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Jun 13, 2018
06/18
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KQED
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>> narrator: >> narrator: rob has now finished his treatment program. he's living in a halfway housen and gotten a job ahour's walk away.be but he's frustratecause the money he earns is controlled by the halfway house. >> if i work 40 hours i'mav allowed e $40. you get a dollar per hour of what you work to hold on you.ac i've got to go band fill out a budget sheet and show them my check, they copy it. inu know, most of it goes to savings. but i can't touch none of it. mosometimes i feel it's alst not worth it to work. like, my daughter sent me a picture. she wants a pair of sneakers for basketball. and i can't buy them.uy i told her i can't bhem, i'm not allowed to touch my money. ha whenever raeann needed something, if i had the money, she always got it, no matterou what it was,now? and it made me feel good. at that point in time being on parole they were dictating to m what i could dth my money that i earned.al it was tly embarrassing. >> narrator: rob also needs appral from the halfway hous to go anywhere other than his job. >> like right now, even g
>> narrator: >> narrator: rob has now finished his treatment program. he's living in a halfway housen and gotten a job ahour's walk away.be but he's frustratecause the money he earns is controlled by the halfway house. >> if i work 40 hours i'mav allowed e $40. you get a dollar per hour of what you work to hold on you.ac i've got to go band fill out a budget sheet and show them my check, they copy it. inu know, most of it goes to savings. but i can't touch none of it....
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125
Jun 20, 2018
06/18
by
KQED
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eye 125
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b >> narrator: the treatment of transgender kids can be controversial. it's a field omedicine with very little research, and the few studies that do exist suggest that for most kids, the distress about gender will shift th time. >> the majority of children with gender dysphoria wl not grow up to be transgender adolescentr dults. but i think the challenge is fat we're not able to definitively predi whom gender dysphoria wilcontinue and for those that it may not contue. >> all right, get your arm back. >> our goal is to try to fure out which children are goinge to continu identify asdi erent than their natal sex. and we don't have any definitive test to do that right now, and that's very challenging. i wish there was a test to say, "oh yeah, of course, you're five and you think this now, and you will when you're 15, and you will when yore 30." i mean, we don't have it, though, so it's a real challenge.o!>> hello, hell look who's here! how are you, daniel?ut >> narrator: bhere is growing consensus that the more intense gender dysphoria is in thildhood, the
b >> narrator: the treatment of transgender kids can be controversial. it's a field omedicine with very little research, and the few studies that do exist suggest that for most kids, the distress about gender will shift th time. >> the majority of children with gender dysphoria wl not grow up to be transgender adolescentr dults. but i think the challenge is fat we're not able to definitively predi whom gender dysphoria wilcontinue and for those that it may not contue. >> all...
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Jun 30, 2018
06/18
by
KGO
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- [narrator] wanna supercharge your body and live a longer, healthier life?ruits and vegetables are proven to help you stay healthy and even live longer. introducing grown american superfood. organile superfood nutrition made simple. 100% grown in america, usda certified organic, farm to table fresh in every scoop. just one scoop of grown american superfood is the fast, easy delicious way to double your servings of fruits and vegetables everyday to help improve your chances of better health and a longer life. only grown american superfood has a full one and a half servings of healthy, life giving fruits and vegetables from a unique blend of over 30 certified organic superfoods packed into every applicious scoop. no more wasting time and money to shop, chop, prep, cook, or juice, and clean all this everyday. just one scoop of grown american superfood in water, juice, your favorite milk, or yogurt makes a delicious, energizing superfood smoothie in just seconds. - it's a powder but it tastes farm to table fresh. - you take a scoop, you put in your glass of wate
- [narrator] wanna supercharge your body and live a longer, healthier life?ruits and vegetables are proven to help you stay healthy and even live longer. introducing grown american superfood. organile superfood nutrition made simple. 100% grown in america, usda certified organic, farm to table fresh in every scoop. just one scoop of grown american superfood is the fast, easy delicious way to double your servings of fruits and vegetables everyday to help improve your chances of better health and...
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31
Jun 3, 2018
06/18
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 31
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and it was such a potent thing that i decided that inventing a narrator to tell this would just ruinhe whole idea. you couldn't take yourself out of the story after that experience. exactly, exactly. i had to putjuan gabriel vasquez as a narrator in order not to undermine, i guess, the personal importance the whole thing had for me. one of the powerful things about this story is that sense of, you know, a piece of information being passed and a quest beginning. yes. which becomes something that has to be satisfied, it has to be completed. it can't be left. yes. the idea of investigation is very important in the novel. my novels are always built in the shape of a quest. but this one much more so than the other ones because it became an obsession for me personally. to know, first of all, how had these human remains, really, the human ruins of a title, how had they been inherited from generation to generation until they ended up in the hands of this person who was able to show them to me? but also the whole novel turns around mysteries, historical mysteries, places where history has lie
and it was such a potent thing that i decided that inventing a narrator to tell this would just ruinhe whole idea. you couldn't take yourself out of the story after that experience. exactly, exactly. i had to putjuan gabriel vasquez as a narrator in order not to undermine, i guess, the personal importance the whole thing had for me. one of the powerful things about this story is that sense of, you know, a piece of information being passed and a quest beginning. yes. which becomes something that...
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Jun 21, 2018
06/18
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 36
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narrator: on this episode of "earth focus," climate change is forcing people to migrate in search of food and shelter, altering traditional lifestyles across the globe. in tijuana, mexico, haitians fleeing devastation are building a neighborhood as their dreams of entering the united states dwindle. while in mongolia, the traditional herding lifestyle is threatened as drought forces a new generation to the capital in search of opportunities. [makelson derilus speaking spanish] [greetings exchanged in spanish] [man on podium speaking spanish] ng spanish] [both speaking spanish] [derilus speaking] isabel rivera-collazo: we think of migrants and refugees as these people that are coming to take over our country. we don't see that these are the people that got to the point that it was so hard for them to survive that it was easier to face death than to stay. because that's what they are facing when they decide to get on a boat or they decide to cross a border or they decide to cross the desert, they're facing their own death, they're facing the death of their loved ones, their children, a
narrator: on this episode of "earth focus," climate change is forcing people to migrate in search of food and shelter, altering traditional lifestyles across the globe. in tijuana, mexico, haitians fleeing devastation are building a neighborhood as their dreams of entering the united states dwindle. while in mongolia, the traditional herding lifestyle is threatened as drought forces a new generation to the capital in search of opportunities. [makelson derilus speaking spanish]...
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john fassola is an attorney from homer glen, illinois, who did some narration for a documentary film,nderstand. i did. i have a friend who has done some film production work, and she had done a documentary and was looking for someone to do the voice-over narration. a mutual friend suggested that i might be able to do it, and so i have done the voice-over narration for a about the art of mongolian contortionism. [ laughter ] mongolian contortionism? yes. it's a very respected art there. children start very young training. and the film was about the process for becoming a contortionist in mongolia. -okay. -mm-hmm. thank you. [ laughter ] david kleinman, student from sharon, massachusetts. you are informally licensed to do what? to drill bones, yes. what kind of bones? [ chuckles ] well, last time i did it, i believe they were plastic. oh. but, no, my mother's a doctor, and so when i was younger, she would take me all around to these medical conferences. and at one of them, this guy was debuting this new bone drill. and so i -- he said, "who wants to give it a shot?" and i stepped right
john fassola is an attorney from homer glen, illinois, who did some narration for a documentary film,nderstand. i did. i have a friend who has done some film production work, and she had done a documentary and was looking for someone to do the voice-over narration. a mutual friend suggested that i might be able to do it, and so i have done the voice-over narration for a about the art of mongolian contortionism. [ laughter ] mongolian contortionism? yes. it's a very respected art there. children...
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102
Jun 2, 2018
06/18
by
KRON
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eye 102
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narrator: for the fortunate few...
narrator: for the fortunate few...
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79
Jun 30, 2018
06/18
by
KRON
tv
eye 79
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never want to hear you say i want it that way ♪ ♪ i want it that way [ cheers and applause ] - [narratorluminess air. watch how this touchless makeup appears to erase flaws like magic. it'll transform the way you look in minutes. - you're gonna see it just disappear. you see that? gone. - [narrator] people are leaving ordinary foundation for this miracle breakthrough because it seemingly wipes away years in seconds. - i am 52 years old and let me tell ya, i look better than i have ever looked. - [narrator] women everywhere are switching to this new beauty breakthrough because it delivers stunning results that everyone will notice. - i will have people say, "what are you doing? "you look younger." - it's like night and day. - people asked if i got botox.
never want to hear you say i want it that way ♪ ♪ i want it that way [ cheers and applause ] - [narratorluminess air. watch how this touchless makeup appears to erase flaws like magic. it'll transform the way you look in minutes. - you're gonna see it just disappear. you see that? gone. - [narrator] people are leaving ordinary foundation for this miracle breakthrough because it seemingly wipes away years in seconds. - i am 52 years old and let me tell ya, i look better than i have ever...
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125
Jun 16, 2018
06/18
by
KRON
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eye 125
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narrator: ...inspirational heroes... -i want to show the world what i can do.rs old, he is going to las vegas. -yeah! narrator: ...and unexpected stars... -the first american ninja warrior can absolutely be a woman. and it can be me. whoo! narrator: ...chase their place in history. time is short, but legends last forever. -we're coming for you, mountain! -welcome to las vegas, nevada, where we're continuing the national finals of american ninja warrior here at stage one of mount midoriyama. i'm matt iseman, alongside former nfl defensive end akbar gbaja-biamila.
narrator: ...inspirational heroes... -i want to show the world what i can do.rs old, he is going to las vegas. -yeah! narrator: ...and unexpected stars... -the first american ninja warrior can absolutely be a woman. and it can be me. whoo! narrator: ...chase their place in history. time is short, but legends last forever. -we're coming for you, mountain! -welcome to las vegas, nevada, where we're continuing the national finals of american ninja warrior here at stage one of mount midoriyama. i'm...
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99
Jun 16, 2018
06/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 99
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narrator: ...a shepherd-collie mix is in extreme pain.so, you're saying his leg is fully dislocated. dr. nardi: yes. narrator: he'll have to undergo surgery and a long recovery process. brandon: i know, i know, it's tricky. there you go, good. narrator: but each step forward brings him closer to his new family. kim: hey, handsome! hey! i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope.
narrator: ...a shepherd-collie mix is in extreme pain.so, you're saying his leg is fully dislocated. dr. nardi: yes. narrator: he'll have to undergo surgery and a long recovery process. brandon: i know, i know, it's tricky. there you go, good. narrator: but each step forward brings him closer to his new family. kim: hey, handsome! hey! i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope.
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Jun 11, 2018
06/18
by
CNBC
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eye 155
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i'm jim cramer, and i will see you tomorrow ♪ >> narrator: in this episode of "american greed"...d death in the cosmetic-surgery underground. >> when you're a hustler, you know how to get money. you know what i'm saying? and i know how to get money. >> narrator: this hip-hop model, famous for her physical assets, works with a provider of silicone butt injections. together, natasha stewart and tracey lynn garner sell body enhancements to a young woman for the ultimate price -- her life. >> this was a very barbaric procedure that should have never been performed. >> narrator: and later, chad livdahl is a doctor who develops a botox knock-off and distributes it to more than 200 physicians nationwide. >> he had it in the palm of his ha
i'm jim cramer, and i will see you tomorrow ♪ >> narrator: in this episode of "american greed"...d death in the cosmetic-surgery underground. >> when you're a hustler, you know how to get money. you know what i'm saying? and i know how to get money. >> narrator: this hip-hop model, famous for her physical assets, works with a provider of silicone butt injections. together, natasha stewart and tracey lynn garner sell body enhancements to a young woman for the...
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106
Jun 1, 2018
06/18
by
CNBC
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eye 106
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i'm jim cramer, and i will see you monday narrator: in this episode of "american greed"...as a purple heart and isn't afraid to show it. darryl used his purple heart, flaunted it, and he weaponized it. narrator: as a wounded warrior, wright collects more than $700,000 in government benefits until an undercover investigation unravels this "hero's" story. 99.9% of that stuff is not true. that did not happen. i think he enjoyed getting free money. we started to refer to this as the "purple heart fraudster case." narrator: wright's victims are veterans who feel their sacrifices have been tarnished by his lies,
i'm jim cramer, and i will see you monday narrator: in this episode of "american greed"...as a purple heart and isn't afraid to show it. darryl used his purple heart, flaunted it, and he weaponized it. narrator: as a wounded warrior, wright collects more than $700,000 in government benefits until an undercover investigation unravels this "hero's" story. 99.9% of that stuff is not true. that did not happen. i think he enjoyed getting free money. we started to refer to this as...
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95
Jun 13, 2018
06/18
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 95
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. ♪ narrator: 2008, discontent turns ininto confrontationon.raround the world people e tako the streets. ♪ music momar: they use tear gas, electric batons, plastic bullets. it was a very, very hard day. narrator: protests like these in dakar and senegal spread to many other cities. there were similar riots in egypt and in india. in haiti the president was overthrown. the reason?highe major causes: climate change. villagers are leaving their homes simply to survive.
. ♪ narrator: 2008, discontent turns ininto confrontationon.raround the world people e tako the streets. ♪ music momar: they use tear gas, electric batons, plastic bullets. it was a very, very hard day. narrator: protests like these in dakar and senegal spread to many other cities. there were similar riots in egypt and in india. in haiti the president was overthrown. the reason?highe major causes: climate change. villagers are leaving their homes simply to survive.
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99
Jun 27, 2018
06/18
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 99
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narrator: shanghai is to china what new york is to america. syf success and a warning about the price that may have to be paid. professor geofoffrey heal: china isn't just an economic super power these days, it's a green house gas super power too. china has
narrator: shanghai is to china what new york is to america. syf success and a warning about the price that may have to be paid. professor geofoffrey heal: china isn't just an economic super power these days, it's a green house gas super power too. china has
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Jun 24, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 35
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casting himself as narrator?ow is himself as victorious union general over the course of his work? >> one way perhaps is the division of the two volumes. to get you two victories instead of one. toneso takes a very subtle in both his praise and criticism. as my wife repeatedly reminds me, that is much better than being acerbic. at edwinhis shots carefully but incisively if you read into them. i think that is the case with his criticism and his praise throughout the book. the memoirs, like every memory is constructed carefully. i think it is also one of the reasons it works so well is it is grant. is very much his personality. it is extremely revealing about his mental processes and how he made decisions and managed people, which is one of the fascinating aspects of the war as a relates to some of the great leaders. lincoln. if you are want the primer and managing difficult people, read abraham lincoln's collected works. he has the patience and a skillet that that most of us to manage people could only dream of ev
casting himself as narrator?ow is himself as victorious union general over the course of his work? >> one way perhaps is the division of the two volumes. to get you two victories instead of one. toneso takes a very subtle in both his praise and criticism. as my wife repeatedly reminds me, that is much better than being acerbic. at edwinhis shots carefully but incisively if you read into them. i think that is the case with his criticism and his praise throughout the book. the memoirs, like...
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47
Jun 19, 2018
06/18
by
KGO
tv
eye 47
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. >> narrator: in the east bay. >> narrator: in the east bay. an officer-involved shooting i >>> good morning on this tuesday june 19th coming up on 5:00 a.m. >> glad you're here with us. you're never more than 7 minutes away from accuweather forecast. mike nicco tracking it all. hi, mike. >> hi, everybody. tracking gusty breezes in fairfield. a broken deck of clouds this morning but they are lower to the ground so you may feel a little more claustrophobic when you go outside. you can't see the top of some of the buildings in san francisco, pier 15. breaking down next couple of hours 7:00, mid-50s. pretty much the same start temperature wise. you'll already know this by noon, warmer, inland at 80, warm around the bay, 57 at the coast. you'll still be 57 at the coast, 76 to 85. a little jump in temperatures, a little above average at 4:00. then we've got a pretty comfortable evening on the way. 71 around the bay, 77 inland but definitely chilly at the coast, 56. all right. let's see what alexis is watching for the commute. >> watching a busy bay
. >> narrator: in the east bay. >> narrator: in the east bay. an officer-involved shooting i >>> good morning on this tuesday june 19th coming up on 5:00 a.m. >> glad you're here with us. you're never more than 7 minutes away from accuweather forecast. mike nicco tracking it all. hi, mike. >> hi, everybody. tracking gusty breezes in fairfield. a broken deck of clouds this morning but they are lower to the ground so you may feel a little more claustrophobic when...
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99
Jun 23, 2018
06/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 99
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narrator: and the desire for his new job. brandon: the bottom line is even if i can train him to be a good dog for a facility like this, if he's not happy doing it it's the wrong dog. [music - intro] brandon: i'm brandon mcmillan and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely,
narrator: and the desire for his new job. brandon: the bottom line is even if i can train him to be a good dog for a facility like this, if he's not happy doing it it's the wrong dog. [music - intro] brandon: i'm brandon mcmillan and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely,
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[arguing over each other] narrator: disasters don't plan ahead. you can.our loved ones about how you're going to be ready in an emergency. don't wait. communicate. maria: welcome back. our next guest is a legend in the investing world, jack bogle founded the vanguard group in 1974, turning it into the largest mutual fund company in the world. the vanguard 500 index that bogle started and created in 1975 was the first low-cost index mutual fund designed for the average investor. jack named by fortune magazine as one of the four giants of the 20th century in the investigationment industry. invt industry. he'll talk to us about his new book. jack bogle is with us this weekend. thanks for joining us. >> my pleasure, maria. always. maria: let me start off with news of the week. this week we learned that household wealth reached a milestone, jack, $100 trillion. americans wealth surpassed $100 trillion mark for the first time early this year, which is an incredible number and that has to do with stock investing and the price of the homes. jack bogle, you are the
[arguing over each other] narrator: disasters don't plan ahead. you can.our loved ones about how you're going to be ready in an emergency. don't wait. communicate. maria: welcome back. our next guest is a legend in the investing world, jack bogle founded the vanguard group in 1974, turning it into the largest mutual fund company in the world. the vanguard 500 index that bogle started and created in 1975 was the first low-cost index mutual fund designed for the average investor. jack named by...
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Jun 2, 2018
06/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 78
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narrator: he'll learn to fit right in with a new family. judy: max, you're never going to have a bad day with us ever. brandon: i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope.
narrator: he'll learn to fit right in with a new family. judy: max, you're never going to have a bad day with us ever. brandon: i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope.
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Jun 15, 2018
06/18
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 93
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and mishkin, who is the narrator at the beginning of your latest book, talking about his mother, andgrows up during the course of the book, but how easy or how difficult is it to put yourself in the head of a child who is worth immediately sympathetic a character, but also somebody who is naivete about the fact that his mother ran away is really engaging? yeah. when i was thinking about mishkin, i have had him with me for a few years, as just a boy who could enter paintings. and that was how this began, because he is a boy with a very vivid visual sense and he enters these paintings and loses himself in them. but then the rest of the story grew around him and it is actually narrated i mishkin when he is much older. so here thinking back to things in a way that, you know, there is a kind of double prism. he sees himself there as the child and he can see how one scene he was, in a way. he couldn't understand what was going on around him. and as an older man he is trying to make sense of those things that he now sees in quite a different light. so in this look, the same person actually
and mishkin, who is the narrator at the beginning of your latest book, talking about his mother, andgrows up during the course of the book, but how easy or how difficult is it to put yourself in the head of a child who is worth immediately sympathetic a character, but also somebody who is naivete about the fact that his mother ran away is really engaging? yeah. when i was thinking about mishkin, i have had him with me for a few years, as just a boy who could enter paintings. and that was how...
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102
Jun 18, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN3
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eye 102
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y, [screaming and crying] narrator: five others were also wounded.is in critical condition. >> is there a doctor? terry: the suspect, now identified as sirhan sirhan was grabbed by the two kennedy men and then he was led by police through the ballroom and the hotel. some of the officers had to protect him from the crowd. there were several kennedy supporters and bystanders who were close to hysteria at this point and there was concern for the suspect's safety. [screaming] narrator: in his pocket, officers found newspaper clippings attacking kennedy. sirhan is the man in the blue shirt, dark complexion on the far side of the squad car. [screaming] narrator: two of the others who were hit were brought back to the ballroom. by then most people knew what had happened. seven minutes before this room was the place of senator kennedy's finest political triumph. at this moment, kennedy was being taken on a stretcher from the hotel to an ambulance. [shouting] >> if there is a doctor in the house, i want to see him right here. everybody else, please stay back.
y, [screaming and crying] narrator: five others were also wounded.is in critical condition. >> is there a doctor? terry: the suspect, now identified as sirhan sirhan was grabbed by the two kennedy men and then he was led by police through the ballroom and the hotel. some of the officers had to protect him from the crowd. there were several kennedy supporters and bystanders who were close to hysteria at this point and there was concern for the suspect's safety. [screaming] narrator: in his...
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89
Jun 9, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 89
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many people are narrating. there is a suggestion that because we had one thing going on y it's almost like a series in my mind of a sense that you're getting these storiesri with there's an infinite number ofr other stories. there is a way that's here. a little bit the way i was talking about it. we have this book but we must acknowledge that there other realities. did you know how this book was going to end when you started it. this goes back to the caller who asked about the process. i never know where i'm going. a with all of that. are they going to be surprise either. not only do you know where your book is can be. you don't know what it's gonna do to you as a person and whether you are going to be the same person p i think actually ideally part of my writing this way. i came out of the short story. i just knew that you'd start out with the feeling or something or a nerve. in the longer form. it's also true what i know. i did it theid same way. one of the reasons is that i'm writing a book so often for thre
many people are narrating. there is a suggestion that because we had one thing going on y it's almost like a series in my mind of a sense that you're getting these storiesri with there's an infinite number ofr other stories. there is a way that's here. a little bit the way i was talking about it. we have this book but we must acknowledge that there other realities. did you know how this book was going to end when you started it. this goes back to the caller who asked about the process. i never...
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96
Jun 16, 2018
06/18
by
CNNW
tv
eye 96
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. >> narrator: mankind teeters precariously on the brink of a thermal nuclear war. >> anthony: the missile crisis. duck and cover. hide under your desk, kids, cover yourselves with wet newspaper, because we're all going to die. >> narrator: the flames of crisis burn far stronger, fed and fanned by the bitter tirades of fidel castro. >> anthony: and this guy, always in the fatigues, underlining with every appearance that we were two nations in a never-ending state of war. >> president obama: today, the united states of america is changing its relationship with the people of cuba. we will begin to normalize relations between our two countries. ♪ i took a walk through this beautiful world ♪ ♪ felt the cool rain on my shoulder ♪ ♪ found something good in this beautiful world ♪ ♪ i felt the rain getting colder ♪ ♪ sha la la la la sha la la la la la ♪ ♪ sha la la la la sha la la la la la la ♪ ♪ ♪ >> anthony: cuba has been sitting here 55 years now, half an hour away, basically giving the biggest superpower in the world the stiff middle finger. 50-plus years of animosity, embargo, rationing, and
. >> narrator: mankind teeters precariously on the brink of a thermal nuclear war. >> anthony: the missile crisis. duck and cover. hide under your desk, kids, cover yourselves with wet newspaper, because we're all going to die. >> narrator: the flames of crisis burn far stronger, fed and fanned by the bitter tirades of fidel castro. >> anthony: and this guy, always in the fatigues, underlining with every appearance that we were two nations in a never-ending state of war....
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60
Jun 9, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 60
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they narrate their lives on facebook everyday. they were narrating the process, the surgical process for their friends and family. it was very easy to get access to a lot of information about them and they were very gracious and forthcoming. i was quite frankly a little shocked by that, but obviously has a writer it was something that served my interest. the other thing going on if i could be the sociologist for a minute is that reality tv has really reshaped how we think about our lives or at least how some people think about their lives as well. they were just, sure i will tell you about my life and you will write about and people will read about it. it was something that was not at all unnatural to them. also, the other thing going on is that they are the first generation of transgender people and transgender men in particular who would like to be very out, who went to be proud of who they are, who don't want to be closeted and ashamed about their transgender status. they thought pitches speeding in this book as a kind of polit
they narrate their lives on facebook everyday. they were narrating the process, the surgical process for their friends and family. it was very easy to get access to a lot of information about them and they were very gracious and forthcoming. i was quite frankly a little shocked by that, but obviously has a writer it was something that served my interest. the other thing going on if i could be the sociologist for a minute is that reality tv has really reshaped how we think about our lives or at...
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108
Jun 21, 2018
06/18
by
KRON
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eye 108
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narrator: drugs? the agents never found any.sing young mother either. was there a connection? i was afraid for her.
narrator: drugs? the agents never found any.sing young mother either. was there a connection? i was afraid for her.
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70
Jun 25, 2018
06/18
by
CNBC
tv
eye 70
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narrator: in this episode of "american greed"...n $18 million eyewear empire hawking fake luxury designs online. there is no crime that i've ever come across where you can make this much money and face such little risk. everybody wants something designer, something name brand for cheap. he had ray-ban, prada, gucci, chanel. narrator: customers think they're scoring high-end bargains. instead, they're getting hustled with bogus brands and violent threats when they dare to question vitaly borker. he just went nuts -- started yelling at me, started cursing at me.
narrator: in this episode of "american greed"...n $18 million eyewear empire hawking fake luxury designs online. there is no crime that i've ever come across where you can make this much money and face such little risk. everybody wants something designer, something name brand for cheap. he had ray-ban, prada, gucci, chanel. narrator: customers think they're scoring high-end bargains. instead, they're getting hustled with bogus brands and violent threats when they dare to question...
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80
Jun 30, 2018
06/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 80
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narrator: today on "lucky dog", a two-year-old boxer is the crown champion of energy.randon: slow it down. slow it down. this dog needs a crash course in control. narrator: if she can learn to focus and pass the ultimate training challenges, she might just be the perfect match for three young boys. [laughter frank: you can give me kisses.mian, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope. my mission is to
narrator: today on "lucky dog", a two-year-old boxer is the crown champion of energy.randon: slow it down. slow it down. this dog needs a crash course in control. narrator: if she can learn to focus and pass the ultimate training challenges, she might just be the perfect match for three young boys. [laughter frank: you can give me kisses.mian, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope. my mission is to
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176
Jun 9, 2018
06/18
by
KPIX
tv
eye 176
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narrator: but for them and their families, the path to a new life wasn't always so easy.ation of the spirit of life, we revisit some of lucky dog's most life-saving, life-affirming, and life-changing adoptions. brandon: take a minute. mike: yes. carri: okay, thank you. mike: sorry. brandon: no, take a minute. take your time. i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope. my mission is to make sure these amazing animals find
narrator: but for them and their families, the path to a new life wasn't always so easy.ation of the spirit of life, we revisit some of lucky dog's most life-saving, life-affirming, and life-changing adoptions. brandon: take a minute. mike: yes. carri: okay, thank you. mike: sorry. brandon: no, take a minute. take your time. i'm brandon mcmillan, and i've dedicated my life to saving the lonely, unwanted dogs that are living without hope. my mission is to make sure these amazing animals find
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41
Jun 23, 2018
06/18
by
FBC
tv
eye 41
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[narrator] go to curestigma.org and get tested for stigma.tening a 20% tariff on vehicles assembled in the european union. deirdre bolton of fox business network joins us from new york with an update. dierdre: some strategists say massive tariffs on american car makers can cause economic chaos. based on the tariffs and trade barriers long placed on american cop any, if they are not soon broken down and removed we'll be placing a 20% tariff on all of their cars coming into the u.s. build them here. ford and gm. mercedes-benz has a huge presence in the united states. a 20% tariff would result in 195 lost auto workers jobs. the u.s. and eu are already in a trade spat. the e.u. announced a 25% tariff in retaliation for tariffs on steel and he aluminum. president trump asked his administration to identify $200 billion worth of chinese goods for additional tariffs at a rate of 10%. stocks were lower for most of of the five days. boeing, caterpillar, all examples. china's stock market fell, too. sources telling us some at the white house are trying
[narrator] go to curestigma.org and get tested for stigma.tening a 20% tariff on vehicles assembled in the european union. deirdre bolton of fox business network joins us from new york with an update. dierdre: some strategists say massive tariffs on american car makers can cause economic chaos. based on the tariffs and trade barriers long placed on american cop any, if they are not soon broken down and removed we'll be placing a 20% tariff on all of their cars coming into the u.s. build them...
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242
Jun 3, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 242
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and then "world and town" a book where many people are narrating. there is a suggest that because we have kind of one thing going on and also -- it's almost like a series of in my mind, there's a sense that kind of you're getting the stories but there are all these other things-infinite number of other stories that could be in the book. they just wouldn't all fit. so there's way in which i do have enough story that you feel like it's one story but you feel like -- i hope that the boundary around the novel is not a solid thing but a moveable thing. this is a selection of reality but a little bit the way i was talking about, i laugh but must acknowledge i laugh because maxine crimpled we must acknowledge floor realities that enabled this book to be here and are not part of this book. does that make sense? >> host: gish jen, did you know how this book would end when you startedded it? >> guest: no. of course not. goes back to the caller who asked about process. i never know where i'm going. more than anything else, we want our novels -- our fiction to
and then "world and town" a book where many people are narrating. there is a suggest that because we have kind of one thing going on and also -- it's almost like a series of in my mind, there's a sense that kind of you're getting the stories but there are all these other things-infinite number of other stories that could be in the book. they just wouldn't all fit. so there's way in which i do have enough story that you feel like it's one story but you feel like -- i hope that the...
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. >> i didn't believe he has the where with all to narrate as we are going along.is trying to not fall over the cliff. it says there are rocks, dust, sand that make it hard for him to have any traction. she puts on contacts to help make it look more real. >> yes. >> it's transforming. >> she is transforming. you need some so she goes and gets some candy mold and some gelatin. right here she begins to make the mold. she is using painted air brush makeup. it does take quite a bit of work. she starts attaching with hair spray. >> i don't know about that. >> into the nose, into the mouth. paints a little blood on them. with the wave of her wand there's the final look. >> okay. good job. >> 5,000 miles for one picture. see his picture next right this minute. >>> and still to come, a cycst who says london pedestrians. >> got on his last nerve using the bike lane, why they are about to hear his frustrations loud and clear. >> it works. >>> plus, see how this guy takes his dad strength up enough. >> she is like you better not drop my baby. simparica is what kills tick and
. >> i didn't believe he has the where with all to narrate as we are going along.is trying to not fall over the cliff. it says there are rocks, dust, sand that make it hard for him to have any traction. she puts on contacts to help make it look more real. >> yes. >> it's transforming. >> she is transforming. you need some so she goes and gets some candy mold and some gelatin. right here she begins to make the mold. she is using painted air brush makeup. it does take...
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77
Jun 20, 2018
06/18
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 77
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paying attention to that mockery, he has cut his hair in what looks a little more acceptable. zñvpx] narrator yet another hurricane pounds c cuba. waves as tall as five story buildings. streets flooded. many forced from their homes. in an era of climate change, ather around the world is becoming more extreme. hurricanes are getting worse. if this is the future for our coastal cities, how will they survive the storm?
paying attention to that mockery, he has cut his hair in what looks a little more acceptable. zñvpx] narrator yet another hurricane pounds c cuba. waves as tall as five story buildings. streets flooded. many forced from their homes. in an era of climate change, ather around the world is becoming more extreme. hurricanes are getting worse. if this is the future for our coastal cities, how will they survive the storm?
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145
Jun 13, 2018
06/18
by
CNNW
tv
eye 145
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way too much narration.ration throughout the whole four minutes and it is -- it is redundant and gets repetitious. you could tell that story in -- you could progress that story in two minutes. >> marcus castaldo thanks for coming on. >> thanks for having me. >> "the lead" with jake tapper starts right now. >>> did michael cohen just send an s.o.s. to president trump? the lead starts right now. breaking news. president trump's personal lawyer and fixer changing his legal team. to cooperate?nal that he's going does it signal that he's any more likely to flip. stormy daniels' attorney will be her live to react in moments. after one meeting and one hand shake and signature, the president said the north korea nuclear threat is over. really? is this his mission a
way too much narration.ration throughout the whole four minutes and it is -- it is redundant and gets repetitious. you could tell that story in -- you could progress that story in two minutes. >> marcus castaldo thanks for coming on. >> thanks for having me. >> "the lead" with jake tapper starts right now. >>> did michael cohen just send an s.o.s. to president trump? the lead starts right now. breaking news. president trump's personal lawyer and fixer...
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123
Jun 16, 2018
06/18
by
CNNW
tv
eye 123
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. >> narrator: mankind teeters precariously on the brink of a thermal nuclear war. >> anthony: the missile with wet newspaper, because we're all going to die. >> narrator: the flames of crisis burn far stronger, fed and fanned by the bitter tirades of fidel castro. >> anthony: and this guy, always in the fatigues, underlining with every appearance that we were two nations in a never-ending state of war. >> president obama: today, the
. >> narrator: mankind teeters precariously on the brink of a thermal nuclear war. >> anthony: the missile with wet newspaper, because we're all going to die. >> narrator: the flames of crisis burn far stronger, fed and fanned by the bitter tirades of fidel castro. >> anthony: and this guy, always in the fatigues, underlining with every appearance that we were two nations in a never-ending state of war. >> president obama: today, the
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45
Jun 25, 2018
06/18
by
FBC
tv
eye 45
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[arguing over each other] narrator: disasters don't plan ahead. you can.nes about how you're going to be ready in an emergency. don't wait. communicate. >> lou: you like the direction the united states is headed. dissatisfaction is a 12- year high. and the latest gall up poll, find that 38 percent is happy. that is a high not seen since november 2005. think about that. that is three years before barak obama was elected. 68 percent of the republicans polled gave big thumbs up to trump's leadership. and joining us tonight. retired four- star general, fox strategic analyst giant jack keane. the sense of optimism is moving high. 30 percent doesn't sound high but that is highest in 12 years a turn around is taking place. >> no doubt about it. the economy is moving forward and good national security policies. they are not perfect but it is it a work in progress and we changed american leadership in this world. today allies are pushing back on us because they have taken advantage of us for years. i think we will sort through all of this in time. >> lou: the g- se
[arguing over each other] narrator: disasters don't plan ahead. you can.nes about how you're going to be ready in an emergency. don't wait. communicate. >> lou: you like the direction the united states is headed. dissatisfaction is a 12- year high. and the latest gall up poll, find that 38 percent is happy. that is a high not seen since november 2005. think about that. that is three years before barak obama was elected. 68 percent of the republicans polled gave big thumbs up to trump's...
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69
Jun 16, 2018
06/18
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 69
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you know, they narrate their lives on facebook every day. they were narrating the process of -- you know, the surgical process for all of their friends and family. >> host: wow. >> guest: it was very easy to get access to a lot of information about them. and they were very, you know, gracious and forthcoming. i was quite frankly a little bit shocked by that. but, you know, obviously the writer it was something that served my interest. >> host: yeah. >> guest: the other thing that's going on, if i can be the sociologist for just a minute, is that reality tv that's really reshaped how we think about our lives or at least how some people think about their lives as well. you know, they were just -- sure i'm going to tell you about my life, you know. and you're going to write about it. and people are going to read about it. [ laughing ] guest: it was -- it was, you know, something that was not at all unnatural to them. and also the other thing going on is that they are the first generation of transgender people and transgender men in particular w
you know, they narrate their lives on facebook every day. they were narrating the process of -- you know, the surgical process for all of their friends and family. >> host: wow. >> guest: it was very easy to get access to a lot of information about them. and they were very, you know, gracious and forthcoming. i was quite frankly a little bit shocked by that. but, you know, obviously the writer it was something that served my interest. >> host: yeah. >> guest: the other...