Both Stephen and Anderson deserve recognition for how they moved grief towards an embrace and acceptance level. We need this. Most of us experience grief. We need to hear how those who trudged this before continue to LIVE & Love.
Andersen Cooper is one of the few real journalists remaining on the news. He's always been a humble man..the fact that he didn't use his mother's name-Vanderbilt, speaks volumes about who he is.
Stephen's insight on grief in that 2019 conversation with Anderson, as well as Andrew Garfield's sharing on this show about his grief at his mum's death, were really pivotal in helping me to navigate my own grief journey in this past year. Stephen really has a beautiful way of creating safe spaces for people to open up about such strong emotions, which then also allows them - and us - to embrace the necessary vulnerability.
So well said, Lisa❤ I completely agree. Watching my sweet husband fade away from Early On-Set Alzheimers as I cared for him, meant my grief began long before he passed away. That first conversation between these two stellar men made this point known to me. Love them both.
I lost my mom over 20 years ago (she was 64), so the pain isn't as fresh. But I can also find the sadness as well as the anger over her loss in seconds. You're never fully at peace over a parental loss, but you carry on cuz there's no other option.
Speaking of pigeons..❤❤❤ I lived in a gross part of Chicago afew years ago. Two pigeons decided my crappy little porch was their home. I loved it!!! They had two broods before my neighbors started to complain. The second brood they abandon. So I took them to a pigeon sancturay to keep them alive. They were beautiful once their feathers came in. The first two babies I held and made sure they knew me. In Chicago you can not hurt the pigeons. They are protected. Well I did move out and walked by my old apartment where they were and the dick landlord had put up spikes on the railing to keep them away. I love birds. All birds..😢
I had to let my dog go a few months ago on July 1st. I haven't allowed myself to grief. I've never ignored something so vehemently before. I told myself I'll get another dog or cat in about a year, but I totally understand why some people want to fill that void right away. 💔
I haven't listen to Cooper and Colbert's conversation about grief. But Andrew Garfield's interview a while ago talking about grief from losing his Mom was deeply memorable.
All There Is is a beautiful podcast - deeply affecting conversations on how we process loss, grief & the overwhelming emotions that accompany that journey. I’ve cried through a number of episodes, finding some solace & catharsis in the experiences of others. We are not alone in this process ❤
We are all in the same club, unfortunately it’s a club nobody wants to be a member of. but absolutely looking forward to the 3rd season, and of course Anderson is spot on about Stephen. 😉
I was living in Chicago when the coldest winter on record hit. Down so far in the negatives that it didn't matter if it were Celsius or Fahrenheit. News told us, "if you just go outside, _don't breathe."_ It was like that: killing cold. After a few days it went back up to a balmy 3°F (-16°C). As I walked to work that morning, I noted: all the pigeons were back. And nobody I asked knew where they'd GONE for the half-week-long storm. I have this mental image of walking into some deep subway tunnel, flicking on the lights, and 2 million pigeons all swiveling their heads in unison, followed by this deafening inquiring chorus of "Brrrbboo?" echoing through the tunnel. (Then backing away slowly and running like hell).
In the last few years I've lost both parents, 2 brothers and 1 of my 2 sisters, and my best friend. None to covid. The grief has been astronomical and even when I try to talk about it, people brush it off. I now realize how very superficial people are. It does help to talk about it and I urge anyone who has a friend dealing with grief to really try to listen and talk with them about it. I've never felt so alone, especially when my own dear friends blow it off.
i grieved at ten years old when my mother and father split and my father left me. i never recovered from that and now at 65 my wife gone 15 years and then with mom at home in her last years may explain why i tear up so easy yet try and love life daily
@@andyK1878 or move to abc. Jimmy Kimmel doesn't split his interviews. Everyone else does. Hell, even if they left in the commercials that were on television, I'd still watch through. I just blank when podcast ads start playing unless it's Conan. He's hilarious in ads.
All respect to Stephen Colbert, but i really think Anderson should have Nick Cave on his podcast to talk about grief. Colbert's interview with Nick Cave was one of the most insightful, touching, affecting conversations about such things that i've ever heard.
I'm 70years old and have voted since I turned 18. I have never been called for a poll and don't know anyone that has. Anybody else have the same experience?
I've been watching Anderson Cooper since the 6th grade when he was on a Whittle program called Channel One in 1993. I hope I can meet him someday to tell him that I appreciate his reporting.
I've seen 2 baby pigeons. I live in Melbourne Australia and a pigeon nested twice in a pot plant on my balcony. The first eggs didn't hatch, but there were 2 pigeonettes (my name for them) from the second set of eggs. I came home after a night out and saw blood on the light-coloured carpet. I hadn't closed the balcony door completely when I left, and my cat got into the nest ... and then feasted on the baby pigeons up and down the hallway ... it was a bloody crime scene. God, I hate myself.
I recommend Is That All There Is to everybody I know, and I always send a link to the interview with Stephen to anyone I know experiencing loss and grief because it is such a gentle yet powerful discourse on the reality of loss.
If it helps people understand why we feel the same among the joy, it's so worth it. It's tiring to hear the "get over i" comments. When people begin to understand you don't get over it, you are constantly aware of it but able to maneuver through it as necessary, it will be wonderful
A close friend of mine who recently lost their son was told by his niece that “grief is love with nowhere to go.” I think that’s really beautiful and accurate.
Anderson should interview Cheryl Fuller, author of Peace by Piece. She's amazing. Take the 3 worst childhood stories you've heard. Hers was all three and more. But she found peace and now she promotes healing from trauma. There are techniques of controlling the body that she can teach and they actually work. Seriously, please share with Anderson. He won't regret it.
Grief is a something we will all experience, a common trust.. so, I talk of Stewardship of sorrow/grief, the force we experience in the common experience changes us forever, we will never be the same, how we choose to change is our stewardship.. clearly, this doesn't change the pain of the loss, the healing required, the time required to heal.. and friends often want to help.. and again the metaphor is like a vase that is smashed.. you can't really try to find all the pieces and glue them back together.. this experience is like a fire, so throw the pieces in and it will forge into something new and different... perhaps something more beautiful....
❤❤❤❤❤Mr. Cooper. I saw him save boy Haiti. He literally shield him with his body. Gloria Vanderbilt son. This kid was Bleeding all over him. Not once did he flinch. That's a real man. I wish he was mine. True American Prince!!!!
Stephen did a great interview with Joe Biden about grief very early in his Late Show run, before Biden had decided to run for President. I think that episode deserves to be rerun.
I can't tell you how many people I know who say they don't like him as a person but there's a policy or two they agree with wholeheartedly so they're voting for him. 😢
Our backyard is full of doves (related to pigeons) with lots of babies, but they're the same size as their parents so we tell them apart by their behaviors.
Grief is result of trauma from all kinds of events. Right now there are millions of Americans grieving for our country due to the MAGA virus that struck back in 2016 and we don't have a vaccine for yet. As long as this contemptible virus is still circulating and remains viable we will be grieving. The damage done will be with us for decades and those of us that realizes this have that additional grief to deal with as well. All we can do is our best to keep it at bay by tending to our country and supporting the people that are doing all they can to keep this virus at bay until it disappears naturally or we find a vaccine that will give us more protection from it. I just hope that those of us who have not succumbed to it can be strong enough and patient enough to keep doing our best to assist in keeping this destructive virus contained as much as possible. Vote Democrat this time around. It will help push the virus back. 💙 I am a former Republican. 52 years. Democrat as of 11/23.
If anyone here is interested in one of the best books about dealing with grief, "Modern Grief," by Conrad Reeder, is a must-have. Connie's book was written in an effort to deal with the grief she felt when her two heroes--John Denver and Roger Nichols--were taken from her, too soon. Highly recommended!
COOPER AND COLDBUTT NEVER COVERED BORDER CRISIS, MURDERS, RAPES AND SEX TRAFFICKING OF CHILDREN BY BIDEN'S OPEN BORDER POLICIES. BORDER CZAR WHERE ARE THE 300,000 MISSING CHILDREN?
Come on, guys. You're both intelligent city-dwellers. You should know why you've never seen baby pigeons. Pigeons generally nest on rooftops, bridges, and other not-so-easily accessible areas. Squabs get their feathers at 4-wks, and they stay in the nest for up to 6-weeks. By then they look like smaller adult pigeons, so at a glance, they blend in with the adults.
Baby pigeons (squabs) are pretty weird, ugly little things. But they grow up very quickly into juveniles that just look like pigeons but a little smaller, then regular adult pigeons. For the small window they look different, they're kept in safer, hidden spots
Dear everyone complaining about how interview segments are "posted out of order": Just go to the shows main page, hit Playlists, boom. Every episode segment is posted, in order, by date. They've ALWAYS done that. The problem you're whining about has always had a solution.
I still remember that interview that Anderson did with Stephen Colbert about grief, it was so poignant and deeply honest. Then, I was so let down and disappointed when Colbert made jokes about Princess Catherine after she was diagnosed with cancer. I was so convinced of Colbert’s depth of character, but seeing him go for laughs at her expense left me feeling completely disillusioned.
The problem with polls involving modern Republicans in general and DJT in particular is that they generally under represent the people voting for them. I'd say mostly because of the number of people who are ashamed to admit that they are going to vote for them.
I believe emotional intelligence is linked to mental health. If one suffers, the other suffers. Communication and understanding are valuable tools that are under used in society
The first time I thoroughly looked up a polling source - from a supposed legitimate news show - the number of people queried was 200. TWO HUNDRED 😮 Is that really a reliable source to use??
I was recently sent a text asking which candidate I would vote for. I answered like an idiot and received a thank you. but I am 76 and it was a first if I was indeed being polled.
I'm so dull Baby pigeons are called squabs. They grow quickly into their adult size and plumage They don't leave the nest until they are fully fledged and that's why you don't see baby pigeons.
Both Stephen and I need to "have some of what Sting and Sam Jackson are having" 'Cuz they are older than both of us yet are more sprightly and healthier than we are.
This was painful to watch. They both kept interrupting each other, and when they were the ones talking they never seemed to be sure of what they're saying. It really makes me wonder how Anderson Cooper suffers from Pete Buttegeg. Pete never interrupts anyone so far as I remember, and when he does speak, he speaks with earnestness and confidence.
I processed marketing research data for years and it was amazing how consistent data was between various polls. If there is inconsistency in polling it is for a couple of reasons usually. The questions asked may be poorly phrased or confusing and most commonly the data is bad because the sampling is poorly done. In the modern era where so many people will not answer their phone if the caller is unknown it is very difficult to get a representative sample.
That conversation about grief between Stephen and Anderson was one of the most powerful conversations I've ever watched.
Indeed.
SAME!!! You have to listen to the podcast if you liked their conversation! Every episode is powerful! I am def excited about season 3!!
Both Stephen and Anderson deserve recognition for how they moved grief towards an embrace and acceptance level. We need this. Most of us experience grief. We need to hear how those who trudged this before continue to LIVE & Love.
Seeing Stephen's genuine smile when Anderson complimented him was so wholesome lol
"Grief is love with nowhere to go."
@@sicknado yup..
your profile name is oddly apt…
@@AnimefortheLazyman I don't understand but I do have severe grief. My heart is broken. Stress Cardiomyopathy..
Stephen is not fearful of having intimate, meaningful conversations with other men. It's such a wonderful example.
I agree so much. His interviews with John Mulaney are also really deep.
Andersen Cooper is one of the few real journalists remaining on the news. He's always been a humble man..the fact that he didn't use his mother's name-Vanderbilt, speaks volumes about who he is.
Your high
@@jordanlee2645 * You're
_(Exactly how drunk are you?)_
@@hervigdewilde3599 pretty 😂
@binaryfairy4197 real note though, he 100% says things that he doesn't believe, so that he continues to get a pay check.
Stephen's insight on grief in that 2019 conversation with Anderson, as well as Andrew Garfield's sharing on this show about his grief at his mum's death, were really pivotal in helping me to navigate my own grief journey in this past year. Stephen really has a beautiful way of creating safe spaces for people to open up about such strong emotions, which then also allows them - and us - to embrace the necessary vulnerability.
Beautifully said.
So well said, Lisa❤ I completely agree. Watching my sweet husband fade away from Early On-Set Alzheimers as I cared for him, meant my grief began long before he passed away. That first conversation between these two stellar men made this point known to me. Love them both.
I lost my mom over 20 years ago (she was 64), so the pain isn't as fresh. But I can also find the sadness as well as the anger over her loss in seconds. You're never fully at peace over a parental loss, but you carry on cuz there's no other option.
You were an adult- I was 12 years when dad died- seven days before starting high school.
I love the conversation they had about grief.
Speaking of pigeons..❤❤❤
I lived in a gross part of Chicago afew years ago. Two pigeons decided my crappy little porch was their home. I loved it!!! They had two broods before my neighbors started to complain. The second brood they abandon. So I took them to a pigeon sancturay to keep them alive. They were beautiful once their feathers came in. The first two babies I held and made sure they knew me. In Chicago you can not hurt the pigeons. They are protected. Well I did move out and walked by my old apartment where they were and the dick landlord had put up spikes on the railing to keep them away.
I love birds. All birds..😢
❤
I had to let my dog go a few months ago on July 1st. I haven't allowed myself to grief. I've never ignored something so vehemently before. I told myself I'll get another dog or cat in about a year, but I totally understand why some people want to fill that void right away. 💔
I really like Anderson Cooper ❤️
I haven't listen to Cooper and Colbert's conversation about grief. But Andrew Garfield's interview a while ago talking about grief from losing his Mom was deeply memorable.
All There Is is a beautiful podcast - deeply affecting conversations on how we process loss, grief & the overwhelming emotions that accompany that journey.
I’ve cried through a number of episodes, finding some solace & catharsis in the experiences of others. We are not alone in this process ❤
We are all in the same club, unfortunately it’s a club nobody wants to be a member of. but absolutely looking forward to the 3rd season, and of course Anderson is spot on about Stephen. 😉
How can I find that podcast?
@@celesteburley4035
It’s called ‘All there is’ and you can get it anywhere you get your podcasts! 😊
"It's like baby piegeons"
My face hurts from laughing... 🤣
Those ones you see are the babies. The adults have 10 foot wing spans and snatch human babies from cribs and strollers. Be afraid, be very afraid.
@@miamiclipper😮 😂😅 😅😂😊
Yes, and I love that he's noticed this! It's very sweet.
I was living in Chicago when the coldest winter on record hit. Down so far in the negatives that it didn't matter if it were Celsius or Fahrenheit. News told us, "if you just go outside, _don't breathe."_ It was like that: killing cold.
After a few days it went back up to a balmy 3°F (-16°C). As I walked to work that morning, I noted: all the pigeons were back. And nobody I asked knew where they'd GONE for the half-week-long storm.
I have this mental image of walking into some deep subway tunnel, flicking on the lights, and 2 million pigeons all swiveling their heads in unison, followed by this deafening inquiring chorus of "Brrrbboo?" echoing through the tunnel.
(Then backing away slowly and running like hell).
In the last few years I've lost both parents, 2 brothers and 1 of my 2 sisters, and my best friend. None to covid.
The grief has been astronomical and even when I try to talk about it, people brush it off. I now realize how very superficial people are. It does help to talk about it and I urge anyone who has a friend dealing with grief to really try to listen and talk with them about it. I've never felt so alone, especially when my own dear friends blow it off.
Adore Anderson Cooper ♥️
i grieved at ten years old when my mother and father split and my father left me. i never recovered from that and now at 65 my wife gone 15 years and then with mom at home in her last years may explain why i tear up so easy yet try and love life daily
Wish these weren't split into 3 parts. It's not necessary
What's unnecessary is posting them out of order and without labels. 👎🏽
it is when theyre concerned about advertising revenue
💰💰💰💰💰💰
The breaks will stop whenever Colbert moves to the BBC 🇬🇧!
@@andyK1878 or move to abc. Jimmy Kimmel doesn't split his interviews. Everyone else does. Hell, even if they left in the commercials that were on television, I'd still watch through. I just blank when podcast ads start playing unless it's Conan. He's hilarious in ads.
All respect to Stephen Colbert, but i really think Anderson should have Nick Cave on his podcast to talk about grief. Colbert's interview with Nick Cave was one of the most insightful, touching, affecting conversations about such things that i've ever heard.
Grief is the greatest expression of how well we loved and were loved.❤
I'm 70years old and have voted since I turned 18. I have never been called for a poll and don't know anyone that has. Anybody else have the same experience?
Yes 70 of age also
I have been called and always give them the answer they want. Not truthful but I hate polls.
Me, I have been voting since 18 , I am 62. I have never been contacted nor has anyone I know.
I as well. Could it be because I live in a deep red state?
Been voting for more years than I care to admit and same thing.
Never ever contacted to take a poll
Grief is love everlasting.
I've been watching Anderson Cooper since the 6th grade when he was on a Whittle program called Channel One in 1993. I hope I can meet him someday to tell him that I appreciate his reporting.
This is Part 2
For the people posting these, for the love of all that is holy, please label the part numbers in the title for these longer sit downs.
How interesting all these deep and powerful insights into the human condition.
Such banter can't be better than from those who can cant.
I'd like to just see the complete interview, extended cut. thanks.
By "segment", do you think he meant "segue"?
I've seen 2 baby pigeons. I live in Melbourne Australia and a pigeon nested twice in a pot plant on my balcony. The first eggs didn't hatch, but there were 2 pigeonettes (my name for them) from the second set of eggs. I came home after a night out and saw blood on the light-coloured carpet. I hadn't closed the balcony door completely when I left, and my cat got into the nest ... and then feasted on the baby pigeons up and down the hallway ... it was a bloody crime scene. God, I hate myself.
Volunteer! You want to know you did the right thing at this critical time. History is being made now for better or worse.
I recommend Is That All There Is to everybody I know, and I always send a link to the interview with Stephen to anyone I know experiencing loss and grief because it is such a gentle yet powerful discourse on the reality of loss.
If it helps people understand why we feel the same among the joy, it's so worth it. It's tiring to hear the "get over i" comments. When people begin to understand you don't get over it, you are constantly aware of it but able to maneuver through it as necessary, it will be wonderful
A close friend of mine who recently lost their son was told by his niece that “grief is love with nowhere to go.” I think that’s really beautiful and accurate.
As a former hospice social worker i can say grieving takes as long as it takes. There’s not one way to grieve. Don’t judge others in how they grieve.
I remember watching Anderson on Channel One when I was a kid.
Anderson should interview Cheryl Fuller, author of Peace by Piece. She's amazing. Take the 3 worst childhood stories you've heard. Hers was all three and more. But she found peace and now she promotes healing from trauma. There are techniques of controlling the body that she can teach and they actually work.
Seriously, please share with Anderson. He won't regret it.
Grief is a something we will all experience, a common trust.. so, I talk of Stewardship of sorrow/grief, the force we experience in the common experience changes us forever, we will never be the same, how we choose to change is our stewardship.. clearly, this doesn't change the pain of the loss, the healing required, the time required to heal.. and friends often want to help.. and again the metaphor is like a vase that is smashed.. you can't really try to find all the pieces and glue them back together.. this experience is like a fire, so throw the pieces in and it will forge into something new and different... perhaps something more beautiful....
❤❤❤❤❤Mr. Cooper. I saw him save boy Haiti. He literally shield him with his body. Gloria Vanderbilt son. This kid was Bleeding all over him. Not once did he flinch. That's a real man. I wish he was mine. True American Prince!!!!
I love the idea of baby pigeons!
Stephen did a great interview with Joe Biden about grief very early in his Late Show run, before Biden had decided to run for President. I think that episode deserves to be rerun.
Anderson's pod cast is great
Whippersnapper is such a great and under used word. Its an old man cliche word to be sure, but i really enjoy it.
The baby pigeons! I've had the same thought!!! Same with seagulls...
And herons!
Part 2...
I’m amazed how the polls say that Trump seems to have 50% of the vote. I can’t believe that so many people think he’s a good prospect for president
From what I've heard, it's because 45 supports Israel.
Odd that anyone could compare 2021 favorably to 2024. It was a dumpster fire pandemic response, yet half the country feels nostalgia.
I literally said that almost word for word to my husband an hour ago.
I can't tell you how many people I know who say they don't like him as a person but there's a policy or two they agree with wholeheartedly so they're voting for him. 😢
68 years of life I’ve never been polled.
Don’t be complacent!!
Volunteer! Donate!! Vote!!!
🇺🇸💙🗳️🔵
Nick Cave speaks the most powerfully about grief... As evidenced by this very show a few weeks ago.
Our backyard is full of doves (related to pigeons) with lots of babies, but they're the same size as their parents so we tell them apart by their behaviors.
Grief is result of trauma from all kinds of events. Right now there are millions of Americans grieving for our country due to the MAGA virus that struck back in 2016 and we don't have a vaccine for yet. As long as this contemptible virus is still circulating and remains viable we will be grieving. The damage done will be with us for decades and those of us that realizes this have that additional grief to deal with as well. All we can do is our best to keep it at bay by tending to our country and supporting the people that are doing all they can to keep this virus at bay until it disappears naturally or we find a vaccine that will give us more protection from it. I just hope that those of us who have not succumbed to it can be strong enough and patient enough to keep doing our best to assist in keeping this destructive virus contained as much as possible. Vote Democrat this time around. It will help push the virus back. 💙 I am a former Republican. 52 years. Democrat as of 11/23.
Could we not combine 3 videos into 1?? Who are these break ups for?
commercial breaks in the live broadcast
It's for the advertisers @keenan13jpn ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ Welcome to modern media finance.
💰💰💰💰💰
They could at least label these segments so we know what order they go in instead of guessing.
They do it for money. Notice that Kimmel doesn't do it.
If anyone here is interested in one of the best books about dealing with grief, "Modern Grief," by Conrad Reeder, is a must-have.
Connie's book was written in an effort to deal with the grief she felt when her two heroes--John Denver and Roger Nichols--were taken from her, too soon.
Highly recommended!
Man anderson got some guts✌️
COOPER AND COLDBUTT NEVER COVERED BORDER CRISIS, MURDERS, RAPES AND SEX TRAFFICKING OF CHILDREN BY BIDEN'S OPEN BORDER POLICIES. BORDER CZAR WHERE ARE THE 300,000 MISSING CHILDREN?
Come on, guys. You're both intelligent city-dwellers. You should know why you've never seen baby pigeons. Pigeons generally nest on rooftops, bridges, and other not-so-easily accessible areas. Squabs get their feathers at 4-wks, and they stay in the nest for up to 6-weeks. By then they look like smaller adult pigeons, so at a glance, they blend in with the adults.
Why do you split these interviews and do NOT number them?
JD Vance < Walz all Day.💕
Baby pigeons (squabs) are pretty weird, ugly little things. But they grow up very quickly into juveniles that just look like pigeons but a little smaller, then regular adult pigeons. For the small window they look different, they're kept in safer, hidden spots
Dear everyone complaining about how interview segments are "posted out of order":
Just go to the shows main page, hit Playlists, boom. Every episode segment is posted, in order, by date. They've ALWAYS done that. The problem you're whining about has always had a solution.
These are grown men talking about loss. I was 10 years old when dad died of cancer and no one talking about it. No one.
I still remember that interview that Anderson did with Stephen Colbert about grief, it was so poignant and deeply honest. Then, I was so let down and disappointed when Colbert made jokes about Princess Catherine after she was diagnosed with cancer. I was so convinced of Colbert’s depth of character, but seeing him go for laughs at her expense left me feeling completely disillusioned.
The problem with polls involving modern Republicans in general and DJT in particular is that they generally under represent the people voting for them. I'd say mostly because of the number of people who are ashamed to admit that they are going to vote for them.
Not Anderson inadvertently boosting the "Birds aren't real" movement by questioning baby pigeons.
It’s a reference to a really funny character in a scene from Harry and the Hendersons about the existence of big foot.
I believe emotional intelligence is linked to mental health. If one suffers, the other suffers. Communication and understanding are valuable tools that are under used in society
Heeey I just raised two baby pigeons on my balcony in Queens NY
"None of us are alone on this road..." OK WE'RE GONNA TAKE A BREAK HERE!
Not great.
The first time I thoroughly looked up a polling source - from a supposed legitimate news show - the number of people queried was 200. TWO HUNDRED 😮 Is that really a reliable source to use??
My grief is generational. Mansplain.
Baby pigeons in Canada are often eaten by Magpies. I saw it happen one summer. The parents came back to an empty nest.
I was recently sent a text asking which candidate I would vote for. I answered like an idiot and received a thank you. but I am 76 and it was a first if I was indeed being polled.
I raised two orphaned baby pigeons...so they definitely exist! Lol...
part 2
Stephen’s dad and brothers died 50 years ago last Wednesday…😢😔
I'm so dull
Baby pigeons are called squabs. They grow quickly into their adult size and plumage
They don't leave the nest until they are fully fledged and that's why you don't see baby pigeons.
We never see Fox News being this open.
I've seen baby pigeons!!! I raised them.
As a Haida Woman in America where is my Native American Holocaust Museum?
You know the old saying: a watched pigeon egg never hatches.
i have never in 71 years on this planet ever been asked anything for a poll
Birds aren't real.
Just remember... If it flies, it spies.😂😅
I didn't see anyone else comment it but it's because the pigeons are part of the bourgeoisie... lol
Baby pigeons exist, but they're featherless and really ugly. (Source: Gunnerkrigg Court)
Both Stephen and I need to "have some of what Sting and Sam Jackson are having" 'Cuz they are older than both of us yet are more sprightly and healthier than we are.
Bravo.
That's a *segue, rather than a segment. (Wow, the Jackal in me can't be stopped at this point, apparently! lol 😆😉🐾💕)
Stop the stupidity
Trump For Prison 2024
JD Vance from Wanker Couchy ... sorry ... Wanker County
🤭🤭
No, that didn't feel interrupted at all.
Re: Baby pigeons - These ARE the babies. Just you wait.
This was painful to watch. They both kept interrupting each other, and when they were the ones talking they never seemed to be sure of what they're saying.
It really makes me wonder how Anderson Cooper suffers from Pete Buttegeg. Pete never interrupts anyone so far as I remember, and when he does speak, he speaks with earnestness and confidence.
Polls are like weather forcasts.
CLSB Politics has the best reporting on polls.
What a crappy time to stop this video. I wanted to hear what he had to say.
He actually continues talking about it more in the next part of the interview
@@CTJMusic thank you, I hadn't realised they had done it in parts.
I processed marketing research data for years and it was amazing how consistent data was between various polls. If there is inconsistency in polling it is for a couple of reasons usually. The questions asked may be poorly phrased or confusing and most commonly the data is bad because the sampling is poorly done. In the modern era where so many people will not answer their phone if the caller is unknown it is very difficult to get a representative sample.
Makes sense.
I saw 👀 baby pigeons 🐦 and I have the googly photos to prove it. 😹😹😎💅
Wish you guys would number these, they're never in order.
No more damn polls please.
Baby pigeons exist. I have a nest in my balcony and I can see them.
Baby Pigeons? Like Looking into the Face of the Medusa.
I saw a pigeon nest in my barn with baby pigeons in it. They are really cute! Why do they have to grow into flying rats?!