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Jul 10, 2013
07/13
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kitty kitty. i don't think i would encourage a bird to say that, but this bird is not scared. >> here kitty kitty.> here kitty kitty kitty. >> you see him stair, and he moves his mouth. >> all my bird would know is dirty words. >> go to the cockatoo. it is only 22 days old, it is in the ugly ducking faze. >> very ugly. >> it is like transparent. >> it looks like a scrotum. >> the fastest way to light a barbecue. >> if you have a barbecue that's taking ages to light, you just need one of these. >> this should be very entertaining to say the least. >> this is scorpion infused vodka. >> he is not just going to drink vodka, he eats the scorpion as well. >> are you ready? let's do this? >> takes the vodka down, no problem there. >> i love that he has a knife and fork out just in case. >> never know, he digs out the scorpion, takes a bite. he is like eating it in pieces. he should have eaten it and chased it with vodka. >> down the hatch, stinger included, chews it up. >> -- i hope it didn't have any venom in there, i think the alcohol gets rid of that. >> i wonder if chuck ever questions his career. >>
kitty kitty. i don't think i would encourage a bird to say that, but this bird is not scared. >> here kitty kitty.> here kitty kitty kitty. >> you see him stair, and he moves his mouth. >> all my bird would know is dirty words. >> go to the cockatoo. it is only 22 days old, it is in the ugly ducking faze. >> very ugly. >> it is like transparent. >> it looks like a scrotum. >> the fastest way to light a barbecue. >> if you have a barbecue...
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Jul 31, 2013
07/13
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. ♪ kitty kitty >> this made us a fan since, and now is so funny. >> i've always been a redskins' fans our show. we will see you for the next >>> that's our show. we will see you for the next edition of "right this minute." -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com >>> hi, everybody. i'm beth troutman. if you are looking for the best individu videos from the web, this is the show for you, "right this minute." >>> rescuers track the sounds of someone lost in the woods for five days. the remarkable story of getting grandma out alive. >>> a train commuter is stretched out -- >> and also listening to some mus music. >> and why lying down did not sit well with another passenger. >>> some raccoon babies are stranded. >> just below
. ♪ kitty kitty >> this made us a fan since, and now is so funny. >> i've always been a redskins' fans our show. we will see you for the next >>> that's our show. we will see you for the next edition of "right this minute." -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com >>> hi, everybody. i'm beth troutman. if you are looking for the best individu videos from the web, this is the show for you, "right this minute." >>> rescuers track the sounds...
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Jul 23, 2013
07/13
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FOXNEWSW
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kitty logan. kitty. >> that's right. the future king is here at last. the weight is over. the baby was born 4:24 local time here in london. the royal couple wanted privacy and time to bond with their baby before they made the official announcement which came ho later. with the press statement that caused excitement and then the traditional showing of the announcement on an easel outside buckingham palace. a crowd there rushing up to the easel to take a look to see the details of the newborn baby boy. great day of excitement in london. it's been a hot night. people have been pouring over to the hospital, to buckingham palace, cheering and waving flags. the queen is delighted at the news. so the prince charles. david cameron also issued his congratulations. the royal couple themselves are said to be very happy. absolutely delighted with their newborn son. we understand they will be spending the night at this hospital. we'll have to wait and see when they emerge. perhaps tomorrow at the earliest and also we don't know yet, sean, what the baby will be called. we'll have to wait and see to find out what the name is. >> all right kitty. good news for a change. thank you so much for being with us. we're going to go back to london later this hour for more on the birth of the royal baby boy but we fwin tonight with a exclusive, for the first time on national television one of the four alternate jurors in the george zimmerman murder trial is breaking his silence. he is known as juror e-54 and is agreed to appear on the program in silhouette in order to protect his privacy. sir, thank you for being here. >> thank you. >> you were an alternate. were you disappointed you were an alternate? >> yes, i was. i was hoping to be able to go back and deliberate with the other jurors. >> you would have agreed with them. i know you were interviewed and you agreed with what the jury verdict was? >> that's correct. i did. yes. >> what evidence stood out the most in your mind? >> well, you know, it's several things. one was the call by george zimmerman. his manerrisms on the call. the 911 call. the witnesses. the eyewitness testimony b
kitty logan. kitty. >> that's right. the future king is here at last. the weight is over. the baby was born 4:24 local time here in london. the royal couple wanted privacy and time to bond with their baby before they made the official announcement which came ho later. with the press statement that caused excitement and then the traditional showing of the announcement on an easel outside buckingham palace. a crowd there rushing up to the easel to take a look to see the details of the...
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Jul 23, 2013
07/13
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joining me in london at this ungodly hour, kitty logan. kitty. >> that's right.re at last. the weight is over. the baby was born 4:24 local time here in london. the royal couple wanted privacy and time to bond with
joining me in london at this ungodly hour, kitty logan. kitty. >> that's right.re at last. the weight is over. the baby was born 4:24 local time here in london. the royal couple wanted privacy and time to bond with
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Jul 29, 2013
07/13
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. >> you know, i grew up in new york city where there was the infamous case of kitty genovese. >> in 1964, kittyovese, a 28-year-old woman, is stabbed outside her queens home, then later raped and stabbed again. nearly 40 people either see or hear the crime from their homes, but no one responds to her calls for help. >> that led to a lot of studies looking at what's called the bystander effect, which is when people see someone in trouble, we are far less likely to reach out and help if we see that other people are around because we assume that means, hey, the other guy has it handled, when, in fact, if everybody thinks that way, nobody helps. >> unfortunately, more than four decades after the genovese murder jose sanchez suffers the same awful fate. the ambulance rushes him to the hospital, but it's too late. sanchez dies of a traumatic brain injury three days later. >> is it possible that immediate medical care would have made a difference? we'll never know for sure, but it does seem like there is a possibility. >> hector gomez thinks the makeup of the population in this neighborhood may have c
. >> you know, i grew up in new york city where there was the infamous case of kitty genovese. >> in 1964, kittyovese, a 28-year-old woman, is stabbed outside her queens home, then later raped and stabbed again. nearly 40 people either see or hear the crime from their homes, but no one responds to her calls for help. >> that led to a lot of studies looking at what's called the bystander effect, which is when people see someone in trouble, we are far less likely to reach out...
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Jul 5, 2013
07/13
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kitty logan is live in london and, kitty, why did the british police launch this new investigation? >> reporter: well, here in the u.k. the police believe there is new evidence in this case, and they are following fresh lines of inquiry. as you say, they want to speak to a number of people about madeleine's disappearance. also they believe she may still be alive simply for the reason there is no conclusive evidence that she died. and, of course, kate and gerry mccann, the parents, have been clinging to this hope for many years, ever since she disappeared, and they welcome this investigation. they say that they hope the investigation will lead to the person who was responsible for taking their daughter away from them to be brought to justice, arthel. arthel: what are the chances of them actually solving this case? >> reporter: it's a tough one. as you know, madeleine disappeared in 2007, and the portuguese police closed the case in 2008, a year later. so, obviously, there isn't going to be much hard evidence left. but british police have managed to take over the case from the portuguese, and they've received tens of thousands of files which they've been looking through. also they have evidence which was gathered by private investors hired by the mccann family, and all that has led to 38 persons of interest which the british police are now investigating more closely. there is no breakthrough yet, but, of course, this new investigation does give hope to the mccann family who absolutely desperate for answers about their daughter, arthel. arthel: i'll bet they are. kitty now a little background on madeleine mccann and her disappearance, as kitty just said, she went missing may 3, 2007, from the resort where her family was spending their vacation. four months later, both parents were declared official suspects. but in july of 2008, portugal's attorney general said the mccanns were no longer considered suspects and shelfed the investigation into the girl's disappearance. in just the past 24 hours, detectives said there is every chance madeleine is still alive. ♪ ♪ rick: "happening now," the sudden postponement of new hushes requirements -- health insurance requirements for employers is just the latest change to obamacare. president obama making some simple promises about the health law back in 2010, but since then the law has changed in more ways than one. chief washington correspondent be jim angle live from washington. hi, jim. >> reporter: hello, rick. well, that's right. the delay in the employer mandate's one of many changes so far. in fact, parts
kitty logan is live in london and, kitty, why did the british police launch this new investigation? >> reporter: well, here in the u.k. the police believe there is new evidence in this case, and they are following fresh lines of inquiry. as you say, they want to speak to a number of people about madeleine's disappearance. also they believe she may still be alive simply for the reason there is no conclusive evidence that she died. and, of course, kate and gerry mccann, the parents, have...
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Jul 8, 2013
07/13
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kitty ears, two eyes. hard to do to remember where you've been. put a nose on him. a kitty head. it didn't have a mouth. put a couple of teeth in him. he's a healthy cat. loves to eat. look at the teeth on him. oh, he's ferocious. >> i like his commentary. he's a healthy little cat. look at the teeth. >> almost hear him pur, can't you? >> if you squint, maybe you don't see a cat but something else. i see a turtle. >> another request. >> a car. >> can tommy da draw a car? >> hop in, everybody. >> next i think is the most fascinating. someone asked him to draw himself. >> we'll start with like the forehead. down here, look, we can draw like an eye. put the nose here. put the eyebrows in again. round eye in the middle. oh, boy, hideous. >> there he is. a self-portrait. >> can't tell which is which now. i forgot to sign it. because this will be on sale in the lobby. lol. >> when the johannesburg zoo was looking for a social media manager they decided to promote from within and hire b.g., the friendly honey badger. you know, honey badgers are warm and friendly. they're perfect figure head for the community t
kitty ears, two eyes. hard to do to remember where you've been. put a nose on him. a kitty head. it didn't have a mouth. put a couple of teeth in him. he's a healthy cat. loves to eat. look at the teeth on him. oh, he's ferocious. >> i like his commentary. he's a healthy little cat. look at the teeth. >> almost hear him pur, can't you? >> if you squint, maybe you don't see a cat but something else. i see a turtle. >> another request. >> a car. >> can tommy da...
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Jul 23, 2013
07/13
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kitty, thank you. very exciting day and morning and the uk. kitty, thank you very much.royal, just a baby, already has a busy schedule planned. where is the baby headed after he and kate are released from the hospital? people.com expert eloise parker joins us. welcome. >> thank you. >> he has a busy schedule, that baby, already. what are the plans? >> that's correct. we do expect the baby will go back to kensington palace. but right now, their apartment is just a two bedroom and it is suspected kate will retreat to her parent home and spend the first few weeks of motherhood there. of course prince william will join her. he is currently on paternity leave. there is a small chance the couple could join the queen in the scottish highlands for her annual vacation. she is generally there until early september. it would be a good place for the couple to get away from the eyes of the press and just parent in privacy. but it seems they do that in berkshire also, which is where kate spent the last couple weeks of her pregnancy and managed to stay away from photographers for a mon
kitty, thank you. very exciting day and morning and the uk. kitty, thank you very much.royal, just a baby, already has a busy schedule planned. where is the baby headed after he and kate are released from the hospital? people.com expert eloise parker joins us. welcome. >> thank you. >> he has a busy schedule, that baby, already. what are the plans? >> that's correct. we do expect the baby will go back to kensington palace. but right now, their apartment is just a two bedroom...
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Jul 13, 2013
07/13
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kitty cat thing. then you get a little i.d. with the kittyats on it. >> minnick was extremely bonded with his cat, mr. majestic. this cat kind of ruled the roost, as far as i was concerned. minnick painted this cat, fed this cat abundantly, from what it looked like, and they seemed to be somewhat symbiotic. >> i got him november 2nd, 2006, and he got neutered october 27th, same day i got arrested. so we had something in common. >> i think the cat program tames the beast. >> come on. all right. >> at the holman correctional facility in alabama, the cats are even more abundant, but none of them are invited. >> at holman, they're just wild cats who the inmates connect with and start feeding, even though it drives the staff crazy. >> i'm going to catch him. i'm going to catch every one of you cats. >> there was a sergeant this charge, sergeant english, whose job it was to try to deal with these feral cats and get them outside the prison. the cats became his nemesis, particularly fluffy. >> there's fluffy. i think you're going to have a little tro
kitty cat thing. then you get a little i.d. with the kittyats on it. >> minnick was extremely bonded with his cat, mr. majestic. this cat kind of ruled the roost, as far as i was concerned. minnick painted this cat, fed this cat abundantly, from what it looked like, and they seemed to be somewhat symbiotic. >> i got him november 2nd, 2006, and he got neutered october 27th, same day i got arrested. so we had something in common. >> i think the cat program tames the beast....
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Jul 5, 2013
07/13
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kitty hawk." even more than the kitty hawk, my dad's old plane that happened after this 40-year-old guy had to goeek of swim and survival guide. flying upside down over mt. rainier and having the experience even where i booted a spectacular yellow fluid into my puke bag -- >> still amazing. >> still amazing. and, you know, i will cherish it always and it's one of the beauties of being a reporter. you can actually walk in someone's footsteps like that. >> the book that you've written -- >> a great book. >> "the magical stranger, a son's journey into his father's life." thank you so much. thank you for sharing. >> thank you for having me. >> we'll be right back. we're at the legendary southfork ranch in dallas for a cookout with world champion grill master brett galloway. he's serving his guests walmart choice premium steaks. but they don't know it yet. they will. it's a steak-over. steak was excellent. very tender. melts in your mouth. it was delicious. tonight you are eating walmart steak. what???!! good steak. two thumbs up? look, i ate all of mine. it matches any good steakhouse if not better.
kitty hawk." even more than the kitty hawk, my dad's old plane that happened after this 40-year-old guy had to goeek of swim and survival guide. flying upside down over mt. rainier and having the experience even where i booted a spectacular yellow fluid into my puke bag -- >> still amazing. >> still amazing. and, you know, i will cherish it always and it's one of the beauties of being a reporter. you can actually walk in someone's footsteps like that. >> the book that...
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Jul 6, 2013
07/13
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kitty who is a member of the communist party. in their conversation where he is phoning home and kitty says what is that noise? there was noise on the line and oppenheimer says that will be the fbi hanging out. this is written into the transcript. despite all of that oppenheimer was the choice of general growth to head the laboratory that produced the first atomic bomb. what has happened in the 30s? sedition had been discovered, neils bohr realized in order to get a workable atomic bomb you need to separate uranium 235 from 238, and when he realized that he said you will never build a bomb because you don't know how to separate enough of this isotope 235. neils bohr said you had to turn the whole united states into a factory. such was general groves's will, he was a fed student. another aspect of his will was oppenheimer was made director of the laboratory. it is hard to stress enough what an unlikely choice that was. as i have been emphasizing of an honor wasn't an experimental physicist. he was notoriously bad in the laboratory. and verify or he had never done any laboratory work and certainly had never run a laboratory. somebody said about oppenheimer he never read anything. he couldn't run a hamburger store let alone a laboratory. in addition to all that groves pleaded with a edgar hoover, he is a communist and might supply secrets to the soviet union. despite all that groves appointed oppenheimer. the question is why? groves had been given the job of pushing this thing forward. it has been established more or less that theoretically it was possible to build a very powerful explosive utilizing the energy released in the fission process. it seemed possible that it could be done so groves was given the job of getting it done. he met with some of the leading scientists who were involved in this work. he met with enrico fermi, he was dismayed, these meetings did not fill him with joy at all for two reasons. when he couldn't understand a word they said. and they didn't seem to him much like people who were concerned with getting the job done. however when he went to berkeley to meet with ernest lawrence who introduced him to oppenheimer, oppenheimer as would become apparent later on in television program robert mentioned oppenheimer was brilliant at explaining things and oppenheimer gave groves a course on fission and isotopes separation and all of that and in addition to that oppenheimer was burning with ambition for getting this job done because oppenheimer was haunted by the thought that the germans would get there first. hy eisenberg was still in germany. he hadn't left. a lot of scientists did leave and the important ones left and those important to the story of the bomb left germany to work in britain or america including otto frisch and rudolph piles who came to birmingham and they with first people to spell out exactly how an atomic bomb could be built and winston churchill had piles in mind, winston churchill said the reason we won the war was our germans were better than their german. what he had in mind was otto frisch and rudolph plum. anyway oppenheimer was haunted by the idea that the germans would get their first. you got to get this done quickly and it is no good having a bunch of scientists in chicago and some in colombia and some in berkeley. you have to get the mall in a single laboratory working with each other and also because this is such a sensitive job it needs to be in a remote place like new mexico. groves was so impressed by that none of the other considerations, the fact that oppenheimer wasn't an experimental physicist, some people said enrico fermi has a nobel prize, oppenheimer doesn't, groves wasn't worried about that and also made down the law, few people could lay down the law to j. edgar hoover but groves was one of them, giving this man security clearance and that is that so he appointed oppenheimer in charge of the laboratory. i couldn't resist including this. i am going on a bit. i couldn't resist including this photograph because a lot of people when they think of the manhattan project think of the laboratory loss alamosa. was a bunch of scientists working on a problem, terribly important but most of the 200,000 or so people who work for the manhattan project were not scientists working in loss alamos. most were women and they were women working in these kinds of conditions. groves solve the problem of isotopes separation, nobody had any idea how to do it. there was a possibility with centrifugal force or gas or electronic acceleration. groves started to build a planned for each possibility. so he bought this piece of real-estate in tennessee, built isotopes' separation plants, most people work for the manhattan project were working in places like this without the least idea what they were doing. they spend their working day looking at these machines and if it goes this way you need to turn this this way and they had no idea and the bomb dropped on hiroshima was what they're doing was creating material for an atomic bomb. the uranium bomb, the scientists were so convinced they got a physics right they didn't even bother testing it. it was known that you could build a bomb with uranium and plutonium. the only thing they thought would go wrong with the plutonium bomb, which is what they tested in the summer of 1945, was an unforgettable experience for everybody involved, oppenheimer later said the words came to his mind now i am become death, the destroyer of worlds. so they built two bonds, the fat man bomb exploded over nagasaki, the little boy bomb exploded over hiroshima and oppenheimer became a national hero by the end war so much so that when a semi popular journal was started called physics today, wanted a cover to represent the world of physics at that moment, and a hat on the cyclotron, so famous was oppenheimer that his task on a cyclotron was enough to say robert oppenheimer. he was so famous you didn't even need to have a picture of him. he moved from california to princeton, to take directorship of the institute. an ideal job for him in all sorts of ways but one of his main reasons for taking up the job was it moved him away from the west coast to the east coast because what he concentrated on after the second world war was not physics but politics. he spent a lot of time in washington advising the u.s. government on atomic policy, made some enemies by opposing the development of the hydrogen bomb. the hydrogen bomb is thousands of times more powerful than the hiroshima bomb. one argument he used was you don't need to develop this, you can't imagine using a bomb that powerful so why would you ever want to build it? the other argument was nobody knew how to build it at that stage. then the breakthrough, after which oppenheimer grudgingly said okay, it is technically sweet and prepared to see it being developed but by that time he had made very influential enemies in the corridors of power. two of the most important were edward teller, the hungarian physicist and made it his life's work to see the hydrogen bomb being developed and made and the head of the atomic energy commission, it is spelled strauss but spelled straw and between them grew suspicious of oppenheimer and actually they ended up hating him as did many of the most important people in the u.s. military establishment including people in the air force and so on the result of which was the famous 1954 hearings in which oppenheimer who few years earlier had been the most celebrated scientist in the united states had his cast scrutinized in great detail and his character and the hearing concluded he was not a fit man to be the bearer of military secrets, so he had his security clearance taken away from him and after that he was a broken man. he kept -- the usage at princeton to his great credit refused pressure to get rid of oppenheimer. he stayed in princeton as director and airily quickly a process of reconciliation between him and the american people began. .. who was very good in front of the camera and was very good at explaining very difficult physics to a popular audience. the other reconciliation was he was invited to japan. in this photograph remarkably he is 56 years old. he looks more like 86. you can see the toll that these events have taken on him. i think primarily the security hearing aged him about 20 years. here he is in japan with kitty. he was asked over and over again did he regret developing the bomb that destroyed hiroshima and then nagasaki? on every occasion he refused the invitation to say that he regretted it. of course you know he had misgivings about it but he would never say that he regretted it. i think for several reasons. one is that he generally believed that it brought a quick and, the hiroshima bomb. the nagasaki bomb thought it was necessary but the hiroshima bomb he thought was a quick end to the war and he also from niels bohr had the argument that you need to see the terrible power of this weapon in order to knock heads together so to speak, in order to get everybody to agree that what you want is world cooperation on the handling of this material so that this never happens again. the final reconciliation was when he was awarded the family prize for outstanding physicist. he was due to receive the award from jfk but after jfk's assassination he was given by president johnson. he was congratulated
kitty who is a member of the communist party. in their conversation where he is phoning home and kitty says what is that noise? there was noise on the line and oppenheimer says that will be the fbi hanging out. this is written into the transcript. despite all of that oppenheimer was the choice of general growth to head the laboratory that produced the first atomic bomb. what has happened in the 30s? sedition had been discovered, neils bohr realized in order to get a workable atomic bomb you...
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Jul 26, 2013
07/13
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>> we had money left in the kitty, rainy day fund assuming the voters approve $2 million in water infrastructure will have $8 billion sitting in the kittyincreasing sales tax revenue, we lost 4% of our jobs and gained back all of those and another 550,000 jobs. dennis: that $9 billion surplus is what a new will budget? what is your annual spending? >> 95. dennis: billion. almost 10% set aside. what is the secret? simply that you have an energy boom going on and other states don't have that? >> we don't have an income tax. we have regulatory climate but a very diverse economy. we are more diverse than canada or mexico so we have a broad platform on which to run your sectors. you have high-tech financial services, energy, health care that gives you a lot of legs to stand on and we are thriving. dennis: how much current economic strength as a government is because we cut spending versus because we are collecting more tax revenue on a booming economy? >> we cut spending a couple years ago but also put some back into transportation and health care and schools. we have been blessed by having the sales tax revenue but that is driven by consume
>> we had money left in the kitty, rainy day fund assuming the voters approve $2 million in water infrastructure will have $8 billion sitting in the kittyincreasing sales tax revenue, we lost 4% of our jobs and gained back all of those and another 550,000 jobs. dennis: that $9 billion surplus is what a new will budget? what is your annual spending? >> 95. dennis: billion. almost 10% set aside. what is the secret? simply that you have an energy boom going on and other states don't...