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. >> jim jim, jim.spray tan, buddy. >> follow that. >> i prefer he goes back to the sweater. >> he looks leaner though so that's good news. i'm sure his wife is loving the attention that is getting. >> medical news from the cavs has a lot of warrior fans thinking sweet. the injury to could i reyou are vipg -- to kyrie >>> a devastating blow to the cleveland cavalier with game two coming up. they lost their allstar point guard out with a broken kneecap. he came in hobbling. he played well in game one of the finals for 23 points last night. in the over time irving knocks knees with klay thompson and left in absolute agony. today an mri revealed a fracture kneecap. irving is out for three to four months. look for matthew delavadova to get the start. >> i have played a longtime. seen it all no matter what the circumstances is you go out and play as hard as you can and live with the results. >> who ever is gonna play those minutes, they will come in and try to win the game as well and impact the game. we can
. >> jim jim, jim.spray tan, buddy. >> follow that. >> i prefer he goes back to the sweater. >> he looks leaner though so that's good news. i'm sure his wife is loving the attention that is getting. >> medical news from the cavs has a lot of warrior fans thinking sweet. the injury to could i reyou are vipg -- to kyrie >>> a devastating blow to the cleveland cavalier with game two coming up. they lost their allstar point guard out with a broken kneecap. he...
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Jun 6, 2015
06/15
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KOFY
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. >> jim jim, jim. spray tan, buddy. >> follow that. >> i prefer he goes ba to the sweater. >> he looks leaner though so that's good news. i'm sure his wife is loving the attention that is getting. >> medical news from the cavs has a lot of warrior fans thinking sweet the injury to could i reyou are vipg -- >>> devastating blow to the cleveland cavier with game two coming up. they lost their allstar point guard out with a broken kneecap. he came in hobbling. he ayed well in game one of the finals for 23 points last night. in the over time irvin knocks knees with klay thpson and left in absolute agony. today an mri revealed a fracture kneecap. irving is out for three to four months. look for matthew delavadova to get the start. >> i have played a longtime. seen it all no matter what the circumstances is you go out and play as hard as youan and live with the results. >> who ever is gonna play those minutes, they will come in and try to win the game as wellnd impact the game. we can't assume it will a cake
. >> jim jim, jim. spray tan, buddy. >> follow that. >> i prefer he goes ba to the sweater. >> he looks leaner though so that's good news. i'm sure his wife is loving the attention that is getting. >> medical news from the cavs has a lot of warrior fans thinking sweet the injury to could i reyou are vipg -- >>> devastating blow to the cleveland cavier with game two coming up. they lost their allstar point guard out with a broken kneecap. he came in...
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. >> jim jim, jim.follow that. >> i prefer he goes back to the sweater. >> he looks leaner though so that's good news. i'm sure his wife is loving the attention that is getting. >> medical news from the cavs has a lot of warrior fans thinking sweet. the injury to could i reyou are vipg -- my name is peter tran. i'm a gas service representative. i've been with pg&e nine years. as an employee of pg&e you always put your best foot forward to provide reliable and safe service and be able to help the community. we always have the safety of our customers and the community in mind. my family is in oakland, my wife's family is in oakland so this is home to us. being able to work in the community that i grew up in, customers feel like friends, neighbors and it makes it a little bit more special. together, we're building a better california. >>> a devastating blow to the cleveland cavalier with game two coming up. they lost their allstar point guard out with a broken kneecap. he came in hobbling. he played well i
. >> jim jim, jim.follow that. >> i prefer he goes back to the sweater. >> he looks leaner though so that's good news. i'm sure his wife is loving the attention that is getting. >> medical news from the cavs has a lot of warrior fans thinking sweet. the injury to could i reyou are vipg -- my name is peter tran. i'm a gas service representative. i've been with pg&e nine years. as an employee of pg&e you always put your best foot forward to provide reliable and...
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jim: oh, boy. nick: sand? well we've seen a few up and down. jim: yes, it is. nick: is he on the upslope? that's the most important thing. he is, so -- jimpaul azinger. nick: not quite but you're right, it is on an upslope which makes a huge difference. david: rose has 7-iron pulled. 180 yards. >> good club. david: mark full cher likes it. peter: pretty clean contact. jim: it's going right maybe a little bit? no? yeah. nick: on the front section of the green. an up and over around the corner putt. he knows the break. he knows the last 20 feet of the break. jim: mentioned azinger if you pointed out it was higher up in the bunker but this is how he closed things in 1993. you see payne stewart in the background. boom. for the win. nick: jack has done over the bunkers. they're now twice as deep. jim: how hard of an up and down will it be for lingmerth? upslope? nick: i don't think it's too bad. the slope is a huge help. it might leave him a downhill six-footer. jim: just a sea of supporters ringing the 1th green and lined up all the way down the fairway some 10 deep.
jim: oh, boy. nick: sand? well we've seen a few up and down. jim: yes, it is. nick: is he on the upslope? that's the most important thing. he is, so -- jimpaul azinger. nick: not quite but you're right, it is on an upslope which makes a huge difference. david: rose has 7-iron pulled. 180 yards. >> good club. david: mark full cher likes it. peter: pretty clean contact. jim: it's going right maybe a little bit? no? yeah. nick: on the front section of the green. an up and over around the...
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Jun 13, 2015
06/15
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jim: you can't seem to get far enough away. ed: it is all the difference in the world with this gun. i was maneuvering all around. jim: we are at 48% on our 02. ed: let me get a picture. >> got about five minutes. >> gemini 4, houston. >> the flight rector says get back in. jim. jim: they want you to come back in now. ed: back in? >> roger. ed: coming in. >> you got about four minutes. >> history will record command pilot mcdivitt opened the hatch at 2:42 eastern standard time. and along the eastern seaboard they had opened up a new frontier for americans to explore. in 21 and one half minutes, eva was completed. inside, the crew was placed -- the crew was faced with a problem. the hatch would not close. that day mcdivitt took apart the hatch paid off. hatch finally closed. cabin was re-pressurized and the mission settled back into its cycle. the crew was busy with the x-ray equipment. -- with the extra equipment. america settled back in to its daily routine. tv and radio returned to the regular programs. news reporters and editors concentrated on other stories, like their earthbound counterparts, the crew settled down to working, eating and sleeping. but most of us have not flown in orbit. it might seem to men in space have considerable time hanging over th
jim: you can't seem to get far enough away. ed: it is all the difference in the world with this gun. i was maneuvering all around. jim: we are at 48% on our 02. ed: let me get a picture. >> got about five minutes. >> gemini 4, houston. >> the flight rector says get back in. jim. jim: they want you to come back in now. ed: back in? >> roger. ed: coming in. >> you got about four minutes. >> history will record command pilot mcdivitt opened the hatch at 2:42...
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Jun 27, 2015
06/15
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jim heard a voice. hey, hooper called jim nicholson! jim grinned and took a step toward hooper. perhaps he thought the stranger knew him from somewhere or needed to talk to him about his luggage. he was still smiling when hooper got close enough to flash his credentials. jim, fbi he said. it's over. jim tensed and balled his fists, looking furtively past hooper. don't try it hooper said. it's over. dave raymond baby-faced fbi tech agent can in jean -- agent in jeans and an identical jacket locked his hand around jim's arm. he had arrested all kinds of people in his career, most of his targets knew the day was coming, probably even expected it, but p hooper had never seen anyone look quite the way jim did just then, stone frozen, paralyzed. his eyes were vacant, he seemed unable to utter a word. jim unclenched his fists. there would be no fight, no foot race. above the action a member of the fbi surveillance team photographed the moment frame after frame documenting the takedown with such clarity you could see the crown of jim's head had grown a little threadbare. one of his cia s
jim heard a voice. hey, hooper called jim nicholson! jim grinned and took a step toward hooper. perhaps he thought the stranger knew him from somewhere or needed to talk to him about his luggage. he was still smiling when hooper got close enough to flash his credentials. jim, fbi he said. it's over. jim tensed and balled his fists, looking furtively past hooper. don't try it hooper said. it's over. dave raymond baby-faced fbi tech agent can in jean -- agent in jeans and an identical jacket...
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Jun 28, 2015
06/15
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KYW
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jim: dead center. nick: thape he holes this one we'll have another playoff. jim: bubba to extend and as you said -- jim: on we go again. so they're going to go to the 18th one more time, and if they match scores on the second hole of the playoff they then would go to the 17th. we'll be back at the travelers championship. jim: again tonight on cbs as we've en1kwr0eud go covering here "60 minutes" with did foo fighters tonight featured. only cbs. casey watch daddy make a little up and down par save to keep this going. i think we're within an hour since casey teed off having played a group ahead of bubba in regulation. they're each playing the hole for the third time in a one-hour window of -- or less. of course, you know, bubba with his admitted concerns about the tee shot at 17, that would be the next playoff hole if we see see them again match numbers on this hole. >> hey! nick: they don't need to be doing that. let everybody else worry about that. paul made a great swing 1034i7bs -- minutes ago. same again, please. i think he did. up a little higher, but it's good. jim: no, no, no. nick: wow! the way
jim: dead center. nick: thape he holes this one we'll have another playoff. jim: bubba to extend and as you said -- jim: on we go again. so they're going to go to the 18th one more time, and if they match scores on the second hole of the playoff they then would go to the 17th. we'll be back at the travelers championship. jim: again tonight on cbs as we've en1kwr0eud go covering here "60 minutes" with did foo fighters tonight featured. only cbs. casey watch daddy make a little up and...
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Jun 28, 2015
06/15
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jim: dead center. nick: thape he holes this one we'll have another playoff. jim: bubba to extend and as you said -- jim: on we go again. so they're going to go to the 18th one more time, and if they match scores on the second hole of the playoff they then would go to the 17th. we'll be back at the travelers championship. right now verizon is offering unlimited talk and text. plus 10 gigs of shareable data. (yeah, 10 gigantic gigs.) for $80 a month. and $15 per line. more data than ever. for more of what you want. on the network that's #1 in speed. call. data. and reliability. so you never have to settle. now also get $300 or more when you trade-in your smartphone and buy a new one. stop by or visit us online. and save without settling. only on verizon. jim: again tonight on cbs as we've en1kwr0eud go covering here "60 minutes" with did foo fighters tonight featured. only cbs. casey watch daddy make a little up and down par save to keep this going. i think we're within an hour since casey teed off having played a group ahead of bubba in regulation. they're each playing the hole for the third time in a o
jim: dead center. nick: thape he holes this one we'll have another playoff. jim: bubba to extend and as you said -- jim: on we go again. so they're going to go to the 18th one more time, and if they match scores on the second hole of the playoff they then would go to the 17th. we'll be back at the travelers championship. right now verizon is offering unlimited talk and text. plus 10 gigs of shareable data. (yeah, 10 gigantic gigs.) for $80 a month. and $15 per line. more data than ever. for...
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Jun 28, 2015
06/15
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KYW
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jim: in the fairway and deep. tied with casey. jim: the travelers championship is sponsored by -- jim: the greenbrier classic on cbs next saturday and sunday. we look forward to bringing you all the coverage. from that beautiful resort, greenbrier classic. where that field awaits us coming up on july 4 weekend. bubba, on his way to 62. ask ted scott to go up there and attend the flag. i think this would gone in. >> i agree. frank: these conditions have really changed. nick: bubba has gone 2le 7. jim: how is that peter kostis, compared to yesterday? peter: i paced it off he's 47 yards behind his tee shot. this is a significantly different hole than we've seen all week long. frank: bryan's got 185. jim: we have the led up there on the right hillside. what's his situation going to be? graham delaet -- harman is going to go first. does he have a good lie? peter: brian harman is asking which tway green breaks. this is a 5-iron he's practicing with. >> he's playing a close to 200-yard shot. >> oh, come on! >> that's a good shot. sat down. yeah. jim: there's paul casey with little baby lex. nick: lex has the yardage -- got the pin sheet, r
jim: in the fairway and deep. tied with casey. jim: the travelers championship is sponsored by -- jim: the greenbrier classic on cbs next saturday and sunday. we look forward to bringing you all the coverage. from that beautiful resort, greenbrier classic. where that field awaits us coming up on july 4 weekend. bubba, on his way to 62. ask ted scott to go up there and attend the flag. i think this would gone in. >> i agree. frank: these conditions have really changed. nick: bubba has gone...
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Jun 23, 2015
06/15
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. >>> seth mcfarland stopped by "the tonight show" and battled jim jim jimmy fallon and battled on thesions. >> i'll come to your house and install your cable. that will be the end of it. if you don't, i will look for you. i will find you. i will kill you. >> jimmy should know better to battle seth mcfarland. this is "first look." >>> "way too early" starts now. >> it's time to move the flag from the capitol grounds. [ cheers and applause ] >> standing among a group of bipartisan lawmakers south carolina governor nicki haley calls for removal of confederate flag from state grounds. will the general assembly support her decision? >>> pete rose said he only bet as a manager. this morning questions a rise as his actions as a player. >>> jimmy fallon and seth mcfarland take a spin on the wheel of impressions. you don't want to miss it. this is "way too early." >>> good morning everyone. it is tuesday, june 23rd. we begin this morning in south carolina where the governor has taken a historic step calling for removal of the confederate battle flag from state grounds. it gained support from s
. >>> seth mcfarland stopped by "the tonight show" and battled jim jim jimmy fallon and battled on thesions. >> i'll come to your house and install your cable. that will be the end of it. if you don't, i will look for you. i will find you. i will kill you. >> jimmy should know better to battle seth mcfarland. this is "first look." >>> "way too early" starts now. >> it's time to move the flag from the capitol grounds. [ cheers and...
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Jun 13, 2015
06/15
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jim. we've been working together for 12 years. weird joke, dwight. - you're not jim. jim's. - you seriously never noticed? hey, hats off to you for
jim. we've been working together for 12 years. weird joke, dwight. - you're not jim. jim's. - you seriously never noticed? hey, hats off to you for
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Jun 30, 2015
06/15
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a war and and i do look forward to jim being here. jim argues that the islamic state in iraq is al qaeda 3.0. that's how the war on terror has gone. certainly on september 11 2001, if someone had told any of us in the room except for the naval academy kids who were in diapers at that point, that
a war and and i do look forward to jim being here. jim argues that the islamic state in iraq is al qaeda 3.0. that's how the war on terror has gone. certainly on september 11 2001, if someone had told any of us in the room except for the naval academy kids who were in diapers at that point, that
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Jun 21, 2015
06/15
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jim is in a meeting command authorize meeting their in kuala lumpur of the russian spy service and says is in trouble and needs $25,000. the dillman says this can be arranged. sure enough jim jim is open the door of all the shutter can be shut. he's a walking, volunteers by the seller this country secrets. he does this a few months after he was arrested which was astonishing the people in the intelligence field. should be astonishing to everyone. for the next two years he accepts tasks from his fbi handler to print to obtain and hand over some of the nations most closely and secrets. new line $300,000. meanwhile us intelligence folks give it to from a number of places this gives them toward the. he's back in the us working in teaching tradecraft, the art of spying, the covert training center in virginia. these are the folks in training at the firemen a bunch of them jim taught himself. some some of these he portrayed were deep cover spies. it forces the cia and fbi who really of france to pull together and counterspy operations. counterespionage investigators arranged to getting promoted as a branch chief in the counterterrorism center in langley and is going to start off with
jim is in a meeting command authorize meeting their in kuala lumpur of the russian spy service and says is in trouble and needs $25,000. the dillman says this can be arranged. sure enough jim jim is open the door of all the shutter can be shut. he's a walking, volunteers by the seller this country secrets. he does this a few months after he was arrested which was astonishing the people in the intelligence field. should be astonishing to everyone. for the next two years he accepts tasks from his...
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Jun 28, 2015
06/15
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jim? jim cav fkavanaugh, are you sti with us? >> yeah, i'm still here. yeah, i'm still here. >> are you surprised that david sweat had such survival instincts? >> well, you know, he had the advantage of the deep, thick woods, like the superintendent said. and so, you know, you can't see someone through that brush and foliage unless they're moving. so you have to be really close to be able to see the movement. once they sit still, you could walk 20 feet right past them and not see them. and see what happened to sweat was, he couldn't move through the thick brush effectively. they had been doing that for three weeks, and they only made 35 or 40 miles in three weeks. that's only a couple of miles a day, 2 1/2 miles a day. so he wanted to get some more time. so he comes out on the road, and he's jogging. you can't jog through the woods. he had to get somewhere like a power line or a road. so he decided to take the chance. and that's when the sergeant caught him. but you know what's important about that is the superintendent and the governor talking about the on-scene commander, the major there. old yankee catcher, branch rickey. he said luck is the residue of design. and by designing the perimeter around where they were, the sergeant checking his troopers on the perimeter, by designing that, then the luck was they spotted him. had they not designed it, the perimeter, they probably wouldn't have saw him there. so it goes back to the strategy, the commanders, the deployment of the troops. i think it's great that the new york state police are the ones that apprehended sweat. you know, and the customs and border patrol tactical unit got matt. teamwork all around. great work all around. >> great day for sergeant jay cook, for sure. >> absolutely for sergeant cook, but every single trooper, officer, corrections guy, federal agent, u.s. marshal that stood out there in the rain for weeks, these guys saw some of you. trust me, they saw you. they saw you through the treeline. they heard the aviation and helicopters and airplanes. they saw the vehicles, the patrol cars. they saw the armored cars because they could look through those woods. they could look through that canopy and see. and that kept them only going certain ways, moving quietly, hard, kept their time down, kept them away from the citizens. so every single officer out there participated in that. it's great work. >> yeah, great work. arthur roderick, i want to ask you, are you surprised that david sweat would be walking on the road given that he was unarmed? >> not really. i mean, i think, you know, he had reached the point where he had to take a shot here. he had to take a chance. and i think his chance was getting to an area that he could easily move through. and i think, you know, coming up, this would have got a lot tougher as we moved through this particular week with the holiday coming up. people, they would have been thousands of people heading up to that area. maybe not as many as usual with what was going on, but a lot of people have homes up there that they were going to open up for the summer which made it a lot more difficult. so i think the timeliness of this arrest, and just the fact -- i mean, it's 22 days. he lost his psychological and physical support when matt was taken down. and i think he was just making a run for the border at this point. and luckily, you know, as jim had mentioned, that the perimeters were established certain ways with an inner perimeter, outer perimeter and probably even a further outer perimeter as they were moving down from the canadian border that allowed sergeant cook to get out there. yeah, i think the superintendent and the major did a hell of a job putting this thing together. >> are we likely to see a closer look at our prison system and the culture that exists inside those walls? >> yeah, absolutely. i think that is definitely going to happen. i mean, you'll hear probably about every attempted escape here in the next month or so and what the circumstances are surrounding that escape and what's going on in a lot of these jails. i mean, for years, there's been -- there's been at least on the federal penitentiary side, there's always an avenue for prisoners to file civil rights lawsuits against facilities. and that has actually changed the way a lot of prisoners are treated in these facilities. and that has trickled down to
jim? jim cav fkavanaugh, are you sti with us? >> yeah, i'm still here. yeah, i'm still here. >> are you surprised that david sweat had such survival instincts? >> well, you know, he had the advantage of the deep, thick woods, like the superintendent said. and so, you know, you can't see someone through that brush and foliage unless they're moving. so you have to be really close to be able to see the movement. once they sit still, you could walk 20 feet right past them and not...
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Jun 11, 2015
06/15
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. >> and i am jim plunkett. -- jim savage. no more rain, hopefully? >> i know. a lot of rainfall records yesterday, i mean a bunch. >> y
. >> and i am jim plunkett. -- jim savage. no more rain, hopefully? >> i know. a lot of rainfall records yesterday, i mean a bunch. >> y
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Jun 28, 2015
06/15
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jim cavanaugh. jim, are you still with us in. >> yes. still here. >> jim, what -- what do you make of the psychological profile of these two men and their relationship? was this just the strongest of best friends? what can you tell us, based on your expertise? >> well, you know, clint's talked about that a lot. he is a profiler. as a commander, i relied on those profiles to give us that assessment of people in many, many cases, from the behavioral analysis section at the fbi, which was staffed by the fbi and atf. so, i'm not a profiler myself, but certainly, a agen agent a l time. i just thought when they got out and joyce dropped them there, when they were seen in the backyard by the neighbor, that their plan was gone. that they didn't have anything else. there was nobody else to help them. i don't think they had a vast network. they are not members of organized crime. either one of these guys committed basically individual crimes. they split had another confederate with them. they weren't members of la cosa nostra, ms-13 gang, didn't have confederates to
jim cavanaugh. jim, are you still with us in. >> yes. still here. >> jim, what -- what do you make of the psychological profile of these two men and their relationship? was this just the strongest of best friends? what can you tell us, based on your expertise? >> well, you know, clint's talked about that a lot. he is a profiler. as a commander, i relied on those profiles to give us that assessment of people in many, many cases, from the behavioral analysis section at the fbi,...
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Jun 26, 2015
06/15
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. >> jim, jim cavanaugh, retired atf special agent in charge. jimcan you give us a sense of what law enforcement is trying to do at this moment? >> i can tell you, chris, that any command post on these, you know, the commanders are always trying to stay ahead. whether eric rudolph or snipers or cop killers. the conversation you had with candice is spot on. and she is right. but take that conversation that you had just a little further. these guys traveled 35 miles in 20 days. that's less than two miles a day. because that terrain's so rugged rugged. so they're not at a fast pace because they're trying to hide. they're having a lot of conversations. the evidence is they're together. and they're having a lot of conversations about i'm not going back. remember, these guys are not guys that are going to face a trial. there's a certainty of absolutely going back into the most secure facility. not the honor block. and they're having these conversations. i'm not going back. i'm not going back. once they gt the shotgun and/or a couple of guns that even gets
. >> jim, jim cavanaugh, retired atf special agent in charge. jimcan you give us a sense of what law enforcement is trying to do at this moment? >> i can tell you, chris, that any command post on these, you know, the commanders are always trying to stay ahead. whether eric rudolph or snipers or cop killers. the conversation you had with candice is spot on. and she is right. but take that conversation that you had just a little further. these guys traveled 35 miles in 20 days. that's...
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Jun 16, 2015
06/15
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BLOOMBERG
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joining me now is jim steele. jim, so good to see you.hais it, is the composite killing gold in china? >> gold has to compete with other investment vehicles, not only in china but across the world. the popularity of paper assets, hard assets, it is an old trade-off. anywhere where you have strong equity market gains tens to detract from old prices. one reason have gold, in case those investments take a turn for the worse alix:. alix. alix: we are seeing a change in gold prices, so if we lose the china demand because of this rally in stocks, what happens to the gold price? >> here you have to, that is the major theme of our outlook, how demand hasntial been, not only for the gold market, but the price and range of price. that is largely why we have $1120 bottom, that is where we see market demand coming in. priceis also a level of sensitivity and what we have found, what we found in 2013, when you have a sharp drop in level ornd the 1150 1100, you usually get a recovery, it is not have to be related to the investment cycle, it could be sep
joining me now is jim steele. jim, so good to see you.hais it, is the composite killing gold in china? >> gold has to compete with other investment vehicles, not only in china but across the world. the popularity of paper assets, hard assets, it is an old trade-off. anywhere where you have strong equity market gains tens to detract from old prices. one reason have gold, in case those investments take a turn for the worse alix:. alix. alix: we are seeing a change in gold prices, so if we...
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Jun 18, 2015
06/15
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WRC
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jim jim clark fired back, wrong doesn't begin to describe it, mr. white.he notion that you would terrorize people who were utterly defenseless to support your drug habit is beyond belief. with that white was sentenced to serve 25 years in prize up. >> they are putting it behind them. >> reporter: the fee miami victim's daughter says the couple has physically healed from the attack and are doing their best to get back to a normal routine. >> they are great. they are tough as nails. they have so much support from their neighbors and friends in the community and hopefully, this conviction and sentence will help them heal and move on. >> reporter: the victim's daughter had high praise for police and prosecutors who worked this case. coming up on news4 at 6:00, tell you how a metro smart trip card was used to track down horace white. >>> some wild weather this after into and now close to 14,000 people in fairfax county alone are without power right now and take a look behind us this has been a fast-moving affair. >> hey doug it looks great behind us. does this
jim jim clark fired back, wrong doesn't begin to describe it, mr. white.he notion that you would terrorize people who were utterly defenseless to support your drug habit is beyond belief. with that white was sentenced to serve 25 years in prize up. >> they are putting it behind them. >> reporter: the fee miami victim's daughter says the couple has physically healed from the attack and are doing their best to get back to a normal routine. >> they are great. they are tough as...
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Jun 28, 2015
06/15
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WUSA
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jim: let's go down to peter kostis. peter: thank you jim i'm here with bubba. after you made that brilliant eagle on 13, it looked like maybe it would be a walk in the park but it never turns out that way, doesn't >> no, it doesn't. casey played great. i watched him. i hung on. that's what we have to do sometimes to win. peter: congratulations on your second win here at hartford. >> thanks a lot. thank you. peter: back to you jim. jim: congratulations to bubba watson. eighth win of his career. "60 minutes" and "big brother" tonight on cbs. we'll see you next week from the greenbrier for sir letable. the beast was as long as the boat. for seven hours, we did battle. until i said... you will not beat... meeeeee!!! greg. what should i do with your fish? gary. just put it in the cooler. if you're a fisherman, you tell tales. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance you switch to geico. it's what you do. put the fish in the cooler! captioning funded by cbs and ford >> kroft: was this like a community of people doing this? >> more like a nation of people. >> kroft: he's talking about a scam so simple, you'd never think it would work, but for years now, people like corey williams have been filing bogus tax returns in order to collect billions of dollars in fraudulent refunds. >> by the year 2016, the i.r.s. will be hemorrhaging and losing $21 billion due to this type of fraud. >>
jim: let's go down to peter kostis. peter: thank you jim i'm here with bubba. after you made that brilliant eagle on 13, it looked like maybe it would be a walk in the park but it never turns out that way, doesn't >> no, it doesn't. casey played great. i watched him. i hung on. that's what we have to do sometimes to win. peter: congratulations on your second win here at hartford. >> thanks a lot. thank you. peter: back to you jim. jim: congratulations to bubba watson. eighth win of...
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Jun 1, 2015
06/15
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jim: and only a few years ago, these same polaroid photographers were taking the same photos of american gi's. jack: in that same square. jim: in that same location. jack: what did they charge? jim: they charged a thousand piasters, which is about one dollar. a joint military committee appeared briefly in saigon. they had been held up at the air base. this was the committee founded during the paris peace treaty. jack: communists troops or -- were there all the time. riding in a car. jim: and there were also members of the international control commission still around. for two years to supervise the peace. and then they left shortly thereafter after the peace was restored. jack: while there was no peace they were there. now that there is peace, they've gone. jim: immediately, all of the south vietnamese regulars, the soldiers, were asked to register. in a few days there were radio broadcasts asking all citizens to bring their old papers of the old government down and register themselves. jack: but do you know of any reprisals against men because they served in the arvn? because they were soldiers? jim: no. even the south vietnamese officers went to register and were given new pap
jim: and only a few years ago, these same polaroid photographers were taking the same photos of american gi's. jack: in that same square. jim: in that same location. jack: what did they charge? jim: they charged a thousand piasters, which is about one dollar. a joint military committee appeared briefly in saigon. they had been held up at the air base. this was the committee founded during the paris peace treaty. jack: communists troops or -- were there all the time. riding in a car. jim: and...
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Jun 11, 2015
06/15
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WCAU
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jim carrey -- huge jim carrey fan. and you, back in the day, you did some jim carrey costumes for halloween. great, great, great. yeah i've worked with jim. i call him jim now. three times. >> seth: so this is a halloween costume, and that is -- [ audience aws ] that's you as the mask. >> nailed it. killed it. >> seth: we were saying, don't print this ever in black and white. cause this looks really -- [ laughter ] >> some bad version of "the jazz singer." >> seth: what were you doing? >> whoa! >> seth: you need the yellow and the green to play in this photo. then you also dressed up as jim carrey next year for the riddler, yes? >> i was jim carrey consecutive years. i think even before "the mask," it was the "ace ventura" year. >> seth: wow. >> and then the year after this was the riddler from "batman forever." i decided to cut my hair into a flat top for just halloween. >> seth: wow. >> to really look like the riddler. i remember the day after i got the haircut, i showed up at school and at morning break, robby blauer walked up to me and was like, "hey, did you get your haircut to look like
jim carrey -- huge jim carrey fan. and you, back in the day, you did some jim carrey costumes for halloween. great, great, great. yeah i've worked with jim. i call him jim now. three times. >> seth: so this is a halloween costume, and that is -- [ audience aws ] that's you as the mask. >> nailed it. killed it. >> seth: we were saying, don't print this ever in black and white. cause this looks really -- [ laughter ] >> some bad version of "the jazz singer."...
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Jun 11, 2015
06/15
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KTVU
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. >> and i am jim plunkett. -- jim savage. no more rain, hopefully? >> i know. a lot of rainfall records yesterday, i mean a bunch. >> yes. >> at least eight around here and there were probably more in sacramento. you name it. there was a lot of rain around here. the system moved out but the fog is left behind. there will be a lot of low clouds and thick fog. even san jose with fog. some of it is reducing visibility. our system, i tell you it is an unusual pattern for june but we got the rain, really good rain, almost 2/3 of an inch and liver more got .33, broke the old record in 1976. in fact, what is interesting most of the rainfall broke records from 1976. suicide 60s. not the 70s we had yesterday. that is mild. we are on the drier side. sal, yesterday you and i were very busy. hopefully today is quiet. >>> yes. steve. let's check out the morning commute. the traffic is not too bad if you are driving on the bay bridge into san francisco. it looks pretty good. there is very little delay at the toll plaza. looking at the commute at the toll plaza area westbound
. >> and i am jim plunkett. -- jim savage. no more rain, hopefully? >> i know. a lot of rainfall records yesterday, i mean a bunch. >> yes. >> at least eight around here and there were probably more in sacramento. you name it. there was a lot of rain around here. the system moved out but the fog is left behind. there will be a lot of low clouds and thick fog. even san jose with fog. some of it is reducing visibility. our system, i tell you it is an unusual pattern for...
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Jun 12, 2015
06/15
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jim bittermann. jim, surprising details. >> reporter: absolutely surprising and shocking john, to tell you the truth. the news about the criminal investigation comes none too soon of the passengers involved in the crash. andreas lubitz was a very depressed young man and a lot of people seemed to have known that. according to the prosecutor lubitz saw 41 different psychiatrists and doctors in the five years leading up to the crash and seven in just the month before the crash. he was complaining about sight problems. he was worried he was losing his vision. he said he had 35% of his vision at nighttime. the doctors said they could find no organic cause for this suggesting that it was related to mental problems. he was depressed according to the prosecutor and sometimes only sleeping two hours a night. this is where the criminal complaint may arise. should anyone have taken action or known this and is anyone negligent in this case? who should be brought into a courtroom. >> interesting that much blindness could be psycho sematic. jim>>> all right. thanks jim. the world's oil supply is soaring. the oil supply getting bigger and bigger. some good news at the gas pump next. [baby cooing] your baby looks at the world... ...through those delicate little baby lashes. and one of those chubby baby hands... ...latches onto your finger so hard... it's like she's saying i love you. that's why aveeno® baby lotions... ...active naturals® oat formula... ...is designed for your baby's sensitive skin. because, while you count each miraculous toe... ...you know they're counting on you. [baby coos] aveeno®. naturally beautiful babies. ♪ ♪ every backyard comes together around a grill and kingsford charcoal. gather 'round. >>> good morning. i'm christine romans. let's get an early start on your money. european stocks are down. so are stock futures. greek talks hit another roadblock. it is crazy. the imf made the decision to walkway from negotiations yesterday. >> there is no drama like greek drama. >> the oldest drama. stocks climbed
jim bittermann. jim, surprising details. >> reporter: absolutely surprising and shocking john, to tell you the truth. the news about the criminal investigation comes none too soon of the passengers involved in the crash. andreas lubitz was a very depressed young man and a lot of people seemed to have known that. according to the prosecutor lubitz saw 41 different psychiatrists and doctors in the five years leading up to the crash and seven in just the month before the crash. he was...
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Jun 28, 2015
06/15
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jim this. what are your thoughts about what this does to joyce mitchell's defense, the capture of david sweat? >> yeah, it seems to me that i think jim's right on, too, on that point. that they probably have got everything out of joyce mitchell. it sounds like she's confessed to everything because more details are coming out every day as to exactly what she did and how she was going to assist them. so i think they pretty much have her boxed in at this point. sweat might be able to add some stuff to it. i'm not sure she even has any exculpatory information to help her out. but he might be able to add something to it, but they pretty much have her -- pretty much have her nailed down. >> and larry lawton, i hope that you're still with us. what do you think this does to joyce? >> well, you know, i agree with the guys about information. i mean, i think he might have information just on the whole totality of the prison itself and what goes on. but i think she could be relieved that they didn't kill anybody, hopefully when they clear all the cabins. you know, because i think if there was -- somebody got hurt in this whole incident besides those guys, that it could have been more on her. it could have been maybe an accessory. i don't know how the law would work on that, but it might be. so i think she's a little bit relieved at that point that nobody got hurt. now it's about, you know, introduction of contraband. >> okay, larry, i'm so sorry, i have to interrupt you because we have a picture up of david sweat when he was captured. okay there he is. obviously bedraggled, does not look like he's been sleeping in the lap of luxury for the last few weeks. but he does -- he is alive. and he's sitting up. kind of remarkable given everything he's gone through. larry? >> absolutely. absolutely. i think, you know, him surviving -- but i think what a lot of people don't realize, prisoners are survivalists. they have a lot of patience. they learn how to make things out of nothing. so in a way, they are survivalists. but they also have what they call sensory overload when they get out. and what i mean by that is, the average person today will make 1500 choices. what they're going to wear, what they're going to eat, et cetera. >> right. >> the average inmate makes 100 choices. so getting out, it's sensory overload. it's just a natural reaction of being incarcerated for a long time. >> and i'd love to get the other people's reaction to this picture. clint? how do you think he looks? >> you see the one officer with his hand on sweat's back, propping him up. he may be looking at the wounds. as you know, we've been told he's been hit either one or two times perhaps in that left shoulder. but, you know, he's sitting there. his eyes, his face, everything else. i mean, after having been shot and being in the woods over three weeks, the guy doesn't look that bad. i mean, if he was -- if he was proned out, then we'd have a greater problem. you never know what that wound is going to do to him. that's why they're moving him to a trauma center where they can work on him better. you though, we're going to work very hard. we're going to save his life. and then we're going to lock him up for the rest of his life. >> and it looks as if he's even been shaving because he doesn't have a beard. >> yeah. and we're told that was the same thing with matt, too. that when the autopsy was done, there was different opinions. but at least one person suggested matt looked like he had shaved, looked like he had changed clothes. and i think what's interesting, too, you see the clothes that sweat has got on. he doesn't have on prison clothes. he has on clothes that he probably stole from somebody's hunting cabins to allow him to move around in the bush a little bit better. >> any reaction to this picture, arthur? >> obviously he's got blood on the side of his face. and it looks like he might have some blood on his mouth which could indicate a lung injury. and i agree that i think the officer that's actually looking at his back is probably looking at a wound. and in that area could produce blood in the mouth coming up from the lung area. >> this is going to sound like a funny question, but i'm not trying to be. why would they even bother with shaving? wouldn't you want to grow a beard and disguise your face? >> well, not necessarily. i mean, they've been out for three weeks. if you're going to be looking at someone, if they're clean-shaven, you're not going to be thinking that they were hidden in the woods. so that's just another way of disguising yourself. i mean, having a heavy growth beard for three weeks, looking unkempt could lead to more suspicion than being clean-shaichb. clean-shaven. >> but he could have groomed a beard just so he could disguise his appearance. >> but i think the pictures that were put out in the press earlier that did show the beard, they might have been able to get to -- you know, they might have observed that on tv and decided to change it. i mean, you know, i'm sure we'll know -- hopefully we'll know exactly what that's about, but it seems -- you know, in the autopsy of matt, that if he was shaven, then more than likely that was done to change their appearance. >> zeke unger, you're a bounty hunter. what are your thoughts as you look at this picture? do we still have zeke? >> high adrenaline for many days. he's wore out. and now shot. that's my opinion. >> and is that pretty much how you thought he would like when captured? >> absolutely. >> tired, pale? >> they say you can run, but you're just going to get caught tired. >> what do you think -- i mean, you've dealt with people who have been caught like this. what is going through their minds? what are their emotions? >> believe it or not, right now he's feeling relief. the amount of stress that he's been under for the last 21, 22 days has been unmeasurable. again, having to do a crime to get everything, stealing, on the run, tired. these are the things that fugitives, you know, it happens when they're caught, they're so relieved, they say i just want to go back to jail. >> and i want to remind everybody that we're waiting for governor cuomo to appear at that podium and give a news conference momentarily. in the meantime, i want to bring in john cuff. who is joining us. john, can you give us your reaction to this picture? >> well, obviously, it appears that he probably cleaned himself up to a certain degree, but he picked up these camouflage clothing along the way somewhere. i mean, i know i just joined, but this is a win-win for law enforcement today. it's a win-win for the public. it was a great ending. it's not over yet. but the amount of effort between law enforcement and the community involved, along with the media to get the message out is a great winning combination and great work. hats are off to all them. sergeant cook and all the entire law enforcement community up there on the ground that put all these tireless, many, many exhausting man hours into this hunt. >> do you think that this is going to shine a much-needed light on prisons and the culture within them? >> i think undoubtedly. there's a lot of unanswered questions. there's a lot of things that occurred and things that have been reported that happened during this particular investigation with respect to staff involvement and so on. mr. sweat here would be in a position to possibly shed some light on that to help answer some of those questions. but in the long run, i think it will -- i haven't done many of these escapes, these after-action reports, you're always interested in lessons learned and how things can be improved. and certainly from the standpoint of correctional facilities for security improvements and so on. i'm sure this will serve as a template for corrections nationwi nationwide. >> it is the top of the hour. we want to let everybody know that we are waiting for governor cuomo to appear at that podium and speak about the capture of david sweat who you see on the left side of your screen. this was a picture taken right after he was apprehended. i want to go back now to jimling some -- david sweat may be feeling some relief right now. that's what zeke unger told us who is a bounty hunter. what are your thoughts? what do you think he's experiencing right now? >> well, just to build on what john said, i agree. i think he is feeling absolute relief.
jim this. what are your thoughts about what this does to joyce mitchell's defense, the capture of david sweat? >> yeah, it seems to me that i think jim's right on, too, on that point. that they probably have got everything out of joyce mitchell. it sounds like she's confessed to everything because more details are coming out every day as to exactly what she did and how she was going to assist them. so i think they pretty much have her boxed in at this point. sweat might be able to add...
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Jun 1, 2015
06/15
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BLOOMBERG
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jim caron is with us from morning stanley. do you worry, given a tantrum of some level, that there is not enough liquidity out there? jim: every day. this is one thing that the imf has been talking about. tom: is wall street talking about it? jimeven the fed has mentioned this as one of the risks. tom: what kind of move is a liquidity issue? jim: it is typically a gap move that we cannot explain. how do you manage that? if that is what is in store for us in the future, you need to build in a bigger risk premium into whatever you want to buy, which means bonds and assets become cheaper. tom: monday is math-free here but the fact is we have a lot of negative interest rates, particularly in europe. do you presume that when we go from a negative rate to a positive rate that it is a smooth process, or is that where you get your condition that leads to issues? jim: i think we get a junk condition. things typically do not move smoothly. with a temper tantrum it had over the last couple of weeks, i would argue that initially we can set a stage where yields are low, but when that comes to an end there is not enough liquidity to take on the flows for sales. tom: trying to get the boone yield lower and your -- lower and lower. brendan: t
jim caron is with us from morning stanley. do you worry, given a tantrum of some level, that there is not enough liquidity out there? jim: every day. this is one thing that the imf has been talking about. tom: is wall street talking about it? jimeven the fed has mentioned this as one of the risks. tom: what kind of move is a liquidity issue? jim: it is typically a gap move that we cannot explain. how do you manage that? if that is what is in store for us in the future, you need to build in a...
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Jun 30, 2015
06/15
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and i share jim's concern indignation that the american people are not involved in these wars. jim fallows who also is not here here, jimfollows that a very important cover story in january called the tragedy of the american military which argued essentially that we need to bring back the draft because the american people are disconnected from these wars. i disagree. no one that i know of in uniform wants anybody near them with a weapon who doesn't want to have that weapon and doesn't want to be there and let me tell you we have more than enough young americans volunteering for that service. we are currently giving pink slips to u.s. army captain serving in afghanistan talon family thank them for their interest in national security but because of the sequester imposed on us by representatives and as they simply are not able to fund all of the captains that the department of defense needs we believe so they are out of here. the problem is not that we don't have a draft. we have not asked the american people as a whole to make sacrifices on behalf of these wars. that is the real tragedy of the america of the century. >> c
and i share jim's concern indignation that the american people are not involved in these wars. jim fallows who also is not here here, jimfollows that a very important cover story in january called the tragedy of the american military which argued essentially that we need to bring back the draft because the american people are disconnected from these wars. i disagree. no one that i know of in uniform wants anybody near them with a weapon who doesn't want to have that weapon and doesn't want to...
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Jun 17, 2015
06/15
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WTXF
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jim out? >> no >> jim's steaks >> so jim opened the original jim's steaks in 1939 >> thirty-nine.irty-nine. so, he sold the business to billy, in the 60s >> right? >> he and my father opened up this place in 1976. billy passed away 2011. this became my father's solely in 76 -- 2011, and then he pass the dollars away just this past january. >> now, let's do. >> this let's go to a place in the back of the kitchen here, that i find real interesting. this is where you guys actually sliced the meat >> yup >> i don't see this from any cheese steak places, a lot of them might get it frozen or something else? >> how come this set you guys apart? >> we only use top round, usda choice surloin, black uncle us beef. we get it from a single provider, and we slice it fresh here every day. we get 4,000 pounds delivered a week. summertime, 5,000 pounds. and we cut it here fresh every day >> now, can we walk back here and take a look? they are slicing up the onions fresh, too. take a look at this. this guy is going at it! look at the rhythm here >> 3 barrels of onions >> how are you doing today? >
jim out? >> no >> jim's steaks >> so jim opened the original jim's steaks in 1939 >> thirty-nine.irty-nine. so, he sold the business to billy, in the 60s >> right? >> he and my father opened up this place in 1976. billy passed away 2011. this became my father's solely in 76 -- 2011, and then he pass the dollars away just this past january. >> now, let's do. >> this let's go to a place in the back of the kitchen here, that i find real interesting....
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Jun 10, 2015
06/15
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CNBC
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jim: this store is probably losing about $20,000, $25,000. lemonis: but the biggest problem might have been jim himself. he was definitely resistant to change. jimu're closing the store? -lemonis: that's right. -jim: okay, that's enough. you're out of here. you're gone. lemonis: and, honestly, he seemed to have anger issues. [ clatter ] tammy: you want me to order it even though there may or may not be enough money to pay for it. jim: i'm tired of this bull[bleep] lemonis: stuck in the middle of this mess was tammy. tammy: every week, it's a fight, which is just ridiculous. lemonis: and what else are you managing? tammy: staffing, any human-resources issues, any customer complaints, scheduling. -lemonis: employee issues? -tammy: special events. lemonis: the only thing that jim and i actually agreed on was tammy's value. jim: she's a great employee. she does everything that needs to get done. and she works two and a half days a week at her other job. lemonis: she was working 40 hours a week and making $300. she was the heart and soul of this place. jim: i wish i could pay her more money, but i can't afford it right now. lemonis: jim and allison w
jim: this store is probably losing about $20,000, $25,000. lemonis: but the biggest problem might have been jim himself. he was definitely resistant to change. jimu're closing the store? -lemonis: that's right. -jim: okay, that's enough. you're out of here. you're gone. lemonis: and, honestly, he seemed to have anger issues. [ clatter ] tammy: you want me to order it even though there may or may not be enough money to pay for it. jim: i'm tired of this bull[bleep] lemonis: stuck in the middle...
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Jun 5, 2015
06/15
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let's start with jim. jim: thank you.begin by saying that what you saw is validated and all of the polling we have done. when we first did our poll after 9/11, there were questions about what arabs want. we did a wide-ranging poll published in a book called "what arabs think." we found that contrary to the myth that they go to bed at night hating israel, wake up in the morning hating america they actually go to bed at night thinking about their kids and wake up in the morning worrying about their jobs, and spend the day working really hard trying to get a better life. their values and concerns stacked up with what any man on america would say they want with their lives. they want to prosper, take care of their kids, make sure when they get old, someone will be there for them. we reviewed our polling over the last 15 years. i found that people are confounded in the region about the changes that are taking place and how to respond. there are conflicted, in particular about the united states. after 9/11, there was this notio
let's start with jim. jim: thank you.begin by saying that what you saw is validated and all of the polling we have done. when we first did our poll after 9/11, there were questions about what arabs want. we did a wide-ranging poll published in a book called "what arabs think." we found that contrary to the myth that they go to bed at night hating israel, wake up in the morning hating america they actually go to bed at night thinking about their kids and wake up in the morning worrying...
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Jun 8, 2015
06/15
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jim acosta is travelings with the president. he's joining us right now. actually we don't have jim. we do have jim sciutto. what did you hear from the president as far as iraq is concerned? we clearly heard him giving at least some indirect lecturing to the prime minister al abadi who was there with him in germany today, some indirect lecturing. you got to get your act together. you got to work not only with iraqi shia but also with the sunnis and the kurds. >> he does but at the same time we also heard some acknowledgements admissions from the president on where the current strategy isn't working. he said that about isis that if they're displaced in one place, they show up in another place, kind of this whack a mole phenomenon you have seen where you might have had a victory in tikrit but a few weeks later you have isis take over ramadi. and the president acknowledging that the foreign fighter flow continuing despite a great effort by a number of nations involved. the president saying that even though in his words, we're taking a lot of them out, they're being replenished and that doesn't solve the prauk p
jim acosta is travelings with the president. he's joining us right now. actually we don't have jim. we do have jim sciutto. what did you hear from the president as far as iraq is concerned? we clearly heard him giving at least some indirect lecturing to the prime minister al abadi who was there with him in germany today, some indirect lecturing. you got to get your act together. you got to work not only with iraqi shia but also with the sunnis and the kurds. >> he does but at the same...
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Jun 5, 2015
06/15
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jim webb, thank you for your time. se >> this sunday, we will be air our interview with jim webb at 6:35 and 9:35 eastern on c-span. >> coming up, former secretary of state albright and former national security advisor stephen hadley on middle east policy. later, a senate banking committee hearing on the export bank. on the next washington journal a look at the legislation changing government data collection. on how radical islam records followers. and the national center for transgendered equality on transgender rights. you can join the conversation with your calls and comments on facebook and twitter. >> on friday, the defense department will given operation update on the coalition nations to combat the terrorist group isis in iraq and syria. we will have that live with them to the general john has esterman. >> this weekend, the c-span cities tour has partnered to learn about the history of lincoln, nebraska. >> she was given almost every literary award possible, before she died. except for the nobel prize, she was known for her masterpieces like "my antonia." many others in 1943, she made a will which had a few restrictions on it. one was that she did not want her letters to be published or be quoted in whole or in part. she left behind at least 3000 letters that we know about. the biggest collections are here in nebraska. in her will, she left to the discretion of her executors to decide if they enforce her preferences. they believe that for educational purposes, cather belongs to us and we should know more. >> another important figure was mr. butcher. >> he was in western rascal. n nebraska. he took photos until about the early 1890's of homesteaders. and he was able to tell the story of development in american history. i'm going to show you one of my favorite images from the collection. it is the photograph of the sisters. it is four sisters who each took a homestead in the county. this shows women homesteaders. it was the first time that women could own land on their own. it did not belong to their husbands, their fathers, single women could own their own land. that was a big deal with the homestead act. each sister, they took a homestead -- near their father's ranch. they each built a small house on the homestead, part of the homestead act. and they would take turns staying in each other's house and working the farm. the sisters pulled together and made it in nebraska. >> watch all of our events from lincoln saturday evening at 6:00. sunday afternoon at 2 p.m. on c-span3. >> next, madeleine albright and stephen hadley discussing the launch of their middle east task force. the goal of the task force is to gather information and make policy recommendations. from the atlantic council, this is an hour and a half. >> good afternoon. on behalf of the chairman of the board of the atlantic council, tom huntsman and the vice president and director, frank doney and all of us at the atlantic council welcome to the , launch of the task force. i'm fred camp, ceo. we are pleased to be joined by some of the task force's senior advisers and many of our friends from middle eastern and european diplomatic communities. as you can see, we have a full house and a virtual full house. welcome, also, to viewers around the world. this event is live streaming on our website in arabic translation as well. and a full video of today's event, both in arabic and english, will be posted on the council website following the event. this is an innovation for us. frank, i believe it is the first event we have done with live translation, live streaming, from the center. we now have this capability and will do this more often. we encourage you to interact online by following @acmideast and tweet using #mcacst. i want to welcome and salute the founder of the center for the middle east, baha hariri, who is in washington with us for the launch of this group. on behalf of all of us, i want to thank you or your vision. without which this center would not exist and this task force would not exist. thank you for entrusting to us the legacy of your father. today, after more than a year of behind-the-scenes groundwork, we are proud to announce madeleine albright and stephen hadley will cochair the atlantic council middle east strategy task force in the bipartisan manner for which we have become known. it is an ambitious project to form a global consensus on how to address the challenges and opportunities in the middle east. in a moment i will invite secretary albright to tell us more about the task force's work, but let me give you some context on how the task force fits in the atlantic council's larger mission of working with friends and allies to secure the global future. through the ideas we develop and the communities we convene, we emphasize an active approach to policy around the world with a premium on highly relevant and impactful policy recommendations. over the last several years, we have seen a growing need for well-developed, actionable strategy for addressing the world's problems. for too long, the united states and its global friends have focused on tactics, jumping from crisis to crisis without a plan for leading the world to a better future with friends and allies. to begin answering that need the atlantic council watched a comprehensive strategy initiative, led by the center for international security using a multi-vector approach developing a strategic framework to guide american for a policy -- foreign policy, irrespective of the 2016 elections. the middle east strategy task force we announced today, led by the center for the middle east, is an element of the larger effort with a specific goal of advancing the strategic collaboration among americans our closest friends and allies in europe, and among our closest friends and allies in the middle east about the future of the middle east. this is not americans talking to americans about what others ought to do. this is a multi-stakeholder conversation about what those in the middle east believe their future ought to be and how we help them get there. the task force will explore alternative policy approaches that can lead to a breakthrough in a more stable, prosperous region. rarely is the world confronted with challenges more intractable than those in the middle east today. i am equally confident there has really been an initiative better equipped to address those challenges, or leaders more capable in cultivating the right kind of change, as we find in this task force. with two of the great foreign policy strategist of our time in secretary albright and mr. hadley during the project , alongside the energy and diplomatic savvy of frank doney and a network of supporters that spans the globe, i think there is a real opportunity for impact. you will certainly give it our best try. it is now my pleasure to invite the cochairs to the stage to kickoff the event. one is an executive vice president of the board of the atlantic council. the other is an honorary director of the atlantic council , both friends of the organization. since leaving office, both secretary albright and advisor stephen hadley have been engaged in the issues of the middle east. steve is the chair of an organization deeply engaged with trying to mitigate conflict in the region at national and local levels. he is chair of the middle east board, one of a many -- the many bipartisan operations. as chair of the national democratic institute and partners for the new beginning and organization that seeks to build understanding between the u.s. and muslim world, secretary albright has been a champion for both political and economic development in the region. her 2007 book "the mighty and almighty" cited the independence of politics in the region. secretary albright, the stage is yours. [applause] secretary albright: thank you for your kind words, and thank you to the council for bringing us together. to examine one of the most complicated and salient issues of our time. i am gratified to see so many distinguished members of the diplomatic corps in this audience. your presence today underscores the global perspective we want for the project. our emphasis today on listening to voices from the region reflects our determination to incorporate the views of your citizens in our research. as fred mentioned it was last , year that stephen hadley and i began discussing the need for a focused effort to better understand what is happening in the middle east. i would like to say what a pleasure it is to work with steve hadley on this project and many others. the reasons are simple and compelling. this is a region of tremendous importance to the united states and the world. it is facing a set of overlapping crises unlike any we have witnessed in generations. policymakers here in washington have been working around the clock to navigate these crises and protect america's full range of interests. having both served in the government, steve and i know how easy it is for the inbox to get overrun. there is rarely the opportunity to take a step back and consider the deeper issues at hand to get at the root causes of the crises and develop an effective and enduring long term approach in concert with people from the region. the important part is to take the time and step back and look forward. that is in part what we hope to accomplish with this bipartisan project. it is an ambitious effort, but we begin in a strong position because we can leverage the considerable resources of the atlantic council's center for the middle east. for that reason, i would also very much like to take a moment to acknowledge and thank baha ha riri, whose generous efforts have made this possible and has done so much to progress the causes of peace which were so dear to his father's heart. thank you so much. [applause] secretary albright: i would like to thank frank doney, one of the finest diplomats the u.s. has had. thank you, frank. we are lucky that after a long and distinguished diplomatic career frank has chosen tuesday involved in the public policy debate. it is his vision that has shaped this into a distinctive and compelling project. i say it is distinctive for a few reasons. first, while it will be housed here at the atlantic council center we are engaging with a wide range of think tanks and involving a diverse range of foreign policy practitioners and civil society leaders. we have established working groups led by experts from brookings, the simpson center, the u.s. institute of peace, and an independent researcher. i would note that two of them jennifer abdo and chris howard are here today. their subjects include countering violent extremism refugees, recovery, and reconciliation. politics and state society relations, and economic recovery and revitalization. you can see that that we are fully covering many of the issues we see as root causes of disruptions and looking at ways to deal with the issues. in the coming months, the working groups will analyze the topics in depth and issue reports that will feed into a final task force to be drafted at the center and reviewed by a distinguished panel of senior advisors. this group of advisers include eminent diplomats and experts from the united states, europe and most importantly, from the region. in fact a majority of the , advisors are from outside the united states. that is another thing i believe makes the project especially distinctive. we are not going to look at how to codify the beltway consensus. we want to engage with people on the ground in the region and incorporate their perspectives into everything we do. in short, we want to listen more. and listening to voices from the region is what today's event is about. with that, let me invite my friend and cochair, steve hadley to step forward and set the stage for our discussions. [applause] mr. hadley: it is a pleasure to be with all of you this afternoon. i want to thank madeleine for the opportunity and the pleasure and privilege to work with you once again on one of our bipartisan policy initiatives. it is an important and exciting prospect. what we want to distinguish this project from others is to start with the views, perspectives and interests of the citizens and leaders in the regions on the problems of the region and the challenges it faces. for that reason, the theme of the event is "a view from the region," and we want to address a number of questions that would be the basis of our work. what are the underlying causes of the current crisis in the middle east? why have so many countries seen their governments collapse or be overthrown? what explains the rise of extremism in the region? what sort of government would people in the region be willing to support and fight for? what do the people of the region need to help resolve the current crisis? and how can the united states, europe, and the rest of the world help? this is not your typical panel event today. let me walk through what is going to happen this afternoon. first, we are going to watch a brief video of on the street interview produced by sky news arabia. next, we will hear polling data by jim zogby. then, we will turn to cairo to respond and participate in the panel. we will have a brief conversation among the three speakers with madeleine albright and myself presiding. then we will bring our in-house and twitter audience into the conversation for a q and a session. let me introduce the panel you will see on the stage after the video. first is james zogby, who had a four-decade career working on u.s.-arab relations and bringing an arab american perspective into the policy conversation. he is the managing director of the zogby research services, author of "arab voices," and founder of the arab american institute. next is mohammed eunis, a gallup subject matter expert on the middle east and north africa. his research at gallup focuses on employment challenges in the arab world and relations between muslim majority and western societies. finally with us from cairo will , be rabab amadi, associate professor of political science at the american university in cairo. her work cov
jim webb, thank you for your time. se >> this sunday, we will be air our interview with jim webb at 6:35 and 9:35 eastern on c-span. >> coming up, former secretary of state albright and former national security advisor stephen hadley on middle east policy. later, a senate banking committee hearing on the export bank. on the next washington journal a look at the legislation changing government data collection. on how radical islam records followers. and the national center for...
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our chief national security correspondent, jim sciutto, is at the magic wall. jim i jim? >> this is the end of may, areas in red, isis control. yellow, isis support. the orange areas, where they've been able to carry out attacks. you see it extends from into iraq. extends down to jordan. general clark mentioned the threat to jordan. attacks in lebanon, also threatening saudi arabia. so key question -- has the u.s.-led air campaign, has the effort of kurdish and iraqi troops made a difference so far in changing this map? let's look to three months ago, february. if you can't tell a difference between those two maps, you're not alone. the maps are largely the same. again, this is may, end of may. this is february. the map largely unchanged. in fact, during that time, isis gaining some ground in ramadi. the oil refinery, maintaining their key base of support in mosul. let's look at the influence beyond iraq and syria. as they've held their ground there, they've gone to expand their influence throughout the region. you have presence and affiliate in libya, in egypt, in yemen,
our chief national security correspondent, jim sciutto, is at the magic wall. jim i jim? >> this is the end of may, areas in red, isis control. yellow, isis support. the orange areas, where they've been able to carry out attacks. you see it extends from into iraq. extends down to jordan. general clark mentioned the threat to jordan. attacks in lebanon, also threatening saudi arabia. so key question -- has the u.s.-led air campaign, has the effort of kurdish and iraqi troops made a...
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jim gaffigan show" which premieres july 15th at 10pm on tvland. please welcome jim gaffigan, ladies and gentlemen. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> thank you. thank you. >> jimmy: it is so great to see you. thank you for coming back. >> it's good to be here. >> jimmy: and happy early father's day to you. >> it's going to be father's day. [ light laughter ] how weird is that? right? that is a weird holiday, right? i mean mother's day i get. the mothers give birth to us, but father's day, you know the guy's having a lot more fun, you know what i mean? father's day is kind of like celebrating darth vader's birthday. [ light laughter ] it's weird and i have a lot of kids, jimmy. and i say a lot because i don't know the real number. [ laughter ] and they're always moving. i have an 11 year old, nine year old, six, four, two and i will start the bidding at $50. there is -- father's day is weird, right? you're a dad, it's nice, but it feels like a holiday that is kind of an after thought. like, you know, mother's day, all right, i guess we should do something that for that guy that on his one day off goes golfing. maybe we'll have a barbecue for him. it's weird. even the gifts, right? a tie. we give dads ties, is this 1950? [ light laughter ] it's just a silk noose, right? [ laughter ] >> jimmy: i didn't look at it that way. i didn't think of it that way. >> it's weird, like my kids, last year my kids gave me a a book. and you know, who doesn't want a book that an eight year old picked out, right? by the way i would not mind this book. [ cheers and applause ] you know, i have this book. by the way, jimmy, i have one question. what took longer to read this or to write this? [ laughter ] were you on the toilet when you wrote this? [ laughter ] dada. it's amazing. >> jimmy: don't spoil the end. don't spoil the end. >> i don't wanna give it away. [ light laughter ] >> jimmy: don't give it away. it's a good twist. >> you know what? i love the idea behind this because, obviously, you know, there is this interest in your kid saying dada first. and i would say that i lost at wholesale with all of my kids. but my four year old did have a a strange attachment to me. like, he would want to come to me rather than his mom. and i was flattered, but i also was like concerned for his judgment. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: something is wrong. >> he is not the brightest one. >> jimmy: he's not the brightest one. no, he's not. are you doing anything for the summer? any summer plans? >> well it may come as no surprise. i'm not a huge fan of summer. [ laughter ] i like jacket weather. i like a place to put the keys and hide the fact that i haven't worked out in two decades. [ laughter ] it's just weird. you know all my kids, they have summer vacation. and, hey, who doesn't deserve three months off, after the rigors of kindergarten? [ laughter ] but you know, summer is -- and we live in new york city. it's like people forget. they're excited for summer. but august, in new york city, it is like walking through urine. [ laughter ] it's horrible. but, you know, i always think it is funny how everyone, there's pressure to go outside. there's pressure to travel, people are like, "where are you going this summer?" i'm like, "why do i have to go somewhere?" it's like, "well, you were here during the horrible weather and now that it's nice, you should probably go somewhere else." >> jimmy: yeah, exactly. >> it makes so much sense. >> jimmy: congrats on the show, by the way. >> thank you. >> jimmy: "the jimmy: tvland. set your tivos and dvrs. it's based on your stand up and your life. >> it's very similar to "true detective." >> jimmy: no it's not. no it's not. no, no, no it's not. [ laughter ] >> but instead of solving crimes, i'm eating food. [ laughter ] but, you did an episode, quest and the roots were in an episode. >> jimmy: oh, yeah, we did. thank you for including us. [ cheers and applause ] >> you guys were amazing. >> jimmy: thank you for having us on, we had so much fun. it was -- >> so amazing. >> jimmy: here is a clip of the show. >> this is, we had an interview to try to get our daughter into this school, and a lot of parents will identify with this interview. >> jimmy: here you go guys, "the jim gaffigan show." check it out. >> what sort of paintings do you like? >> i like, um -- i waiver. you know i'm always changing. i go in there and i just get some inspiration. i like the blurry ones. where it's kind of blurry where you're like maybe this guy didn't have glasses on whe
jim gaffigan show" which premieres july 15th at 10pm on tvland. please welcome jim gaffigan, ladies and gentlemen. ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> thank you. thank you. >> jimmy: it is so great to see you. thank you for coming back. >> it's good to be here. >> jimmy: and happy early father's day to you. >> it's going to be father's day. [ light laughter ] how weird is that? right? that is a weird holiday, right? i mean mother's day i get. the mothers give birth...
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jim: hi, jim from the "l.a. times." i think a lot of savers, people on fixed incomes were hopeful that they would see a rate increase, if not this meeting, soon. what kind of assurances can you give them an people out there who think the fed is never going to raise rates? i got some e-mails today from people saying, "they are never going to raise rates." what kind of assurances can you give people that are waiting for that to happen? chair yellen: i cannot get an ironclad promise, but i think it is clear from our summary and economic projections that we anticipate that the economy will grow, that the labor market will improve, that inflation will , as ourk up to 2% as we objective over the medium-term, and even economic conditions unfold in the way that most my colleagues and i anticipate, we see it as appropriate to raise rates. and as you can see, the largest number of participants anticipate that those conditions should be in place later this year. obviously we have to -- you know, there can be surprises that might n
jim: hi, jim from the "l.a. times." i think a lot of savers, people on fixed incomes were hopeful that they would see a rate increase, if not this meeting, soon. what kind of assurances can you give them an people out there who think the fed is never going to raise rates? i got some e-mails today from people saying, "they are never going to raise rates." what kind of assurances can you give people that are waiting for that to happen? chair yellen: i cannot get an ironclad...
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jim: bud light theater whether it is a drama or comedy, it does not matter. charlie: sometimes i think live political conventions and things like that have that aspect. jim: absolutely. charlie: the enthusiasm is so great it can rev up the speaker. jimit changes what you are hearing. charlie: they like it. you are playing god here. jim: god is playing me is the premise. he has some things he wanted to tell the people. i have a winning, likable personality and he feels his profound message will be easier to take given my off the charm. one thing i definitely am is a brand. i am an established, well respected brand, ok question mark when i see some backup wide receiver from dip university on sport center point to me after scoring a touchdown, that cheapens the brand. it is very simple -- i am not with you when your team wins. i am not against you and your team loses. i am not whether against you when you win or lose. i am not a laker or a cowboy or a red wing -- please, listen carefully -- i am not a yankee. [laughter] i do not guide the ball between the uprights are into the basket or out of the stadium or into your opponents crotch. [laughter] you won the game congratulations. you are a super bowl m.v.p. mazel tov. leave me out of i
jim: bud light theater whether it is a drama or comedy, it does not matter. charlie: sometimes i think live political conventions and things like that have that aspect. jim: absolutely. charlie: the enthusiasm is so great it can rev up the speaker. jimit changes what you are hearing. charlie: they like it. you are playing god here. jim: god is playing me is the premise. he has some things he wanted to tell the people. i have a winning, likable personality and he feels his profound message will...
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jim bittermann. jim, with the mental health there is secrecy between a doctor and patient. when you have someone flying a plane with all those souls on board the history of this pilot is troubling. >> reporter: exactly. the prosecutor said he wanted to go into the detail of the secrecy law and how much information could be released to lufthansa. obviously this was a troubled young man. if you go back five years, he visited 41 different doctors in five years time before the crash. including neurologists and opthamologists. he said he had 30% of his vision at night. the doctors, according to the prosecutor, the doctors found no organic reasons suggesting that these were psychological reasons leading to vision problems. in any case he was losing sleep. he complained of sleeping two hours a night. he was on anti-depressants. so many things going on and somebody should have sent up a warning flare. that is what the prosecutor is suspecting. he will look into german laws of privacy with doctors and patients to see if anything should be done or changed. >> certainly i'm sure the families are still really grappling with the developments with his health. thank you, jim oil supply is soaring. some good news at the gas pump, folks. that's next. [baby cooing] your baby looks at the world... ...through those delicate little baby lashes. and one of those chubby baby hands... ...latches onto your finger so hard... it's like she's saying i love you. that's why aveeno® baby lotions... ...active naturals® oat formula... ...is designed for your baby's sensitive skin. because, while you count each miraculous toe... ...you know they're counting on you. [baby coos] aveeno®. naturally beautiful babies. ♪ ♪ when you're living with diabetes steady is exciting. only glucerna has carbsteady clinically proven to help minimize blood sugar spikes. so you stay steady ahead. many wrinkle creams come with high hopes, but hope... doesn't work on wrinkles. clinically proven neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair with the fastest retinol formula available, it works on fine lines and even deep wrinkles. you'll see younger looking skin in just one week. stop hoping for results, and s
jim bittermann. jim, with the mental health there is secrecy between a doctor and patient. when you have someone flying a plane with all those souls on board the history of this pilot is troubling. >> reporter: exactly. the prosecutor said he wanted to go into the detail of the secrecy law and how much information could be released to lufthansa. obviously this was a troubled young man. if you go back five years, he visited 41 different doctors in five years time before the crash....
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jim -- jim hunt and yourself and a lot of your constituents. i have a question, and the question is -- the democratic party has had the rain now for several -- reign now for several years, but it appears to me that everything is personal. it is not about the american people, it is not about the trade agreements, it is not about obamacare, it is about trying to blackball, we would say when i worked in d.c., we called a black ball a certain entity to make them look bad in front of the american public. you know however, we are looking at it from that point of view. we are not looking at it -- what this person says is the gospel. according to the politics in washington or in raleigh. we know that jim hunt has a lot of export, import kind of things coming in, which made north carolina a great state above all the other states i have been to in the united states, which is all of them. north carolina is probably the best date of them all because of what jim hunt did. guest: jim hunt was a great governor no question. i own a lot to him in terms of our working together over the years. you know, i -- i agree with you but i also want to say something about this personalized politics. i expect your thinking of the president. and i do think there has been a -- a tendency among some people in politics, some people in -- and some of our citizens to oppose almost anything president obama puts forward. it seems sometimes it has more to do with him than it does the of the case. this trade battle, actually, is not like that. in fact, there is some pretty strange alliances here and the president is counting of course i'm republican leaders -- of course on republican leaders to get this fast track.
jim -- jim hunt and yourself and a lot of your constituents. i have a question, and the question is -- the democratic party has had the rain now for several -- reign now for several years, but it appears to me that everything is personal. it is not about the american people, it is not about the trade agreements, it is not about obamacare, it is about trying to blackball, we would say when i worked in d.c., we called a black ball a certain entity to make them look bad in front of the american...
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jim crow era? >> the connection between the jim crow south and 19th-century new mexico was that in the jim crow era peonage was instituted in the south as a way of maintaining african-americans in a form of bondage, neil slavery if you will -- neo-slagevery, if you will. slavery by another name. the bondage in mexico served as an operational prototype for the system instituted in the jim crow south. the most significant impact that new mexico had -- by the early 1900s that is not much peonage existing, it is pretty much eradicated. the significance of new mexico is that there were several court cases, in the 1850's and 1860's, that ruled on debt peonage. there were federal district courts and even the u.s. supreme court in 1905. they used those new mexico cases from 50 years earlier as their guiding precedent. new mexico was very significant inasmuch it had these long-lasting legal implications in terms of american centralization of free labor and slavery. >> when going about your research, what kind of documents did you turn to? >> unfortunately unlike slavery in the south, there are no slave narr
jim crow era? >> the connection between the jim crow south and 19th-century new mexico was that in the jim crow era peonage was instituted in the south as a way of maintaining african-americans in a form of bondage, neil slavery if you will -- neo-slagevery, if you will. slavery by another name. the bondage in mexico served as an operational prototype for the system instituted in the jim crow south. the most significant impact that new mexico had -- by the early 1900s that is not much...
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jim scuitto. jim, these very stark warnings are coming after very bloody scenes overseas. >> i asked a senior official if this was the normal ratcheted up up security before a major holiday, and he told me this is different, the senior u.s. officials say it's definitely a heightened state of alert based on isis' open call to attack the west. the most deadly isis-inspired attack to date. gunfire ringing out in a tunisian resort leaving at least 38 dead, most of them british. >> i was laying in her blood, trying to keep her awake, and then -- [ crying ] >> reporter: from what is proving to be the lethal weapon the lone wolf attacker in this case a radical iced tunisian student, seen running away after the attack and moments later, shot dead by police after he stopped to pray. now with the july 4th holiday approaching here in the u.s. u.s. law infersment senior krrterrorism tells cnn definitely on a heightened state of alert based on isis's call to conduct attacks. >> there's a volume if you will we're being on the cautious side to warn the public to remain vigilant. >> reporter: isis-inspired groups are answering the calls to attack anywhere and anyhow during the month of ramadan. a leader rewarding ten times the rewards in heaven. a gunman stormed the beach resort. a suicide bomber attacked a mosque in kuwait killing 27. another assailant beheaded a man in southern france and attempted to brow up a u.s.-owned factory. >> they're willing to inspired attacks, and relatively easy attack, with armed assault style attacks. >> reporter: the fear of such attacks prompting the fbi to issue a bull fen urging law enforcement and the public to be vigilant. in the years it declared an islamic state, isis already a global threat lodging more than 3,000 attacks across the mideast and africa as you're beginning to see attacks play out. >> jimso much. >>> let's talk more about the threat and a group that consults companies, michael chertoff and he sits on the national security advisory board that advises the nsa. thank you for being here. >> good to be here. >> i want to play something that the former 2 and acting head of the cia said this morning. >> i don't want to tell americans what to to do or not to do but i wouldn't be surprised if we're here a week from today talking about an attack in the u.s. that's how serious it is. we've seen an uptick in isis-linked plots both in the united states and overseas. obviously july 4th is a period of time when people congregate. they go to the beach, they'll make the call for insurgent attacks in ramadan. that's probability raised the temperature level. so i think we need to be vigilant. not only for the u.s. but americans traveling overseas. more mo rely said there's -- >> you always issue a bulletin before a holiday weekend. >> but i don't think there's necessarily specific inform
jim scuitto. jim, these very stark warnings are coming after very bloody scenes overseas. >> i asked a senior official if this was the normal ratcheted up up security before a major holiday, and he told me this is different, the senior u.s. officials say it's definitely a heightened state of alert based on isis' open call to attack the west. the most deadly isis-inspired attack to date. gunfire ringing out in a tunisian resort leaving at least 38 dead, most of them british. >> i was...
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jim sciutto. jim, officials are saying this is not a drill. this is a legitimate concern for this weekend? >> that's right. let's frame it this way, and as you did there, brooke you have a whole range of possible terror alerts ranging from the most severe there's a credible and specific plot. this is not that. but it is also not a sort of general warning that hey, we know terrorists may try to do something. the level of concern today is greater than it's been in some time and the specific reason for that is this call from a senior isis leader to supporters from around the world to attack anywhere they can during the muslim holy month of ramadan which we are in right now. the concern is you have more americans, like the last person that was arrested whose picture you showed on the air right there, as more americans get caught up in this isis wave isis is the kind of group that knows the power of timing and july 4th weekend would be enormously powerful timing. that's the collection in the threat picture right now. not a specific threat but a very real threat. not just a kind of general everybody watch out but they encourage people to keep their eyes open. they are not saying at the same time to stay home. they want people to celebrate this weekend. >> timing symbolism is very important for this group. we referenced a he showed a picture of this new jersey man. what more do you know about this guy officials arrested? what was he allegedly plotting to do? >> this fits a pattern of a kind of plot by american recruits or add adherence to isis. the number this year is dwarfing the charges from last year. it generally starts with social media contact with isis online possibly with an isis recruiter or just in web chat rooms, et cetera. and then moving forward where the police move in when someone like this seems to be talking about plans to do something. and the sad fact is brooke they are seeing this with a greater and greater frequency and that's why you have the level of concern about july 4th. >> again, don't be afraid. i'll be in washington, d.c., taking in the fireworks. jimto, hope to see threw. >> me too. >>> just as nbc cuts ties with donald trump, the republican candidate is doubling down on his comments about mexicans but not without more fallout. this time involving his miss universe pageant. one country now deciding to pull out. thanks for calling angie's list. how may i help you? i heard i could call angie's list if i needed work done around my house at a fair price. you heard right, just tell us what you need done and we'll find a top rated provider to take care of it. so i could get a faulty light switch fixed? yup! or have a guy refinish my floors? absolutely! or send someone out to groom my pookie? pookie's what you call your? my dog. yes, we can do that. real help from real people. come see what the new angie's list can do for you. big day? ah, the usual. moved some new cars. hauled a bunch of steel. kept the supermarket shelves stocked. made sure everyone got their latest gadgets. what's up for the next shift? ah, nothing much. just keeping
jim sciutto. jim, officials are saying this is not a drill. this is a legitimate concern for this weekend? >> that's right. let's frame it this way, and as you did there, brooke you have a whole range of possible terror alerts ranging from the most severe there's a credible and specific plot. this is not that. but it is also not a sort of general warning that hey, we know terrorists may try to do something. the level of concern today is greater than it's been in some time and the specific...
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who's sister sells -- >> jimmy: jim sissel. jimeashore. >> jimmy: sea house. scary, scary story. >> steve: he says a scary story about different sorts of peoples that live -- >> jimmy: they're sissel, sisters. the sisters friends. >> steve: the sisters live in the cities. >> jimmy: sisters friends? different things. you don't know the sisseles? >> steve: the sisseles? the ones that live up by the saunsters? [ laughter ] >> jimmy: the saunsters? >> steve: yeah. >> jimmy: you know the saunsters? >> steve: yeah, i went to school with them. sixth, seventh. [ laughter ] and seminary school with them. >> jimmy: what year, what year did you graduate? >> steve: i graduated in '66. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: all right. here we go. @jmsissel, he says -- ♪ to all my victims you got much flava this is how i chew it ♪ ♪ t-rex does it like nobody does this is how i chew it ♪ [ laughter ] [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: t-rex. montell jordan. this one is from @justinfreed. he says -- ♪ bronto bronto bronto can't you see sometimes your long neck hyp
who's sister sells -- >> jimmy: jim sissel. jimeashore. >> jimmy: sea house. scary, scary story. >> steve: he says a scary story about different sorts of peoples that live -- >> jimmy: they're sissel, sisters. the sisters friends. >> steve: the sisters live in the cities. >> jimmy: sisters friends? different things. you don't know the sisseles? >> steve: the sisseles? the ones that live up by the saunsters? [ laughter ] >> jimmy: the saunsters?...
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jim: for nick and all the crew, jim nantz saying so long. congratulations, david lingmerth, the champion for the first time. (music) hey! let me help with that. oh, thank you! (music) introducing the one-and-only volkswagen golf sportwagen. the sportier utility vehicle. dear fellow citizen, kids are a great thing. before you know it they're in college. if you're lucky, they get a degree in finance and figure out how to pay for it. could happen. but just in case it doesn't, i can help. we have new student loans others don't offer. next time you have a question about how to pay for college ask me. sincerely, jared duemling, fellow ninja and fellow citizen >> in tonight police hope a clue found at the scene will lead them to the person responsible. >>> good evening everyone, i'm natasha brown. thanks for joining us. the 17-year-old was riding a skateboard home when he was struck. this happened just before 2:00 this morning on new york owe north hook road at lee avenue in pennsville salem county new jersey. "eyewitness news" reporter alexandria
jim: for nick and all the crew, jim nantz saying so long. congratulations, david lingmerth, the champion for the first time. (music) hey! let me help with that. oh, thank you! (music) introducing the one-and-only volkswagen golf sportwagen. the sportier utility vehicle. dear fellow citizen, kids are a great thing. before you know it they're in college. if you're lucky, they get a degree in finance and figure out how to pay for it. could happen. but just in case it doesn't, i can help. we have...
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jim, i'm from yardley, pennsylvania, a long-time follower of your show, a lifetime sports fan, go eagles? what are your thoughts on hlo? >> that certain group halo and bloomberg. i like this. >> jim. >> los angeles sans. >> anything happening? >> the chinese have cut down. let's be careful. >> yes, from connecticut, outer wall. >> no no i just the earnings quality there is suspect to the point it's up down up down. i can't handle that. let's stay away. yes! >> i appreciate the opportunity to be here live in cramer's house of pleasure. >> thank you. >> one you thought a small biotech is doing work zoma corps, xoma? >> i want to be careful, xoma yes. >> hey, jim, nick from new jersey, a big boo-yah from my son nick jr., watching at home a huge fan. >> also when the younger people watch. >> a big thank you for me for creating show my entire family loves to watch. maritime. >> i look at it. it's very interesting, i did a lot of work listen up i think it's got more progress coming in terms of the next two quarters. yes! >> hey, jim, eric from omaha, nebraska. a big boo-yah. >> fantastic. >> i flew in. looking at a couple. how about southwest? >> i a you the other day, i would never slap a sale with gary kelly as the operator. i will say this i there i the airlines will have to wait to see the quarters. they will cause a numbers/aim then we go the next level. it will be delta. that's my thing. yes! >> hey, jim, robert from new jersey. devonn energy. i've had it for a while. >> i think devonn could be a takeover target. natural gas i'm going in, i'm not kidding. i think devonn is right. yes, sir. >> john from the bronx, living in connecticut. got
jim, i'm from yardley, pennsylvania, a long-time follower of your show, a lifetime sports fan, go eagles? what are your thoughts on hlo? >> that certain group halo and bloomberg. i like this. >> jim. >> los angeles sans. >> anything happening? >> the chinese have cut down. let's be careful. >> yes, from connecticut, outer wall. >> no no i just the earnings quality there is suspect to the point it's up down up down. i can't handle that. let's stay away....
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jim kavanaugh. jim, would you classify this giving your experience knowing that two are linked in likely the third one is linked as well? >> yes, alex i clearly would. and also there is another nine or so incidents reported to the police of windows shattering. they are not all going to be shots, probably some could be road debris but you have people reporting, they hear a pop and then their rear window in their car is shattered. or their driver's side window is shattered, just like when cori was shot. so i think some of those window shatterings are probably the work of the shooter. so i think we have a real problem here. >> what are the challenges in putting this all together jim in because as i understand it there's a 15-mile difference between the furthest shootings apart. so you've got 15 miles to deal with here. >> yeah it's big but also it's not a huge metropolitan area. it's kind of a suburban rural area north of denver. that's a plus for authorities for surveillance. they can you know lock it down a little easier than when in a bigger city. but i wouldn't be surprised to see this shooter, this killer take a trip and go outside of this zone where these shootings, if these three prove to be linked, then some of the window shatterings. take a trip 100 miles out to try to throw things off. but he's very comfortable in this area and moving around this area. and notice the progression. cori shot through the driver's window. maybe the window shatterings he's trying to kill somebody in a car, and guess what cori survives and the other people involved, it doesn't work. then he goes to the bicyclist, mr. jacoby and then to mr. connolly walking on the street late
jim kavanaugh. jim, would you classify this giving your experience knowing that two are linked in likely the third one is linked as well? >> yes, alex i clearly would. and also there is another nine or so incidents reported to the police of windows shattering. they are not all going to be shots, probably some could be road debris but you have people reporting, they hear a pop and then their rear window in their car is shattered. or their driver's side window is shattered, just like when...