803
803
Nov 27, 2017
11/17
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 803
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it says to tami butcher. you're right, tami. you are worth it.an in life. you are more than welcome to come and obtain the tools needed to change your way of living. stay focused, tami. you're worth it. good luck. so, yeah, i've been waiting for that for two and a half weeks now. yay. >> her acceptance into a drug rehabilitation program could enable butcher to set out on a new path. >> this is rad. it means i don't have to go to prison. that's the easy way. i'm not going to run -- take the easy way. i'm going to do the hard thing because anything worth it is worth working for. and i've been sober before. i've had three years. and my daddy passed away, and i ran. and i was running, gunning strong ever since. so i'm going to do it again and stay that way because if my mom was to pass away while i was in prison, i would never forgive myself. and she's not -- she's not healthy. she's sick. so -- and i want to regain the respect of my oldest daughter. i don't want them to be all, mom's just another convict, addicted, jerk-off, worth nothing. so i'll s
it says to tami butcher. you're right, tami. you are worth it.an in life. you are more than welcome to come and obtain the tools needed to change your way of living. stay focused, tami. you're worth it. good luck. so, yeah, i've been waiting for that for two and a half weeks now. yay. >> her acceptance into a drug rehabilitation program could enable butcher to set out on a new path. >> this is rad. it means i don't have to go to prison. that's the easy way. i'm not going to run --...
63
63
Nov 14, 2017
11/17
by
WUSA
tv
eye 63
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wake up the next morning and i don't know that either. >> reporter: but watch how chip reacts when tamie's son walks into the room. >> [ barking ] >> reporter: keep in mind this is five months after the dog joined their family. [ barking and growling ] >> come on. it's just brad. >> a disaster, disgusting. >> reporter: a trained diabetic alert dog can often detect highs and lows before a continuous glucose monitor like this, but not chip. [ growling ] >> they ll fault. you're the one that needs to bring the dog back for training or retraining because you messed it up. >> reporter: she contacted the director of operations for diabetic alert dogs of america, ed peeples. >> ready to go? >> yeah. >> reporter: we tried to interview him in las vegas, but his plans changed. >> take the i-94 east ramp off silver spring. >> reporter: and he agreed to meet us at newark international airport between flights. hi, ed. thank you for coming. peeples was returning from canada after delivering the company's400th service dog. how can you deliver that kind of dog? >> what this client did over the year i have
wake up the next morning and i don't know that either. >> reporter: but watch how chip reacts when tamie's son walks into the room. >> [ barking ] >> reporter: keep in mind this is five months after the dog joined their family. [ barking and growling ] >> come on. it's just brad. >> a disaster, disgusting. >> reporter: a trained diabetic alert dog can often detect highs and lows before a continuous glucose monitor like this, but not chip. [ growling ]...
43
43
Nov 5, 2017
11/17
by
CNBC
tv
eye 43
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quote 0
i remember tami from key west key lime.he single-handedly kept that business afloat, managing their finances, inventory, the staffing, all for 300 bucks a week. and she had two kids at home and another one on the way. it was crazy. and the owner, he just took her for granted. how do you get it all done? i don't. have you talked to jim about this? yes. but he believes that everybody should work really hard and so it's -- it's disheartening. it's hard. we almost lost tami to another company, but we saw her value and we wanted to make sure that she stuck around, so we gave her a raise and paid maternity leave. lemonis: i'm going to give you six months' worth of pay and i'm going to pay you $1,000 a week, so you don't have to bartend, if that's okay. [ sobs ] okay. i'm going to give you a check and it should help you just kind of, just be able to rest, take care of your baby. and then when you come back, you're going to bust somebody's ass. [ laughs ] all right? okay? wow. thank you. every time i see that, it reminds me how imp
i remember tami from key west key lime.he single-handedly kept that business afloat, managing their finances, inventory, the staffing, all for 300 bucks a week. and she had two kids at home and another one on the way. it was crazy. and the owner, he just took her for granted. how do you get it all done? i don't. have you talked to jim about this? yes. but he believes that everybody should work really hard and so it's -- it's disheartening. it's hard. we almost lost tami to another company, but...
152
152
Nov 29, 2017
11/17
by
KQED
tv
eye 152
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tami barker was an enrollment advisor at ashford university.phone ringing) >> they used to tell us, you know, "dig deep. get to their pain. get to what's bothering them so that that way, you can convince them that a college degree is going to solve all their problems." >> the problem is that for many of these students, they think they're talking to an admissions advisor, they think they're talking to someone with some sort of ethical standards, and they don't realize that they're talking to a person who is selling them something, and that they might be better off to just walk away. >> smith: many students assumed they were getting a quality education and a useful degree. >> i love grand canyon and the community that it represents, and also the christian background. >> this school is just perfect. it's night classes. >> i'm studying merchandise product development, and it is the coolest thing i've ever done in my life. i love it. >> smith: in 2010, the top washington lobbyist for the sector told me it was all about providing new opportunities. >
tami barker was an enrollment advisor at ashford university.phone ringing) >> they used to tell us, you know, "dig deep. get to their pain. get to what's bothering them so that that way, you can convince them that a college degree is going to solve all their problems." >> the problem is that for many of these students, they think they're talking to an admissions advisor, they think they're talking to someone with some sort of ethical standards, and they don't realize that...
77
77
Nov 9, 2017
11/17
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 77
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i've got a young woman, tami fisher worked for us up here. she went back to texas. i think it was her aunt's estate. had been in the family 100 years. they had to sell about two-thirds of it just to pay the death tax. these are the idle rich? these are special interests? think of the people who supported this in the past. community pharmacists, the wholesale florists. your roofers, service station auto repair people. they don't have clean hands among them. that's the idle rich? look at our smul base entrepreneurs, professional beauty associations? our beauticians and barbers, gosh, they're idle. on sundays. maybe. irrigation association, they're digging the ditches in your home. your local printers, heating and cooling so the plumbers who come to wade through all that stuff for you and me, they're the idle rich? seriously. tell you what, this is the most un-american tax we have. you work your whole lifetime, uncle sam swoopes in when you die and can take nearly half of everything you earned above a certain amount. it's morally wrong. by the way, you want to create j
i've got a young woman, tami fisher worked for us up here. she went back to texas. i think it was her aunt's estate. had been in the family 100 years. they had to sell about two-thirds of it just to pay the death tax. these are the idle rich? these are special interests? think of the people who supported this in the past. community pharmacists, the wholesale florists. your roofers, service station auto repair people. they don't have clean hands among them. that's the idle rich? look at our smul...