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Jun 3, 2019
06/19
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CNNW
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and i was nervous, i was scared. d on, you know what i mean? people still challenged me. so i knew i had to be turtle. that was the name the gang gave me. i had to be turtle or i was going to be stabbed or possibly raped or anything. you know, so it was just that type of lifestyle that i was living for the first ten years. i came to san quentin in 2014. and i really exerted myself into learning how to read and write and stuff like that. ♪ right now, i'm a janitorial maintenance where working the hospital, learning how to do different things in the hospital. it's a good learning experience, not just the work but actual outside contact with people. i'm about to have this dialogue with a -- with the officer i tried to kill. i'm going to need all the support i can get because it's going to be some very emotional stuff that i'm going to be going through. might be traumatized by the whole experience. >> i know that you're anxious. also you're nervous. but we're down as far as we can go. the next step is death. >> yeah. >> s
and i was nervous, i was scared. d on, you know what i mean? people still challenged me. so i knew i had to be turtle. that was the name the gang gave me. i had to be turtle or i was going to be stabbed or possibly raped or anything. you know, so it was just that type of lifestyle that i was living for the first ten years. i came to san quentin in 2014. and i really exerted myself into learning how to read and write and stuff like that. ♪ right now, i'm a janitorial maintenance where working...
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Jun 13, 2019
06/19
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BBCNEWS
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eye 55
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i was in such a deep hole. i felt there was no way out. to your rescue was your son harrison but also then later your partner, or new partner, karen. tells the story of how that happened. again, sitting on the beach, looking up at that rendezvous hotel in scarborough, i thought, that's the place. and i reminded myself, what they say you talking about. you start talking about yourself. and i said, that's the place i'm going to finish it. and i knew exactly how i was going to finish my life. i had enough. you planned it? i planned it. i had enough of living like i was. lost hope, lost respect, laughingstock, friends, family. i thought, hope, lost respect, laughingstock, friends, family. ithought, no. i'm not going to put my family through any of this anymore. the easiest for them is to put them out of their misery. i would them is to put them out of their misery. iwould never them is to put them out of their misery. i would never have had the guts to go and bought a gun. you planned it despite knowing this would cause enormous hurt to your c
i was in such a deep hole. i felt there was no way out. to your rescue was your son harrison but also then later your partner, or new partner, karen. tells the story of how that happened. again, sitting on the beach, looking up at that rendezvous hotel in scarborough, i thought, that's the place. and i reminded myself, what they say you talking about. you start talking about yourself. and i said, that's the place i'm going to finish it. and i knew exactly how i was going to finish my life. i...
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47
Jun 2, 2019
06/19
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CSPAN
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eye 47
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i was sworn into the u.s. house of representatives as a member of the most diverse congress ever with more diverse women serving than ever before. and i am not kidding about the diverse part. this18, the new women that country elected included the two youngest women to ever serve, first muslim woman, the first native american woman, a pediatrician, a helicopter pilot, a former professional mixed martial arts fighter was also the first lgbt member of congress from kansas, a navy veteran who started a business where you paint your own ceramic mermaids, and me. [cheering and applause] congresswoman underwood: we have each other's backs and we are setting the agenda and we are having fun while doing it. the trolls and the critics are out there, and i'm going to be real with you -- they will be waiting for you when you leave this amazing graduation bubble we are all in today. young enoughre growing up already experiencing this your whole life and away way i never had to. i do not have to spend my middle school years
i was sworn into the u.s. house of representatives as a member of the most diverse congress ever with more diverse women serving than ever before. and i am not kidding about the diverse part. this18, the new women that country elected included the two youngest women to ever serve, first muslim woman, the first native american woman, a pediatrician, a helicopter pilot, a former professional mixed martial arts fighter was also the first lgbt member of congress from kansas, a navy veteran who...
893
893
Jun 10, 2019
06/19
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CNNW
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eye 893
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i was 15 years old. i was on my own. and i discovered the grateful dead and it was, you know, a profound experience for a young kid. ♪ so i went on the road and saw the dead coast to coast and had some pretty amazing experiences. i had a pretty happy, carefree, existence as a hippy. i didn't have support financially from my parents at that time. so i learned to sell marijuana. i thought of it not really as dealing drugs but as a service. it seemed really laid back. i didn't think of having to carry a gun, but eventually i started to because there was just so much money involved. >> and you're, like, how old? >> 19, 18, yeah. >> so, just take me back. describe what happened the night of the incident. >> it was december 20th of 1994. i remember patrick. a really good friend of mine. came by. i remember he tuned my mandolin for me. i had a mandolin. i could play it poorly. he was a really good musician. he tuned it for me. we got a six pack of sammy smiths. maybe smoked a joint. went down and had taco bell. and when we came
i was 15 years old. i was on my own. and i discovered the grateful dead and it was, you know, a profound experience for a young kid. ♪ so i went on the road and saw the dead coast to coast and had some pretty amazing experiences. i had a pretty happy, carefree, existence as a hippy. i didn't have support financially from my parents at that time. so i learned to sell marijuana. i thought of it not really as dealing drugs but as a service. it seemed really laid back. i didn't think of having to...
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i was more optimistic and reached a point where i thought the improvement was permanent. but then i had a relapse. 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 early so i have to admit i never wanted to live in a senior citizens home not with all those old mummies. i didn't mind visiting former colleagues and friends but living one never. knows but here i am like a mummy myself. 95. after suffering a stroke 5 years ago my lease moved into the marchese barr home for retired actors environment. indian food. i have lost so much strength in the 5 years i've been living here i have to say. old age. why am i still around. it was an actress for 45 years i trained at the starts to. feel on feel to the end i graduated in 1944 and this was the world was still going on. for us playing the classics was what i enjoyed most. then here in d.c. or when you see what it's like growing old in a home like this or in any nursing home it's shocking. and contact made in under mangers very little contact with other people. my conversation is limited to good morning enjoy your walk. and so on their own for instance i still don'
i was more optimistic and reached a point where i thought the improvement was permanent. but then i had a relapse. 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 early so i have to admit i never wanted to live in a senior citizens home not with all those old mummies. i didn't mind visiting former colleagues and friends but living one never. knows but here i am like a mummy myself. 95. after suffering a stroke 5 years ago my lease moved into the marchese barr home for retired actors environment. indian food. i have lost so much...
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280
Jun 2, 2019
06/19
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CNNW
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eye 280
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i was 24. this was essentially my first job. e been fired on the spot, right? it was a little tempting, yeah. there was a little bit of temptation. like, hey, i know your twin. i -- i saw somebody a week ago who looks exactly like you. to question whether i feel guilty is interesting. because i never felt a responsibility. i came on after this was designed. however, i was a participant. so you could say, you know, i was ethically compromised by that. in retrospect, i think it was undoubtedly ethically wrong. i got some notes here. okay. okay. these are my actual original notes. copies of psychologicals that i did. >> who in particular are in these files? >> well, i have the triplets. hm. i'm not going to mention the name. but here's a loud, energetic boy. his need to establish his autonomy takes the form of showing off both his intelligence and his strength and putting down others, including his parents. he was very intense in his play and got quite rough. this kid had some problems. hyperaggressiveness. okay, so apparently his p
i was 24. this was essentially my first job. e been fired on the spot, right? it was a little tempting, yeah. there was a little bit of temptation. like, hey, i know your twin. i -- i saw somebody a week ago who looks exactly like you. to question whether i feel guilty is interesting. because i never felt a responsibility. i came on after this was designed. however, i was a participant. so you could say, you know, i was ethically compromised by that. in retrospect, i think it was undoubtedly...
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52
Jun 23, 2019
06/19
by
CSPAN2
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eye 52
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remember there was a shooting, i just didn't know how bad i was. i wanted to know how david and crystal were because i could hear the shootout. i knew there were different calibers of weapons being fired, it wasn't just the shooter. i heard somebody might have been hit but i wasn't sure. i asked how they were doing and i found out they were okay, which gave me a lot of release. crystal was at the same hospital as me so we got to visit a few times in the hospital as we were both recovering. >> semiautomatic, 40 round clip, 9-millimeter, extra clip, 40 more pounds for the rifle. extra magazine, that's what the shooter had. you write that these bullets entered your body at 2000 meters a second. >> pretty powerful weapon, obviously. the boat that hit me, you could take a pair down with that. when i saw the size of the bullet later, they showed me, it does make you wonder. a lot of miracles that day. that was one that i detail in the book. whatever your faith, i have a strong faith in it helped me get through it. i chronicle some specific things that hap
remember there was a shooting, i just didn't know how bad i was. i wanted to know how david and crystal were because i could hear the shootout. i knew there were different calibers of weapons being fired, it wasn't just the shooter. i heard somebody might have been hit but i wasn't sure. i asked how they were doing and i found out they were okay, which gave me a lot of release. crystal was at the same hospital as me so we got to visit a few times in the hospital as we were both recovering....
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35
Jun 3, 2019
06/19
by
ALJAZ
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eye 35
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that i was listening. i good job isn't it sad that all england is you so much for the good with all i know is that i'm head of the national much into the fish i think i should put it down which of you. as in not this up gone up then and will stand now in our. eyes not that one time to put it you think everybody. in camp out i am sad how the hell me is that the gas. you can't get out in anyone else i've been thinkin about it come on that. is that out. who would. use if you wrote well yeah but what about often what we are used to it's fun. for. them in their home but if they were mad who made of anybody who behold on all media and your cause and there's a look you know a bit when he. have a smoke with one of the key njt upon the i phone going to behold i can nominate. that the event of them will go on for the following of the beat any of us will go when i've known him ya meant that i think. that absent the man who i nominate me off i don't know what. she's thought i thought everybody here most of office goes
that i was listening. i good job isn't it sad that all england is you so much for the good with all i know is that i'm head of the national much into the fish i think i should put it down which of you. as in not this up gone up then and will stand now in our. eyes not that one time to put it you think everybody. in camp out i am sad how the hell me is that the gas. you can't get out in anyone else i've been thinkin about it come on that. is that out. who would. use if you wrote well yeah but...
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i was. climate change as such of finding issues of our age leaders of the world i pretend for a living but you do not. the people made their voices heard on sunday around the world and the moment so i was just scared i was just terrified basically i was just. practicing at a wall and baby was crying and she was screaming in the back to which didn't know how i was getting stressed out because i was like oh my gosh of the baby but after the performance so i was terrified from the marshall islands please welcome can be. my family and i have traveled a long way to be here today all the way from the marshall islands you want to perform it's pretty cool because the worst is kind of take over for me and i just lose myself in the words and it happened i would now like to share with you a poem that i have written for my daughter much of filipino. dear ma to philip being. you are a 7 month old son rise of smile you are bald as an egg and bald as the buddha you are thighs that are thunder streets that a
i was. climate change as such of finding issues of our age leaders of the world i pretend for a living but you do not. the people made their voices heard on sunday around the world and the moment so i was just scared i was just terrified basically i was just. practicing at a wall and baby was crying and she was screaming in the back to which didn't know how i was getting stressed out because i was like oh my gosh of the baby but after the performance so i was terrified from the marshall islands...
105
105
Jun 18, 2019
06/19
by
CSPAN
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eye 105
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from then i was put into contact. s a small, tightknit community, but it is spread out all over southern california but everyone knows everyone. so talking about nipsey's death, they talked about how he was a pillar in the community. i asked, could you connect me? i know he is grieving and i don't want to in any way be disrespectful, but i would say that i would love to talk to that person, so can you pass that on? and they did. they said they had read my work and they knew my coverage, and i got a call from nipsey's brother. he called me while i was reporting the eritrean story, and we talked for several hours. in that time, he just kind of, you know, we had a very intimate conversation. i am more friendly with my sources. because i am dealing with everyday people. i am not dealing with politicians. in that, i understand that they do not understand the boundaries of journalism in the same way, so i do not want to treat them in that way. so we had the conversation, and he was very open and candid about his brother's fi
from then i was put into contact. s a small, tightknit community, but it is spread out all over southern california but everyone knows everyone. so talking about nipsey's death, they talked about how he was a pillar in the community. i asked, could you connect me? i know he is grieving and i don't want to in any way be disrespectful, but i would say that i would love to talk to that person, so can you pass that on? and they did. they said they had read my work and they knew my coverage, and i...
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21 years i was addicted to the lifestyle if i can make a $1000.00 and do ya was why i go to work and i understand that i have a craft and i'm good at it so all i did was transfer the street energy until marc. what i make not as a barber to say. fostex 1000 or something when you 1st start out as a drug dealer you guys spent 24 hours on the street when you 1st as a barber you gotta do about $16.00 is more dangerous bin and street us because that's what they like this like until she got the russian mob that's what they look we now we're not going to sugar coat like everything is peachy so they'd like us to live there they chose to live only they can change their mind is like i woke up one day and said i'm going back to jail they could do the same day i get the same 24 walls and is what she want to do that's what he's for. all you he who you got a job you know say what you want me to just stop doing what i do all right i didn't pay for what you a coffee my drink will feed my family and that's like you know it's like going to. where you think you go it's a very. low to jail cold right mak
21 years i was addicted to the lifestyle if i can make a $1000.00 and do ya was why i go to work and i understand that i have a craft and i'm good at it so all i did was transfer the street energy until marc. what i make not as a barber to say. fostex 1000 or something when you 1st start out as a drug dealer you guys spent 24 hours on the street when you 1st as a barber you gotta do about $16.00 is more dangerous bin and street us because that's what they like this like until she got the...
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54
Jun 4, 2019
06/19
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 54
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i know. if there was i don't want to deal. i'm sure you missed your sparkle about their monthly budget which was about the ramble strike occurring monday if one of your legal. issues are to do over you know the guys i'm writing on mr i mean are they going to give me a new young irishman i know my sponsors understand he's president enough when he was over. the earth or of iraq or to kill him is the key with. me wish it was. so to all get your. i see mr bastable socialist or. john as a moment when you could couldn't get it without either the real and i did not enter the. iraq war or was there must be brutally honest with you not the but i did after i'd ask you said i was you don't you got. a whole lot of the. fact that this was a no we can't risk another how will you know. all of this after their wedding when they. want to move it down i just thought it would be. hoarders here the other question is she of them were. more copies make them better for the machine. and with whom i know one thing but i don't hear enough for the house
i know. if there was i don't want to deal. i'm sure you missed your sparkle about their monthly budget which was about the ramble strike occurring monday if one of your legal. issues are to do over you know the guys i'm writing on mr i mean are they going to give me a new young irishman i know my sponsors understand he's president enough when he was over. the earth or of iraq or to kill him is the key with. me wish it was. so to all get your. i see mr bastable socialist or. john as a moment...
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175
Jun 23, 2019
06/19
by
CNNW
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eye 175
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inherited my money when i was 21. i thought he was god, and that's what i did.n't give her any money at all. stokowski kept saying, she never loved you, why should you do it? there was a terrible sort of press about it in the papers and all that, that i was cutting my mother off without anything. >> you know, darling, so many of our friends have come to the conclusion, why did we go into the doll business. with the way the income tax is today, everybody's got to go to work. >> how right you are. >> thank you, everybody. good-bye. >> this goes way, way back. this is stan. this is when i was living in greenwi greenwich. >> it's 1952. >> yeah. >> it's a great picture. you were 28 here? >> just about to blow the koop? >> what do you mean? >> well, i knew i wasn't going to stay married to leopold. that's when i met sinatra, after i had done that play. ♪ drifters off to see the world ♪ ♪ there's such a lot of world to see ♪ >> because sinatra was in love with me, and behind me, i could leave god so to speak. and i took my kids and i walked out. and i was able to do it
inherited my money when i was 21. i thought he was god, and that's what i did.n't give her any money at all. stokowski kept saying, she never loved you, why should you do it? there was a terrible sort of press about it in the papers and all that, that i was cutting my mother off without anything. >> you know, darling, so many of our friends have come to the conclusion, why did we go into the doll business. with the way the income tax is today, everybody's got to go to work. >> how...
570
570
Jun 7, 2019
06/19
by
KNTV
tv
eye 570
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quote 1
it's just gorgeous and i walked in, as i was walking in i heard run dmc and i was like - i was like,mself was rapping on stage -- [ audience ohs ] to like a track or something it was like just by himself. it was dmc with like a boom box or something [ light laughter ] i was like, "what kind of party is this? it's the weirdest thing ever this is fantastic. i'm like -- so then i watch him. they're like, "ladies and gentlemen. he leaves. he sings one song. he leaves. they go, "ladies and gentlemen, eddie money. [ light laughter ] eddie money walks out and sings like "two tickets to paradise" or something i go, "what is going" -- this is good he finishes the song and they go, "ladies and gentlemen, taylor dyane." i go, "this is the best concert i've ever been to in my life." [ laughter ] like, who books this show? it's unbelievable. >> steve: k-tel. >> jimmy: so i'm there i end up getting on stage and singing with kid rock and it was awesome. [ laughter ] just went nuts and then we finish the night and i'm leaving with my girlfriend at the time, i said, who's now my wife. and we're leavi
it's just gorgeous and i walked in, as i was walking in i heard run dmc and i was like - i was like,mself was rapping on stage -- [ audience ohs ] to like a track or something it was like just by himself. it was dmc with like a boom box or something [ light laughter ] i was like, "what kind of party is this? it's the weirdest thing ever this is fantastic. i'm like -- so then i watch him. they're like, "ladies and gentlemen. he leaves. he sings one song. he leaves. they go,...
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87
Jun 28, 2019
06/19
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 87
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my voice was being suppressed. i felt it was time to go forward other than when they needed me to explain a certain piece of culture. as they hire more people of color, even if they are not always black or always latino, we are still getting more diversity in the newspaper. it has allowed me to take that step back and be a voice now, before i have to be the voice, if that makes sense. when it comes to something like nipsey, that can be frank. if i hadn't written that first story, i don't think there would be the interest there was. from a coverage reference, i think somebody had to tell them this was important. i think angel and i had been there the same amount of time. but we still both had to convince editors this was something that matters. we still had to do so much work convincing editors that this was something that matters and is something affecting headlines. somebody is dead. we know the newsrooms get onto celebrity death. but this is an opportunity to show this was not just a celebrity death. this is someth
my voice was being suppressed. i felt it was time to go forward other than when they needed me to explain a certain piece of culture. as they hire more people of color, even if they are not always black or always latino, we are still getting more diversity in the newspaper. it has allowed me to take that step back and be a voice now, before i have to be the voice, if that makes sense. when it comes to something like nipsey, that can be frank. if i hadn't written that first story, i don't think...
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when i was locked up. with jail yes. personal business i'm not so with street activity just a little story oh well sold drugs while because the environment i lived in that's what it was a group on the streets of philadelphia so you know selling drugs and get one was the thing still drives. from cysteine to i went to jail $760.00 all the guardian 21 years i was addicted to the lifestyle if i can make a $1000.00 and do ya was why i go to work and i understand that i have a craft and i'm good at it so all i did was transfer the street energy into barber . what i make known as a barber to say. $6000.00 or something when you 1st start out as a drug dealing guy spent 24 hours on the street when you 1st as a barber your idea about $16.00 is more dangerous being in st louis because that's where they like this like i will show you how the russian mob that's where they live we know we're not going to like everything is peachy so they live just a lot of them they chose to live only they can change their mind is like i will go one da
when i was locked up. with jail yes. personal business i'm not so with street activity just a little story oh well sold drugs while because the environment i lived in that's what it was a group on the streets of philadelphia so you know selling drugs and get one was the thing still drives. from cysteine to i went to jail $760.00 all the guardian 21 years i was addicted to the lifestyle if i can make a $1000.00 and do ya was why i go to work and i understand that i have a craft and i'm good at...
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63
Jun 1, 2019
06/19
by
CSPAN
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eye 63
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i ran strategy for the state. my job was to hold government accountable, make it more efficient, and ensure that people lead better lives. i understand how important it is when government works well for the people who serve and i'm one of the people who brings to the table that you can't just put policy in place without appropriate structures and resources. i've been behind the scenes implementing it. that is the strength i bring that i'm hoping we can include in our thought process for good policy. >> what made you run for this seat? rep. axne: i've been involved in the a lot of community activism, like with a kindergarten where i found out half the kids lost out because of a lottery, those things don't sit well. i will stand up when things aren't right. iowans know i have sharp elbows. when i saw decisions being made out here in washington that were hurting my family, i knew they were hurting my neighbors families and families across the district. i knew i had to step up. i decided to get more engaged and this is what it l
i ran strategy for the state. my job was to hold government accountable, make it more efficient, and ensure that people lead better lives. i understand how important it is when government works well for the people who serve and i'm one of the people who brings to the table that you can't just put policy in place without appropriate structures and resources. i've been behind the scenes implementing it. that is the strength i bring that i'm hoping we can include in our thought process for good...
175
175
Jun 23, 2019
06/19
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 175
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i was lucky. i didn't have anyone relying on me. for financial support, so i definitely was surviving, more than surviving. anyone going into the city now making $65,000 a year, you have to find an apartment is probably in for a more difficult time. >> host: from your book, it did not take long for me to understand the fetish for big data. >> guest: would you like me to expand on that? i think that this still exists. i think around the time i was writing people were excited about big data. i think that technology had made it so people could collect data on any facet of theirproduct, running queries on it . and i think some people like to know what's going on so you look at the cohort level analysis and it shows you how people are using your products or how people are engagingwith the technology your building. i think also , my third month on the job at the analytics company was the story broke and i hadn't realized how high up that fetish goes for collecting data and the sort of surveillance applic
i was lucky. i didn't have anyone relying on me. for financial support, so i definitely was surviving, more than surviving. anyone going into the city now making $65,000 a year, you have to find an apartment is probably in for a more difficult time. >> host: from your book, it did not take long for me to understand the fetish for big data. >> guest: would you like me to expand on that? i think that this still exists. i think around the time i was writing people were excited about...
572
572
Jun 19, 2019
06/19
by
WRC
tv
eye 572
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i was pregnant when we shot the pilot. to think of namesy and i knew mbaby was going to be santiago. i was like, "why don't you try santiago see if that clears." and it cleared so the character is my baby.r >> seth: wow, that's fantastic >> yes >> seth: what a hot start in show business for him. >> i know. [ light laughter ] i know >> seth: and then what's it like bees your -- does he like g on set does your son like being there >> no. >> seth: okay. >> yeah. [ laughter ] not really no, you know, he -- i directed the first -- the first episode back of "grand hotel" when he was 2-months-old >> seth: uh-huh. >> so he didn't really have an opinion. >> seth: yeah. >> you know, he was like -- i was breastfeeding. i was -- you know, he was just on me the entire time i was directing. and then this last pilot i just directed, he was, you know, 10-months-old. and he was like, "bah! ah!" and i was like, "oh, he doesn't like that take." >> seth: yeah. ere's a lot of less attention, probably, paid to him on set - >> yeah. >> seth: --
i was pregnant when we shot the pilot. to think of namesy and i knew mbaby was going to be santiago. i was like, "why don't you try santiago see if that clears." and it cleared so the character is my baby.r >> seth: wow, that's fantastic >> yes >> seth: what a hot start in show business for him. >> i know. [ light laughter ] i know >> seth: and then what's it like bees your -- does he like g on set does your son like being there >> no. >>...
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199
Jun 25, 2019
06/19
by
CNNW
tv
eye 199
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and that was when it turned serious. i realize this was a fight. and even though i can talk about it now, and put words to it. at the time all i want to do is -- >> what were you -- you said you were surprised. fighting. were you scared? angry? >> i was too panicked to be scared. >> too panicked. okay. adrenaline was pumping. >> i assume it was. because i got strong enough. he is 6'3". i was about 6'1" in the massive heels. and so, we were even almost even in height. and down go the tights. and it was against my will. and it hurt. it was a fight. >> and this is not a question i normally ask. if you don't answer i understand. but given the prior accusations which have been of forms of assault or harassment. you're saying there was penetration. >> yes. >> did you -- which is puts it into a different category. of the other women who have come forward. that is the definition of rape. one definition. >> that's the definition. yes. >> how long -- >> brief. brief. because when a woman is stamping her feet. >> that's what you were doing. >> i always think b
and that was when it turned serious. i realize this was a fight. and even though i can talk about it now, and put words to it. at the time all i want to do is -- >> what were you -- you said you were surprised. fighting. were you scared? angry? >> i was too panicked to be scared. >> too panicked. okay. adrenaline was pumping. >> i assume it was. because i got strong enough. he is 6'3". i was about 6'1" in the massive heels. and so, we were even almost even in...
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45
Jun 16, 2019
06/19
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 45
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i was an innocent young child. to be let down by the system was devastating. 9 he went to the police to report bob higgins. five other young players made similar claims around that time. i was only there about an hour. no one ever got back to me to go through my statement or ask whether it could be used in court. he left the police station and buried that abuse for the next 25 years. we will talk now to billy seymour, a former southampton youth player... in 2016, this programme broadcast an interview with another of bob higgins‘s victims. i was tired, just sort of lay your head in my lap. i watched that and had a quiet spell in my house. went upstairs and saw my son. at that point, i knew that once again i was willing to go through all the hurt, stress, anger, to come forward and speak out again and hopefully this time round, something could be done. in 2016, the player went to the police for a second time and was interviewed for seven hours. he was later told he would be treated as a victim in a new case against the coach. then as part of the investigation, po
i was an innocent young child. to be let down by the system was devastating. 9 he went to the police to report bob higgins. five other young players made similar claims around that time. i was only there about an hour. no one ever got back to me to go through my statement or ask whether it could be used in court. he left the police station and buried that abuse for the next 25 years. we will talk now to billy seymour, a former southampton youth player... in 2016, this programme broadcast an...
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Jun 23, 2019
06/19
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BLOOMBERG
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when i was a commander there, when i went back for a subsequent tour, i was the senior marine commanderthe ground. there were a lot of things that you would be woken up for in the middle of the night. i only had two of them. a missing american, because then, we had to go to general quarters to find that person. and then, a death. people would say, why did you want to get woken up for a death? there's nothing you can do. i think i owe the marine to be woken up and for someone to tell me that this young man, this young woman died in the defense of their country. david: let's talk about after you retire. before you joined the trump administration, you were in the business world. what were you doing? gen. kelly: not very much. i started working with the national defense university, part of dod. i just started to get a couple of opportunities to be on boards. i joined those boards. almost as soon as i joined, i was disengaging. i was in the process of going to dhs. david: you are on some corporate boards for the first time. you are making more money than presumably you made in the marine cor
when i was a commander there, when i went back for a subsequent tour, i was the senior marine commanderthe ground. there were a lot of things that you would be woken up for in the middle of the night. i only had two of them. a missing american, because then, we had to go to general quarters to find that person. and then, a death. people would say, why did you want to get woken up for a death? there's nothing you can do. i think i owe the marine to be woken up and for someone to tell me that...
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Jun 3, 2019
06/19
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was special. almost a palpable -- in the crowd, what i thought was visible, and i have seen some of the film since -- that this was an historic occasion. that this was a man who achieved remarkable things. like you inen history. he had come back from a defeat, and one of the things which some people knew, but not very many was his reaction to that defeats was -- to that defeat was something that -- i always nixon is a fighter. he is, in his words, not a quitter. race, whenhe '60 there were people urging him to contest the election, he did few mightthat i think to me, it of, and spoke volumes about this man, whatever his ambition and whatever his reasons for wanting to be president, he thought there was an obligation of the one who sought that office to not leave the contest with a contest that would inevitably be perhaps disruptive, but what he accurately that would be a constitutional crisis. god there wish to were people serving in congress of the united states today who were capable of that kind of magnanimity and let kind of concern for the future of the nation. he was, even to his critics, un
was special. almost a palpable -- in the crowd, what i thought was visible, and i have seen some of the film since -- that this was an historic occasion. that this was a man who achieved remarkable things. like you inen history. he had come back from a defeat, and one of the things which some people knew, but not very many was his reaction to that defeats was -- to that defeat was something that -- i always nixon is a fighter. he is, in his words, not a quitter. race, whenhe '60 there were...
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i was actually worked in with people they had m.h. and more disabilities and i got fired from that job and i was sitting for about a couple months wondering and being a mailman was always something that i always thought would be a great job for me something that i would fit in. but if i can say if i if i was able to do it over and if i was a little bit smarter i would have been a psychology major in a sociology minor i think that you know would coincide pretty good would win everything but actually i'm a sociology major and being a mailman it kind of works with this because i'm working with society the whole time. you have to work like a slave whenever you 1st start. i consider you. hard i think you're more or less just a working slave and no they'll have you to. work in hours on top of hours and if you can survive the one that and work and all day long and not know where to go. oh sorry i have a package that i have in the truck for you i don't think i got to drive a thing you know i reckon you meet all kinds of people it's all cards s
i was actually worked in with people they had m.h. and more disabilities and i got fired from that job and i was sitting for about a couple months wondering and being a mailman was always something that i always thought would be a great job for me something that i would fit in. but if i can say if i if i was able to do it over and if i was a little bit smarter i would have been a psychology major in a sociology minor i think that you know would coincide pretty good would win everything but...
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Jun 1, 2019
06/19
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CSPAN
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eye 70
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i was like i know. [laughter] ms. abrams: they whispered it to me as if they were giving me a terminal diagnosis. because you see, they had decided what i was capable of based on what they saw, not based on what they knew. people i had known for years kept telling me that i wasn't ready for this. in fact, it was suggested that i support the other person running and ask for a role in her administration. that didn't work for me then and it doesn't work for me now. applause]and i was told i needed to wait until georgia was ready for me. i was told to wait my turn. after a while, listening to people who supported me for many years, i started to wonder if maybe they were correct. if i was pushing too far, too fast. if maybe what i wanted wasn't real or possible. i listened to their doubts and started to internalize the ir definitions of my capacity. until i reminded myself that i knew what i wanted and i had a plan to get it. when you aim high, when you stretch beyond your conceptions, your ambitions will be strong. especi
i was like i know. [laughter] ms. abrams: they whispered it to me as if they were giving me a terminal diagnosis. because you see, they had decided what i was capable of based on what they saw, not based on what they knew. people i had known for years kept telling me that i wasn't ready for this. in fact, it was suggested that i support the other person running and ask for a role in her administration. that didn't work for me then and it doesn't work for me now. applause]and i was told i needed...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 28, 2019
06/19
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SFGTV
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what was i going to say? i think that was about it. think it's just very important to listen to youth about what exactly we can do to help everyone that we can instead of just the select few. all right. thank you. [cheers and applause] >> hello, again. i am one of the youth leaders at an organization that is a grassroots organization of the arab resource in organizing center. i'm here in call -- consolidation with c.p.a. for school wellness centres. during my time in middle and high school, i didn't know the resources that the wellness centres that our school had to offer. i didn't even know wellness centres existed, but when i did find out, i started therapy, and it has helped me a lot with my mental health. i just want to say, please support student demands and student mental health on campuses. thank you. [cheers and applause]. [please stand by] >> but i know that a lot of youth, including my friends, did not have access to these wellness centers. so it is so, so important to make these wellness centered opcentered -- centers open a
what was i going to say? i think that was about it. think it's just very important to listen to youth about what exactly we can do to help everyone that we can instead of just the select few. all right. thank you. [cheers and applause] >> hello, again. i am one of the youth leaders at an organization that is a grassroots organization of the arab resource in organizing center. i'm here in call -- consolidation with c.p.a. for school wellness centres. during my time in middle and high...
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Jun 24, 2019
06/19
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CSPAN
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eye 136
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the fir language i spoke was japanese. -- the first language i spoke was japanese. it has been a long road. i have lived all over the world. it has been good exposure because i lived in belgium, germany for two years, paris for eight months and on and off between the united states and japan. brian: the political cartoon came to you when? michael: i never anticipated being a political cartoonist. the strangest part of this story is i really wanted to be a doctor. i recall reading the newspaper every morning with my dad. we had two when i lived in california. we took the orange county register and the l.a. times. the "l.a. times" had paul conrad. the register had jeff mcnally. he was working for the richmond times at the time. it ran his cartoons. we had this morning ritual where we would have breakfast, he would read the l.a. times first and halfway through, we would swap papers. i was aware of political cartoons and i loved political cartoons. and i loved paul conrad dark images. they were moving and they had deep messages. i think paul -- i think jeff took that a st
the fir language i spoke was japanese. -- the first language i spoke was japanese. it has been a long road. i have lived all over the world. it has been good exposure because i lived in belgium, germany for two years, paris for eight months and on and off between the united states and japan. brian: the political cartoon came to you when? michael: i never anticipated being a political cartoonist. the strangest part of this story is i really wanted to be a doctor. i recall reading the newspaper...
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2.8K
Jun 23, 2019
06/19
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MSNBCW
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i knew this was the man i was going to marry. >> reporter: at 16? >> at 16. >> reporter: they married right out of high school. a year later, daughter nikki was born. were your parents in love? >> oh, yes. we definitely saw love growing up in the house. >> i love my baby. >> reporter: what was your relationship like with your dad? >> not your typical father-daughter relationship. like, a best friend, almost. i could tell dad anything. >> reporter: four years after nikki came justin. did he really want a son? >> oh, my god. when they pulled that baby out and they said, mr. hall, you have a son, that man cried. >> reporter: bill worked hard to give his young family a better life. >> bill used to clean airplanes. he went to college. and on the weekends, if he was off, he'd go dig ditches. we made ends meet. >> reporter: but his true passion was big rigs. so one day he up and quit school, started his own business. bill hall jr. trucking. >> that's what his family did for a living. so it's in their blood. >> reporter: bill got his first truck and went to
i knew this was the man i was going to marry. >> reporter: at 16? >> at 16. >> reporter: they married right out of high school. a year later, daughter nikki was born. were your parents in love? >> oh, yes. we definitely saw love growing up in the house. >> i love my baby. >> reporter: what was your relationship like with your dad? >> not your typical father-daughter relationship. like, a best friend, almost. i could tell dad anything. >> reporter:...
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161
Jun 16, 2019
06/19
by
CSPAN3
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eye 161
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i was given the opportunity. hetood with him all night, was crying and screaming and praying all night. i stood there praying and crying with him all night. it was a very hard thing. early in the morning he died. at that time i felt a great relief. not in pain anymore. that is a vivid mine -- a vivid thing in my mind to this day. that's the most emotional i ever got. this is early in the war. i can't get so emotional over of her -- over other things. i have to keep it under control. we just had to. >> did we have any other --tances >> not really. just got myself under control and just did the nursing i needed to do. we were so busy we had to keep going and keep at it. job.tough it was an awesome experience. tremendous experience. i'm very glad that i had the chance to do it. >> did you get to know a few of the patients who were well enough to stay and not be transferred out. not too well because after a few weeks usually they were not on. you started feeling that they people andonderful you would like to get to kn
i was given the opportunity. hetood with him all night, was crying and screaming and praying all night. i stood there praying and crying with him all night. it was a very hard thing. early in the morning he died. at that time i felt a great relief. not in pain anymore. that is a vivid mine -- a vivid thing in my mind to this day. that's the most emotional i ever got. this is early in the war. i can't get so emotional over of her -- over other things. i have to keep it under control. we just had...
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Jun 9, 2019
06/19
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CNNW
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so i was angry. and you don't sing a folk song. you gotta scream. [ screaming ] >> anthony: i missed all the great art of the time. i came for heroin and i came for music. other than that, i didn't live here. but man, a lot of people didn't make it and i remember i guess around 1980, it was like, something is happening and no one knows what it is. >> joe: you mean the aids? a lot of that time exists in my mind like a dream. like an opium dream. i have these people that i loved that would just drop out, and fall out. and i'm a little bit sad that i wasn't there. i wasn't present, you know, for them. because i was too off in this other world. but for me, there was still something of great beauty to that time. you have wall st. tycoons fighting for huge amounts of wealth, and you have bums fighting over like pennies. and yeah, it has like, you know, a primal awe. moving is hard. no kidding. but moving your internet and tv? that's easy. easy?! easy? easy. because now xfinity lets you transfer your service
so i was angry. and you don't sing a folk song. you gotta scream. [ screaming ] >> anthony: i missed all the great art of the time. i came for heroin and i came for music. other than that, i didn't live here. but man, a lot of people didn't make it and i remember i guess around 1980, it was like, something is happening and no one knows what it is. >> joe: you mean the aids? a lot of that time exists in my mind like a dream. like an opium dream. i have these people that i loved that...
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clearly a case that's correct and i was in there for an hour and a half and it was a look of a gun. casting director like crazy talk about this and he said so ok well it was great to meet you you know want to talk about the other guy i said no i'm good good luck with the movie and i left and kicked myself for days afterwards thing i haven't worked for 9 months woman doing but i got a phone call 10 days later and i was asked to come back to see him i was a crisis over there now i'm something wrong you know and turned out that the actor who'd been offered the role was trying to get. a role in the other scottish from which would be made at the time the robbery one which was considered the small the mere script so busy everybody wanted to be in the other one this one was like the cheesy hollywood think right. got invited back and it turned out that this other actor had let the goal the day go by by which he should've accepted the offer so they withdrew it and gave it to me so there's a sort of element of destiny in that in such
clearly a case that's correct and i was in there for an hour and a half and it was a look of a gun. casting director like crazy talk about this and he said so ok well it was great to meet you you know want to talk about the other guy i said no i'm good good luck with the movie and i left and kicked myself for days afterwards thing i haven't worked for 9 months woman doing but i got a phone call 10 days later and i was asked to come back to see him i was a crisis over there now i'm something...
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30
Jun 20, 2019
06/19
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 30
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ultimately, i made sergeant. my mother wasgnosed with cancer so i get out of the marine corps but stayed in a program that continued my training while i was going to college. as soon as i graduated from college, i get commissioned and went back into the marine corps. david: the highest you can become is a four-star general. you became a four-star general. did you ever expect when you were just beginning that you would be a general? john: no. when i was an enlisted marine, i wanted to be an nco. that's corporal. david: you are in the marine corps. as you rise up, one of your assignments is to go into iraq in 2003. you were in combat. did you expect that you would survive? john: it is dangerous. there's a lot of shooting and bombs and whatnot. we are marines. you take that on as a possibility. when we were designing the campaign plan, one of the things we did was to understand the iraqi army. it was nothing close to us. we designed a strategy that would minimize the amount of damage to the country and the amount of death to the
ultimately, i made sergeant. my mother wasgnosed with cancer so i get out of the marine corps but stayed in a program that continued my training while i was going to college. as soon as i graduated from college, i get commissioned and went back into the marine corps. david: the highest you can become is a four-star general. you became a four-star general. did you ever expect when you were just beginning that you would be a general? john: no. when i was an enlisted marine, i wanted to be an nco....
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139
Jun 24, 2019
06/19
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CSPAN
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i was leaning down to putt, and suddenly i heard ronald reagan coaching me and it was paul. is an amazing impersonator. i hooked him up with the rush limbaugh show. so now he is doing the rush limbaugh show. so paul, every once in a while, i would get him to record my answering machine and do different voices. i made the mistake once of giving him my code to the answering machine. i actually had to get rid of that answering machine. in the middle of the night, he would change my messages and that created all kinds of problems. in fact, on sundays, when i was doing u.s. today for mondays, paul and i would get together to talk about parities and skits for his songs. when i am starting to draw my cartoon, i get focused and ignore everything. unbeknownst to me, paul would answer my telephone as me. later in the day, i would have friends calling me back asking me what kinds of medications i was on because i was speaking gibberish. and i would say, no, i have not spoken to you today. it was paul answering my phone as me. if you want an obnoxious friend, there is one for you. brian
i was leaning down to putt, and suddenly i heard ronald reagan coaching me and it was paul. is an amazing impersonator. i hooked him up with the rush limbaugh show. so now he is doing the rush limbaugh show. so paul, every once in a while, i would get him to record my answering machine and do different voices. i made the mistake once of giving him my code to the answering machine. i actually had to get rid of that answering machine. in the middle of the night, he would change my messages and...
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i was. i was. under so i don't know i guess i'm looking at. how people. how can we help citizens become healthy and happy. full of the 7th of july business program interactive exhibition open house congress how the festival the movie tells them also been forum dot com 16 plus. saudi arabia faces a must. over its push to sentence a teenage boy crucified for his involvement in an. old. film industry big german. small. the location for a hollywood blockbuster. coming up on the program to. face the chop from truth in.
i was. i was. under so i don't know i guess i'm looking at. how people. how can we help citizens become healthy and happy. full of the 7th of july business program interactive exhibition open house congress how the festival the movie tells them also been forum dot com 16 plus. saudi arabia faces a must. over its push to sentence a teenage boy crucified for his involvement in an. old. film industry big german. small. the location for a hollywood blockbuster. coming up on the program to. face the...
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Jun 29, 2019
06/19
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CSPAN3
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had -- i was a leader, and i was convinced that the message described in the field demanded -- manuals, they were incredibly clumsy. for instance, they issued a pair of lehman stakes, and it was two steaks and they were 50 -- 16 feet long, painted red and white. the artillery use them because the artillery piece, every time they fire, it pushes to the rear. it is offset to the rear. and it is at an angle there, when they go to the rear, the lehman post are pushed. it comes back, and then they put the post halfway between the crosshair and another post. and then it is parallel with the lehman stakes. that is common practice and that is essential. but it goes down, so you only need one lehman post. our first discarded lehman post, and i cut a straight switch and painted it so i could see, and it does not have to be 50 yards away, i could pick it out at 20 yards, and that would do just fine. and then i found the ammunition was always in short supply. it was all airdropped. and it was always short. i realized we wasted a lot of ammunition because shooting alon
had -- i was a leader, and i was convinced that the message described in the field demanded -- manuals, they were incredibly clumsy. for instance, they issued a pair of lehman stakes, and it was two steaks and they were 50 -- 16 feet long, painted red and white. the artillery use them because the artillery piece, every time they fire, it pushes to the rear. it is offset to the rear. and it is at an angle there, when they go to the rear, the lehman post are pushed. it comes back, and then they...
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138
Jun 9, 2019
06/19
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KPIX
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eye 138
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older than i was. it was never the age factor as much as some of my peers saying how could you be a minister that age. we're used to ministers much older. so dealing with was i accepted as a person and not every time minister comes up in the conversation, people turn off. and so i had to wrestle with that. apply i accepted as a person or just the minister? i wrestled with that. and i didn't get comfortable until four or five years.. >> what helped you get comfortable with the identity? >> i think my second appointment. it was easter hill in richmond, 13 years. and that was my longest appointment. and they made me feel at home. not that elm hurst didn't. i was just green and wrestling with the struggle. i came to easter hill and it clicked. i have many friends from that time. that's way back in 1978 to 1990. quite some time. it helped me grow and learn to preach better. for me, the preaching is central and primary. the text. it's about the text, text, text. >> that's right. >> and also trying to relate i
older than i was. it was never the age factor as much as some of my peers saying how could you be a minister that age. we're used to ministers much older. so dealing with was i accepted as a person and not every time minister comes up in the conversation, people turn off. and so i had to wrestle with that. apply i accepted as a person or just the minister? i wrestled with that. and i didn't get comfortable until four or five years.. >> what helped you get comfortable with the identity?...
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Jun 28, 2019
06/19
by
BBCNEWS
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i ate. he wasrted to get less energetic and he was always complaining about headaches. but i was away at one point and i came back and heard that terry, and found out that terry had collapsed in a nightclub and been taken into hospital, and he was very sick. we were starting to hear about this american disease, and what was being called ‘gay—related immune deficiency‘ at that time. in new york, this is greenwich village. here, the killer disease has taken its greatest toll of death and of fear amongst those who walk in its shadow. we still had no idea what it was. was it a lifestyle thing? was some kind of infection? what was it? but until terry got ill, we had not heard of any cases in britain. the last time i went, i was going to take some lucozade and some ice lollies for him. i went up to the ward and there were curtains around terry‘s bed at the time, and i was standing just a few feet away and i could see there was quite some activity inside. i just stood there. then, the — one of the nurses
i ate. he wasrted to get less energetic and he was always complaining about headaches. but i was away at one point and i came back and heard that terry, and found out that terry had collapsed in a nightclub and been taken into hospital, and he was very sick. we were starting to hear about this american disease, and what was being called ‘gay—related immune deficiency‘ at that time. in new york, this is greenwich village. here, the killer disease has taken its greatest toll of death and of...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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48
Jun 18, 2019
06/19
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SFGTV
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eye 48
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i think -- well, it was too hazy. so that's what got me. are you done? because i have a couple of questions. can you refresh my memory. this reminds me of clay street, clay and walnut. same argument. the pacific heights neighborhood association spent lots and lots of money probably in the tens of thousands of dollars to underground everything. and turn that neighborhood into a pristine neighborhood without wires all over the place. and i recall -- i'm just asking that you affirm my recollection. i recall that we asked for another location and it didn't work, but what was the gist of it was i believe that piece of equipment ended up standing on top of a light pole. is that true? >> i can't say with certainty about the facts of the case. i defer to the board. i think the board had initially denied the application and then came back? but -- >> we continued. >> and then the other one was on steiner street at either bush or pine, i think it's pine, where the church is and it was across the street from the church. the church
i think -- well, it was too hazy. so that's what got me. are you done? because i have a couple of questions. can you refresh my memory. this reminds me of clay street, clay and walnut. same argument. the pacific heights neighborhood association spent lots and lots of money probably in the tens of thousands of dollars to underground everything. and turn that neighborhood into a pristine neighborhood without wires all over the place. and i recall -- i'm just asking that you affirm my...
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972
Jun 12, 2019
06/19
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KNTV
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eye 972
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i mean, it was kismet. his call, and here we are on "project runway" together >> jimmy: explain, -- 'cause i like "project runway", because you give these designers all new -- you basically set them up. you give them a great opportunity. even people that don't win, i got to be honest, because everyone's watching them >> it's so true. >> jimmy: and they're going, "oh, i like that person no matter if they win or not. >> yes >> jimmy: but the winner gets a good deal. >> a really good deal. >> jimmy: with "elle", right >> a cfda -- yeah a cdfa mentorship a feature in "elle." and look at christian siriano. his business is massive. >> jimmy: yeah, from the show. >> totally and i think what i'm most excited about with "project runway" is helping to push it into a new era and to make it a part of what's happening in the world outside of fashion and to kind of increase conversations around diversity and inclusion. i'm very proud to say, it is the most inclusive season of "project runway" ever. >> jimmy: yeah, that's
i mean, it was kismet. his call, and here we are on "project runway" together >> jimmy: explain, -- 'cause i like "project runway", because you give these designers all new -- you basically set them up. you give them a great opportunity. even people that don't win, i got to be honest, because everyone's watching them >> it's so true. >> jimmy: and they're going, "oh, i like that person no matter if they win or not. >> yes >> jimmy: but the...
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946
Jun 8, 2019
06/19
by
MSNBCW
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eye 946
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now he was back. >> when i arrived home. everything was quiet. i assumed that corey was sleeping, resting. she hadn't slept most of the night. i was just going to leave her alone in order to sleep. >> before looking in on her, he said he went over his e-mails in the kitchen. then he headed upstairs. >> i needed to take a shower and as i walked up the steps, i looked to the left the door to our bedroom was as i left it, opened. i could see her lying in bed and i could see something from the distance didn't seem right. so i -- >> what made you say that looking in? >> i'm really not sure. as i got closer, i could see that she was pale, she was motionless and i immediately knew that something was really, really wrong. >> did you think she's dead? >> i shook her. i called out her name and tant i knew that she was dead. >> in that moment, he said, his thoughts turned to his four-year-old boy larsson who was still in the house. >> and i needed to get larsson out of the house. >> and what did you do? >> i grabbed larsson, i believe he was in bed and i too
now he was back. >> when i arrived home. everything was quiet. i assumed that corey was sleeping, resting. she hadn't slept most of the night. i was just going to leave her alone in order to sleep. >> before looking in on her, he said he went over his e-mails in the kitchen. then he headed upstairs. >> i needed to take a shower and as i walked up the steps, i looked to the left the door to our bedroom was as i left it, opened. i could see her lying in bed and i could see...
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i was. just off. the hook. oh my gosh i love that i let them forget i was on the bike on and then the little guy who could. have been it was going to have. to ask me why i think i was how he was being i got the money that somehow i thought oh my goodness i wouldn't have believed that doesn't mean i don't know what it must have been weakened. to bring with him when he got serious on my credit for. going to the school and no follow up on going to sit with the salafis you know because he has to say the t.g.v. this was the custom and he would go the look at it and of them that i don't know if you have mentioned. so similarly you know it was an homage to mark the opposite of the shake press he. shared with listeners unless you have a list of the issue you are so dumb but not they are i thought if i didn't. know one thing i shot like this how did i break and i was right but i can work out i don't tell us what the some of what i care about. but. we do know that they're all right there with me and i think. about. how i
i was. just off. the hook. oh my gosh i love that i let them forget i was on the bike on and then the little guy who could. have been it was going to have. to ask me why i think i was how he was being i got the money that somehow i thought oh my goodness i wouldn't have believed that doesn't mean i don't know what it must have been weakened. to bring with him when he got serious on my credit for. going to the school and no follow up on going to sit with the salafis you know because he has to...