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May 12, 2023
05/23
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and a lesson from the nyu journalism professor on how the media should handle the twice impeached former president who has no problem constantly lying. as the 11th hour gets underway on this thursday night. >> good evening once again. i'm stephanie ruhle. we are now less than one hour away from a major change in this country's immigration policy. it could lead to a large influx of migrants into the united states. at 11:59 pm eastern, just a few minutes from now, the policy known as title expires. it was used during the covid pandemic to quickly expel migrants, even if they requested asylum. tonight there are growing concerns about what could happen once title 42 ends. nbc's tom giannis is on the board border with more. >> title 42 set to expire. fears of a crush of the border leading to changes, begin small. troops now armed near the rio grande. new fencing going up outside of juarez. and that massive crowd of my migrants by the border wall waiting days to be processed, finally rounded up and put in single file lines. the biden ministration trying to calm that but rumors, spreading on so
and a lesson from the nyu journalism professor on how the media should handle the twice impeached former president who has no problem constantly lying. as the 11th hour gets underway on this thursday night. >> good evening once again. i'm stephanie ruhle. we are now less than one hour away from a major change in this country's immigration policy. it could lead to a large influx of migrants into the united states. at 11:59 pm eastern, just a few minutes from now, the policy known as title...
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May 12, 2023
05/23
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MSNBCW
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congressman jim hines is here, and later, an nyu journalism professor gives his take on the town hallith donald trump and how we move forward covering someone who pushes lies that may be the candidate. the 11th hour, just getting underway on a thursday night. thursday night bridgett is here. she has no clue that i'm here. she has no clue who's in the helmet. are you ready? -i'm ready! alright. xfinity rewards creates experiences big and small, and once-in-a-lifetime. speaker mccarthy is willing to state that despite what trump says, that default is off the table, there can be real progress on the budget. and, obviously, as the speaker of the house, mccarthy, will have some real influence in that. but that progress should not and cannot be tied to default. >> majority leader, chuck schumer, calling out speaker kevin mccarthy from the senate floor, today, urging him to take default off the table. hours later, the scheduled meeting between top congressional leaders and the president was postponed until next week. a source, familiar with the meetings, they told nbc that it was a positive
congressman jim hines is here, and later, an nyu journalism professor gives his take on the town hallith donald trump and how we move forward covering someone who pushes lies that may be the candidate. the 11th hour, just getting underway on a thursday night. thursday night bridgett is here. she has no clue that i'm here. she has no clue who's in the helmet. are you ready? -i'm ready! alright. xfinity rewards creates experiences big and small, and once-in-a-lifetime. speaker mccarthy is willing...
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May 17, 2023
05/23
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BLOOMBERG
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ed: gary marcus nyu professor also podcast host. thank you.ticking with ai, goldman sachs says ai offers the biggest potential long-term support for u.s. profit margins. it can boost net margins by nearly 400 basis points over a decade. the team notes that predicting ai's impact is tricky due to the large number of unknown factors surrounding it such as regulation. there have been 1600 mentions of ai by european forms -- firms in the first quarter calls alone. coming up, how kim kardashian is using her social reach to attract investors for private equity fund. keeping an eye on shares of cisco. it is higher by 7%. would we be surprised if ai is a key term when it comes to them? more on the networking side. this is bloomberg. ♪ oh booking.com, ♪ i'm going to somewhere, anywhere. ♪ ♪ a beach house, a treehouse, ♪ ♪ honestly i don't care ♪ find the perfect vacation rental for you booking.com, booking. yeah. ed: india investing $2 billion to pitch itself as a manufacturing hub to companies like apple that make laptops and other hardware. the techn
ed: gary marcus nyu professor also podcast host. thank you.ticking with ai, goldman sachs says ai offers the biggest potential long-term support for u.s. profit margins. it can boost net margins by nearly 400 basis points over a decade. the team notes that predicting ai's impact is tricky due to the large number of unknown factors surrounding it such as regulation. there have been 1600 mentions of ai by european forms -- firms in the first quarter calls alone. coming up, how kim kardashian is...
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May 26, 2023
05/23
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FBC
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that's the message from an nyu professor. watch this. this. we missed it.e going to have it and soit's a very good sound byte ad get to it later. i promise. tomi lahren is out of the house and walking across stewed joe and will join us -- studio and will discuss get out of the house. thanks, tomi. ♪ ♪ ♪ the biggest ideas inspire new ones. 30 years ago, state street created an etf that inspired the world to invest differently. it still does. what can you do with spy? ♪ ♪ if you have this... and you get this... you could end up with this... unexpected out-of-pocket costs. which for those on medicare, or soon to be, is a good reason to take charge of your health care. so consider this. an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan from unitedhealthcare. why? because medicare alone doesn't pay for everything. and what it doesn't pay for, like deductibles and copays, could really add up. even thousands of dollars a year. medicare supplement plans help by paying some of what medicare doesn't... and making your out-of-pocket costs a lot more predictable. call unitedh
that's the message from an nyu professor. watch this. this. we missed it.e going to have it and soit's a very good sound byte ad get to it later. i promise. tomi lahren is out of the house and walking across stewed joe and will join us -- studio and will discuss get out of the house. thanks, tomi. ♪ ♪ ♪ the biggest ideas inspire new ones. 30 years ago, state street created an etf that inspired the world to invest differently. it still does. what can you do with spy? ♪ ♪ if you have...
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going to defer for a year and we are in year 23. >> jimmy: you never went to nyu?l these famous people. >> jimmy: you taught them? >> jeff: i taught them and they became famous. >> jimmy: like who? >> jeff: alana glaser and abby jacobson, kate mckinnon, aubrey plaza... i was on an improv team. >> jimmy: is not hard where you taught these people and they've gone on the big things? >> jeff: a little. but they are all good. >> jimmy: did you audition for "saturday night live"? >> jeff: i did but i actually just read ellie kemper's book and she talked about it and she got invited to "30 rock." >> jim30 rock. >> jimmy: 30 route the building, not the show. >> jeff: first i chose daphne ruben zager who is a broadway star in rent. she is in latinx woman. i would never play her. also no sketch would ever be about her. and then i did... be one who was that again? >> jeff: daphne ruben vega. >> jimmy: [laughter] >> jeff: because she kind of speaks like this. i'm good at it. [cheers and applause] >> jimmy: when you got know who... >> jeff: and i did right wing fred schneider w
going to defer for a year and we are in year 23. >> jimmy: you never went to nyu?l these famous people. >> jimmy: you taught them? >> jeff: i taught them and they became famous. >> jimmy: like who? >> jeff: alana glaser and abby jacobson, kate mckinnon, aubrey plaza... i was on an improv team. >> jimmy: is not hard where you taught these people and they've gone on the big things? >> jeff: a little. but they are all good. >> jimmy: did you audition...
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20
May 17, 2023
05/23
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1TV
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eye 20
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why really why, but it looks silly, like the nyu student who interviewed me today, who interviewed you's funny about that? do you know the oil business? i am mine too kinda star, then why did she look stupid? i don’t know, maybe she was nervous, i think she is a foreigner, i think she is a russian russian student from new york university who is interested in the oil business. it's interesting what we have here, take your hands off a piece. yes , long time no see. what are you doing here? what's going on here? you really thought that in russia we won't get you. you should know that justice knows no bounds, my friend what the hell is justice, what do you want from me? and you don't know, damn you you don't know, i told your lawyer. i don't deal in weapons. i don't know what you told him, but you took the money, but we didn't get the guns like that. what money is money? okay yes thanks. if it wasn't for you, how did you know? i'm from the security service , and a week ago our director gave me orders to keep an eye on this group. yes, you know him. are you sure you're okay? i wish it happe
why really why, but it looks silly, like the nyu student who interviewed me today, who interviewed you's funny about that? do you know the oil business? i am mine too kinda star, then why did she look stupid? i don’t know, maybe she was nervous, i think she is a foreigner, i think she is a russian russian student from new york university who is interested in the oil business. it's interesting what we have here, take your hands off a piece. yes , long time no see. what are you doing here?...
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May 10, 2023
05/23
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CNNW
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. >> also, two nyu students shot and killed while vacationing in puerto rico. the what we're learning about the suspect next. erizon privateg network, associated british ports can now precisely orchestrate nearly 600,000 vehicles passing through their uk port every year. don't just connect your business. (dock worker) right on time. (vo) make it even smarter. we call this enterprise intelllligence. there's a didifferent way to treat hiv. it's every-other-month, injectable cabenuva. for adults who are undetectable, cabenuva is the only complete, long-acting hiv treatment you can t every other month. cabenuva helps keep me undetectable. it's two injections, given by my healthcare provider, it's one less thing to think about while aveling. hiv pills aren't on my mind. a quick change in my plans is no big deal. don't receive cabenuva if you're allergic to its ingredients or taking certain medicines, which may interact with cabenuva. serious side effects include allergic reactions post-injection reactions, liver problems, and depression. if you have a rash and other
. >> also, two nyu students shot and killed while vacationing in puerto rico. the what we're learning about the suspect next. erizon privateg network, associated british ports can now precisely orchestrate nearly 600,000 vehicles passing through their uk port every year. don't just connect your business. (dock worker) right on time. (vo) make it even smarter. we call this enterprise intelllligence. there's a didifferent way to treat hiv. it's every-other-month, injectable cabenuva. for...
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nyu has them, columbia has them, two of the biggest schools in our city and they're based on our you generation, a member of lgbtq community, are you black or latine and latin x is outdated ands they're technically open to everyone, but i would wonder if you decide to waltz into one of those ceremonies and not part of the designated group how that would go for you. stuart: are they separate or not? >> they're optional, they're separate. stuart: how well are they attended? >> i don't know but i do have friends when i went to nyu who did participate in some of the ceremonies based on their immutable characteristics, which seems to be a step backwards in terms of progress but that's the new world we live? stuart: i would definitely call it a accept backwards like -- step backwards like seguated dorms and gradu graduations ands segregated and how is that american? >> this is the result of raising a generation of people and telling them that their group characteristics are more important than their personal ones. stuart: you're right on that. here we have it. stuart: ricky, that was excel
nyu has them, columbia has them, two of the biggest schools in our city and they're based on our you generation, a member of lgbtq community, are you black or latine and latin x is outdated ands they're technically open to everyone, but i would wonder if you decide to waltz into one of those ceremonies and not part of the designated group how that would go for you. stuart: are they separate or not? >> they're optional, they're separate. stuart: how well are they attended? >> i don't...
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May 20, 2023
05/23
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CNNW
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she teaches a at nyu school of business. her most recent op-ed explores the newest trend called "fun employment." it's great to see you. what's fun employment? >> fun employment is a term that gen z uses to describe the period between jobs. the first time i heard it, i was teaching. and a student said i don't have anything quite yet. until then i will just do some funemployment. because i think like you come from a generation where unemployment was never fun. we never put those two words together, but times have changed. the whole contract between the worker and the company that they work with has changed. my students and many people from gen z, not all of them, believe unemployment doesn't have to be dismal and dreary and scary and bad. but when you're not working, you can be living. and you can be having fun. and you can be enjoying it. they have all sorts of great ideas. it blew my mind. >> do they think that the deal is stacked against them, or are they looking at their parents and saying, i i don't want to end up like t
she teaches a at nyu school of business. her most recent op-ed explores the newest trend called "fun employment." it's great to see you. what's fun employment? >> fun employment is a term that gen z uses to describe the period between jobs. the first time i heard it, i was teaching. and a student said i don't have anything quite yet. until then i will just do some funemployment. because i think like you come from a generation where unemployment was never fun. we never put those...
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May 20, 2023
05/23
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CNNW
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she terms at nyu stearns school of business.op-ed in the "wall street journal" explores the newest work office trend in a post-pandemic world. it's called "fun employment." great to see you. what is fun employment? >> fun employment is a term that gen-z uses to describe the period between jobs. and the first time i heard it i was teach willing. a student said -- teaching, a student sudden i don't have anything i'll do fun employment. i said, what did you say? fun employment? i, like i think you, come from a generation when employment was never fun. times have changed. the contract between the worker and the company that they work for has changed. my students and many people from gen-z, not all of them, of course, believe that unemployment doesn't have to be dismal and dreary and scary and bad. but when you're not working, you can actually be living, and you can be having fun, and you can be enjoying it. they've got great ideas for fun employment. it absolutely blew my mind. >> do they think that the deal is stacked against them,
she terms at nyu stearns school of business.op-ed in the "wall street journal" explores the newest work office trend in a post-pandemic world. it's called "fun employment." great to see you. what is fun employment? >> fun employment is a term that gen-z uses to describe the period between jobs. and the first time i heard it i was teach willing. a student said -- teaching, a student sudden i don't have anything i'll do fun employment. i said, what did you say? fun...
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May 9, 2023
05/23
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KNTV
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nyu has offered their condolences. the stern school of business is setting up scholarships in their name. >>> the tv announcer for the oakland a's is under fire and off the job after saying -- speaking a racial slur live on the air. here's how the moment played out during the a's pregame show on friday. >> we had a phenomenal day today. [ bleep ] league museum and arthur breents's barbecue. >> that came after he visited a museum. he used the "n" word and now they're divided over whether he should be fired. marissa parra following the story for us. so, marisa, what has the announcer said and what's been the reaction? >> reporter: yeah, so this was last friday during the team's pregame show. kuiper was trying to say he paid a visit to the negro league's baseball museum but instead of using the word negros he used the "n" word so it was over an hour later that addressed the moment saying it was a mistake. >> a little bit earlier in the show it came out not quite the way i wanted it to and i wanted to apologize if it sound
nyu has offered their condolences. the stern school of business is setting up scholarships in their name. >>> the tv announcer for the oakland a's is under fire and off the job after saying -- speaking a racial slur live on the air. here's how the moment played out during the a's pregame show on friday. >> we had a phenomenal day today. [ bleep ] league museum and arthur breents's barbecue. >> that came after he visited a museum. he used the "n" word and now...
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May 5, 2023
05/23
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KNTV
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a reading, a play reading, i remember walking you back to the subway because you were going back to nyu the last day on set light? >> it was awful. >> it was terrible. >> we loved the show so much, the work. we could not wrap our brains around the fact that it was coming to a close. >> alex is a picture of stoicism. >> i am usually cold and mean. >> kelly: i saw the other word flash through your eyes. >> we had to rehearse one of our scenes and we were starting to rehearse and alex was getting teary at 8:00 in the morning. i couldn't look her in the eyes so we spent all of the rehearsal, i was looking at the center of her for head. >> kelly: michael, did you get to keep the dull? >> i did. i have adopted the super creepy doll. no. i left her behind. very creepy, sticky doll. it would be nice to have a guest bedroom. >> kelly: i stayed at someone's house.
a reading, a play reading, i remember walking you back to the subway because you were going back to nyu the last day on set light? >> it was awful. >> it was terrible. >> we loved the show so much, the work. we could not wrap our brains around the fact that it was coming to a close. >> alex is a picture of stoicism. >> i am usually cold and mean. >> kelly: i saw the other word flash through your eyes. >> we had to rehearse one of our scenes and we were...
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May 25, 2023
05/23
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BLOOMBERG
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. >> our brand stands for innovationnd we work in the health-care space we theater ane hospital at nyuing brain surgeons and how to prepare for surgery. we also work in health care and restorative care with companies like panumbra. we are trying to use this technology to bring value. we also work with companies in construction like bell helicopter and redesigning helicopters and taking six months to design a prototype instead of six years. these are highly efficient products. in the health care space, we see 29% faster in getting through surgeries, four hundred percent faster in confidence level in your content. these surgeons are making upwards of six times less errors in the surgical room so this is better outcomes for patients across the board and for these brands involved. jon: there are many companies that see hardware opportunities and apple is one of them. in terms of apple being a player in this market, does that hurt or help? >> i think it will be tremendously helpful to the industry to have more brands come in. apple has been a rival for htc for many years. we look forward to
. >> our brand stands for innovationnd we work in the health-care space we theater ane hospital at nyuing brain surgeons and how to prepare for surgery. we also work in health care and restorative care with companies like panumbra. we are trying to use this technology to bring value. we also work with companies in construction like bell helicopter and redesigning helicopters and taking six months to design a prototype instead of six years. these are highly efficient products. in the...
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May 26, 2023
05/23
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FBC
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start with this from scott galloway, professor at nyu. >> you should never be at home. 7 hours of sleepnd that is it. the amount of time you spend at home is inversely cold ordinate it to your success. you need to be out of the house. stuart: did you hear that? get out of the house for professional and romantic success. college is a place to meet people with whom you may have romantic interest. romance in college today, let's just say it is discouraged. men are supposed to ask permission to hold hands. don't you dare express an opinion on row unless it conforms to the groupthink number step out of line and you become one of hillary's deplorables, the college experience should be one of free association and open debate, develop your brain and social skills by being on campus, engaging, discussing, maybe meeting someone you love. now i will do the when i was a lad thing, 55 years ago i spent my college years feverishly discussing politics, theater, movies and anything else that came into our young heads usually in the bar, no computers, no internet, cell phones, cable tv or meta-verse. i
start with this from scott galloway, professor at nyu. >> you should never be at home. 7 hours of sleepnd that is it. the amount of time you spend at home is inversely cold ordinate it to your success. you need to be out of the house. stuart: did you hear that? get out of the house for professional and romantic success. college is a place to meet people with whom you may have romantic interest. romance in college today, let's just say it is discouraged. men are supposed to ask permission...
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May 15, 2023
05/23
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CNNW
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. >> reporter: back in his nyu abu dhabi lab kemal has been conducting scientific experiments on this to decarbonize it. it's possible for the person. >> reporter: he found it contains high concentrations of magnesium, a compound that does not produce co2. >> so, what we are doing, using this plat tomorrow for desalination, and applying chemistry. with the chemical strip and through stirring process, it means we are separating the solid liquid and using the solid part to make s saline. this is the finished product. >> reporter: now he's looking beyond his lab. >> right now, from this status, once we're able to produce concept and amount of material it will be able to be applied in industry. >> reporter: when he does, kemal says his discovery should help the environment in two ways. less salty brine being dumped into our oceans and a new cement with a lower carbon footprint. christina macfarlane, cnn. >>> still ahead, the nba's game seven playoffs scoring record -- just the last two weeks. nba news coming up. that smell could be 8,000,000 odor causing bacteria. good thing adding lysol
. >> reporter: back in his nyu abu dhabi lab kemal has been conducting scientific experiments on this to decarbonize it. it's possible for the person. >> reporter: he found it contains high concentrations of magnesium, a compound that does not produce co2. >> so, what we are doing, using this plat tomorrow for desalination, and applying chemistry. with the chemical strip and through stirring process, it means we are separating the solid liquid and using the solid part to make...
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15
May 16, 2023
05/23
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1TV
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yes, you were accepted by the nyu master's program and distance.efore you, i never cheated on my wife, and you, i'm not married trader premiere serial film. look after the program time listen i studied at your university but not a single professor helped me make a career. recommend choose different goods at favorable prices, toilet paper 16 rolls. thank you to the alps, where 50 years ago the austrian clothing brand equipment notland was born. thank you for the morning fogs , the boundless sky and the routes that brought us here. thank you for these peaks northland born of the alps sberbank presents a profitable loan. with the lowest rate over the past 10 years from four percent per annum get a loan from sberbank and get a monthly cashback. obviously profitable at any time. do you like to smile at yourself? choose yours dress in austin to please yourself with a 20% discount only in the application. this is a movie about you one tv presents. results this come on, you won't catch me evacuating a fall from a height has not been so strange for a long t
yes, you were accepted by the nyu master's program and distance.efore you, i never cheated on my wife, and you, i'm not married trader premiere serial film. look after the program time listen i studied at your university but not a single professor helped me make a career. recommend choose different goods at favorable prices, toilet paper 16 rolls. thank you to the alps, where 50 years ago the austrian clothing brand equipment notland was born. thank you for the morning fogs , the boundless sky...
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48
May 26, 2023
05/23
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LINKTV
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eye 48
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we came up in nyu film school together.were doing this thing called the double doubty shot where it looks like summit is floating. before we did malcolm x, ernest and i said, we can't keep seeing that stuff to show. we have been out of comes over many years. we have to have a reason to use that shot. dr. betty shabazz told me that she felt her husband knew he was going to be assassinated right here. she told me that. and when dr. betty shabazz told me that, that is when i knew, that is where the devil doubty shot had to be. you know the scene, sam cooke. that is how that scene came to be. dr. betty shabazz, thank you. good night. amy: the oscar winning filmmaker spike lee speaking last friday at the malcolm x and dr. betty shabazz memorial and educational center, housed in the former audubon ballroom in new york where malcolm x was assassinated in 1965. slightly was speaking -- spike lee was speaking on what would have been the 90th birthday of malcolm x. we come back, memorial day massacre. workers died, film buried. we lo
we came up in nyu film school together.were doing this thing called the double doubty shot where it looks like summit is floating. before we did malcolm x, ernest and i said, we can't keep seeing that stuff to show. we have been out of comes over many years. we have to have a reason to use that shot. dr. betty shabazz told me that she felt her husband knew he was going to be assassinated right here. she told me that. and when dr. betty shabazz told me that, that is when i knew, that is where...
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87
May 17, 2023
05/23
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CNNW
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and also a former nyu professor and self described critic of ai hype. >> we acted too slowly with socialisions got locked in with lasting consequence. the choices we make now will have lasting effects for decades and maybe centuries. >> reporter: wide ranging implications like jobs. >> like with all technology cal revolutions, i expect significant impact on jobs. gpt 4 i think will automate away some jobs and it will create new ones that we believe will be much better. >> reporter: overrun by a subject of 80,000 illegals -- >> reporter: and targeting elections. >> should we be worried about the elections? >> it is one of myers of greatest concern. >> reporter: national security, how ai can be used by adversaries.concern. >> reporter: national security, how ai can be used by adversaries. >> classified briefings on this issue have abounded. >> reporter: and even the music industry wheremen ai has been u to clone voices and create new songs. >> who owns the right to that ai generated material? i went in this weekend and i said write me a song that sounds like garth brooks and it gave me a d
and also a former nyu professor and self described critic of ai hype. >> we acted too slowly with socialisions got locked in with lasting consequence. the choices we make now will have lasting effects for decades and maybe centuries. >> reporter: wide ranging implications like jobs. >> like with all technology cal revolutions, i expect significant impact on jobs. gpt 4 i think will automate away some jobs and it will create new ones that we believe will be much better....
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125
May 12, 2023
05/23
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FOXNEWSW
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the aid of all the citizens there he could've walked away like most people done or observe we call nyubusiness which paralyze her city. he gets involved, to other good samaritans jump and they didn't know. they hold him down they restrain him. he is telling the passengers call 911 they did. it took 50 minutes for the cops to come because we don't have enough cops. all we can long all the officials saying we are not doing enough to be emotionally disturbed, for the schizophrenic we need to do more. now all of a sudden now he gets a call from two people. i'll soon's lady i want them indicted for murder and what the two good samaritans indicted for murder. ready mine? and then all of her crazy cortez scores a trifecta. day one she says he murdered him. day two he lynched him. day three, he executed them. so you have this game of influential new yorkers ringing the phone of alvin bragg who should not be taken the calls he should not be influenced by anybody. and he has decided not to put in front of a grand jury because grand jury on subway riders they looked at sky go so he's them arreste
the aid of all the citizens there he could've walked away like most people done or observe we call nyubusiness which paralyze her city. he gets involved, to other good samaritans jump and they didn't know. they hold him down they restrain him. he is telling the passengers call 911 they did. it took 50 minutes for the cops to come because we don't have enough cops. all we can long all the officials saying we are not doing enough to be emotionally disturbed, for the schizophrenic we need to do...
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101
May 9, 2023
05/23
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FOXNEWSW
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million to create safe injection sites, and the two areas where they're going to do it is outside of nyuown in providence, rhode island, okay, so what is going to happen there is there going to have a home of these open air drug sites and people are going to be dying at fornicating and defecating just like they do on the streets and they're going to say, gee, that isn't a good idea. in the end, i think what they need to do is recognize we have a real problem in this country. china does not have the problem. china, in fact, setting a lot of its fentanyl over to mexico and then to us. you know it is a death penalty crime in china to be involved in drug trafficking, and they are similarly harsh when it comes to drug use. and the drug use, they end up sending you to an isolation camp for two years. you know, the last thing we need to do is decriminalize anything. and maybe do what china is doing, not the death penalty, but we've got to get rid -- we have to get rid of some of this. >> harold: criminalize -- undo these decriminalization laws here in america around use of cannabis and others?
million to create safe injection sites, and the two areas where they're going to do it is outside of nyuown in providence, rhode island, okay, so what is going to happen there is there going to have a home of these open air drug sites and people are going to be dying at fornicating and defecating just like they do on the streets and they're going to say, gee, that isn't a good idea. in the end, i think what they need to do is recognize we have a real problem in this country. china does not have...
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May 25, 2023
05/23
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FOXNEWSW
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were not written by -- that one was not written by a scientist and another one that was written out of nyu they will peddle this nonsense until somebody steps up and uses an air freshener to try to get rid of the manure. >> sean: sounds like fauci wrote it. jimmy. >> i didn't even know i was going to talk. i was here for the ice fishing contest we're having in this cold studio of yours hannity. >> sean: i know. >> i was just trying to catch a bass and get out of here with a a prize. no, no, it's totally fine. what's amazing is they're trying to help us out they're regulating indoor pollution because they know in democratic cities you're not safe going outdoors anymore. that's the problem. think about that, regulate indoor pollution, regulate outdoor crime, if you really want to regulate outdoors make every u-haul electric for all the people fleeing democrat cities. electric u-hauls. we're good. >> sean: let me shift gears after widespread backlash over their, quote -- >> you want me to say it for snub. >> sean: yeah. >> tuck-friendly bathing suits. >> sean: okay. target now has pulled some
were not written by -- that one was not written by a scientist and another one that was written out of nyu they will peddle this nonsense until somebody steps up and uses an air freshener to try to get rid of the manure. >> sean: sounds like fauci wrote it. jimmy. >> i didn't even know i was going to talk. i was here for the ice fishing contest we're having in this cold studio of yours hannity. >> sean: i know. >> i was just trying to catch a bass and get out of here...
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May 18, 2023
05/23
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FBC
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i will bring in professor of medicine nyu langone fox news medical analyst dr. marc siegel. dr.gel you wrote a great piece, meet my new copilot in the doctor's office, artificial intelligence. are we ready for it? >> the key is copilot, not pilot. the operating room, i don't want chatgpt operating anyone. it passed the radiology boards by the way. here is what can happen in the operating room. very rapid analysis of radiological imaging, feeding the surgeon information, huge databases pointing out one idea versus another idea. i don't want a.i. running the robot. charles: right. >> i don't want it making surgical incisions. charles: right. >> i don't want it in the doctor's office telling you or me what to do. charles: right. >> i like the idea both the patient and doctor being informed and radiology is key. charles, some studies out of harvard, earlier diagnosis with lung cancer. they have shown earlier diagnosis with pancreatic cancer, now maybe the most important thing for drug development. one study out of arizona is looking at new alzheimer's drugs. think about it, what do
i will bring in professor of medicine nyu langone fox news medical analyst dr. marc siegel. dr.gel you wrote a great piece, meet my new copilot in the doctor's office, artificial intelligence. are we ready for it? >> the key is copilot, not pilot. the operating room, i don't want chatgpt operating anyone. it passed the radiology boards by the way. here is what can happen in the operating room. very rapid analysis of radiological imaging, feeding the surgeon information, huge databases...
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May 29, 2023
05/23
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KPIX
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this kid from long island at nyu? >> it wasn't made by people who went to the music conservatory.> the few hip-hop records rubin could get his hands on didn't sound like what he heard in the clubs. >> in the hip-hop club the music was made by the deejay scratching records or playing break beats or using drum machines or some combination and then there would be a rapper or a group of rappers, and the records that came out were always a band playing. ♪ that's the breaks, that's the breaks ♪ >> and that wasn't what, to me, what hip-hop was. >> so he had tila rock and dj jazzy j to have a break to hear what it sounded live. >> the stripped-down version got noticed and he met with russell simmons. >> you had a meeting in your dorm room. >> i met with run dmc at the dorm room. i met everyone at the dorm room. >> that dorm became the headquarters for def jam. >> did the university know that you were operating want just a side hustle, but at the school? >> eventually it became an issue because over time as def jam grew, the entire mailroom was filled with boxes of records to be shipped ou
this kid from long island at nyu? >> it wasn't made by people who went to the music conservatory.> the few hip-hop records rubin could get his hands on didn't sound like what he heard in the clubs. >> in the hip-hop club the music was made by the deejay scratching records or playing break beats or using drum machines or some combination and then there would be a rapper or a group of rappers, and the records that came out were always a band playing. ♪ that's the breaks, that's...
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May 24, 2023
05/23
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marc siegel, fox news contributor and professor of medicine at nyu langone medical center.xic. and as you know, i spoke to the surgeon general and interviewed him and he raised my eyebrows on a couple of things. when kids use more than three hours a day, and we have older kids and i think parents are saying now in the survey that parents are much more worried now than they were 20 years ago. when you have more than three hours on social media a day, you double or triple your chances of depression. and anxiety and you get sucked in and what the surgeon general said to me i was not aware of is that basically researchers have been trying to get technology companies and social media companies to give out information, you know, how addictive is this, how much cyber bullying is going on, how sexualized is this, how much violence and they can't get the data to figure out how to make regulations, that's deeply disturbing. and the second point he made i thought was really important, looks at it from a health point of view. sandra, john, listen. when i started to think about it that
marc siegel, fox news contributor and professor of medicine at nyu langone medical center.xic. and as you know, i spoke to the surgeon general and interviewed him and he raised my eyebrows on a couple of things. when kids use more than three hours a day, and we have older kids and i think parents are saying now in the survey that parents are much more worried now than they were 20 years ago. when you have more than three hours on social media a day, you double or triple your chances of...
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May 13, 2023
05/23
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FOXNEWSW
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and joining us now from the nyu school of medicine.ve to worry about and what do they have to worry about, doctor? >> well, ours is a little different than the ranchers. as a doctor once someone is in front of you regardless what happened on the side, the physician-patient relationship and i've seen migrants over the years and i see them for orthopedic injuries and things like that. it's not easy to differentiate if someone is a migrant or not because they might be especially in new york. one of the things, could they have a higher risk of having polio virus, for example, because a lot of them may be unvaccinated from their home countries and stuff. there's been a memo that's come out in the past month or so that says that we should be asking migrants about their vaccination status. but i would say this is also very difficult to actually do because since you don't know for sure if someone is a migrant or not, and how can you know if you're asking a migrant about it. you might have to ask everybody about their vaccination status, a diff
and joining us now from the nyu school of medicine.ve to worry about and what do they have to worry about, doctor? >> well, ours is a little different than the ranchers. as a doctor once someone is in front of you regardless what happened on the side, the physician-patient relationship and i've seen migrants over the years and i see them for orthopedic injuries and things like that. it's not easy to differentiate if someone is a migrant or not because they might be especially in new york....
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May 19, 2023
05/23
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KGO
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when he was at nyu he was like 17 or 18 alle having beers hanging out ad was going to the clubs he workednyone. he was working hard doing standup in the dorms. >> jimmy: a cult leader so to stay. he does have subjects. >> molly: exactly. adam did the sweetest thing when i first started the show, we were at a party and i was new to journalist and critics and it was a stewart smalley after party, like a premier party. >> jimmy: the movie. >> molly: yeah the movie and a critic came up to me and said something nasty, i don't remember what it was but it was something about the off movie and something about me maybement so i went and told adam and adam was like who is it? i was like that guy over there. he said you come here, and he booted him out i never felt so protected, i felt leak a protected big brother and the guy was shocked he showed him the door. >> jimmy: he's not just mark twain he's like arnold schwarzenegger, too. >> molly: yeah. >> jimmy: molly shannon is here. we'll be right back. ♪ ne? i got a great price on it. - did you see my tail when that chewy box showed up? - oh, i saw i
when he was at nyu he was like 17 or 18 alle having beers hanging out ad was going to the clubs he workednyone. he was working hard doing standup in the dorms. >> jimmy: a cult leader so to stay. he does have subjects. >> molly: exactly. adam did the sweetest thing when i first started the show, we were at a party and i was new to journalist and critics and it was a stewart smalley after party, like a premier party. >> jimmy: the movie. >> molly: yeah the movie and a...
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May 15, 2023
05/23
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FBC
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subcommittee on privacy, technology, and the law will question him along with an ibm executive and nyus. notably one of the people who signed that letter calling for a six-month pause on some ai development. businesses are bracing for the rise of ai and looking to see what congress might do to regulate it, because they think this technology will be absolutely transformative. >> the reason we talk about these huge technological trends is every once in a while, once every generation or so, there is a revolution and technology changes everything and that is artificial intelligence. it'll be as profound as the internet. maybe significantly greater. it's going to affect everything. reporter: the chair of the subcommittee senator richard blumenthal says ai " urgently needs rules and safeguards to address its promise and pitfalls" while the top republican senator josh hawley isn't calling so directly for regulations. he says artificial intelligence will be transformative in ways we can't even imagine for implications for americans elections, jobs and security. this hearing marks a critical fi
subcommittee on privacy, technology, and the law will question him along with an ibm executive and nyus. notably one of the people who signed that letter calling for a six-month pause on some ai development. businesses are bracing for the rise of ai and looking to see what congress might do to regulate it, because they think this technology will be absolutely transformative. >> the reason we talk about these huge technological trends is every once in a while, once every generation or so,...
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May 26, 2023
05/23
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FBC
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stuart: now listen to this one, nyu professor scott galloway, he's been on this program several timesver work from home. interesting, lauren. what else can did he say? lauren: and a professor saying this to his gen-z students. he says working from home holds you back professionally and romantically are -- stuart: i saw that. lauren: listen. >> you should never be at home. that's what i tell young people. almost for seven hours of sleep and that's it. the amount of time you spend at home is core lated to your success professionally and romantically. you need to be out of the house. lauren: which means you need to get off the phone and interact with people. and everybody's obsessed with the mental health dilemma in this, this crisis in this country. that's because of isolation. because we're forging relationships on our phones, on the internet instead of in real life. stuart: i'm going to editorialize about that at the top of the 10. that's a very good idea. personal interaction, got to have it. lauren, next case, this is for you -- lauren: i love this stir. stuart: jp mayor kwan delvin
stuart: now listen to this one, nyu professor scott galloway, he's been on this program several timesver work from home. interesting, lauren. what else can did he say? lauren: and a professor saying this to his gen-z students. he says working from home holds you back professionally and romantically are -- stuart: i saw that. lauren: listen. >> you should never be at home. that's what i tell young people. almost for seven hours of sleep and that's it. the amount of time you spend at home...
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May 24, 2023
05/23
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pillars applies when a justice department reporter for the new york times, professor melissa murray of nyuchool, she was a law clerk for sonia sotomayor, one of the federal bench before her nomination to the supreme court. and tim o'brien, bloomberg opinion senior decorative editor and trump biographer. he is one of the few people who actually gotten a look at trump's stat stacks return. plus he wrote the book trump nation, they are to being the donald. thank you all for being here. melissa, i am going to start with you. what do you think of this letter from trump's team demanding a meeting with merrick garland? >> well i have to say, symone, all of us who are lawyers legal professions out the country are hanging their heads in shame in this letter. this is not really a letter about the law, it was a letter about politics and reiterating trump's repeated claims that he is been treated less well and less fairly than others like joe biden, and hunter biden. it was really a scurried and again perhaps shows that the heat is on and donald trump anticipates getting some more fire from the justic
pillars applies when a justice department reporter for the new york times, professor melissa murray of nyuchool, she was a law clerk for sonia sotomayor, one of the federal bench before her nomination to the supreme court. and tim o'brien, bloomberg opinion senior decorative editor and trump biographer. he is one of the few people who actually gotten a look at trump's stat stacks return. plus he wrote the book trump nation, they are to being the donald. thank you all for being here. melissa, i...
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May 16, 2023
05/23
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. >> reporter: altman was joined on capitol hill by a former nyu professor and self-described critiqueany unfortunate decisions got locked in with lasting consequence. the choices we make now will have lasting effects for decades, maybe even centuries. >> reporter: the wide-ranging implications of ai reflected in the topics discussed like jobs. >> like with all technological revolutions, i expect there to be significant impact on jobs. gpt4 will, i think, entirely automate away some jobs, and it will create new ones that we believe will be much better. >> reporter: deepfakes of audio in elections. >> it's one of my areas of greatest concern. >> reporter: national security. how ai could be used by america's adversaries. >> there are huge implications. classified briefings on this issue have abounded. >> reporter: even the music industry where ai has been used to clone famous recording artists' voices and create whole new songs. >> who owns the right to that ai-generated material? i went in this weekend, and i said, write me a song that sounds like garth brooks, and it behave me a differ
. >> reporter: altman was joined on capitol hill by a former nyu professor and self-described critiqueany unfortunate decisions got locked in with lasting consequence. the choices we make now will have lasting effects for decades, maybe even centuries. >> reporter: the wide-ranging implications of ai reflected in the topics discussed like jobs. >> like with all technological revolutions, i expect there to be significant impact on jobs. gpt4 will, i think, entirely automate...
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May 16, 2023
05/23
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former chief of the criminal division in the eastern district of new york, he's professor of practice at nyu school and msnbc legal analyst. and andrew, jested is still here actually so why don't i do this -- you give me the response to what you heard so far but if you have a question for justin, feel free! >> i'm interested from gaston, as you were about corroboration. because obviously his client is going to be attacked as anyone would in this situation, whether fairly or unfairly. i'm interested in other witnesses other than the ones you mentioned. i certainly heard the interview about a tape recording that is going to be great, emails, those could be great. i was it was a show no are there other potential witnesses who can corroborate what you may have other than love harness? >> absolutely, the complete mentions of why variety of people who we think will have relevant information for various reasons related to her employment, related to the person that you confided in when unwanted sexual advances were made. they are a whole host of individuals referenced in by name or by position and t
former chief of the criminal division in the eastern district of new york, he's professor of practice at nyu school and msnbc legal analyst. and andrew, jested is still here actually so why don't i do this -- you give me the response to what you heard so far but if you have a question for justin, feel free! >> i'm interested from gaston, as you were about corroboration. because obviously his client is going to be attacked as anyone would in this situation, whether fairly or unfairly. i'm...
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penn-wharton, nyu says it's more than double that.now they want to backstop all the deposits, get rid of the insurance limit for uninsured accounts, at the same time they want to subsidize riskier borrowers, mortgage loans paid for by good credit borrowers, johnsome this is insanity. >> yeah, you're right. i guess one of the big problems is, where does all this stop? we've reached a position that if the federal reserve or the government fails to bail out depositors in the event of wide spread bank failures we'll have have a huge political problem on our hands. that would be for the democratic party making it next to the impossible for the democrats to win the 2024 the presidential race, i would think. so as far as the safety of money in the bank is concerned, i would still look at it as being money in the bank, that it's still relatively safe, that it would be political suicide for any party in power to allow deposits not to be fully repaid especially after the bailout of wealthy depositors at silicon valley bank. >> right. elizabeth:
penn-wharton, nyu says it's more than double that.now they want to backstop all the deposits, get rid of the insurance limit for uninsured accounts, at the same time they want to subsidize riskier borrowers, mortgage loans paid for by good credit borrowers, johnsome this is insanity. >> yeah, you're right. i guess one of the big problems is, where does all this stop? we've reached a position that if the federal reserve or the government fails to bail out depositors in the event of wide...
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May 17, 2023
05/23
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is or how it will look remains to be seen and one of the experts on yesterday's panel was a former nyuumber one, a safety review like we use like the fda prior to widespread deployment. number two, a nimble, monitoring agency to see what's going on. number three would be funding geared towards things like a icon stugz or ai that can reason about what it's doing. i would not leave things up to entirely to current technology which is poor in behaving in ethical fashion and behaving in an honest fashion and i would try to focus on ai safety research. >> now, a hot yesterday's hearings they didn't want to make the sacme mistakes with ai that they made with social media and we didn't get on top of social media and the potential harms of that and the horse is emboldened. they are trying to get a handle on ai and this will touch every aspect of our lives and you spoke to eric schmidt. >> and health care and all sorts of advancements and the big part of this could end us. >> he was asked straight up, is this going to kill jobs? >> he said yes. gpt technology is going to kill jobs and we should
is or how it will look remains to be seen and one of the experts on yesterday's panel was a former nyuumber one, a safety review like we use like the fda prior to widespread deployment. number two, a nimble, monitoring agency to see what's going on. number three would be funding geared towards things like a icon stugz or ai that can reason about what it's doing. i would not leave things up to entirely to current technology which is poor in behaving in ethical fashion and behaving in an honest...
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May 15, 2023
05/23
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FBC
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nyu professor, gary marcus signed the letter calling for a six-month pause on some a.i.. here is what he told you, neil, why congress needs to act fast. >> there has to be enforcement, saying you need to be transparent enough about this so we can actually do something about it. so the traditional let's have a study about it, talk about it in a year is not going to cut it. >> reporter: we have repeatedly asked lawmakers here on the hill what con treat proposals they have in terms of a.i. regulation and it has been very hard to get specific answers, neil. so we'll be looking at their questioning tomorrow to see if we get any sense what type of regulations they might propose and how strictly they want to come down on oversight of artificial intelligence. something to keep an eye on, neil. neil: and we shall. as always, grady trimble in washington ton. meantime ron desantis had the stage for a moment all to himself in iowa over the weekend. why comments he made, hinting a sort of a slap at a former president. has a lot of folks wondering what we will hear from the former pre
nyu professor, gary marcus signed the letter calling for a six-month pause on some a.i.. here is what he told you, neil, why congress needs to act fast. >> there has to be enforcement, saying you need to be transparent enough about this so we can actually do something about it. so the traditional let's have a study about it, talk about it in a year is not going to cut it. >> reporter: we have repeatedly asked lawmakers here on the hill what con treat proposals they have in terms of...
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May 26, 2023
05/23
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she's a professor of law at nyu. and an msnbc legal analyst. ladies, what a treat to have you both here tonight. we will get to the bloomberg reporting on the possible timeline of an indictment in a minute, that would be our lead on any other night. we have this reporting, from the washington post, and the new york times. a day before doj prosecutors show up at mar-a-lago, trump having aids move boxes into a storage unit. what strikes you? >> what strikes me is that evan corcoran was used by the former president, perhaps, others in his orbit. we know, from prior reporting, the boxes were actually moved out of that same storage area, after the subpoena was served on may 11th. it now appears that someone, possibly former president trump, took documents out of them. move the boxes back in on june 2nd, then that's when evan corcoran went in, conducted his search, and that evening, called it a crime of justice and said, you guys should come by tomorrow and pick these up. that's because when the department of justice said the subpoena, they said, in
she's a professor of law at nyu. and an msnbc legal analyst. ladies, what a treat to have you both here tonight. we will get to the bloomberg reporting on the possible timeline of an indictment in a minute, that would be our lead on any other night. we have this reporting, from the washington post, and the new york times. a day before doj prosecutors show up at mar-a-lago, trump having aids move boxes into a storage unit. what strikes you? >> what strikes me is that evan corcoran was used...
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May 27, 2023
05/23
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the marc siegel, professor of med medicine at nyu langone. saw stuff similar to this during the pandemic and the supply chain issues, and it just felt so weird that we would create these drugs in this country with american companies, billions of dollars of investments, these phases, three phases, years, and then we would have to rely on them to be manufactured elsewhere. is that what's driving this, or is there something even deeper? >> so that's part of it, and we've talked a lot about it, you and i, active pharmaceutical ingredients from india and china in very short supply, the lockdown closed factories. but there's another story here that the journal actually had in an editorial earlier in the week that's very profound which is about generics. generic companies like teva in israel, they cherry pick where they're going to make their drugs. they're not going to compete with 14 other companies with a narrow profit margin. they say we want that one because there's only one or two other companies competing with us. so drugs like chemotherapy a
the marc siegel, professor of med medicine at nyu langone. saw stuff similar to this during the pandemic and the supply chain issues, and it just felt so weird that we would create these drugs in this country with american companies, billions of dollars of investments, these phases, three phases, years, and then we would have to rely on them to be manufactured elsewhere. is that what's driving this, or is there something even deeper? >> so that's part of it, and we've talked a lot about...
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May 24, 2023
05/23
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i spoke to -- one of the leading nyu researcher.the surgeon general for collecting the data. but he was really frustrated that he didn't take the next step and advocate specific solutions. you, know enforce the age limit, raise the age limit. there are bills, the senators -- have a bill. senator blackburn and blumenthal of a bill. this has bipartisan support. they should be something we could get done. parents are also trying to act on their own, my son's school, third grade parents are saying, they're gonna all sign a pledge saying, no social media until eighth grade. >> way too late. >> that's because the government, even though this bipartisan support, can't seem to get its act together. so now is the time to act. >> for parents, it's like figure out, pollution parents. this is a government that has to happen. you can't figure out this, by the way, you're addicted to. that's the problem. every single person in society, especially since the pandemic, these are necessary things, you can't stop putting it down, it's designed a crawl
i spoke to -- one of the leading nyu researcher.the surgeon general for collecting the data. but he was really frustrated that he didn't take the next step and advocate specific solutions. you, know enforce the age limit, raise the age limit. there are bills, the senators -- have a bill. senator blackburn and blumenthal of a bill. this has bipartisan support. they should be something we could get done. parents are also trying to act on their own, my son's school, third grade parents are saying,...
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May 5, 2023
05/23
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he's a professor of practice at nyu law school. also with us, bradley moss, a national security attorney and former clerk for the national security archive. andrew, i want to raise this last point, which is the saudi golf tournament. it's kind of a stand-alone item, this island of its own, in the middle of that reporting. the reporting is about donald trump's illegal possession of classified documents. it seems to me, the saudis could be one group that would be very interested in donald trump's possession of classified documents. he's trying to do business with the saudis. he's in possession of classified documents that might be of interest to them. it's not hard to imagine how those lines could cross in this investigation. >> i had the same thought. obviously, this is pure speculation on your part and my part, because it completely in a story they admittedly say, we have this information. we don't know it's import. if you remember, there was previous reporting about donald trump showing off these documents and speaking to people a
he's a professor of practice at nyu law school. also with us, bradley moss, a national security attorney and former clerk for the national security archive. andrew, i want to raise this last point, which is the saudi golf tournament. it's kind of a stand-alone item, this island of its own, in the middle of that reporting. the reporting is about donald trump's illegal possession of classified documents. it seems to me, the saudis could be one group that would be very interested in donald trump's...
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May 13, 2023
05/23
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thank you to both of you, -- professor of history at nyu, the author of strongmen, from mussolini to -- tom nichols is the author of our own worsened, with the assault from within on modern democracy. nbc news has learned that staff for president biden and congressional leaders are meeting today to try to make progress towards resolving the debt ceiling crisis for those of you who actually are interested in policy. coming up we'll talk to the senior member of the house appropriations committee, barbara lee, and brendan boyle about the widespread dangerous of a default. plus, with pandemic era immigration policy title 42 officially expired, we go to the border for the latest on what that policy change looks like on the ground. like on the ground sh mozzarella on standouts like the boss. it's hard being that cheesy. but you make it look easy though. try the subway series menu. their tastiest refresh yet. ♪ your yard is your sanctuary. where you should feel free. i know... i was talking about the dogs. [barking] they need their lawn back fast and you need scotts turf builder rapid grass
thank you to both of you, -- professor of history at nyu, the author of strongmen, from mussolini to -- tom nichols is the author of our own worsened, with the assault from within on modern democracy. nbc news has learned that staff for president biden and congressional leaders are meeting today to try to make progress towards resolving the debt ceiling crisis for those of you who actually are interested in policy. coming up we'll talk to the senior member of the house appropriations committee,...
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May 15, 2023
05/23
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FBC
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they will question him along with an ibm executive and nyu professor gary marcus.ling for a pause on some a.i. development. business is will be watching whether congress moves to regulate the technology. they see the rise of a.i. as transformative. >> the reason we talk about these huge technological trends, every once in a while, every generation a technology changes everything and that is artificial intelligence. that will be profound as the internet maybe significantly greater. it will affect everything. >> reporter: democrat chair of the subcommittee richard blumenthal says a.i. needs rules to address promise and pitfalls. the top republican on that committee josh hawley is not calling so directly for regulation. instead he says tomorrow's hear something a critical first step towards understanding what congress should do. while we wait to see what congress does, we know other adversaries like china are putting a let of money and resources into artificial intelligence development. beijing sees a.i. as a tool not just for economic growth, david, but also for surv
they will question him along with an ibm executive and nyu professor gary marcus.ling for a pause on some a.i. development. business is will be watching whether congress moves to regulate the technology. they see the rise of a.i. as transformative. >> the reason we talk about these huge technological trends, every once in a while, every generation a technology changes everything and that is artificial intelligence. that will be profound as the internet maybe significantly greater. it will...
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May 13, 2023
05/23
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[inaudible] joining me now is ruth ben-ghiat, a professor of nyu and author of strongmen, from mussoliniany indication the president runs to run on his litany of lies again, he's trying to create his own reality, hoping enough people buy into it, talk to me about the relationship between misinformation and authoritarianism. >> yes, it's absolutely fundamental. and trump is a superb propagandist. he's also a cult leader. this is really important, and its -- people don't quite know how to cover him as a cult leader. and the think the cult leader is that they indoctrinate -- they use their campaign events, they're different purposes then someone like a joe biden. they're using their campaign events to indoctrinate people into believing that only they have the truth. or their allies. right? so misinformation, disinformation, propaganda is at the very heart of authoritarianism. it is not just hitting people to believe one or two lies, it's actually changing the way they think and how they make associations. one thing is every authoritarian tries to change the perception of violence, making it
[inaudible] joining me now is ruth ben-ghiat, a professor of nyu and author of strongmen, from mussoliniany indication the president runs to run on his litany of lies again, he's trying to create his own reality, hoping enough people buy into it, talk to me about the relationship between misinformation and authoritarianism. >> yes, it's absolutely fundamental. and trump is a superb propagandist. he's also a cult leader. this is really important, and its -- people don't quite know how to...
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May 23, 2023
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maya wylie and nyu law professor and analyst melissa murray. welcome to both of you. maya, a lot there we just looked at, but starting with trump back in court virtually, is it a big deal that the trial is set? is it important that this is going forward? >> big deal, important, and what you just said -- donald trump visually in court. this is -- one it's important because any time you have someone indicted on a crime, that's a big deal. it just is. doesn't happen that often in our system, truth bo told. lots of investigations, not always prosecuted. but secondly, let's be honest, this is someone who has run the country. first time we have had a former president indict offend a crime. this trial date as you pointed out is going to be happening in realtime while he is a candidate for office, and that is the last thing anybody who is a candidate for office wants to be seen in a courtroom as a defendant as a candidate. >> yeah, and you're -- sometimes you unpack really complex things for us. i would say you just said something that's more fundamental, but it is striking.
maya wylie and nyu law professor and analyst melissa murray. welcome to both of you. maya, a lot there we just looked at, but starting with trump back in court virtually, is it a big deal that the trial is set? is it important that this is going forward? >> big deal, important, and what you just said -- donald trump visually in court. this is -- one it's important because any time you have someone indicted on a crime, that's a big deal. it just is. doesn't happen that often in our system,...
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May 27, 2023
05/23
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in michigan and co-host of the hashtag sisters in law podcast, and melissa murray, professor at the nyund co-host of the strict scrutiny podcast. both are msnbc legal analysts. thank you both for coming to the saturday, show barbara, even if we don't know what was in those boxes, what does the post reporting mean for the possibility of obstruction of justice? >> well, that reporting wouldn't really catch the eye of a prosecutor because it suggests potential for obstruction of justice. when prosecutors are considering pressing charges for the documents, they're looking for an aggravating factor began in instant sake. and so here, if they really were looking for boxes the day before they knew the justice department is coming to visit to look at them, that could suggest that they were trying to conceal or interfere with the case. that could be significant for a couple of reasons. one is the charging decision, but the other is that it would really take off the table any suggestion that this was just an honest mistake, it would take off the table any suggestion about whether it mattered abou
in michigan and co-host of the hashtag sisters in law podcast, and melissa murray, professor at the nyund co-host of the strict scrutiny podcast. both are msnbc legal analysts. thank you both for coming to the saturday, show barbara, even if we don't know what was in those boxes, what does the post reporting mean for the possibility of obstruction of justice? >> well, that reporting wouldn't really catch the eye of a prosecutor because it suggests potential for obstruction of justice....
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May 10, 2023
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chief of the criminal division of the eastern district of new york, he's a professor of practice at nyudonald trump. it is the indicator of why no trump lawyers ever want to allow him to go under oath, which he will never have to do in any of the criminal cases that he's facing, he'll never be an obligation for him to testify under oath in a criminal case. but if he does, this is the way it goes. >> yeah, he will not testify, one thing that fani willis, alvin bragg, jack smith knows is, he's not going to testify. and frankly, as faith and i know, if you are a prosecutor, the best thing that could happen if he does testify because you will get things like that or you will get the statement that marla maples is e. jean carroll. you know, he says things that are just gifts to the other side. and why? because he's lying. so, that's something that -- it's not gonna happen in a criminal case, but just remember, he's not gonna testify, but there are lots of statements out there in connection with the fani willis case, connection with january six and mar-a-lago cases. all sorts of statements th
chief of the criminal division of the eastern district of new york, he's a professor of practice at nyudonald trump. it is the indicator of why no trump lawyers ever want to allow him to go under oath, which he will never have to do in any of the criminal cases that he's facing, he'll never be an obligation for him to testify under oath in a criminal case. but if he does, this is the way it goes. >> yeah, he will not testify, one thing that fani willis, alvin bragg, jack smith knows is,...
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May 4, 2023
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we bring in nyu law professor melissa murray to talk about the cases if not the pot brownies.doing in. >> i'm doing great. mr. wood is super sharp as so many comedians are. if you watch that he had gags and funny stuff, but a lot of jokes had that very clear informed undercurrent. also happens to come from a family with civil rights and journalistic cred, soy have the impression he's been in these dinner table conversations his whole life. how about the joke he makes, the punch line that a month later it wasn't even a big deal that trump got arrested. how does that work in law and life? is that good or bad? and to finish the allegory, should america be waiting for the more potentially severe sativa strain of a georgia browny? >> i think we are perhaps in the media responsible for the expected high that many people wanted when they took the pot browny of the bag indictment, but law isn't like that. yes, there was going to be an initial flurry of activity. but we don't know all the evidence against trump that bragg and the manhattan d.a.'s office has amassed. we're not going to
we bring in nyu law professor melissa murray to talk about the cases if not the pot brownies.doing in. >> i'm doing great. mr. wood is super sharp as so many comedians are. if you watch that he had gags and funny stuff, but a lot of jokes had that very clear informed undercurrent. also happens to come from a family with civil rights and journalistic cred, soy have the impression he's been in these dinner table conversations his whole life. how about the joke he makes, the punch line that...
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May 23, 2023
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rebecca barry, a scpsychologist here at nyu. all right.eir children that they don't already see? >> right. i think, you know, there is a lot that happens on a screen that parents may not be aware because many of our youth are reporting increased usage. i mean, the numbers are quite phenomenal. and that could be for adults as well. but it's important for parents to really understand about how much time their child is really on their device and how they are engaging with social media. what programs they are on. so when we think about some of the impacts the time and the way youth are engaging to on their growing minds, we can see a profound increase in anxiety, depression, low self-esteem and some a reduction in their body image and some distortion in their body image as well. that has been a prevalence growing as well. >> our con league sanjay gupta wrote a great piece and has a great episode on his podcast about this because he has teenage girl. he wrote an essay on cnn.com. he said it's important to start having the conversation with your
rebecca barry, a scpsychologist here at nyu. all right.eir children that they don't already see? >> right. i think, you know, there is a lot that happens on a screen that parents may not be aware because many of our youth are reporting increased usage. i mean, the numbers are quite phenomenal. and that could be for adults as well. but it's important for parents to really understand about how much time their child is really on their device and how they are engaging with social media. what...