that right? that s right. we want to be on board with thelingo. absolutely. you were officially founded in 2007, your roots go all the way back to 90 s, what do you share with viewers who don t know anything about waa, about the really important mission you guys have? well, wreaths across america was originally started in 1992 by patriots family, they have a wreath company up in maine and one holiday season they had 5,000 left over wreaths left over at the end of the season and they were trying to figure out what to do with the wreaths and they are a patriotic family and love veterans and our service member who is have paid the ultimate sacrifice, they decided to take those extra 5,000 wreaths to arlington national cemetery and little by little they started doing more and now turn intoed turned
it sounds like something horrible you do with cream cheese frosting. i don t like anything with man in front of it. i don t like anything with spreading at the end. what do you think, paul? with what should be banned or banished? i don t think you should cut words out. i feel like offer a solution, an exchange. if you are using a word, cut it out. maybe offended and we can switch it out for waa. the word nice. i hate the word nice to describe a person. that just also means boring, right? all of these knives. it is all the same thing. nice is always guys. you never say a girl is nice. she is fine, right? is this a 90s movie? what i don t like you don t say that ever. language already does this. we already get rid of words organically we don t use
and isis. i agree, assad, let putin deal with him. he is in. will not get out. isis, whole different deal. harris: their ability to recruit all this year we ve had airstrikes has not made one dent in terms of numbers. people signing up have nothing to live for anyway. they might as well take a bunch people out. like shooters in the usa. harris: supposed to be exciting time for high school graduates, going to college. majority of first-year students say they did not feel prepared emotionally once school actually got started. so do they have something to cry about or not? waa.
there. i ll deal with it and rock back and forth. then i ll jump out and get them. [ screaming ] it s good fun but there s some people even the pranksters won t risk scaring. that is unless the temptation is too great. i usually don t scare older people. we don t want to create a health risk. unless they seem like they can handle it. she was like waa! she didn t know it, but she was looking at me directly in the eye. like, i saw fear. it was pretty bad. it was like time slowed down. i saw her as a child. we talked to them for like 20 minutes afterwards explaining the youtube thing. bringing the videos up on our phone. they were all about it. they were saying they were going to tell their granddaughters and all that stuff. they wanted more cards. yeah, they loved it. it s one thing to scare the elderly.
because he has got some movement when you have 16 people in the mix here, you re in single digits most of them. john kasich is tied for third in new hampshire after just entering. what you do make of it? new hampshire is wide open. i think kasich s movement in the poll coming out of jeb bush s take in new hampshire. people moving to kasich they re not coming out of anybody else s polling. these people going to case i can and going to christie coming straight out of jeb bush s voters in new hampshire. martha: mark. when you look at that you ve got chris christie who has put a ton of time and effort into new hampshire. cruz, rubio all of those, hope to be in the top third there but donald trump has seriously changed the game in new hampshire, and in way waa of course. you know when you look at the stack with kasich moving you, what do you think? i think he could be a dark horse. new hampshire represents a