projectile, whatever, a pill or a pie of metal, anything hard, put inside that, grab it, pull it, pop it, it will shoot out of there at a velocity. part of speedy s intel involves showing officers how easily weapons can be made. in this case, the plastic lids of coffee cups. once melted by the heat of an ignited roll of toilet paper will transform into a potentially lethal shank. i m hardening this plastic right here. you see how it s folding down like this? what i m doing is i m trying to get a little wad of it to where i could i have a little something to work with. know what i mean? so what i m doing right now is i m molding. this is like playing with clay. only it s plastic. i m making a weapon right now. i m making a weapon right now. i m melting this plastic down
the feeling was we didn t have to prepare all that much. according to everything we knew, it would be howdy, hello, handshake. turned out to be anything but that. after the first morning when reagan and gorbachev met, we were called into the embassy which was right nearby. reagan says gorbachev really wants to reduce nuclear weapons, so he hands a piece of paper to no one in particular. all of us kind of grab it, looked it over, and it was a holy cow moment. this guy really wants to reduce nuclear weapons. here s a soviet leader not going by the script, here s a guy that wanted to do business. the first indication that some progress may have been made at today s talks came at a white house briefing a few minutes ago.
then play it like that. anthony: oh my god, they wanted to kill you. you re a very unusual man. masa: sushi is the best meal. we can enjoy every single small piece, different fish. we can see the chef, right there, he s slicing, wasabi, make it, put it right here, eat. anthony: right. sugyiyama: [ speaking japanese ] anthony: japanese tiger prawn, octopus, and fluke sashimi. masa: japanese cooking, we care very much about the ki, which is fighting spirits. like this, right? anthony: mm-hmm. striped jack brushed with soy and sake. sugyiyama: [ speaking japanese ] masa: this moment, do not miss this. then, grab it, right? you eat. see? anthony: mm. masa: that s why you gotta eat quickly. if 30 second, one minute anthony: it s dying.
always. but you capture moments and the moments are what sustain you to the next moments. so i think. but unfortunately, too many of ray s moments have been filled with nothing but pain since he broke his back. what do they say on the x-rays. that s metal, all metal. two screws here, two screws here. and there s a fake vertebrae. what s the vertebrae made out of? titanium. to help ray deal with all the discomfort in his back, doctors embedded a pain medication pump beneath his skin. it s a big metal disk. how heavy is it? it s heavy. grab it. i don t want to hurt you. you won t hurt me. grab it. grab it. it gives me the heebie-jeebies, too, bro. that thing s big. to repair his back, it also required removal of a rib. oh, my god. it s like a hole there. i can feel it. there s nothing protecting your
you re a billionaire, it s hard for you to actually connect with what real folks are actually asking for. well, we used to have a term in the 60s called pigs. i thought it was a very good term. we knew exactly what it meant. take it now. rape the land. grab it, use it, throw it away, and who gives a damn about your kids or anything that s coming later, including human life. yeah. i don t think our president is actually thinking about the future. i don t think he s thinking about our next generation, and it s actually really interesting. i think the way he approaches policy is that actually like the monopoly game where there are pieces on the board, and you decide which ones are going to be sold off to the highest bidder. but yet people are never a part of that equation. mrs. ramirez isn t a part of that conversation. mr. johnson isn t a part of that conversation. but park place is. definitely. and boardwalk. here s the question. i discovered something. i was visiting a frien