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Sep 5, 2020
09/20
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and the evolution of the development of the new yorker but before we get to the new yorker and how thedynamics of the new yorker shaped this book in many ways, what do you mean by the cover-up? what was the state of play when john hershey went off to japan to do the reporting to produce his legendary peace "hiroshima" which filled an entire issue of the new yorker the first time that ever happened, a year after the bombing. >> the audience should know that you are a sounding board for me since the beginning. when that first started researching the project i didn't actually realize the extent to which a cover-up would be playing a role in this narrative at all. i just really wanted to know the back story. i was approached the story and journalist covering another journalist and the story of her she's hiroshima had been about outside success. nobody ever looked at how they got the story in the first place will. i wanted to look at logistics of how he got in. when i started looking at how much general macarthur and his total domination of japan at the time started to realize how impossibl
and the evolution of the development of the new yorker but before we get to the new yorker and how thedynamics of the new yorker shaped this book in many ways, what do you mean by the cover-up? what was the state of play when john hershey went off to japan to do the reporting to produce his legendary peace "hiroshima" which filled an entire issue of the new yorker the first time that ever happened, a year after the bombing. >> the audience should know that you are a sounding...
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Sep 13, 2020
09/20
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and evolution of the developer of the new yorker that before we get to the new yorker and the internal dynamics of the new yorker shake this book in many ways, what do you mean by the cover-up? what was the state of play when john hirschi went off to japan to do the reporting that produced is legendary piece, hiroshima which filled an entire issue of the new yorker, the first time that had ever happened, a year after the bombing. >> the audience should know you are a sounding board for me since the beginning. when i first are researching this project i didn't realize the extent to which the cover-up we even play a role in this narrative at all. i just would want to to know the back story. the story of hirschi has was been about outside success. nobody ever look at how they got the story the first place. i started my career in "nightline" news and where you learn how the story comes out entirely to logistics and whoever controls the ground controls the story. i wanted to look at how they got in. when i started looking at how much general macarthur and his occupation force had total domi
and evolution of the developer of the new yorker that before we get to the new yorker and the internal dynamics of the new yorker shake this book in many ways, what do you mean by the cover-up? what was the state of play when john hirschi went off to japan to do the reporting that produced is legendary piece, hiroshima which filled an entire issue of the new yorker, the first time that had ever happened, a year after the bombing. >> the audience should know you are a sounding board for me...
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Sep 27, 2020
09/20
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the history of a new yorker the development of a new yorker. but before we get to that and the internal dynamics of the narco shape this book in many ways, what do you mean by the cover-up? what was the state of play when he would off to japan to do the reporting the produces legendary peace on hiroshima which filled an entire issue of the new yorker the first time that had ever happened. year after the bombing. >> the audience should now that you are sounding board for me since the very beginning. when i first started researching this project i didn't realize the extent to which cover-up is can play a role in this narrative at all. but truly just wanted the back story for taoist approach these journalists -- the story of hiroshima has always been about outsiders. except no one really looked at how the story in first place. i started my career "nightline" newsroom as a production coordinator. they make you learn how the story comes down entirely t the ground how we got in. so start looking at how arthur education nation of japan at the time sta
the history of a new yorker the development of a new yorker. but before we get to that and the internal dynamics of the narco shape this book in many ways, what do you mean by the cover-up? what was the state of play when he would off to japan to do the reporting the produces legendary peace on hiroshima which filled an entire issue of the new yorker the first time that had ever happened. year after the bombing. >> the audience should now that you are sounding board for me since the very...
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Sep 7, 2020
09/20
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the editor of the new yorker said the new way i have to pronounce it. it is an extraordinary book >>. >> and i started to realize how impossible would have been to get in as an independent reporter. the more i researched the subject we came across macarthur how much he had suppressed the foreign press and the magnitude of the cover-up previously that never to the extent i felt it should have been and was central to the story. >> what were they covering up? >> interestingly the government and president truman was advertising the bomb being dropped on hiroshima with 20000 tons of tnt, the biggest bond in the history of warfare. the government released pictures of the mushroom cloud but what they were quick to pick up line is that weirdly there was no reporting on the human toll. nobody knew what was happening to the human beings that was at the receiving end. >> and also to this day. that was the environment so talk about the new yorker in 1945 and where it was. the new yorker was in transition and it had changed in the course of four years from the onset
the editor of the new yorker said the new way i have to pronounce it. it is an extraordinary book >>. >> and i started to realize how impossible would have been to get in as an independent reporter. the more i researched the subject we came across macarthur how much he had suppressed the foreign press and the magnitude of the cover-up previously that never to the extent i felt it should have been and was central to the story. >> what were they covering up? >>...
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Sep 13, 2020
09/20
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let me introduce Ãbcartoons began appearing in the new yorker in 1978, she has since published more than00 she wrote and illustrated the number one new york times bestseller "can we talk about something more pleasant" national book critics circle award and Ã"what i hate from a to z" and cartoon selection Ãb bill hayes is the author of insomniac city among other books. forthcoming history of exercise to be published by lounsbury. the recipient of the guggenheim fellowship in nonfiction and frequent contributor to the new york times. collection of his street photography how new york breaks your heart published recently by Ãhe completed the screenplay for film adaptation for insomniac city and coeditor of oliver sacks à >> hi billy. >> hi roz, hi everyone, welcome. >> hi everybody. it's great to see you billy. i'm very excited about this. we are here to talk about your upcoming book. i guess i want to start by asking you when did you first realize that this wasn't just like another news story about some virus but actually something that was going to change the way we all live? >> i think pr
let me introduce Ãbcartoons began appearing in the new yorker in 1978, she has since published more than00 she wrote and illustrated the number one new york times bestseller "can we talk about something more pleasant" national book critics circle award and Ã"what i hate from a to z" and cartoon selection Ãb bill hayes is the author of insomniac city among other books. forthcoming history of exercise to be published by lounsbury. the recipient of the guggenheim fellowship...
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Sep 20, 2020
09/20
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and yet at the same time it has been amazing to see how new yorkers have adapted very quickly to this, whether any book store or restaurant or a shop. >> have you seen any light things, like during, that it just inexplicably made you just we be? >> -- we be. sure. one thought that comes to mind is there was that moment, i write about in the book when there's a headline in the "new york times" that said something like that was the time to make your own facemask. because before that authorities were sort of hedging and saying no, only for from frontline workers, don't hoard them. don't wear a facemask. now they're saying what a facemask and there's all these videos about to make a facemask. i couldn't find a bandanna scarf or something like that. [laughing] so i improvised and first i tried a vacuum cleaner bag. [laughing] >> knew, i hope. >> yeah, clean, a new one. [laughing] it was so thick i couldn't breathe. and then i found this in a drawer this morning. this is like going into my time capsule but i made a facemask out of a cloth napkin with shoelaces. >> that has a very -- that is
and yet at the same time it has been amazing to see how new yorkers have adapted very quickly to this, whether any book store or restaurant or a shop. >> have you seen any light things, like during, that it just inexplicably made you just we be? >> -- we be. sure. one thought that comes to mind is there was that moment, i write about in the book when there's a headline in the "new york times" that said something like that was the time to make your own facemask. because...
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Sep 26, 2020
09/20
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. >> and, you know, at the same time it has been amazing to see how new yorkers have adapted very quickly >> to this new normal. whether at a bookstore or at a restaurant or a shop. >> have you seen any, like, things like during this that are just sort of inexplicably just made you weepy? >> sure. sure. i mean, one, one thought that just comes to mind is, you know, there's that that -- in fact, i write about it in the book, there was a head in "the new york times" that said something like now's the time to make your own face mask. because before that they were, authorities were sort of hedging and saying, no, only for front-line are workers, don't hoard them, you don't need to wear a face mask, and then suddenly they were saying wear a face mask, and there were all these videos about how to make face masks. [laughter] and i, i couldn't find a bandanna or scarf -- [laughter] so i imto vised, and first i tried a vacuum cleaner bag which i cut up -- [laughter] >> new, i hope. >> yeah, a new one, a clean one. i was is so sick, i couldn't breathe. i said this is going in my time capsule. but i
. >> and, you know, at the same time it has been amazing to see how new yorkers have adapted very quickly >> to this new normal. whether at a bookstore or at a restaurant or a shop. >> have you seen any, like, things like during this that are just sort of inexplicably just made you weepy? >> sure. sure. i mean, one, one thought that just comes to mind is, you know, there's that that -- in fact, i write about it in the book, there was a head in "the new york...
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Sep 13, 2020
09/20
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ultimately shortly before he died disbarred by the state of new york and if you know how bad a lot of new yorkers, new lawyer lawyers are takes a lot to get disbarred in new york state but cohn managed to do that and i think you know, the fact that even today trump views roy cohn as the platonic ideal of alawyer . tells you a lot about his own ethical confidence and it's really just shocking to me but before word that i think defined the trump presidency are shocking but not surprising. and that's in his fx affection from roy cohn fits that because this was a really bad guy. >> in the book talking about how he approaches life, you speak of a fair amount about the election and donald trump had made the pitch too i'll take all comers, from russia and so forth. and i'm curious based on this testimony last week by sally yates, peter strzok and others and the topic of russian interference comes up and now chinese interference, what are your thoughts on this research that you've done for this book and what we might expect in this coming election because you write a lot about the first one. >> more of t
ultimately shortly before he died disbarred by the state of new york and if you know how bad a lot of new yorkers, new lawyer lawyers are takes a lot to get disbarred in new york state but cohn managed to do that and i think you know, the fact that even today trump views roy cohn as the platonic ideal of alawyer . tells you a lot about his own ethical confidence and it's really just shocking to me but before word that i think defined the trump presidency are shocking but not surprising. and...
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Sep 4, 2020
09/20
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cities like portland, seattle, washington, d.c., and new york. >> new yorkers new yorkers are unsafe they don't have a mayor or a governor who is willing to protect them. and this administration and president is insisting on working with governors to be able to ensure that they can secure their communities and he is taking bold action here in a legal way. >> mike: focusing on the administration with kevin walling and new york city police commissioner devon character, welcome. your thoughts on your beloved city and the president applying pressure on bill de blasio and other democrats? >> i don't think he has a choice, mike. i think that there has to be some accountability to the democratic leaders in the city is like new york, portland, seattle, d.c. and others that have failed completely failed to secure their cities. and it is only getting worse. so i think that that is why the president is applying the pressure. and i have to tell you, i am really -- i am outraged at the governor's comments, because i think of the governor does not realize that the president does have an army. he h
cities like portland, seattle, washington, d.c., and new york. >> new yorkers new yorkers are unsafe they don't have a mayor or a governor who is willing to protect them. and this administration and president is insisting on working with governors to be able to ensure that they can secure their communities and he is taking bold action here in a legal way. >> mike: focusing on the administration with kevin walling and new york city police commissioner devon character, welcome. your...
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Sep 4, 2020
09/20
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governor's books people later clarifying the statement was not a threat but his way of showing how much new yorkersrump. the president continuing his fight with cuomo tweeting andrew cuomo of new york has the worst record on death from the china virus, 11,000 people died in nursing homes because of his incompetence, new york state's official nursing home death toll actually stands at just over 6600 people, some suggest that number is far greater given it doesn't include the elderly who died at hospitals. according to the associated press federal data shows nursing homes reported 65% more deaths than the state county during june and july, the justice department last week calling in new york, new jersey, michigan and pennsylvania to hand over information about patient care during the pandemic. as the operation stretches into september the us has reported 6 million cases and the deaths of at least 186,000 americans. mike: thanks a lot. as you heard earlier the president is pushing to withhold federal funding from various cities he sees as not doing enough to stop outbreaks of violence like portland, s
governor's books people later clarifying the statement was not a threat but his way of showing how much new yorkersrump. the president continuing his fight with cuomo tweeting andrew cuomo of new york has the worst record on death from the china virus, 11,000 people died in nursing homes because of his incompetence, new york state's official nursing home death toll actually stands at just over 6600 people, some suggest that number is far greater given it doesn't include the elderly who died at...
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Sep 11, 2020
09/20
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as a new yorker, it's especially poignant to me. i remember going to windows on the world for lunch with my family. there's a lot to remember on that day. when i tried to do with the tweets, it struck me years later with iphones, take a picture of something and send it out, i reconstructed the day as i went through it and tried to do it down to the minute when things happen so people could go through what i went through, what other people on the white house staff went through and what the president went through. to this day, what impacts me the most about doing these tweets is when schoolteacher send me notes i get a lot of them saying they use to teach history and that kind of inspires me to keep doing this. it's not something i look forward to doing or like doing. it's heavy. when teachers say this keeps history alive and makes things relevant for their students, it means a lot and that's why i do it. >> melissa: it's different that you were there. i have a new yorker, i have a hard time going i'm watching this because it's too cl
as a new yorker, it's especially poignant to me. i remember going to windows on the world for lunch with my family. there's a lot to remember on that day. when i tried to do with the tweets, it struck me years later with iphones, take a picture of something and send it out, i reconstructed the day as i went through it and tried to do it down to the minute when things happen so people could go through what i went through, what other people on the white house staff went through and what the...
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Sep 12, 2020
09/20
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lost their jobs as a direct result from the 2001 terrorist attack so far more than 1000000 new yorkers have lost their jobs because of the pandemic and the unemployment rate is about 19 percent in the city about the same levels as it was during the great depression a city living in a clash between slowly returning to normal but not knowing exactly what normal is anymore gabriel sandow how does eva new york. the governor of the u.s. state of oregon says thousands of people have been reported missing as the massive wildfires burn across states half a 1000000 people have been ordered to leave their homes as far as threatened areas that's more than 10 percent of the state's population the city of portland is shrouded in smoke and has the worst equity of the world's major cities the south in california the remains of 7 people have been found by firefighters the state has been ravaged by dozens of fires for several weeks nearly 15000 firefighters are battling blazes across the state. california based journalist steve patterson has been monitoring the finest the death toll rising in californi
lost their jobs as a direct result from the 2001 terrorist attack so far more than 1000000 new yorkers have lost their jobs because of the pandemic and the unemployment rate is about 19 percent in the city about the same levels as it was during the great depression a city living in a clash between slowly returning to normal but not knowing exactly what normal is anymore gabriel sandow how does eva new york. the governor of the u.s. state of oregon says thousands of people have been reported...
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Sep 11, 2020
09/20
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ALJAZ
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far more than 23000 people in new york city have lost their lives because of coronavirus 100000 new yorkers lost their jobs as a direct result from the 2001 terrorist attack so far more than $1000000.00 new yorkers have lost their jobs because of the pandemic and the unemployment rate is about 19 percent in the city about the same levels as it was during the great depression a city living in a clash between slowly returning to normal but not knowing exactly what normal is anymore gabriel is on to his eda new york. what it was like for gabriel to report from new york in the pandemic was at its peak he shares his experiences in between us you can find it on the a.j. go section of our website at al-jazeera don't call as we've heard it's been 6 months since the world health organization declared the coronavirus and global pandemic code 19 has infected millions from the rich and famous to the very poorest in society. looks back now at how the disease spread across the world. what started as a cluster of cases in china has gone on to kill more than 104000 people worldwide with reported infections
far more than 23000 people in new york city have lost their lives because of coronavirus 100000 new yorkers lost their jobs as a direct result from the 2001 terrorist attack so far more than $1000000.00 new yorkers have lost their jobs because of the pandemic and the unemployment rate is about 19 percent in the city about the same levels as it was during the great depression a city living in a clash between slowly returning to normal but not knowing exactly what normal is anymore gabriel is on...
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Sep 11, 2020
09/20
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lost their jobs as a direct result from the 2001 terrorist attack so far more than 1000000 new yorkers have lost their jobs because of the pandemic and the unemployment rate is about 19 percent in the city about the same levels as it was during the great depression a city living in a clash between slowly returning to normal but not knowing exactly what normal is anymore. how do you see it in new york the c.e.o. unto our senior executives of a mining company that destroyed ancient caves in western australia is stepping down rio tinto has been widely criticized for blowing up 46000 year old walk shelters in may to expand an order. on him the. caves are one of the earliest known aboriginal heritage sites professor langsam is from the university of melbourne and says that the rio tinto executives chose to destroy the ancient sites to protect their interests. think we're trying to act since. nobody was $935000000.00 in there so i am not sure i unroll in our rights we are into. the ira words or it's all money and the contracts are longstanding and our boy that is the explanation from what i'
lost their jobs as a direct result from the 2001 terrorist attack so far more than 1000000 new yorkers have lost their jobs because of the pandemic and the unemployment rate is about 19 percent in the city about the same levels as it was during the great depression a city living in a clash between slowly returning to normal but not knowing exactly what normal is anymore. how do you see it in new york the c.e.o. unto our senior executives of a mining company that destroyed ancient caves in...
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the end of july , governor cuomo dragged his feet, and stepping up and signing up so unemployed new yorkersdent trump is still trailing in an average of also no that state. this is a republican led state by the governor. and where mar-a-lago is the president family spend last time there, joe biden is still leading by 3. 7 percentage points over president trump in florida according to the realclearpolitics average why how do you change. >> i don't put much faith in polling you have seen what joe biden voters are doing democrated voters, they are rioting, looting cancel culture think push on anyone with conservative value i don't think people are honest with any of these people you have see each economic results trump administration delivered negatinging decades income tens unlike joe biden support of nafta pppoerm strayed is it as u.s. destroyed american middle class these are incompetent democrat policies again, the media won't call out but i had to i literally wrote a book because in my four months of lockdown, irstarted analyzing all of the decisions of a half a century of joe biden's car
the end of july , governor cuomo dragged his feet, and stepping up and signing up so unemployed new yorkersdent trump is still trailing in an average of also no that state. this is a republican led state by the governor. and where mar-a-lago is the president family spend last time there, joe biden is still leading by 3. 7 percentage points over president trump in florida according to the realclearpolitics average why how do you change. >> i don't put much faith in polling you have seen...
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otherwise i believe they will continue to lose a lot of new yorkers who are just fed up. david: not only new york of course. it is chicago, los angeles, a lot of cities. finally very quickly. corporate real estate is suffering also as a result of this lockdown. people are not wanting -- companies are thinking of ways not to bring people back because it is a lot cheaper on overhead if people work from home. is that sort of thing happening in red states like florida as well. >> we're beginning to see people reevaluate for all the over head for office space. we're also beginning to see multifamilies because the -- market is doing extremely well because of he relocating. whereas the retail spaces are not doing as well, because a lot of businesses are going out of business. david: right. >> as a result the landlords are suffering. it depends on the product type for real estate. industrials doing very well. multifamily is doing very well. the retail centers are not doing as well because businesses are suffering. david: katrina, i could go on, but we've run out of time. that was
otherwise i believe they will continue to lose a lot of new yorkers who are just fed up. david: not only new york of course. it is chicago, los angeles, a lot of cities. finally very quickly. corporate real estate is suffering also as a result of this lockdown. people are not wanting -- companies are thinking of ways not to bring people back because it is a lot cheaper on overhead if people work from home. is that sort of thing happening in red states like florida as well. >> we're...
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Sep 29, 2020
09/20
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let's start with this latest piece in "the new yorker." "the case fors ending the supreme court as we know it." can you tell u us why you belile this? >> thank you for having me on. -- the history of the supreme court has been one ofof really enforcing a conservative social ordrder in e united states for most of its century, and in the 20th chief justice earl warren presidedvever the court because the l late 1950's through the late 1960's,s, is ts ment of ththe supremee couourt depending freedom and rights and all of these things, reallyly is an outlier in the courts history. and even within those instatanc, it has come at tremendous pressure from eieither social momovements or shiftfting international political dynamics where the united statetes need to project itself as a beacon of democracy and really cover-up and hide what was happening too african-americans in thee south. and so i thi that the court and the e other wings ofof government s sort of defefend te cocourt as an apololitical bodyt is sort of mutually making decisions about l
let's start with this latest piece in "the new yorker." "the case fors ending the supreme court as we know it." can you tell u us why you belile this? >> thank you for having me on. -- the history of the supreme court has been one ofof really enforcing a conservative social ordrder in e united states for most of its century, and in the 20th chief justice earl warren presidedvever the court because the l late 1950's through the late 1960's,s, is ts ment of ththe...
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Sep 18, 2020
09/20
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FBC
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new yorker -- average new yorker is not going to have access to that.uomo. >> i think it's policies and not politics. maria: yes. katherine, great to have you. we all want to see -- >> thanks, maria. maria: katherine, we will see you soon, thank you, we will be right back. maria: welcome back, busy day for ipo off snowflake's record breaking offering. amwell telemedicine by google jumped 26%. joining me ceo of amwell, congratulations on such a successful deal. >> thank you very much, maria. it's great to be here. maria: tell me about your business because we are seeing something that was used not very often or, you know, at different times to now being something that people go to regularly, do you believe this pandemic has actually deepened the penetration of telemedicine throughout the country? >> yes, but there are many things in life. nothing as good or bad as they seem. our goal is very different than many telehealth companies. we don't try to urge you to talk to a doctor you never met, get the service from someone who doesn't get records but rather
new yorker -- average new yorker is not going to have access to that.uomo. >> i think it's policies and not politics. maria: yes. katherine, great to have you. we all want to see -- >> thanks, maria. maria: katherine, we will see you soon, thank you, we will be right back. maria: welcome back, busy day for ipo off snowflake's record breaking offering. amwell telemedicine by google jumped 26%. joining me ceo of amwell, congratulations on such a successful deal. >> thank you...
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Sep 14, 2020
09/20
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in new yorker magazine writer cobb talks about his new pbs frontline documentary policing the police0. what see spans "washington journal" live at seven eastern tuesday morning. and be sure to join the discussion with your phone calls, facebook comments, texts and tweets. ♪ ♪ >> next a discussion on current u.s. strategy in the indo pacific region. we heard about u.s. relations with china and india, the impact of covid-19 in those countries. in u.s. troop withdrawal from germany. held by the center for strategic and international studies, this is half an hour. >> good morning everyone. i am the international security program at csis. i'm so please have joy to me this moring the chief of staff of the army, general mcconnell, thank you first coming and welcome to csis. thanks is great to be here with you
in new yorker magazine writer cobb talks about his new pbs frontline documentary policing the police0. what see spans "washington journal" live at seven eastern tuesday morning. and be sure to join the discussion with your phone calls, facebook comments, texts and tweets. ♪ ♪ >> next a discussion on current u.s. strategy in the indo pacific region. we heard about u.s. relations with china and india, the impact of covid-19 in those countries. in u.s. troop withdrawal from...
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Sep 11, 2020
09/20
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KNTV
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new yorker now florida real estate agent alison tells transplants there are other advantages too. from home part of the equation here? >> absolutely. if you can work from home, work remotely, why not move to a state like florida where there's no state income tax? >> reporter: the meaningful impact in this critical swing state where polls show the presidential race is too close to call. >> i think the pandemic is driving all of the change that's happening in new york right now. >> reporter: and for this family, like others, it's driving employment as well. she's a high-end fashion buyer whose job is now virtual. her husband darris is an accomplished actor in films, tv, and on broadway, which will stay dark for the rest of the year. his new role, teaching acting at florida state university. >> when new york is like stable again in whatever way that can be interpreted down the road, we would be so excited to come back and be a part of it again. >> all right. a big change around the country right now. well, you know what, a big change in the forecast but not for the better. kari, you
new yorker now florida real estate agent alison tells transplants there are other advantages too. from home part of the equation here? >> absolutely. if you can work from home, work remotely, why not move to a state like florida where there's no state income tax? >> reporter: the meaningful impact in this critical swing state where polls show the presidential race is too close to call. >> i think the pandemic is driving all of the change that's happening in new york right now....
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Sep 27, 2020
09/20
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she was staff writer at the new yorker. she edit the book 6 times and repeatedly would take me to the woods frankly, wait a minute, you haven't absolutely confirmed this, you need talk to this person and she would give me graphs and i would have 250 words on a page typed out neatly and then she would go after it and actually write more than 250 words on the page and rearranging, and so forth. and i am blessed, you know her as a friend, i know her as a wife and a friend, and the most -- yeah. exactly. >> but i mean, the question i had was this process that you went through of coming out of your -- you are most accomplished reporter in america and you come out of the tradition of trying to keep your voice neutral even as -- and let the reporting tell the story. and in this case you actually spoke up as an individual and said, issued an opinion, and i can imagine that, it's kind of -- it's a hard step to take for people like you and like me, maybe, who are trained as traditional reporters. and i wonder what is it about trump t
she was staff writer at the new yorker. she edit the book 6 times and repeatedly would take me to the woods frankly, wait a minute, you haven't absolutely confirmed this, you need talk to this person and she would give me graphs and i would have 250 words on a page typed out neatly and then she would go after it and actually write more than 250 words on the page and rearranging, and so forth. and i am blessed, you know her as a friend, i know her as a wife and a friend, and the most -- yeah....
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129
Sep 3, 2020
09/20
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FOXNEWSW
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neil. >> neil: just to new yorkers at each other's throats. thank you. there we go. k you, john roberts. former republican governor of the beautiful state of new york. you know, it's still a beautiful state, governor, but man, all men, between the uptick in crime and a lot of people who don't want to go back there, concerns about the virus. well new york every do things the way that they use to do things? it just seems like a mess. >> it is a mess. i spent 12 years trying to get new york on the right track, and when i left, it was. now it is clearly on the wrong track. maybe that was political, but there are many, many new yorkers who are now -- too expensive here the taxes are too high. the social climate has deteriorated enormously. new york will come back. it is just a question of what led come back quickly, or will it be a matter of many, many years? >> neil: governor cuomo gets a bad rap. he is nowhere near as controversial or polarizing a figure as the new york city mayor, who's been pushing this notion that maybe we hold off on indoor dining in the big apple un
neil. >> neil: just to new yorkers at each other's throats. thank you. there we go. k you, john roberts. former republican governor of the beautiful state of new york. you know, it's still a beautiful state, governor, but man, all men, between the uptick in crime and a lot of people who don't want to go back there, concerns about the virus. well new york every do things the way that they use to do things? it just seems like a mess. >> it is a mess. i spent 12 years trying to get new...
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129
Sep 5, 2020
09/20
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CNNW
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i'll talk to a lifelong new yorker who wrote a widely read essay that predicts, not this time. when we started carvana, they told us that selling cars 100% online wouldn't work. but we went to work. building an experience that lets you shop over 17,000 cars from home. creating a coast to coast network to deliver your car as soon as tomorrow. recruiting an army of customer advocates to make your experience incredible. and putting you in control of the whole thing with powerful technology. that's why we've become the nation's fastest growing retailer. because our customers love it. see for yourself, at carvana.com. - i'm szasz. [norm] and we live in columbia, missouri. we do consulting, but we also write. [szasz] we take care of ourselves constantly; it's important. we walk three to five times a week, a couple miles at a time. - we've both been taking prevagen for a little more than 11 years now. after about 30 days of taking it, we noticed clarity that we didn't notice before. - it's still helping me. i still notice a difference. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. to give y
i'll talk to a lifelong new yorker who wrote a widely read essay that predicts, not this time. when we started carvana, they told us that selling cars 100% online wouldn't work. but we went to work. building an experience that lets you shop over 17,000 cars from home. creating a coast to coast network to deliver your car as soon as tomorrow. recruiting an army of customer advocates to make your experience incredible. and putting you in control of the whole thing with powerful technology. that's...
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Sep 30, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 17
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no new yorker was at all surprised by this report. all the hallmarks of president trump's career before and after politics are there. hyperbole, fraud, avoiding responsibility, pursuing selfish interests above all else. that's president trump in a nutshell. documents obtained by the new york times shows a long history of the president's egregious tax avoidance, and potential criminal activity and owes $500 million in personal obligations. who does he owe that to? >> 500 million is not chump change. who does the president owe $500 million to? if president trump wants another four-year term as president, the people have to know who president trump is so deeply indebted to. these documents reveal that president trump was an abject failure in business, and a serial tax cheat. we've already heard the president claim the reporting in the new york times is fake. well, president trump, put your tax returns where your mouth is. i yield the floor. >> who will control congress in january? stay informed on all the competitive congressional praise
no new yorker was at all surprised by this report. all the hallmarks of president trump's career before and after politics are there. hyperbole, fraud, avoiding responsibility, pursuing selfish interests above all else. that's president trump in a nutshell. documents obtained by the new york times shows a long history of the president's egregious tax avoidance, and potential criminal activity and owes $500 million in personal obligations. who does he owe that to? >> 500 million is not...
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Sep 6, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN2
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eye 116
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we always go back to mid century new yorker but operations thinks this homegrown plan to kill 5 million human beings and civilians is too awful to think about. you have to read the book to find out what it was. >> thank you. thank you for the no-hitters on that list. what could be more beautiful. [laughter] >> when you get into the zone and the sounds of the baseball hitting is just so much conviction it is so american. >> how do we reconcile these things? >> we don't. we had so many good conversations over the years and a lot of them it isn't simpleminded but very appreciative and graceful one that he talked about the character there's a lot of things in common and what the hell is wrong with his first but also leading to the point what you just said is there anything more glorious even in poetry? and ever in our lifetime was there a more moving part? and also carmichael and george gershwin. i'm a gershwin. as a lyricist we read wonderful poetry. and the boy nick baker and was conflicted shall we say. let's learn more about nick baker. >> sometimes writing a book first of all, yes to a
we always go back to mid century new yorker but operations thinks this homegrown plan to kill 5 million human beings and civilians is too awful to think about. you have to read the book to find out what it was. >> thank you. thank you for the no-hitters on that list. what could be more beautiful. [laughter] >> when you get into the zone and the sounds of the baseball hitting is just so much conviction it is so american. >> how do we reconcile these things? >> we don't....
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Sep 11, 2020
09/20
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FBC
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york representative max rose because i love marketing and he had a great ad out this week unifying new yorkers15 second ad saying that bill de blasio is the worst mayor new york has ever seen, and he ended by saying that's the ad, that's it folks. i think that's a winning ad for him. a lot of people are frustrated in new york and maybe they are going to go vote for him for congress now. charles: yeah. we will see. a winning ad but a terrible situation for new york. love our segments, beverly. have a great weekend. talk to you next week. >> thank you. charles: coming up here, next, folks, another winner in my book, a serious big-time winner. gerri willis will join us on an update of an important event that is near and dear to her heart. please stay with us. my name is joe. i'm a sustainability science researcher at amazon. climate change is the fight of our generation. the biggest obstacle right now is that we're running out of time. amazon now has a goal to be net zero carbon by 2040. we don't really know exactly how we are going to get there. it's going to be pretty hard. but one way or anoth
york representative max rose because i love marketing and he had a great ad out this week unifying new yorkers15 second ad saying that bill de blasio is the worst mayor new york has ever seen, and he ended by saying that's the ad, that's it folks. i think that's a winning ad for him. a lot of people are frustrated in new york and maybe they are going to go vote for him for congress now. charles: yeah. we will see. a winning ad but a terrible situation for new york. love our segments, beverly....
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Sep 21, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN2
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the conversation is another prize-winning journalist jane meyer chief correspondent for the new yorker magazine where she has been 25 years she is also the author of four books to help deepen our understanding of such important topics such as the money behind the minds of the radical right the war on terror the clarence thomas hearings in the iran-contra affair. jane and bob, take it away. >> hello bob it's good to be with you. i just want to start that there has been so much news to get your thoughts on the court and i wonder if your book on trump if you had got any insights into his relationship with mitch mcconnell and if they are coordinated closely and if they have the same interest when it comes to filling the vacancy by ruth bader ginsburg's death. >> yes what your piece said and your ideas that mcconnell wants to make sure that he retains control of the senate over getting another justice. is that correct? >> my guess is he is very canny he surprises people with the fine print but i know who i have interviewed about mitch mcconnell and nothing matters more to him than staying m
the conversation is another prize-winning journalist jane meyer chief correspondent for the new yorker magazine where she has been 25 years she is also the author of four books to help deepen our understanding of such important topics such as the money behind the minds of the radical right the war on terror the clarence thomas hearings in the iran-contra affair. jane and bob, take it away. >> hello bob it's good to be with you. i just want to start that there has been so much news to get...
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Sep 28, 2020
09/20
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MSNBCW
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. >> more than 1,000 new yorkers tested positive for coronavirus on friday, the first time since juneth the infection rate reached 1%. new york city's health department said in some neighborhoods 19 is spreading at an alarming rate and the city should consider shutting down private schools and nonessential businesses in these areas. in some parts of the city the infection rate topped more than 6%. new york city's public schools are set for in-person instruction this week. >> in the spring, before it got warm, you had a lot of places across the north especially that had problems because more of those residents were inside. in the summer months when donald trump said this was going to magically go away, you suddenly saw an outbreak from florida to arizona because it was getting hot, a lot of people were coming inside. here now as we go into the fall and flu season starts up, a lot of people have been concerned about this, new yorkers and others in the northeast and across the northern states are going to be going back inside again en masse and it's just going to cause, again, probably g
. >> more than 1,000 new yorkers tested positive for coronavirus on friday, the first time since juneth the infection rate reached 1%. new york city's health department said in some neighborhoods 19 is spreading at an alarming rate and the city should consider shutting down private schools and nonessential businesses in these areas. in some parts of the city the infection rate topped more than 6%. new york city's public schools are set for in-person instruction this week. >> in the...
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Sep 5, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN2
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i have written so much about him, long new yorker profile of him. a movie about him, i was a -- so i am sadly an expert on roger stone. again, he is another figure i think people have wild theories that he was the go-20/20 -- go-between, between the russians and the campaign irthink rog would have liked to be to the go-between but he was really on oouts with trump during the campaign and didn't have the access hi watched and was convicted of lying to congress as well he should have been, but he was not someone who was -- again i don't think he was the linchpin of some conspiracy with russia. think it was just roger doing his crazy roger thing. >> in your book at the end you have an author's note. i now know from my singular experience compared to your many and wonderful books, that you do get to say just something you really want to say at the end. it's not really part of the story and you talk about the profession of journalism and fake news and being under fire and talk about everything who helped make the book happened put focused at the very end
i have written so much about him, long new yorker profile of him. a movie about him, i was a -- so i am sadly an expert on roger stone. again, he is another figure i think people have wild theories that he was the go-20/20 -- go-between, between the russians and the campaign irthink rog would have liked to be to the go-between but he was really on oouts with trump during the campaign and didn't have the access hi watched and was convicted of lying to congress as well he should have been, but he...
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Sep 18, 2020
09/20
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BBCNEWS
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and atla ntic times and the new yorker and atlantic magazine and all of these influential magazinesis so different from mine that he frankly has no real right to tell me what race means, how we should deal with race in america today because he's in a funny sort of way run away from it and he lives in paris and my lived experience back in the united states tells me that being black is still a very real and meaningful and discriminated against experience. your identity is a co nsta nt experience. your identity is a constant negotiation between how you perceive yourself and how you perceive yourself and how the institutions and other people you interact with perceive you. when i'm in france, i'm frequently misperceived as north african or arab. it doesn't make it real and it doesn't mean i need to a cce pt real and it doesn't mean i need to accept that sense of myself that the french system of reality thrust on me. it does not mean that people who are racialised as black in america need to redefine or reinforce that sense of themselves by embracing the mistaken racial categorisation so
and atla ntic times and the new yorker and atlantic magazine and all of these influential magazinesis so different from mine that he frankly has no real right to tell me what race means, how we should deal with race in america today because he's in a funny sort of way run away from it and he lives in paris and my lived experience back in the united states tells me that being black is still a very real and meaningful and discriminated against experience. your identity is a co nsta nt experience....
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Sep 25, 2020
09/20
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FBC
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ask the new yorkers, the millions of new yorkers if they want to put up with cuomo's decisions.you know, rick, what we've heard that democrats trust the scientists. if a vaccine -- when a vaccine is approved, let's be positive, it will be approved by scientists. >> yeah, it will be. but you know, look, david and i might disagree on where the politicization of the vaccine came from, but i think we all know where it came from. look, i mean, the reality is you, david, myself, we're all going to rely a lot more on what our doctor says than what the governor of my home state says or what the president of the united states says. when my doctor says yeah, take the vaccine, i'm going to take the vaccine. if governor cuomo wants to make sure that it's safe, i can't imagine i'm going to be concerned about it. charles: no, you may not be unless you are on a ventilator and then you might say hey buddy hurry on the process. >> if you are on the ventilator, the vaccine is too late. charles: yeah, yeah. you get my point, though. just slowing it up for someone who made all the mistakes that cuo
ask the new yorkers, the millions of new yorkers if they want to put up with cuomo's decisions.you know, rick, what we've heard that democrats trust the scientists. if a vaccine -- when a vaccine is approved, let's be positive, it will be approved by scientists. >> yeah, it will be. but you know, look, david and i might disagree on where the politicization of the vaccine came from, but i think we all know where it came from. look, i mean, the reality is you, david, myself, we're all going...
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107
Sep 11, 2020
09/20
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ALJAZ
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lost their jobs as a direct result from the 2001 terrorist attack so far more than 1000000 new yorkers have lost their jobs because of the pandemic and the unemployment rate is about 19 percent in the city about the same levels as it was during the great depression a city living in a clash between slowly returning to normal but not knowing exactly what normal is anymore gabriel sandow how does eda new york. find out what it was like for gabe to report from new york when the pandemic was at its peak he shares his experiences in between us which you can find in the a.j. go section of our website al-jazeera don't. look at a weather update next here on the news and then iranians cost the ballots at round 2 of a parliamentary vote it's been delayed because of the panda. i'll tell you why disney's new movie is causing offense to some in china. have a school. it seems that not all n.f.l. fans are happy with a new era of player protests against racial injustice. hello the it has been particularly warm across northern sections of the middle east 3 eastern and the mad and extending across the le
lost their jobs as a direct result from the 2001 terrorist attack so far more than 1000000 new yorkers have lost their jobs because of the pandemic and the unemployment rate is about 19 percent in the city about the same levels as it was during the great depression a city living in a clash between slowly returning to normal but not knowing exactly what normal is anymore gabriel sandow how does eda new york. find out what it was like for gabe to report from new york when the pandemic was at its...
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52
Sep 21, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN3
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eye 52
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but new yorkers called it the l.ied people to work and home again, but the steel skeleton outlived its usefulness. passengers dwindled. and so, the l is being torn down. above chinatown, manhattan's last l dappled the street in shadows. it proudly clung to cold stoves for heating it's old-fashioned waiting rooms. colored glass ornamented ancient windows and passengers paid a station agent who pushed a plunger to unlock a gate to let them in. the wooden train started with tired dignity. passengers sat and swayed and the track rolled on behind. the route was passed miles of tenements, giving passengers a glimpse into every window. all they got in return was a feeling of being close to the passing parade and lots of noise. the cars themselves were 50 years old and almost everybody agreed 3rd avenue would be better without the l that nearly touched the buildings, obstructed traffic, and blotted out the sun. a ride once cost a nickel. before electricity came, steam engines hauled the cars. showering red hot coals onto ped
but new yorkers called it the l.ied people to work and home again, but the steel skeleton outlived its usefulness. passengers dwindled. and so, the l is being torn down. above chinatown, manhattan's last l dappled the street in shadows. it proudly clung to cold stoves for heating it's old-fashioned waiting rooms. colored glass ornamented ancient windows and passengers paid a station agent who pushed a plunger to unlock a gate to let them in. the wooden train started with tired dignity....
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Sep 11, 2020
09/20
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ALJAZ
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eye 88
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lost their jobs as a direct result from the 2001 terrorist attack so far more than 1000000 new yorkers have lost their jobs because of the pandemic and the unemployment rate is about 19 percent in the city about the same levels as it was during the great depression a city living in a clash between slowly returning to normal but not knowing exactly what normal is anymore gabriel is onto his eda new york. talks upon argus is assistant professor at the johns hopkins school of medicine he joins us now live from baltimore scott good to have you with us dr here we are 6 months into the pandemic and we've been seeing this thing yes. well it's everyone's 1st can't at mc and. it's a repeating this thing it's hard to say i think there's definitely regions of the world who are doing really well by recognizing the biology of the virus recognizing how it spreads they're doing the appropriate actions to mitigate that spread right from physical distance saying face masking chronic can't hygiene limiting their times and public spaces so i do think certain regions of the world are doing really well and
lost their jobs as a direct result from the 2001 terrorist attack so far more than 1000000 new yorkers have lost their jobs because of the pandemic and the unemployment rate is about 19 percent in the city about the same levels as it was during the great depression a city living in a clash between slowly returning to normal but not knowing exactly what normal is anymore gabriel is onto his eda new york. talks upon argus is assistant professor at the johns hopkins school of medicine he joins us...
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many people died in the holocaust a significant share even thought jews were to blame and asked new yorkers what they've been taught about this dark chapter in history. and u.s. politicians are angry after it's revealed.
many people died in the holocaust a significant share even thought jews were to blame and asked new yorkers what they've been taught about this dark chapter in history. and u.s. politicians are angry after it's revealed.
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71
Sep 20, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN2
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>> guest: you have a piece of the new yorker to remind everyone what your piece said and did the idea that mcconnell wants to make sure that he maintains control of the senate more than getting other justice; is that correct? >> host: he would like to do both he and my guess is that he is very canny and will find a way to do both with incredible maneuvers. he often surprises people with the fine print ofine print of te senate. a few people that have interviewed mitch mcconnell thinks that nothing matters more to him than stating the majority leader. put it that way. but i imagine at this point trump really wants yet another justice, and this would be his third on the court. i'm sure mitch would like it, too, but not at the expense of losing his majority in the senate, and it's dicey politics as we know right now. so, what do you think is going on? how do they work together; have you gotten any -- >> guest: i'm going to release some audio and transcripts of trump talking with me about this very issue. i think we are going to release them in an hour, but it shows that trump and mcconnel
>> guest: you have a piece of the new yorker to remind everyone what your piece said and did the idea that mcconnell wants to make sure that he maintains control of the senate more than getting other justice; is that correct? >> host: he would like to do both he and my guess is that he is very canny and will find a way to do both with incredible maneuvers. he often surprises people with the fine print ofine print of te senate. a few people that have interviewed mitch mcconnell...
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62
Sep 15, 2020
09/20
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CSPAN
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at 8:30, "new yorker" magazine writer jelani cobb discusses his new pbs frontline documentary "policing the police 2020." ♪ ♪ host: good morning. it's tuesday, september 15, 2020. the house returns this morning at 9 a.m. eastern and at 10 a.m. today in the white house, representatives from bahrain, the united arab emirates, and israel gathered to sign an agreement to normalize relations. we begin this morning back on the campaign trail yesterday as president trump met with california officials overseeing the response to raging wildfires in the state as joe biden sought to put the issue of climate change front and center in an address from his home state of delaware. this morning we are asking you how important our climate issues when it comes to your election 2020 vote. give us a call. phone lines split this way, if you are a supporter of the biden harris ticket, (202) 748-8000. if you support the trump-pence ticket, (202) 748-8001. a special line for those who have been impacted by recent --ural disasters, 202, 7 (202) 748-8002. you can send us a text at (202) 748-8003. otherwise, cap
at 8:30, "new yorker" magazine writer jelani cobb discusses his new pbs frontline documentary "policing the police 2020." ♪ ♪ host: good morning. it's tuesday, september 15, 2020. the house returns this morning at 9 a.m. eastern and at 10 a.m. today in the white house, representatives from bahrain, the united arab emirates, and israel gathered to sign an agreement to normalize relations. we begin this morning back on the campaign trail yesterday as president trump met...
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113
Sep 1, 2020
09/20
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CNNW
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you're a new yorker. i'm a new yorker. true? >> no, absolutely not. york is a resill yeblt city. we can come back when you look at the year we had. no doubt about it. here's what i'm confident of. we're going to get out of, there and it will be the men and kwichl of the police department that will have a significant role to play. we need people to step up across -- you know, you mentioned politics. cops don't get to be politicians. we don't get to call and say who is ooh calling. we have a job do and we do it. we try to leave all that noise up. obviously at this time the country is incredibly political. we try to stay above that. >> you have seen a phenomenon. it's not isolated. we've seen armed groups come out, big weapons. a 17-year-old charged with homicide, other groups driving in to portland. local officials say it's not calming the situation. there i want to ask you. you're a cop. you're tough. >> yep. >> do you have any desire to see private citizens appointing themselves in effect as deputies to law enforcement and come to respond to crime and
you're a new yorker. i'm a new yorker. true? >> no, absolutely not. york is a resill yeblt city. we can come back when you look at the year we had. no doubt about it. here's what i'm confident of. we're going to get out of, there and it will be the men and kwichl of the police department that will have a significant role to play. we need people to step up across -- you know, you mentioned politics. cops don't get to be politicians. we don't get to call and say who is ooh calling. we have...
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97
Sep 10, 2020
09/20
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FOXNEWSW
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carley: privileged new yorkers arrested for writing, details on the comrades in custody. ♪ if i had $1 would buy you a house another day, another chance to bounce forward. let's do this. by making internet speeds fast and reliable. so you can keep up with your customers. by ensuring those speeds have wireless internet backup. so if the power goes down, your connection doesn't. and by covering all your connected devices with serious security. so we can handle this. and this. while you get on with this. and this. be fast, be secure. bounce forward. with comcast business. get started with a powerful internet and voice solution for just $64.90 a month. call or go online today. >> i started to get a ton of phone calls, text messages, email, or my yelp reviews, then i fail, i am done in san francisco and closing my doors unfortunately. >> the san francisco salon owner who called out nancy pelosi's' sitting down for good. erica says she's showing her salon doors over threats to her family after she shared video of pelosi getting her hair done. this image shows pelosi inside the salon without
carley: privileged new yorkers arrested for writing, details on the comrades in custody. ♪ if i had $1 would buy you a house another day, another chance to bounce forward. let's do this. by making internet speeds fast and reliable. so you can keep up with your customers. by ensuring those speeds have wireless internet backup. so if the power goes down, your connection doesn't. and by covering all your connected devices with serious security. so we can handle this. and this. while you get on...
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45
Sep 16, 2020
09/20
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BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 45
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as new yorkers, we always figure these things out. own before, and we are coming back. jonathan: lieutenant governor can appreciate the sentiment. thanks for giving it to us. kathy, new york lieutenant governor. fedre counting down to the decision and news conference later with chairman powell. we will be catching up with peter oppenheimer, goldman sachs international chief equity strategist. your bond market with the smallest of bids, yields lower. a single basis point, 0.67%. together with tom keene lisa abramowicz, i am jonathan ferro, heard on bloomberg radio, seen is bloomberg tv, this is kevin "bloomberg surveillance." ♪ so you're a small business, or a big one. you were thriving, but then... oh. ah. okay. plan, pivot. how do you bounce back? you don't, you bounce forward, with serious and reliable internet. powered by the largest gig speed network in america. but is it secure? sure it's secure. and even if the power goes down, your connection doesn't. so how do i do this? you don't do this. we do this, together. bounce forward,
as new yorkers, we always figure these things out. own before, and we are coming back. jonathan: lieutenant governor can appreciate the sentiment. thanks for giving it to us. kathy, new york lieutenant governor. fedre counting down to the decision and news conference later with chairman powell. we will be catching up with peter oppenheimer, goldman sachs international chief equity strategist. your bond market with the smallest of bids, yields lower. a single basis point, 0.67%. together with...
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87
Sep 25, 2020
09/20
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FOXNEWSW
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. >> i'm not going to trust the federal government's opinion and i wouldn't recommend to new yorkers ederal government's opinion. >> reporter: can estate of new york legally prevent residents from getting a potentially life-saving vaccine and the answer is yes, judicial analyst judge andrew napolitano told me when it comes to health and safety they can impose stricter is the federal government but in this one, cuomo trumps trump. >> they have butted heads over many things in recent months. thank you. what about governor cuomo's pledge, not to authorize the vaccine, a, quote, trump vaccine without having state officials that it first. let's talk about operation speed and healthcare reform the president rolled out, with the author of the new book the price we pay and fox's medical contributor, the politics of fear and the power of science doctor mark siegel. good to have you both with us tonight. i want to start with you on the threat from governor cuomo. how do you think this benefits or doesn't the people of new york saying even if the fda approves that we will have another vetting pr
. >> i'm not going to trust the federal government's opinion and i wouldn't recommend to new yorkers ederal government's opinion. >> reporter: can estate of new york legally prevent residents from getting a potentially life-saving vaccine and the answer is yes, judicial analyst judge andrew napolitano told me when it comes to health and safety they can impose stricter is the federal government but in this one, cuomo trumps trump. >> they have butted heads over many things in...
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Sep 25, 2020
09/20
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>> frankly, i'm not going to trust the federal government's opinion and i wouldn't recommend to new yorkers based on the federal government's opinion. >> new york officials don't generally play a role in approving drugs or vaccines, but they could delay distribution in the state if they believe the vaccine was not safe. this erosion of trust is already having big consequences. >>> how big of a problem is growing skepticism? >> oh, it's enormous. once we do develop a vaccine, obviously we want people to accept it. the medical profession, they're very concerned. i hear that almost literally every single day. >> a key model used by the white house now projects more than 371,000 coronavirus deaths in the u.s. by january 1st. that's 7,000 lest than before yet still there could be 3,000 deaths a day by the end of the year. nearly 100,000 people could be saved if most people would just wear masks. right now about half of them are wearing them. the average immune cases are up 27% in two weeks. now when people are heading indoors for the season, a reality check from dr. anthony fauci. >> given the f
>> frankly, i'm not going to trust the federal government's opinion and i wouldn't recommend to new yorkers based on the federal government's opinion. >> new york officials don't generally play a role in approving drugs or vaccines, but they could delay distribution in the state if they believe the vaccine was not safe. this erosion of trust is already having big consequences. >>> how big of a problem is growing skepticism? >> oh, it's enormous. once we do develop a...
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Sep 17, 2020
09/20
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i want to read this piece from the new yorker, black scholars confront white supremacy and classicalalk about when america was formed and the interesting european classical music, the white ms. of classical music is above all an american problem between european classical music was transplanted to the multicultural united states it blended into the racial hierarchy the governed the country from its founding. the white majority tended to adopt european music as a badge of its supremacy. >> this is really dismaying. the arguments that lack almost no logic or reason whatsoever. there was a time in america when pop music, rock music was overwhelmingly dominated by whites and blacks were not encouraged to participate. there was a time when entertainment, in movies and on television was the same way, you know what changed, had nothing to do with some concentrated effort to end, quote, white supremacy, talented people when they were given a shot participated and it turned out that there were so many talented people they dominated. you see this in sports, you see this in entertainment and if
i want to read this piece from the new yorker, black scholars confront white supremacy and classicalalk about when america was formed and the interesting european classical music, the white ms. of classical music is above all an american problem between european classical music was transplanted to the multicultural united states it blended into the racial hierarchy the governed the country from its founding. the white majority tended to adopt european music as a badge of its supremacy. >>...
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Sep 11, 2020
09/20
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"new yorker" magazine, after almost 100 years become truly a garbage publication, unfortunately, calledit "extraordinary," and said "only evangelicals don't like it." the telegraph newspaper says an important film in "an age terrified of child sexuality." we are going to show you a portion of what these people are celebrating. again, it is disturbing. these are literally 11-year-old girls. ♪ ♪ >> tucker: so this controversy emerged several weeks ago, at the time based on a movie poster, netflix insisted the film really wasn't like that at all, they said the poster misrepresented with the movie was really about, but they were lying. so how should we respond? any normal society would reject it, sexualizing children. what does it say about our country that this is airing without any restraint on the biggest streaming service in america? tammy bruce is the president of independent women's voice had a fox news contributor. she joins us tonight. tammy, the idea that if you don't like this, you are terrified of child sexuality, i mean, i don't even know where to begin on this, so i'm just goin
"new yorker" magazine, after almost 100 years become truly a garbage publication, unfortunately, calledit "extraordinary," and said "only evangelicals don't like it." the telegraph newspaper says an important film in "an age terrified of child sexuality." we are going to show you a portion of what these people are celebrating. again, it is disturbing. these are literally 11-year-old girls. ♪ ♪ >> tucker: so this controversy emerged several weeks...
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Sep 14, 2020
09/20
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one vanderbilt is located across from grand central terminal and many new yorkers are still at home. building's owner, green realty, estimates 72% of the space will be occupied by year end, though. we spoke with president mark holliday about that. >> i have every confidence in the world, speaking to believers of the businesses that for my portfolio, that they all want to be back. a lot of tenants are coming in in the month -- in the next month or two. we have thousands and thousands of employees already back in our building portfolio. they tell us they feel safe, satisfied, good morale, and are happy they are back. sl greenhat was president mark holliday. coming up, we discuss the latest of oracle's pursuit of tiktok. we will be checking markets for you right now. let's take a look at where we stand. the dow jones industrial average is up about 1.1%. at 3383.00 up 1.3% a big day in terms of the landscape. also verizon making a deal today, buying the prepaid operations of american mobile, the carlos slim operation in mexico. verizon is up 1.25% on that deal. the nasdaq is the leader t
one vanderbilt is located across from grand central terminal and many new yorkers are still at home. building's owner, green realty, estimates 72% of the space will be occupied by year end, though. we spoke with president mark holliday about that. >> i have every confidence in the world, speaking to believers of the businesses that for my portfolio, that they all want to be back. a lot of tenants are coming in in the month -- in the next month or two. we have thousands and thousands of...