From 85cccbcbc73c3b814db5455465db63b3dcfea461 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: ZLFlyApple Date: 2017年9月25日 13:58:58 +0800 Subject: [PATCH] n-gram --- .../Obama's dinner speech 2013.txt" | 85 ++++++ .../Obama's dinner speech 2014.txt" | 95 +++++++ .../Obama's dinner speech 2015.txt" | 148 ++++++++++ .../Obama's dinner speech 2016.txt" | 123 +++++++++ .../ZLFlyApple-ngram/README.md" | 54 ++++ .../ZLFlyApple-ngram/n-gram.ipynb" | 252 ++++++++++++++++++ 6 files changed, 757 insertions(+) create mode 100644 "MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2013.txt" create mode 100644 "MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2014.txt" create mode 100644 "MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2015.txt" create mode 100644 "MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2016.txt" create mode 100644 "MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/README.md" create mode 100644 "MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/n-gram.ipynb" diff --git "a/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2013.txt" "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2013.txt" new file mode 100644 index 0000000..04ec1ff --- /dev/null +++ "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2013.txt" @@ -0,0 +1,85 @@ +Remarks by The President at The White House Correspondents' Association Dinner + +10:14 P.M. EDT + +THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. (Applause.) Thank you, everybody. (Laughter.) How do you like my new entrance music? (Applause.) Rush Limbaugh warned you about this -- second term, baby. (Laughter and applause.) We。ッre changing things around here a little bit. (Laughter.) + +Actually, my advisors were a little worried about the new rap entrance music. (Laughter.) They are a little more traditional. They suggested that I should start with some jokes at my own expense, just take myself down a peg. I was like, guys, after four and a half years, how many pegs are there left? (Laughter.) + +I want to thank the White House Correspondents. Ed, you。ッre doing an outstanding job. We are grateful for -- (applause) -- the great work you。ッve done. To all the dignitaries who are here, everybody on the dais -- I especially want to say thank you to Ray Odierno, who does outstanding service on behalf of our country, and all our men and women in uniform every single day. (Applause.) + +And of course, our extraordinary First Lady, Michelle Obama. (Applause.) Everybody loves Michelle. (Laughter.) She。ッs on the cover of Vogue, high poll numbers. But don。ッt worry -- I recently got my own magazine cover. (Laughter.) + +Now, look, I get it. These days, I look in the mirror and I have to admit, I。ッm not the strapping young Muslim socialist that I used to be. (Laughter.) Time passes. You get a little gray. (Laughter.) + +And yet, even after all this time, I still make rookie mistakes. Like, I。ッm out in California, we。ッre at a fundraiser, we。ッre having a nice time. I happen to mention that Kamala Harris is the best-looking attorney general in the country. (Laughter.) As you might imagine, I got trouble when I got back home. (Laughter.) Who knew Eric Holder was so sensitive? (Laughter and applause.) + +And then there。ッs the Easter Egg Roll, which is supposed to be just a nice, fun event with the kids. I go out on the basketball court, took 22 shots -- made two of them. (Laughter.) That。ッs right: two hits, 20 misses. The executives at NBC asked, 。ーWhat。ッs your secret?。ア (Laughter and applause.) + +So, yes, maybe I have lost a step. But some things are beyond my control. For example, this whole controversy about Jaz-Z going to Cuba -- it。ッs unbelievable. I。ッve got 99 problems and now Jay-Z is one. (Laughter and applause.) That。ッs another rap reference, Bill. (Laughter.) I。ッll let you know. (Applause.) + +Of course, everybody has got plenty of advice. Maureen Dowd said I could solve all my problems if I were just more like Michael Douglas in 。ーThe American President.。ア (Laughter.) And I know Michael is here tonight. Michael, what。ッs your secret, man? (Laughter.) Could it be that you were an actor in an Aaron Sorkin liberal fantasy? (Laughter.) Might that have something to do with it? (Applause.) I don。ッt know. Check in with me. Maybe it。ッs something else. (Laughter.) + +Anyway, I recognize that this job can take a toll on you. I understand -- second term, you need a burst of new energy, try some new things. And my team and I talked about it. We were willing to try anything. So we borrowed one of Michelle。ッs tricks. (Laughter and applause.) I thought this looked pretty good, but no bounce. (Laughter.) + +I want to give a shout-out to our headliner, Conan O。ッBrien. (Applause.) I was just talking to Ed, and I understand that when the Correspondents。ッ Association was considering Conan for this gig, they were faced with that age-old dilemma: Do you offer it to him now, or wait for five years and then give it to Jimmy Fallon? (Laughter.) That was a little harsh. (Laughter.) I love Conan. + +And of course, the White House press corps is here. I know CNN has taken some knocks lately, but the fact is I admire their commitment to cover all sides of a story, just in case one of them happens to be accurate. (Laughter and applause.) + +Some of my former advisors have switched over to the dark side. For example, David Axelrod now works for MSNBC, which is a nice change of pace since MSNBC used to work for David Axelrod. (Laughter.) + +The History Channel is not here. I guess they were embarrassed about the whole Obama-is-a-devil thing. (Laughter.) Of course, that never kept Fox News from showing up. (Laughter.) They actually thought the comparison was not fair -- to Satan. (Laughter and applause.) + +But the problem is, is that the media landscape is changing so rapidly. You can。ッt keep up with it. I mean, I remember when BuzzFeed was just something I did in college around 2:00 a.m. (Laughter.) It。ッs true. (Laughter.) + +Recently, though, I found a new favorite source for political news -- these guys are great. I think everybody here should check it out, they tell it like it is. It。ッs called whitehouse.gov. (Laughter.) I cannot get enough of it. + +The fact is I really do respect the press. I recognize that the press and I have different jobs to do. My job is to be President; your job is to keep me humble. Frankly, I think I。ッm doing my job better. (Laughter and applause.) + +But part of the problem is everybody is so cynical. I mean, we。ッre constantly feeding cynicism, suspicion, conspiracies. You remember a few months ago, my administration put out a photograph of me going skeet shooting at Camp David? You remember that? And quite a number of people insisted that this had been photoshopped. But tonight I have something to confess: You were right. Guys, can we show them the actual photo? (Laughter.) We were just trying to tone it down a little bit. (Laughter.) That was an awesome day. (Laughter.) + +There are other new players in the media landscape as well, like super PACs. Did you know that Sheldon Adelson spent 100ドル million of his own money last year on negative ads? You。ッve got to really dislike me -- (laughter) -- to spend that kind of money. I mean, that。ッs Oprah money. (Laughter.) You could buy an island and call it 。ーNobama。ア for that kind of money. (Laughter.) Sheldon would have been better off offering me 100ドル million to drop out of the race. (Laughter and applause.) I probably wouldn。ッt have taken it, but I'd have thought about it. (Laughter.) Michelle would have taken it. (Laughter.) You think I。ッm joking? (Laughter.) + +I know Republicans are still sorting out what happened in 2012, but one thing they all agree on is they need to do a better job reaching out to minorities. And look, call me self-centered, but I can think of one minority they could start with. (Laughter.) Hello? Think of me as a trial run, you know? (Laughter.) See how it goes. (Laughter.) + +If they won。ッt come to me, I will come to them. Recently, I had dinner -- it。ッs been well publicized -- I had dinner with a number of the Republican senators. And I。ッll admit it wasn。ッt easy. I proposed a toast -- it died in committee. (Laughter.) + +Of course, even after I've done all this, some folks still don。ッt think I spend enough time with Congress. "Why don。ッt you get a drink with Mitch McConnell?" they ask. Really? (Laughter.) Why don。ッt you get a drink with Mitch McConnell? (Laughter and applause.) I'm sorry. I get frustrated sometimes. + +I am not giving up. In fact, I'm taking my charm offensive on the road -- a Texas barbeque with Ted Cruz, a Kentucky bluegrass concert with Rand Paul, and a book-burning with Michele Bachmann. (Laughter and applause.) + +My charm offensive has helped me learn some interesting things about what's going on in Congress -- it turns out, absolutely nothing. (Laughter.) But the point of my charm offensive is simple: We need to make progress on some important issues. Take the sequester. Republicans fell in love with this thing, and now they can't stop talking about how much they hate it. It's like we're trapped in a Taylor Swift album. (Laughter.) + +One senator who has reached across the aisle recently is Marco Rubio, but I don。ッt know about 2016. I mean, the guy has not even finished a single term in the Senate and he thinks he's ready to be President. (Laughter and applause.) Kids these days. + +I, on the other hand, have run my last campaign. On Thursday, as Ed mentioned, I went to the opening of the Bush Presidential Library in Dallas. It was a wonderful event, and that inspired me to get started on my own legacy, which will actually begin by building another edifice right next to the Bush Library -- can we show that, please? (Laughter.) + +I'm also hard at work on plans for the Obama Library. And some have suggested that we put it in my birthplace, but I'd rather keep it in the United States. (Laughter.) Did anybody not see that joke coming? (Laughter.) Show of hands. Only Gallup? Maybe Dick Morris? (Laughter and applause.) + +Now, speaking of presidents and their legacies, I want to acknowledge a wonderful friend, Steven Spielberg, and Daniel Day-Lewis, who are here tonight. (Applause.) We had a screening of their most recent film, Lincoln, which was an extraordinary film. I am a little nervous, though, about Steven's next project. I saw a behind-the-scenes look on HBO -- well, let's just check it out. Roll the tape. + +(Video is shown.) (Laughter and applause.) + +It's a remarkable transformation. Do I really sound like that, though, honey? (Laughter.) + +Groucho Marx once said -- and, Senator Cruz, that。ッs Groucho Marx, not Karl. That。ッs the other guy. (Laughter.) Groucho Marx once told an audience, "Before I speak, I have something important to say." (Laughter.) And along those same lines, I want to close on a more serious note. + +Obviously, there has been no shortage of news to cover over these past few weeks. And these have been some very hard days for too many of our citizens. Even as we gather here tonight, our thoughts are not far from the people of Boston and the people of West, Texas. There are families in the Midwest who are coping with some terrible floods. So we've had some difficult days. + +But even when the days seemed darkest, we have seen humanity shine at its brightest. We've seen first responders and National Guardsmen who have dashed into danger, law enforcement officers who lived their oath to serve and to protect, and everyday Americans who are opening their homes and their hearts to perfect strangers. + +And we also saw journalists at their best -- especially those who took the time to wade upstream through the torrent of digital rumors to chase down leads and verify facts and painstakingly put the pieces together to inform, and to educate, and to tell stories that demanded to be told. + +If anyone wonders, for example, whether newspapers are a thing of the past, all you needed to do was to pick up or log on to papers like the Boston Globe. (Applause.) When their communities and the wider world needed them most, they were there making sense of events that might at first blush seem beyond our comprehension. And that。ッs what great journalism is, and that。ッs what great journalists do. And that。ッs why, for example, Pete Williams' new nickname around the NBC newsroom is "Big Papi." (Applause.) + +And in these past few weeks, as I've gotten a chance to meet many of the first responders and the police officers and volunteers who raced to help when hardship hits, I was reminded, as I'm always reminded when I meet our men and women in uniform, whether they're in war theater, or here back home, or at Walter Reed in Bethesda -- I'm reminded that all these folks, they don。ッt do it to be honored, they don。ッt do it to be celebrated. They do it because they love their families and they love their neighborhoods and they love their country. + +And so, these men and women should inspire all of us in this room to live up to those same standards; to be worthy of their trust; to do our jobs with the same fidelity, and the same integrity, and the same sense of purpose, and the same love of country. Because if we're only focused on profits or ratings or polls, then we're contributing to the cynicism that so many people feel right now. (Applause.) + +And so, those of us in this room tonight, we are incredibly lucky. And the fact is, we can do better -- all of us. Those of us in public office, those of us in the press, those who produce entertainment for our kids, those with power, those with influence -- all of us, including myself, we can strive to value those things that I suspect led most of us to do the work that we do in the first place -- because we believed in something that was true, and we believed in service, and the idea that we can have a lasting, positive impact on the lives of the people around us. + +And that。ッs our obligation. That。ッs a task we should gladly embrace on behalf of all of those folks who are counting on us; on behalf of this country that。ッs given us so much. + +So thank you all, to the White House Correspondents for the great work you do. God bless you all. May God bless the United States of America. + +END \ No newline at end of file diff --git "a/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2014.txt" "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2014.txt" new file mode 100644 index 0000000..cfc0981 --- /dev/null +++ "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2014.txt" @@ -0,0 +1,95 @@ +Remarks by the President at White House Correspondents' Dinner + +10:21 P.M. EDT + +THE PRESIDENT: Thank you so much, everybody. Have a seat, have a seat. Before I get started, can we get the new presidential setup out here? + +(Aides bring out two ferns.) + +It was worked before. (Laughter and applause.) That。ッs more like it. + +It is great to be back. What a year, huh? I usually start these dinners with a few self-deprecating jokes. After my stellar 2013, what could I possibly talk about? (Laughter.) + +I admit it -- last year was rough. Sheesh. (Laughter.) At one point things got so bad, the 47 percent called Mitt Romney to apologize. (Laughter.) + +Of course, we rolled out healthcare.gov. That could have gone better. (Laughter.) In 2008 my slogan was, 。ーYes We Can.。ア In 2013 my slogan was, 。ーControl-Alt-Delete.。ア (Laughter.) On the plus side, they did turn the launch of healthcare.gov into one of the year。ッs biggest movies. (Laughter.) + +But rather than dwell on the past, I would like to pivot to this dinner. Let。ッs welcome our headliner this evening, Joel McHale. (Applause.) On 。ーCommunity,。ア Joel plays a preening, self-obsessed narcissist. So this dinner must be a real change of pace for you. (Laughter.) + +I want to thank the White House Correspondents Association for hosting us here tonight. I am happy to be here, even though I am a little jet-lagged from my trip to Malaysia. The lengths we have to go to get CNN coverage these days. (Laughter and applause.) I think they。ッre still searching for their table. (Laughter and applause.) + +MSNBC is here. They。ッre a little overwhelmed. (Laughter.) They。ッve never seen an audience this big before. (Laughter.) + +But, look, everybody is trying to keep up with this incredibly fast-changing media landscape. For example, I got a lot of grief on cable news for promoting Obamacare to young people on Between Two Ferns. But that。ッs what young people like to watch. And to be fair, I am not the first person on television between two potted plants. (Laughter and applause.) + +Sometimes I do feel disrespected by you reporters. But that。ッs okay. Seattle Seahawk cornerback Richard Sherman is here tonight. (Applause.) And he gave me some great tips on how to handle it. Jake Tapper, don。ッt you ever talk about me like that! (Laughter.) I。ッm the best President in the game! (Laughter.) + +What do you think, Richard? Was that good? A little more feeling next time? + +While we。ッre talking sports, just last month, a wonderful story -- an American won the Boston Marathon for first time in 30 years. (Applause.) Which was inspiring and only fair, since a Kenyan has been president for the last six. (Laughter and applause.) Had to even things out. (Laughter.) + +We have some other athletes here tonight, including Olympic snowboarding gold medalist Jamie Anderson is here. We。ッre proud of her. (Applause.) Incredibly talented young lady. Michelle and I watched the Olympics -- we cannot believe what these folks do -- death-defying feats -- haven。ッt seen somebody pull a 。ー180。ア that fast since Rand Paul disinvited that Nevada rancher from this dinner. (Laughter.) As a general rule, things don。ッt like end well if the sentence starts, 。ーLet me tell you something I know about the negro.。ア (Laughter.) You don。ッt really need to hear the rest of it. (Laughter and applause.) Just a tip for you -- don。ッt start your sentence that way. (Laughter.) + +Speaking of Rand Paul -- (laughter) -- Colorado legalized marijuana this year, an interesting social experiment. I do hope it doesn。ッt lead to a whole lot of paranoid people who think that the federal government is out to get them and listening to their phone calls. (Laughter.) That would be a problem. (Laughter.) + +And speaking of conservative heroes, the Koch brothers bought a table here tonight. But as usual, they used a shadowy right-wing organization as a front. Hello, Fox News. (Laughter and applause.) + +I。ッm just kidding. Let。ッs face it, Fox, you。ッll miss me when I。ッm gone. (Laughter.) It will be harder to convince the American people that Hillary was born in Kenya. (Laughter and applause.) + +A lot of us really are concerned about the way big money is influencing our politics. I remember when a Super PAC was just me buying Marlboro 100s instead of regulars. (Laughter.) + +Of course, now that it。ッs 2014, Washington is obsessed on the midterms. Folks are saying that with my sagging poll numbers, my fellow Democrats don。ッt really want me campaigning with them. And I don。ッt think that。ッs true -- although I did notice the other day that Sasha needed a speaker at career day, and she invited Bill Clinton. (Laughter.) I was a little hurt by that. (Laughter.) + +Both sides are doing whatever it takes to win the ruthless game. Republicans -- this is a true story -- Republicans actually brought in a group of consultants to teach their candidates how to speak to women. This is true. And I don。ッt know if it will work with women, but I understand that America。ッs teenage boys are signing up to run for the Senate in droves. (Laughter.) + +Anyway, while you guys focus on the horserace, I。ッm going to do what I do -- I。ッm going to be focused on everyday Americans. Just yesterday, I read a heartbreaking letter -- you know I get letters from folks from around the country; every day I get 10 that I read -- this one got to me. A Virginia man who。ッs been stuck in the same part-time job for years; no respect from his boss; no chance to get ahead. I really wish Eric Cantor would stop writing me. (Laughter.) You can just pick up the phone, Eric. (Laughter.) + +And I。ッm feeling sorry -- believe it or not -- for the Speaker of the House, as well. These days, the House Republicans actually give John Boehner a harder time than they give me, which means orange really is the new black. (Laughter and applause.) + +But I have not given up the idea of working with Congress. In fact, two weeks ago, Senator Ted Cruz and I, we got a bill done together. And I have to say, the signing ceremony was something special. We。ッve got a picture of it I think. (Laughter.) + +Look, I know, Washington seems more dysfunctional than ever. Gridlock has gotten so bad in this town you have to wonder: What did we do to piss off Chris Christie so bad? (Laughter and applause.) + +One issue, for example, we haven。ッt been able to agree on is unemployment insurance. Republicans continue to refuse to extend it. And you know what, I am beginning to think they。ッve got a point. If you want to get paid while not working, you should have to run for Congress just like everybody else. (Laughter and applause.) + +Of course, there is one thing that keeps Republicans busy. They have tried more than 50 times to repeal Obamacare. Despite that, 8 million people signed up for health care in the first open enrollment. (Applause.) Which does lead one to ask, how well does Obamacare have to work before you don。ッt want to repeal it? What if everybody。ッs cholesterol drops to 120? (Laughter.) What if your yearly checkup came with tickets to a Clippers game? (Laughter.) Not the old, Donald Sterling Clippers -- the new Oprah Clippers. Would that be good enough? (Laughter.) What if they gave Mitch McConnell a pulse? (Laughter.) What is it going to take? (Laughter.) + +Anyway, this year, I。ッve promised to use more executive actions to get things done without Congress. My critics call this the 。ーimperial presidency.。ア The truth is, I just show up every day in my office and do my job. I。ッve got a picture of this I think. (Laughter and applause.) You would think they。ッd appreciate a more assertive approach, considering that the new conservative darling is none other than Vladimir Putin. (Laughter.) Last year, Pat Buchanan said Putin is 。ーheaded straight for the Nobel Peace Prize.。ア He said this. Now I know it sounds crazy but to be fair, they give those to just about anybody these days. (Laughter.) So it could happen. + +But it。ッs not just Pat -- Rudy Giuliani said Putin is 。ーwhat you call a leader.。ア Mike Huckabee and Sean Hannity keep talking about his bare chest, which is kind of weird. (Laughter.) Look it up -- they talk about it a lot. (Laughter.) + +It is strange to think that I have just two and a half years left in this office. Everywhere I look, there are reminders that I only hold this job temporarily. (Laughter.) + +But it。ッs a long time between now and 2016, and anything can happen. You may have heard the other day, Hillary had to dodge a flying shoe at a press conference. (Laughter and applause.) I love that picture. (Laughter.) + +Regardless of what happens, I。ッve run my last campaign and I。ッm beginning to think about my legacy. Some of you know -- Mayor Rahm Emanuel recently announced he is naming a high school in Chicago after me, which is extremely humbling. I was even more flattered to hear Rick Perry, who is here tonigh, is doing the same thing in Texas. Take a look. (Laughter.) Thank you, Rick. It means a lot to me. (Laughter and applause.) + +And I intend to enjoy all the free time that I will have. George W. Bush took up painting after he left office, which inspired me to take up my own artistic side. (Laughter.) I。ッm sure we。ッve got a shot of this. (Laughter.) Maybe not. The joke doesn。ッt work without the slide. (Laughter.) Oh well. Assume that it was funny. (Laughter.) Does this happen to you, Joel? It does? Okay. + +On a more serious note, tonight reminds us that we really are lucky to live in a country where reporters get to give a head of state a hard time on a daily basis -- and then, once a year, give him or her the chance, at least, to try to return the favor. + +But we also know that not every journalist, or photographer, or crewmember is so fortunate, because even as we celebrate the free press tonight, our thoughts are with those in places around the globe like Ukraine, and Afghanistan, and Syria, and Egypt, who risk everything -- in some cases, even give their lives -- to report the news. + +And what tonight also reminds us is that the fight for full and fair access goes beyond the chance to ask a question. As Steve mentioned, decades ago, an African American who wanted to cover his or her President might be barred from journalism school, burdened by Jim Crow, and, once in Washington, banned from press conferences. But after years of effort, black editors and publishers began meeting with FDR。ッs press secretary, Steve Early. And then they met with the President himself, who declared that a black reporter would get a credential. And even when Harry McAlpin made history as the first African American to attend a presidential news conference, he wasn。ッt always welcomed by the other reporters. But he was welcomed by the President, who told him, I。ッm glad to see you, McAlpin, and I。ッm very happy to have you here. + +Now, that sentiment might have worn off once Harry asked him a question or two -- (laughter) -- and Harry。ッs battles continued. But he made history. And we。ッre s proud of Sherman and his family for being here tonight, and the White House Correspondents Association for creating a scholarship in Harry。ッs name. (Applause.) + +For over 100 years, even as the White House Correspondents Association has told the story of America。ッs progress, you。ッve lived it, too -- gradually allowing equal access to women, and minorities, and gays, and Americans with disabilities. And, yes, radio, and television, and Internet reporters, as well. And through it all, you。ッve helped make sure that even as societies change, our fundamental commitment to the interaction between those who govern and those who ask questions doesn。ッt change. And as Jay will attest, it。ッs a legacy you carry on enthusiastically every single day. + +And because this is the 100th anniversary of the Correspondents。ッ Association, I actually recorded an additional brief video thanking all of you for your hard work. Can we run the video? + +(Video fails to play.) + +THE PRESIDENT: What。ッs going on? (Laughter.) I was told this would work. Does anybody know how to fix this? (Laughter.) + +(Secretary Sebelius enters from backstage.) + +THE PRESIDENT: Oh, thank you. (Laughter and applause.) You got it? + +SECRETARY SEBELIUS: I got this -- I see it all the time. There, that should work. + +(Video plays.) + +THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, everybody. God bless you. And God bless America, and thank you, Kathleen Sebelius. (Applause.) + +END \ No newline at end of file diff --git "a/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2015.txt" "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2015.txt" new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8b6db0c --- /dev/null +++ "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2015.txt" @@ -0,0 +1,148 @@ +Remarks By The President At White House Correspondents' Association Dinner + +The Washington Hilton Hotel +Washington, D.C. + +10:20 P.M. EDT + +THE PRESIDENT: Good evening, everybody. Welcome to the White House Correspondents Dinner ィC- the night when Washington celebrates itself. (Laughter.) Somebody。ッs got to do it. (Laughter.) + +And welcome to the fourth quarter of my presidency. (Laughter and applause.) It。ッs true ィC- that was Michelle cheering. (Laughter.) The fact is, I feel more loose and relaxed than ever. Those Joe Biden shoulder massages, they。ッre like magic. (Laughter.) You should try one. Oh, you have. (Laughter.) + +I am determined to make the most of every moment I have left. After the midterm elections, my advisors asked me, 。ーMr. President, do you have a bucket list?。ア And I said, 。ーWell, I have something that rhymes with bucket list.。ッ。ア (Laughter and applause.) + +Take executive action on immigration? Bucket. (Laughter.) New climate regulations? Bucket. It。ッs the right thing to do. (Laughter and applause.) + +And my new attitude is paying off. Look at my Cuba policy. The Castro brothers are here tonight. (Laughter and applause.) Welcome to America, amigos! Que pasa? What? It。ッs the Castros from Texas? (Laughter.) Oh. Hi Joaquin. Hi Julian. (Laughter.) + +Anyway, being President is never easy. I still have to fix a broken immigration system, issue veto threats, negotiate with Iran -ィC all while finding time to pray five times a day. (Laughter.) Which is strenuous. (Laughter and applause.) + +And it is no wonder that people keep pointing out how the presidency has aged me. I look so old, John Boehner has already invited Netanyahu to speak at my funeral. (Laughter and applause.) + +Meanwhile, Michelle hasn。ッt aged a day. (Applause.) I ask her what her secret is, she just says 。ーfresh fruits and vegetables.。ア It。ッs aggravating. (Laughter.) + +The fact is, though, at this point, my legacy is finally beginning to take shape. The economy is getting better. Nine in ten Americans now have health coverage. (Applause.) Today, thanks to Obamacare, you no longer have to worry about losing your insurance if you lose your job. You。ッre welcome, Senate Democrats. (Laughter and applause.) + +Now, look, it is true I have not managed to make everybody happy. Six years into my presidency, some people still say I。ッm arrogant and aloof, condescending. Some people are so dumb. (Laughter.) No wonder I don。ッt meet with them. (Laughter.) + +And that。ッs not all people say about me. A few weeks ago, Dick Cheney says he thinks I。ッm the worst President of his lifetime. Which is interesting, because I think Dick Cheney is the worst President of my lifetime. (Laughter and applause.) It。ッs quite a coincidence. + +I mean, everybody has got something to say these days. Mike Huckabee recently said people shouldn。ッt join our military until a true conservative is elected President. Think about that. It was so outrageous, 47 Ayatollahs wrote us a letter trying to explain to Huckabee how our system works. (Laughter.) + +It gets worse. Just this week, Michele Bachmann actually predicted that I would bring about the biblical end of days. (Laughter.) Now that。ッs a legacy! (Laughter.) That。ッs big. I mean, Lincoln, Washington -- they didn。ッt do that. (Laughter.) + +But I just have to put this stuff aside, I。ッve got to stay focused on my job, because for many Americans, this is still a time of deep uncertainty. For example, I have one friend ィC- just a few weeks ago, she was making millions of dollars a year. And she。ッs now living out of a van in Iowa. (Laughter and applause.) + +Meanwhile, back here in our nation。ッs capital, we。ッre always dealing with new challenges. I。ッm happy to report that the Secret Service, thanks to some excellent reporting by White House correspondents, they。ッre really focusing on some of the issues that have come up. And they finally figured out a full-proof way to keep people off my lawn. (Laughter.) It works. And it。ッs not just fence-jumpers. As some of you know, a few months ago, a drone crash-landed out back. That was pretty serious, but don。ッt worry, we。ッve installed a new, state-of-the-art security system. (Laughter.) + +You know what, let me set the record straight. I tease Joe sometimes, but he has been at my side for seven years now. I love that man. (Applause.) He。ッs not just a great Vice President, he is a great friend. We。ッve gotten so close, in some places in Indiana, they won。ッt serve us pizza anymore. (Laughter and applause.) + +I want to thank our host for the evening, a Chicago girl, the incredibly talented Cecily Strong. (Applause.) On 。ーSaturday Night Life,。ア Cecily impersonates CNN anchor Brooke Baldwin. Which is surprising, because usually the only people impersonating journalists on CNN are journalists on CNN. (Laughter.) + +ABC is here with some of the stars from their big new comedy, 。ーBlack-ish.。ア (Applause.) It。ッs a great show, but I have to give ABC fair warning ィC- being 。ーBlack-ish。ア only makes you popular for so long. Trust me. (Laughter.) There。ッs a shelf life to that thing. (Laughter.) + +As always, the reporters here had a lot to cover over the last year. Here on the East Coast, one big story was the brutal winter. The polar vortex caused so many record lows, they renamed it 。ーMSNBC.。ア (Laughter.) + +But of course, let。ッs face it, there is one issue on every reporter。ッs mind and that is 2016. Already, we。ッve seen some missteps. It turns out Jeb Bush identified himself as 。ーHispanic。ア back in 2009. Which you know what, look, I understand. It。ッs an innocent mistake. Reminds me of when I identified myself as 。ーAmerican。ア back in 1961. (Laughter and applause.) + +Ted Cruz said that denying the existence of climate change made him like Galileo. (Laughter.) Now that。ッs not really an apt comparison. Galileo believed the Earth revolves around the sun. Ted Cruz believes the Earth revolves around Ted Cruz. (Laughter.) And just as an aside, I want to point out, when a guy who has his face on a 。ーHope。ア poster calls you self-centered, you know you。ッve got a problem. (Laughter.) The narcissism index is creeping up a little too high. (Laughter.) + +Meanwhile, Rick Santorum announced that he would not attend the same-sex wedding of a friend or a loved one. To which gays and lesbians across the country responded, that。ッs not going to be a problem. (Laughter and applause.) Don。ッt sweat that one. (Laughter.) + +And Donald Trump is here. Still. (Laughter.) + +Anyway. (Laughter.) It。ッs amazing how time flies. Soon, the first presidential contest will take place. And I for one cannot wait to see who the Koch brothers pick. + +It。ッs exciting. Marco Rubio, Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, Jeb Bush, Scott Walker. Who will finally get that red rose? (Laughter.) The winner gets a billion-dollar war chest. The runner up gets to be the bachelor on the next season of 。ーThe Bachelor.。ア (Laughter.) I mean, seriously, a billion dollars. From just two guys. Is it just me, or does that feel a little excessive? (Laughter.) I mean, it。ッs almost insulting to the candidates. The Koch brothers think they need to spend a billion dollars to get folks to like one of these people. (Laughter.) It's got to hurt their feelings a little bit. (Laughter.) + +And, look, I know I。ッve raised a lot of money too. But in all fairness, my middle name is 。ーHussein.。ア (Laughter.) What。ッs their excuse? (Laughter and applause.) + +The trail hasn。ッt been easy for my fellow Democrats either. As we all know, Hillary。ッs private emails got her in trouble. Frankly, I thought it was going to be her private Instagram account that was going to cause her bigger problems. (Laughter.) + +Hillary kicked things off by going completely unrecognized at a Chipotle. Not to be outdone, Martin O。ッMalley kicked things off by going completely unrecognized at a Martin O。ッMalley campaign event. (Laughter.) + +And Bernie Sanders might run. I like Bernie. Bernie is an interesting guy. Apparently some folks really want to see a pot-smoking socialist in the White House. (Laughter.) We could get a third Obama term after all. (Laughter and applause.) It could happen. + +Anyway, as always, I want to close on a more serious note. I often joke about tensions between me and the press, but honestly, what they say doesn。ッt bother me. I understand we。ッve got an adversarial system. I。ッm a mellow sort of guy. + +And that。ッs why I invited Luther, my anger translator, to join me here tonight. (Laughter and applause.) + +[LUTHER ENTERS] + + LUTHER: Hold on to your lily-white butts. (Laughter.) + +THE PRESIDENT: In our fast-changing world, traditions like the White House Correspondents。ッ Dinner are important. + +LUTHER: I mean, really, what is this dinner? (Laughter.) And why am I required to come to it? (Laughter.) Jeb Bush, do you really want to do this? (Laughter.) + +THE PRESIDENT: Because despite our differences, we count on the press to shed light on the most important issues of the day. + +LUTHER: And we can count on Fox News to terrify old white people with some nonsense! (Laughter.) 。ーSharia law is coming to Cleveland. Run for the damn hills!。ア (Laughter.) Y。ッall, it。ッs ridiculous. (Laughter.) + +THE PRESIDENT: We won。ッt always see eye to eye. + +LUTHER: Oh, and CNN, thank you so much for the wall-to-wall Ebola coverage. For two whole weeks, we were one step away from the Walking Dead. (Laughter.) And then you all got up and just moved on to the next day. That was awesome. Oh, and by the way, just if you haven。ッt noticed, you don。ッt have Ebola! (Laughter.) + +THE PRESIDENT: But I still deeply appreciate the work that you do. + +LUTHER: Ya。ッll remember when I had that big, old hole in the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico and then I plugged it? Remember that? Which 。ーObama。ッs Katrina。ア was that one? Was that 19? Or was it 20? Because I can。ッt remember. (Laughter.) + +THE PRESIDENT: Protecting our democracy is more important than ever. For example, the Supreme Court ruled that the donor who gave Ted Cruz 6 million dollars was just exercising free speech. + +LUTHER: Yeah, that。ッs the kind of speech like this, 。ーI just wasted six million dollars.。ア (Laughter and applause.) + +THE PRESIDENT: And it。ッs not just Republicans. Hillary will have to raise huge sums of money, too. + +LUTHER: Oh, yes. She。ッs gonna get that money. She。ッs gonna get all the money. Khaleesi is coming to Westeros. (Laughter and applause.) So watch out! (Laughter.) + +THE PRESIDENT: The nonstop focus on billionaire donors creates real problems for our democracy. + +LUTHER: And that。ッs why we。ッre running for a third term! (Laughter.) + +THE PRESIDENT: No, we。ッre not. + +LUTHER: We。ッre not? + +THE PRESIDENT: No. + +LUTHER: Who the hell said that? (Laughter.) + +THE PRESIDENT: But we do need to stay focused on some big challenges, like climate change. + +LUTHER: Hey, listen, ya。ッll, if you haven。ッt noticed, California is bone dry. (Laughter.) It looks like a trailer for the new 。ーMad Max。ア movie up in there. (Laughter.) Ya。ッll think that Bradley Cooper came here because he wants to talk to Chuck Todd? (Laughter.) He needed a glass of water. Come on! (Laughter and applause.) + +THE PRESIDENT: The science is clear. Nine of the ten hottest years ever came in the last decade. + +LUTHER: Now, I。ッm not a scientist, but I do know how to count to 10. (Laughter.) + +THE PRESIDENT: Rising seas, more violent storms. + +LUTHER: We。ッve got mosquitos. Sweaty people on the train, stinking it up. It。ッs just nasty. (Laughter.) + +THE PRESIDENT: I mean, look at what。ッs happening right now. Every serious scientist says we need to act. The Pentagon says it。ッs a national security risk. Miami floods on a sunny day, and instead of doing anything about it, we。ッve got elected officials throwing snowballs in the Senate! + +LUTHER: Okay, Mr. President. Okay, I think they。ッve got it, bro. + +THE PRESIDENT: It is crazy! What about our kids? What kind of stupid, shortsighted, irresponsible bull -- (Laughter and applause.) + +LUTHER: Wow! Hey! (Applause.) + +THE PRESIDENT: What?! + +LUTHER: All due respect, sir. You don。ッt need an anger translator. (Laughter.) You need counseling. (Laughter.) So I。ッm out of here, man. I ain。ッt trying to get into all this. (Laughter.) + +THE PRESIDENT: Go. (Applause.) + +LUTHER: He crazy. (Laughter and applause.) + +THE PRESIDENT: Luther, my anger translator, ladies and gentlemen. (Applause.) + +Now that I got that off my chest. Investigative journalism; explanatory journalism; journalism that exposes corruption and injustice and gives a voice to the different, the marginalized, the voiceless ィC- that。ッs power. It。ッs a privilege. It。ッs as important to America。ッs trajectory -- to our values, our ideals -- than anything that we could do in elected office. + +We remember journalists we lost over the past year -- journalists like Steven Sotloff and James Foley, murdered for nothing more than trying to shine a light into some of the world。ッs darkest corners. (Applause.) We remember the journalists unjustly imprisoned around the world, including our own Jason Rezaian. (Applause.) For nine months, Jason has been imprisoned in Tehran for nothing more than writing about the hopes and the fears of the Iranian people, carrying their stories to the readers of the Washington Post in an effort to bridge our common humanity. As was already mentioned, Jason。ッs brother, Ali, is here tonight and I have told him personally we will not rest until we bring him home to his family, safe and sound. (Applause.) + +These journalists and so many others view their work as more than just a profession, but as a public good; an indispensable pillar of our society. So I want to give a toast to them. I raise a glass to them and all of you, with the words of the American foreign correspondent Dorothy Thompson: 。ーIt is not the fact of liberty, but the way in which liberty is exercised, that ultimately determines whether liberty itself survives.。ア + +Thank you for your devotion to exercising our liberty, and to telling our American story. God bless you. God bless the United States of America. (Applause.) + +END \ No newline at end of file diff --git "a/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2016.txt" "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2016.txt" new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8e7e66b --- /dev/null +++ "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/Obama's dinner speech 2016.txt" @@ -0,0 +1,123 @@ +Remarks by the President at the White House Correspondents' Dinner + +Capital Hilton +Washington, D.C. + +10:05 P.M. EDT + + (Entrance music: "When I'm Gone" by Anna Kendrick.) + + THE PRESIDENT: You can't say it, but you know it's true. (Laughter.) + +Good evening, everybody. It is an honor to be here at my last -- and perhaps the last -- White House Correspondents' Dinner. (Laughter and applause.) + +You all look great. The end of the Republic has never looked better. (Laughter and applause.) + +I do apologize -- I know I was a little late tonight. I was running on C.P.T. -- (laughter) -- which stands for "jokes that white people should not make." (Laughter and applause.) It's a tip for you, Jeff. (Laughter.) + +Anyway, here we are. My eighth and final appearance at this unique event. (Laughter.) And I am excited. If this material works well, I'm going to use it at Goldman Sachs next year. (Laughter and applause.) Earn me some serious Tubmans. That's right. (Laughter and applause.) + +My brilliant and beautiful wife, Michelle, is here tonight. (Applause.) She looks so happy to be here. (Laughter.) That's called practice -- it's like learning to do three-minute planks. (Laughter.) She makes it look easy now. (Laughter.) + +Next year at this time, someone else will be standing here in this very spot, and it's anyone's guess who she will be. (Laughter and applause.) But standing here, I can't help but be reflective, a little sentimental. Eight years ago, I said it was time to change the tone of our politics. In hindsight, I clearly should have been more specific. (Laughter.) + +Eight years ago, I was a young man, full of idealism and vigor, and look at me now. (Laughter.) I am gray and grizzled, just counting down the days 'til my death panel. (Laughter and applause.) Hillary once questioned whether I'd be ready for a 3 a.m. phone call -- now I'm awake anyway because I've got to go to the bathroom. (Laughter and applause.) I'm up. + +In fact, somebody recently said to me, Mr. President, you are so yesterday; Justin Trudeau has completely replaced you -- he's so handsome, he's so charming, he's the future. And I said, Justin, just give it a rest. (Laughter and applause.) I resented that. (Laughter.) + +Meanwhile, Michelle has not aged a day. (Applause.) The only way you can date her in photos is by looking at me. (Laughter.) Take a look. + +END +Here we are in 2008. (Slide is shown.) + +Here we are a few years later. (Slide is shown.) + +And this one is from two weeks ago. (Slide is shown.) (Laughter and applause.) + +So time passes. (Laughter.) In just six short months, I will be officially a lame duck, which means Congress now will flat-out reject my authority. (Laughter.) And Republican leaders won't take my phone calls. And this is going to take some getting used to, it's really going to -- it's a curve ball. I don't know what to do with it. (Laughter.) + +Of course, in fact, for months now congressional Republicans have been saying there are things I cannot do in my final year. Unfortunately, this dinner was not one of them. (Laughter.) But on everything else, it's another story. And you know who you are, Republicans. In fact, I think we've got Republican Senators Tim Scott and Cory Gardner, they're in the house, which reminds me, security, bar the doors! (Laughter.) Judge Merrick Garland, come on out, we're going to do this right here, right now. (Applause.) It's like "The Red Wedding." (Laughter.) + +But it's not just Congress. Even some foreign leaders, they've been looking ahead, anticipating my departure. Last week, Prince George showed up to our meeting in his bathrobe. (Laughter and applause.) That was a slap in the face. (Laughter.) A clear breach in protocol. (Laughter.) Although while in England I did have lunch with Her Majesty, the Queen, took in a performance of Shakespeare, hit the links with David Cameron -- just in case anybody is still debating whether I'm black enough, I think that settles the debate. (Laughter and applause.) + +I won't lie -- look, this is a tough transition. It's hard. Key staff are now starting to leave the White House. Even reporters have left me. Savannah Guthrie, she's left the White House Press Corps to host the Today show. Norah O'Donnell left the briefing room to host CBS This Morning. Jake Tapper left journalism to join CNN. (Laughter and applause.) + +But the prospect of leaving the White House is a mixed bag. You might have heard that someone jumped the White House fence last week, but I have to give Secret Service credit -- they found Michelle, brought her back, she's safe back at home now. (Laughter and applause.) It's only nine more months, baby. Settle down. (Laughter.) + +And yet, somehow, despite all this, despite the churn, in my final year, my approval ratings keep going up. (Laughter.) The last time I was this high, I was trying to decide on my major. (Laughter and applause.) + +And here's the thing: I haven't really done anything differently. So it's odd. Even my aides can't explain the rising poll numbers -- what has changed, nobody can figure it out. (Slide is shown.) (Laughter and applause.) Puzzling. + +Anyway, in this last year I do have more appreciation for those who have been with me on this amazing ride, like one of our finest public servants, Joe Biden. God bless him. Love that guy. (Applause.) I love Joe Biden, I really do. And I want to thank him for his friendship, for his counsel, for always giving it to me straight, for not shooting anybody in the face. (Laughter.) Thank you, Joe. (Laughter.) + +Also, I would be remiss -- let's give it up for our host, Larry Wilmore. (Applause.) Also known as one of the two black guys who is not Jon Stewart. (Laughter.) You're the South African guy, right? (Laughter.) I love Larry. And his parents are here, who are from Evanston, which is a great town. (Applause.) + +I also would like to acknowledge some of the award-winning reporters that we have with us here tonight. Rachel McAdams. Mark Ruffalo. Liev Schreiber. (Laughter.) Thank you all for everything that you've done. (Laughter.) I。ッm just joking. As you know, "Spotlight" is a film, a movie about investigative journalists with the resources and the autonomy to chase down the truth and hold the powerful accountable. Best fantasy film since Star Wars. (Laughter.) Look -- that was maybe a cheap shot. (laughter.) + +I understand the news business is tough these days, it keeps changing all the time. Every year at this dinner, somebody makes a joke about BuzzFeed, for example, changing the media landscape. And every year, the Washington Post laughs a little bit less hard. (Laughter.) Kind of a silence there. (Laughter.) Especially at the Washington Post table. (Laughter.) + +GOP Chairman Reince Priebus is here as well. (Applause.) Glad to see you that you feel that you。ッve earned a night off. (Laughter.) Congratulations on all your success. The Republican Party, the nomination process -ィC it。ッs all going great. Keep it up. (Laughter and applause.) + +Kendall Jenner is also here. And we had a chance to meet her backstage -- she seems like a very nice young woman. I。ッm not exactly sure what she does, but I am told that my Twitter mentions are about to go through the roof. (Laughter.) + +Helen Mirren is here tonight. (Applause.) I don。ッt even have a joke here. I just think Helen Mirren is awesome. (Laughter and applause.) She's awesome. (Laughter.) + +Sitting at the same table, I see Mike Bloomberg. (Applause.) Mike, a combative, controversial New York billionaire is leading the GOP primary and it is not you. (Laughter.) That。ッs has to sting a little bit. (Laughter.) Although it。ッs not an entirely fair comparison between you and the Donald. After all, Mike was a big-city mayor. He knows policy in depth. And he。ッs actually worth the amount of money that he says he is. (Laughter and applause.) + +What an election season. For example, we。ッve got the bright new face of the Democratic Party here tonight ィC- Mr. Bernie Sanders! (Applause.) There he is -- Bernie! (Applause.) Bernie, you look like a million bucks. (Laughter.) Or to put it in terms you。ッll understand, you look like 37,000 donations of 27 dollars each. (Laughter and applause.) + +A lot of folks have been surprised by the Bernie phenomenon, especially his appeal to young people. But not me, I get it. Just recently, a young person came up to me and said she was sick of politicians standing in the way of her dreams. As if we were actually going to let Malia go to Burning Man this year. (Laughter.) That was not going to happen. (Laughter.) Bernie might have let her go. (Laughter.) Not us. (Laughter.) + +I am hurt, though, Bernie, that you've distancing yourself a little from me. (Laughter.) I mean, that's just not something that you do to your comrade. (Laughter and applause.) + +Bernie。ッs slogan has helped his campaign catch fire among young people. 。ーFeel the Bern.。ア (Laughter.) Feel the Bern -- it's a good slogan. Hillary。ッs slogan has not had the same effect. Let's see this. (Slide is shown.) (Laughter.) + +Look, I。ッve said how much I admire Hillary。ッs toughness, her smarts, her policy chops, her experience. You。ッve got to admit it, though, Hillary trying to appeal to young voters is a little bit like your relative just signed up for Facebook. (Laughter.) 。ーDear America, did you get my poke?" (Laughter.) "Is it appearing on your wall?" (Laughter.) "I'm not sure I am using this right. Love, Aunt Hillary.。ア (Laughter and applause.) It's not entirely persuasive. + +Meanwhile, on the Republican side, things are a little more -- how should we say this -- a little "more loose." Just look at the confusion over the invitations to tonight。ッs dinner. Guests were asked to check whether they wanted steak or fish, but instead, a whole bunch of you wrote in Paul Ryan. (Laughter.) That's not an option, people. Steak or fish. (Laughter.) You may not like steak or fish -- (laughter) -- but that's your choice. (Laughter.) + +Meanwhile, some candidates aren。ッt polling high enough to qualify for their own joke tonight. (Slide is shown.) (Laughter.) The rules were well-established ahead of time. (Laughter.) + +And then there's Ted Cruz. Ted had a tough week. He went to Indiana ィC- Hoosier country ィC- stood on a basketball court, and called the hoop a 。ーbasketball ring.。ア (Laughter and applause.) What else is in his lexicon? Baseball sticks? Football hats? (Laughter.) But sure, I。ッm the foreign one. (Laughter and applause.) + +Well, let me conclude tonight on a more serious note. I want to thank the Washington press corps, I want to thank Carol for all that you do. The free press is central to our democracy, and -- nah, I。ッm just kidding! You know I。ッve got to talk about Trump! Come on! (Laughter and applause.) We weren't just going to stop there. Come on. (Laughter and applause.) + +Although I am a little hurt that he。ッs not here tonight. We had so much fun the last time. (Laughter.) And it is surprising. You've got a room full of reporters, celebrities, cameras, and he says no? (Laughter.) Is this dinner too tacky for The Donald? (Laughter.) What could he possibly be doing instead? Is he at home, eating a Trump Steak -- (laughter) -- tweeting out insults to Angela Merkel? (Laughter.) What's he doing? (Laughter.) + +The Republican establishment is incredulous that he is their most likely nominee -- incredulous, shocking. They say Donald lacks the foreign policy experience to be President. But, in fairness, he has spent years meeting with leaders from around the world: Miss Sweden, Miss Argentina, Miss Azerbaijan. (Laughter and applause.) + +And there's one area where Donald。ッs experience could be invaluable -ィC and that。ッs closing Guantanamo. Because Trump knows a thing or two about running waterfront properties into the ground. (Laughter and applause.) + +All right, that。ッs probably enough. I mean, I've got more material -- (applause) -- no, no, I don。ッt want to spend too much time on The Donald. Following your lead, I want to show some restraint. (Laughter.) Because I think we can all agree that from the start, he。ッs gotten the appropriate amount of coverage, befitting the seriousness of his candidacy. (Laughter and applause.) + +I hope you all are proud of yourselves. (Laughter.) The guy wanted to give his hotel business a boost, and now we。ッre praying that Cleveland makes it through July. (Laughter.) + +Mm-mm-mm. (Laughter and applause.) Hmm. (Laughter.) + +As for me and Michelle, we。ッve decided to stay in D.C. for a couple more years. (Applause.) Thank you. This way, our youngest daughter can finish up high school, Michelle can stay closer to her plot of carrots. (Laughter.) She。ッs already making plans to see them every day. Take a look. (Slide is shown.) (Laughter.) + +But our decision has actually presented a bit of a dilemma because, traditionally, Presidents don。ッt stick around after they're done. And it's something that I've been brooding about a little bit. Take a look. + +(Video is shown.) + +(Applause.) + +I am still waiting for all of you to respond to my invitation to connect on LinkedIn. (Laughter.) But I know you have jobs to do, which is what really brings us here tonight. + +I know that there are times that we've had differences, and that's inherent in our institutional roles -- it's true of every President and his press corps. But we've always shared the same goal ィC- to root our public discourse in the truth; to open the doors of this democracy; to do whatever we can to make our country and our world more free and more just. And I've always appreciated the role that you have all played as equal partners in reaching these goals. + +And our free press is why we once again recognize the real journalists who uncovered a horrifying scandal and brought about some measure of justice for thousands of victims throughout the world. They are here with us tonight ィC- Sacha Pfeiffer, Mike Rezendes, Walter Robinson, Matt Carroll, and Ben Bradlee, Jr. Please give them a big round of applause. (Applause.) + +Our free press is why, once again, we honor Jason Rezaian. (Applause.) As Carol noted, last time this year, we spoke of Jason。ッs courage as he endured the isolation of an Iranian prison. This year, we see that courage in the flesh and it's a living testament to the very idea of a free press, and a reminder of the rising level of danger, and political intimidation, and physical threats faced by reporters overseas. And I can make this commitment that as long as I hold this office, my administration will continue to fight for the release of American journalists held against their will -- and we will not stop until they see the same freedom as Jason had. (Applause.) + +At home and abroad, journalists like all of you engage in the dogged pursuit of informing citizens, and holding leaders accountable, and making our government of the people possible. And it's an enormous responsibility. And I realize it。ッs an enormous challenge at a time when the economics of the business sometimes incentivize speed over depth; and when controversy and conflict are what most immediately attract readers and viewers. + +The good news is there are so many of you that are pushing against those trends. And as a citizen of this great democracy, I am grateful for that. For this is also a time around the world when some of the fundamental ideals of liberal democracies are under attack, and when notions of objectivity, and of a free press, and of facts, and of evidence are trying to be undermined. Or, in some cases, ignored entirely. + +And in such a climate, it。ッs not enough just to give people a megaphone. And that。ッs why your power and your responsibility to dig and to question and to counter distortions and untruths is more important than ever. Taking a stand on behalf of what is true does not require you shedding your objectivity. In fact, it is the essence of good journalism. It affirms the idea that the only way we can build consensus, the only way that we can move forward as a country, the only way we can help the world mend itself is by agreeing on a baseline of facts when it comes to the challenges that confront us all. + +So this night is a testament to all of you who have devoted your lives to that idea, who push to shine a light on the truth every single day. So I want to close my final White House Correspondents' Dinner by just saying thank you. (Applause.) I'm very proud of what you've done. It has been an honor and a privilege to work side by side with you to strengthen our democracy. (Applause.) + +And with that, I just have two more words to say -ィC Obama out. (Drops microphone.) (Laughter and applause.) Thank you. (Applause.) + +END \ No newline at end of file diff --git "a/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/README.md" "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/README.md" new file mode 100644 index 0000000..603cea5 --- /dev/null +++ "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/README.md" @@ -0,0 +1,54 @@ +- Python 3.6 +- Jupyter Notebook 5.0 +- ECharts + +---------- + +襍キ蝗? +-- +> DT蜷娜ython邊セ闍ア鄒、菴應ク夲シ悟ュヲ荵?菴ソ逕ィn-gram?シ悟??譫蝉コ?螂・蟾エ鬩ャ隨ャ莠御ササ譛溷??4谺。逋ス螳ォ隶ー閠?諡帛セ?莨壽劒螳エ貍碑ョイ縲? + +---------- + +逶ョ逧? +-- +1. 蟄ヲ荵?隹?隸貧-gram +2. 菴ソ逕ィECharts霑幄。檎サ捺棡螻慕、コ +3. 菴ソ逕ィ1-gram蛻?譫?4谺。貍碑ョイ逧?蜷ャ莨怜渚譏??シ鯉シ?Laughter and Applause?シ? + +---------- + +謨ー謐ョ隸エ譏主所螻慕、コ +---- + +貍碑ョイ隶ー蠖穂クュ莨壽?ケ謐ョ螳樣刔諠?蜀オ譬?豕ィ蜷ャ莨様aughter蜥径pplause逧?諠?蜀オ縲ゆスソ逕ィ1-gram邂?蜊慕サ溯ョ。?シ瑚?ス螟溷セ怜?コ谿オ蟄先焔螂・蟾エ鬩ャ逧?2016蟷エ貍碑ョイ窶懃ャ第棡窶晄怙螂ス縲? + +鬥門?茨シ?2016蟷エ貍碑ョイ荳ュ逧?laughter蜿蛎pplause谺。謨ー蝮?荳コ蜴?蟷エ荵区怙縲? + +![蜷ャ莨怜渚譏?隶。謨ー](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ZLFlyApple/DTTest/master/%E5%90%AC%E4%BC%97%E5%8F%8D%E6%98%A0%E8%AE%A1%E6%95%B0.png) + +蜀崎??陌大芦豈丞ケエ貍碑ョイ髟ソ蠎ヲ荳榊酔?シ? + +![蟄玲焚](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ZLFlyApple/DTTest/master/wordscount.png) + +謌台サャ蜀崎ョ。邂様aughter蜿蛎pplause逧?鬚第ャ。?シ亥叉蟷ウ蝮?螟壼ー台クェwords莨壽怏荳?谺。laughter謌紡pplause?シ会シ御ケ滉シ壼書邇ー2016蟷エ貍碑ョイ逧?窶懃ャ第棡窶晄怙蟇?髮?縲? + +![蜷ャ莨怜渚譏?鬚第ャ。扈溯ョ。](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ZLFlyApple/DTTest/master/%E5%90%AC%E4%BC%97%E5%8F%8D%E6%98%A0%E9%A2%91%E6%AC%A1%E7%BB%9F%E8%AE%A1.png) + + +---------- + + +莉」遐∝所譁?譛ャ謨ー謐ョ +---- + +蝮?蛹?蜷ォ蝨ィ譛ャ譁?莉カ螟ケ荳ュ縲? + +---------- + +蜿り?? +---- +- MrLevo520 +- 縲咳ython鄂醍サ懈焚謐ョ驥?髮?縲? +- 譁?譛ャ譚・貅? https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/ + diff --git "a/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/n-gram.ipynb" "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/n-gram.ipynb" new file mode 100644 index 0000000..79c68af --- /dev/null +++ "b/MrLevo520-N-gram346円246円202円346円213円254円345円205円250円346円226円207円/furtherProject/ZLFlyApple-ngram/n-gram.ipynb" @@ -0,0 +1,252 @@ +{ + "cells": [ + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "讓。蝮玲オ玖ッ?" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 2, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "['a', 'b', 'cj!/n']\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "import string\n", + "list = [',,a,','b!','cj!/n']\n", + "item = []\n", + "for i in list:\n", + " i = i.strip(string.punctuation)\n", + " #蝨ィ蠕ェ邇ッ菴謎クュ逕ィitem.strip(string.punctuation) 蟇ケ蜀?螳ケ荳ュ逧?謇?譛牙黒隸崎ソ幄。梧ク?豢暦シ悟黒隸堺ク、遶ッ\n", + " #逧?莉サ菴墓??轤ケ隨ヲ蜿キ驛ス莨夊「ォ蜴サ謗会シ御ス?蟶ヲ霑槫ュ礼ャヲ逧?蜊戊ッ搾シ郁ソ槫ュ礼ャヲ蝨ィ蜊戊ッ榊??驛ィ?シ我サ咲┯莨壻ソ晉蕗縲?\n", + " item.append(i)\n", + "print(item)" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 11, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "[('name1', '2'), ('name2', '1'), ('name3', '2')]\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "import operator\n", + "dict_ = {'name1':'2','name2':'1','name3':'2'}\n", + "print(sorted(dict_.items(),key=operator.itemgetter(0,1),reverse=False))#謗貞コ?" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "markdown", + "metadata": {}, + "source": [ + "## n-gram" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 143, + "metadata": { + "collapsed": true + }, + "outputs": [], + "source": [ + "from urllib.request import urlopen\n", + "\n", + "import re\n", + "import string\n", + "import operator\n", + "\n", + "def isCommon(ngram):\n", + " commonWords = [\"the\", \"be\", \"and\", \"of\", \"a\", \"in\", \"to\", \"have\", \"it\",\n", + " \"i\", \"that\", \"for\", \"you\", \"he\", \"with\", \"on\", \"do\", \"say\", \"this\",\n", + " \"they\", \"is\", \"an\", \"at\", \"but\",\"we\", \"his\", \"from\", \"that\", \"not\",\n", + " \"by\", \"she\", \"or\", \"as\", \"what\", \"go\", \"their\",\"can\", \"who\", \"get\",\n", + " \"if\", \"would\", \"her\", \"all\", \"my\", \"make\", \"about\", \"know\", \"will\",\n", + " \"as\", \"up\", \"one\", \"time\", \"has\", \"been\", \"there\", \"year\", \"so\",\n", + " \"think\", \"when\", \"which\", \"them\", \"some\", \"me\", \"people\", \"take\",\n", + " \"out\", \"into\", \"just\", \"see\", \"him\", \"your\", \"come\", \"could\", \"now\",\n", + " \"than\", \"like\", \"other\", \"how\", \"then\", \"its\", \"our\", \"two\", \"more\",\n", + " \"these\", \"want\", \"way\", \"look\", \"first\", \"also\", \"new\", \"because\",\n", + " \"day\", \"more\", \"use\", \"no\", \"man\", \"find\", \"here\", \"thing\", \"give\",\n", + " #\"laughter\", \"applause\", \n", + " \"many\", \"well\", \"said\", \"was\", \"are\", \"were\", \"had\"]\n", + " #############################################\n", + " for word in ngram:\n", + " if word in commonWords:\n", + " return True\n", + " return False\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "\n", + "def cleanInput(input):\n", + " \n", + " input = re.sub('\\n+', \" \", input).lower()\n", + " input = re.sub('\\[[0-9]*\\]', \"\", input)\n", + " input = re.sub(' +', \" \", input)\n", + " input = bytes(input, \"UTF-8\")\n", + " input = input.decode(\"ascii\", \"ignore\")\n", + " \n", + " cleanInput = []\n", + " input = input.split(' ')\n", + " for item in input:\n", + " item = item.strip(string.punctuation)\n", + " if len(item)> 1 or (item.lower() == 'a' or item.lower() == 'i'):\n", + " cleanInput.append(item)\n", + " return cleanInput\n", + "\n", + "def ngrams(input, n):\n", + " input = cleanInput(input)\n", + " print(\"Total words: %d\"%len(input))\n", + " output = {}\n", + " for i in range(len(input)-n+1):\n", + " ngramTemp = \" \".join(input[i:i+n])\n", + " #print(ngramTemp)\n", + " if isCommon(ngramTemp.split()):\n", + " #print(\"in\")\n", + " pass\n", + " else:\n", + " if ngramTemp not in output:\n", + " output[ngramTemp] = 0\n", + " output[ngramTemp] += 1\n", + " return (output,len(input))\n", + "\n", + "#content = str(\n", + "# urlopen(\"http://pythonscraping.com/files/inaugurationSpeech.txt\").read(),\n", + "# 'utf-8')\n", + "\n", + " " + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 149, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "2013\n", + "Total words: 2232\n", + "laughter 61 36\n", + "applause 26 85\n", + "2014\n", + "Total words: 2096\n", + "laughter 60 34\n", + "applause 22 95\n", + "2015\n", + "Total words: 2302\n", + "laughter 79 29\n", + "applause 32 71\n", + "2016\n", + "Total words: 2809\n", + "laughter 99 28\n", + "applause 52 54\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "for i in range(4):\n", + " year = 2013+i\n", + " print(year)\n", + " content=open(\"Obama's dinner speech %d.txt\"%year).read()\n", + " (ngram,length)=(ngrams(content, 1))\n", + " sortedNGrams = sorted(ngram.items(), key = operator.itemgetter(1), reverse=True)\n", + " ngram.clear()\n", + " for top2 in range(2):\n", + " print(sortedNGrams[top2][0],sortedNGrams[top2][1],length//sortedNGrams[top2][1])" + ] + }, + { + "cell_type": "code", + "execution_count": 136, + "metadata": {}, + "outputs": [ + { + "name": "stdout", + "output_type": "stream", + "text": [ + "2013\n", + "Total words: 2232\n", + "('white house', 4)\n", + "('house correspondents', 3)\n", + "('charm offensive', 3)\n", + "('groucho marx', 3)\n", + "2014\n", + "Total words: 2096\n", + "('white house', 4)\n", + "('house correspondents', 4)\n", + "('correspondents association', 4)\n", + "2015\n", + "Total words: 2302\n", + "('white house', 5)\n", + "('ted cruz', 5)\n", + "('house correspondents', 4)\n", + "('jeb bush', 3)\n", + "('weve got', 3)\n", + "('anger translator', 3)\n", + "2016\n", + "Total words: 2809\n", + "('white house', 7)\n", + "('free press', 5)\n", + "('little bit', 4)\n", + "('house correspondents', 3)\n", + "('correspondents dinner', 3)\n", + "('press corps', 3)\n" + ] + } + ], + "source": [ + "for i in range(4):\n", + " year = 2013+i\n", + " print(year)\n", + " content=open(\"Obama's dinner speech %d.txt\"%year).read()\n", + " ngram=(ngrams(content, 2))\n", + " sortedNGrams = sorted(ngram.items(), key = operator.itemgetter(1), reverse=True)\n", + " ngram.clear()\n", + " for top2 in range(20):\n", + " if sortedNGrams[top2][1]>2:\n", + " #print(type(sortedNGrams[top2]))\n", + " print(sortedNGrams[top2])" + ] + } + ], + "metadata": { + "kernelspec": { + "display_name": "Python 3", + "language": "python", + "name": "python3" + }, + "language_info": { + "codemirror_mode": { + "name": "ipython", + "version": 3 + }, + "file_extension": ".py", + "mimetype": "text/x-python", + "name": "python", + "nbconvert_exporter": "python", + "pygments_lexer": "ipython3", + "version": "3.6.1" + } + }, + "nbformat": 4, + "nbformat_minor": 2 +}

AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /