what you are doing to something else. anger in one hand and close out discussion with the other hand. bill: one finger angry. i m not angry sometimes i m trying to make my point i don t think i m over l.a. aggressive but i didn t think atila was, i thought he was moderately aggressive. here is the difference though. it s not what you are feeling. it s how the recipient was feeling. bill: i don t care how the recipient is feeling and there you go. [ laughter ] here is obama and putin. thank you very much, mr. president we in fact, did have a candid, thoughtful, and thorough conversation on a whole range of bilateral and international issues. bill: my question is, this putin is sitting on a nail. yes, oh my goodness. bill: sitting on a nail. that is the worst body language i have ever seen. it was terrible. so he is sitting back, is he gripping on to his chair, is he not even oriented toward the president. look how his chin is tucked
something else. anger in one hand and close out discussion with the other hand. bill: one finger angry. i m not angry sometimes i m trying to make my point i don t think i m over l.a. aggressive but i didn t think atila was, i thought he was moderately aggressive. here is the difference though. it s not what you are feeling. it s how the recipient was feeling. bill: i don t care how the recipient is feeling and there you go. [ laughter ] here is obama and putin. thank you very much, mr. president we in fact, did have a candid, thoughtful, and thorough conversation on a whole range of bilateral and international issues. bill: my question is, this putin is sitting on a nail. yes, oh my goodness. bill: sitting on a nail. that is the worst body language i have ever seen. it was terrible. so he is sitting back, is he gripping on to his chair, is he not even oriented toward the president. look how his chin is tucked down. bill: he hates him.
they ll there s a lot of fires. there s a lot of evidence to look at all over l.a. what is it? shepard: all over hollywood. the lawyer is saying to the citizens, they have their guy, be on alert. why would you say that? shepard: one little matter is they ve been having fires every night. they arrested this guy. that s not to say he did them all but they arrested him and the fires stopped. i suppose if you were setting fires and they arrested him you can play all the games you want. show me some evidence. they have a guy but no evidence. shepard: i m not in charge of the evidence but if they put me in charge of it, i won t show it to you. i have no response. shepard: the guy setting the fires is in a minivan. a video of an individual who looks like him, in the same type of car. i agree it s not lock, stock and barely but we re in the right direction. you took poetic license.
look at all over l.a. what is it? shepard: all over hollywood. the lawyer is saying to the citizens, they have their guy, be on alert. why would you say that? shepard: one little matter is they ve been having fires every night. they arrested this guy. that s not to say he did them all but they arrested him and the fires stopped. i suppose if you were setting fires and they arrested him you can play all the games you want. show me some evidence. they have a guy but no evidence. shepard: i m not in charge of the evidence but if they put me in charge of it, i won t show it to you. i have no response. shepard: the guy setting the fires is in a minivan. a video of an individual who looks like him, in the same type of car. i agree it s not lock, stock and barely but we re in the right direction. you took poetic license. shepard: all right, guys, happy new year.
it starts off with flag at age 6 and work up to age 13 to tackle. larry: anybody around l.a. play? or do you have to live in a certain neighborhood? all over l.a., all you got to do is hit us up at snoop youth football league.com. and get our commissioner i do. larry: how about a couple of white kids from beverly hills? why not, not why. larry: i ve got two kids, what if they were to win the snooper bowl, would that embarrass you? no, that would make me feel good, because football has no color barriers. larry: you ve got 3,500 kids in the league. how did you start that? i started it six years ago with my oldest son. he was playing little league football, and we were playing in a league that i didn t feel was really, you know, really meeting the needs of what we needed as far as inner city football program. so i went back to the community that i come from and created a football program for the kids who didn t have money, who didn t really have the necessities that they n