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Nov 30, 2014
11/14
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there were various ways to try to impose order on the drinking altar of new york. despite these attempts to establish an orderly drinking toture and the attempt establish an orderly resistance to british policy, and drunkenness and violence were bound to accompany tavern life and the revolutionary movement. new yorkers had different views, and this became part of the tension that shaped the political culture. the resistance to great britain also encompassed drink and, as well as orderly mobilization. as new yorkers found mutual affirmation and tavern companies, political leaders attended to mobilize these tavern goers, rich, poor, orderly, and disorderly. colonial new york city was a and consumption of alcohol was staggering. americans over the age of 16 downed 6.6 gallons of alcohol per capita over the course of the year 1770. towards the end of the 20th century, it was about 2.8 gallons of alcohol per capita per adult. drinking was almost certainly more prevalent. new york merchants insisted any imported liquor be distilled at a high proof. -- new york merchants i
there were various ways to try to impose order on the drinking altar of new york. despite these attempts to establish an orderly drinking toture and the attempt establish an orderly resistance to british policy, and drunkenness and violence were bound to accompany tavern life and the revolutionary movement. new yorkers had different views, and this became part of the tension that shaped the political culture. the resistance to great britain also encompassed drink and, as well as orderly...
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Nov 5, 2014
11/14
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and new york had always been in the forefront of that since 19th century. sending packet books to england. associated press going out there and picking up the news 60 miles off-shore and in fast boats bring them into the city. and all that sort of stuff. always a communication center with more newspapers than any other city in the country. and i think you have this wonderful symbiosis in the '20s. greatest port in the hemisphere. it had an industrial base but is quickly moving into a new age and a new type of lifestyle. and that's what i tried to do here in what i call the tale of two cities. one, the quintessential heavy industrial city of large labor unions and large corporations and lots of labor strikes. and new york, in the '20s at least, moving toward a different type of economy. different type of lifestyle. where consumption is almost more important than production. maybe the tale of three cities, and maybe do l.a. in the '50s, which is a complete auto city. still trying to figure that out. anybody else? one there and then up here. >> hi. thank you fo
and new york had always been in the forefront of that since 19th century. sending packet books to england. associated press going out there and picking up the news 60 miles off-shore and in fast boats bring them into the city. and all that sort of stuff. always a communication center with more newspapers than any other city in the country. and i think you have this wonderful symbiosis in the '20s. greatest port in the hemisphere. it had an industrial base but is quickly moving into a new age...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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the imperial crisis created disorder in new york just as it did throughout north america. parliament's harsh implementation of order caused mobilization. new yorkers reacted to the stamp act with outrage. this was parliament's first attempt to tax the colonies under a new regime by placing on playing cards and legal documents. they're going to threaten the groups most likely to complain, lawyers, printers, and people who hang out at taverns. this is a bad idea. you will see what happens. first, new yorkers threaten to attack the stamp officer from in 1765. packs them off to fort george. when delegates from colonies convened in new york city during the stamp act congress in october of 17 685, john dickinson was among them. he wrote to his mother at a center will consume the greatest part of our afternoon. he was a straitlaced philadelphian. he is worried. this is how they were getting political business done. the day before the stamp act was to take effect, the merchant ped documentsrap in black as a sign of mourning this would be the death of liberty. 200 merchants met and
the imperial crisis created disorder in new york just as it did throughout north america. parliament's harsh implementation of order caused mobilization. new yorkers reacted to the stamp act with outrage. this was parliament's first attempt to tax the colonies under a new regime by placing on playing cards and legal documents. they're going to threaten the groups most likely to complain, lawyers, printers, and people who hang out at taverns. this is a bad idea. you will see what happens. first,...
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Nov 28, 2014
11/14
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. >> on a recent trip to new york city, booktv visited the new york public library where we thought what the library's president and ceo, it anthony marx about the history of the institution as well as its current operations and future. >> host: tony marx, let's start with some numbers. how big is the new york public library? how many employees, budget, et cetera? >> guest: the new york public library circulates the largest in america. 88 branches in every neighborhood diversely serve as well as for important research libraries, this one being the crown jewel at the center of the system, but also the schaumburg center in harlem, library for performing arts at lincoln center and science industry and is this library. we have about 2100 employees. we have a budget of about $280 million a year operating about half comes from the city of new york, largely to pay for the circulating library system in all the neighborhoods. the other half comes from return on the billion dollars endowment of the private foundation that employs me, the lenox aster until contrasts. and then, weaver is somewhere b
. >> on a recent trip to new york city, booktv visited the new york public library where we thought what the library's president and ceo, it anthony marx about the history of the institution as well as its current operations and future. >> host: tony marx, let's start with some numbers. how big is the new york public library? how many employees, budget, et cetera? >> guest: the new york public library circulates the largest in america. 88 branches in every neighborhood...
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Nov 30, 2014
11/14
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WHYY
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a feat of wondrous political engineering. >> the real estate industry here in new york city is like theoil industry in texas. they outspend everybody. they often have a much better relationship with elected officials than everyday new yorkers do. while there was affordable housing built in the last 12 years under mayor bloomberg, that affordable housing was not built for certain people. for example, if you were a family of four that earned between $26,000 a year and $42,000 a year. so think of a single mom with three kids who works as an administrative assistant. there were basically no affordable apartments constructed over the last 12 years for that family. that really sent a message as to who this city wanted. you know, this city did not want regular working people, which is a real shame because that's who makes new york city great. >> as billionaires' row keeps rising, so does the cost of living, driving more and more people elsewhere. >> we're going to use every tool of this city government in ways more aggressive than ever attempted in the past to protect the interests of our peop
a feat of wondrous political engineering. >> the real estate industry here in new york city is like theoil industry in texas. they outspend everybody. they often have a much better relationship with elected officials than everyday new yorkers do. while there was affordable housing built in the last 12 years under mayor bloomberg, that affordable housing was not built for certain people. for example, if you were a family of four that earned between $26,000 a year and $42,000 a year. so...
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Nov 5, 2014
11/14
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there would be articles occasionally in new york that would say new york is over built.the next day there would be three articles contesting the whole idea. this city can never be over built. it's a growth driven place. it always has been. yeah. >> thanks a lot. >> okay. >> you talked about the fact that no one expected the depression to come. >> well, some people. there are profits only when it comes. >> my question is among your characters, were there any who were sort of like the sky is falling sort of characters. >> ironically, sarnaff sold all of his stock in 1928, including his rca stock. he wouldn't even explain to his mother who asked him why did he it. he wasn't getting advice from aotoconn or any one of the big bankers or anybody like that. but he kind of sees it. aotoconn, another big financier, who was a big broad way player who said he was spending beyond his means a publisher. livright had the same philosophy that he had about the city. we will get in great debt and we will create a lot of books on the best-seller list and it will balance out at the end. ir
there would be articles occasionally in new york that would say new york is over built.the next day there would be three articles contesting the whole idea. this city can never be over built. it's a growth driven place. it always has been. yeah. >> thanks a lot. >> okay. >> you talked about the fact that no one expected the depression to come. >> well, some people. there are profits only when it comes. >> my question is among your characters, were there any who...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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WHYY
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in our signature segment, new york tries out a new plan to eliminate traffic fatalities. it's worked in sweden. can it work here? and, st. louis on edge as it awaits a grand jury decision whether to indict the police officer who killed michael brown. next on pbs newshour weekend additional support is provided by: and by the corporation for public broadcasting and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. from the tisch wnet studios in lincoln center in new york, hari sreenivasan. >> sreenivasan: good evening. thanks for joining us. after months and months of negotiations, the deadline for the world's major powers to strike a permanent deal with iran to curb its nuclear program is tomorrow. and the two sides are still said to be some distance apart. in an interview broadcast this morning with abc's george stephanopoulos, president obama said the interim deal reached last november had slowed iran's nuclear program. >> the good news is that the interim deal that we entered into has definitely stopped iran's nuclear program from advancing. so it's
in our signature segment, new york tries out a new plan to eliminate traffic fatalities. it's worked in sweden. can it work here? and, st. louis on edge as it awaits a grand jury decision whether to indict the police officer who killed michael brown. next on pbs newshour weekend additional support is provided by: and by the corporation for public broadcasting and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. from the tisch wnet studios in lincoln center in new york,...
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Nov 15, 2014
11/14
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BLOOMBERG
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he was born and raised in a new york family. in 1959, his family branched out and bought loews theaters. today the loews corporation has $80 billion in assets that generate $15 billion in annual revenue with interest from everything in hotels, insurance, oil and gas. jonathan tisch runs the company with his cousin and is also the chairman of loews hotels. >> he took this area and made it guest friendly. >> he completed a massive luxury renovation of a flagship hotel that is near and dear to his heart. >> i grew up in this hotel. >> but that work has not stopped him from writing three business strategy books. >> you get about six hours of sleep? >> 5 to 6 hours of sleep. you will get an e-mail from me at 3:00 in the morning. >> despite a demanding schedule, he tries to make it to every giants home game. i caught up with him at his team's home turf -- metlife stadium. it is incredible to be out here. how does it make you feel? >> pretty amazing. i think of my father and what he went through to afford us this opportunity to be part
he was born and raised in a new york family. in 1959, his family branched out and bought loews theaters. today the loews corporation has $80 billion in assets that generate $15 billion in annual revenue with interest from everything in hotels, insurance, oil and gas. jonathan tisch runs the company with his cousin and is also the chairman of loews hotels. >> he took this area and made it guest friendly. >> he completed a massive luxury renovation of a flagship hotel that is near and...
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Nov 5, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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you have the beginning of tabloid journalism with the new york daily news, the first american tabloid founded by the passerson family of chicago, the newspaper family. you have the spread through radio and phone graphic records and the pulsating new urban music called jazz and i featured dukelington in this group and you have the emergence with yankee stadium, example of mass spectator sports and enormously important boxing matches staged at madison square garden and yankee stadium and other venues. ellington summed it up. he said new york was the capital of everything, very little happens in the country unless someone in new york presses the button and so it is. and it's a story, in other words, of an urban revolution, but i try to tell it. i'm interested in people and i try to tell this story through about three dozen characters and i have a cast of characters like a playbill at the beginning of the book and most of them as lois was saying are blazingly ambitious drivers from west of the hudson and east of the danube and it was e.b. wright of the new yorker who wrote about this phen
you have the beginning of tabloid journalism with the new york daily news, the first american tabloid founded by the passerson family of chicago, the newspaper family. you have the spread through radio and phone graphic records and the pulsating new urban music called jazz and i featured dukelington in this group and you have the emergence with yankee stadium, example of mass spectator sports and enormously important boxing matches staged at madison square garden and yankee stadium and other...
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Nov 3, 2014
11/14
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>> the biggest was certainly the new york herald and the new york tribune.ailyot close to 100,000 during the civil war. greeley had a national edition that went all the way to the west. that is how abraham lincoln got to know -- and even before the presidency -- distrust horace greeley. win as wanted douglas to a rebuke of the democratic presidents. it is complicated. those are the biggest. but the reach spread exponentially not only from national edition's but from the fact that newspapers around the country picked up the reports of the times, the tribune and the herald. one person wrote, or more than one person wrote, all of the news from this country seems to flow west and south from new york. you never see newspapers arriving in new york from other cities. new york became the great exporter of news and it was all political news. >> do you have another lincoln book? >> not really. i am thinking of getting my story in order to tell the tale of this book around the century for a year. i am waiting for that invitation and inspiration that i talked about at t
>> the biggest was certainly the new york herald and the new york tribune.ailyot close to 100,000 during the civil war. greeley had a national edition that went all the way to the west. that is how abraham lincoln got to know -- and even before the presidency -- distrust horace greeley. win as wanted douglas to a rebuke of the democratic presidents. it is complicated. those are the biggest. but the reach spread exponentially not only from national edition's but from the fact that...
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Nov 1, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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while at the new york military the new york times, he was pulitzernominated for a prize. books, "i pledge allegiance," it was turned into a great miniseries on cbs. perhaps some of you watched it in the past. "gangland," how the fbi broke 1993.b, in "the eve of destruction," the of the war in to 2003. "american lightning: terror, mystery, the birth of hollywood, century,"ime of the truefloor of heaven: a tale of the last frontier and the yukon gold rush." i should also mention that warner brothers is preparing a film of "dark invasion," starring bradley cooper as the the book. please welcome howard blum! [applause] >> pick up a newspaper and just headlines.he check out the internet and read post. any there's news about terrorism anywhere, and it's all very frightening. at night.ep you up one day, they're saying new york city is a target. chicago.day, it's then las vegas. even the air force academy. the president tells us that we have to worry, isis is not going to attack the homeland yet. then a republican presidential candidate comes out and says, do have to worry. our b
while at the new york military the new york times, he was pulitzernominated for a prize. books, "i pledge allegiance," it was turned into a great miniseries on cbs. perhaps some of you watched it in the past. "gangland," how the fbi broke 1993.b, in "the eve of destruction," the of the war in to 2003. "american lightning: terror, mystery, the birth of hollywood, century,"ime of the truefloor of heaven: a tale of the last frontier and the yukon gold...
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40
Nov 28, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN2
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, county is one of the other vice chairs from the new york family. we have tony morrison and the editor of the new yorker and escapes from harvard. people that cover all different industries and academics. george stephanopoulos and anthony have princeton at nyu are recent additions. it is a great mix which is what you would want it to be. let's put it this way. what makes new york amazing? what makes america amazing is the mix of people. the mix of background and talent and experience and experience. the library is where the fix of people come together with all the different information. it's been the most exclusive of combinations. it's where it comes from. at the library is the library is the foundation of that. it's where everyone can do that and does do that. and new york as elsewhere in the country into the trustees are a great mix of experience and bring their ideas to provide for stewardship and leadership. >> host: you talked about new york city being at the apex for the use etc.. when was it not, when it's at its lowest? >> guest: one of my p
, county is one of the other vice chairs from the new york family. we have tony morrison and the editor of the new yorker and escapes from harvard. people that cover all different industries and academics. george stephanopoulos and anthony have princeton at nyu are recent additions. it is a great mix which is what you would want it to be. let's put it this way. what makes new york amazing? what makes america amazing is the mix of people. the mix of background and talent and experience and...
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Nov 17, 2014
11/14
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LINKTV
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the new york times and daily news prospered even as the herald tribune expired.of both the business demand curves and the union-determined supply curve in the newspaper industry. for a prosperous paper its situation before the settlements would appear like this. its demand curve is strongly affected by the printers' productivity. the supply curve is really the union-determined wage. we have equilibrium at this wage with this number of printers. now two things happen. unions demanded higher wages. so the supply curve of labor shifted up here. but also the times introduced more highly automated typesetting machinery. this greatly raised the productivity of printers. since the demand curve for labor reflects printers' productivity, the new demand curve might look like this. here's the final situation. the times is basically ok. wages are higher. employment is lower. but the productivity increase made possible by automation leaves the firm profitable. when it came to relatively unprofitable papers like the herald tribune however, the situation was quite different. th
the new york times and daily news prospered even as the herald tribune expired.of both the business demand curves and the union-determined supply curve in the newspaper industry. for a prosperous paper its situation before the settlements would appear like this. its demand curve is strongly affected by the printers' productivity. the supply curve is really the union-determined wage. we have equilibrium at this wage with this number of printers. now two things happen. unions demanded higher...
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Nov 9, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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that's why i had to take a new york city policeman. why i had to take tom tuny and appoint him to protect this &Ñcity. after 9/11, ray kelly, former new york city cop, former marine, he takes the job and he has the same reaction. he says, it's all doom and gloom and we can't count on the feds to protect us. he makes his own intelligence network. he takes a former director of operations from the cia, brings him to new york city and then has him set up agencies representing new york in various capitols, all different capitols around the world so that new york will get the information it needs right away without having to rely on the federal gover'2q9 marathon ke again raises the issue. the fbi knew about these two brothers. why didn't they pass it on to the police? so, here we have this same concern, the same concern that was bothering police chief woods, captain tuny is now bothering the people in charge of new york city and other cities today. intelligence is only valuable if it's shared. we have all the eyes and ears in the world list
that's why i had to take a new york city policeman. why i had to take tom tuny and appoint him to protect this &Ñcity. after 9/11, ray kelly, former new york city cop, former marine, he takes the job and he has the same reaction. he says, it's all doom and gloom and we can't count on the feds to protect us. he makes his own intelligence network. he takes a former director of operations from the cia, brings him to new york city and then has him set up agencies representing new york in...
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Nov 2, 2014
11/14
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during the trial 15 months later it was covered quite extensively in the new york papers including thegreat tabloid the daily ne news. they actually cloke the prosecutor saying the prosecutor instructed us that mr. sebold was a counterintelligence agent or counterspy as if this phrase in this idea. assigned to the handler was james e. ellsworth a mormon who had gained -- as a missionary during his missionary in germany and it happened to be an inveterate diarist and letter writer extremely generous in sharing his diary and newsletters. this is what he wrote in his diary when he first met sebold. but as i was getting out of the shower in the hotel room sunday came and. i found sebold to be a tall six-foot three-inch than 157-pound german. he was big boned brown eyed and had brown hair. he spoke english brokenly but as time went on he spoke english very well. the fbi of course wasn't entirely sure that they could trust this character with his incredible story. i spent three years trying to get a file from the national archives which the fbi had transferred into the national archives and
during the trial 15 months later it was covered quite extensively in the new york papers including thegreat tabloid the daily ne news. they actually cloke the prosecutor saying the prosecutor instructed us that mr. sebold was a counterintelligence agent or counterspy as if this phrase in this idea. assigned to the handler was james e. ellsworth a mormon who had gained -- as a missionary during his missionary in germany and it happened to be an inveterate diarist and letter writer extremely...
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Nov 12, 2014
11/14
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CNNW
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new york state.ady 41 companies are investing almost $80 million dollars, and creating 1750 jobs. from long island to all across upstate new york, more businesses are coming to new york. they are paying no property taxes, no corporate taxes, and no sales taxes. and with over 300 locations, and 3.7 million square feet available, there's a place that is is right for your business. see if startup-ny can work for you. go to startup.ny.gov. celebrate what's new, with the bigger, better menu at red lobster! try our newest wood-grilled combination! maine lobster, extra jumbo shrimp, and salmon! all topped with decadent brown butter. or savory new lobster scampi linguini, with lobster in every bite. and, the ultimate feast. it's the ultimate ultimate! with more shrimp than ever. more of what you love, our new menu. it's a bigger, better reason to celebrate. so hurry in! and sea food differently. so i can reach ally bank 24/7, but there are24/7branches? it's just i'm a little reluctant to try new things. what
new york state.ady 41 companies are investing almost $80 million dollars, and creating 1750 jobs. from long island to all across upstate new york, more businesses are coming to new york. they are paying no property taxes, no corporate taxes, and no sales taxes. and with over 300 locations, and 3.7 million square feet available, there's a place that is is right for your business. see if startup-ny can work for you. go to startup.ny.gov. celebrate what's new, with the bigger, better menu at red...
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Nov 1, 2014
11/14
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i grew up in central new york. i was born and raised here, went to public schools, graduated from nottingham high school, and in college i worked at my family's plant just down the road here on burnet avenue, and i saw the struggle firsthand to run a small business, to raise a family, to get to the middle class, and to stay in the middle class. that is why i have dedicated myself and focused to creating jobs, making sure that small businesses can succeed, and to bettering the middle class, because if the middle-class succeeds, then central new york will succeed. i believe that we do have challenges, but we can face those challenges together, and that central new york is the best place to live and work and raise a family, and as congressman, my job is to keep it that way. >> congressman, thank you. mr. katko. >> good evening, and thank you, seth, liz, and bill, for having me here, and the thank you, time warner. this is my first go round in a debate and i'm very honored to be here. i am excited to take part in this
i grew up in central new york. i was born and raised here, went to public schools, graduated from nottingham high school, and in college i worked at my family's plant just down the road here on burnet avenue, and i saw the struggle firsthand to run a small business, to raise a family, to get to the middle class, and to stay in the middle class. that is why i have dedicated myself and focused to creating jobs, making sure that small businesses can succeed, and to bettering the middle class,...
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Nov 5, 2014
11/14
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CSPAN3
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marconey would come to new york, he had a lot of girlfriends in new york, and tsarnaev would deliver flowers and candy to them, and got to know them well. when the marconey company creates a spin-off called rca, which turned the company from ship-to-shore communications, and to entertainment for the millions. tsarnaev said let's do this. how about creating a thing called an entertainment box. and out of it will come news and sports and all of that. and we'll put it in the living room. they felt, you're crazy. five years later they're doing it. in the mid-'20s, he moves rca's headquarters from downtown, where the biggest radio industry in the world was created, up to broadway. that's where the entertainment is. that's where bing crosby is. that's where jack benny is. his life-long rival, and they were truly life-long rivals, tsarnaev with bill paley. paley is the son of very rich cigar making family. the family started in the ukraine. by the time they moved from chicago to philadelphia, they had made it. he went to wharton school. his dad basically bought him the station. he hated him
marconey would come to new york, he had a lot of girlfriends in new york, and tsarnaev would deliver flowers and candy to them, and got to know them well. when the marconey company creates a spin-off called rca, which turned the company from ship-to-shore communications, and to entertainment for the millions. tsarnaev said let's do this. how about creating a thing called an entertainment box. and out of it will come news and sports and all of that. and we'll put it in the living room. they...
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Nov 4, 2014
11/14
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. >> another debate for new york 24th district. om syracuse, the debate is courtesy of time warner cable news. ♪ >> hello and welcome to our time warner cable news debate between the candidates in the 24th congressional district. i am "capital tonight" host liz benjamin. i will be moderating along with syracuse reporter bill carey and rochester reporter seth voorhees. this district is right at the center of the state geographically and in each of the past three elections it has changed hands from one party to the other. democrat dan maffei is currently holding the seat. he is participating in this evening's debate along with former federal prosecutor john katko, who is a republican. these are the rules that both have agreed to. each candidate will have one minute for an opening statement and one minute for a closing statement. in between, we will ask as many questions as we have time for. responses will be limited to one minute each with rebuttals allowed at the discretion of the moderator. there were also be a lightning round about
. >> another debate for new york 24th district. om syracuse, the debate is courtesy of time warner cable news. ♪ >> hello and welcome to our time warner cable news debate between the candidates in the 24th congressional district. i am "capital tonight" host liz benjamin. i will be moderating along with syracuse reporter bill carey and rochester reporter seth voorhees. this district is right at the center of the state geographically and in each of the past three elections...
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117
Nov 26, 2014
11/14
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BLOOMBERG
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>> wrong, new york., it's the turduken. >> what else will you do when you're digging out from eight feet of snow? >> we should have asked dotty about that. let's have a great thanksgiving, folks. on thursday, the ceo of target. ♪ >> it is approaching 56 past the hour, which means bloomberg television is on the markets. take a look at the major averages here. a whole lot of major nothing going on as far as the s&p and our concern. but what do you expect the day before thanksgiving? we have low volumes on these days. the dow has actually shown movement, up about one third of 1%. as techocks gain -- stocks gain. even though the s&p and nasdaq are not moving much at all, they are still hanging around all highs. not bad, actually. claims gotd jobless investors worried up the strength of the economy. stocks snapped a three-day winning streak yesterday, barely. but hopefully gaining some momentum heading into the holiday. joining me on options is the equity strategist at the crest partners. first, let me ask yo
>> wrong, new york., it's the turduken. >> what else will you do when you're digging out from eight feet of snow? >> we should have asked dotty about that. let's have a great thanksgiving, folks. on thursday, the ceo of target. ♪ >> it is approaching 56 past the hour, which means bloomberg television is on the markets. take a look at the major averages here. a whole lot of major nothing going on as far as the s&p and our concern. but what do you expect the day...
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264
Nov 12, 2014
11/14
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CNNW
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eye 264
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it's not only "the new york times" but bloomberg news published a big report a couple years ago aboutealth accumulated by his relatives and it faced visa problems and other western media blocked in china. this is an issue that american officials raised. when vice president biden was in china some months ago, he had a private meeting with some members of the american press corps to hear their concerns. but from his point of view, i think he took a very, very tough line and made clear there's no give. that's part of what we've seen generally is that he's taken a very, very strong unyielding line on many issues and not only in u.s./china relations but broadly internationally. he's a tough, strong leader. that came through. even though the question got raised, it certainly doesn't appear that it's going to lead to any change in the way china deals with these media organizations. >> he answered the question and he did it on his own terms most certainly. thank you so much for being with us. coming up, a key city in iraq held by the iraqi army in a tense battle against isis, a few months ago
it's not only "the new york times" but bloomberg news published a big report a couple years ago aboutealth accumulated by his relatives and it faced visa problems and other western media blocked in china. this is an issue that american officials raised. when vice president biden was in china some months ago, he had a private meeting with some members of the american press corps to hear their concerns. but from his point of view, i think he took a very, very tough line and made clear...
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Nov 2, 2014
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you just walked in new york's fashion week, one of the biggest events that goes down in new york cityson: right. allie: what was that like for you preparing for that? jason: first i was, you know, i was kind of nervous doing it, you know, because, you know, i'm -- really, when i know fashion -- when it comes to fashion people, it's all crazy. it's crazy stuff. allie: any comparisons to when you walked out on the stage in front of a huge crowd, the nerves, the excitement, to when you walk out on the football field in front of your fans? jason: it was like cameras flashing like the super bowl. you know, the super bowl, you came out, all those cameras just flashing. that's how it felt. i went with it, and i did it, and everybody loved it, and we walking the runway was crazy. i did little dances and stuff to make everybody laugh, and i -- and i got through it. allie: fashion shows are just part of the perks that come with playing in new york, and jpp has embraced the spotlight in the big city and the fans that come with it. jason: because here in new york, you know, i feel like if you can
you just walked in new york's fashion week, one of the biggest events that goes down in new york cityson: right. allie: what was that like for you preparing for that? jason: first i was, you know, i was kind of nervous doing it, you know, because, you know, i'm -- really, when i know fashion -- when it comes to fashion people, it's all crazy. it's crazy stuff. allie: any comparisons to when you walked out on the stage in front of a huge crowd, the nerves, the excitement, to when you walk out on...
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Nov 28, 2014
11/14
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>> guest: i worked in the new york public library in the past. i've been in the rare book division and i was later a curator at the southern methodist university, and downtown at the general theological seminary sandbox library. and i got a doctorate in renaissance history in colombia and all that led to my being here. >> host: how long have you been at the new york public library? >> guest: as a curator since 2000. >> host: you brought some things out to show us that you have in the collection. >> guest: i have. it's an enormous collection of 2,000 linear feet of archives and manuscripts and printed items that this is what i like to call the tip of the iceberg so to speak. here we have the only surviving manuscript of john donne's paradoxes that was done in his own lifetime. it's not in his hands but it's in the hands of his secretary and personal assistant. this has the highest authority directly from his own manuscripts and you can see changes the differences in the text as it is represented here and the transcriptions that were made in the fi
>> guest: i worked in the new york public library in the past. i've been in the rare book division and i was later a curator at the southern methodist university, and downtown at the general theological seminary sandbox library. and i got a doctorate in renaissance history in colombia and all that led to my being here. >> host: how long have you been at the new york public library? >> guest: as a curator since 2000. >> host: you brought some things out to show us that...
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Nov 26, 2014
11/14
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ALJAZAM
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again, demonstrations in new york city, a sizeable group on the streets of new york tying up travelling is bit. traffic is always difficult in new york. that's all we have time for in this newshour. rely -- "real money" with ali velshi is next. you. >> they are the innocent victims of the ferguson tragedy. shop owners who watched as their shops went up in smoke, and a solution to one of the biggest struggles. how your tax dollars transform them into positive, productive members of society. and plus, why all of that money you're saving when you fill your tank at the gas station is probably going into the prosh store. i'm ali velshi, this this is "real money." >> one day after a grand jury decided against inindicting officer darren wilson in the shooting death of michael brown, ferg on is picking up the pieces. fires in at least 10 businesses in ferguson, destroying or damaging them in the process. they broke into businesses, and hardest-hit, the police chief declared that there's nothing left on an one mile stretch of it between chambers road and colway avenue. businesses like st. louis
again, demonstrations in new york city, a sizeable group on the streets of new york tying up travelling is bit. traffic is always difficult in new york. that's all we have time for in this newshour. rely -- "real money" with ali velshi is next. you. >> they are the innocent victims of the ferguson tragedy. shop owners who watched as their shops went up in smoke, and a solution to one of the biggest struggles. how your tax dollars transform them into positive, productive members...
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625
Nov 1, 2014
11/14
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KNTV
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it will be a washout here in new york city. the rain up to new england and the carolinas and in the middle of the country which is dry and sunny. however, temperatures below average. we are going to top out at 45 degrees today in chicago. it is extremely windy. winds spread east. for the marathon in new york city tomorrow, dry, but windy. erica, that is a look across the country. here is a peek out your wind >>> here at home we are watching some showers rolling through the bay area. you can see pretty intense thunderstorms. if you are doing any traveling through the santa cruz mountains take it easy. it will be raini ing very heavy it stays stormy in the south bay. the farther north you get that is where the shower chance diminishes. in san francisco just a few showers. in the north bay we will be dry with temperatures near 70. 's your latest forecast. >> dylan, thanks. >>> up next, a boo-tiful day. halloween celebrating. but first this is "today" on nbc. celebrating. but first this is "today" on nbc. ♪ good morning, usher! hey!
it will be a washout here in new york city. the rain up to new england and the carolinas and in the middle of the country which is dry and sunny. however, temperatures below average. we are going to top out at 45 degrees today in chicago. it is extremely windy. winds spread east. for the marathon in new york city tomorrow, dry, but windy. erica, that is a look across the country. here is a peek out your wind >>> here at home we are watching some showers rolling through the bay area....
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Nov 18, 2014
11/14
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fallen in penbrookver a foot of new york that is 17 miles to the east of buffalo new york. want to talk about t-- take a look at the radar images to show you how much snow we have it is off of lake ontario and parts of west michigan you are looking at significant snowfall and cold temperatures that are impacting over 200 million americans this morning. they are looking at temperatures that are below freezing all of the way down to part of the southeast. heather and ainsley? >> thank you, maria. try and stay warm. >> it is time for your 5@5:00. speaking of wintery miss holiday travel school always go as planned. >> i don't care if i have to hitchhike. if i have to sell my soul to the devil himself i am going to get home to my son. >> here are the five worst airports for winter weather based on flight delays. dallas fort worth national airport. next denver national airport. number three new jersey newark outside of new york city. number two, fort lauderdale florida. number one worst airport during the winter, we all know this, is chicago o'hare. brace for it. it is coming. >>
fallen in penbrookver a foot of new york that is 17 miles to the east of buffalo new york. want to talk about t-- take a look at the radar images to show you how much snow we have it is off of lake ontario and parts of west michigan you are looking at significant snowfall and cold temperatures that are impacting over 200 million americans this morning. they are looking at temperatures that are below freezing all of the way down to part of the southeast. heather and ainsley? >> thank you,...
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Nov 19, 2014
11/14
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WUSA
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from maryland into northeast washington, you do have access to both kenilworth, d.c. 295 and new yorknue. back to you. >> thanks, beverly. >>> plans to build a new stadium for the d.c. united could be in trouble. >> nick is in the newsroom with more on some of the comments made from d.c.'s mayor-elect. very interesting. >> reporter: muriel bowser, d.c.'s mayor-elect says no deal, especially when it comes to a land swap. "the washington post" reports bowser weighed in on the plan before the federal city council. under said plan the center at 14th and u northwest would be told to a real estate firm in return for cash and land on the proposed site for the new stadium which is over at buzzard point. bowser says she will propose a compromise deal. >>> meanwhile the federal communications commission is calling for the public to chip in to help fund high speed internet in public schools. the fcc planned to spend almost $4 billion a year to wire schools and libraries in low income areas. phone customers would pay an additional $2 a year to cover the cost. >>> no telling how much this would co
from maryland into northeast washington, you do have access to both kenilworth, d.c. 295 and new yorknue. back to you. >> thanks, beverly. >>> plans to build a new stadium for the d.c. united could be in trouble. >> nick is in the newsroom with more on some of the comments made from d.c.'s mayor-elect. very interesting. >> reporter: muriel bowser, d.c.'s mayor-elect says no deal, especially when it comes to a land swap. "the washington post" reports...
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Nov 12, 2014
11/14
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this is a building owned by the port authority of new york and new jersey. actually, i think we might have lost stephanie. nick, staying with you just for a moment, this is a publicly owned building. a lot of people would wonder in 2014, this is an extremely dangerous way to clean a building. is this something that you've seen in your history as a fire department fairly frequently happen with these kinds of window watchers? >> well, scaffold collapses are not totally rare. they do happen and the fire department responds to every one of them. so that -- without seeing what the commanders are seeing, i wouldn't be able to go beyond that. >> indeed. earlier stephanie gosk was saying at this point police and fire officials are not clearing the ground below. how long do you think a situation like that will continue before police and fire officials would want to completely clear the area below? as you said, the scaffold is not just a threat to the men who are on it? also potentially a threat to the people on the ground. >> sure. that's a judgment how much space th
this is a building owned by the port authority of new york and new jersey. actually, i think we might have lost stephanie. nick, staying with you just for a moment, this is a publicly owned building. a lot of people would wonder in 2014, this is an extremely dangerous way to clean a building. is this something that you've seen in your history as a fire department fairly frequently happen with these kinds of window watchers? >> well, scaffold collapses are not totally rare. they do happen...
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Nov 1, 2014
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upstate, new york, is half the vote, sean. new york city's expected to be a lower turnout.has a lot of problems on the left where democrats are not endorsing him or voting for him. it's the suburbs that are going to making the big difference. we can win this race, it's going to be a huge win on tuesday, a big statement, gun own verse to come out to vote -- owners have to come out to vote. off lot of big issues where people may not normally vote for republicans, but they will this time. >> we have to say good-bye. thank you rob, we'll watch closely. four days to go. thanks for being with us. >>> when we come back, the question of the day, it's about halloween, straight ahead. why dodododododo want to know how hard it can be... ...to breathe with copd? it can feel like this. copd includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled... ...copd maintenance treatment... ...that helps open my airways for a full 24 hours. you know, spiriva helps me breathe easier. spiriva handihaler tiotropium bromide inhalation powder does not replace rescue inhalers for sud
upstate, new york, is half the vote, sean. new york city's expected to be a lower turnout.has a lot of problems on the left where democrats are not endorsing him or voting for him. it's the suburbs that are going to making the big difference. we can win this race, it's going to be a huge win on tuesday, a big statement, gun own verse to come out to vote -- owners have to come out to vote. off lot of big issues where people may not normally vote for republicans, but they will this time. >>...
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Nov 26, 2014
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sunny you and i live in new york city. see this happening outside of new year's eve is a really big deal. >> it is remarkable. i was born and raised in new york. i don't think i have ever seen anything like this. it is so american for people to be able to protest. peacefully. constitutional. american. it goes back to henry thoreau, mlk, jr., ghandi. a tenet of society when you want to affect change. what we saw last night. looting, rioting. that is not how you affect change. you affect change this way. what is so sig fnificant, van w saying, likely spurned on and organized through social media. we are talking organized protests all over our country. has anyone ever seen anything like that. people are walking with signs that say, we stand with ferguson. that is phenomenal. that is really a, a game changer in our society. >> michael, you have been on the rai radio in philadelphia. discussing this all day long. and as you are watching the pictures. interested in what your callers said. and just your reaction as you see these
sunny you and i live in new york city. see this happening outside of new year's eve is a really big deal. >> it is remarkable. i was born and raised in new york. i don't think i have ever seen anything like this. it is so american for people to be able to protest. peacefully. constitutional. american. it goes back to henry thoreau, mlk, jr., ghandi. a tenet of society when you want to affect change. what we saw last night. looting, rioting. that is not how you affect change. you affect...
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Nov 26, 2014
11/14
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new york, los angeles. protesters in large numbers particularly in new york just, just moving through the city without really a plan that has been announced. without permits or anything. obviously for law enforcement this is a very delicate balance. >> absolutely. and the best thing they could do in a peaceful protest like this, this could easily go to a d disobedience if the police walken front of them and tell them to stop right now. we close our roads every day in america, because of wrecks. let these people walk. let them talk. as long as they're nonviolent, because if the police tell them to stop now, because they want them off the road, because the police said so, then you are going to go disobedience. because they're disobeying civil order from the police. so i think what you are seeing on television right now, let it work itself out. let people demonstrate. because as soon as the police tell them to stop. and the demonstrators want to continue to move. it goats to cives to civil diso. >> lieutenant
new york, los angeles. protesters in large numbers particularly in new york just, just moving through the city without really a plan that has been announced. without permits or anything. obviously for law enforcement this is a very delicate balance. >> absolutely. and the best thing they could do in a peaceful protest like this, this could easily go to a d disobedience if the police walken front of them and tell them to stop right now. we close our roads every day in america, because of...
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Nov 9, 2014
11/14
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new york city. this does not include their american-born children. it is 25%, 28% of people born in ireland. if you throw when their kids, in their kids, you're talking 40%, 50% of the population. and do not forget one thing in that statistic -- these are not just irish people. they are mostly irish catholics. this is a double set of fears there. i just threw this image in, too, to show you the other connections with other groups. this is from 1882. you see the caption at the bottom. "the dream of the jews realized." the cartoonist showing new york city completely taken over by jewish immigrants and they are taking down the sign that says john smith's drygoods. good american-born name, john smith. that is coming down and epstein and sons is being placed up there. the new herald is "the new jerusalem herald." you see stereotypes of jewish people lording over the city. the funny thing is this is 1882 and the cartoonist is worried that there are too many jews in new york and it is just at this moment t
new york city. this does not include their american-born children. it is 25%, 28% of people born in ireland. if you throw when their kids, in their kids, you're talking 40%, 50% of the population. and do not forget one thing in that statistic -- these are not just irish people. they are mostly irish catholics. this is a double set of fears there. i just threw this image in, too, to show you the other connections with other groups. this is from 1882. you see the caption at the bottom. "the...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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for now, i'm jim axelrod in new york, and for all of us here at cbs news, thanks for joining us. and good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org her eyes: i was 6 inches away from catching his hood, and i wad him tumble and fall. : a mother's nightmare plays out right in front of her eyes. >> i was 6 inches away from catching his foot. >> tonight, a brave little boy who survived a 21 story fall off a bay area cliff. >> recognize this guy? police say he tried to drag a seven-year-old child into a restroom at a bay area park. he is out there somewhere. >> and getting to the oakland airport just got a whole lot easier right in time for the holiday travel rush. >> kpix5 news is next. ♪ ♪ ♪ [ female announcer ] get your taste of the season, >>> live from the cbs bay area studios. this
for now, i'm jim axelrod in new york, and for all of us here at cbs news, thanks for joining us. and good night. captioning sponsored by cbs captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org her eyes: i was 6 inches away from catching his hood, and i wad him tumble and fall. : a mother's nightmare plays out right in front of her eyes. >> i was 6 inches away from catching his foot. >> tonight, a brave little boy who survived a 21 story fall off a bay area cliff. >>...
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Nov 19, 2014
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there will be a mess in western new york. that's it back to you in new york. >>> we will check back with you for suth tole rising in jerusalem. five people killed one policeman and four worshippers. >> good morning. the people in jerusalem are realing from this vicious barbaric attack on worshippers in the sin doiynagogusynagogue. the police killed twoed palestinian men armed with meat cleavers and a gun who yelled in arabic allah akbar god is great as they killed the innocent victims who were praying for peace at this israel synagogue as benjamin netanyahu vows retaliation. >> i think it is important for palestinians and israelis to work together to reject violence. >> but the president's response is too strong they need to take a stand against acts of terror. >> islamic radicals butchered american citizens. doesn't matter whether it happened in israel or iraq. can you image for the isis beheading a world leader came out and said we need calm on both sides we need to restrain violence. we don't need moral equivalency we need
there will be a mess in western new york. that's it back to you in new york. >>> we will check back with you for suth tole rising in jerusalem. five people killed one policeman and four worshippers. >> good morning. the people in jerusalem are realing from this vicious barbaric attack on worshippers in the sin doiynagogusynagogue. the police killed twoed palestinian men armed with meat cleavers and a gun who yelled in arabic allah akbar god is great as they killed the innocent...
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Nov 27, 2014
11/14
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we understand the very long ripple effects and reverberations of "the new york times," which extends so deeply into our nation's history, 1851. it is red on five continents, as we say all the news that is fit , in the digital world, all the news that is fit to click. to be honest, rush limbaugh explains, i can only read a few paragraphs in a "new york times" story before i puke. well, last summer i was watching a rerun of a charlie rose special and the editor of "the new yorker" was speaking about the media in america, and remnick talked about his career. he had spent 10 years at the "washington post." for the past 22 years he has been the editor of "the new yorker." he said, "new york times" has been the greatest competitor of my entire professional career. he said to charlie rose, i think nation's times" is the most important privately held institution. i thought about that. think about what you would lift as a treasurer, what is privately owned in the united states, and that is what is his assessment of the power of "new york times." wants to university thank our video -- are very
we understand the very long ripple effects and reverberations of "the new york times," which extends so deeply into our nation's history, 1851. it is red on five continents, as we say all the news that is fit , in the digital world, all the news that is fit to click. to be honest, rush limbaugh explains, i can only read a few paragraphs in a "new york times" story before i puke. well, last summer i was watching a rerun of a charlie rose special and the editor of "the...
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Nov 26, 2014
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light rain here in new york. look at how close that snow line is coming in to us and then boston light rain but, again, mixing over to snow we think in the later hours of the afternoon and into the evening. delays at the airport big time, especially across newark. three hour delays. over an hour at laguardia, philadelphia and boston as well. so, man, it's a tough go across the airports and if you live across the northeast, this is a big deal, but over the rest of the country as well because that ripple effect. if you've got delays in the northeast you have delays in the midwest and the other parts of the country. so there's your forecast snowfall total. west of d.c., west of philadelphia, west of the new york area, that's where we could see 6 to 12, even 18 inches of snow, jon scott. >> it looks like this thing is moving pretty quickly though. how long until it moves out? >> you are very good at looking at the radar satellite picture. because he's a pilot. that's why. it should be out of the way by wednesday nigh
light rain here in new york. look at how close that snow line is coming in to us and then boston light rain but, again, mixing over to snow we think in the later hours of the afternoon and into the evening. delays at the airport big time, especially across newark. three hour delays. over an hour at laguardia, philadelphia and boston as well. so, man, it's a tough go across the airports and if you live across the northeast, this is a big deal, but over the rest of the country as well because...
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Nov 26, 2014
11/14
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miguel marquez is in new york. miguel, people are out early and there are a lot of them. >> reporter: there are a lot of them and there are separate groups tonight. that spark that was sparked off in ferguson is now burning here new york city. this is 14th street, if you know the city, we're walking west on 14th. and they have completely shut it down. we're walking now on the opposite way that traffic is flowing. it's not clear where this crowd is going to go tonight. several hundred people out here, hands in the air, protesting police brutality. it has been peaceful so far, and what nypd is doing is being extraordinary patient so far. same as they did last night. we walked about eight miles last night, all the way up to harlem. nypd only clearing the way for them, make sugar the protesters were safe and that traffic didn't get out of control. the only time they stepped in is when the protesters tried to shut down bridges or tunnels, like today. they tried to take the lincoln tunnel and shut that down. that's when
miguel marquez is in new york. miguel, people are out early and there are a lot of them. >> reporter: there are a lot of them and there are separate groups tonight. that spark that was sparked off in ferguson is now burning here new york city. this is 14th street, if you know the city, we're walking west on 14th. and they have completely shut it down. we're walking now on the opposite way that traffic is flowing. it's not clear where this crowd is going to go tonight. several hundred...
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Nov 23, 2014
11/14
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WCAU
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. >>> from nbc world headquarters in new york, this is "nbc nightly news" with lester holt. >>> good evening. as we come on the air here on the east coast tonight, temperatures in the buffalo, new york, area are hovering in the upper 40s, heading into 60s tomorrow. after temperatures in the 20s last week that would be welcome news. except there is the matter of all that snow. up to seven feet in someplaces that fell last week. now with rain predicted on top of the warm-up, a lot of the snow is turning to water. tonight flood warnings are in effect for some local creeks in the area and communities still digging out worry they will soon be bailing out. nbc's kristin dahlgren is there to tell us more. kristin? >> reporter: good evening, lester. they are getting hit on all sides. first they had to deal with things like this roof collapse under the weight of the snow. now they have to worry about water seeping in their homes, their basements. this is really just a community that is bracing now with temperatures predicted to go up in the forecast. near buffalo today, a race against time an
. >>> from nbc world headquarters in new york, this is "nbc nightly news" with lester holt. >>> good evening. as we come on the air here on the east coast tonight, temperatures in the buffalo, new york, area are hovering in the upper 40s, heading into 60s tomorrow. after temperatures in the 20s last week that would be welcome news. except there is the matter of all that snow. up to seven feet in someplaces that fell last week. now with rain predicted on top of the...
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Nov 25, 2014
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mandvi in new york.at's the story, aasif? >> the story, jon? jon: that's right. >> the story is when i said i'd stay here in new york ebola was in texas. [ applause ] but now that everyone but me is in texas, ebola is in new york! >> jon: so you are saying -- what i'm saying is (bleep) (bleep) (bleep) -- >> jon: always good to have him back. we also wanted to check in on austin's own ebola preparation, jessica will exams is at the capitol city at the ip february husband disease facility. at least -- i think you're there. >> that's where i am. but like every other place in austin the infectious disease ward is also an espresso bar. >> jon: jessica, based on your -- [ cheering and applause ] i know you've been doing a lot of boots on the ground reporting could ebola strode austin. >> from dallas, oh, yeah, jon. austin going to pick up something after dallas. no, jon, no. austin sets the trends, dallas finds out about them five years later. [ cheering and applause ] >> jon: there's no way ebola makes it? >>
mandvi in new york.at's the story, aasif? >> the story, jon? jon: that's right. >> the story is when i said i'd stay here in new york ebola was in texas. [ applause ] but now that everyone but me is in texas, ebola is in new york! >> jon: so you are saying -- what i'm saying is (bleep) (bleep) (bleep) -- >> jon: always good to have him back. we also wanted to check in on austin's own ebola preparation, jessica will exams is at the capitol city at the ip february husband...
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Nov 2, 2014
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i'm lester holt reporting from new york. see you tomorrow morning on "today" and right back here tomorrow evening. good night. >>> nbc bay area flus starts now >>> new information on an illegal drug lab in the east bay. lives interrupted. the neighbors trying to pick up the pieces >>> plus, details on a man accused of sparking fires >>> this is not the san francisco bay >>> crews rushing to a rescue on the north bay. i am terry mcsweeney. >> i am peggy bunker. one man is dead in bodega bay. in the newsroom we have been following the four and we have more. >> reporter: a coast guard crew found the loan survivor.
i'm lester holt reporting from new york. see you tomorrow morning on "today" and right back here tomorrow evening. good night. >>> nbc bay area flus starts now >>> new information on an illegal drug lab in the east bay. lives interrupted. the neighbors trying to pick up the pieces >>> plus, details on a man accused of sparking fires >>> this is not the san francisco bay >>> crews rushing to a rescue on the north bay. i am terry mcsweeney....
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Nov 27, 2014
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not from new york city. 1 from new york city.t's just about over there, but it really is just still winding up for portland into maine, and also into upstate new york and vermont, new hampshire. it still has a ways to go yet. probably another 4 to 5 more hours. here's where all the snow has fallen, from west virginia up to maine. some spots over a foot of snow. and still a few more inches to go. up into maine, nova scotia, you'll pick up another foot. >> okay. i will ask you my personal question after this. so, it is keeping people from getting to see their loved ones. and eat their pumpkin pie. so, how much longer really, is this horrible weather going to be around. its everyone out -- is everyone in the clear tomorrow? can they get back this weekend? >> yeah, i think we are done probably by 3:00 a.m., for new york. most of new england. not yet for maine. that probably won't stop until 7:00. by the time you wake up to go watch the, macy's day parade. it will be 37 degrees with a dugs dusting of snow. all done. >> so, i have a pe
not from new york city. 1 from new york city.t's just about over there, but it really is just still winding up for portland into maine, and also into upstate new york and vermont, new hampshire. it still has a ways to go yet. probably another 4 to 5 more hours. here's where all the snow has fallen, from west virginia up to maine. some spots over a foot of snow. and still a few more inches to go. up into maine, nova scotia, you'll pick up another foot. >> okay. i will ask you my personal...