his book is called the art of being unreasonable. it chronicles his career from businessman to cultural leader to philanthropist. i don t take no for an answer. i always ask why not when people say you can t do that. it hasn t been done before. i say why not? and i listen. rarely do i great a answer. if i don t get a great answer to why not i go ahead. charlie: bradley and broad when we continue. funding for charlie rose was provided by the following. captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. charlie: bill bradley is here. he s a former new jersey senator and presidential candidate. while senator he was instrumental in forging a bipartisan tax policy agreement with president ronald reagan. before entering politics he played for the new york knicks. in his ten-year career he won two nba championships. in a new book he talks about the state of our economy and political gridlock in washington. it is called we can al
being unreasonable. it chronicles his career from businessman to cultural leader to philanthropist. i don t take no for an answer. i always ask why not when people say you can t do that. it hasn t been done before. i say why not? and i listen. rarely do i great a answer. if i don t get a great answer to why not i go ahead. charlie: bradley and broad when we continue. funding for charlie rose was provided by the following. captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. charlie: bill bradley is here. he s a former new jersey senator and presidential candidate. while senator he was instrumental in forging a bipartisan tax policy agreement with president ronald reagan. before entering politics he played for the new york knicks. in his ten-year career he won two nba championships. in a new book he talks about the state of our economy and political gridlock in washington. it is called we can all do better. i am pleased to h
it chronicles his career from businessman to cultural leader to philanthropist. i don t take no for an answer. i always ask why not when people say you can t do that. it hasn t been done before. i say why not? and i listen. rarely do i great a answer. if i don t get a great answer to why not i go ahead. charlie: bradley and broad when we continue. funding for charlie rose was provided by the following. captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. charlie: bill bradley is here. he s a former new jersey senator and presidential candidate. while senator he was instrumental in forging a bipartisan tax policy agreement with president ronald reagan. before entering politics he played for the new york knicks. in his ten-year career he won two nba championships. in a new book he talks about the state of our economy and political gridlock in washington. it is called we can all do better. i am pleased to have him here back at
light that thing up! oh, my gosh. now we know what it does. that s just tacky. like a terrible party thing from spencer s gifts in 1990. it s a 71-foot structure created by the jeff coombs. there you go. fantastic. you remember and it s one of the few good things that the atlanta braves did back in the 1960s. it was great. but they were the first to celebrate home runs. you remember how they did it?
morning joe starts right now. i can t think of a time when i felt it was more important for us to defeat an incumbent president than today with respect to barack obama. i think he has been an unmitigated disaster for the country. i think to be in a position where he gets four more years in the white house to continue the policies he has, both with respect to the economy and tax policy and defense and then so many other areas would be a huge, huge disappointment. top of the hour. good morning. it is monday, april 16. welcome to morning joe. with us on set, we ve got the executive editor of random house and pulitzer prize winning historian and time magazine contributing editor john meacham. and msnbc political analyst and visiting professor at nyu and former common harold ford jr. and, look, i don t know you. hello. who s you? good to be back. did you misus? i did. i missed you. you did not. it s good to come back. john meacham was gone also this past