0
0.0
Apr 25, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
i got to publish his book on the wright brothers. and and that was a kind of a classic david mccullough book, because he could. it allowed him to write about the optimism of the american spirit and, you know, the can do nature of americans as told through these these brothers. and that was a story, the truman picasso story that i wanted to get out there. mr. good. mr. karp, how much time do you have to work directly with authors and edit them since you've been ceo and president for the last four years? well, i still get to do it. i don't get to do it as much as i would like, but i do get to work with doris kearns goodwin. i'm still working with bob woodward and john irving, who is my favorite novelist of all time. and i've worked with john on three of his novels, the first one, which i think is really a classic, is called in one person. and it was years ahead of the curve on on transgender rights. and and then i did abc mysteries and most recently, we published the last chairlift and john, i think is one of the greatest novelists ali
i got to publish his book on the wright brothers. and and that was a kind of a classic david mccullough book, because he could. it allowed him to write about the optimism of the american spirit and, you know, the can do nature of americans as told through these these brothers. and that was a story, the truman picasso story that i wanted to get out there. mr. good. mr. karp, how much time do you have to work directly with authors and edit them since you've been ceo and president for the last...
0
0.0
Apr 6, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
i got to publish his book on the wright brothers. and and that was a kind of a classic david mccullough book, because he could. it allowed him to write about the optimism of the american spirit and, you know, the can do nature of americans as told through these these brothers. and that was a story, the truman picasso story that i wanted to get out there. mr. good. mr. karp, how much time do you have to work directly with authors and edit them since you've been ceo and president for the last four years? well, i still get to do it. i don't get to do it as much as i would like, but i do get to work with doris kearns goodwin. i'm still working with bob woodward and john irving, who is my favorite novelist of all time. and i've worked with john on three of his novels, the first one, which i think is really a classic, is called in one person. and it was years ahead of the curve on on transgender rights. and and then i did abc mysteries and most recently, we published the last chairlift and john, i think is one of the greatest novelists ali
i got to publish his book on the wright brothers. and and that was a kind of a classic david mccullough book, because he could. it allowed him to write about the optimism of the american spirit and, you know, the can do nature of americans as told through these these brothers. and that was a story, the truman picasso story that i wanted to get out there. mr. good. mr. karp, how much time do you have to work directly with authors and edit them since you've been ceo and president for the last...
0
0.0
Apr 25, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
and there's sort of this long standing conspiracy that there's a hangar at wright-patterson. the alien spacecraft are kept it it would have gone to the asylum national lab, which was right up the road from roswell and which was where the government had already all of the smartest physicists in the united states to address the biggest questions of physics. if we'd encountered an alien spacecraft the summer of 47, even if that had been kept incredibly secret by. if there were ten people in the united who knew about that craft and had been asked to provide advice about it, there's no enrico fermi was not one of those ten that if anyone in america that we had recovered or spacecraft in the summer of 47 fermi in teller would have been among that group and they were at the base where the us government would have almost absolutely put that. so if in the summer, 1950, three years later, enrico fermi is sitting there saying, well, we haven't seen any evidence of any aliens yet, have we? to me that's the most convincing evidence that nothing interesting happened in roswell in 47. one m
and there's sort of this long standing conspiracy that there's a hangar at wright-patterson. the alien spacecraft are kept it it would have gone to the asylum national lab, which was right up the road from roswell and which was where the government had already all of the smartest physicists in the united states to address the biggest questions of physics. if we'd encountered an alien spacecraft the summer of 47, even if that had been kept incredibly secret by. if there were ten people in the...
0
0.0
Apr 23, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
well, if that was a fact it wasn't a fact that the wright brothers found very convincing and six years later, they emerged the dunes of kitty hawk, half man birds. and for much of the 20th century america, the nation that was the first to spread its wings made dramatic on all frontiers of flight, we saw advances by argonauts astronaut suits and aviators. we watched great people up from earthly stars, people like lindbergh, hughes and armstrong. we built aircraft carriers and launched americans into space. these were years of progress and plenty. these were years of pride. but something terrible has happened. the intervening years. we've lost our way plans have become ambitions. ambitions have become dreams. supersonic has slipped into subsonic. and subsonic has slipped into stagnation. and in december 120 years after kitty hawk, too many american passengers have their flights canceled, delayed and downed. sometimes it feels as if the washington post had it right the first time. maybe men can't fly, but i hope no one in this assemblage would agree with that sentiment. we can fly. we've
well, if that was a fact it wasn't a fact that the wright brothers found very convincing and six years later, they emerged the dunes of kitty hawk, half man birds. and for much of the 20th century america, the nation that was the first to spread its wings made dramatic on all frontiers of flight, we saw advances by argonauts astronaut suits and aviators. we watched great people up from earthly stars, people like lindbergh, hughes and armstrong. we built aircraft carriers and launched americans...
0
0.0
Apr 23, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
richard wright and gwendolyn brooks, james baldwin, as well as writers who aren't really known, such as vincent carter, with this sort of sense of thoughtfulness about the impact of their work within this cold war binary. ralph ellison is not featured in the book, but he does. the specter of it kind of factors pretty heavily in the sort of idea of being underground for having not been seen and how that haunts. the book by the authors own admission, like the reason why these writers are their motivation for the book is this idea of not being seen by the society at large, and this is what's caused them to seek out these individual autonomous mode within the cold war framework. and that is jesse mccarthy's upcoming book, the blue period. black writing in the early cold war. why do you think he calls it the blue period? it's a reference to miles davis specifically to the sort of fifties work that's leading into kind of blue in this idea that you think it's one thing with miles davis where the brevity of his music is a theoretical music theoretical framework. what a reality, what he's doi
richard wright and gwendolyn brooks, james baldwin, as well as writers who aren't really known, such as vincent carter, with this sort of sense of thoughtfulness about the impact of their work within this cold war binary. ralph ellison is not featured in the book, but he does. the specter of it kind of factors pretty heavily in the sort of idea of being underground for having not been seen and how that haunts. the book by the authors own admission, like the reason why these writers are their...
0
0.0
Apr 6, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
richard wright and gwendolyn brooks, james baldwin, as well as writers who aren't really known, such as vincent carter, with this sort of sense of thoughtfulness about the impact of their work within this cold war binary. ralph ellison is not featured in the book, but he does. the specter of it kind of factors pretty heavily in the sort of idea of being underground for having not been seen and how that haunts. the book by the authors own admission, like the reason why these writers are their motivation for the book is this idea of not being seen by the society at large, and this is what's caused them to seek out these individual autonomous mode within the cold war framework. and that is jesse mccarthy's upcoming book, the blue period. black writing in the early cold war. why do you think he calls it the blue period? it's a reference to miles davis specifically to the sort of fifties work that's leading into kind of blue in this idea that you think it's one thing with miles davis where the brevity of his music is a theoretical music theoretical framework. what a reality, what he's doi
richard wright and gwendolyn brooks, james baldwin, as well as writers who aren't really known, such as vincent carter, with this sort of sense of thoughtfulness about the impact of their work within this cold war binary. ralph ellison is not featured in the book, but he does. the specter of it kind of factors pretty heavily in the sort of idea of being underground for having not been seen and how that haunts. the book by the authors own admission, like the reason why these writers are their...
0
0.0
Apr 28, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
kimberly wright asks how at all has heritage affected your and your position on tech? well, i think i just was alluding to that. i mean, we all come from someplace with that perspective and i refer to my my my mother's dining room table and yeah, i'm blessed because come from a family of inherited image of of building and problem solving and you know, this is at end of the day, a infrastructure or engineering problem. and we can fix that. as i said earlier at the the bigger challenge, i think, is going to be the how do we create momentum around, you know, adopting an alternative to the current internet and really people understand how they fit in know really and the reason we wrote the book is really as a call to action. it's really to say you know, this is and please spend a couple of hours reading it won't take long it was written in kind of a thomas paine style it's a couple hundred words. the language is intended to be accessible. but i did ask tim berners-lee to read it. and and he he said i kept putting red checkmarks in the margin. agree agree. agree, agree. so
kimberly wright asks how at all has heritage affected your and your position on tech? well, i think i just was alluding to that. i mean, we all come from someplace with that perspective and i refer to my my my mother's dining room table and yeah, i'm blessed because come from a family of inherited image of of building and problem solving and you know, this is at end of the day, a infrastructure or engineering problem. and we can fix that. as i said earlier at the the bigger challenge, i think,...
0
0.0
Apr 15, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
richard wright referred to this concept as the ethics of living crow and today iterations of this tradition live on in what is commonly referred to as the talk that parents with black adolescence to educate them about racism and policing. so mobley was also an orchestrator. she arranged how her son's corpse was to different audiences from the images of him in his best that she painted. till's casket to illustrate the violent ways that white supremacy violated black bodies and disrupted black life. to the images printed in the black press that circulated across the country we must also see till mobley asks three and orator and four and educator due to her, that still story should always be told and taught. given her interest in subjects like english and poetry, and her experiences as a public teacher, playwright on the south end and playwright on the south side of chicago, mamie till-mobley believe that knowledge creation is a transformative because. she did not confine herself to the classroom. till mobley was also political lobbyists. she was a fighter for racial and was committed to holdi
richard wright referred to this concept as the ethics of living crow and today iterations of this tradition live on in what is commonly referred to as the talk that parents with black adolescence to educate them about racism and policing. so mobley was also an orchestrator. she arranged how her son's corpse was to different audiences from the images of him in his best that she painted. till's casket to illustrate the violent ways that white supremacy violated black bodies and disrupted black...
0
0.0
Apr 26, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
so our third panelist this morning is stephen vladeck who is the charles allen wright chair in federal courts at the university of texas law school, a nationally that i know. that's okay. okay. texas longhorn. well, this is going to take long time. so he's nationally recognized expert on federal courts, constitutional law national security law and military justice and is currently hosting a podcast on national security law. but hidden from his public. and i talked to him this morning about, this is one of my favorite podcasts that he and his wife co-hosted in loco parentis, which only ran for two seasons during the pandemic about parenting and the law and parenting comes first and you can go and look at past or listen to past sessions of this podcast. i also i asked if steve would you know reprise this podcast because their repartee in the podcast is fabulous interviewing with different people about parenting and and being lawyers and whatnot. it's just fantastic. anyway, he lives in austin with his wife karen, and two daughters and their ten year old pug, who also has not bidden any s
so our third panelist this morning is stephen vladeck who is the charles allen wright chair in federal courts at the university of texas law school, a nationally that i know. that's okay. okay. texas longhorn. well, this is going to take long time. so he's nationally recognized expert on federal courts, constitutional law national security law and military justice and is currently hosting a podcast on national security law. but hidden from his public. and i talked to him this morning about,...
0
0.0
Apr 5, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
let us have faith that wright makes might is in caps. that i'm sure, was lincoln's idea. and then just one quick nod to michelle's presence of of different versions of the of first inaugural address. he had that preprinted by the the republican paper in springfield thinking that this is it i've got a down in type it'll be. and then of course he he writes the subject to edits bye bye. at least seven people including seward, of course, and the famous last. but anyway, he's now using i could go on but there'll be other that's the beginning of the story. well and then joe, can you talk about other methods lincoln used to persuade or influence opinion. yeah. sorry. don't play. hello. thank you. i think it's also important to to emphasize the role that the reason speech for lincoln as a as a communicator. right. and and kind of distinguishing early in his career his appeal to unpack and reason to the kind of demagogic emotion you know, appeals which are all too common in political discourse as well and lincoln lincoln through his appeal to logic in his argumentation, appeals to
let us have faith that wright makes might is in caps. that i'm sure, was lincoln's idea. and then just one quick nod to michelle's presence of of different versions of the of first inaugural address. he had that preprinted by the the republican paper in springfield thinking that this is it i've got a down in type it'll be. and then of course he he writes the subject to edits bye bye. at least seven people including seward, of course, and the famous last. but anyway, he's now using i could go on...
0
0.0
Apr 15, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
steel or general motors or the curtis wright aviation company. there's some questions about whether truman succeeded very much in sort of the notion that small contractors were going to make fighter planes or tanks or whatever. but he did advocate that it played very well with the american people. but some of the criticism for that, he wasn't really all that effective in that regard. yeah. steve drummond going back to the steel issue, taking on henry kaiser would not be for the faint of heart, would it? no. kaiser it's funny. henry kaiser is almost forgotten today. we only really know of him because of the health care plan that bears his name. kaiser permanente. but at the time, he was one of the most powerful and successful industrialists in the country. kaiser had figured out, and kaiser stepped into a giant void early in the war. the need for merchant ships to get materials across the ocean to great britain, which stood alone against nazi germany at the time. d in german submarines, the u-boats were sinking those ships at a very frightening ra
steel or general motors or the curtis wright aviation company. there's some questions about whether truman succeeded very much in sort of the notion that small contractors were going to make fighter planes or tanks or whatever. but he did advocate that it played very well with the american people. but some of the criticism for that, he wasn't really all that effective in that regard. yeah. steve drummond going back to the steel issue, taking on henry kaiser would not be for the faint of heart,...
0
0.0
Apr 14, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
steel or general motors or the curtis wright aviation company. there's some questions about whether truman succeeded very much in sort of the notion that small contractors were going to make fighter planes or tanks or whatever. but he did advocate that it played very well with the american people. but some of the criticism for that, he wasn't really all that effective in that regard. yeah. steve drummond going back to the steel issue, taking on henry kaiser would not be for the faint of heart, would it? no. kaiser it's funny. henry kaiser is almost forgotten today. we only really know of him because of the health care plan that bears his name. kaiser permanente. but at the time, he was one of the most powerful and successful industrialists in the country. kaiser had figured out, and kaiser stepped into a giant void early in the war. the need for merchant ships to get materials across the ocean to great britain, which stood alone against nazi germany at the time. and in german submarines, the u-boats were sinking those ships at a very frightening
steel or general motors or the curtis wright aviation company. there's some questions about whether truman succeeded very much in sort of the notion that small contractors were going to make fighter planes or tanks or whatever. but he did advocate that it played very well with the american people. but some of the criticism for that, he wasn't really all that effective in that regard. yeah. steve drummond going back to the steel issue, taking on henry kaiser would not be for the faint of heart,...
0
0.0
Apr 28, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
he went on to found the washington law of goldberg godless weiner and wright, and is described as the dean of american telecommunications lawyers. in addition to his brilliant practice, he has authored many articles and reports on communications. the first amendment and the media and communications technologies. thomas hazlett is hugh mccall, a professor of economics and director of the economic director. the information economy project at clemson university. is author of the politic spectrum the tumultuous of wireless technology from herbert hoover to the smartphone and other influential books and hundreds of articles on communication policy, including regular columns for the wall street journal and the financial times. the two times white whitehead and haslett were colleagues and collaborators in the 2000, when both held professorships at george mason university. let me say a long time student of professor work that it towers above everything else that has been written in the field now margaret whitehead margaret the flaw or i should say the airwaves are yours. thank you, jim baron
he went on to found the washington law of goldberg godless weiner and wright, and is described as the dean of american telecommunications lawyers. in addition to his brilliant practice, he has authored many articles and reports on communications. the first amendment and the media and communications technologies. thomas hazlett is hugh mccall, a professor of economics and director of the economic director. the information economy project at clemson university. is author of the politic spectrum...
0
0.0
Apr 21, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
wright has been there long enough to be an aircraft commander, and i signed him as first mission as an aircraft commander. and by 12:00 that day, he did. i was 20 years old. come back to the states for a year, work with the vietnamese being half vietnam students and 100 go to go to school, go back to vietnam as a cobra attack pilot. and we recon the ash valley primarily for six months, 102 down. we came home and i got out of the army. so i got anybody. we're going to ask for some questions now if can turn the lights up, is that time to do that? a couple of questions. i don't know what time it is here. we got about. about 10 minutes. so who has. where's microphone? who has a question? raise your hand, please. so let's wait. wait for the microphone. you said when you went down that last time chinook took you out, it pulled out the whole helicopter. yeah, it when you leave here, there's a couple of guys standing by some ammo crates with a cargo net and everything and they're hooking up to a chinook. there was actually a crew that came out and would rig them a helicopter, tie the blades do
wright has been there long enough to be an aircraft commander, and i signed him as first mission as an aircraft commander. and by 12:00 that day, he did. i was 20 years old. come back to the states for a year, work with the vietnamese being half vietnam students and 100 go to go to school, go back to vietnam as a cobra attack pilot. and we recon the ash valley primarily for six months, 102 down. we came home and i got out of the army. so i got anybody. we're going to ask for some questions now...
0
0.0
Apr 28, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
wright and his the evil propaganda arm or press tv from iran right, but, but, but they seem fine with the bbc and of course npr and pbs are the gold standard of journalism in the united states. i'm curiously enough, if we apply critical media literacy sort of critiques across the spectrum to all these media outlets, we probably will discover that they all have issues. they all have biases. they have problems. right? some of them may be more obvious than others, but they're still there and living in this hyper polarized, hyper partizan, polarized sort of media ecosystem, the team red team blue kind of dynamic, we all the gray area and we consequently lose the gray matter. right. we lose out on the significant debates, significant facts around, controversial issues, because many people afraid to go there or they're afraid challenge their own belief system. and we all know that this is really it's rooted in its tentacles into our community. it's very hard to change one's mind about certain things, particularly when they're rooted in, maybe family or community or ethnic city history place
wright and his the evil propaganda arm or press tv from iran right, but, but, but they seem fine with the bbc and of course npr and pbs are the gold standard of journalism in the united states. i'm curiously enough, if we apply critical media literacy sort of critiques across the spectrum to all these media outlets, we probably will discover that they all have issues. they all have biases. they have problems. right? some of them may be more obvious than others, but they're still there and...
0
0.0
Apr 30, 2024
04/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
a law that is governing sexually explicit deepfakes, it seems to me it is fine to have those morgan wright, long-term possibly, may be plus 70. talking about protection of broad federal right of publicity, maybe not so much. i've not written in this area but would recommend looking at the works of people who have come mark bartholomew, jennifer rothman is working on a paper. >> mr. crabtree-ireland. >> to me it is shocking this right does not deserve to be preserved and protected after death. after all the reasons twigs stated about how personal it is, it is an economic right it is a personal right and something that has real value. how that should dissipate upon that and make itself to big corporate interest like the ones represented by folks here, it does not make any sense. i would argue there should not be 70 year limitation at all. the right should be perpetual and the reason is that every one of us is unique, there is no other twigs and there never will be. there is no other you or any of us, this is not the same thing as copyright. it is not the same thing we will use this to create
a law that is governing sexually explicit deepfakes, it seems to me it is fine to have those morgan wright, long-term possibly, may be plus 70. talking about protection of broad federal right of publicity, maybe not so much. i've not written in this area but would recommend looking at the works of people who have come mark bartholomew, jennifer rothman is working on a paper. >> mr. crabtree-ireland. >> to me it is shocking this right does not deserve to be preserved and protected...