Subtitles section Play video
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- Hi, I'm Barack Obama.
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- And I'm Michelle.
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- Welcome to Live from the Library.
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Today we thought we'd read you a story.
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- I remember my first trip to the library
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and how important I felt.
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It was around age four, my library card was a key
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that unlocked a world of knowledge and experiences.
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- Public libraries are essential institutions
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and that's why we're bringing a new branch
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of the Chicago Public Library to the
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Obama Presidential Center on the South Side.
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When it opens, it will give families one more chance
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to explore their interests, learn and engage
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with their communities.
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And we're excited for you to visit one day.
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- We are excited also to share today's book,
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The Word Collector
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written and illustrated by Peter H. Reynolds.
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- We chose this book because it illustrates
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the transformative power of words.
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I love words.
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- Yeah, your favorite.
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So, let's get started.
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- Okay.
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The Word Collector.
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Collectors collect things.
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Some people collect stamps.
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Some people collect coins.
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Others collect rocks.
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Some collect art.
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Some collect bugs.
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Others collect baseball cards.
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Some people collect comic books.
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And Jerome?
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What did he collect?
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- Jerome collected words.
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He collected words he heard.
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My Trip to Peru was perfectly pleasant.
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Certain words caught his attention.
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- [Barack Obama] He collected words he saw.
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Willow Tea Shoppe.
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Certain words jumped out at him.
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- He collected words he read.
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Emerald.
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Certain words popped off the page.
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- Short and sweet words.
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Spark.
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Bloom.
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Drift.
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Dream.
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Two-syllable treats.
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Treasure.
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Motive.
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Whisper.
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Glimmer.
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Hover.
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Candid.
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- And multi-syllable words that sounded like songs.
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Guacamole.
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Kaleidoscope.
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Wonderful.
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Geometry.
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Symphony.
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- There were words he did not know the meaning of at first,
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but they were marvelous to say.
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Aromatic.
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Vociferous.
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Effervescent.
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- There words who's sounds were perfectly suited
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to their meaning.
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Molasses.
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Torrential.
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Smudge.
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Bellow.
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Tyrannosaurus Rex.
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- Jerome filled his scrapbooks
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with more and more
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of his favorite words.
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- [Michelle] Jerome's collections grew.
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He began organizing them.
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Dreamy.
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Science.
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Sad.
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Action.
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Poetic.
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One day, while transporting them
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- Jerome slipped and his words went flying.
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- [Michelle] Oh my goodness.
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As he began to pick them up he noticed his collections
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had become jumbled.
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Big words next to little words.
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Sad words next to dreamy words.
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- Jerome began stringing words together.
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Words he had not imagined being side by side.
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- He used his words to write poems.
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He used his poems to make songs.
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They moved.
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They delighted.
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- Some of his simplest were his most powerful.
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I understand.
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I'm sorry.
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Thank you.
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You matter.
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- [Michelle] Jerome eagerly collected more and more
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of his favorite words.
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- The more words he knew, the clearly he could share
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with the world what he was thinking, feeling and dreaming.
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One breezy afternoon, Jerome climbed the highest hill,
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pulling a wagon packed with his word collection.
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- He smiled as he emptied his collection of words
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into the wind.
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- He saw children in valley below scurrying about
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collecting words from the breeze.
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- Jerome had no words to describe how happy that made him.
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The end.
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That was beautiful.
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- I love that book.
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- He's the word guy.
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- I like words.
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- And he looks kind of like Jerome too.
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They have the same ears.
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- Mine are a little bigger than Jerome's.
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- A lot bigger.
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(laughter)
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Thanks for being with us.
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Hope you enjoyed today's book, see you soon.
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- Bye bye.