14
14
Jun 23, 2023
06/23
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 14
favorite 0
quote 0
fashion week, new york times, time magazine. i have an obsession with contemporary culture and how women are feeling, like at a bachelorette party. i've seen these girls just get crazy. and i like the psychological transformation. it's like, get a stripper, get drunk, play games. the point is to push boundaries. i found 80% of them through social media. it's not really about the women itself, it's about the rituals and you can see how much they need this break from reality. this one night without being judged. five years ago, when i started going out and shooting some clubs, people didn't like when i took pictures of them. they would ask me to delete them, or would go like this. all of a sudden everybody's posing and loving it. it was a very distinct change. women are really being exhibitionists. i always look for girls with this uber confidence. they feel like they're celebrities. and they feel like i'm a paparazzi when i photograph them. everybody wants to be in the spotlight. she looks like a movie star and she feels like a m
fashion week, new york times, time magazine. i have an obsession with contemporary culture and how women are feeling, like at a bachelorette party. i've seen these girls just get crazy. and i like the psychological transformation. it's like, get a stripper, get drunk, play games. the point is to push boundaries. i found 80% of them through social media. it's not really about the women itself, it's about the rituals and you can see how much they need this break from reality. this one night...
12
12
tv
eye 12
favorite 0
quote 0
a time magazine correspondent photographed an emaciated bosnian muslim.ehind barbed wire, allegedly a serbian concentration camp. the picture turned out to be so impressive that it immediately turned into as proof of the genocide became an ironclad argument in favor of the demands to bomb the serbs. this here is a modern form of western democracy, when uh gross violence, a show to demonstrate. play the whole scene so to speak. this is a rather terrible form, because people support what they put into their heads, so to speak , some idea and put into their heads, and they don’t even realize it. they think they are making a conscious choice. and then it turned out this photo, which helped to sway public opinion in favor of the military us intervention in european affairs is a forgery. here he is the same prisoner alive and well. and even quite well-fed, his name is fikrit. alic was then in 1992 when the photo was taken, he was 22 and had just recovered from a serious illness, during which time he lost weight. taksilno the story of the same photography itself
a time magazine correspondent photographed an emaciated bosnian muslim.ehind barbed wire, allegedly a serbian concentration camp. the picture turned out to be so impressive that it immediately turned into as proof of the genocide became an ironclad argument in favor of the demands to bomb the serbs. this here is a modern form of western democracy, when uh gross violence, a show to demonstrate. play the whole scene so to speak. this is a rather terrible form, because people support what they put...
91
91
Jun 1, 2023
06/23
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 91
favorite 0
quote 0
his recent time magazine article "the 'don't look up' thinking that could doom us with ai."you could explain that point. also, why you think right now, you know, many people have just heard the term chatgpt for the first time in the last months. the general public has become aware of this. and how you think it is most effective to regulate ai technology? >> thank you. thank you for the great question. i wrote this piece comparing what is happening now in ai with the movie "don't look up" because we are all living this film. where as a species, confronting the most dramatic thing that has ever happened to us. where we may be losing control over our future and almost no one is talking about it. i'm so grateful to you and others for starting to have that conversation now. that is of course why we had these open letters that you just referred to here, to really help mainstream this conversation that we have to have. that people previously used to make fun of you you brought up that we could lose control of this and go extinct, or example. nermeen: you have drawn analogies when i
his recent time magazine article "the 'don't look up' thinking that could doom us with ai."you could explain that point. also, why you think right now, you know, many people have just heard the term chatgpt for the first time in the last months. the general public has become aware of this. and how you think it is most effective to regulate ai technology? >> thank you. thank you for the great question. i wrote this piece comparing what is happening now in ai with the movie...
11
11
Jun 22, 2023
06/23
by
BELARUSTV
tv
eye 11
favorite 0
quote 0
it must be transported early to canada remarkably even the times magazine reminded readers of the double standards. west the death of several hundred migrants recently buried in the mediterranean did not bother anyone, and the fate of the five rich men in the bathisca causes universal sympathy and excitement. preservation of historical memory and stable operation of the economy is the key to the successful development of the country and stability in belarus. works on import substitution . all enterprises covered in this direction are working and 17 union projects have already been agreed with russian colleagues in june. open financing six in general this year is developing successfully so the volume of production for five months. made up 12% of exports. it grew by a quarter and a half times increased and this profit was reflected in real wages in industry. the last two years, well, we are probably such leaders, real leaders in real wage growth, and last year and 5 months of this year, we have more hired workers than the number of freelancers. this indicates that we are consistently provi
it must be transported early to canada remarkably even the times magazine reminded readers of the double standards. west the death of several hundred migrants recently buried in the mediterranean did not bother anyone, and the fate of the five rich men in the bathisca causes universal sympathy and excitement. preservation of historical memory and stable operation of the economy is the key to the successful development of the country and stability in belarus. works on import substitution . all...
62
62
Jun 18, 2023
06/23
by
CNNW
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
there's a great article written back in 2018, an entire issue of the the "new york times" magazine that again in 202 is and it's the same story. so what are we going to do about it is really the key. >> doctor, we really appreciate your expertise. apologies for putting you at the wrong university. as an alum of georgetown, we are very lucky to have you in our georgetown university community. >> thank you. if i could just say one thing, all we need to do is to look at the models that have worked, which are led by mid wives, dulas and nurses who listen and pay attention to the woman. there are better outcomes with those women taking care of uncomplicated births than physicians and i'm a doctor. >> and so we should listen to you. thank you very much. appreciate it. >> now from tractors and trailers to drones and a.i., technology is rapidly changing the field of farming. vanessa has your story in today's innovate. >> the usda estimates that farming production could cost more than $450 billion this year, rising costs in fuel and equipment have some farmers turning to drone technology as a wa
there's a great article written back in 2018, an entire issue of the the "new york times" magazine that again in 202 is and it's the same story. so what are we going to do about it is really the key. >> doctor, we really appreciate your expertise. apologies for putting you at the wrong university. as an alum of georgetown, we are very lucky to have you in our georgetown university community. >> thank you. if i could just say one thing, all we need to do is to look at the...
18
18
Jun 3, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 18
favorite 0
quote 0
he begins in a fair with mary walsh who a times magazine correspondent. who later becomes his fourth and final wife and i agree with you. he didn't learn he didn't learn. and i think something to know on that end technically wanted a wife martha. wanted to be reporting the war and so i you know, it seemed like it was destined to never quite be there. anyways, and so eventually she does get over through quite an interesting way and she arrived to london. finds out that he's hospitalized. he had been in a car accident had received a concussion and she was called over to the hospital to come see him finds out about the affair and basically unsympathetically is like i'm through i'm absolutely finished. she's done and at that point she is determined to just do what she does best cover the war and while in her time in england, she covered stories on pilots who had their experiences with their crash planes are being pulled from burning wreckage. she was focusing on their scars and their experiences from a personal and sensitive point of view instead of just a ra
he begins in a fair with mary walsh who a times magazine correspondent. who later becomes his fourth and final wife and i agree with you. he didn't learn he didn't learn. and i think something to know on that end technically wanted a wife martha. wanted to be reporting the war and so i you know, it seemed like it was destined to never quite be there. anyways, and so eventually she does get over through quite an interesting way and she arrived to london. finds out that he's hospitalized. he had...
21
21
Jun 7, 2023
06/23
by
IRINN
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
of the most important advanced air defense systems, it can target the systems, as well as the time magazinethe american news agency associated press, in the case of an ultrasound missile , write a line tomorrow, and fly 15 times the speed of sound. farewell to you and bakhtiari, the news that was in news agencies and in various media around the world was the unveiling of a missile that upsets all the equations of the defense systems of the united states and the zionist regime and caused concern . i would like to add some time to the talks that having a cartoon 6 days ago, isfahan defense wrote a note before the accurate observation that iran is entering the game and israel is lagging behind . in order to deal with the defensive shield and also the missile defense shield , there are different tactics used to deal with the shields, for example, one of them is the mass firing of the palestinians' saif al-quds operation against the mass firing of the iron dome, which is a very advanced, modern and efficient system. challenged in the form of some of these important announcements, it has hit the
of the most important advanced air defense systems, it can target the systems, as well as the time magazinethe american news agency associated press, in the case of an ultrasound missile , write a line tomorrow, and fly 15 times the speed of sound. farewell to you and bakhtiari, the news that was in news agencies and in various media around the world was the unveiling of a missile that upsets all the equations of the defense systems of the united states and the zionist regime and caused concern...
23
23
Jun 7, 2023
06/23
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 23
favorite 0
quote 0
she has personally seen, is dr sylvia earle — she is "founder of mission blue" and was named time magazine'si understand that you have just come back from yet another trip to antarctica earlier this year — can you just tell us what you've noticed over the years when you've travelled to places like these, and you see the oceans up close? thank ou. so you see the oceans up close? thank you so yes. — you see the oceans up close? thank you- so yes. just — you see the oceans up close? thank you. so yes, just back— you see the oceans up close? thank you. so yes, just back from - you. so yes, just back from antarctica, so part of the antarctic climate expedition that the ocean geographic society really made possible. and i was on a ship of experts and artists, and economists — big thinkers who are exposed to scenes such as the melting of glaciers, the melting of the antarctic ice around the edges. and you know, itjust highlights the importance of being aware of climate changing, and therefore putting ourselves at risk. most people don't get the opportunity that we had to go to antarctica to see the
she has personally seen, is dr sylvia earle — she is "founder of mission blue" and was named time magazine'si understand that you have just come back from yet another trip to antarctica earlier this year — can you just tell us what you've noticed over the years when you've travelled to places like these, and you see the oceans up close? thank ou. so you see the oceans up close? thank you so yes. — you see the oceans up close? thank you- so yes. just — you see the oceans up...
31
31
Jun 22, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
host: time magazine did a piece in 2022 about how much justices make, some of them have written books and they've made money from that. that's in addition to their base salary which is over $250,000. the chief justice makes more. justices are legally limited to not earn more than roughly $30,000 for outside teaching and several justices earned close to that in 2021. clarence thomas reported 20 9000, 5 hundred $95 from george washington university law school and the university of notre dame. gorsuch earned over $26,000 from a university. brett kavanaugh earned $25,000 and amy coney barrett. what has been your reporting on their salary what they can make themselves in this position? guest: yeah, they make a good salary by most american standards. a lot of them make a lot of money off book deals. they certainly can afford to go on vacations or in clarence thomas's case, they could have reported the child they were raising. it's really interesting that supreme court justices are making a pittance in comparison to what they could make in the private sector if they were to retire and become
host: time magazine did a piece in 2022 about how much justices make, some of them have written books and they've made money from that. that's in addition to their base salary which is over $250,000. the chief justice makes more. justices are legally limited to not earn more than roughly $30,000 for outside teaching and several justices earned close to that in 2021. clarence thomas reported 20 9000, 5 hundred $95 from george washington university law school and the university of notre dame....
16
16
Jun 28, 2023
06/23
by
ESPRESO
tv
eye 16
favorite 0
quote 0
it is interesting to see what the western media write about it, and in particular, the new or times magazineother publications this weekend also published a number of materials, they did not communicate with western officials, and the wall street journal in its publication says that referring again to the interlocutors that prigozhin was apparently preparing a plan to take hostage the russian minister of defense and shoigu as well as the chief of the russian general staff gerasimov during their trip to rostov-on-don, however, the publication claims, referring to intelligence data, that the russian special services found out about these plans in advance and therefore it was necessary to realize them, to act in advance , to start this attempted rebellion , to start it earlier than he planned and also to improvise it to become one of the reasons why this rebellion did not succeed, as he could have wanted prigozhyn, and i am also asking for the publication that he relied on could he rely in his calculations on the fact that he was supported by a part of the russian army or supported by a part of
it is interesting to see what the western media write about it, and in particular, the new or times magazineother publications this weekend also published a number of materials, they did not communicate with western officials, and the wall street journal in its publication says that referring again to the interlocutors that prigozhin was apparently preparing a plan to take hostage the russian minister of defense and shoigu as well as the chief of the russian general staff gerasimov during their...
12
12
Jun 4, 2023
06/23
by
ESPRESO
tv
eye 12
favorite 0
quote 0
reality, and here i recall an article that appeared a month or two ago in the influential british times magazinehich they noted that, unfortunately, the international monetary fund and other international financial institutions. they very often make their forecasts about russia, use data as they see fit . propaganda, that is, they claim that they have a lot of missiles , that they can do this. tanks per year. a few days later, even president putin told them that they could make 600 tanks, but not for a year, but for three years and including modernization, that is, then there was such an interesting situation. when in fact there were two completely different statements from two, that is that is, there are a lot of officials of this country, they say that they can. they pretend that this is not a problem for them, but i do not rule out that in reality it is more, let's say, pr , intimidation of partners between the real situation that they have and yes. unfortunately, this and the missiles are not enough, but these the volumes are not unlimited and i do not rule out that soon, if the wind blows o
reality, and here i recall an article that appeared a month or two ago in the influential british times magazinehich they noted that, unfortunately, the international monetary fund and other international financial institutions. they very often make their forecasts about russia, use data as they see fit . propaganda, that is, they claim that they have a lot of missiles , that they can do this. tanks per year. a few days later, even president putin told them that they could make 600 tanks, but...
78
78
Jun 28, 2023
06/23
by
KNTV
tv
eye 78
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> rob: i was so proud of that coming but i thought it was a cover of "time" magazine for me. >> kellyas in the burleson star and i was like i made it! >> rob: and my parents have 5,000 copies of it. >> kelly: that's awesome though, like the first thing you do, and inspires you to keep going. and you want to be an actor young, i did not know that i was a singer until i was a teenager. >> rob: i was 8, because i went and saw a local production, like a literally neighborhood playhouse production of "all of her" and there were kids in it. and the light went off for me, and i knew that at a serious, serious level where all of the other kids thought i was a freak, because -- >> kelly: you have kids and i have kids, i have an 8-year-old and i can't believe her being like this is it right now. >> rob: honey, you have your whole life ahead of you, you're going to learn about so many things. >> kelly: but you knew. >> rob: i was like shut up, i'm going to be an actor. >> kelly: bold, i hear that you had a memorable moment, this is the craziest story ever, so it's right after you got sober, righ
. >> rob: i was so proud of that coming but i thought it was a cover of "time" magazine for me. >> kellyas in the burleson star and i was like i made it! >> rob: and my parents have 5,000 copies of it. >> kelly: that's awesome though, like the first thing you do, and inspires you to keep going. and you want to be an actor young, i did not know that i was a singer until i was a teenager. >> rob: i was 8, because i went and saw a local production, like a...
163
163
Jun 16, 2023
06/23
by
KNTV
tv
eye 163
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> reporter: this week felix wrote in an essay for "time" magazine that tori bowie's death couldn'td that the medical community has to do its part. she earnrned a social l work de so she could help other women. but she's decided she won't expand her own family. >> the choice to have children is not necessarily because we don't want any, it's because we're scared of the system and the statistics. >> reporter: antonia hylton, nbc news new york. >>> when we come back, the milestones we'll always remember. a lookback o over 75 yeaears of "nightlyly news." i'm prprotecting m my car. i'm prprotecting m my car. thatat's too mucuch work. i'm prprotecting m my car. weathertecech is so mumuch easier.... laser-measurured floorlilines upup here, weathertecech is so mumuch easier.... seatat protector and cargogolir back t there... weathertecech is so mumuch easier.... nice! weathertecech is so mumuch easier.... out t here, sidede window deflectotors... and d mud flaps. anand the bumpmpstep, to keeeep the bumpmper dent-fr. cool! anand the bumpmpstep, to keeeep the bumpmper dent-fr. itit's the bes
. >> reporter: this week felix wrote in an essay for "time" magazine that tori bowie's death couldn'td that the medical community has to do its part. she earnrned a social l work de so she could help other women. but she's decided she won't expand her own family. >> the choice to have children is not necessarily because we don't want any, it's because we're scared of the system and the statistics. >> reporter: antonia hylton, nbc news new york. >>> when we...
20
20
Jun 11, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 20
favorite 0
quote 0
host: i want to bring to you all an article that was in time magazine on june 8.brought this up today. here is what time magazine said in an article about the accusations against president biden. president biden said the fbi pointed to a bribery scheme benefiting him or his family, calling it malarkey. chairman of the house oversight committee to release an fbi document of unsubstantiated allegations based on secondhand information. the question came at the end of a 40 minute press conference. the leaders discussed their nation's commitment. finding ways for the countries. asked for his response to the bribery allegation, where is the money? i'm joking is a bunch of malarkey. saying they point to a broader effort by foreign governments to influence policy. the justice department investigated the allegations in 20 and found no evidence to back them up. that is according to the top democrat on the committee. this is a time magazine story where biden has called bribery accusations a bunch of malarkey. calling from stratton bill. good morning. caller: good morning. i
host: i want to bring to you all an article that was in time magazine on june 8.brought this up today. here is what time magazine said in an article about the accusations against president biden. president biden said the fbi pointed to a bribery scheme benefiting him or his family, calling it malarkey. chairman of the house oversight committee to release an fbi document of unsubstantiated allegations based on secondhand information. the question came at the end of a 40 minute press conference....
25
25
Jun 11, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
host: i want to bring to you all an article that was in time magazine on june 8.brought this up today. here is what time magazine said in an article about the accusations against president biden. president biden said the fbi pointed to a bribery scheme benefiting him or his family, calling it malarkey. chairman of the house oversight committee to release an fbi document of unsubstantiated allegations based on secondhand information. the question came at the end of a 40 minute press conference. the leaders discussed their nation's commitment. finding ways for the countries. asked for his response to the bribery allegation, where is the money? i'm joking is a bunch of malarkey. saying they point to a broader effort by foreign governments to influence policy. the justice department investigated the allegations in 20 and found no evidence to back them up. that is according to the top democrat on the committee. this is a time magazine story where biden has called bribery accusations a bunch of malarkey. calling from stratton bill. good morning. caller: good morning. i
host: i want to bring to you all an article that was in time magazine on june 8.brought this up today. here is what time magazine said in an article about the accusations against president biden. president biden said the fbi pointed to a bribery scheme benefiting him or his family, calling it malarkey. chairman of the house oversight committee to release an fbi document of unsubstantiated allegations based on secondhand information. the question came at the end of a 40 minute press conference....
54
54
Jun 2, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 54
favorite 0
quote 0
the spring of 2015 i was flying from boston to pittsburgh for story i was doing at the time for politico magazine about the unlikely possibility of curing the state of pennsylvania before the flight f i grab a bok that have been sitting on my bed time stamp for some time which is where it typically piles up and this is the book some of you may of heard of called the astronauts wives club by willie koppel. it's a nonfiction narrative of the wives of the mercury seven astronauts. john glenn's wife alan shepard's wife. one of my favorite books of all time is the right stuff which is the course that work about those astronauts. i wanted to read lily koppel's book to see how she had done it. i wanted to see how she had taken t this story which we all know and flipped it around and reverse and told it from the opposite perspective. so i'm reading this book very closely on the plane and very early in the book you mentioned that one of the wives was a private pilot who had longs to fly in an all-female airplane race with that started in 1920s and featured amelia earhart. that's the line that stopped me b
the spring of 2015 i was flying from boston to pittsburgh for story i was doing at the time for politico magazine about the unlikely possibility of curing the state of pennsylvania before the flight f i grab a bok that have been sitting on my bed time stamp for some time which is where it typically piles up and this is the book some of you may of heard of called the astronauts wives club by willie koppel. it's a nonfiction narrative of the wives of the mercury seven astronauts. john glenn's...
28
28
Jun 30, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 28
favorite 0
quote 0
that was the only time bbc time magazine. everybody called me. oh, how he met with kim zeman. seems like to me that because coming from a business background, he thought he could make a deal, you know, like putting a hotel a like desert of cutting or something. i think he really underestimated that this regime has lasted 80 years. they are extremely and they are also behaving in their interests of china behind. so i thought that kim jong un giving him the legitimacy was now worth it. and i do think that trump had good intentions that he really genuine thought he could give, that kim jong un some trust so he could open up the country and, you know, denuclearize country backwards. didn't happen. so it's too bad that, you know, good intentions always not lead to good pass thank. hi when you first came to america i was shocking thing that you found besides the things you've already talked about. it was very interesting, me and so many things, but, you know how again, like having too much can be a problem, you know, or my were going to like econ gym do you know what that is and yo
that was the only time bbc time magazine. everybody called me. oh, how he met with kim zeman. seems like to me that because coming from a business background, he thought he could make a deal, you know, like putting a hotel a like desert of cutting or something. i think he really underestimated that this regime has lasted 80 years. they are extremely and they are also behaving in their interests of china behind. so i thought that kim jong un giving him the legitimacy was now worth it. and i do...
43
43
Jun 2, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
during his time in england, he begins an affair with mary welch who is a time magazine correspondent who later becomes his fourth and final wife. i agree, he didn't learn. and i think something to note and that end, hemingway wanted a wife. martha was reporting the war. it seemed like it was destined to never quite be there anyway so eventually she does get over through quite an interesting way and she arrives to london, finds out he's hospitalized. he had been in a car accident, received a concussion and she was called over to the hospital to see him, find out about the affair, and basically on sympathetically, i am farouk, i am absolutely finished and at that point she is determined to just do what she does best, cover the war. in her time in england she covered stories on pilots, being pulled from burning wreckage, focusing on their scars and experiences from a personal and sensitive point of view instead of just a regular piece but this is when she took the time to get to know teenagers. how are teenagers doing during the war, not something a lot of people did think about. she to
during his time in england, he begins an affair with mary welch who is a time magazine correspondent who later becomes his fourth and final wife. i agree, he didn't learn. and i think something to note and that end, hemingway wanted a wife. martha was reporting the war. it seemed like it was destined to never quite be there anyway so eventually she does get over through quite an interesting way and she arrives to london, finds out he's hospitalized. he had been in a car accident, received a...
54
54
Jun 23, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 54
favorite 0
quote 0
the editor told time magazine that he decided to move his magazine out of new york because of mayor laguardiaells that german bombers are coming. the decision was explained in blunter terms to a far right newsletter called america in danger. what they said about the movie 1941 was this. they said for some weeks before we left new york our mailbags were rifled. new york has a jew postmaster and did you laguardia as mayor. the magazine that moved the editor told another reporter that he wanted to get his magazine out of new york and into lake geneva specifically instead because there was about to be a civil war in the united states in 1941. he said as long as roosevelt continued to drive america towards war against hitler, midwest farmers were going to rise up and lead civil war and they were going to win. because midwest farmers were the real heart when stock of america. america. they did not want to fight the blood in europe. today the day was soon apprg when they would rise up, it would take up arms, overthrow the elites come over the u.s. government to keep america from fighting hitler. sin
the editor told time magazine that he decided to move his magazine out of new york because of mayor laguardiaells that german bombers are coming. the decision was explained in blunter terms to a far right newsletter called america in danger. what they said about the movie 1941 was this. they said for some weeks before we left new york our mailbags were rifled. new york has a jew postmaster and did you laguardia as mayor. the magazine that moved the editor told another reporter that he wanted to...
30
30
Jun 2, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 30
favorite 0
quote 0
but wrote to show different ways that war disrupts life and during particularly world war ii, times magazine called gellhorn one of colliers star reporters. and i think that can be true for the rest of her reporting as well, you know. her career spanned 60 years before she was a war time correspondent she covered the great depression, she covered different topics that were going on in europe as well. she had quite an extraordinary career, but where did it begin? it started in her humble roots in missouri so she was born on november 8th, 1908, to george and edna gellhorn in st. louis, missouri. her mother was a suffragette and i think that gave martha spunk and independence. at age of eight participated in the golden line pictured on the screen. this was a rally for women's suffrage at the 1916 national convention in st. louis so you see women here, they're yingellow parasols, wearing yellow sashes. lined on both sides of the street headed towards the convention center at st. louis colosseum. there is a tablea united states in front, those that had not embraced women were draped in black. som
but wrote to show different ways that war disrupts life and during particularly world war ii, times magazine called gellhorn one of colliers star reporters. and i think that can be true for the rest of her reporting as well, you know. her career spanned 60 years before she was a war time correspondent she covered the great depression, she covered different topics that were going on in europe as well. she had quite an extraordinary career, but where did it begin? it started in her humble roots...
28
28
Jun 3, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 28
favorite 0
quote 0
a fair with mary during this time in england he begins an affair with the merritt walsh was a times magazine correspondent. later becomes his fourth and final wife. and i will grew through he did not learn, he did not learn. something to know on that end, martha wanted to be reporting the war. it seemed like it was destined to never quite be there anyway. eventually she gets over there quite an interesting way and she arrives to london, find out that he is hospitalized. he bit car accident, received aa concussion she was called over to the hospital to come see him. find out about the affair. basically under the sympathetically it's like i'mbs through, and actually finished, she is done. and at that point she is determined to do it she does best. cover the war. while in that's our time in england she covered stories on pilots, their express for the past trap entrance to the focusing on their scars and their experiences from a personal incentive point o of vw incentive pieces. this is also when she took the time to get to know teenagers. how are teenagers during during the war? that is not som
a fair with mary during this time in england he begins an affair with the merritt walsh was a times magazine correspondent. later becomes his fourth and final wife. and i will grew through he did not learn, he did not learn. something to know on that end, martha wanted to be reporting the war. it seemed like it was destined to never quite be there anyway. eventually she gets over there quite an interesting way and she arrives to london, find out that he is hospitalized. he bit car accident,...
82
82
Jun 10, 2023
06/23
by
CNNW
tv
eye 82
favorite 0
quote 0
he says that comey was leaking classified information to the press, he did an interview with "time" magazined that time where he says classified information, you go to jail when you release stuff like that and he talks about comey, saying he leaked classified information for which he should be prosecuted. now, let's fast forward a few years to 2020, during that election john bolton was his national security director, he leaves the administration under bad terms, he writes sort of a tell-all book, and trump is very angry about this. he says in interviews that he releases classified information, again says he should go to jail for many years, and then in this tweet he says he must pay a very, very high price for this, talking about bolton, his book, saying that he released classified information in it. >> now, this case has been assigned, at least for now, to a federal judge in southern florida who was appointed by trump in 2020. many are now asking if the judge can be impartial, giving her controversial involvement in the case last year. cnn's brian todd has our report. >> reporter: this 42-y
he says that comey was leaking classified information to the press, he did an interview with "time" magazined that time where he says classified information, you go to jail when you release stuff like that and he talks about comey, saying he leaked classified information for which he should be prosecuted. now, let's fast forward a few years to 2020, during that election john bolton was his national security director, he leaves the administration under bad terms, he writes sort of a...
22
22
Jun 26, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 22
favorite 0
quote 0
mark godfrey, photojournalist for ap life and time magazine's. mark covered the war in vietnam and cambodia and later worked for numerous international magazines on that included coverage of the first gulf war. loren on key director of the corcoran school of arts and design and professor of music at the george washington university, and in an earlier incarnation in her career, she was at the rock and roll hall of and knows a lot about the music. we're going to talk about and then my good friend marcus sullivan, vietnam vet and close friend of michael o'donnell, was himself the subject of in that time michael o'donnell in the tragic era of vietnam. mark has served in vietnam. marcus was, a musician, still is. and through that experience and can talk to us about that as well. so i'd like to begin by talking imagery. vietnam was the first war that was televised. most of us who lived through it remember seeing on television every day that was different from other wars. it was not movietone news that we were experiencing, but something much more direc
mark godfrey, photojournalist for ap life and time magazine's. mark covered the war in vietnam and cambodia and later worked for numerous international magazines on that included coverage of the first gulf war. loren on key director of the corcoran school of arts and design and professor of music at the george washington university, and in an earlier incarnation in her career, she was at the rock and roll hall of and knows a lot about the music. we're going to talk about and then my good friend...
31
31
Jun 2, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
the editor told time magazine he decided to move his magazine out of new york because mayor laguardia yelled german bombers are coming. the decision was explained in blunter terms to a far right newsletter called "america in danger". in 1941 they said "for some weeks before we left new york, our mail bags were rifled. new york has a jew postmaster and a jew guardia as mayor." the editor told another reporter he wanted to get his magazine out of new york and into lead geneva specifically instead because there was about to be a civil war in the u.s. in 1941. he said "as long as roosevelt continues to drive america towards war against hitler's midwest farmers will rise up and lead civil war and win." because, midwest farmers where the real heartland stock of america. they did not want to fight the blood in europe. they was soon approaching when they would rise up, take up arms come over throw the u.s. government to keep america from fighting hitler's. since that day was coming soon he figured it was better to be in wisconsin, the winning side of the civil war, particularly against the ea
the editor told time magazine he decided to move his magazine out of new york because mayor laguardia yelled german bombers are coming. the decision was explained in blunter terms to a far right newsletter called "america in danger". in 1941 they said "for some weeks before we left new york, our mail bags were rifled. new york has a jew postmaster and a jew guardia as mayor." the editor told another reporter he wanted to get his magazine out of new york and into lead geneva...
23
23
Jun 27, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 23
favorite 0
quote 0
mark godfrey, photojournalist for ap life and time magazine's. mark covered the war in vietnam and cambodia and later worked for numerous international magazines on that included coverage of the first gulf war. loren on key director of the corcoran school of arts and design and professor of music at the george washington university, and in an earlier incarnation in her career, she was at the rock and roll hall of and knows a lot about the music. we're going to talk about and then my good friend marcus sullivan, vietnam vet and close friend of michael o'donnell, was himself the subject of in that time michael o'donnell in the tragic era of vietnam. mark has served in vietnam. marcus was, a musician, still is. and through that experience and can talk to us about that as well. so i'd like to begin by talking imagery. vietnam was the first war that was televised. most of us who lived through it remember seeing on television every day that was different from other wars. it was not movietone news that we were experiencing, but something much more direc
mark godfrey, photojournalist for ap life and time magazine's. mark covered the war in vietnam and cambodia and later worked for numerous international magazines on that included coverage of the first gulf war. loren on key director of the corcoran school of arts and design and professor of music at the george washington university, and in an earlier incarnation in her career, she was at the rock and roll hall of and knows a lot about the music. we're going to talk about and then my good friend...
18
18
Jun 26, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 18
favorite 0
quote 0
i make it to 109 so is on really formerly an editor at large for time magazine and now the deputy opinions editor at the washington post. now he's going to be conversation with tonight tyler, not berg, who is the chairman and chief optimist of u.s. engineering that is a part of the kansas city business and civic community and has done for 130 years. so also a friend of david's and a friend of rainy day books. so please help me welcome david tyler. it's wonderful to be here. it's great to see so many people. i feel like i won the lottery. steve, you were supposed to be here this evening. who's a kansas city treasurer, of course, but he was unable to make it. so i given this opportunity and i have to say that to able to interview someone who's forgotten about the history that he's learned than any of us will ever learn in our lives, it's it's a real privilege to be able to interview david and to be able to be at this event with with rainy day books. so, david, welcome thank you very much, you everyone, for coming out this book is among other things, love letter to kansas city. because kansas
i make it to 109 so is on really formerly an editor at large for time magazine and now the deputy opinions editor at the washington post. now he's going to be conversation with tonight tyler, not berg, who is the chairman and chief optimist of u.s. engineering that is a part of the kansas city business and civic community and has done for 130 years. so also a friend of david's and a friend of rainy day books. so please help me welcome david tyler. it's wonderful to be here. it's great to see so...
140
140
Jun 9, 2023
06/23
by
CNNW
tv
eye 140
favorite 0
quote 0
he did an interview with "time" magazine around that time where he said, classified information, you. take a look at this tweet. he says, he leaked classified information, for which he should be prosecuted. let's fast forward a few years to 2020. during that election, john bolton was his national security director. he leaves the administration under bad terms. he writes sort of a tell-all book. and trump is very angry about this. he says in interviews that he releases classified information, again, says he should go to jail for many years. and then in this tweet, he says, he must pay a very, very high price for this, talking about bolton, his book, saying that he released classified information. >> it is incredible. a thing he went to again and again. all right. andrew, thank you very much for all that digging and sharing it with us. >>> next, russia claiming ukraine's massive counteroffensive is p underway, and cnn is on the ground in a frontline town. we're going to take you there next. trying vapes to quit smoking might feel like progress, but with 3x more nicotine than a pack of
he did an interview with "time" magazine around that time where he said, classified information, you. take a look at this tweet. he says, he leaked classified information, for which he should be prosecuted. let's fast forward a few years to 2020. during that election, john bolton was his national security director. he leaves the administration under bad terms. he writes sort of a tell-all book. and trump is very angry about this. he says in interviews that he releases classified...
33
33
Jun 3, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
spring of 2016 i was flying from from boston to pittsburgh for a story i was doing at the time for political magazineabout the unlikely possibility of donald trump carrying the state of pennsylvania that fall and for the flight, i grabbed a book that had been sitting on my bedside stand for some time, which is where my to be read pile typically piles up and this is a book some of you may have heard of it's called the astronaut wives club by lily koppel. it's it's a nonfiction narrative of the wives of the mercury 7 astronauts. so john glenn's wife alan shepard's wife and you know. one of my favorite books of all time is tom wolfe's the right stuff, which is of course that seminal work about the mercury 7. and so i wanted to read lily koppel's book to see how she had done it, which is actually a thing that authors do i wanted to see how she had taken this story which we all know. and and flipped it around in reverse and told the sort of from the opposite perspective. and so i'm reading this book very closely on the plane. and i'm very early in the book and it mentioned that one of the wives was a priv
spring of 2016 i was flying from from boston to pittsburgh for a story i was doing at the time for political magazineabout the unlikely possibility of donald trump carrying the state of pennsylvania that fall and for the flight, i grabbed a book that had been sitting on my bedside stand for some time, which is where my to be read pile typically piles up and this is a book some of you may have heard of it's called the astronaut wives club by lily koppel. it's it's a nonfiction narrative of the...
163
163
Jun 13, 2023
06/23
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 163
favorite 0
quote 0
in your time magazine article with this headline "tequila is will to become the us's most popular spiritthat article was in part local tequila's growing global popularity also led to a loss o genetic diversity as manufacturers turn to high-yielding monographs that require increasing amounts of pesticides. emissions wise tequila and vodk production are on par emitting proximally 3 kilograms of carbo dioxide per liter matheus cunha charging a smart phone every da for a year." you know, i wonder if these smart phone charging tequila drinkers emit more than the liberals jet setting everyday? i don't know but i believe i'm doing something for the environment because i'm not a tequila drinker. >> but you do have a cell phone. >> i do have a cell phone. >> that's huge. i like vodka and whiskey engine not at the same time but just i general. >> we don't judge. >> tequila i can now feel good about herself by saving the environment every time i have gin and tonic. >> i am looking for because i had a margarita last night and i'm half latino on the other side. so to speak crazy latinos, take away ou
in your time magazine article with this headline "tequila is will to become the us's most popular spiritthat article was in part local tequila's growing global popularity also led to a loss o genetic diversity as manufacturers turn to high-yielding monographs that require increasing amounts of pesticides. emissions wise tequila and vodk production are on par emitting proximally 3 kilograms of carbo dioxide per liter matheus cunha charging a smart phone every da for a year." you know,...
36
36
Jun 4, 2023
06/23
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
quote 0
hall who is the executive director of the american library association was just named one of time magazine's most influential people of 2023. because she talks about library access as an equity issue. and you have to have the informed citizenship, that's why those institutions were built. i have to quote something. not word for word, but alberto bagwell and his history greeting has a chapter on forbidden reading. and the start of the chapter has a photograph of a woman who you could tell she is african-american, she might recently have been a slave and she has a book. and he says in their as tyrant slaveowners and dictators and other illicit holders of power have always known, an illiterate crowd is the easiest to rule. if you cannot prevent people from learning to read, the bet -- next best recourse is to limit its scope. and it goes on, book burning, censorship, all of this. in frederick douglass in his autobiography the main crux of it, he says once you learn to read you will be forever free. because then you can see, there is a reason why all of those laws were put into effect. to preven
hall who is the executive director of the american library association was just named one of time magazine's most influential people of 2023. because she talks about library access as an equity issue. and you have to have the informed citizenship, that's why those institutions were built. i have to quote something. not word for word, but alberto bagwell and his history greeting has a chapter on forbidden reading. and the start of the chapter has a photograph of a woman who you could tell she is...
87
87
Jun 22, 2023
06/23
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 87
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm joined now by legal experts i managed, "new york times" magazine writer emily basel lon and lesley caldwell, the former assistant attorney general of the criminal division. "the new york times" called her instrumental in the selection of jack smith in this very special counsel post. welcome to both of you. leslie, walk us through the public part of those statements. as i mentioned, you could go godfather, good fellas, the wire. people are pretty careful not doing what trump did because jam smith is using it as evidence. >> yeah. it appears that he's continuing to make statements as recently as earlier this week. as a lawyer, as a defense lawyer, your first piece of advice to any client is stop talking. don't talk at all. i'm sure his lawyers likely have given him that advice, but he's obviously not following it. it will be interesting to see what use is made of all the statements he's made over the years including post indictment and how those sound when they're played back in court. >> leslie, could you expect prosecutors and his team, smith and his team are monitoring this becaus
i'm joined now by legal experts i managed, "new york times" magazine writer emily basel lon and lesley caldwell, the former assistant attorney general of the criminal division. "the new york times" called her instrumental in the selection of jack smith in this very special counsel post. welcome to both of you. leslie, walk us through the public part of those statements. as i mentioned, you could go godfather, good fellas, the wire. people are pretty careful not doing what...
16
16
Jun 29, 2023
06/23
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 16
favorite 0
quote 0
and the jet said, there was actually a time magazine cover of the champagne of drugs. here's a wonderful drug that you can get high on and it's not addicted. roll did roll the i assume the 18th, 2009 to somewhere in the pacific ocean. the, the war on drugs is in june to new, leviathan's, invisible, unconquerable pray that nearly impossible to spot to day out in the open seas, a red couch in the underwater valley of this feast. the coast guard discovers over 7 tons of cocaine, blue to us. $213000000000.00. when drug lord, full criminal organizations reinvent themselves once more, they never disappear. they simply, we compose into networks, not structures. they become nodes in a wider network and even the commode nodes in these networks. you can take down a come on that, but it doesn't dismantle the workings of the network itself. a new era for criminal organizations began at the start of the 90s in a system where everything was accelerating, transportation, communication, cash flow, globalization. the trial for free trade hope to raise folders. i believe we have made a
and the jet said, there was actually a time magazine cover of the champagne of drugs. here's a wonderful drug that you can get high on and it's not addicted. roll did roll the i assume the 18th, 2009 to somewhere in the pacific ocean. the, the war on drugs is in june to new, leviathan's, invisible, unconquerable pray that nearly impossible to spot to day out in the open seas, a red couch in the underwater valley of this feast. the coast guard discovers over 7 tons of cocaine, blue to us....
80
80
Jun 28, 2023
06/23
by
FBC
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
i have see this from time magazine from ray dalio. the world on the break of great disorder.peter, my antennas raise what is the great disorder we're getting ready for and how might it impact everyone watching this show? >> ray dalio has been worried about this for a while and what he has been focused on there are three things that happen now freak him out, because they happened on a scale since the 1930s, soaring debt and inflation, historic gaps in income and wealth, and now great powers flirting with world war. so in his mind this is setting up 1930s scenario. he has been warning raising political polarization, potentially civil war and i think, he doesn't necessarily connect it to this but i think what holds those three things together is that we have had a massive increase in the size of government especially in the federal reserve, to the point where they dominate markets, you know, many conversations that you're having about the macro economy we're not talking about companies anymore, right? we're talking about the fed. we're talking about government spending, stimulus
i have see this from time magazine from ray dalio. the world on the break of great disorder.peter, my antennas raise what is the great disorder we're getting ready for and how might it impact everyone watching this show? >> ray dalio has been worried about this for a while and what he has been focused on there are three things that happen now freak him out, because they happened on a scale since the 1930s, soaring debt and inflation, historic gaps in income and wealth, and now great...
99,205
99K
Jun 21, 2023
06/23
by
CNNW
tv
eye 99,205
favorite 0
quote 1
the stamp features a 2013 "time" magazine photo of lewis and the stamp sheet includes a 1963 photo ofhts icon. lewis of course was elected to the house of representatives in 1986 where he served for more than 30 years until his death in 2020. before that he was a prominent civil rights leader who suffered a skull fracture when beaten by police during the march from selma to montgomery, alabama in 1965. lewis was known for advocating people to get into good trouble to make positive change in society. our coverage continues with "the situation room." i'll see you tomorrow. >> reporter: happening now the search for a missing under water tourist vessel intensifies as banging noises are heard in the area again today. we have experts standing by tracking the desperate hunt for survivors of the expedition to
the stamp features a 2013 "time" magazine photo of lewis and the stamp sheet includes a 1963 photo ofhts icon. lewis of course was elected to the house of representatives in 1986 where he served for more than 30 years until his death in 2020. before that he was a prominent civil rights leader who suffered a skull fracture when beaten by police during the march from selma to montgomery, alabama in 1965. lewis was known for advocating people to get into good trouble to make positive...
155
155
Jun 21, 2023
06/23
by
CNNW
tv
eye 155
favorite 0
quote 0
the stamp features a 2013 "time" magazine photo of lewis and the stamp sheet includes a 1963 photo of lewis as a young man when he began being a civil rights icon. lewis of course was elected to the house of representatives in 1986 where he served for more than 30 years until his death in 2020. before that he was a prominent civil rights leader who suffered a skull fracture when beaten by police during the march from selma to montgomery, alabama in 1965. lewis was known for advocating people to get into good trouble to make positive change in society. our coverage continues with "the situation room." i'll see you tomorrow. >> reporter: happening now the search for a missing under water tourist vessel intensifies as banging noises are heard in the area again today. we have experts standing by tracking the desperate hunt for survivors of the expedition to see the wreckage of the titanic. this hour the supply of oxygen is rapidly running out. we'll show you what conditions are like inside the small, cramped sub that left with five people on board. >>> china is now lashing out at the unit
the stamp features a 2013 "time" magazine photo of lewis and the stamp sheet includes a 1963 photo of lewis as a young man when he began being a civil rights icon. lewis of course was elected to the house of representatives in 1986 where he served for more than 30 years until his death in 2020. before that he was a prominent civil rights leader who suffered a skull fracture when beaten by police during the march from selma to montgomery, alabama in 1965. lewis was known for advocating...
26
26
Jun 15, 2023
06/23
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 26
favorite 0
quote 0
there was actually a time magazine cover, the champagne of drugs. here's a wonderful drug. it's, you can get high on and it's not addicted. wrong did wrong. but as a result, there are political consequences. a d, a was instructed, you will devote all your investigative effort toward heroin. you will not in vote investigative effort to cocaine trafficking. as the pos was open for the launch scale control of his new market in columbia, home, some of the criminals began production without encountering the slightest obstacle . a poor country. columbia was a vast tower tree of jungles and mountains which escaped. allstate control that the traffic has what kings are going on, because you probably will even faddie into the eyes. you turn the light beverage i saw like one to instructional, deployed to them, and they're not enough to do at least to deal with the fact. when can bridge i so they have made a lot to do. yeah. i think go 30. i ended up 3 tests in the early 19 seventy's, columbia and traffic has boat cocaine in bolivia and peruse smuggled into the united states. the frien
there was actually a time magazine cover, the champagne of drugs. here's a wonderful drug. it's, you can get high on and it's not addicted. wrong did wrong. but as a result, there are political consequences. a d, a was instructed, you will devote all your investigative effort toward heroin. you will not in vote investigative effort to cocaine trafficking. as the pos was open for the launch scale control of his new market in columbia, home, some of the criminals began production without...
42
42
Jun 17, 2023
06/23
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 42
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> this week, felix wrote in an essay for time magazine that tori bowie's could not be in vain, and that the medical community must do her part. since her traumatic pregnancy, tiana earned a social work degree so that she could help other women. but she decided that she won't expand her own family. >> the choice to have children is not necessarily because we don't want any it is because we are scared of the system and the statistics. >> antonia hylton, nbc news, report new york. >> joining me now is dr. ebony jade hilton -- -- dr. ebony jade hilton, please help us -- then if you consider that beyoncÉ and serena williams, with unbelievable access to top medical care also experience potentially deadly pregnancy complications. what is that telling us about black women and childbirth? >> what it is telling us, unfortunately is that america has not put forth the effort to get to the root of why. it is not only because, as you stated -- it is not that black women are unhealthy. we in fact, have higher education we can have a higher level of wealth, we can live in a better neighborhood, we
. >> this week, felix wrote in an essay for time magazine that tori bowie's could not be in vain, and that the medical community must do her part. since her traumatic pregnancy, tiana earned a social work degree so that she could help other women. but she decided that she won't expand her own family. >> the choice to have children is not necessarily because we don't want any it is because we are scared of the system and the statistics. >> antonia hylton, nbc news, report new...