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another iconic goal and the bright lips of a paul paul paul paul we interview jimmy said job was to run outs in clubs it comes off in loops of and then at the other end of the long writing process do you. do what you do best i.q. score a goal that will be followed to do for you i just i guess that human eyes again is the explosion of emotion and different feelings of relief of him back in the game of the joy of actually scoring in a game as massive as. i'm with volley and it was a joyous moment but obviously there's a lot going to go. but at that specific moment i. remember a kind of benefiting poor guy scoring good was a tournament kind back yourself a superstar something that you knew about going about from the no you know six world cup gets a yellow call do you feel a responsibility to see this kind of incredible talent others say i call it my will point to the same issue again i had no idea it is only half the people stop. god what we do know well and then i'm sore and i do i remember the guys it was always see my dilemma and that's actually missed on the call the other call which h
another iconic goal and the bright lips of a paul paul paul paul we interview jimmy said job was to run outs in clubs it comes off in loops of and then at the other end of the long writing process do you. do what you do best i.q. score a goal that will be followed to do for you i just i guess that human eyes again is the explosion of emotion and different feelings of relief of him back in the game of the joy of actually scoring in a game as massive as. i'm with volley and it was a joyous moment...
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and move the iconic goal and the bright lips of a paul paul paul paul we interview jimmy said poster burnouts and close it comes off loops of and then at the other end of the long writing process do you. do what you do best i.q. score a goal that will let me fall i didn't feel i was against the gym and i was again is the explosion of emotion and different feelings of relief of him back in the game of the joy of actually scoring in a game as massive as. i am with the left foot volley and it was a joyous moment but obviously there's a lot of games to go. but at that specific moment i can't remember a kind of benefiting poor guy scoring good was a tournament kind back yourself a superstar something that you knew about going about from the no you know six woke up gets a yellow call do you feel a responsibility to see this kind of incredible talent others say i could take my will to the same which again i had no idea at the time i was on enough stuff to people stop. well and then i'm sore and i remember the guys it was obviously made a lunge and it's actually missed on all the other calls
and move the iconic goal and the bright lips of a paul paul paul paul we interview jimmy said poster burnouts and close it comes off loops of and then at the other end of the long writing process do you. do what you do best i.q. score a goal that will let me fall i didn't feel i was against the gym and i was again is the explosion of emotion and different feelings of relief of him back in the game of the joy of actually scoring in a game as massive as. i am with the left foot volley and it was...
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of a paul paul paul paul interview to me said. mr brown outs in clubs comes off in loops of and then at the other end of the long writing process so you you do what you do best i.q. score a goal that will be followed to do for you i was against the german i was again it was the explosion of emotion and different failings of relief of him back in the game of the joy of actually scoring in a game as massive as. i am with the left volley and it was a joyous moment but obviously it is the law going to go. but at that specific moment i can't remember a kind of bet a feeling poor guy scoring good will say in that tournament kind back yourself a superstar something that you knew about coming but from the no you know six world cup gets a yellow call do you feel a responsibility to see this kind of incredible talent others say i call it my will point to the same issue again i had no idea the teller is only half staff the papers dog i won't. well and then i saw her and i i remember the guys it was obviously made the launch an attack you mis
of a paul paul paul paul interview to me said. mr brown outs in clubs comes off in loops of and then at the other end of the long writing process so you you do what you do best i.q. score a goal that will be followed to do for you i was against the german i was again it was the explosion of emotion and different failings of relief of him back in the game of the joy of actually scoring in a game as massive as. i am with the left volley and it was a joyous moment but obviously it is the law going...
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of a paul paul paul paul interview jimmy said poster burnouts and close it comes off in loops of and then at the other end of the long writing process do you. do what you do best i.q. score a goal that will let me fall i didn't feel i was against the gym and i was again is the explosion of emotion and different failings of relief of him back in the game of the joy of actually scoring a game as massive as. i am with volley and it was a joyous moment but obviously it is the law going to go. but at that specific moment i can't remember a kind of benefiting polka scoring good was a tournament kind back yourself a superstar something that you knew about going about from the no you know six world cup gets a yellow call do you feel a responsibility to see this kind of incredible talent as a iconic moment point to the same which again i had no idea it was only half the people's dog i won't. well and then i saw her and i i remember the guys it was always he made the launch an attack you missed on the call the other call which he did that for if we made the final he wouldn't apply then i was j
of a paul paul paul paul interview jimmy said poster burnouts and close it comes off in loops of and then at the other end of the long writing process do you. do what you do best i.q. score a goal that will let me fall i didn't feel i was against the gym and i was again is the explosion of emotion and different failings of relief of him back in the game of the joy of actually scoring a game as massive as. i am with volley and it was a joyous moment but obviously it is the law going to go. but...
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Jan 3, 2018
01/18
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WPVI
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paul -- or who logan paul is. not paul logan, but logan paul. he is a household name among children and teens in the u.s. 15 million youtube followers. tonight his name is in the headlines if posting a ghoulish video of a suicide victim that he says now is a mistake. >> i want to apologize to the internet. i want to apologize to anyone who has seen the video. i want to apologize to anyone touched by mental illness or depression or suicide. >> showing pauln japan in the suicide forest because of the high number of suicides that happen there. paul is seen laughing with his friends as they come across a hanging body. he says his reaction was out of nervousness. after harsh criticism, paul eventual pulled the shocking video from youtube and says it was not meant to generate ad money from the views. before it came down, it was seen at least 6 million times. the internet star knows now it's a mistake and plans to do better. >>> new at 11:00 tonight, los angeles prosecutors say they are reviewing two cases brought to them by beverly hills police against disgraced movie mogul, harvey weinstein. a spokesman for the district attorney says the cases were given to them last month, but declined to provide further details. dozens of women have accused weinstein of sexual harassment and sexual assault. police in london and other places are looking at accusations. representatives have denied all allegations of non-consensual section. >>> an american s
paul -- or who logan paul is. not paul logan, but logan paul. he is a household name among children and teens in the u.s. 15 million youtube followers. tonight his name is in the headlines if posting a ghoulish video of a suicide victim that he says now is a mistake. >> i want to apologize to the internet. i want to apologize to anyone who has seen the video. i want to apologize to anyone touched by mental illness or depression or suicide. >> showing pauln japan in the suicide...
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Jan 14, 2018
01/18
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BLOOMBERG
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paul: my mom did that. david: your mother is 99? paul: yeah, 99 plus. david: 99 plus. paul: she is waiting for that call next year. david: i assume she is proud of you, i assume. paul: yes, she is. [laughter] david: and -- paulanswer to your other question is -- from the beginning a 13.5% net compounded rate of return, so one dollar became like $160, $165. and there were some earlier investors that have stayed in basically all the entire time. david: so over 40 years, you have compounded 13.5% net for 40 years, that is pretty good. is it too late to invest retroactively into that? i guess probably. [laughter] david: you have an image being a person that strikes fear into a lot of ceos. you must recognize that some people are afraid that they are going to get a call from paul singer. paul: it is good when a corporate executive listens with the understanding that we are real, we have the capacity to carry through on projects that we undertake, and that we need to be convinced. ♪ david: today you take corporate bonds or government bonds and you are willing to litigate. paul: litigation is always a last resort in a situation in which there is a dispute about seniority or a claim. it is part of the equation. one
paul: my mom did that. david: your mother is 99? paul: yeah, 99 plus. david: 99 plus. paul: she is waiting for that call next year. david: i assume she is proud of you, i assume. paul: yes, she is. [laughter] david: and -- paulanswer to your other question is -- from the beginning a 13.5% net compounded rate of return, so one dollar became like $160, $165. and there were some earlier investors that have stayed in basically all the entire time. david: so over 40 years, you have compounded 13.5%...
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Jan 31, 2018
01/18
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CNBC
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paul: operations for me. i have restaurant background. lemonis: what are the numbers here? paul: we're doing $4 million. -i can go back and -- -mike: no, we weren't that high. -paul: don't think so? -mike: nope. paul: we did, yeah. lemonis: so the numbers aren't crystal clear? -paul: yeah. lemonis: i don't know what just happened. paul answers my question, and then mike says he's wrong. and quite frankly, they both look totally lost. -how many stores exist today? -mike: there's five stores. bob farrell started the company back in 1963. when we started the company, he came up to the opening. he goes, "guys, you did it. -this is farrell's." -lemonis: oh, that's awesome. paul: my uncle would take me to farrell's growing up. and farrell's is part of families. it was part of mine, and it's part of millions as they grow up. lemonis: lot of childhood memories. mike: when we closed mission viejo earlier this year, it was one of the worst days of my life. bob had passed away at the time. [ voice breaking ] he was... he would not have been happy. 'cause he never -- bob never had a store close. lemonis: so, what happened in mission viejo? mike: a bunch of things happened. first of all, our rent was high. then there was another very popular restaurant across from us. ultimat
paul: operations for me. i have restaurant background. lemonis: what are the numbers here? paul: we're doing $4 million. -i can go back and -- -mike: no, we weren't that high. -paul: don't think so? -mike: nope. paul: we did, yeah. lemonis: so the numbers aren't crystal clear? -paul: yeah. lemonis: i don't know what just happened. paul answers my question, and then mike says he's wrong. and quite frankly, they both look totally lost. -how many stores exist today? -mike: there's five stores. bob...
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Jan 30, 2018
01/18
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KGO
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paul. >> you got a missed call from dave. >> cheers. paul, dave. dave, paul. >> good to meet you. >> paul is my new smartphone. >> is he brilliant. >> call dave. >> dave, he wants you. >> see? >> it's just as easy to use as a regular old smartphone. in fact maybe even more intuitive. >> this is already better than siri. you listen to that, siri? >> i'm sorry, i'll try harder. >> weather in dublin? a bit nippy. >> what does that mean? >> it's cold. >> doesn't seem happy. >> where do you plug the charger? >> you feed it. you feed it a burrito. >> low battery. low battery. cheers. >> see, you're right. easy enough. >> sit, check it out. yeah! >> where is he wearing a helmet? >> kept on dropping it on the ground. >> remember those unlock codes? they can come back to bite you. >> change language, german. will you remind me to get milk on the way home? [ speaking in foreign language ] >> are you [ bleep ]. >> heck, heck, heck. just a funny parody put together by the guys over at foil arms and hog. >> where did paul go? maybe set to roaming. >>> in rural places in america you might see a coyote cross your path or maybe a bear. in india, a tiger. and then if i just stop, sit down, and interfere with your progression. >> what are you going to do, confront it? >> catch it by the tail? >> what you're going to do is remain calm. you think the people in the car are having an adventure? no, no, no, the people who ride up here on this motorbike. >> oh, man. >> dude, i would have already pulled a 180. i'd be doing a wheelie and going away so quick. >> it's terrifying no matter what motorcycle gear you have on. it's not going to protect you. >> a small group. >> this is on a tiger reserve so if you're on a reserve and it says tiger and you're on the road, it's a possibility that this could happen. >> maybe don't take the motorcycle through the tiger reserve. that's asking for trouble. >> right. >> hold on a second. turn around. there's two. >> two decided to make an appearance. >> you hear the driver try t
paul. >> you got a missed call from dave. >> cheers. paul, dave. dave, paul. >> good to meet you. >> paul is my new smartphone. >> is he brilliant. >> call dave. >> dave, he wants you. >> see? >> it's just as easy to use as a regular old smartphone. in fact maybe even more intuitive. >> this is already better than siri. you listen to that, siri? >> i'm sorry, i'll try harder. >> weather in dublin? a bit nippy. >> what...
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Jan 29, 2018
01/18
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CNNW
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paul: did anyone ever come to an island, uh, with a good intention? people, people -- >> anthony: no, never in the history of the world. >> paul: no, no. >> anthony: best case scenario bring syphilis. >> paul: yeah. >> anthony: pretty much. >> paul: yeah, yeah. >> anthony: i mean, at the very least. >> paulened here. captain cook put his sailors ashore in ni'ihau, which is just a little northwest of here. he was the first haole. like magellan. hawaii killed its first tourist and -- >> anthony: right. >> paul: philippines killed their first tourist. but people who live on islands, who were born on islands, view anyone who comes to shore with suspicion. >> nainoa: well, to go back to what defines a hawaiian. maybe we should go back in our imaginations to -- it could have been two thousand years ago. the tahitians have this voyaging canoe. way before any other culture on the planet is exploring the deep seas. somehow gets here someplace in the south pacific, single most isolated archipelago on the planet. fast forward to captain cook and his identification of native hawaiian. you get a glimpse that these are very productive people. they're industrious. they were healthy, strong. and they had time for the arts. that was a large population, more than half of what we have in hawaii today. full
paul: did anyone ever come to an island, uh, with a good intention? people, people -- >> anthony: no, never in the history of the world. >> paul: no, no. >> anthony: best case scenario bring syphilis. >> paul: yeah. >> anthony: pretty much. >> paul: yeah, yeah. >> anthony: i mean, at the very least. >> paulened here. captain cook put his sailors ashore in ni'ihau, which is just a little northwest of here. he was the first haole. like magellan....
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Jan 11, 2018
01/18
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BLOOMBERG
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paul: i think it's $34 billion at this point. david: so you started your fund in what year? paul: 1977. david: how much money did you have then? paul: $1.3 million. david: where did you get that? paul: it was friends and family. i was a practicing lawyer, and in early 1977, i decided that what i had been doing managing a small amount of -- a tiny amount of friends' and family money was much more interesting than practicing law. david: you grew up in new jersey and manhattan and you went to the university of rochester, and then harvard law school. paulght. it was a wonderful experience, but a daunting experience, especially because i did not exactly like what i was doing. david: but you went to practice law in new york. paul: in the absence of a better idea. david: ok, so i practiced law in new york initially as well, and i practiced law in washington -- paul: sad to hear it. [laughter] david: when i gave up the practice of law to go in business, my mother said, you went to law school. what are you going to do? you do not know anything about business. what did your mother say when you said, i am going to give up the practice of law? she said what? paul: can you earn a living? [laughter] david: so you started, and you work out of your apartment. what was the strategy that you used to get off of the ground? paul: a tiny bit of context. my dad was a retail pharmacist , and after i started attending law school he said, you have to learn how to be an investor. he and i traded tiny amounts of tech stocks and mining stocks together. $2000
paul: i think it's $34 billion at this point. david: so you started your fund in what year? paul: 1977. david: how much money did you have then? paul: $1.3 million. david: where did you get that? paul: it was friends and family. i was a practicing lawyer, and in early 1977, i decided that what i had been doing managing a small amount of -- a tiny amount of friends' and family money was much more interesting than practicing law. david: you grew up in new jersey and manhattan and you went to the...
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Jan 28, 2018
01/18
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paul ryan's office, they were there to ask for house speaker paul ryan's help. they were hoping that paul ryan would get nunez to back off. they didn't get paul ryan's help. instead, nunez announced that doj agreed to provide access to everything that he requested. the compromise appeared that documents would not be handed over to nunez, instead, the chairman and a handful of people from the house intelligence committee would go into a secure room in the doj to review them. there is one document, deemed so sensitive, chris ray decided to personally show it to nunez himself. apparently, what nunez proceeded to do, was take in a document, about an on-going counter intelligence information, put that into a set of talking points, a memo, laying out a supposed conspiracy inside the fbi, to undermine the trump campaign and presidency. if you have been reading any right wing media, this is all anyone on the right has been talking and tweeting about. the secret memo that will bring down the russian investigation, reveal the experience at the heart of the justice department. republicans on the committee voted to make it available to the entire house. now, they are poised to vote to release it publicly. the justice department called that plan extraordinarily reckless and nunez would be violating the terms of the deal struck earlier this month in paul ryan's offense. nope, he said, the deal does not prevent them from doing anything. as for speaker ryan, quote. as previously responded, the speaker's only message was that it needed to reply with oversight requests and no terms set. paul ryan is saying, sorry justice department, he seeded with them again. under the deal, the justice department struck with nunez, that is the ranking democrat on the house intelligence committee, adam shift, access to the underlying materials used by the majority to produce the talking points memo was limited to shift and appropriate staff. the majority doesn't dispute this. makes the absurd claim that it did not preclaim them from sharing the information with other members of congress. if that were true, there was no point to limiting access in the first place. it is in clear violation to the commitment to the justice department. remarkable. the trump justice department is allied with democrats in a fight against republicans, all the hyperventilating ab
paul ryan's office, they were there to ask for house speaker paul ryan's help. they were hoping that paul ryan would get nunez to back off. they didn't get paul ryan's help. instead, nunez announced that doj agreed to provide access to everything that he requested. the compromise appeared that documents would not be handed over to nunez, instead, the chairman and a handful of people from the house intelligence committee would go into a secure room in the doj to review them. there is one...
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Jan 14, 2018
01/18
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BBCNEWS
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paul getty, the kidnapping of paul getty. kevin spacey in the original filming of paul getty. kevin spacey in the originalfilming of the movie, played his grandfather, j originalfilming of the movie, played his grandfather,j paulf the allegations of sexual harassment came out against kevin spacey, he was dropped pretty quickly from this film, even though they had actually completed. christopher plummer was brought in to play his part. but that also met michelle williams and mark warburton had to be brought back as well, to re—film there seems that they had previously done with kevin spacey, now with christopher plummer. mark warburton, it seems, was paid $1.5 million to develop. the shell williams was paid nothing apart from a very tiny amounts to cover her expenses. much has been made of that over the last week or so. made of that over the last week or so. people saying this highlights the pay disparity between actresses and actors in hollywood. mark warburton has now released a statement, saying over the last few days... he says i 100% supported the fight forfair days... he says i 100% supported the fight for fair pay and days... he says i 100% supported the fight forfair pay and i am donating my $1.5 millio
paul getty, the kidnapping of paul getty. kevin spacey in the original filming of paul getty. kevin spacey in the originalfilming of the movie, played his grandfather, j originalfilming of the movie, played his grandfather,j paulf the allegations of sexual harassment came out against kevin spacey, he was dropped pretty quickly from this film, even though they had actually completed. christopher plummer was brought in to play his part. but that also met michelle williams and mark warburton had...
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Jan 15, 2018
01/18
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WCAU
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paul does not make threats to roberto. paul works with roberto. >> which is how parisi presented paul to the jury. of course if you know paul had a deeply troubled history with the law. violent sexual offense in his background. but the jury didn't get to hear about that. nor were they told about the dna. quite possibly paulwould the jury see the same paul moore prosecutors saw? >> he is almost like a marvel comic book arch villain. he's bright, clever, evil as can be and he has a flaw. his flaw is his arrogance. >> the jury retired. to think about it. they were not fooled. after just five hours of deliberation they walked back into the courtroom and declared paul moore guilty of murder. the judge sentenced him to life in prison. >> i remember driving away from the courtroom and my wife and i were together and we'd start crying because we knew it was over. i did the job. i went in there and i did my job. i told everything i knew. and it wasn't easy because i basically put away somebody who i loved. >> pete is not so blind that he doesn't see how he was used by his boyhood playmate the kid he once spent the long, lazy days on the river. the man he treated and trusted like a brother. what do you think paul's motive was? why did he kill robert? he always talks about how robert thinks he is so smart and by ki
paul does not make threats to roberto. paul works with roberto. >> which is how parisi presented paul to the jury. of course if you know paul had a deeply troubled history with the law. violent sexual offense in his background. but the jury didn't get to hear about that. nor were they told about the dna. quite possibly paulwould the jury see the same paul moore prosecutors saw? >> he is almost like a marvel comic book arch villain. he's bright, clever, evil as can be and he has a...
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119
Jan 27, 2018
01/18
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MSNBCW
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paul ryan's office, they were there to ask for house speaker paul ryan's help, hoping paul ryan would get devon nunes to back off. they did not get paul ryan's help. instead speaker ryan sided with devon nunes and he announced the d.o.j. had agreed to provide access to everything he had requested. the compromise appeared to be the documents would not be handed offer to nunes. instead the chairman and a handful of designated people from the house intelligence committee would go into a secure room at the d.o.j. to review them. but there was one document that the d.o.j. deemed so sensitive chris wray opted to personally show it to nunes himself and apparently what nunes then proceeded to do was to take in all of those classified documents about an ongoing counterintelligence investigation and turn around and put that information into a set of talking point, a memo, laying out a supposed conspiracy inside the fbi and inside the justice department to undermine the trump campaign and the trump presidency. now, if you've been watching or listening to or reading any right-wing media over the pa week you know this is all anyone on the right has been talking or tweeting about, the secret memo that will bring down the whole russia investigation, reveal the conspiracy at the heart of justice department and blow up the deep state. republicans voted last week to make that talking points memo available to the entire house. now they're poised to vote to release it publicly. the justice department this week called that plan, quote, extraordinarily reckless and also charged that congressman nunes would be violating the terms of that deal they struck earlier this month in paul ryan's office. but devon nunes says, nope, that deal does not prevent them from doing anything. as for paul ryan, well, the speaker's office sent us this statement, quote, as previously reported, the speaker's only message to the department was that it needed to comply with oversight requests and there were no terms set for its compliance, which i think means paul ryan is saying sorry, justice department, he's siding with nunes again. but there's one other person who got access to all those classified documents under the deal the justice department struck with nunes and that is the ranking democrat on the house intelligence committee, adam schiff and he sent us this statement. quote, access to the underlying materials used by the majority to produce its talking point memo was limited to the chairman or designee, that's nunes, ranking member, that's schiff and appropriate staff. the majority doesn't dispute this but makes the absurd claim that after reviewing the materials, the agreeme
paul ryan's office, they were there to ask for house speaker paul ryan's help, hoping paul ryan would get devon nunes to back off. they did not get paul ryan's help. instead speaker ryan sided with devon nunes and he announced the d.o.j. had agreed to provide access to everything he had requested. the compromise appeared to be the documents would not be handed offer to nunes. instead the chairman and a handful of designated people from the house intelligence committee would go into a secure...
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Jan 28, 2018
01/18
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KPIX
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paul. paul: hey! dr. chris: what are you doing here? paul: this is the home of the new snowmaking factory. dr. chris: that is actually a snow factory. paul: that's the snow factory. that is it. so, this is pumped out on all our runs all over the hill. dr. chris: this is where it all ends up. paulis is where it's coming out, and we're moving it around the hill with our kassbohrer. dr. chris: once it's all spread out like it is now, what's the next step? paul: the next step is, hopefully, it freezes up overnight, and hopefully, we don't get anybody skiing on it. dr. chris: honestly, that would be so rude. but oh, so tempting. just look at that fresh powder but these people, they're my friends now, and it looks like paul has got something in common with that husky pup i met earlier. i'm here struggling, and look at this. paul: you might be better off in the cab. dr. chris: you don't mind? paul: you go and warm up. go on. dr. chris: it's all right? now, i may be more familiar with dog grooming, but my new mate, mikey, is an expert at manicuring the white stuff. mikey: after a slope has been skied all day... dr. chris: yeah. mikey: ...it creates these bumps from the skiers and snowboarders. basically, what i'm trying to do is make it all nice and flat again with my blade on the fro
paul. paul: hey! dr. chris: what are you doing here? paul: this is the home of the new snowmaking factory. dr. chris: that is actually a snow factory. paul: that's the snow factory. that is it. so, this is pumped out on all our runs all over the hill. dr. chris: this is where it all ends up. paulis is where it's coming out, and we're moving it around the hill with our kassbohrer. dr. chris: once it's all spread out like it is now, what's the next step? paul: the next step is, hopefully, it...
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133
Jan 23, 2018
01/18
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MSNBCW
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paul ryan making his debut on "the last word". no, not that paul ryan. this is the paul ryan who wants an investigation of the president and the porn star. the paul ryan of common cause. common cause has filed a pair of complaints today alleging that the $130,000 payment reportedly made to an adult film actress who claims to have had an affair with president trump may have violated campaign finance laws in submissions to the justice department, he says the payment to stormy daniels, which the wall street journal claims occurred a month before the election amounted to an in-kind donation to donald trump's campaign. common cause says the payment should have been disclosed in official reports. stormy daniels told "in touch" magazine in 2011 she had an affair with donald trump in 2006. the magazine published her full interview last week only after "the wall street journal" report. they said that donald trump's lawyer, michael cohen, established an llc to pay stormy daniels, which is not her real name, to not discuss the alleged encounter. an attorney for common cause, paulyan said the payment appeared to be hush money. he's joining us now. and back with us is david frum. >> what does the s. stand from. >> seamus. >> on this money, the $130,000, does it matter whether that money came from donald trump himself or from someone else? >> it matters, but it doesn't change the fact that there seems to be an underlying campaign financing reporting violation. if it came from donald trump, that's the end of the line. but if it came from the trump organization or someone else, it may be a sly lags of illegal corporate contribution or illegal excessively large contribution if it came from an individual. because individuals can only give 2700 bucks to a candidate, corporations can't give any money at all. >> this is one of the issues that, as i recall, was a factor in the john edwards investigation about hush money being paid on his behalf during a presidential campaign in order to advance his candidacy -- >> this does look a lot like john edwards. >> it's designed
paul ryan making his debut on "the last word". no, not that paul ryan. this is the paul ryan who wants an investigation of the president and the porn star. the paul ryan of common cause. common cause has filed a pair of complaints today alleging that the $130,000 payment reportedly made to an adult film actress who claims to have had an affair with president trump may have violated campaign finance laws in submissions to the justice department, he says the payment to stormy daniels,...
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paul ryan is so invested in what he can get from the donald trump. remember, donald trump is the person who obviously sells the base on paul ryan's agenda. paul ryan wants those tax cuts for the rich. paul ryan wants donald trump's right hand with a pen in it and doesn't care. >> i mean, we know -- i worked for one of these speakers in the house. it's a constitutional office. it's a greater office than senate majority leader in the line of success. there's there because the founding fathers wanted it there. to think you work for the president? >> as you he's afraid. they've gotten the big prize. they've gotten the tax cuts through. now it's about short-term political survival. he's afraid this president will turn on the republicans who obviously are standing there in the rose garden with him on a dime if they start to go against him. and this next election. >> the lion's club, the rotary club, the chamber of commerce, all the burgers back home are thrilled because they got a big tax break. >> and the members of congress. >> they've been paid. therefore, somehow the speaker of the house has somehow done his duty as a steward of their interests. therefore, they'll put up with trump and nunes and the rest of this. >> it's not even that. they're afraid he will cannibalize him. that they will go down with him in the next election. >> you have to remember the republican party at the base level, there's a shrinking pool of people who obviously call themselves republicans. what's left, seven in ten of them believe trump is a good role model for their children. >> whose terrible poll was that? >> quinnipiac university. >> it's not the minnesota multifamultfacic test. >> the republicans understand it's his party. we're moving in the direction where you have a coequal branch after government that has subordinated itself. >> if you think of your 7-year-old or 10-year-old and your parents say be like donald trump. don't button your coat, stick your stomach out, have your tie eight feet long and walk around like you own the world. is that what you're supposed to act like? what do they mean by that role modelling? >> what they mean is the thing that got him elected ultimately that had such a cross section of americans that we thought certainly communities of americans we thought would never support the president from african-americans to hispanics to women. and what that was was his fight, his moxy, his willingness to go and shake the system by its throat. that still resonates for a lot of voters out there across the country. and to paul ryan and to mitch mcconnell and others, they hear it every weekend when they go home. they are tethered to him because they're tethers to him by their base. those base republicans who obviously remind them you got to help the president carry out the things he says he's going to do. >> let's go through the smell test tonight. the president will say tonight he's extending an open hand to work with democrats. according to his advisers and he today at lunch his message today will be about unity. let's watch. >> what should we expect toochbtd from your standpoint? >> a lot of reports i think have been accurate. you'll see a very upbeat very positive speech. he is going to start to reach across the aisle a little bit. we'll talk about the successes we've had in the past year. >> wants the american people to understand he's for them. he wants to uplift all americans and show these he supports them. it will be one of those speeches when it's done, people are going to be proud to be part of th
paul ryan is so invested in what he can get from the donald trump. remember, donald trump is the person who obviously sells the base on paul ryan's agenda. paul ryan wants those tax cuts for the rich. paul ryan wants donald trump's right hand with a pen in it and doesn't care. >> i mean, we know -- i worked for one of these speakers in the house. it's a constitutional office. it's a greater office than senate majority leader in the line of success. there's there because the founding...