Ultimate Earl "The Pearl" Monroe MIX
Earl Monroe - The Pearl
Earl Monroe - The Greatest Moves
CenterStage: Earl Monroe Talks about playing for the Knicks
dr.j and earl monroe - 1970 something
Earl Monroe at Walt Frazier's Wine and Dine
Earl Monroe - Vintage NBA (Castellano)
THE LEGEND - Earl Monroe MIX by MISIEK
Earl "The Pearl" Monroe's Impact - 1966-67 season - Winston-Salem State
Classic Confrontations: Walt Clyde Frazier vs Earl The Pearl Monroe
Something about Black Jesus "Pearl" Earl Monroe
Retro NBA - Earl Monroe
Federico Buffa ci parla di Earl Monroe The Black Jesus
Earl Monroe - The Pearl
Plot
Robert Miller is a successful financial businessman with a loving wife and a smart daughter ready to take over the family business. Professional secrets involving illegal fraudulent activities start coming out at the same time that Robert's personal secrets take a turn for the worse and threaten to derail everything he has achieved.
Keywords: accidental-death, accounting-fraud, adultery, billionaire, blackmail, business-deal, car-accident, car-crash, car-explosion, central-park
Power is the best alibi.
Robert Miller: This is a trust, in your name, assets of two million dollars. Take a look at that.::Jimmy Grant: Are you serious? You think money's gonna fix this? Huh?::Robert Miller: [perplexed] What else is there?
[first lines]::Maria Bartiromo: But you took a huge bet on the housing crisis in the middle of the biggest boom in housing anybody has ever seen. Why?::Robert Miller: I'm a child of the '50s. My father welded steel for the Navy, and my mother worked at the V.A. They lived through the Depression, Pearl Harbor, and the bomb. They didn't think that bad things might happen. They knew that bad things would happen.::Maria Bartiromo: Is that what's happening now?::Robert Miller: When I was a kid, my favorite teacher was Mr. James. Mr. James said world events all revolve around five things. M - O - N - E - Y.
Ellen Miller: It's all going to be fine. It always is. Just follow the plan.::Robert Miller: And what is that plan?::Ellen Miller: Confidence equals contract.::Robert Miller: You sound like a fortune cookie.::Ellen Miller: They are your words, actually.::Robert Miller: Then you married an idiot.
Det. Michael Bryer: [interrogating] You stay on the phone for a minute and a half with a wrong number. What the fuck do you talk about? Area codes?
Syd Felder: What's baffling to me, despite your sentimental history together, is why you would put your family's future in this kid's hands.::Robert Miller: He's not like us.::Syd Felder: Is that a good thing?
Robert Miller: What you did is way beyond the money.::Jimmy Grant: Nothing id beyond money for you, Robert. We both know that.
Ellen Miller: You broke our little girl's heart.::Robert Miller: That's how it all works, Ellen. You know that.::Ellen Miller: I know, but she didn't.::Robert Miller: She'll be better for it. The world is cold.::Ellen Miller: Then you're gonna need a warm coat.
[last lines]::Brooke Miller: And to receive this prestigious award, I invite now to the stage the man who led this generous effort. And whose financial trading firm, Miller Capital, was just this morning acquired by Standard Bank and Trust. A dedicated businessman, a family man, philanthropist, and all-around humanitarian. A man I am very lucky to call my mentor, my friend, and my father. Mr. Robert Miller... [standing applause]
Det. Michael Bryer: [talking on the phone] Yeah... I need a serious fucking favor.
Plot
Just after he turns sixteen, Robert finds out that he is adopted. His parents find to their horror that he was kidnaped from his real parents. They decide to tell him about this, even though they fear they might lose him. Robert runs away to find his real parents. He finds and gets close to them, without revealing his true identity. Eventually he must decided where he belongs.
Keywords: christmas, family-relationships, kidnapping, teenager
Desperate, confused and alone... he wasn't prepared for what was to come
Robert: She raised me for two years... and then sold me?::Martha: No she didn't sell you. You were taken from her. Stolen.
John: I don't care how much you like my parents, or you like my sister, or you like me! But that's my home, I live there! You're just passing through, man!
Robert: I have as much right to be here as you!
Robert: What you said about forgiveness makes a lot of sense. People do make innocent mistakes that end up hurting someone. But blame doesn't do any good. People have to forgive themselves before hurts can heal.
Robert: Maybe you're wondering why I'm writing you this. The reason is, I love you. And I don't want to see you suffer anymore.
Ultimate Earl "The Pearl" Monroe MIX
Earl Monroe - The Pearl
Earl Monroe - The Greatest Moves
CenterStage: Earl Monroe Talks about playing for the Knicks
dr.j and earl monroe - 1970 something
Earl Monroe at Walt Frazier's Wine and Dine
Earl Monroe - Vintage NBA (Castellano)
THE LEGEND - Earl Monroe MIX by MISIEK
Earl "The Pearl" Monroe's Impact - 1966-67 season - Winston-Salem State
Classic Confrontations: Walt Clyde Frazier vs Earl The Pearl Monroe
Something about Black Jesus "Pearl" Earl Monroe
Retro NBA - Earl Monroe
Federico Buffa ci parla di Earl Monroe The Black Jesus
Earl Monroe - The Pearl
African American Legends: Earl Monroe, NY Knicks Legend & Hall of Famer, "Still Making Magic Happen"
Profiles Featuring Earl Monroe
Earl B. Monroe , 1987
Earl Monroe ISHoF Award 2013
earl monroe spin
Mike's On: Earl Monroe
CenterStage: Earl Monroe Plays Hit and Run
Earl Monroe (1980 Jordache ad)
Taku x Earl Monroe
Earl the Pearl Monroe Interview
Adam Taxin interviews basketball legend Earl Monroe about diabetes as well as the NBA postseason
Marilyn Monroe - Columnist Earl Wilson interviewed in 1956
Coaches Corner with Earl Monroe 10-16-2012
WVSU Coach's Corner 2010-2011 ep 5 pt 1 of 3
WVSU Coach's Corner 2010-2011 ep 8 pt 1of 3
earl monroe walt frazier
Vernon Earl Monroe (born November 21, 1944, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is an American former professional basketball player known for his flamboyant dribbling, passing, and play-making. He was nicknamed both "Earl the Pearl" and "Jesus".
From an early age, Monroe was a playground legend. His high school teammates at John Bartram High School called him "Thomas Edison" because of the many moves he invented.
Monroe rose to prominence at a national level while playing basketball at then Division II Winston-Salem State University, located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Under the coaching of Hall of Fame coach Clarence "Big House" Gaines, Monroe averaged 7.1 points his freshman year, 23.2 points as a sophomore, 29.8 points as a junior and an amazing 41.5 points his senior year. In 1967, he earned NCAA College Division Player of the Year honors and led the Rams to the NCAA College Division Championship.
In 1967, the two-time All-American was drafted by the Baltimore Bullets (now the Washington Wizards) in the first round of the NBA draft (2nd overall pick). He won the NBA Rookie of the Year Award in a season in which he averaged 24.3 points per game, and scored 56 points in a game against the Los Angeles Lakers. This still stands as the third-highest rookie total in NBA history. It was also a franchise record, later broken by Gilbert Arenas on December 17, 2006.
Walter "Clyde" Frazier (born March 29, 1945, in Atlanta, Georgia) is a retired American basketball player in the National Basketball Association (NBA). He was blessed with a unique combination of court vision, quickness, and size (he stands 6'4") for a guard. As their floor general, he led the New York Knicks to the franchise's only two NBA Championships (1970 & 1973), and was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1987. Upon his retirement from basketball, Frazier went into broadcasting; he is currently a color commentator for telecasts of Knicks games on the MSG Network.
The eldest of nine children, Frazier attended Atlanta's David Tobias Howard High School. He quarterbacked the football team and played catcher on the baseball team. He learned basketball on a rutted and dirt playground, the only facility available at his all-black school in the racially segregated South of the 1950s. After having a great career at Howard, Frazier attended Southern Illinois University. Although he was offered other scholarships for his football skills, Frazier accepted a basketball offer from Southern Illinois University.
Federico Buffa (28 July 1959, Milan) is an Italian journalist, writer and television sportscaster.
He has studied sociology at UCLA Summer Session in 1978. He obtained his degree at University of Milan in 1986 (Law). In the same year he wrote his first article for Italian Magazine "Superbasket" (which has been published on September's Number). Two years later he began working as basketball agent and started his career as NBA's commentator for Italian TV. He still works as journalist for Sky Sport Italia and Milan Channel.
African Americans (also referred to as Black Americans or Afro-Americans, and formerly as American Negroes) are citizens or residents of the United States that have ancestry from any of the native populations of Sub-Saharan Africa.
African Americans make up the single largest racial minority in the United States. Most African Americans are of West and Central African descent and are descendants of enslaved Africans within the boundaries of the present United States. However, some immigrants from African, Caribbean, Central American or South American nations, or their descendants, may be identified or self-identify with the term.
African-American history starts in the 16th century with African slaves who quickly rose up against the Spanish explorer Lucas Vázquez de Ayllón and progresses to the present day, with Barack Obama as the 44th and current President of the United States. Between those landmarks there have been events and issues, both resolved and ongoing, including slavery, racism, Reconstruction, development of the African-American community, participation in the great military conflicts of the United States, racial segregation, and the Civil Rights Movement.