Look at how hes standing. Lou from hollywood, its Jimmy Kimmel Live tonight snoop dogg, ms. Pat, and music from october london. With cleto and the cletones. And now, jimmy kimmel [ cheers and applause ] jimmy thank you. Hola. Im jimmy, im the host of the show. Thanks for watching. Thank you for coming. Im glad youre here. Im glad were able to do a show tonight. I have to tell you, i dont know if you heard about this. Last night we had an eventful night. I went home and got a call saying the Fire Department was at the show. Turns out we had smoke pouring out of the vents outside our edit rooms, then coming out of the building. They had to clear the whole place. Fortunately, everything and everyone was okay. The firefighters even left us a photo. Posing together at my desk. [ laughter ] they fixed it all. Thank you, guys. By the way, i want to say, the Fire Department, if you see any smoke coming from the building tonight, thats just because snoop is here, were fine. [ cheers and applaus
Of marchers and reenactors and descendents to washington, d. C. To talk about the close of the american civil war. At the end of the war, the government celebrated by bringing 200,000 soldiers to washington d. C. To acknowledge the fact that after four years of a bloody war, it was finally over, the nation had been saved as one nation under god, and the legacy of slavery had ended forever because the union now includes africanamerican soldiers who helped win this war and change the direction of this nation. This afternoon at the museum we are going to have a Panel Discussion including three knowledgeable, informed persons who will talk about one of the legacies of the africanamerican civil war. That is the Voting Rights legacy of the africanamerican civil war. The 14th amendment makes africanamericans citizens of the United States and also hand some a provision about Voting Rights. The 15th amendment takes it a little bit further. We may get into the 15th amendment. I come at this pers
Technology, and the changing landscape of political talk shows. This is almost an hour and a half. Thank you very much. Good morning. I was just sitting here with ryan kill me kilmeade. The long island guys are well represented here this morning. I work right down the block here, a couple blocks away so it isnt easy john job this morning to come in and say hello. I was looking through some stuff the last couple of days and everyone is talking about radio. It is amazing the amount of negativity no matter what part of the business that you are in. I have in part of wfan since 1987. I have been in the same job since 1989. Kind of warring. Same time, same station. I used had a partner, i lost him about somewhere along the way. I look up and he was gone. I think he is working. I sent out notes. He is doing fine on a different part in doing a baseball show. All you read now is consolidation leads to death clusters, which to me is a dirty word, cut tax nobody has a good word for radio anymore
The second time addressing the members of the press club was in support of the documentary film brothers at war. And a third time as john said four years ago, when we first launched the foundation. So i guess i havent burned any bridges at the press club yet. You keep asking me back. I would like to speak today about how far the foundation has come in those four years with the work the foundation is doing and what the future looks like as we continue to grow and i would like to emphasize how important it is to have nonprofits in the military support space as the military men and women continue to confront the dark forces of this world on many fun with long and many fronts with long and very tough deployment. At first i would like to acknowledge a few people here today, one of our board members. Thank you for coming. I appreciate you being here. [applause] i have a very distinguished guest that john introduced, a friend of mine that is here today, general livingston was awarded the Unit
It is out there. I will not discuss that today. I would like to but i will not. The point is, it is hard now, it is much more fun and i am a big the lever although we have sean and so many people who have done so well and have built really and industries in brilliant businesses doing network radio. My has always been live in local and immediate. I have always liked this small city here as my home turf. I think of it as my home. My point is that it has changed. It is not going to change back. We know that it is going to be owned most of the time, most stations will be owned by people who have a lot of stations managers who have more than one station to run. Salespeople involved in more than one type of programming all that stuff. It does not change the dynamic of the business. Live in local, it has to go back to that no matter what part of the business you are running because eventually, it is about a guy who has a show room to sell cars or a storefront he wants people to walk into or a