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Apr 13, 2013
04/13
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tim saw their vulnerability. >> reporter: why is tim able to look through that and others can snot. >that's a good question. i don't know. he was not interested in the obviously -- sort of the obvious things. >> reporter: as a result of tim's death in libya, sebastian was haunted by the fact he could have been saved if someone there with him had experience in first aid. so sebastian started risk, an organization with the soul aim of teaching freelance reporters to operate like army medics. >> we're sending them out in the frontlines. they're not just crossing their fingers and hoping for the best. they realize they have the skills and the equipment to deal with most combat medical emergencies. >>. >> reporter: what should we remember about tim? >> tim lived a really big life. he was very, very curious about the world. insatiably curious. he was completely compassionate towards people. he didn't make any distinctions at all. he was just incredibly compassionate and humane about that sort of -- the sort of quiet dignity of the human struggle. >> i have no desire to be a kind of war figh
tim saw their vulnerability. >> reporter: why is tim able to look through that and others can snot. >that's a good question. i don't know. he was not interested in the obviously -- sort of the obvious things. >> reporter: as a result of tim's death in libya, sebastian was haunted by the fact he could have been saved if someone there with him had experience in first aid. so sebastian started risk, an organization with the soul aim of teaching freelance reporters to operate like...
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Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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CSPAN2
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-- i gave it to tim, and tim broke that down into about 900 pages -- 100 pages of artwork. so there's really two reporters on this thing. because without his drug, there's no, nothing there. so he had to take the facts i gave him and ground those in a sense of reality. so his artwork is reported in the sense that it's all based on research as well. so collaborative nonfiction graphic journalism. [laughter] >> and either fortunately or unfortunately, on google i can look up whatever david wrote even though david didn't take pictures of everything that happened to him in the congo. but, um, shall we? >> shall we? >> yeah. >> okay. okay. can everybody hear me? great, i'm rona, as you've heard, and i am very pleased to be here tonight. human rights watch has done a great deal of work on the lra as you will see be you read david and tim's book. and examples of our work are upstairs, actually, so you can see it on your way upstairs. we have researchers based in both goma and kinshasa and have done extensive reporting on the ground and advocacy with policymakers both in congo and
-- i gave it to tim, and tim broke that down into about 900 pages -- 100 pages of artwork. so there's really two reporters on this thing. because without his drug, there's no, nothing there. so he had to take the facts i gave him and ground those in a sense of reality. so his artwork is reported in the sense that it's all based on research as well. so collaborative nonfiction graphic journalism. [laughter] >> and either fortunately or unfortunately, on google i can look up whatever david...
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Apr 5, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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>> you won it, tim tim.s your first one ever, tim tim. >> easy to remember when you won one. >> oh. >> just letting you know. >> those were the biggest moves of the week. let's look back at the best moments this week on "fast." >> what's the corn cob? you got to say it. you threw it out there. >> you threw it out there. now we're all wondering. >> we might have to do a whole show. >> one of my prized position is a new zealand five signed by sir end monday hillary, may 14th of 1953, i think. >> you have that, too? >> bookmark -- >> melville. 1840 something, 365 pages,ish. >> i don't feel sill little for asking for clarification. >> time for the final trade. go around the horn. >> dr. j? >> julio cesar at the met tonight. >> oh, what a great week. coming up next, what's on our trader's watch list as we get ready for a key week ahead. and a major industrial company faces off against one of the world's biggest banks. which stock will make it into the "fast money" madness championship? find out next. plus, your f
>> you won it, tim tim.s your first one ever, tim tim. >> easy to remember when you won one. >> oh. >> just letting you know. >> those were the biggest moves of the week. let's look back at the best moments this week on "fast." >> what's the corn cob? you got to say it. you threw it out there. >> you threw it out there. now we're all wondering. >> we might have to do a whole show. >> one of my prized position is a new zealand five...
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Apr 12, 2013
04/13
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KICU
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that's tim mulholland. thank tim. this year's class of college graduates have a slightly better chance of landing jobs than their predecessors who found a deep recession waiting for them. our cover story found work for graduates not only picking up but also paying more, if--as always-- you've got a skill in demand. this year, nearly two million college graduates will enter a job market that's added an average of 190-thousand private sector jobs each month for more than a year. the best advice seems to be to network and be willing to accept less than the ideal job. "they're expectations of what they want should come down a little bit." everyone wants to get out of law school and make $150,000. that's not gonna happen." "what i always do, i just ask, put me in touch with someone. that helps." "definitely add any specific capabilities that nobody else has and any relevant work experience always helps." though the job market is improving, the outplacement firm challenger gray and christmas reports that this year's graduat
that's tim mulholland. thank tim. this year's class of college graduates have a slightly better chance of landing jobs than their predecessors who found a deep recession waiting for them. our cover story found work for graduates not only picking up but also paying more, if--as always-- you've got a skill in demand. this year, nearly two million college graduates will enter a job market that's added an average of 190-thousand private sector jobs each month for more than a year. the best advice...
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Apr 5, 2013
04/13
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CNNW
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i respect tim's decision to step down. and i sincerely wish him well. will be moving to appoint an interim athletic director in the coming days. that concludes my statement. i am now going to read to you at tim's request the letter that he has posted to the community that's recently gone up on the scarlet knights website. it will be available to you all. what i'm reading now are tim's words. this is his letter of resignation to me. i write in confirmation of our conversation earlier today during which we agreed that it was in the best interest of rutgers university that i step down from my position as director of intercollegiate athletics. i do so reluctantly because i always have and always will love rutgers. i want to thank the people who have supported me throughout my years as a student athlete and an athletic director and help them understand my reasoning in this situation. my continued tenure as athletic director is no longer sustainable for the university which i attended and where a piece of me will always remain. in connection with the incident
i respect tim's decision to step down. and i sincerely wish him well. will be moving to appoint an interim athletic director in the coming days. that concludes my statement. i am now going to read to you at tim's request the letter that he has posted to the community that's recently gone up on the scarlet knights website. it will be available to you all. what i'm reading now are tim's words. this is his letter of resignation to me. i write in confirmation of our conversation earlier today...
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Apr 20, 2013
04/13
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MSNBCW
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i mean any breaking of the law is bad, tim.ou should never break the law. >> after graduating from high school, mcveigh attends a local business college but gives it up after only one year. he is restless and looking for focus. >> he wanted excitement. he comes home. he tells his father, i'm joining the army, dad. his father says, when? well, i go in tomorrow. and bill said okay. >> in the spring of 1988 mcveigh chops off his hair and is ship dound to ft. benning, georgia, for basic training. from there he's assigned a post at ft. riley, kansas. immediately mcveigh takes to the discipline and regimenation of military life. >> i wanted to get out and experience the rest of the world. i wanted to get out of my isolation of penalty. i wanted to be part of a team. i was a bit of a gun enthusiast, and so you can't go wrong both in brushing up your skills and getting the army's free ammunition. the army for me were some of the best years of my life. >> i think mcveigh found success for the first time in his life in the army. i think
i mean any breaking of the law is bad, tim.ou should never break the law. >> after graduating from high school, mcveigh attends a local business college but gives it up after only one year. he is restless and looking for focus. >> he wanted excitement. he comes home. he tells his father, i'm joining the army, dad. his father says, when? well, i go in tomorrow. and bill said okay. >> in the spring of 1988 mcveigh chops off his hair and is ship dound to ft. benning, georgia, for...
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Apr 17, 2013
04/13
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how do you and tim -- how did you and tim do that?id that by spending off and on a whole year with 30 men, a platoon. at a very remote outpost. everyone had to count on each other, including tim and myself. tim and i could not fall out on a patrol. we had to act responsibly. we gradually gained their trust because essentially we functioned like soldiers. we also were not interested in a strategic or political analysis of the war. we were solely trying to document their experience, their lives at this remote outpost. and once they figured that out, they were really, really very good with us. we actually came to be very close to them sfwl we've actually got some footage of tim heatherington in action. here he is with u.s. soldiers in afghanistan. let's take a look. >> you're always looking for those moments where the machine breaks down. where there's cracks in it. i think what happened to us in terms of being given access into this remote valley in afghanistan was that people kind of forgot about us. and i think it was that persistence
how do you and tim -- how did you and tim do that?id that by spending off and on a whole year with 30 men, a platoon. at a very remote outpost. everyone had to count on each other, including tim and myself. tim and i could not fall out on a patrol. we had to act responsibly. we gradually gained their trust because essentially we functioned like soldiers. we also were not interested in a strategic or political analysis of the war. we were solely trying to document their experience, their lives...
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Apr 23, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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but it's exactly what tim said. europe rallied so hard today on the idea that things are so bad that the only thing they can do now is try to stimulate the economy. so that's a little concerning being in the bear suit. i didn't do anything. i'll give it a couple day does mature. >>ity tal ran rates are at record lows. on a credit perspective, people are thinking things are better than i think they are. >> we talked about the pmi numbers are not great either. i thought to me one of the themes we had at the end of last year are what stocks are going to catch up and do better in 2013 and defense names are what we talked about. and look at the report out of lockheed-martin. they beat by almost 30 cents, revenues much better as well. now the stock opened on the high, sifted down the rest of the day. but i think the move is still in tact. and that's going to be a theme later when hash tag and i go head to head. >> hash tag smooth is what he's referring to. >> right now the stock is trading sharply higher. it's 426 in the
but it's exactly what tim said. europe rallied so hard today on the idea that things are so bad that the only thing they can do now is try to stimulate the economy. so that's a little concerning being in the bear suit. i didn't do anything. i'll give it a couple day does mature. >>ity tal ran rates are at record lows. on a credit perspective, people are thinking things are better than i think they are. >> we talked about the pmi numbers are not great either. i thought to me one of...
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Apr 29, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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and to tim's point and pete's point, you have to have an entrance here. and your entrance is above 40-420. as long as it holds there, you're in good shape. i'm still long the name. i'm happy be long the name. i don't think the headwinds are completely out of the way. but i think it's tradable, you ride this back to 500. >> ibm, nice move here and of course that big revenue miss really killed it the day -- >> they'll do it again. i think at 200 or wherever we are now i think this is no man's land for the stock. that last quarter was not a great quarter. especially for ibm, who has consistently done a great job into earnings and post-earnings. so here at 200 i think they get the benefit of what's been a tremendous tape in the s&p. but it's -- again, it's got to prove it to me and prove it to me means closing above 215, which we obviously haven't seen. at 200 it's a best to hold. >> the interesting thing now is the ibm dividend yield doesn't look that high sxhpd to apple's. now it's 1.7%. >> there's absolutely other places you can hide if that's exactly what
and to tim's point and pete's point, you have to have an entrance here. and your entrance is above 40-420. as long as it holds there, you're in good shape. i'm still long the name. i'm happy be long the name. i don't think the headwinds are completely out of the way. but i think it's tradable, you ride this back to 500. >> ibm, nice move here and of course that big revenue miss really killed it the day -- >> they'll do it again. i think at 200 or wherever we are now i think this is...
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Apr 7, 2013
04/13
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i thought he was going to pull it off for sure. >> but tim doesn't pull it off.>> i knew as soon as i hit. i felt my face hit the handlebars and i knew something, my teeth were broke or my lip was cut off or something like i felt my face hit the handlebars and i knew something, my teeth were broke or my lip was cut off or something like that. >> tim landed pushed the handlebars down and the sled bucked back, bucked back forward, then tim got fully ejected feet over head, landed in front of the sled. >> and that sled is still running. >> it just mowed my butt down and gave me the biggest hematoma you've ever seen in your life. it's a giant bruise. >> for rob and the crew it's a scary sight. >> it was like losing my brother right in front of my eyes. i wasn't sure what happened. i pretty much freaked out, hopped on my sled. went over to make sure he was all right. >> tim is bruised and battered. >> i've never seen anyone go bigger in my entire [ muted ] life. >> i felt like i got hit by a bus. my back was severely hurt. you know, sprained. and my neck was sore. and
i thought he was going to pull it off for sure. >> but tim doesn't pull it off.>> i knew as soon as i hit. i felt my face hit the handlebars and i knew something, my teeth were broke or my lip was cut off or something like i felt my face hit the handlebars and i knew something, my teeth were broke or my lip was cut off or something like that. >> tim landed pushed the handlebars down and the sled bucked back, bucked back forward, then tim got fully ejected feet over head,...
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Apr 17, 2013
04/13
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my friend tim was killed not by ied but by a mortar in libya two years ago. he died of blood loss. similar kind of injuries, amputations, that kind of thing. very similar. >> you and tim were committed to presenting such an authentic picture of soldiers on the front lines. we've learned in the aftermath of monday's bombings that, you
my friend tim was killed not by ied but by a mortar in libya two years ago. he died of blood loss. similar kind of injuries, amputations, that kind of thing. very similar. >> you and tim were committed to presenting such an authentic picture of soldiers on the front lines. we've learned in the aftermath of monday's bombings that, you
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Apr 9, 2013
04/13
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KTVU
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tim might have been a little disoriented. he wasn't going to go on this flight because he was feeling kind of sick this day, didn't get much sleep, so was kind of out of it. tim was rushed to the an javier hospital. according to the uploader, it missed all of his major arteries, they said missed by own inches. so tim, after nine hours of the surgery in the hospital, recovering well, lucky to be alive. >> he just didn't judge the distance between his head and the propolar. >> i think he just wasn't thinking about it. he just had the sound in his head and completely forgot about it. tim, the guy who got hurt, asked his friends to upload the video to youtube as a reminder to be careful. >> a woman attempting suicide jumped off a bridge earlier this month, but an officer's daring rescue was caught on dash cam. here you can see people telling him, we saw something. we saw a woman jump over the bridge. as soon as we pulled over, she jumped pt sore officer looks down, realized that they could hear somebody. >> they think they can he
tim might have been a little disoriented. he wasn't going to go on this flight because he was feeling kind of sick this day, didn't get much sleep, so was kind of out of it. tim was rushed to the an javier hospital. according to the uploader, it missed all of his major arteries, they said missed by own inches. so tim, after nine hours of the surgery in the hospital, recovering well, lucky to be alive. >> he just didn't judge the distance between his head and the propolar. >> i think...
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Apr 12, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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our own tim see more is here. where do you start, tim? starting multi-national, i'm not going to say this is in emerging markets but i want to be where the consumers are growing. that's emerging markets. i want to be invested in multi-nationals. here's my pi chart. here's the breakdown of my portfolio. i want exposure to the consumer vehicles and discretionary. this is where we're getting the growth in discretionaries. materials we talked about today. i don't think you need to have a bigger weight in there even though some stuff has bombed out. credit is growing. you want exposure to financials and also health care. we've talked about it here, but the social net around the world in improving health care and pharma is exactly what these guys are doing. the stocks i'll give you are multi-nationals and you know the names well. i always refer to the brazil onbeer company. pfizer we talked about. hsbc, tremendous asian growth. we know about nike and caterpillar. vodafone. that's how you get your consumer. >> very big allocation to the consumer
our own tim see more is here. where do you start, tim? starting multi-national, i'm not going to say this is in emerging markets but i want to be where the consumers are growing. that's emerging markets. i want to be invested in multi-nationals. here's my pi chart. here's the breakdown of my portfolio. i want exposure to the consumer vehicles and discretionary. this is where we're getting the growth in discretionaries. materials we talked about today. i don't think you need to have a bigger...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 20, 2013
04/13
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(applause) . >> thank you tim and thank you wells fargo bank for providing tim and now, we are going to invite our mayors to the stage and we are going to be able to hear about their requirement prierts and outlook and envision and is each mayor will get some time on the podium and then other manage editor will be leading a k q and a with them and if there are questions that you would like to ask him hold your hands up and either now or during the presentation and we will get to as many as we can and since fraction is the host city, mayor lee is gracious enough to allow mayor khan to go first please welcome dan angle who's president of golden gate university to introduce mayor khan (applause) >>> good morning. i noticed that governor rick pairy was mentioned articlier and i think i may send him a question and tell him why i came here ten year ago and there is some good news in recent california he picked out the top three firms he was after and called a joint meeting of the legislature and he did pretty well till he got to the third one he could not remember who it is of golden gate
(applause) . >> thank you tim and thank you wells fargo bank for providing tim and now, we are going to invite our mayors to the stage and we are going to be able to hear about their requirement prierts and outlook and envision and is each mayor will get some time on the podium and then other manage editor will be leading a k q and a with them and if there are questions that you would like to ask him hold your hands up and either now or during the presentation and we will get to as many...
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Apr 19, 2013
04/13
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KICU
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joining us now is trader tim biggam of trading block. happy friday to you tim. what is happening with oil stocks as oil futures are coming down? - happy friday to you, angie. gold got the headlines, but oil and a lot of the other commodities got hit very hard this week as well, and a lot of the big oil producer names have fallen in sympathy with the price of oil. the biggest of the big, exxon, is starting to get to a level that i find kind of attractive, both on a fundamental basis, looking at over 2.5% yield here, and the fact that the stock is back to pretty much unchanged on the year, down about 8% over the past week-and-a-half or so. also looking good technically, that $85 level kind of held a couple times last year, in november and december, and then earlier in the year. so, it is a stock that maybe got ahead of itself a little early on. i kind of like it now that it has trimmed back some of those gains. - what kind of a bounce are you looking for in exxon? - probably about 2/3 of the way to the highs that we saw not too long ago around $94 or so, somewhere
joining us now is trader tim biggam of trading block. happy friday to you tim. what is happening with oil stocks as oil futures are coming down? - happy friday to you, angie. gold got the headlines, but oil and a lot of the other commodities got hit very hard this week as well, and a lot of the big oil producer names have fallen in sympathy with the price of oil. the biggest of the big, exxon, is starting to get to a level that i find kind of attractive, both on a fundamental basis, looking at...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 13, 2013
04/13
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together encompassing this whole wide region for wells far going and we are soon going to hear from tim quinn written economist from wells far go and going to get some insight from him and a major focus and this says so much about the strength of our economy and the economy is small business lending and really promising news and 2012 wells far go expended scene billion dollars in that now loan commitments to small businesses across the united states over 30% in 2011 and that is great news so thank you wells fargo and many thanks to our partners in associations who always help us in promote things event it takes a villages to market deimagine. >> joseph markenson, md: and new president and c o oavment bob electric sway and president and c o e dennis callahan and executive director dave metcalf, e c a karen inc.,el and inner city advisers jose conia and typely going to have to forgive me if i miss some of you and so you can send me another or someone else will help me when they get up here and so welcome to the public officials in the room. supervisor carmen chu and scott wiener and super
together encompassing this whole wide region for wells far going and we are soon going to hear from tim quinn written economist from wells far go and going to get some insight from him and a major focus and this says so much about the strength of our economy and the economy is small business lending and really promising news and 2012 wells far go expended scene billion dollars in that now loan commitments to small businesses across the united states over 30% in 2011 and that is great news so...
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Apr 18, 2013
04/13
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FBC
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tim? is. >> yeah.hink, you know, again, that's a whole windows 8, the year before they didn't have that, you know? so, but, yes, i think you -- liz: hold on one second, we've got ibm numbers. dennis kneale has them. >> a second tech disappointment, and you've got to wonder what's going to happen to the nasdaq tomorrow or after hours. $3 a share in earnings but that is a nickel below the $3.05 that wall street was expecting and wanting. revenue also missing for ibm, $23.4 billion is the number, wall street wanted $24.62 billion. and some analysts out there had a 3% pop bringing it to 25.42. so that's kind of a tend number. ibm has increased the dividend 17 years in a row. i want to see if they do something on the dividend today to make up for the shortfall. you can see already after hours, david, they're trading almost maybe below 200 instead of 207. david: right. we should emphasize, by the way, the previous three quarters have shown declines as well, 3%, 5% and 1%, and that 3% -- >> in revenue. david:
tim? is. >> yeah.hink, you know, again, that's a whole windows 8, the year before they didn't have that, you know? so, but, yes, i think you -- liz: hold on one second, we've got ibm numbers. dennis kneale has them. >> a second tech disappointment, and you've got to wonder what's going to happen to the nasdaq tomorrow or after hours. $3 a share in earnings but that is a nickel below the $3.05 that wall street was expecting and wanting. revenue also missing for ibm, $23.4 billion is...
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Apr 10, 2013
04/13
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KQEH
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tim dechristopher was federally prosecuted on felony charges. he could potentially receive substantial prison time and hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines if he's found guilty. [tim dechristopher] if i'm convicted i won't necessarily be surprised. i made the decision going in that this was something worth going to prison for, and i still stand by that, and will accept any consequences that i have to deal with for this, but i think this trial will be kind of a key indicator of where we're really at as a society and whether we're willing to justify the continued exploitation of not only our natural world, but our younger generations, and whether we're willing, as a society, to start standing up against that kind of exploitation. [ken salazar] it's inappropriate for people to break the law, and in that particular case there are laws that don't allow for the disruption of oil and gas leases, and other laws that may have been broken. [kathleen sgamma] well, i think it's unfortunate that he felt compelled to take a drastic action. i think if he
tim dechristopher was federally prosecuted on felony charges. he could potentially receive substantial prison time and hundreds of thousands of dollars in fines if he's found guilty. [tim dechristopher] if i'm convicted i won't necessarily be surprised. i made the decision going in that this was something worth going to prison for, and i still stand by that, and will accept any consequences that i have to deal with for this, but i think this trial will be kind of a key indicator of where we're...
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Apr 30, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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. >> tim?well, i think if you look at, you know, tomorrow's may day, by the way, which is translated as a distress signal. and most of the markets are going to be closed tomorrow. the fed's coming in here and i think it's going to happen on a day with zero volume in the market. and ultimately i'd ask carter, which are the places more vulnerable to a low-volume move. you know, you've seen a lot of these markets make higher highs on very low volume. i look at the russell. carter, can you speak to that? because that's a little concerning. >> there is no volume. people are not participating. speaking of the russell, here's a days where you are far above trend, as well. more like some of the extended parts of the market. yet, if you look at the decelerati deceleration, it's getting worse and worse, quote it's getting more and more expensive. these divergences are happening all over the place. you can look at them for the stock market, copper versus the s&p. typically when started creasing and creasi
. >> tim?well, i think if you look at, you know, tomorrow's may day, by the way, which is translated as a distress signal. and most of the markets are going to be closed tomorrow. the fed's coming in here and i think it's going to happen on a day with zero volume in the market. and ultimately i'd ask carter, which are the places more vulnerable to a low-volume move. you know, you've seen a lot of these markets make higher highs on very low volume. i look at the russell. carter, can you...
542
542
Apr 16, 2013
04/13
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KGO
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eye 542
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tim, back to you. doctor! doctor! $1,000, please. tim. who is kapoor? no. lisa.s mindy kaling? you got her, and you're on the board with $1,000 and in the lead. you need a lab test for $200, please. matt. what is anemia? good. lab test, $400. tim. what are allergies? you're right. it's the "flu" for $200. matt. what is fluent? correct. you need a lab test, $600. matt. what is glucose? lab test, $800.
tim, back to you. doctor! doctor! $1,000, please. tim. who is kapoor? no. lisa.s mindy kaling? you got her, and you're on the board with $1,000 and in the lead. you need a lab test for $200, please. matt. what is anemia? good. lab test, $400. tim. what are allergies? you're right. it's the "flu" for $200. matt. what is fluent? correct. you need a lab test, $600. matt. what is glucose? lab test, $800.
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 16, 2013
04/13
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SFGTV2
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i will conclude i see the floor. >> thank you, tim. simon. >> well, now you know all about how computing. [laughter] let me give you a slightly different angle. i think of the cloud as being roughly categorized into two worlds. there is the clout as envisaged and manifested within the enterprise, which includes the city of santa francisco. large organizations of people who have i.t. needs. then there is another kind of clout, which is the cloud that is in your pockets, which is most of what jim spoke to. everyone of us walked into our job every day with a cloud in our pocket, okay? that is the apps that sit on your smart device. you are driving cloud adoption far faster than enterprise i.t. can adopt anything. actually, most enterprise i.t. shops since 2003, if you are lucky. we are delighted with this experience, delighted to innovate upon, and that is where you see all this amazing innovation on top of new form factor devices like tablets and smartphones, and yet, the real world, which is the world in which we live -- absolutely suck
i will conclude i see the floor. >> thank you, tim. simon. >> well, now you know all about how computing. [laughter] let me give you a slightly different angle. i think of the cloud as being roughly categorized into two worlds. there is the clout as envisaged and manifested within the enterprise, which includes the city of santa francisco. large organizations of people who have i.t. needs. then there is another kind of clout, which is the cloud that is in your pockets, which is most...
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Apr 18, 2013
04/13
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we're pleased to be joined by rolling stone editor, the great tim dickinson. they called today a shameful day in washington. >> it's a shameful day for democracy when you have 90% of americans foiled by the senate. what kind of a democracy do we live in when we can't have an up or down vote that on something that has 90% support in the country. >> john: president obama also said that this marked only round one in the fight for gun control legislation. let me ask you tim what do you think comes next specifically for gun control legislation more universally. >> well, i don't think that manchin-toomey has much of a future unless there is an soap-like up rising on the twitter. but americans are distracted. nra wins when the americans are distracted. it's tragic that we have the boston bomb, and the poisoned letters, and people could have brought more pressure to bear if there hadn't been these other factors going on this week. i think the real political future for gun control is out in the states. california is probably next in line for a major gun-control effort
we're pleased to be joined by rolling stone editor, the great tim dickinson. they called today a shameful day in washington. >> it's a shameful day for democracy when you have 90% of americans foiled by the senate. what kind of a democracy do we live in when we can't have an up or down vote that on something that has 90% support in the country. >> john: president obama also said that this marked only round one in the fight for gun control legislation. let me ask you tim what do you...
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Apr 14, 2013
04/13
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to you first, tim. >> well, it is clumsy.t race in this country is pretty clumsy and oftentimes misguided. is it any worse than the way we teach history in our schools? no. here in the south, we've had seven generations of white folks who have been taught the civil war was a war of northern aggression and had nothing to do with slavery. it doesn't surprise me that seven generations later, in spite of the history that says secession was about that, we have people who wave confederate flags and put them on their trucks and think that it doesn't mean anything. we have to do better at understanding that history, whether we're a songwriter or teacher in high school. >> we're going to get more specific about the lyrics in a moment. but peter cooper, you're a songwriter. you're a performer, also senior music writer for "the tennessean." you said, paisley walked it into more than a million rooms when he wore a t-shirt with the alabama band logo on a nationally televised show. someone on twitter called him a racist and it made him thi
to you first, tim. >> well, it is clumsy.t race in this country is pretty clumsy and oftentimes misguided. is it any worse than the way we teach history in our schools? no. here in the south, we've had seven generations of white folks who have been taught the civil war was a war of northern aggression and had nothing to do with slavery. it doesn't surprise me that seven generations later, in spite of the history that says secession was about that, we have people who wave confederate flags...
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Apr 6, 2013
04/13
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with that i'm going turn it over to tim. i should have shown you art before tim got up here. tim will show you some of the art he did for the book we'll talk about this in more detail and explain to you how a work of reporting can be converted in to a comic book. so tim? >> good evening, everybody. i'm just going to switch slide shows real quick. i'm going to talk briefly. i'm sorry -- [inaudible] i'm kibbled of kind of the -- i'm kind of the odd man out. you're here to hear about the lra unlike david i didn't go to the congo. i was in brooklyn. [laughter] and that's where i did all of my work. and i worked from photographs david sent me, which really enough reference even for me to draw a book that was, i think 80 pages is it now? so i had to go on google and look up pictures about the congo and the research for the book isn't what i would call fun. i looked for mad magazine for marvel comics and i recently write -- my own children book and they are enjoyable. through the research i had do myself. horrible things which made me realize that it must be very hard to see this ev
with that i'm going turn it over to tim. i should have shown you art before tim got up here. tim will show you some of the art he did for the book we'll talk about this in more detail and explain to you how a work of reporting can be converted in to a comic book. so tim? >> good evening, everybody. i'm just going to switch slide shows real quick. i'm going to talk briefly. i'm sorry -- [inaudible] i'm kibbled of kind of the -- i'm kind of the odd man out. you're here to hear about the lra...
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Apr 23, 2013
04/13
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FBC
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tim cook, pressure on him.asn't had a break through since he took over and the entire financial team is on scrutiny. four apple executives are among the top paid of all 500 top company ceo's, get between 68 and 85 million dollars a year. a lot more than tim cook. he gets 4 million. apple stock has gone from 705 to 390 in seven months. huh. next, looks like the internet sales tax will breeze through the senate. we have one senator who is opposed to it. he's a democrat. plus, a business owner who makes a lot of money on-line and he says this tax is going to hurt him and his business. but you are going to like the markets when it opens up, a gain of maybe 90 points. that's next. in today's markets, a lot can happen in a second. with fidelity's guaranteed one-second trade execution, we route your order to up to 75 market centers to look for the best possible price -- maybe even better than you expected. it's all part of our goal to execute your trade in one second. i'm derrick chan of fidelity investments. our one-
tim cook, pressure on him.asn't had a break through since he took over and the entire financial team is on scrutiny. four apple executives are among the top paid of all 500 top company ceo's, get between 68 and 85 million dollars a year. a lot more than tim cook. he gets 4 million. apple stock has gone from 705 to 390 in seven months. huh. next, looks like the internet sales tax will breeze through the senate. we have one senator who is opposed to it. he's a democrat. plus, a business owner who...
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Apr 16, 2013
04/13
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CNBC
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tim, kick it off. >> 50 cents from all-time highs.eason this is happening is because em is where all the growth is. china is not where they have to do it. the operating income, $791 million last quarter from latin america, $491 million from north america, latin america is blowing away the core business, which is great, which is exciting. the evolution of refranchising the bottlers is about making this a more efficient company. margins are getting better. coca-cola is running itself like they have never run it before. you've got a company that is growing, company paying you a fantastic dividend, company that's proven it can execute over and over and over again. the multiple is something brian's going to attack because he's right at the top of its range. but it's right there in the five-year average. and they deserve a premium to the sector and they're not even trading at it. >> go ahead. >> well, i was going to go with valuation, but valuation, you know, we all know that valuation can get stretched, it's very difficult to short a stock
tim, kick it off. >> 50 cents from all-time highs.eason this is happening is because em is where all the growth is. china is not where they have to do it. the operating income, $791 million last quarter from latin america, $491 million from north america, latin america is blowing away the core business, which is great, which is exciting. the evolution of refranchising the bottlers is about making this a more efficient company. margins are getting better. coca-cola is running itself like...
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Apr 14, 2013
04/13
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>> tim mcveigh considered himself a patriot.his conviction that the government had overstepped, it had killed people, violated the law, the law had failed to avenge the wrongful death of innocent people in ruby ridge and mt. carmel with the branch davidians. >> this fire is really rolling now. >> -- and that it was necessary to strike back in, say, the fashion of john brown and harper's ferry. >> he had to know that there were children in that building, and i cannot imagine anybody committing that kind of act against another human being. >> at times, he said he knew there was a day care center there. at other times, he appeared to avoid that. i think that the death of the children was very uncomfortable for him. on one hand, he sought to rationalize it. on the other hand, it was beyond rationalization, and even tim mcveigh knew that. i think the first time he said he just looked at me and he said, children also died at waco. he assigned almost all responsibility to himself. i did this, i did that. terry nichols helped me with th
>> tim mcveigh considered himself a patriot.his conviction that the government had overstepped, it had killed people, violated the law, the law had failed to avenge the wrongful death of innocent people in ruby ridge and mt. carmel with the branch davidians. >> this fire is really rolling now. >> -- and that it was necessary to strike back in, say, the fashion of john brown and harper's ferry. >> he had to know that there were children in that building, and i cannot...
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Apr 14, 2013
04/13
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on the other hand, it was beyond rationalization, and even tim mcveigh knew that.hink the first time he said -- he just looked at me and he said, "children also died at waco." he assigned almost all responsibility to himself. "i did this," "i did that." terry nichols helped me with this or that, but he played down the role of terry, played down the role of anyone else. i think he expected to be found guilty. >> we got him! >> he was not surprised by the return of the verdict finding him guilty, nor was he surprised that the jury voted death. as i recall, we simply exchanged some brief momentary remark and then the marshals took him out. >> if anyone was ever deserving of the death penalty, it was tim mcveigh. >> they got us up about 6:30 that morning. we got in a van, we drove over to the chambers. we was the last ones to go in. they finally opened up the curtains and he looked over, first of all, to his area where his lawyer was at. then he turned his head towards us. and he only kept his head there just maybe 30 seconds or less. enough time for me to see in his e
on the other hand, it was beyond rationalization, and even tim mcveigh knew that.hink the first time he said -- he just looked at me and he said, "children also died at waco." he assigned almost all responsibility to himself. "i did this," "i did that." terry nichols helped me with this or that, but he played down the role of terry, played down the role of anyone else. i think he expected to be found guilty. >> we got him! >> he was not surprised by the...
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Apr 12, 2013
04/13
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what's going on out there, tim? >> well, the first thing, maria, is i don't think anybody should rush to judgment on loan growth in the industry, based upon the first quarter results. because the first quarter tends to be a seasonal low in terms of loan growth. clearly, there was an impact in terms of consumer and commercial decisions based upon the tax changes that occurred at the end of last year. but putting it all together, our core loan growth was up 8% year over year and our net loan growth was up 4% year over year. and our expectations, we can't continue to grow loans and we can grow loans at a faster rate than the rest of the industry. >> what about expenses? you noted them. others have as well. your ability to control them was the key reason why the numbers were fairly good. but can you keep reducing expenses? >> i hope so. and i think we can. we put out an expense efficiency ratio range of between 55 and 59% a year ago at our investor day in may. and our goal is to continue to improve that efficiency. expe
what's going on out there, tim? >> well, the first thing, maria, is i don't think anybody should rush to judgment on loan growth in the industry, based upon the first quarter results. because the first quarter tends to be a seasonal low in terms of loan growth. clearly, there was an impact in terms of consumer and commercial decisions based upon the tax changes that occurred at the end of last year. but putting it all together, our core loan growth was up 8% year over year and our net...
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Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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first president obama, then the republican address by senator tim scott of south carolina. on monday, an act of terror killed and injured people at the boston marathon. but americans refused to be terrorized. ultimately that's what we'll remember from this week. the stories of heroism and kindness, resolve and resilience, generosity and love. the brave first responders, police officers and firefighters, the e.m.t.'s and national guard, who ran toward danger to help their fellow citizens. the race volunteers, spectators and exhausted runners who rushed to help, including troops and veterans who never expected to see such scenes on the streets of america. the determined doctors and nurses at some of the world's best hospitals who toiled day and night to save so many lives. the big hearted people of boston. residents, priests, shopkeepers, who carried victims in their arms and delivered water and blankets, lined up to give blood, opened their homes up to total strangers. and the heroic federal agents and police officers who worked together throughout the week, often at great r
first president obama, then the republican address by senator tim scott of south carolina. on monday, an act of terror killed and injured people at the boston marathon. but americans refused to be terrorized. ultimately that's what we'll remember from this week. the stories of heroism and kindness, resolve and resilience, generosity and love. the brave first responders, police officers and firefighters, the e.m.t.'s and national guard, who ran toward danger to help their fellow citizens. the...
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Apr 24, 2013
04/13
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FBC
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it is tim cook and it is steve jobs. that's why it hasn't been too long as you would say in terms of time, for investors they get very nervous. don't see the same guy in the black turtleneck. >> they're in war and competition with samsg and samsung's latest smartphone hits store sales in the united states on thursday. >> yeah. >> is apple in defensive mode? are they still in a kind of a offensive mode? >> you're both asking the right questions. i believe they're in offensive mooe. i believe, i am cerin that they're going to try to come out with some, something fantastic. i don't know when. i don't know what and i don't know if it will succeed. if it succeeds we'll look back on this to say, oh, they didransition just fine and investors were worried over nothing. if think fail it will be a lot worse than what we're seeing right now. right now we're seeing a pause before that effort. i prome you that effort will be there, because if it isn't, then they aren't apple anymore. melissa: adam shapiro thanks so much. we'll come b
it is tim cook and it is steve jobs. that's why it hasn't been too long as you would say in terms of time, for investors they get very nervous. don't see the same guy in the black turtleneck. >> they're in war and competition with samsg and samsung's latest smartphone hits store sales in the united states on thursday. >> yeah. >> is apple in defensive mode? are they still in a kind of a offensive mode? >> you're both asking the right questions. i believe they're in...
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Apr 24, 2013
04/13
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let's take this first, tim. >> it's a name that i have bought around 23 on the way down. what i like about these numbers is not only have they affirmed and slightly improved but they kept 2013 capex. people are worried about the balance sheets of a lot of the companies. so i'm not telling you there is going be a major turn around. >> and the revenue as well as guidance for the next quarter all very strong i thought it was a crush. that's what i said when i put it out there. and the stock traded up three. it's holding that gain and it holds on to that tomorrow. >> amazon's quarterly earnings are -- a report claiming that amazon is jumping into the video streaming business and will release a television set top box this fall. what do you make of this set top box report? it doesn't make a on the of sense for them to be there. there is a real business around ekmars and they can focus on. >> what's the point of doing this? maybe creates more of an amazon eco-system around its devices? or some other lost leader for their content sales? >> they want to make it easier and easier f
let's take this first, tim. >> it's a name that i have bought around 23 on the way down. what i like about these numbers is not only have they affirmed and slightly improved but they kept 2013 capex. people are worried about the balance sheets of a lot of the companies. so i'm not telling you there is going be a major turn around. >> and the revenue as well as guidance for the next quarter all very strong i thought it was a crush. that's what i said when i put it out there. and the...
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Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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KGO
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tim lincecum's best outing of the >> mike: giants finally got a decent outing from tim lincecum.y take their second straight from the padres. men in black in mccovey's cove. tim gave up only four hits. santo -- sandoval gets the team on the board. 2- 0. padres threatened in the eighth. runners on the corner, but the inning-ending double play. in the nine. romo gets his eighth save of the season. giants win. >> a's and tampa. reddick showing his mom his newly shavedder into hair. bottom two matt joyce facing parker. that out of here. parker falling to 0-3, lock gore ya with the popup. people are scrambling. donaldson over the shoulder, and is a lip reed longoria, he caught that? >> this sports report brought to you by riff -- river rock casino. coming up, we'll tee it up and throw some fridays byes, my minor in college. >> helping a hero. how social media is helping a man who helped police track down the boston bombing suspect. >> bay area residents teaming up to help a boy injured >>> good evening. i'm in for ama daetz who is in boston. here are tonight's headlines. a brush fire
tim lincecum's best outing of the >> mike: giants finally got a decent outing from tim lincecum.y take their second straight from the padres. men in black in mccovey's cove. tim gave up only four hits. santo -- sandoval gets the team on the board. 2- 0. padres threatened in the eighth. runners on the corner, but the inning-ending double play. in the nine. romo gets his eighth save of the season. giants win. >> a's and tampa. reddick showing his mom his newly shavedder into hair....
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Apr 24, 2013
04/13
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KQEH
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tim cook said our teams are hard at work on some amazing new hardware, software and services, and we are very excited about the products in our pipeline. good news there, tyler and susie? >> seema, thank you so much. seema modi reporting from the nasdaq. let's turn now to john buckingham. he's been buying apple for his clients and he's chief investment officer at asset management. so, john, is this what you expected in terms of earnings and the dividend and the stock buyback from apple tonight? >> well, it was certainly a news-filled afternoon from apple. the stock buyback was frankly, more than we might have envisioned so we're very appreciative of that. apple has a gigantic cash hoard. over $150 a share in cash and we really are happy that they're putting that to work especially when you can buy the stock here at these very inexpensive valuations. >> we are trading at less than ten times earnings for one of america's greatest corporations and yes, i know that earnings were a little disappointing in terms of the guidance here for the next quarter, but this is a fantastic company wit
tim cook said our teams are hard at work on some amazing new hardware, software and services, and we are very excited about the products in our pipeline. good news there, tyler and susie? >> seema, thank you so much. seema modi reporting from the nasdaq. let's turn now to john buckingham. he's been buying apple for his clients and he's chief investment officer at asset management. so, john, is this what you expected in terms of earnings and the dividend and the stock buyback from apple...
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126
Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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KGO
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eye 126
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tim lincecum's best outing of the >> mike: giants finally got a decent outing from tim lincecum.y take their second straight from the padres. men in black in mccovey's cove. tim gave up only four hits. santo -- sandoval gets the team on the board. 2- 0. padres threatened in the eighth. runners on the corner, but the inning-ending double play. in the nine. romo gets his eighth save of the season. giants win. >> a's and tampa. reddick showing his mom his newly shavedder into hair. bottom two matt joyce facing parker. that out of here. parker falling to 0-3, lock gore ya with the popup. people are scrambling. donaldson over the shoulder, and is a lip reed longoria, he caught that? >> this sports report brought to you by riff -- river rock casino. coming up, we'll tee it up and throw some fridays byes, my minor in college. >> helping a hero. how social media is helping a man who helped police track down the boston bombing suspect. >> bay area residents teaming up to help a boy injured >>> good evening. i'm in for ama daetz who is in boston. here are tonight's headlines. a brush fire
tim lincecum's best outing of the >> mike: giants finally got a decent outing from tim lincecum.y take their second straight from the padres. men in black in mccovey's cove. tim gave up only four hits. santo -- sandoval gets the team on the board. 2- 0. padres threatened in the eighth. runners on the corner, but the inning-ending double play. in the nine. romo gets his eighth save of the season. giants win. >> a's and tampa. reddick showing his mom his newly shavedder into hair....
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Apr 23, 2013
04/13
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FBC
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let's focus on tim took for a second. a leadership change but that doesn't necessarily mean tim cook has to go, right? >> i would actually recommend tim cook not to go. if you bring somebody else in the ideal person to train the individual and to supplement them for the guy that had been assisting steve jobs in the same role. you do creative things creating office of ceo or intel, put two in a box with shared responsibility. david: i don't know. remember what, excuse me remember what happened to blackberry when they tried that. didn't work out too well for them. >> well, i they make sure the people that you have shared in the box. those were two old-timers. they needed fresh blood in that company. >> i just want to jump in here. david: sure. >> here's the thing with apple, 70% of their gross margin comes from iphones and that is so key to apple's performance. we're seeing too that 2/3 of its numbers that are coming in now, their earnings came from overseas markets. whether or not apple can hook up with china mobile is rea
let's focus on tim took for a second. a leadership change but that doesn't necessarily mean tim cook has to go, right? >> i would actually recommend tim cook not to go. if you bring somebody else in the ideal person to train the individual and to supplement them for the guy that had been assisting steve jobs in the same role. you do creative things creating office of ceo or intel, put two in a box with shared responsibility. david: i don't know. remember what, excuse me remember what...