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Jan 1, 2020
01/20
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i was 3a and i was one of the older guys in the room. i would say, to the point of going into lunar orbit. the final phases of the descent of apollo 11 were kind of fraught. we had two computer alarms saying that the computer was being overworked. they took a quick look to make sure all the guidance was correct. quickly gave them a go. so it was dicey, and then they started running short of fuel, and we were concerned. you heard 60 seconds, 30. it was in neil armstrong‘s hands at that point. neil was a very, very good pilot. he could already see that the computer was taking him into a boulderfield, so he had to manoeuvre to try to find a smooth place. and the fuel gauge was headed down, and we were watching it. and it was nerve—racking. i never will forget when buzz aldrin said we were picking up dust, he did that a little less than 100 feet above the surface, and that is when i thought, "we will make it." when they first touched down, it was a great relief. i remember being proud — we did it! neil told me one time, "it‘s like an automobi
i was 3a and i was one of the older guys in the room. i would say, to the point of going into lunar orbit. the final phases of the descent of apollo 11 were kind of fraught. we had two computer alarms saying that the computer was being overworked. they took a quick look to make sure all the guidance was correct. quickly gave them a go. so it was dicey, and then they started running short of fuel, and we were concerned. you heard 60 seconds, 30. it was in neil armstrong‘s hands at that point....
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Jan 4, 2020
01/20
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eye 41
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i was 3a and i was one of the older guys in the room. s ever done this, so let's just do it. there was a routine from launch, i would say, to the point of going into lunar orbit. the final phases of the descent of apollo 11 were kind of fraught. we had two computer alarms saying that the computer was being overworked. they took a quick look to make sure all the guidance was correct. quickly gave them a go. so it was dicey, and then they started running short of fuel, and we were concerned. you heard 60 seconds, 30. it was in neil armstrong's hands at that point. neil was a very, very good pilot. he could already see that the computer was taking him into a boulderfield, so he had to manoeuvre to try to find a smooth place. and the fuel gauge was headed down, and we were watching it. and it was nerve—racking. i never will forget when buzz aldrin said we were picking up dust, he did that a little less than 100 feet above the surface, and that is when i thought, "we will make it." when they first touched down, it was a great relief. i remembe
i was 3a and i was one of the older guys in the room. s ever done this, so let's just do it. there was a routine from launch, i would say, to the point of going into lunar orbit. the final phases of the descent of apollo 11 were kind of fraught. we had two computer alarms saying that the computer was being overworked. they took a quick look to make sure all the guidance was correct. quickly gave them a go. so it was dicey, and then they started running short of fuel, and we were concerned. you...
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every thing came to a complete change the day that i was raped i got there in february by april i was drugged and raped for the 1st time i had like a cold or pneumonia like symptoms and so they sent me to get shut down and while i was waiting to be examined. and came in any help himself he said he was going to the bathroom he came into my room and and that's when he raped me the entire time i was screaming and yelling for help and for him to stop nobody came to the door nobody came to help me and maurice cure anything they made it very very clear. that. if i said anything they were going to kill me. you know in then of course i didn't have anyone to go talk to because the people that were perpetrating me were the police. it was my 1st time ever and was had a tough time convincing myself that i'm still. if this is happening to me you know i can only imagine surely i'm not the only one which i found out later going through the claims process that i wasn't. it's just after 3 am i see a shadow of a human head over my body next thing you know that i'm awake and like he's on top of me pushe
every thing came to a complete change the day that i was raped i got there in february by april i was drugged and raped for the 1st time i had like a cold or pneumonia like symptoms and so they sent me to get shut down and while i was waiting to be examined. and came in any help himself he said he was going to the bathroom he came into my room and and that's when he raped me the entire time i was screaming and yelling for help and for him to stop nobody came to the door nobody came to help me...
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Jan 13, 2020
01/20
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eye 42
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so i was documenting that. he first book i wrote that i never published was titled, i thought it mattered. there were all these things about sports that we think matters. there's no i in team. all that bs. all the altruism we assume was all bs. all part of the performance of masculinity. i always felt like there was something i had to tell in this process i was going through. >> so you're masculinity was commodified in the sense. >> absolutely. i write about a game that was the absolute worst performance i've ever had in any sporting event from the time i was 10 years old and it was the last game i played in syracuse university. all people remember was the last 90 seconds. when west virginia scores. we drive the length of the field and when by appointed everyone remembers that last 90 seconds. it's an the chapter about hyperbole and myths. the reality of that game, that was the worst football game, the worst performance. i threw four interceptions. i gave the bull to virginia five times. - - the ball. >> that 90
so i was documenting that. he first book i wrote that i never published was titled, i thought it mattered. there were all these things about sports that we think matters. there's no i in team. all that bs. all the altruism we assume was all bs. all part of the performance of masculinity. i always felt like there was something i had to tell in this process i was going through. >> so you're masculinity was commodified in the sense. >> absolutely. i write about a game that was the...
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409
Jan 15, 2020
01/20
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KNTV
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eye 409
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that's - >> you know, when i was 25 years old, i was -- i was so ambitious and i was so driven and i otten older i started getting a little bit more fearful and i would -- i would ask myself, i was like, "why are you so crazy? [ laughter ] why do you think you can do so much?" you know, there's such a power to naivety >> seth: yeah, that's true yeah >> and it's like once you know you can't -- you can't - >> seth: you can't un-know it. that's right one thing you did that was fearless but maybe didn't look that way to people, you know, i first knew you obviously as a hip-hop artist and you were at a time where this was not what a lot of people were doing, your lyrics were very clean. >> absolutely. >> seth: that choice - >> oh, yeah. >> seth: --was a bigger choice than i think it probably looked to people. >> that's when i started when i was -- i was 12 years old and i started rapping. so i had my rap book i was writing my stuff and had all my little, you know, my little curse words in my rap book and my grandmother found my rap book [ light laughter ] and she just turned -- she never s
that's - >> you know, when i was 25 years old, i was -- i was so ambitious and i was so driven and i otten older i started getting a little bit more fearful and i would -- i would ask myself, i was like, "why are you so crazy? [ laughter ] why do you think you can do so much?" you know, there's such a power to naivety >> seth: yeah, that's true yeah >> and it's like once you know you can't -- you can't - >> seth: you can't un-know it. that's right one thing you...
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Jan 3, 2020
01/20
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BBCNEWS
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eye 163
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i mean, i was... kicked out of practice, and i talk about them, but there was one school who would, and it was in dc, and the reason they took me was that this one coach had actually coached me for a very short time in high school, and he says, "look, you've a clean slate with me." i think he was hoping to get a fast swimmer too but i was like, "whatever, i need to finish college." and then i came out. i came out as gay, and there are no gay athletes. i come out like this. like, there is no—one who looks like me in swimming. i shaved my head, you know... looking back, i have such fondness for that experience, but it was ultimately the excuse i used to quit swimming. the last, um, the last moment i had with the team was that i sat down to eat with them. they had all found out i was gay maybe a week or a few days prior. about half the team stood up and left. again, this is the late 1990s. homophobia in dc is still very real. there are still pockets in the united states, there are pockets where safety is
i mean, i was... kicked out of practice, and i talk about them, but there was one school who would, and it was in dc, and the reason they took me was that this one coach had actually coached me for a very short time in high school, and he says, "look, you've a clean slate with me." i think he was hoping to get a fast swimmer too but i was like, "whatever, i need to finish college." and then i came out. i came out as gay, and there are no gay athletes. i come out like this....
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51
Jan 5, 2020
01/20
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eye 51
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and i was just curious. does she think that -- does she now think that what her family and i guess former friends were doing was -- does she think they're evil or at least being evil with this so-called hate speech? or does she take a different view of it? thanks. >> thank you, glen. >> yeah, i do think that they do things that are evil. i do believe that, you know, especially for me the funeral protest thing is some of the worst things that we ever did, celebrating the death of children, praying for god to -- i mean we had a sign that said pray for more dead children, pray for more dead kids, it said. i do believe that's evil. i do believe, though, that for me the fact that my family is motivated by good intentions. you know, and having lived among them for, you know, the first nearly 27 years of my life, i see them as good people who have been trapped by bad ideas. you know, and i understand there are some people who really want me to completely condemn my family. a line from the great gatsby says reserving
and i was just curious. does she think that -- does she now think that what her family and i guess former friends were doing was -- does she think they're evil or at least being evil with this so-called hate speech? or does she take a different view of it? thanks. >> thank you, glen. >> yeah, i do think that they do things that are evil. i do believe that, you know, especially for me the funeral protest thing is some of the worst things that we ever did, celebrating the death of...
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Jan 18, 2020
01/20
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CNNW
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i think i was recruited. i think at some point because of two worlds collided, as me and igor were trying to build a business. we were trying to build a business and entering the trump orbit. it's not the typical orbit that usual -- that i've learned to know just from being around now and hearing that it's not typical, and other administrations, the way this administration was. >> during the campaign when you got involved it was small, it was -- >> right, it was the same people, the same faces. so it was -- >> it was possible to actually get in. >> yeah, i mean, it was -- i mean, we were there all the time. >> you loved president trump. >> i loved him. i mean, he -- i mean, when the fbi came to my house to raid and my wife felt embarrassed because they said i had a shrine to him. i had pictures all over. i idolized him. i thought he was the savior. >> do you think you were friends? >> absolutely. i mean, again, i went from being a top donor, from being at all events where we would just socialize to becoming a
i think i was recruited. i think at some point because of two worlds collided, as me and igor were trying to build a business. we were trying to build a business and entering the trump orbit. it's not the typical orbit that usual -- that i've learned to know just from being around now and hearing that it's not typical, and other administrations, the way this administration was. >> during the campaign when you got involved it was small, it was -- >> right, it was the same people, the...
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265
Jan 3, 2020
01/20
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KNTV
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eye 265
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, "was i terrible? times that can happen, though, when it's a part you really want, you get tight in a way that then makes you blow the audition. >> totally >> seth: but you feel like, obviously looking back it went all right. >> apparently. but i feel like i did a thing on way out of the room, that i kind of like broke up with it, and i was like "i left it all on the floor. and if they don't love me, i don't love them and it's fine. [ laughter ] >> seth: and you said that out loud to them >> and i said it out loud and i've never been invited back to the casting office [ laughter ] >> seth: you play hailee steinfeld's younger sister >> yes >> seth: you did some research for this 'cause you're older than her, i think. >> i'm a little older. yep. >> seth: gotcha, so what's her -- >> just a little, just a tiny bit. >> seth: just a little bit like in hollywood, it's nothing. yeah but what was the research you put into the role? >> so, yes so, i play her kind of, like, little kid sister. but in real life, i f
, "was i terrible? times that can happen, though, when it's a part you really want, you get tight in a way that then makes you blow the audition. >> totally >> seth: but you feel like, obviously looking back it went all right. >> apparently. but i feel like i did a thing on way out of the room, that i kind of like broke up with it, and i was like "i left it all on the floor. and if they don't love me, i don't love them and it's fine. [ laughter ] >> seth: and...
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Jan 2, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 135
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i was over there in 1982. i was married to a canadian. that was the only way i was allowed to travel there. we got the checkpoint charlie and we were met by east german border guards with machine guns. they took our car apart. they took all the reading with serial. there was a stars & stripes newspaper and a herald tribune. all my cassette tapes and anything that had any kind of printed message on it. they took the backseats out of the car. they said put your car back together and move on. the whole time we were in east germany >> they made you put your car back together? they did not have the courtesy to do it? >> no, they stood there with a machine gun. ok, put your backseat back in and get out here. it was not a warm reception to say the least. they frowned at that time. pretty much the height of the cold war. we had german license plates on our car. they knew i was west german and she was canadian. i could have tactically because i was with her. they basically followed us the whole time we were in east berlin. it is like you see in the
i was over there in 1982. i was married to a canadian. that was the only way i was allowed to travel there. we got the checkpoint charlie and we were met by east german border guards with machine guns. they took our car apart. they took all the reading with serial. there was a stars & stripes newspaper and a herald tribune. all my cassette tapes and anything that had any kind of printed message on it. they took the backseats out of the car. they said put your car back together and move on....
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do i was just like helpless i don't know i was handling this child like a fragile thing. it's cannot be described real moser's love and i missed it. i know it's hard for me to call if they ever saw me crying could be. i really tried my best to protect them and. i kept a lot of things away or something say i didn't want them to know. when the time already came when they saw my number and there were days when mother what disease you can imagine and they're too warm and what can you tell it. and i used to say well they put this number because if i get lost found me go find your mama and that's it enclosed. i was older i got. and i looked back. and reading between the lines. that they really held it. so this is something i'd completely forgotten about it's an anthology of poems by children of holocaust survivors and i remembered having a poem published in it but until i just opened it up i remember what paula was the poem was called at 32. i don't remember this poem at all that i'll read it for you and i haven't seen it in like a long time. sonia 32 the lady never shakes free
do i was just like helpless i don't know i was handling this child like a fragile thing. it's cannot be described real moser's love and i missed it. i know it's hard for me to call if they ever saw me crying could be. i really tried my best to protect them and. i kept a lot of things away or something say i didn't want them to know. when the time already came when they saw my number and there were days when mother what disease you can imagine and they're too warm and what can you tell it. and i...
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Jan 20, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 49
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i was reading before i really understood what it was.my family was looking at me -- finally, i discovered the essays that was quite a revelation. the finish, the title essay notes of a native son. you know, it's still kind of sends shivers through me. one of the greatest things ever to sort of discover. somehow, you know, i don't know how one new these things, but somehow, one new about baldwin. i think i must have read another and figured out what giovanni's room was about. he was the only one. >> once parents and one friend. sometimes say, oh, he is so brilliant. a little light on his feet. something like that. >> they used to say i was never afraid to leave my wife along with him, don't you know. don't you know. [laughter] >> he also was our only. they were proud. >> i the time we read the essays i knew about the attack but i had not read it. leroy jones had sort of attacked in the same language. people knew him. i remember once walking by and i saw him in the window. i ran in. he signed them. he was a very sweet and gracious guy. mor
i was reading before i really understood what it was.my family was looking at me -- finally, i discovered the essays that was quite a revelation. the finish, the title essay notes of a native son. you know, it's still kind of sends shivers through me. one of the greatest things ever to sort of discover. somehow, you know, i don't know how one new these things, but somehow, one new about baldwin. i think i must have read another and figured out what giovanni's room was about. he was the only...
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Jan 18, 2020
01/20
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KQED
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eye 82
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rice: i was. rubensand did you go in to the president and say, "let's jump up and down and take credit for this"? rice: i did. i was one of the people. the minut the berlin wall fell, a bunch of us went over to the oval office. "mr. president, you have to go to berlin. "you have to go for kennedy. you have to go for truman. you have to go for reagan," and he looked at us, and he said, " tat would do, dance wall?" he said, "is is a german moment, not an american moment," and i'll never forget that because it was just so much george h.w. bush-- self-effacing, modest, a great sense of humility, and it was the right thing. he was absolutely right. rubenstein: you saw him recently. you were at the barbara bush funeral... rurice: i was. you saw him recently. rubenstein: and did you have a chance to talk to him at that time? rice: i d. i did. i had a chance to talk to him and tell him how much i love him and loved mrs. bush. they--that's a generation that's going to beissed. they were people who understoo
rice: i was. rubensand did you go in to the president and say, "let's jump up and down and take credit for this"? rice: i did. i was one of the people. the minut the berlin wall fell, a bunch of us went over to the oval office. "mr. president, you have to go to berlin. "you have to go for kennedy. you have to go for truman. you have to go for reagan," and he looked at us, and he said, " tat would do, dance wall?" he said, "is is a german moment, not an...
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Jan 27, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 54
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my first very best friend was a white boy. he and i were inseparable until we reached the age of 15. when we reached the age of 15, his parents told him he could no longer be my friend and that he as a white boy was better than me and therefore he and i could no longer hang out together. he came to me and told me that story, which was amazing. and he felt horrible about it but he had no basis of not obeying his parents and that split us up. we never had contact again. i became very angry as a result of that and then engaged in my first protest. on a saturday morning, i'll never forget it, i was in the town of lithonia and went to go to the bathroom and went in at that time a colored bathroom. it was a unisex bathroom and it was dirty with all kinds of oil and grease in the bathroom and i just refused to use it. i don't know why. but on that particular occasion i simply said, i'm not using it, so i went into the white men's bathroom. used the white men's bathroom and should have come out and gone on my way but i decided since i'm here i
my first very best friend was a white boy. he and i were inseparable until we reached the age of 15. when we reached the age of 15, his parents told him he could no longer be my friend and that he as a white boy was better than me and therefore he and i could no longer hang out together. he came to me and told me that story, which was amazing. and he felt horrible about it but he had no basis of not obeying his parents and that split us up. we never had contact again. i became very angry as a...
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92
Jan 25, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 92
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i believe you served. it was actually very useful, because that way i could see how people lived and would also get some food. i wouldr and father and be invited to the shop at dinner , because we actually had very little. people were still living quite well and for me, it was very unusual. i had never seen very religious jews. that was something i had not seen. all of this life that was unfortunately lost now, the jewish culture of eastern europe was right there in the ghetto. of course, it is all gone but to me it was as a child and i -- to me as a child, it was just ye-opener to see all of this life. nick: but you also saw you're first killings there, i assume, the story of someone with white shoes? thomas: yes, when the ghetto was dissolved or liquidated as the germans would say -- my father at the end ran a workshop that had tailors, shoemakers and other people who had to perform work for germans. my father saved a whole group of his workers. in the evening, when he came out of the workshop with us and the w
i believe you served. it was actually very useful, because that way i could see how people lived and would also get some food. i wouldr and father and be invited to the shop at dinner , because we actually had very little. people were still living quite well and for me, it was very unusual. i had never seen very religious jews. that was something i had not seen. all of this life that was unfortunately lost now, the jewish culture of eastern europe was right there in the ghetto. of course, it is...
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49
Jan 5, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 49
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i was being honored. i got irate degrees. i get all kinds of bombers. it was a time in my life to sit back and really reflect on what i i had accomplished growing up in brooklyn in a poor family, first my family graduate from college, first in my family obviously to become a professional and then suddenly out of the blue and woman i never met, never heard of, i'm told had accused me of having sex with her when she was under age. i never had sex with anybody who is under age, even when i was under age. i tried, but in my day you know, marriage license was not preceded by a learners permit. i got married. i was 20 years old. that was my life. my wife and i, who i've been married to now 33 and half years, we've known each other 36 years, we've had a a wonderful, wonderful marriage, relationship. we have a terrific daughter. it just came out of the blue, this accusation. it was like somebody scribbled a name on a bathroom wall and i didn't take it seriously. my wife didn't take it seriously in the beginning, but she accused me along with another person. beca
i was being honored. i got irate degrees. i get all kinds of bombers. it was a time in my life to sit back and really reflect on what i i had accomplished growing up in brooklyn in a poor family, first my family graduate from college, first in my family obviously to become a professional and then suddenly out of the blue and woman i never met, never heard of, i'm told had accused me of having sex with her when she was under age. i never had sex with anybody who is under age, even when i was...
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153
Jan 1, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 153
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yeah i was there, i had a good time, it was great. i grew up in new jersey. i went with a friend of mine, he had a 59 triumph, the four of us in that little two seater car. we managed to go mile after mile skirting around traffic. we left about for the afternoon and my buddy who couldn't drive anymore, we parked, and it turned out we were 12 miles from the stage. we walked that way. i got to see, it started to rain on june by as, we got there around midnight. we had an awesome time from there. i remember it well, we had a great time. in fact, me and a friend went there friday just two days ago so i could stand at the same spot that i was 50 years ago. and we had a great it, they had it pretty closed off, the venue headed parking pass. i had a great time i never forgot it and that's why i went back friday. to stand in the very same spot in front of the stage that i was 50 years ago but they had it kind of closed off so you can do. it but did it look the same as 50 years ago when you are there just a couple days ago? >> yes, i mean i remember everything, the la
yeah i was there, i had a good time, it was great. i grew up in new jersey. i went with a friend of mine, he had a 59 triumph, the four of us in that little two seater car. we managed to go mile after mile skirting around traffic. we left about for the afternoon and my buddy who couldn't drive anymore, we parked, and it turned out we were 12 miles from the stage. we walked that way. i got to see, it started to rain on june by as, we got there around midnight. we had an awesome time from there....
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209
Jan 5, 2020
01/20
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CNNW
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eye 209
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it was something i learned to do. it was kind of like lip reading. nd said these songs are very traditional and very difficult to do. i said, well, they're the only songs i know, so we better learn them. ♪ i went to the president of my record company, who is a man who genuinely likes music, and i said, look, i've made all these records for you. they've sold. i'm going to do this just for me. this might be self-indulgent. if it sells two copies, i don't care. if i don't record this music, i'm going to die. >> i don't understand any spanish. i didn't understand how popular those songs were, but this is a lady who wanted to do it her way and who was going to say no? ♪ [ singing in spanish ] ♪ >> it's the largest selling spanish language album in the history of the industry. that's the whole linda ronstadt story right there in a nutshell. linda deciding she wants to do something. the record company telling her she can't. she goes ahead and does it anyway, and they jump onboard as the thing starts to take off. >> they loved it because they were here from m
it was something i learned to do. it was kind of like lip reading. nd said these songs are very traditional and very difficult to do. i said, well, they're the only songs i know, so we better learn them. ♪ i went to the president of my record company, who is a man who genuinely likes music, and i said, look, i've made all these records for you. they've sold. i'm going to do this just for me. this might be self-indulgent. if it sells two copies, i don't care. if i don't record this music, i'm...
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118
Jan 11, 2020
01/20
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MSNBCW
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eye 118
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felt like i was in a dream like it wasn't real. >> and i just was thinking, "what?" >> reporter: gerfa's husband, heiko lunsmann, had stayed behind in lynchburg and was at work when he heard. >> you must have been terrified. >> yes. it was impossible to think about it. but pictures don't lie. >> reporter: they didn't. there they were, on philippine television. incomprehensible images, gerfa's and kevin's passports, their half-packed suitcases. the stricken relatives they'd been visiting on tictabon, a small island at the tip of the southern philippines. gerfa, kevin and one of gerfa's young cousins, said the news reports, kidnapped by boat in the dead of night. >> i was thinking, no, that doesn't happen to us! >> well, nobody thinks it's going to happen to us, right? >> yeah. but my wife's heart is in the philippines. that's her family. >> reporter: gerfa was born in the philippines, had always felt safe there. her older sister married a u.s. navy sailor and moved to america in 1985. brought then 16-year-old gerfa with her, h
felt like i was in a dream like it wasn't real. >> and i just was thinking, "what?" >> reporter: gerfa's husband, heiko lunsmann, had stayed behind in lynchburg and was at work when he heard. >> you must have been terrified. >> yes. it was impossible to think about it. but pictures don't lie. >> reporter: they didn't. there they were, on philippine television. incomprehensible images, gerfa's and kevin's passports, their half-packed suitcases. the...
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30
Jan 11, 2020
01/20
by
CSPAN3
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eye 30
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and i was just a question asker. so i would ask my dad, why do the israelis and arab world not get along? and what about president nixon and henry kissinger and so those issues really fascinated me along with sports. and then when i got to high school, i was i got into debates with my social studies teachers. they were liberal, i was conservative. not because i thought through political theory but mostly because my parents were conservative. and so that was always a passion. i went to university of washington. and my undergrad was political science. and a big deal to me, it was critical to my own career was actually internships. i was an intern at the washington state senate when i was a junior. i worked for a state senator in owe limp olympia and then came to d.c. whether i was a senior at university of washington. and interned at the center for strategic and international studies. that is one of the big breaks that i got. i assumed i would return to seattle. i guess i assumed i would go to law school even though i d
and i was just a question asker. so i would ask my dad, why do the israelis and arab world not get along? and what about president nixon and henry kissinger and so those issues really fascinated me along with sports. and then when i got to high school, i was i got into debates with my social studies teachers. they were liberal, i was conservative. not because i thought through political theory but mostly because my parents were conservative. and so that was always a passion. i went to...
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111
Jan 4, 2020
01/20
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KQED
tv
eye 111
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i was always proud of him, but i was very proud of him that night. >> youay not know this, but in 1998, john mccain appeared on the origin "firing line" with william f. buckley jr., and he was speaking about teen smoking, and herought meghan up. let's take a look. >> i -- i read somewhere that, in the last two or three years, the number of leading men who are seen smoking has increased by 400% or 500% over against seven or eight years ago. is there something we can do about it? >> leonardo dicaprio is an obct of my 13-year-old daughter's affection to the degree which i have never experienced. >> so he smokes, she'll smoke. yeah. >> yeah, i mean, this young man has captured the hearts of every 13-year-old girl in america, and what does he do throughout the movie? they're continuously smoking. bre willis in the "die har movies -- he smokes continuous through those, and i'm not picking on him or leonardo. i have other problems withbu leonardo.. [ laughter ] the fact is... >>e seduced your daughter. >> yes. to distraction. you know, he has website? anyway, well, that's not surprising. >> i
i was always proud of him, but i was very proud of him that night. >> youay not know this, but in 1998, john mccain appeared on the origin "firing line" with william f. buckley jr., and he was speaking about teen smoking, and herought meghan up. let's take a look. >> i -- i read somewhere that, in the last two or three years, the number of leading men who are seen smoking has increased by 400% or 500% over against seven or eight years ago. is there something we can do...
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tv
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even when i was. briefed. on the fight only once i've been used since $1000.00 cost might be if it was an accident that happened before the vote if i stuck around through what to feed those plans for the season. if. you did 5 years the rules sure the source they're going to be the ball she was what she was fighting just those them all the states got to ask you a little walking but if you're on the board with me you look at falkirk are stark truth that all those folks need to sort of the minute to thank you for the. read you want to. thank the school. that was in the car with us want to let my friend. know what the rules i thought i was a born or spall but i will get on with and. the only. thing you're stuck on with the future is the facts so please ask all of the one stipulation or stick there that's just so you'll see. that there were other. folks who didn't go on with him some you might say it's mean. of the guy who could stop war going it's just the ukrainians they are more almost more than i do. do you buy
even when i was. briefed. on the fight only once i've been used since $1000.00 cost might be if it was an accident that happened before the vote if i stuck around through what to feed those plans for the season. if. you did 5 years the rules sure the source they're going to be the ball she was what she was fighting just those them all the states got to ask you a little walking but if you're on the board with me you look at falkirk are stark truth that all those folks need to sort of the minute...
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62
Jan 21, 2020
01/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 62
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but i was clueless, that was my ignorance was the best thing i had going for me. because i said wow great people. i didn't realize i was in the presence of great nationalists. catholic nationals and intelligence of poland. we are still in touch, it's a complicated relationship, she will say jews and polls are great friends. no i don't think so. my archival research does not support that. laughter so they know. there was some friction -- the friction was around the political questions. but we are still great friends. >> have they read the book? >> my colleague has my polish friend has not read the book. she plays a big part in it, i'm actually a little bit, look you semi- twitter but i am besieged by polish nationalists who are really very aggressive tweets already. i mean it happened immediately when the book review that mentions poland and i just started getting it immediately. at 9:00 a.m. that day, i wrote her and told her i'm going to central book. you are not going to like some parts of it i think, but you will see that i care for you and i appreciate your he
but i was clueless, that was my ignorance was the best thing i had going for me. because i said wow great people. i didn't realize i was in the presence of great nationalists. catholic nationals and intelligence of poland. we are still in touch, it's a complicated relationship, she will say jews and polls are great friends. no i don't think so. my archival research does not support that. laughter so they know. there was some friction -- the friction was around the political questions. but we...
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44
Jan 20, 2020
01/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 44
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and that day i guess i was tired. i have no idea. maybe i was just ready to go home. but i got on the bus and sat on the long seat behind the driver. and all of a sudden the driver stood up, turned around and just bellowed something out to somebody down the aisle. i realized it was an older woman. well, she was in her 40s, so that was older. so when he did that, let me have that seat, i just stood up and said she can have my seat. and when i did that, a fair-skinned, tall man pushed his knees into mine and said "don't you dare move." >> don't you dare. >> "don't you dare move." and mr. gray knows in the '50s women did what men said. totally different from today. but men were in charge of the world. so anyway, that's what happened. all of a sudden -- well, i sat back down and got off the bus when the driver said everyone get off the bus. >> did you see her arrest? >> no. no, i did not. >> so here you were. her daughter, jan, is in the audience exactly 64 years -- oops, i'm sorry. but i think back because you -- people -- no one came forward to tell the story until you.
and that day i guess i was tired. i have no idea. maybe i was just ready to go home. but i got on the bus and sat on the long seat behind the driver. and all of a sudden the driver stood up, turned around and just bellowed something out to somebody down the aisle. i realized it was an older woman. well, she was in her 40s, so that was older. so when he did that, let me have that seat, i just stood up and said she can have my seat. and when i did that, a fair-skinned, tall man pushed his knees...
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33
Jan 1, 2020
01/20
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 33
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i was talking with a woman. by the time i was finished, i had one last question. what hope do you have? her name was mina, what hope do you have? she looked down for a long time. she cast her eyes down. i thought, i have asked something inappropriate. she finally looked up at me and said, the truth is, i have no hope. i have no hope for feeding this child or that one, or educating them. please, take them home with you. when that happened, it was not the first time, it is heartbreaking. to see a woman who clearly loves her sons that much, but to know they would be better off going home with a stranger, that is heartbreaking. that is the story of many women and families around the world. david: annually you have a letter written by the the heads of the foundation you and bill. originally it was written by bill. when you said, bill, i want to get women's issues in, what did he say? melinda: the idea for the annual letter came from warren and we both thought that was a good idea. however, we had three very young children at the time. i was on several boards and working
i was talking with a woman. by the time i was finished, i had one last question. what hope do you have? her name was mina, what hope do you have? she looked down for a long time. she cast her eyes down. i thought, i have asked something inappropriate. she finally looked up at me and said, the truth is, i have no hope. i have no hope for feeding this child or that one, or educating them. please, take them home with you. when that happened, it was not the first time, it is heartbreaking. to see a...
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31
Jan 2, 2020
01/20
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 31
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i of course like that was back when i used to live in tunisia there was a different environment political and social except and after that i lived a few years and friends i travelled i toured and i composed made different albums so i feel a little bit less of. a rebel but now i feel like i matured into a warrior and. i think part of coming into the person you're supposed to be for you based on what people are telling us online is the languages that you use for your songs of course you're at least trilingual right arabic english friends who wore the 5555 we're going to so our audience picked up on that i want to play a video comment from someone who talks about that this is a lecturer in the air but program at stanford university here in the u.s. and here's what he asked i would like to congratulate. chasse tracks both. arabic my question is does it feel different toward your record your own arabic that it does what you recorded or fred which if so. so when i started to sing in my 1st. passion started by covering other artists and it was mostly in english so english actually is my musical
i of course like that was back when i used to live in tunisia there was a different environment political and social except and after that i lived a few years and friends i travelled i toured and i composed made different albums so i feel a little bit less of. a rebel but now i feel like i matured into a warrior and. i think part of coming into the person you're supposed to be for you based on what people are telling us online is the languages that you use for your songs of course you're at...
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54
Jan 19, 2020
01/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 54
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i was really impressed. is taking names mean to you quick. >> i really didn't think it would ruffle as many feathers as it did that i realized i wasn't that much of a diplomat. when i went to the united nations obviously there was a crash course in foreign policy to study our friends and foes and conflicts and what we needed to work on. i purposely did not study the do's and don'ts of the un program wanted to go in with fresh eyes and wanted them to know i had goals to achieve and i didn't want the bureaucracy to get in the way. so when i first talk to the press for the first time i said it is a new day the united states mission of the united nations it is important to me countries didn't have to like us but wanted to know what we were for him to be very clear what it was for and against with no gray areas in the process and i said we will have the backs of our allies and taking names of those that are not with us. you have 193 countries most to resent us on any given day and every day felt like you had to pu
i was really impressed. is taking names mean to you quick. >> i really didn't think it would ruffle as many feathers as it did that i realized i wasn't that much of a diplomat. when i went to the united nations obviously there was a crash course in foreign policy to study our friends and foes and conflicts and what we needed to work on. i purposely did not study the do's and don'ts of the un program wanted to go in with fresh eyes and wanted them to know i had goals to achieve and i...
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64
Jan 8, 2020
01/20
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 64
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i was naive. i thought the judge was the boss. i was wrong. the boss was the prosecutor.y nice polite. why don't you bring the document, they said we will think about it. then the days come and they say we are light. why all of this? try as much as possible to delay the trial. when i was in japan i still do not have a date for the first charge, did not have a date. then they came with the idea, we cannot put all the trials of the same time. yet to finish the first charge before we start the second one. when i asked my lawyers about how much time this will take, they said maybe five years in japan before i get a judgment. five years in japan. , we is, we have messaging have a specialist in human rights. a speedy trial is one of the basic and most fundamental rights of any human being. part of the treaty of human rights. i was far from a speedy trial. on the contrary, i had the impression they would take as much time as possible. with the judge being a nice organizer, and the prosecutor calling the shots. 99.4% conviction rate. all of the signs there was no way i was going
i was naive. i thought the judge was the boss. i was wrong. the boss was the prosecutor.y nice polite. why don't you bring the document, they said we will think about it. then the days come and they say we are light. why all of this? try as much as possible to delay the trial. when i was in japan i still do not have a date for the first charge, did not have a date. then they came with the idea, we cannot put all the trials of the same time. yet to finish the first charge before we start the...
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55
Jan 13, 2020
01/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 55
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the first thing i did was to ask everyone i knew wherever i wa was, do they know a nanny in the boston and they had a wonderful nanny. so law school was fine the. [laughter] >> before we leave this. you were so self-possessed early on he wrote the letter to eleanor roosevelt which made me weep about the need to resurrect them and the rvg exhibit going around the country there are editorials from the cornell newspaper about wiretapping and surveillance. did you feel these life lessons were instilled by your mother or important ones that came after that? . . . . the f y important in being productive. to be able to concentrate [inaudible] it is children's hour we sing silly songs and then but i had to make the most of the time it was helping [inaudible] to stay up all night he had a between nine and 1:00 [inaudible] went to sleep about 2:00 and i would begin my own work. it is a resolution to you every moment. >> [inaudible] people would stay out all day and take time to read the newspaper. i think it worked out well for me. the next one is working together and it'sth the story that is no
the first thing i did was to ask everyone i knew wherever i wa was, do they know a nanny in the boston and they had a wonderful nanny. so law school was fine the. [laughter] >> before we leave this. you were so self-possessed early on he wrote the letter to eleanor roosevelt which made me weep about the need to resurrect them and the rvg exhibit going around the country there are editorials from the cornell newspaper about wiretapping and surveillance. did you feel these life lessons were...
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185
Jan 25, 2020
01/20
by
KNTV
tv
eye 185
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then i was like, "is he this one? and my friend was like, "yes." i was like, "what? xy come on suga let me what ♪ [ light laughter ] it was very fun. then i heard actress sharon stone was blocked on bumble and i was like, "what is bumble?" because i'm married. apparently, it's a dating app and people were reporting her account as fake because they couldn't believe it was really sharon stone and i was like, "what is sharon stone doing on a dating app? there should be a dating app where people sign up to date sharon stone in fact, i'm going to make one try to date sharon stone with a new dating app, romancing the stone. [ light laughter ] with romancing the stone, love's just a sharon stone's throw away ♪ [ laughter ] speaking of famous blondes, put rod stewart back up. i have another one ♪ forever wha forever what ♪ [ light laughter ] then everyone was talking about how dr. phil's son put his house up for sale and i was like, "what, who cares?" but everyone was like, "you got to look at it. and i did and i was like, "what? a person lives here? then i saw that his house
then i was like, "is he this one? and my friend was like, "yes." i was like, "what? xy come on suga let me what ♪ [ light laughter ] it was very fun. then i heard actress sharon stone was blocked on bumble and i was like, "what is bumble?" because i'm married. apparently, it's a dating app and people were reporting her account as fake because they couldn't believe it was really sharon stone and i was like, "what is sharon stone doing on a dating app? there...
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33
Jan 9, 2020
01/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 33
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i was so busy, it was like i didn't have time to use the bathroom. it was like hard to eat and get a break in. probably not very fair, but that's life. and i actually started at this network before it even launched. it was a huge decision to leave the cbs affiliate. it was pretty risky. i remember having a conversation with my parents. it's always good to bounce ideas of things you want to do in the future with the people that you love. my dad is like that's really risky. why would you leave cbs to go work for some network that no one has ever heard of. that's crazy. my mom is, you should do it. go to san diego, national news. that's what you want to do. so this was a big back and forth. i just to roll the dice and how i did even find out about this network that wasn't on air yet. well, there was a person i had had interned with at pbs in college who worked there on the entertainment side for what was called, the wealth of entertainment. he d.m.'d me on facebook and told me to apply. so i did. which brings me to relationships and how you treat people.
i was so busy, it was like i didn't have time to use the bathroom. it was like hard to eat and get a break in. probably not very fair, but that's life. and i actually started at this network before it even launched. it was a huge decision to leave the cbs affiliate. it was pretty risky. i remember having a conversation with my parents. it's always good to bounce ideas of things you want to do in the future with the people that you love. my dad is like that's really risky. why would you leave...
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58
Jan 19, 2020
01/20
by
CNBC
tv
eye 58
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i was probably more agitated and embarrassed that i -- you know, that somebody was able to do that. oday. you would not care what i said, you would not care -- [ laughing ] like, back then you actually cared what i said. if i had said, "marcus, please stay for a little bit, and just"... lemonis: see what happens? amber: ...you know, "see what happens," you'd stay. today, you would never stay. right? lemonis: so, basically you have no control anymore? amber: i have no control anymore. lemonis: if your business is in trouble and you need my help, log on to the theprofitcasting.com. ♪ lemonis: you guys have spent a lot of time telling me about trust. tom: sure. lemonis: you don't trust him, he doesn't trust you, all the nonsense back and forth. i move forward in the negotiation based on trust. i made a deal with tom and nancy because they said they were making $400,000 in profit. but when i look at these financials, it says $200,000, i need to get to the bottom of this. amber: well, i mean, you did a deal based on $400,000. now it's $200,000. how different would your deal have been? lem
i was probably more agitated and embarrassed that i -- you know, that somebody was able to do that. oday. you would not care what i said, you would not care -- [ laughing ] like, back then you actually cared what i said. if i had said, "marcus, please stay for a little bit, and just"... lemonis: see what happens? amber: ...you know, "see what happens," you'd stay. today, you would never stay. right? lemonis: so, basically you have no control anymore? amber: i have no control...
491
491
Jan 30, 2020
01/20
by
KNTV
tv
eye 491
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i was old. he was in his prime killing me. >> oh, love that footage. >> never gets old to see. >> magic called kobe the greatest laker too. >>> and more from jessica simpson. her "open book" is revealing things nobody knew. >> this morning she spoke candidly with hoda kotb about the sexual abuse she experienced as a 6-year-old. >> at the time i didn't nrgs what w understand what was happening. i knew something was wrong. this was a very close person and she was being abused. it hapd in my life. >> though she recognized the abuse, jessica struggled with telling her parents, who are a core part of the baptist community in her home state of texas. >> i felt guilty. i felt shame. i felt what anybody would feel in abuse. i was a preacher's daughter. like i was taught to be a virgin until i got married and so i never wanted to share these like sexual things that were happening because i didn't want to hurt anybody. >> you did finally told your folks, and that took big-time guts. >> it did. and my paren
i was old. he was in his prime killing me. >> oh, love that footage. >> never gets old to see. >> magic called kobe the greatest laker too. >>> and more from jessica simpson. her "open book" is revealing things nobody knew. >> this morning she spoke candidly with hoda kotb about the sexual abuse she experienced as a 6-year-old. >> at the time i didn't nrgs what w understand what was happening. i knew something was wrong. this was a very close...
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21
tv
eye 21
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when the ships left but i was left time and dry if. you could tell they weren't here anymore we've lost so many jobs it's not a good thing to the a mystery to me on the matter after i stop driving taxis i started to work in a bodega hired my own business and sold mine on the base i had an idea and i could go in and out as i wished i don't know what it's like there today i don't go there anymore do you know i'm been there for 40 years the place they and only any one in tiny. towns cultural roots had almost been lost. later about 30 years ago the old identities started to resurface again people were looking for their own traditions again. the fairy the sun the seadrill festival the virgin carmen festival and all these things that had been forgotten at that time have now returned and. we even have 14 churches in the city again we've got of if you. for me this is the really interesting the greatest culture shock for me because i grew up here from 8 was not coming here it was going back it was going back to the united states that was my cult
when the ships left but i was left time and dry if. you could tell they weren't here anymore we've lost so many jobs it's not a good thing to the a mystery to me on the matter after i stop driving taxis i started to work in a bodega hired my own business and sold mine on the base i had an idea and i could go in and out as i wished i don't know what it's like there today i don't go there anymore do you know i'm been there for 40 years the place they and only any one in tiny. towns cultural roots...
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43
Jan 31, 2020
01/20
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 43
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sol know i was facing simona, so it was going to be a hard match.ging in there and fighting with all the energy i had. luckily i have 48 hours now to recover and get ready for the last match, and yes, we train all of our career to be able to play in this court and this crowd. on to football, and barcelona have cruised through to the quarter—finals of the copa del rey. they thrashed fellow top—flight team leganes 5—0. antoine griezmann and lionel messi were both among the scorers in their last—16 tie at camp nou, while in the night's other game, shock result. second—tier mirandes beating champions league—chasing sevilla 3—1 to progress. on—loan watford forward matheus with two goals for the home side. elsewhere, lyon are through to the quarter—finals of the coupe de france after a 2—1victory at nice. houssem aouar got the winner with a penalty in stoppage time. the draw for the quarter—finals was made staright after that game, and lyon will be at home to marseille in the pick of the quarter—finals. paris st—germain will visit dijon in another all—lig
sol know i was facing simona, so it was going to be a hard match.ging in there and fighting with all the energy i had. luckily i have 48 hours now to recover and get ready for the last match, and yes, we train all of our career to be able to play in this court and this crowd. on to football, and barcelona have cruised through to the quarter—finals of the copa del rey. they thrashed fellow top—flight team leganes 5—0. antoine griezmann and lionel messi were both among the scorers in their...
78
78
Jan 1, 2020
01/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 78
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i was just in all. i stayed up on my own energy. it was quite an experience. host: did you think at the time did 50 years later we would still be talking about this then you, this music concert and what happened over three days? caller: i did not. host: thank you for phoning in. we have another woodstock memory from eddie in pennsylvania. go ahead. up like it is today. i had a great time. i never forgot it. i wanted to stand in the same spot i was in 50 years ago. they had it kind of closed off. host:i wanted to stand in the fd where i was. i wasn't able to do it. host: it is a historic site as you can see from this marker. this is what it looks like today. what do you think? caller: i'm not looking at the tv right now. i remember it exactly the way it was. it was a field of mud. today, it's a nice landscape field. sign you can see the peace that commemorates the 50th anniversary. how old were you? caller: i was 21 at the time. we drove from outside detroit. we came in the back way. we did that experience all the traffic that they saw from new york city. that w
i was just in all. i stayed up on my own energy. it was quite an experience. host: did you think at the time did 50 years later we would still be talking about this then you, this music concert and what happened over three days? caller: i did not. host: thank you for phoning in. we have another woodstock memory from eddie in pennsylvania. go ahead. up like it is today. i had a great time. i never forgot it. i wanted to stand in the same spot i was in 50 years ago. they had it kind of closed...
333
333
Jan 11, 2020
01/20
by
KGO
tv
eye 333
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i guess age wise he was. more mature. >> reporter: she also got the only interview ever with billy flinn. >> i was still in love with pam. that trial was one of the hard east things i've ever done in my life ever. >> i guess it's hard for a lot of people to think that you could do something like that for love. >> that was the whole world to me that day. i fell in love with her. she was really all i had, you know. >> reporter: in the years since, pamela appealed her case to no avail. currently, she's housed at the bedford hills correctional facility in new york where she's received two masters degrees, tutors other prisoners and takes part in prison ministry. the boys, billy flinn himself, served long sentences and are now free e. >> even if you believe she's guilty, which i don't, the actual killers who said yes, we murdered him, are walking around and having their lives, and she deserves better. >> reporter: pamela has had to watch as other women who actually fired the bullets that killed their victims walk
i guess age wise he was. more mature. >> reporter: she also got the only interview ever with billy flinn. >> i was still in love with pam. that trial was one of the hard east things i've ever done in my life ever. >> i guess it's hard for a lot of people to think that you could do something like that for love. >> that was the whole world to me that day. i fell in love with her. she was really all i had, you know. >> reporter: in the years since, pamela appealed...
86
86
Jan 2, 2020
01/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 86
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i had ran mercury and roulette, and capitol was the biggest, and it is that i was the first vice president of rock in the music industry business, because that is the way it went out, vice president of rock. and rock was just coming in, and it was about 1965 or '66 going out of pop into rock, and hanging out with the moby grape, and signed quick silver and stuff like that, and that is the start of rock, right? >> i am talking to you later about moby grape. >> and matthew kates was a lunatic and he used to drink his own urine, and he did and he had his daughter do it, and he believed that is the key to the longer life, and that is a private story. sorry, matt. he lived near malibu and that is how i knew. he tried -- >> let me ask you, what was that sort of the tipping point that said, gee, i am going to create this company called the woodstock and arts festival. >> was running capitol, and on the east coast and very successful. i had no budgets and the chairman of the board loved me. i signed the first deal with no limits, and nobody could say no to what i wanted to do and i was in the stud
i had ran mercury and roulette, and capitol was the biggest, and it is that i was the first vice president of rock in the music industry business, because that is the way it went out, vice president of rock. and rock was just coming in, and it was about 1965 or '66 going out of pop into rock, and hanging out with the moby grape, and signed quick silver and stuff like that, and that is the start of rock, right? >> i am talking to you later about moby grape. >> and matthew kates was a...
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35
Jan 20, 2020
01/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 35
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and i was aware of his story. and i also knew charles -- charlie barber because as a director of the connection, he and i had met over a recidivism study i was working on relating to sex offenders. it just so happened that at the time mr. outlaw wanted to tell his story. and i thought it was a very good story to tell. he asked me if i could write it, and i said i'm not the guy. you know, you know, i can write, but i'm not the guy. but i thought i knew the guy, and so i introduced him to charlie barber, and i said why don't you guys just sit down and talk, and i will just leave, and if anything comes from this, i will be happy. so i'm happy today because there's a book. and i feel it's really my little contribution to it. i was able to do something quite good, and for those of you that don't know william outlaw, he was -- he has a fearsome reputation in the history of connecticut department of correction both in law enforcement both in new haven and statewide. back in 80s he ran a gang that was known as the jungle b
and i was aware of his story. and i also knew charles -- charlie barber because as a director of the connection, he and i had met over a recidivism study i was working on relating to sex offenders. it just so happened that at the time mr. outlaw wanted to tell his story. and i thought it was a very good story to tell. he asked me if i could write it, and i said i'm not the guy. you know, you know, i can write, but i'm not the guy. but i thought i knew the guy, and so i introduced him to charlie...
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Jan 26, 2020
01/20
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BBCNEWS
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i guess that i was there for a reason that night. ave kept quiet and not spoken out. but as god says, you have to do something in this life and i did something. lucia on speaking out against the salvadoran government. ourfinal story is about a man his work is said to help us save a billion people from hunger and famine. in 1970 the american scientist norman borlog was awarded nobel peace prize for his pioneering work developing disease resistant crops. at the time, famine and malnutrition were claiming millions of lives the world. his work meant countries like india were able to become self—sufficient. witness history hears from his friend. if the field is uniform you get a general picture of what it is likely to yield. the man who fed the world. norman borlog praised saving more lives than anyone in history. we were in the field hard at work and looked up and saw a car. he said, whoa, that looks like margaret. margaret was his wife, she says, norman, you won the nobel prize. he didn't believe that, he comes back and we go back to wor
i guess that i was there for a reason that night. ave kept quiet and not spoken out. but as god says, you have to do something in this life and i did something. lucia on speaking out against the salvadoran government. ourfinal story is about a man his work is said to help us save a billion people from hunger and famine. in 1970 the american scientist norman borlog was awarded nobel peace prize for his pioneering work developing disease resistant crops. at the time, famine and malnutrition were...
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i was listening to. it was never the same seats in the time i was this is an hour and we do not need to the right path so that this collective on that we all call. our planet. will be able to survive. for the generations that follow us thank you. misconceive. us and in the not in my. head the vein. of this difference goes to see a mother we assume this is that it is us. and the and us and saying. this. is in absolutes land these things. as in its existence. it's time to go in obstacles and misty and i have nothing here that we're not going app stores were out. in times by them but that. guy with the seat in mind that i'm going to be inside and i was saying who does have mine doesn't my mom said sometimes as i was going my house up i was going. to start. up any good income thing not money. when suzy was assume suits and that has been missing women to do a business. may miss and begin the. things you would do with a list as is not. easy but i am worried. what i was never. thought oh. wait it is one's even i
i was listening to. it was never the same seats in the time i was this is an hour and we do not need to the right path so that this collective on that we all call. our planet. will be able to survive. for the generations that follow us thank you. misconceive. us and in the not in my. head the vein. of this difference goes to see a mother we assume this is that it is us. and the and us and saying. this. is in absolutes land these things. as in its existence. it's time to go in obstacles and...
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i was in the difference 8 i was on i was on the political side for the view one thing you learn aversion fein and the ira even today is that the higher up you go with fear the next thing you know you're sitting at meetings astonishing fin meeting anymore it's often half the setting was a or a volunteers the set was a or a commander's you know and that's when you realize these 2 are want i mean even today we've got the peace process we've got mary lou mcdonald we've got michelle in need we've got all these people but the ira army consul are still in place the area me consul is the ared of the republican movement and they dictate what happens with them the political opposition very completely deny that so the f. or you going back to this because this is a submission to the united nations i mean 864 civilians were killed around this time by loyalist paramilitaries and linked to the air for you estimates so therefore he was responsible for 15 dead do you do you think there could be any truth was it a death squad you were working for many have to understand that. my understanding is that stea
i was in the difference 8 i was on i was on the political side for the view one thing you learn aversion fein and the ira even today is that the higher up you go with fear the next thing you know you're sitting at meetings astonishing fin meeting anymore it's often half the setting was a or a volunteers the set was a or a commander's you know and that's when you realize these 2 are want i mean even today we've got the peace process we've got mary lou mcdonald we've got michelle in need we've...
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Jan 27, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN2
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i was young. we were at war, and we were afraid and it was pretty much with a view to wiping adversary off the map. and over the course of a career, and interaction after a interaction, i realized that that just is a fiction. it doesn't work. i mean, it's not a fulfilling way to live but it also risks creating more adversary than you destroy, and adding to the heads, and i think there is a more long term and a holistic way to bring an end to this conflict we just have proven time and again that we cannot prevent violence through violence alone. you know? over 17,000 years of human history so -- well with that sort of brings me to my question which is i didn't expect a book about cia to be a deeply spiritual book or i didn't know to call it spirituality or personal philosophy but an idea that human beings want the same thing you point out graffiti in a taxi in pakistan that says remember the other person as you. which had just really as you say a core and you say i think i found that deep down most
i was young. we were at war, and we were afraid and it was pretty much with a view to wiping adversary off the map. and over the course of a career, and interaction after a interaction, i realized that that just is a fiction. it doesn't work. i mean, it's not a fulfilling way to live but it also risks creating more adversary than you destroy, and adding to the heads, and i think there is a more long term and a holistic way to bring an end to this conflict we just have proven time and again that...
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Jan 25, 2020
01/20
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on the afternoon of the 17th, i was on my way in a small vehicle, and i had to dismount because it wasossible to get ahead on this road. i walked toward the front and try to make myself useful as a military policeman. it was hopeless to try to untangle the vehicles when suddenly i heard someone calling in a loud voice. at the front, i thought i saw a military policeman and i approached. , who had auperior same intention as i. we continued our efforts and try to separate the column, but until nightfall, a certain confusion and perplexity remained. we were not able to separate the vehicles. you realize as well as organizedhe battle is confusion. the job of the general is to see that the confusion is not too disorganized. >> one human element was seventh armored division private bill -- dasinger.bill >> trucks, and equipment going the opposite way. , what are wehink getting ourselves into? later on, we found out. >> another was lieutenant will rogers junior. >> down a side road. at this time, the roads were packed with traffic, all kinds of vehicles coming out of st. vith. way very find o
on the afternoon of the 17th, i was on my way in a small vehicle, and i had to dismount because it wasossible to get ahead on this road. i walked toward the front and try to make myself useful as a military policeman. it was hopeless to try to untangle the vehicles when suddenly i heard someone calling in a loud voice. at the front, i thought i saw a military policeman and i approached. , who had auperior same intention as i. we continued our efforts and try to separate the column, but until...
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Jan 2, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN3
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i was the messenger and i was not the creator and i used from whatever power i was in on. i just knew exactly what to do. ? how did you end up with matt's part? >> the real story is i'm sitting in my apartment and my cousin lenore lived on 52nd street and he had a neighbor. it was all lies. all lies, totally. >> i get a phone call from this guy and he says mr. kornfeld, i live next door to your cousin lenore and my uncle has a cattle farm up in bethel, new york, and he's going to lose it. he needs $60,000 desperately. so i said, well, let me have his number and i called michael. i said, michael, there's a guy named max yasger. this is the true story and this is the honest truth and there are witnesses to the story and it's even in my book. people who heard the conversation, and michael went and made the deal with matt. >> it was 60,000 originally and when i got out there i couldn't believe it. we got done closing the deal and we left from warner brothers to get out there and michael says to me, take the motorcycle. we're all over these farmers' lands. there are 12 farms her
i was the messenger and i was not the creator and i used from whatever power i was in on. i just knew exactly what to do. ? how did you end up with matt's part? >> the real story is i'm sitting in my apartment and my cousin lenore lived on 52nd street and he had a neighbor. it was all lies. all lies, totally. >> i get a phone call from this guy and he says mr. kornfeld, i live next door to your cousin lenore and my uncle has a cattle farm up in bethel, new york, and he's going to...
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Jan 18, 2020
01/20
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KPIX
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and i was behind the curtain. i didn't know he was there. was here, because i knew all his albums -- >> stephen: who was it? >> come on, you know who it was. ( laughter ) >> stephen: tell-- tell me one of his jokes. >> we're both catholic, you and me. >> stephen: yes, yes. >> and every catholic kid that i know-- >> stephen: it was george carlin. >> yes, it was, sir. ( applause ) and-- >> stephen: that's another thing to be jealous-- i never got to meet carlin. >> well, i had never met him either. i had worked his concerts. i had worked concerts as a kid in college. he was sitting there, and carson was where you were, and i couldn't believe it was george carlin, which gave carson-- what he loved to do which is pretend that he was being ignored. which he did the whole show. but i knew all of his bits. >> stephen: did your parents know you listened to george carlin when you were younger? because he was famous for "the seven dirty words you can never say on television." >> yes, he was. >> stephen: do you know what they were? >> i do, but-- >> st
and i was behind the curtain. i didn't know he was there. was here, because i knew all his albums -- >> stephen: who was it? >> come on, you know who it was. ( laughter ) >> stephen: tell-- tell me one of his jokes. >> we're both catholic, you and me. >> stephen: yes, yes. >> and every catholic kid that i know-- >> stephen: it was george carlin. >> yes, it was, sir. ( applause ) and-- >> stephen: that's another thing to be jealous-- i never...
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Jan 1, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN3
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i was proud that it held. when the rain hit, it was such a threat to everybody and that is when the miracle happened. when the rain hit, the miracle happened because we had threat of being in jail for the rest of our life and committing manslaughter if someone died, and everyone on the field was just so up about it and when my friend bury the fish barry the fish, he's a lawyer now. very great lawyer. he started chanting "no more rain, " and the rain stopped. i even did the mudslide. i wanted to see what they are doing so i enjoyed it. i walked up on the field. i didn't go to the top. i walked to the shops. the one that said smoke shop, that was one of my best friends i played basketball with. >> >> the movie, which is iconic, you were instrumental in making that happen. >> >> according to the president of warner bros. i was the only reason it happened. honestly, that's true. it's just a fact. if i didn't produce when i was at mercury, they came through with an act from candida and i spent $80,000 and produced h
i was proud that it held. when the rain hit, it was such a threat to everybody and that is when the miracle happened. when the rain hit, the miracle happened because we had threat of being in jail for the rest of our life and committing manslaughter if someone died, and everyone on the field was just so up about it and when my friend bury the fish barry the fish, he's a lawyer now. very great lawyer. he started chanting "no more rain, " and the rain stopped. i even did the mudslide. i...
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that the world was willing to offer me this week that i found life in moscow hard so i was denied permission to leave for concerts so there were restrictions placed on my repertoire and i couldn't always play the music i wanted to play which incidentally also happens today now and again. back in the soviet union the reasons were ideological now the commercial business basically not much different the same. there's always pressure i've learned to live with the pressure. but i don't give up so easily when i believe in something so that i often when i toss loman there was a lot of almost i shed some light but i think that on the one thing i've been given certain districts personally. you know that has sustained those moves and cool because of the someone else told. me to. her 6 6 6 6. it's just so. i. love love lisa. he says. the old the old. think going to challenge. any of. the men that yes to my 1st born daughter is a journalist. if we talk and argue about a lot of things together. but we also have valuable discussions and very often i feel that she's a pillar of support for example when i'm
that the world was willing to offer me this week that i found life in moscow hard so i was denied permission to leave for concerts so there were restrictions placed on my repertoire and i couldn't always play the music i wanted to play which incidentally also happens today now and again. back in the soviet union the reasons were ideological now the commercial business basically not much different the same. there's always pressure i've learned to live with the pressure. but i don't give up so...