pored over for days and days. they have been speculating for the past, what? did cnn cover this? i don t know if cnn covered this or not. i don t know. it reminds me of another story they covered wall-to-wall to get ratings. are they covering it? is cnn covering this? did they really. i think they are on it right now. a lot of false information. who is the great hollywood type that said nobody knows nothing? let s build a cockpit. monte hall. i don t think it was him. one of the early kings of hollywood saying nobody knows nothing. if you want to hear nobody talking about nothing and no one knows and endless speculation, you can turn to another channel. let s watch people dance around information a long time when they are bored stiff. we have nothing to talking about here and keep talking about it for 24 straight hours. cue. go to your co-anchor and have her talk about nothing too.
million. of that $100 million collection, how much of it has been paid for by taxpayers? zero. but it s not a museum. the secretary of state and other top officials use the rooms. 700 times last year. a lunch for the turkish prime minister in the benjamin franklin dining room. negotiating with chinese officials in the thomas jefferson reception room. these rooms are used for diplomacy and for the work of the state department. do ai think the setting helps? absolutely. when the building opens in 1961, the two floors were sparsely furnished, with wall to wall carpeting and acoustic tile ceilings. they were used for state luncheons and events. basic government just one step removed from a convention center. officials began what turned into a 25-year, $18 million project to transform the rooms into what you see today. craighill gave us a tour. we re now coming into the
million. of that $100 million collection, how much of it has been paid for by taxpayers? zero. but it s not a museum. the secretary of state and other top officials use the rooms. 700 times last year. a lunch for the turkish prime minister in the benjamin franklin dining room. negotiating with chinese officials in the thomas jefferson reception room. these rooms are used for diplomacy and for the work of the state department. do ai think the setting helps? absolutely. when the building opens in 1961, the two floors were sparsely furnished, with wall to wall carpeting and acoustic tile ceilings. they were used for state luncheons and events. basic government just one step removed from a convention center. officials began what turned into a 25-year, $18 million project to transform the rooms into what you see today. craighill gave us a tour. we re now coming into the
endings. it s a pretty eloquent thing to say and shows it he did watch all those movies. bill, you ve been looking into ramos and who how he game the comedy great. those aren t the only movies. not at all. if you came of age during the age of hbo, he is our orson welles. did you know that and ot first day of first grade, harold ramos was sent to the principal s office for chewing gum. he remembers thinking well, there goes college. but a tortured rebel he was not. see, harold was the kind of kid who spent his bar mitts vats money on wall to wall carpeting for his parents. when he made it to washington yurnt university in the 60s, his tool of anarchy was comedy. the satire he wrote in school helped him get into the second city and to avoid vietnam he told the army he was a bed wetter with bed sweats and attraction to men something he would use in the great movie stripes. we re not homosexual but willing to learn. yeah, would they send us some