Did you miss Larry King at the 2014 Captain Planet Foundation Benefit Gala? Here's your second chance!
Larry King has generously provided an opportunity for you and a guest to spend an afternoon with him! Once you sign up for this online auction you'll be able to place the next minimum bid amount or the maximum amount you want to bid. The wining bid amount will go to support the programs of the Captain Planet Foundation.
Your time with this television legend will include:
Meet & Greet with Larry King
A visit to his studio and watch a live taping of Larry King Now
Enjoy lunch with Larry in the Green Room and turn the table on him where YOU can ask Larry questions
Have Larry record your outgoing voicemail
message
Owing to my long-standing love of The Science Guy - as his followers affectionately dubbed him - I was ecstatic when I heard Netflix and Nye had agreed to work together on a new show. Unfortunately, it became clear in the first five minutes of the first episode of Bill Nye Saves the World that the Bill Nye being exhibited was not the Bill Nye of old. Much of Bill Nye Saves the World is Nye simply agreeing with popular opinions, oftentimes contradicting points he presented as fact in past projects. The show is not so much science for DIY scholars as it is science for D-bags who hate
“Land of the free and the home of the brave.” This line has represented the United States for decades. These words were captured in The Star Spangled Banner by Francis Scott Key and since 1913, the United States has adopted The Star-Spangled Banner as its national anthem. We have used the Red, White, and Blue as one of our nation’s symbols. It has fifty stars, to represent the number of states we have in our Union. The military pledges its allegiance to the flag and the country which it represents at all costs. We are the land of the free and the home of the brave, and we are proud to show it.
Dr. King is an emotional, inspiring and strong speaker. His " I Have A Dream" speech tugs a deep root war of emotions in every American’s heart; therefore, this speech is the perfect display of pathos. Even though pathos overwhelm logo and ethos, they also very much present in his speech.
HOST: Dr King, tell us how did you get the world to see the struggle of black America?
King was involved with the American Cancer Society, he also provided scholarships for local high school students, and contributed to numerous other local and national charities.
King would be happy about the documentary. In King’s letter, He describes that white individuals need to get involved in order to stop discrimination for good. And in “30 Days” Dave does just that by defending the muslims when negative comments came his way, in public and on the radio show. King’s argument would be compelling in regards to this documentary. His arguments match the illustrations of the the
"Martin Luther King Jr." - Acceptance Speech. The Novel Foundation, n.d. Web. 22 Apr. 2014. .
Just under 17 minutes, King influenced the generations and generations of people about his dream for America’s future and planted seeds of anti-racism and racial equality in them. King has employed three rhetorical elements of ethos, pathos and logos which are reinforced with metaphors in his ground-breaking speech.
Dick Gregory, seen on the state of the black union on CNN, hosted by Travis Smiley, is a phenomenal speaker. He was direct, brutally honest and used satire to deliver his point of view to the audience.
On August 28th, 1963, Martin Luther King Jr. gave one of the most notable speeches in American history, at the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. King started off his famous “I Have a Dream” speech by stating the impact it would have on America’s civil rights movement: “I am happy to join with you today in what will go down in history as the greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation” (King 1). With knowledge of rhetoric and persuasion, King had a substantial impact on the civil rights movement. Martin Luther King Jr.’s use of ethos, pathos, and logos appeals enable King to persuade the audience to achieve equality.
King’s historical speech in 1963 has held great symbolic value not only for the African Americans, but also for all of the equal rights supporters of every age and race. He was the first one who really fought for the same rights of African Americans and therefore inspired other people to live his dream and to continue his work for racial equality.
Martin Luther King Jr. was a big impact on the world, he stood up for what he believed in. When Martin was young, he and his family went through a lot of discrimination and threats of violence many times throughout the day. Martin did not like the way he and others were treated, he wanted to make a difference, so he became the leader of the Civil Rights Movement to stop segregation. Martin Luther King Jr. is a hero because he wanted equal rights for everyone.
Of all the grimly iconic images Stephen King can be credited with thinking up – those leering hotel guests in The Shining, the pig’s-blood rinse in Carrie – there’s one that stands out as so evilly nightmarish, so plain wrong, it’s actively hard to watch. It’s the sight of an innocent young boy, Georgie, being dragged into a storm drain by a child-eating clown – the name’s Pennywise – and never seen, or at least not in living form, again.
His argument is very reasoning to his defence and he eats so many reason to why the work works in its evil ways of discrimination. He wants everyone to that, it's very easy to not be very discriminated by the way you look but the way your skin color. Mr. King is very descriptive of his words and his meaning for them. He can really make the world change if everyone really did follow. King's reason for the speech is because he is trying to make a difference, he is a very good well taught speaker and he speaks with so much enthusiasm and nothing could really stop him from anything he's
Ever since I was young I have wanted to be a doctor. Yes, I know high-expectations. I guess I’m that optimistic Asian oblivious to how difficult it really is to get into medicine. I just find science so fascinating. From the atoms that make up these cue cards those walls, your pen to the idea that one tiny strand of DNA can create another one of us. I envisioned a future dedicated to philanthropy. I wanted to put the sick onto a road to recovery. See the look on a patient’s face when I tell them they are cancer free. But, alas, Tony Abbott may just have torn this dream away from me when he decided to slash millions of dollars’ worth of funds from Australia’s science research, the climate change move and tertiary education. If Mr Abbott continues