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Jun 24, 2021
06/21
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i mean, you know, we're at nyu, it's not like we were in third grade.dle of the class. you know, they would go, "adam, titus -- guys, come on, please." so it became, you know, we thoroughly enjoyed torturing this poor assistant professor. she deeply disliked us, and i don't know why other than, maybe she just had a thing abou in that way, that i got to see adam, you know, so early in his career i would go and see him in little comedy clubs all over manhattan. and, you know, he's an original. the stuff he was doing then was not -- you didn't say "wow, that reminds me of x. it was, you know, sandler is his own guy. and you know, his success has been, you know, a really nice thing to observe, because he's a really good human being. >> seth: he's one of the all-time greats. i said to him that i don't think he has a new hampshire accent as much as every kid i grew up with in new hampshire had an adam sandler accent. because once he became famous, like, every kid i went to high school with was like, "oh, here we go. that's not a regional dialect, you're just
i mean, you know, we're at nyu, it's not like we were in third grade.dle of the class. you know, they would go, "adam, titus -- guys, come on, please." so it became, you know, we thoroughly enjoyed torturing this poor assistant professor. she deeply disliked us, and i don't know why other than, maybe she just had a thing abou in that way, that i got to see adam, you know, so early in his career i would go and see him in little comedy clubs all over manhattan. and, you know, he's an...
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Jun 1, 2021
06/21
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as promised, back with us is nyu law professor melissa murray.resentative, especially for people who may have been busy living their lives over the weekend, walk us through why you and your colleagues did what you did and what happens next. >> sure. so thank you so much for having me. i wanted to let you know. so sb-7 is the so-called voter integrity, election integrity bill that the republican controlled legislature presented. they presented it to the full body on the 139th day of 140 day session. so for them to go around saying this was a priority bill, they sure did wait to the end to present one of their priorities. but this bill has been through so many iterations. it went from being a 40-page document to a 70-page document almost overnight with measures not even vetted in the public eye. they were not presented to the public and for public input. so this, to me, is evidence that they are trying to pass measures without really hearing the voices of texans who this will greatly impact in the end. so this bill has been put forth. it had so man
as promised, back with us is nyu law professor melissa murray.resentative, especially for people who may have been busy living their lives over the weekend, walk us through why you and your colleagues did what you did and what happens next. >> sure. so thank you so much for having me. i wanted to let you know. so sb-7 is the so-called voter integrity, election integrity bill that the republican controlled legislature presented. they presented it to the full body on the 139th day of 140...
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Jun 11, 2021
06/21
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morris has a bachelors in economics from boston college and a masters in urban planning from nyu wagner's school, with an emphasis on quantitative methods and evaluation. mimi -- is the president of the texas civil-rights project where she has served since 2016, and teaches election law and policy at the university of texas school of law. before moving to texas, she spent several years at the council for democracy program at the brennan center of justice where she litigated election law cases in federal court, including the u.s. supreme court. donald palmer is a commissioner with the u.s. election assistance commission and the commission's current chair. commissioner palmer was confirmed by the senate on 2 january 2019. he served as secretary of the virginia state board of elections, florida's board of elections, it try let turn a with the voting rights section -- a trial attorney with the voting rights section of the department of justice. he served with the navy and thank you, sir, for your service. i will recognize each of our witnesses for five minutes, starting with dr. pettigrew. yo
morris has a bachelors in economics from boston college and a masters in urban planning from nyu wagner's school, with an emphasis on quantitative methods and evaluation. mimi -- is the president of the texas civil-rights project where she has served since 2016, and teaches election law and policy at the university of texas school of law. before moving to texas, she spent several years at the council for democracy program at the brennan center of justice where she litigated election law cases...
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Jun 2, 2021
06/21
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. >> there was one part in the article i was reading, quoting a professor at nyu, saying that they willucts that will reach a mass audience and are bought by as many people as possible to make shareholders happy. products that people want to buy, and that is junk food. as the tide not turned with what the public wants? >> i think it is turning to some degree. products that we would consider junk food are still showing pretty healthy sales, but at the same time, the really strong growth is coming in products that boast about their health credentials. consumers are becoming more skeptical about some of these very well-known brands that are not known for being healthy. for example, sports nutrition, plant-based substitutes for meat perceived as healthy are areas of huge growth. that marks the change in climate. at the same time, governments are becoming more uncompromising. in the u.k., new rules on advertising of junk food. i think there is a shift taking place. obviously, the role of obesity and the risk of contracting covid-19 is the latest minder of how important this issue is. >> obes
. >> there was one part in the article i was reading, quoting a professor at nyu, saying that they willucts that will reach a mass audience and are bought by as many people as possible to make shareholders happy. products that people want to buy, and that is junk food. as the tide not turned with what the public wants? >> i think it is turning to some degree. products that we would consider junk food are still showing pretty healthy sales, but at the same time, the really strong...
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Jun 21, 2021
06/21
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candice: this nyu study found crime free housing not only keeps out people with trouble pasts, it alsowho have more contacts with police. louis: this is an example of institutional racism. ♪♪♪ over the years, mercedes-benz has patented thousands of safety innovations. crash-tested so many cars we've stopped counting. and built our most punishing test facility yet, in our effort to build the world's safest cars. we've created crumple zones and autonomous braking. active lane keeping assist and blind spot assist. we've introduced airbags, side curtain airbags, and now the first-ever rear-mounted front-impact airbags. all in the hope that you never need any of it. if there were a button that would help you use less energy, breathe cleaner air, and even take on climate change... would you press it? jason, did you know geico could save you hundreds on car insurance and a whole lot more? cool. so what are you waiting for? mckayla maroney to get your frisbee off the roof? i'll get it. ♪ (upbeat music) ♪ ♪ ♪ whoa. here you go. (in unison) thank you mckayla! dude, get it. i'm not getting it, yo
candice: this nyu study found crime free housing not only keeps out people with trouble pasts, it alsowho have more contacts with police. louis: this is an example of institutional racism. ♪♪♪ over the years, mercedes-benz has patented thousands of safety innovations. crash-tested so many cars we've stopped counting. and built our most punishing test facility yet, in our effort to build the world's safest cars. we've created crumple zones and autonomous braking. active lane keeping assist...
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Jun 26, 2021
06/21
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in american civilization from nyu. scholar in italy, she's received scholarships and grants from the national endowment of the humanities, the franklin and e roosevelt institute. the hoover presidential library, and the lbj foundation. before found joining the faculty at the university of new york she taught palermo and rome. betty is the author of a number of books including first ladies, the ever-changing rule, which we will be talking about tonight. ladybird and lyndon the hidden story of a marriage that made president. the roosevelt women, and inside the white house. she currently resides in new york city, and sometimes, although not, now in venice italy. >> welcome betty. >> thank you very. much happy to be here. >> i know our audience is looking forward to this conversation, so we're going to have a read back and forth and they were going to go to questions from our audience. at the beginning of our, book you discussed the rule of the early first ladies and how they set important precedents. can you elaborate on
in american civilization from nyu. scholar in italy, she's received scholarships and grants from the national endowment of the humanities, the franklin and e roosevelt institute. the hoover presidential library, and the lbj foundation. before found joining the faculty at the university of new york she taught palermo and rome. betty is the author of a number of books including first ladies, the ever-changing rule, which we will be talking about tonight. ladybird and lyndon the hidden story of a...
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Jun 13, 2021
06/21
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apprentice ships, being students and not workers, and shoutout to columbia university and brown and nyuwho are either on strike or about to strike, and'ing identified as workers. the same thing happening right now on the sports field. so, if you watching the big dance you have a couple of african-american basketball player width t-shirts saying #not ncaa property. so these universities reap millions off of tv contracts and paraphernalia and under the guys of being a student athlete, students receive nothing. and so this is another mode of using the category educational purposes, whether its be prospect exemption or be the apprenticeship status of student worker inside the laboratories or as tas, or as athlete workers as being student-athletes. amateur status. amateurism. they become mechanisms of wealth extraction. they're part of a more comprehensive business model and we need to understand that. i say -- if we can talk but solutions, i say one solution should be the neighborhoods and communities that produce these students should receive a portion of the wealth that they create. >> th
apprentice ships, being students and not workers, and shoutout to columbia university and brown and nyuwho are either on strike or about to strike, and'ing identified as workers. the same thing happening right now on the sports field. so, if you watching the big dance you have a couple of african-american basketball player width t-shirts saying #not ncaa property. so these universities reap millions off of tv contracts and paraphernalia and under the guys of being a student athlete, students...
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Jun 26, 2021
06/21
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from the annenberg school at the university of pennsylvania and a phd in american civilization from nyu a fulbright scholar in italy. she has received fellowships and grants from the national endowment for the humanities the franklin and eleanor roosevelt institute, the hoover presidential library and the lbj foundation. before joining the faculty at the city university of new york. she taught in palermo and rome. betty is the author of a number of books including first ladies the ever-changing role which will be talking about tonight lady bird and linden the hidden story of a marriage that made a president the roosevelt women and inside the white house. she currently resides in new york city and sometimes although not now in venice italy. welcome betty. thank you very much. good to be here colleen terrific. well, i know our audience is really looking forward to this conversation. so we're gonna have a brief back and forth and then we'll go to plenty of questions from our audience. at the beginning of your book you discussed the role of the early first ladies and how they set important
from the annenberg school at the university of pennsylvania and a phd in american civilization from nyu a fulbright scholar in italy. she has received fellowships and grants from the national endowment for the humanities the franklin and eleanor roosevelt institute, the hoover presidential library and the lbj foundation. before joining the faculty at the city university of new york. she taught in palermo and rome. betty is the author of a number of books including first ladies the ever-changing...
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Jun 6, 2021
06/21
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professor joe lee from nyu university has calculated that between 1847 and 1853, 200,000 immigrants had died within three years of their arrival. that is a very high mortality rate. after 1852, here is bishop fitzpatrick. i have is out of sequence, who helped to raise so much money and that is the cathedral of the holy cross, the first one in boston built in the early 19th century. fitzpatrick was very important in helping famine relief. here you see the areas of boston where the irish settled, down in the wharf areas, here down in the south end. up here along what would be atlantic avenue. and over here. and they lived in very crowded sellers with sometimes 20 people in one room. -- they lived in very cellars with sometimes 20 people in one room. as a consequence of this, disease spread very quickly. a massive outbreak of cholera happened after this huge influx. this isn't terribly clear, but you see these black marks along here, these all represent the areas where the public health authorities had determined that cholera outbreaks had happened. it corresponds with the previous map, as
professor joe lee from nyu university has calculated that between 1847 and 1853, 200,000 immigrants had died within three years of their arrival. that is a very high mortality rate. after 1852, here is bishop fitzpatrick. i have is out of sequence, who helped to raise so much money and that is the cathedral of the holy cross, the first one in boston built in the early 19th century. fitzpatrick was very important in helping famine relief. here you see the areas of boston where the irish settled,...
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Jun 7, 2021
06/21
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there's opening up what are you seeing in your hotels >> sara, first, on behalf of nyu, thank you for sara just interviewed the head of marriott, hyatt, intercontinental, best western these are the biggest players in the industry as we heard for an hour, there is a sense of optimism things are improving but there are a whole host of challenges still out there the numbers will get us back to where we were in 2019. but for that to happen, this is the summer of leisure travel there are other segments that have to kick in. most likely that will start to happen after labor day on the group side we are just starting to see business pick up at a bunch of our properties we're starting to see interest from small groups. small groups lead to bigger groups and then the whole question of business travel. and you were kind to mention loews sapphire falls in orlando and a joint venture that we have with your parent company, comcast nbc universal. when sapphire opens next week, that means that all eight hotels, 9,000 rooms, will be reopened the theme park is doing well our hotels are doing well. so
there's opening up what are you seeing in your hotels >> sara, first, on behalf of nyu, thank you for sara just interviewed the head of marriott, hyatt, intercontinental, best western these are the biggest players in the industry as we heard for an hour, there is a sense of optimism things are improving but there are a whole host of challenges still out there the numbers will get us back to where we were in 2019. but for that to happen, this is the summer of leisure travel there are other...
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do no harm especially to americans question joined me to it discuss fox medical news correspondent nyungo doctor marc siegel is back. welcome dr. siegel. >> kennedy great to be with you on this very important topic. thank you. kennedy: when you read these e-mails and you start to realize what fauci knew, what strikes you most? speckle i went up arch this out and give some definitions here. a lot of it is a blur to be will do not know viruses. first of all interview doctor fauci recently put i think he believes what he is saying pretty thinking believes it did not come from a lab. the problem is he sticking rigidly to one scientist, edward holmes in sydney, australia was working in china with the china cdc at the time and put the structure of the virus online for the world to see in january. but notice this, candy, where was the cdc's boots on the ground? on january 2020 bird why? it seems to me they are hiding something. your point about the e-mail sender policy and is plenty of incoming but dr. fauci said wait a minute, wuhan lab? wuhan virus? 20 miles apart. as a matter fact there ar
do no harm especially to americans question joined me to it discuss fox medical news correspondent nyungo doctor marc siegel is back. welcome dr. siegel. >> kennedy great to be with you on this very important topic. thank you. kennedy: when you read these e-mails and you start to realize what fauci knew, what strikes you most? speckle i went up arch this out and give some definitions here. a lot of it is a blur to be will do not know viruses. first of all interview doctor fauci recently...
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Jun 24, 2021
06/21
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professor melissa murray, nyu law school, clerk for justice sewn ya sotomayor, and -- a professor of politics and journalism at morgan state university. phil rutger, we'd like to begin with you. the white house beat. why did the white house choose today, to the best of your knowledge, to launch this anti-crime initiative? >> well, brian, it was an important day for president biden to launch this initiative in part because there are indications that crime this summer could be going up in cities across the country. biden warned of that in his remarks from the white house today. and he wanted to take political advantage or at least position his administration bet ears the summer bears on. this is a politically tricky issue for democrats. it always has been for decades now, but especially in this moment because republicans on capitol hill have said that they want to try to use crime, if there's a crime wave this summer, as a campaign tool to try to defeat the democrats and take back the majority and midterm elections next year somewhat we've heard from biden and the attorney general is a
professor melissa murray, nyu law school, clerk for justice sewn ya sotomayor, and -- a professor of politics and journalism at morgan state university. phil rutger, we'd like to begin with you. the white house beat. why did the white house choose today, to the best of your knowledge, to launch this anti-crime initiative? >> well, brian, it was an important day for president biden to launch this initiative in part because there are indications that crime this summer could be going up in...
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Jun 6, 2021
06/21
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sue varna, psychiatrist and clinical professor of psychiatry at nyu.sporting arenas and it would seem to me that there is a common thread between the these events where people are acting incredibly aggressively. your sense of what is going on? 60 to 80% of people are saying they're feeling anxious, have difficulty sleeping, that they're depressed. they lost jobs. they lost loved ones. the problem is lack of social support. socially isolated. we don't have the services. we needed social services. people have lost jobs. financial problems. all of this is bringing the average person who had been in quarantine, at home, in very close contact with other people, in crowded situations. we now have waited people being too close together. add in divisiveness, political divisiveness that we've experienced. so there's a heightened sense of you and me is are different. if you're not doing what i like or following the rules you're a potential threat to my safety. >> do you see this as a question of systems, of actual structures that need to be changed to give peopl
sue varna, psychiatrist and clinical professor of psychiatry at nyu.sporting arenas and it would seem to me that there is a common thread between the these events where people are acting incredibly aggressively. your sense of what is going on? 60 to 80% of people are saying they're feeling anxious, have difficulty sleeping, that they're depressed. they lost jobs. they lost loved ones. the problem is lack of social support. socially isolated. we don't have the services. we needed social...
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Jun 7, 2021
06/21
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she is the nyu langone medical center. there's been a lot of attention to what is happening.ng up. give me your sense of what is going on? >> just to give a little background, with very seen height ened stress across the board. 60% of people are saying they're feeling anxious and have difficulty sleeping and feeling depressed. they lost jobs, they lost loved ones. and the problem is we have lock of social support. we've been socially isolated. there is more stressful tension. people have lost jobs, childcare, giving home learning, home schooling for children, financial problems. so all of this is bringing the average person who had been, you know in, quarantine in home very close contact with other people. n. crowded situations. and we now have equate the being too close together with danger, alert. and add in the political device, so there is a heightened sense of you and me are different if you're not following the rules or doing something that i like. you're potentially a threat to my safety. >> do you see this as a question of systems? of actual structures that need to be
she is the nyu langone medical center. there's been a lot of attention to what is happening.ng up. give me your sense of what is going on? >> just to give a little background, with very seen height ened stress across the board. 60% of people are saying they're feeling anxious and have difficulty sleeping and feeling depressed. they lost jobs, they lost loved ones. and the problem is we have lock of social support. we've been socially isolated. there is more stressful tension. people have...
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as think tank is director of center for urban science and progress in nyu. it. guest: and took off much faster than anybody unexpected. we sold out the first print run and more companies should be available within the week so the demand is very surprising and gratifying. see what will i expected it in the country needs you among other things. now i want to talk to, we talked about a lot of things. by the country is not going to help because of climate warming at least in the next year or two and what the economic impacts are moderate. now the put out biden puts out this executive order and i started to read it to the nec and a two page but i just want to you for quick comments when generic question is doing the death this. the order directs regulators the budget writers and purchasing agencies to rethink how they do the taxpayer business. it focuses on financial risk okay we got that and he goes into public and private companies, americans who owned the home americans who take out home loans, mortgages, retirement fund management, insurance management . for
as think tank is director of center for urban science and progress in nyu. it. guest: and took off much faster than anybody unexpected. we sold out the first print run and more companies should be available within the week so the demand is very surprising and gratifying. see what will i expected it in the country needs you among other things. now i want to talk to, we talked about a lot of things. by the country is not going to help because of climate warming at least in the next year or two...
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Jun 8, 2021
06/21
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marc siegel fox news contributor and professor of medicine at nyu langone medical center. good to see you. i took a pause after rich edson gave the choices. i was reading recently in a pretty in-depth report on how many animals they've tested in china reportedly. like 80,000 bats and that they've pretty much found that it was not that. when we had the first round of covid, sars a few years back they found it within four months, didn't they, the origin and it was an animal? >> correct, harris. listen, it started in a bat for sure. a bat coronavirus, a horseshoe bat. that much they know because the vast majority of the structure is from a bat coronavirus. but for sars 1 as you mentioned it went through a cat and they've been testing animal after animal here and haven't found what we call an intermediary creature. if it started as a bat coronavirus where did it go next? it doesn't go from bat to human. those viruses don't go easily human-to-human. the thing that raised eyebrows on the lab is what they're doing in lab that study bat coronavirus. they are looking to see how the
marc siegel fox news contributor and professor of medicine at nyu langone medical center. good to see you. i took a pause after rich edson gave the choices. i was reading recently in a pretty in-depth report on how many animals they've tested in china reportedly. like 80,000 bats and that they've pretty much found that it was not that. when we had the first round of covid, sars a few years back they found it within four months, didn't they, the origin and it was an animal? >> correct,...
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Jun 7, 2021
06/21
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the secretary of foreign affairs, also a professor at nyu, secretary, thanks for taking the time.d was this a free and fair election, do you trust the results are legitimate? >> hi, ana, yes, i think the results are legitimate. there may be cases of tampering here or there or results that may be overturned by the courts but by and large the election was free and fair. the results are legitimate. and the violence was, of course, something terribly tragic and unfortunate. and something should have been done about it to avoid it by the government but at the end of the day also this is one of the largest elections in recent mexican history. more candidates than ever. 1,900 town mayors were up for election, 15 governors, 300 congressmen, et cetera. so you had a lot more people competing, which leads, perhaps, in part to more violence, and you also had some parties making local alliances with some cartels or mini drug cartels which made their candidates targets for other cartels. but by and large the results are acceptable. >> but that's what i guess i don't understand because if the th
the secretary of foreign affairs, also a professor at nyu, secretary, thanks for taking the time.d was this a free and fair election, do you trust the results are legitimate? >> hi, ana, yes, i think the results are legitimate. there may be cases of tampering here or there or results that may be overturned by the courts but by and large the election was free and fair. the results are legitimate. and the violence was, of course, something terribly tragic and unfortunate. and something...
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Jun 6, 2021
06/21
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friend and colleague visiting scholar, richard epstein who, in his day job, professor of law at the nyu school of law where he is the director of the liberal institute and the peter fellow at the hoover institution so richard, thank you for joining me today. both of us wrote book published last year. yours was pre-published in published in littlefield last spring and find came out in september last year, both involving subject. regulation and administrative state. my book was entitled on elected, how unaccountable elites is governing america and richards is entitled morality of administrative law in each of these books offer a detailed account of the evolution of the current state of the american regulatory apparatus and problems with it. together, both argued the administrative state is at odds with other principles we hold dear. professor epstein focuses on the administrative state undermines rule of law itself and i were principally held the administrative state conflict with norms of popular representation and accountability. now we have had a change of administration, 5050 senate a
friend and colleague visiting scholar, richard epstein who, in his day job, professor of law at the nyu school of law where he is the director of the liberal institute and the peter fellow at the hoover institution so richard, thank you for joining me today. both of us wrote book published last year. yours was pre-published in published in littlefield last spring and find came out in september last year, both involving subject. regulation and administrative state. my book was entitled on...
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Jun 26, 2021
06/21
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she teaches in very lucky students it nyu journalism institute. her work has been cited in hundreds, i said hundreds of scholarlyy articles. here to talk with us about her latest book virus : vaccinations, the cdc, and the hijacking of america's response to the pandemic. please welcome nina burleigh. nina please feel free to take it away and share with us. >> thank you for that f wonderfull introduction. i am super honored tom be here and to be asked to address my object fellow skeptics put a big fan of csi i've spoken to them about two other books. i a was very thrilled to be asked to come here tonight. so thank you very much for the introduction. and i guess where i'm going to start with is why this book? people a are questioning -- and a bite friends and colleagues, why did you do this? were you writing this the entire time? did you start in march of 2020? the answer is no protection did not start writing it until i got a call from a publisher around thanksgiving. and he said hey, i want someone to write a 50000 word book and book world that is
she teaches in very lucky students it nyu journalism institute. her work has been cited in hundreds, i said hundreds of scholarlyy articles. here to talk with us about her latest book virus : vaccinations, the cdc, and the hijacking of america's response to the pandemic. please welcome nina burleigh. nina please feel free to take it away and share with us. >> thank you for that f wonderfull introduction. i am super honored tom be here and to be asked to address my object fellow skeptics...
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Jun 3, 2021
06/21
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they have known each other an awfully long time speaking of valuations on amc, pleased to bring in nyuchool of business professor at the dean evaluation talking about what it might actually be. welcome back great to see you >> good to see you, too. >> so lots of people are running all kinds of numbers for the time when fundamentals matter again which is obviously not right now. but you're talking about, you know, depending on your forecasts for box office, maybe $4 billion in revenue. it would be selling at ten times earlier in the week. what is a fair price >> i think that at the moment there is a feedback from the price going up, and amc i think is playing this game a lot better than gamestop is. i think that taking advantage of what might be an opportunistic moment of raising capital, because they're in a business in transition look at amazon buying mgm for $9 billion. you see at&t selling the business clearly the business is ripe for change and amc own as niche of this business less critical than it used to be but still a critical cog in the wheel no way to get to a $30 billion mar
they have known each other an awfully long time speaking of valuations on amc, pleased to bring in nyuchool of business professor at the dean evaluation talking about what it might actually be. welcome back great to see you >> good to see you, too. >> so lots of people are running all kinds of numbers for the time when fundamentals matter again which is obviously not right now. but you're talking about, you know, depending on your forecasts for box office, maybe $4 billion in...
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Jun 15, 2021
06/21
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at the nyu medical center where i do the work, do my work.but maybe it should be at the end of the day, though, i just heard so many positive anecdotes about psychodelics one of my former colleagues got into an experimental trial that helped him beat alcoholism i was thrilled for him it been a total success and i'm really proud of the guy. he told the story to anderson cooper on "60 minutes" not that long ago you hear about micro dosing help cluster headaches. it is legitimate enough to speculate on since the company seems to have a good working relationship with the fda but this story is ridiculously speculative. you have to be prepared to lose all of your money because there are all sorts of ways to blow up in your face maybe they can't figure out low to administer them and maybe one of the competitors beats them to the punch but maybe just maybe harvard professor timothy leary was ahead of his time when he thought it could be the gateway to a saner, safer more enjoyable life and that's why richard nixon called him the most dangerous man in
at the nyu medical center where i do the work, do my work.but maybe it should be at the end of the day, though, i just heard so many positive anecdotes about psychodelics one of my former colleagues got into an experimental trial that helped him beat alcoholism i was thrilled for him it been a total success and i'm really proud of the guy. he told the story to anderson cooper on "60 minutes" not that long ago you hear about micro dosing help cluster headaches. it is legitimate enough...
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Jun 13, 2021
06/21
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time with bill maher, "good morning america" and msnbc, cnn and npr and teaches very lucky students at nyu author of parks journalism institute and her work is incited in hundreds of scholarly articles, so here to talk with us about her latest book "virus" vaccinations with the cdc and hijacking of america's response to the pandemic. please welcome nina burleigh. nina, feel free to take it away and share with us. >> thank you for that wonderful introduction. i am super honored to be here and to be asked to address my i guess fellow skeptics. i'm a big fan. i was thrilled to be asked to come here tonight, so thank you for the introduction. i guess what i will start with is why this book, people have come up to me, friends and colleagues, why did you do this like we readiness the entire time, did you start in march 2020 and the answer is no. actually did not start writing until i got a call from a publisher around thanksgiving and he said i want someone to write a 50000 word book, in book world that is short, a 50000 word book on vaccination, and i said you know i am intrigued. obviously i h
time with bill maher, "good morning america" and msnbc, cnn and npr and teaches very lucky students at nyu author of parks journalism institute and her work is incited in hundreds of scholarly articles, so here to talk with us about her latest book "virus" vaccinations with the cdc and hijacking of america's response to the pandemic. please welcome nina burleigh. nina, feel free to take it away and share with us. >> thank you for that wonderful introduction. i am super...
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Jun 19, 2021
06/21
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koonin, not a famous scientist, for some and infamous scientists, professor at new york university nyu, formerly head of the department of energy research portfolio under the secretary of energy, a senate approved post under president obama. he was chief scientist at bp, for those who may remember, that used to mean british petroleum, then it went beyond petroleum and it went back to bp. we will talk about that and part of that, professor and provo caltech which is i will confess i am jealous because it was my first choice where i tend to go to school, i went to queens university as you know, i like to think of it as a good business school, it is the genuine mothership so in short he is the scientist of some consequence. he's not a dilettante. we will talk about his book, if you're joining us you know why we are talking about the book titled "unsettled?: what climate science tells us, what it doesn't, and why it matters," steve is on the circuit, i know what that is like. could be fun, could be annoying but you write a book it is a lot of work, you hope people will read it. we will tal
koonin, not a famous scientist, for some and infamous scientists, professor at new york university nyu, formerly head of the department of energy research portfolio under the secretary of energy, a senate approved post under president obama. he was chief scientist at bp, for those who may remember, that used to mean british petroleum, then it went beyond petroleum and it went back to bp. we will talk about that and part of that, professor and provo caltech which is i will confess i am jealous...
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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nyu oberlin, swarthmore annapolis, west point, wisconsin, michigan, illinois, iowa, kansas, oregon state the list rolls on between 1900 and 1960 the olmsted firm worked on more than 180 campuses. well as the work poured in they needed help and talented young men joined the firm such as henry codman and charles elliott the nephew of the grant of the president of harvard university elliot was responsible for the boston regional park system later referred to as the emerald necklace and olmstead elder son. john charles had also entered the firm by then and he was taking on more responsibility. the columbian exposition in chicago of 1893 in part inspired by the 1889 world world's exposition in paris was planned to design by a very large team of architects engineers and boosters from chicago as well as the olmsted firm. largely, it was a bozar's vision of daniel burnham and charles fullen mckim and it set in motion the city beautiful movement in american civic planning and design as his empath exemplified, but the benjamin franklin parkway and his monumental cultural buildings here in philadel
nyu oberlin, swarthmore annapolis, west point, wisconsin, michigan, illinois, iowa, kansas, oregon state the list rolls on between 1900 and 1960 the olmsted firm worked on more than 180 campuses. well as the work poured in they needed help and talented young men joined the firm such as henry codman and charles elliott the nephew of the grant of the president of harvard university elliot was responsible for the boston regional park system later referred to as the emerald necklace and olmstead...
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Jun 17, 2021
06/21
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i mentioned before and many many sources if any of you are interested nyu has an entire thing on rosie the riveter the as i will show you later. the redstone army has this wonderful ordinance on women's ordinance the various branches of the military each have different websites which have this material and much of this material is copyright free so you can look at it and use it next slide, please. so here's where we go from an interesting shift first. i want to start by saying women have always worked. they worked before the industrial revolution. they worked in what's called the domestic economy. you are not taking care of a home and a family and children you were creating the economy that fueled your home the farm the produce the goods whatever you did contributed to that economy, and that's what women did they worked side by side with men they contributed to every effort from the starting of the american revolution. so that's one of the things we need to keep in mind by the 1930s depression. however, women had begun to be discouraged from working and there was a shifting demographic
i mentioned before and many many sources if any of you are interested nyu has an entire thing on rosie the riveter the as i will show you later. the redstone army has this wonderful ordinance on women's ordinance the various branches of the military each have different websites which have this material and much of this material is copyright free so you can look at it and use it next slide, please. so here's where we go from an interesting shift first. i want to start by saying women have always...
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Jun 6, 2021
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joining me now, nyu law professor and msnbc contributor melissa murray, and former watergate prosecutorually wanted to fire acting ag jeff rosen for not looking into the election conspiracies. why is it dangerous for the white house to even tell the justice department what they should be investigating? >> this was all part of donald trump's belief that he controlled the justice department, that he could tell them what to do, that he could have them serve his own political needs and not the attorneys for all the people of america. so it's dangerous in and of itself for that. but this is really beyond ridiculous. the italy gate, as it is now known, was such a ridiculous theory. it goes along with some of the qanon theories. and the fact that the department of justice even had to listen to any request to investigate these conspiracies and was being pushed by this chief of staff to donald trump, mark meadows, to help find election fraud when there clearly was none means that the department of justice was on the edge of being overtaken by political wrongdoing. >> just listening to that theor
joining me now, nyu law professor and msnbc contributor melissa murray, and former watergate prosecutorually wanted to fire acting ag jeff rosen for not looking into the election conspiracies. why is it dangerous for the white house to even tell the justice department what they should be investigating? >> this was all part of donald trump's belief that he controlled the justice department, that he could tell them what to do, that he could have them serve his own political needs and not...
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Jun 3, 2021
06/21
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we have melissa murray, nyu law professor, and jason johnson from morgan state university. welcome to you both. melissa, you don't have to be a long-time news viewer to remember that donald trump was accused of multiple instances of obstruction of justice. the conservative count in the mueller report is five and then there is some that were gray. but he was president so it was dealt in a very specific way. he had no more vocal defender of the idea that he didn't and perhaps couldn't commit obstruction than matt gaetz. what do you see beyond here in the report that the feds are looking at this beyond other potential charges? >> well, it suggests the investigation has moved into a stage where they're not only dealing with the information that greenberg is offering but those associated with greenberg were also telling them things. again, obstruction of justice is a pretty wide range of activity that could be incapsulated in that. it is everything including threats, coercion. or even more minor things like trying to administrate justice. so if matt gaetz, for example, suggested
we have melissa murray, nyu law professor, and jason johnson from morgan state university. welcome to you both. melissa, you don't have to be a long-time news viewer to remember that donald trump was accused of multiple instances of obstruction of justice. the conservative count in the mueller report is five and then there is some that were gray. but he was president so it was dealt in a very specific way. he had no more vocal defender of the idea that he didn't and perhaps couldn't commit...
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Jun 18, 2021
06/21
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he is the esteemed professor of history formerly of pan and now at nyu their conversation will last for a little under an hour with time for a q&a and a book signing outside afterwards and please stay for some refreshments. and also, please take this time to silence your cell phones and without further ado kelly and steve. yeah, thank you. would you like to start would you like me to? you can say well, thank you very much, and it's really a great pleasure to be here. let me start with kind of general comment a number of years ago. i was approached by robert lockhart of the university of pennsylvania, press and i was invited to co-edit a new series a co-edit with brian delay who teaches at the university of california at berkeley and amy drew stanley who teaches at the university of chicago a new series on american in the 19th century the university of pennsylvania, press already had this thing. we're serious and early american history and in twentieth century history and our idea was not to publish a whole bunch of books, but actually to publish a small number of challenging new work th
he is the esteemed professor of history formerly of pan and now at nyu their conversation will last for a little under an hour with time for a q&a and a book signing outside afterwards and please stay for some refreshments. and also, please take this time to silence your cell phones and without further ado kelly and steve. yeah, thank you. would you like to start would you like me to? you can say well, thank you very much, and it's really a great pleasure to be here. let me start with kind...
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Jun 27, 2021
06/21
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institute visiting scholar richard who in his day job is the lawrence a tisch professor of law at the nyu school of law where he's director of the classical liberal institute e and also peter pearson bedford fellow at the hoover institution so richard, thank you forjoining me here today . both of us wrote books were published last year. yours was pre-published by the manhattan institute in fall of 2019 and published by rowan and littlefield last spring and mine came out in september of last year. both involving asthis subject, regulation and the administrative state. my book the title unelected, how an unaccountable elite is governing america . richards is entitled the, "the dubious morality of modern administrative law" each of these books offers a detailed account of the current state of the american regulatory apparatus and the problems with it . together richard and i and our books are due the administrative state is at odds with principles we hold dear. professor epstein focuses on how the administrative state undermines the rule of law itself and i more principally how the administr
institute visiting scholar richard who in his day job is the lawrence a tisch professor of law at the nyu school of law where he's director of the classical liberal institute e and also peter pearson bedford fellow at the hoover institution so richard, thank you forjoining me here today . both of us wrote books were published last year. yours was pre-published by the manhattan institute in fall of 2019 and published by rowan and littlefield last spring and mine came out in september of last...
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Jun 8, 2021
06/21
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. >> joining our conversation is nyu law professor melissa murray. josh marshall still with us. professor, i wanted to bring you in and give this update to your viewers because while one big story in washington is happening right now with the funding, the other big story is what we're still learning and what many in the congress have tried to prevent, which is understanding what led to this. your thoughts on the report? >> it reminds me of the report of the 9/11 commission. what you have here are a number of different agencies all charged with gathering intelligence. but none of it incredibly joined up. so lots of disjointed not sharing of information. not a lot of coordination. there seems to be opportunities for improving communication sharing among these agencies. but the real meat of this report is going to be in this bipartisan working together going forward about the appropriations to improve some of this. there has been a huge bill passed in the house. it is unlikely to pass without serious reconciliation in the senate. but that would be the appropriations to actually mak
. >> joining our conversation is nyu law professor melissa murray. josh marshall still with us. professor, i wanted to bring you in and give this update to your viewers because while one big story in washington is happening right now with the funding, the other big story is what we're still learning and what many in the congress have tried to prevent, which is understanding what led to this. your thoughts on the report? >> it reminds me of the report of the 9/11 commission. what you...
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Jun 14, 2021
06/21
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i actually graduated from nyu with a masters in cybersecurity. just last week, many of your firms, had some of your executives, team members in that program. i appreciate you all making it a priority to learn from the past, to make sure you're doing everything you can to secure our data. with that i yield back, thank you. >> thank you very much. this committee will stand in recess for five minutes. we will return. in five minutes. the gentleman from new york, mr. torres, is now recognized for five minutes. >> thank you madam chair. have a question for the ceo of morgan stanley. how much did you sustain in losses from the collapse of -- ? >> 911 million dollars. >> and bill wayne, pleaded guilty to insider trading a decade ago. were you aware of this before entering into a contract with him? >> i was not personally but as a company we were aware of it. >> were you aware of all the other credit swab contracts he had, the lack of your specification on the contracts and the over leveraging? >> no, there was no clarity or transparency around his posit
i actually graduated from nyu with a masters in cybersecurity. just last week, many of your firms, had some of your executives, team members in that program. i appreciate you all making it a priority to learn from the past, to make sure you're doing everything you can to secure our data. with that i yield back, thank you. >> thank you very much. this committee will stand in recess for five minutes. we will return. in five minutes. the gentleman from new york, mr. torres, is now recognized...
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Jun 17, 2021
06/21
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now, the brennan center for justice at the nyu law school conduct this had study.ating an election threats task force at the department of justice. >>> former republican governor of pennsylvania tom ridge rushed to the hospital wednesday after suffering a stroke. he underwent a successful procedure to remove a blood clot. he was in critical but stable condition as of wednesday evening. a ridge served as the first director of the white house office of homeland security you will recall after those attacks on september 11th. one of his most high profile moves was to oversee the creation of the color coded threat warning system. >>> the atlanta hawks making another big come back this game five last night. coy wire has your "bleacher report" next. you love rich, delicious ice cream. but your stomach doesn't. that disagreement ends right now. lactaid ice cream is the creamy, real ice cream you love that will never mess with your stomach. lactaid ice cream. spray, lift, skip, step. swipe, lift, spin, dry. slam, pan, still...fresh move, move, move, move aaaaand still fresh
now, the brennan center for justice at the nyu law school conduct this had study.ating an election threats task force at the department of justice. >>> former republican governor of pennsylvania tom ridge rushed to the hospital wednesday after suffering a stroke. he underwent a successful procedure to remove a blood clot. he was in critical but stable condition as of wednesday evening. a ridge served as the first director of the white house office of homeland security you will recall...
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Jun 28, 2021
06/21
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one entity that really is championing civil juries in an interesting way is a project at nyu law school, organized by a great lawyer named steve sexton. and you will be surprised to know he was a law clerk for the great jury trial lawyer hugo black. susan: thank you very much to akhil. and paul from being back this season. so glad to have you. and thank you all of you for watching and for those who participated. ♪ [speaking foreign language] ♪ >> c-span's washington journal, every day we are taking your calls, live on the air. coming up monday morning, a preview of the week ahead in congress with catherine tully mcmanus, and a discussion of covid vaccination rates and vaccine hesitancy. watch washington journal, live at 7:00 eastern monday morning. be sure to join the discussion with your phone calls, facebook comments, text messages, and tweets. welcome back chief correspondent and columnist for the washington post. thank you for being with us. guest: always a pleasure. host: let's talk about the news regarding infrastructure and that statement from the white house. where do things sta
one entity that really is championing civil juries in an interesting way is a project at nyu law school, organized by a great lawyer named steve sexton. and you will be surprised to know he was a law clerk for the great jury trial lawyer hugo black. susan: thank you very much to akhil. and paul from being back this season. so glad to have you. and thank you all of you for watching and for those who participated. ♪ [speaking foreign language] ♪ >> c-span's washington journal, every day...
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Jun 21, 2021
06/21
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joining us right now is nyu law professor melissa murray and former rnc chair michael steele. professor, your view of the combined picture we're getting from each of these reports about the probe? >> well, it's definitely a case of keep your friends close and your enemies or at least those who can testify against you closer. and so it seems that former president trump is keeping tabs on mr. weisselberg because mr. weisselberg is one member of that small circle of trust. it's not just that the circle of trust is small that makes it difficult for the prosecutors, it's also that former president trump has over his course of business been really reticent to document his doings in email. he famously doesn't email. he doesn't write things down. so it's really mr. weisselberg who has been the eyes and ears of this whole operation that can provide the information to link any misdoings to trump. that's really what's needed here. if weisselberg isn't talking, it's going to be very difficult to get the goods to prove intent on the part of trump. >> yeah. michael, this "journal" story aga
joining us right now is nyu law professor melissa murray and former rnc chair michael steele. professor, your view of the combined picture we're getting from each of these reports about the probe? >> well, it's definitely a case of keep your friends close and your enemies or at least those who can testify against you closer. and so it seems that former president trump is keeping tabs on mr. weisselberg because mr. weisselberg is one member of that small circle of trust. it's not just that...
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Jun 28, 2021
06/21
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one entity that really is championing civil juries in an interesting way is a project at nyu law school, organized by a great lawyer named steve sexton. and you will be surprised to know he was a law clerk for the great jury trial lawyer hugo black. susan: thank you very much to akhil. and paul from being back this season. so glad to have you. and thank you all of you for watching and for those who participated. ♪ [speaking foreign language] ♪ >> washington journal continues. host: our focus is the biden administration and the party.
one entity that really is championing civil juries in an interesting way is a project at nyu law school, organized by a great lawyer named steve sexton. and you will be surprised to know he was a law clerk for the great jury trial lawyer hugo black. susan: thank you very much to akhil. and paul from being back this season. so glad to have you. and thank you all of you for watching and for those who participated. ♪ [speaking foreign language] ♪ >> washington journal continues. host:...
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Jun 16, 2021
06/21
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professor melissa murray nyu law school who was law clerk for justice sonia sotomayor on the federal bench prior to her nomination to the supreme court. and dr. irwin redlener founder of national university national center for disaster preparedness and advises us on public health and happens to be a columnist over at "the daily beast." good evening to you and welcome. peter, let's start with the president you cover for a living and more than that start with lindsey graham tonight presummit advice on "hannity." >> he needs to tell putin if there is another cyber attack in america, coming from russian soil, you're going to pay a price. his policies indicate to me that he doesn't understand the dangers we face. >> this would not have happened if donald trump were president. we would not be attacked twice from russia by cyber terrorists if donald trump were president. >> agreed. >> joe biden needs to fix this. >> interesting advice there to be tough on putin. perhaps the senator can be forgiven. perhaps he is forgetting this in helsinki. >> my people came to me, dan coates came to me and
professor melissa murray nyu law school who was law clerk for justice sonia sotomayor on the federal bench prior to her nomination to the supreme court. and dr. irwin redlener founder of national university national center for disaster preparedness and advises us on public health and happens to be a columnist over at "the daily beast." good evening to you and welcome. peter, let's start with the president you cover for a living and more than that start with lindsey graham tonight...
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Jun 26, 2021
06/21
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in american civilization from nyu. scholar in italy, she's received scholarships and grants from the national endowment of the humanities,
in american civilization from nyu. scholar in italy, she's received scholarships and grants from the national endowment of the humanities,
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Jun 18, 2021
06/21
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> seth: did you -- i want to ask, you play a sort of grifter of sorts you came to new york to go to nyuto new york? >> absolutely. i was swindled out of my entire net worth within two months of moving here. it was halloween 2008, a week before the election, and i decided to walk over to the parade or no, i was walking to some dorm, and i crossed the street at union square. and someone stopped me and said, "hey, you stepped on my glasses. and held up this pair of shattered frames, and he was like, "i need these to see, you need to pay me $100 right now. i said, "i am so sorry i don't believe i did that, but if i did, i don't have the money. he kept following me and then, i had gotten -- i acquiesced that point. i was like, "fine, you can come with me to the atm, i need to pick up some cash, but i have to tell you, i have $13 in my bank account right now, so i do need to call my father so he could deposit at least $7 to give you $20. and so then, his face fell and he was like, "oh, okay, sure." and i think he felt sorry for me at that point, so that when we were waiting for the money to t
> seth: did you -- i want to ask, you play a sort of grifter of sorts you came to new york to go to nyuto new york? >> absolutely. i was swindled out of my entire net worth within two months of moving here. it was halloween 2008, a week before the election, and i decided to walk over to the parade or no, i was walking to some dorm, and i crossed the street at union square. and someone stopped me and said, "hey, you stepped on my glasses. and held up this pair of shattered frames,...
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Jun 6, 2021
06/21
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friend and colleague visiting scholar, richard epstein who, in his day job, professor of law at the nyuschool of law where he is the director of the liberal institute
friend and colleague visiting scholar, richard epstein who, in his day job, professor of law at the nyuschool of law where he is the director of the liberal institute
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Jun 21, 2021
06/21
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business trip for going out and reporting, but weather hearing -- i had a big ceo conference at the nyuerences for the fall nowhere near the levels, but of course they push back against the idea it would never come back in the same numbers. >> i don't know that it will ever equal 2019. zoom is going to win for some. radio shows, maybe. >> certain types of sales, that's where you -- it's a p & l thing, you probably will make the trip, not a road show that's a one to many time of environment. >>> moving on here, your prime day purchases could be facing shipping and supply chain issues frank holland has the details for us also adjusting, their on-time deliveredy numbers reflecting that shift industrial experts say they expect prime day to kickstart the holiday peak that usually begins on black friday wreak trucking demand has increased 160% year to day over 2020, while available trucks have fallen by 28%. really another sign of the tightening summer chain. back over to you >> thank, frank. why isn't that inflationary? >> it definitely is. >> that's transitory we're sure that's transitory >
business trip for going out and reporting, but weather hearing -- i had a big ceo conference at the nyuerences for the fall nowhere near the levels, but of course they push back against the idea it would never come back in the same numbers. >> i don't know that it will ever equal 2019. zoom is going to win for some. radio shows, maybe. >> certain types of sales, that's where you -- it's a p & l thing, you probably will make the trip, not a road show that's a one to many time of...
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Jun 14, 2021
06/21
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i actually graduated from nyu with a masters in cybersecurity. just last week, many of your firms, had some of your executives, team members in that program. i appreciate you all making it a priority to learn from the past, to make sure you're doing everything you can to secure our data. with that i yield back, thank you. >> thank you very much. this committee will stand in recess for five minutes. we will return. in five minutes. the gentleman from new york, mr. torres, is now recognized for five minutes. >> thank you madam chair. have a question for the ceo of morgan stanley. how much did you sustain in losses from the collapse of -- ? >> 911 million dollars. >> and bill wayne, pl
i actually graduated from nyu with a masters in cybersecurity. just last week, many of your firms, had some of your executives, team members in that program. i appreciate you all making it a priority to learn from the past, to make sure you're doing everything you can to secure our data. with that i yield back, thank you. >> thank you very much. this committee will stand in recess for five minutes. we will return. in five minutes. the gentleman from new york, mr. torres, is now recognized...
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Jun 21, 2021
06/21
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in that same park two nyu students were assaulted.is so dangerous here my app., i downloaded that app. called citizen. and it just goes off constantly. of any crime that is in your surrounding area. brian: the thing is, it is not just new york, it is every major city and the thing they have in common is left wing mayors who think criminal first. james craig is going to be running for office, former detroit police chief it seems, and is he talking about what he has seen. >> our profession is in a crisis right now. and when you talk about issues like bail reform, the courts are not using common sense. they're putting these violent predatory criminals back in our community. the other big issue, some of the mayors in these cities are failing miserably. just look at chicago. lori lightfoot talks about what's dangerous in the cops are dangerous? no, she is dangerous. people who live in the most vulnerable communities in chicago, south and west chicago, vulnerable communities, who speaks for them. they want effective policing. where are the
in that same park two nyu students were assaulted.is so dangerous here my app., i downloaded that app. called citizen. and it just goes off constantly. of any crime that is in your surrounding area. brian: the thing is, it is not just new york, it is every major city and the thing they have in common is left wing mayors who think criminal first. james craig is going to be running for office, former detroit police chief it seems, and is he talking about what he has seen. >> our profession...
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Jun 8, 2021
06/21
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larry newman at nyu.ting for this to happen it is such a breakthrough. >> the other bits of pharma news are pfizer testing some lower doses for kids 5-11 which is encouraging for perhaps later in the year and j&j, the journal wrote the story about the steep decline in demand for their vaccine ohio has 300,000 doses that will expire the week after next governor is saying please, anybody go get and j&j vaccine. >> i think the yankees i know you are a mets fan. congratulations for a pretty good season so far. >> only june but thank you. >> there are some yankee members who had just the j&j and look, i think the main thing is that it lessens what's happening. >> none of them got sick they got the virus but i don't believe any of them actually got sick which is again a key here to why you want to be vaccinated -- as unlikely it is it is that you will you would get the virus its effects are muted to say the least. everybody should get vaccinated but of course that is not happening in the country. >> well there
larry newman at nyu.ting for this to happen it is such a breakthrough. >> the other bits of pharma news are pfizer testing some lower doses for kids 5-11 which is encouraging for perhaps later in the year and j&j, the journal wrote the story about the steep decline in demand for their vaccine ohio has 300,000 doses that will expire the week after next governor is saying please, anybody go get and j&j vaccine. >> i think the yankees i know you are a mets fan. congratulations...
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Jun 1, 2021
06/21
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one part of your article i i read and best quotes are professor emerita at nyu saying they will sellabout their health credentials. consumers are becoming more sceptical about some of these very well—known brands that are not known for being healthy. for example, sports nutrition, plant—based substitutes nutrition, pla nt—based substitutes for nutrition, plant—based substitutes for meat which are perceived as healthy our areas of huge growth and i think that really mark the changing climate. at the same time, government is getting much, there is new rules coming in on advertising ofjunk food. there is a shift taking place and tonight the role of obesity and the risk of contracting covid—19 is the latest reminder of how important this issue is. covid-19 is the latest reminder of how important this issue is. obesity is an factor with _ how important this issue is. obesity is an factor with covid-19. _ how important this issue is. obesity is an factor with covid-19. what - how important this issue is. obesity is an factor with covid-19. what do | is an factor with covid—19. what do you
one part of your article i i read and best quotes are professor emerita at nyu saying they will sellabout their health credentials. consumers are becoming more sceptical about some of these very well—known brands that are not known for being healthy. for example, sports nutrition, plant—based substitutes nutrition, pla nt—based substitutes for nutrition, plant—based substitutes for meat which are perceived as healthy our areas of huge growth and i think that really mark the changing...