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NPR-20491-4
PROLIFIC_88
R_3mlRXkdAnefziul
1
So basically every website you visit creates itself the moment you arrive, and you know that because you see that your ads are customized to you. But in fact the whole page could well be customized, and we have found that there are cases where companies determine the price of the product to you based on where you live. The one we found most recently was Princeton Review with their online SAT course had different prices in different ZIP codes across the nation ranging from $6,600 to $8,400.
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Yeah, one finding that you report is that because of that, Asians were nearly twice as likely to be charged a higher price in SAT prep courses by Princeton Review than non-Asians because they're Asian or because they live in certain ZIP codes.
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CNN-329196-7
PROLIFIC_63
R_OMVTrg9f8KmnWlr
1
And as I wrote in my most recent column, there's a real danger to that. Because when everything he says and does provokes an unmitigated outrage and fury. How do we then get voters, get Americans to focus on the stuff that Trump is doing that really, really warrants sustained attention, stuff that really is damaging the country? Things get lost in this weltering world, and I think that's what exactly what Trump wants. When we answer his melodrama with our own melodrama we're playing his game by his rules, and I think he wins.
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Very well said. So let's talk about your column in the Times, it's called the end of Trump and the end of days. And it speaks on democratic (Inaudible) are responding to this president. You're right. "When Trump's opponents react to so much of what he says and does with such unfettered outrage, how does this how not become background noise, and how do we make sure that his unequivocally foul manner stands out from the debatably foolish ones? When we constantly conjure the duress scenario don't we risk looking like ignorable hysterics and bolstering his grandiose claims of martyrdom if events unfold in less damnable fashion?" That's very well put. It's similar what you -- the answer that you just said. So what's the answer for democrats? How do they react to so much outrage and one outrage after another? Because he, I mean, it's just one in a row -- one after another.
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CNN-31436-9
PROLIFIC_63
R_OMVTrg9f8KmnWlr
0
No, no, not child birth but childhood.
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Oh, childhood. You totally got my attention. OK, well, before we get to the treatment, let's talk about how we can check. For example, how do we know if it may be melanoma or not?
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CNN-349401-8
PROLIFIC_63
R_OMVTrg9f8KmnWlr
1
I don't think anybody is that vital, and I think that if you feel strongly enough about it -- and I'm not saying that this individual doesn't. But if you do, you need to stand up in front of the American people, God and country, and say, here I am. This is my name and this is what I believe. I don't think, Chris, in my opinion, you should try to have it both ways. You should try to say, well, I'm indispensable, and therefore, I'm going to remain anonymous. But at the same time, I'm going to criticize my boss -- even if it's justified, and I don't know whether it's justified or not.
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Fair point. I get the having it both ways point. Fair point. How about how the president is handling this? If it is a nothing- burger, way make so much ado about something that doesn't matter? Having these people come forward, these apparent loyalty tests, you know, trying to do everything they can to unearth who is anonymous. Why if it doesn't matter? If you don't think it's real, why treat it this way?
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NPR-20491-7
PROLIFIC_76
R_cUvfFWs3D3pumrv
1
As far as we could tell - and the company said it was not an intentional discrimination against Asians. They drew their lines for their ZIP code pricing in a way that mostly captured a lot of high-income areas but actually also managed to capture a lot of low-income, Asian areas. So Queens, N.Y., is highly Asian but not a high-income area. And we don't really know what went into their algorithm to make it turn out that way.
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We're talking about algorithms, but should we be talking about the humans who design the algorithms?
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NPR-13735-12
PROLIFIC_76
R_cUvfFWs3D3pumrv
1
The best cameras people can get now, you know, the saying is the best camera is the one that's always with you and with a lot of these new phones, which are around $200. So, it's the iPhone 4, the Droid X, you know, they have really amazing cameras inside of them, considering the fact that they're also a phone. But if you're looking for something a little more powerful, for somebody who's sort of an aspiring photographer in terms of point-and-shoot cameras, I really like Canon's S95. It's around $400, which is pricey, but this camera is pocketable and takes really amazing photos and video. There are a couple of other options, too. I like Panasonic's Lumix LX3, which has been sort of a pro favorite model of point-and-shoot for a while. Or if you want something a little nicer or another step up, somebody who thinks they really want to get into photography, I really like Canon's Rebel T2I. It's a DSLR.
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DSLR - digital single lens reflex - it's like the old cameras but digital.
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CNN-363203-3
PROLIFIC_76
R_cUvfFWs3D3pumrv
0
So let's start at the beginning. You graduate college 1985. One of your first campaigns you covered was, my grandfather President George H. W. Bush. He was then vice president running against Michael Dukakis. I know you're on to Dukakis campaign with your news following. But what was that experience like?
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Right. That was most because I was based in Boston at the time. Most of my work was covering Dukakis. But so you had to write when say the George H.W. Bush campaign when after Boston Harbor or when after the Willie Horton. I would write the record pieces about that. But that was a fascinating campaign because remember, Dukakis went to Atlanta, his big convention and they were up 17 points and they thought it was over. But, watching -- watching the Bush campaign and its effectiveness was eye opening to me. And number of different things, you have -- number one, your grandfather is always underrated as a politician. Number two, they smartly pulled off the, here's this very nice gentleman, the guy with a bare knuckles are tough, rough and tumbled campaign. And he was always surrounded by very good people. If you're down 17 points, you think it's over. The quality and the caliber of the people including the candidate and the staff as well, just rebuilt it one.
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NPR-20086-15
PROLIFIC_88
R_3qyP9qWQPJdvP8V
0
When it comes to the direct detection, yeah, there's no real progress. We're doing lots of interesting studies. And we're putting limits on them. But nobody's found a direct detection. There's been no direct detection. But if you're talking about this sort of seeing the effects of what we think is dark matter, that's getting better and better all the time. We are definitely convinced that something is going on out there, whether it's dark matter - or we're going to have to invent something else - that is still for the future to decide.
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And by out there, you mean also in here.
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CNN-243827-11
PROLIFIC_88
R_3qyP9qWQPJdvP8V
0
I don't think so. I think that -- you know I'm not exempt. We are living in a community where you have extreme poverty and individuals are just extremely hopeless. They don't care about life and they don't care about taking the life of others. And I just don't believe that he knew who I was. I was just there at the right time for him, to inflict that type of mental strain on me.
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All right. Well, you are remarkable. Thank you so much, Senator Jamilla Nasheed. Thanks for being with us and thanks for enduring what you endured last night, a gun to your head, someone who demanded something from you. What did he demand exactly?
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CNN-319588-9
PROLIFIC_88
R_3qyP9qWQPJdvP8V
1
Well, that's why I'm suggesting that it's really in the court of the vice president and the majority of those members of the cabinet to make that determination at this point whether or not that incapacity is preventing him from doing his job.
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You mentioned there some of the requirements to meet the standards set by the 25th Amendment. Just in brief, we'll lay them out because the audience may not be aware. But you need the vice president and a majority of the president's cabinet -- of course, he appointed his cabinet secretaries. So you have that. Or Congress or a body appointed by Congress. And then, a later stage, to make this permanent if the president were to protest, you need a vote of two-thirds in both the Senate and the House. You have a Republican vice president, of course, in Mike Pence who's been very supportive of the president throughout. The president would have appointed his cabinet secretaries, so folks that he picked for the job. And you still have a majority in both the Senate and the House. Do you see that -- those as hurdles that practically could be met to reach the standards of the 25th?
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NPR-40990-7
PROLIFIC_76
R_ufceCImHpnybIhb
1
Yeah, that was last summer. And initially, they did let him compete pending scientific testing. Pistorius went to Germany; he was tested for two days alongside able-bodied sprinters who ran as fast as he did. The results showed that the prosthetics returned more energy and lost less energy compared to the able-bodied runners. In other words, Pistorius used less energy to achieve the same results. He used less oxygen to run the 400, and that translates to a physiological advantage.
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Yeah. And the conclusion was that the prosthesis amounted to technical aids for Pistorius and that made him ineligible to try to qualify for the Olympics. Before we go on to some of the issues raised by this, did he actually have a shot at qualifying for the Olympics or doing well there?
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NPR-19489-5
PROLIFIC_76
R_ufceCImHpnybIhb
1
Because it's so confrontational right off the bat and because no questions were taken. But I also advise you have to see this as more than a Saturday story. On Monday, Sean is going to be accountable. Sean is going to stand in front of the press and he's going to take questions. He'll either be able to back up what he said and justify it or he'll be pilloried. And that's why I take a long view of what was said. It leaves me uncomfortable, but it's not over yet.
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Why does it leave you uncomfortable?
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CNN-192572-5
PROLIFIC_76
R_ufceCImHpnybIhb
1
No, no paparazzi anywhere. There was a local radio station in South Carolina who was hinting at a potential wedding, because the reason they got married there is because Ryan loved this small town. And he was in town, but no one knew they were actually getting married. They knew there was an event at this plantation, but no one knew it was Blake and Ryan`s wedding.
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Yes, and it is one of the most beautiful places in our country. So "People" magazine was right there. Carlos, you were at the wedding. You got to listen to the vows. You got a close-up look at Blake`s dress and the ring. What was the most surprising thing about the whole secret celebrity wedding for you guys?
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CNN-303095-9
PROLIFIC_94
R_USl0mmTfpcK8cPn
1
Well, I think the team of the president and his -- president-elect and his team are now in the waiting room, if you will, and soon, another week from now, they'll be in the situation room, and I think those are two very different sets of circumstances. And they're going to have to come to the grips with the issue of developing a coordinated, synchronized policies towards each and every one of these issues. Right now, you can see some divergences between them. You can see some public statements by the cabinet members-designate to the effect that Russia is a through threat, the President-elect Trump kind of dismissing that. There's going to have to be a real harmonization of those points of view. If not, then I think there could be some discord and trouble ahead. I recall the beginning of the Reagan administration, there were quite a few divergences, and it took them a number of years to sort that out. The sooner the president and his team can develop harmonized, coordinated policies toward these issues, the better it is for them and for the country.
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Clarity for the country.
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CNN-61505-19
PROLIFIC_94
R_USl0mmTfpcK8cPn
1
It is terrible. Nausea, vomiting...
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It is one of the worst, most violent sicknesses...
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NPR-20426-6
PROLIFIC_94
R_USl0mmTfpcK8cPn
0
Well, the Iraqi security forces are certainly very keen to say that they now plan, having taken Ramadi, move into the cities of Fallujah and Mosul, which are ISIS strongholds. There are other military sources that say this might be a bit unrealistic based on the fact that Fallujah and Mosul are heavily populated, unlike Ramadi and Tikrit and Sinjar which were largely depopulated by the time the battles happened there. And honestly, on the basis of the still quite limited capacities of the Iraqi security forces, ISIS have been in these cities for a year and a half, two years now. They're deeply entrenched. Analysts have also for a long time said the problem of ISIS in Iraq and Syria won't be resolved until there's strong central governments in those places who can offer the people living under ISIS a better life than what they currently have. And right now that's still, on balance, not really the case.
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Meaning that even if you were to formally retake territory, you might still have chaos there, you might still have unrest, you might still have armed groups.
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NPR-23296-9
PROLIFIC_94
R_1QMz9A0QMJI6vys
1
Now, what we saw was that there was a high degree of correlation in the socioeconomic factors that determined that community.
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So more poverty meant more murder.
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CNN-11952-3
PROLIFIC_94
R_1QMz9A0QMJI6vys
0
Linda, that fact is true, and the infection is passed from mother to child, sometimes during pregnancy, sometimes during birth, and then with breastfeeding as well.
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And what about breastfeeding, though, where are we on that? because I know that that has been somewhat controversial whether women should breastfeed their children if they are infected with HIV?
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CNN-68742-3
PROLIFIC_94
R_1QMz9A0QMJI6vys
1
Well, Iraqis have very bitter memories of what happened in 1991 when they were asked to rise up and free themselves, and then they were let down by the Americans.
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And, in fact, your concern with how this military campaign is going right now, it's feeling like they're being let down as it's being conducted. Tell me about that.
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CNN-56267-3
PROLIFIC_94
R_1QMz9A0QMJI6vys
0
Well, certainly the White House as is the Congress concerned about any leaks that might jeopardize our sources and methods for obtaining information. This intercept that was reported is not a hugely sensitive one. The problem with getting snippets of information is it sounds more salient than it really is in the full picture. The White House is disappointed that this information was made public; so are we in the Congress. Before the vice president even called our chairman, we had decided that we would call for an investigation to see how the information was made public. It had been made public long before we had our hearing yesterday. One network told us they had it a couple of weeks ago. So as we look into how Congress may have revealed this information, we also have to look into what may have come from the administration as well.
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Let me take your attention back to October, October 5. The president penned a memo in which he wanted investigations to only include the leaders of the intelligence committees and no one else. Later, that memo was pulled back. Does this not highlight the concern the White House has right now for secret information getting out? Even though this one may have not been very incendiary in the intelligence side, who knows what may come out in the future.
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CNN-24667-5
PROLIFIC_94
R_1ISm05WoUKzLjbf
0
Well, he's a gifted speaker. If you close your eyes and hear him talk, he sounds every bit like his dad, who as we all know, is a very gifted orator. He has a well-known name, a magical name in New York politics. He has an ability to raise money, that seems to be apparent. And also his wife is Kerry Kennedy Cuomo. She's a daughter of the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy. She brings some of the Kennedy family mystique into this whole equation.
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Yes, and Kennedy mystique could be particularly important, considering that he is a facing black candidate.
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NPR-16481-3
PROLIFIC_94
R_1ISm05WoUKzLjbf
0
First of all, it's a voluntary program. But for lenders who agree to participate, the bill requires them to refinance the troubled mortgage at just 90 percent of the current value of the house. Now, that's likely to represent a big loss since housing prices have fallen 10 percent or more in most areas.
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So what's the incentive for the lender to take such a loss?
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CNN-178518-3
PROLIFIC_94
R_1gkc4kqGzeEnf3m
1
We are. I think this is one of the things that people may not fully realize. We are kind of sleep walking towards a military confrontation. I don't believe the Obama administration has the intent for war nor do I think necessarily the Iranians are looking for war, but the policies that we are pursuing nevertheless are increasing the risk of a military confrontation. What we are seeing right now in the Persian Gulf, with the Iranian warnings of closing down the strait is just an indication of the things that can come and that can actually spark a much larger military confrontation.
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Is this not just sabre-rattling by Iran? Closing off the Strait of Hormuz would choke off its own ability to supply oil to the world. Aren't these just words?
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CNN-126364-6
PROLIFIC_94
R_1gkc4kqGzeEnf3m
1
But I`m with you 100 percent about the oil. We have got to get the handcuffs off the oil companies. We`ve got to have coal-to-oil technology. You know, you and I have discussed this, and it`s incredibly important. We could not last one day without the oil companies, but all we do in Washington is beat them up, beat them up, beat them up, as if they were the problem. They`re the solution. They`re the ones who get us the oil in the first place. We can`t live without them. Why are we torturing them?
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We -- you know what? We beat our oil company executives up. In Russia, they make them president.
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CNN-55331-7
PROLIFIC_94
R_2CoWXdRr63sbt6K
0
Well, I think the system is broken, Paula. And I don't give any excuses for anybody, but I would just caution your viewers that there are literally hundreds and hundreds of thousands of pieces of information that go into these agencies every day. It's crystal clear in retrospect, you know, what that information was and, you know, why it should have caused people to action. And also, I think we've created a very risk-adverse -- particularly the FBI -- agency over the last 20, 25 years, where the bureaucracy has been strengthened and the call to action of the young -- you know, agents in the field that want to do the right thing. And of course, there's a lot of people in Washington that want to do the right thing. We've created this bureaucracy, this very risk-adverse, zero-defects mentality. We need to get away from that, and we need to empower people to do what's right to protect the American public.
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"TIME" magazine this week actually quotes a member of the Attorney General's Office talking about how former field agents like you were very much hampered by the old rules, referring to the so- called blind Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman, who was convicted in the 1993 World Trade Center bombings. The Justice Department source says, quote, "Here was a guy you knew had ties to a terrorist organization. You knew he was meeting with his followers in the mosque. The agents couldn't go in. They had to stop at the door because no crime had been committed yet." How might some of your investigations have been different if you were given some of the same new latitude that FBI agents will be given under these reforms?
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CNN-135292-8
PROLIFIC_94
R_2CoWXdRr63sbt6K
0
Sarah Palin, she won't chair it. So a couple of things are happening. Fewer TV cameras are going to be in our committee hearing. And the second thing is, is that I have to stay all the way to the end to report out from the committee, so I wish she was here.
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And why isn't she here?
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CNN-241881-3
PROLIFIC_94
R_2CoWXdRr63sbt6K
0
Well, it started out writing up until yesterday. Then he started talking. It's very important because he just wants to let people know that, you know, he's OK. He's getting better. But this idea that he's still wondering a lot of things.
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What is he wondering? He's just wondering what motivated his cousin to do this?
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CNN-243827-11
PROLIFIC_94
R_1LSQ7C3iXwfTugp
0
I don't think so. I think that -- you know I'm not exempt. We are living in a community where you have extreme poverty and individuals are just extremely hopeless. They don't care about life and they don't care about taking the life of others. And I just don't believe that he knew who I was. I was just there at the right time for him, to inflict that type of mental strain on me.
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All right. Well, you are remarkable. Thank you so much, Senator Jamilla Nasheed. Thanks for being with us and thanks for enduring what you endured last night, a gun to your head, someone who demanded something from you. What did he demand exactly?
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CNN-319588-9
PROLIFIC_94
R_1LSQ7C3iXwfTugp
0
Well, that's why I'm suggesting that it's really in the court of the vice president and the majority of those members of the cabinet to make that determination at this point whether or not that incapacity is preventing him from doing his job.
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You mentioned there some of the requirements to meet the standards set by the 25th Amendment. Just in brief, we'll lay them out because the audience may not be aware. But you need the vice president and a majority of the president's cabinet -- of course, he appointed his cabinet secretaries. So you have that. Or Congress or a body appointed by Congress. And then, a later stage, to make this permanent if the president were to protest, you need a vote of two-thirds in both the Senate and the House. You have a Republican vice president, of course, in Mike Pence who's been very supportive of the president throughout. The president would have appointed his cabinet secretaries, so folks that he picked for the job. And you still have a majority in both the Senate and the House. Do you see that -- those as hurdles that practically could be met to reach the standards of the 25th?
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NPR-20086-15
PROLIFIC_94
R_1LSQ7C3iXwfTugp
1
When it comes to the direct detection, yeah, there's no real progress. We're doing lots of interesting studies. And we're putting limits on them. But nobody's found a direct detection. There's been no direct detection. But if you're talking about this sort of seeing the effects of what we think is dark matter, that's getting better and better all the time. We are definitely convinced that something is going on out there, whether it's dark matter - or we're going to have to invent something else - that is still for the future to decide.
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And by out there, you mean also in here.
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NPR-13735-12
PROLIFIC_94
R_2XcETKlosAoZAMW
1
The best cameras people can get now, you know, the saying is the best camera is the one that's always with you and with a lot of these new phones, which are around $200. So, it's the iPhone 4, the Droid X, you know, they have really amazing cameras inside of them, considering the fact that they're also a phone. But if you're looking for something a little more powerful, for somebody who's sort of an aspiring photographer in terms of point-and-shoot cameras, I really like Canon's S95. It's around $400, which is pricey, but this camera is pocketable and takes really amazing photos and video. There are a couple of other options, too. I like Panasonic's Lumix LX3, which has been sort of a pro favorite model of point-and-shoot for a while. Or if you want something a little nicer or another step up, somebody who thinks they really want to get into photography, I really like Canon's Rebel T2I. It's a DSLR.
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DSLR - digital single lens reflex - it's like the old cameras but digital.
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CNN-363203-3
PROLIFIC_94
R_2XcETKlosAoZAMW
0
So let's start at the beginning. You graduate college 1985. One of your first campaigns you covered was, my grandfather President George H. W. Bush. He was then vice president running against Michael Dukakis. I know you're on to Dukakis campaign with your news following. But what was that experience like?
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Right. That was most because I was based in Boston at the time. Most of my work was covering Dukakis. But so you had to write when say the George H.W. Bush campaign when after Boston Harbor or when after the Willie Horton. I would write the record pieces about that. But that was a fascinating campaign because remember, Dukakis went to Atlanta, his big convention and they were up 17 points and they thought it was over. But, watching -- watching the Bush campaign and its effectiveness was eye opening to me. And number of different things, you have -- number one, your grandfather is always underrated as a politician. Number two, they smartly pulled off the, here's this very nice gentleman, the guy with a bare knuckles are tough, rough and tumbled campaign. And he was always surrounded by very good people. If you're down 17 points, you think it's over. The quality and the caliber of the people including the candidate and the staff as well, just rebuilt it one.
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NPR-20491-7
PROLIFIC_94
R_2XcETKlosAoZAMW
1
As far as we could tell - and the company said it was not an intentional discrimination against Asians. They drew their lines for their ZIP code pricing in a way that mostly captured a lot of high-income areas but actually also managed to capture a lot of low-income, Asian areas. So Queens, N.Y., is highly Asian but not a high-income area. And we don't really know what went into their algorithm to make it turn out that way.
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We're talking about algorithms, but should we be talking about the humans who design the algorithms?
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CNN-29888-9
PROLIFIC_93
R_3jTikcPWpGvdJe3
1
That's a concept that involves looking at sentences individually as well as the writing sample as a whole and scoring it for how many ideas they find per 10 words.
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So more complex sentences, more expressive thoughts, would lead to someone who would be less likely to develop Alzheimer's in later life; is that right?
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NPR-29986-4
PROLIFIC_93
R_3jTikcPWpGvdJe3
1
The international community led by the United States has, of course, denounced the violence. Steps beyond that, quite frankly, are going to be difficult to implement. There has been some speculation on declaring a no-fly zone over Libya, to prevent Gadhafi from using his air power against his citizens, but, you know, that would take a decision at least from NATO.
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Besides a no-fly zone, is there anything else? It just feels like there should be something else that could be done.
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CNN-271388-12
PROLIFIC_93
R_3jTikcPWpGvdJe3
1
Outside the country, there really are no constitutional protections and a lot of people misconceive, even on immigration and other subjects, if you're not in our country, there are no constitutional protections for you.
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So, you don't have a problem with the idea that Facebook should offer if the government asks for it access to private accounts of anybody who is applying to come into the U.S.?
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NPR-8365-10
PROLIFIC_96
R_pMHn3rmeXNfaXm1
0
It's the evaporated remains or residues of the original beverage that was in the vessels, and in this case it turned out to be a combination of barley, honey and grapes, so it was like a wine, beer and mead all in one. And, you know, your stomach might cringe a little bit at the thought of such a beverage, especially back in 2000 when people weren't doing all the experimental work that we have going on today, especially among craft brewers. So we did some experimental archaeology and got a bunch of microbrewers to go back to their breweries and do up, you know, different versions of what we later called Midas Touch.
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And so you can still make that old stuff today.
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CNN-174603-13
PROLIFIC_96
R_pMHn3rmeXNfaXm1
0
Right. Absolutely, he was inside the White House daily briefing. He went over there to hang out with the press secretary and take a few pictures of. You know, he is a real fixture in Washington, D.C. He has spoken a lot at dinners here. People know him well and have enjoyed his comedy, quite frankly, at some of the best even media events around town.
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What is it about Washington it attracts him? Is it just because he is such a highly sought-after, I don't know, emcee of events?
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CNN-146084-3
PROLIFIC_96
R_1F9V6rs5P1rY2fx
0
Well, I don't think we're too much focused on the part of 100 detainees as we are about the jobs that it will bring to the area.
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How many jobs could you see? How many new jobs could you see, in your community, and why is it that you are so in need of jobs right now? What is the major employer that is there?
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NPR-9347-17
PROLIFIC_96
R_1F9V6rs5P1rY2fx
0
Well, it's true. A lot of scientists are hesitant to get involved with industry. It's seen as, you know, getting in bed with the devil, actually. But I found that doing this has been really the only way and one of the best ways I know to take a finding from the bench side to people. There's no other way, in fact. This drug, if we ever succeed, is going to cost probably a billion dollars, and no academic lab can do that. So yeah, I'm still working with, as a consultant to, GlaxoSmithKline. But they're the ones who have done the hard chemistry. They've made 4,000 different variants of chemicals that activate this pathway, and the best couple of those have gone into human studies.
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So when you activate the pathway, this enzyme, what does - what kind of benefits happen from that?
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CNN-44456-3
PROLIFIC_93
R_AEVGmZRJSpD849P
1
I -- I've been talked to a number of times over the last several years to write a book about a number of things I've done, and I wanted something that would inspire other people that -- that had grown up sort of like me, and also something for my kids. You know, to learn about their history, and where they came from, and where I came from.
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Let's talk a little bit about where you came from. What do you want to tell us about your mother?
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NPR-34092-16
PROLIFIC_93
R_AEVGmZRJSpD849P
1
Well, the disconnect is that too many of my colleagues are not willing to take short term pain for long term gain. Too many have not been willing to do without certain things and unwilling to pay for it. The thing that was missing in the past, frankly, is a lot of the public didn't understand how bad things really were. And when I - I'll never forget, I was in Brussels at the German marshal Brussels forum and they were talking about the U.S. putting a lot more money into NATO and so forth. And I just basically told them, I said, you know, we've been the sugar daddy of the world for 60 years. And what you don't understand is last year, we borrowed 42 cents on every dollar that we spent. A hush went over the room. When I mention that same statistic in speeches that I give, people, a lot of them, didn't understand this. Now, they do.
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But if people have not been tuned in to this or haven't gotten the scale of the borrowing, in theory, you can excuse the House of Representatives. They're always running for election and they're the people's House and the people dont get it. The upper chamber is supposed to be the wise people of the republic who temper those judgments.
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CNN-378542-13
PROLIFIC_93
R_AEVGmZRJSpD849P
1
Well, it depends on the product. And in the case of Beyond Meat, you certainly, I think, have less processing in terms of, you know, what's potentially damaging to human health in that product than you have in many conventional meats that we eat and the processing that goes on in the products into which that meat goes. So, you know, when you compare them, I think that there's probably huge benefits to human health with some of these plant-based alternatives. You have to read the labels closely. That's one of the reasons why there is a lot of interest in cell-based meats, right, because you're essentially just growing the muscle tissues and the connective tissues and the fat tissues that we eat in animal-based meat and you can actually control how much fat and what kind of fat goes into those products...
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So that's essentially laboratory-made -- it really is beef; it's just you don't need a live animal to get to the beef. You get to it in a lab.
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CNN-95407-3
PROLIFIC_96
R_22FCh8y1iU5j7O5
1
Hey, Daryn, do you know that kids influence their parents in spending some $1 trillion a year. It's amazing the amount of influence that kids have, and it's mostly because of advertising on television. Your best job, sitting down with your kids and talking with them about what they're seeing on TV and having them associate those goodies with price tags.
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Now something that a lot of adults don't like to do, draw up a budget.
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CNN-103838-3
PROLIFIC_96
R_22FCh8y1iU5j7O5
1
Eating infected -- parts of infected animals. And I say that deliberately, because it's not so much a steak or, like, a piece of -- of beef. It -- it is more from specific parts of the animal, and specifically parts of the brain and -- and nervous system. And, you know, that -- that's not something that people typically eat. So, it's unlikely, in this country, anyways, that mad cow disease could even be transmitted by what we typically eat as a typical diet here.
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So, hamburger Tuesday can go on tomorrow night?
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NPR-38181-5
PROLIFIC_93
R_UT2uPvIiK9VW4yl
1
It's a slim box, looks kind of like a sleek DVD player, except there's no slot. It hooks up to your TV, and it comes with a hundred movies on it. A hundred recent movies already on it, and you just pick the one you want to watch. Each week, eight of them disappear and eight new ones arrive. And they arrive, interestingly, over the PBS signal using an antenna that you park up high on a shelf or near a window. That means that you don't need cable service, you don't need a computer - these movies just arrive through the airwaves each week. So there's always...
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Over the signal from your local public television station?
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CNN-26241-5
PROLIFIC_93
R_UT2uPvIiK9VW4yl
1
I worked, unfortunately, with both men. But I think I have a great dead of sympathy for the CIA employees when they heard the name Aldrich Ames, because the first, initial reaction is total, unmitigated shock, and then after that wears down, you go into an anger phase. So I'm apparently in the anger phase right now as to..
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Why are you angry? Why were you shocked? You've known him since the '80s.
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CNN-155750-6
PROLIFIC_96
R_Uzufl8OZAr1i57r
1
Well, we've had two groups of teachers who left, who were asked to leave, and they were under different circumstances. The first group, they were dismissed allegedly because of a budget deficit and many of those teachers did have performance evaluations that indicated they had well not just in the previous year to them, you know, being fired, but in the years prior to that. Those are people who certainly should be considered.
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You will rehire those teachers?
[1, 1, 1, 1, 1]
NPR-14122-9
PROLIFIC_96
R_Uzufl8OZAr1i57r
1
Yeah. Well, what piqued my interest in this as a mathematician was a study that was done quite recently within the last few months at Liverpool's John Moores University. They confirmed that the best chance for a kicker is to aim for one of the two callers high and to one side. They found out that the speed has to be between 56 and 65 miles and hour. If it's faster than that, then the kicker is going to lose accuracy. If it's slower than 56 miles an hour, then the goalie has a chance to catch it.
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Of course, if the goalkeeper knows that the odds favor putting it in one of those corners, the goalkeeper will do his best to be in one of those corners, won't he?
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CNN-382242-8
PROLIFIC_96
R_Uzufl8OZAr1i57r
1
I think that that is a significant part of it. I mean we in the U.S. were so obsessed with the kind of dysfunction and polarization in the country at large, really focused on the Trump presidency of the last three years. It's obscured, really reduce the tension on lots of other issues. The other thing I would say is that in Europe the effects of climate change over the last three or four years seem to have been more visible, really dramatic shrinkage of glaciers, fires all across Scandinavia where they never really had to deal with that before, record temperatures. That maybe part of it but I think the thing you mentioned, the partisan divisions and the dysfunction in the United States and the obsession sort of with the events of the last three years have obscured other issues.
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Right and unless people can see and feel a problem, often, they don't think or care about it, climate change has been hard to grasp for many people. Now that we are feeling unbelievable heat, setting records, powerful deadly storms, seeing all of these fires in California, do you get a sense Americans are paying attention?
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CNN-254573-3
PROLIFIC_93
R_2ALPWprnXTpeCPo
1
One of the things that I think that is important that we have this dialogue and conversation with officers all the time. I know recently, about a week ago, a week-and-a-half ago, I had all of the community come together. We had the deputy commissioner come in. We had the new commanding officer of a local precinct come in...
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Meeting one another.
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CNN-112560-7
PROLIFIC_93
R_2ALPWprnXTpeCPo
1
That's right, just like in any economy you have both the goods and the services being exchanged, but if something goes wrong, you usually go to small claims court, or you can call the police. Those folks use each other. There's always third party arbiters, maybe it's a local clergy, maybe it's a block club president, who will settle a pricing dispute or enforce a contract. But it's usually turning to each other so they have both regulation as well as the commercial end of it, coming up at the same time. It's really a creative process you see on the ground.
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Well, and that was something to me that was just really eye-opening when I was reading your research. That people are really kind of together in ways that you might not expect to address the problems that are going on in their community. And in a way, you say, it's really a great example of people being democratic.
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CNN-55879-13
PROLIFIC_96
R_3nB0c5vuiQO5ifb
1
My position is very simple. I think we live in one country and we have a national constitution, that tells us that governors aren't able to stop interstate commerce. I have been in a position before when I could have done what my friend Jim Hodges is now doing. I could have politicized this issue. I chose to work with Secretary Bill Richardson on finding a way to solve this question, of...
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So you're saying what he did was purely political?
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NPR-26945-7
PROLIFIC_93
R_3JwuNMmqiyZDyBY
1
First of all, in terms of the study, the study deals with the risks. It doesn't deal with the solutions. Now, in terms of me personally, I believe putting a price on carbon - I think that is the best way to change behavior. I don't favor the EPA regulations, but I would say this. If we can't get a nationwide solution or putting a price on carbon, then I would reluctantly agree that the EPA regulations are necessary because I think the problems we are facing are so significant that we need to act. To those who argue against putting a price against carbon because it is a big government solution - what I say to them - that's rather perverse thinking, because by not dealing with the issue on a national level and changing policy, you are guaranteeing that the government's going to play a bigger and bigger role because we are increasingly going to see disasters.
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Why do you think talking about the economic impact will make a difference, especially given the way conservatives and Republicans have really fought this issue, precisely on the economics, saying that a carbon tax or some solution in that direction would hurt the economy?
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NPR-19802-5
PROLIFIC_93
R_3JwuNMmqiyZDyBY
1
The NRA has its political side. We are an organization strictly for education. We do not endorse candidates. And we're a place - many of our members have joined NRA boards, other gun forums and found that they weren't welcome there because they didn't follow lockstep with the NRA's support of nearly unanimously Republican and right-leaning candidates.
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A lot of people may assume that liberal-leaning people are less likely to be gun enthusiasts. You're saying - and then the name of your club suggests - that this isn't necessarily so.
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CNN-3409-7
PROLIFIC_93
R_3JwuNMmqiyZDyBY
1
This is a wonderful opportunity to reassess your objectives, your goals. What are you doing and why? Why are you making the investments you are? What's the strategy you're using, and is it really designed to achieve your long-term goals, or were you merely acting greedy, trying to get a quick hit real fast? So what I would really encourage people to do is reassess their portfolio and make sure that this is the kind of investment strategy that you can live with for decades. If it's not, then now is the time to do something about it.
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Because the reality is playing the stock market is a long- term proposition.
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NPR-11551-6
PROLIFIC_93
R_3JwuNMmqiyZDyBY
1
That is true. And you might've caught the news where cremated remains were scattered at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City at the intermission, which canceled the rest of the production.
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I missed that. Oh, my word. Most of us maybe, you know, get some malted milk balls at intermission, not scattered remains. But go ahead, yeah.
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CNN-8208-5
PROLIFIC_93
R_3JwuNMmqiyZDyBY
1
Well, you know, certainly -- I think nationally we tend to look at it differently than we probably do here in the state. I think there are more shades of gray here in the state. Personally, I have a hard time with the president's assessment that none of the individual incidents amounted to a firing offense. I mean, we're talking about acts of physical violence, grabbing a player by the throat, allegedly, you know, knocking out another member of the athletic staff. But here in the state, I mean, again, firing this guy would be tantamount to impeaching the governor. It might even be bigger. With Bob Knight goes a sizable portion of the state, perhaps a sizable portion of support for this university. I think it was a tricky decision for President Brand.
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Well, explain this to me, because one of the things that most people on the outside looking in -- even some on the inside -- are thinking is that at least he should be forced to have to apologize to each of these people that he has been accused or they have evidence of him actually abusing. And as I understand it, he's only going to have to apologize to the secretary in the office, but not to the sports information director that he punched and knocked out, and not to the assistant coach that he also accosted, or to Neil Reed, the man that we just saw being choked on tape.
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NPR-6831-23
PROLIFIC_96
R_23ZBWANzmMKH5wS
1
So go, Tim Tebow. And thank you for providing a segue way. Can we talk about some baseball now?
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Yeah. Let's talk about some baseball 'cause I hear - I mean, speaking of, like, arms and throwing, these people who are on the pitcher's mound are hurting themselves a lot. How come?
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CNN-80984-7
PROLIFIC_96
R_0BVfHILSHyppwA1
1
It's really amazing out there right now. We've taken a look at some of those offers in our February round-up on cell phones. What we found overall though is that the ads are getting better, but the service is not. The deals are there, certainly. But the best deals, unfortunately, are tied to the longest term contracts. If you want the best price on a phone, if you want the sweetest deal on calling time, the companies want you to sign up for a two-year contract.
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You have to commit. Let's talk about the actual phones. Now, for a long time there has been one system in Europe, and that's GSM. Most phones here in the U.S. have been TDMA. Sounds technical in engineering but that's kind of changing.
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NPR-42758-10
PROLIFIC_96
R_0BVfHILSHyppwA1
1
Precisely, that is it. And, you know, we as a newspaper have been raising questions about this from July 18th and, of course, on July 19th, it was really projected as a done deal. And as things have begun to emerge, the kind of atmosphere has moved from triumphalism down to reality. So we do realize that yes, that is of concern. We do realize that a large number of senators and people on the Hill would actually want India definitely to roll back.
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Roll back from the nuclear capabilities that it already has?
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CNN-175637-9
PROLIFIC_96
R_0BVfHILSHyppwA1
0
Well, the next step in North Carolina is that the governor has established a tax force that is to give her their final recommendations by February 1st as to what type of justice to give to victims. So that will be very important because a lot of victims will be hesitant to come forward until they know what the end product will be, whether that's some sort of compensation or some sort of package.
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And what would that compensation be?
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CNN-255832-9
PROLIFIC_93
R_29cPNIjrr2I8XtV
0
I doubt that. You know, if I had a dime for every amount of speculation that happens in D.C., I think all of us would be wealthy.
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Your budget would be a lot bigger, is that --?
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NPR-22815-7
PROLIFIC_96
R_23UddLb2xNaZzkB
1
Well, Peter Greste, Mohamed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed were arrested and convicted then on terrorism charges. But the evidence that was put out in court showed run-of-the-mill tools that journalists use, like cameras and notebooks, and doing things that journalists do, like taking notes and reporting, asking questions. And a lot of rights groups say that this trial was really a sham trial, and it was more political than actually criminal over a beef between Qatar, which owns Al-Jazeera, and Egypt.
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Oh, there were people, as you've discussed on this program before, who thought that this was actually part of power diplomacy that these people from Qatar - associated, anyway, with Qatar - were imprisoned. But now we have this situation where their sentences have been canceled. Is it a possible for Egyptians then to argue that, well, their system is working?
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NPR-8339-8
PROLIFIC_96
R_23UddLb2xNaZzkB
1
Well, because he had been involved in this for some time. This is something he'd been working on for months in terms of being in contact with Ukraine, trying to get an investigation started into the Bidens. He talked about it on TV. He was on Twitter, so he was very public about this in the past couple of months after the Mueller investigation wound up. He said he met an aide of the Ukrainian president. He said he was working with the State Department, that he cleared it with them, he was in contact with them. But then, you know, Trump said also that the Ukrainian - told the Ukrainian president that Giuliani and the attorney general, William Barr, would get in touch with him.
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It's odd that he would keep referring to the attorney general because, typically, it would be the secretary of state who would deal with world leaders. The secretary of state is the top diplomat. Why would Attorney General Barr be involved in this matter?
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CNN-159391-15
PROLIFIC_76
R_3gMLtz6kDPuK4Ar
0
It's actually a little less. There's a couple of services that require a log in and software installs and I didn't want to bring that into the studio today. But it's enough to build a nice profile, figure out who he is, what he's doing, and if whatever reason we might be tracking him or looking at investigating him for. It's enough to go on.
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How useful were - he gave you the log-ins, some of the log-ins he uses, how useful are those in getting the information that you got?
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CNN-257156-5
PROLIFIC_76
R_3gMLtz6kDPuK4Ar
1
And with the National Guard, and then joined the state guard here in Georgia later in 2010. I got out of the military service, but when I saw this, I saw this as an option to really do something that wasn't limited by the confines of politics.
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Not limited by the confines of politics, so how did you get there, and who did you fight with, and what did you see, what did you experience?
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CNN-82012-6
PROLIFIC_76
R_3gMLtz6kDPuK4Ar
1
That's our assessment, too, Wolf. And that's what we said, that as we get close and closer to governance, that there will be terrorist groups that are going to try to demonstrate to the citizens of this country that the coalition is unable to protect them, that the security services are weak. But I think it is clear to them that they're failing in this, and both the coalition is standing firm and so are the people of Iraq.
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When you say it is clear that they're failing, they've had two successes from their standpoint over the past two days. Clearly, you must be bracing for more of this?
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CNN-303095-9
PROLIFIC_88
R_1q9dH9f6N7oe6mh
1
Well, I think the team of the president and his -- president-elect and his team are now in the waiting room, if you will, and soon, another week from now, they'll be in the situation room, and I think those are two very different sets of circumstances. And they're going to have to come to the grips with the issue of developing a coordinated, synchronized policies towards each and every one of these issues. Right now, you can see some divergences between them. You can see some public statements by the cabinet members-designate to the effect that Russia is a through threat, the President-elect Trump kind of dismissing that. There's going to have to be a real harmonization of those points of view. If not, then I think there could be some discord and trouble ahead. I recall the beginning of the Reagan administration, there were quite a few divergences, and it took them a number of years to sort that out. The sooner the president and his team can develop harmonized, coordinated policies toward these issues, the better it is for them and for the country.
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Clarity for the country.
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NPR-20426-6
PROLIFIC_88
R_1q9dH9f6N7oe6mh
1
Well, the Iraqi security forces are certainly very keen to say that they now plan, having taken Ramadi, move into the cities of Fallujah and Mosul, which are ISIS strongholds. There are other military sources that say this might be a bit unrealistic based on the fact that Fallujah and Mosul are heavily populated, unlike Ramadi and Tikrit and Sinjar which were largely depopulated by the time the battles happened there. And honestly, on the basis of the still quite limited capacities of the Iraqi security forces, ISIS have been in these cities for a year and a half, two years now. They're deeply entrenched. Analysts have also for a long time said the problem of ISIS in Iraq and Syria won't be resolved until there's strong central governments in those places who can offer the people living under ISIS a better life than what they currently have. And right now that's still, on balance, not really the case.
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Meaning that even if you were to formally retake territory, you might still have chaos there, you might still have unrest, you might still have armed groups.
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CNN-61505-19
PROLIFIC_88
R_1q9dH9f6N7oe6mh
1
It is terrible. Nausea, vomiting...
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It is one of the worst, most violent sicknesses...
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CNN-126364-6
PROLIFIC_80
R_2a9MOuJPbWuHgsY
1
But I`m with you 100 percent about the oil. We have got to get the handcuffs off the oil companies. We`ve got to have coal-to-oil technology. You know, you and I have discussed this, and it`s incredibly important. We could not last one day without the oil companies, but all we do in Washington is beat them up, beat them up, beat them up, as if they were the problem. They`re the solution. They`re the ones who get us the oil in the first place. We can`t live without them. Why are we torturing them?
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We -- you know what? We beat our oil company executives up. In Russia, they make them president.
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CNN-178518-3
PROLIFIC_80
R_2a9MOuJPbWuHgsY
0
We are. I think this is one of the things that people may not fully realize. We are kind of sleep walking towards a military confrontation. I don't believe the Obama administration has the intent for war nor do I think necessarily the Iranians are looking for war, but the policies that we are pursuing nevertheless are increasing the risk of a military confrontation. What we are seeing right now in the Persian Gulf, with the Iranian warnings of closing down the strait is just an indication of the things that can come and that can actually spark a much larger military confrontation.
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Is this not just sabre-rattling by Iran? Closing off the Strait of Hormuz would choke off its own ability to supply oil to the world. Aren't these just words?
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CNN-64921-5
PROLIFIC_80
R_3NEqza5nFt6xQGC
1
Well, I'm not sure it's so much carrots. It's simply actually recognizing what their strategic objective is. And in my view it's actually not nuclear weapons, although I also don't believe that they're bluffing, that if they don't get what they want from the United States, they will in fact build a nuclear weapons arsenal and keep the world at arm's length. But their strategic objective is very clear, and they said it very loudly themselves. It is to engage the United States, get off the terrorism listing, get access to the Japanese reparations that will kick start their economy and negotiate that away, or trade in their nuclear weapons capacity, for the ability to actually have an economy and move into the 21st century.
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So at the root of this is economic viability, feeding the people?
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CNN-197484-7
PROLIFIC_80
R_3NEqza5nFt6xQGC
0
No. We are not a secret government. Who are we as America? We now will have official secrets and the American people can't know that not even Congress can know?
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But there things that members of Congress do behind closed doors. Can't some of this be kept a secret?
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CNN-136098-3
PROLIFIC_88
R_2YYct7PxKSiYO7Z
1
She started off where -- the first phone call was like, OK, she was laughing. She got off the slope, went back to the hotel, and she had a headache. All of a sudden, turn of events, horrible, horrible tragic turn, and now she`s being flown from the hospital in Montreal to New York, and she`s on life support. I can tell you for sure that we`ve now found out that the ambulance ride with her husband and her to the Lennox Hospital in New York was horrible. He was quiet; he was caressing her face. She was horribly unresponsive. And at this point, we`re just awaiting the family`s -- her family to come out of the hospital and give the word. But just horrid 180 turn-around and just the most tragic thing. I mean, when I was working on this story all day today, it`s just like you`re hoping that it`s not true, and it is. It`s just such a horrible situation.
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It`s awful. Now, her husband, who is a famous actor, apparently was on location. Dropped everything immediately and raced to her side. Tell us about that.
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NPR-13735-12
PROLIFIC_56
R_1InPFqvIAYhoG5m
0
The best cameras people can get now, you know, the saying is the best camera is the one that's always with you and with a lot of these new phones, which are around $200. So, it's the iPhone 4, the Droid X, you know, they have really amazing cameras inside of them, considering the fact that they're also a phone. But if you're looking for something a little more powerful, for somebody who's sort of an aspiring photographer in terms of point-and-shoot cameras, I really like Canon's S95. It's around $400, which is pricey, but this camera is pocketable and takes really amazing photos and video. There are a couple of other options, too. I like Panasonic's Lumix LX3, which has been sort of a pro favorite model of point-and-shoot for a while. Or if you want something a little nicer or another step up, somebody who thinks they really want to get into photography, I really like Canon's Rebel T2I. It's a DSLR.
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DSLR - digital single lens reflex - it's like the old cameras but digital.
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CNN-363203-3
PROLIFIC_56
R_1InPFqvIAYhoG5m
0
So let's start at the beginning. You graduate college 1985. One of your first campaigns you covered was, my grandfather President George H. W. Bush. He was then vice president running against Michael Dukakis. I know you're on to Dukakis campaign with your news following. But what was that experience like?
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Right. That was most because I was based in Boston at the time. Most of my work was covering Dukakis. But so you had to write when say the George H.W. Bush campaign when after Boston Harbor or when after the Willie Horton. I would write the record pieces about that. But that was a fascinating campaign because remember, Dukakis went to Atlanta, his big convention and they were up 17 points and they thought it was over. But, watching -- watching the Bush campaign and its effectiveness was eye opening to me. And number of different things, you have -- number one, your grandfather is always underrated as a politician. Number two, they smartly pulled off the, here's this very nice gentleman, the guy with a bare knuckles are tough, rough and tumbled campaign. And he was always surrounded by very good people. If you're down 17 points, you think it's over. The quality and the caliber of the people including the candidate and the staff as well, just rebuilt it one.
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NPR-20491-7
PROLIFIC_56
R_1InPFqvIAYhoG5m
1
As far as we could tell - and the company said it was not an intentional discrimination against Asians. They drew their lines for their ZIP code pricing in a way that mostly captured a lot of high-income areas but actually also managed to capture a lot of low-income, Asian areas. So Queens, N.Y., is highly Asian but not a high-income area. And we don't really know what went into their algorithm to make it turn out that way.
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We're talking about algorithms, but should we be talking about the humans who design the algorithms?
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NPR-6831-23
PROLIFIC_80
R_3qX6R664coTxWF2
1
So go, Tim Tebow. And thank you for providing a segue way. Can we talk about some baseball now?
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Yeah. Let's talk about some baseball 'cause I hear - I mean, speaking of, like, arms and throwing, these people who are on the pitcher's mound are hurting themselves a lot. How come?
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NPR-42283-9
PROLIFIC_88
R_DBJPDyn54Bk2GAh
1
That's right. That's the rub. That's the big challenge. The ACLU basically wants to stay away from state secrets. They're trying to push this judge to rule on the constitutionality of this particular program without getting into state secrets. They're saying, we know enough about the program. The president has acknowledged he is wiretapping people without a warrant, people in the United States. That should be illegal. Just get to that point, judge, before you get to the state secrets issue. And of course the government wants everything to stop in its tracks right now so that they don't have to reveal any more information, because they say, we just can't. We can't talk about the facts of the case.
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Today's hearing is on a motion by the ACLU to dispense with any further hearings, as I understand this. Is that what they're asking?
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CNN-84854-5
PROLIFIC_88
R_DBJPDyn54Bk2GAh
1
Well, he was at Alasad, which was a detention center right next to the Baghdad Airport. And during that period there, he was there about three, four weeks, they were doing some of the same things that we've read about and of course heard about in recent weeks. And that is abusing detainees, keeping them up for 24 to 48 hours, banging sledgehammers on the walls, sounding weapons against their ears to make it seem as though they might be executed. And these are very, very -- had a very, very deep impact on Camillo and I think led to him deciding not to go back to the war.
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OK. If he was so concerned about these abuses, why didn't he report it before he went AWOL? Why did he wait until going AWOL before saying something about it?
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CNN-236636-5
PROLIFIC_88
R_DBJPDyn54Bk2GAh
0
Well, I think that, you know, there is an awareness that comes from social media. We see images. All of us became very aware of what happened in Ferguson. We got images very quickly. But we can get a certain, you know, good feeling about retweeting something you agree with, and then consider that actually something that you've done. A friend of mine, who is really in the trenches with this, a black pastor, said it's a moment, not a movement, when we do that.
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Yes. And it needs to be a movement.
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CNN-68742-3
PROLIFIC_87
R_32PKTqoE5nS6MAe
1
Well, Iraqis have very bitter memories of what happened in 1991 when they were asked to rise up and free themselves, and then they were let down by the Americans.
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And, in fact, your concern with how this military campaign is going right now, it's feeling like they're being let down as it's being conducted. Tell me about that.
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NPR-23296-9
PROLIFIC_87
R_32PKTqoE5nS6MAe
1
Now, what we saw was that there was a high degree of correlation in the socioeconomic factors that determined that community.
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So more poverty meant more murder.
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CNN-286939-3
PROLIFIC_87
R_1rv6YMzHsnXynEJ
1
Well, first of all, people should understand when you buy a beverage in a movie theater, it is so overpriced to begin with. So, the profit margin on these products, have been legendary and the profits that the soda companies have been making is legendary. What we're saying is basically you have marketed this product to poor people for generations. All we're asking for is for a tax to let some of the money stay in struggling communities so that kids can have a better chance. It's clearly shown that 3-year-olds and 4-year-olds who have quality pre-K have a much better chance of being successful citizens than those who don't.
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You know the criticisms. People will say, you just referenced the poor. People will say, well, this is a regressive tax.
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NPR-45051-11
PROLIFIC_87
R_1rv6YMzHsnXynEJ
1
Correct, and he sort of thinks everything good in the world is disappearing, and he's on a quest to record the good things and save them before they're gone.
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And he actually thinks that one thing that's disappearing as obsolete is love.
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CNN-22232-3
PROLIFIC_87
R_1rv6YMzHsnXynEJ
0
That's right. That's right. Certainly, there are a lot of considerations that you need to look at in terms of tax planning. You can look at a estate planning as well as income tax planning ideas in the next few days, and while not every technique is going to work for every person -- it's very factual dependent -- there's still time to a few things.
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All right, let's talk about deductions, first of all, that people can do here in the last few days to help with their taxes next year. What can you tell us.
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NPR-8365-10
PROLIFIC_97
R_O1ZekO5mgnpsIsV
0
It's the evaporated remains or residues of the original beverage that was in the vessels, and in this case it turned out to be a combination of barley, honey and grapes, so it was like a wine, beer and mead all in one. And, you know, your stomach might cringe a little bit at the thought of such a beverage, especially back in 2000 when people weren't doing all the experimental work that we have going on today, especially among craft brewers. So we did some experimental archaeology and got a bunch of microbrewers to go back to their breweries and do up, you know, different versions of what we later called Midas Touch.
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And so you can still make that old stuff today.
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CNN-174603-13
PROLIFIC_97
R_O1ZekO5mgnpsIsV
1
Right. Absolutely, he was inside the White House daily briefing. He went over there to hang out with the press secretary and take a few pictures of. You know, he is a real fixture in Washington, D.C. He has spoken a lot at dinners here. People know him well and have enjoyed his comedy, quite frankly, at some of the best even media events around town.
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What is it about Washington it attracts him? Is it just because he is such a highly sought-after, I don't know, emcee of events?
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CNN-114925-5
PROLIFIC_97
R_3lVUoqoTX5lIpgF
1
No, they`re completely separate actions. In fact, there`s two hearings that went on today in Florida, one in the court of appeals pertaining to the body, one in the lower courts pertaining to paternity. And there were a couple different hearings that happened yesterday in the Bahamas. So this is being fought out internationally, really. And I can say on behalf of Virgie Arthur, she`s clearly fighting on both fronts. And Howard K. Stern, as you know, Larry Birkhead also fighting over the baby. But the gripe that I have that I think is consistent with what you`re saying is why is it taking so long to resolve this about the baby? This is one of those few legal matters you can actually decide conclusively in a snap. You do the DNA test. You find out who the daddy is. If he`s a fit father, you give the baby to him. You`re done.
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So the -- the story today with the DNA, it was decided in Florida...
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NPR-19540-5
PROLIFIC_97
R_3lVUoqoTX5lIpgF
0
I think to a certain extent, there's been a lot of criticism of the indiscriminate airstrikes and shelling on the city, a lot of reports of civilian casualties. There is an attitude within other parts of Iraq that Fallujahns are sympathetic to ISIS and their causes. That is a problem for sure. And when it comes to government tactics, the city has been cordoned off and slowly sort of choked off for months and months now.
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Why is the government taking this approach of a siege?
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CNN-80402-7
PROLIFIC_97
R_3lVUoqoTX5lIpgF
1
It's funny because like at the Ashram, for instance, in Calabasas, California, that's hard-core. That's like, up at 6:00 in the morning, hiking all day. You know, you get one spa treatment at the end of the afternoon, which is a massage. And then you go to bed really early because you're so tired. As opposed to like, maybe Miraval, which is a men's program where you get both. You get sort of pushing yourself during the day and sort of hard-core workouts during the day. And then you get the advantage of being at this luxury spa, which can really give you amazing massages, all different kinds of treatments that are sort of more aligned with the regular pampering in a spa. So, it can be both things depending on kind of what you're interested in.
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OK. So you mentioned the Ashram. You mentioned Miraval. There's a few others I want to talk about. Park Hyatt, Beaver Creek, what can you tell us about that place?
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CNN-286787-5
PROLIFIC_90
R_1P0gRmTRCgmixqj
1
Well, I wish there was one thing I could point to, but it's really been kind of a journey over 20 years, and specifically as I have gotten to know more people from the LGBT community, just their love, their kindness, their patience with me. It's amazing. When you try to reach out and get to know and love someone different than you, you find out remarkably that we're really not that different. And I know that sounds simplistic, but I think it's a truth and it certainly has been in my life.
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Why do you think -- I mean, it's -- it seems extraordinary that you would do this. I'm sure people do it all the time. I have actually had friends who have done similar things when I came out. But what exactly are you apologizing for? How did you treat gay people when you were younger?
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NPR-26945-7
PROLIFIC_90
R_YXfeZqEYDXqw3mx
1
First of all, in terms of the study, the study deals with the risks. It doesn't deal with the solutions. Now, in terms of me personally, I believe putting a price on carbon - I think that is the best way to change behavior. I don't favor the EPA regulations, but I would say this. If we can't get a nationwide solution or putting a price on carbon, then I would reluctantly agree that the EPA regulations are necessary because I think the problems we are facing are so significant that we need to act. To those who argue against putting a price against carbon because it is a big government solution - what I say to them - that's rather perverse thinking, because by not dealing with the issue on a national level and changing policy, you are guaranteeing that the government's going to play a bigger and bigger role because we are increasingly going to see disasters.
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Why do you think talking about the economic impact will make a difference, especially given the way conservatives and Republicans have really fought this issue, precisely on the economics, saying that a carbon tax or some solution in that direction would hurt the economy?
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NPR-11551-6
PROLIFIC_90
R_YXfeZqEYDXqw3mx
1
That is true. And you might've caught the news where cremated remains were scattered at the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City at the intermission, which canceled the rest of the production.
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I missed that. Oh, my word. Most of us maybe, you know, get some malted milk balls at intermission, not scattered remains. But go ahead, yeah.
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CNN-3409-7
PROLIFIC_90
R_YXfeZqEYDXqw3mx
0
This is a wonderful opportunity to reassess your objectives, your goals. What are you doing and why? Why are you making the investments you are? What's the strategy you're using, and is it really designed to achieve your long-term goals, or were you merely acting greedy, trying to get a quick hit real fast? So what I would really encourage people to do is reassess their portfolio and make sure that this is the kind of investment strategy that you can live with for decades. If it's not, then now is the time to do something about it.
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Because the reality is playing the stock market is a long- term proposition.
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CNN-8208-5
PROLIFIC_90
R_YXfeZqEYDXqw3mx
0
Well, you know, certainly -- I think nationally we tend to look at it differently than we probably do here in the state. I think there are more shades of gray here in the state. Personally, I have a hard time with the president's assessment that none of the individual incidents amounted to a firing offense. I mean, we're talking about acts of physical violence, grabbing a player by the throat, allegedly, you know, knocking out another member of the athletic staff. But here in the state, I mean, again, firing this guy would be tantamount to impeaching the governor. It might even be bigger. With Bob Knight goes a sizable portion of the state, perhaps a sizable portion of support for this university. I think it was a tricky decision for President Brand.
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Well, explain this to me, because one of the things that most people on the outside looking in -- even some on the inside -- are thinking is that at least he should be forced to have to apologize to each of these people that he has been accused or they have evidence of him actually abusing. And as I understand it, he's only going to have to apologize to the secretary in the office, but not to the sports information director that he punched and knocked out, and not to the assistant coach that he also accosted, or to Neil Reed, the man that we just saw being choked on tape.
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NPR-19802-5
PROLIFIC_90
R_YXfeZqEYDXqw3mx
1
The NRA has its political side. We are an organization strictly for education. We do not endorse candidates. And we're a place - many of our members have joined NRA boards, other gun forums and found that they weren't welcome there because they didn't follow lockstep with the NRA's support of nearly unanimously Republican and right-leaning candidates.
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A lot of people may assume that liberal-leaning people are less likely to be gun enthusiasts. You're saying - and then the name of your club suggests - that this isn't necessarily so.
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CNN-192572-5
PROLIFIC_90
R_3m8nXnVcmoo7bJz
0
No, no paparazzi anywhere. There was a local radio station in South Carolina who was hinting at a potential wedding, because the reason they got married there is because Ryan loved this small town. And he was in town, but no one knew they were actually getting married. They knew there was an event at this plantation, but no one knew it was Blake and Ryan`s wedding.
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Yes, and it is one of the most beautiful places in our country. So "People" magazine was right there. Carlos, you were at the wedding. You got to listen to the vows. You got a close-up look at Blake`s dress and the ring. What was the most surprising thing about the whole secret celebrity wedding for you guys?
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