the navy for 11 years, and i came back to georgia for farming. one of the most memorable occasions i had was the volunteer of what they called a...
47
47
Jun 2, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 47
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some might say that i was a stalker. i would like to say, i was focused. [laughter] and every day, i would add, if anyone has seen him -- i would ask if anyone had seen him. i met him one day, and he told me, no. he would not come to my school. but i saw another player on the team. and he said, sure. i will come. so i brought him to frederick douglass high school. everyone was stunned, including my teacher. and i got an a in the class. [laughter] i share this story with you, to share a few lessons that i learned in my pursuit of what i wanted most at the age of 16. that was to have a georgia tech basketball player come to my school. first lesson i learned to be summed up by a quote from nelson mandela, "it always seems impossible until it is done." i know that many of you are experiencing that feeling today. it probably seemed impossible when he got to the campus of georgia tech. but here you are today. so congratulations to you. [applause] the other lesson i learned was one that my father taught me. what is the worst i can happen, someone can tell you know
some might say that i was a stalker. i would like to say, i was focused. [laughter] and every day, i would add, if anyone has seen him -- i would ask if anyone had seen him. i met him one day, and he told me, no. he would not come to my school. but i saw another player on the team. and he said, sure. i will come. so i brought him to frederick douglass high school. everyone was stunned, including my teacher. and i got an a in the class. [laughter] i share this story with you, to share a few...
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79
Jun 10, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 79
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i didn't know what human rights was. i remember when i saw on tv when i was in south korea, i could not believe what people talking about. i didn't know i had rights. in many country, i have rights. how different this world is. not only this i had to learn about what a movie theater is, a supermarket, everything. i could talk and walk, but didn't know anything. people were asking me what do you think? i never had the privilege to use my freedom. i didn't have the option of what i was going to wear, what am i going to study. people were asking me what are you doing in the future? what is your favorite color? i didn't know what i wanted to do. i was hoping somebody can tell me, what i should do for my life. and then -- but not only that, i just lost all faith in humanity. i just couldn't trust anybody again. what i believed in north korea, that was a lie, what you are telling is true? i just couldn't do it. [inaudible]. i thought this book is going to be about animals. i picked a very thin book. i just couldn't believe it b
i didn't know what human rights was. i remember when i saw on tv when i was in south korea, i could not believe what people talking about. i didn't know i had rights. in many country, i have rights. how different this world is. not only this i had to learn about what a movie theater is, a supermarket, everything. i could talk and walk, but didn't know anything. people were asking me what do you think? i never had the privilege to use my freedom. i didn't have the option of what i was going to...
130
130
Jun 15, 2018
06/18
by
WRC
tv
eye 130
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and i was trying to be margaret. eter said,whlook, has happened to your legs?" and it was a fast-developing, very strong, kind of, industrial fake tan. [ laughter ] >> seth: yeah. >> so, they were like luminous orange. >> seth: so -- you said -- >> and he said -- >> seth: you said you had, sort --of, a regular colored le >> yes. >> seth: into the -- >> very pale. >> seth: okay. >> yeah. >> seth: into, like, what? did it look like a soc >> yeah, sort of, fluorescent football sock. >> seth: okay. [ light laughter ] >> i'd say. yeah. >> seth: so, a very orrange choice member of the royal family. >> do you know what i mean? >> seth: yeah.>> mean, pete just said -- i mean, honestly, i think he looked at my ankles more than my face. for the whole hour. and he said it neajoy cost me th >> seth: wow. >> yeah. >> seth: well, i'm glad you persevered through that. >> i know i pushed through, or soh:thing. >> seah. the great actors always have to handle bad self-applied tanning at some point. [ light laughter ] >> at some point,
and i was trying to be margaret. eter said,whlook, has happened to your legs?" and it was a fast-developing, very strong, kind of, industrial fake tan. [ laughter ] >> seth: yeah. >> so, they were like luminous orange. >> seth: so -- you said -- >> and he said -- >> seth: you said you had, sort --of, a regular colored le >> yes. >> seth: into the -- >> very pale. >> seth: okay. >> yeah. >> seth: into, like, what? did it look...
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151
Jun 3, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN2
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eye 151
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when i was for my mom, dad and i went to the grocery store. y mom was in her were close but looked phone tired. as the groceries iran down the conveyor belt my dad stood at the other end. when the time came to pay only my mother reached for her wallet and i looked at dad expecting and waiting on him to contribute. he looked at me sheepishly almost shrugging is my mother paid for the groceries alone. why had my daddy not helped my mommy? in the months to come daddy bounced and strutting out the door once in the morning with a towel slung over his bare torso after my mother summoned the courage to tell him it's over. he left without incident refusing even to catch my eye as i sat on the sofa witnessing his exit. i asked my mother what motivated her to want to get out of the projects even though all of her friends to live there and she said simply i saw people going to sleep all around me and i wanted better for you. concentrated poverty meant that scene ambulances and hearing police sirens were a regular occurrence. one evening one of my mom's fr
when i was for my mom, dad and i went to the grocery store. y mom was in her were close but looked phone tired. as the groceries iran down the conveyor belt my dad stood at the other end. when the time came to pay only my mother reached for her wallet and i looked at dad expecting and waiting on him to contribute. he looked at me sheepishly almost shrugging is my mother paid for the groceries alone. why had my daddy not helped my mommy? in the months to come daddy bounced and strutting out the...
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so exciting that i was almost beside myself and i was taking place. i knew that by the forty teams all over the world were filming for me. i was incredibly nervous because i know well i had no idea what was going to have with. both teams had really truly outstanding differences and that's why the match drag on like a day this is the windlass you know there were one or two really close calls when someone almost scored a goal as it's almost but i know that. wasn't us today i'd. like to state my as i was there were some stretches where i almost lost faith in the project i thought my god this is going to be boring just do something someone please just shoot a goal and become world champion of a. was to have the whole little india and then they went into overtime and nothing happened i just ran back and forth and tried this and tried that and nothing worked so i went to penalties. the restaurants. had a minor injury and he probably should never have taken that shot but he did anyway let me fire the ball way over the box i thought close. to it was tr
so exciting that i was almost beside myself and i was taking place. i knew that by the forty teams all over the world were filming for me. i was incredibly nervous because i know well i had no idea what was going to have with. both teams had really truly outstanding differences and that's why the match drag on like a day this is the windlass you know there were one or two really close calls when someone almost scored a goal as it's almost but i know that. wasn't us today i'd. like to state my...
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64
Jun 15, 2018
06/18
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 64
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i. was sixteen i. the ground we visited the size it up down to shake it i mean everybody result is coming down every bloke every man in that stadium were crying i did cry here at the age. of six. i was. it's never been seen before now never ever be done again so when the last kick of the game you know me the last combat for me no one no down for the last kick of the game and win the league by goal difference against the enemy from a trust the road best moment in premier league mr revelle shovel it out that was because well never to. you know be in the shadow view ninety four hundred i mean yes full to beef champion of the premier league i think it's things find the different food he does every down. i think he'll go down in history for churchill definitely and you know if you turn around and say why was it through that period today we have show much success i've got to say the person because the i assure you it was populate from the middle of the field if i had to pick out one playa and i've been watch
i. was sixteen i. the ground we visited the size it up down to shake it i mean everybody result is coming down every bloke every man in that stadium were crying i did cry here at the age. of six. i was. it's never been seen before now never ever be done again so when the last kick of the game you know me the last combat for me no one no down for the last kick of the game and win the league by goal difference against the enemy from a trust the road best moment in premier league mr revelle shovel...
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69
Jun 8, 2018
06/18
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 69
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and ijust thought i was, i don't know, it was a small thing to people who read my newsletters. i was on. i had not intended that is all. one of the ways you dealt with it in the public realm was to write about it. and this book i think, itjust sums up and this book i think, itjust sums up an awful lot about your writing. because it is a picture of marian, "saved by kate is what it is called. —— cake. but it is a harrowing account of how depressed you were. and i am going to quote from it, you said" i will kill myself or i can break at doesn't cupcakes." that is literally how i was. —— bake a dozen. i suddenly started baking out of the blue. ijust dozen. i suddenly started baking out of the blue. i just found dozen. i suddenly started baking out of the blue. ijust found it really helpful. the whole thing of sifting the flower and bringing in the butter, and i loved decorating them, my husband himself was finding things very difficult as well. and he used to photograph the cakes. i used to bake them and decorate them, and get great comfort out of them, and get great comfort out o
and ijust thought i was, i don't know, it was a small thing to people who read my newsletters. i was on. i had not intended that is all. one of the ways you dealt with it in the public realm was to write about it. and this book i think, itjust sums up and this book i think, itjust sums up an awful lot about your writing. because it is a picture of marian, "saved by kate is what it is called. —— cake. but it is a harrowing account of how depressed you were. and i am going to quote from...
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69
Jun 15, 2018
06/18
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 69
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i was in yemen. maybe they used the very corrupt yemeni intelligence officers, paid a lot of money, i believe, and theyjust took me out of the waiting hall. and they passed me to the ethiopian intelligence officers that came about six hours later, and they kept me in the airport, in a little room. the intelligence officers, four of them, they handcuffed me behind my back and used heavy—duty silver tape to tape my eyes and mouth and took me to a waiting plane. i did not know where i was being taken. that must have been very painful to have thick tape right across your eyes and mouth. especially when they handcuffed you. your hands were at the back, that's very, very painful. anyway, that is the way they transported me to ethiopia. you ended up in an ethiopianjail? not a properjail. just a villa, and they had a room with no windows, just a small hole near the thing, and i was kept there for a year and a month until i was taken to the federal prison, the legal prison. as a co—leader of this opposition gr
i was in yemen. maybe they used the very corrupt yemeni intelligence officers, paid a lot of money, i believe, and theyjust took me out of the waiting hall. and they passed me to the ethiopian intelligence officers that came about six hours later, and they kept me in the airport, in a little room. the intelligence officers, four of them, they handcuffed me behind my back and used heavy—duty silver tape to tape my eyes and mouth and took me to a waiting plane. i did not know where i was being...
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129
Jun 9, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN2
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eye 129
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mean, it was an amazing experience. inever read a screenplay but got hired to write them. it would never happen now. they like the dialogue and it's a very different place now. what was to say, no? >> host: you came out here. >> guest: never left. >> host: you will stay here? >> guest: no. the time has come>> to leave. that doesn't mean i will stop writing movies, books, i mean, i'm a writer to my core and it's in my dna but you can do that anywhere on the planet. i think if you stay in one place for too long you get [inaudible] and my wife and i are moving to nashville but i'm not going to become a country singer. i promise. >> host: when is this happening? >> guest: shortly. >> host: are you moving to tennessee because politically you are more in tune with people from tennessee? >> guest: i think to some extent. to be honest, i am on c-span, why not? always do some assent. i've lived here at odds with many of my neighbors for quite a while. i'm doing it more reasons than that. you know, it's a strange comparison but you
mean, it was an amazing experience. inever read a screenplay but got hired to write them. it would never happen now. they like the dialogue and it's a very different place now. what was to say, no? >> host: you came out here. >> guest: never left. >> host: you will stay here? >> guest: no. the time has come>> to leave. that doesn't mean i will stop writing movies, books, i mean, i'm a writer to my core and it's in my dna but you can do that anywhere on the planet....
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i was like you need a thousand effect and i got it here so we can go with it just go to it now was it your money. it's the deal and i wonder if i was thinking the market is going up on this we're going to slow the people in holland who doesn't think because of course the. films are going to end on this one source or the now doing glory it's on ice or snow on the engines on. it. it will hit. it. three. to. reduce your mean time say closer to home has a. choice. hey i gave you one that. topic will cut us off and i say without taking my smoke i'm. told. was going on once in a monk i was starting to post. it turns me on partners part time and often turns out don't have prevention i or humans i say isn't happening tonight as a smart. one then you will have to volunteer for something there is always some sort of reward in the days or so. when i was in one of the events that are universal through an article i am not a whole lot of what i. have out there use your name. to sort of hold or put a smug. wasn't. and long the money now that i know. clearly condone wrong. to conclude. what you tell
i was like you need a thousand effect and i got it here so we can go with it just go to it now was it your money. it's the deal and i wonder if i was thinking the market is going up on this we're going to slow the people in holland who doesn't think because of course the. films are going to end on this one source or the now doing glory it's on ice or snow on the engines on. it. it will hit. it. three. to. reduce your mean time say closer to home has a. choice. hey i gave you one that. topic...
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tv
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that was what i was. previously yes and no they are being false form of where he was a member of the society. and he left. them. you know world of big partisan new things lot and conspiracy it's time to wake up to dig deeper to hit the stories that mainstream media refuses to tell more than ever we need to be smarter we need to stop slamming the door on the past and shouting past each other it's taught for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle for the truth the time is now for watching closely watching the hawks. what politicians do something to. put themselves on the lawn. to get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president. or somehow want to be brits. that's a right to be for us this is what the forecast three in the morning can't be good that i'm interested always in the waters about how the. question. we all hear the way the team is in five volgograd gang maybe a little. was the same oh. no not me i. believe. it was ok i. love. to be with bobby brown i can see with the guardian
that was what i was. previously yes and no they are being false form of where he was a member of the society. and he left. them. you know world of big partisan new things lot and conspiracy it's time to wake up to dig deeper to hit the stories that mainstream media refuses to tell more than ever we need to be smarter we need to stop slamming the door on the past and shouting past each other it's taught for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle for the truth the time is now for...
108
108
Jun 10, 2018
06/18
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 108
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i was hysterical because i knew who she was. s? >> 37 years. there they are. >> what did that feel like? >> it felt great. i had been hoping to find my children before i die because i'm getting old. and it was like a miracle. >> geri's story that shirley who took the girls had been her friend turned roommate turned babysitter. >> she said i'll babysit for you. i'll take care of her while you work. i said, well, that's great because i really thought i was blessed. >> first it was renee she looked after. then renee and pepper and then two years later little brother raymond leonard smith jr. wait. brother? it wasn't just the two girls. there was a younger brother the girls never knew they had. the father wasn't around very much. geri supported them all with what she could make as a waitress. and shirley made a change, a positive one, it seemed, at least financially. >> she got this job supposedly at the motel managing, which was further from where i worked. so i arranged with her to watch the kids while i worked. >> it was a godsend
i was hysterical because i knew who she was. s? >> 37 years. there they are. >> what did that feel like? >> it felt great. i had been hoping to find my children before i die because i'm getting old. and it was like a miracle. >> geri's story that shirley who took the girls had been her friend turned roommate turned babysitter. >> she said i'll babysit for you. i'll take care of her while you work. i said, well, that's great because i really thought i was blessed....
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166
Jun 3, 2018
06/18
by
KNTV
tv
eye 166
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when i was there, i saw people like gavin newsom and i heard the things he was saying. and i said this is why my pashlts left the state. my best friend is in texas. my clients in 22 states around the nation. i made it right there my job to fight for the people of california to fight back against california democrats and to truly take back california. which is what we're going to do in 2018. >> mr. newsom, the biggest sacrifice. >> i think this is a privilege, a gift. if i look back at my life, if i do nothing else, if could i look back honestly and reflect upon it and say i sacrificed for my four extraordinary kids, it was life worth living. every day i try the approximate the best father i can be, my wife is here today. to me that should be all of our goals. to take care of the next generation, to raise our kids to be healthy and strong. >> it was the best of times. it was the worst of types. one of the best decisions i ever made was to be involved in public life. first as a planning commissioner, then a city councilwoman, and then a member of the legislature, and final
when i was there, i saw people like gavin newsom and i heard the things he was saying. and i said this is why my pashlts left the state. my best friend is in texas. my clients in 22 states around the nation. i made it right there my job to fight for the people of california to fight back against california democrats and to truly take back california. which is what we're going to do in 2018. >> mr. newsom, the biggest sacrifice. >> i think this is a privilege, a gift. if i look back...
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but as i now know it was not in fact every eye. there is my grandfather who raised me and my father the man with the sad expression. i always think i can see that bloody night when he himself was murdered in his eyes. i was only one year old and was saved by a trick my father servant still an infant from a gypsy woman and handed it over to the rebellious boy i was in my place they probably. what the boy i was failed to do these men accomplished stone at constantine and told her what the sword of the county because you know family another artist subsequently overpainted their portraits rightly so posterity now no longer sees them feigning to wish me well. instead their gaze is averted only grow to the sultan claiming i had sealed a secret pact with the sultan's enemies in the eyes of the porter i was guilty of high treason. the sultan welcomed the opportunity to deal with me he had long mistrusted my policies now he had a pretext for high treason they could be only one punishment. the thing. long long after my death the people of my
but as i now know it was not in fact every eye. there is my grandfather who raised me and my father the man with the sad expression. i always think i can see that bloody night when he himself was murdered in his eyes. i was only one year old and was saved by a trick my father servant still an infant from a gypsy woman and handed it over to the rebellious boy i was in my place they probably. what the boy i was failed to do these men accomplished stone at constantine and told her what the sword...
89
89
Jun 19, 2018
06/18
by
WRC
tv
eye 89
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i mean it was fantastic. ry and catch. >> seth: it's amazing that you e pulled tony kuas an officiant for a wedding. >> i just asked him, and he said, "yes," which is --an i kind of knew him, but not well enough to say, will you marry us. a seth: yeah. i was like, well i'm going to try, and he said, "okay," and like we basically had like a breakfast together where he asked us how we met. i'm like, "this is just so weird. [ light laughter ] you're going to marry us." i'm ju our origin story." is [ light laughter ] and, but he wrote this ceremony that i was like,well, you're going to win a second pulitzer for this because it's amazing." [ light laughter ] >> seth: that's fantastic. yeah. beautiful. he still hasn't given me the transcript of the ceremony yet though. seth: oh, interesting. >> so, if he's watching, i'm sure he is. >> seth: i'm sure he is, yes. >> i need that. >> seth: okay, great. >> yeah, yeah. >> seth: thanks so much for being here. >> absolutely. >> seth: it's always such a pleasure to see feu.
i mean it was fantastic. ry and catch. >> seth: it's amazing that you e pulled tony kuas an officiant for a wedding. >> i just asked him, and he said, "yes," which is --an i kind of knew him, but not well enough to say, will you marry us. a seth: yeah. i was like, well i'm going to try, and he said, "okay," and like we basically had like a breakfast together where he asked us how we met. i'm like, "this is just so weird. [ light laughter ] you're going to...
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Jun 28, 2018
06/18
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knew i was doing. t impulsively, not of anger or ego, i was doing it because i thought it was the best of two bad choices. one was bad and the other was worse, so i chose bad. it is a big word, insubordination, particularly for a guy who has spent a lot of time saying that his commitment is entirely to institutional integrity, to the rule of law and to due process. to remind people what you did, injuly 2016, is ignore due process when you took it upon yourself to go out there and tell the united states and the world that you were closing the investigation into hillary clinton's misuse of e—mails and that there would be no charges brought. that was insubordination. yes, in the inspector general‘s view. i had an emotional reaction when they called me insubordinate, for the reasons you said, but i actually think it was fair and i did it on purpose. it is not about due process. you are saying you are bigger than the system, the institutions and the proper way to do things. no. i am a servant of the institut
knew i was doing. t impulsively, not of anger or ego, i was doing it because i thought it was the best of two bad choices. one was bad and the other was worse, so i chose bad. it is a big word, insubordination, particularly for a guy who has spent a lot of time saying that his commitment is entirely to institutional integrity, to the rule of law and to due process. to remind people what you did, injuly 2016, is ignore due process when you took it upon yourself to go out there and tell the...
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Jun 25, 2018
06/18
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i was okay at what i did. i did research.art wasn't in it and i felt there was a world happening out there, outside the hospital walls but there was no way to get from here to there. and pure, shear blind certain diserendipitous luck. one of the professors at harvard i had written a paper on bipolar disease. out of the blue i got appointed by jimmy carter national institutes of health. the second i heard about it i went right to his office, i said jerry, i hear you are going to washington. he said yes. i said i also hear that if you go to washington without a right-hand man they are going to eat you alive. he said where did you hear that? i said i made it up but i really think you need somebody. he said okay. you got the job. i came to washington and jerry, my boss, and my professor was the only person i knew in d.c. for a radius of 200 miles. but i thought once i'm in washington, isn't that where they do politics? one thing will lead to another. i had been a reader of the new republic, a liberal magazine, very well-written,
i was okay at what i did. i did research.art wasn't in it and i felt there was a world happening out there, outside the hospital walls but there was no way to get from here to there. and pure, shear blind certain diserendipitous luck. one of the professors at harvard i had written a paper on bipolar disease. out of the blue i got appointed by jimmy carter national institutes of health. the second i heard about it i went right to his office, i said jerry, i hear you are going to washington. he...
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i was. responsible . for the amount of months i said listen i got a year so it was great let me take the nice couple of months to talk to good people who are supposed to be a part of the. game and. all of sudden a few months later he came to my school and they give me and i still stay till that night so it was a huge share on their. responsibility privileged. to get just and i of course and i said it when i. think it's was so it was so easy to. be in the people i'm bored of speaking about that i know that president clinton is a likely to play in that place but i'm far more excited about the man out of dicaprio and i know that he's from what i heard donna north cape i mean he would be a great attraction to sitting on the sidelines but do you think there is actually a chance of him facing off against putin and john kerry and john kerry well i mean i live for him and i get where he was good. student time and of course i give you my jersey when i was in washington on and on all day and i said this is great can
i was. responsible . for the amount of months i said listen i got a year so it was great let me take the nice couple of months to talk to good people who are supposed to be a part of the. game and. all of sudden a few months later he came to my school and they give me and i still stay till that night so it was a huge share on their. responsibility privileged. to get just and i of course and i said it when i. think it's was so it was so easy to. be in the people i'm bored of speaking about that...
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i paid to launches when i was a boy and having the privilege to do. something that i never take for granted and genuinely as a publisher do it because they see the from the. building ships and the shows being launched and the whole tone gets behind it and to play that small part of people doing it it always feels with a joy and it's great thank you very much indeed for joining us here today thank you thank you thank you now back to alex jenny marshall lisieux ferguson many. kelly welcome to the alex salmond show thank you very much alec tell me a bit first about the history of this great ship applied welfare to since has been the fed distances since one thousand nine hundred three and you can actually go back to seven hundred ninety if you want to look for the first vessel is actually recorded to be launched in the stadium and how many if you done today to date we've done three hundred sixty down and i mean when i was last year there's been a almost been a few changes in terms of investment well with no invested in bibles capital command the national i
i paid to launches when i was a boy and having the privilege to do. something that i never take for granted and genuinely as a publisher do it because they see the from the. building ships and the shows being launched and the whole tone gets behind it and to play that small part of people doing it it always feels with a joy and it's great thank you very much indeed for joining us here today thank you thank you thank you now back to alex jenny marshall lisieux ferguson many. kelly welcome to the...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 23, 2018
06/18
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was very vague. she told me that she had not authorized it. i also met with her loss prevention, ryan williams, who was also there. he also basically confirmed that nobody authorized the towing of that vehicle. i went to mr. badillo's lot to do an investigation to see if i could find the vehicle. when i asked for the invoices for that particular month, it was not in there, but i did locate the vehicle with officer thomas and another officer. the vehicle was there. after i went through the invoices, i came back a second time with c.h.p., which also assists with missing vehicles, and we did locate the vehicle, but it had been moved from 170 -- i think assist ae 1707 yosemite to 1229 underwood. when i asked mr. badillo where the vehicle came from, he said he didn't know at the time, and he was trying to figure out why it was from enterprise. the hold on it was approximately 56 days, and i asked him why would you hold a vehicle that long, and he said he couldn't find the registered owner of the vehicle. the c.h.p. went into the glove box and found t
was very vague. she told me that she had not authorized it. i also met with her loss prevention, ryan williams, who was also there. he also basically confirmed that nobody authorized the towing of that vehicle. i went to mr. badillo's lot to do an investigation to see if i could find the vehicle. when i asked for the invoices for that particular month, it was not in there, but i did locate the vehicle with officer thomas and another officer. the vehicle was there. after i went through the...