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Dec 23, 2014
12/14
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KPIX
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. >> a new take on a famous norman rockwell painting. his daughter helps renew the portrait of the american family and what tylenol has to do with it. ,,,,,,,, female announcer: sleep train thanks all those who helped make a difference last year for thousands of california foster kids. thank you for helping foster kids. thank you for the school supplies! thank you for the new shoes. thank you, secret santa! and thank you for donating money. announcer: your generosity proves that while not everyone can be a foster parent, anyone can help a foster child. thank you! thank you! ¡gracias por su ayuda! [baby cooing] thank you. stories off a building in s -- and survived. . >>> nor the first time, we are hearing from the family of a window washer who fell eleven stories of a building in san francisco and survived. kpix-5's michelle griego is here with a look at his recovery. >> reporter: the family of pedro perez feel lucky he is a live. he was nearly killed when he fell from the roof of a building. he crashed on a moving toyota camry and in a
. >> a new take on a famous norman rockwell painting. his daughter helps renew the portrait of the american family and what tylenol has to do with it. ,,,,,,,, female announcer: sleep train thanks all those who helped make a difference last year for thousands of california foster kids. thank you for helping foster kids. thank you for the school supplies! thank you for the new shoes. thank you, secret santa! and thank you for donating money. announcer: your generosity proves that while not...
96
96
Dec 4, 2014
12/14
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BLOOMBERG
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it is heroi when i first started reading about it, the small, predominantly white, norman rockwell towns all over america that have moved from legally prescribed oxycontin to epidemics of heroin use. probably the worst urban street drug there is. i find that interesting. likely, thehe most best argument for depicting heroine as a problem. it is going to be the easiest sell. what precise moment did it become a criminal problem? who is a junkie and who is someone who has been overprescribed? ofse questions become sort tricky to answer. >> where are you going, in a sense? you are at cnn and do the other thing too. but cnn talked about you as representative of the future. that what you have done is representative of the future of where one cable network wants to go. where are you going? >> i am not looking that far in the future. nothing about me sees you as a guide with has planned his life out. [laughter] going?e am i i see what we do as an adjunct to the news. we are telling stories about people's everyday lives. more often than not. that i think are useful. you know, when you are reading
it is heroi when i first started reading about it, the small, predominantly white, norman rockwell towns all over america that have moved from legally prescribed oxycontin to epidemics of heroin use. probably the worst urban street drug there is. i find that interesting. likely, thehe most best argument for depicting heroine as a problem. it is going to be the easiest sell. what precise moment did it become a criminal problem? who is a junkie and who is someone who has been overprescribed? ofse...
96
96
Dec 26, 2014
12/14
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CNNW
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the gorgeous mill towns, victorian houses, deeply felt famously upright and new england values, norman rockwellplicable and unexpected has happened. >> new england is a new mecca for heroin use. >> emergency room admissions, law enforcement areas dealing with crimes being committed that never happened before. >> detectives are working around the clock. dealers are making a killing. >> not new york or baltimore or l.a. or chicago, but rural towns like this one are now statistically ground zero for the heroin epidemic. what the hell happened? >> the next couple years, if this heroin use trend continues to grow, it may be beyond getting a handle on. i'm a detective with the greenfield police department here, and my focus is undercover and narcotic investigations. >> this is a well-known area to us and very active. >> heroin use in the past year, its just increased to a level i've never seen any other drug come into an area. people are all going to be affected. it hasn't topped out yet. >> someone you've known, someone you went to school with, someone you work with. >> so, sunny crocket gets a ferr
the gorgeous mill towns, victorian houses, deeply felt famously upright and new england values, norman rockwellplicable and unexpected has happened. >> new england is a new mecca for heroin use. >> emergency room admissions, law enforcement areas dealing with crimes being committed that never happened before. >> detectives are working around the clock. dealers are making a killing. >> not new york or baltimore or l.a. or chicago, but rural towns like this one are now...
172
172
Dec 20, 2014
12/14
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CNNW
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. >> it was just a really american norman rockwell vision. >> but the trouble is there are all kindstensions. >> the civil rights movement is the seminal event of the 1960s that ignites so many of the changes in society. >> the day has come when racism must be banished. >> the civil rights movement was incredibly inspiring. but at the same time, the women in it were not recognized as leaders in the same way that the men were. it's said to us, if these movements we love still are not equal, then there has to be an autonomous women's movement. >> mr. president, the democratic platform promises to work for equal rights for women, including equal pay. what have you done for the women? >> i'm sure we haven't done enough, and -- [ laughter ] >> in 1961, president kennedy creates the commission on the status of women. that commission produced a report in 1963 that revealed things like the fact that women earned 59 cents for every dollar that men earned. that women were kept out of the most lucrative professional positions. >> women couldn't open a bank account in their own name. they couldn
. >> it was just a really american norman rockwell vision. >> but the trouble is there are all kindstensions. >> the civil rights movement is the seminal event of the 1960s that ignites so many of the changes in society. >> the day has come when racism must be banished. >> the civil rights movement was incredibly inspiring. but at the same time, the women in it were not recognized as leaders in the same way that the men were. it's said to us, if these movements we...
118
118
Dec 3, 2014
12/14
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KQED
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eye 118
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it's a story when i first started reading about it, the small predominantly white rural norman rockwellowns all over america that have moved fromcle. i find it interesting and it's also the most likely the best argument for depicting heroin as a public health problem rather than a criminal justice problem. it's going to be easiest to sell at what precise moment did it become a criminal justice problem, this addiction, you know. who is a junkie and who is somebody who just has a you know, been overprescribed. those questions become sort of tricky to answer. >> rose: why are you going in a sense. you're now on cnn and doing the other thing too. cnn often talks about you as representative of the future, that what you have done is representative of the future of where one cable network wants to go. where are you going? >> i don't, i'm not looking. >> rose: nothing about me sees you as a guy who has planned his life out. >> where am i going? i mean, i see what we're doing as an adjunct to the news. we're telling stories about people's every day lives more often than not , that i think ae use
it's a story when i first started reading about it, the small predominantly white rural norman rockwellowns all over america that have moved fromcle. i find it interesting and it's also the most likely the best argument for depicting heroin as a public health problem rather than a criminal justice problem. it's going to be easiest to sell at what precise moment did it become a criminal justice problem, this addiction, you know. who is a junkie and who is somebody who just has a you know, been...
72
72
Dec 7, 2014
12/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 72
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mark and carol graham is at the center of this book, had for longtime a norman rockwell painting. they had three children who are all extraordinarily close. kevin was the middle child and sensitive, the perfect one when his parents what they do something, he would do it without hesitation, without thinking. jeff, his older brother was for rambunctious one. he drank. he was with was the life of the party. kevin would fall into the party and sit by himself in the corner. then melanie was the young sister, the one they tried to look out for brevity what in the world. the three of them were a single you know, the three them against the world because like many military families, they moved from base to base, from country to country. for the two boys their picture in every sense of the phrase. they looked at the father, watched him ascend from his early start in kentucky to be captain in germany to moving on to korea to moving and doing some tours in saudi arabia and kuwait. for them this was the highest honor, the highest in the public service. and both wanted to do the same thing. the
mark and carol graham is at the center of this book, had for longtime a norman rockwell painting. they had three children who are all extraordinarily close. kevin was the middle child and sensitive, the perfect one when his parents what they do something, he would do it without hesitation, without thinking. jeff, his older brother was for rambunctious one. he drank. he was with was the life of the party. kevin would fall into the party and sit by himself in the corner. then melanie was the...
1,015
1.0K
Dec 12, 2014
12/14
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KNTV
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it's well known you didn't grow up in a norman rockwell existence. >> no, not at all. >> outside bostonpancy there. >> yeah. of course, everybody has an opinion, is entitled to it. whether i'm deserving of it or not. from the day i woke up in prison, realized the mistakes i made and the pain i caused people, i committed to turning my life around, which is not an easy thing to do. a i still had to go to prison. not being in the gang anymore left me alone. i was basically a follower instead of a leader and i needed to change my ways. going back to the community, still living in that neighborhood and having to go to the train station every day and pass those guys was a tough thing to do. i was committed to turning my life around and committed to turning other kids' lives around and helping to avoid the mistakes i made. >> it's an evolution. you're a father also. >> this is 27 years in the works. if i'm not granted the pardon it will not change my commitment to working in the community. >> have you read the speculation, that you want to become a reservist in the los angeles police departmen
it's well known you didn't grow up in a norman rockwell existence. >> no, not at all. >> outside bostonpancy there. >> yeah. of course, everybody has an opinion, is entitled to it. whether i'm deserving of it or not. from the day i woke up in prison, realized the mistakes i made and the pain i caused people, i committed to turning my life around, which is not an easy thing to do. a i still had to go to prison. not being in the gang anymore left me alone. i was basically a...