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a quote from actor robert deniro.
wonderful 80's song by robert palmer.
brilliant version of robert miles tune children on piano
cage rage 24 : feel the pain - london, england on december 1st 2007 - superheavyweight bout : neil grove vs robert berry
chuck the movieguy interviews robert downey jr. for the movie iron man!
conan o`brien and former secretary of labor robert reich team up as detectives.
robert anton wilson or raw (born robert edward wilson, january 18, 1932 january 11, 2007) was an american novelist, essayist, philosopher, psychonaut, futurologist and libertarian. wilson described his writing as an "attempt to break down conditioned associations—to look at the world in a new way, with many models recognized as models or maps and no one model elevated to the truth."[1] ... "my goal is to try to get people into a state of generalized agnosticism, not agnosticism about god alone, but agnosticism about everything
robert novak, frustrated by james carville's comments that he is trying to impress the right wing, utters profanity and storms off the cnn set.
cult cartoonist robert crumb's poignant parable on america and progress. crumb also composed the music. i'm not even american but this touches me deeply.
robert de niro explains to elmo what an actor is, and puts his imagination to the test. this sesame street episode aired march 28th 2001.
robert de niro, filming an ad/spot for tribeca film festival...watch his reaction when somebody behind the camera asks for a more “energetic” second take.
uc berkeley biologist robert full shares his fascination with spiny cockroach legs that allow them to scuttle at full speed across loose mesh and gecko feet that have billions of nano-bristles to run straight up walls. his talk, complete with wonderful slow-mo video of cockroach, crab and gecko gaits, explains his goal of creating the perfect robotic "distributed foot."
charleston novelist james oliver rigney jr., 58, known to millions of readers by the pen name robert jordan, the best-selling author of "the wheel of time" fantasy series, died sunday after a fight with the rare blood disease amyloidosis, a progressive disorder first diagnosed in december 2005 at the medical university of south carolina. rigney, who also wrote novels under the nom de plume reagan o'neal, succumbed to complications from primary amyloidosis with cardiomyopathy. in an open letter to the science fiction magazine locus in april of 2006, rigney said he had been diagnosed with a disorder that affects only eight people out of one million each year. the most popular fantasy author since j.r.r. tolkien, rigney was born in 1948 in charleston. a graduate of the citadel who earned a degree in physics, he served two tours of duty in vietnam with the u.s. army, winning a distinguished flying cross, the bronze star and two vietnamese crosses of gallantry. a life-long history buff and voracious reader, he also wrote dance and theater criticism. he had been writing full time since 1977. his "wheel of time" series was among the best-selling in the history of fantasy publishing, with thousands of web sites devoted in whole or in part to his writing. he also wrote many of the popular "conan the barbarian" books, picking up from series creator robert e. howard. a note published on his blog, www.dragonmount.com, announcing his death continued to fill up with the comments from fans from across the globe sunday night as word spread of his death. at the time of his death, rigney was one of the leading lights of the lowcountry literary community. along with outdoor activities, he liked playing poker and chess and collecting hats and pipes. he is survived by his wife, harriet mcdougal rigney. funeral services will be announced later this week. robert_jordan_dies_at_age16247/>source
los angeles - robert goulet, the handsome, big-voiced baritone whose broadway debut in "camelot" launched an award-winning stage and recording career, has died. he was 73. the singer died tuesday morning in a los angeles hospital while awaiting a lung transplant, said goulet spokesman norm johnson. he had been awaiting a lung transplant at cedars-sinai medical center in los angeles after being found last month to have a rare form of pulmonary fibrosis. goulet had remained in good spirits even as he waited for the transplant, said vera goulet, his wife of 25 years. "just watch my vocal cords," she said he told doctors before they inserted a breathing tube. he became a hit with american tv viewers with appearances on "the ed sullivan show" and other programs. sullivan labeled him the "american baritone from canada," where he had already been a popular star in the 1950s, hosting his own tv show called "general electric's showtime." goulet won a grammy award in 1962 as best new artist and made the singles chart in 1964 with "my love forgive me." "when i'm using a microphone or doing recordings i try to concentrate on the emotional content of the song and to forget about the voice itself," he told the new york times in 1962. "sometimes i think that if you sing with a big voice, the people in the audience don't listen to the words, as they should," he told the paper. "they just listen to the sound." goulet had no problems poking fun at his own fame, appearing recently in an emerald nuts commercial in which he "messes" with the stuff of dozing office workers, and lending his name to goulet's snoozebars. goulet also has been sent up by will ferrell on "saturday night live." "you have to have humor and be able to laugh at yourself," goulet said in a biography on his web site. source
the title is: finding new cures for migraines, depression and malpractice. this guy is really awesome, he donated $30 million dollars to the university of maryland college park for a new bioengineering department.. im a freshmen there, i might just think about switching my major...
courtesy of actiontrip.com
american comedian from the bronx, new york. clip from the 'just for laughs' comedy festival.
any model we make does not describe the universe, it describes what our brains are capable of saying at this time. all perception is gamble. we believe what we see and then we believe our interpretation of it we don`t even know we`re making an interpretation most of the time. life not going right? maybe try a different reality tunnel.
a clip from the final episode of the original uk version.
this shows how nature engineered animals, insects and how this can improve our engineering skills.
world predictions
robert de niro as a child.
this is a clip from "analyze that" where robert de niro plays a mobster trying to go legit.