SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 13, 2013
07/13
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casey has a ba from harvard and ms in real estate from nyu. >> welcome. >> good afternoon, president fong. the item before you is a conditional use authorization to sfb a former retail restaurant at 16 west portal avenue. it's a french cafe and bakery with 7 other locations throughout the bay area. they serve breakfast and lunch from 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. daily. the existing tenant space measures approximately 2675 square feet. the 1 story commercial building is currently vacant but was previously occupied by a grocery store. to date the department has received approximately 150 letters in support of the project from neighborhood organizations. in addition, the department has received a survey conducted by the greater west portal neighborhood association with 200 respondents in support. the they have not received opposition. this concludes my presentation. i will be available for questions. thank you. >> thank you. project sponsor? >> good afternoon, president fong and members of the planning commission. my name is jp, vp of operation for cafe. we are seeking permission to open the
casey has a ba from harvard and ms in real estate from nyu. >> welcome. >> good afternoon, president fong. the item before you is a conditional use authorization to sfb a former retail restaurant at 16 west portal avenue. it's a french cafe and bakery with 7 other locations throughout the bay area. they serve breakfast and lunch from 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. daily. the existing tenant space measures approximately 2675 square feet. the 1 story commercial building is currently vacant...
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Jul 21, 2013
07/13
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FOXNEWSW
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as always, joining us this morning, associate professor of medicine at nyu's lango center. >> dr. samadi is here, too. people know it's 30 minutes after the hour. nobody misses "sunday housecall." my mom's watching, even. >> our best viewer there. >> she's good. she's in florida. i understand the heat in other areas is even warmer than it is in florida. you guys are concerned about people not knowing what to do to stay cool and then i was also informed to ask you about hyperthe hyperthermia. >> it means too much heat where the body heat is building up. we have something called the heat index people out there need to know about. especially your mother down there in florida. heat index is the combination of the temperature outside and humidity ouz. the higher the heat index the less you can sweat. your sweat is what the body has to cool you off. it's your sprinkler system. if it doesn't work and you can't sweat enough you have a problem. elderly people like your mom have another problem which is -- >> oh, she hates you right now for calling her elderly. >> sorry, mom. >> generically
as always, joining us this morning, associate professor of medicine at nyu's lango center. >> dr. samadi is here, too. people know it's 30 minutes after the hour. nobody misses "sunday housecall." my mom's watching, even. >> our best viewer there. >> she's good. she's in florida. i understand the heat in other areas is even warmer than it is in florida. you guys are concerned about people not knowing what to do to stay cool and then i was also informed to ask you...
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Jul 7, 2013
07/13
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marc siegel, associate professor of medicine at nyu's lango medical center. doctors, good morning.our colleagues in san francisco must have been and are very busy today. marc, what do they deal with? how do they treat these patients? what's the first priority? >> right on the scene they have to triage. the way they've been triaging in california lately, something called s.t.a.r.t. a program they're using. they first will decide the people that can walk they set aside. those people are probably okay. in this case there were spinal injuries. you saw on the scene people that had injured spines they put on boards. they tape them, literally, their head to the board because they don't want any movement with a spinal injury whatsoever. can they breathe? do they need an airway to help them breathe? is there any bleeding going on? what is their mental status? those are the first things you think about. you know what happens in a situation like this? people get injured and they don't even know it. they get thrown about the cabin. they may have a head yinjury they're not going to know about r
marc siegel, associate professor of medicine at nyu's lango medical center. doctors, good morning.our colleagues in san francisco must have been and are very busy today. marc, what do they deal with? how do they treat these patients? what's the first priority? >> right on the scene they have to triage. the way they've been triaging in california lately, something called s.t.a.r.t. a program they're using. they first will decide the people that can walk they set aside. those people are...
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Jul 4, 2013
07/13
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is that nyu building or or new school? new school? >> [inaudible] >> it is that banded box sort after build building. that is where it used to be. so that is the new school. you know, they were so busy fighting off the highways, that were planned to go through, in both directions that were going to obliterate the village, that they missed some stuff. i don't think they could have possibly covered everything. one of the things they missed was, weren't focusing on enough in the 50's was private developers moving in, knocking stuff down and building new stuff. i think that, once they finally started fighting the rear guard action against that when they at least the heart of the village landmarked so you can't do that anymore. that has the other effect of, price of real estate goes up there because, you know, so. so there is an upside and downside to everything i guess. >> how did you go about doing your research? because you certainly researched. >> boy, did i research. i read, you know, hundreds of books, articles. i didn't read all of
is that nyu building or or new school? new school? >> [inaudible] >> it is that banded box sort after build building. that is where it used to be. so that is the new school. you know, they were so busy fighting off the highways, that were planned to go through, in both directions that were going to obliterate the village, that they missed some stuff. i don't think they could have possibly covered everything. one of the things they missed was, weren't focusing on enough in the 50's...
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Jul 4, 2013
07/13
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a professor of music at nyu says that were -- that is were brands come in. >> you can be a well-established artist and come out, people yawn. one of those things where you have to continue to stay in that world. the number one thing the bigger artists get is money. a lot of money, a lot of exposure. >> most experts believe corporate technology tie-ins will become the new way to distribute content. they also agree one thing will not change -- the content has to be good for fans to stay tuned. cctv, new york. >> heading to hong kong for a check on stocks in a few minutes. we will see how investors reacted to all the volatility rocking the global markets. and streaming media. all the rage in the tech world. i will sit down with the ceo of rope to -- roku after the break. clicks from emerging powers to expanding partnerships, fighting poverty to combating climate change. everything in between. we capture the changes affecting the most dynamic and diverse continent on the planet. taking you beyond the headlines, to the people and their stories. asia today -- delivering asia to the world. culture
a professor of music at nyu says that were -- that is were brands come in. >> you can be a well-established artist and come out, people yawn. one of those things where you have to continue to stay in that world. the number one thing the bigger artists get is money. a lot of money, a lot of exposure. >> most experts believe corporate technology tie-ins will become the new way to distribute content. they also agree one thing will not change -- the content has to be good for fans to...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 15, 2013
07/13
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engineering school is doubling the size of it and nyu is collaborating with overseas universities ande are attracting the big companies. google has a block square building and microsoft has similar to that. everyone of these companies are opening in new york city and not just opening sales office, they are opening development offices and in the same thing coming in this direction. you want to be in a place that is fun, that is diverse, and that's challenging. and i come back to the same thing here in this city and my city are going to be major game changers in the world economically and academically for years to come and they are going to add to the pool of sophisticated talent generate new jobs and economic activity. we have to figure out how the other cities are losing hope. we are a country of equal opportunity and not equal results. we have to make sure people have the ability to move up an share in the american dream and that means being self sufficient and having the education that you need to understand the issues and participate. when it comes to tech, we have a government in
engineering school is doubling the size of it and nyu is collaborating with overseas universities ande are attracting the big companies. google has a block square building and microsoft has similar to that. everyone of these companies are opening in new york city and not just opening sales office, they are opening development offices and in the same thing coming in this direction. you want to be in a place that is fun, that is diverse, and that's challenging. and i come back to the same thing...
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Jul 28, 2013
07/13
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FOXNEWSW
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associate professor of medicine at nyu's lango medical center and author of "the inner pulse: unlockinghe secret code of sickness and health." >> dr. samadi is here, too. david samadi, chairman of neurology at lennox hill hospital and chief of robotic surgery. i'll go first. eric's doing great. i'm doing great. you might have the stomach virus definitely going around. hundreds of people have been sick across more than a dozen states. it's spreading, too. we wanted to ask you, dr. samadi, where is this coming from? it does seem in the nice weather you wouldn't expect so many people to be down with the flu or a virus. >> this is really nothing new. almost every other month we're coming up with listeria. we just had hepatitis a in the restaurants. now we see the psych lo spocycl. it's coming, jamie, from food, contaminated food and water. >> how do you know when you go to a restaurant or you buy something in the grocery store, maybe it even lives in your own refrigerator too long, y
associate professor of medicine at nyu's lango medical center and author of "the inner pulse: unlockinghe secret code of sickness and health." >> dr. samadi is here, too. david samadi, chairman of neurology at lennox hill hospital and chief of robotic surgery. i'll go first. eric's doing great. i'm doing great. you might have the stomach virus definitely going around. hundreds of people have been sick across more than a dozen states. it's spreading, too. we wanted to ask you,...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jul 18, 2013
07/13
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money and time as training teachers as i became a teacher i think my big skill coming out i went to nyu and bachelor's in elementary ed. i could thread a projector with the best of them and my career in the 70's and in the last panel "if you had all the money what would you invest in?" . i would invest in education and we're not investing in the future of the children and the in the country and the global future of our world and i agree absolutely with everything you said. we're short changing our kids and not giving teachers the resources. there is mold in the teacher's work room. if i worked in the building that many children go to school in i wouldn't go to work either and in answer to your question there is a priority here about education that's not quite right. >> and while we're earmarking money i would totally support that and i feel that we should train teachers in digital media. you can't teach cooking out a kitchen, so we need to bring digital media into the classroom so people can practice in the environments they're in all the tiouide of school. >> and i would say that havin
money and time as training teachers as i became a teacher i think my big skill coming out i went to nyu and bachelor's in elementary ed. i could thread a projector with the best of them and my career in the 70's and in the last panel "if you had all the money what would you invest in?" . i would invest in education and we're not investing in the future of the children and the in the country and the global future of our world and i agree absolutely with everything you said. we're short...
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Jul 17, 2013
07/13
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FBC
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you're talking about my hospital at nyu, i'm not sure in that case.e hospital that i think is doing a very interesting job here. the thing as it doe reduce your choices. obama is saying that you keep your doctor and you get to keep your insurance -- it's just not true. in the hospital setting, i am working more shifts -- it is a shift mentality. so you come in with a sore throat, my ship is overcome another doctor may be on-call. i've seen that already wh you're working for a hospital, you're more of a salaried employee, i worked really hard today and it's time to go home and. melissa: i grew up in california. iser permanente was one building, you got your services, you left and he didn't have a relationship with a particular doctor. it was more of a factory. is that where we are going? >> customizi the hmo plans of the 1990s have pretty much failed, but we are tlking about hmo medicine and obama for the new ribbon on it. it is a long-term relationship with your physician will suffer. the time that i learned the most about patience is what it was an e
you're talking about my hospital at nyu, i'm not sure in that case.e hospital that i think is doing a very interesting job here. the thing as it doe reduce your choices. obama is saying that you keep your doctor and you get to keep your insurance -- it's just not true. in the hospital setting, i am working more shifts -- it is a shift mentality. so you come in with a sore throat, my ship is overcome another doctor may be on-call. i've seen that already wh you're working for a hospital, you're...
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Jul 29, 2013
07/13
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is, problem is and i experience this, the lowest grade i ever got in school was from a professor at nyu that the first words out of his mouth when we started the semester, i am a communist. punished for my opinion. >> maybe your argument wasn't very good. >> we have in our own colleges in new york, we have, professor not to far from me that was implicated in the murder and she's a professor, so this is the right of this great country that we can do these things. on that side of it, that's the right of this country. >> having liberal professors is nothing new. this has been going on for decades. we're seeing our middle schools and elementary schools. >> and common core, good point. this is a captive audience. i'll tell you what professors do have an obligation to do. kids can't read, write and do math by the time they get out of school. indoctrine nated as captive audience, they can't argue. he set the standard of bombing the pentagon, but to the point of liberals running the university system, they do. but i actually think this benefits conservatives more because they're constantly chal
is, problem is and i experience this, the lowest grade i ever got in school was from a professor at nyu that the first words out of his mouth when we started the semester, i am a communist. punished for my opinion. >> maybe your argument wasn't very good. >> we have in our own colleges in new york, we have, professor not to far from me that was implicated in the murder and she's a professor, so this is the right of this great country that we can do these things. on that side of it,...
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Jul 24, 2013
07/13
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. >> you are teaching at nyu.eyond many other things and like that curiosity to listen to not only to that, but the eagles and the beach boys but embrace it. is that a testament to the environment to which you grew up? >> i'm probably the only person that doesn't find it that unusual. there are producers that came up in hip-hop. if you listen to dela souls music or the beastie boys. when i first got it. i instantly recognized. i played like name that tune. these drums come from the eagles and that is david bowie and this is james brown. it became a spot your father's record collection. and most producers who have sample based work. they grew to love the records that they collect. most are searching for that perfect 8 bar loop. i had those records long before. >> my father was easy listening. he likes nat king coal and my mom liked miles davis and my sister was into a lot of am rock. that is how i knew about zeppelin. that is like the perfect storm. that is great for a producer. that is why i'm obsessed. anyone who
. >> you are teaching at nyu.eyond many other things and like that curiosity to listen to not only to that, but the eagles and the beach boys but embrace it. is that a testament to the environment to which you grew up? >> i'm probably the only person that doesn't find it that unusual. there are producers that came up in hip-hop. if you listen to dela souls music or the beastie boys. when i first got it. i instantly recognized. i played like name that tune. these drums come from the...
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now he is at nyu getting his m.b.a. from interning at barkley's.t in your heart to donate. there are some many more like him that need special homes. you will see where we are doing the triathlon. we hope to raise money. a bunch of you guys have already donated. >> this is an amazing thing. i cannot see chris. liz: he ran 30 miles in one day. >> he's in good shape. it. liz: you can make fun of me tomorrow. my shorts tomorrow, my bike shorts. closing bell ringing in 25 minutes. you cannot close just yet on bonds and nobles, but it is that a critical turning point. a failure of its digital strategy, but still alive. the abrupt departure of the ceo late yesterday. is it a game changer for the nation's largest bookseller? is it still a page turner of an investment? stay tuned. ♪ liz: we are suddenly very close to session highs for the dow jones industrials. the move to the upside. rare now of 91 points. 15,316. about 73. we are watching to see what is going on. we should look at the nasdaq which right now is up 23 points at 3508. we are seeing bullish
now he is at nyu getting his m.b.a. from interning at barkley's.t in your heart to donate. there are some many more like him that need special homes. you will see where we are doing the triathlon. we hope to raise money. a bunch of you guys have already donated. >> this is an amazing thing. i cannot see chris. liz: he ran 30 miles in one day. >> he's in good shape. it. liz: you can make fun of me tomorrow. my shorts tomorrow, my bike shorts. closing bell ringing in 25 minutes. you...
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he is at nyu. he is getting his mba, fabulous. liz: we give these heroes.t if you find it in your heart. so many more like captain blyler, who need special homes, mortgage-free. building homes for heroes.org. thank you. ashley: great cause. good luck on the biking section. liz: i'm doing biking section. chris does the run. ashley: another thing to watch tomorrow, speech by chairman ben bernanke and a q&a session. he is scheduled to speak four p.m. eastern. fox business will carry it live for you right here. so don't miss us. liz: thanks for joining us. "money" with adam shapiro is here in for melissa francis. >> i'm adam shapiro in for melissa francis. here is what is money tonight. can bubbles be prevented. ben bernanke and central bankers develop tools to pop them before they get too big. will they sew the seeds of the next financial disaster? of wall street's brightest stars. storm clouds swirl around meredith whitney and her advisory group. it is all the word on wall street and we've got the inside scoop. >>> and "who made money today?" here speculation
he is at nyu. he is getting his mba, fabulous. liz: we give these heroes.t if you find it in your heart. so many more like captain blyler, who need special homes, mortgage-free. building homes for heroes.org. thank you. ashley: great cause. good luck on the biking section. liz: i'm doing biking section. chris does the run. ashley: another thing to watch tomorrow, speech by chairman ben bernanke and a q&a session. he is scheduled to speak four p.m. eastern. fox business will carry it live...
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Jul 16, 2013
07/13
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a general internist affiliated with nyu medical center right here in tiny town. cancer on your eyeballs, that's real? >> it really is. eight frightening. >> shepard: i'm thinking about keeping my eyes closed. >> even if you did there'd still be a risk. there's no doubt about the fact that sun, especially early sun exposure in youth, is a risk factor but some people can develop cancer of the eye that really have no obvious risk factors. we're talking about two different types of cancer. >> shepard: you just keep talking. >> there are two different types of cancer. intraocular and extra ocular. now, intraocular means it really starts within the eyeball. and it can appear in the sclera, the white pat, and the retina, which is deep in your eye, and the two types of cancer that can form there, melanoma or lymphoma. so they can be very serious and melanoma is known to be a stress aggressive tumor. >> shepard: what do i do to keep from getting it? >> you have to constantly wear sun screen, and protect your children, and starting at a very young age, and protective eye w
a general internist affiliated with nyu medical center right here in tiny town. cancer on your eyeballs, that's real? >> it really is. eight frightening. >> shepard: i'm thinking about keeping my eyes closed. >> even if you did there'd still be a risk. there's no doubt about the fact that sun, especially early sun exposure in youth, is a risk factor but some people can develop cancer of the eye that really have no obvious risk factors. we're talking about two different types...
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Jul 18, 2013
07/13
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and kids going into college don't think about should i really be borrowing $30,000 a year to go to nyuuld i really be being charged. >> the reason they can charge it, a lot of research says when you're buying something on debt you become less price sensitive because you're paying in the future. but allowing people to borrow $10,000 a year to go to college, there is a real sense among a lot of economists -- >> it is putting the blame on the student when more of it should be on the institution. >> i agree. >> when you look at community colleges, we've got a big series on this coming out. its, at best, a small part of the story here. there is a lot more going on in terms of why these cuts are going on student loans. their accessibility has more to do with how much people need to do and the do agree to which we are unable to say no. we aren't going to bring this down through ratcheting back student loans. >> coming up, rand paul may be sizing up a presidential run in 2016 but before tackling debates in primaries the senator may have to overcome another obstacle at his own dinner table. we'
and kids going into college don't think about should i really be borrowing $30,000 a year to go to nyuuld i really be being charged. >> the reason they can charge it, a lot of research says when you're buying something on debt you become less price sensitive because you're paying in the future. but allowing people to borrow $10,000 a year to go to college, there is a real sense among a lot of economists -- >> it is putting the blame on the student when more of it should be on the...
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Jul 8, 2013
07/13
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nyu media professor jay rosen defines that effect as the direct and indirect gains in public knowledgerom the cascade of events and further reporting that followed edward snowden's leaks of classify information. the snowden effect was evident in reporting this weekend from both "the new york times" and "wall street journal" which ran expose's on the inner workings of america's secretive foreign intelligence surveillance or the fisa court. at times the court's use was described as a narrow legal principle "the special needs doctrine" which originally concerned drug testing of railway workers. under this special needs doctrine, the fisa court has allowed the u.s. government to vastly expand its domestic surveillance operations. its rulings have so dramatically redrawn american legal boundaries that the "times" concludes the fisa court has created a secret body of law and quietly become almost a parallel supreme court. joining me today, msnbc political analyst and executive editor at msnbc b.com, richard wolfe. joan walsh, and retired u.s. army captain and author of "the other wes more,"
nyu media professor jay rosen defines that effect as the direct and indirect gains in public knowledgerom the cascade of events and further reporting that followed edward snowden's leaks of classify information. the snowden effect was evident in reporting this weekend from both "the new york times" and "wall street journal" which ran expose's on the inner workings of america's secretive foreign intelligence surveillance or the fisa court. at times the court's use was...
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Jul 9, 2013
07/13
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joining us now is eliza goitein, co-director of the liberty and national security program at nyu school. eliza, thank you so much for being here tonight. >> thanks for having me. >> so right now when the government goes before this court, they have an incredible win record. it is the tiniest fraction of the thousands of cases they bring before them that are rejected. that's before you get into rewriting the laws. what do we take from that? because this kind of court structured the way it is is very -- it's possible it's getting captured. only hearing from the government and they're being too soft. what can we take from this incredible win record? >> absolutely. i think this is a flawed institution by design. by concept. because it operates in secret, because it only hears from one party, as you said, always the same party. because all the judges are appointed by one person, it's very difficult to see how a court like that could avoid capture, and if you look at the win record that you were talking about, we're talking about somewhere about 34,000 applications since 1978 of which only 11
joining us now is eliza goitein, co-director of the liberty and national security program at nyu school. eliza, thank you so much for being here tonight. >> thanks for having me. >> so right now when the government goes before this court, they have an incredible win record. it is the tiniest fraction of the thousands of cases they bring before them that are rejected. that's before you get into rewriting the laws. what do we take from that? because this kind of court structured the...
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Jul 24, 2013
07/13
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visiting professor at nyu, harold ford jr. nbc news capitol hill correspondent kelly o'donnell.st of weekend political junky morning show, steve. it's surprising, and yet not. >> exactly. we already knew he was into this difficult to talk about stuff online. what is so surprising is the timing. that he made the decision to get back into public life. to try to go for his ultimate dream job. already knowing this would likely company out. really, for people who looked to the magazine spread last summer and thought, okay, they're moving forward. to find out it was still going on after that is troubling. he is defiant today. >> how are voters going to react to this? it's interesting to me, if you want to look at trends. it's tough to make a trend out of three women who stand by their personally flawed husbands. but the ones who speak out, hillary clinton, it saved bill clinton. wendy vitter spoke out and it saved david vitter arguably. ones who don't speak out -- it's interesting, but i wonder if huma helped him yesterday in a way that maybe none of us can understand. >> it was an un
visiting professor at nyu, harold ford jr. nbc news capitol hill correspondent kelly o'donnell.st of weekend political junky morning show, steve. it's surprising, and yet not. >> exactly. we already knew he was into this difficult to talk about stuff online. what is so surprising is the timing. that he made the decision to get back into public life. to try to go for his ultimate dream job. already knowing this would likely company out. really, for people who looked to the magazine spread...
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Jul 25, 2013
07/13
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maya surdari is a brand professor at nyu. >> there could be funding over terrorist organizations. >>s as tough designers lose out, wall street is hit hard. a direct impact on companies like louis vuitton and prada. >> you have sales decreasing, and once you get in a negative cash flow area, you can see the earnings being affected, and this is how it ends up affecting wall street. >> reporter: and according to experts, luxury companies spending tens of millions every year on global investigators to fight counterfeiting. bill ryan is a retired nypd detective. he's now a private investigator, working for a major designer. >> our client wants us to find the bags and put the bag sellers out of business. >> reporter: we went undercover with ryan's team to see how the knock-off sellers are adapting to increased pressure from law enforcement. our first stop, right in new york city's chinatown. we're not looking for vendors selling low-quality bags on the streets but bags meant to look like the real deal. they attract tourists by the thousands. they said the hawkers have moved from back rooms
maya surdari is a brand professor at nyu. >> there could be funding over terrorist organizations. >>s as tough designers lose out, wall street is hit hard. a direct impact on companies like louis vuitton and prada. >> you have sales decreasing, and once you get in a negative cash flow area, you can see the earnings being affected, and this is how it ends up affecting wall street. >> reporter: and according to experts, luxury companies spending tens of millions every year...
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Jul 29, 2013
07/13
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. >> disrespect to the officers is a zero tolerance policy in nyu unit.ve him a break for making threats to a correctional officer, it's not a good thing. it's not a good practice. hello, mr. madrid. the reason we brought you out here today, we're going to hold a unit management team meeting. i think you know why. this conduct report issued for threats, verbal abuse, and gestures and displaying unlawful order. inmate madrid was on the phone approximately 40 minutes. at 5:40 p.m. my correctional officer told nathan madrid to lock down for next shift. he yelled up [ bleep ]. i turned his phone off at that point. i walked to the window and told him this is a directive to lock down. he was told approximately five times. during this time inmate madrid was telling me you're [ bleep ], girl, you're [ bleep ]. if you're writing me up, i'm going to make it worthwhile. inmate madrid locked down and then started banging the door with a stool. he continued for a while. inmate madrid was informed that the incident would be a behavior log and a misconduct report. okay.
. >> disrespect to the officers is a zero tolerance policy in nyu unit.ve him a break for making threats to a correctional officer, it's not a good thing. it's not a good practice. hello, mr. madrid. the reason we brought you out here today, we're going to hold a unit management team meeting. i think you know why. this conduct report issued for threats, verbal abuse, and gestures and displaying unlawful order. inmate madrid was on the phone approximately 40 minutes. at 5:40 p.m. my...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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CNBC
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our executive producer is 1990 nyu alum, tuition $16,000., four years, loaned out, in debt more than the average price of a home in the united states. >> that is really a shocking statistic. but oregon seems to have a found a solution to the problem. the state is mulling a plan that would allow students to attend state schools without taking out a loan. it's called pay it forward. students would pay back a percentage of their salary for about 25 years after graduation to pay for future students. let's see where it goes. >> have a great weekend. >> "closing bell" is next. >>> happy, everybody. we enter the final stretch for the week. welcome to cleveland brown clk. i'm maria bartiromo. the market trying to squeeze out another big win. not sure we're going to make it. >> boeing is not helping. we've had a very good week so far. i'm bill griffeth. the stocks struggling to hold onto the early gains. still, we are set to close what has been the second best week this year so far.
our executive producer is 1990 nyu alum, tuition $16,000., four years, loaned out, in debt more than the average price of a home in the united states. >> that is really a shocking statistic. but oregon seems to have a found a solution to the problem. the state is mulling a plan that would allow students to attend state schools without taking out a loan. it's called pay it forward. students would pay back a percentage of their salary for about 25 years after graduation to pay for future...
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Jul 11, 2013
07/13
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talk a lot about what will happen to edward snowden but it is actually -- i agree with jay rosen, the nyut is more about the cass kate effect after snowden. to some degree i had think this is really prompting an examination of the legal infrastructure that allows to us do this. what i have determined from my in-depth research, but what i have learned from reading about this is that the terms that sort of justify these actions are incredibly vague, whether it's like imminent threat that justifies drone strikes, whether it's access to the internet which is basically what the u.s. government's case against bradley manning's sort of treason hangs upon. i mean these are open to wild amounts of interpretation and what does that mean for the next administration? >> right. and i think the productive thing that edward snowden has done is cause this debate to become more public and more substantive. i'm hopeful that as the government tries to figure out -- first of all, what do we do to get people to not leak? they want to prevent the next one from rising so they have to go hard against edward snow
talk a lot about what will happen to edward snowden but it is actually -- i agree with jay rosen, the nyut is more about the cass kate effect after snowden. to some degree i had think this is really prompting an examination of the legal infrastructure that allows to us do this. what i have determined from my in-depth research, but what i have learned from reading about this is that the terms that sort of justify these actions are incredibly vague, whether it's like imminent threat that...
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Jul 23, 2013
07/13
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visiting professor at nyu and msnbc political analyst, former democratic congressman harold ford jr. "washington post" columnist and msnbc contributing jonathan capehart, and joining me from washington is "new york" magazine columnist jonathan shate whose feature is the latest issue is "anarchists of the house." jonath jonathan, fascinating read. you followed it up with today's post online basically talking about the hellaciousness -- i am of course paraphrasing -- of being john boehner in the current house of representatives. talk to us about your thesis here, that it isn't so much about radical policy with house republicans these days. it is about actually stopping the wheels of governance. >> exactly. it's different means. it's not radical ends that are new. when the house republicans took control of the institution after 2010 they didn't just say that's the end of obama's agenda, we're not passing any new laws. they had this idea that they were the new legitimate government. obama's presidency was over and they were going to push policy in their direction. of course they didn't h
visiting professor at nyu and msnbc political analyst, former democratic congressman harold ford jr. "washington post" columnist and msnbc contributing jonathan capehart, and joining me from washington is "new york" magazine columnist jonathan shate whose feature is the latest issue is "anarchists of the house." jonath jonathan, fascinating read. you followed it up with today's post online basically talking about the hellaciousness -- i am of course paraphrasing --...
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Jul 29, 2013
07/13
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anti-poverty dinner in manhattan, a board member of that organization as well as a recent donor to one of nyual's research program to benefit veteranses but the hampton party came at a bad time coming days after his hedge fund s.a.c. capital has been indicted. s.a.c. capital pled not guilty and they are trying to hammer out an agreement that allows them to ring fencing from a large part of liability. they are trading as they speak but they want more clarity for the parties. it isn't clear exactly what the details will be and i'm told there isn't a first draft in place at least as of this morning. a lot is riding on whether s.a.c. can provide the assurances, and you would think cohen would want to avoid even the appearance of defiance or disrespect to the public at a time like this. >> well, yes and no. as you recall, when he paid that $600 million fine some months ago, he very promptly went out and paid several hundred million dollars, didn't he, for a painting? >> he bought this painting from steve wynn and around this time he bought a house in the hamptons not far from the home where the pa
anti-poverty dinner in manhattan, a board member of that organization as well as a recent donor to one of nyual's research program to benefit veteranses but the hampton party came at a bad time coming days after his hedge fund s.a.c. capital has been indicted. s.a.c. capital pled not guilty and they are trying to hammer out an agreement that allows them to ring fencing from a large part of liability. they are trading as they speak but they want more clarity for the parties. it isn't clear...
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Jul 24, 2013
07/13
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marc siegel, part of fox news medical a-team and professor of medicine at nyu langone medical center.ow are you? what is going on with this thing? >> it is cyclospora. it is a tiny parasite. usually people get in from traveling to other countries. it is on food and in water. you can not get it by touching somebody who has it. that is really good news. if you're in one of the states, nebraska, iowa, wisconsin, that is having this outbreak and someone you know in your family has it, you shake their hand, you will not get it from that. you will get it from the food or the water. wash your hand before you handle the -- bill: foodborne illness? >> exactly. bill: that comes from people handling food that have not what, washed their hands i assume? >> exactly. i want to point out how it could be in several states. why is it in several states? because usually in the irrigation. you're growing produce in one state or growing spinach or whatever it ends up being on. then you package it. it goes to another state. you sell it in a third state. that is how it tracks across state lines. it starts o
marc siegel, part of fox news medical a-team and professor of medicine at nyu langone medical center.ow are you? what is going on with this thing? >> it is cyclospora. it is a tiny parasite. usually people get in from traveling to other countries. it is on food and in water. you can not get it by touching somebody who has it. that is really good news. if you're in one of the states, nebraska, iowa, wisconsin, that is having this outbreak and someone you know in your family has it, you...
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Jul 13, 2013
07/13
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harvey mudd college is behind nyu. nine of the top ten schools cost more than $60,000.ook compiled a list on user bas activities, virginia beach, virginia followed by colorado springs and austin, texas as the most fittest places. proof of heaven and the third wheel fell out the top three. lean in ranks fourth. sharknado quite a story on scy-fi. the movie about a hurricane that produces tornadoes full of sharks was the top trending topic on twitter thursday night. it buzzed for hours before the social media frenzy subsided. those are your number ones. [ brent ] now steve's looking pretty good so far. [ herbie ] eh, hold on brent, what's this? mmmm, nice car. there's no doubt, that's definitely gonna throw him off. she's seen it too. oh this could be trouble. [ sentra lock noise ] oh man. gotta think fast, herbie. back pedal, back pedal. [ crowd cheering ] oh, he's down in flames and now the ice-cold shoulder. one last play... no, game over! gps take him to the dog house. [ male announcer ] make a powerful first impression. the all-new nissan sentra. ♪ the all-new nissan
harvey mudd college is behind nyu. nine of the top ten schools cost more than $60,000.ook compiled a list on user bas activities, virginia beach, virginia followed by colorado springs and austin, texas as the most fittest places. proof of heaven and the third wheel fell out the top three. lean in ranks fourth. sharknado quite a story on scy-fi. the movie about a hurricane that produces tornadoes full of sharks was the top trending topic on twitter thursday night. it buzzed for hours before the...
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Jul 1, 2013
07/13
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rashini raj is a "today" contributor and gastroenterologist with the nyu center. good to see you.eanses. is there anything wrong with trying a cleanse for a few days? >> there could be. some are extreme and incorporate very few ingredients in them. you're really limiting yourself in terms of not getting enough protein, potentially not enough fiber. all the -- even healthy fat that you need. it is potentially dangerous especially for anyone with any medical conditions, taking any prescription medications, pregnant women, children, or the elderly. >> the promise is that they will rid the body of taxins. do they actually do that -- toxins. do they actually do that in the ♪ >> they don't. there's no scientific evidence for that. we have as we saw kidneys, livermo liver. three days of sticking to a certain juice will pull out toxins in the blood doesn't scientifically make sense, hasn't been proven. >> people dive in thinking i'm not going to eat for three or five days, i will lose weight by definition. is this a good way to lose weight? >> it's very temporary water weight that you're
rashini raj is a "today" contributor and gastroenterologist with the nyu center. good to see you.eanses. is there anything wrong with trying a cleanse for a few days? >> there could be. some are extreme and incorporate very few ingredients in them. you're really limiting yourself in terms of not getting enough protein, potentially not enough fiber. all the -- even healthy fat that you need. it is potentially dangerous especially for anyone with any medical conditions, taking any...
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Jul 24, 2013
07/13
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at nyu in addition to getting a terrific legal education i met lynn kelly, a lovely young woman from minnesota. we have been married for 25 years, and she is here today with our two wonderful children. after it judicial court ship i started my career as a field attorney. after a few years i left to go into private practice but not before gaining a deep appreciation for the importance of the agency's work and a deep respect for the quality and dedication of the agency's employees. so after over 20 years as a partner with the new york city labor and the bonn a law firm had decided to return to the agency when mark pearce asked me to serve as his chief counsel. the three years that i have spent at headquarters had been a tremendous learning experience and have given me a deeper appreciation for the staffs talents, professionalism, and commitment to fairness and the goals of the national labor relations act. if i am given the opportunity to serve i think that might decades of practice as a labor lawyer both within and before the agency will serve me well. i think ellen also be helped by
at nyu in addition to getting a terrific legal education i met lynn kelly, a lovely young woman from minnesota. we have been married for 25 years, and she is here today with our two wonderful children. after it judicial court ship i started my career as a field attorney. after a few years i left to go into private practice but not before gaining a deep appreciation for the importance of the agency's work and a deep respect for the quality and dedication of the agency's employees. so after over...
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Jul 25, 2013
07/13
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. >> brian: nyu professor. >> steve: he says he doesn't need to run for mayor, mr. wiener.says put a fork in wiener. enough already. and the "new york times" says mr. wiener has disqualified himself. >> gretchen: i don't understand why they would come out publicly and decide that this was the time for him to reenter politics. i don't know how you psychologically do that -- >> brian: there is no we. it's he. he had $4 million he had to give up and give back unless he wanted to use it. plus he raised 836,000 since he said i'm healed and i want to become mayor. on top of that, after facebook and he starts this relationship with her where they have this very explicit relationship, he promises her a job at politico and a con did he in chicago! where does he get this influence and money? >> steve: remember issues of it in the form kind of as a bribe because he said you got to delete all that stuff. we got to get rid of all the evidence. >> gretchen: that was after the fact. he wrote that when he decided to run for mayor, he wrote to her and said, do a hard delete of all these oth
. >> brian: nyu professor. >> steve: he says he doesn't need to run for mayor, mr. wiener.says put a fork in wiener. enough already. and the "new york times" says mr. wiener has disqualified himself. >> gretchen: i don't understand why they would come out publicly and decide that this was the time for him to reenter politics. i don't know how you psychologically do that -- >> brian: there is no we. it's he. he had $4 million he had to give up and give back...
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Jul 1, 2013
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magazine's editor leigh gallagher, jeremy peters, msnbc political analyst and visiting professor at nyu former democratic congressman harold ford jr. >> good morning. >> in washington, columnist for "the washington post," david ignatius. 19 out of a 20-member crew from prescott, arizona, killed last evening, late yesterday afternoon, fighting a forest fire. >> we've been watching that heat out there out west and the fires that have been emerging. they must have got caught among the fire. >> these are the folks best trained to handle this. mike, you said it best, just a tragedy. >> they were enveloped in the fire and as a last resort they are trained to dig holes, fox holes, and cover themselves with fire resistant equipment. obviously that they carry. even that did them no good. 19 out of a 20-member crew. >> let's get the latest. the victims were part of a hot shot crew, a highly trained elite team sent into some of the worst conditions. they were working on a 2,000 acre fire near yarnle, arizona, 18 miles northwest of phoenix. the fire itself started on friday, believed to be sparked
magazine's editor leigh gallagher, jeremy peters, msnbc political analyst and visiting professor at nyu former democratic congressman harold ford jr. >> good morning. >> in washington, columnist for "the washington post," david ignatius. 19 out of a 20-member crew from prescott, arizona, killed last evening, late yesterday afternoon, fighting a forest fire. >> we've been watching that heat out there out west and the fires that have been emerging. they must have got...
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Jul 30, 2013
07/13
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msnbc political analyst and visiting professor at nyu, former democratic congressman harold ford jr.ize winning columnist, associate editor of the "washington post" and political analyst eugene robinson. joe, good to have a great panel with us this hour. we'll lead with anthony weiner again. >> let's keep it short. get through it quickly. i wanted -- let's just move, after a couple quick questions, bigger implications with hillary clinton, the top of politico this morning, talking about how the clinton world is very concerned about this. it's one more distraction. a dust up, obviously. not as serious as say benghazi, but just something that clintons don't want out there right now, as andrea mitchell said, it brings up too many reminders of a painful past for hillary clinton. and so i'm sure they want him to get out of the race as soon as possible and it seems like a lot of new yorkers are feeling the same way, mika. >> a new quinnipiac poll finds support for anthony weiner has dropped substantially since the second round of elicit messages found its way into the national spotlight. t
msnbc political analyst and visiting professor at nyu, former democratic congressman harold ford jr.ize winning columnist, associate editor of the "washington post" and political analyst eugene robinson. joe, good to have a great panel with us this hour. we'll lead with anthony weiner again. >> let's keep it short. get through it quickly. i wanted -- let's just move, after a couple quick questions, bigger implications with hillary clinton, the top of politico this morning,...