5:25
GOP Women Turn on the Charm to Court Vote
A string of female speakers, including Ann Romney and Nikki Haley, at the RNC spoke out ag...
published: 29 Aug 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
GOP Women Turn on the Charm to Court Vote
A string of female speakers, including Ann Romney and Nikki Haley, at the RNC spoke out against Obama's economic policies and aimed to energize their party's appeal among women voters. John McKinnon reports on Markets Hub. Photo: AP. Follow our Election Coverage: www.youtube.com Subscribe to the WSJ Live YouTube Channel - www.youtube.com More WSJLive YouTube: www.youtube.com Facebook: www.facebook.com Twitter: twitter.com WSJ: www.wsj.com
13:22
Karl Rove on His View of the GOP Convention
Karl Rove discusses the impact of the Republican Convention speeches of Chris Christie and...
published: 30 Aug 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
Karl Rove on His View of the GOP Convention
Karl Rove discusses the impact of the Republican Convention speeches of Chris Christie and Ann Romney on the narrative of the convention and on Mitt Romney's chances to win the presidential election. Follow our Election Coverage: www.youtube.com Subscribe to the WSJ Live YouTube Channel - www.youtube.com More WSJLive YouTube: www.youtube.com Facebook: www.facebook.com Twitter: twitter.com WSJ: www.wsj.com
12:52
Romney's Mormon Faith Takes Center Stage
For the first time in US history, a Mormon is on a major-party presidential ticket. The Wa...
published: 30 Aug 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
Romney's Mormon Faith Takes Center Stage
For the first time in US history, a Mormon is on a major-party presidential ticket. The Wall Street Journal examines the changing role of religion in American politics and how that will affect Mitt Romney's chances of winning in November. Follow our Election Coverage: www.youtube.com Subscribe to the WSJ Live YouTube Channel - www.youtube.com More WSJLive YouTube: www.youtube.com Facebook: www.facebook.com Twitter: twitter.com WSJ: www.wsj.com
2:23
Homemade Highlights: Gabby Douglas is a Golden Girl
On the latest Homemade Highlights, Gabby Douglas vaults her way atop the medal stand, Aly ...
published: 03 Aug 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
Homemade Highlights: Gabby Douglas is a Golden Girl
On the latest Homemade Highlights, Gabby Douglas vaults her way atop the medal stand, Aly Raisman's parents watch her perform to "Hava Nagila" and Aliya Mustafina falls off the breadstick beam. Plus: Michael Phelps chases a world record. More Homemade Highlights HERE: bit.ly More Olympic Video HERE: bit.ly Subscribe to WSJ Live HERE: bit.ly WSJ Live brings you original programming from The Wall Street Journal. Get news directly from The Wall Street Journal's 2000 reporters across the globe. With exclusive video and daily live programming, you can stay on top of the latest in news, elections, markets, tech, opinion and lifestyle.
1:32
Homemade Highlights: Missy Franklin Wins Olympic Gold in 100 Meter Backstroke
Missy Franklin had her big Olympic moment on Monday when she won a gold medal in the 100-m...
published: 31 Jul 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
Homemade Highlights: Missy Franklin Wins Olympic Gold in 100 Meter Backstroke
Missy Franklin had her big Olympic moment on Monday when she won a gold medal in the 100-meter backstroke final in her first bid for an individual medal at the London Olympics.
2:43
$100 Million Pay Day for Yahoo's Marissa Mayer
Yahoo's new CEO Marissa Mayer is set to make $100 million over the next five years. WS...
published: 20 Jul 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
$100 Million Pay Day for Yahoo's Marissa Mayer
Yahoo's new CEO Marissa Mayer is set to make $100 million over the next five years. WSJ's Amir Efrati has the details of Mayer's mega pay package.
1:11
Apple iPad Guided Tour: The Wall Street Journal
Read the Wall Street Journal on iPad and soak up news from around the globe, everywhere yo...
published: 03 Apr 2010
Author: Cladouros
Apple iPad Guided Tour: The Wall Street Journal
Read the Wall Street Journal on iPad and soak up news from around the globe, everywhere you go. In-depth analysis, real-time quotes, video, and WSJ Radio — all your favorite sections of the Journal are here — and theyre even better on iPad. The large display shows you an entire page of award-winning news. Turn iPad horizontally to see two pages at once. You can even customize this app to get only the news you want, when you want it.
3:44
Parkinson's Research Yields Progress on Memory Treatment
An electrical brain stimulation technique used to treat Parkinson's disease and severe...
published: 09 Feb 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
Parkinson's Research Yields Progress on Memory Treatment
An electrical brain stimulation technique used to treat Parkinson's disease and severe depression appears to enhance human memory as well, according to a tiny but intriguing new study of seven patients, that adds to early evidence suggesting deep brain stimulation may improve memory.
5:11
New Google Drive Jumps Into Cloud Based File Storage - Mossberg Review
Google is jumping into the cloud-based file storage and syncing business, offering a servi...
published: 24 Apr 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
New Google Drive Jumps Into Cloud Based File Storage - Mossberg Review
Google is jumping into the cloud-based file storage and syncing business, offering a service called Google Drive, by offering lower prices and different features. It works on multiple operating systems, browsers, and mobile devices. WSJ's personal technology columnist, Walt Mossberg takes it for a drive.
2:47
Rahm Emanuel on the Opportunities of Crisis
For more political videos, head to www.wsj.com/video. Rahm Emanuel, chief of staff for pre...
published: 19 Nov 2008
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
Rahm Emanuel on the Opportunities of Crisis
For more political videos, head to www.wsj.com/video. Rahm Emanuel, chief of staff for president-elect Barack Obama, outlines the opportunities for bipartisan reform that he says the financial crisis presents at the Wall Street Journal CEO Council in Washington, DC (Nov. 19)
2:14
WSJ Chief Economist: 75% of Obamacare Costs Will Fall on Backs of Those Making $120K or Less
Stephen Moore, Senior Economics Writer with the Wall Street Journal, told FOX and Friends ...
published: 30 Jun 2012
Author: jackohoft
WSJ Chief Economist: 75% of Obamacare Costs Will Fall on Backs of Those Making $120K or Less
Stephen Moore, Senior Economics Writer with the Wall Street Journal, told FOX and Friends this morning that nearly 75% of Obamacare costs will fall on the backs of those Americans making less than $120000 a year.
10:00
UFC's Lorenzo Fertitta and Dana White: UFC Bigger than NFL - Full WSJ Interview
The WSJ's Lee Hawkins interviews Ultimate Fighting Championship moguls Dana White and ...
published: 07 May 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
UFC's Lorenzo Fertitta and Dana White: UFC Bigger than NFL - Full WSJ Interview
The WSJ's Lee Hawkins interviews Ultimate Fighting Championship moguls Dana White and Lorenzo Fertitta about the continued rise of UFC and the future of the wildly successful enterprise.
4:58
Payroll Tax Cut Advice from the Wall Street Journal
Cenk Uygur discusses the debate over the extension of the payroll tax holiday. President O...
published: 22 Dec 2011
Author: TheYoungTurks
Payroll Tax Cut Advice from the Wall Street Journal
Cenk Uygur discusses the debate over the extension of the payroll tax holiday. President Obama's response and the Wall Street Journal advice is discussed. www.washingtonpost.com online.wsj.com Subscribe to The Young Turks: bit.ly Download the politics or entertainment hour of this TYT episode: goo.gl The Largest Online New Show in the World. Google+: www.gplus.to Facebook: www.facebook.com Twitter: twitter.com
3:56
'Hunger Games' Movie - Teaching Jennifer Lawrence Archery
In "The Hunger Games" film, Katniss Everdeen, played by Jennifer Lawrence, wield...
published: 21 Mar 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
'Hunger Games' Movie - Teaching Jennifer Lawrence Archery
In "The Hunger Games" film, Katniss Everdeen, played by Jennifer Lawrence, wields a mean bow and arrow. Wendy Bounds spoke with Lawrence's archery instructor, Olympian Khatuna Lorig, on how she trained the young start to look like a real hunter.
Vimeo results:
15:03
Critical Card Check Video Briefing
Senator Jim DeMint, Steve Forbes, Steve Moore of the Wall Street Journal and other leading...
published: 06 Jul 2009
Author: National Right to Work
Critical Card Check Video Briefing
Senator Jim DeMint, Steve Forbes, Steve Moore of the Wall Street Journal and other leading experts discuss the threat of card check legislation.
3:52
Bill Moyers Essay: Plutocracy and Democracy Don't Mix
An excerpt from "Bill Moyers Journal"
(premiered April 30, 2010)
BILL MOYERS: You've no d...
published: 28 Nov 2011
Author: BillMoyers.com
Bill Moyers Essay: Plutocracy and Democracy Don't Mix
An excerpt from "Bill Moyers Journal"
(premiered April 30, 2010)
BILL MOYERS: You've no doubt figured out my bias by now. I've hardly kept it a secret. In this regard, I take my cue from the late Edward R. Murrow, the Moses of broadcast news.
Ed Murrow told his generation of journalists bias is okay as long as you don't try to hide it. So here, one more time, is mine: plutocracy and democracy don't mix. Plutocracy, the rule of the rich, political power controlled by the wealthy.
Plutocracy is not an American word but it's become an American phenomenon. Back in the fall of 2005, the Wall Street giant Citigroup even coined a variation on it, plutonomy, an economic system where the privileged few make sure the rich get richer with government on their side. By the next spring, Citigroup decided the time had come to publicly "bang the drum on plutonomy."
And bang they did, with an "equity strategy" for their investors, entitled, "Revisiting Plutonomy: The Rich Getting Richer." Here are some excerpts:
"Asset booms, a rising profit share and favorable treatment by market-friendly governments have allowed the rich to prosper...[and] take an increasing share of income and wealth over the last 20 years..."
"...the top 10%, particularly the top 1% of the US-- the plutonomists in our parlance-- have benefited disproportionately from the recent productivity surge in the US...[and] from globalization and the productivity boom, at the relative expense of labor."
"...[and they] are likely to get even wealthier in the coming years. [Because] the dynamics of plutonomy are still intact."
And so they were, before the great collapse of 2008. And so they are, today, after the fall. While millions of people have lost their jobs, their homes, and their savings, the plutonomists are doing just fine. In some cases, even better, thanks to our bailout of the big banks which meant record profits and record bonuses for Wall Street.
Now why is this? Because over the past 30 years the plutocrats, or plutonomists — choose your poison — have used their vastly increased wealth to capture the flag and assure the government does their bidding. Remember that Citigroup reference to "market-friendly governments" on their side? It hasn't mattered which party has been in power — government has done Wall Street's bidding.
Don't blame the lobbyists, by the way; they are simply the mules of politics, delivering the drug of choice to a political class addicted to cash — what polite circles call "campaign contributions" and Tony Soprano would call "protection."
This marriage of money and politics has produced an America of gross inequality at the top and low social mobility at the bottom, with little but anxiety and dread in between, as middle class Americans feel the ground falling out from under their feet. According to a study from the Pew Research Center last month, nine out of ten Americans give our national economy a negative rating. Eight out of ten report difficulty finding jobs in their communities, and seven out of ten say they experienced job-related or financial problems over the past year.
So it is that like those populists of that earlier era, millions of Americans have awakened to a sobering reality: they live in a plutocracy, where they are disposable. Then, the remedy was a popular insurgency that ignited the spark of democracy.
Now we have come to another parting of the ways, and once again the fate and character of our country are up for grabs.
So along with Jim Hightower and Iowa's concerned citizens, and many of you, I am biased: democracy only works when we claim it as our own.
47:13
Free To Choose (1990) Vol. 1 - The Power of the Market
Dr. Friedman states, "There is not a single person in the world who can make this pencil."...
published: 05 May 2010
Author: Free To Choose Network
Free To Choose (1990) Vol. 1 - The Power of the Market
Dr. Friedman states, "There is not a single person in the world who can make this pencil." He explains that the creation of even a simple object - like the "lead" pencil - requires the knowledge of many people, lumberjacks, steel manufacturers, miners, etc. These people may not speak the same language, they may not know or like one another, yet the market enables them to combine knowledge and effort to produce wealth. Introduced by Arnold Schwarzenegger. Discussion with David Brooks, Wall Street Journal and James Galbraith, University of Texas.
78:24
The Inaugural Henry Cole Lecture: Sir Christopher Frayling, 30 October 2008
The inaugural Henry Cole Lecture, held at the V&A; Museum in London on 30 October 2008. Th...
published: 22 Sep 2009
Author: Victoria and Albert Museum
The Inaugural Henry Cole Lecture: Sir Christopher Frayling, 30 October 2008
The inaugural Henry Cole Lecture, held at the V&A; Museum in London on 30 October 2008. The purpose of the lecture is to celebrate the legacy of the Museum’s founding director, and explore its implications for museums, culture and society today.
The lecture, entitled 'We Must Have Steam: Get Cole! Henry Cole, the Chamber of Horrors, and the Educational Role of the Museum' was delivered by Professor Sir Christopher Frayling. He presented new research on the “chamber of horrors” (a contemporary nickname for one of the V&A;'s earliest galleries, 'Decorations on False Principles', that opened in 1852) and the myths and realities of its reception, then opened up a wider debate on design education and museums from the nineteenth century to the present day.
Transcript:
Mark Jones: The annual Henry Cole lecture has been initiated to celebrate Henry Cole's legacy and to explore the contribution that culture can make to education and society today. It has also been launched to celebrate the opening of the Sackler Centre for arts education, including the Hochhauser Auditorium in which we sit tonight. There could be no one better than Professor Sir Christopher Frayling to give the inaugural Henry Cole Lecture. Christopher is a rare being: an intellectual who is a great communicator; a theorist who has a firm grip on the practical realities of life: a writer who truly and instinctively understands the words of making design and visual communication. As an enormously successful and respected Rector of the Royal College of Art, as Chairman of the Arts Council, and as a member and chair of boards too numerous to mention - but not forgetting the Royal Mint Advisory Committee which has recently been responsible for redesigning the coinage (personal interest) and as by far the longest-serving Trustee of the V&A;, he brings together culture, education and public service in a way which Henry Cole would have approved and admired. So it's more than fitting that he should be giving this first Henry Cole Lecture, 'We Must Have Steam: Get Cole! Henry Cole, the Chamber of Horrors, and the Educational Role of the Museum'.
CHRISTOPHER FRAYLING:
Thank you very much indeed Mark and thank you very much for inviting me to give this first Henry Cole Lecture. Just how much of an honour it is for me will I hope become clear as the lecture progresses.
Mark, Chairpeople, ladies and gentlemen:
Hidden away in the garden of the South Kensington Museum - now the Madejski Garden of the V&A; - there is a small and easily overlooked commemorative plaque that doesn't have a museum number. It reads: 'In Memory of Jim Died 1879 Aged 15 Years, Faithful Dog of Sir Henry Cole of this Museum'. Jim had in fact died on 30 January 1879. He was with Henry Cole in his heyday, as the king of South Kensington - its museums and colleges - and saw him through to retirement from the public service and beyond. And next to this inscription there's another one dedicated to Jim's successor, Tycho, and dated 1885. The dogs are actually buried in the garden. Now we know from Henry Cole's diary that between 1864 and 1879 Jim, who was a cairn terrier, was often to be seen in public at his master's side. In 1864 they were together inspecting the new memorial to the Great Exhibition of 1851 just behind the Albert Hall - a statue of Prince Albert by Joseph Durham on a lofty plinth covered in statistics about the income, expenditure and visitor numbers to the Great Exhibition: 6,039,195 to be exact. Cole had been a tireless champion of Prince Albert and according to the Princess Royal (later Empress of Prussia) there was a family saying in Buckingham Palace at the time, invented by Albert himself, that when things needed doing 'when we want steam we must get Cole'. We may therefore assume that when looking at the memorial, Cole was interested in the inscription, the statistics and the likeness of Prince Albert, while Jim was more interested in the possibilities of the plinth. In early 1866 - these are five studies of Jim, an etching by Henry Cole himself of 1864. In early 1866, first thing in the morning, soon after the workmen's bell had rung, Henry and Jim would set forth together from Cole's newly constructed official residence in the Museum (where he moved in July 1863) to tour the building sites of South Kensington - a name which was first invented by Cole when he re-named the museum The South Kensington Museum to describe the new developments happening around Brompton Church. According to 'The Builder' magazine, these two well-known figures would 'be seen clambering over bricks, mortar and girders up ladders and about scaffolding'. Several buildings in the South Kensington Renaissance Revival style were springing up all around them: The Natural History Museum, The College of Science, the extension to this Museum. And on the morning the Bethnal Green Museum opened - 24 June 1872 - Jim showed a healthy distaste for his master's well-known predilection for pomp and
Youtube results:
9:05
War Torn: An Iraq War Veteran's Story
Ian Welch was on his first combat tour in Iraq, waiting to storm across the Diyala Bridge ...
published: 04 Feb 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
War Torn: An Iraq War Veteran's Story
Ian Welch was on his first combat tour in Iraq, waiting to storm across the Diyala Bridge and seize Baghdad, when an artillery round exploded behind him--changing his life forever. Now he and his girlfriend Katie are hoping love can change it back. Photos, Audio and Video by Brandon Thibodeaux - www.brandonthibodeaux.com Additional photography by: Gary Knight - www.viiphoto.com Gilles Bassignac Robert Nickelsberg
11:14
"Hunger Games" Star Amandla Stenberg - WSJ Interview
A "Hunger Games" fan favorite, actress Amandla Stenberg played 'Rue' in ...
published: 04 Apr 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
"Hunger Games" Star Amandla Stenberg - WSJ Interview
A "Hunger Games" fan favorite, actress Amandla Stenberg played 'Rue' in the blockbuster film. She spoke with Wendy Bounds about her experience making the film and working with Jennifer Lawrence in particular.
16:35
Elon Musk: I'll Put a Man on Mars in 10 Years
In an interview with WSJ's Alan Murray, Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk makes the case for ...
published: 27 Dec 2011
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
Elon Musk: I'll Put a Man on Mars in 10 Years
In an interview with WSJ's Alan Murray, Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk makes the case for an affordable electric car, the likelihood of his company SpaceX sending a man to Mars, and why he isn't exactly like "Iron Man"'s Tony Stark. Interview originally aired on 4/22/2011.
9:37
Gotye -- Australian Music Star -- A WSJ Exclusive Interview
Gotye, the stage name of Australian singer-songwriter Wally De Backer, scored an internati...
published: 08 Feb 2012
Author: WSJDigitalNetwork
Gotye -- Australian Music Star -- A WSJ Exclusive Interview
Gotye, the stage name of Australian singer-songwriter Wally De Backer, scored an international hit with his song 'Somebody I Used to Know.' The music video for the song has been viewed over 64 million times on YouTube. Now, Gotye is in the United States to promote his music and break into the American market. He recently sat down with WSJ's John Jurgensen.