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Feb 25, 2019
02/19
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KNTV
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cnbc's steve sedgwick is next with details. potluck.his parade of dishes will soon be yours to scrub. and they're not even... yours. new and improved dawn ultra can finish off this buffet. each drop now has even more grease-cleaning power. so you can scrub 50% less, and get done faster. next month, their place! a drop of dawn and grease is gone. everyone wants to be (cthe cadbury bunny because only he brings delicious cadbury creme eggs. while others may keep trying, nobunny knows easter better than cadbury!® that rocking chair would look grahh, new house, eh?e. well, you should definitely see how geico could help you save on homeowners insurance. nice tip. i'll give you two bucks for the chair. two?! that's a victorian antique! all right, how much for the recliner, then? wait wait... how did that get out here? that is definitely not for sale! is this a yard sale? if it's in the yard then it's... for sale. oh, here we go. geico. it's easy to switch and save on homeowners and renters insurance. beauty editors have tried everything. in se
cnbc's steve sedgwick is next with details. potluck.his parade of dishes will soon be yours to scrub. and they're not even... yours. new and improved dawn ultra can finish off this buffet. each drop now has even more grease-cleaning power. so you can scrub 50% less, and get done faster. next month, their place! a drop of dawn and grease is gone. everyone wants to be (cthe cadbury bunny because only he brings delicious cadbury creme eggs. while others may keep trying, nobunny knows easter better...
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Feb 24, 2019
02/19
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KPIX
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ck seporter: sedgwick street in chicago's old town neighborhood appears to divide two worlds. a subsidized housing complex, called marshall field garden, home to mostly black residents. and to the east, condos and million-dollar homes, where mostly white residents live. adell thomas has lived in the housing complex for decades. we're talking about this side of the street, that side of the street, but what does that really mean? >> it's segregation is what it is. they live over there in their own world. we're over here in our own hrld. >> i've heard people saying, "oh, i don't like my kids to walk down sedgwick street." >> reporter: charlie branda lives on the east side but often boked across the way to the west. >> people over here all seemed to be really friendly with each other, and they were hugging each other and, like, everybody was everybody's aunt. >> reporter: after a deadly shooting here in 2013, charlie decided this community needed unity. >> the theme is you make this place beautiful. >> reporter: so she enlisted well and built a bridge with art. >> start cutting ou
ck seporter: sedgwick street in chicago's old town neighborhood appears to divide two worlds. a subsidized housing complex, called marshall field garden, home to mostly black residents. and to the east, condos and million-dollar homes, where mostly white residents live. adell thomas has lived in the housing complex for decades. we're talking about this side of the street, that side of the street, but what does that really mean? >> it's segregation is what it is. they live over there in...
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Feb 11, 2019
02/19
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KNTV
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cnbc's steve sedgwick has the details for thus morning. >> happy monday, frances.s in context. the u.s. markets have been on a tear since christmas eve. we're still up 15% on the dow since christmas eve. but having said that, we stalled last week. in fact, we came off a little bit on friday. the dow's down .5%, 121 points. the s&p down .6%. it's the juul concerns yet again. it's the shutdown fears and concerns over china trade wars with makings kicking off yet again this week. americans, you're being sluggish filing your tax returns. the number of individual t week dropped more than 12% on last year's, probably because you're not getting big checks back in terms of rebate. the average refund is in the region of $1865, an 8.4% drop on the $2035 you got in the same period last year. happy monday, frances and philip. >> right? it's a big deal. >> it is, steve. thank you so much. >>> bill's tracking a winter storm. and the first look at will smith as the genie in "aladdin" will leave fans wishing for more. you're watching "early today." ♪ bywith quality ingredients lik
cnbc's steve sedgwick has the details for thus morning. >> happy monday, frances.s in context. the u.s. markets have been on a tear since christmas eve. we're still up 15% on the dow since christmas eve. but having said that, we stalled last week. in fact, we came off a little bit on friday. the dow's down .5%, 121 points. the s&p down .6%. it's the juul concerns yet again. it's the shutdown fears and concerns over china trade wars with makings kicking off yet again this week....
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Feb 10, 2019
02/19
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CSPAN3
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it unhinges -- it unhinges sedgwick. this is the part of the battlefield, also, where oliver wendell holmes, robert gould shaw are going to be wounded. some celebrities are found in this part of the battlefield, as well. it is interesting to note, could hope have just portrayed artillery hell? yes. but what does he do instead? he includes yet another, not totally futile, but a very desperate charge made by union soldiers, trying to convey, i would argue, not quite anti-war, but it almost suggests an anti-war sentiment. someone who is uncomfortable, certainly, with combat and seeking to express the repulsiveness of battle. the unnatural transformation of landscapes he loved and admired so much. the final element i want us to think about is, again, how photographs influence the paintings. once again, i have given you all a close-up. i apologize for going back and forth. that scene blown up is this scene right here. if you're at the painting on the battlefield because the pain is so large, it reads relatively clearly. on a
it unhinges -- it unhinges sedgwick. this is the part of the battlefield, also, where oliver wendell holmes, robert gould shaw are going to be wounded. some celebrities are found in this part of the battlefield, as well. it is interesting to note, could hope have just portrayed artillery hell? yes. but what does he do instead? he includes yet another, not totally futile, but a very desperate charge made by union soldiers, trying to convey, i would argue, not quite anti-war, but it almost...
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Feb 3, 2019
02/19
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CSPAN3
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in the near theride ford upper bridge, and they are going majorordered to support general john sedgwick's division , but at the very last minute, they are rerouted and told instead to support the assault on saints sunken road. so the regiment will fall into of william flank , andh's division throughout the course of the battle, they will be positioned somewhere in this area. they will be looking over the action that is occurring in the sunken road. they will be bombarded by attila rioux over the course of the 17th, but they themselves will not be directly engaged in combat. detached froms the regiments. we do not know quite where he is on the battlefield. our a suction is probably spending time in the -- with the vermont brigade -- our assumption is he is probably spending time with the vermont brigade. this area is a subject of the majority of his antietam paintings. .o we have to wonder hope himself does not really right of what he sees or experiences, but what did other members of the vermont brigade see and experience? well, we have quotes. one member of the second vermont wrote in ve
in the near theride ford upper bridge, and they are going majorordered to support general john sedgwick's division , but at the very last minute, they are rerouted and told instead to support the assault on saints sunken road. so the regiment will fall into of william flank , andh's division throughout the course of the battle, they will be positioned somewhere in this area. they will be looking over the action that is occurring in the sunken road. they will be bombarded by attila rioux over...
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. >> bottom line is i want the people of sedgwick county and the united states and the world to knowkiller. i'm going to pay for it. life sentence. >> after i hung up the phone, i remember thinking, i've just talked to a man who has no soul. >> reporter: facing overwhelming evidence of his crimes, rader pleaded guilty. >> those plea hearings are usually 10, 12 minutes. this one turned into about an hour and a half. >> reporter: with the courtroom transfixed in horror, rader recounted the agonizing details of every murder. >> i did mrs. otero. i had never strangled anyone before. so i really didn't know how much pressure you had to put on a person or how long it would take. mrs. vian, i tied her up and put a bag over her head and strangled her -- >> here is this man standing up in court in what i imagine was his church suit, recounting the murders of his neighbors one by one by one. >> he makes himself sound like he's mr. good guy. he says, i got mr. otero a pillow. before i strangled mr. otero. >> tried to make mr. otero as comfortable as i could. apparently he had a cracked rib from
. >> bottom line is i want the people of sedgwick county and the united states and the world to knowkiller. i'm going to pay for it. life sentence. >> after i hung up the phone, i remember thinking, i've just talked to a man who has no soul. >> reporter: facing overwhelming evidence of his crimes, rader pleaded guilty. >> those plea hearings are usually 10, 12 minutes. this one turned into about an hour and a half. >> reporter: with the courtroom transfixed in...
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and the operator says, will you accept a collect call from the sedgwick county detention facility?t with you. >> sure. >> i said, there are questions that i want to ask you, and he said, go ahead. >> when did you first know that you had a problem? i was always curious when he knew that he was going to become something very bad in life? >> this was a building thing. that started many, many years ago. >> can you pinpoint when you knew that there was a problem coming? >> well i would say probably even when i was in grade school i started having problems. >> and what kind of problems were those? >> oh, sexual fantasies. mine was probably just a little bit weirder than other people. >> he said by the time i was in. apt was even before he startedk to kill was his desire to be a serial killer at a time when that phrase wasn't even in use.. he was reading "true dective" magaziatths weho s then became role models for him. he incorporated serial murder into his fantasy life. >> he talked about the hunt. >> the hunt for that object, it was more of a high i guess than it was actually them. >>
and the operator says, will you accept a collect call from the sedgwick county detention facility?t with you. >> sure. >> i said, there are questions that i want to ask you, and he said, go ahead. >> when did you first know that you had a problem? i was always curious when he knew that he was going to become something very bad in life? >> this was a building thing. that started many, many years ago. >> can you pinpoint when you knew that there was a problem coming?...
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Feb 20, 2019
02/19
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KQED
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experimental films and videos, and subverting the hollywood "screen test" byki subjects, including edie sedgwicks most famous muse, to do absolutely nothing, creating a new kind of visual portrait. and he pioneered an idea that would become very familiar today: documenting life momen by moment. claire henry is the assistant curator of the andy warhol film project also at the whitney. >> he started to film people at we would film with our iphones. so, his friends, people he worked wisth, his colleagues, paramours, all of these people in his circles. >> brown: you're seeing his early films as our version of social media? >> absolutely, yeah, and they function in that way, the very earliest ones. he did document everything, and not just on , fit also on polaroids, on still photograp, audio tapes. he was a mass collector and an amasser of information and stuff. brown: in 1968, valerie solanas, a writer and radical feminist activist, shot and nearly killed warhol. many critics saw warhol's artistic influence wane in the '70s and '80s wk that followed: the portraits, often commissioned, of frien, star
experimental films and videos, and subverting the hollywood "screen test" byki subjects, including edie sedgwicks most famous muse, to do absolutely nothing, creating a new kind of visual portrait. and he pioneered an idea that would become very familiar today: documenting life momen by moment. claire henry is the assistant curator of the andy warhol film project also at the whitney. >> he started to film people at we would film with our iphones. so, his friends, people he...