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Aug 11, 2014
08/14
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so, central park is indeed looks like nature but it's a recreation of nature, a landscaped scale replica of a natured that was being destroyed at the time they built it. so manhattan island and new york city are these incredible raging conflagration of industrial and financial power, which quite scared americans. americans had been trained to think of ourselves as an egrayan people who live on farms farms d small towns, virtue in simple missty and we think of ourselves and yet in the set century we're confronted we ever a very different reality which was visible in places like new york city, enormousr) ed. nervous irritation and loss of spirit and that by walking in this landscape they would be renewed, literal lay form of national therapy is what that represents. so, if you walk in central park, think about the tension between our view of nature as a repository of virtue and then the fact our economy is baseed on exploitation, if not destruction of nature, and those things are difficult to reconcile, as different to reconcile as jefferson's ideals -- he wrote the declaration of independ
so, central park is indeed looks like nature but it's a recreation of nature, a landscaped scale replica of a natured that was being destroyed at the time they built it. so manhattan island and new york city are these incredible raging conflagration of industrial and financial power, which quite scared americans. americans had been trained to think of ourselves as an egrayan people who live on farms farms d small towns, virtue in simple missty and we think of ourselves and yet in the set...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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natural gas production soared. they were right that shale was working and you can get a lot of natural gas from it. by 2008 aubrey mcclendon was worth $3 billion. i write about how he got overconfident and believe too much in himself and his company and in his revolution and they produced too much energy. first off in 2008 if you remember the natural collapse and i write in the book about his broker had to cut him off and sell the shares because he borrowed too much money and bought too many of his own shares. he rebounded and did some very aggressive things like selling has map collection to his company. he cut a huge bonus for himself when maybe he shouldn't have but the thing that god and his investors most upset is that he hurt himself and his company overproduced. as we all know commodities are natural gas. there was too much supply what happens when there's too much supply? prices go down and he thought they were to focus on what they were doing. aubrey mcclendon into getting kicked out of his company and tom
natural gas production soared. they were right that shale was working and you can get a lot of natural gas from it. by 2008 aubrey mcclendon was worth $3 billion. i write about how he got overconfident and believe too much in himself and his company and in his revolution and they produced too much energy. first off in 2008 if you remember the natural collapse and i write in the book about his broker had to cut him off and sell the shares because he borrowed too much money and bought too many of...
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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ALJAZAM
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and natural gas is a different game, where russian natural gas only makes up 20% of the revenues, and oil makes up -- and they will be able to use it in the past, knowing that it's not as much of a cash cow. >> oil is much more plungable around the world than natural gas. particularly to europe. europe gets the oil from the pipelines from ukraine through russia, and they can't be replaced that easily. they don't frack in europe, so they can get oil somewhere else, but they can't get gas somewhere else. >> which is what makes the negotiations heading into winter so important at this moment. europe knows that winter is a month away, so right now, europe is becoming a little bit more friendly to the option of russia's demands over ukraine. we have seen the demands to angela merkel in the past week. >> they are asking for $42 billion, and we're talking about "real money." russia said in 2015, they might grow by 1%, though i don't think that happens now if sanctions continue, and we are talking about real inflation because they banned foods from some places and as a result, they have less
and natural gas is a different game, where russian natural gas only makes up 20% of the revenues, and oil makes up -- and they will be able to use it in the past, knowing that it's not as much of a cash cow. >> oil is much more plungable around the world than natural gas. particularly to europe. europe gets the oil from the pipelines from ukraine through russia, and they can't be replaced that easily. they don't frack in europe, so they can get oil somewhere else, but they can't get gas...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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natural gas, they want maybe five, six, $7 -- let's say $6. consumers are willing to pay maybe four or five. we will be somewhere in the middle. it will go probably a little higher than it is right now. a good news is, we're not seeing ten or $12 price spikes the we did for natural gas. oil, the global market, a hundred dollar a barrel of oil. the more interesting question there is, do we think -- do i think oil prices are more likely to go down rather than up? and i think -- my sense is properly we are looking at lower prices of the next few years. we have will everywhere. you know, big oil is not in the conversation anymore. we have plenty. but this is a cyclical business. ten years go by and all of a sudden -- you never have too much. and when you do you start using more. if you don't have enough anymore. boom and bust cycle of business. >> i did want to give russells story in the "wall street journal" and online applaud. three things. stop leaks. >> stop methane leaks which we talked about. the one thing we did not talk about, do water tes
natural gas, they want maybe five, six, $7 -- let's say $6. consumers are willing to pay maybe four or five. we will be somewhere in the middle. it will go probably a little higher than it is right now. a good news is, we're not seeing ten or $12 price spikes the we did for natural gas. oil, the global market, a hundred dollar a barrel of oil. the more interesting question there is, do we think -- do i think oil prices are more likely to go down rather than up? and i think -- my sense is...
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Aug 10, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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central park looks like nature, but it is the recreation, landscape scale replica of a nature that was being destroyed. men and island and new york city are this incredible raging conflagration of industrial and financial power which quite scared americans. americans have been trained to think of ourselves as an agrarian people live on farms and small towns. a virtue and simplicity. yet in the 19th century we are confronted with a different reality, places like new york city which was enormous cities, industrialization, emigrants coming in by the tens of thousands. corruption and disease and war are around the spirit is a war. they're is a kind of a wonderful moment in a novel from 1952 which no one reads called pierre. a young country girl who gazes at the endless avenues and the tall buildings. she is anxious and says the time will come when all the earth still be paved. in the combat that is what it felt like to people. we were paving the world in this country and. that is the thing that makes us different from the british, french, everyone. it guarantees or virtue. so in our active
central park looks like nature, but it is the recreation, landscape scale replica of a nature that was being destroyed. men and island and new york city are this incredible raging conflagration of industrial and financial power which quite scared americans. americans have been trained to think of ourselves as an agrarian people live on farms and small towns. a virtue and simplicity. yet in the 19th century we are confronted with a different reality, places like new york city which was enormous...
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Aug 31, 2014
08/14
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ALJAZAM
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natural gas is $4 per million btus. we could see up to a 25% increase, if a large number of terminals are built. it will have an impact. in the midst of sluggish any, we have enjoyed inexpensive electricity. we heat the whom. >> when your energy consumption price goes up in a household, there's nothing you can do about that. it has to come out of somewhere else. you have consumers having an impact. and we talk about industry. it loves low energy prices. it brought back manufacturing to america, and kept some from moving away from america, because heavy industry benefits from low electricity prices. tri loves that this is an -- industry loves that this is an area that opens arms and has low price stable gas prices. natural gas prices, a third in europe and asia, a great place to build a plant. if they look at it and say the price disparity is going to go away or we go back to a period of volatility, which we saw a lot of, that will scare them away and mean a lose of jobs. from a commodity perspective, it's weird. oil is
natural gas is $4 per million btus. we could see up to a 25% increase, if a large number of terminals are built. it will have an impact. in the midst of sluggish any, we have enjoyed inexpensive electricity. we heat the whom. >> when your energy consumption price goes up in a household, there's nothing you can do about that. it has to come out of somewhere else. you have consumers having an impact. and we talk about industry. it loves low energy prices. it brought back manufacturing to...
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Aug 27, 2014
08/14
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LINKTV
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it is used naturally. and he is introducing nature in his representation of these figures, natural flesh tones, for example, and actual color of the drapery. now, if we go back to the vermeer's work, we see that in the vermeer's girl, color is complemented through use of light. they are integrally interwoven. they work together to create a very distinct impression. light bounces off. notice the metal, the shapes, the wonderful reflections in the translucent pearls. and all of these create the wonderful feeling of-- they're achieved through color, but light is a very important element and a very important part. but color is used naturally. he's observing light. there is a window that's implied. it's directly behind the girl-- or in front of her, and it's casting a shadow. and it is illuminating the young lady. now, color can be used, as in this case, a painting by marc of "the red horses," it is used in an arbitrary way. we know horses aren't red. this has nothing to do with nature. color can be used decora
it is used naturally. and he is introducing nature in his representation of these figures, natural flesh tones, for example, and actual color of the drapery. now, if we go back to the vermeer's work, we see that in the vermeer's girl, color is complemented through use of light. they are integrally interwoven. they work together to create a very distinct impression. light bounces off. notice the metal, the shapes, the wonderful reflections in the translucent pearls. and all of these create the...
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Aug 10, 2014
08/14
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FOXNEWSW
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very natural, great exfoliator. people like this a lot. >> some people did the lira product is nice, too. it gives you great exfoliation with aluminum in it. aluminum you may not like very much. that you may not like as much. if you want to go the acid route, here you have a product that has salycitic acid. it acts as an exfoliant with an acid bass because some people don't like a grainy exfoliant. here you have a product that has lactic acid. that comes from milk so very natural. so you can go either way. some people like to exfoliate with an acid, some people like to exfoliate with more of a grain.ave let's say eczema or rosacea or inflamation in your skin, you would not want to use an acid. >> would you want to use in he kind of exfoliant or rub around the areas and be very careful? >> you may want to go with a sonic cleansing system then, something sonic is a good way. or you could exfoliate with something six as a baby washcloth or even with cotton pads. exfoliation doesn't have to be complicated. >> it doesn't
very natural, great exfoliator. people like this a lot. >> some people did the lira product is nice, too. it gives you great exfoliation with aluminum in it. aluminum you may not like very much. that you may not like as much. if you want to go the acid route, here you have a product that has salycitic acid. it acts as an exfoliant with an acid bass because some people don't like a grainy exfoliant. here you have a product that has lactic acid. that comes from milk so very natural. so you...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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every time you turn on your natural gas stove and every time you go and use a natural gas heater you are encouraging the use of hydraulic fracturing in our economy. so it's important to understand individual responsibility. a lot of folks don't. without let me turn it over to questions. can you come over to the mic? >> hi. i guess my question is what a lot of this be solved if the fracking industry was forced to follow the clean air act i mean the clean water act? how much is it the problem of? my feeling is if it's safe you've got to do it because we are all using energy but i always assumed there was more safety than your explaining here. if they're not following the clean water act it's pretty mu much -- there's no transparency. and it seems like we have to trust an industry that why should i trust someone? that's my question. >> i can give a brief answer. it would become more expensive for the industry to develop and may be less feasible. it would tip the scales because we all know there is competing energy industries out there including renewables. what gets subsidies and what d
every time you turn on your natural gas stove and every time you go and use a natural gas heater you are encouraging the use of hydraulic fracturing in our economy. so it's important to understand individual responsibility. a lot of folks don't. without let me turn it over to questions. can you come over to the mic? >> hi. i guess my question is what a lot of this be solved if the fracking industry was forced to follow the clean air act i mean the clean water act? how much is it the...
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Aug 11, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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natural gas. he's not doing it to europe, most of his contracts are going to asia but he still seemed as at the forefront of this new era of people that are going to be exporting natural gas. in some ways "the new york times" recently ran an editorial about how we should be exporting more natural gas, do something about russia. maybe we can send some energy to europe. if you think about it natural gas comes from fracking, almost all of it, 95%. basically we've got to do more fracking. they didn't really say that, they are so wary of fracking itself but they were very supportive of exporting natural gas. it's sort of ironic. i find that ironic. there's some interesting people i write about in my book, "the frackers," and again they're not the people you would've expected who have changed the country and started this revolution. i'm going to give you some thought as to what i think is that these people led the way and were the pioneers. and then i'm going to set that aside and talk about the risks a
natural gas. he's not doing it to europe, most of his contracts are going to asia but he still seemed as at the forefront of this new era of people that are going to be exporting natural gas. in some ways "the new york times" recently ran an editorial about how we should be exporting more natural gas, do something about russia. maybe we can send some energy to europe. if you think about it natural gas comes from fracking, almost all of it, 95%. basically we've got to do more fracking....
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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it turns out natural gas is incredibly good at that. and so you can begin to envision a world where you have a lot of real bulls to much more that we have now, and natural gas to back it up. we are producing fairly inexpensively the kind of energy that this society expects with a lot fewer emissions. there are challenges out there. he brought up methane leakage. but that is one of the things i want to talk about. this -- the energy boom is an incredible opportunity for jobs, to transform the country, but it is also at "modern environmental law" for us to really think where do we want to be in 20 or 30 years? what kind of economy and what type of energy do we want and use and half. because we can use it all right now, start exporting to the start running truss on natural-gas to my bill petrochemicals. we can do all these things. o we are not having is a conversation. so what do we want to do and where do we want to be? you raise something else that is interesting. i traveled around south texas and obscene how these cities have been trans
it turns out natural gas is incredibly good at that. and so you can begin to envision a world where you have a lot of real bulls to much more that we have now, and natural gas to back it up. we are producing fairly inexpensively the kind of energy that this society expects with a lot fewer emissions. there are challenges out there. he brought up methane leakage. but that is one of the things i want to talk about. this -- the energy boom is an incredible opportunity for jobs, to transform the...
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Aug 27, 2014
08/14
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LINKTV
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leonardo now turned entirely to studies of nature.in his last years, he was fascinated by the power of invisible forces. "the force of the wind can only be seen as it bends the trees above or sweeps the dust below. but the wind itself is never seen. the water churns and swirls and dashes waves against the shore, but the force that moves the water is only seen by its effect upon the water. it is not the movement of the wind itself, but the movement of things carried by it which alone is visible in the air," leonardo noted. if he could not see elemental forces, he could see the effects of elemental forces, searching for and seeing, as no man before him had ever seen, the invisible. leonardo saw the world ending in a deluge and swirling floods and thunderstorms. the water which had given birth to life was destined to destroy it. in that sense, the violence of the end of the world must still be part of the order d beauty and harmony of the universe. leonardo wrote, "necessity is the guardian of nature." and the earth's final days, he beli
leonardo now turned entirely to studies of nature.in his last years, he was fascinated by the power of invisible forces. "the force of the wind can only be seen as it bends the trees above or sweeps the dust below. but the wind itself is never seen. the water churns and swirls and dashes waves against the shore, but the force that moves the water is only seen by its effect upon the water. it is not the movement of the wind itself, but the movement of things carried by it which alone is...
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Aug 1, 2014
08/14
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KDTV
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me llamó la atención de que era natural y que hablaban de regenerar el músculo.endé a todos mis compañeros y ya han empezado a tomarlo. imagínate que ahora hasta hacemos competencia de quién termina más rápido el trabajo, quién hace más entregas. ha sido un cambio tan bueno, porque trabajar sin dolor es mucho más fácil. yo bioxtron te lo recomiendo con los ojos cerrados. >>doctor, ¿qué le parece si repasamos las bondades del tratamiento bioxtron? >>bioxtron, gracias a su fórmula exclusiva de extracto de afa, logra incrementar la producción de células madre en la médula ósea. por eso ayuda a combatir la diabetes al reponer células sanas en el páncreas y en el hígado. alivia también la artritis al regenerar los cartílagos dañados e impedir la inflamación. disminuye el avance de males como el parkinson y el alzheimer, al normalizar la función de las neuronas y nervios. elimina dolores musculares, al producir nuevas células lisas. renueva la piel, logrando borrar manchas y cicatrices. proporciona más energía y mejora la mente. contribuye a revertir enfermedades como
me llamó la atención de que era natural y que hablaban de regenerar el músculo.endé a todos mis compañeros y ya han empezado a tomarlo. imagínate que ahora hasta hacemos competencia de quién termina más rápido el trabajo, quién hace más entregas. ha sido un cambio tan bueno, porque trabajar sin dolor es mucho más fácil. yo bioxtron te lo recomiendo con los ojos cerrados. >>doctor, ¿qué le parece si repasamos las bondades del tratamiento bioxtron? >>bioxtron, gracias a...
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Aug 3, 2014
08/14
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FOXNEWSW
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i kept seeing olive oil, natural olive oils were an ingredient. i said why not just the olive oil itself. i started experimenting with my stubborn eye makeup remover. i was like this isn't working as well as olive oil does. you use a q-tip on or a cotton round and lightly go around the eye area. it removes your heavy makeup but leaves your skin condition nice and moisturized after. >> especially as you get older. >> egg whites. >> why are there eggs here? they seal on the skin and tighten the skin. if you have large pores, sagging skin, if you put on an egg white kind of masque, it will tighten everything up and shrink the look of large pores. you wash it off and your skin feels rejuvenated. >> always do that before a date. >> undereyes, the whole bit. use your egg whites. >> coffee. >> i quit drinking coffee but i keep it in the house because grounds decrease puffiness. it's a diuretic. you see it in a lot of anti-cellulite creams. if you put it straight on the saddle bags or underneath the eyes when you have puffy eyes it reduces the swelling. i
i kept seeing olive oil, natural olive oils were an ingredient. i said why not just the olive oil itself. i started experimenting with my stubborn eye makeup remover. i was like this isn't working as well as olive oil does. you use a q-tip on or a cotton round and lightly go around the eye area. it removes your heavy makeup but leaves your skin condition nice and moisturized after. >> especially as you get older. >> egg whites. >> why are there eggs here? they seal on the skin...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 20, 2014
08/14
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SFGTV
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of the natural environment. it reminds us of what the history was. >> there is a section for dogs and plenty of parking. transit is available on the 28 bus to get you very easily. the part is ada -- park is ada accessible. it is also a natural lake. this is your chance to stroll around the lake and let the kids run free. it also has many birds to watch. it is a place to find and appreciate what you -- a wonderful breath of fresh air. come and experience in this park and enjoy the people, picnics, and sunshine. this is a lovely place to take a stroll with your loved ones. in the middle of pacific heights, on top of these hills, it offers a great square, a peaceful beauty, large trees and grass and greenery. it features tables and benches, a playground, restaurants, and tennis courts. there are plenty of areas for football and picnics. it is very much a couple's park. there are many activities you can experience together. stroll on the pathways, bring your dog, or just picnic at one of the many tables and enjoy al
of the natural environment. it reminds us of what the history was. >> there is a section for dogs and plenty of parking. transit is available on the 28 bus to get you very easily. the part is ada -- park is ada accessible. it is also a natural lake. this is your chance to stroll around the lake and let the kids run free. it also has many birds to watch. it is a place to find and appreciate what you -- a wonderful breath of fresh air. come and experience in this park and enjoy the people,...
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Aug 17, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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they are the worlds first ecologist because he is interested in the diversity of nature and other natural forces. he was a great deal. he spent five years collecting all this information and then going back home in producing that she didn't go back home. he eventually went back to berlin, but volume after volume a five volume are called cosmos, which explains everything he knows about the world. >> host: how do you draw a line between him and the 1800s or the 18th century and christopher columbus in the 15th, 16th century? >> guest: very different kinds of men. i don't think it was brilliant. he was very shrewd, very determined, very tough. i don't think christopher columbus was that curious. he didn't say while i found a new role. said he didn't have a lot of curiosity where is humboldt is just radiating with questions and he was the smartest person and he loves things that he discovered he took measurements and discovered based on the mat. the governor invited them for dinner and took great pride in doing these things. he is more like darwin but they had different personalities. darwin
they are the worlds first ecologist because he is interested in the diversity of nature and other natural forces. he was a great deal. he spent five years collecting all this information and then going back home in producing that she didn't go back home. he eventually went back to berlin, but volume after volume a five volume are called cosmos, which explains everything he knows about the world. >> host: how do you draw a line between him and the 1800s or the 18th century and christopher...
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Aug 29, 2014
08/14
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LINKTV
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of course in nature, nothing is so simple as that. there isn't just one sine wave happening at one moment. actually, there are many sine waves all adding and subtracting. when you listen to a sound, when you listen to a musical note, you hear several things. [flute music continues] you hear the basic note, but you also hear some overtones that are generated. (man) the overtone series is really quite simple. behind every acoustically generated tone, there is a series of other tones which are happening simultaneously, and this series of tones extends above what we call the fundamental tone, and what we call the fundamental tone is usually the tone we can identify and sing back. ♪ silent night, ♪ holy night, (shapiro) when you begin to talk about the notes of music, you have to talk about different parts to those sounds. every musical sound has four parameters. it has its pitch, and we've been looking at pitch in terms of the frequency of the sine wave or the fundamental. it has its pitch-- how high or low is the sound? it has its amplit
of course in nature, nothing is so simple as that. there isn't just one sine wave happening at one moment. actually, there are many sine waves all adding and subtracting. when you listen to a sound, when you listen to a musical note, you hear several things. [flute music continues] you hear the basic note, but you also hear some overtones that are generated. (man) the overtone series is really quite simple. behind every acoustically generated tone, there is a series of other tones which are...
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Aug 7, 2014
08/14
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ALJAZAM
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the natural gas fired plant will be shut down in just 35 years. by then enough nonfossil fuel energy sources will be available to replace it. environmental groups reached that agreement with the utility in keeping with massachusetts official target of more than one quarter of its leskt generated from yubl -- electricity generated from renewable sources in the next five years. >> a great example ever how we can use natural gas in the near term to make sure we keep the lights on and create a very careful intentional transition to a clean energy future. >> reporter: but to some local residents that deal is full of holes. >> we think that's a terrible idea. there is no way that they will meet the mandated goals if they continue to burn carbon. >> the economics are such that if you build this plant it's going to shut out the development of actual renewable energy like wind and solar and wave technology. >> massachusetts has plenty of wind and waves but u.s. development of both those technologies lags behind europe. off the massachusetts coast the first
the natural gas fired plant will be shut down in just 35 years. by then enough nonfossil fuel energy sources will be available to replace it. environmental groups reached that agreement with the utility in keeping with massachusetts official target of more than one quarter of its leskt generated from yubl -- electricity generated from renewable sources in the next five years. >> a great example ever how we can use natural gas in the near term to make sure we keep the lights on and create...
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is declining very substantially and currently half of our natural our national natural gas production is coming from these these shale resources and again we're told that there's an abundance of the stuff that will last one hundred years but the the evidence is just not there to support those assertions. so so what do it well it first of all if if natural gas is going through the same cycle that oil went through. what we were it king harbor back in the fifty's was able to you know put together this that you know again a look at all the data points and all the information around the world and the united states and predict when we would hit peak oil and it was pretty damn accurate do we has anybody done that work with regard to frac to gas to we know when peak fracking is going to occur well actually we've done that work at post carbon institute we we purchased the proprietary rights to the drilling information on over sixty five thousand wells. that are currently frakt and horizontally drilled in in various geologic formations in the united states we looked at the location of each well
is declining very substantially and currently half of our natural our national natural gas production is coming from these these shale resources and again we're told that there's an abundance of the stuff that will last one hundred years but the the evidence is just not there to support those assertions. so so what do it well it first of all if if natural gas is going through the same cycle that oil went through. what we were it king harbor back in the fifty's was able to you know put together...
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it is innovation inspired by nature. and it's a new discipline where engineers chemists material sciences the people who make our world are asking has nature already solved this and is there a model out there that i can emulate. and the idea is that you know there's. like i said three point eight billion years on this planet and in that time has it's really figured out how to leave here very sleek so you know energy efficiency . shaving material use on. you know absolutely not have any way step six processes chemistries that are life friendly. in almost every realm we look at there or there's this there's an enormous databank of biological intelligence that until recently we've been ignoring and that's changing now is biomimicry. finding that is what how could biomimicry help us with climate change. well you know you gave it an excellent example of a very simple organism. you know everything from. serving in. to be generating it to mit using c o two as a building block so for instance in in conserving energy there's ther
it is innovation inspired by nature. and it's a new discipline where engineers chemists material sciences the people who make our world are asking has nature already solved this and is there a model out there that i can emulate. and the idea is that you know there's. like i said three point eight billion years on this planet and in that time has it's really figured out how to leave here very sleek so you know energy efficiency . shaving material use on. you know absolutely not have any way step...
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Aug 15, 2014
08/14
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LINKTV
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is this purely nature, or are there manmade, therefore controllable, factors at work? a warmer, moister environment can intensify storms, creating heavier precipitation. and this scientists say is why human activities may account, at least in part, for the rise in extreme weather we're experiencing. >> the debate is settled. climate change is a fact. and when our children's children look us in the eye and ask if we did all we could to leave them a safer, more stable world with new sources of energy, i want us to be able to say yes, we did. [applause] >> as the obama administration renews its commitment to act, the debate over climate change remains polarized. climate scientist michael mann is a central figure in that debate. he was one of the scientists behind the development of the controversial hockey stick chart, which showed how temperature in the late twentieth century was exceptionally warm compared to the previous 900 years. this triggered a tax on dr. mann and the science behind his work, all documented in his book "the hockey stick and the climate wars." micha
is this purely nature, or are there manmade, therefore controllable, factors at work? a warmer, moister environment can intensify storms, creating heavier precipitation. and this scientists say is why human activities may account, at least in part, for the rise in extreme weather we're experiencing. >> the debate is settled. climate change is a fact. and when our children's children look us in the eye and ask if we did all we could to leave them a safer, more stable world with new sources...
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neutrogena naturals.f nutrient-rich skincare with pure, naturally derived ingredients, carefully chosen and clinically proven to cleanse, purify and moisturize... and you'll never find any harsh chemical sulfates, parabens or unnecessary additives. healthy skin-starts from within. neutrogena naturals. learn more at neutrogenanaturals.com. ♪ michigan man who shot an unarmed woman on his porch. theodore wafer was convicted of second-degree murder and manslaughter for killing mcbride. mcbride's parents were pleased with the decision. >> we know as parents how we raised her. she was not violent. she was a regular teenager and she was well raised and brought up with a loving family and her life mattered, and we showed that. >> wafer could face up to life in prison when he's sentenced on august 25th. >>> the illegal stowaway is in custody again. marilyn jean hartman was arrested for violating probation while at the l.a.x. international airport. she snuck through and flew to los angeles without a boarding pass.
neutrogena naturals.f nutrient-rich skincare with pure, naturally derived ingredients, carefully chosen and clinically proven to cleanse, purify and moisturize... and you'll never find any harsh chemical sulfates, parabens or unnecessary additives. healthy skin-starts from within. neutrogena naturals. learn more at neutrogenanaturals.com. ♪ michigan man who shot an unarmed woman on his porch. theodore wafer was convicted of second-degree murder and manslaughter for killing mcbride. mcbride's...
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Aug 28, 2014
08/14
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WHYY
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felt natural, what do you mean?imes a song just comes out already sounding like a record, you know? it fits your range, your tone. the melody, phrasing feels natural. >> you go through tracks, pick the ones that sound and feel natural. at the end you look at what you have. when you look at what you have, what you did what thread do you see running through it? >> there are a couple of songs about trust and lack of trust. we covered "if you don't know me by now" and s"suspicious minds." i have been married for years and that's not an issue we deal with. that was on a couple of songs. we did "to know him is to love him" which is a sweet song. i don't know if there is a theme that runs through it. it deals with different emotions. >> when you're in front of the audience and you throw in a soul song, how does it fit into your typical play list? >> great. when we do "natural woman," everybody loves that song. i choose songs everybody knows. that's the thing about this music. these songs, my fans will love this music. it's
felt natural, what do you mean?imes a song just comes out already sounding like a record, you know? it fits your range, your tone. the melody, phrasing feels natural. >> you go through tracks, pick the ones that sound and feel natural. at the end you look at what you have. when you look at what you have, what you did what thread do you see running through it? >> there are a couple of songs about trust and lack of trust. we covered "if you don't know me by now" and...
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Aug 18, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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they're right to the natural history that is extremely important. so he writes in spanish with the vernacular language. ritchie to a much larger audience. and not want to see everyone stopped in their tracks but i would say it makes the big impression. >> host: teeeight nine does the church understand what columbus was doing and did they continue? i hate to use said terms the church said not know what it means. >> guest: rehab an institution in everybody's lives regardless of what they may believe some of the church is all encompassing. i don't know the answer how they responded to columbus. everybody is catholic in the zero western world. and one goes out as the farmer and becomes the first priest from the new world and is concerned the way the spanish are treating the native population and is a vigorous presence and goes back to spain and several times so in that sense i do know how the spanish church reacted he was named protector and becomes the bishop but the capacity to make a fortune in the new world and the distance there is very little of t
they're right to the natural history that is extremely important. so he writes in spanish with the vernacular language. ritchie to a much larger audience. and not want to see everyone stopped in their tracks but i would say it makes the big impression. >> host: teeeight nine does the church understand what columbus was doing and did they continue? i hate to use said terms the church said not know what it means. >> guest: rehab an institution in everybody's lives regardless of what...
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Aug 30, 2014
08/14
by
LINKTV
tv
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the german nature and biodiversity conservation union wants to preserve the area. doesn't want to destroy traditions, but it does want people to change their ways. >> more than three million people are dependent on the lake. our government is also investing too much money, trusting lake tana exists. we have hydropower, hydropower investments in this part of lake tana. we have more than 70,000 hectares of land is being considered for investment, for agriculture. all this is planned assuming lake tana is there. so, it is very important. it's millions of people's livelihood at stake. so, protecting lake tana is crucial. >> but the people need the land to survive. farmers cultivate fields right up to the water's edge, under the simplest of conditions, to the displeasure of conservationists, because birds from europe, like these cranes, spend part of the year here. >> it's one of the most important bird areas, i said, because most, more than 50% of the migratory birds, especially common cranes, they come and they stay here during the winter season in europe. >> the firs
the german nature and biodiversity conservation union wants to preserve the area. doesn't want to destroy traditions, but it does want people to change their ways. >> more than three million people are dependent on the lake. our government is also investing too much money, trusting lake tana exists. we have hydropower, hydropower investments in this part of lake tana. we have more than 70,000 hectares of land is being considered for investment, for agriculture. all this is planned...
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Aug 1, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 67
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businesses pay $35 billion more for natural gas. these are the consequences of the poorly designed policies and the reason epa assessment of the economic impact on the rules inspire and. after all the epa projected the agency's rules would cost less than 5,000 megawatts of the capacity to close and as it turns out it will likely be ten to 12 times more. this is all before the current proposals for carbon dioxide. the presentations have generated many thoughtful questions but in our view how the rules can actually work. however there is one inescapable fact the costs and risks are real and the benefits are not. epa expects to much when it asks governors to put their economic energy security at a great risk and to have their energy supplies and infrastructure andd forfeited estates full potential for economic growth. thank you. thank you. good morning. glad to be here and appreciate you having the session around the country. i'm the executive director of environmental america a federatiofederationof 29 state-y groups they lead over on
businesses pay $35 billion more for natural gas. these are the consequences of the poorly designed policies and the reason epa assessment of the economic impact on the rules inspire and. after all the epa projected the agency's rules would cost less than 5,000 megawatts of the capacity to close and as it turns out it will likely be ten to 12 times more. this is all before the current proposals for carbon dioxide. the presentations have generated many thoughtful questions but in our view how the...
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Aug 4, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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-- nature's god clearly nonetheless they did make frequent references to providence and wholly talk because they believe it is necessary to motivate the troops to get the population on board so there was the element of doublespeak says jefferson writes in the preamble to the preferences of nature that some of the troops literally he paraphrases the act if you are friendlier with . [applause] [inaudible conversations] >> we have a misperception a profit invents a new religion but a profit is someone who reforms the religion and the cultural view in which he lives. jesus did not create christianity he was said to preach about today's them. blue dutch did not create do this and he was reforming hinduism and the same for the profit mohammad as the car reminds people this is not a new religions the same message given to all the profits that came before mohammad, etc., etc.. but the profit passes ahead now is the responsibility of the followers to figure out a way of the of profit that is how it is founded and as an inmate institution requires a power structure into becomes in charge? pur
-- nature's god clearly nonetheless they did make frequent references to providence and wholly talk because they believe it is necessary to motivate the troops to get the population on board so there was the element of doublespeak says jefferson writes in the preamble to the preferences of nature that some of the troops literally he paraphrases the act if you are friendlier with . [applause] [inaudible conversations] >> we have a misperception a profit invents a new religion but a profit...
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1.0K
Aug 3, 2014
08/14
by
KNTV
tv
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neutrogena naturals. line of nutrient-rich skincare with pure, naturally derived ingredients, carefully chosen and clinically proven to cleanse, purify and moisturize... and you'll never find any harsh chemical sulfates, parabens or unnecessary additives. healthy skin-starts from within. neutrogena naturals. learn more at neutrogenanaturals.com. ♪ >>> now on a sunday morning, there are some happy birthday dylan signs out there. in the meantime, yesterday was your birthday. >> i decided to wake up in a tropical island. >> happy birthday. >> thank you. >> i hope you had a great day. >> i did have a great day. >> apparently cake was out. even though i know you say it doesn't count on your birthday. since you eat one of these every single morning -- >> what's up with you? >> i don't know what it is. i'm very excited about this. i was there for the last week. i didn't eat a single breakfast treat and i didn't have any this morning, i was out when i got back. >> i don't know if i can process what you're saying.
neutrogena naturals. line of nutrient-rich skincare with pure, naturally derived ingredients, carefully chosen and clinically proven to cleanse, purify and moisturize... and you'll never find any harsh chemical sulfates, parabens or unnecessary additives. healthy skin-starts from within. neutrogena naturals. learn more at neutrogenanaturals.com. ♪ >>> now on a sunday morning, there are some happy birthday dylan signs out there. in the meantime, yesterday was your birthday. >> i...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
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is that 65% natural gas usage comes from residences. as we look in one of the things i love about both of these books in their fabulous books are page-turner switch in the environmental area i don't see very often. when people say they are anti-fracking and pro-fracking you need to understand your individual impact on those debates and every time you turn on your natural gas stove and every time you go and you use the natural gas heater you are encouraging the use of hydraulic fracturing and our economy and so it's something important to understand individual responsibility a lot of folks don't. and with that i'm going to turn it over to questions. can you just go over to the mic? you will be second. >> i guess my question is what a lot of this be solved if the fracking industry was forced to follow the clean air act i mean the clean water act? how much is at the problem, but my feeling is if it's safe you got to do it but i always assumed there was more safety than you are explaining here. if they are not following the clean water act
is that 65% natural gas usage comes from residences. as we look in one of the things i love about both of these books in their fabulous books are page-turner switch in the environmental area i don't see very often. when people say they are anti-fracking and pro-fracking you need to understand your individual impact on those debates and every time you turn on your natural gas stove and every time you go and you use the natural gas heater you are encouraging the use of hydraulic fracturing and...
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Aug 21, 2014
08/14
by
CNBC
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that that is a natural gas flare-up. that's being burned off because there is not enough capacity in the pipe lean for it. long term, more pipelines will help that situation. short term, drillers are getting creative with what to do with that wasted natural gas right now. so stat oil, for example, has teamed up with general electric and another company out of canada. they're compressing their natural gas and turning it into fuel to help power thee ricks. >> that is one way folks are starting to get a little more creative with how they're using this burned offer natural gas. back to you. >> all right. thank you, morgan brennan and the use of natural gas appears to be booming in texas. the railroad commission says natural gas sales in that state have already doubled fiscal year 2014 estimate. could falling gas prices but the brakes on nat gas usage. let's look at the provider of clean energy fuels. glad to see you again. >> good to see you, melissa. your stock has correlated 71% to oil prices and we have seen a decline in
that that is a natural gas flare-up. that's being burned off because there is not enough capacity in the pipe lean for it. long term, more pipelines will help that situation. short term, drillers are getting creative with what to do with that wasted natural gas right now. so stat oil, for example, has teamed up with general electric and another company out of canada. they're compressing their natural gas and turning it into fuel to help power thee ricks. >> that is one way folks are...
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45
Aug 7, 2014
08/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
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let's not send our natural gas to the more lucrative areas like arab, let's use our natural gas and send it to europe. it would be a good political move. >> it's interesting. lauren. everything is on the table. good to see you. >>> coming up next russian hackers reportedly steal more than a billion names passwords. jake word will be with us to tell fuss there is a way to protect ourselves. and a major settlement between the government and bank of america that could be as high as $17 billion, but who gets that money? those stories and more as "real money" continues. keep it here. >> on techknow, new hope for a cure >> he has a rare severe form epilepsy >> a miraculous medical marijuana breakthrough... >> it's something we can all relate to, a sick child getting better >> a week went by, still no seizures... then we know we were on to something... >> tech know, every saturday go where science meets humanity. >> this is some of the best driving i've every done, even though i can't see. >> tech kn ah, got it. these wifi hotspots we get with our xfinity internet service are all over the place
let's not send our natural gas to the more lucrative areas like arab, let's use our natural gas and send it to europe. it would be a good political move. >> it's interesting. lauren. everything is on the table. good to see you. >>> coming up next russian hackers reportedly steal more than a billion names passwords. jake word will be with us to tell fuss there is a way to protect ourselves. and a major settlement between the government and bank of america that could be as high as...
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Aug 27, 2014
08/14
by
KCSM
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. >> the mekong river in its natural glory. but for how long? the first signs of change -- downriver from luang prabang in laos, a bridge is being built for one of asia's most controversial dam construction projects. we're traveling on a motorboat towards the xayaburi dam, the source of the controversy. we don't know how close we'll get to the construction site, since we're not licensed to film there. but what do the people here know? they say construction has been underway for two years, mostly of roads leading to the site. sure, says this man, the landscape here has changed significantly. 1400 kilometers downstream, the river branches out in several directions and takes a 20-meter plunge. measured by the volume of water, it's the world's largest waterfall. we continue our journey to another dam construction project. laos is hoping to export hydroelectric power. it wants to become the battery of asia. the country plans to dam up this branch of the river to make way for a hydropower plant. for now, the fishermen's wooden traps
. >> the mekong river in its natural glory. but for how long? the first signs of change -- downriver from luang prabang in laos, a bridge is being built for one of asia's most controversial dam construction projects. we're traveling on a motorboat towards the xayaburi dam, the source of the controversy. we don't know how close we'll get to the construction site, since we're not licensed to film there. but what do the people here know? they say construction has been underway for two years,...