Rising drone aerial of big tent revival in Hollywood
TAP-2B Beta SP; DN-212 Beta SP (most segments); 1 inch
OUR WORLD - 1937 #2
Revival Meeting Tent
An outdoor tent for a church revival meeting.
[The Hero of Liao Yang Part 2] Obviously staged footage : 3 soldiers enter frame, advance to mid-screen and remove gear. Two sleep while one stands guard. All three rise as horsemen appears from woods. He dismounts, gives his sword, and leaves screen right. (070919) - two Russian soldiers appear sc. left, crouching, drop to ground and crawl in woods. Swordless soldier appears from woods and comes toward camera. Russians burst from woods. Furious struggle, and he breaks away. Cut to LS (070958) - Japanese soldier runs from Russians while they pursue and shoot. He drops FG having killed two with his pistol. Two surviving search his body. He is captured. Cut to MS, hospital tent and guard. Guards carry him out and bury him. He is revived and is supplied with a uniform but a Japanese servant of the Russians. (071404) - soldiers observe as artillery shells explode nearby and as horsemen come and go. Across the field comes the wounded man in the uniform who reports. They pin a medal to his chest and he leaves screen right. Soldiers seem unperturbed despite proximity of the exploding shells. 07:15:30 Staged field combat, nice big explosion.
COVID: INSIDE US-MX BORDER HOSPITAL OVERWHELMED BY VIRUS
--SUPERS--\n1:13-1:17\nDr. Jorge Robles\nEl Centro Regional Medical Ctr.\n\n2:12-2:16\nAmber Marez\nNurse, El Centro Regional Medical Ctr.\n\n3:09-3:14\nAndrew LaFree\nMedical Dir. of Emergency Dept., El Centro Regional Medical Ctr.\n\n3:40-3:46\nAndrew LaFree\nMedical Dir. of Emergency Dept., El Centro Regional Medical Ctr.\n\n4:15-4:22\nLuis Olmedo\nExec. Director, Comité Cívico del Valle, Inc.\n\n4:59-5:06\nAdolphe Edward\nCEO, El Centro Regional Medical Ctr.\n\n --LEAD IN--\nCALIFORNIA IS NOW REPORTING THE MOST COVID DEATHS IN A SINGLE DAY SINCE THE PANDEMIC BEGAN.\nCORONAVIRUS CASES ARE TAKING OVER HOSPITALS.\nC-N-N'S KYUNG LAH HAS A LOOK INSIDE A CALIFORNIA HOSPITAL BORDERING MEXICO THAT'S EXPLODING BEYOND ITS WALLS WITH NEW CASES.. \n --REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS--\nnats\nAdolphe Edward, Hospital CEO: "When folks say it's a war zone well, a war zone of what? A war zone of us trying to combat the covid-19."\nnats\nTHE FRONTLINE IN THIS BATTLEFIELD… SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S EL CENTRO REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER.\nnats\nCEO ADOLPHE EDWARD… IS A FORMER AIR FORCE OFFICER AND IRAQ WAR VET...\nAdolphe Edward, Hospital CEO: "I have seen this tent actually deploy with me when we were in Balad, when we were in Iraq."\nNOW HE'S BUILT THEM ON AMERICAN SOIL…\nnats\nTO HANDLE A CRUSH OF COVID CASES HIS HOSPITAL NO LONGER HAS ROOM FOR .\nnats\nAIR CONDITIONED TENTS IN THE TRIPLE DIGIT DESERT HEAT…\nTO HANDLE PATIENT…\nnats\nAFTER PATIENT… \nnats\nEL CENTRO IS IN IMPERIAL COUNTY… IT SITS AT THE U-S MEXICO BORDER.\nTHIS RURAL COMMUNITY IS 85 PERCENT LATINO… \nONE IN FOUR LIVE IN POVERTY. \nPER CAPITA… IT HAS THREE TIMES AS MANY COVID CASES AS LOS ANGELES.\nAND THE DEATH RATE… IS THE HIGHEST IN CALIFORNIA.\nLah: Is it crazy to you that you're a physician working in a tent in America?\nDr Ramos: Yah. Its incredible isn't it? Yah. We'll, we'll make it thru \nnats\nINSIDE THE HOSPITAL -- \nnats\nWE VISIT THE SICKEST PATIENTS IN THE ICU.\nnats\n"She's a new patient?"\n"Yeah, she's a new patient. She's a transfer from the regular floor."\nnats\nEVERY SINGLE PATIENT IN THIS 12-BED I-C-U HAS COVID.\n11 OF THEM… SURVIVE WITH VENTILATORS.\nnats\nLah: "Can you explain what you're wearing?"\nAmber Marez: "Well it's a device that helps keep everything you know kind of like closed so we're not exposed to anything."\nIT'S WHAT NURSE AMBER MAREZ NEEDS TO WEAR TO STAY SAFE… WHILE HELPING HER 40 YEAR OLD PATIENT…\n"How sick is he?"\n"He's really sick and he's really young so we're trying to do everything we can before we intubate him."\n"What does that suggest to you as a nurse that the age is dropping?"\n"I think that a lot of people aren't honoring the stay at home you know a lot of people aren't doing the social distancing."\nnats\nTHAT'S WHAT THE EL CENTRO FIRE DEPARTMENT… SEES ON THE STREET.\nTHE BATTALION CHIEF SAYS IN THIS TOWN OF 50-THOUSAND PEOPLE… EVERY SINGLE HOUR… IT IS THIS.\n"There's a possible covid patient on scene so at this point our personnel are gearing up for a covid patient."\nIN A FULL HAZMAT SUIT… CAPTAIN CHAD WHITLOCK REVIVES AN UNCONSCIOUS PATIENT…\nIT'S A STIFLING 110 DEGREES. \nCapt. Chad Whitlock: "We have to decon all the equipment, remove all our uniforms and take a shower and put a different uniform on for the rest of the day."\n"You're dripping!"\n"Yes ma'am. We're inundated. Everybody's really tired and everybody's you can see it in my face you know, I'm a little frustrated."\nnats\nTHAT PATIENT CAPTAIN WHITLOCK SAVED… ARRIVES AT EL CENTRO MEDICAL REGIONAL CENTER'S EMERGENCY ROOM.\nAndrew LaFree, Medical Director of Emergency Dept.: "We've hit capacity. We've transferred out 2-3x the normal amount of patients we're sending out. In the last 2-3 months we've sent out something like 500 patients."\nnats\nSOME TO NEARBY SAN DIEGO…OTHERS AS FAR AWAY AS NORTHERN CALIFORNIA.\nTHIS HELICOPTER IS HERE TO PICK UP ANOTHER PATIENT.\nnats\nE-R DOCTORS AND NURSES INTUBATE UNDER THIS BLUE DRAPE TO LIMIT PARTICLE EXPOSURE.\nnats\nSTABILIZED…\nnats\nTHE PATIENT HEADS OUT…\nnats\n"Why is it happening so badly here in Imperial County?" \nAndrew LaFree: "You hear a lot of US nationals that live in Mexicali, they've had a really bad outbreak there.. There's a lot of people that cross the border here for work that live in Mexicali and then coming to work here."\nTHE FIELDS IN IMPERIAL COUNTY,… SEND PRODUCE ACROSS THE COUNTRY…\nAND EVEN IN A PANDEMIC, SOME 20,000 MEXICAN DAY WORKERS ENTER LEGALLY EVERY MORNING TO PROVIDE THE LABOR \nnats\nNO WORK… NO MONEY FOR FOOD, SAYS 65 YEAR OLD FARM WORKER JACINTO MORENO…\nFOUR OF HIS FELLOW FARM WORKERS HAVE DIED OF COVID, HE SAYS.\nLuis Olmedo, Comité Cívico del Valle, Inc.: "We cannot win a war on Covid in the emergency room. Look at the big picture. We need to fight the war on covid where its breeding and that's our neighborhoods."\nIN THIS BI-NATIONAL COUNTY… COVID IS NOT THE DISEASE.\nIT'S THE SYMPTOM.\nLuis Olmedo, Comité Cívico del Valle, Inc.: "This is it. This is the poster child right here. We are the poster of those inequities and the reason why we're not able to control covid."\nTHE HOSPITAL HERE IS BRACING FOR WHAT'S YET TO COME.\nTHIS EMPTY TENT… IS THE FUTURE COVID WARD… FOR THE SECOND WAVE.\nLah: "Is this tent a sign that this pandemic is here to stay?"\nAdolphe: "Yes. I keep telling people now it's a pandemic, eventually it's going to be an endemic so is this really how we want to take care of our communities? The answer is no."\n -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----\n\n --KEYWORD TAGS--\nMEDICAL HEALTH CORONA PANDEMIC COVID19\n\n
GOSPEL MUSIC
WIDE SHOT OF CAMPGROUNDS. FAIRGROUNDS. LOT. YARD. BIG SIGN READS "REVIVAL IN PROGRESS." A STATION WAGON (POSSIBLY READS AS A WOODIE/ WOODY) DRIVES PASSED. TOWARDS HUGE TENT. CLASSIC TENT REVIVAL MEETING. SOUTHERN VERNACULAR CULTURE. EARLY 1960S CARS ARE PARKED OUTSIDE.
WIDE ANGLE OF PARKING LOT WITH CARS, PARK AND TENT WITH PALM TREES. COULD BE AT ORCHID SHOW IN SANTA BARBARA. COULD BE USED FOR FESTIVAL, REVIVAL MEETING OR SMALL CIRCUS.
WIDE ANGLE OF PARKING LOT WITH CARS, PARK AND TENT WITH PALM TREES. COULD BE AT ORCHID SHOW IN SANTA BARBARA. COULD BE USED FOR FESTIVAL, REVIVAL MEETING OR SMALL CIRCUS.
THE GLOBAL IMPACT OF REVEREND BILLY GRAHAM
--SUPERS--\nWednesday \n\nBecky Anderson\nHost CNN's "Connect the World with Becky Anderson"\n\n\nCandida Moss\nProfessor of Theology, University of Birmingham, England\n\n:44 \nGetty\n\n\n1:18\nWBFF\n\n\n2:01\nBilly Graham Evangelistic Association\n\n --LEAD IN--\nHE PREACHED TO U-S PRESIDENTS --\nSPOKE IN 185 COUNTRIES --\nAND REVOLUTIONIZED HOW PREACHERS SPREAD THEIR MESSAGE.\nBILLY GRAHAM HAS DIED AT AGE 99.\nA SPOKESMAN FOR THE CHRISTIAN EVANGELIST SAYS HE DIED OF NATURAL CAUSES AT HIS HOME, IN NORTH CAROLINA.\nBECKY ANDERSON SPOKE WITH A PROFESSOR OF THEOLOGY ABOUT GRAHAM'S IMPACT AROUND THE WORLD.\n\n --INTERVIEW--\nBecky Anderson, Host CNN's Connect the World: "As big a character and as big an influence as Billy Graham had it does seem it was of a generation to a younger generation who may not know as much about Billy Graham. What should his legacy be and what should we be teaching of his legacy?"\nCandida Moss, Professor of Theology, University of Birmingham, England: "Well Billy Graham is really the architect of modern evangelism. Before Billy Graham it was sort of every organization and every church for itself. So Billy Graham really brought people together not just in the United States but globally. He organized these world congresses for ministers to attend. So one of the most important parts of his legacy is he united Evangelical Christians under a single banner. \nBecky Anderson, Host CNN's Connect the World: "He didn't steer clear of politics did he? At times that got him into trouble let's say. Should that be something we remember him for or is it bigger than that?"\nCandida Moss, Professor of Theology, University of Birmingham, England: "Well it's really interesting. So Billy Graham did visit a number of countries behind the Iron Curtain so he went to Russia for which he was widely criticized. You also went to Romania and to Hungary and when he was in those places he did adapt his language in order not to cause offense there. So this has drawn criticism but it would be a mistake to see Billy Graham as sort of just another member of the religious right who is active in politics. Because when he came to U.S. politics Grant actually wanted to sort of stay out of the fray. And unlike many others he was really strongly opposed to marrying his message to the Republican Party."\nBecky Anderson, Host CNN's Connect the World: "His ministry, I think it would be right to say somewhat grew larger than himself. How difficult was that at times the assumption that those who were speaking in his tone as it were might have had a different attitude in tone at times.Does that makes sense?"\nCandida Moss, Professor of Theology, University of Birmingham, England: "It does an it is an excellent point. In fact Billy Graham actually said in an interview that one of his regrets was that some of these organizations had grown too large and they were thus difficult to control and manage. And there were a lot of people who can quote the legacy of Graham that kind of ideological and political goals to say nothing of those who may have just confused his religious message."\nBecky Anderson, Host CNN's Connect the World: "Fascinating. Thank you for your thoughts. On the day that we learn that Billy Graham has died."\n ----CNN INFORMATION-----\n (CNN) -- Evangelist Billy Graham -- a confidant to presidents, a guiding light to generations of American evangelicals and a globe-trotting preacher who converted millions to Christianity -- died Wednesday at the age of 99, his spokesman confirmed to CNN.\n Graham passed away at his home in Montreat, North Carolina, spokesman Jeremy Blume said.\n The skinny preacher with the booming voice evangelized to nearly 215 million people over six decades and prayed with US presidents from Harry Truman to Barack Obama. \n Several presidents, including Lyndon Johnson, George W. Bush and Bill Clinton, relied closely on his spiritual counsel.\n\n He was tall and handsome, with a disarming aw-shucks demeanor and a Southern twang to his voice. But Graham's influence, historians say, was monumental. Some called him "America's pastor," others referred to him as the "Protestant pope." \n Graham is reported to have persuaded more than 3 million people to commit their lives to Christianity and his preaching was heard in 185 of the world's 195 countries, according to the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. \n "He was probably the dominant religious leader of his era; no more than one or two popes, perhaps one or two other people, could come close to what he achieved," said William Martin, a former historian at Rice University and the author of "A Prophet with Honor: The Billy Graham Story."\n\n\n Condolences\n\n People across the world mourned Graham's death.\n President Donald Trump said in a tweet that "the GREAT Billy Graham is dead. There was nobody like him! He will be missed by Christians and all religions. A very special man."\n\n Vice President Mike Pence said in a statement that "Karen and I were saddened to learn of the passing of one of the greatest Americans of the 20th century, Reverend Billy Graham."\n "We send our deepest condolences to the Graham family. Billy Graham's ministry for the gospel of Jesus Christ and his matchless voice changed the lives of millions. We mourn his passing but I know with absolute certainty that today he heard those words, 'Well done, good and faithful servant.' Thank you Billy Graham. God bless you."\n Former President Jimmy Carter said in a statement that he and his wife Rosalynn "are deeply saddened" at the news of Graham's death and that he was "pleased to count Reverend Graham" as a friend and adviser.\n "Tirelessly spreading a message of fellowship and hope, he shaped the spiritual lives of tens of millions of people worldwide," Carter said in a statement. "Broad-minded, forgiving, and humble in his treatment of others, he exemplified the life of Jesus Christ by constantly reaching out for opportunities to serve. He had an enormous influence on my own spiritual life."\n Former President George H.W. Bush called Graham "America's pastor" and said he was a mentor to several of his children, including former President George W. Bush.\n "His faith in Christ and his totally honest evangelical spirit inspired people across the country and around the world. I think Billy touched the hearts of not only Christians, but people of all faiths, because he was such a good man," the elder Bush said in a statement\n Bush said he was "privileged" to count Graham as a "personal friend."\n "He would come to Maine to visit with Barbara and me, and he was a great sport. He loved going really fast in my boat. I guess you could say we had that in common. Then we would come home and talk about life."\n Russell Moore, the president of the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, said on Twitter that Graham was "the most important evangelist since the Apostle Paul."\n "He preached Christ, not himself, not politics, not prosperity," Moore said, adding that Graham also "carried unimpeachable personal integrity."\n\n "RIP Billy Graham, a good and faithful servant. He fought the good fight, finished the race, and kept the faith," US Rep. Ron DeSantis, who represents Florida's 6th District, said on Twitter.\n Televangelist Joel Osteen told CNN that Graham was his hero, and said the best way to honor him is for Christians to continue what he started.\n "Preaching good news and letting people know about Christ and the love and respect that we can show one another. I think it's to continue on in that passion. He took great steps of faith. He paved the way for young ministers like myself."\n\n\n The creation of a ministry\n\n\n Graham built his ministry by bringing the gospel message of tent-revival preachers into the modern media age, using any tool at his disposal -- from telegrams to telephones to satellites and the Internet -- to "win souls for Christ."\n In doing so, Graham formed a bridge between the itinerant preachers like Dwight Moody and Billy Sunday who once crisscrossed the country in search of lost souls and contemporary Christian pastors like Joel Osteen, Rick Warren and T.D. Jakes. \n "He saw himself as using new media to deliver a very old message," said Randall Balmer, an expert on American religious history at Dartmouth College. \n That message, as Graham said during thousands of altar calls, was that salvation is offered to one and all, black and white, rich and poor, men and women, sinners and saints, so long as they believed in Jesus.\n\n\n Crusades and cathedrals\n\n Avoiding the types of public scandals that befell other prominent preachers was key to Graham's long-running success, said Martin.\n In 1948, at the beginning of his rise to fame, Graham and his tight circle of traveling evangelists gathered in California and catalogued the sins that had destroyed the careers of other Christian preachers. Money, sexual temptation and hubris topped the list. \n Their pledge to avoid all three came to be known as the "Modesto Manifesto" and was later adopted by other ministers looking to avoid public disgrace. \n In return for his scandal-free life, Americans regularly put Graham at the top of "most-admired" people polls. In 2013, he tied for fourth among most-admired men with former President Bill Clinton. It was his record-setting 57th appearance in the top 10, according to Gallup. \n "In my favorite poll, I believe it was the Ladies' Home Journal, he was chosen second only to God in achievements in religion," Martin said.\n\n Missionary work\n\n\n Graham began his missionary work in 1944 by speaking at rallies for the Youth for Christ Campus Life ministry. \n Five years later, he branched out on his own, holding a tent crusade in downtown Los Angeles. Originally scheduled for three weeks, the crusade drew such large crowds that it was extended to seven; a radio disc jockey, a small-time mobster and an Olympic athlete were among those who accepted his altar call under the "Canvas Cathedral." \n The next year, Graham founded the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. \n The crusades, which soon became the signature feature of his global ministry, frequently blended well-known hymns, preaching and patriotic displays. \n "His sermons contained just the right mix of patriotism and reproof," said Molly Worthen, a religious historian at the University of North Carolina. "He urged Americans to stand strong against 'godless communism' but also criticized American hubris."\n Graham told an audience in Charlotte in 1958 that, "We have an idea that we Americans are God's chosen people, that God loves us more than any other people, and that we are God's blessed. I tell you that God doesn't love us any more than he does the Russians."\n Graham's crusades mobilized hundreds of volunteers not just from his own evangelical movement but also from liberal Protestant congregations and Catholic parishes.\n His inclusive message -- he said that theological differences were less important than Christian comity -- angered some fundamentalists, who fulminated when he shared the stage with Catholic or liberal Protestant ministers. \n\n\n The traveling messenger\n\n Graham was seldom still, holding crusades in more than 80 countries, according to Martin, often for weeks and months at a time. He missed the birth of his first daughter, Virginia, because he was away on a preaching trip, the biographer said. At other times, he failed to recognize his own children because he had been away from home so long. \n Graham led a 12-week crusade in London in 1954 and a 16-week revival in New York in 1957, which drew tens of thousands to Madison Square Garden. \n At the time, Graham praised New York's religious diversity, saying, "Almost every religion you can think of in the whole world is represented." His "last crusade" in June 2005 in Queens, New York, drew a total of 230,000 people.\n In addition to his traveling crusades, Graham hosted a weekly Sunday radio program called "The Hour of Decision" and wrote an advice column, "My Answer," that was distributed by Tribune Media Services. In 1956, he founded the magazine Christianity Today, a leading publication among evangelicals. \n\n Presidents and critics\n\n William Franklin Graham Jr. was born November 7, 1918, and raised on a dairy farm near Charlotte, North Carolina. He said he made a personal commitment to God in 1934 after hearing an evangelist preach in the Southern city.\n He graduated in 1940 from the Florida Bible Institute, now Trinity College, with a bachelor's degree in theology. Graham was ordained that year by a Southern Baptist church in Florida. A few years later, he took over a Chicago radio program, "Songs in the Night."\n While in Florida, Graham met relatives of V. Raymond Edman, president of Wheaton College in Wheaton, Illinois. After they told Edman how impressed they were with Graham's preaching ability, Edman arranged for him to attend Wheaton. \n Graham graduated in 1943 with a bachelor's degree in anthropology. \n At Wheaton, he met fellow student Ruth Bell, his future wife. She was the daughter of the Southern Presbyterian missionary and surgeon L. Nelson Bell, and Ruth had spent her childhood in China and Korea. \n The couple married in 1943 and moved to Montreat, North Carolina, two years later. They had five children: Virginia Leftwich, Anne Morrow, Ruth Bell, William Franklin III and Nelson Edman.\n Graham was said to have enjoyed the recognition that came with providing counsel to several U.S. presidents, and he also became a de facto chaplain to Washington's elite. \n Graham urged Dwight Eisenhower to run for president in 1952 and served as an unofficial adviser to the former general after he was elected. He also became close friends with President Lyndon Johnson and preached at the former president's funeral. President George W. Bush credits Graham with helping him change from a lukewarm Christian with a fondness for beer to a serious and committed evangelical. \n\n Critics accused Graham of becoming too involved with politics.\n His association with President Richard Nixon led to embarrassment in March 2002, when tapes of private conversations between Nixon and Graham revealed the evangelist joining the president in making anti-Semitic remarks. Graham apologized. \n "After Watergate, Graham understood that he had been used to support Nixon and his policies when the White House was more interested in his support than his love," said Martin, the biographer. \n Some critics also charge that Graham was not active enough during the civil rights movement. \n But during at least two crusades in the early 1950s in Tennessee and Mississippi, Graham literally removed the racial barrier -- taking down the ropes that separated blacks and whites -- according to Martin and Cliff Barrows, Graham's longtime music and program director for the Evangelistic Association. \n "Billy himself went and took the rope down and said, 'We don't have segregated meetings, whatever their reason for segregating them. They can sit wherever they want to.' And he took a stand for his belief that every man is equal before Christ and the gospel was for everyone."\n At his Madison Square Garden crusade, Graham asked the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to deliver a prayer. Although Graham preached that racial segregation was unbiblical, he was criticized by some civil rights leaders for not being more involved in the movement. \n A week after the deadly bombing of a church in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963, Graham told fellow evangelicals: "We should have been leading the way to racial justice but we failed. Let's confess it, let's admit it, and let's do something about it." \n\n Among the honors bestowed on Graham were the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian award, in 1983; the Congressional Gold Medal in 1996; and an honorary knighthood from Britain for his contribution to civic and religious life.\n Former Presidents Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush and Jimmy Carter were on hand for the dedication of the Billy Graham Library in Charlotte in June 2007. \n In addition, the Billy Graham Center on the campus of Wheaton College has an archive, museum and library dedicated to the study of evangelism, as well as an Institute of Evangelism and other efforts aimed at promoting evangelistic work throughout the world.\n\n The love of his life\n\n In 2005, Graham opened up to CNN about his wife, Ruth. "I don't think I could have ever married anybody that would have been more helpful to my work and ministry than she has been," he told Larry King.\n She died in 2007 at the couple's home in Montreat.\n "Ruth was my life partner, and we were called by God as a team," Graham said in her obituary. "No one else could have borne the load that she carried."\n Ruth Graham was buried at the foot of a cross-shaped walkway in the Prayer Garden on the grounds of the Billy Graham Library. The couple had agreed that they would be buried side by side.\n Asked what he'd like people to say about him when he died, Graham said, "I want to hear one person say something nice about me and that's the Lord, when I face him. I want him to say to me, 'Well done, thou good and faithful servant.'\n\n --KEYWORD TAGS--\nBILLY GRAHAM REVEREND EVANGELICAL RELIGION CHURCH\n\n
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: ROSKILDE FESTIVAL
TAPE_NUMBER: EN9927 IN_TIME: 11:19:13 LENGTH: 04:38 SOURCES: APTN/STV TELEVISION MATERIAL/NUDE RECORDS RESTRICTIONS: No re-use/re-sale of film/video clips without clearance, No access Internet, Music/performance rights must be cleared. FEED: SCRIPT: xfa Story: Roskilde Festival Location: Denmark Date: 1-4 July 1999 Dur: 4:38 Europe's season of open air rock concerts is well and truly under way and this last weekend it was the turn of Denmark to provide four mammoth days of eclectic rock and roll. The festival, now in its 29th year, kicked off on Thursday, July 1, and ran through to Sunday, July 4. Day one gave the chance for the thousands of eager rock fans to choose between STEREOPHONICS, BARENAKED LADIES, MARILYN MANSON, METALLICA, MANIC STREET PREACHERS and SUEDE. In total 170 different acts were involved in the four day musical jamboree with groups divided up between seven different arenas, including two tech areas for those with a less then deep appreciation of old fashioned rock. Brit-Pop originals SUEDE made the highly unusual decision to play three separate venues on three consequetive days. Apparently the lads really like Roskilde, especially its non- profit making policy and that special party atmosphere you only get in Scandanavian countries. Suede, currently riding high after the release of their latest album HEAD MUSIC, the fourth album by the band who in the 1990s were credited with reviving British music and opening the door for the likes of OASIS and BLUR. The band who were once memorably described by a British Music paper as 'The Best New Band in Britain' are BRETT ANDERSON (voice), RICHARD OAKES (guitar), MAT OSMAN (bass), SIMON GILBERT (drums) and NEIL CODLING (keyboards). Cynics thought the band would not survive the departure of one of their early members BERNARD BUTLER, who was also a major influence on their music. With characteristic resource the band however recruited a 17-year-old guitarist Richard Oakes from Poole in Dorset. Like Bulter before him Oakes big break with one of the hottest bands in Britain came because he answered an ad in the music press. The group's last LP 'COMING UP' gained 5 UK TopTen hits, selling 1 point 5 million copies worldwide. The festival also drew some celebrities in the audience. LENE NYSTR?M and REN? DIF from europopsters AQUA dropped by just to enjoy the music. Cuban ALBITA had to cancel due to illness, and now their entire European tour has been cancelled. Albita's slot in Roskilde was filled by Columbian/Cuban ALFREDO DE LA FØ, one of Central America's legendary salsa star. Other highlights from the festival include on Friday, by far the popiest day of the event, a line-up that took in ROBBIE WILLIAMS, PLACEBO, FAITHLESS, SKUNK ANANSIE, REM, ORBITAL and THE DIVINE COMEDY. REM are currently in the midst of their first major tour of Europe in years and taking in much of the festival circuit. Williams continues his seemingly unstoppable march from has-been ex-boy band singer to one of Europe's biggest and most critic credible pop stars. Other stars of the weekend included BASEMENT JAXX, ECHO AND THE BUNNYMEN, BLONDIE, CULTURE CLUB, BLUR and MERCURY REV. SHOTLIST: ROSKILDE ENTRANCE SIGN ; GVS PEOPLE ARRIVING ; GVS CAMPS ; PAN QUEUE FOR TOILET ; B-ROLL WOMEN WASHING HAIR ; SOT LEIF SKOV, FESTIVAL MANAGER ; B-ROLL AQUA SINGERS LENE NYSTR?M AND REN? DIF SIGNING AUTOGRAPHS (WHO ARE NOT PLAYING BUT TURNED UP TO WATCH MUSIC) ; SOT AQUA SINGERS LENE NYSTR?M AND REN? DIF ; FESTIVALGOERS SIT AROUND AND SING ; WS TENT ; SOT AUDIENCE MEMBER ; SUEDE PERFORMANCE ; SOT BRETT ANDERSON ; SUEDE PERFORM 'TRASH' ; SOT ANDERSON ; CLIP VIDEO 'SHE'S IN FASHION' ; SOT ANDERSON ; PERFORMANCE STAGE ?
Members of religious group listening to music
WGN - Chicago, IL, U.S. - Members of religious group listening to music. Members of “The Last Reformation” group hosted what they call “Big Tent Revival” meetings, which were large religious events, at the Methodist Campground amid the COVID-19 pandemic in Des Plaines, Illinois. This left wider community wondering how they got permission to hold the meetings and it’s proving to be a bit of a mystery. On Monday, July 27, 2020.
Mongolia Bishop - Filipino priest becomes Mongolia's first Roman Catholic bishop
TAPE: EF03/0797 IN_TIME: 03:15:49 DURATION: 3:39 SOURCES: APTN RESTRICTIONS: DATELINE: Ulan Bator, 29/30 Aug 2003 SHOTLIST: August 29, 2003 1. Ordination ceremony of Wenceslaw Padilla 2. Padilla sitting waiting to be ordained 3. Close up Padilla 4. Members of Mongolian Catholic community at the ceremony 5. Mongolian women 6. Wide ceremony 7. Medium senior Roman Catholic clergy representatives at the ceremony 8. Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe leading the ceremony 9. Padilla taking his vows 10. Faithful in church 11. Padilla kneeling 12. Close Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe giving a ring to Bishop Wenceslaw Padilla 13. Cross on wall of church 14. Close Cardinal Crescezio Sepe placing hat of bishop on Wenceslaw's head 15. Faithful in church 16. Cardinal Crescezio Sepe giving specter (staff) to Wen 17. SOUNDBITE (English) Wenceslaw Padilla, Bishop of Ulan Bator, Roman Catholic Church: ""The people are very susceptible and receptive to what ever new that comes in. New things like fashion, but new ideas also, philosophies, ideologies and with this I think that we can do our work well and I hope the people don't find themselves cheated or deceived by what we can offer them." 18. Padilla giving holy communion to people 19. People queuing up 20. Buddhist nun congratulating Padilla 21. SOUNDBITE (English) Wenceslaw Padilla, Bishop of Ulan Bator, Roman Catholic Church: "Knowing for sure that Mongolia had a very long tradition on the communist regime or the Soviet regime, we just don't know if those ideologies and mentalities will come back stronger in the future." August 30, 2003 22. Wide exterior St Peter and Paul Cathedral in Ulan Bator 23. Priests in front of the cathedral 24. People walking into the cathedral 25. People getting into the cathedral 26. Children singing inside the cathedral 27. Ceiling of the cathedral 28. Nuns 29. Close shot old woman 30. Wide mass in the cathedral 31. Close woman 32. Senior Roman Catholic Church representatives leaving the cathedral 33. SOUNDBITE (English) Giovanni B. Morandini, Papal Nuncio and Vatican ambassador: "With wisdom, openness and personal freedom, they accept this challenge (Mongolian authorities). For them this is a big, big challenge. They give us the religious freedom, which for us is the fundamental. Where you have your religious freedom, you have all rights assured." 34. First mass performed by Bishop Wenceslaw Padilla at the St Peter and Paul Cathedral 35. Bishop Wenceslaw Padilla at mass 36. Wide exterior building of the St Peter and Paul Cathedral STORYLINE: A Filipino priest was installed as Mongolia's first Roman Catholic bishop, leading a Catholic community of less than 200 people in a largely Buddhist nation. Bishop Wenceslaw Padilla was ordained in a ceremony attended by about 1,000 people in the newly built cathedral, St Peter and Paul Cathedral, in Mongolia's capital Ulan Bator. The ceremony was led by Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe, head of the Vatican's missionary arm, and dozens of missionary priests wearing cream-coloured silk robes trimmed in red. Pope John Paul II had considered visiting Mongolia to personally ordain Padilla, but the Vatican dropped that plan last month. Bishop Padilla's work in Mongolia is regarded as important to Vatican missionary work in Asia. Mongolia, a sparsely populated land of 2.5 million people in the steppes of North Asia, has just 179 Roman Catholics. But the country has seen a surge in religious activity since communist rule ended in 1990. Catholic, Mormon and other missionaries have found a ready audience of believers, while Buddhist monks are reviving Mongolia's traditional religion. The mission that started the Catholic Church Mission in Mongolia, is C-I-C-M: an abbreviation of the Latin words meaning the Congregation of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. There are now 45 C-I-C-M missionaries, many of them from the Philippines, South Korea, Belgium, and Congo. Wenceslaw Selga Padilla, known in Mongolia as Wens, was born at Tubao, San Fernando de la Union, Philippines, Sept. 29, 1949. He became a priest in 1976 and after a missionary job in Taiwan, he was appointed Superior of the "Sui Iuris" Mission in Mongolia in 1992. He became Apostolic prefect 2002. The day after his ordination, the new St Peter and Paul Cathedral - a circular building in the shape of a traditional Mongol tent - had its consecration ceremony. Located in the eastern part of Ulan Bator, the cathedral building itself required 1.7 (M) million US dollars of investment, but more funds are needed to develop the site. The project was funded by individuals and Catholic organisations around the world. Historical findings show that Mongolia, in times of Khubilai Khan (Chinggis Khan's grandson), used to have Buddhist, Christian, and Muslim temples close to each other in the ancient capital Karakorum (today's Kharkhorin). While Catholic missions in the 19th century were able to establish the church in Inner Mongolia, today's Mongolia proper - called by the Chinese the 'Outer Mongolia' - received a few evangelical missions and churches in 1918 to early 1920s. Some of the Catholic churches still function in Inner Mongolia (part of them underground), but the evangelical groups in Mongolia proper, were destroyed by the Communists, and disappeared after 1924.
Religious concert taking place in large tent
WGN - Chicago, IL, U.S. - Religious concert taking place in large tent. Members of “The Last Reformation” group hosted what they call “Big Tent Revival” meetings, which were large religious events, at the Methodist Campground amid the COVID-19 pandemic in Des Plaines, Illinois. This left wider community wondering how they got permission to hold the meetings and it’s proving to be a bit of a mystery. On Monday, July 27, 2020.
BILLY GRAHAM LAYS IN HONOR AT THE US CAPITOL 1000 - SWITCHED
1000 BILLY GRAHAM CAPITOL SW FS1 79 CSPAN POOL Rev. Billy Graham the evangelist known as "America's Pastor" - lies in honor in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda starting today. The Capitol service, which will include remarks and the laying of wreaths by President Donald Trump and congressional leadership, will begin at 11 a.m. ET (10 a.m. CT). The Rotunda will be open to the public at 1 p.m. ET (noon CT). Graham died last week at the age of 99. He is only the fourth civilian to lie in honor in the Rotunda. INCLUDES OUTSIDE AND INSIDE OF THE EVENT THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY attend the arrival ceremony preceding the lying in honor of the Reverend Billy Graham DC SLUG: 1000 BILLY GRAHAM CAPITOL SW FS2 79 AR: 16x9 WASH-3 11:21:46 TRUMP: Thank you, Speaker Ryan and Leader McConnell. And most importantly, thank you to the entire Graham family for honoring us with your presence here today. Thank you. In the spring of 1934, Billy Graham's father allowed a group of Charlotte businessmen to use a portion of the family's dairy farm to gather for a day of prayer. On that day, the men prayed for the city. They prayed that out of Charlotte the Lord would raise up someone to preach the Gospel to the ends of the Earth. We are here today more than 80 years later because that prayer was truly answered. 11:22:46 TRUMP: Billy Graham was 15 years old at the time. Just a few months later he accepted Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior. That choice didn't just change Billy's life, it changed our lives. It changed our country and it changed, in fact, the entire world. The North Carolina farm boy walked out of those fields into a great and beautiful history. Starting at a small Bible school in Florida, he soon led a nationwide revival, from a large tent in Los Angeles, to 100,000 people in a single day at Yankee Stadium, to more than 2 million people at Madison Square Garden over 16 weeks in 1957. And I remember that, because my father said to me, "Come on son," and by the way, he said, "Come on, Mom. Let's go see Billy Graham at Yankee Stadium." And it was something very special. But Americans came in droves to hear that great, young preacher. Fred Trump was a big fan. Fred Trump was my father. In London, Tokyo, Seoul, Bogota, Moscow, New Delhi, Saigon, Johannesburg and scores of other places all over the world, Reverend Graham shared the power of God's word with more than 200 million people in person, and countless others through television and radio, where people loved to watch and listen. In 1978, with the support of the Catholic bishop would soon become Pope John Paul II, Reverend Graham went to Poland and spoke of the meaning of the cross to a people suffering under the soulless oppression of communism. 11:25:10 Billy Graham carried his message around the world, but his heart, as Franklin will tell you, was always in America. He took his message to the poorest places, to the downtrodden and to the brokenhearted, to inmates in prison, and to the overlooked and the neglected. He felt a great passion for those that were neglected. Everywhere he went, Reverend Graham delivered the same beautiful message: God loves you. That was his message: God loves you. We can only imagine the number of lives touched by the preaching and the prayers of Billy Graham; the hearts he changed, the sorrows he eased, and the joy he brought to so many. The testimony is endless. Today, we give thanks for this extraordinary life. And it's very fitting that we do so right here in the Rotunda of the United States Capitol, where the memory of the American people is enshrined. Here in this room, we are reminded that America is a nation sustained by prayer. The painting to my left is of the Pilgrims as they embark for America, holding fast to the Bible, and bowing their heads in prayer. 11:26:59 Along these walls, we see the faces of Americans who prayed as they stood on the Lexington Green, who prayed as they headed west, prayed as they headed into battle, and prayed as they marched for justice, and always marched for victory. TRUMP: Around us stand the statues of heroes who led the nation in prayer during the great and difficult times, from Washington to Lincoln to Eisenhower to King. And today, in the center of this great chamber, lies legendary Billy Graham, an ambassador for Christ who reminded the world of the power of prayer and the gift of God's grace. 11:27:54 Today, we honor him as only three private citizens before him have been so honored. And like the faithful of Charlotte once did, today we say a prayer for our country that all across this land the Lord will raise up men and women like Billy Graham to spread a message of love and hope to every precious child of God. TRUMP: Thank you. God bless you, and God bless America. Thank you very much. (MUSIC)
BILLY GRAHAM LAYS IN HONOR AT THE US CAPITOL 1000 - CUTS
1000 BILLY GRAHAM CAPITOL CUTS FS4 82 CSPAN POOL Rev. Billy Graham the evangelist known as "America's Pastor" - lies in honor in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda starting today. The Capitol service, which will include remarks and the laying of wreaths by President Donald Trump and congressional leadership, will begin at 11 a.m. ET (10 a.m. CT). The Rotunda will be open to the public at 1 p.m. ET (noon CT). Graham died last week at the age of 99. He is only the fourth civilian to lie in honor in the Rotunda. 10:31:35:34 NANCY PELOSI 10:41:15:28 SENATORS ROY BLUNT, ORRIN HATCH, LAMAR ALEXANDER 10:58:34:21 VP MIKE PENCE, KAREN PENCE, PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP AND FIRST LADY MELANIA TURMP WALK IN. WS 11:09:08:08 TS SENATOR JOHN CORNYN, CHUCK SCHUMER, AND OTHERS 11:10:39:12 CASKET ARRIVES WS OF TRUMP REMARKS THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY attend the arrival ceremony preceding the lying in honor of the Reverend Billy Graham AR: 16x9 11:21:46 TRUMP: Thank you, Speaker Ryan and Leader McConnell. And most importantly, thank you to the entire Graham family for honoring us with your presence here today. Thank you. In the spring of 1934, Billy Graham's father allowed a group of Charlotte businessmen to use a portion of the family's dairy farm to gather for a day of prayer. On that day, the men prayed for the city. They prayed that out of Charlotte the Lord would raise up someone to preach the Gospel to the ends of the Earth. We are here today more than 80 years later because that prayer was truly answered. 11:22:46 TRUMP: Billy Graham was 15 years old at the time. Just a few months later he accepted Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior. That choice didn't just change Billy's life, it changed our lives. It changed our country and it changed, in fact, the entire world. The North Carolina farm boy walked out of those fields into a great and beautiful history. Starting at a small Bible school in Florida, he soon led a nationwide revival, from a large tent in Los Angeles, to 100,000 people in a single day at Yankee Stadium, to more than 2 million people at Madison Square Garden over 16 weeks in 1957. And I remember that, because my father said to me, "Come on son," and by the way, he said, "Come on, Mom. Let's go see Billy Graham at Yankee Stadium." And it was something very special. But Americans came in droves to hear that great, young preacher. Fred Trump was a big fan. Fred Trump was my father. In London, Tokyo, Seoul, Bogota, Moscow, New Delhi, Saigon, Johannesburg and scores of other places all over the world, Reverend Graham shared the power of God's word with more than 200 million people in person, and countless others through television and radio, where people loved to watch and listen. In 1978, with the support of the Catholic bishop would soon become Pope John Paul II, Reverend Graham went to Poland and spoke of the meaning of the cross to a people suffering under the soulless oppression of communism. 11:25:10 Billy Graham carried his message around the world, but his heart, as Franklin will tell you, was always in America. He took his message to the poorest places, to the downtrodden and to the brokenhearted, to inmates in prison, and to the overlooked and the neglected. He felt a great passion for those that were neglected. Everywhere he went, Reverend Graham delivered the same beautiful message: God loves you. That was his message: God loves you. We can only imagine the number of lives touched by the preaching and the prayers of Billy Graham; the hearts he changed, the sorrows he eased, and the joy he brought to so many. The testimony is endless. Today, we give thanks for this extraordinary life. And it's very fitting that we do so right here in the Rotunda of the United States Capitol, where the memory of the American people is enshrined. Here in this room, we are reminded that America is a nation sustained by prayer. The painting to my left is of the Pilgrims as they embark for America, holding fast to the Bible, and bowing their heads in prayer. 11:26:59 Along these walls, we see the faces of Americans who prayed as they stood on the Lexington Green, who prayed as they headed west, prayed as they headed into battle, and prayed as they marched for justice, and always marched for victory. TRUMP: Around us stand the statues of heroes who led the nation in prayer during the great and difficult times, from Washington to Lincoln to Eisenhower to King. And today, in the center of this great chamber, lies legendary Billy Graham, an ambassador for Christ who reminded the world of the power of prayer and the gift of God's grace. 11:27:54 Today, we honor him as only three private citizens before him have been so honored. And like the faithful of Charlotte once did, today we say a prayer for our country that all across this land the Lord will raise up men and women like Billy Graham to spread a message of love and hope to every precious child of God. TRUMP: Thank you. God bless you, and God bless America. Thank you very much. (MUSIC) 11:31:28:24 WS OF MITCH MCCONNELL, PAUL RYAN, KAREN PENCE AND VICE PRESIDENT MIKE PENCE 11:34:00:26 DONALD TRUMP AND MELANIA TURMP AT THE WREATH - WS
Exterior of Civic Center of City of Des Plaines
WGN - Chicago, IL, U.S. - Exterior of Civic Center of City of Des Plaines. Members of “The Last Reformation” group hosted what they call “Big Tent Revival” meetings, which were large religious events, at the Methodist Campground amid the COVID-19 pandemic in Des Plaines, Illinois. This left wider community wondering how they got permission to hold the meetings and it’s proving to be a bit of a mystery. On Monday, July 27, 2020.
BILLY GRAHAM LAYS IN HONOR AT THE US CAPITOL 1115 - STIX 2 TRUMP REMARKS HEADON
1115 BILLY GRAHAM CAPITOL STIX2 FS3 81 CSPAN POOL NOTE: FEED BEGAN LATE FROM CSPAN. NO HEADON TS OF MCCONNELL REMARKS - SEE SWITCHED FEED MCCONNELL REMARKS BEGIN AT 11:14, FEED BEGINS AT 11:17 Rev. Billy Graham the evangelist known as "America's Pastor" - lies in honor in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda starting today. The Capitol service, which will include remarks and the laying of wreaths by President Donald Trump and congressional leadership, will begin at 11 a.m. ET (10 a.m. CT). The Rotunda will be open to the public at 1 p.m. ET (noon CT). Graham died last week at the age of 99. He is only the fourth civilian to lie in honor in the Rotunda. THE PRESIDENT and THE FIRST LADY attend the arrival ceremony preceding the lying in honor of the Reverend Billy Graham HEADON ISO AR: 16x9 WASH-3 11:21:46 TRUMP: Thank you, Speaker Ryan and Leader McConnell. And most importantly, thank you to the entire Graham family for honoring us with your presence here today. Thank you. In the spring of 1934, Billy Graham's father allowed a group of Charlotte businessmen to use a portion of the family's dairy farm to gather for a day of prayer. On that day, the men prayed for the city. They prayed that out of Charlotte the Lord would raise up someone to preach the Gospel to the ends of the Earth. We are here today more than 80 years later because that prayer was truly answered. 11:22:46 TRUMP: Billy Graham was 15 years old at the time. Just a few months later he accepted Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior. That choice didn't just change Billy's life, it changed our lives. It changed our country and it changed, in fact, the entire world. The North Carolina farm boy walked out of those fields into a great and beautiful history. Starting at a small Bible school in Florida, he soon led a nationwide revival, from a large tent in Los Angeles, to 100,000 people in a single day at Yankee Stadium, to more than 2 million people at Madison Square Garden over 16 weeks in 1957. And I remember that, because my father said to me, "Come on son," and by the way, he said, "Come on, Mom. Let's go see Billy Graham at Yankee Stadium." And it was something very special. But Americans came in droves to hear that great, young preacher. Fred Trump was a big fan. Fred Trump was my father. In London, Tokyo, Seoul, Bogota, Moscow, New Delhi, Saigon, Johannesburg and scores of other places all over the world, Reverend Graham shared the power of God's word with more than 200 million people in person, and countless others through television and radio, where people loved to watch and listen. In 1978, with the support of the Catholic bishop would soon become Pope John Paul II, Reverend Graham went to Poland and spoke of the meaning of the cross to a people suffering under the soulless oppression of communism. 11:25:10 Billy Graham carried his message around the world, but his heart, as Franklin will tell you, was always in America. He took his message to the poorest places, to the downtrodden and to the brokenhearted, to inmates in prison, and to the overlooked and the neglected. He felt a great passion for those that were neglected. Everywhere he went, Reverend Graham delivered the same beautiful message: God loves you. That was his message: God loves you. We can only imagine the number of lives touched by the preaching and the prayers of Billy Graham; the hearts he changed, the sorrows he eased, and the joy he brought to so many. The testimony is endless. Today, we give thanks for this extraordinary life. And it's very fitting that we do so right here in the Rotunda of the United States Capitol, where the memory of the American people is enshrined. Here in this room, we are reminded that America is a nation sustained by prayer. The painting to my left is of the Pilgrims as they embark for America, holding fast to the Bible, and bowing their heads in prayer. 11:26:59 Along these walls, we see the faces of Americans who prayed as they stood on the Lexington Green, who prayed as they headed west, prayed as they headed into battle, and prayed as they marched for justice, and always marched for victory. TRUMP: Around us stand the statues of heroes who led the nation in prayer during the great and difficult times, from Washington to Lincoln to Eisenhower to King. And today, in the center of this great chamber, lies legendary Billy Graham, an ambassador for Christ who reminded the world of the power of prayer and the gift of God's grace. 11:27:54 Today, we honor him as only three private citizens before him have been so honored. And like the faithful of Charlotte once did, today we say a prayer for our country that all across this land the Lord will raise up men and women like Billy Graham to spread a message of love and hope to every precious child of God. TRUMP: Thank you. God bless you, and God bless America. Thank you very much. (MUSIC)
Various crowd shots at festival (Lattitude Festival at Henham Park, Suffolk, England)
Various crowd shots at festival (Lattitude Festival at Henham Park, Suffolk, England)
US UK McQueen 2 - WRAP Models, designers, celebrities pay tribute to British designer
NAME: US UK MCQ 2 20100212I TAPE: EF10/0136 IN_TIME: 10:48:47:13 DURATION: 00:03:37:15 SOURCES: AP TELEVISION DATELINE: Various - 11/12 Feb 2010/File RESTRICTIONS: SHOTLIST: New York, US - 11 February 2010 1. Pan from road to venue for New York Fashion Week 2. Close up of model Heidi Klum speaking to reporters 3. SOUNDBITE (English) Heidi Klum, Model, TV personality: "It''s really, it''s very unfortunate, I mean what a truly amazing person and so out there and so full of ideas, how to dress us all, it''s very, very sad." 4. Tilt up of actress Kristin Chenoweth twirls on carpet 5. SOUNDBITE (English) Kristin Chenoweth, Actress: "I think it''s a gentle reminder for all of us that even when we have our own loss in our life, that we can continue and I think he must have been in a spot where he felt he couldn''t and that makes me sad because the world has lost this amazing talent. But, I just, my heart goes out to his family." 6. Zoom out from designer and TV personality Kimora Lee Simons speaking to reporters 7. SOUNDBITE (English) Kimora Lee Simons, designer and TV personality: "He is a great, a wonderful, original talent, a really creative person. He does things that I will only dream to do one day." London, UK - 11 February 2010 8. Wide of cinema 9. Mid of actor Ashton Kutcher 10. SOUNDBITE (English) Ashton Kutcher, Actor: "It''s a huge loss for the fashion industry as a whole and my heart goes out to his friends and colleagues, it''s tough. I didn''t know him personally. It''s a tough loss for the industry " 11. SOUNDBITE (English) Jessica Alba, Actress: "A huge fan, he''s amazing and it''s, it''s very, very sad. And I feel for his family." 12. Wide of Kutcher on red carpet New York, US - 11 February 2010 13. SOUNDBITE (English) Nadia Masri, Editor-in-Chief, fashionvisionboardgirl.com: "Also, I know March 7, it''s close, about a month away from marking the anniversary of the suicide of Isabella Blow and that''s basically the woman that took him from his graduate show and basically plucked him out and said this is gonna be the next big designer." London, UK - 12 February 2010 14. Wide tilt down exterior of home of Alexander McQueen 15. Various of doorway with floral tributes 16. Tilt down exterior Alexander McQueen store in Old Bond Street 17. Close up of various floral tributes inside shop 18. Various exterior Selfridges department store 19. Various of interior and signs for McQueen concession at Selfridges 20. Various of McQueen designs on sale in store 21. SOUNDBITE (English) Anne Pitcher, Buying and Merchandising Director and Selfridges: "He won''t disappear, he''ll be with us forever. And you know the reaction we''ve seen today and yesterday from our customers who want to buy a little piece of McQueen I think is testament to exactly that, a memory or a momento of his ability and his creativity." FILE: Paris, January 16 2000 22. Various of Givenchy catwalk show 23. Alexander McQueen takes bow STORYLINE: Stars at New York Fashion Week and celebrities in London have paid tribute to British fashion designer Alexander McQueen who was found dead at his home on Thursday. McQueen''s death came days after he posted anguished online remarks about the death of his mother. He was 40. The circumstances pointed to a possible suicide, but there was no confirmation from police or McQueen''s publicists. Authorities said the death was not suspicious, apparently ruling out foul play. They did not indicate how McQueen was discovered. McQueen''s mother died on February 2. Some fashion experts speculated that his mood may have also been clouded by pressure to outdo himself again next month at his catwalk show in Paris. Nadia Masri, Editor-in-Chief of fashionvisionboardgirl.com, said he a close relationship with his mother, but added that the anniversary of the death of a close friend Isabella Blow was approaching. Masri said Blow took McQueen "from his graduate show and basically plucked him out and said this is gonna be the next big designer." News of his death broke at the start of New York Fashion Week and sent shock waves through the Bryant Park tents. A presentation of McQueen''s secondary label, McQ, had been scheduled for later on Thursday, but it was quickly cancelled. Model Heidi Klum called McQueen "a truly amazing person," adding that his death was, "very, very sad." Designer Pamella Roland agreed, saying that he was, "going to be very, very missed." Another designer, Kimora Simmons, said the fashion industry had lost a true original. McQueen helped spark a renaissance in London fashion, helping to revive it after the long-dormant period that followed the punk explosion in the 1970s. He was also responsible for one of history''s most famous "wardrobe malfunctions." He designed Janet Jackson''s Super Bowl outfit, which fell open while she was singing, revealing one of her breasts. In the usually glad-handing fashion world, McQueen was known as a private man who shunned the limelight. He turned down most interview requests and did not cultivate a cult of personality or try do develop an air of mystery about his work. McQueen was the youngest of six children born to a taxi driver and a teacher. He received his early fashion training at the Central St. Martin''s College of Art and Design, long recognised for its fashion-forward approach and encouragement of Britain''s talented young designers. He learned the finer points of traditional men''s tailoring at two famous, conservative Savile Row houses: Anderson and Sheppard, and Gieves and Hawkes. After his Savile Row stint, McQueen started to develop his trademark, more theatrical designs, working with several other brands before first starting his own label in 1992. He quickly earned a reputation for innovation. The company he founded was purchased by the Gucci Group, and he retained creative control of his own brand. There were plans for stores in Paris, Milan and London, as well as Manhattan and San Francisco. His runway shows were always a highlight during the Paris ready-to-wear fashion week. One of his previous collections included a show built around the concept of recycling, with models donning extravagant headwear made out of trash. His last collection, shown in October in Paris, featured elaborate and highly structured cocktail dresses. Critics raved. He was named British Fashion Designer of the Year four times, and was recognised by Queen Elizabeth II in 2003, when she made him a Commander of the British Empire for his fashion leadership. Meanwhile, McQueen''s London store closed its doors out of respect for the iconic fashion designer and floral tributes were left outside his store on Old Bond Street and the shop''s flag was flying at half mast. However, McQueen''s creations are still being sold in U.K. department store Selfridges. Anne Pitcher, Buying and Merchandising Director of Selfridges, said McQueen''s fans have rushed to buy his designs. "You know the reaction we''ve seen today and yesterday from our customers who want to buy a little piece of McQueen I think is testament to exactly that, a memory or a momento of his memorability and his creativity," she said.
WS View of crowd and tents at music festival, castle in background / Knebworth, Hertfordshire, UK
EDWARDS RALLY / HUCKABEE MEDIA AVAIL
[EDWARDS RALLY / HUCKABEE MEDIA AVAIL] [EDWARDS RALLY] [MANCHESTER, NH USA] FTG OF PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER SENATOR JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC) RALLY AT TOWER MILLS IN MANCHESTER, NEW HAMPSHIRE / FTG OF REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER ARKANSAS GOVERNOR MIKE HUCKABEE MEDIA AVAILABILITY IN NEW HAMPSHIRE Huckabee Press Availability this morning. Verbate from Kevin Chupka: You heard me say it about a dozen times this week - to get first place was a seismic event on the political Richter scale and I still believe that - probably believe it now more than ever - and it wasn't even close. All the latest polls showed we would be either dead even or ya know within 6, but ya know to win by 9 was pretty amazing. Q: can you tell us a little about the moment when you were told A: yeah, let me tell you about that moment we were told. We went to Waterloo so I could speak at one of the caucuses so we were in a chartered plane. we got there and we couldn't get to the event because there was so much traffic trying to get there we were stuck in traffic.we had no special patter or no escort.just stuck with everybody else. So we were 40 min late getting in there and we were really worried that we weren't gonna get back to des moines. We finally got out of the car and walked about 2 blocks just to get in the building. I walked in and they were introducing me so I went ahead and they only gave us a few minutes to speak, got back on the plane and everything was basically happening while we were in the air from waterloo back to des moines so I'm the last guy in the whole America to know that we had won the caucus. We landed and out blackberries just started lightin up. Ya know 20 messages on the blackberry and I'm lookin down there and I'm saying "cnn just called it for ay, fox news just called it, ap has just called it and I'm thinking ya know we got a pretty good consensus goin here and everybody on our whole team and staff knew it before I did. I didn't know it til we were landing in des moines. Mrs Huck: this is a picture of us lookin at our blackberries Q:are you going to compete in NH? (video unusable until he starts talking about dick morris) A: I mean we'll compete for sure - I think it would be a little bold to say we're gonna win NH - probably not, although crazier things could happen - I mean in the short period of time the likelihood is that mccain will win - he's had a long standing organization there and that makes sense but I mean we're not lookin at NH, we're lookin at tonight we're savoring the moment - every now and then you get one of those special desserts in life you just wanna inhale every last bit of it - for me I cant remember any time in my political life that is equal to this except in 1993 when I won lt gov and it was a breakthrough type election like this where nobody thought I could win - incredibly overwhelmed by money and odds nobody believed it was gonna happen and I remember dick morris sat there in the old Camelot motel scratching out numbers and about 830 he looks up and he says 'well, you're gonna win' and I said dick there's only 5% of the votes in how do you know that? He said I know the patterns , you'll win %51 %49, it'll be a tight but you'll win and by 10:00 the results were in and that's exactly what happened to the letter. It was a pretty exciting. I remember that night and I wont bore you with all the details but when I went out on the stage to do the victory speech the place was just going nuts and there was this man in probably his late 60's and he was just bawling. And I went up to him afterwards and he was just crying and he said, 'I've been coming to the republican election nights for 25 years and this is the first time I've been to a victory party' - cuz republicans, we never won. And it was really a seminal moment to see a republican win a state-wide race and tonight it felt a lot like that - it was very emotional. I think it's a validation of not only what the campaign was about maybe the way that we did it. Q: has Romney called? A: not yet, and ya know it's not something I have an expectation of. Ya know it's a primary with a lot of people - its not like a two man race. I have had conversations with senator mccain and mayor Giuliani tonight - very gracious, very nice conversations they were very kind Q: mccain love fest - how does it change? A: ya know I don't think it will change. It's not like we don't realize we're competing for the same job but I think we also realize e it can be done in civil manner and we're both committed to that Q: biggest difference b/t you and mccain A: I wouldn't even venture at it - right now the difference is I won the Iowa caucus and I'm having a good time talking about it - that's the big difference Q: evangelicals - have to get beyond it in NH A: We're gonna have to go convert a lot of people in New Hampshire in the next five days. A big tent revival out on the grounds of the Concord state capitol - we'll get em all converted to the evangelical faith and then we'll win - how bout that? I mean we had a great support from the evangelicals, no doubt about it but if you look at the numbers there were a whole lot of people out there who weren't evangelicals voting for us. And it doesn't explain numbers in Michigan and Delaware and places like that - is that an important part of our coalition? Absolutely. Is it all the support we have? Of course not. And the numbers reflected that It was a good spread tonight - 34 to 25 I mean that's a good spread and I should have asked - how many of you would have bet your paycheck on that spread tonight - NOOOO Q: fundraising? A: I mean we saw our internet site pretty well light up tonight and uh, it didn't surprise us. I have a feeling that over the next several days our fundraising is going to hit into high gear, but you know a lot of people didn't understand that we may have had - we probably had as much cash on hand as some of those other campaigns so we feel like because we ran the campaign in a very frugally it gave us the chance not only for a victory but to have some gas in the tank to keep going - so we're not broke - couple million bucks in hand and uh - we're good to go Q: one thing you will really remember about tonight? A: I think for me it was when I was getting all those blackberry messages when I was coming in on the plane and I was trying to let it sink in that we were really gonna win this thing. Ya know it's one of those things you think 'wow it could happen' and I felt the momentum - I mean you guys were out there with us and I think you could sense the spirit of people - they weren't there just giving polite applause they were there packing these places, standing room only, several places we had more people that couldn't get into the room than got in -- same thing that I felt at the Iowa straw poll, just before that - that momentum you can just feel, but at the same time you don't want to be ridiculous and assume that maybe its happening to Romney and everybody else too and we were getting reports that it was happening in the other camps so we felt good that the direction our supporters were absolutely on fire to get out there and vote for us - but when those numbers started coming in I think it was hard for me to actually absorb it and say I'm gonna go stand on the stage in a little while and be a winner tonight Q: who were the bberry messages from? A: Mostly from our staff, but then I started getting them from friends all over the country - they were watching television - it was like 'congratulations', congratulations for what? And then I found out that we had won the caucus - woulda been nice to have been there to savor it when it happened, but we were trying to get out of waterloo
Camping ground at a music festival. Green field and forest. Aerial view
Multi colored tents and cars seen from above. Summer music festival - Woodstock in Poland
EDWARDS RALLY / HUCKABEE MEDIA AVAIL
[EDWARDS RALLY / HUCKABEE MEDIA AVAIL] [EDWARDS RALLY] [MANCHESTER, NH USA] FTG OF PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER SENATOR JOHN EDWARDS (D-NC) RALLY AT TOWER MILLS IN MANCHESTER, NEW HAMPSHIRE / FTG OF REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE FORMER ARKANSAS GOVERNOR MIKE HUCKABEE MEDIA AVAILABILITY IN NEW HAMPSHIRE Huckabee Press Availability this morning. Verbate from Kevin Chupka: You heard me say it about a dozen times this week - to get first place was a seismic event on the political Richter scale and I still believe that - probably believe it now more than ever - and it wasn't even close. All the latest polls showed we would be either dead even or ya know within 6, but ya know to win by 9 was pretty amazing. Q: can you tell us a little about the moment when you were told A: yeah, let me tell you about that moment we were told. We went to Waterloo so I could speak at one of the caucuses so we were in a chartered plane. we got there and we couldn't get to the event because there was so much traffic trying to get there we were stuck in traffic.we had no special patter or no escort.just stuck with everybody else. So we were 40 min late getting in there and we were really worried that we weren't gonna get back to des moines. We finally got out of the car and walked about 2 blocks just to get in the building. I walked in and they were introducing me so I went ahead and they only gave us a few minutes to speak, got back on the plane and everything was basically happening while we were in the air from waterloo back to des moines so I'm the last guy in the whole America to know that we had won the caucus. We landed and out blackberries just started lightin up. Ya know 20 messages on the blackberry and I'm lookin down there and I'm saying "cnn just called it for ay, fox news just called it, ap has just called it and I'm thinking ya know we got a pretty good consensus goin here and everybody on our whole team and staff knew it before I did. I didn't know it til we were landing in des moines. Mrs Huck: this is a picture of us lookin at our blackberries Q:are you going to compete in NH? (video unusable until he starts talking about dick morris) A: I mean we'll compete for sure - I think it would be a little bold to say we're gonna win NH - probably not, although crazier things could happen - I mean in the short period of time the likelihood is that mccain will win - he's had a long standing organization there and that makes sense but I mean we're not lookin at NH, we're lookin at tonight we're savoring the moment - every now and then you get one of those special desserts in life you just wanna inhale every last bit of it - for me I cant remember any time in my political life that is equal to this except in 1993 when I won lt gov and it was a breakthrough type election like this where nobody thought I could win - incredibly overwhelmed by money and odds nobody believed it was gonna happen and I remember dick morris sat there in the old Camelot motel scratching out numbers and about 830 he looks up and he says 'well, you're gonna win' and I said dick there's only 5% of the votes in how do you know that? He said I know the patterns , you'll win %51 %49, it'll be a tight but you'll win and by 10:00 the results were in and that's exactly what happened to the letter. It was a pretty exciting. I remember that night and I wont bore you with all the details but when I went out on the stage to do the victory speech the place was just going nuts and there was this man in probably his late 60's and he was just bawling. And I went up to him afterwards and he was just crying and he said, 'I've been coming to the republican election nights for 25 years and this is the first time I've been to a victory party' - cuz republicans, we never won. And it was really a seminal moment to see a republican win a state-wide race and tonight it felt a lot like that - it was very emotional. I think it's a validation of not only what the campaign was about maybe the way that we did it. Q: has Romney called? A: not yet, and ya know it's not something I have an expectation of. Ya know it's a primary with a lot of people - its not like a two man race. I have had conversations with senator mccain and mayor Giuliani tonight - very gracious, very nice conversations they were very kind Q: mccain love fest - how does it change? A: ya know I don't think it will change. It's not like we don't realize we're competing for the same job but I think we also realize e it can be done in civil manner and we're both committed to that Q: biggest difference b/t you and mccain A: I wouldn't even venture at it - right now the difference is I won the Iowa caucus and I'm having a good time talking about it - that's the big difference Q: evangelicals - have to get beyond it in NH A: We're gonna have to go convert a lot of people in New Hampshire in the next five days. A big tent revival out on the grounds of the Concord state capitol - we'll get em all converted to the evangelical faith and then we'll win - how bout that? I mean we had a great support from the evangelicals, no doubt about it but if you look at the numbers there were a whole lot of people out there who weren't evangelicals voting for us. And it doesn't explain numbers in Michigan and Delaware and places like that - is that an important part of our coalition? Absolutely. Is it all the support we have? Of course not. And the numbers reflected that It was a good spread tonight - 34 to 25 I mean that's a good spread and I should have asked - how many of you would have bet your paycheck on that spread tonight - NOOOO Q: fundraising? A: I mean we saw our internet site pretty well light up tonight and uh, it didn't surprise us. I have a feeling that over the next several days our fundraising is going to hit into high gear, but you know a lot of people didn't understand that we may have had - we probably had as much cash on hand as some of those other campaigns so we feel like because we ran the campaign in a very frugally it gave us the chance not only for a victory but to have some gas in the tank to keep going - so we're not broke - couple million bucks in hand and uh - we're good to go Q: one thing you will really remember about tonight? A: I think for me it was when I was getting all those blackberry messages when I was coming in on the plane and I was trying to let it sink in that we were really gonna win this thing. Ya know it's one of those things you think 'wow it could happen' and I felt the momentum - I mean you guys were out there with us and I think you could sense the spirit of people - they weren't there just giving polite applause they were there packing these places, standing room only, several places we had more people that couldn't get into the room than got in -- same thing that I felt at the Iowa straw poll, just before that - that momentum you can just feel, but at the same time you don't want to be ridiculous and assume that maybe its happening to Romney and everybody else too and we were getting reports that it was happening in the other camps so we felt good that the direction our supporters were absolutely on fire to get out there and vote for us - but when those numbers started coming in I think it was hard for me to actually absorb it and say I'm gonna go stand on the stage in a little while and be a winner tonight Q: who were the bberry messages from? A: Mostly from our staff, but then I started getting them from friends all over the country - they were watching television - it was like 'congratulations', congratulations for what? And then I found out that we had won the caucus - woulda been nice to have been there to savor it when it happened, but we were trying to get out of waterloo
Timelapse hot air balloons prepare for mass launch, Bristol, UK
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