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Sep 3, 2018
09/18
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it's our princeton.s from now, it's going to be someone else's princeton, that may look a whole lot different than this. and i think that's the beautiful thing about it. >> more on tonight's stories, including steve scalise on little miracles... >> if one of them doesn't have a problem, he's not here. >> ...at 60minutesovertime.com. ♪ ) mike: i've tried lots of things for my joint pain. now? watch me. ( ♪ ) joni: think i'd give up showing these guys how it's done? please. real people with active psoriatic arthritis are changing the way they fight it. they're moving forward with cosentyx. it's a different kind of targeted biologic. it's proven to help people find less joint pain and clearer skin. don't use if you are allergic to cosentyx. before starting cosentyx you should be checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms of an infection. or if you have received a vaccine, or plan to. if you have
it's our princeton.s from now, it's going to be someone else's princeton, that may look a whole lot different than this. and i think that's the beautiful thing about it. >> more on tonight's stories, including steve scalise on little miracles... >> if one of them doesn't have a problem, he's not here. >> ...at 60minutesovertime.com. ♪ ) mike: i've tried lots of things for my joint pain. now? watch me. ( ♪ ) joni: think i'd give up showing these guys how it's done? please....
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Sep 29, 2018
09/18
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massee: they are at princeton. host: and what is their connection to princeton?assee: princeton is the place the grover and frances retired to buried it's a crazy story, but i've been told this many time. grover did not like woodrow wilson, and at the time woodrow wilson was the presidet and hes children are woodrow wilson's children to play together, because there was a little bit of a rift. so they did not play together. but that's the connection, he retired to princeton. talking aboutre the cleveland children, he had a daughter that became famous and who eventually passed away, baby ruth. we have a candy bar named after baby ruth. tell us the family stories about baby ruth. massee: so the actual candy company contacted the cleveland family to put the images of the baby and also frances on that. and we have tons of political memorabilia, tons of souvenirs that have been given away, and they actually contacted the family to actually allow both images on the candy bar. ruthadly, like you said, passed away and sadly, susan, she was pregnant with a child at and bot
massee: they are at princeton. host: and what is their connection to princeton?assee: princeton is the place the grover and frances retired to buried it's a crazy story, but i've been told this many time. grover did not like woodrow wilson, and at the time woodrow wilson was the presidet and hes children are woodrow wilson's children to play together, because there was a little bit of a rift. so they did not play together. but that's the connection, he retired to princeton. talking aboutre the...
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Sep 30, 2018
09/18
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>> princeton. >> what is their princeton connection? placenceton is the actual that grover and francis retired two. to.etired i will never forget the story. grover did not like woodrow wilson. woodrow wilson was the president at that time. he did not allow his children and woodrow wilson stood -- wilson's to play together. that's the connection. he retired to princeton. >> the cleveland children also had a daughter that became a very -- became very famous. baby ruth. we have a candy bar named after her. tell us what you know about the family stories about baby ruth? >> the actual candy company contacted the cleveland family to put the images of the baby and francis on that. i have tons of political memorabilia the -- memorabilia that have been given away. they contacted the family to actually allow both images on the candy bar. sadly, like you said, ruth passed away. sadly, susan was pregnant with the child at the time. happened almost at the same time. she did not get a chance to say goodbye before she passed away. >> are very early ch
>> princeton. >> what is their princeton connection? placenceton is the actual that grover and francis retired two. to.etired i will never forget the story. grover did not like woodrow wilson. woodrow wilson was the president at that time. he did not allow his children and woodrow wilson stood -- wilson's to play together. that's the connection. he retired to princeton. >> the cleveland children also had a daughter that became a very -- became very famous. baby ruth. we have a...
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princeton studying a college and i was traveling by train to new york i would see trying to do bronze wakin of the towns of america fall apart exactly they'd fall in the rust belt as a cold and so that's that a case not about the fact of yeah we have all street stocks and facebook stocks and google stocks are wonderful and you can make money but how about the the underbelly which is most people who are living in third world status within the greatest nation in the world and you seem to suggest that the. government itself is being privatized away in the united states we followed the factors lead right that was the whole point was from the seventy's late seventy's carter actually start of the lot of that privatization process of the banking sector and you know obviously through the eighty's but that she was doing in london was very much mirrored by reagan throughout the eighty's and. that privatization that ultimately you know kind of. you could say that moment really was the renunciation of glass steagall when we took that down by clinton actually did it right in about two thousand the
princeton studying a college and i was traveling by train to new york i would see trying to do bronze wakin of the towns of america fall apart exactly they'd fall in the rust belt as a cold and so that's that a case not about the fact of yeah we have all street stocks and facebook stocks and google stocks are wonderful and you can make money but how about the the underbelly which is most people who are living in third world status within the greatest nation in the world and you seem to suggest...
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Sep 15, 2018
09/18
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grover retired to princeton. it was interesting, he, he'd never gone to college, and he went to princeton and sort of became the mascot there. and after a football victory all students would march to grover's house and give a cheer, and he really enjoyed his final time in princeton. we have somebody who's going to bring a microphone for you, just a second. >> yeah. the other half of your title is the panic of 1893, and other than the fact you mentioned there was a railroad bubble that burst, you didn't say anything about that. is it covered in the book? no, it is covered inside the book. as i said, there were two major causes of the panic which was the overbuilding of the railroads and the uncertainty in the currency situation. and it would be hard to overstate how contentious and controversial and detrimental this was to the country, the debate over gold versus silver. and i think that was what really, um, precipitated the panic. people didn't know what was going to happen with the currency. would there be infla
grover retired to princeton. it was interesting, he, he'd never gone to college, and he went to princeton and sort of became the mascot there. and after a football victory all students would march to grover's house and give a cheer, and he really enjoyed his final time in princeton. we have somebody who's going to bring a microphone for you, just a second. >> yeah. the other half of your title is the panic of 1893, and other than the fact you mentioned there was a railroad bubble that...
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it's interesting because princeton and harvard economists do not tend to be that friendly to mr. trump. there's a great economist at yale or princeton, i might have that wrong, really slammed trump all of the time saying he doesn't deserve credit. maybe that's true. but for whatever reason we're having a miraculous recovery and you don't need to look up statistics. walk down any street anywhere. every window and store says hiring, hiring. never seen anything like it. it's a miracle. elizabeth: and they're hiring for 75,000, 80,000 a year, high-paying jobs. here's plump slamming the tax pg the tax cuts as bad. >> on winding regulations, weakening working restrictions, shrinking the safety net. you have come of age during a time of growing inequality, of fracturing of economic opportunity. and that growing economic divide compounded other divisions in our country. elizabeth: so he is. >> not true. elizabeth: basically, ben, this is still, critics say, remarkably breathe taking tedious and incompetent basically analysis by president obama here. he's flat out wrong. there are are mor
it's interesting because princeton and harvard economists do not tend to be that friendly to mr. trump. there's a great economist at yale or princeton, i might have that wrong, really slammed trump all of the time saying he doesn't deserve credit. maybe that's true. but for whatever reason we're having a miraculous recovery and you don't need to look up statistics. walk down any street anywhere. every window and store says hiring, hiring. never seen anything like it. it's a miracle. elizabeth:...
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Sep 15, 2018
09/18
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today in princeton plaza mall in san jose. tomorrow morning with your news and weather. hope to see you then. . announcer: when you see this symbol you know you're watching television that's educational and informational. the more you know on nbc. josh: today, on "the voyager", i explore one of the most unique markets on the planet... this is so wild. there's so many fruits and vegetables that we have completely ignored our entire lives. it's all right here. ...learn how to create thailand's most iconic dish... it's got the five s's, sweet, salty, savory, sour, and spicy! nhoi: just a little bit, yeah. josh: that's what makes pad thai such a flavor explosion in your mouth. ...and discover an ancient community preserving one of bangkok's lost traditions. josh: they're really impressive. they're smooth.
today in princeton plaza mall in san jose. tomorrow morning with your news and weather. hope to see you then. . announcer: when you see this symbol you know you're watching television that's educational and informational. the more you know on nbc. josh: today, on "the voyager", i explore one of the most unique markets on the planet... this is so wild. there's so many fruits and vegetables that we have completely ignored our entire lives. it's all right here. ...learn how to create...
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Sep 18, 2018
09/18
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the president of princeton says as a tactic, he tries to make having controversial speakers so routine that it is not an event. tosomeone is looking around stir trouble, they will have to come every three days because it happens. i havere tactics that learned from. adopting the chicago principles, the tilling the hecklers'veto and making your campus one where there are many points of view is routine. those are two diffuse the possibility of a big explosion over free speech. mr. rosenstein: i have plenty more questions of my own. i would like to invite the audience, if you have notecards past those forward. takeenator is prepared to unscripted question. take advantage of that opportunity. let me follow up by asking you what you think is the best pathway forward. you have spoken eloquently about the notion that colleges should treat intellectual diversity like other forms of diversity. using colleges should support underrepresented points of view? sen. alexander: i do. that's probably the best thing. ofn i was a senior vanderbilt university, 1962, vanderbilt was segregated by race. sever
the president of princeton says as a tactic, he tries to make having controversial speakers so routine that it is not an event. tosomeone is looking around stir trouble, they will have to come every three days because it happens. i havere tactics that learned from. adopting the chicago principles, the tilling the hecklers'veto and making your campus one where there are many points of view is routine. those are two diffuse the possibility of a big explosion over free speech. mr. rosenstein: i...
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Sep 24, 2018
09/18
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left-wing professor we are dying so with that endangered status but my favorite moment came from princeton w they chanted we are sick and tired of being sick and tired now this phrase was first used as a civil rights activist beaten in the 19 fifties for trying to vote fannie lou had grounds aplenty but any princeton student i don't care if you are green or purple or orange is in the grip of a terrible delusion or perhaps you were thinking the adults on campus try to get them a firmer grip on reality but the adults actively encourage the hysteria devoted to cultivating the self-involvement in those preposterous forms of self-pity do you want to know the reason for that astronomical tuition? >> look no further than the bureaucratic bloat before the appreciative audience of equity diversity and inclusion to expand their dominion creating a bias response team on the assumption it is so rampant that the defense force is needed they feature seminars with toxic masculinity and white privilege as they are the oppressed or the oppressors if you are not female or black or hispanic or gay or any of
left-wing professor we are dying so with that endangered status but my favorite moment came from princeton w they chanted we are sick and tired of being sick and tired now this phrase was first used as a civil rights activist beaten in the 19 fifties for trying to vote fannie lou had grounds aplenty but any princeton student i don't care if you are green or purple or orange is in the grip of a terrible delusion or perhaps you were thinking the adults on campus try to get them a firmer grip on...
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Sep 23, 2018
09/18
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from one of the ranchers with the minority students that my favorite moment came from princeton and in 2015 the black students chanted we are sick and tired of being sick and tired. this phrase was used by who was beaten in the fifties for trying to vote. fannie lou had grounds for being sick and tired of being sick and tired but any princeton student green or purple or orange he thinks of himself as oppressed that bureaucracy to cultivating students with a preposterous form of self-pity do you want to know the reason for that astronomical tuition? >> look no further than bureaucratic bloat. they act out the psychodrama's of diversity and equity diversity to use the occasion to expand their dominion many campuses have created bias response teams the active shooter response teams that discrimination is rampant and lethal that a rapid defense force is needed freshman orientation to feature seminars of toxic masculinity and white privilege. students are taught they are the oppressed or the oppressors if you are not female black hispanic gay or any of the 116 metastasized categories of gen
from one of the ranchers with the minority students that my favorite moment came from princeton and in 2015 the black students chanted we are sick and tired of being sick and tired. this phrase was used by who was beaten in the fifties for trying to vote. fannie lou had grounds for being sick and tired of being sick and tired but any princeton student green or purple or orange he thinks of himself as oppressed that bureaucracy to cultivating students with a preposterous form of self-pity do you...
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Sep 29, 2018
09/18
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but my favorite moment in this parade of narcissism came from princeton. in 2015, princeton's black students chanted "we're sick and tired of being sick and tired." now, this phrase was first used by fanny lou hammer, civil rights activist who was beaten in the 1950s for trying to vote. fannie lou hammer had grounds aplenty forking into sick and tired of being sick and tired but any princeton student, i don't care if he is green, purple or orange, who think himself as oppressed, is in the grip of a terrible delusion that will encoupleber him for the rest office his life. prangs you're thinking, at least the adults on campus are trying to give students a firmer grip on reality. to the contrary. the adults actively encourage the hysteria. a massive diversity bureaucracy is devoted to cultivating in students evermore arcane spears of self-involvement and ever more preposterous forms of -- of self-pity. want to know the recent for astro naomi cal tuition? look no further than the bureaucratic bloat. students october out psycho dodges of omission before an brit
but my favorite moment in this parade of narcissism came from princeton. in 2015, princeton's black students chanted "we're sick and tired of being sick and tired." now, this phrase was first used by fanny lou hammer, civil rights activist who was beaten in the 1950s for trying to vote. fannie lou hammer had grounds aplenty forking into sick and tired of being sick and tired but any princeton student, i don't care if he is green, purple or orange, who think himself as oppressed, is in...
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Oct 1, 2018
10/18
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princeton university publish this book. we got a call from the president's office saying the chinese have gone to visit president bush because they have concerns about what i say in the book. used.es was the word they we have to ask how they got a copy. the second question -- brian: i what point in the process is this? dr. engel: we were -- brian: before the book was published? dr. engel: yes. brian: and they had a copy? do you have any ideas how they got a copy? dr. engel: there were copies that had been circulating. but president bush did not have a copy because one of the rules we set out from our arrangement was that he would never see the book until it was published because he could not have any influence. he agreed to that in a heartbeat. what was fascinating to me was the chinese complaint about the mistakes in the diary, and my first reaction as a researcher was to say, great, i must have misidentified people. they are going to help me get it right. what they were upset about is the fact i referred to tiananmen squa
princeton university publish this book. we got a call from the president's office saying the chinese have gone to visit president bush because they have concerns about what i say in the book. used.es was the word they we have to ask how they got a copy. the second question -- brian: i what point in the process is this? dr. engel: we were -- brian: before the book was published? dr. engel: yes. brian: and they had a copy? do you have any ideas how they got a copy? dr. engel: there were copies...
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Sep 28, 2018
09/18
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we are joined by lauren in public affairs with princeton. a lot to sort out. let me start with this investigation the president has ordered. do you think the fbi will be able to get any closer to figuring out what may or may are not -- may not have happened? g they are the best at their jobs in the world. the timeline however is really sure. i think what happens next depends on what information they can gather in that week. if they do not find new material information and mark judge for example does not come out and say something differently than he did in that letter, he will ironically make it more easy for some to vote for kavanagh. if the vote was held today they would have a hard time during their support. on the other side i think it is likely that information will come to light. he was pretty had g on a few things especially how much he drank in high school. if the fbi does in fact find that information we're talking about i think it will be tough for kavanagh to get confirmed. >> the president says one parameter is it cannot be more than a week . >> bu
we are joined by lauren in public affairs with princeton. a lot to sort out. let me start with this investigation the president has ordered. do you think the fbi will be able to get any closer to figuring out what may or may are not -- may not have happened? g they are the best at their jobs in the world. the timeline however is really sure. i think what happens next depends on what information they can gather in that week. if they do not find new material information and mark judge for example...
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Sep 18, 2018
09/18
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paul: i am in princeton.striking thing is how the streaming services did compared to the more conventional networks. the streaming services had another big year in terms of winning these procedure -- these prestigious awards. the streaming services are continuing to ramp up their programming investment and spending a lot of money on content, directors, actors, scripps, and they are getting awarded for it with awards and recognition. david: where does this lead? are we starting to see the death of broadcast networks? paul: not necessarily the death but the balance of power is shifting more towards the streaming services. we are seeing continued growth in their subscribers. take a look at netflix with over 150 million subscribers. prime from amazon is also doing very well. there. out we are seeing a shift in viewing from linear broadcasting towards the streaming services. as a result, we are seeing advertising dollars go there, we are seeing production budgets go there, we are seeing talent go there. it is a br
paul: i am in princeton.striking thing is how the streaming services did compared to the more conventional networks. the streaming services had another big year in terms of winning these procedure -- these prestigious awards. the streaming services are continuing to ramp up their programming investment and spending a lot of money on content, directors, actors, scripps, and they are getting awarded for it with awards and recognition. david: where does this lead? are we starting to see the death...
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Sep 15, 2018
09/18
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there's so-called personhood theory that people like peter singer at princeton, and many other bioethicists enbrace which claims that humans are only valuable if they have certain capacity and rationality is one capacity. that means that humans aren't all equal. many secularists admit that human equality goes along with their point and i show how that spins now secular thought. >> host: how do you show that. >> guest: well by looking at their own works and what they said themselves about these issues, and sewing that many of. the themselves admit that this is the implications of their view. now i don't claim all of the will say that. man of them actually contradict themselves because many of them do at some level think that human life has value. their philosophy claims it doesn't but they will say -- let me give you a great example that i bring out in the book that blew me away when i was working on the book. bertrand russell, british fill of fer in the earliest 20th 20th century. he said devoce forthright live in his philosophy that humans were insignificant, even called them parasites on
there's so-called personhood theory that people like peter singer at princeton, and many other bioethicists enbrace which claims that humans are only valuable if they have certain capacity and rationality is one capacity. that means that humans aren't all equal. many secularists admit that human equality goes along with their point and i show how that spins now secular thought. >> host: how do you show that. >> guest: well by looking at their own works and what they said themselves...
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Sep 14, 2018
09/18
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. >> this saturday, 9:00 to 3:00 at the princeton plaza mall. now if you want all the details, go to my facebook page, garvin thomas, nbc bay area. you can get a step by step instructions on how to schedule a time that's convenient for you. we welcome drop-ins, but if you know you can make it at 1:00, you can schedule a time for 1:00 or 10:30. last year, 120 people came, 34, it was the first time they'd ever donated. in addition to bringing in people who regularly donate, i would like for this drive to introduce more donors to the system. that can only do good for so many people. >> you can help save leitchs. >> lives. >> winds are gusting. >> 112-mile-per-hour wind gusts. the storm approaching the coast, still technically a category two, but the most important headline, a slow-moving hurricane that is set to drop over two days time, 20-30 inches of rain. right now you see that northwest movement. you can almost walk faster than the storm is moving right now to the northwest. only five miles per hour and the future cast taking it all the way to
. >> this saturday, 9:00 to 3:00 at the princeton plaza mall. now if you want all the details, go to my facebook page, garvin thomas, nbc bay area. you can get a step by step instructions on how to schedule a time that's convenient for you. we welcome drop-ins, but if you know you can make it at 1:00, you can schedule a time for 1:00 or 10:30. last year, 120 people came, 34, it was the first time they'd ever donated. in addition to bringing in people who regularly donate, i would like for...
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Sep 20, 2018
09/18
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. ♪ ♪ david: you graduated as as valedictorian and decided you want to go to princeton. why? be a physicist. i changed my major quickly. david: phi beta kappa? jeff: phi beta kappa. david: then you win into the highest calling of mankind, finance. [laughter] jeff: yes, i worked at a quantitative hedge fund, d. e. shaw & co. i used a lot of his ideas and principles, hr, recruiting, what kind of people to hire. david: a very good, well-known hedge fund. you were a star there. quittingelled you aim this and will start a company selling books over the internet from seattle? where did that idea come from? jeff: this is 1994. nobody has heard of the internet, very few people. i came across the fact the world wide web was growing at something like 2300% a year in 1994. anything growing that fast, even if baseline usage is tiny, it is going to be big. i looked at that and said there has to be, i should come up with a business idea on the internet, then let the internet grow around this and keep working on it. i made a list of products on might sell, forced ranking them. i picked book
. ♪ ♪ david: you graduated as as valedictorian and decided you want to go to princeton. why? be a physicist. i changed my major quickly. david: phi beta kappa? jeff: phi beta kappa. david: then you win into the highest calling of mankind, finance. [laughter] jeff: yes, i worked at a quantitative hedge fund, d. e. shaw & co. i used a lot of his ideas and principles, hr, recruiting, what kind of people to hire. david: a very good, well-known hedge fund. you were a star there....
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talking about this issue have a legal background i mean they really wasted a lot of money at yale and princeton if they can't get the simple principles of the rule of law together no prosecutor would go to court over these it's hearsay he said she said there's no evidence no forensic evidence here no one would take it to trial but you want to take it to trial in public but that's what it is this is a book opinion trial peter that's what it is go ahead jason. right peter but this is not a criminal trial like i said judge kavanagh is not a risk of criminal prosecution that's not what this is about this is about his fitness to serve on the supreme court of the united states so that's what this is about and i think i know i wouldn't want someone who was sexually assaulted several people to be or even one person to be on the supreme court that's what this is less i mean there you. go again so you're assuming it's true ok i think a lot of people watching this program would like to know what i didn't make that assumption and unfortunately jason we never know what that truth is for the many reasons i'v
talking about this issue have a legal background i mean they really wasted a lot of money at yale and princeton if they can't get the simple principles of the rule of law together no prosecutor would go to court over these it's hearsay he said she said there's no evidence no forensic evidence here no one would take it to trial but you want to take it to trial in public but that's what it is this is a book opinion trial peter that's what it is go ahead jason. right peter but this is not a...
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Sep 21, 2018
09/18
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BLOOMBERG
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. ♪ david: you graduated as as valedictorian and decided you want to go to princeton. why?ted to be a physicist. i changed my major quickly. david: phi beta kappa? jeff: phi beta kappa. david: then you win into the highest calling of mankind, finance. [laughter] jeff: yes, i worked at a quantitative hedge fund, d. e. shaw & co. i used a lot of his ideas and principles, hr, recruiting, what kind of people to hire. david: a very good, well-known hedge fund. you were a star there. what propelled you aim quitting this and will start a company selling books over the internet from seattle? where did that idea come from? jeff: this is 1994. nobody has heard of the internet, very few people. i came across the fact the world wide web was growing at something like 2300% a year in 1994. anything growing that fast, even if baseline usage is tiny, it is going to be big. i looked at that and said there has to be, i should come up with a business idea on the internet, then let the internet grow around this and keep working on it. i made a list of products on might sell, forced ranking the
. ♪ david: you graduated as as valedictorian and decided you want to go to princeton. why?ted to be a physicist. i changed my major quickly. david: phi beta kappa? jeff: phi beta kappa. david: then you win into the highest calling of mankind, finance. [laughter] jeff: yes, i worked at a quantitative hedge fund, d. e. shaw & co. i used a lot of his ideas and principles, hr, recruiting, what kind of people to hire. david: a very good, well-known hedge fund. you were a star there. what...
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about what you think of the event that's going on down here if absolutely thank you for coming in to princeton i'm here with these images . very close to my art. they inspire me you know they made. a record of the community. tell the true story of how you know we settled. in britain well lots of these pictures really wouldn't be recognizable in one thousand nine hundred. gallery's tell me about first of all people know the us black panther movement tell me about the british black panther movement that is chronicled here years of. rock on the they were like educational. they were like the american no walk around with guns and all that it was just to inspire katy that educated community i mean it was a great education for me the working class boy brought up in brixton we believed that we couldn't go beyond a certain point by point a movement that you can they you know they're not teach us about we gave and how we understand the system. because before that i didn't understand capitalism socialism and all that sort of stuff but the block and the movement will give us that sort of strength and ener
about what you think of the event that's going on down here if absolutely thank you for coming in to princeton i'm here with these images . very close to my art. they inspire me you know they made. a record of the community. tell the true story of how you know we settled. in britain well lots of these pictures really wouldn't be recognizable in one thousand nine hundred. gallery's tell me about first of all people know the us black panther movement tell me about the british black panther...
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Sep 9, 2018
09/18
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he will be taking leave this fall to teach at princeton. he lives in baltimore with his wife, who is also a journalist. while in moscow, he became interested in the year 1917, the year the united states entered the war and the year the russians left the war. and he wrote about the 1917 year and how it changed the world as well as how it changed world war i. he is going to talk about woodrow wilson and how he was going to make the world safe for democracy by leading the united states into world war i. will, i will turn it over to you and you can tell us all about it. >> thank you. thank you all for coming. [applause] >> what a great day it is after this past week. i have to say the weather is really terrific. i want to talk about how we got into the war in march and april of 1917. weorder to do that, i think need to talk about democracy a little bit. democracy is a question americans have been dealing with 1776.at least 1917, i argueof it really came into sharp focus. let me set the stage. the war began in 1914. this is a picture of new york
he will be taking leave this fall to teach at princeton. he lives in baltimore with his wife, who is also a journalist. while in moscow, he became interested in the year 1917, the year the united states entered the war and the year the russians left the war. and he wrote about the 1917 year and how it changed the world as well as how it changed world war i. he is going to talk about woodrow wilson and how he was going to make the world safe for democracy by leading the united states into world...
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Sep 13, 2018
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faugh long time locate to locate and tool kill the director princeton in lebanon and in some other countries that they leave before finally they got information from the palestinian that lived in beirut and was a member of one of the palestinians that is a chance to deliver some information about the life of riley and be able their israelis for a few months made a plan how to reach him and to kill him basically to know a little bit and say it's a disease mcclim so often. i was rooting for the party though the little birds who fit. in there and how it is the election will affect them to do it each elephant that i'm going to be on if them fees or is wish which my genuine and it was going to look at the issue and an argument was that they're in the middle of a dilemma the fellas feed them fears feed their. perfectly arbitron. alicia to. italy another year what are your duty in a. shoe fits. the definition been me a listener see a. man i've been afan minicon have seen us that routinely in a game and i sure. don't want la you want it to he. only know what down killing me hey key in all. suffer an
faugh long time locate to locate and tool kill the director princeton in lebanon and in some other countries that they leave before finally they got information from the palestinian that lived in beirut and was a member of one of the palestinians that is a chance to deliver some information about the life of riley and be able their israelis for a few months made a plan how to reach him and to kill him basically to know a little bit and say it's a disease mcclim so often. i was rooting for the...
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back to princeton and explosive day of testimony in the u.s. senate is exactly right been an extraordinary senate hearing is underway in washington d.c. that could seal the fate of president trump's nominee for the u.s. supreme court brett kavanaugh is facing multiple allegations of sexual misconduct his initial accuser christine blasi forward completed her four hours of testimony earlier today she gave an emotional account of the evening thirty six years ago and which she says cavanaugh tried to rape her at a party before the also repeatedly stated that she is one hundred percent certain that her attacker was brett kavanaugh and here's an excerpt from dr ford's testimony today. can you tell us what you don't forget about that night in the stairwell the living room the bedroom the bed on the right side of the room as you walk into the room there is that that to the right. the bathroom in close proximity. the laughter the uproarious laughter and the multiple attempts to escape and the final ability to do so. well that was followed by an angry ka
back to princeton and explosive day of testimony in the u.s. senate is exactly right been an extraordinary senate hearing is underway in washington d.c. that could seal the fate of president trump's nominee for the u.s. supreme court brett kavanaugh is facing multiple allegations of sexual misconduct his initial accuser christine blasi forward completed her four hours of testimony earlier today she gave an emotional account of the evening thirty six years ago and which she says cavanaugh tried...
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Sep 4, 2018
09/18
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. >> host: thomas hazlett is the chief economist formerly and an economist professor at princeton university. his book is "the political spectrum" the tumultuous liberation of wireless technology, from herbert hoover to the smartphone. this
. >> host: thomas hazlett is the chief economist formerly and an economist professor at princeton university. his book is "the political spectrum" the tumultuous liberation of wireless technology, from herbert hoover to the smartphone. this
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the turkish relations formerly princeton uncorrupt now with g.w. here in berlin and their believes that everyone is neither a friend nor of important strategic interest for most germany to talk with the search president please note she says with any price on the woman a computer direct kobo from the has any polling been steady school of governments who argues that it's high time for the german government to uphold democratic values and human rights instead of its economic political and security interests in its dealings with the other one regime welcome once again to all three of you about to begin with you deliver my just tell us why president and other ones visit to germany state visit to germany is so important and so controversial. well it is to start from the turkish perspective from the turkish government's perspective it is very important for for for the government for various reasons first of all of course there's a comic crisis in turkey as we know and the prospects for the prospects are very dark you know it's not expected to go to improv
the turkish relations formerly princeton uncorrupt now with g.w. here in berlin and their believes that everyone is neither a friend nor of important strategic interest for most germany to talk with the search president please note she says with any price on the woman a computer direct kobo from the has any polling been steady school of governments who argues that it's high time for the german government to uphold democratic values and human rights instead of its economic political and security...
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north korean journalists and actually the axis for not princeton it's quite you get a lot of t.v.footage that don't look very staged for example one image that i would like to point out this is when arriving at the airport and conjunctions little sister was awaiting for him to see her which is in the waiting lounge and notice you're looking at her smartphone and built in very tense and obvious and it has been staged i mean she didn't know that she should be ok now the agenda in pyongyang is not limited to north korea's nuclear weapons program what's at stake act. i mean they're different interests from the south korean side i think the first issue is not necessarily the t.v. crew station but rather improving the korean tice name. ending the korean war i mean signing a few for that technically you also need the chinese side and the u.s. because they were the ones signing the armistice and nineteen fifty three but also in this delegation he brings a lot of business for us for example some songs a defacto leader e.j. on and i think that's a sign to say not if you cooperate if you go
north korean journalists and actually the axis for not princeton it's quite you get a lot of t.v.footage that don't look very staged for example one image that i would like to point out this is when arriving at the airport and conjunctions little sister was awaiting for him to see her which is in the waiting lounge and notice you're looking at her smartphone and built in very tense and obvious and it has been staged i mean she didn't know that she should be ok now the agenda in pyongyang is not...
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Sep 15, 2018
09/18
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years later, as if that isn't enough, he transfers to princeton university at age 15, and he is a genius. a financial wizard. he knows what he is talking about. but that is also his downfall. he is elitist, arrogant, a bit pretentious. because of that pretentiousness, he looks at someone like jackson, is this really going on? he doesn't know what he's talking about. he sees jackson as an unsophisticated dimwit. he doesn't have any idea what he's talking about. but the country in an age of jacksonian democracy, who are they going to side with? nicholas biddle earned the nickname czar nicholas. here's a cartoon, old hickory and bully nick going at it. not only do we have nicholas biddle, we also have an election coming up. jackson versus clay. the presidential election of 1832. what an election. the drama. look at this. unbelievable. the future of the country, financially speaking, hanging in the balance. you cannot find two greater opponents. in conjunction with daniel webster, has a plan. clay pushes through congress that summer, just a few months before election day, a bill to recharter
years later, as if that isn't enough, he transfers to princeton university at age 15, and he is a genius. a financial wizard. he knows what he is talking about. but that is also his downfall. he is elitist, arrogant, a bit pretentious. because of that pretentiousness, he looks at someone like jackson, is this really going on? he doesn't know what he's talking about. he sees jackson as an unsophisticated dimwit. he doesn't have any idea what he's talking about. but the country in an age of...
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Sep 8, 2018
09/18
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but that doesn't mean but if kruger comes up as a princeton economist with the study and found 94% of the net new jobs that were created were the alternative work arrangements they can call them temp or the alternative work arrangement. so i think that's part of it and if you ask people are you a gig worker with space in the last two weeks and with that again the numbers change vets it isn't how they pay the bills. i like playstation didn't matter. it is wonderful but if you can't get paid nothing and half of the people under 35 there is a really different experience depending on where you are in society in the world. and from that university professor with two or $3000 they will plan to do the research and this is all part of the same system. >> with the data and the way that we categorize and then to count different things so you have these headlines everybody is doing this and then to say this doesn't even exist. >> hello. both of your books sound really interesting i'm looking forward to reading them. angie talk about the excellent dividend and so that they can invest in people wi
but that doesn't mean but if kruger comes up as a princeton economist with the study and found 94% of the net new jobs that were created were the alternative work arrangements they can call them temp or the alternative work arrangement. so i think that's part of it and if you ask people are you a gig worker with space in the last two weeks and with that again the numbers change vets it isn't how they pay the bills. i like playstation didn't matter. it is wonderful but if you can't get paid...
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Sep 8, 2018
09/18
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that princeton and they've made some changes but they it doesed -- there's a woodrow wilson school of public and international affairs there and that name still stays because they've made some other changes. in new york city, i did a project with the american museum of natural history once, they were revising their theodore roosevelt hall or remodelling it and there's a statue maybe some of you have seen it outside on central park west theodore roosevelt on a horse and there's a native american walking on one side of him not even like an african-american figure but an african figure for some reason walking on other side. and he's -- you know, roosevelt in his younger years thought that he said about settling the west whether by treaty or annihilation we're going to settle the west. that is really harsher than anything wilson ever said. so there are a lot of people who would like that statute to come down and it can't come down. it was -- landmarked in new york state. so that's the argument so far that you can't take down a landmark saying i think that could change some time. and look
that princeton and they've made some changes but they it doesed -- there's a woodrow wilson school of public and international affairs there and that name still stays because they've made some other changes. in new york city, i did a project with the american museum of natural history once, they were revising their theodore roosevelt hall or remodelling it and there's a statue maybe some of you have seen it outside on central park west theodore roosevelt on a horse and there's a native american...
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Sep 15, 2018
09/18
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[applause] >> she earned a ba from princeton university and a jd from yale law school. and in 1991, president george hw bush nominated her to the southern district of new york. in 1997 president bill clinton nominated her to the court of appeals, and barack obama nominated her to the supreme court. [cheers and applause] >> on may 26, 2009. she was confirmed on august 8, 2009, becoming the first latina on the high court. [cheers and applause] >> and she is a best-selling author, "the beloved world of sonia sotomayor" among others. however, justice, you have done something remarkable. >> host: how many years has been going on? >> guest: 18 years. >> host: and we never had books written for young people. but because of you, kids are powerful. >> it took you to get us on the main stage. that intrigued me. i am a former children's librarian. what motivated you, all the things you can do, asking you to write other books? why would you write for young people? what was it? >> with respect to the middle school books, the beloved -- "the beloved world of sonia sotomayor," kids, y
[applause] >> she earned a ba from princeton university and a jd from yale law school. and in 1991, president george hw bush nominated her to the southern district of new york. in 1997 president bill clinton nominated her to the court of appeals, and barack obama nominated her to the supreme court. [cheers and applause] >> on may 26, 2009. she was confirmed on august 8, 2009, becoming the first latina on the high court. [cheers and applause] >> and she is a best-selling...
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Sep 30, 2018
09/18
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[applause] she earned a ba from princeton university. and a jd from yale law school.pp and in 1991, president george hw bush nominated her to the us district court of new york . in 1997, president bill clinton nominated her towards the us court of appeals for the second circuit and then president barack obama nominated her to the supreme court . [applause] on may 26, 2009 and she was confirmed on august 8 2009, becoming the first latino on the high court. [applause] and she's a best-selling author, my beloved world amongothers . however, justice, you have done something remarkable, a first for the book festival . how many years has been going on? >> 18 years. >> it's a long time in 18 years we've never had on the main stage books that were written for young people. but because of you, and kids are powerful. they are.re >> ti know, but it took you to get us on the main stage. so that really intrigued me because i'm a former children's librarian and we know about the power of books and what motivated you? with all the things you could do a
[applause] she earned a ba from princeton university. and a jd from yale law school.pp and in 1991, president george hw bush nominated her to the us district court of new york . in 1997, president bill clinton nominated her towards the us court of appeals for the second circuit and then president barack obama nominated her to the supreme court . [applause] on may 26, 2009 and she was confirmed on august 8 2009, becoming the first latino on the high court. [applause] and she's a best-selling...
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Sep 10, 2018
09/18
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he will be taking leave this fall to teach at princeton journalism. he lives in baltimore with his wife who is also a journalist. well in moscow he became interested in the year 1917 the year that the united states entered the war and the russians left the war. he wrote about the 1917 year and how it changed the world as well as how it changed world war i. he's going to talk about woodrow wilson and how he was going to make the world safe for democracy by leading the united states into world war i. i'll turn it over to you and you can tell us all about it. >> thank you all for coming. what a great day it is after this past week, i've got to say the weather is really risk. so i want to talk about how we got into the war in march and april of 1917 and in order to do that, i think i've got to talk about democracy a little bit. democracy is a question that americans have been dealing with since at least 1776ing and in the spring of 1917 i would argue this question really came into really sharp focus, but first, let's -- let them just set the stage a littl
he will be taking leave this fall to teach at princeton journalism. he lives in baltimore with his wife who is also a journalist. well in moscow he became interested in the year 1917 the year that the united states entered the war and the russians left the war. he wrote about the 1917 year and how it changed the world as well as how it changed world war i. he's going to talk about woodrow wilson and how he was going to make the world safe for democracy by leading the united states into world...
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Sep 2, 2018
09/18
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associate justice justice for the court born in the bronx.e [applause]rinceton she hurt her ba from princeton , birthday pen her jv from yale law school. 199 and in 1981 present george h toe view bush nominated her to the district court of new york in 1897 president bill clinton nominated her to the u.s. courtd of appeals for the second her circuit and then president barack obama president barack obama nominated her to the supreme court. [applause], may 26, 2009 she was confirmed0. august 82009 becoming the first latina on the high court. [applause]hor, >> and a best-selling author my beloved world among others. but justice you have something remarkable. how many years has this been 18 going on? >> eighteen? >> 18 years. this is a long time. years >> we have never had on the main stage able that was written by a a latino. but because you kids our -- are. powerful. tha but it is you that god is on the main stage. but that really is we know abou- the power of books but all ofu i the things that you could do and people asking you to write y fo, why did you write for young people? mac with respec
associate justice justice for the court born in the bronx.e [applause]rinceton she hurt her ba from princeton , birthday pen her jv from yale law school. 199 and in 1981 present george h toe view bush nominated her to the district court of new york in 1897 president bill clinton nominated her to the u.s. courtd of appeals for the second her circuit and then president barack obama president barack obama nominated her to the supreme court. [applause], may 26, 2009 she was confirmed0. august 82009...
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Sep 10, 2018
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princeton is number one for the eighth straight year. harvard ranked second.he university of chicago and the massachusetts institute of technology tied for third. stanford is seventh. >> i want to check out the methodology. >> this is offensive to kristen. >>> a new report ranks science as the most valuable major right now. you can look forward to an average annual salary of $109,000. zoology is number two, followed by nuclear engineering, health and medical preparatory, and applied mathematics is fifth. 162 majors are based on salary, unemployment rate, and whether a career needed a post graduate degree. >>> a family searching for answers while mourning the loss of a loved one. >> this is something that happened to a man that was in his last days. >> his wedding ring disappeared while he was in the hospital. now a reward is being offered to track it down. >>> on "abc7 news" at 5:00, bay gang februamembers hacking terminals netting them almost $1 million. >>> residents at millennium tower playing the waiting game event... ...and get the brands you want... chec
princeton is number one for the eighth straight year. harvard ranked second.he university of chicago and the massachusetts institute of technology tied for third. stanford is seventh. >> i want to check out the methodology. >> this is offensive to kristen. >>> a new report ranks science as the most valuable major right now. you can look forward to an average annual salary of $109,000. zoology is number two, followed by nuclear engineering, health and medical preparatory,...
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Sep 30, 2018
09/18
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grand nephew wrote an interesting manifesto in which he summoned all the graduates of harvard, yale, princeton and the rest to rally -- >> to balcony in philadelphia. >> well, they're going to get to that balcony, and so you have this remarkable response of hundreds of thousands of people -- not all, of course, the graduates, but influence by that culture. and the tickets in the balcony were distributed at something like a 9:1 ratio in favor of what were called orrin root's boys. and the death of the campaign manager, the convention manager -- some think mysteriously, too profishesly, he had been in fine health, but he was a taft man. and when he dropped dead, a wendell willkie advocate, sam pryor, who went on to be vice president of pan-american, became the manager of the convention. and the keys of the convention, as h.l. mencken said, were in that man's pockets. and so willkie seizes on the fifth ballot -- >> we are now down, david, to five minutes. [laughter] so he loses the election. >> he does lose the election. and in losing the election, he makes a speech that was extraordinary on armi
grand nephew wrote an interesting manifesto in which he summoned all the graduates of harvard, yale, princeton and the rest to rally -- >> to balcony in philadelphia. >> well, they're going to get to that balcony, and so you have this remarkable response of hundreds of thousands of people -- not all, of course, the graduates, but influence by that culture. and the tickets in the balcony were distributed at something like a 9:1 ratio in favor of what were called orrin root's boys....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 3, 2018
09/18
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and they had a number of interns in our meeting and i chatted with one of them who is a princeton student, she was about to go back, but she said my internship has been awesome and i've been tagging around with the government outreach team and learning how this company is interacting with the city. it occurred to me, how could would it to be a get an internship at airbnb and you were to help legacy businesses? i think we should look into how could we facilitate these companies helping at a level making donations to san francisco city and county, and you know, all the p.r. benefits that come from that. especially with our program which is really, i think, shaping up, especially as we're finishing our branding program and start to roll that out. it will become a lot more visible. i know that the legacy business is grateful for the support they receive getting through the process. if nothing else, there is the gratification of documented your history which you've never taken the time to do. not only for yourselves but for your children and grandchildren. there is nothing but feel-good out of
and they had a number of interns in our meeting and i chatted with one of them who is a princeton student, she was about to go back, but she said my internship has been awesome and i've been tagging around with the government outreach team and learning how this company is interacting with the city. it occurred to me, how could would it to be a get an internship at airbnb and you were to help legacy businesses? i think we should look into how could we facilitate these companies helping at a...
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Sep 23, 2018
09/18
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is a common critique of him who grew up in a privileged family in baltimore and went to princeton and harvard and was an episcopal priest. that might explain something. according to that, what you just said, all of the social engineering in the world would not get rid of and be -- and the and despite. is that we were saying? >> they're trying to change human nature. >> change human nature? [laughter] good luck. that is a common critique of him. he would say, and many others, give it a shot. people -- we used to do this more. people's better nature, higher angels. when somebody said you have what i don't and i hate you. somebody would say, in my case, gary, do would say, not be greedy. i still was but i did not say it. [laughter] do not be envious. not covet the neighbor house, wife, or donkey. or mercedes-benz. [laughter] change and the moral say you have this source of antisocial tendencies where you hate other people. that is wrong. we are not supposed to hate other people. you are not supposed to hate anybody . love other people. understand them. and set of envy, hatred, violence.
is a common critique of him who grew up in a privileged family in baltimore and went to princeton and harvard and was an episcopal priest. that might explain something. according to that, what you just said, all of the social engineering in the world would not get rid of and be -- and the and despite. is that we were saying? >> they're trying to change human nature. >> change human nature? [laughter] good luck. that is a common critique of him. he would say, and many others, give it...
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Sep 29, 2018
09/18
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so when a princeton economist comes up. and he did this study. he found that 94 percent of the net new jobs of the jobs that were created were in these alternative work arrangements. so the alternative work arrangements. i think it's part of the story. have you worked in this kind of space in the last two weeks the answer is about 10%. it's been that way for a very long time. if they ask them the numbers change. it's not part of how you are paying your bills. as a playstation didn't matter. it's wonderful. these are the questions. what kind of work matters. if you can't pay enough at your regular job and you need an extra job. about half of people under 35. live in this freelance economy. depending on where you are in the world. in society. they are getting full-time jobs at the same time that a lot of people who aren't. a lot of people i know are tenured professors. 70% of higher ed professors are there to pay about two to $3,000 per course. they don't had time to do the research. they're very difficult lives. this is all part of the same system
so when a princeton economist comes up. and he did this study. he found that 94 percent of the net new jobs of the jobs that were created were in these alternative work arrangements. so the alternative work arrangements. i think it's part of the story. have you worked in this kind of space in the last two weeks the answer is about 10%. it's been that way for a very long time. if they ask them the numbers change. it's not part of how you are paying your bills. as a playstation didn't matter....