U.S. Senate: Impeachment Trial (Day 7)
The Senate impeachment trial of President Trump continues with opening arguments by the President’s defense team.
Impeachment trial of President Trump | Jan. 27, 2020 (FULL LIVE STREAM)
The House managers wrapped up their arguments against President Trump on Jan. 24. Trump’s team, including lawyers Pat Cipollone and Jay Sekulow, now has 24 hours to present their case. After Trump’s lawyers conclude their presentation, senators will have an opportunity to submit questions to both sides in writing. Following that, debate will turn to whether to call witnesses and subpoena documents.
Trump was impeached by the House of Representatives in December for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress. Impeachment does not mean that the president has been removed from office. In the next phase, the Senate must hold a trial to make that determination. A Senate impeachment trial has happened only two other times in American history and once in the modern era. At the center of the Democrats’ case is that Trump sought to withhold military assistance and an Oval Office meeting until Ukraine announced investigations into former vice president Joe Biden and his son.
Watch the debate on Jan. 21 on the rules of the trial:
Watch the first day of opening arguments on Jan. 22:
Watch the second day of opening arguments on Jan. 23:
Watch the third day of opening arguments on Jan. 24:
Watch the first day of Trump’s legal team’s defense:
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Rachel Armstrong & Mitchell Joachim | Talks at Google
From October 1st 2010, Rachel Armstrong and Mitchell Joachim talk about their art in the current Digital Art @Google art show (We Write this to You from the Distant Future) on view in the Chelsea market lobby.
First, Rachel Armstrong talks on Living materials for the built environment then
at 37:40 Mitchell Joachim talks about his work at Terreform1.
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Nik Wallenda Crosses 1,500-Foot Grand Canyon Gorge on Tightrope
Daredevil's trek across landmark had him seeing elevations higher than the Empire State Building.
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10 Outrageously Dangerous Situations Caused by Selfies
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Po Kim: A Memorial Tribute - Gallery Talk
September 3, 2014
Po Kim’s artistic career was characterized by an ever-evolving style, and an eagerness to seek out new areas of inspiration. His paintings, often large in scale, were bold and compelling, bursting with life, energy, and emotion. This work distinguished Kim as one of the premier Korean-American artists of his time. When the artist died earlier this year, he left behind a strong legacy in his paintings, the innumerable artists he inspired, and the gallery in New York and museum in Korea which bear his name.
Po’s life as an artist began in Korea, where he founded the Department of Fine Arts at Chosun University. Incarcerated and tortured during the Korean War, Kim left Korea in 1955 to accept a fellowship at the University of Illinois. He moved to New York City a few years later, and his artistic life flourished here over the next six decades.
This exhibition, through personal objects, photographs, catalogues, and paintings, seeks to provide viewers a deeper sense of an artist who found great inspiration in his identities as a Korean, an American, and a New Yorker. The objects are on loan from The Sylvia Wald and Po Kim Art Gallery, an institution dedicated to the art of its founders and their personal mission of intercultural dialogue between the artistic communities of New York and the world.
For more information, please visit the link below:
Tower Climbers working
It will help you to get on your feets for starting to play LoL!
The Top 5 Billy Joel Songs, Ranked By Billy Joel
Who better than the Piano Man himself to pick the Top 5 Billy Joel songs of all time? Hint: 'Vienna' is number five.
Chicago Tonight full episode: December 17, 2019
An effort to delay recreational pot sales in Chicago gains steam. The controversy over isolation rooms. A primer on impeachment on the eve of an expected vote. And a new literary genre: climate fiction.
A Conversation with Danny Lyon
“I am left feeling the people I photograph are the best people in America. I leave to the future the only thing I saw worth leaving.” –Danny Lyon, 1967
Danny Lyon once described the writer James Agee as, “a romantic who adored reality,” an epithet equally apt to characterize him. The photographer made a name for himself in the 1960s with an embedded style of reportage, capturing a compelling beauty in the places and people he befriended across the country, from student leaders of the civil rights movement to convicts in Texas prisons. Subsequently, Lyon turned to non-fiction film as a means to further explore the narrative strands of living reality. He has also continued to make photographs, expanding his focus beyond the United States to work in Colombia, Mexico, Haiti, and China, among other places, as well as turning the lens on himself and his family.
Lyon has described himself as having a short attention span and it is perhaps this that has driven him to explore such different worlds, from the emptiness of condemned buildings to the adventure of the open road. But the diverse subjects are united through his attentive respect; he gets to know his subjects as they really are—the good with the ugly—falls fleetingly in love with some, makes heroes of others. There is power in such attraction and, as Lyon has explained, fact can be discovered, “through forms and beauty. In the most beautiful pictures the truth is easiest seen.”
Drawn from the David Winton Bell Gallery collection, the exhibition presents photographs from four of Lyon’s most significant series—Memories of the Southern Civil Rights Movement (1962–1964), The Bikeriders (1963–1966), The Destruction of Lower Manhattan (1966–1967), and Conversations with the Dead (1967–1968)—supplemented by films. Disparate though their subjects are, the photographs engage in dialogue with each other across time, space, and circumstances.
The Only Thing I Saw Worth Leaving is organized around five such shared principles that Lyon has referred to time and again in discussing his work: empathy, freedom, history, destruction, and narrative. Each section of the exhibition brings together photographs from different bodies of work that engage one of these principles with particular sensitivity, alongside a core group of images from one of the series. This pairing was, to a certain degree, random; each of the series could have been matched with any term. This is the strength of Lyon’s vision, and the vital insistence of his subjects to be seen.
Brown University
November 1, 2018
Visual Language Is Language: The Importance of Reading the Pictures in Visual Culture
MFA Photography, Video and Related Media presents Michael Shaw, publisher of Reading the Pictures, discussing how the publication analyzes news and media images for meaning, trends, context and fairness. Shaw will also describe how fluency in pictures is central to engagement in the current information, media and social media sphere.
Around the Corner with John McGivern | Program | Haymarket District in Milwaukee (#801)
[Original Airdate: January 4, 2019]
Milwaukee’s Haymarket District may get its name from the past, but it’s the present and future of this perfectly situated, downtown Milwaukee neighborhood that has long-time tenants and developers alike singing this neighborhoods’ praises. For residents of Hillside and businesses like Bennett Coachworks and Miller Baking Company, this is just home. For places like Fiserv Forum and the new development coming to the old National Hardware building, it’s becoming home. And for the kids who learn at Golda Meir School and play at the Hillside Boys and Girls Club, it’s their home away from home. Any way you look at it, it’s nice to be home in the Haymarket.
Around the Corner with John McGivern:
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ABOUT AROUND THE CORNER WITH JOHN MCGIVERN
Join Emmy Award-Winning actor John McGivern as he explores living, working and playing in Wisconsin's unique communities. John has visited more than 100 communities so far, with no end in sight!
ABOUT MILWAUKEE PBS
Milwaukee PBS is an award-winning multimedia producer and broadcaster of exceptional and meaningful local and national content. Licensed to Milwaukee Area Technical College, Milwaukee PBS is one of the highest-rated PBS stations in the country. Our unique, independent position in the community makes us the ideal source of community engagement as a storyteller, conversation facilitator and advocate. No matter where you come from or where you make your home, we encourage you to bring your world and Milwaukee into focus as a member of the Milwaukee PBS community.
Renée Ater: Monuments, Slavery, and the Digital Humanities
Renée Ater discusses the processes and challenges of creating a digital project/publication about the memorialization of slavery. Her project, Contemporary Monuments to the Slave Past: Race, Memorialization, Public Space, and Civic Engagement, investigates how we visualize, interpret, and engage the slave past through contemporary public monuments.
Ater is Associate Professor Emerita of American Art at the University of Maryland. She holds a B.A. in art history from Oberlin College (1987); a M.A. in art history from the University of Maryland (1993); and a Ph.D. in art history from the University of Maryland (2000).
Tuesday, April 30, 2019
Brown University
Breakthrough Lab (B-Lab) Venture Showcase 2019
Building the Next Big Thing
Brown University’s Breakthrough Lab (B-Lab) is a unique, intensive 8-week accelerator program that supports student entrepreneurs developing high-impact ventures. The Venture Showcase presentations are a significant milestone for the students who spent their summer in Providence and in the local community advancing their ventures.
B-Lab provides students access to high-level sector-specific mentoring, business and technical support, focused programming and dedicated space. Our ventures span a wide range of sectors including healthcare, software, food, sustainable products, and education. In B-Lab, we value the personal and professional development of our participants alongside the development of their ventures, and in so doing we aim to continue building an ecosystem of next-generation entrepreneurs. Read about the 2019 cohort, here:
Wednesday, September 25, 2019
Brown University
Vigésimocuarto Domingo del Tiempo Ordinario - Ciclo C - 15 de septiembre de 2019 8:00 am
Multistreaming with
RIVETING! FULL LENGTH #QMovie! #WWG1WGA - Where We Go One We Go All: The Movie
USE THIS LINK TO SHARE THIS VIDEO: (since the YouTube Censorship Police have disabled my share buttons ). #QMovie! Watch the HEART-POUNDING, FULL LENGTH #WWG1WGA #QANON MOVIE RIGHT HERE ON James Red Pills America! THIS IS THE FEATURE FILM / MOVIE THAT WE'VE ALL BEEN WAITING FOR - and, as promised (to the COUNTLESS Patriots who requested that I compile this series into one video for easy sharing), it's the EDITED & RECOMPILED version of a 3 Part Video Series that I just recently published. The difference? It's all three parts in one, easy-to-share video, and I've made a few visual improvements!!
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THE BEST TRUMP, QANON, SPACE FORCE, DEPLORABLES & FAITH-BASED GEAR ON THE NET - Use PROMO CODE 'JRPA' and get 10% OFF YOUR ORDER!
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WWG1WGA! Where We Go One, We Go All - The Movie (Director's Cut) - recompiled from the 3 Part Video Series: 'What If Qanon & The Great Awakening ARE Real?' by James Red Pills America
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Video & Audio Editing, Mixing and Remastering by none other than James Red Pills America!
Based on numerous articles written by various Patriots, Christians (like Billy Graham) - and various Intel sources
Joe Rogan Experience Interview w/ CIA Agent, Mike Baker:
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Robert J. Shiller, Narrative Economics: Director's Lecture, January 26, 2017
Robert J. Shiller’s Director's Lecture, “Narrative Economics,” addressed narrative psychology in economics and its relation to economic inequality. How society has dealt with inequality in the past is deeply reflective of the narratives that shape our observations of blame and incentivization, Shiller argued. If inequality gets worse as technology continues to replace common labor, society will need to draw on insights from psychology, sociology, and institutional economics to address the problem in a durable way.
Jocko Podcast 148 w/ Echo Charles: Valleys Of Death, by Bill Richardson
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0:00:00 - Opening
0:04:29 - Valleys Of Death: Memoirs of The Korean War, by Bill Richardson
Buy the Book here:
2:58:49 - Final Thoughts and take-aways.
3:13:32 - How to Stay on THE PATH.
3:42:58 - Closing Gratitude.
Looks aren't everything. Believe me, I'm a model. | Cameron Russell
Cameron Russell admits she won a genetic lottery: she's tall, pretty and an underwear model. But don't judge her by her looks. In this fearless talk, she takes a wry look at the industry that had her looking highly seductive at barely 16-years-old.
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