tv CNN Newsroom CNN June 17, 2012 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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i want it to be the biggest hit of the summer so i can watch "dallas" endlessly again. reliving my youth. >> come back. >> come back any time you like. it's been a pleasure. >> "dallas" i need to go lie down and take a cold shower with sue ellen. i'm don lemon. the stories you're talking about in just a moment. first, up to speed on some of the day's headlines. this is just in to cnn. travis bumgarner under arrest the man police believe killed three of hits co-workers while robbing an armored car yesterday at the university of amber ta in canada. the officials grabbed him tonight while he was trying to cross the border into washington state. three security guards were killed and another one is in critical condition. bumgarner worked for the same company as the victims he had been on the run since yesterday, wanted on three counts of
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murder. one person is dead and several others are hurt in toronto tonight. the overhead part of a concert stage, look at that welcome broke apart and fell about 50 feet. the man killed was working on the stage getting ready for a radiohead concert. the show was cancelled, of course. weather was good, no high winds. they're trying to figure out exactly what happened. we've learned that a state psychologist will examine ch football coach jerry sandusky tomorrow. a friday court order allows the defense in the child abuse trial to introduce testimony that sandusky suffers from system call hisself wrooiric personality disorder. it will explain letters he wrote to his alleged victims. wait until you see what else we're working on for you tonight. there is no god. or is there? >> our father who aren't in heaven -- >> more people than ever question god's existence.
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>> a reading from the holy gospel. >> at this rate, we ask, will anyone believe god exists in 50 years? >> latino vote, black vote and on and on. but what about the white people? the real deciders in the presidential election. why isn't anybody talking about them? guess what? we are. and not so real rierlt tv. >> i am so very sorry. >> he lied. so did the makers of this show. does hollywood really think we're that dumb? more importantly, are we that gullible. so there's no cushioning this one. here you go. will anyone still believe in god in 50 years? an odd question. maybe it is. here's why we're asking it. today more people than ever are questioning god's existence. five areas ago 83% of people, 83%, under the age of 30, said they never doubted the existence
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of god. now that number is down to 68%. joining me is linda lascolla who help approachers who openly question their faith and david silverman who is the president american atheist incorporated. more people are having doubts. could we be looking at a gradual phasing out of god over the next several decades? i'll start with eye miss lascolla. the question again, please? >> why are we seeing a doubt in the existence of god recently with so many, especially, young people now? >> well, i can only speculate. the work i had done is conducting research with clergy who have lost their faith. clergy who no longer believe in the super natural and what they tell me, and these are generally older people, at least over 30. what they're telling me is that
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they'll really wanted to believe and they'll -- for many, many years and dedicated their lives to believing, but at some point, the evidence outweighs their beliefs. and there's just a lot of information out there that wasn't available before. i think it's that simple. >> is this a graduate wl phasing out, you believe, mr. silverman over the next several decades? >> yes. i believe we're going to see not so gradual phasing out of religion over the next several decades. i don't think religion will go away but in 50 years those religious believers will be pitied and churches will be paying their fair share of taxes. it's all about communication and all about the internet. that's what's causing it. they can find millions of atheists like them and they can trade information and learn quite a bit and that's why we're going to see such a dramatic decline in the future. >> the young people we hadn't earlier were echoing the same thoughts you are.
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what about the political implications for all this? look at that and then answer if you think there are going to be close to 80% of the u.s. population considers themselves some form of christian, 16% say they are unaffiliated. do you think we'll see more voters not caring about the religious beliefs of their candidates as we've seen so much, we hear so much of about the evangelical vote and this vote and mr. romney being a mormon and whether or not the president is a muslim and all that. do you think that will matter to
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people eventually? >> once again, speaking from the research i've conducted with clergy, what i've noticed among them politically is that wherever they start out, as they lose their super natural believes they become more liberal. if they're conservative they become more liberal. if they are already liberal, they stay liberal, not go the other way. losing supernatural beliefs results in what i've seen in working with the clergy, in becoming more liberal. >> this is something from boston university. take a listen. >> wow, two-thirds are saying they never even in their entire lives never debated the or doubted the existence of god. i think most of the church people i know have some mixture of faith and doubt. so i don't see evidence here of the fact that religion is going away. it seems religion is, perhaps, changing a little bit. only about 3% of millenniums, under 30. >> so he says there are still plenty of people who have never questioned god's existence and the number of atheists is low.
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so just because you question god's existence doesn't mean you don't believe? >> i doesn't mean you do. a lot of people know there are cultural christians and cultural jews. and they check the box even though they don't believe in the man in the sky. i want to go back to linda about the politicians. as we grow as a nation, the atheists are looking at the political candidates and they're going to be looking at their religious beliefs with a very concerned eye. if you believe in a man in the sky without any evidence. if you believe your underwear is magic, what else will you believe? and are you qualified to run this country if you are? we need our politicians to be grounded and intelligent and educated and not victims of brainwashing if we can get that.
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>> we've been talking awe lot about the people who may not necessarily be believers. may not necessarily believe, but what about the other people around them? now if you don't believe people look at you for the most part because this is a country that believes in something, so for the people around who are believers, how might they be perceived? might they be perceived one day coming soon as atheists are perceived now? >> i can't comment on that. i can't predict the future that way, i'm sorry. >> oh, i can. >> it's all -- it's not science. it's not rocket science. we're just talking about data as it progresses in the future if it continues along this vain. sort of take a guess about where we're going or where we're moving. >> the question was will believers be looked down on lik eighth eighth yourselves are
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like down on and they won't hate them. they'll feel voir for them because when it comes down to it, religious believers are usually religious because they've been so heavily indoctrinated as children. such that even intelligent well-meaning people the shut their mind off and believe in something ridiculous. that's the general feelings as far as i'm concerned toward most atheists and that's what we'll see in the future. however, i'll tell you that absolutely under no circumstances has any atheist organization that i run ever going to champion the elimination of religious beliefs. you're always going to have religious freedom. you'll have to pay your fair share of taxes. >> david silverman. thank you, good answer to the question. linda, thank you, as well. i'm playing devil's advocate. if god exists, prove it.
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and also, this. >> latino vote, black vote, and on and on. but what about the white people? the real deciders in the presidential election? why isn't anybody talking about them? guess what? we are. ♪ [ man ] excuse me miss. [ gasps ] this fiber one 90 calorie brownie has all the moist, chewy, deliciousness you desire. mmmm. thanks. at 90 calories, the brownie of your dreams is now deliciously real.
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god. do you hear me? >> what? >> nothing, forget it. >> mel brooks in "history of the world part 1". clearly god doesn't speak to everyone like that. no one has really had a documented recorded conversation with god. in a word, proof here. where's the proof that god exists at all. time to play devil's advocate and joining me here now is. baker. the pastor of revolution city. revolution fwhooirk city, the son of jim baker and tammy fay mezner. >> my book is called "fall to grace." >> and you're writing another
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bookbility doubt? >> "faith and doubt." >> you saw the numbers. more people are saying they question the existence of god some i'm laying it out there. what's the proof? give me the proof, the physical proof that god exists. >> well i think the idea that god sees god as this being in the sky when if you look at god as being like the grounded being. god is the ground below us. ground is in everything. and for me, i can't prove to you. that's why it's called faith. if it was a belief. for me it's faith. >> listen, a lot of people would say, of course i can prove to you that there is god. look at the sun, wlooirk at the moon and trees. how do you think the wind. i was talking to people on social media. i said, give me physical proof that god exists and those were similar answers. i said, is there a recorded conversation. do you have any physical proof? really playing devil's advocate but there's no real physical proof, is there? >> no.
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the sun is a pretty interesting idea because it's amazing to study but there's no physical proof. and the thing is that we have to realize that doubt is not opposite of faith. doubt is actually an element of faith. that was said by paul tillick. you can't have one without the other. when you don't doubt, you don't grow. you don't question thing. i think it's important to question things. i think faith is becoming something else. but i also think that the church is going to shrink. i think we'll see less religious people because i think of all the partisan politics and how the church has treated the gay community. so, we'll see a decline. >> and for those among us who consider themselves christian, if you read the bible and you read the red parts, the guy who was jesus said "doubt, doubt, doubt you should doubt everything."
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>> he doubted in the garden and also on the cross. he said, god, why have you foresaken me? so we have a god that was foresaken by god. so in a way christ was even an atheist at one point. >> interesting. pretty subversive things here. and here's a quote from the renowned physicist stephen hawking. he told "the guardian" i regard the brain as a computer which will stop working when its components fail. there's no heaven or christmas eve life or broken down computers. their a fairy story for people afraid of the dark. and hawkings said that's his final conclusion. listen. >> my view that the simplest explanation is that there is no god. there is is no one created the universe. and no one directs our fate. >> arguably, one of the greatest minds of our time. do you think people are starting to see heaven as a fairy story?
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yeah. i think so. i think it started when people started questioning hell. now people question heaven i think what's important is that we don't live for life after death. we have live before death and that we love each other and we focus on helping one another and you don't have to have religion for that but for some of us it's a comfort. for some of us it's shown us a whole new world. like i'm obsessed with the idea of grace. because of the bible and the church. >> i have to run. i want to ask you, were not you writing -- why aren't you writing a book on doubt? >> because it's something that i've dealt with over the past years. i doubt just as much as anybody else does. i think it's important to realize that doubt is part of faith. it is an element of faith and it's okay, to have. i want people out there. i think so many people are feared over the years of doubting but now that we have computers and internet and facebook and everybody is
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talking and able to share their doubts, which say powerful thing and we shouldn't have this h ever have the ability to tell them they can't doubt or shouldn't doubt. you're going to doubt everything. >> i said to jay during the break, i said, i want some physical proof. you have to show me he said, what should i do, make fire fly out of my hand? but he didn't do that. >> no, it's all done. >> jay baker, thank you, appreciate it. >> thank you quarterback don. >> reality tv, is it really real? from accusations that tv beauty competitions may not be on the up and up to shows where a contestant's biggest talent may be the ability to bs. >> i really don't know right now what's reality and what's not reality. >> are you being bamboozled by hollywood? >> don't forget, stay connected. you can watch cnn live on your computer. do it from work.
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is reality tv duping us? first we learn a singing soldier on "america's got talent" lied about his service record. then a miss usa pageant contestant said the show was fixed. and then, a show had a pretend to be interested in houses that were not even on the market so let's talk about this right now. let's say we were duped in all of these instances. does hollywood really think we're that stupid? anna is, a contributor to cnn, congratulations, fancy lady. you're big-timing now. are you afraid i'm going to get struck by lightning for doubting the existence of god on national television. >> into the last thing has the word god in it. i'm the embodiment of the existence of god. my last name is english for
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servant of god so you're in big trouble. >> don, i'm clinging to mary guns and my religion. >> i'm glad. >> i'm not messing with god on national tv. you can be sure of that. >> so listen, anna, this is television. and should we be surprised by this. i remember the kardashian wedding and most people felt that it was staged. >> well, don, i think most weddings are staged. there's rehearsals and all sorts of things but if you're getting paid millions of dollars for a wedding -- a marriage that's going to last a few months, stage anything you want. i think it's the most lucrative staging i've ever seen. >> dean, how do you feel about this? i'll ask you a very similar question. because it is television and even though it says "reality tv" most people lead pretty boring lives are you surprised that we get duped? >> you're right. most people not donl lemons of the world, but most people live boring lives.
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they should have a right show about you called "the flavor of don" or "living the lemon live" because your life the different. i was complimenting you in a way i'll never do again. you have to make it hyperreality. i pitched a reality show. i have friends who worked on reality shows. the signers aren't crypted. the settings are scripted. they say which episode and you put snooki in a bar and give her jell-o shots, they put it all together. >> and maybe i'm weird, i am not a fan of reality television. i don't watch it. i know who they are because i sit here and i have to report on it. but i'm not a big fan of reality teel vision. i would much rather watch a scripted well-written show with character development so does it really matter if these shows aren't real?
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does it matter? do we care? >> anna? >> no. it doesn't matter because people aren't watching reality tv because it's reality. people are watching it because it's entertaining. in fact, i'd even tell you that -- what's real right now -- i'm sure, don, for example, that donald trump's miss america pageant, there may be questions about its credibility and reality. but i'm sure every contestant has a real birth certificate that's participating in that contest. so i would tell you that it's entertainment. reality shows are 2012's new soap operas. the way we eyesed to each "dallas" and "dynasty" and all those before, these are the new soap operas of 2012. they are an escape. they are fun. you read them the way somebody would read, you know, ""the enquirer."" they're just pure entertainment and frankly, i think they're therapeutic because most of the people on those reality shows have such dysfunctional lives
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that all of a sudden you're watching and you're feeling tremendously adequate and normal. >> the thing about the miss usa pageant, remember, beauty pa jebtss were the original talent shows on television. you watch the miss america pageant and you would watch these young women, most of them would sing or dance or play the piano or something and now it's evolved into this. but i'm wondering about when you hear the soldier who was apparently hurt and all that. do you think that this will hurt reality shows when people start to learn more about this? will people be so heart broken that they won't watch anymore in. >> i think people watch it for the entertainment value. that's why they watch professional wrestling. not for the sport, for tamts value. this isn't like in the '50s where there was actual corruption going on with people being fid off giving answers to people because they liked the winner. it's not like that. it's for fun. we watch it to escape and have a good time. like "the hills" a lot of that was scripted.
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it happens. as long as it's fun and we're enjoying it, that's all that matters. we need to escape from real reality to watch other's fake reality. >> i was watching tmz, the other day, the entertainment show i like to watch because they make fun of all of that instead of going this new movie coming out -- they don't take it seriously. and they were saying enough of the housewives already. i'm done. there's a housewife of every city -- every major city in the country. over it. >> it's a big thing, though. that's one of the shows people love. people want to see this glamorous life. that's why a reality show about you. i'm pitching it tomorrow. i'm going to see if we can make it happen. >> whatever, diern. >> dean suggested it and in an op ed this week that maybe we should have candidates cussing during debates, something -- using swear words like a debate on hbo or maybe candidates doing reality shows and the moirn public would be far more
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interested in these elections. >> we'd probably get more people turning out to vote if we did it that way. >> it would be river vetting to >> it would be river vetting to see a show of michelle telling obama to eat his green beans of mitt romney putting down some yoo hoos. >> how mitt romney and president obama are overlooking white people next. here we go. what about the white people? uh, forgot jack's cereal. [ jack ] what's for breakfast? um... try the number one! [ jack ] yeah, this is pretty good. [ male announcer ] half a day's worth of fiber. fiber one.
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here we go. what about the white people? it sounds funny to say that but when was the last time you heard mitt romney or president obama make a direct appeal to white folks. we know all about the political appeals to hispanics. did you see friday's immigration announcement? and republican's can't stop talking about senator marco rubio, a cuban american and potential romney running mate and as for the black vote, the president has it covered but why this still dominate at the polls.
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they made up almost 75% of our voters four years ago. obama got 43% of them. john mccain got 55% of the white vote. let's bring in anna navarro and steven maier of the wall street jiern natural. steven, how do you feel being the token white guy on the show? >> i'm the minority on the show. great to be on your show, don, thanks for having me. >> anna, why no love for white voters in this campaign? >> i think there's plenty of love for white voters. you have mitt romney doing a bus tour right now through new hampshire and ohio, through pennsylvania. got to tell you, i've within to new hampshire and i've been to ohio and there's a lot of white people there so i think they're getting plenty of love. they are -- it's a good voting group for republicans. we actually have a white male
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gap that obama has got to overcome. >> that's why we're talking about this and trust me, i was at the iowa state fair and so your point is well taken, anna navarro stephen, president obama 38% of white voters. is that a white voter problem? you wrote about that this week, didn't you? >> i did. it is a big problem for president obama. i wrote this story, don, because as you said at the outset of the show, everybody talks about the latino vote and the black vote and the senior vote and the soccer mom vote but nobody looks closely at the biggest voter bloc of all which is the still whitetion and it's about 70 to 75% of the electorate. when i looked at the numbers in
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the polling 'lo and behold it shows that barack obama has a white voter problem that's worse than it was in 2008. i actually believe, with don, in 2008 that barack obama's race was actually an asset. americans loved the idea of electing the first black president. i think that really helped him in the election. it was cool to be for barack obama. it's a little bit of a problem now -- let me put it this way. it's not as big of an asset now as then because barack obama has a record to run on. and so you have more skepticism of white voters and the polling shows that barack obama is doing unbelievably well with black voters. 94 to 95% of the black vote for barack obama. this interesting thing time is
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will the black electorate be as passionate about going to the pollings as they were the last time. if that doesn't has been i think it's going to pose a big challenge for president obama. it's interesting, anna, and stephen, last time you would think that if barack obama is president of the united states he garnered most of the white vote. john mccain did. stephen, i want to talk about something you mentioned a little bit earlier. you talked about you know, about people last time, that are proud to go to the polls and vote with the idea of a black president. do you think some liberals have white guilt -- being honest
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because we talked about this -- and when they go into the polls this time, they may be reluctant to deny the first black president a second term? >> i think there's a little bit of that. i think no question about -- the american people like barack obama. not just because of his race and being the first blierk president. he's just a likable person. >> does the economy outweigh that? >> definitely it does. that's the reason why the barack obama has a white voter problem. what if problem is most severe and i looked at the cross-tabulations in this polling data. a white middle class anxiety out there and a lot of white middle class voters did vote for barack obama in 2008 but they're feeling the stress and financial strain. they know a family member that doesn't have a job and i think you put your finger on it. the economic issues now are troimping these issues of it's cool to be for barack obama. >> so, don, i think it's a lot less about race, i think than it is about history. four years ago obama was a phenomenon. he was a historical moment. a historical opportunity. the thing is, you can only make history once and he's made it. so now he's no liernger the historical figure. he's the grey-haired president who's got a four-year record that he has to defend and contend with. two completely different barack obama's. he's not less black or more black today than he was four years ago. and it's not about that issue.
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it's the historical components that i think are the determining factor. >> the one last point, barack obama does have to get 40% of the white vote. it's hard for miami to go over the finish line if he doesn't get 4 of 10. as you said he's atbility 38%. so he has some work to do. >> and there's a period on this particular segment and a great point. thank you, stephen and anna. >> i said, enough already. from lawmakers -- >> the reforms i'm proposing would not apply to those here illegally. >> to reporters -- >> excuse me, sir. it's not time for questions, sorry. >> are you going to take questions? >> not while i'm speaking. >> what is it about this president that makes some people so darn angry? our doctor was great, but with so many tough decisions i felt lost. unitedhealthcare offered us a specially trained rn who helped us weigh and understand all our options. for me cancer was as scary as a fastball is to some of these kids. but my coach had hit that pitch before. turning data into useful answers. we're 78,000 people looking out for 70 million americans. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare.
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i didn't ask for an argument, i'm answering your question. it is the right thing to do for the american people and here's why. here's the reason. because these young people are going to make extraordinary contributions and are already making contributions to our society. >> really? interrupting the presidential announcement? and the white house rose garden? i know reporters be pushy, come on. no one can remember this ever happening before. i'll bring you guys back in. anna, remember that congressman
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we called oish live during the joint session of congress. -- that called president obama a liar in the joint session. now there's a this. what is itbility this president that just angers people so much? >> i don't think it's anything about obama specifically, don. we've become a very polarized society, politically. people really detested george w. bush as well. politics has become emotional-laiden and increasingly polarized but i think that this is a rare case and it's a case that's completely inappropriate. and you know, to tell you the truth, maybe obama needs to get heckled more often because he showed such conviction and emotion and anger and he tend to be somewhat emotionally aloof sometimes.
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i thought it made him look quite good. >> i want to -- i get your point. i want to laugh about it but when it happened as we were watching it in the newsroom and people in the control room and reporters in the rose garden said they were stunned by the incivility and the lack of respect. >> it was completely impolite and you have to respect the president of the united states. regardless of who it is and the reason you're respecting him is because of his position and what he represents. he represents our entire country. whether you like him or not is the issue. it's the fact that he represents all of us. and the position itself carries respect and should be respected.
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>> okay. so, dean, i know you wrote about this. i know that you were -- you're very upset by it so i'll ask you. everyone has been dancing around it. i saw many people on a number of different net works dance around it and i saw some people just hone in on it right after. was it on this network and they said -- did this guy feel he could do this because the president is blaek? i'll ask you that question. >> you know, i think there's a campaign against president obama that i've never seen. it's not about what happened to president bush. a campaign to delegitimize the presidency. i'm not saying that neil monroe, the reporter, is a racist. people who are saying that president obama is an "other." he's not american like the rest of us. he wasn't born here. i don't his college education. he's a muslim. to me that's a racial thing we've never seen before. it angers me because he's not a democratic president but the president of the united states of america and he deserves the same respect as any other president and having a congressman yell "you're lying" during a joint session of congress, no one has ever done
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that. having a conservative reporter and heck it will president twice. i'm a comedian. heckle me once, it's a mistake. heckle me twice and it's an agenda. this man, neil monroe, had a agenda. deport him! >> here's the thing i think is interesting. being in the workforce and working with -- i grew up in a family of all women so i know the plight of women and how they are sometimes diermd as "other." and women in the workplace don't get respect. and men will question women in a way that they won't question men. and i think that there is an undercurrent, the same thing that's happening with the president. where people may not be out and out racist, they don't treat him with the same respect that they would treat a white man in that position and that is simply because of the way we look at black or brown people in this country. no different than the way we deem some women, look at some women in this country. >> there's been a history of discrimination against blacks. year to go through it, we have to have the civil rights act, the voting rights act. the national guard accompany black students to go with white
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students in the south and today, a in arizona, they called president obama the first monkey president. these people are -- this campaign of delegitimatization. and the only way to heal from this is to talk about it honestly. >> to admit that you have a problem and then deal with it. >> work on its together. we'll have to stand together. >> we're out of time and that's if last of it. we're out of time. sorry. now this -- i have not been on roller skates since high school. so why am i risking my life to do it? anything is possible is possible in "xanadu." wierl go behind the scenes of the box office flop that's now broadway flop.
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the news you need to know right now. travis bumgarner in police custody no longer on the run. the man believed to to have killed and robbed three of his co-workers in canada. all security guards hauling cash in an armored car and we're told the police captured bumgarner tonight trying to cross from canada into washington state.
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it is time to let our hair down. >> oh, yes! >> i want to rock! >> all right. that was me hanging with the cast from the musical "rock of ages" movie in theater this is weekend. that's right now now that we're here in xanadu. we'll talk about that coming up. october 27th, 2007, was a beautiful autumn day. mariah with was her two friends. i didn't know the last time i kissed her it would have been my last time. later that night, they were walking down this path when an underage drunk driver swerved off the road and hit them and mariah landed here. she died that night. they were only a block away from my house. mariah was only 14 and i'm
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thinking -- how did that happen? it is so preventible! my name is leo mccarthy. i give kids tools to stay away from drinking. our state has been notoriously top five in drinking and driving fatalities in the country. the drinking culture is a sierkle cal disease that we allow to continue. mariah's challenges be the first generation of you kids to not drink. >> in the eulogy i said, if you stick with me, for four yourself, don't areas alcohol or elicit drugs, i'll be there with a bunch of other people to give you money and we'll go to a post secondary school. >> i promise not to drink until i'm 21. >> i promise not to get into a car with someone who has been drinking. >> i promise to give back to my community. >> i think mariah's challenge is something that makes people think a little bit more to say, we can be better. >> mariah is forever 14.
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i can't get her back. but i can help other parents keep their kids safe. if we save one child, we save a generation. and it tastes good? sure does! right... ♪ wow. delicious, right? yeah. it's the honey, it makes it taste so... ♪ well, would you look at the time... what's the rush? be happy. be healthy.
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ajust your head bands, we're going back in time to the '80s with the cast of "xanadu." >> how do you feel like being on roller skates and in a theater, everyone is so close? >> it's like being in a living room. >> it has to be exciting for the audience members to be that close to the action. >> we want them to be part of the party so having them this close they'll really do get to interact with us. >> i mean i would like to open a roller discoo. >> you fall down in the middle of the play. >> no. i have never fallen down. >> down, down, down in front. >> hey, hey, hey! >> do they sing along with you?
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and the video of the week. that won't send you running. [ jack ] what's for breakfast? um... try the number one! [ jack ] yeah, this is pretty good. [ male announcer ] half a day's worth of fiber. fiber one. >> announcer: you never know when, but thieves can steal your identity, turning your life upside down in a matter of seconds. >> hi. >> hi. you know, i can save you 15% today if you open up a charge card account with us. >> you just read my mind. >> announcer: just one little piece of information and they can open bogus accounts, stealing your credit, your money and ruining your reputation. that's why you need lifelock. lifelock is the leader in identity theft protection, relentlessly protecting your personal information to help stop the crooks in their tracks before your identity is attacked, protecting your social security number, your bank accounts, even the equity in your home. >> i didn't know how serious
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identity theft was... until i lost my credit and eventually i lost my home. >> announcer: credit monitoring alone is not enough to protect your identity, and only tells you after the fact, sometimes as much as 60 days later. with lifelock, as soon as we spot a threat to your identity within our network, our advanced lifelock i.d. alert system directly notifies you, protecting your identity before you become a victim. >> identity theft was a huge, huge problem for me and it's gone away because of lifelock. >> announcer: while no one can stop all identity theft, if the criminals do manage to steal your information, lifelock is there to help fix it, with our $1 million service guarantee. that's right, a $1 million service guarantee. don't wait until you become the next victim. call now to try lifelock risk-free for two full months. that's right, 60 days risk-free. use promo code: norisk. if you're not completely satisfied, notify lifelock and you won't pay a cent. order now and also get this document shredder to keep your personal documents
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out of the wrong hands-- a $29 dollar value, free. get the protection you need right now. call or go to lifelock.com to try lifelock risk-free for a full 60 days. use promo code: norisk. plus get this document shredder free, but only if you act right now. call now! lifelock service guarantee cannot be offered to residents of new york. this next clip had us all holding our breath and you have to stop to watch this. whatever you're doing. this video from inside a police cruiser shows the violent end of a police chase and look closely as the suv flips over, a toddler is thrown from the vehicle. even the police are stunned. the child only had minor injuries and this has to be the
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