SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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69
Nov 21, 2012
11/12
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SFGTV2
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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...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
104
104
Nov 20, 2012
11/12
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SFGTV2
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eye 104
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this was before he was in office. he was interested in coalitions. he got me involved in the blue green alliance which was an alliance between environmentalists and labor and promote green energy and other activities and he brought all of this to the college board when he came. he brought me on, as i said to be a warrior, to fight the corruption, the lack of transparency, and other horrible things that were going on at the time, and after things got going we worked together on some projects of policy. he had an idea to create a sustainability plan that was not going anywhere for a while, but we worked together on that and we passed it, and it's really a great plan. it's an environmental model, i have to say. he brought a sunshine policy. we worked together in passing a sunshine policy. you have no idea how hard this was. everyone was opposed to it. it took a year, but we finally got it through, and he was persistent. we would meet about it and after i would say "i don't know milton. this doesn't look like it's going anywhere" and he would say "no. we
this was before he was in office. he was interested in coalitions. he got me involved in the blue green alliance which was an alliance between environmentalists and labor and promote green energy and other activities and he brought all of this to the college board when he came. he brought me on, as i said to be a warrior, to fight the corruption, the lack of transparency, and other horrible things that were going on at the time, and after things got going we worked together on some projects of...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
83
83
Nov 5, 2012
11/12
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SFGTV2
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eye 83
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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...
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if the bar tender was right that it was a friend of her son's. there it was.ay planner seized five years earlier just after the murder. >> i went through that day planner for probably a day or more. went through every scratch, piece of paper, notation, everything that was put into place in that day planner was looked at. there was a small piece of note paper with the name which appeared to me at that time to say schauber. >> that's all it said? >> i thought so, yes. >> but where we he find this schraber. unearthed one more clue when asked about the friend, sandra said the boys were once work buddies. >> they work together. >> so detective dove crisscrossed southern california searching the employment record of every target store for a guy named schrauber. but nobody heard of him. >> we were starting to come to the end of our rope. dead end. >> that was about the time jack's daughter shiree said she was getting strange packages in the mail from sandra. >> like what? >> bowling bags and ashtrays. junk. they kept coming. >> hatred more than i had before. >> sandr
if the bar tender was right that it was a friend of her son's. there it was.ay planner seized five years earlier just after the murder. >> i went through that day planner for probably a day or more. went through every scratch, piece of paper, notation, everything that was put into place in that day planner was looked at. there was a small piece of note paper with the name which appeared to me at that time to say schauber. >> that's all it said? >> i thought so, yes. >>...
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99
Nov 23, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 99
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he understood this was what the objective was and this was how to get there. discovered in himself something he didn't have any idea of and no one else did either. he had a genius for modern war. i could elaborate on that little more but there's a great deal in the book. the important point here is war made everything straight forward. we have the army and you have your army. we bang it out and we see who wins. on this question of secession grant was not constitutional lawyer. he thought the south had the inferior argument over whether secession was legal but he shared something with lincoln and that was even if the session was unconstitutional they both acknowledge a right of revolution. this was the right the american colonies exercised but the deal of revolution isn't based on the inalienable right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness and self-government but the essence of revolution is you have to win. nobody hands you victory in revolution. that is what the war was about but then the war ends and the south has to be reintegrated into the union. but t
he understood this was what the objective was and this was how to get there. discovered in himself something he didn't have any idea of and no one else did either. he had a genius for modern war. i could elaborate on that little more but there's a great deal in the book. the important point here is war made everything straight forward. we have the army and you have your army. we bang it out and we see who wins. on this question of secession grant was not constitutional lawyer. he thought the...
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Nov 23, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 81
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and he was right. it was pitch black. we couldn't even see where we're going, and a lot of times we were, like tripping on rocks and stumbling. and then what our number most about the border crossing was a helicopter. and there was a helicopter they came back with a searchlight and we were just running for our lives trying to find a place to hide, and we crawled under the bushes it and i remember that the beam of the light fell on my shoe and i was praying so hard that the people up there in the cockpit had not seen me. and luckily they didn't. so we made it across. >> where did you spend that first night? >> well, the first night, well, we may become by the time we made it across the border it was dawn. and we walked to the second house, and he was responsible for driving us to l.a. and he made us lie down in the back seat and he wouldn't let us sit up because he said we could still get pulled over by border patrol. so my siblings and i spent the whole car ride basically laying down, and it wasn't until we got like inste
and he was right. it was pitch black. we couldn't even see where we're going, and a lot of times we were, like tripping on rocks and stumbling. and then what our number most about the border crossing was a helicopter. and there was a helicopter they came back with a searchlight and we were just running for our lives trying to find a place to hide, and we crawled under the bushes it and i remember that the beam of the light fell on my shoe and i was praying so hard that the people up there in...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 26, 2012
11/12
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SFGTV2
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eye 54
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milton was my student. milton was my colleague and milton was definitely my friend. at presidio junior high school at the era before they became middle schools he was a student in my english class. even then the complexity of his personality could be seen within the child there was reflective and mature little man. adolescence can be sortd and graded in the classrooms by their sense of humor. the immature ones are still laughing at the jokes from thid grade. why did tiger look in the toilet? he was trying to find poo. >> >> i have 12th graders that still laugh at that assumer but even as a 12 year old milton had developed a taste for rye and mature humor and sophisticated humor and he was one of the few when we read the "romeo and juliet" and really got it was that was so wonderful in the humor there, and there was a lot of humor, and it was all very dirty, and that was the one thing that got my students to really love romer and juliet" and the parents thought it was good and my students understand there were magnificent dirty jokes and words that they understood and
milton was my student. milton was my colleague and milton was definitely my friend. at presidio junior high school at the era before they became middle schools he was a student in my english class. even then the complexity of his personality could be seen within the child there was reflective and mature little man. adolescence can be sortd and graded in the classrooms by their sense of humor. the immature ones are still laughing at the jokes from thid grade. why did tiger look in the toilet? he...
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Nov 23, 2012
11/12
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CNNW
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under way, the lid was blown off systematic doping in the peloton. >> it was pretty clear there was major problem. the french police are arresting team members or followers with industrial quantities of doping substances and equipment. >> the following year, the tour de france was billed as the tour of renewal. teams were terrified of being raided, but lance armstrong came prepared with a deliveryman in tow called motoman. >> motoman was this gardener/handyman for lance armstrong. the team i was on didn't carry performance enhancing drugs, so to get epo for the tour de france we came up with the plan and the plan had motoman involved where he would follow the race, always stay within probably a half hour drive of our -- motorcycle drive in our hotel. he basically had the container filled with epo and he would basically just wait for a phone call on a secret phone. when he had to do a delivery, he'd do a delivery. >> and armstrong coming up now. can he get off to a great start in the tour de france? he is aiming at 8:09. he's certainly ahead at this point. goodness me, 8:02:51. lance
under way, the lid was blown off systematic doping in the peloton. >> it was pretty clear there was major problem. the french police are arresting team members or followers with industrial quantities of doping substances and equipment. >> the following year, the tour de france was billed as the tour of renewal. teams were terrified of being raided, but lance armstrong came prepared with a deliveryman in tow called motoman. >> motoman was this gardener/handyman for lance...
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Nov 1, 2012
11/12
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KQED
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eye 169
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it was cold. we were in london, it was freezing.f whatever it was, scotchs or something. and we're thinking we're great now. we're thinking we're doing-- and the director was like, "cut, cut. what are you doing? what's wrong with you?" we were like, "we're brilliant." he said, no, you're not, you're drunk. that's it for the day. let's go home." and you know, that taught me a lesson. i was like you're thinking-- you're thinking if nobody-- he's probably thinking if nobody notices, then i'm doing a great job. i got this plane in. hey, we landed it. i beat them again. straight to the bar. start again tomorrow. >. >> rose: is there a movie you're dying to make? a story it? an idea? >> yeah, there's one i want to do. i want to do-- there was a documentary done a couple of years ago called "man on wire." he snuck across the world trade center towers -- >> rose: it was a documentary made about him. >> made about him and the caper. and i want to do the next chapter of that. i want to do-- i want to actually do that i want to recreate that.
it was cold. we were in london, it was freezing.f whatever it was, scotchs or something. and we're thinking we're great now. we're thinking we're doing-- and the director was like, "cut, cut. what are you doing? what's wrong with you?" we were like, "we're brilliant." he said, no, you're not, you're drunk. that's it for the day. let's go home." and you know, that taught me a lesson. i was like you're thinking-- you're thinking if nobody-- he's probably thinking if...
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Nov 25, 2012
11/12
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MSNBCW
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eye 91
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i told him, i was like, dad, just stop. i was like, you did what was right. i'm not mad at you. love you. i'm just glad to be home. and i'm glad to be here with you. >>> he's a very dangerous person, and he needs to remain detained. >> that's some [ bleep ] man. i swear to god, man. >> i am telling you that that is the option. >> i'm telling you if i go back to that school i'm definitely going to violate my probation. >> what is that supposed to mean? >> he reaches over the seat and pulls out a gun and had it aimed at my chest. it hit me in the arm. >> if two years in placement didn't help you change your ways, i'm not certain any more time here is going to do anything for you. today what i'm going to do is -- >> i've got a lot of years to live. if i keep messing around with this i'm going to end up dead or in jail.
i told him, i was like, dad, just stop. i was like, you did what was right. i'm not mad at you. love you. i'm just glad to be home. and i'm glad to be here with you. >>> he's a very dangerous person, and he needs to remain detained. >> that's some [ bleep ] man. i swear to god, man. >> i am telling you that that is the option. >> i'm telling you if i go back to that school i'm definitely going to violate my probation. >> what is that supposed to mean? >>...
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137
Nov 5, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN
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eye 137
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where was he that night? >> he was at home. the person who assigned that task had a drink and decided there was not actually an attack on johnson, there was a failed attack. the mastermind of this conspiracy was just a few blocks away from seward's house and succeeds on like an's life. >> we have a before and after picture of william seward. back before that night, how was he injured and why was he in bed? >> in early april, seward, one of his customs was to take a carriage ride in the late afternoon. he, his daughter, and one of his daughter's girlfriends were going to take a carriage ride in the late afternoon. the driver starts off from their house but the door is not closed. where the vermont avenue has a towering office building, the driver gets out, gets down, goes around to close the door, and the horses bolt. seward, thinking he might save them all, tries to jump out and grab the reins. instead, he falls to the ground, breaks his arm, shatters his job, black and blue all over his body. given his age and given the severi
where was he that night? >> he was at home. the person who assigned that task had a drink and decided there was not actually an attack on johnson, there was a failed attack. the mastermind of this conspiracy was just a few blocks away from seward's house and succeeds on like an's life. >> we have a before and after picture of william seward. back before that night, how was he injured and why was he in bed? >> in early april, seward, one of his customs was to take a carriage...
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755
Nov 24, 2012
11/12
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KNTV
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michael was thrilled, life was good.ut early one morning in august 2009, it all came to an end to the two with a finality as certain as crime scene tape sprung across the front of the con development dalia had been located at her 6 a.m. workout by the boynton beach police u. >> this is sergeant frank ram circumstance boynton beach police department. >> everyone all right? >> ma'am, i need talk to you it is very urgent, it involves your husband, there's been an incident. >> reporter: she was instructed to get home right away. when she arrived, she saw police cars out front, everything that spells disaster just ahead. this is a police videotape of dalia getting the news. >> ms. dippolito? i'm sergeant ram zucker the one that called you. thank you for coming. sorry to call you. listen, we'd reported disturbance at your house. >> reporter: the officer was direct with dalia. he said there's been an intruder in the house and several shots were fired. >> your husband, michael, okay, i'm sorry to tell you you ma'am, he's been ki
michael was thrilled, life was good.ut early one morning in august 2009, it all came to an end to the two with a finality as certain as crime scene tape sprung across the front of the con development dalia had been located at her 6 a.m. workout by the boynton beach police u. >> this is sergeant frank ram circumstance boynton beach police department. >> everyone all right? >> ma'am, i need talk to you it is very urgent, it involves your husband, there's been an incident....
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Nov 14, 2012
11/12
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KQED
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eye 168
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(geese honking) >> it was a beautiful morning. the sun was out. and he said this was the day. he brought out this wretched rusty revolver. and i ran a cleaning rod through it to make sure that it was all right. he seemed a little uncertain as to just how to hold the weapon. if you tried to aim the weapon toward the top of your head, the trigger guard would interfere with your chin. so we concluded that if you turned it 90 degrees, that would be the way to do it. one of us suggested maybe he'd like to have a last smoke. so i got him his tobacco and his pipe, and he enjoyed that. and then he indicated that it was time. he took the gun-- he had loaded it-- and with the aid of his walker, we walked out to the garden. he chose the spot, and he decided he would lie down. so we said goodbye. and i shook his hand. i walked up the road a few hundred feet. i started to say, "god bless you," and i got "god bless" out when i heard the shot. he had put the revolver in his mouth, and it was instantly effective. and his pulse ceased soon after that. and i felt very sure that i could report t
(geese honking) >> it was a beautiful morning. the sun was out. and he said this was the day. he brought out this wretched rusty revolver. and i ran a cleaning rod through it to make sure that it was all right. he seemed a little uncertain as to just how to hold the weapon. if you tried to aim the weapon toward the top of your head, the trigger guard would interfere with your chin. so we concluded that if you turned it 90 degrees, that would be the way to do it. one of us suggested maybe...
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Nov 3, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 184
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it was another photo op and it was at least 20 below zero and what he was doing was participating in some of the annual perry frostbite bicycle race, where they i think bicycle 20 miles and back and it's an annual event and then they have some kind of meal at the local high school, etc., so he was dressd in that garb, he was very athletic, and this was his photo op for the day which none of us particularly appreciated. we were in heated vans and that's the way i like to keep it when it's that cold, but that's what he was doing, this frostbite race, which was just a photo op. >> this one? >> this is again u.s. studio, i believe, in des moines, when he was getting ready for an appearance on c-span and one of the production assistants was helping i think with your piece, i don't know whether it was remote or not, helping him into the ear piece, and it's that kind of moment that is totally unplanned, where somebody's hands were behind him and this is again the imagery of hands on the candidate all the time. fix this, manipulate, always hands on, somebody doctoring up the candidate i thud
it was another photo op and it was at least 20 below zero and what he was doing was participating in some of the annual perry frostbite bicycle race, where they i think bicycle 20 miles and back and it's an annual event and then they have some kind of meal at the local high school, etc., so he was dressd in that garb, he was very athletic, and this was his photo op for the day which none of us particularly appreciated. we were in heated vans and that's the way i like to keep it when it's that...
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Nov 26, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 170
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one was sam adams and the other was john adams.am adams that was a direct descendant and john adams was a direct descendant of john adams. >> they stayed out of the news which is public good -- probably good. is there a place people can go? >> there's a national park, the john adams national park or of a lifelong homes of the generations, and i think the gender generation kept them up for a while they all drifted into the city's. both of the original home where john adams was born and then a second small home were john quincy adams was born are open to visitors and a large home that john adams built later on in his life and his retirement with abigail that too was there and beautifully furnished to read everybody talks about the founding fathers and they forget to talk about the founding mothers. martha washington was at valley forge, and abigail adams, as i said, took young john quincy up to the top of the hill to watch the battle and then worked hard to help the cause while her husband was in philadelphia. this might kill was of
one was sam adams and the other was john adams.am adams that was a direct descendant and john adams was a direct descendant of john adams. >> they stayed out of the news which is public good -- probably good. is there a place people can go? >> there's a national park, the john adams national park or of a lifelong homes of the generations, and i think the gender generation kept them up for a while they all drifted into the city's. both of the original home where john adams was born...
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416
Nov 18, 2012
11/12
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CNNW
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eye 416
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one thing was the same as the day she arrived 30 years ago. >> first thing i noticed was the heat wasng else was different. an open field at what was the heart of the settlement. the buildings dismantled and carried away by natives. jungle growth retaking the land, so thick our guides needed machetes. a few banana trees still standing. and this. the remains of one small tractor half hidden in the weeds. for tracy parks, what is important is what was not here. >> it's -- this is where it happened. so i had to bring myself back to feel the pain and the -- the fears. and see that it's gone, really helped me. >> did you not believe it was gone? >> i had to see it for myself. >> that it was really gone? >> yeah. >> that no buildings stand? >> yep. >> that he's not here. >> that he's not here. >> when one of the earliest members of the peoples temple arrived here in guyana he said jim jones told him the road to jonestown led in but it did not lead out. for 900 people who followed jim jones here, he led them only to the grave. the sign in the rafters in the suicide hall read those who do not
one thing was the same as the day she arrived 30 years ago. >> first thing i noticed was the heat wasng else was different. an open field at what was the heart of the settlement. the buildings dismantled and carried away by natives. jungle growth retaking the land, so thick our guides needed machetes. a few banana trees still standing. and this. the remains of one small tractor half hidden in the weeds. for tracy parks, what is important is what was not here. >> it's -- this is...
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130
Nov 26, 2012
11/12
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KCSM
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eye 130
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he was bigger than i was. so i finally got him sideways and i started to roll down the hill with him, just me wrapped around him, to get him. and the machine gun was firing at us. and i can remember going like, "if they hit us, i hope this guy's on top." that was going through my mind. it's like, "i hope he's on top, not me, when the bullet hits." i got down and we fell over a little ledge. and there was a navy corpsman there that started to work on him right away. and he -- you know, i mean it's just so amazing when i think about this scene. it's just -- talking to you about it. the kid was vomiting. and this navy corpsman was taking the vomit and spitting it out and then blowing air into him. and taking the vomit and spitting it out and blowing air into him. and -- then he stopped. and he looked me and said, "there's no use, lieutenant. i just saw this." and he held the kid's head. and there was a bullet hole right in the top of his head. and i thought, well, okay, he's dead. and i went off -- i was busy. th
he was bigger than i was. so i finally got him sideways and i started to roll down the hill with him, just me wrapped around him, to get him. and the machine gun was firing at us. and i can remember going like, "if they hit us, i hope this guy's on top." that was going through my mind. it's like, "i hope he's on top, not me, when the bullet hits." i got down and we fell over a little ledge. and there was a navy corpsman there that started to work on him right away. and he --...
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264
Nov 23, 2012
11/12
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 264
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but he did exist, and he was actuallyhe was infirm. he was suffering from a terrible degenerative disease called huntington's disease, and he was in the brooklyn hospital here in new york. dylan saw him before he died. he died in 1967. but his legacy was to write thei suppose, what you might call the founding songs of political pop, you know. and i would argue that he was the first alternative musician. he wrote his most famous song, "this land is your land," as an alternative to the number one hit single in jukeboxes in 1940, when he was hitchhiking to new york. every time he went and stopped in a bar, someone would put this song on the jukebox. and it was irving berlin's "god bless america." and he hated it. it was like, how can you say that aboutyou know, it was still the depression. in the 1940s, the depression hadn't ended in the united states of america. it was only the second world war that we ended the depression. and he sat down, and he wrote this song called "god blessed america for you and me," and which later became "this l
but he did exist, and he was actuallyhe was infirm. he was suffering from a terrible degenerative disease called huntington's disease, and he was in the brooklyn hospital here in new york. dylan saw him before he died. he died in 1967. but his legacy was to write thei suppose, what you might call the founding songs of political pop, you know. and i would argue that he was the first alternative musician. he wrote his most famous song, "this land is your land," as an alternative to the...
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124
Nov 18, 2012
11/12
by
CNN
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eye 124
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i would not is have cried if we would lost though, it was -- it was that close.ain, it was another good fight for boxing, i thought. and it was two great technicians doing what they do best. ♪ neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair visibly reduces fine lines and wrinkles in just one week. why wait if you don't have to. neutrogena®. >> the september press tour finished off in juan manual marquez's hometown, they had a gathering at the city arena. inside, there was the feel of a celebration. with fans eager to glimpse the two legends up close. >> viva mexico, viva mexico! viva juan manual marquez. viva marquez! and viva congressman manny pacquiao. >> the reception for pacquiao, of course, was no surprise. given how frustrating the bouts have been for mexican fans. a third of the bouts took another four years to come to be. and when it did last november, it would be held again at the mgm grand. over the course of the eight years since the first bout, the two sides have become well acquainted. perhaps too acquainted in fact for freddie roach. >> i did have something happen
i would not is have cried if we would lost though, it was -- it was that close.ain, it was another good fight for boxing, i thought. and it was two great technicians doing what they do best. ♪ neutrogena® rapid wrinkle repair visibly reduces fine lines and wrinkles in just one week. why wait if you don't have to. neutrogena®. >> the september press tour finished off in juan manual marquez's hometown, they had a gathering at the city arena. inside, there was the feel of a celebration....
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206
Nov 8, 2012
11/12
by
CNNW
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eye 206
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i was confidence then and please thad i was right. sometimes you have to take a stand and i did on that one. >> well, courage has always been your strong point. congratulations on a brilliant campaign. it was a master class on how to win an election. well done. >> david axelrod a very, smart guy. >> with me now is bo biden you must be a happy guy tonight. >> i am. wonderful night. >> you were with the first family and your parents. what was the mood like as victory became a reality? >> it was an exciting night. as david said, it was exciting for all of us. we were in a different part of the hotel than the first family. i saw that we won iowa and i was interested in the fact that we won iowa. and then my 6-year-old son came and i told him that and he said no, daddy we won. i went back to start getting dressed. and he said we won. and that is how i found out fom my son >> how is your father about it? >> oh he was you know, over the moon. he was very, very happy. our entire family was we were all together. it was a great end to a great n
i was confidence then and please thad i was right. sometimes you have to take a stand and i did on that one. >> well, courage has always been your strong point. congratulations on a brilliant campaign. it was a master class on how to win an election. well done. >> david axelrod a very, smart guy. >> with me now is bo biden you must be a happy guy tonight. >> i am. wonderful night. >> you were with the first family and your parents. what was the mood like as victory...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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105
Nov 12, 2012
11/12
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SFGTV
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eye 105
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there was no planning commission action it was in violation. >> okay. i misread it. are you finished? >> i am here for any other questions. >> okay. i guess i have to allow him to say something. >> i'm sorry. first i agree with the zoning administrator and it dealt with a variance case at that time and it was because they were proposing a 50-foot by 25-foot lot. it was just individual dwelling and the planning commission denied for various reasons. the most important thing is the action of approval for the two dwellings south to subject property where the planning department staff and specific person said this is okay as long as you keep a 10-foot strip between the two buildings, and the existing building to serve as a rear yard for the existing building, and what i believe the zoning administrator's determination that is before you has done to effectively wipe away that stipulation that the rear yard be maintained for the benefit of the corner lot, and that would be something that would be considered in a variance. generally -- i will go back. if i were the zoning a
there was no planning commission action it was in violation. >> okay. i misread it. are you finished? >> i am here for any other questions. >> okay. i guess i have to allow him to say something. >> i'm sorry. first i agree with the zoning administrator and it dealt with a variance case at that time and it was because they were proposing a 50-foot by 25-foot lot. it was just individual dwelling and the planning commission denied for various reasons. the most important...
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Nov 25, 2012
11/12
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MSNBCW
tv
eye 63
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he was in a daze. he was quiet. he looked like he knew he could have been killed. >> the train didn't hit the cab. it hit the last axle on the tractor, on the truck. and just spun it around. and that's what saved that guy's life. >> the massive collision is a learning experience for truck drivers who view the dramatic footage and especially for the one who sees it firsthand. >> every time i cross that train track crossing, i think of that day. other train crossings, i slow down, i stop, and i make sure there's nobody coming. >>> another direct hit at a railroad crossing. this time, in the american midwest. may 24th, 1991, lafayette, indiana. a freight train blows its horn and then slams into a tractor-trailer trying to cross the tracks. the train forces the truck 75 feet down the track before finally coming to a stop. >> it was like slow motion. it hit in the trailer and it kind of scooted down the trailer and then it was pushing on the cab and it knocked down signals. rocks were flying everywhere. >> mark skaggs li
he was in a daze. he was quiet. he looked like he knew he could have been killed. >> the train didn't hit the cab. it hit the last axle on the tractor, on the truck. and just spun it around. and that's what saved that guy's life. >> the massive collision is a learning experience for truck drivers who view the dramatic footage and especially for the one who sees it firsthand. >> every time i cross that train track crossing, i think of that day. other train crossings, i slow...
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Nov 19, 2012
11/12
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KNTV
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eye 146
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also the other point was, once the video was put together, it was clear there was no demonstration. this should have been known much earlier. it also raises the concern of talking points by committee. and i have some concern about that. >> but was there a cover-up? do you believe that the president or anybody serving the president deliberately misled the american people about the true nature of this attack for political reasons? >> no, no. >> absolutely not, senator? >> that's correct. >> i don't -- >> do you believe anyone misled the american people deliberately for political reasons? >> well, this is what i know. i know the narrative was wrong and the intelligence was right. now, getting between there and there i think you have to be careful about making those accusations. i think you should have to prove it. as an old fbi agent, you should prove it first. >> but this is important. you're saying petraeus says, look, i said it was terrorism all along. susan rice told the american people we thought it was spontaneous. there's a disconnect. >> even more important than that, the narra
also the other point was, once the video was put together, it was clear there was no demonstration. this should have been known much earlier. it also raises the concern of talking points by committee. and i have some concern about that. >> but was there a cover-up? do you believe that the president or anybody serving the president deliberately misled the american people about the true nature of this attack for political reasons? >> no, no. >> absolutely not, senator? >>...
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a was given was a phone conversation from in a. small it was supplied by did work closely with titan all year long while i was in iraq. and i can say that a lot of the translators weren't trained at all there was no managers there was no soldiers agent there was no training there was no follow up even a system of if these teams really translating or doing a reading out inflating given their opinions probably ate as a result a lot of people got hurt a lot of people get killed and medicine was stuck last because someone wants to make money and wants to have affection in his pocket. it's. here you have the m.p.'s who engage and participated in horrific conduct are being held accountable for their actions why aren't they u.s. contractors the civilian corporate personnel why aren't they being held accountable for their actions if you are a u.s. soldier and you heard an iraqi civilian and that becomes know it you will be court martialed but if you are a u.s. contractor and you kill iraqi civilian that becomes known you will be sent home
a was given was a phone conversation from in a. small it was supplied by did work closely with titan all year long while i was in iraq. and i can say that a lot of the translators weren't trained at all there was no managers there was no soldiers agent there was no training there was no follow up even a system of if these teams really translating or doing a reading out inflating given their opinions probably ate as a result a lot of people got hurt a lot of people get killed and medicine was...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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86
Nov 16, 2012
11/12
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SFGTV2
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eye 86
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i was born when he was 20. mine were not related to diplomacy. as a toddler he would send me on missions, which i was a willing accomplice. he sent me to stick carrots up my younger brothers nose as he slept in on christmas morning. that was really fun. growing up i was always able to brag that i had a brother in a foreign country. i got to visit him in these places. we road camels around pyramids in egypt, bathed in tunisia, snorkled in sinai and danced in israeli discos. in libya i played tennis with the daughter of his libyan tennis coach, learned about medical school in libya and jogged through the ruins. but, as we said, chris always came home and entertained us when he did. i worked hard to sharpen tennis and skiiing skills. i was proud the year chris said you ski faster than the master. [ laughter] >> we got up early to be the first on the ski lift. at my wedding he said he would be happy by to perform a libyan liberation dance to celebrate the success of the revolution. [ laughter] >> he inspired me to travel and work inter nationally. i
i was born when he was 20. mine were not related to diplomacy. as a toddler he would send me on missions, which i was a willing accomplice. he sent me to stick carrots up my younger brothers nose as he slept in on christmas morning. that was really fun. growing up i was always able to brag that i had a brother in a foreign country. i got to visit him in these places. we road camels around pyramids in egypt, bathed in tunisia, snorkled in sinai and danced in israeli discos. in libya i played...
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Nov 7, 2012
11/12
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CURRENT
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his father was a muslim. his father was an atheist and his father was a communist.ake my guns. [ applause ] he says mitch mcconnell just announced republicans must dedicate themselves to the goal of denying barack obama a third term. >> i think he may be able to succeed there. [ applause ] >> stephanie: the president. >> obama: we're an american family and we rise or fall together as one nation. >> stephanie: thank you mr. president. [ ♪ battle hymn of republic ♪ ] aww! >> she's not saying. >> stephanie: jim's happy clappy for a day. >> are you going to go back to normal tomorrow? >> shh whatever. >> he went back to normal now. >> stephanie: 45 minutes after the hour. right back on "the stephanie miller show." >> it is a combination of low self-esteem, low blood sugar and missing red wine with -- mixing red wine with my dog's painkillers. >> announcer: it's "the stephanie miller show." from silver screens... to flat screens... twizzlerize your entertainment everyday with twizzlers the twist you can't resist. (vo) she gets the comedians laughing and the thinkers thin
his father was a muslim. his father was an atheist and his father was a communist.ake my guns. [ applause ] he says mitch mcconnell just announced republicans must dedicate themselves to the goal of denying barack obama a third term. >> i think he may be able to succeed there. [ applause ] >> stephanie: the president. >> obama: we're an american family and we rise or fall together as one nation. >> stephanie: thank you mr. president. [ ♪ battle hymn of republic ♪ ]...
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460
Nov 23, 2012
11/12
by
KQED
tv
eye 460
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quote 2
the magic was fun but it was ultimately it was the characters that kept people coming back, it was the people. >> rose: how do you write? you get up in the morning early do you go make coffee and sit down? >> late 40s, believe me the best work is done early morning. >> rose: exactly. >> the earlier, when i was in my 20s i could indeed sit up all night but those days are gone. it is really best to get up early and i find that the morning -- >> rose: early means what? >> well, my husband needs da. >> rose: the crash of -- >> 6:30 to get to work my huh and the kids need to be get up early to go off to school, so once they have gone and the house is empty i would start working yes and get another coffee and start working and that's the ideal writing time, those hours in the morning. >> rose: and how long? >> well, i can write a lot of hours in the day, i mean i have done eight hours days comfortably recently. >> and every day you sit down for eight hours a day you have something on the page? >> yes, definitely. >> rose: you don't go days in which you are just -- >> no. >> rose: but there w
the magic was fun but it was ultimately it was the characters that kept people coming back, it was the people. >> rose: how do you write? you get up in the morning early do you go make coffee and sit down? >> late 40s, believe me the best work is done early morning. >> rose: exactly. >> the earlier, when i was in my 20s i could indeed sit up all night but those days are gone. it is really best to get up early and i find that the morning -- >> rose: early means...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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125
Nov 4, 2012
11/12
by
SFGTV2
tv
eye 125
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he was so well thought of.ent a hand-written card and to my surprise he returned the correspondence with his own handwritten note. that would be very much like chris. he appreciated and enjoyed interactions with people. in fact, our friend chris highland put it very eloquently when he said, chris was the finest among us. more than his obviously charms, he was a man of substance and humility. at parties, dinners and gatherings he spent little times talking about himself and his accomplishments. only when he was forced to. instead he asked people about their lives, their views, their accomplishments. he always focused on ther people rather than himself. this is true and never changed. i believe it was central to his success in washington and around the world. for all of us who came to know him it was such pleasure and a privilege. [applause] >> i am the lead ambassador before and after the revolution. on behalf of the libyan government and libyan people, i want to say to chris' family, parents, brother, sisters a
he was so well thought of.ent a hand-written card and to my surprise he returned the correspondence with his own handwritten note. that would be very much like chris. he appreciated and enjoyed interactions with people. in fact, our friend chris highland put it very eloquently when he said, chris was the finest among us. more than his obviously charms, he was a man of substance and humility. at parties, dinners and gatherings he spent little times talking about himself and his accomplishments....
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Nov 13, 2012
11/12
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FOXNEWS
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it's possible, and if that's the way it was done it was wrong. it was improper. i can't believe that a a sitting cabinet member, a close adviser ever the president would allow the president to be sending general petraeus around the world on these high-level, top secret missions nothing that this was hanging over general petraeus' head. that again should trump everything. the president's main job is to be commander and chief. that was important for him to know. he could decide whether he wanted to keep general petraeus on the team, keep sending them on this mission. megyn: does petraeus need to testify before congress about libya. >> absolutely. megyn: thank you mr. 4 chairman. thank you for being here. we'll see if it happens. we appreciate it. that is one of the key questions about whether the two events are tied, his resignation and his now canceled testimony before congress about what happened in libya. we will be probing that a little further in the broadcast. we've also been watching this white house briefing for news about changes to the president's cabinet
it's possible, and if that's the way it was done it was wrong. it was improper. i can't believe that a a sitting cabinet member, a close adviser ever the president would allow the president to be sending general petraeus around the world on these high-level, top secret missions nothing that this was hanging over general petraeus' head. that again should trump everything. the president's main job is to be commander and chief. that was important for him to know. he could decide whether he wanted...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 23, 2012
11/12
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SFGTV2
tv
eye 137
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this was in the late 50's. my grandfather and my father, like many other irish who went to cuba during the past three centuries, became integrated into the cuban society and many used spanish as their mother tongue. as a child, i was never able to pronounce certain words. i spent many solitary hours searching for words and phrases in dictionaries. my spanish was not cuban enough. my english was not irish enough. my catalan, only a few words. spanish was and is a privileged territory where i feel alive and well. my father grew up in new york and havana and married a cuban woman, my mother. all my family shared a great loving for havana, a city they call home. but contrary to my family, i grew up dreaming of traveling and wanted to leave havana for dublin, where some of the most famous writers i keep admiring were born, and also dreaming of paris where my grandparents, my grandfather, spend many important years of his life. also i want to move to my place, i don't know what was the name of that place. every time
this was in the late 50's. my grandfather and my father, like many other irish who went to cuba during the past three centuries, became integrated into the cuban society and many used spanish as their mother tongue. as a child, i was never able to pronounce certain words. i spent many solitary hours searching for words and phrases in dictionaries. my spanish was not cuban enough. my english was not irish enough. my catalan, only a few words. spanish was and is a privileged territory where i...
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Nov 15, 2012
11/12
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CNNW
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and i think in his own way, he was very testy today, and in his own way, what he was doing was he was saying to john mccain, you want to make this an issue, buddy? dare me to nominate her. it really sounded like in reading between the lines that this is something he's interested in doing. this is a political fight that's not going to go away. one thing that struck me is that the president talked about going after her, because she's "an easy target." well, what does that mean? is it because she's a woman? is it because she was the only one out there using the information that she had? a i mean, it's interesting to me. i'm not quite sure what the president was talking about. >> you know, david, so many questions about the attacks in benghazi, and it is surprising that they are going after ambassador rice and not secretary clinton? >> no, i'm not surprised, and i do think that underneath all of this, there is not as much confidence with susan rice as with republicans. they favor john kerry as the next secretary of state. they work well with him, and they think he has the requisite experi
and i think in his own way, he was very testy today, and in his own way, what he was doing was he was saying to john mccain, you want to make this an issue, buddy? dare me to nominate her. it really sounded like in reading between the lines that this is something he's interested in doing. this is a political fight that's not going to go away. one thing that struck me is that the president talked about going after her, because she's "an easy target." well, what does that mean? is it...
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Nov 19, 2012
11/12
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MSNBCW
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eye 84
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it was dr.epper. >> as they hover together above the earth, austin asks leslie to marry him. >> you're kidding me! >> as soon as he pulled out the ring box, i was just so surprised that i yelled "you are kidding me! "and then i was just laughing and crying. >> success. creighton and the others descend with a celebratory bottle of apple cider. >> the memorable proposal makes a finale to an already epic day. >> i was in my favorite place. i was with the person who meant the most to me, and it's the best i've ever felt. >>> coming up, it's a race against time to save a group of horses who fall through the ice. >> and they're just screaming for help. >> when "caught on camera: what on earth?" continues. ombine the capability of a pathfinder with the comfort of a sedan and create a next-gen s.u.v. with best-in-class fuel economy of 26 miles per gallon, highway, and best-in-class passenger roominess? yeah, that would be cool. introducing the all-new nissan pathfinder. it's our most innovative pathfind
it was dr.epper. >> as they hover together above the earth, austin asks leslie to marry him. >> you're kidding me! >> as soon as he pulled out the ring box, i was just so surprised that i yelled "you are kidding me! "and then i was just laughing and crying. >> success. creighton and the others descend with a celebratory bottle of apple cider. >> the memorable proposal makes a finale to an already epic day. >> i was in my favorite place. i was with...
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Nov 12, 2012
11/12
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KQED
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eye 158
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when i was a little girl, i was a dancer. i was doing musicals. and you know, with this part i would have done-- i would have done it if it had come to me as a miniseries or a film. i really felt a connection to the character. so you know, after leaving school i, in fact, david and i, was one of my very first plays i did out of college, david and i did a play together. i was doing theatre and i had only been making movies for about four and a half years. but i do find comfort and education in all the mediums, television, film and theatre. and i will continue to do all of them for that reason. >> rose: did you go to julliard on a scholarship funded by robin williams? >> yes, i did. amazing, huh? what a generous man. yes. yeah, i know, the first person to go to college in my family. and it was made possible because robin williams generously offers a scholarship because he's an alumni at julliard. and i have not met him yet. >> rose: you will after this airs, i guarantee you. >> i have been saying it a lot. i still haven't met him. part of me is expe
when i was a little girl, i was a dancer. i was doing musicals. and you know, with this part i would have done-- i would have done it if it had come to me as a miniseries or a film. i really felt a connection to the character. so you know, after leaving school i, in fact, david and i, was one of my very first plays i did out of college, david and i did a play together. i was doing theatre and i had only been making movies for about four and a half years. but i do find comfort and education in...
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Nov 12, 2012
11/12
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MSNBC
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was it the tape? was it the 47% tape?was that, and he said they also made a terrible mistake at the end with that jeep commercial that we saw here on "morning joe" that had two automobile ceos coming out and calling romney who was supposed to be the business guy, the michigan native, calling him a liar basically. >> mike allen. >> that's not good. >> with a look at the "politico playbook." mike, thanks so much. >> at his age. >> for 102, he's good-looking. >> i tell you what. >> if i'm looking that good five or six years from now when i'm 102, i'll be happy. >> you know what it is? it's all that gingham pinafore. what is that? i don't know that what was. i don't know what i read there. >> keeps you young. >>> when we come back, not a good day yesterday for mark sanchez. what do we do here? >> when has mark sanchez had a good day recently? >> that's a good question. >> last night he went out to eva longoria. >> when will it be tebow time? mike florio joins us next on "morning joe." ♪ if it wasn't for you ♪ don't know what
was it the tape? was it the 47% tape?was that, and he said they also made a terrible mistake at the end with that jeep commercial that we saw here on "morning joe" that had two automobile ceos coming out and calling romney who was supposed to be the business guy, the michigan native, calling him a liar basically. >> mike allen. >> that's not good. >> with a look at the "politico playbook." mike, thanks so much. >> at his age. >> for 102, he's...
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208
Nov 9, 2012
11/12
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FOXNEWS
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eye 208
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the way the issue was handled it was like 15%. >> this is a perm house that was destroyed and personal property. they feel like this dude cares more about me. it could have been both ways. >> why do we want a government that cares about you? >> now it is like, love me, care about me. >> jimmy, that's an excellent question. >> you want them to come and bring some of my money back. >> i want my money. >> that's what they are there for. >> my point is that you can state the fact that it had an i will pact, but you don't take pleasure in it and don't brag about it. >> i just realized something. we are talking about these bloody illegals. there are maybe 12 million here illegally, right? if you dare question them that is racial profiling. nobody has a problem with that. >> they ain't making movies. >> but even you are saying, that is not valid. when you dig up a stupid bank fraud thing you say he deserves to be in jail. >> but jimmy -- >> they don't go to jail, but this guy does. >> i give you that. >> why is this any different than the arizona law that said if a person gets stopped for som
the way the issue was handled it was like 15%. >> this is a perm house that was destroyed and personal property. they feel like this dude cares more about me. it could have been both ways. >> why do we want a government that cares about you? >> now it is like, love me, care about me. >> jimmy, that's an excellent question. >> you want them to come and bring some of my money back. >> i want my money. >> that's what they are there for. >> my point...
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Nov 16, 2012
11/12
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FOXNEWS
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eye 167
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that was the oven. this was 7:00 a.m. in the morning when it happened and people in this part of southern israel have 10 seconds from when the warning sirens go off to a rocket exploding in their kitchen. still tonight those rockets are flying. the israeli air force is pounding away. the egyptian prime minister went into gaza today trying to bring about some sort of calm. that didn't work. tomorrow is a turkish envoy coming to see hamas. a number of these envoys are supporting hamas. the egyptian president spoke about how much he supported the principle people. the question is, was this really happening or is the egyptian president playing two sides of the cards. that at this point is is the only hope for peace rather than a ground war starting sometime this weekend. megyn: let's take a look at what unfolded today. 66 rockets hit inside israel. this doesn't count those intercepted by israel's missile defense system and failed to reach their targets. since israel launched operation pill lah --doperation pillar of. take a l
that was the oven. this was 7:00 a.m. in the morning when it happened and people in this part of southern israel have 10 seconds from when the warning sirens go off to a rocket exploding in their kitchen. still tonight those rockets are flying. the israeli air force is pounding away. the egyptian prime minister went into gaza today trying to bring about some sort of calm. that didn't work. tomorrow is a turkish envoy coming to see hamas. a number of these envoys are supporting hamas. the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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107
Nov 11, 2012
11/12
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SFGTV2
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that was most visible, she was the one that became a star. in december, jill's behavior began to change a little bit. we noticed she began to pull away from the family. >> we worked very hard to let her do the things she wanted to do and keep it in a safe environment that we had some control over. and that was a difficult task and we worked long hours discussing it with her and what we felt was important and how she should behave. >> what went through my mind was initially the feeling that she was a teenager, i knew jill was very strong in hr personality and i knew that she was a good kid, a really good -- both my daughters are great kids. she was just exploring her sort of self-identity and i saw it as a way for her to become independent so i supported it. but it frustrated me that she was pushing away from the family. >> the day jill died i walked into her bedroom to wake her up around 11:00 am and i walked in and the dogs jumped up on the bed and she said a sweet hello to me. and i said i was concerned because she was sleeping late and i t
that was most visible, she was the one that became a star. in december, jill's behavior began to change a little bit. we noticed she began to pull away from the family. >> we worked very hard to let her do the things she wanted to do and keep it in a safe environment that we had some control over. and that was a difficult task and we worked long hours discussing it with her and what we felt was important and how she should behave. >> what went through my mind was initially the...
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Nov 12, 2012
11/12
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CSPAN2
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but there was no more. the republican party was ousted during his brief existence it was cited in the mid to 1850's and its rhetoric had insulted us all and the institution as racial slavery than the determination that the republicans' determination morph into a unit that could win a national election without any southern support the republicans repeatedly condemned the south as on progressive, undemocratic, and american. with of this party on the threshold of the presidency, seven sectional radicals to the to to the platforms and ms. cooper columns to proclaim the crisis of the south was at hand. now this was not the first time sectional crisis gripped the country, however. there had been several sharp disputes prior to 1860. each of these come in each of the major ones had been settled by compromise. yes i will point specifically to the critical ones. first, the constitutional convention of 1787 in philadelphia, then the crisis of 1820 which had to do with the misery state and the louisiana purchase which
but there was no more. the republican party was ousted during his brief existence it was cited in the mid to 1850's and its rhetoric had insulted us all and the institution as racial slavery than the determination that the republicans' determination morph into a unit that could win a national election without any southern support the republicans repeatedly condemned the south as on progressive, undemocratic, and american. with of this party on the threshold of the presidency, seven sectional...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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100
Nov 2, 2012
11/12
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WHUT
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eye 100
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i was hoping what i had come across was true. it is fascinating and empowering for kids to see somebody who had some issues whenever young, who went to one of these alternative programs, but was able to get himself together. a lot of time these kids get in these programs and then reintegrate back into their old high school and graduate, but some of these kids just get lost and they never make it. anyway, i appreciate you answering that. i was fascinated when i came across that you had actually chosen to have that experience. there is oscar buzz in this town, in case you had not heard. i know actors are always a little leery of commenting on that, because nobody wants to jinx themselves, but it must feel good to know that your name is being bandied about. >> it is very embarrassing, but it does feel good to hear nice things about your performance. maybe we did something right. the way i can get around the embarrassment of people saying nice things is just thinking it is good for the production. all the people that worked on this t
i was hoping what i had come across was true. it is fascinating and empowering for kids to see somebody who had some issues whenever young, who went to one of these alternative programs, but was able to get himself together. a lot of time these kids get in these programs and then reintegrate back into their old high school and graduate, but some of these kids just get lost and they never make it. anyway, i appreciate you answering that. i was fascinated when i came across that you had actually...
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210
Nov 16, 2012
11/12
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FOXNEWSW
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eye 210
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it was terrorist attack it made headlines because until then the administration was saying it was not terrorist. it was very cordial if you will. general petraeus is an outstanding patriot. we shook hand before and afterwards. we all thanked him for his service but i think he has a different impression, the impressions he left on september 14th. >> mr. chairman, can you tell us whether or not his affair or the security issues surrounding his affair came up at all? >> only in answer to one question he was asked at the start, did that have any impact on his testimony? he said no. >> how were the talking points different? >> the original talking points were much more specific about al qaeda involvement and yet the final ones just said indications of extremes. indicate, even though it was clearly evidence from the cia there was al qaeda involvement. >> do you have any idea -- [inaudible] >> they said it goes through a long process, interagency process that when it came back it was taken out. >> did he seem concerned things were changed? did that surprise him? >> he seemed to say at time h
it was terrorist attack it made headlines because until then the administration was saying it was not terrorist. it was very cordial if you will. general petraeus is an outstanding patriot. we shook hand before and afterwards. we all thanked him for his service but i think he has a different impression, the impressions he left on september 14th. >> mr. chairman, can you tell us whether or not his affair or the security issues surrounding his affair came up at all? >> only in answer...
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Nov 16, 2012
11/12
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he was the -- that he was -- he was -- he was -- he was wonderful husband and lover and chum and playmate >> it's impossible to think that it's nearly a year since he died. >> yeah. >> he wrote these pieces, incredibly powerful book, "mortality." i remember reading the pieces in "vanity fair" at the time, and put together for the book. this wasn't the normal cliche courage, it was a real battle with this thing he was determined to beat. >> yeah. >> and a battle, of course, with the god-fearing people out there, determined that he would convert at the last minute and start praying for his life. >> yeah, well, he -- he didn't mind at all that they were praying for his recovery, and he wanted them -- he wanted to make sure there wouldn't be some kind of drooling scene at the last moment where it seemed as if he had converted. in fact, it never came up in the last days, so it just wasn't a subject of interest to him. >> what would he have made of what's going on on the international stage now? he was such an internationalist. >> i think he would -- i know that he had hoped there would have be
he was the -- that he was -- he was -- he was -- he was wonderful husband and lover and chum and playmate >> it's impossible to think that it's nearly a year since he died. >> yeah. >> he wrote these pieces, incredibly powerful book, "mortality." i remember reading the pieces in "vanity fair" at the time, and put together for the book. this wasn't the normal cliche courage, it was a real battle with this thing he was determined to beat. >> yeah....
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Nov 18, 2012
11/12
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explain. >> he was really good at it azra jeev was saying. pe trail spent a lot of time with the journalists and pulled them into his world and he was fun to be around. i met him at a party and he was a lot of fun to talk to and i can see how intoxicating it would be. >> you also say, tara, in that article that petraeus was a flirt. >> yeah. he was a total flirt, both with men and with women and people respond to it. they like to be flattered, and he was good at it. >> rah geofjivrajiv, in a piecen a piece he had to resign as cia director and he became famous as a general and commander that he had fallen. >> oh, indeed. both sides in some way are culpable here. both sides are responsible for building him up. yes, petraeus grasped before many of his fellow generals, the power of the media narrative in shaping the modern battlefield story and he reached out to journalists, to authors, and not to think tank experts and others bringing him to iraq and afghanistan to observe what was going on. he under thstood that the stori of the wars would not
explain. >> he was really good at it azra jeev was saying. pe trail spent a lot of time with the journalists and pulled them into his world and he was fun to be around. i met him at a party and he was a lot of fun to talk to and i can see how intoxicating it would be. >> you also say, tara, in that article that petraeus was a flirt. >> yeah. he was a total flirt, both with men and with women and people respond to it. they like to be flattered, and he was good at it. >>...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 12, 2012
11/12
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it was terrible. i could not believe that a great city like this did not have a proper command center. as i walked a way with the mayor i said something that i later regretted. someone asked me "what did you think?" and i said "i felt like i just came out of a mississippi sheriff's office". it was grim, grim. and there is a lesson in that. issue careful what you wish for and be careful what criticize and who you criticize because you maybe wearing it. i responded to the mayor's request. we eventually had marine corps personnel and conducting recovery and rescue and we rescued all kinds of people from the collapsed freeway and we brought an aircraft carrier in here and took the heat off of the city and took 500 homeless people on the aircraft carrier for a week. it was a wonderful exercise in taking care of the more fragile among us. anyway fast forward three and a half years newly elected mayor he asks me to be the director of emergency services and i really didn't want to do it because of what i have
it was terrible. i could not believe that a great city like this did not have a proper command center. as i walked a way with the mayor i said something that i later regretted. someone asked me "what did you think?" and i said "i felt like i just came out of a mississippi sheriff's office". it was grim, grim. and there is a lesson in that. issue careful what you wish for and be careful what criticize and who you criticize because you maybe wearing it. i responded to the...