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. masa: ki is leaving somewhere. masa: also, the fish, sushis arrive moving. swimming. very fast. done. amazing. this momentum is ended right there. it s very important. anthony: anago, or sea eel, a handroll in fresh, crackling seaweed. mm, oh man. wow. sugyiyama: [ speaking japanese ]
a piece of metal, anything hard, put it 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 into a shape, and what i m doing is is i ve got to get it all to this way, like here. and once i get it like this,
accessible all over the place, put it on the end of the water bottle with a rubber band, tighten it down. and then take a projectile or whatever, a pill or something, a piece of metal, anything hard, put it inside that, grab it, pull it, pop it and 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 heats 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 melted down like this? i m trying to get a wad of it where i have something to work with, you know what i mean? so, what i m doing right now is i m molding. this is like playing with klay. only it s plastic. i m making a weapon right now.
front-line clinic struggle to stabilize him. so, we re going to get him on that same helicopter? but, listen, it might not he s going to call me back. he might not be able to get out of here for 30 minutes. reporter: this volunteer group, new york city medics, is working a ten-minute drive in the battle for western mosul. go ahead. grab it. reporter: most have never been in a war zone. they treated only one civilian while we were there. a little girl with a tooth ache. her family fled mosul earlier that morning. the rest were so will ders, many with multiple wounds. jeff evans normally works in boulder, colorado. that guy had a gunshot wound right under his arm, like right below his armpit. and i think he actually escaped from it penetrating his lung. so, i think it bounced down into his gut.
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. masa: ki is leaving somewhere. masa: also, the fish, sushis arrive moving. swimming. very fast. done. amazing. this momentum is ended right there. it s very important. anthony: anago, or sea eel, a handroll in fresh, crackling seaweed. mm, oh man. wow. sugyiyama: [ speaking japanese ]