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Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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i went like this. the cross and i just said, god protect me. and i went on there. >> the story behind the man they call cowboy. >>> on april 15th, three people died and more than 260 others were injured when the enthusiastic cheers of the boston marathon spectators were silenced by the explosion of two bombs. it takes a certain kind of person to run the 26.2 mile course and on that after nonoon took extraordinary people to come to the rescue. one man's name was carlos adondo. >> when the bomb went off, you see the ball of fire whatever it was, it was very bad, very bad. >> on april 15th, carlos arredondo, an immigrant from costa rico, became the picture of courage and compassion. he was one of the extraordinary people from all walks of life who rushed in to save lives when they could have run for safety. >> no, there were people who need my help. i was hoping not to get in anybody's way and help in any way i could. >> 27,000 strong. >> in boston, it is patriot's day. but carlos was not there just to ce
i went like this. the cross and i just said, god protect me. and i went on there. >> the story behind the man they call cowboy. >>> on april 15th, three people died and more than 260 others were injured when the enthusiastic cheers of the boston marathon spectators were silenced by the explosion of two bombs. it takes a certain kind of person to run the 26.2 mile course and on that after nonoon took extraordinary people to come to the rescue. one man's name was carlos adondo....
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Jan 7, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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eye 105
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and i went to see mother. she cried all week long. i went to see her. i said, mother. she had to get up every morning at 7:00. then she had to come back late in the afternoon. but my grandfather came to live with us when my grandmother died. and so my mother had flexible hours because the post master didn't want to get up early. and he didn't want to stay late. but anyway. i said, "mother, don't you enjoy just being able to sleep in?" she said, "it is not that. it is just that nobody thinks i can do good work anymore." so that made an impression on me. when jimmy was president, i did work with aging. i became interested in working with mental illnesses, too, because there were no doctors to care for people with mental illness. and actually no geriatric doctors. he passed an age discrimination law people where people in the federal government could work as long as they wanted to and people outside could work until they were 75. >> rosalynn carter, you have always been a political partner to your husband. is that a fair statement? >> i have been a partner. i would call i
and i went to see mother. she cried all week long. i went to see her. i said, mother. she had to get up every morning at 7:00. then she had to come back late in the afternoon. but my grandfather came to live with us when my grandmother died. and so my mother had flexible hours because the post master didn't want to get up early. and he didn't want to stay late. but anyway. i said, "mother, don't you enjoy just being able to sleep in?" she said, "it is not that. it is just that...
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Jan 7, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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eye 206
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and i went to see mother. she cried all week long. i went to see her. i said, mother. she had to get up every morning at 7:00. then she had to come back late in the afternoon. but my grandfather came to live with us when my grandmother died. and so my mother had flexible hours because the post master didn't want to get up early. and he didn't want to stay late. but anyway. i said, "mother, don't you enjoy just being able to sleep in?" she said, "it is not that. it is just that nobody thinks i can do good work anymore." so that made an impression on me. when jimmy was president, i did work with aging. i became interested in working with mental illnesses, too, because there were no doctors to care for people with mental illness. and actually no geriatric doctors. he passed an age discrimination law people where people in the federal government could work as long as they wanted to and people outside could work until they were 75. >> rosalynn carter, you have always been a political partner to your husband. is that a fair statement? >> i have been a partner. i would call i
and i went to see mother. she cried all week long. i went to see her. i said, mother. she had to get up every morning at 7:00. then she had to come back late in the afternoon. but my grandfather came to live with us when my grandmother died. and so my mother had flexible hours because the post master didn't want to get up early. and he didn't want to stay late. but anyway. i said, "mother, don't you enjoy just being able to sleep in?" she said, "it is not that. it is just that...
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Jan 7, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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eye 123
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my heart went out to mom. she had to keep the whole ship in the right direction. >> what was her personality like? >> mom was a jokester, fun loving. she had a background in the arts dance. she was very expressive and wanted us as children to be expressive. i spent 25 years in film and tv business as an actor. i have to think what ever that calling was for me came not from dad's side but from mom. >> how successful was she -- you did have a typical -- how did going to the white house change that at all? >> looking back, we were fortunate. if you were a member of the bush or reagan family, there was almost an expectation that at some point, your father was going to run for president or be president. not with gerald ford. he was a house minority leader and wanted to be speaker of house. there was never any pressure on us that he would be president. it happened overnight, very quickly. we barely had time to comb our hair. within days, nixon resigned. we moved to the white house. to our advantage as a person, ther
my heart went out to mom. she had to keep the whole ship in the right direction. >> what was her personality like? >> mom was a jokester, fun loving. she had a background in the arts dance. she was very expressive and wanted us as children to be expressive. i spent 25 years in film and tv business as an actor. i have to think what ever that calling was for me came not from dad's side but from mom. >> how successful was she -- you did have a typical -- how did going to the...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 30, 2014
01/14
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SFGTV
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eye 77
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>> i went and talked to ms. stacy lee because they canceled the application denying because you didn't continue the paperwork. if you want to continue, you need to appear. i need to apply for the appear that's why she gave me the address and that's why i seen mr. pacheco and i talked to him and he gave me all the paperwork we need to appear. >> excuse me, madam president, your statement submitted to our board, who helped you with your statement? did you complete this statement that was submitted to us yourself or did somebody help you? >> somebody helped me. there is like a community service. >> so the concern mr. castillo is that some of the information that you are giving us is a little different than what we have received in our briefs. so we are trying to figure it out. you said you needed more time and you can complete the paperwork. but i think specifically do you have the money to make all the payments the go forward? >> yes. >> okay, thank you very much. >> anything else you would like to add? >> no. tha
>> i went and talked to ms. stacy lee because they canceled the application denying because you didn't continue the paperwork. if you want to continue, you need to appear. i need to apply for the appear that's why she gave me the address and that's why i seen mr. pacheco and i talked to him and he gave me all the paperwork we need to appear. >> excuse me, madam president, your statement submitted to our board, who helped you with your statement? did you complete this statement that...
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Jan 20, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 100
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she went to peru and went on a humanitarian mission, the first time the first lady went on a humanitarian mission. she helped with the earthquake there. almost like queen elizabeth during the blitz. tons of people in she went on her own trip to africa in 1972 and was the first represent a president at an official inauguration. the president of nigeria. she discussed policy is with a number of heads of state. so she was emerging. one of the tragedies of watergate is that pat nixon was a high-level diplomat and i and i think that she could of been like jean kennedy smith, an ambassador to a country have not built watergate crisis happened. and now i would just like to talk about the end of their lives. packing down with lung cancer in the 1990s and nixon was devastated. monica crowley's assistant a foreign-policy said that he wasn't able to finish sentences. he walked along aimlessly in the court order. he just couldn't seem to handle it. finally, pat came close to that and supposedly his last words to her as she was a very frail and leading in a chair, was your family loves you intercountr
she went to peru and went on a humanitarian mission, the first time the first lady went on a humanitarian mission. she helped with the earthquake there. almost like queen elizabeth during the blitz. tons of people in she went on her own trip to africa in 1972 and was the first represent a president at an official inauguration. the president of nigeria. she discussed policy is with a number of heads of state. so she was emerging. one of the tragedies of watergate is that pat nixon was a...
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Jan 4, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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eye 127
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then he went the other way.lamboyant speaker and was in charge of cutting the budget after the war. and a crucial job we should look out when we are writing a new budget. because they had this budget law. so he was a man when nixon went to china. he did cut the budget. he helped germany wheeling them money. the germans paid everyone else back. what a statesman. banking family. chicago man family. but he would go his own way. and what infuriated coolidge was he had some close confirmation hearings planned and dozen used -- and doz used his inauguration to get up and berate the senators for their poor behavior and abuse of the filibuster essentially. and he antagonized the senate rather than following his orders from calvin to appease, make friends, grease the wheels for the nominations to come. >> you talk about calvin coolidge having breakfast at the white house and a lot of members of the senate calling in sick, not wanting to come. >> that's right. he wasn't a get along guy. harding was a get along guy. coolid
then he went the other way.lamboyant speaker and was in charge of cutting the budget after the war. and a crucial job we should look out when we are writing a new budget. because they had this budget law. so he was a man when nixon went to china. he did cut the budget. he helped germany wheeling them money. the germans paid everyone else back. what a statesman. banking family. chicago man family. but he would go his own way. and what infuriated coolidge was he had some close confirmation...
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Jan 29, 2014
01/14
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WUSA
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> i went to afghanistan.we flew commercial to dubai and flew on the only airline that will fly into a war zone, things being held together by tinfoil. i thought maybe this isn't such a great idea but it was a great experience for me. i showed all the troops. we went to lebanon and a couple of other bases. i met so many amazing afghan people as well. the people that were responsible for marcus luttrell, who i play in the movie, getting off of that mountain and being with us today, they sacrificed their lives to save a stranger. marcus went into their village and they put their lives on the line and and they went to war against the taliban and they are still at war with the taliban today because of that act of heroism. craig: it is a hell of a story. good luck with the movie. mark wahlberg, everybody! we'll be right back. [richard] moola. bank. cash money. scrilla. stacks. fat stacks. mad stacks. wallet fat. bank roll. clams. samolians. frog skins. foliage. dollar. dollar bills. money. mattress meat. cushion. a
> i went to afghanistan.we flew commercial to dubai and flew on the only airline that will fly into a war zone, things being held together by tinfoil. i thought maybe this isn't such a great idea but it was a great experience for me. i showed all the troops. we went to lebanon and a couple of other bases. i met so many amazing afghan people as well. the people that were responsible for marcus luttrell, who i play in the movie, getting off of that mountain and being with us today, they...
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Jan 8, 2014
01/14
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KQEH
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eye 230
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what went into the making of that music is not arbitrary.is: his first doo-wop album after all these years, we had a great time talking to him. >> i read his poetry. i love him so much. tavis: i know you do. how have you known, artistically, who and who not to collaborate with? at this, how did you know that your voices would match. >> you just have to throw yourself at it and start doing it. i am a can million. in my family music, i was a harmony singer. it is just as hard as lead singing, harder in some ways because you have to really listen. 99% of singing is listening and one percent is singing. you just have got to be able to shade and fly with the blue angels. if the wing guy goes like this, everybody else goes like that. in the case of aaron, he invited me onstage to sing with him. i did not know if he knew me from adam, but i i went to see him and i will never go up on stage without singing -- without rehearsing. i thought,ere and what are we going to do? he wanted to sing doo-wop and i thought, great. harmony and hung on for dear li
what went into the making of that music is not arbitrary.is: his first doo-wop album after all these years, we had a great time talking to him. >> i read his poetry. i love him so much. tavis: i know you do. how have you known, artistically, who and who not to collaborate with? at this, how did you know that your voices would match. >> you just have to throw yourself at it and start doing it. i am a can million. in my family music, i was a harmony singer. it is just as hard as lead...
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Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 120
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he went overseas. he went to london by destroyer. he went to france, across the channel and submarine infested waters. he visited for downwind verdun had just gone through a terrible siege in which hundreds of thousands died. for don was still being fired and roosevelt had the opportunity to be under fire. he loved the fact that he was under fire not only better, but under fire in the channel as the german aircraft and submarines attacked ships in the channel. one of the things he realized once we were in the water was the navy, big ships like the arizona been involved in commissioning works no use. they were too big and unwieldy for submarine to send them they had no role in siege warfare because we were not involved in sea warfare. he had an idea. why not take the big guys, the 14-inch and 16-inch guns that were on battleships and that some of them on two flat tires that could then be used as traveling artillery, big artillery to go towards the front lines. he did. ever done that way and successful. and then he volunteered to an ad
he went overseas. he went to london by destroyer. he went to france, across the channel and submarine infested waters. he visited for downwind verdun had just gone through a terrible siege in which hundreds of thousands died. for don was still being fired and roosevelt had the opportunity to be under fire. he loved the fact that he was under fire not only better, but under fire in the channel as the german aircraft and submarines attacked ships in the channel. one of the things he realized once...
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Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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CNBC
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and how national video went out. i didn't know what national video did or why it went out. i know it made him furious. i wanted to find out more about these things that made him react with such fury. so he sat me down and explained each of these lines represented the line of the stock. the range was how low and how high it traded during the day, and the close was how much it was worth when trading finished at the "closing bell". it fascinated me. how could there be so many companies and why the heck did they trade in ranges, and what did it mean to close? he described to me that people tried very hard to figure out each day which stocks would go up at the close and when to buy them so they could make money from the increase during that range from the open to close. frankly this struck me as downright silly. i told him when i looked at the baseball tables i was always trying to figure out who was hot, who would go up in average and who would go down and what it meant for the teams i liked. he said it was pretty much the same for stocks. some players were doing just okay. som
and how national video went out. i didn't know what national video did or why it went out. i know it made him furious. i wanted to find out more about these things that made him react with such fury. so he sat me down and explained each of these lines represented the line of the stock. the range was how low and how high it traded during the day, and the close was how much it was worth when trading finished at the "closing bell". it fascinated me. how could there be so many companies...
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Jan 14, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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she went to hollywood. she went to the theater, and then she went back to hollywood. she was typecast. she was cast as the steady woman. that is what she was. >> did nancy reagan and barbara bush know each other as students at smith college? >> i would have to ask. do you know? i think nancy was leaving as barbara bush was coming in. >> she was only there a year or two, so i don't think so. that is a good question. >> we know that nancy went to new york to try acting right out of smith. she was in new york for two years before she went to hollywood. she had a contract at mgm studios. >> a question about her stepfather and the influence on her politics. dr. davis was very active in conservative politics. did that influence her? >> he was a republican. i think that did influence her. she married ronald reagan, and on their first date, reagan was discussing politics. and he's talking about communism. he didn't like communism. she was receptive to his message. >> how did they meet? >> it is an interesting story. this is hollywood in the late 1940's when there was the comm
she went to hollywood. she went to the theater, and then she went back to hollywood. she was typecast. she was cast as the steady woman. that is what she was. >> did nancy reagan and barbara bush know each other as students at smith college? >> i would have to ask. do you know? i think nancy was leaving as barbara bush was coming in. >> she was only there a year or two, so i don't think so. that is a good question. >> we know that nancy went to new york to try acting...
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Jan 13, 2014
01/14
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MSNBCW
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what went wrong?heastern pennsylvania, a holiday celebration goes from festive to fearsome in the blink of an eye. >> oh, my god. >> what the -- what the -- >> july 4th, 2010, the town is celebrating more than american independence. they are also celebrating their home town's big birthday. lifelong natives look forward to the evening festivities. palmyra was celebrating and it was a big deal for the community. >> the night will be topped off by a fireworks display at the buck swank football field, a first in the town's history. >> i was hanging out with my girlfriend all day. we met up with my mom right before we watched the fireworks. >> the lawn is crowded with scores of spectators but she and her kids find a spot in the grass upfront. they sit just behind the tape separating them from the fireworks launch site, 250 feet away. hundreds more get a view from farther away. >> about 10:00 the fireworks started going off. it was beautiful. >> my girlfriend and i were just laying down in the grass looking
what went wrong?heastern pennsylvania, a holiday celebration goes from festive to fearsome in the blink of an eye. >> oh, my god. >> what the -- what the -- >> july 4th, 2010, the town is celebrating more than american independence. they are also celebrating their home town's big birthday. lifelong natives look forward to the evening festivities. palmyra was celebrating and it was a big deal for the community. >> the night will be topped off by a fireworks display at the...
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Jan 5, 2014
01/14
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LINKTV
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he and i went to the same school. i went afterwards to the united states, and he went to greece to study denyivityry, but he returned to jerusalem -- denyivityry. and he returned to jerusalem and has been living there ever since. >> maybe the people he meets here can have root canal from him. >> he's seen the situation. half of his patients can't even afford to pay him. but he never turns anyone away. >> and you see some guy coming from russia and he says this is my land, and he takes your land, which you have been here thousands and thousands of years. and somebody comes only a month ago and says this is my land. why? because god gave it to me. >> you stopped believing in god. i'm a christian. i stopped believing in god maybe. imagine if they came into china and you find some jews in china, my god. the number would be about 10 million. where would we put them? look at the country. in seven years, i don't know from america, from argentine narcs i don't know from where, but these are not the palestinians. they don't kn
he and i went to the same school. i went afterwards to the united states, and he went to greece to study denyivityry, but he returned to jerusalem -- denyivityry. and he returned to jerusalem and has been living there ever since. >> maybe the people he meets here can have root canal from him. >> he's seen the situation. half of his patients can't even afford to pay him. but he never turns anyone away. >> and you see some guy coming from russia and he says this is my land, and...
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Jan 28, 2014
01/14
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BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 108
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but i went onto the internet and went on usa today and they said, people coming to the grammys.t about 60 pictures up. i didn't know any of them. then i said, i am out of it. it later on, they had taylor swift and madonna. i didn't know any of the first people, at first. i am out of it. i like my mother now. it was not bad at all. my mother was really smart. i would love to be that smart. >> your music? are you making music? >> we are still recording. we are working on a record now. it is really slow. that is normal for me. i have something that everyone was excited about. we have an opening track. the voice of paradise on bat out of hell is on it. everybody thinks he sang it. she has been of several years. and she doesn't get the recognition. it is a tough gig. you just don't always get what you should get. you cannot always do it you want or get what you need. >> your super bowl pick? >> well, there is a whole thing with that super bowl. i have been around peyton manning a couple of times. >> this is it. you have to pick. >> i cannot pick. i met peyton manning a couple or thre
but i went onto the internet and went on usa today and they said, people coming to the grammys.t about 60 pictures up. i didn't know any of them. then i said, i am out of it. it later on, they had taylor swift and madonna. i didn't know any of the first people, at first. i am out of it. i like my mother now. it was not bad at all. my mother was really smart. i would love to be that smart. >> your music? are you making music? >> we are still recording. we are working on a record now....
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Jan 21, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 120
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and we went downstairs and we went through everything.thing i could never get an answer to, there is a yellow guest towel, the kind you would hang in a downstairs bathroom. maybe you're in l.a. or somebody. and it was yellow light inc. and blue cross stitched initials, jfk. and there is no notation in the trunk where it came from. now, there was one note from jackie that said stanley much loved jackie. i thought, would she have really sent a guess that stanley? and then i thought, do you think maybe stanley pinched that when he were to hyannis or that somehow it got into his camera bag? for one thing i never could answer. when i was doing the book, i thought it made me remember stanley ainu. i didn't know stanley during the 60s when he was so close to the kennedys. i was still in school. but one-time stanley drove me through washington d.c. and pouring it to a building that was deserted and nurses dirty, filthy towel in the window. stanley said that's where i came from. and i looked at this photographer who is so well-established and wore
and we went downstairs and we went through everything.thing i could never get an answer to, there is a yellow guest towel, the kind you would hang in a downstairs bathroom. maybe you're in l.a. or somebody. and it was yellow light inc. and blue cross stitched initials, jfk. and there is no notation in the trunk where it came from. now, there was one note from jackie that said stanley much loved jackie. i thought, would she have really sent a guess that stanley? and then i thought, do you think...
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Jan 26, 2014
01/14
by
CSPAN
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eye 92
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went back into the interrogation room. i felt confident that i had gotten rid of evidence that could possibly keep me there for a area long time. about five minutes later, the >> more with her, the director "the square." on sunday night at 8 p.m. ladies, featuring barbara bush. followed by a recent interview first lady. t onr tonight, evan faye liberals and the media. ♪ >> did i feel prepared? yes. i did notice the difference between being the vice president's wife and the president's wife is huge because the vice president's wife can say anything and nobody cares. the minute you say one thing as the president's wife, you have made the news. >> barbara bush used the office of first lady to promote literacy and to raise awareness about aids and homelessness. she earned her way into the history books. she and abigail adams are the only women to be both a wife and mother of a president. welcome to "first ladies: influence and image." tonight is the story of barbara bush. for the next 90 minutes, to tell us more about her life
went back into the interrogation room. i felt confident that i had gotten rid of evidence that could possibly keep me there for a area long time. about five minutes later, the >> more with her, the director "the square." on sunday night at 8 p.m. ladies, featuring barbara bush. followed by a recent interview first lady. t onr tonight, evan faye liberals and the media. ♪ >> did i feel prepared? yes. i did notice the difference between being the vice president's wife and...
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Jan 25, 2014
01/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 134
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then you said you and others went back to the store.at what point did you make the decision to leave the mall, leave period, and some of you stayed in to i guess, hunker down? >> we originally left, i was trying to help a lot of other people go out. so i was just hanging arranged the back entrance waiting for word. we really didn't hear anything and there were no -- there were no cops in the back of the mall where we were exiting at. there were none back there. there was nobody to tell us not to go back into the mall. so like i said, when the other lady said she talked to her husband and she heard they got the guy, that's when i said, okay. let me go balancing insiinside, belongings. that's when i thought, wow. they didn't find the guy. that's when we were hanging out there. >> how frightened were you through all this? >> i mean -- i guess as frightened as you can be. i mean, if god's going to take me off the earth, he's going to take me. so can't be too scared. >> this is -- i know this mall, at least as a kid, i frequented that mall.
then you said you and others went back to the store.at what point did you make the decision to leave the mall, leave period, and some of you stayed in to i guess, hunker down? >> we originally left, i was trying to help a lot of other people go out. so i was just hanging arranged the back entrance waiting for word. we really didn't hear anything and there were no -- there were no cops in the back of the mall where we were exiting at. there were none back there. there was nobody to tell us...
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Jan 11, 2014
01/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 158
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we went on air and it went like that. >> was it like a superbowl sunday for you? was, and that surprised us. we go out when we do this and fall on the sword and say it was in great and then sales are double-digit. >> you are sitting in a meeting and sales have been going down three consecutive years. then you put this program in place and then what happened? >> the first year we are up 9.9%. >> but did you see it, like, overnight? >> overnight. it was amazing. in the back of our stores -- i can show you a sales chart all day. my favorite chart, someone went to the back of the store, and the guy every week is tracking the sales. 2008, 2009, then 2010, it is hitting the ceiling. he is tracking the sales, and it went up so high. that was amazing. we were two days away from running out of pepperoni. we were up that quarter around a little bit over 14%. we would have been up more had we had the people to answer the phones. literally. who knows what the opportunity was lost there, but no one thinks it will be that big. >> because you have put this as a standard operatin
we went on air and it went like that. >> was it like a superbowl sunday for you? was, and that surprised us. we go out when we do this and fall on the sword and say it was in great and then sales are double-digit. >> you are sitting in a meeting and sales have been going down three consecutive years. then you put this program in place and then what happened? >> the first year we are up 9.9%. >> but did you see it, like, overnight? >> overnight. it was amazing. in...
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117
Jan 16, 2014
01/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 117
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she went into the room. they said mama.he said, she'll be right back. >> angela is about to find out if she'll be able to see her children today. >> we don't have a whole lot right now, but we have each other. and that's the most important thing in the world to me. >> it feels like i haven't seen my kids in a year, and it's only been a week. there they are. [ sobbing ] >> i love you so much. hi, baby. >> angela's children are being returned to her under state supervision. >> i missed you guys. >> on future hearing she'll find out if she'll regain full custody. >> did you pray? >> i prayed every minute. >> me, too. >> me, too. >> later angela tells us about a message a police investigator sent her. >> tell me about this note? >> the investigator called and said wanted me to let you know as a parent you can decline trials involvement in custody case. >> you can decline the help of your tribe. >> she said it to me over the phone. >> why do you think she's telling you that. >> i think she wants to influence me that i'm better o
she went into the room. they said mama.he said, she'll be right back. >> angela is about to find out if she'll be able to see her children today. >> we don't have a whole lot right now, but we have each other. and that's the most important thing in the world to me. >> it feels like i haven't seen my kids in a year, and it's only been a week. there they are. [ sobbing ] >> i love you so much. hi, baby. >> angela's children are being returned to her under state...
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Jan 24, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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i spoke i went to the dr. king plearl and i thought of his "i have a dream" speech and that was given on the steps of the lincoln memorial. we went there and saw president lincoln there. and then we looked across the mall to the far end. and i saw it as the national nut house. just the day before, the government had been opened. >> the national nut house would be the capitol? >> the congress -- >> the howpt howpts and house of representatives and the congress? >> you used the word wacko. >> i did use the word wacko. >> those people are crazy. they throw hundreds of thousands of people out of their jobs and they say it ultimately in the purpose of creating jobs. madness! you know, my life has been shaped by that kind of situation. madness, craziness on one end of our democracy and the shining ideals of our democracy, memorialized, in those monuments at the other end of the national mall. because incarceration of japanese americans was absolutely crazy! they didn't incarcerate the japanese americans in hawaii. t
i spoke i went to the dr. king plearl and i thought of his "i have a dream" speech and that was given on the steps of the lincoln memorial. we went there and saw president lincoln there. and then we looked across the mall to the far end. and i saw it as the national nut house. just the day before, the government had been opened. >> the national nut house would be the capitol? >> the congress -- >> the howpt howpts and house of representatives and the congress?...
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Jan 5, 2014
01/14
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MSNBCW
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. >> the customer just went crazy. >> but you know what they say -- >> the customer's always right! >>> "caught on camera: customers gone wild." hello, i'm contessa brewer. welcome to "caught on camera." do you ever feel frustrated waiting in line, or have you watched as someone else flies off the handle? from naked shoppers to angry plane passengers, in this hour, we'll watch what happens when customers go wild. ♪ a late-night shopper decides to open up a drive-through in one of the most bizarre and audacious smash-and-grabs this small ohio town has ever seen. >> i've heard of people breaking windows and using rocks and boulders, but never seeing somebody actually decide to drive their car through a store. >> it's 5:00 a.m. in amherst, ohio, and a sleepless bargain hunter cases an adult novelty store. the store is closed, but this customer isn't concerned with such minor details. he circles the store to make sure no one is around, then chooses the back door to make his grand entrance. tracy is the store's manager. >> he decided that he wanted to come through the back door, and you
. >> the customer just went crazy. >> but you know what they say -- >> the customer's always right! >>> "caught on camera: customers gone wild." hello, i'm contessa brewer. welcome to "caught on camera." do you ever feel frustrated waiting in line, or have you watched as someone else flies off the handle? from naked shoppers to angry plane passengers, in this hour, we'll watch what happens when customers go wild. ♪ a late-night shopper decides to...
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102
Jan 3, 2014
01/14
by
LINKTV
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eye 102
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then i went through the actual physical rape kit.was told the lacerations were consistent with rape by the actual medical person. then the next day, my parents were called to the police ittion and they were told was public lewdness which had happened and i was going to be put in a disciplinary alternative education program our school offers. >> that you are going to be put? >> yes. >> what happened to your accused rapist? >> he was also put in the same disciplinary school as i was. and that was it. >> did they explain why you are being punished? that -- ist told me wasn't even told. it was my parents. i never spoke to anyone after that, not even the principal or any kind of public official. >> how did you respond to this charge of public lewdness -- or if you weren't told it was public lewdness, how did you respond to being put in a disciplinary school from a removed for your own high school as a senior? i was upset. i don't really know what feelings i had. numb for aonally while. i did not know to blame. i did not know how to feel o
then i went through the actual physical rape kit.was told the lacerations were consistent with rape by the actual medical person. then the next day, my parents were called to the police ittion and they were told was public lewdness which had happened and i was going to be put in a disciplinary alternative education program our school offers. >> that you are going to be put? >> yes. >> what happened to your accused rapist? >> he was also put in the same disciplinary...
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187
Jan 25, 2014
01/14
by
CNNW
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eye 187
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i then ran all of the way upstairs and then went to my job and grabbed whatever i could and went backand took care of them while we barricaded the door so nobody could get? >> how did everyone respond to you when you said that? did they believe you? >> they did because the shots continued. it didn't stop. i don't know when they stopped. i don't know how many were done. it sounded like more than ten shots. >> so have you ever experienced anything close to it? can you tell us what it was like for you, especially since you're so young and you just started? >> i've never been in this situation. i just started running and my asthma kicked up. i didn't know what to do except for run and try to get to safety where i could. >> and when did you get out of the mall? how long did it take and when -- this is your mother, robin. when were you able to talk to her? >> as soon as i tried to
i then ran all of the way upstairs and then went to my job and grabbed whatever i could and went backand took care of them while we barricaded the door so nobody could get? >> how did everyone respond to you when you said that? did they believe you? >> they did because the shots continued. it didn't stop. i don't know when they stopped. i don't know how many were done. it sounded like more than ten shots. >> so have you ever experienced anything close to it? can you tell us...
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400
Jan 21, 2014
01/14
by
KGO
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eye 400
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then he went in.st went in to kiss me. in a split second in my mind i was like you have to make a decision. he was going for my mouth. it was a straight aim. there may have been tongue. i don't know. [ laughter ] and he went, and i was like kiss or turn or what's going to -- so i just did -- i like double-chinned it, which is what that was. >> jimmy: don't you feel like you should have tongued him, though? [ laughter ] i mean, it's stan lee, for god's sake. >> i really should have. but he did a cameo on our show. so he'll be on our show in the next episode. >> jimmy: oh, yeah. well, he does a cameo in every -- >> if that didn't happen it would have been like a really awkward run-in after an awkward date. he probably actually would not have remembered. >> jimmy: he probably could have -- oh, he remembered. believe me. you never get that old. >> yeah. >> jimmy: you have an interesting background. and i was mentioning in the intro you've lived in all these different places. >> yeah. i'm from chicago. >>
then he went in.st went in to kiss me. in a split second in my mind i was like you have to make a decision. he was going for my mouth. it was a straight aim. there may have been tongue. i don't know. [ laughter ] and he went, and i was like kiss or turn or what's going to -- so i just did -- i like double-chinned it, which is what that was. >> jimmy: don't you feel like you should have tongued him, though? [ laughter ] i mean, it's stan lee, for god's sake. >> i really should have....
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Jan 21, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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i went to london--he went to london by destroyer, went to france across the channel, submarine infested waters. had just gone through a terrible siege in which hundreds of thousands died, was still being fired on and roosevelt had the opportunity to be under fire finally and he loved the fact that he was under fire not only there but under fire in the channel as the german aircraft submarines attack ships in the channel. once we were in the war, in the navy, big ships like the arizona that he had been involved in commissioning were of no use. they were too big and unwieldy for submarine defense and they had no role in sea warfare because we were not involved in sea warfare. he had an idea. why not take the big guns, a 14 inch and 16 inch guns on battleships and move some of them on to flatcars that could then be used as travelling artillery, big artillery to go toward the front lines and he did. they were done that way and successful and he volunteered to an admiral who was in charge of the battery can i be in uniform and what i those batteries? and the admiral said i would be glad to m
i went to london--he went to london by destroyer, went to france across the channel, submarine infested waters. had just gone through a terrible siege in which hundreds of thousands died, was still being fired on and roosevelt had the opportunity to be under fire finally and he loved the fact that he was under fire not only there but under fire in the channel as the german aircraft submarines attack ships in the channel. once we were in the war, in the navy, big ships like the arizona that he...
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Jan 21, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN
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they went to private schools. when barbara was old enough for high school, she was sent away to ashley hall, a boarding school in south carolina. ome for christmas break of her junior year, she went to a country club dance and that is when she met george h.w. bush. >> they were very young people and they got married very young. what do you know about the attraction, early courtship? >> they were attracted from the start. they developed an intimate correspondence, which was typical for the times. george bush decides to join the navy. he becomes the youngest aviator in the pacific theater. their correspondence is emotional, intimate, when they could not be together in the same spot. when they could be together, it was electric. >> she began school at smith college. >> she was there for a year and she admitted that she was not the most dedicated of students. she was more interested in her boyfriend. believe she was rather active in athletics. she went back for the first semester of her sophomore year and then left sc
they went to private schools. when barbara was old enough for high school, she was sent away to ashley hall, a boarding school in south carolina. ome for christmas break of her junior year, she went to a country club dance and that is when she met george h.w. bush. >> they were very young people and they got married very young. what do you know about the attraction, early courtship? >> they were attracted from the start. they developed an intimate correspondence, which was typical...
102
102
Jan 4, 2014
01/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 102
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school, in switzerland, went back to michigan and college and went straight into reporting, and within a year of working for, then, the christian science monitor, i was traveling overseas. c-span: was your dad a law professor at michigan? >> guest: yes. c-span: and you went there? >> guest: yes. c-span: your mom worked while you were in school or... >> guest: both of them were academics. mother gave up a lot because she was one of those women who kind of got caught early. she danced with agnes de mille. she was an actress. now she still does plays at the age of 73. she just got back from eastern europe. last year she was in china. she's a great adventurer, too. c-span: how has she been able to visit you in nine war zones? >> guest: she hasn't visited me in all. in one case, an army beat her in. she was scheduled to come in, and they came in and took the capital and there were no more flights. she flies in and she's a great both my parents were great political sightseers. when they came to south africa to visit me when i was based there, they didn't want to go to the game parks or the m
school, in switzerland, went back to michigan and college and went straight into reporting, and within a year of working for, then, the christian science monitor, i was traveling overseas. c-span: was your dad a law professor at michigan? >> guest: yes. c-span: and you went there? >> guest: yes. c-span: your mom worked while you were in school or... >> guest: both of them were academics. mother gave up a lot because she was one of those women who kind of got caught early. she...
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78
Jan 26, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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i went to a college where anything went. you could ask any question. you could raise any issue, whereas the high school i went to you were punished essentially for raising questions that were critical. i do think that brooklyn college sydney. if i'd better grades in high school you and i would've been classmates because i would've tried to get into columbia. >> i was turned down by columbia based on my grades and as a likely that brooklyn college which a preschool and had an exam you could take to get in. him. i think that's what turned me around. one person told me i was smart. a camp counselor who i have a lot of respect for told i was more. i said no, no, no. i just have a good memory. he said you are smart. that's something and gave me confidence. >> you once told me you had two feet for your legal work. outrageous every. tell us about one in each category. >> i do have of my cases for free. i represented lots and lots of people. for example, i represent soldiers, and first responders and police officers, people who in my view or for any numbers pu
i went to a college where anything went. you could ask any question. you could raise any issue, whereas the high school i went to you were punished essentially for raising questions that were critical. i do think that brooklyn college sydney. if i'd better grades in high school you and i would've been classmates because i would've tried to get into columbia. >> i was turned down by columbia based on my grades and as a likely that brooklyn college which a preschool and had an exam you...
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155
Jan 16, 2014
01/14
by
KQEH
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eye 155
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i went my entire life. it was not that there was, when you live on the north shore outside of chicago, evanston, so schoolthe only guy in my who was black was mr. johnson who started the black entertainment network. did not have differences. i felt a difference in my house but never when i got to school. friends werest jewish kids and jewish kids had moved from chicago after the second world war. there was, it was all new. it was 1946, the north shore took off. yet there were old families that a different age. i did not like it. i was not familiar with it. i had an uncle who was a poet prize winner. librarian of congress for a long time. a poet laureate. i was not an actor but when i decided to become one, they said acting as keep saying an art. you are not an artist. i said why is my uncle an artist? because he is a man of letters. what am i doing? a livinging to make pretending. this family does not pretend. tavis: did your family disown you? >> my dad was gone and my mother, i went to broadway and starte
i went my entire life. it was not that there was, when you live on the north shore outside of chicago, evanston, so schoolthe only guy in my who was black was mr. johnson who started the black entertainment network. did not have differences. i felt a difference in my house but never when i got to school. friends werest jewish kids and jewish kids had moved from chicago after the second world war. there was, it was all new. it was 1946, the north shore took off. yet there were old families that...
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79
Jan 20, 2014
01/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 79
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as the white house years went on, pat developed her own independent role as first lady and went to the nixon center to prove for the first time as the first lady went on a humanitarian mission to help people in the earthquake. she actually showed how almost like queen elizabeth during the blacks out to comfort people and in 1972 she went on her own trip to africa and she was the first first lady to represent a president and an official inauguration, the president of liberia. she addressed the assembly and discussed the policy and there were a number of heads of state. so one of the tragedies in watergate is that pat nixon was emerging as a high level diplomat. i think that she could have been like jean kennedy smith, an ambassador to the country had not the watergate crisis happened. now i just want to talk about the end of their lives. pat came down with lung cancer in the 1990's and nixon was devastated. of monaco crowley, the foreign policy assistant said he wasn't able to finish sentences. he walked around aimlessly in the quarters. he just couldn't seem to handle it. finally, pat
as the white house years went on, pat developed her own independent role as first lady and went to the nixon center to prove for the first time as the first lady went on a humanitarian mission to help people in the earthquake. she actually showed how almost like queen elizabeth during the blacks out to comfort people and in 1972 she went on her own trip to africa and she was the first first lady to represent a president and an official inauguration, the president of liberia. she addressed the...
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199
Jan 25, 2014
01/14
by
CNNW
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eye 199
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she went back to law school at 65.he does pro bono work, lawyer of the year in her 70s. >> what does she say to you? when it all unravelled and the reality of what had been going on? >> she said we love you and we support you. we're here to help you pick up the pieces of your live an get back on track and they were. >> what else did she say to you? >> no judgment. >> no criticism? >> i think she knew i was hard enough on myself at that point i didn't need her to criticize me. >> your father? what did he say? >> similar. >> let's take a short break. when we come back i want to talk about the crash of you, the firm, the feds coming in. we saw it all in dramatic play out on the movie. but also you in turn rat and end up being wire tapped and squealing on your friend and they all go to prison. some of them, steve madden, do more time than you do. i want to get your reaction to all that after the break. here we honor the proud thaccomplishmentsss. of our students and alumni. people like, maria salazar, an executive director
she went back to law school at 65.he does pro bono work, lawyer of the year in her 70s. >> what does she say to you? when it all unravelled and the reality of what had been going on? >> she said we love you and we support you. we're here to help you pick up the pieces of your live an get back on track and they were. >> what else did she say to you? >> no judgment. >> no criticism? >> i think she knew i was hard enough on myself at that point i didn't need her...
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281
Jan 21, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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eye 281
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>> well, not -- i went down there, it's even worse than that, i went down there and i trained for six months while the market was soaring to the very top. >> you're thinking this is -- >> i'm thinking, this is it. my first day of being a broker, and just like that it's black monday and it's over. >> when you say over. didn't the firm -- >> well, yes, the thing is worse than that, if you remember back then, the attitude was like, people thought it was the next great depression, no one knew the economy would bounce back, people thought it was going to be 1933 all over again. on the subway ride home, the gloom and doom, i was absolutely devastated. when i was working and i was broke, and that was -- i had no money, i was working for $100 a week, and it was costing me more than that to commute into the city back then. i knew i could do the job. i would be a great salesman. i said, my future's bright even though i'm broke. >> you thought you had the skills in some other way to make money doing what these guys had been doing to make money? >> correct. every hope and dream i had was dashed.
>> well, not -- i went down there, it's even worse than that, i went down there and i trained for six months while the market was soaring to the very top. >> you're thinking this is -- >> i'm thinking, this is it. my first day of being a broker, and just like that it's black monday and it's over. >> when you say over. didn't the firm -- >> well, yes, the thing is worse than that, if you remember back then, the attitude was like, people thought it was the next great...
495
495
Jan 25, 2014
01/14
by
KNTV
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eye 495
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everybody went to bed and i heard a popping sound.ut and saw somebody laying on the ground. >> what condition was he in when you talked to him? >> he was intox caugicatentoxic. he wasn't fall down, stupid drunk. i was carrying on a conversation with him. >> he said he was in the bedroom. then he said he heard the shot, saw the body and in his confused state. >> i didn't know it was lee. i didn't know who it was. >> did that seem strange to you? didn't recognize that person? >> somewhat. >> narrator: and the gun, the detective wondered, where did that come from? well, said rob, it was his gun. one which as an ex-cop, he always carried. >> how much do you beat yourself up that you allowed yourself to take that gun into their home? >> it was my normal practice. do i wish on that one particular trip i wouldn't have? of course. >> narrator: how did rob's gun get from a holster in the guest room into lee's hand? good question. rob couldn't seem to answer it. >> mike, i was really drinking and i don't remember a lot. i'm not even sure it was
everybody went to bed and i heard a popping sound.ut and saw somebody laying on the ground. >> what condition was he in when you talked to him? >> he was intox caugicatentoxic. he wasn't fall down, stupid drunk. i was carrying on a conversation with him. >> he said he was in the bedroom. then he said he heard the shot, saw the body and in his confused state. >> i didn't know it was lee. i didn't know who it was. >> did that seem strange to you? didn't recognize...
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573
Jan 29, 2014
01/14
by
KQED
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eye 573
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and i went through the same sequence of answers again.ace brightened and we celebrated again. maybe ten minutes passed. and he looked at me with the same puzzled expression and asked the same sequence of questions. it terrified me to see how tender the bond was between sentient consciousness and potential dementia and confusion was. >> third down and nine, young throws and that's incomplete. and... down... >> narrator: 49ers quarterback steve young was another one of leigh steinberg's clients. >> a sight that is the last thing in the world the 49ers would want to see. it looks almost as if he's out cold. >> well, i've been there. and there he is, he's up, that's a good sign. what i like is he wants to get up off the ground. >> look at this. he looks like he's out cold and now he's walking off. >> i remember thinking as i walked to the sidelines, "this is not good," you know? "this is just not the right thing to happen." >> narrator: it was young's seventh concussion. >> that's a sight we thought would be impossible. steve young apparently
and i went through the same sequence of answers again.ace brightened and we celebrated again. maybe ten minutes passed. and he looked at me with the same puzzled expression and asked the same sequence of questions. it terrified me to see how tender the bond was between sentient consciousness and potential dementia and confusion was. >> third down and nine, young throws and that's incomplete. and... down... >> narrator: 49ers quarterback steve young was another one of leigh...
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231
Jan 19, 2014
01/14
by
CNNW
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when you found out, what went through your mind?the one thing i remember is just screams, screams from my aunt, screams from my mother, everybody screaming. i just remember the screams. >> the death certificate states the cause of death was trauma to the right side of her head causing hemorrhage of the brain and suffocation. it also states irene's body had evidence of having been raped while in a coma. noemi, when you stand here at this site, tell me what goes through your mind. >> a great sadness. it just breaks my heart. >> all of mcallen was shaken. nothing like this had ever happened here. >> it was just so horrible to know that this beautiful, beautiful, nice person was found dead, murdered. [ bells toll ] >> since irene's car was still at the church, that's where investigators focused, and on the last man believed to see her alive, father john feit, the visiting priest. in a sworn statement, feit said he had taken a phone call from irene, wanting to speak to one of the priests about an important matter. but instead of taking i
when you found out, what went through your mind?the one thing i remember is just screams, screams from my aunt, screams from my mother, everybody screaming. i just remember the screams. >> the death certificate states the cause of death was trauma to the right side of her head causing hemorrhage of the brain and suffocation. it also states irene's body had evidence of having been raped while in a coma. noemi, when you stand here at this site, tell me what goes through your mind. >>...
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564
Jan 6, 2014
01/14
by
KNTV
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eye 564
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went to sleep. >> what time was this?where between 5:00 and 6:00 in the evening. >> so when kim nees was murdered, he said he was fast asleep. but even though his sister swore that he was telling the truth, there was that confession. >> you said you killed that girl up at montana. >> yes, sir, i said that i killed kim nees. >> and that's when the story enters the twilight zone. barry beach says he believed he was about to be released from the prison, minor charges called in by his stepmother about to be dropped, instead he found himself in an interrogation room answering questions about murder. those detectives seem to think he had committed those three unsolved louisiana murders, the murders they were try so very hard to solve. >> the next thing i know they started showing me pictures of dead bodies and told me, do you remember doing this? i was telling them i didn't do it, i didn't kill anyone. >> but as the day wore on and his anxiety, fatigue, and confusion grew, the door opened and in walked commander alfred calhoun.
went to sleep. >> what time was this?where between 5:00 and 6:00 in the evening. >> so when kim nees was murdered, he said he was fast asleep. but even though his sister swore that he was telling the truth, there was that confession. >> you said you killed that girl up at montana. >> yes, sir, i said that i killed kim nees. >> and that's when the story enters the twilight zone. barry beach says he believed he was about to be released from the prison, minor charges...
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120
Jan 15, 2014
01/14
by
KGO
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eye 120
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it went right around ours. it went behind the cabins then. >> reporter: there's no official cause. he says his neighbor discovered a squatter living in his cabin. >> he was burning a knapsack or something and it just took ot it got out of hand. there's so much dry brush and berry bushes out there. it goes quick. >> reporter: witnesses say the initial fire response was slow. likely because kimball island lies at the intersection of the three counties. >> it's not specifically attached to a fire district. sometimes there could be some agencies that question whose authority they have. >> reporter: the island is in sacramento county. the deputies and the coast guard ended up evacuating the people. >>> we are still under a red flag warning. seeing signs like there, warning of extreme fire danger in east bay lhills. red flag conditions mean wildfires could spark and spread as they would during peak fire season. fire crews patrol the hills today. >>> pa >> part of our normal procedure is to go out and do patrol in our fire station. we are doing those, actively doing those and staffed with
it went right around ours. it went behind the cabins then. >> reporter: there's no official cause. he says his neighbor discovered a squatter living in his cabin. >> he was burning a knapsack or something and it just took ot it got out of hand. there's so much dry brush and berry bushes out there. it goes quick. >> reporter: witnesses say the initial fire response was slow. likely because kimball island lies at the intersection of the three counties. >> it's not...
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71
Jan 12, 2014
01/14
by
CNNW
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. >> it went horribly. it was a total disaster. >> the siege at waco. next. >> waco, texas, is a quiet, modest city surrounded by sprawling cattle ranches located halfway between dallas and austin, it's an unlikely place for a modern day armageddon. >> this is the fbi command post. we have a fire at the compound in mt. carmel. the entire compound is going up right now. >> it was an epic debacle in united states law enforcement history. a deadly shootout followed by a 51-day siege that ended with more than 70 people dead in a raging inferno. all caught on live television with the whole world watching. two questions rise from the ashes of this american tragedy. who shot first and who started the fire? >> it began innocently enough. in 1935 a small religious group moved to waco. an off-shoot of the seventh day adventist church, they eventually called themselves as the branch davidians. >> pretty stable leadership for a lot of years, and they were known in town as a somewhat bizarre but benign religious group that pretty much kept to themselves. >> the davi
. >> it went horribly. it was a total disaster. >> the siege at waco. next. >> waco, texas, is a quiet, modest city surrounded by sprawling cattle ranches located halfway between dallas and austin, it's an unlikely place for a modern day armageddon. >> this is the fbi command post. we have a fire at the compound in mt. carmel. the entire compound is going up right now. >> it was an epic debacle in united states law enforcement history. a deadly shootout followed by...
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was doing was not not very covert but when you went to your seniors when you went to your bosses and said hey guys i'm kind of clearing all these dubious transactions that could be linked to terrorists and drug cartels what did they say no average you're hallucinating doing any of that or did they say we know but you have to kind of shut up about it what was their reaction. well i there's an internal e-mail that the f.b.i. has and the cia has and sort of the united states congress when i went and i met with them about a month ago. called compliance error and i'm more happy to send an e-mail to you i still have it and it's compliance our e-mail is an e-mail from for me to management explaining how these debt collectors are approving funds that are going into gaza and they're going to hamas. what i was told was that hamas is not a terrorist organization now there are some people out there who believe that hamas is not a terrorist organization but according to myself and also the united states government ofac in the most democratic countries in the world they are terrorist organization
was doing was not not very covert but when you went to your seniors when you went to your bosses and said hey guys i'm kind of clearing all these dubious transactions that could be linked to terrorists and drug cartels what did they say no average you're hallucinating doing any of that or did they say we know but you have to kind of shut up about it what was their reaction. well i there's an internal e-mail that the f.b.i. has and the cia has and sort of the united states congress when i went...
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384
Jan 1, 2014
01/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 384
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we went through a difficult period. ratings went down for a while. we got back in first place. everything worked out fine. but it was kind of take on the world every morning. we had maybe a third of the staff they now have on the "today" show. we didn't have the backing of the network. it was a little chaotic at that time. we got through it, and we got through it together because you were doing two hours every morning side by side. jane was married to gary at that point. my kids are growing up. so you go through a lot of experiences in life. i think the audience tunes into that. they kind of watch it. >> morning television is -- my friend, you were mentioning that i was going to be here yesterday. suddenly my text lights up. so evidently a lot of people in my demographic are watching you. which frankly is why, you know, we're doing the special. the whole point of it is that, you know, for a while advertisers kind of ignored us. we went off a cliff. 18 to 49 is the sweet spot. i think that was stretched to 18 to 54. i'm history with that. >> i remember my mom turned 40. she thou
we went through a difficult period. ratings went down for a while. we got back in first place. everything worked out fine. but it was kind of take on the world every morning. we had maybe a third of the staff they now have on the "today" show. we didn't have the backing of the network. it was a little chaotic at that time. we got through it, and we got through it together because you were doing two hours every morning side by side. jane was married to gary at that point. my kids are...