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the world over that job john john john john. well audio we spoke soon at the very base journalists the make up there about the saudi movement and whether it might develop from a street level protests a political force and government. what the difference perhaps between this movement and the 5 star movement is that it's not about populous ideas and there's no use as such or in the way that the 5 star movement had bet big really oh the comedian turned politician. so in that sense it's different this very categorically they don't want any representation of any political party no banners no flags of any party is allowed at any of these gatherings but i think a lot of political observers as well are looking at this and wondering while this actually resulted anything is is what you are as well i mean is it going to be a political party as such and i think the key test will be in the regional election that is expected next month and that's of the region of a 1000000 or money away or below nya is located the 1st spot where we saw this g
the world over that job john john john john. well audio we spoke soon at the very base journalists the make up there about the saudi movement and whether it might develop from a street level protests a political force and government. what the difference perhaps between this movement and the 5 star movement is that it's not about populous ideas and there's no use as such or in the way that the 5 star movement had bet big really oh the comedian turned politician. so in that sense it's different...
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Dec 4, 2019
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john. john walked down the aisle on the house side. of course i was not paying a lot of attention. i figured the best thing to do is follow john. i followed john. when john got through introducing me, i followed him to the well. i said thank you to everybody and named three or four people that helped me get there. then i said well, i'm going to work. and i'm honored to be here. what they didn't tell me was that if you're in the house, at that particular day, the mike for the people who were republicans was on the left. republicans spoke from the right. this dummy followed john, who was smart, and went to the right where he was supposed to go. i went to the left. where i wasn't supposed to go. i noticed these eyeballs on the front row just going around and around. some guy slipped up behind me after i gave my one-minute speech, so you're going to start this day demonstrating what a liberal guy you are. that's one of the voices that came over the back of my shoulder just like something hanging on my head. i turned around and looked. this other guy come up to me and said don't pay any attention to that. named tom blakeman, he went on about his business. i a
john. john walked down the aisle on the house side. of course i was not paying a lot of attention. i figured the best thing to do is follow john. i followed john. when john got through introducing me, i followed him to the well. i said thank you to everybody and named three or four people that helped me get there. then i said well, i'm going to work. and i'm honored to be here. what they didn't tell me was that if you're in the house, at that particular day, the mike for the people who were...
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Dec 4, 2019
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john lewis here yet? where is john? john, you're getting shorter. [laughter] john lewis is one of the finest people i've known and a great friend of mine. we were invited -- i was invited to speak to the senate a couple of days ago and i recognized john who was there and he introduced me and said things that meant more to me than anybody's ever sent to me. i want you to come to my last speech. i want to say things about you, in essence, john, to a much greater extent than me, and together represent how things can really change. if people want them to change. they're willing to do the things that let them change. john was born in the 1940's. i was born in the 1940's. john went to-- was born and lives in alabama i live in georgia for a while. and shelby was there so he came to alabama. and he's a good guy. john came there and john worked and lived in a shotgun house. that's where the hole in the back, hole in the front and go through and don't hit anything. but john was a great civil rights leader in his youth. he was president the student nonviolent coordinate committee and he walked the streets of atlanta, georgia where i lived and i was part of the-- i thought he was running for office, and never got that figured out until i got old
john lewis here yet? where is john? john, you're getting shorter. [laughter] john lewis is one of the finest people i've known and a great friend of mine. we were invited -- i was invited to speak to the senate a couple of days ago and i recognized john who was there and he introduced me and said things that meant more to me than anybody's ever sent to me. i want you to come to my last speech. i want to say things about you, in essence, john, to a much greater extent than me, and together...
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Dec 4, 2019
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john lewis here?? where is john john you're getting shorter. [laughter] john lewis is one of the finest people i've ever known and a friend. i was invited to speak to the senate a couple days ago and i recognize john who is there and he introduced me and said things that meant more than anybody's ever said to me. i want to come to my last speech because i want to say a few things about you. in essence john who is much better than me represent how things can change. if people are willing to change john was born in 1940s and i was born in the 1940s. john was in alabama and i lived in georgia, he's a good guy. john came there and lived in a shotgun house, holes in the back and hold in the front. but john was a great civil rights leader in his youth nonviolent court naming committee. and john walked the streets of atlanta, georgia where i lived and i was part of the people who are running for office and i never got that figured out till i got older. anyway the board of education and he'd been thrown out in the schools are going to be integrated. he decided the only way to prove was numbers. so they figured how much of a percentage of how many black people would constitute the savior desegregated. vice
john lewis here?? where is john john you're getting shorter. [laughter] john lewis is one of the finest people i've ever known and a friend. i was invited to speak to the senate a couple days ago and i recognize john who is there and he introduced me and said things that meant more than anybody's ever said to me. i want to come to my last speech because i want to say a few things about you. in essence john who is much better than me represent how things can change. if people are willing to...
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Dec 20, 2019
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insecure when it comes to a states person, whether john mccain -- think about what he said about john mccain and his supporters. john mccain. now john dingell. , what heresident misunderstands is that cruelty is not wait. -- is not wit. just because he gets a laugh at the cruel things he says means it is funny, it is not funny at all, it is very sad. thank you. >> following speaker pelosi's news conference, reporters heard from house minority leader kevin mccarthy, who also talked about
insecure when it comes to a states person, whether john mccain -- think about what he said about john mccain and his supporters. john mccain. now john dingell. , what heresident misunderstands is that cruelty is not wait. -- is not wit. just because he gets a laugh at the cruel things he says means it is funny, it is not funny at all, it is very sad. thank you. >> following speaker pelosi's news conference, reporters heard from house minority leader kevin mccarthy, who also talked about
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Dec 25, 2019
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>> we're here to celebrate john. >> one of the groomsmen said -- >> john meehan's nickname is filthy john meehan. >> reporter: filthy john, over the years, became dirty john> reporter: you found out later on, there was a story to that. >> yes. he was basically conning little old women out of money for jobs that he didn't do. and also that he had a way with the ladies. >> reporter: luken discovered darker secrets as well. john supplied the opioids that killed his own addicted brother. he was alone with his sick father when the old man died rather suddenly. john wasn't charged in those cases, but there were others, said luken, and as the years went on, he developed a certain criminal specialty. >> he would go on dating websites and he would find women that usually had good financial backing. he always told people he was a doctor. >> reporter: he seemed like an ideal catch, i suppose. >> yes. >> reporter: for a lot of these women. >> he was a true conman. he'd take their money and when they would find out about him, john would threaten 'em, he would terrorize 'em. >> reporter: how bad was he? >> john was the most dangerous, treacherous, manipulative, deceitf
>> we're here to celebrate john. >> one of the groomsmen said -- >> john meehan's nickname is filthy john meehan. >> reporter: filthy john, over the years, became dirty john> reporter: you found out later on, there was a story to that. >> yes. he was basically conning little old women out of money for jobs that he didn't do. and also that he had a way with the ladies. >> reporter: luken discovered darker secrets as well. john supplied the opioids that...
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Dec 20, 2019
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john dingell. i knew john dingell, i knew debbie dingell. i served with them both. i think they are very good individuals. i think they served -- john served his country very well. very proud. when john passed away, if you watched on the floor and you heard my speech on the floor, a tribute to him, i find him very strong individual, very bright individual, i think he made a great contribution to america. we may differ philosophically and sometimes in principles, but, no, i considered him a friend. reporter: now that the house has voted on articles of impeachment, what will house republicans' role in the senate be? are you planning on having some of your members prep senate as they prepare for a trial or what will that look like? mr. mccarthy: we'll do anything senators need, if they want information, if they need it we have a lot of members who spent a lot of time on this. but that's up to the senate and also up to the president who he wants to represent him. but anything that we can be helpful with, we will. reporter: would you consider -- [indiscernible] -- mr. mccarthy: a defeat? let me first gauge that. i would feel it was a defeat to the constitution. that the rise of impeachmen
john dingell. i knew john dingell, i knew debbie dingell. i served with them both. i think they are very good individuals. i think they served -- john served his country very well. very proud. when john passed away, if you watched on the floor and you heard my speech on the floor, a tribute to him, i find him very strong individual, very bright individual, i think he made a great contribution to america. we may differ philosophically and sometimes in principles, but, no, i considered him a...
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Dec 26, 2019
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john. >> one of the groomsmen said -- >> john meehan's nickname is filthy john meehan. >> reporter: filthy john, over the years, became dirty john nickname stuck. >> reporter: you found out later on, there was a story to that. >> yes. he was basically conning little old women out of money for jobs that he didn't do. and also that he had a way with the ladies. >> reporter: luken discovered darker secrets as well. john supplied the opioids that killed his own addicted brother. he was alone with his sick father when the old man died rather suddenly. john wasn't charged in those cases, but there were others, said luken, and as the years went on, he developed a certain criminal specialty. >> he would go on dating websites and he would find women that usually had good financial backing. he always told people he was a doctor. >> reporter: he seemed like an ideal catch, i suppose. >> yes. >> reporter: for a lot of these women. >> he was a true conman. he'd take their money and when they would find out about him, john would threaten 'em, he would terrorize 'em. >> reporter: how bad was he? >> john was the most dangerous, treacherous, man
john. >> one of the groomsmen said -- >> john meehan's nickname is filthy john meehan. >> reporter: filthy john, over the years, became dirty john nickname stuck. >> reporter: you found out later on, there was a story to that. >> yes. he was basically conning little old women out of money for jobs that he didn't do. and also that he had a way with the ladies. >> reporter: luken discovered darker secrets as well. john supplied the opioids that killed his own...
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Dec 8, 2019
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john. >> one of the groomsmen said -- >> john meehan's nickname is filthy john meehan. >> reporter: filthy john, over the years, became dirty johname stuck. >> reporter: you found out later on there was a story to that. >> yes. he was basically conning little old women out of money for jobs that he didn't do. and also that he had a way with the ladies. >> reporter: luken discovered darker secrets as well. john supplied the opioids that killed his own addicted brother. he was alone with his sick father when the old man died rather suddenly. john wasn't charged in those cases, but there were others, said luken, and as the years went on, he developed a certain criminal specialty. >> he would go on dating websites and he would find women that usually had good financial backing. he always told people he was a doctor. >> reporter: he seemed like an ideal catch, i suppose. >> yes. >> reporter: for a lot of these women. >> he was a true con man. he'd take their money and when they would find out about him john would threaten them, he would terrorize them. >> reporter: how bad was he? >> john was the most dangerous, treacherous, manipula
john. >> one of the groomsmen said -- >> john meehan's nickname is filthy john meehan. >> reporter: filthy john, over the years, became dirty johname stuck. >> reporter: you found out later on there was a story to that. >> yes. he was basically conning little old women out of money for jobs that he didn't do. and also that he had a way with the ladies. >> reporter: luken discovered darker secrets as well. john supplied the opioids that killed his own addicted...
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Dec 19, 2019
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john mccain. think of what he said about john mccain and his supporters just overlooked that. john mccain. now john dingell. what the president misunderstands is that cruelty is not wit. just because he gets a laugh for saying a cruel thing -- for saying the cruel things that he says doesn't mean he's funny. it's not funny at all. it's very sad. thank you all very much. happy holidays. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2019]
john mccain. think of what he said about john mccain and his supporters just overlooked that. john mccain. now john dingell. what the president misunderstands is that cruelty is not wit. just because he gets a laugh for saying a cruel thing -- for saying the cruel things that he says doesn't mean he's funny. it's not funny at all. it's very sad. thank you all very much. happy holidays. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and...
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Dec 19, 2019
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it comes to states persons, whether it was john mccain, think of what he said about john mccain and his supporters just overlooked that. john mccain. now john dingle. what the president misunderstands is that cruelty is not wit. just because he gets a laugh for saying the cruel things that he says doesn't mean he's funny. it's not funny at all. it's very sad. thank you all very much. happy holidays to all. >>> if you missed any of this live briefing, it's available for you to view again online at c-span.org. just type, speaker pelosi in the video search box which you can at the top of the page. the house agenda, the next steps in impeachment, the u.s. mexico canada trade agreement being debated and state and local tax legislation. more discussion later today with kevin mccarthy, his weekly news conference set to start in about 15 minutes at 11:30 eastern liev here as well. >>> coming up later, the house oversight subcommittee holds a meeting about climbed change. live here on c-span 3, also live, or listen with the radio app. >>> in wood bridge, virginia, democratic caller.
it comes to states persons, whether it was john mccain, think of what he said about john mccain and his supporters just overlooked that. john mccain. now john dingle. what the president misunderstands is that cruelty is not wit. just because he gets a laugh for saying the cruel things that he says doesn't mean he's funny. it's not funny at all. it's very sad. thank you all very much. happy holidays to all. >>> if you missed any of this live briefing, it's available for you to view...
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Dec 3, 2019
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john. john walked down the aisle on the house side. of course i was not paying a lot of attention. i figured the best thing to do is follow john. i followed john. when john got through introducing me, i followed him to the well. i said thank you to everybody and named three or four people that helped me get there. then i said well, i'm going to work. and i'm honored to be here. what they didn't tell me was that if you're in the house, at that particular day, the mike for the people who were republicans was on the left. republicans spoke from the right. this dummy followed john, who was smart, and went to the right where he was supposed to go. i went to the left. where i wasn't supposed to go. i noticed these eyeballs on the front row just going around and around. some guy slipped up behind me after i gave my one-minute speech, so you're going to start this day demonstrating what a liberal guy you are. that's one of the voices that came over the back of my shoulder just like something hanging on my head. i turned around and looked. this other guy come up to me and said don't pay any attention to that. named tom blakeman, he went on about his business. i a
john. john walked down the aisle on the house side. of course i was not paying a lot of attention. i figured the best thing to do is follow john. i followed john. when john got through introducing me, i followed him to the well. i said thank you to everybody and named three or four people that helped me get there. then i said well, i'm going to work. and i'm honored to be here. what they didn't tell me was that if you're in the house, at that particular day, the mike for the people who were...
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Dec 9, 2019
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john. know, the expression john kennedy said, moral courage is a rare commodity than physical courage. john has demonstrated both. there is of things that john has covered, he's given the credit, some of which i don't deserve because john was the guy in the fight in some of these foreign-policy issues. what john and i have intellectually and politically has gone for a long time. you chose very well when john ran and like john, i'm not here to tell you that i deserve your vote. i'm telling you i don't want you to look me over. i would knockrom, on doors and say my name is joe biden, democratic candidate for united states senate. look me over. if you like what you see, help me out, if not, vote for the other person. but give me a look over. that's all i'm asking you to do. you are really the starting gun in the primary race for the united states presidency. you have an incredible obligation. not to me, but to yourselves. because what you do here in iowa , what you do here in a primary, and in new hampshire, is set the tone for who is likely to be the nominee for president of the united states. and you always take it seriously, you really do. you always taken seriously. but i don't think it has ever been a more serious vo
john. know, the expression john kennedy said, moral courage is a rare commodity than physical courage. john has demonstrated both. there is of things that john has covered, he's given the credit, some of which i don't deserve because john was the guy in the fight in some of these foreign-policy issues. what john and i have intellectually and politically has gone for a long time. you chose very well when john ran and like john, i'm not here to tell you that i deserve your vote. i'm telling you i...
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Dec 9, 2019
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john, but you know, with john kennedy, moral courage is a rare commodity in public life. and things that john covered and credit which i don't deserve because john was the guy leading the fight of some of the foreign policy missions. but john and i have are sympatico intellectually for a long time and chose well when john ran. like john, i'm not telling you i deserve your vote. i'm telling you i want you to look me over. where i come from, i'd knock on door, my name is joe biden democratic candidate for the united states united states, look me over, if you like what you see, vote for me, if you don't. that's what, you are the starting gun for the primary race for the united states presidency. you have an incredible obligation plot to me at all, but to yourselves because what you do here in iowa and what they do in iowa, what you do here in a primary in new hampshire is going to set the tone of who is likely to be the nominee for president of the united states. and you always take it seriously. you really do. you always take it seriously. but i don't think it's ever been a more serious choice you have to make, not because i'm running, not because i'm running, but because of the man who holds the office of the united states
john, but you know, with john kennedy, moral courage is a rare commodity in public life. and things that john covered and credit which i don't deserve because john was the guy leading the fight of some of the foreign policy missions. but john and i have are sympatico intellectually for a long time and chose well when john ran. like john, i'm not telling you i deserve your vote. i'm telling you i want you to look me over. where i come from, i'd knock on door, my name is joe biden democratic...
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Dec 19, 2019
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it comes to states persons, whether it is john mccain -- think of what he said about john mccain and his supporters -- just overlook that. john mccain. now john dingell. but the president misunderstands, cruelty is not wit. just because he gets a laugh for saying a cruel thing does not mean that he is funny. it is not funny at all. it is very sad. mark: white house press toldtary stephanie grisham good morning america that president trump was "just rif fing" when speaking about the late congressman. the comments came shortly after mrs. dingle voted in favor of two articles of impeachment against the president. has earmarked more than $400 million to boost election security in early caucus and primary states where voting is slated to begin in february. under the proposed spending bills, states would use the money for upgrading voting equipment, conducting postelection audits, and cybersecurity training. the nation's intelligence chiefs have warned russia and others remain interested in attempting to interfere in u.s. elections. nasa faces a major test tomorrow, set to launch boeing's star letter space capsule into orbit. the plan is to connect
it comes to states persons, whether it is john mccain -- think of what he said about john mccain and his supporters -- just overlook that. john mccain. now john dingell. but the president misunderstands, cruelty is not wit. just because he gets a laugh for saying a cruel thing does not mean that he is funny. it is not funny at all. it is very sad. mark: white house press toldtary stephanie grisham good morning america that president trump was "just rif fing" when speaking about the...
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Dec 9, 2019
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john. the expression john kennedy said, moral courage is a rare commodity that physical courage in public life. . john has demonstrated both. folks, there are a lot of things john has covered. he has given me credit, some of which i do not deserve, because john was the guy leading the fight in some of these foreign policy initiatives. but john and i have been simpatico intellectually and politically for a long, long time. and you chose really well when john ran. like john, i am not here to tell you that i deserve your vote. i am telling you that i want you to look me over. where i come from, there's no expression. ice to knock on doors and i would say my name is joe biden. democratic candidate for united states senate. if you look me over if you like what you see vote for me and if you do not come about for the other person. you are really the starting gun for the primary race for the united states presidency. you have an incredible obligation not to me, to yourselves. in the what you do here primary in new hampshire is going to set the tone for who is likely to be the nominee for president of the united states. and you always take it seriously, you really do. you always take it seriously. but i do not think it has ever been a more serious c
john. the expression john kennedy said, moral courage is a rare commodity that physical courage in public life. . john has demonstrated both. folks, there are a lot of things john has covered. he has given me credit, some of which i do not deserve, because john was the guy leading the fight in some of these foreign policy initiatives. but john and i have been simpatico intellectually and politically for a long, long time. and you chose really well when john ran. like john, i am not here to tell...
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john creech was charged with his murder. police believe john carried out the rage-fueled killing as revenge for gavin's affair with john's wife chandy. several of john's associates admitted they helped johns did not think they had the whole story just yet. and there was one person who could give it to them directly. so they figured out a way to get it. once again, here's keith morrison. >> reporter: detectives john o'brien and ty labbe had a problem. an important witness who wouldn't talk. chandrika creech had clammed up. but there's more than one way to get a story. they found an associate of john creech's, someone who knew chandy. they convinced him to wear a wire and meet with her. it worked. >> do you want the whole story? >> yeah. >> reporter: once chandy felt safe, she spilled it. all of it. how she and gavin met in secret at that secluded cul-de-sac, got close in gavin's car. >> and then all of a sudden the door opened, and johnny just goes like -- and i just like pushed myself out this way. got out the driver's side. >> reporter: creech burst in like a machine, said chandy. started slugging, wouldn't quit. >> and i was like, stop it, you're going to kill him -- i was like screami
john creech was charged with his murder. police believe john carried out the rage-fueled killing as revenge for gavin's affair with john's wife chandy. several of john's associates admitted they helped johns did not think they had the whole story just yet. and there was one person who could give it to them directly. so they figured out a way to get it. once again, here's keith morrison. >> reporter: detectives john o'brien and ty labbe had a problem. an important witness who wouldn't...
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Dec 19, 2019
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john mccain. think or what he said about john mccain and his supporters just overlooked that. john mccain. now john dingell. what the president misunderstand stands is that cruelty is not wit. just because he gets a laugh for saying the cruel things he says doesn't mean he's funny. it's not funny at all. it's very sad. thank you all very much. happy holidays. >>> good morning. i'm chris jansing in for craig melvin. you see the speaker of the house departing after what was an historic day yesterday. she made it very clear, what we're all watching for, what happens next after the impeachment was affirmed yesterday, the president on both counts impeached. something with him for the historical record. she is sticking to their guns. she says we don't know what arena we're in, i don't care what the republicans say. she said, when we see what the process is, then we'll let you know. they're waiting to decide who among the house members would go to the senate and present the case for removal from office. this is just the first, though, of several live events we're expecting this busy hour. up next for her, a meeting with senate minority leader chuck schumer in a couple minutes. we also expect to hear from pelosi's republican counterpart, kevin mccarthy. she had plenty to say about the guy in charge on the senate side, mitch mcconnell. she said they, meaning the founding fathers, suspected we could have a rogue president. i don't think they expected there could be a rogue president and a rogue leader at the same time. we've got a lot of great guests to talk about all of this, what we're going to see happening next including somebody who was in that room, msnbc's garrett haake, our capitol hill reporter. but also with us, phil rucker white house bureau chief of the washington poet. michael steele, mark uptigrove, president and ceo of the l.b.j. foundation. michael conway, helped draft the judiciary committee's presentation to the house. garrett, let's start with what we just heard. nancy pelosi was giving no quarter there in that press conference. she said you can ask as many questions as you want. well, she didn't let them ask as many questions as you all wanted, but she's sticking to her guns. she wants to see what happens. tell us what's going on behind the scenes and what the mood is on the hill. >> i'm not sure we got much clarity from the speaker. here is what she did say. she said she wants to find out what the senate trial process will be before she can determine how many managers she'll appoint. those are the house prosecutors of the impeachment case essentially, and who they will be. practically speaking, that means we're probably not going to find out those next steps until the new year. the house is set to have one more vote today and they're probably going home for the rest of the 2019 calendar year. what i think we're seeing practically is a delay into the new year for how this is going to go. the speaker is also on her way, as we speak, to go meet with chuck schumer, for the two democratic leaders to put their heads together and finalize a strategy. do they hold up the process even more to get what schumer has asked for, four witnesses in a trial that they feel like would be more fair? or do they acquiesce and expand the list of demands? all of that still being worked out. for right now we're in this gray area between the end of the house process and a senate process we don't see to start until january almost regardless of what they decide. as to the mood, the speaker summed it up. last night was a historic night. she was very proud, she said, of the moral courage of her freshmen members in particular. she said those are folks probably largely glad to have this process behind them. but a lot of democrats are looking at each other today, looking at their committee chair people, looking at the leadership looking at the next steps to the degree their role if all this might be done or not. some of these are just i think going to have to stay open questions for a little while, not a comfortable position to be in. you can see it from the speaker who wanted to talk about literally any other house business this morning other than the his stork impeachment of a president of the united states last night. >> but also messaging, messaging that we're here to get stuff done. phil, your paper reports some house democrats have pushed democratic leadership and that's what all the questions were about, to withhold the articles of impeachment so they can have a say in how a trial plays out in the senate. we heard a little while ago from mitch mcconnell about that. let me play that and i'll get your reaction on the other side about this standoff we seem to be in. >> speaker pelosi suggested house democrats may be too afraid to transmit their shoddy work product to the senate. president trump, it looks like the prosecutors are getting cold feet. >> is the president's case so weak that none of the president's men can defend him under oath? if the house case is so weak, why is leader mcconnell so afraid of witnesses an documents? i have yet to hear one good argument, why less evidence is better than more evidence. >> that pretty much, phil, lays out where we are. a few minutes ago the president tweeted, backing up what we heard from mitch mcconnell, pelosi feels her phony impeachment hoax is so pathetic, she's afraid to present it to the senate. where does that leave us? >> the standoff is over the witnesses, whether mitch mcconnell will agree to a trial as schumer has requested that would include witnesses, including the acting white house chief of staff mick mulvaney and former national security adviser john bolton, both of whom refused to testify in the house inquiry. whether they come forward in the senate is an open question. i think the wildcard right now is going to be president trump. does he become impatient in the weeks to come in wanting this trial to begin quickly? he views the senate as his home court advantage. he's been looking forward do this trial insofar as it's his chance to be acquitted and to be vindicated in some way from the impeachment act last night in the house. if he becomes impatient and starts mushing mcconnell to make a deal with the democrats, that could possibly be the leverage pelosi is looking for. as garrett said, we don't know when this is going to get resolved, if at all, between now and january. it might be the beginning of the new year before we get any sort of resolution in terms of an agreement for the parameters of a senate trial. >> as you well know, michael steele, donald trump is always a wildcard. if this ends up being donald trump and nancy pel
john mccain. think or what he said about john mccain and his supporters just overlooked that. john mccain. now john dingell. what the president misunderstand stands is that cruelty is not wit. just because he gets a laugh for saying the cruel things he says doesn't mean he's funny. it's not funny at all. it's very sad. thank you all very much. happy holidays. >>> good morning. i'm chris jansing in for craig melvin. you see the speaker of the house departing after what was an historic...
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john: hello, guys. lemonis: how you doing? i'm marcus. john: john levatino. lemonis: john, nice to see you. this is my friend dante. i wanted to take dante and jimmy to driscoll foods because in any restaurant, the food distributor is quintessential to your success because not only do they deliver the food, but they help you craft the menu. they help you work on your food costs, and they give you other ideas of things that are working and not working in the marketplace. dante: okay, so, um, i guess maybe we could start -- i could show you what i'm ordering now. jimmy: give him the menu first. that way, he'll get a taste of what the business is like, and then you'll -- john able to match up apples to apples as far as pricing is concerned. dante: invoices? john: yeah, invoices are great. jimmy: what about the situation with the sauce and the special sauce you need and the cheese you need? there was a big problem when we made the last switch. lemonis: maybe just for a second, jimmy, for one second, if you could let your son just answer a question. john: i would be charging you $33.50 for romaine hearts, and they charge you $39.58. lemonis: what's that as a percentage? dante: as a percentage? lemonis: yep. dante: how would i find the percentage? ♪ lemonis: so 15% across -- how much food do you buy a week? dante: i was averaging about $2,300. lemonis: and the business is gonna go up. times 52. and how much is your rent? dante: $2,800. lemonis: how many months of free rent did you just get? dante: almost 6 1/2. lemonis: right. you have a much different approach today than you did a month ago. dante is actually starting to get on board with the program. he's s
john: hello, guys. lemonis: how you doing? i'm marcus. john: john levatino. lemonis: john, nice to see you. this is my friend dante. i wanted to take dante and jimmy to driscoll foods because in any restaurant, the food distributor is quintessential to your success because not only do they deliver the food, but they help you craft the menu. they help you work on your food costs, and they give you other ideas of things that are working and not working in the marketplace. dante: okay, so, um, i...
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john dingell, i knew john dingell. i knew debbie dingell. i served with them both. i think they're both very good individuals. i think they served -- john served his country very well, very proud. when john passed away, if you watched on the floor and you heard my speech on the floor, a tribute to him and i find him a very strong individual, a very bright individual. i think he made a great contribution to america. we may differ philosophically and sometimes in principles but i considered him a friend. yes? >> now that the house has voted on articles of impeachment, what will house republicans' role in the senate be? are you planning on having some of your members prep the senate as they prepare for a trial? what will that look like? >> we will do anything senators need if they want information. we have a lot of members that spent a lot of time on this. that's up to the senate and the president of who he wants to represent him. but anything that we can be helpful, we will. yes, ma'am? >> would you consider last night's house republicans' defeat a failure to the party? >> a defeat, well, let me first gauge that. i feel it was a defeat to the constitution, that the rise of impeachment would become so low that you didn't read the constitution to take it. i'd consider it a defeat in the idea that we didn't hold the same standard that the speaker asked us to hold in march of this year, at least at that time, that impeachment was so divisive that it would have to be overwhelming, compelling and bipartisan. what i watched last night, the only bipartisan vote was against impeachment. a democrat who's actually running for president voted present. so the question you probably wanted to ask was to the speaker. unfortunately, she would not take any questions when it came to impeachment. i would think if nancy pelosi thought impeachment was so important that she had to put this before the american public, that she wrote a timeline, that she selected committee chairmen based on in the future, that she spent two and a half years working on this, the press conference the day after impeachment that she has weekly, i thought she would have welcomed questions about impeachment. unfortunately, she told you they were republican talking points and she would not take your questions. i never thought a speaker would act that way. i guess the only thing i could take from that, she's embarrassed of it. she understands how weak it is. she understands her own criteria was not met, constitutionally was not met. she probably failed on all parts. i hope i answered your question. yes, sir. >> usmca passed today and the speaker said the democrats deserved some credit for strengthening the product over time for improving the enforcement mechanisms. do you think that the final product that's going to pass is stronger than what was -- what initially came out, and how would you summarize the way that the negotiations have taken place over the last several months? >> well, you started by saying the speaker believes the democrats need some credit for bringing usmca up. the only reason it was brought up is because they impeached the president. if she thinks the credit belongs for impeaching the president is why she brought it up, i'll let her have that credit. the credit for the bill itself, no. what did she talk about, less than 1% of the over all bill. i don't think it's better. it actually put doubt into some people of whether they would vote for it. u usma talks >> that was kevin mccarthy speaking now. >>> the the democrats get ready to hit center stage. what role will obamacare play? er to become part of our family. man: that's why our chevy employee discount is now available to everyone. the chevy price you pay is what we pay. not a cent more. family is important to us. and we'd like you to be part of ours. so happy holidays. and welcome to the family. the chevy family! get the chevy employee discount for everyone today. the wait is over. t-mobile is lighting up 5g nationwide. while some 5g signals go only blocks, t-mobile 5g goes miles... beyond the big cities to the small towns... to the people. now, millions of americans can have access to 5g on t-mobile. and this is just the beginning. t-mobile, the first and only nationwide 5g network. if your glasses aren't so will we. no we won't. don't forget to use your vision benefits before they're gone. now in-network with vsp. visionworks. see the difference. ...she keeps us centered. love you. introducing the center of me collection. because every 'your love keeps me centered' begins with kay. the ones that make a truebeen difference in people's lives. and mike's won them, which is important right this minute, because if he could beat america's biggest gun lobby, helping pass background check laws and defeat nra backed politicians across this country, beat big coal, helping shut down hundreds of polluting plants and beat big tobacco, helping pass laws to save the next generation from addiction. all against big odds you can beat him. i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message. i'm mike bloomberg and i approve this message. but he wanted snow for thelace holidays.. so we built a snow globe. i'll get that later. dylan! but the one thing we could both agree on was getting geico to help with homeowners insurance. what? switching and saving was really easy! i love you! what? sweetie! hands off the glass. ugh!! call geico and see how easy saving on homeowners and condo insurance can be. i love her! up here at the dewar's distillery, all our whiskies are aged, blended and aged again. it's the reason our whisky is so extraordinarily smooth. dewar's. double aged for extra smoothness. >>> the final democratic primary debate of the year now just hours away. it will be the smallest debate stage yet. seven candidates on stage, eight democratic candidates not making the cut this time around. obamacare likely to be front and center again. the court says an individual mandate is unconstitutional, sending the law back to a lower court to decide if it can stand without this key provision. david challian is on the ground from marymount university, also jane gandeau. david, with obamacare front and center again, what are you expecting tonight? >> i think you'll see all these democrats use that court ruling to say these are the stakes in this election. this is the issue they use so successfully, as you know, in 2018. i'm curious to see, is it just the unified front, this is why donald trump has to be defeated, or do we see some of the proponents of a more modest approach, the non medicare for all club, buttigieg, klobuchar, using this to say the bipartisan cannot be using this debate as an extreme overhaul rather than an enhancement to what it is, because obamacare itself needs to be protected and the protections in that law need to be protected. >> since the debate last month, the gloves have come off between candidates. warren and buttigieg, biden and buttigieg, on and on. where are the attacks going to be coming from tonight, do you think? >> i think you are right, there's been a lot of that kind of skirmishing out on the campaign trail. i would watch for two things. one, who is going to take on joe biden? he's still the frontrunner in this race. he has been through the entirety of it. but when other candidates have tried to take him down a peg, it hasn't always worked to their benefit. does someone try to do that? the other thing is elizabeth warren has been more aggressive on the trail about taking on biden and buttigieg, specifically, bloomberg as well. does she take that to the debate stage or leave that to the campaign trail? does she want to do that in front of millions of campaign voters? i'm curious to see that, kate. >> this is the first debate since the president has been impeached, it was just last night. what do they do with that? >> it's also very good timing because nancy pelosi hasn't sent the articles over. there is a little political leverage here. trump likes to be a winner. right now he is a loser. he is impeached. we all think he will be -- that the votes will go in his favor in the senate and then he can say he's exonerated. but right now from a tactical point of view, that's very helpful for them. there is also a "washington post" abc poll that i think is very helpful for democrats, and that is most americans, 71%, including 62% of republicans and 72% of independents think that president trump's aides should be allowed to testify in the senate. so we may see that come up. >> and we know that donald trump will be a target, obviously, jamie, tonight. i want to play something from the president last night because it gets to politics now. listen. >> the dishwasher, right? you press it. there would be like an explosion. five minutes later you open it, the steam pours out. now you press it five times. they give you four drops of water. >> women tell me you only get four drops of water, the outdated notion that men don't run dishwashers. helpful? >> last night's rally even by donald trump standards was, i think, unhinged. anyone who thinks he's not bothered by impeachment, he's bothered by impeachment. but just from a political point of view, he needs women voters. he needs those suburban women voters. comments like that do not help. >> david, have you ever run a dishwasher? >> i have. i have run a dishwasher. i'm not sure how successfully, but i have run dishwashers, yes. >> when it comes to the vote, the women's vote and what suburban women mean, it's everything. >> it is. this is exactly what helped deliver the majority in the house to democrats in 2018 that brings us to this moment in american political history. he has been driving those female voters away. it's in every aspect of his polling when you look at the president's standing. this is a huge, huge to-do list item for them, to try to get some of those female voters back. this does not help. >> dishwashers. that's how we ended today. it's really a remarkable thing. great to see you guys. reminder, the democratic presidential debate airs on cnn and your local pbs station tonight at 8:00. >>> inside positive"inside poli right now. >>> thank you, kate, and welcome to "inside politics." i'm johnresident has been impeached and now it shifts to the senate. the republicans call it rushed and unfair and say there's no way the president will be convicted and removed from the senate. impeachment is forever a stain on his legacy and he's
john dingell, i knew john dingell. i knew debbie dingell. i served with them both. i think they're both very good individuals. i think they served -- john served his country very well, very proud. when john passed away, if you watched on the floor and you heard my speech on the floor, a tribute to him and i find him a very strong individual, a very bright individual. i think he made a great contribution to america. we may differ philosophically and sometimes in principles but i considered him a...
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john and john travolta got back togher for a "grease" reunion. >> we love you. >> 71-year-old olivia and 65-year-ol john teamed up for a movie sing alon john has been sporting the shaved head but his danny wig was awesome. in more '70 nostalgia the bunkers are back. woody harrelson returns as archie and marissa toe may as edit for another reboo of all in the family. >> cld this become a seri? >> oh, well, i don't think i would want to do it as a series. it's nice to do as a one-off. >> it's a two-off now. >> jimmy kimmel a norman lear are executive producers and this time they're doing a live episode of "good times" with viola davis, andre brourd and tiffany haddish. >> she is ready. >> jie foxx's daughter corrine is part of the cast and who can forget her dad's live flub as george jefferson. >> i feel like that's why you're watchinghat live. a flub can happen. someone can trip. hopefully it's not me. >> one of those sitcoms wld have been great in your neigorhood. >> would have been great in my neigorhood. >> shameless pl. >> it airs wednesday on abc and thriller "you are in for a treat. >> penn badgley is here. >> damn, why do people want t watch this so much? >> our exclusive with penn and gip girl reboot. ut the gos > then - >> it's a vy brady christmas tree. >> only "e.t." is behindhe scenes of the special. >>> and chris harrison on hannah has bloopers from the neighb ♪ ♪ ain't nobody love me better >>> ain't nobod stops dancing when that song is on. >> it's not an easy song toing eier. >> i don't t. >> that is penn badgley and his wife domino jamming out to "ain't nobody" by aka khan. they tied the knot two years o, or just before season one of "you," ich is probably a good thing because penn plays a total psychoph. >> no. he is a sexy psycho, which is a big reon 40 million people have watched the show on netflix. >> but only lauren zima caught up with pe before the debut of season two. >> at this point do people come up to you more for "gossip girl" fandom >> i'm dan humphrey. >> or for "you" obsession? >> joe, am locked in a glass cage! >> joe is challenging dan's gacy, i'll say that, pretty quickly. >> well "gossip girl" is gting a new life. could dan humpey get a new life? >> i've nohad conversations with any of the creators yet. >> wld you be willing to bring dan humphrey back? i guess it would just -- it would just depend on a lot of things. it would depend on how and why 's there. >> if he's there to murder somee? >> that would be- yeah. >> you left me here to die >> the season two trailer drped today reveing that penn's murderous character joe he's got a new identity, new city and a new gl to obsess over. >> i feel liken just in the first episode you see him at a level of -- it's n just disturbed. he's like -- it's more than disturbed. damn, why we wanna watch this so much? like, thiss intense. >> what do you want candace? >> you did it again, didn't you? >> we also are getting more dr. nicky. johntamos is back. >> that's right. i haven't thoughabout that for a while. >> i'm happy to see you. >> i mean he's now a new father and he still looks amazing. i don't know how that's ssible. it's like 30. it's le he's my age. >> john a deal with the devil. >> he must have. he looks good. >>> "you" gets insane. wait until you hear about the new season of the bachelor. >> what chris harrison is only telling "e.t.." why thi is really could be the most dramac yet? >>> plus our holiday ex clus if with the brady bunch. >> there's a turkey and mashed potatoes. >> stop it. >>> closed captioning provided by -- >>> welcome back to "e.t." i'm joined by bachelor host chris harrison. >> wre flying high this season >> bachelor nation got their first glimpse of the ladies vying for pilot pet why is hannah b. in the fir episode? >> you'rebout to find out. there's chemistry between the two. it's one of the reasons we wanted her backn the show. it's one of those things when you see each other, it's a thing. >> what if isked you to come be partf the house? >> do they kiss? >> it's more than just a, hey, buddy good luck. >>or than a hand shake? >> yes. you'll see her make a big impression on the show. >> we were kind of looking back
john and john travolta got back togher for a "grease" reunion. >> we love you. >> 71-year-old olivia and 65-year-ol john teamed up for a movie sing alon john has been sporting the shaved head but his danny wig was awesome. in more '70 nostalgia the bunkers are back. woody harrelson returns as archie and marissa toe may as edit for another reboo of all in the family. >> cld this become a seri? >> oh, well, i don't think i would want to do it as a series. it's...
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john dingell, i knew john dingell and his wife debbie. they are very good individuals. i think they served -- john served his country very well. very proud. when john passed away if you watched on the floor and heard my speech on the floor and contribute to him and i find him very strong individual, very bright individual. i think he made a great contribution to america. we may differ philosophically, but i considered him a friend. yes? >> now that the house has voted on articles of impeachment, what will house republicans' role in the senate be? are you planning on having some of your members prep senate as they prepare for eventual trial? >> we will do anything senators need if they want information, they need it, we have a lot of members that spent a lot of time on this. but that's up to the senate and also up to the president, who he wants to represent him. but anything that we can be helpful, we will. yes ma'am? >> would you consider last night's house republicans' defeat a failure to the party? >> a defeat? well, let me first gauge that. i would feel it was a defeat to the constitution. that the rise of impeachment would become so low that yo
john dingell, i knew john dingell and his wife debbie. they are very good individuals. i think they served -- john served his country very well. very proud. when john passed away if you watched on the floor and heard my speech on the floor and contribute to him and i find him very strong individual, very bright individual. i think he made a great contribution to america. we may differ philosophically, but i considered him a friend. yes? >> now that the house has voted on articles of...
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john, quote, this is very john. didn't make a finale meal. i wod haveotten a cake. ultimately john had a solution ♪ everything's gonna be all right ♪ >> thiis our life in a john ordered this cake and yet i ordered th. >> your cakes have no writing. >> but back to the reasothey were partying, the epic "voice" finale. >> i'm just gonna get my trophy. >> much to blake's disappointment kelly earned her third win thanks to country croonejake hoot. >> jake hoot! >> kelly clarkson beats ake shelton with a country artist. >> ho ho merryhrisas yo, ye yes, yes. >> gwen revealed her biggest style secre ever. >> if aone knew you secretly designed by wardrobe i would be so embarrassed. >> let's get to wo. perfect. >> mullet, blake. really? >> you're going to bring it back. i'm such a genius. >> ts one seems dangerous. >> that's what i was going for. >> i can't move my arms. >> what do you think? >> it looks just like my drawing. >> okay. blake and gnre the new kanye and kim. >> the only dress i want t see him design is a wedding dress. >>> let's just move on to tom uise. i think it's safe to say we're all excited for the "t gun" sequel. >> yeah, and it seems tom was annelling maverick today alongside a new mystery lady. >> there's tom with big smile as he heads to a chopper on a london rooftop today. joing him for the ride, this blonde woman whoasscorted out about ten minutes before 57-year-old mr. cruise showed up taking t pilot's seat naturally before taking of nooubt it s a smoother take off than this one. >> you just can't recreate this kind of experience unless you shoot it liv >> t giving us this behind the scenes look at theaking of "top gun: maverick." distortion in the face. >> putting us up in this these jets, it's very serious. that's why evebody thought it was impossible. when tom hrd impossible, that's when he gets to work. >> tom's had the need for speed ever sin he was a kid whicwe learned when wwere on set for op gun" in 1985. >> who didn't grow up wanting to fly an f-14 when he grew up wanting to be an astnaut? >> fast foard 34 years. tom's back in the cockpit feeling all the g-forces. >> tom did some of his own flying, in the movie, like this scene with jennifer connel in his personal vintage plane. but did he also fly thfighte jets? that's a negative ghost rider. >> we have the greatest fighter pilots in the world working with us. >> as super human as tom is, 's still considered civilian and the navy doesn't l cilians fly their $34 million highly technal f8s. litelly, and let the real navy pilots do the flying. >> that's what i'm talking about! >> i mean, does it get any >> while we n't see tom ba as maverick until june 2020, you watching michael b. jordan merry chrimas. michael gave his hometown crd some love at the screeng of his drama "just mercy" and he just couldn't contain his excitement. >> we know you are hap to be back home too because we were stalking your instagram story. we saw the -- >> did you see the moves? did you see the mos? i can't do nothing anymore. when y get back home it feels good. so i'm back. let's do this. let's rock o. >> michael b. jord! [ cheers and applause ] how ds iteel, though, to bring this mie, especially this movie, back here to newark? >> it just feels good, man, to be able to give this. it's a powerful film with a powerful message. >> plee judge, hold on one second. >> jordaplays a real-life super hero. civil rights attorney brn stevenson who foughto save a man, playeby jamie foxx, wrongly accused on death row. the real-life brian joked to me there was just one thing missing in michael's portrayal. >>e's a little disappointed because he wanted the killmonger vibe for you to ay him he needed that. >> he needed that. >> that's what he wanted. how happy were you when you saw what he did with you on the screen >> i was blown away. >> yeah. >> it's extraoinary, extraordinary peormance. >> the 32-year-old actor's celebrating another milestone. heust became an uncle. we got a little gift for you. >> okay. >> okey dokey r the w edition to the family. open it up. >> wha we got here? >> my uncle michael bae jordan. >> that's pretty -- that's pretty dope. >> i hophe wears it. >> thanks so much. >> that little boy is going to grow upnowing his uncle is somebody the ladies love. >> he's a hottie. >> speaking of that baby fever, your second one is on the way. got you a little ft. >> i have a little bae of m own coming. >> yes, you do. >> what did you get me? >> you're ithe family now. >> of course. >> coming soono i'll just relax. >> h are things the second time around? >> ts baby is showing his personality. he bopping ound. >> your daughter haseen talkin to her other? >> he does. it's so cute.she rubs mybell so cu. >> yr new netflix show "soundtrack" drops today. >> it's a love story through music. did you and jenna dewan plan your egnancies? >> there's something in the air. she called me a month after i announced. i'm prean too.we my goshirl all weo is tk about how bloated we feel. ♪ >> i'm going to take youack for a second. >> my first starring role in a movie. i'm excited. i'm cute. >> do you remember that? do you remember ts moment? >> lot don't cost a thing had it was all hitting me at once. the dream w coming alive. who would have known that teen movie would have en a classic that people still talkbout and watch. >> we could chat all day talking about now. we have to take this conversation to a quiet place. >> what was that? >> a quiet ple. >> i hear you especially after seei emily unt's silent return. >> details on four new avatar quels. >>> then only we have oprah's big announcement that involves ppies, wine and bread. >>> plus angelina jolie mistress of laughter. our maleficent o ♪ >>> at the recorng academy p grammy gala ignite the holiday spirit with notes of pine and eucalyptusthat a. true fragrance crafted only by glad s.c. johns.nd eucalyptusthat a. ♪ >>> who are we? we can't protect the >> i stillon't think i have recovered from seeing a "quiet place." >> did it freak you out too? >> it definitely eaked me out. >> the movie was the surprise block buster of 2018 raking in morehan $300 million. >> and i cannot wait to sethe sequel. especially after checking out this excsive nerve-wracking rst look. >> it's 25 seconds of pe tension. no sound of course and emi blunt taking a rky step. part two was written and directed by john>> we loved the first one. it's a world you get to explore, who is inhis world. >> any tease? >> no, none. >>> another sequel in the works actually four of tm james cameron's vatar." today marks the 10th anniversary of the original movie. >> i see you. >> "avatar" was the highest grossing film of all time, earng $2.7 billion, holding that record until the fil "avengers" installment eclipsed it this year. wh do thsequels have in store? >> you know when you come ck to see h and jake sully, they're not the young love birds. they're having to beat a lot more adversities and it's going >> check out this justeleased screen test with z saldana and samantha worthinon. this is before all the digital magic was added. >> we call this a triamokre, a tree of voices, the ices of our anceors. >> it's crazy to think james cameron is shooting all four sequels at the same ti. they will be released between december of 2020 and december of >> one per year which makes see. >>> why oprah is hitting the road
john, quote, this is very john. didn't make a finale meal. i wod haveotten a cake. ultimately john had a solution ♪ everything's gonna be all right ♪ >> thiis our life in a john ordered this cake and yet i ordered th. >> your cakes have no writing. >> but back to the reasothey were partying, the epic "voice" finale. >> i'm just gonna get my trophy. >> much to blake's disappointment kelly earned her third win thanks to country croonejake hoot. >>...
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Dec 19, 2019
12/19
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john, quote, this is very john. didn't make a finale meal. i would haveotten a ca. ultimate john had a solution. ♪ everything's gonna be all right ♪ >> thiis our life in a nutshell. john orderedhis cake and yet i ordered this. >> your cakes have no writing. >> but back to the reason they were partying, the epic "voice" finale. >> i'm just gonna get my trophy. >> much blake's disappointment kelly eard her third win thanks to country crner jake hoot. >> jake hoot! >> kelly clarkson beats ake shelton with a cntry artist. >> ho ho merry chrisas yo, ye yes, yes. >> gwen revealed her biggest yle secre ever. >> if anyone kne you secretly designed by wardre i would be so embarrassed. >> let's get towo. perft. >> a mullet, blake. really? >> youe going to bring it back. i'such genius. >> this one seems dangerous. >> i can't move my arms. g for. >> what do you think? >> it looks just like my drawing. >> okay. blak and gwen are the new kanye and kim. >> the only dress i want to see him design is a wedding dress. >>> let's just move on to tom uise. i think it's safe to say we're all excited for e "top gun" sequel. >> yeah, and it seems tom was annelling maveck today alongside a new mystery lady. >> there's tom with a big ile as he heads to a chopper on a london rooftop today. joining him for the ridethis blonde woman who wasscorted out about ten minutes before 57-year-old mr. cruise showed up taking the pilot's seat turally before taking off. no doubt it s a smooer take off than this one. >> you just can't recreate this shoot it live.ce unless you >> tom giving us this bend the scenes look at theaking of "top gun: maverick distortion in the face. the >> putting us up in this these jets, it's very serious. that'shy evebody thought it was impossible. when tom heard impossible, >> tom's had the need for speed ever sin he was a kid which we learned when we were on set for op gun" 1985. >> who didn't grow up wanting to fly an-14 when he grew up wanting toe an astnaut? tom's back in the cockpit feeling all the g-forces. >> tom did some of his own flying, in the movie, like thi scene with jennifer connelly in his personal vintage plane. but did he also fly thfighter jets? th's a negative ghost rider. >> we have the greatest fighter pilots in the world working with us. >> as super hun as tom is, he'still considered civilian and the navy dsn't l civilis fly thr $34 miion highly technal f-18s. so tom took a ba seat, literally, and let the rl navy pilots do the flying. >> that's what i'malking about! >> i mean, does it get any better than that? >> while we n't see tom back as maverick until june 2020, you watching michael b. jordan merry chrimas. michael gave his hometown crowd some love at the screening of s drama "just mercy" and he just couldn't contain his excitement. >> we know you are happy to be backome too because we were stalking your instagram story. we saw the -- >> did you s the moves? d you see the mos? i can't do nothing anymore. when y get back home it feels good. so i'm back. let's do this. let's rock o. michael. jordan! [ cheers and applause ] >> how does iteel,hough, to bring this movie, especially this movie, backere to newark? >> it just feels good, man, to be able toive this. it's a powerful film with a powerful message. >> please judge, hold on o second. >> jordan plays real-life super hero. civil rights attorney brian stevsowho foughto ve a ma playebyamie foxx, wrongly accused on death row. the real-life brian joked to me there was just one thing missing in michael's ptrayal. e's a little disappointed because he wanted the killmonger vibe forou to ay him he needed that. >> he needed that. >> that's whate wanted. how happy were you when you saw what he did with you on the screen? >> i w blown away. yeah. >> it's extraordinary, extraordinary performance. >> the 32-year-old actor's celebrating another milestone. he just became an uncl >> in honor of your new nephew, we got a lite gift for you. >> okay. >> okey dokey for the new editn to the family. open it up. >> what we got here? jordan. cle is micha bae >> that's pretty -- that's pretty dope. >> i hope he wears it. >> thanks so much. >> that littleoy is going to grow up knowing his uncle is somebody the ladies love. >> he's a hottie. >> saking of that bab fever, your second one is on the way. we got you a little gift. i have a little bae of my own >> yes, you do. >> whatid you get me? >> you're in the family now. >> of course. >> coming soon so i'll just relax. >> how are this the second time around? >> this babys showing his personality. he bopping ound. your daughter has been >> he does.her brother? e rubs my bell so cute. ♪ >> yr new netflix show "soundtrack" drops today. >> it's a love story through music. did you a jenna dewan plan your pregnancies? >> there's something in the air. she called me a month after i announce i' preant too.we my gh girl all weo is talk aboutow bloated we feel. ♪ >> i'm going to take youack for a send. >> m first starring role in a moe. i'm excited. >> i'm cute. >> do you remember that? doou remember this moment? >> lot don't cost a thing had just comeout. the dream was comin alive.nce. who wou have known thateen movie would have been a classic that people still talk about and watch. >> we could chat all day talking about now. we have to take this conversation to a quiet place. >> what was that? >> a qui place. >> i hear you especially after seei emily blunt's sent return. >> details onour new avatar sequels. >>> then only we have oprah's big announcement tt involves ppies, winend bread. >>> plu angelina jolie mistress of laughter. our meficentut ♪ >>> at the recording academy p grammy gala ♪ >>> who are we? we can't protect them. >> i still don't think i hav recovered from seeing a "quiet place." >> did it freak you out too? >> it definitely freaked me out. >> the movie w the surprise block buster of 2018 raking in more than $300 million. >> and i cant wait to see the sequel. especially after checking ou rst look.ive nerve-wracking >> it's 25 seconds of pe tension. no sound of course and emily blunt taking a risky step. part two was written and directed by john we loved the first one. it's a world you get to explore, who i in this world. >> any tease? >> no, none. >>> another sequel in the works actually four of them ames cameron's "avata" today marks the 10th anniversary of the original movie. >> i see you. >> "avatar" was the highest grossing film of all time, earnin$2.7 billion, holding that record until the final "aveers" insllment eclipsed what do the sequels have in store? >> you know when you come back to see h and jake suy, they're not e young love birds. they're having to beat a lot more adversities and it's going >> check out this just released scre test with zoe saldana and samantha worthington. this is before all the digital magic was added. >> we call thia triamokre, a tree of voes, the voices of our ancestors. >> it's crazy to tnk james meron is shooting all four sequels at the same time. they will be released betwee december of 2020 and december of 2025. sense. per year which makes >>> why oprah is hitting the ro withady gaga.
john, quote, this is very john. didn't make a finale meal. i would haveotten a ca. ultimate john had a solution. ♪ everything's gonna be all right ♪ >> thiis our life in a nutshell. john orderedhis cake and yet i ordered this. >> your cakes have no writing. >> but back to the reason they were partying, the epic "voice" finale. >> i'm just gonna get my trophy. >> much blake's disappointment kelly eard her third win thanks to country crner jake hoot....
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Dec 20, 2019
12/19
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FOXNEWSW
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john durham. john durham is going to do what john durham wants. quite frankly, i'm glad that he has john brennan in his cross hairs because it couldn't happen to a nicer guy. there are a lot of people out there who falsely accused donald trump of conspiring with russia. but the worst of the worst where the people who had access to classified intelligence and use their positions to suggest they knew something that we did not, that there was really secret evidence that donald trump colluded with russia. that's exactly what johnan did. he called him a traitor, he said he aided and abetted the enemy, said he was in putin's pocket, a russian agent. turns out when the mueller report came out, none of it was true. john brennan, the cia director, said them, and it turned out none of it was true. so they want to get to the bottom of it. that's what john durham is investigating. how did the country spent two years and tens of millions of dollars chasing a conspiracy theory? the every american wants to know the answer. >> shannon: here's what he said. i think we have it. okay. this is what he said. i will read it for you. i will not try to imitate -- listen! this is not a post of the report that's in trouble, but this is what he said. "i feel good about what it is as we did in the intelligence community and i feel very confident and come to but with what i did. i have no qualms whatsoever talking with investigators who are going to be looking at this in a fair and appropriate manner." leslie, should he have anything
john durham. john durham is going to do what john durham wants. quite frankly, i'm glad that he has john brennan in his cross hairs because it couldn't happen to a nicer guy. there are a lot of people out there who falsely accused donald trump of conspiring with russia. but the worst of the worst where the people who had access to classified intelligence and use their positions to suggest they knew something that we did not, that there was really secret evidence that donald trump colluded with...
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Dec 3, 2019
12/19
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john and john walked down the aisle on the house site. i was not paying a lot of attention i was just thinking the best thing to do is to follow john. so john got through introduced introducing me, i said thank you everybody and i t need three or four people help me get there. some going to work. i'm honored to be here. they didn't tell me was that if you are in the house, and that particular day, that republicans were on the left. and they spoke to the right. this dummy, follow john who was smart. and to the right where he was exposed to and i went to the left. i was not supposed to be there. i noticed the eyeballs in the front row went up around. in some baby honey said that was a voice came over the back of my shoulder something hanging over my head. i turned around and looked in the southern guy said don't pay attention to that. anyone about his t business. i assume any later, when he mean. and the problem is that you got otlabeled when he got elected. it is what you mean. he said you elected an arab applicant district but they said you said nice things about democrats. and i said is that wrong to do. what we are trying to get somebody somebody not to avoid you to a committee we heard you helped no child left behind. there was a last and how i was started out. majority democratic house and i was unwanted. some of you know this, new law got passed by seven members are seven votes. the new guy reelected. couldn't get it reelected speaker so he resigned. and i di
john and john walked down the aisle on the house site. i was not paying a lot of attention i was just thinking the best thing to do is to follow john. so john got through introduced introducing me, i said thank you everybody and i t need three or four people help me get there. some going to work. i'm honored to be here. they didn't tell me was that if you are in the house, and that particular day, that republicans were on the left. and they spoke to the right. this dummy, follow john who was...
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Dec 30, 2019
12/19
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CSPAN3
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john lewis, representative from georgia. [applause] john: good evening. >> good evening. john: you are a beautiful group. you look good. >> [laughter] john: let me say to the librarian of congress, thank you. i don't want to cry tonight. but i may shed some tears. thank you for opening this place to have this exhibit in honor of a savior of our country. of our democracy. parks,eren't for rosa [indiscernible] i don't know where i would be. i don't know where our nation would be. i don't know where we would be as a people. this woman, by sitting down, she encouraged so many others to stand up. insisting many of us never looked back, and we will continue to look forward. fred gray would tell you, my friend, my attorney, fred, you many of us.ney for nou probably have a unbelievable number of clients. people just came. we need your help. i grew up in rural alabama about 50 miles from montgomery. we rounded off by saying 48 to 50 miles from montgomery. my father had been a sharecropper, a penny farmer. but in 1944, when i was four years old, and i do remember when i was four, my father had saved $300, and a man sold him 110 acres of land. we still own that land today. [applause] growing up [indiscernible] people lived in fear. we saw the signs that said white only, colored only, white boys, colored boys, white girls, colored girls. growing up, i was told by my mother, my father, my grandparents, and my great grandparents, don't get in trouble. but rosa parks inspired us to get in trouble. and i have been getting in trouble ever since. >> [laughter] [applause] johns saying in effect, if you see something that is not right, not fair, not just, you have an obligation to say something, to do something. i met rosa parks. staff prepared a statement but i am not going to stay with it. i have been moved by the spirit. parks,been for rosa growing up there, i don't know what would have happened to so many people. , finding ad us too way to get in what i call good trouble, necessary trouble. i followed the drummer for gregory in montgomery. i followed your leadership. i followed the words of martin luther king junior, the action of rosa parks. we were too poor to have a subscription to the local newspaper, but my grandfather had one. if any -- when he was finished reading his newspaper, he would pass it on to us to read, so i read about you, reverend abernathy, and rosa parks. i kept saying to myself, if the people in montgomery can organize can stand up, we can stand up and organize. so there was a little college about eight or 10 miles from our home cal
john lewis, representative from georgia. [applause] john: good evening. >> good evening. john: you are a beautiful group. you look good. >> [laughter] john: let me say to the librarian of congress, thank you. i don't want to cry tonight. but i may shed some tears. thank you for opening this place to have this exhibit in honor of a savior of our country. of our democracy. parks,eren't for rosa [indiscernible] i don't know where i would be. i don't know where our nation would be. i...
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Dec 22, 2019
12/19
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FOXNEWSW
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john durham wants to know the same thing. john durham has now requested we understand from the "new york times," that john durham has asked for john brennan's phone records, emails, they know what exactly he was telling cia staff about the dossier? was that perjury there, did he commit perjury in that may hearing? >> we'll let john durham decide that. odd for me to the cia director it tell publicly under oath the public, that the dossier had no participate in the corpus of the intelligence being gathered, when it was essential reason they got fisa warrant against fisa page. there is disconnect. somebody is ignorant what happened. they're trying to shade what happened. i think they never believed there would abhor wits investigation. i think these people believed they would get away with it. along comes horowitz. what horowitz told the american people is very damning. he told the story of manipulating evidence, that continued to get a warrant against an american citizen. he told a story of hiding exculpatory information from the court to keep the investigation going. why did they keep it going when it should have stopped? they hated trump. they were out to get him. there was no other conclusion. i want to know how far up did this go? did president obama, was he aware of counterintelligence investigation of the tr
john durham wants to know the same thing. john durham has now requested we understand from the "new york times," that john durham has asked for john brennan's phone records, emails, they know what exactly he was telling cia staff about the dossier? was that perjury there, did he commit perjury in that may hearing? >> we'll let john durham decide that. odd for me to the cia director it tell publicly under oath the public, that the dossier had no participate in the corpus of the...
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Dec 7, 2019
12/19
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CNNW
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john smith smith. or this john smith. or any of the other hundreds of john smiths that are humana medicare advantage members. no, it's this johnt with humana to create a personalized care plan. at humana, we have more ways to care for your health, and we find one that works just for you. no matter what your name is. >> announcer: young wonders, a cnn heroes special is brought to you by humana. humana, more ways to care. >>> welcome back. for most 12-year-old boys i think it's fair to say that hygiene is not on the top of the list of their priorities. i think this is pretty well documented. but ja keel jackson knows just how valuable a bar of soap or toothbrush to be to somebody. when he was 5, he accompanied his aunt and cousins to feed the homeless in chicago, and it made him profoundly sad to see how people were living on the streets. he was determined to find a way that he could help. when he was just 8 years old, he started project i am. his nonprofit has since assembled and given out more than 30,000 blessing bags as jakeel calls them, filled with hygiene products and other necessities for people in need. >> my name is ja
john smith smith. or this john smith. or any of the other hundreds of john smiths that are humana medicare advantage members. no, it's this johnt with humana to create a personalized care plan. at humana, we have more ways to care for your health, and we find one that works just for you. no matter what your name is. >> announcer: young wonders, a cnn heroes special is brought to you by humana. humana, more ways to care. >>> welcome back. for most 12-year-old boys i think it's...
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133
Dec 16, 2019
12/19
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john travolta and olivia newton-john re-creating their iconic characters in costume for the first time in 40 years. they were in west palm beach. newton-john in her good girl outfit. newton-john later changed into her black leather jacket. that's the jacket that an unidentified fan bought to benefit her cancer charity. newton-johnbattling cancer for the third time. what a great moment. ? a couple of big catches down the stretch. and a run to the end zone. it is caught. >> giants fans may have seen the last of eli manning in person. their two-time super bowl mvp, for 283 yards and 2 touchdowns, and 3 interceptions, what might have been his final home start. he was pulled in the final moments of a 36-22 win over miami, for a standing ovation from the crowd. his wife and children waiting for him in the tunnel. he got the game ball in the locker room. and manning said he has not said publicly if he plans to retire. what a great moment, there it is, for dad. one can assume that's probably his last game, though, at giants stadium. congratulations. >>> senate republicans want a short impeachment trial. but minority leader chuck schumer is outlining what witnesses he wants to call. how a report from the house judiciary could change the whole equation. ♪ >>> senate democrats want witnesses called in an impeachment trial
john travolta and olivia newton-john re-creating their iconic characters in costume for the first time in 40 years. they were in west palm beach. newton-john in her good girl outfit. newton-john later changed into her black leather jacket. that's the jacket that an unidentified fan bought to benefit her cancer charity. newton-johnbattling cancer for the third time. what a great moment. ? a couple of big catches down the stretch. and a run to the end zone. it is caught. >> giants fans may...
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Dec 29, 2019
12/19
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john? i watch your one-sided reporting. do you think i should do that? john, no, seriously, john, do you think i should just sign? >> well the argument is -- >> tell me, tell me. john, do you think i should just sign? would you do that if you were in my position because if you would do that, you should never be in this position. [laughter] greg: you know, it's a sad fact, we don't deserve him. [laughter] greg: and the dems, they only have one trick left. it's called call the hearing, find a crime later. the mueller report, impeachment hearings, russia, ukraine, it was all the same, create something from nothing all because they are worried that their candidate won't get the job done come november. and god knows they put enough candidates out there. [laughter] greg: they are like gremlins. you leave the room for five minutes. you come back, there's twice as many there. [laughter] greg: of course, the media's darlings turned into duds. remember beto, oh, he's just like kennedy. but enough about his driving. [laughter] greg: kamala -- oh, come on. you've heard worse from me. then there's kamala who drew a bigger crowd than obama once, then fell apart like an ikea cupb
john? i watch your one-sided reporting. do you think i should do that? john, no, seriously, john, do you think i should just sign? >> well the argument is -- >> tell me, tell me. john, do you think i should just sign? would you do that if you were in my position because if you would do that, you should never be in this position. [laughter] greg: you know, it's a sad fact, we don't deserve him. [laughter] greg: and the dems, they only have one trick left. it's called call the...
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Dec 4, 2019
12/19
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john stevens, and then me, which is quite extraordinary, but john stevens, i mean, if john stevens felt that way about louis brandeis, i feel that way about john stevens. he was a man of extraordinary brilliance, but even more of extraordinary wisdom, which is not the same thing. he was a man of great integrity. he was a man of great independence. i mean, he always did what he thought was right no matter what, and sometimes, that meant that he went his own way, and was, you know, and wrote an opinion that nobody else signed on to, or voted in a way that nobody else joined, but that was okay with him that he had his own view of the law, and he stuck with it and was extremely independent-minded. he was a deeply kind person, which i think all his colleagues appreciated as well as his clerks, and everybody else in the court. i think, in terms of his judicial legacy, what he'll go down in history for is a deep commitment to the rule of law, to the principle that no person, however high or mighty, is above the law, we are all subject to the same legal rules, and the accompanying principle that, you know, whether you're powerful, or whether you're powerless, the most humble person, the poorest person, the least educated person, is entitled to be treated by the legal system with the same dignity as the rich and the powerful. and for me, that is a great legacy of a magnificent 35-year career on the court. >> we have lots of students in the audience. can i get a show of hands from the students that are here? great. wow. awesome. a lot of students. (applause) >> and you are all in the front which is fantastic. you got the good seeds. i don't know who they put up there. (laughs) >> the students are vips. >> that's what it's all about. >> exactly. everybody else this is for the students. >> why did you go to law school? what was it like for you to be a law student? if you could give some advice to our law students about approach to law school or entering their legal career, especially in this time. >> i went to law school for all the wrong reasons. when i was a dean, i was talking to a bunch of college students about whether they should go to law school. i was saying all these formulaic things about how you should think about this, whether this is what you want to do, and you shouldn't go to law school just because you can't think of anything else. and because you want to keep your options open. as the words were coming out of my mouth, i was thinking, i went to law school because i couldn't really think of anything else. i wanted to keep my options open. i don't really describe this as the way to approach this position. i'm here to say that even if you went to law school for all the wrong reasons like that, when i started law school, i loved law school from the beginning. >> wow. >> does that make me weird? i don't know. from my very first day, i loved law school because it combines two things. one is that i loved the thinking that law school demanded. i loved the kind of analytic rigor that law school demanded. i loved the logical puzzle kind of enterprise that law is. trying to think through complicated legal problems, sometimes arcane legal doctrines, figuring it all out in the way you might figure out a crossword puzzle. i also loved that this was not an abstract or sterile enterprise. that this was a way to make a difference in the world. that it was very obvious to me and my law school classes how it was that the law was about the betterment of our society, the advancement of human welfare. >> oh. can i help? (laughs) i am the wrong person to help with technology, trust me. (laughs) (applause) >> i'll try not to move my head too much from now on. it had this really practical aspect to it. you could see how it could make a difference in the world and how the person using it could make a difference in the world. that's what i loved about law school. guess what i would say to students with their years in law school, how to think about their legal careers, you have this great opportunity to find out in law school readily moves you, the kind of things you care about. it will be different from a few. for all of you. if you come out of law school with a sense of, this is the kind of thing that if i worked on, i would want to go to work every day. i would feel as though i was doing the job full of purpose and meaning. that's a great thing to come out of law school with. not everybody does. some people find it later ron in their legal careers. to try to use law school as an opportunity to experiment in different things and an opportunity to try to find passion, this is what i care about, to not be so worried about planning. i'm a big anti-planner. most law students are planners. most of you will plan enough. if you every once in a while thing to yourselves, no, justice kagan told us not to plan, it would be a good corrective. i think that most of the best things that happen in people's legal careers, when i think of people whose legal careers where i say wow, lead a life and a law like that, is mostly luck and serendipity. of course, you make your luck and there are ways of putting yourself in the position to be offered an opportunity, for the most part, things come out of the blue. that's the way life works. i think too many law students and young lawyers put themselves on this plan. first i have to do this and then that. that prepares me for the next thing. they will say no to opportunities that sound really fun and exciting and interesting because it's not on the plan and because they worry about if they leave the plan, how do i get back on? the most fun and interesting and exciting parts of most legal careers are when people do leave the plan and noticed something. i never considered that for a minute. gosh, that looks a lot more fun than what i'm doing now. i don't know. i really think that the best legal careers are the ones that are guided by a sense of, is this more fun than what i'm doing now? i think i will go do that. >> that makes sense. you have been looking around for a lot of fun. if i think about your career in the way it has gone, you start off at harvard law school. you are clerking on the d c circuit. you are clerking for thurgood marshall on the supreme court. and then it is jumping to teach at the university of chicago. i think i'll become the dean and then supreme court justice. >> you skipped a few too. (laughs) i couldn't keep a job, really. every four years, i was off doing something else. i'm looking forward to keeping this for a while. (laughs) (applause) >> it looks like a dream life. i'm interested in the times you failed. can you tell us about those and how you deal with disappointment? >> you look at my resume and you see all the jobs i got. you don't see all the jobs i didn't get. for every job i got, there were two that i didn't get. starting from law school. loss goal, i did very badly my first semester. i thought, law school has finally outed me for the fraud that i've always been. it wasn't true. i turned myself around and figured it out. there's nobody who has, there's nobody maybe somebody i have flitted around a lot. some people, it's more like i'm going to do one thing and get one job and try to be purchased perfect. i will do that for my whole life. if that's what makes you happy, that's fantastic. if you are more like me, there are plenty of jobs i didn't get along the road. one job i didn't get was bill clinton nominated me to be a judge. the senate didn't give me a hearing and i never became a judge. there were other jobs in government that i didn't get. when i was dean at harvard, i was considered to be president of the university and i didn't get that. all along the road. some of these were high-class disappointments. i don't want to say anything. i don't know. i'm a big believer in, you can't let disappointments get you down too much. it's a little bit of magical thinking. i'm a big believer that when a door opens when a door closes, a window opens. it may be the best thing that ever happened to you that you didn't get a job. that was true of when i was nominated to be a judge. i was quite young at the time. i was in my late 30's. i had worked for years in the clinton white house. i thought i really wanted to be a judge. the senate thought otherwise. it ended up being i didn't get it. i spent the next decade doing all kinds of things that i really enjoyed. i became a justice anyway. >> want to turn our it i want to turn our attention to a lot of folks here in colorado. there are certainly legal issues that are salient in a square states like colorado. i'm thinking about indian law, waterlaw, environmental protections. wondering what your approach is. how do you go about educating yourself when it comes to those complex areas of law but other also cultures also other cultures. have you educate yourself and your colleagues to address those matters? >> are you are in the west. there are certain areas it was my fourth year on the court. i was assigned an opinion by the chief justice. it was a waterlogged opinion watch her law opinion water law opinion. it was a dispute between kansas and nebraska. i remember thinking, i know nothing about this. these big square states that have water problems. i grew up in new york city. i went to school in massachusetts. water law was not high on the curriculum. i think you learned there are so many things we don't know. water law might be one of them. the next year, a super complicated thing about electricity regulation which i knew nothing about. there are those kinds of things. it happens all the time that there are things that you don't know. there are perspectives you've never encountered. cultures you've never experienced. i think you are just under an obligation to keep learning. just going back to your first question about john stevens, when i got to the supreme court, i asked justice stevens for any advice you might offer me. he was a very humble man. i don't think he liked giving advice. i really tried to push him. he said, i think the best thing i ever did was that i tried to learn something new every single day i was on the court. you think about that. this is a man who served on the court for 35 years. you could be forgiven for saying around your 34, i think i've learned it all. he never did. that's the attitude that a justice has to take. there are all kinds of thing in things in this world and in the law that i don't know. to keep an open mind, to figure out how to learn about them. to know what you don't know and to have strategies for learning about them. that might come in the context of one particular case or it might come in a broader context. i think that that is the john stevens advice, to think about all the things you have to learn and go out and learn them, that's the way to be a judge. >> i
john stevens, and then me, which is quite extraordinary, but john stevens, i mean, if john stevens felt that way about louis brandeis, i feel that way about john stevens. he was a man of extraordinary brilliance, but even more of extraordinary wisdom, which is not the same thing. he was a man of great integrity. he was a man of great independence. i mean, he always did what he thought was right no matter what, and sometimes, that meant that he went his own way, and was, you know, and wrote an...
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my good friend john tribal, i but you're not doing as good job as john because cha is the man that's true. yeah he's he's good because of a job d john is the author of person ght now johnout the let's stonow and i'm blushing um yeah we're cold out there this morning. >>the cold may be a fact that's friday, eryo's having fun this morning for the afternooshould be almost carbon copy of yesterday yesterday afrnoon exactly right pretty carbon copy of yesterday we're keeping the sunshine. we're keeping the 50's that has not changed his week regardless of if it's been sunny if it's been cudy if it's been rainy. >>50's at least 7 solid all week longwe have seen change otherwise obviously today we're just gog to be nice and dry a good day for trels a good day for some returns, whatever you may be doing with family that may
my good friend john tribal, i but you're not doing as good job as john because cha is the man that's true. yeah he's he's good because of a job d john is the author of person ght now johnout the let's stonow and i'm blushing um yeah we're cold out there this morning. >>the cold may be a fact that's friday, eryo's having fun this morning for the afternooshould be almost carbon copy of yesterday yesterday afrnoon exactly right pretty carbon copy of yesterday we're keeping the sunshine....
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john tribal, i but you're not doing as good job as john because cha is the man that's true. yeah he's he's good because of a job d john is the author of person ght now john is going tell us about the let's stonow and i'm blushing um yeah we're cold out there this morning. >>the cold may be a fact that's friday, eryo's having fun this morning for the afternooshould be almost carbon copy of yesterday yesterday afrnoon exactly right pretty carbon copy of yesterday we're keeping the sunshine. we're keeping the 50's that has not changed his week regardless of if it's been sunny if it's been cudy if it's been rainy. >>50's at least 7 solid all week longwe have seen change otherwise obviously today we're just gog to be nice and dry a good day for trels a good day for some returns, whatever you may be doing with family that may still be hangingout skies, nice and clear acro the bay and now clear across southn california to if you're heading across the grapevine it is still closed, but i am expecting some improving conditions today so hopefully we'll be getng that route open pretty quickly here because are seeing some icy conditions still up there on the great find and you can imaginwhy when you see temperatures only in the 30's for redwood city inmorgan hill as ell as livermore in dublin still this 9 o'clock hour as for oakland, you work your way out of the 30 stl chilly though at 44 degreeso do want to bundle up as you're stepping outside and napaat 38 right now saint helene a movi your way out of the 20 is now at 30 degrees still very coldand still a lot colder than yesterday livermore and fairfield down 13 to 12 degrees from yesterday this afternoon we're gong to level things out though, and it's back to the 50's we go just like yeerday in san jose back up to 57 grees with plenty re sunshine. ron all right. thank you john over to the benic bridge an accident still wrapping we have several vehicles involved here and it's right at th toll plaza northbound 6 80 at the are blocked and it's creating a little bit of aback up through martinez on northbound 6.80 leading up to the bridge now right after the scene. >>traffic is going to open up so your rip across the bridge looks good. no problems a peek at south to 42 a here's somethi going on whatever it is and hasnot been reported yet. but the merge from south to 42 on2. 6 ad quite slow still waiting for something to pop up there but no crashes no stalls just be on the lookout for that slowdo could pick in the bay bridgee're doing fineo no problems into san francisco ooth sailing all the way across the upper deck to downtown will. >>robin we continue to follow breakinnews out of oakland where a fire breaks out in the overnight hours sending one person that we know of this at this time to the hospital, this is a warehouse located on the corner of car and west
john tribal, i but you're not doing as good job as john because cha is the man that's true. yeah he's he's good because of a job d john is the author of person ght now john is going tell us about the let's stonow and i'm blushing um yeah we're cold out there this morning. >>the cold may be a fact that's friday, eryo's having fun this morning for the afternooshould be almost carbon copy of yesterday yesterday afrnoon exactly right pretty carbon copy of yesterday we're keeping the sunshine....
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john stevens, and then me, which is quite extraordinary. but john stevens, if john stevens felt that way about louis brandeis, i feel that way about john stevens. he was a man of extraordinary brilliance, but even more of extraordinary wisdom which is not the same thing. he was a man of great integrity. he was a man of great independence. he always did what he thought was right no matter what, and sometimes that meant that he wrote anown way, and opinion that nobody else signed on to or voted in a way that nobody else joined, but that was ok with him. he had his own view of the law, and he stuck with it, and was extremely independent-minded. he was a deeply kind person. i think all of his colleagues appreciated as well as his clerks and everybody else in the court. i think in terms of his judicial legacy, what he will go down in history for is the deep commitment to the rule of law, to the principal that no person, however high or mighty, is above the law. that we are all subject to the same legal rules, and company and principle that whether you are powerful or whether you are powerless, you know, the most humble person, the poorest person, the least educated person is entitled to be treated by the legal system with the same dignity as the rich and the powerful. for me, that is a great legacy. of a magnificent 35-year career on the court. prof. malveaux: that is really important. absolutely. i have to ask this question because we have a number of students in the audience. can i get a show of hands for the students that are here? great, wow. awesome. justice kagan: awesome. [applause] prof. malveaux: we have a lot of students. justice kagan: and you are all in the front, too, which is fantastic. i don't know who they put up there. [laughter] prof. malveaux: the students are vips. is law kagan: what school about except for the students, right? prof. malveaux: exactly. justice kagan: what else is everybody else there for? prof. malveaux: this is for the students. why did you go to law school, what it was like for you to be a law student, and if you could give some advice to our law students about the approach of law school or entering their legal career, especially in this time? justice kagan: i went to law school for all the wrong reasons. [laughter] in, when i was a dean , i was talking to a bunch of college students about whether they should go to law school. i was saying these formulaic things about how you should really think about whether this is what you want to do, and you shouldn't go to law school just because you can't think of anything else. [laughter] and because you want to keep your options open. and as the words were coming out of my mouth, i was thinking, i don't know, i went to law school because i couldn't really think of anything else. [laughter] and i wanted to keep my options open. [laughter] so i don't really prescribe this as the way to approach. this decision. but i am here to say that even if you want to law school for all the run reasons, like that -- when i started law school, i just loved law school from the beginning. [laughter] does that make me weird? i don't know. from my very first day. i loved law school because it combined two things. one, i loved the thinking that law school demanded. i loved the kind of analytic rigors law school demanded, i loved the sort of logical puzzle kind of enterprise that law is. you know, trying to think through complicated legal problems, sometimes arcane legal doctrines and sort of figuring it all out in a way that you might figure out a crossword puzzle. but i also loved that this was not an abstract or sterile enterprise. that this was a way to make a difference in the world, that it was a very obvious to me in my law school classes, how it was that law was about the betterment of our society, about the advancement of human welfare. uh oh! can i help? we will just -- [laughter] i am the wrong person to help. [laughter] prof. malveaux: are we doing all right? [applause] justice kagan: i will try not to move my head too much from now on. it had this really practical aspect to it. and you could see how it could make a difference in the world. and how a person using it could make a difference in the world. that is what i loved about law school. i guess what i would say to students about what to do with their years in law school and how to think about their legal careers is, you have this great opportunity to find out in laws school what really moves you, what other the kinds of things that you really care about. and they will be different for all of you. but if you come out of law school with a sense of, this is the kind of thing that if i i would want to go to work every day and i would feel ofif i was doing a job full purpose and meaning. that is a great thing to come out of law school with. not everybody does. some people find it later on in their legal career. but to try to use law school as an opportunity to experiment in different things and an opportunity to try and find that passion, that sense of, this is what i really care about, and to not be so worried about planning. i am a big anti-planner. [laughter] i think most law students are planners. most of you will plan enough, and if you once in a while think to yourself, no, justice kagan told us not to plan, it would be a good corrective. [laughter] of,ink actually that most the best things that happen in people's legal careers, and when they think of people legal careers i say, wow, to live a life like that, it is like luck and serendipity. you make your luck and there are ways of putting yourself in a position to be offered certain opportunities. but for the most part, things, the blue, i think. that's the way life works. i think too many law students and young lawyers put themselves on this plan. first i have to do this, then i have to do that, and that prepares me for the next thing, and they will say no to opportunities that sounds really fun and exciting and interesting, because it is not on the plan, and they worry about, if i leave the plan, how do i get back on the plan? i think the most fun and interesting and exciting parts of most legal careers are when people leave the plan and they look around. they notice something. they say, i never considered that for a minute. gosh, that is a lot more fun than what i'm doing now. i don't know. i really think the best legal careers are the ones that are guided by a sense of, is this more fun than i am doing now? [laughter] i think i'll go do that then. you know? prof. malveaux: that makes sense. you have them looking around for fun. think about your career and the way it has gone. it seems, you know, you start off at harvard law. the dean did a good recap here. then you are clerking on the d c circuit, then you are clerking justice thurgood marshall on the supreme court, then it is at the to teach university of chicago, then teach at harvard law school, then you become the dean, then solicitor general, then supreme court justice. justice kagan: you skipped a few. [laughter] i couldn't keep a job. you know? [laughter] every four years i was off doing something else. now i am looking forward to keeping this for a while. [laughter] [applause] prof. malveaux: from an outsiders point of view, it looks like a dream life. wow. i am interested in the times you failed. can you tell us about those and how you deal with disappointment? justice kagan: it is like, you look at my resume and you seal the jobs i got, but you don't seal the jobs i didn't get. truly. for every job i got there were two that i did not get. and that i was disappointed about not getting. it started from law school. law school i did very badly my first semester. i thought, oh my gosh, law school has finally outed me for the fraud that i have always been. [laughter] prof. malveaux: it wasn't true. justice kagan: right. i turned myself around and figured it out. -- there is nobody who has at least there is nobody -- maybe somebody you know. i have flitted around a lot. are goingsome people to do one thing and get one job, and it is going to be perfect. i will do that for my whole life. if that is what makes you happy, that's fantastic. but if you are more like me, there were plenty of jobs i did not get along the road. one job i didn't get was bill clinton nominated me to be a judge before. and the senate didn't give me a hearing, and i never became a judge. there were other jobs in government that i didn't get when i was dean at harvard i was . considered to be president of the university. i didn't get that. i mean, some of these were high-class disappointments. i don't want to -- [laughter] know. don't i am a big believer in you just , can't let disappointments get you down too much. i know it is a little bit of magical thinking but i am a big believer in the idea that when a door closes, a window opens. it may be the best thing you that ever happened to you that you didn't get a job. that was true of when i was nominated to be a judge. i was quite young at the time, i was in my late 30's. four yearsworked for of the clinton white house. i thought i wanted to be a judge. the senate thought otherwise. [laughter] it ended up being, you know, i didn't get it. i spent the next decade doing all kinds of things i really enjoyed. and i became a justice anyway. you now? so it worked out fine. yeah. [laughter] prof. malveaux: i want to turn our attention -- we have a lot of folks here in colorado. there are certain legal issues that are salient in a square state like colorado. what i am thinking about really is indian law, water law, environmental protection, those sorts of things. and wondering what your approach is. how do you go about educating yourself when it comes to those complex areas of law, but then also other cultures you may not be intimate with. how do you educate yourself and your colleagues to address those matters? it is interesting that you said you are here in the west fourth year on the -- and remember my fourth year on the court. i was assigned an opinion by the chief justice. it was a water law opinion involving kansas, nebraska, and colorado. colorado was a more big player. it was a big dispute between kansas and nebraska. i remember thinking i know nothing about this. you know? it is like these big square states that have water problems. [laughter] i grew up in new york city. i went to school in massachusetts. water law was not really high on the curriculum. [laughter] so i think he learned the same way -- there are so many things we don't know. border law might be one of them. i once wrote an opinion that was a super complicated thing about electricity regulation, which i knew nothing about. there are those kinds of things. it happens all the time that there are things you do not know. that there are perspectives you never encountered. he said cultures you never , experienced. i think you are just under obligation to keep learning. as a justice or a judge and , you know, just going back to johnfirst question about stevens, when i got to the supreme court, i asked him for any advice you might offer me. he was a very humble man, and i don't think you much like giving advice. i really tried to push him. he said, i think the best thing i ever did was that i try to learn something new every single day i was on the court. you think about that. this is a man who served for 35 years. you could be forgiven for saying around year 34 -- [laughter] i think i learned it all. you know? [laughter] but he never did. i think that is the attitude a justice has to take. is that there are all kinds of things in this world, and in the law, but i don't know, and to keep an open mind and figure out how to learn about them. to know what you don't know and to have strategies for learning about them. contextht come in the of one particular case or in a broader context, that i think that is the john stevens advice, to just think about all the things you have to learn and then go out and learn them, is the way to be a judge. prof. malveaux: i hear you. and i think one of the things that really brings up a sort of an important issue is diversity on the court. as you know, the court as a whole does not reflect the demographics of american society. if we look at the justices themselves, many of the appellate lawyers come from a small number of law schools. only three women on the bench. i do say only. and not a lot of diversity when we look at race, religion, ethnicity, and even geographic. what worlddering, are you think, if any, people's experiences and backgrounds shape how the court makes his decisions? is there any good example where you think it really mattered? justice kagan: in general i am a big believer in diversity in the judiciary. but for a different reason than that, which i'll come back to. in general, i do not think diversity necessarily means you will get a different
john stevens, and then me, which is quite extraordinary. but john stevens, if john stevens felt that way about louis brandeis, i feel that way about john stevens. he was a man of extraordinary brilliance, but even more of extraordinary wisdom which is not the same thing. he was a man of great integrity. he was a man of great independence. he always did what he thought was right no matter what, and sometimes that meant that he wrote anown way, and opinion that nobody else signed on to or voted...
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john with more than 4,000 dolls to sell to keep his promise to his mom. now john gets help from a second lady friend. patty beggs, who, like john, has also suffered the death of a spouse. >> did john ask you for help? >> oh, no. we just was there for each other, and he needed help. i don't know if he asked or if i volunteered, but we just started doing it. i mean, we had to do something with them. >> between suzy and patty, it just seems as if women like coming to john'sughing ] >> those dolls ended up helping you out in those young days. >> and evidently it did. i was around some awfully nice girls in my life. >> in 2011, john and patty actually start dating. with patty's help, john rents a storefront in downtown portales from thanksgiving until christmas, and calls it the dollhouse. the dolls sell like hot cakes, some for $1, some for $10. >> it went really well. we had lots of people in, because everybody wanted to buy the dolls, hear the story. >> and meet john? >> but he was mine at that time, so they couldn't have him. [ laughs ] >> i like that. you must have a reputation around town? >> they call me the "doll boy." [ laughs ] >> how's that working out for you? >> once everything started going, with both ebay and the dollhouse, i thought, "you can call me whatever you want. i don't care. i've got a pretty good inheritance here, boys." >> and john does make a tidy sum -- $5,000 on the store. add that to the $15,000 from ebay, and he's liquidated
john with more than 4,000 dolls to sell to keep his promise to his mom. now john gets help from a second lady friend. patty beggs, who, like john, has also suffered the death of a spouse. >> did john ask you for help? >> oh, no. we just was there for each other, and he needed help. i don't know if he asked or if i volunteered, but we just started doing it. i mean, we had to do something with them. >> between suzy and patty, it just seems as if women like coming to john'sughing...
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john dean did not say it was wrong, he just said, it's a little too expensive. what scale this back. host: you mean john mitchell. ms. wine-banks: i'm sorry, john mitchell. definitely john mitchell. you remember,what because you were involved in the trial afterwards. what do you remember about some of the characters? what sense did you get from haldeman from watching him in court? ms. wine-banks: very controlled, very internal. of the defendants would look at us or acknowledge us in any way. not any of them. he doodled a lot while he was sitting there. the cousin were so many defendants, the tables were close together. normally there is a huge space between the prosecutors and defense lawyers, but in this case i sat next to governor quinn and haldeman. mitchell was at a further table. my most enduring memory of mitchell was after the conviction, his wife came over to comfort him and he almost punched her. he just sort of pushed her away. it was really an ugly scene to see. for some reason that's the image i have of him. image of marty is more of him and we hadess stand a big debate over who would because he was , and as a hot head really nasty kind of guy. the idea was, if i could get him to show his personality, it would be much more devastating in front of a jury than if he yelled at rick or jim. would his chauvinism keep him from yelling at me no matter what i did to provoke him? we decided that it was worth a shot. he -- it did not take much to provoke him. truly, not much. he started yelling. judgeunately the immediately intervened and said, now, don't you know you can never win an argument with a lady. which you can laugh at, but at the time all the blood drained from my face. all he is first of ruining my tactic. and second of all, that is one of the most sexist things i have heard. except for when i was questioning rosemary and he said, now ladies, we have enough problems in this courtroom than two women fighting. that is what women had to put up with. i guess the judge says, let's take a break now. he got off the stand and every defense lawyer said, you have got to get a hold of yourself. you are killing yourself. get a hold of yourself. it was much less dramatic. when we came back he was much more control. it does not take much for the jury to see that he had been quite awful. and, it hurt him, i'm sure. it definitely hurt him. ger?: mcgrude ms. wine-banks: yes? host: credible witness? ms. wine-banks: i think the jury believed him. i think to the extent that he was capable of telling the truth, he did. i learned a word in connection with working with him. that is confabulate. he almost believe -- he believed things to be true that sometimes he would just fill in the blanks. dean, iortantly, john he had donew something really wrong, something really a moral -- immoral, he really regretted it, he was willing to pay the consequences and change his life. honestly, i never, ever felt ever got what he did wrong. he just did not get it. he was a moral. it was not that he thought it was right, he had no moral standards. which is interesting, since i understand he has become a priest. which is another thing. he and his wife seem to have a very good relationship. he was my witness. when i was preparing him particularly for trial, we were working long periods of time together, over weekends. he was in jail at the time, i would let his wife, and bring a picnic lunch, let them have lunch and i would go off. they are now divorced. john dean, who i would have never guessed would have stayed married, i just -- they did not seem to have a very close relationship. he is still happily married. it shows how little we knew. if you ask every single prosecutor will they be married or will jeb and h
john dean did not say it was wrong, he just said, it's a little too expensive. what scale this back. host: you mean john mitchell. ms. wine-banks: i'm sorry, john mitchell. definitely john mitchell. you remember,what because you were involved in the trial afterwards. what do you remember about some of the characters? what sense did you get from haldeman from watching him in court? ms. wine-banks: very controlled, very internal. of the defendants would look at us or acknowledge us in any way....
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john roberts, john roberts can win. i do think if john roberts makes the decision, no, i want to hear from witnesses, that mitch mcconnell is going to have to defying the he is chief justice. if john roberts once to assert himself in a profound way and say, i'm not going to oversee a sham trial in the senate, he could make a very, very difficult. amy: this also comes as a super's ruling on no less than, what, three cases involving trump's personal finances? tax just printed the three cases. that will happen in april. there's also, as i said, very good reason to believe the don again, johnolton cases wherein they are refusing to testify under the most elaborate and implausible theory of privilege that anyone is ever heard come all of these cases are two. i would also add this term separate from impeachment from the supreme court is going to vii, abortione case. this is one of the biggest terms don roberts has overseen. all of these cases will come down in june of an election year. in addition to that, a circus in the senate. john roberts hates being on page a1 of the newspaper. this is his worst nightmare. income mark green? >> you mentioned lawrence and the trial. larry came up with a really good idea two months ago. amy: a harvard law fetzer. >> which is getting traction that the house has the sole power to decide the rules of impeachment. piece forhey's articles over the senate. there's is no rule for that. -- presumption is not a rule. mitch mcconnell has had in effect, i am reading the trial, we're not going to be fair, we're just going to put our thumb on it and t
john roberts, john roberts can win. i do think if john roberts makes the decision, no, i want to hear from witnesses, that mitch mcconnell is going to have to defying the he is chief justice. if john roberts once to assert himself in a profound way and say, i'm not going to oversee a sham trial in the senate, he could make a very, very difficult. amy: this also comes as a super's ruling on no less than, what, three cases involving trump's personal finances? tax just printed the three cases....