5
5.0
Dec 13, 2021
12/21
by
BLOOMBERG
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rosanna: yes, that is true. different governments have different risk tolerance, so we have countries that insist on zero cases, but i think that is not feasible anymore. i think we should try to live with the virus, but maybe step up the nonpharmaceutical interventions i just mentioned and do as much testing as possible to try and control the situation. guy: can i come back to alix's earlier question, comparing and contrasting what is happening in the u.k. and the u.s.? how similar is the immunity profile of the two countries right now, and terms of the level of vaccinations, and terms of the level of acquired immunity via having contracted whatever variant it is? i am just wondering how similar the u.k. and the united states look. rosanna: i think in the u.k., the vaccinations timeline is ahead of the u.s., but also in the u.s., it is a bigger country that has more unevenness in terms of vaccinations. there are pockets where the vaccination rates are low, and those are the ones you need to watch out for in ter
rosanna: yes, that is true. different governments have different risk tolerance, so we have countries that insist on zero cases, but i think that is not feasible anymore. i think we should try to live with the virus, but maybe step up the nonpharmaceutical interventions i just mentioned and do as much testing as possible to try and control the situation. guy: can i come back to alix's earlier question, comparing and contrasting what is happening in the u.k. and the u.s.? how similar is the...
28
28
Dec 19, 2021
12/21
by
KNTV
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eye 28
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but for mom rosanna, it's complicated. rosanna: as a woman, i am kind of, like, not equal. as a native american, i am not equal. if i were a white woman, i think i would have it easier. a lot of things would be easier. i think i would be heard more. ♪ >> it means being heard. being able to express yourself and be authentic. jessica: onto kansas city, missouri, as the sun set over the jazz district, we caught up with singer jamie chase. [singing] jessica: her stage name, j love. jamie chase: music is my expression. it's my love. it's my heart. jessica: we asked, does she feel a sense of belonging? jamie chase: musically, yes. but in my everyday life, no. you know, because when i am in the grocery store, everybody doesn't know that i am j love. you know what i'm saying? i don't look the same. i got my hat on. i am just another black person. and i still have p sometimes i am not nice about it. sometimes i'm like, "hey, did you know it's probably not me that's stealing?!" jessica: the mother of two young black men, she wrote a song called "black lives matter." jamie chase: ri
but for mom rosanna, it's complicated. rosanna: as a woman, i am kind of, like, not equal. as a native american, i am not equal. if i were a white woman, i think i would have it easier. a lot of things would be easier. i think i would be heard more. ♪ >> it means being heard. being able to express yourself and be authentic. jessica: onto kansas city, missouri, as the sun set over the jazz district, we caught up with singer jamie chase. [singing] jessica: her stage name, j love. jamie...
14
14
Dec 28, 2021
12/21
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 14
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rosanna: i think so. if you are cautious in the beginning of the pandemic for the virus we said that you could be infectious and pass the infection onto others to do three days before you are symptomatic and maybe you could be infectious up to eight days afterwards. but then most infections within three to five days after the onset of symptoms, i think the cdc is recommending five days so that you can allow the economy to recover and allow people to go back to work. it is a balance between risk and benefits. i agree with the cdc recommendation to cut the isolation by up to five days. we are now in the. were most people are infectious. peter: when we get to the end of the omicron variant, are we going to be left with two populations, one who is fully faxed and boosted -- vaccinated and boosted in the other population will be those who have been infected? rosanna: that is the scenario. as this virus eventually becomes one of the seasonal coronaviruses, eventually everybody will get the kind of immunity we s
rosanna: i think so. if you are cautious in the beginning of the pandemic for the virus we said that you could be infectious and pass the infection onto others to do three days before you are symptomatic and maybe you could be infectious up to eight days afterwards. but then most infections within three to five days after the onset of symptoms, i think the cdc is recommending five days so that you can allow the economy to recover and allow people to go back to work. it is a balance between risk...
7
7.0
Dec 5, 2021
12/21
by
CSPAN2
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eye 7
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the salaries of rosanna, sometimes they would be slashed up to 50 percent. take us from $80000 down to 30000 word and reduced from 25 down to 23 players the roster was reduced to and what were seeing as how baseball is reflecting the reduction in the workforce generally. that would have all kinds of ramifications. all right, we know the dire situation, how does baseball respond and let me start with the concept of something called the ballyhoo and ballyhoo connected to baseball, meanwhile, they will added into baseball and it is defined a vigorous attempted to in the customer's and cause blatant advertising or publicity. so in the graphs attempt to get the customers to in today's media you get oddballs on your webpage, or similar publicity, but this somehow is kind of crazy, is vigorous and in-your-face and kind of like the circus that make sense right, pure familiar with this it is kind of loud and in-your-face. and ballyhoo is a nickname for a side show that would attract attention and anything you can do to attract attention. and all kinds of unusual look
the salaries of rosanna, sometimes they would be slashed up to 50 percent. take us from $80000 down to 30000 word and reduced from 25 down to 23 players the roster was reduced to and what were seeing as how baseball is reflecting the reduction in the workforce generally. that would have all kinds of ramifications. all right, we know the dire situation, how does baseball respond and let me start with the concept of something called the ballyhoo and ballyhoo connected to baseball, meanwhile, they...
25
25
Dec 29, 2021
12/21
by
KNTV
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eye 25
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and rosanna arquette, who's a lovely lady, invited me -- we did a movie together. she invites me to this afternoon with ronan farrow. and he's reading from his book, and it's very intense and very incredible what he's writing about. and all these hollywood women are completely attentive to him, you know, as he's going through chapter and verse of his book. and it's amazing work. and i arrive late, so i'm standing at the back and i'm looking at this and thinking, "wow, this is intense. this is really intense, all that stuff. and then he finishes, and they give him a round of applause and then they turn 'round and they see me, and they all come at me and they take their device out and they say, "can you tell me to [ bleep ] off? [ laughter ] and you go, "this is a me too meeting. and i am a white dinosaur. and you're asking this white dinosaur at this me too meeting to tell you to [ bleep ] off something doesn't seem right." >> seth: right sounds like a trap >> oh, it does but that's - and that's human nature. >> seth: yeah. people like what they like it doesn't matt
and rosanna arquette, who's a lovely lady, invited me -- we did a movie together. she invites me to this afternoon with ronan farrow. and he's reading from his book, and it's very intense and very incredible what he's writing about. and all these hollywood women are completely attentive to him, you know, as he's going through chapter and verse of his book. and it's amazing work. and i arrive late, so i'm standing at the back and i'm looking at this and thinking, "wow, this is intense. this...
5
5.0
Dec 15, 2021
12/21
by
CSPAN
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eye 5
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the people that rosanna is talking about have largely been transferred out and now these 39 last remaining individuals, some are clear for transfer but the majority of whom are hard-core terrorists and the question is should they be released on a global battlefield because the reality is that al qaeda and isis operate outside of afghanistan and from those places they are plotting against the united states, should we release them with a chance that they returned to the fight, that is a hard question. we should also talk about what impact can one detainee have? does it matter if one returns to the fight. in my view there are examples where it can make a huge difference. host: some of the reporting on the hearing you are a part of, following the judiciary committee hearing in the senate. "afghanistan complicates new push to close guantanamo, releasing the detainees to another country means that some could later launch attacks against the united states, the senate analyst told." mike in crescent city, florida. independent line. caller: it was 1966, i was part of the marines in guantanamo. it w
the people that rosanna is talking about have largely been transferred out and now these 39 last remaining individuals, some are clear for transfer but the majority of whom are hard-core terrorists and the question is should they be released on a global battlefield because the reality is that al qaeda and isis operate outside of afghanistan and from those places they are plotting against the united states, should we release them with a chance that they returned to the fight, that is a hard...