How to cook shrimp on a George Foreman Grill; get expert tips for homemade recipes in this free cooking video. Expert: Brandon Sarkis Bio: Brandon Sarkis has been a professional chef for more than 12 years, and he has worked in Austin, Texas, Columbus, Ohio, and Atlanta, Ga. Filmmaker: brandon sarkis
Ireland’s Amazing 2007 World Cup is put under the spotlight by Cricket Ireland TV. George Dockrell & Gary Wilson introduce the video with their memories from this side of the water and then all the members of the current squad who were there in the Caribbean share their thoughts on the unforgettable journey of 2007. Come On You Boys in Green! Get behind your national side for the Cricket World Cup 2011 and show your support. The country needs a feel good story to get behind again. Let’s really try and get the whole country united behind the lads as the try to repeat the amazing scenes of 4 years ago GOOD NEWS!!! There will now be a video released each day in the run up to the Cricket World Cup 2011 that Ireland are playing in with Ireland’s first game on the 25th February 2011 against Bangladesh in Mirpur. SUBSCRIBE NOW to be the first to receive these very latest videos. Also remember to like our facebook page! www.facebook.com All Videos produced with many thanks to LightsCameraAction - see www.lightscameraaction.ie - Cricket Ireland TV would not have been possible without them. Also many thanks to all participants in the videos. Music ‘running against time’ by Yunus licensed under CreativeCommons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License (creativecommons.org
How to cook a filet mignon on a George Foreman Grill; get expert tips for homemade recipes in this free cooking video. Expert: Brandon Sarkis Bio: Brandon Sarkis has been a professional chef for more than 12 years, and he has worked in Austin, Texas, Columbus, Ohio, and Atlanta, Ga. Filmmaker: brandon sarkis
BBC2 29 November 2010 In a wide-ranging special interview, Jeremy Paxman talks to Christopher Hitchens about his cancer diagnosis, his life, his politics and his writing.
George Alagiah investigates a future food crisis triggered by rising populations, changing diets, fuel and water shortages and climate change In the past year, we have seen food riots on three continents, food inflation has rocketed and experts predict that by 2050, if things don’t change, we will see mass starvation across the world. This film sees George Alagiah travel the world in search of solutions to the growing global food crisis. PART 1 George joins a Masai chief among the skeletons of hundreds of cattle he has lost to climate change, and the English farmer who tells him why food production in the UK is also hit. He spends a day eating with a family in Cuba to find out how a future oil shock could lead to dramatic adjustments to diets. He visits the breadbasket of India to meet the farmer who now struggles to irrigate his land as water tables drop, and finds out why obesity is spiralling out of control in Mexico. Back in Britain, George investigates what is wrong with people’s diets, and discovers that the UK imports an average of 3000 litres of water per capita every day. He talks to top nutritionist Susan Jebb, DEFRA minister Hilary Benn and Nobel laureate Rajendra Pachauri to uncover what the future holds for our food. PART 2 George heads out to India to discover how a changing diet in the developing world is putting pressure on the world’s limited food resources. He finds out how using crops to produce fuel is impacting on food supplies across the continents …
From C-SPAN’s 1/30/11 “Q&A” interview, George W. Bush says he’s through with politics. “I don’t want to go out and campaign for candidates. I don’t want to be viewed as a perpetual money raiser. I don’t want to be on these talk shows giving my opinion, second guessing the current president. I think it’s bad for the country, frankly, to have a former president criticize his successor. It’s tough enough to president as it is without a former president undermining the current president. Plus, I don’t want to do that. In other words, in spite of the fact that I’m now on TV, I don’t want to be on TV…I tell people that one of the interesting sacrifices, I don’t think you sacrifice to run for president, but to the extent you do is you lose your anonymity. I like the idea of trying to regain anonymity to a certain extent. And being out of the press, at least in this stage of the post presidency is something that makes me very comfortable and its somewhat liberating, frankly.” See the complete interview, Sunday, January 30 at 8:00 pm & 11:00 pm ET on C-SPAN.