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he was a young man. he was quite a bit younger than i was., "no, he just died walking down the street in new york." and i must say i broke into tears. i was just dumbfounded. and i might add, again, i wasn't a particularly close friend of his, but i felt he sort of got it about human nature in many, many ways, and i felt sad at the loss. and i still feel sad at the loss. >> he wasn't the kind of person you just hung out with, you know? but i loved his wife and his family, and we had a really great relationship. >> for teenagers who had grown up on those movies, i can imagine what a huge loss that must have felt like. it's enormous. >> he left hollywood too soon, and he left this life too soon. i loved him so much, and he just enjoyed the hell out of me. and i always appreciate the people who get me, and he was that guy. [ voice breaking ] i loved him very much. >> narrator: john hughes may have dropped out of the media spotlight, but the movies he made live on. >> john hughes' movies forever changed how hollywood makes and markets youth films
he was a young man. he was quite a bit younger than i was., "no, he just died walking down the street in new york." and i must say i broke into tears. i was just dumbfounded. and i might add, again, i wasn't a particularly close friend of his, but i felt he sort of got it about human nature in many, many ways, and i felt sad at the loss. and i still feel sad at the loss. >> he wasn't the kind of person you just hung out with, you know? but i loved his wife and his family, and we...
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216
Sep 8, 2012
09/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 216
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clutch cargo was a cartoon that was on in those days. was primitive. they didn't easily produce cartoons. what this was was a stone faced drawn on a piece of paper with a mouth cut out with someone in the background putting a disk through and talked. that is what johnson reminded me of. very stone face and in retrospect i now know that johnson was very important to him not to look like what he called a country backwoodsman. he wanted to look like a president. the result was in public he was a solid figure like grover cleveland. one of the fascinating things about history is you can get behind what was the facades and find things about a president in three dimensions that people who did not know him very well didn't know at the time so there's no better way of doing that than these lbj takes because it is almost like night and day. incapable of saying anything in and an interesting way. if he is saying someone is dumb the gristle i will clean this for booktv, can't find his rear end with both hands. too dumb he doesn't know how to for your and out of a.
clutch cargo was a cartoon that was on in those days. was primitive. they didn't easily produce cartoons. what this was was a stone faced drawn on a piece of paper with a mouth cut out with someone in the background putting a disk through and talked. that is what johnson reminded me of. very stone face and in retrospect i now know that johnson was very important to him not to look like what he called a country backwoodsman. he wanted to look like a president. the result was in public he was a...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
97
97
Sep 24, 2012
09/12
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SFGTV2
tv
eye 97
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i was also speaking social society, which was what was going on in society. me, to my grandmother, i was like feeling. too close to say something indefinitely. yes, why did i do the men like that? because i work around it sex. i saw that what was showing, it was the men in this world where the woman was strong. then have to be equal of the men. and i wanted to show it. there was some interest in like a blazer, a jacket, double- breasted. you have the men's jacket with the inside pocket. it is a pocket for the wallet. the women did not have that. why? because the men pay at the restaurant. but can the woman they, too? i think there was a lot of stupid things -- not stupid, but the things that were intelligent but one time that changed and was changing. and the vision of the woman about the man was changing, too. some men were not accepting their femininity. does not mean that they were gay or whatever, no. it just means that men can be sensible, but they have been traumatized by their education that wanted to make them as a john wayne, you know? apparently. it
i was also speaking social society, which was what was going on in society. me, to my grandmother, i was like feeling. too close to say something indefinitely. yes, why did i do the men like that? because i work around it sex. i saw that what was showing, it was the men in this world where the woman was strong. then have to be equal of the men. and i wanted to show it. there was some interest in like a blazer, a jacket, double- breasted. you have the men's jacket with the inside pocket. it is a...
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128
Sep 2, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
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eye 128
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the old guard was out, and mcgovern was in. when strauss was chairman, they left before they were asked. >> [inaudible] >> i heard rumors about the racist, but i don't know that that's true. i don't know if that's -- >> survey says no. >> bob have political ambitions of his own? >> bob would have liked to have been handed the presidency, i think. [laughter] he did not want to run for office. he really preferred being behind the scenes, and he said, you know, he said, you know, if he ran for the house, he said he would have to go around, eat barbecue with everybody in america, and, you know, kiss everybody's ass, but he was like, i like it when they kiss my ass. he wanted to be handing out the checks and not be on the receiving end. [laughter] >> [inaudible] >> there was talk in the 80s about -- serious talk -- i mean, i was surprised, but the "new york times" was running squids about bob being our first jewish president, and he would always say, you know, that he's, you know, foolish enough to love the rumors, but smart enough
the old guard was out, and mcgovern was in. when strauss was chairman, they left before they were asked. >> [inaudible] >> i heard rumors about the racist, but i don't know that that's true. i don't know if that's -- >> survey says no. >> bob have political ambitions of his own? >> bob would have liked to have been handed the presidency, i think. [laughter] he did not want to run for office. he really preferred being behind the scenes, and he said, you know, he...
203
203
Sep 3, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 203
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important to me that holy cross was both special and unique that it was a microcosm of what was happening in the country at that time. i am not american. i actually grew up in scotland. i am half catholic but brady is a handy name to have when you are reporting at holy cross and i was always intrigued by this period. i was born in the late 60's and never really fully understood kind of the emotions of the time as the book opens right after dark or martin luther king had been killed and also father brooks intrigued me as somebody who was a pioneer who went out there and basically circumvented the admissions process. it was very controversial as you know those of you have read the book and if you know him, he was a very strong-willed man and basically went out in a car with jim gallagher, drove to the school, personally interviewed a lot of these men, not the men who came in through other means such as eddie who came in through an athletic scholarship, and they think -- can everybody still hear me. probably better. so you now, then sat in a coffee shop one night and decided who was going to
important to me that holy cross was both special and unique that it was a microcosm of what was happening in the country at that time. i am not american. i actually grew up in scotland. i am half catholic but brady is a handy name to have when you are reporting at holy cross and i was always intrigued by this period. i was born in the late 60's and never really fully understood kind of the emotions of the time as the book opens right after dark or martin luther king had been killed and also...
168
168
Sep 1, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
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eye 168
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was there another one? >> that was -- i mean, that was really the big one.e way history has taught, can be so misleading. the way, the key is to get to the reality of how people live. not the politics of the way history is traditionally construed. actually what was the day-to-day life of the people like. that is what i can't. okay. well, thank you. >> for more permission to visit the authors website. this week a division of the book publisher penguin announce that they're moving of the release date of mark owens firsthand account of the raid of the compound of osama bin laden. describing the planning that went into the rate in the evening of the attack which resulted in the death of osama bin laden. may 2nd 2011 in pakistan. the book, no easy day, a firsthand account of the mission that killed osama bin laden will be published this coming tuesday september 4th and was already ranked number one in book sales on the amazon. .. and that by refocusing learning on the acquisition of knowledge, students and schools will be more successful. this is about an hour.
was there another one? >> that was -- i mean, that was really the big one.e way history has taught, can be so misleading. the way, the key is to get to the reality of how people live. not the politics of the way history is traditionally construed. actually what was the day-to-day life of the people like. that is what i can't. okay. well, thank you. >> for more permission to visit the authors website. this week a division of the book publisher penguin announce that they're moving of...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
108
108
Sep 5, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV2
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eye 108
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i think it was good to go in, because my life was not with ermez. it was for my own company. so we changed. we pushed. spanish rudes, perfume routes. sounds very good to my ears. i am a quite truthful person >. >> is there always going to be a controversial side of jean paul gaultier? there was a time when you were inspired by rabbis. i believe you're in new york, there were a bunch of rabbis he saw walking by the public library, you turned it into a collection. you must have known this was dramatic and would be alarming to people. >> i should say that in some way, i think i have a kind of innocence. like that is not that big part of me. when it is beautiful, i believe in it. i saw it was beautiful. i wanted to show it. for me, it was so strong, the impression. it was beautiful. and with a lot of meaning for me. it was meaning for people like a minority can come together strong and impact. at the same time, visually and spiritually. i wanted to show that beauty. after my time there, michael was to show the beauty seinfield. -- my goal was to show the beauty i felt. i should m
i think it was good to go in, because my life was not with ermez. it was for my own company. so we changed. we pushed. spanish rudes, perfume routes. sounds very good to my ears. i am a quite truthful person >. >> is there always going to be a controversial side of jean paul gaultier? there was a time when you were inspired by rabbis. i believe you're in new york, there were a bunch of rabbis he saw walking by the public library, you turned it into a collection. you must have known...
786
786
Sep 1, 2012
09/12
by
WBAL
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eye 786
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that was just after kelsey was born.hen, three years later, teresa took him back, remarried him. >> she wanted to have her family back together. that was her whole thing -- family. >> what was it like for you when scott came into your house? what would happen here as he walked in the door? >> i tried to be social with scott. he hurt my sister and i would not forget it. >> for a while things were as teresa hoped. but wishes don't always come true. soon scott was back to his old ways with that girl cops were talking to in tuscaloosa. you know how gossip can be. scott went from bereaved widower to cad. and maybe worse. >> you must have been aware of the fact that people were suspicious of him. >> it bothered me hearing the bad things people had to say about him. i knew my dad was never capable of doing something like that. you know, i was going to have his back regardless. >> but, to investigators, scott's affair and the fact that he lied about it to police was suspicious. ellis and boyd asked the girlfriend to help them ou
that was just after kelsey was born.hen, three years later, teresa took him back, remarried him. >> she wanted to have her family back together. that was her whole thing -- family. >> what was it like for you when scott came into your house? what would happen here as he walked in the door? >> i tried to be social with scott. he hurt my sister and i would not forget it. >> for a while things were as teresa hoped. but wishes don't always come true. soon scott was back to...
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tv
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certainly and at this time my father was was ill i was very concerned about him. that the whole experience of jail is not a pleasant one your freedom of course is completely curtails the food is appalling . very very difficulties. but strangely the people who were in the prison i found very nice and normal people even inmates only meets the inmates i found them very nice people very hospitable humid them you met the when you went out in the mean of the sower or you were kept in a in a cell with with that in. the overall prison section had one hundred twenty people who are free to move around at certain times during our day so that at these times during library the gym i think there was more library no longer elaborate but there was a small gym. and during eating times we could we could talk they were mostly criminals that we were the one who also spies like you said. as i have admitted you know they were. mostly there were there for drug offenses mostly mostly drug offenses like the illusion or people wore drugs illegally. i think mostly dealers start dealers so c
certainly and at this time my father was was ill i was very concerned about him. that the whole experience of jail is not a pleasant one your freedom of course is completely curtails the food is appalling . very very difficulties. but strangely the people who were in the prison i found very nice and normal people even inmates only meets the inmates i found them very nice people very hospitable humid them you met the when you went out in the mean of the sower or you were kept in a in a cell with...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
88
88
Sep 28, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV2
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eye 88
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i hadn't heard about that and it was perfect. it was exactly what i was looking for. i can go off and preach about the fact they think so many of us asian american authors and asian authors in general tend to go back and write about our ancestors and write about things in our past not our specific past but may be of of ancestors and mothers and grand mothers. we have been telling their story. i think the generation to come, will be telling stories of living here. it will be different stories. but the oppression of our voices have been for so many, many years, if you think back the first writer who was read in terms of asian american was maxine kingston. i read her in high school and was greatly affected by reading about the woman warrior. before her there were few. there were some but didn't make that economic splash. they were never read in a large way. maxine was the first one we read her in school we knew of her. she was not out there like anny tan was when she wrote the joy luck club. so much of it is timing. it meant all the history and the voices before then had
i hadn't heard about that and it was perfect. it was exactly what i was looking for. i can go off and preach about the fact they think so many of us asian american authors and asian authors in general tend to go back and write about our ancestors and write about things in our past not our specific past but may be of of ancestors and mothers and grand mothers. we have been telling their story. i think the generation to come, will be telling stories of living here. it will be different stories....
203
203
Sep 15, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 203
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that was his mission was to kind of drive these people out and suppress them. >> was there at this time what you call mainstream press outlets covering everything, including the evolution of it? [talking over each other] >> there were three daily newspapers in washington at the time. affecting three difficult and political tendencies. it was a weekly newspaper in georgetown, which was --ñ]ñmñ]ñm georgetown is now part of washington dc, but it was a separate municipality. political factions and government. they would talk about and they would write about slavery is the politics were playing out inw8w8 congress.wxwxw8w8wx someone presented a petitionw8w8 that the abuses of slavery -- i8 would never write about that.v? >> what about the [inaudible] [talking over each other] >> it was very well covered.u868 it was shocking.ux nobody expected that to happen and there was a lot of7x recriminations today and who wa] responsible, they should be did the newspapers to a mechanic.w;: a mechanic with any kind of 7:rking man.7:v86]6]v8w:6]v8 the mechanics got together, at least some of them and said
that was his mission was to kind of drive these people out and suppress them. >> was there at this time what you call mainstream press outlets covering everything, including the evolution of it? [talking over each other] >> there were three daily newspapers in washington at the time. affecting three difficult and political tendencies. it was a weekly newspaper in georgetown, which was --ñ]ñmñ]ñm georgetown is now part of washington dc, but it was a separate municipality....
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well you know i was the emperor and it was the it was here that he's glory and arrogance actually and it's so is this a fact do you believe that really the russian campaign was the main cause of the put in the in the play to probably disagree with the word arrogance and we could talk about that all night but absolutely otherwise completely agree of course the russian campaign was the single biggest reason why the polling in the critical you say single biggest single ladies i mean there there were there were other factors there the confederation of the rhine which was the german confederation was beginning to lead to a sense of german unity and with that came believe that why do they need to be under the auspices of the french empire the spanish ulcer obviously was was another a military problem for for napoleon but there's no question about of the single biggest reason for the ultimate decline of the polian was the campaign of eight hundred twelve he was he was a pretty clever kid and he was a smart politician so do you think today looking looking back at history that it was absolutel
well you know i was the emperor and it was the it was here that he's glory and arrogance actually and it's so is this a fact do you believe that really the russian campaign was the main cause of the put in the in the play to probably disagree with the word arrogance and we could talk about that all night but absolutely otherwise completely agree of course the russian campaign was the single biggest reason why the polling in the critical you say single biggest single ladies i mean there there...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
106
106
Sep 2, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV
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eye 106
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what was the transition? was he in office as the supervisor was that not addressed as the party?airperson hur: i do not remember the testimony about when he finished his duty as sheriff. do you recall the testimony? >> there was a documentary of it submitted showing the letter of resignation that was concurrent with his becoming sheriff. >> so he held public office on december 31. chairperson hur: that is an important fact that also was not established. >> it looks like it is undisputed between the parties on that point. chairperson hur: the parties apparently disagree as to whether the share of restrained ms. lopez and violated her personal liberty in paragraph five. i think that was established. any disagreement regarding that? >> i think that was well- established by the sheriff's testimony and by his guilty plea. chairperson hur: we then invited the parties to submit additional findings of facts and gave each of them 5. i did not find any of them relevant to our determination. but if any of my fellow commissioners would think that any of them should be discussed or
what was the transition? was he in office as the supervisor was that not addressed as the party?airperson hur: i do not remember the testimony about when he finished his duty as sheriff. do you recall the testimony? >> there was a documentary of it submitted showing the letter of resignation that was concurrent with his becoming sheriff. >> so he held public office on december 31. chairperson hur: that is an important fact that also was not established. >> it looks like it is...
308
308
Sep 1, 2012
09/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 308
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he was dead, it was a great release.rs. they announced it in bars around south florida and people cheered and toasted the fact he was dead. signs went up on the street, debt settled. i saw a woman just walking down ocean drive screaming, justice has been served. andrew cunanan is evil. they rejoiced in this man's death. it's a little bizarre, but that gives an indication of how it affected them. you never saw such release. >> in the days and weeks following cunanan's suicide, the investigators try to unravel the mystery behind his deadly rampage. >> police released about 700 pages of investigation several months after the case, and despite the volume of that material, it answered very many questions about cunanan. they said they could never dissect his motives. it's anybody's guess why he was brazen about that. maybe he wanted to make a statement. maybe he wanted to get caught. >> i can't fathom doing what he did. it just doesn't make any sense. obviously, he wanted to go out with a bang. >> why did he ultimately pull th
he was dead, it was a great release.rs. they announced it in bars around south florida and people cheered and toasted the fact he was dead. signs went up on the street, debt settled. i saw a woman just walking down ocean drive screaming, justice has been served. andrew cunanan is evil. they rejoiced in this man's death. it's a little bizarre, but that gives an indication of how it affected them. you never saw such release. >> in the days and weeks following cunanan's suicide, the...
134
134
Sep 3, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 134
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pearl harbor, and it was,, it was felt viscerally by all hands. following midway, the japanese were forced on the defensive, and it allowed the united states navy and marine corps and later the army to initiate the first strategic offensive that america undertook during the war, and that was the landings at guadalcanal in the solomon islands in august, just two months after midway. enterprise was there start to finish, it was involved in two battles, eastern solomons in august and the battle of santa cruz in october. and her youngest sister, the hornet -- which had launched jimmy doolittle's b25s back in april, was sunk at santa cruz -- enterprise, or, excuse me, saratoga was already on the west coast having damage repaired, so that gets us back to eugene burns' book, then there was one. because at the height of the guadalcanal campaign in november, december 1942, enterprise was our only fast carrier operational in the pacific, and she shuttled back and forth from henderson field and a couple other airfields on shore. and as you'll see in the book
pearl harbor, and it was,, it was felt viscerally by all hands. following midway, the japanese were forced on the defensive, and it allowed the united states navy and marine corps and later the army to initiate the first strategic offensive that america undertook during the war, and that was the landings at guadalcanal in the solomon islands in august, just two months after midway. enterprise was there start to finish, it was involved in two battles, eastern solomons in august and the battle of...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
123
123
Sep 19, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 123
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one time i was working and was arriving at an industry job, and i was wearing boots. they looked at me and said, [unintelligible] as a reproach. i thought, ha ha, very funny. [laughter] but it was beautiful, which can be true but it can be awful, too, a beige. it is not because it is beige, but it could be the absolute beauty, no. it depends how it is done, how it is made, how it looks like. so i was like, let's say, killing the french fashion. i should say france in general. so absolute. it has to be like that. things that i did not feel like. i think it's time i was going, i felt really in love with london. i felt more freedom. when i was going there, it gave me -- [unintelligible] sending like, yes, go on to do the things you feel are good. because it is very conservative in paris. >> only you had come to san francisco. >> yes. >> i can only imagine what you would have produced. [applause] >> that is true. >> here is this good little boy who is be heading classically and is very charming and wonderful and working hard. how did you turn into a bad boy? [laughter] an
one time i was working and was arriving at an industry job, and i was wearing boots. they looked at me and said, [unintelligible] as a reproach. i thought, ha ha, very funny. [laughter] but it was beautiful, which can be true but it can be awful, too, a beige. it is not because it is beige, but it could be the absolute beauty, no. it depends how it is done, how it is made, how it looks like. so i was like, let's say, killing the french fashion. i should say france in general. so absolute. it...
153
153
Sep 4, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 153
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there was an election in 1919 in which thompson was up for reelection. people like the newspaper publishers thought he is not going to be reelected. he is a clown. he is a corrupt person but of course he won largely because of african-american votes, german votes and irish votes. the headline was chicago blacks reelect there may. it did create a lot of tension in the city between whites and blacks because he was perceived rightly or wrongly as a true friend of the black community. he was to western extent. he talked a better game than he delivered by allege progressive people were not registering good records on racial issues where as this corrupt machine politician was regarded -- a lot of politicians in the so-called black belt, sins like ththings called him the second -- second lincoln. he was regarded as a hero. there was justification for that because no one was giving black voters representation in city government. he could become quite eloquent. he called the people in the black belt his brothers and they said the same thing back at him. there was
there was an election in 1919 in which thompson was up for reelection. people like the newspaper publishers thought he is not going to be reelected. he is a clown. he is a corrupt person but of course he won largely because of african-american votes, german votes and irish votes. the headline was chicago blacks reelect there may. it did create a lot of tension in the city between whites and blacks because he was perceived rightly or wrongly as a true friend of the black community. he was to...
189
189
Sep 2, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 189
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was born in 1936. what was his childhood like? >> guest: from a fairly early age he was dealing with western culture in the british. he was a very smart kid. his father was difficult to get along with and was not often there mostly in the nairobi and he was growing up. he was lucky in the sense that he was smart enough to get into a very good school in that area, and although he never totally finished he was a very smart student. they had that clash of old and new. for all of his youth and adolescence he was in a colonial country in a very poor part of the kenya, so he lived in the mud huts with cowles and no television and stuff like that. a century behind in some ways and get kenya was starting to emerge. the rebellion was beginning, the push for independence was beginning and the generalization he was a part of that. >> host: how long were you in kenya and what did you see? what was it like to be over there? >> guest: kenya was one of the great experiences of my life. every day was unforgettable. we were there for about two wee
was born in 1936. what was his childhood like? >> guest: from a fairly early age he was dealing with western culture in the british. he was a very smart kid. his father was difficult to get along with and was not often there mostly in the nairobi and he was growing up. he was lucky in the sense that he was smart enough to get into a very good school in that area, and although he never totally finished he was a very smart student. they had that clash of old and new. for all of his youth...
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65
Sep 16, 2012
09/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 65
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drake was convicted when he was 17. tens year later, he has his boyish looks and an adolescent appetite. >> some of the things i miss the most are peanut butter cap'n crunch. i miss gum. it's such a small thing, but you don't really realize how much you miss it until you haven't had it for 11 years. >> if i hadn't known adam's crime, i would never have guessed it was murder. adam drake had a very child-like quality about him, which is a little surprising to see in a prison environment. he came into prison as a teenager and it's almost as if something stopped in him at that age. >> drake's teen years were troubling, and he frequently ran away from home. >> i was bored, i guess. i'm smart. everything that they kind of taught me, i kind of learned. just didn't do homework, didn't like going. >> running away eventually led drake to murder. he shot and killed a man known for giving troubled teens, including himself and some of his friends, a place to stay. drake testified in court that he killed the man in self-defense. >> i
drake was convicted when he was 17. tens year later, he has his boyish looks and an adolescent appetite. >> some of the things i miss the most are peanut butter cap'n crunch. i miss gum. it's such a small thing, but you don't really realize how much you miss it until you haven't had it for 11 years. >> if i hadn't known adam's crime, i would never have guessed it was murder. adam drake had a very child-like quality about him, which is a little surprising to see in a prison...
191
191
Sep 30, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
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eye 191
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the ambassador was furious. the queen of was merely amused. her press secretary told me that because for once, somebody else was the center of media attention. in private during that trip, she also demonstrated the secret of her sturdy stance that the allows her to endure long hours on her feet. lifting her evening gown above her ankles, she told the wife of her foreign secretary that one plants once the apart like this. always keep them parallel. make sure that your weight is evenly distributed, and that is all there is to it. the queen was accompanied by her good friend, jenny, who was her first and only american lady in waiting. who grew up in new york and newport, rhode island. as the wife of one of the queen's friends since childhood, she had been entertained frequently at the queens home, that all moral, and when the queen nasser in 1973 to join her at her household, jenny declined. but she frequently became one of her most frequent attendance. the temperature was very high, but she said luckily i don't mind the heat when surrounded by a
the ambassador was furious. the queen of was merely amused. her press secretary told me that because for once, somebody else was the center of media attention. in private during that trip, she also demonstrated the secret of her sturdy stance that the allows her to endure long hours on her feet. lifting her evening gown above her ankles, she told the wife of her foreign secretary that one plants once the apart like this. always keep them parallel. make sure that your weight is evenly...
884
884
Sep 19, 2012
09/12
by
KQED
tv
eye 884
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music was what bust in my dna. -- was what was in my dna.liers was really -- gave me great insight into my own culture. when he talks about the feuds in kentucky, they started to do research in the university of michigan with a double blind psychology department test. they were setting up an incident in a hallway. all the southern guys took offense in a weird way. these were not even guys that lived there. generations removed. it made sense. the observation and analysis, it is there. it is in the dna. we do not escape our great-great grandparents. we have that in ice. that music was there. we moved to ohio. this record comes full circle in my life in that it is all the stuff i heard in the car radio in columbus, ohio. we moved out of kentucky, it is only 90 miles. the ohio valley, there is another great book called "the united states of appalachia." it is an analysis of our culture. giving us the culture that we all have in the historic perspective on that. that was there. it was clearly in me and was never going to leave. when i came to cal
music was what bust in my dna. -- was what was in my dna.liers was really -- gave me great insight into my own culture. when he talks about the feuds in kentucky, they started to do research in the university of michigan with a double blind psychology department test. they were setting up an incident in a hallway. all the southern guys took offense in a weird way. these were not even guys that lived there. generations removed. it made sense. the observation and analysis, it is there. it is in...
46
46
Sep 9, 2012
09/12
by
FOXNEWS
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eye 46
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some even gave us credit. >> if there was one juror who was a holdout which one do you think it was? >> we don't know if there was a holdout. >> whichever watches fox news. >> this week, 12 people from all walks of life in the small town of joliet, illinois, reaffirmed our faith in the criminal justice system. a faith shaken by verdicts like casey anthony. the csi mentality of dna and quick fixes couldn't compare to the centuries old argument of motive, means and opportunity. and in spite of fractured and whittled down evidence that the judge created this jury connected the dots and make no mistake, circumstancial evidence is powerful. it has been used in this country to get convictions for 200 years. it has no motive to lie. no family members. no poor eye sight. no bias and no hostility. it speaks for itself. the wheels of justice are not always swift. they move slowly. they always have. sometimes they need a little grease. sometimes a push. sometimes even a fourth wife gone missing. with us tonight is one of the 12 jurors who helped move the wheels of justice in the drew peterson c
some even gave us credit. >> if there was one juror who was a holdout which one do you think it was? >> we don't know if there was a holdout. >> whichever watches fox news. >> this week, 12 people from all walks of life in the small town of joliet, illinois, reaffirmed our faith in the criminal justice system. a faith shaken by verdicts like casey anthony. the csi mentality of dna and quick fixes couldn't compare to the centuries old argument of motive, means and...
229
229
Sep 6, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
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eye 229
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that was when i was being raised that was the devil weed. there were these kinds of horror films about what one hit on a marijuana weed would do to you but it was so prevalent, so part of the california social scene, even among the old hollywood crowd for example. there were reports that some of the grand dames of hollywood were kind of taken with marijuana. i didn't handle it very well. i didn't get addicted to it. i got out of it after a couple experiments with it. that is as much as i wanted to try but i was interested in doing it. i think there were lots of people that shared my view of that. then you move on with your life. you know, you kind of circle back and say, what's the long haul here? what are we going to do? >> host: who is red brokaw? >> guest: my father was a working-class kid. he was very, he had a very troubled childhood. he came from a large, hard scrabble family. they ran a little railroading hotel in bristol, south dakota in the north prairie. conditions were very harsh. dad was last of 10 children. his mother died when
that was when i was being raised that was the devil weed. there were these kinds of horror films about what one hit on a marijuana weed would do to you but it was so prevalent, so part of the california social scene, even among the old hollywood crowd for example. there were reports that some of the grand dames of hollywood were kind of taken with marijuana. i didn't handle it very well. i didn't get addicted to it. i got out of it after a couple experiments with it. that is as much as i wanted...
114
114
Sep 6, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 114
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he was the ladies' man. chamber lynn was the exact opposite. he was short, he was she. he wore the pants that the golfers wore in the 1920s. he wore knickers, the long socks, he wore a bow tie, he was unas piloty as a pilot could be. and the fellow who owned the plane that channel chamberlain were flying in did not believe that chamberlain could fit the image of a pilot -- world class pilot if he was the first to cross the atlantic because the owner rightly believed that the first person across the thick would atlantic would be a world class celebrity. he was right at the time. but this time there were not really any professional pilots, this is what is different about them. there were barn stormers. those were showmen, and there were lots of military pilots, but the idea of somebody who made the life of a pilot, a test pilot, somebody that trained other pilots. that was unusual. they did that they were rarities. that was lynn berg. this is taken when he was getting his wings and as an army flier down in texas, or early in his career as a airmail fliers. he was not very
he was the ladies' man. chamber lynn was the exact opposite. he was short, he was she. he wore the pants that the golfers wore in the 1920s. he wore knickers, the long socks, he wore a bow tie, he was unas piloty as a pilot could be. and the fellow who owned the plane that channel chamberlain were flying in did not believe that chamberlain could fit the image of a pilot -- world class pilot if he was the first to cross the atlantic because the owner rightly believed that the first person across...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
70
70
Sep 29, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 70
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it was like america the beautiful. it was so rural. it was such a different world for me. the first sighting of my brother. he didn't know i was coming was at the packing house. i remember seeing him, millions of apples coming down the flumes. my brother was looking at every single piece of fruit to be sure it was shipped correctly. he was to tender. i was seeing him from a long shot. i thought oh my god, all he needs is a sweater, he'd look just like are mr. rogers. i began to realize i didn't get it. that was the beginning. then i began bombing him with questions about apples and fruit. there was one moment that did change things in my perception, which is we were walking one day, i worked the fields and packing house routine, 5:00 a.m. routine. we were walking at dawn with the pickers who were all working, my brother was walking ahead of me. i saw all the shades of green, i was able to get my own ego out of the way. i thought he is amazing. this brother of mine is amazing. he has built up something astonishing here. it was almost like he was no longer invisible to me. i
it was like america the beautiful. it was so rural. it was such a different world for me. the first sighting of my brother. he didn't know i was coming was at the packing house. i remember seeing him, millions of apples coming down the flumes. my brother was looking at every single piece of fruit to be sure it was shipped correctly. he was to tender. i was seeing him from a long shot. i thought oh my god, all he needs is a sweater, he'd look just like are mr. rogers. i began to realize i didn't...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
210
210
Sep 13, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV2
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eye 210
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he saw he was holding his right hand in was dripping with blood. he also observed there was blood all of the sidewalk in front of the victim's house. he rendered first aid and so stayed with the victim. officers chased of fillmore, kevin i sent and sergeant mary gray responded to the scene as back of units. elderly male victim told responded officers that his son had stabbed him, and that he was somewhere inside of the house at 636 funston avenue. he said his son was suffering from mental issues. officers quickly determined there were other family members inside the house with the suspect. officers knew there could be for their victims of they did not act immediately. officer fillmore and sergeant grey enter the residence and started walking up the stairs while announcing san francisco police department. officers could see the carpeted stairs and walls inside the house were covered in blood. at the top of the stairs was always there ran perpendicular to the stairs. there was still no signs of the suspect or family members. officers made the decisio
he saw he was holding his right hand in was dripping with blood. he also observed there was blood all of the sidewalk in front of the victim's house. he rendered first aid and so stayed with the victim. officers chased of fillmore, kevin i sent and sergeant mary gray responded to the scene as back of units. elderly male victim told responded officers that his son had stabbed him, and that he was somewhere inside of the house at 636 funston avenue. he said his son was suffering from mental...
207
207
Sep 1, 2012
09/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 207
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i was in my early 20s. it was a small neighborhood community. it was, you know, nice tree-lined streets. just a very normal everyday community. >> it may be a cliche, but people didn't lock their doors. a lot of people were very trusting of their community and what was going on in the surrounding area. >> but on the morning of september 29, 1982, any sense of innocence and security in the chicago area is about to be shattered. 6:00 a.m. in the quiet neighborhood of elk grove village, 12-year-old mary kellerman wakes up feeling sick. >> she was going to go to school. she had been combing her hair, told dad she had a headache. and he says, well, take two tylenol. everybody took two tylenol at that time. >> within minutes after taking the tylenol capsules, mary collapses on the bathroom floor and is rushed to the hospital. >> when we got her, she was in a full arrest, so we worked on her for quite some time, but couldn't bring her back. >> she had a headache. she could have had an aneurysm, she could have had anything. who knew? that's why it was s
i was in my early 20s. it was a small neighborhood community. it was, you know, nice tree-lined streets. just a very normal everyday community. >> it may be a cliche, but people didn't lock their doors. a lot of people were very trusting of their community and what was going on in the surrounding area. >> but on the morning of september 29, 1982, any sense of innocence and security in the chicago area is about to be shattered. 6:00 a.m. in the quiet neighborhood of elk grove...
73
73
Sep 2, 2012
09/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 73
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because i was carrying a weapon. it was a gunfight. one of the guys ended up dead, the other ended up wounded. and i ended up in prison, to my regret and my family's regret and the person that's dead's regret. >> when we met him, bailey had been in prison at indiana state for 17 years and spent more than 11 of them confined to a 23-hour-per day lockdown cell in administrative segregation. >> a person ends up in administrative segregation are usually the problem child in the institution, they want to make money in the institution by trafficking. the troublemakers. >> bailey seemed more interested in creature comforts than violence. >> this is my la-z-boy. my chair. sitting in the cell for years and years and years will mess your back up because these steel beds and through the years people jump up and down on them, so it makes them uneven and gives you back problems for the rest of your life. and that's it. this is my home. this is my -- this is where i live. >> bailey is also allowed out of his cell once a day for an hour of recreation
because i was carrying a weapon. it was a gunfight. one of the guys ended up dead, the other ended up wounded. and i ended up in prison, to my regret and my family's regret and the person that's dead's regret. >> when we met him, bailey had been in prison at indiana state for 17 years and spent more than 11 of them confined to a 23-hour-per day lockdown cell in administrative segregation. >> a person ends up in administrative segregation are usually the problem child in the...
143
143
Sep 23, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 143
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the one year i was there it was a journey. it was. it was great to be in philly. i can't wait to get my cheese steak. oh my god. [applause] , by the way, mrs. carol is a good principal. you know how it is to have a good principal, for those that are teachers. [applause] great. [applause] so i guess what i should do is tell you how it all started. you get an idea what i was thinking. you see, i was closing in on 60, okay. it's over the speed limit. that's like, you know, i was closing in on 60. i and i had gotten fired. i had a talk show he was in philly here. thank you. thank you. thanks, mom. [laughter] and i was heart broken. i was. and i was thinking maybe, you know, i should think about something else. i started thinking about i'm 60. what should i do with the rest of my life. i had a kind of thing i wept to school to be a teacher and i didn't do it. my life went on. i remember when i had my first profight and my mother sent me to college to be a teacher and i was fighting she was like are you out of your mind. and told her i wanted to be a cab driver. she tho
the one year i was there it was a journey. it was. it was great to be in philly. i can't wait to get my cheese steak. oh my god. [applause] , by the way, mrs. carol is a good principal. you know how it is to have a good principal, for those that are teachers. [applause] great. [applause] so i guess what i should do is tell you how it all started. you get an idea what i was thinking. you see, i was closing in on 60, okay. it's over the speed limit. that's like, you know, i was closing in on 60....
73
73
Sep 17, 2012
09/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 73
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it was such a chaotic scene that i was trying to keep track of what everybody was doing. some of the officers were trying to rescue the stabbing victim. other officers were going after the assailant. >> i got a knife. >> the funny part about that experience was i was so caught up with the officers and what they were doing, i didn't notice until later that i ran right by the actual person that did the stabbing. and in the video, you can see the knife, you can see the officer standing with the guy that did the stabbing, but i followed the action through to the victim. >> hold that. >> come on, come on. >> go, go, go. >> move it. >> lock him up. >> move it. >> move. >> where are you heading? >> he could have probably killed me if i wanted to. looked like he might have got an artery. it was gushing out pretty good. >> we followed the victim all the way to the ambulance. and one of my favorite moments of that show was the warden going out to the ambulance to see what was happening, and then him turning around to walk back into the building and saying "lock it down," you know,
it was such a chaotic scene that i was trying to keep track of what everybody was doing. some of the officers were trying to rescue the stabbing victim. other officers were going after the assailant. >> i got a knife. >> the funny part about that experience was i was so caught up with the officers and what they were doing, i didn't notice until later that i ran right by the actual person that did the stabbing. and in the video, you can see the knife, you can see the officer standing...
1,990
2.0K
Sep 29, 2012
09/12
by
KNTV
tv
eye 1,990
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and she was very excited. i was always a big fan of garrett's. he was sweet. he was funny. and she seemed so happy with him. you know, i should say actually joe and i both were very supportive. >> by joe she is referring to claudia's ex-husband. a character actor who became a star by playing mafia tough guys, joe pesci. it sounds like her marriage to joe pesci didn't end badly. >> not at all. not at all. they're like family, you know. they're very, very close. >> claudia stayed close to joe pesci even after she started dating garrett who came from a different part of the movie business. garrett loved action and adventure, but when he met claudia, he was ready to settle down. >> we felt that this would be the gal that garrett would end up with. no more dating, no more running around. i'm going end to up with claudia. >> narrator: garrett and claudia were married less than a year after they met. >> in the beginning, i think it it was a very good relationship. >> oh, my gosh. >> they soon had a beautiful daughter, kyla. >> look at the hairdo. >> the new couple enjoyed being pa
and she was very excited. i was always a big fan of garrett's. he was sweet. he was funny. and she seemed so happy with him. you know, i should say actually joe and i both were very supportive. >> by joe she is referring to claudia's ex-husband. a character actor who became a star by playing mafia tough guys, joe pesci. it sounds like her marriage to joe pesci didn't end badly. >> not at all. not at all. they're like family, you know. they're very, very close. >> claudia...
137
137
Sep 10, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 137
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he was fired. meanwhile, there is an investigation taking place to find out more about the award of these contracts, what money is involved. we do not know where this is all going to end, but there are spreading tentacles of corruption. >> for those who do not know the stories around washington, i want to show a clip of adrian fenty, who was the mayor of washington d.c. he ran again for mayor in 2010 and lost to vincent gray. here is what the previous mayor looked and sounded like. >> just under 600,000 -- like a lot of other jurisdictions, the city started to be mismanaged and people fled the city. the district of columbia suffered, but we are on the rebound. there has been a net growth of 30,000 residents. all over this city there is great development happening in downtown, in neighborhoods. as we continue to show the city is heading in the right direction, people will continue to move here. our last challenge is, like most cities, making sure we have a world-class school system. >> why was he de
he was fired. meanwhile, there is an investigation taking place to find out more about the award of these contracts, what money is involved. we do not know where this is all going to end, but there are spreading tentacles of corruption. >> for those who do not know the stories around washington, i want to show a clip of adrian fenty, who was the mayor of washington d.c. he ran again for mayor in 2010 and lost to vincent gray. here is what the previous mayor looked and sounded like....
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
66
66
Sep 10, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 66
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the application was given to us, and the implication and description was that this was a microsoft the event. it was a midweek event. it was early, and this was a restaurant, and it has no permit, so we issued a permit for indoors. >> i see. this was not a sound permit. >> this was not an amplified sound permit, so the rest of it was somewhat irrelevant, because after we issued a citation, and we receive many females as well, but the situation was -- many emails as well, and the decision was made that they would come before the commission. >> i was wondering, do we know who the promoters are? >> it was the microsoft's private event a. >> they are exempt from the fines? >> we cited them for violating a whole bunch of things. >> anybody else? >> in conclusion, i think i am asking the same thing jocelyn is asking. if they do go for another one day permits that the commission go over that, and that would give the public the opportunity to voice their concerns, because i have a lot of people who are extremely unhappy and rightfully so. their home was invaded with this. we have had conversat
the application was given to us, and the implication and description was that this was a microsoft the event. it was a midweek event. it was early, and this was a restaurant, and it has no permit, so we issued a permit for indoors. >> i see. this was not a sound permit. >> this was not an amplified sound permit, so the rest of it was somewhat irrelevant, because after we issued a citation, and we receive many females as well, but the situation was -- many emails as well, and the...
143
143
Sep 16, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 143
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quote 0
by the time i was there, i was really mad. [laughter] and i had heard that they said don't come to that hearing with her. the poor woman, think about it now because i was on her until she was trembling. but the young man got his loan. [applause] i felt bad about the way i treated her. [laughter] >> and i think it's important to understand that you come from a place where you have been on the receiving end of this discriminatory practices of the usda so that when you walk into the usda to become the first director of rural development for georgia and the present administration, you have this unique history of having personally experienced the discrimination and having helped with lack and white farmers navigate and you have all the stories that proved him again and again and again to the point that in the book when you submitted your resignation all these reports came flooding in about all the stories you have been telling. one of the letters of support wrote about the usd loan official who kept a news in his desk. he kept a ne
by the time i was there, i was really mad. [laughter] and i had heard that they said don't come to that hearing with her. the poor woman, think about it now because i was on her until she was trembling. but the young man got his loan. [applause] i felt bad about the way i treated her. [laughter] >> and i think it's important to understand that you come from a place where you have been on the receiving end of this discriminatory practices of the usda so that when you walk into the usda to...
161
161
Sep 16, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 161
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sloan was the opposite. he was the ultimate organization man. what decisions are made by committees rather than one man up in flint, and of the world would never be the same. that's the kind of transition i was referring to. to give you one example of the difference between the pioneer one-man a loan style of durant and sloan's concept of corporate management. in 1908, shortly after creating general motors with buick as the cornerstone, he acquired a company called oldsmobile. oldsmobile had actually built the first mass-produced car in america and dominated the market for about four years. because it had fallen on hard times when he bought it. they needed a new car. in fact one of the jokes of the time is that billy paid a bunch of money for the billboards. oldsmobile was the first company to do billboard advertising and the song back then was actually the most popular song in america. but he knew that the oldsmobile team was demoralized. they were losing money. they had just been bought by a man none of them knew so what did he do? billy the s
sloan was the opposite. he was the ultimate organization man. what decisions are made by committees rather than one man up in flint, and of the world would never be the same. that's the kind of transition i was referring to. to give you one example of the difference between the pioneer one-man a loan style of durant and sloan's concept of corporate management. in 1908, shortly after creating general motors with buick as the cornerstone, he acquired a company called oldsmobile. oldsmobile had...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
115
115
Sep 8, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 115
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who was this man servant? what was his life about? it all began with the seeds and the particular questions, as simple as that. although, then, i had to answer them. what i had done is i usual low don't work with an out line. a lot of writers do they will out line what will happen and sometimes they have to because like if you are writing a mystery you need to write out the plot. i write about characters the characters drive the story. when that hatched i sat down and said, what happens is, a, he arrived and gets off the train what's going to happen. >> i know z, he would get on the train and leave at the evented book. i didn't know the alphabet in between. i was nervous and i took one step at a time very japanese like. i began to study and read everything i could find on the japanese culture. the incredible thing was not having everything that went into it and it still became a quiet book. there is a tsunami. there's tv and lep easier and a fire. i call it my zen book i think it's because as i was learning about the japanese culture,
who was this man servant? what was his life about? it all began with the seeds and the particular questions, as simple as that. although, then, i had to answer them. what i had done is i usual low don't work with an out line. a lot of writers do they will out line what will happen and sometimes they have to because like if you are writing a mystery you need to write out the plot. i write about characters the characters drive the story. when that hatched i sat down and said, what happens is, a,...
115
115
Sep 3, 2012
09/12
by
CNNW
tv
eye 115
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> i was 4 years old, and i think ted was 8. we lived two blocks apart. we never met until i was in college. >> to my lawful wife -- >> this was obviously one of the great happy moments. it seemed that everything was coming up roses. >> i sort of entered the political process helping my brother in the '60s. >> senator john kennedy of massachusetts, democrat, throws his hat in the presidential race. >> my brother, bob, managed the presidential campaign, and i had responsibility for the western states. i enjoyed it. i enjoyed the people. i loved that part of the country. i've been traveling around with jack. we're hopeful and confident that the people here in oregon are going to give jack overwhelming and enthusiastic endorsement here on next friday, also next november. thank you very much. we were taking on some of the most powerful figures in the democratic party. lyndon johnson was the strongest. >> senator lyndon b. johnson of texas. now, minnesota's governor, orville freeman places a nomination. >> the senator from the state
. >> i was 4 years old, and i think ted was 8. we lived two blocks apart. we never met until i was in college. >> to my lawful wife -- >> this was obviously one of the great happy moments. it seemed that everything was coming up roses. >> i sort of entered the political process helping my brother in the '60s. >> senator john kennedy of massachusetts, democrat, throws his hat in the presidential race. >> my brother, bob, managed the presidential campaign, and...
85
85
Sep 15, 2012
09/12
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 85
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quote 0
because i was afraid someone was going to stop me. i was interrupting a class.g would happen that would stop the prank right in the middle and that would be the end of it. so i was scared to death. >> and what about the teach? what did he think? >> i had no idea this was going to happen. i was stunned. it was so well done, so well produced and choreographed, the singing, everything was so professional it was as if gilbert and sullivan met vh1 and appeared in my class. >> while the members of prangstgrup have since graduated and moved on, their work lives forever on the web. there's little argument in this columbia university lecture hall, they captured a little piece of viral video magic. >> for a video to be successful, it needs to be first of all creative, second of all well executed and, three, it really needs to strike this emotional chord. and that emotional chord is probably the most critical because, again, you're encouraging someone to actively share something, tell friends and tell their family you have to watch this video. >> hey, teach, i've got a que
because i was afraid someone was going to stop me. i was interrupting a class.g would happen that would stop the prank right in the middle and that would be the end of it. so i was scared to death. >> and what about the teach? what did he think? >> i had no idea this was going to happen. i was stunned. it was so well done, so well produced and choreographed, the singing, everything was so professional it was as if gilbert and sullivan met vh1 and appeared in my class. >> while...
27
27
tv
eye 27
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but that he killed himself oh i heard on the first day i was sitting half an hour heard was there was an injury to the head. they were releasing said nobody knows anything more we can't say anything more than we don't know there was a conscious. thing nobody knew what it was. and then after that you know what he said he did it and then i got a call from the idea that just some people some questions if i said anything or written a letter then they asked me a bunch of questions about him and if we didn't find that was pretty much. members of john's unit were told they committed suicide after receiving a dear john letter from elizabeth it was alleged that the letter had been found with his body our see me personally hand over. but i do know one thing was i wouldn't ever for you know for him or anything would have been this in our rights are a lot of us i don't want anyone to think i would ever do that rumors continued to reach the family from soldiers returning from afghanistan in the weeks following john's funeral talk of a dear john letter gave way to speculation that he may have been
but that he killed himself oh i heard on the first day i was sitting half an hour heard was there was an injury to the head. they were releasing said nobody knows anything more we can't say anything more than we don't know there was a conscious. thing nobody knew what it was. and then after that you know what he said he did it and then i got a call from the idea that just some people some questions if i said anything or written a letter then they asked me a bunch of questions about him and if...
97
97
Sep 7, 2012
09/12
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 97
favorite 0
quote 0
he was christmas shopping and i was in the mall, and that was fun. but formally, we met at the basketball game, and my first year, i was teaching at george washington, and he brought chelsea to a game, and first there was a men's game then a women's game. not scheduled like that anymore. in '94, the president sat in on the men's game. when the women's game began he got up to leave. i thought, okay, what are you going do bonnie? i charged in to the bleachers when where he was very comfortably shaking hands with pretty, you know, approachable secret servicemen letting him meet the people. i stuck out my handnd hi, mr. president, i'm a women's study professor here. i would like you to encourage your support for title ix law. we have a great team what do you say? he said, i would love to. i have a meeting at the white house at 3:00. i said you can watch the first twenty minutes. i thought well, i have given a direct order to the president of the united. and he sat back down! so he sat down, he watched the women and he became the first u.s. president to t
he was christmas shopping and i was in the mall, and that was fun. but formally, we met at the basketball game, and my first year, i was teaching at george washington, and he brought chelsea to a game, and first there was a men's game then a women's game. not scheduled like that anymore. in '94, the president sat in on the men's game. when the women's game began he got up to leave. i thought, okay, what are you going do bonnie? i charged in to the bleachers when where he was very comfortably...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
130
130
Sep 10, 2012
09/12
by
SFGTV2
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there was some testimony about whether he was supposed to turn it over to his attorneys and who was present when that conversation -- when that conversation took place. at the end of the day, the attorneys are correct that the mayor testified that he did not think that, in and of itself, could sustain a charge of official misconduct. >> i agree with your result and i also agree with your comment about a way of acting that i find it uncomfortable. i had not thought about childish, but that applies. putting members of the staff of the sheriff's department into the position that the share of did while he was their supervisor, to return the guns to the share of department staff and expect them to hold on to them and not give them to the police department, and the inconsistent instructions we heard in testimony is insensitive to the dilemma that he puts his line officers in. i think that was troubling. but this is not -- we are not here judging people's judgment, although i think it was poor judgment. Ñichairperson hur: the last factual issue that i think could sustain a charge of official misco
there was some testimony about whether he was supposed to turn it over to his attorneys and who was present when that conversation -- when that conversation took place. at the end of the day, the attorneys are correct that the mayor testified that he did not think that, in and of itself, could sustain a charge of official misconduct. >> i agree with your result and i also agree with your comment about a way of acting that i find it uncomfortable. i had not thought about childish, but that...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 23, 2012
09/12
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SFGTV
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that was -- his application for bay bridge was denied. the revocation was for nelson's and i believe nelson's expired but i believe it expired. >> vice president fung: you know what this is? this is a denial of the appeal of that denial, i presume. >> yes, i believe you're correct. >> vice president fung: okay. the original application was for bay -- >> bay bridge. >> president hwang: again, if i could just clarify, the statement from the appellant states on may 30, the bay bridge tow permit was denied. on june 20, the nelson's tow permit was revoked. >> i'd have to check the records. i just know the one from bay bridge was denied at the hearing. the revocation on the other one probably... you're probably correct on that. >> vice president fung: in the -- his original application then for the one that was revoked, did it have the same requirements? >> same requirements, yes. >> vice president fung: as this ordinance? >> yes. >> vice president fung: it just did not have the fingerprinting requirement, therefore there was no history check?
that was -- his application for bay bridge was denied. the revocation was for nelson's and i believe nelson's expired but i believe it expired. >> vice president fung: you know what this is? this is a denial of the appeal of that denial, i presume. >> yes, i believe you're correct. >> vice president fung: okay. the original application was for bay -- >> bay bridge. >> president hwang: again, if i could just clarify, the statement from the appellant states on may...
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Sep 25, 2012
09/12
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WETA
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and the reason i was offered protection for the british was that the attack was being coming up -- was coming from another state. terrorism. tavis: how did you and others process the extreme amounts of money that was being spent by the british government to protect you? >> first of all, it was not as extreme it. i had to shoulder some of the costs. there is a view of all of these government safe houses. i was never offered a government safe house. it was up to me to find a place tuesday. that made them very expensive. and i remember once saying to one of the police officers, supposing "the satanic verses" are not generating the kind of revenue -- suppose it was a poem. if he were protecting a poet with the kinds of funds that poets and normally have, what would you do? -- that poets would normally have, what would you do? and he said, we did not know that. anyone in britain who has been a target would be protected. sovereignty. tavis: you talk about what it felt like to be in hiding, and it brought on your feelings of shame and ashamed. >> i think it is humiliating to be put in a corne
and the reason i was offered protection for the british was that the attack was being coming up -- was coming from another state. terrorism. tavis: how did you and others process the extreme amounts of money that was being spent by the british government to protect you? >> first of all, it was not as extreme it. i had to shoulder some of the costs. there is a view of all of these government safe houses. i was never offered a government safe house. it was up to me to find a place tuesday....
698
698
Sep 3, 2012
09/12
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KNTV
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when she was 19, she was dating an older man. >> i was angry and upset. she is 14.he's still a kid. and my mother still let her date him. and at one point i had to call child protective services. >> calling the watchdogs on your mother? >> yes. >> the man was arrested and convicted of having sex with a minor and he is now on a list of sex offenders. >> paula waited until he was released from prison and started dating him again. by then she was the age of consent. all before her time but still a dreamy girl in some ways. >> the little girl fantasy of being the pin up girl or shampoo model. she had a lot of barbies? >> over 500. >> she liked bash can so much, she tried to become her. tall, thin, with long golden hair. the world she tried to enter was taken with her barbie looks. but the gentlemens clubs in the detroit area were. she danced at the penthouse club and saved tips to pay for college tuition. she liked to be the girl on the pole. >> i think that's why ultimately, you know, she became a dancer. just seeking male attention. you know, love that she didn't get
when she was 19, she was dating an older man. >> i was angry and upset. she is 14.he's still a kid. and my mother still let her date him. and at one point i had to call child protective services. >> calling the watchdogs on your mother? >> yes. >> the man was arrested and convicted of having sex with a minor and he is now on a list of sex offenders. >> paula waited until he was released from prison and started dating him again. by then she was the age of consent....
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145
Sep 18, 2012
09/12
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KQED
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we know what was happening in iran at the time was that the revolution was in some trouble because of their iraq war having not gone at all well. and he was essentially looking for a way to rally the troops and it was my bad luck to be khomeini's last stand. >> rose: they visited him on the death when when he was very ill. >> and they told there was a book against islam. he was a shrewd and wily old man and saw this was something he could use to his advantage and did. i've often thought that if the book had been published a year later or he had passed away six months earlier we wouldn't be having this conversation. there would have been no need to write ts book. >> rose: there's the idea of hiding which bothers you in retrospect. the idea of, in a sense, signing some kind of apology boths you. what else. >> well, i mean just the loss of ten years of my life. not being able to kick a football in the park with my son kind of thing. but i also felt i learned a lot about myself and that's a gain, if you like. >> rose: what did you learn? >> well, after this moment we've just discussed, th
we know what was happening in iran at the time was that the revolution was in some trouble because of their iraq war having not gone at all well. and he was essentially looking for a way to rally the troops and it was my bad luck to be khomeini's last stand. >> rose: they visited him on the death when when he was very ill. >> and they told there was a book against islam. he was a shrewd and wily old man and saw this was something he could use to his advantage and did. i've often...