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Mar 27, 2024
03/24
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PRESSTV
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and i think that kind of story was the only kind of story that we could launch i do think like the irish times or independent had published that story, i think meal martin would have been in serious serious danger. we kind of, you know, we kind of were hurt a little bit by the fact that you know people are going who the fuck are the ditch, like you know, since then, yeah, we kind of we just kept on at it and um, kind of started off maybe story week or so, and then we kind of ramped it up a we bit, and now paulie's come on board the last half year or so like, so hopefully only... bigger and better things, that's it, then speaking yourself, paulie, i mean, why, why is this work important? the short answer is that um, there was a lack of stories in the irish media identifying wrong doing on the part of people in positions of power and authority, right, and i was quite struck by you, how successful the guys had been, just the two of them, um, at you, holding people to account, identifying wrong doing, in opposition to what the irish media, for the most part does and uh has historically done
and i think that kind of story was the only kind of story that we could launch i do think like the irish times or independent had published that story, i think meal martin would have been in serious serious danger. we kind of, you know, we kind of were hurt a little bit by the fact that you know people are going who the fuck are the ditch, like you know, since then, yeah, we kind of we just kept on at it and um, kind of started off maybe story week or so, and then we kind of ramped it up a we...
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Mar 17, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN3
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and actually brittney's story is really the story of one woman on trial. but the other two stories, the india story is an entire gang taking on abusive men. and in syria, it's a it's it's the story of an entire militia. so the book progressively gets to bigger and bigger groups of women fighting in different ways. yeah, love that. and i think that was one thing is that, you know, this book may sound heavy, but i didn't find it that heavy. maybe the britney story was a little heavy. but then as you keep reading, you, you know, you're finding chuck the this is a this is a person who was part of ypg militia. i mean, she said she used the word joy in kind of taking action against against isis and killing isis fighters. there's another character, angourie person in india who really does. people are unfair taking her land away and she fights back and i found it uplifting and at times cathartic. did you how did you how did did you find it cathartic? i know you talked about your own trauma. how did you kind of deal with your own trauma in writing this book? yeah.
and actually brittney's story is really the story of one woman on trial. but the other two stories, the india story is an entire gang taking on abusive men. and in syria, it's a it's it's the story of an entire militia. so the book progressively gets to bigger and bigger groups of women fighting in different ways. yeah, love that. and i think that was one thing is that, you know, this book may sound heavy, but i didn't find it that heavy. maybe the britney story was a little heavy. but then as...
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Mar 28, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN2
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it's a story of resistance. it's a story of reunion. the story a family and coming a family is broken apart by violence. families brought together through love and persistence. and i just. yes. wondering about that. thanks. but i and said that so yourself. but i guess if you just kind of give us a concluding thought like, when do you would you put your you close your laptop at night and when you thought about what this project has meant to and to the families, what is it that comes mind? what what do you what do you when you're going to go on to another project at some point. but i'm just saying what what has this meant to you? i'm i think it's important for these folks and these folks who are long gone to be seen and and to be recognized and to be acknowledged. and i think that it's important us as americans, is to understand that this is our history. i think the work that i do, i'm from a historian and that you know, i'm very engaged with the but i'm engaged with the past because i'm really interested in how we live with this history
it's a story of resistance. it's a story of reunion. the story a family and coming a family is broken apart by violence. families brought together through love and persistence. and i just. yes. wondering about that. thanks. but i and said that so yourself. but i guess if you just kind of give us a concluding thought like, when do you would you put your you close your laptop at night and when you thought about what this project has meant to and to the families, what is it that comes mind? what...
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Mar 31, 2024
03/24
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ESPRESO
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, do you have any family stories about him?irst of all, it must be said that a lot of information was hidden and kept secret, because, as i said, sheptytskyi was not a patron, he was... very friendly to novakivskyi to such an extent, that is , they were patronizing, and so much so that when novakivsky was gone, that ptytsky actually adopted his children, well, and it was simply impossible for the soviet authorities, and that's why i think that he hid a large amount of information precisely so that he could not, well, let's say, protect us children there. and who grew up in this family, ugh, and was hidden by someone, let's say, yours, your parents, or your parents' parents, eh, well, well , we knew, well, about who the great-grandfather was, we knew, because i i grew up among the paintings of my grandmother, but, well, it is also necessary to realize that the museum is a memorial, it was created by my grandfather, with a very interesting story. because he first wrote to unesco and convinced unesco that they should make a year o
, do you have any family stories about him?irst of all, it must be said that a lot of information was hidden and kept secret, because, as i said, sheptytskyi was not a patron, he was... very friendly to novakivskyi to such an extent, that is , they were patronizing, and so much so that when novakivsky was gone, that ptytsky actually adopted his children, well, and it was simply impossible for the soviet authorities, and that's why i think that he hid a large amount of information precisely so...
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Mar 23, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN2
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it's a great story. it's a story told in other books.y story is abouteed to keep ane on all this and in researching this and detroit's role, i was reading up on the war plants, big and small, around detroit. my grandpa and dorothy melton and james emerson melton worked in several of these plants. my grandma ran a drill press and inevitably this research led me to a place called will run. anybody ever heard of it? a few. yup. it was a big deal back then. a few miles west of where i grew up, a big open farm field in ypsilanti, michigan, 1940. henry and edsel ford. henry, the original henry ford, now in his seventies and pretty much losing it by this point. and his son edsel in early 1940 140, they began building a giant factory there to make. it would have an assembly line. well, let me show you a picture of it, sir. there it is. it would have an assembly ne le long, 30,000 people would andfather.d briefly my it's one of the many production mirawod war two. these are b20 four bombers, four engine bombers that were kind of the workhorse of
it's a great story. it's a story told in other books.y story is abouteed to keep ane on all this and in researching this and detroit's role, i was reading up on the war plants, big and small, around detroit. my grandpa and dorothy melton and james emerson melton worked in several of these plants. my grandma ran a drill press and inevitably this research led me to a place called will run. anybody ever heard of it? a few. yup. it was a big deal back then. a few miles west of where i grew up, a...
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Mar 11, 2024
03/24
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cnn's rafael romo has the story >> i have known carlock siento since 2014. cnn profile her story as part of cnn's freedom project, which seeks to raise awareness about modern day slavery, has synthesis. she's very careful about who she gives her testimony to and how and when she does it. >> so she >> was very surprised. she told me when she found out on saturday that she was in voluntarily put in the middle of a social media storm. this storm was prompted by what appears to be the use of her story during the republican response to the state of the union address by an alabama senator katie britt i reached out to cadillac acidic to in mexico city for her reaction. and this is part of what she told me for this one point when i met you years and years ago, you told me that you felt like at the beginning mexican politicians had taken advantage of view by using your story for political purposes. >> do you >> feel like that happened once again? here in the united states, see the joy in yes. >> in fact, i hardly ever cooperate with politicians because it seems to me
cnn's rafael romo has the story >> i have known carlock siento since 2014. cnn profile her story as part of cnn's freedom project, which seeks to raise awareness about modern day slavery, has synthesis. she's very careful about who she gives her testimony to and how and when she does it. >> so she >> was very surprised. she told me when she found out on saturday that she was in voluntarily put in the middle of a social media storm. this storm was prompted by what appears to be...
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Mar 30, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN2
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and so that is part the story that i endeavored to tell with the sisterhood following, the stories of the women who had served our intelligence gathering during world war two. some of the women who stayed on after the war we thought we were going to close down our intelligence agencies after world war two. but lo and behold, we're now in the cold war. we need to ramp it up. we need to new agencies, a new the national security agency, the intelligence agency, you know, all of these agencies that we have to really build our ability to be the world leader and gathering and intelligence and analysis so that we are never again surprised as we were at pearl harbor. so what will happen after the war is that women will fight to stay included in intelligence gathering and national, despite the fact that these big bureaucratic institutions now being created where they are very bureaucracies competing with each other for money and prestige and the people within them are are competing for the top jobs. right. to be director of the cia or to be a division chief or a station chief running berlin st
and so that is part the story that i endeavored to tell with the sisterhood following, the stories of the women who had served our intelligence gathering during world war two. some of the women who stayed on after the war we thought we were going to close down our intelligence agencies after world war two. but lo and behold, we're now in the cold war. we need to ramp it up. we need to new agencies, a new the national security agency, the intelligence agency, you know, all of these agencies that...
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Mar 11, 2024
03/24
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and if i don't, you my story, these stories are going to die with me. so i was really i felt like that was really important to stay with her. was really i had a question about how these different women related to the use of violence that if you talk a bit more about that, i feel like there's a lot of feminist activism that focuses on highlighting the links between violence and militarized masculinity and right the consequences of war on what for women. but then these women's are using violence in part in self-defense, but also to pursue political goals, it sounds like. so i'm curious how they thought about that and how they thought about the relationship between violence and feminism, or even if they even describeyeah. so like both brittney and gloria, our mothers and have really nurturing sides them too. and, you know, we of course, we have this clichÉ of women as the nurturers and the carers and the mothers and the ones who are thinking aboutgenerations and all of that. and all of that. true. and i think it's important to also look at the other parts
and if i don't, you my story, these stories are going to die with me. so i was really i felt like that was really important to stay with her. was really i had a question about how these different women related to the use of violence that if you talk a bit more about that, i feel like there's a lot of feminist activism that focuses on highlighting the links between violence and militarized masculinity and right the consequences of war on what for women. but then these women's are using violence...
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Mar 20, 2024
03/24
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BBCNEWS
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stories.their stories. tell me how eo - le share their stories. tell me how peeple can _ share their stories. tell me how people can watch _ share their stories. tell me how people can watch it, _ share their stories. tell me how people can watch it, it - share their stories. tell me how people can watch it, it is - share their stories. tell me how people can watch it, it is at - share their stories. tell me how people can watch it, it is at the | people can watch it, it is at the bfi flare film festival, tell us where people can go and sit. bfi flare is an _ where people can go and sit. bfi flare is an internationally recognised lgbt+ film festival, it has been around for many years and i've been lucky enough to have other films there. it has its premiere tonight and i hope people can go and see it and learn more about it. it is very special for us all to be a. what is next? there is always something next?— what is next? there is always something next? what is next? there is always somethin:
stories.their stories. tell me how eo - le share their stories. tell me how peeple can _ share their stories. tell me how people can watch _ share their stories. tell me how people can watch it, _ share their stories. tell me how people can watch it, it - share their stories. tell me how people can watch it, it is - share their stories. tell me how people can watch it, it is at - share their stories. tell me how people can watch it, it is at the | people can watch it, it is at the bfi flare...
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Mar 31, 2024
03/24
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ESPRESO
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angel of death, about the river styx, he has a lot of insight into reflections, and he also has such a storyhat what is the end is the beginning, and it is precisely this transition that is important for for this beginning, he had a different energy, a different intensity, and it is significant that he dressed the angel of death not just in the usual wings. and he gave him hutsul clothes, if actually just hutsul clothing, which flutters like wings behind, behind this angel, and as if it gives honor to the special feature, because angels do not wear clothes, and hutsul clothes are even more so, but this is as such a certain connection the connection between respect for this dignity, which this warrior has in himself. and this is dignity, as a connection with the roots for which you stood, and then these are the roots is in transition, and it is being built further, being built into the future life, both of the one who died, and of the following generations. listen, this means that he had a very good understanding of world culture and art, the karakyu academy of arts gave him this education, o
angel of death, about the river styx, he has a lot of insight into reflections, and he also has such a storyhat what is the end is the beginning, and it is precisely this transition that is important for for this beginning, he had a different energy, a different intensity, and it is significant that he dressed the angel of death not just in the usual wings. and he gave him hutsul clothes, if actually just hutsul clothing, which flutters like wings behind, behind this angel, and as if it gives...
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down the stories. that means i'm going to you whether it will be to silence whether it be to the spoken word. i think the fact that you found the fact that you can tell the stories or i love it. i love the fact that you can do the choices. what was act, steel hasn't made a big impact on me. so that was so, you know, one of the, i can say a life changing the incentive in my life for shot. the artificial intelligence seems capable of anything that can write academic papers or to pick the pope wearing a very on pope like down jackets or even compose music. the possibilities of age are simply endless. and that leaves us certain questions. welcome to dw science magazine tomorrow. today the the lease biological time trends was created using free a i software train with the models that tell the.
down the stories. that means i'm going to you whether it will be to silence whether it be to the spoken word. i think the fact that you found the fact that you can tell the stories or i love it. i love the fact that you can do the choices. what was act, steel hasn't made a big impact on me. so that was so, you know, one of the, i can say a life changing the incentive in my life for shot. the artificial intelligence seems capable of anything that can write academic papers or to pick the pope...
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and there's no of that story. but everybody agrees on the lead. gladstone native r this worldwide are cheering on for success. lily gladstone, being nominated for an oscar, you know, she talked and, and black foot and you know, at her award the acceptance speech and it makes us all proud. and it makes us all believe that we're, we're able to get there, you know, and uplift each other. that's why a native artist, so looking beyond killers of the flower moon, to a brighter future, were, indigenous narratives are not bound by the stories of the past. the forget the world wish native made story telling today can be anything and everything. it can be big bunch of fantasy like marvel movie for wagner off from our director type of what do you do? you think flash sale it can be a low budget syfy like night graders from pre meetings. director done a split. are you ready to give yourself to your country completely? which re imagines the residential school system as a futuristic distributor. it can be hor, like blood quantum
and there's no of that story. but everybody agrees on the lead. gladstone native r this worldwide are cheering on for success. lily gladstone, being nominated for an oscar, you know, she talked and, and black foot and you know, at her award the acceptance speech and it makes us all proud. and it makes us all believe that we're, we're able to get there, you know, and uplift each other. that's why a native artist, so looking beyond killers of the flower moon, to a brighter future, were,...
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Mar 15, 2024
03/24
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BBCNEWS
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it was a story. it wasn't a big news story as far as i'm concerned.mateur photographer, not a professional photographer, and it was a joyful family photo. i've done it myself with family photos, do a little bit of alteration. but what has been taken up by the media, and i watch the bbc a lot, and certainly the bbc all day monday, to have the the lead article with a forensic dissection of that photograph, looking at every aspect of it, to me, was was over the top when there so many more important things going on around the world. james, the story took up eight minutes, pretty much, of all three main bbc bulletins on monday, nearly a third of the air time. wasn't that excessive? i don't think it was. and i think we've seen from your introduction that the picture was already a story on sunday because of the decision by the princess of wales to release it, as you say, to mark mother's day. so it was already a big story and as david said, a heart—warming one. so the picture had had prominence and had been...they had made the decision to release it. so when
it was a story. it wasn't a big news story as far as i'm concerned.mateur photographer, not a professional photographer, and it was a joyful family photo. i've done it myself with family photos, do a little bit of alteration. but what has been taken up by the media, and i watch the bbc a lot, and certainly the bbc all day monday, to have the the lead article with a forensic dissection of that photograph, looking at every aspect of it, to me, was was over the top when there so many more...
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the and digital stories are nothing new. and hollywood from the start american directors were pointing their cameras and native people from the origins of american cinema. and it's just, people were not at the margins of the screen. they were at the center 3 world war, one in the silent era. there was a real, a 100 and an audience, a see what they called indian drama. story was the silent movies were mixed back. some propagating clearly racist stereotypes, others depicting more positive and complex indigenous stories. you had images of villains and noble indians. you had india, white relationships or marriages that worked out. you had those that fell apart. and you also had mixed images of what they referred to as, quote of the evil half breed, but also the noble half rate. anyway, native stars like james young, dear, an empty coke actor, writer and director involved in the production of more than a $150.00 silent films. many with his wife, lilian, st. see, or, or red wing. they were the 1st native american hollywood power c
the and digital stories are nothing new. and hollywood from the start american directors were pointing their cameras and native people from the origins of american cinema. and it's just, people were not at the margins of the screen. they were at the center 3 world war, one in the silent era. there was a real, a 100 and an audience, a see what they called indian drama. story was the silent movies were mixed back. some propagating clearly racist stereotypes, others depicting more positive and...
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are stories. it's written by western sources. other words, you're not allowed to be on youtube. and they're all saying roughly the same thing at the situation for ukraine is putting it mildly, not good andre, your take on that. i'm praying was the war one and scobee and the contact references and the all the tvs are from the get go starting from the 24th of february of 2022 when the restaurant actually forces and the territorial to your brain and on the dunbar, republics, or for middle almost operational initiative on the front of me. but of course good sir. how can i show strategic matters which do not make march again to the media? are which lots to concentrate on their tax to buy a new firm, you know, blowing the banks here and they're blowing the some that bought $3.00 a year. so the more my garage door to brand, it was over there. it was just a matter of how far off from forces will go and the terms of the surrender for the spring. sorry, and it's for the a. it's just a matter of if your brai
are stories. it's written by western sources. other words, you're not allowed to be on youtube. and they're all saying roughly the same thing at the situation for ukraine is putting it mildly, not good andre, your take on that. i'm praying was the war one and scobee and the contact references and the all the tvs are from the get go starting from the 24th of february of 2022 when the restaurant actually forces and the territorial to your brain and on the dunbar, republics, or for middle almost...
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Mar 30, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN3
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it's a human story about. the collision of two opposing views about, the proper human to natural world that occurred on this continent, when the first europeans arrived and, met the people who had already been here for tens of thousands of years. and it's also a human story about our nations relations ship with those people who have inhabited this land the longest. at the center of that is. well, a profound tragedy. how a magnificent species that once numbered in uncountable numbers, perhaps 50 to 60 million, was systematically relentlessly taken to the brink of extinction from uncountable to actually easily countable by the end of the 1800s, there were. perhaps 500 left scattered, different places. and each of them endangered in their own right. and about the terrible consequences that followed that, it's actually a triple it's obviously a tragedy for the buffalo it was tragedy for the great plains ecosystem and. it was a most profoundly a tragedy for the native people who had coexisted with them for so long
it's a human story about. the collision of two opposing views about, the proper human to natural world that occurred on this continent, when the first europeans arrived and, met the people who had already been here for tens of thousands of years. and it's also a human story about our nations relations ship with those people who have inhabited this land the longest. at the center of that is. well, a profound tragedy. how a magnificent species that once numbered in uncountable numbers, perhaps 50...
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now, indigent still makers are beginning to tell their own stories. in hollywood and around the world the the little gladstone one, the best actress building to for killers of the flower moon. she spoke in blackfoot for native tongue, phoenix so so it's miss an incomplete document that those 6 it get to be new. got it took hollywood nearly a century to finally show indigenous people on screen. free from stereotypes include shays, but long before a little gladstone stripes, native stars were making movies. the and digital stories are nothing new and hollywood from the start american directors were pointing their cameras a native people from the origins of american cinema. indigenous people culls. we're not at the margins of the screen. they were at the center 3 world war, one in the silent era. there was a real, a 100 and an audience, a see what they called indian drama. story was the silent movies were mixed bag, some propagating clearly racist stereotypes. others depicting more positive and complex indigenous stories. you had images of villains and n
now, indigent still makers are beginning to tell their own stories. in hollywood and around the world the the little gladstone one, the best actress building to for killers of the flower moon. she spoke in blackfoot for native tongue, phoenix so so it's miss an incomplete document that those 6 it get to be new. got it took hollywood nearly a century to finally show indigenous people on screen. free from stereotypes include shays, but long before a little gladstone stripes, native stars were...
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you paid for example, this story story broke over the weekend and i find it. i found it fascinating. it's reported by a prominent u. s. media outlet, not a russian media outlet, not in a radi and media outlet. this isn't for look at that. there's a headline. it says a russian drone spotted, a ukrainian patriot air defense crew convoy near the front line soon a russian hypersonic missiles streaked down. a fascinating story, you should read it the way it tells how exactly this all came about. now, according to the article, this is what is happening in ukraine's patriot missile launcher system. and apparently that they used it to shoot down the russian missiles. but those patriot systems that are so important, obviously, they're being taken out. they're being picked them out now by russians like what was reported in this piece. in fact, like this here, watch this. see that right there? yeah. according to forbes, this is incredibly important because ukraine doesn't have many patriot launchers left in the u. s. will not be sending more any time soon. and it's not j
you paid for example, this story story broke over the weekend and i find it. i found it fascinating. it's reported by a prominent u. s. media outlet, not a russian media outlet, not in a radi and media outlet. this isn't for look at that. there's a headline. it says a russian drone spotted, a ukrainian patriot air defense crew convoy near the front line soon a russian hypersonic missiles streaked down. a fascinating story, you should read it the way it tells how exactly this all came about....
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so i want to start with a story for you. imagine that a bank robber goes into a bank and then on his way in, he shoots a guard right. and then he kills several of the tellers when he's inside the back. even rough up some of the customers who are there. and he's able to get away from his bank wouldn't know. he ends in millions of dollars, but somehow on the way out when he's trying to run out the door to get away. he happens to trample a little old lady who just happen to be, you know, crossing the sidewalk when he was leaving the back to do you have this picture? you have this picture in your head, is the story in your mind. perfect. now imagine this, the next day when the story is reported in the newspaper, the article only focuses on the fact that this man who rob the bank trampled a little old lady crossing the sidewalk. no mention of the highest, no mention of what he did inside the bank. no mention of the people who died inside the bank. it's almost as if it didn't happen. it kind of sounds ridiculous, right? who would
so i want to start with a story for you. imagine that a bank robber goes into a bank and then on his way in, he shoots a guard right. and then he kills several of the tellers when he's inside the back. even rough up some of the customers who are there. and he's able to get away from his bank wouldn't know. he ends in millions of dollars, but somehow on the way out when he's trying to run out the door to get away. he happens to trample a little old lady who just happen to be, you know, crossing...
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Mar 20, 2024
03/24
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all of those stories and more coming up at 5:00.>>> still to come, top training stories voted by you on my instagram poll. making a change, what you will notice the next time you buy a pack of chips ahoy cookies. back in two minute s. >>> for the second year in a row, according to the american kennel club, frenchy's beat out labrador retrievers for the top spot on the annual list. labrador retriever second, golden retrievers, german shepherds and poodles. they did not count popular asked breeds like labradoodle's and particles. i will post -- puggles. i will post the others on instagram, think you are voting. >>> chips ahoy is getting upgrade, they are changing the chips, they will be made with more cocoa and madagascar are vanilla extract. the cookie will still look and feel the same, likely will taste a little different and chips a voice said it did not take the change lightly. it said it's been four years developing the recipe. it will be on store shelves next month. >>> are you ready for the madness, st. mary's basketball team is already on their way, a grand sendoff this afterno
all of those stories and more coming up at 5:00.>>> still to come, top training stories voted by you on my instagram poll. making a change, what you will notice the next time you buy a pack of chips ahoy cookies. back in two minute s. >>> for the second year in a row, according to the american kennel club, frenchy's beat out labrador retrievers for the top spot on the annual list. labrador retriever second, golden retrievers, german shepherds and poodles. they did not count...
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and he asked blake, can i tell this story? and when they had concerns of like, well, you know, like, what's the story going to be like? how are you going to pick the islands? how are you going to pay to pet the? the sisters? how are you going to pick the family in the tribe? i think he very much listen to their concerns. no stage consultants let square says that you to completely change a key scene. for ernest visits molly at home and there's a storm coming the do you understand about our culture? he said, for example, when i was a young kid or 5 of 6, i'd be running around my house and my grandma would be there and. and then one day was running around, she goes, stop it, stop it sits, sits still. so there's a storm coming and she said, sit and be quiet and let the blessing of the strong the content is giving us. but it wash over us. and we had to sit and let the storm pass and relish actually appreciate. appreciate the blessing of nature. storm is powerful. so we need to be quiet for a while. the discuss lacrosse, that's for
and he asked blake, can i tell this story? and when they had concerns of like, well, you know, like, what's the story going to be like? how are you going to pick the islands? how are you going to pay to pet the? the sisters? how are you going to pick the family in the tribe? i think he very much listen to their concerns. no stage consultants let square says that you to completely change a key scene. for ernest visits molly at home and there's a storm coming the do you understand about our...
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57
Mar 30, 2024
03/24
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CSPAN3
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eye 57
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i read the stories. i the cumnock valley memorial association museum, which is a repository of some of the great relics of that era. and so that, too, has fascinated me for decades. so that's really how i got into that. in fact, in memory and myth, i look at this story from perspectives that of the english colonists and the native americans, and i followed the story. 1704 down to the present day and fact native americans been embraced for hundreds years from their role in the story yes the colonists lost the battle. the natives. had one. but for the next three centuries, until very recent time, the colonists really won the battle of deerfield they won the historical memory. they succeeded in erasing the role of native americans in what happened. so i hope in my book to out and resist the cultural and the stereotypes of the native american role in the deerfield. founded in 1675, deerfield was one of the first new england settlements. it sprouted up as a farming village. it was not wealthy. its had little
i read the stories. i the cumnock valley memorial association museum, which is a repository of some of the great relics of that era. and so that, too, has fascinated me for decades. so that's really how i got into that. in fact, in memory and myth, i look at this story from perspectives that of the english colonists and the native americans, and i followed the story. 1704 down to the present day and fact native americans been embraced for hundreds years from their role in the story yes the...
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down the stories. that means i'm going to you whether it will be to silence. whether it be to the spoken word, i think in the fact that you found the fact that you can tell the stories. i love it. i love the fact that you can do this. choices. what was act, steel hasn't made a big impact on me. so that was so, you know, one of the, i can say a life changing the incentive in my life for shot. the clean energy and cutting with a 2 big challenges facing us today. luckily, we don't need to look far to find some pretty smart solutions. so welcome to go off, we go, i and sandra at the home. so tween of you joining do from complex right here in uganda. thank to sandra. yes. sometimes it, since the difficult to fix all the problems facing i environments what we want to show you how every little bits of progress helps. i am.
down the stories. that means i'm going to you whether it will be to silence. whether it be to the spoken word, i think in the fact that you found the fact that you can tell the stories. i love it. i love the fact that you can do this. choices. what was act, steel hasn't made a big impact on me. so that was so, you know, one of the, i can say a life changing the incentive in my life for shot. the clean energy and cutting with a 2 big challenges facing us today. luckily, we don't need to look far...
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17
Mar 12, 2024
03/24
by
ESPRESO
tv
eye 17
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pavle, let's start with this story, which began to unfold before our eyes on march 12, when fighters of the russian... volunteer battalion, corps, or rather, the legion of freedom of russia, together with the siberia battalion, entered the territory of the russian the federation, volunteers later reported that they had taken full control of tyotkino, this is in the kursk region, next to the sumy region, the deputy commander of the legion of freedom of russia, maksimilian andronikov, known as caesar, announced in an address to the russians that the rebels intend to interfere. to usurp power in the country in the future, let's listen to a small fragment of caesar. we are going to free you from poverty, poverty and fear, to free you from the dictatorship of the terrorist organization that seized power. give your children a normal, civilized future, without sanctions, without repression, without elections, without choices and without talking about important things, but with important values. and most importantly - without war. mr. pavle, do such raids by russian, i emphasize, russian vol
pavle, let's start with this story, which began to unfold before our eyes on march 12, when fighters of the russian... volunteer battalion, corps, or rather, the legion of freedom of russia, together with the siberia battalion, entered the territory of the russian the federation, volunteers later reported that they had taken full control of tyotkino, this is in the kursk region, next to the sumy region, the deputy commander of the legion of freedom of russia, maksimilian andronikov, known as...
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18
Mar 9, 2024
03/24
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 18
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it's wonderful if people come and hear a story from africa or a story from norway or a story from northrkney. and they think, "i wonder if there are any stories "about the place that i come from." now, we're going to hear from a lot of different people today, friends from near and far. you can decide at the end if this really happened. i the waves were coming up over the harbour. the wind was blowing... and every single time she broke a lump off, a mouse fell out until there was a whole squad of mice. the next day, hare showed up at 0tter's place and 0tter had | prepared a beautiful feast for him. tonight is the last night of the 0rkney storytelling festival and it's the grand finale. so it's the absolute best of the best. applause she had no money left. she had her hair done, she had a nice, new dress. audience laughs the next young man _ had spit on the coals of the fire and the coals flame up... i think stories really unite people. and i think if you have this shared experience and shared cultural heritage, it does make you stronger because...especially if there are values in the sto
it's wonderful if people come and hear a story from africa or a story from norway or a story from northrkney. and they think, "i wonder if there are any stories "about the place that i come from." now, we're going to hear from a lot of different people today, friends from near and far. you can decide at the end if this really happened. i the waves were coming up over the harbour. the wind was blowing... and every single time she broke a lump off, a mouse fell out until there was...
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Mar 13, 2024
03/24
by
1TV
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eye 16
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adore the bezmaki people. where you can meet men these days, then one of my friends started telling a storywas traveling somewhere and met by chance in a hotel with a group of bikers, and the bikers were from all over world, guys who are passionate about motorcycles, with tattoos, beautiful, tall, and that by profession they were mainly plumbers, police officers, these are all quite brutal professions, that is, real ones. yes, they started talking about these men so enthusiastically, and i said, girls, well, you’re already old enough, i got over this aesthetic at the age of 20, but now i’m talking if there’s nothing to talk about with him , if he started talking, cool, wow, and then you started talking to him, and he's a fool, they are like that, and that, well, well, he’s handsome , that’s how you perceive male beauty, i like it, i like people who, i don’t know, they’re beautiful, even if they, i don’t know, have contradictions to all proportions, they will still be beautiful, and if they are not molded by nature according to the canons, they will still be beautiful, they will be even more
adore the bezmaki people. where you can meet men these days, then one of my friends started telling a storywas traveling somewhere and met by chance in a hotel with a group of bikers, and the bikers were from all over world, guys who are passionate about motorcycles, with tattoos, beautiful, tall, and that by profession they were mainly plumbers, police officers, these are all quite brutal professions, that is, real ones. yes, they started talking about these men so enthusiastically, and i...
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46
Mar 27, 2024
03/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 46
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i, i, i aspect of that story, which is i didn't understand the back story until i read the book thatabout this little let's can we st a minute. this white guy who had not thought very much about slavery or enslavement, didn't have any connection to understands an institution that he cares deeply about, is deeply enmeshed in it. and he digs into his pocket, does some work, and then reaches out to you and colleague reaches out to you. and there we have it. and i just think that, you know, it's first of all, that's reporting one on one, folks. for those of you who really this is what i always my interns answer the email please please please please don't read your email. please do read your email. and i would say it's like a very fundamental, which was just who were and what were their names. you know, this is the quote from a book you said people who are nameless and faceless. these are real people with real names■ and. real. and that's that was his quote that's what he that's what he says. what he felt. in fact in fact. let us just ask if there are any among us today who are directly c
i, i, i aspect of that story, which is i didn't understand the back story until i read the book thatabout this little let's can we st a minute. this white guy who had not thought very much about slavery or enslavement, didn't have any connection to understands an institution that he cares deeply about, is deeply enmeshed in it. and he digs into his pocket, does some work, and then reaches out to you and colleague reaches out to you. and there we have it. and i just think that, you know, it's...