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tv   Wine to Water  CNN  December 21, 2013 4:00pm-5:01pm PST

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and credit fraud. they are limiting atm withdrawals to $100 a day and debit card purchases to $300. i'm rosa flor es here in atlanta. thank you for sticking around with me. the special, "wine to water" begins right now. ready to swim? >> yeah. >> to me, water simply represents life. you cannot have life without water. >> you are good. water, hands down is the absolute greatest resource this planet has to offer. we have many other ways to fuel
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vehicles or our homes. there's only one way to fuel our bodies. much more fighting and unrest and war in this world because of water than there ever was because of oil. ♪ >> my real name is dixon beatie, but everyone calls me doc. i'm the founder and international president of wine to water. we are a non-profit organization and our goal is to provide clean drinking water to people in need
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all over the world. december, 2003 is when i had the idea for wine to water. at the time, i had no direction. i was happy being a bartender, playing music out. then i started to think that maybe i had the ability to do more with my life than just be a bartender. i remember the night vividly when the phrase, wine to water was in my head. i began to research it. then it was all a snowball effect from there. in 2003, the civil war broke out in western sudan leading to a brutal genocide that displaced millions of people. in august of 2004, i left for sudan. i stayed there for a year. i was able to work alongside another organization. i was over all the water and sanitation programs there. this is what a typical camp
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looks like. ain't the prettiest place in the world. these are some of the children here. these things around her neck are supposed to keep away bullets. it exposed me to the horrors of humanity. a couple close run-ins where i nearly lost my life. our convoy was ambushed. that experience changed my life. it basically gave me the foundation that i needed to build wine to water on. ♪ >> you ready for more? >> yes. >> i would love to have some, please. >> all right. we got our official start in 2004. it took five years to get around to four different countries and 25,000 people. wine to water's philosophy is we believe that every single human being on this planet deserves the right to clean drinking
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water. ♪ i came home late that night ♪ as i -- >> in 2009, i was nominated as a cnn hero. >> please join me in honoring cnn hero, doc hendley. >> since the cnn heroes program in 2009, wine to water has grown exponentially. >> thank you for having us here. it is a blessing. thank you. by 2012, we expanded to 15 countries around the world and reached almost 275,000 people. there are times when it's worth fighting for something or to protect something. water is one of those things. my goal, by the end of 2014, is to have been able to reach 1 million people in the world with clean drinking water.
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♪ >> i been coming here to uganda in east africa since 2007 when wine to water started. we worked all over uganda from the capital to central and north of gulu near the south of the sudan border. for the last two years, i viewed east africa as a second home to me because of how much i changed as an individual. it made such an impact on me. right here, we are standing over top the beginnings of the river
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here in uganda. it's weird to be here because this is the most mighty river in the world, yet the biggest need, the mightiest need for water is here in the same country. right now, there's one in three wells in uganda that are not working. it's expensive to redrill. we can rehabilitate them and teach the locals how to maintain the well. >> clap your hands. >> this school had a well put in quite a few years ago. it's been broken for some time now.
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>> this place is a simple school. >> i met gilbert in 2007. he's been helping us with water projects all over uganda including well rehabilitation. you were a teacher here, correct? >> yes, i was a teacher. we have 597 pupils. half of them come back to school because of water related problems. >> that's crazy. gilbert and i are here to assess the situation and get a crew out to fix it. >> we are meeting mohammad. >> nice to meet you. >> i'm a teacher of a primary school. >> is there a source nearby they walk to to get the water? >> down there from the swamp. when there's no rain, there's no water. do you want to see it? >> yes, i would love to check it out.
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>> this water here. >> this is it here? this is where the children are gathering the water from. >> this is where we get water from. >> obviously, this is not safe for anyone. this is the water you have to use? >> yes. >> it looks like the coffee i had this morning for breakfast. is there another place to get water when this is empty? >> it's 3 to 4 kilometers from here. >> then they walk back with it so 6 or 7 kilometerses altogether. to know they were drinking that water, i was shocked. can you show me the bore hole? i would like to look at it. >> it consists of a series of pipes that run from the earth's surface underground. it's connected by a metal rod to a submerged pump that lifts clean water up the pipes and out the spout. >> i would say the handle is
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broken. it does seem like it's losing pressure and the water is dropping back in the pump. it could be why the handle is broken. they were losing so much. there's probably pipes busted in there. >> fix it for us and we get water. >> i would like that, too. >> the top of the head here off. pull the pipes out of the ground, clamp down and lift it up. awesome. okay. don't drop it on my head. i'm the only one not wearing a hat. the local people on the ground are amazingly capable. sometimes all they need is training. that way, when they are getting help, they are seeing their own people come and help them. they are speaking their own language.
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they are empowered by this. the kids are thinking maybe i can do that one day. >> oh, yeah. >> water. >> oh, yeah. oh, yeah. ♪ >> i tell you, it absolutely
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never gets old, hearing the water gurgle out spew out the top and hear the kids cheering. the smiles on their faces. they have clean water to drink at the school. it's one of the things i live for. i absolutely love doing what i do. [ nurse ] i'm a hospice nurse. britta olsen is my patient. i spend long hours with her checking her heart rate, administering her medication, and just making her comfortable. one night britta told me about a tradition in denmark, "when a person dies," she said, "someone must open the window so the soul can depart." i smiled and squeezed her hand. "not tonight, britta. not tonight." [ female announcer ] to nurses everywhere,
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hi. ♪ we are farmers bum - pa - dum, bum - bum - bum - bum ♪ ♪ >> i began traveling when i was younger quite a bit. i dropped out of my first semester of college, got on my motorcycle. people are what make this life worth living. building relationships with
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people i never would have gotten the opportunity had i not hopped on a plane or my bike to get there. ♪ >> right now, we are in a village north of uganda near sudan. we are getting ready to finish up a rainwater containment system here. our rainwater harvesting systems are simple. it's a big tank able to capture the rain that naturally falls out of the sky. this tank we are building is 15,000 liters. it's going to help 600 people in this community. the huts you see are going to access water from the containment system instead of walking to a well.
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♪ >> any chance i get, especially when it's a new community, a new area, getting to know the head of the village and the people. it's important. i enjoy doing it when we have the opportunity. this mosque means he is the spiritual leader here. >> enjoy having the water from the tank because we used to keep our water in pans. >> before the community had to get the water and leave it in the cans. >> store water. >> thank you for letting us be able to do this. we are excited. we hope the water we are able to help you provide is a blessing to you and your community. >> we hope in future, we share
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together. this world we live by sharing. >> of course. >> thank you. so proud. >> thank you. >> yeah, thank you. bison in uganda is as simple as it gets. they live in round, circular huts with grass roofs made by hand with plastered mud. once the sun goes down, that's it. there's no more light. it's time for bed. the sun comes up and you have to, where am i going to get my water for the day? today, gilbert and i are bringing a filter to a small village in uganda to a family here. these things are not light, that's for sure.
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the filter is basically a water filter. it's a big old thing that holds sand and gravel. you can take dirty water, pour it in the top. out of the nozzle. >> all right, this looks good. >> hi, how are you? >> your name is doc? >> yeah. nice to meet you. sarah. nice to meet you. >> come here. >> has she been having stomach problems from the water? >> we tried to -- we don't know. what's going on. >> all right. you haven't been able to get the medicine. >> yeah. >> oh, man. when i first got into this work, it was confusing to me like how is it that water is killing so many people. after doing digging and research, i found that it's basically the amoebas or
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bacteria in the water. what comes from it is ultimately dehydration. for a young child, they have the diarrhea two, three days, that's it. their body is too weak to experience that dehydration. here is your filter. we are excited to talk to you about it and tell you how it works. right here is what your filter looks like if we cut it so you can see inside it. te first layer is standing water on top of the sand here. it's very, very important. it's where the good bacteria lives. there's good bacteria that eats the bad bacteria causing her to get sick. we don't teach them the proper way to maintain them or give them a desire to maintain it, the project fails and the filter fails. >> this container is meant for storage. >> this one stays clean. the water coming out is clean. it's important to keep it clean as well. >> okay. >> let's fill this thing up and
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get it working. doing something as simple as providing a filter for a home to be more productive. the kids are in school more. it's not just about the clean water, it's the overall improvement of life in general that happens when you bring a family something this simple. ♪ >> back home in the states, there are a lot of people that are like what do you do? you clean water? a lot of people don't wraparound the concept there's such a huge need for it. as a western society, we have no idea what it's like to have to walk four, five hours to gain access to water. starting to realize, we as human
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beings help with what we can empathize with. a lot of times, i'm trying to educate people at home on that simple fact as well. it's not always easy to get people to understand this. but i'm not going to give up. anyone have occasional constipation, diarrhea, gas, bloating? yes! one phillips' colon health probiotic cap each day helps defend against these digestive issues with three strains of good bacteria. live the regular life. phillips'.
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right now, there's almost 200,000 refugees in uganda. they are coming from countries
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around uganda, but the majority from the congo. there's so many refugees fleeing that camps are overrun. in a refugee camp like this, they speak the same language. they are given a little space inside a tent. their number one need before anything else, before food, before medical is going to be water. these people, their whole lives
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have been turned upside down. i have no idea if and when they will ever get to go back home. the refugee camp, by far is children. i got a 5-year-old and a 3-year-old that are their age. i can't imagine what it would be like to have to put my children in this situation. you have people that are living on top of each other, almost literally. the sanitation situation is not good. the human waste and rain happens. it all washes down to drinking water. all that stuff together, it's enough to make a grown person completely sick, but a small child, especially under the age of 5, they are by far the most at risk. like this. there's so many hard things that are refugee has to deal with.
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a lot of it is the unknown. >> i'm the external relags for the u.n. refugee agency in uganda. >> we are supposed to have a capacity of 12,000 in this camp. it seems like there's more than that. >> as of last night, we have close to 20,000. obviously, twice as many as we should be holding. >> you are calling this is transit center. is that because you are not wanting them to stay for a long, long time. >> it's somewhere relatively close to the border where people arrive first, get the basic services, water, health and shelter, then they move to a settlement where they get land and can help with livelihoods and build their own homes. ideally, people stay here two to three weeks. when we first arrived, this was
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the first area we set services up. this is where the first people to relocate will come from. >> even though the camp is overpopulated and there's a lot of people, i'm impressed with how things are going. >> there are many styles of water filters we work with. this is the perfect filter for a situation like what's going on in western uganda. they are lightweight and portable, but effective at cleaning the water. we are in the process of finishing up these filters. there's going to be 100 heads of the household. they receive their filter and training on how to use the filter. >> paul, i need you to find the dirtiest water in camp. my name is kyle. my job here is projects manager. i build relationships with people on the ground. these are the guys with -- >> how's it going?
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what is your name? >> hezakia. >> great to meet you in person. they spent time in camps years ago. they can relate directly to what their needs are. >> ready? >> yeah. >> okay. >> i left congo in 2002 because of war conflicts. i decided to come here to uganda and become part of the refugees. ♪ >> i have water here for you. take this water. >> thank you guys for coming today. i want to explain to you the water filter we are using that you will take with you. there may be places in the camps where the water you have to get may look like this. it's very dirty. we want to do a quick
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demonstration and show you what it's able to do and we'll teach you how to use it and maintain it. if you use them properly, they will last you the next ten years. >>. [ speaking foreign language ] >> the sawyer filter fits on the end of a 5 gallon bucket. the water passes through a membrane with tiny porous holes in it. it captures 99.99% of the contaminants. so, i know a lot of you are going to be leaving to the settlement camp. those of you that are leaving, we wanted you to get one of these filters. we are going to go back and bring more filters so everyone else in the camp can have these same filters that you have as well. that's it. they are simple.
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>> these people are just trying to survive today, make it to tomorrow. we can cover 100 families, about 1,000 people. that's 5% of the population that needs the filters. the filters we have on hand here but we need to do more. do what we are able to do now. let's go back and mobilize and try to reach every single family in the camps. across the country has brought me to the lovely city of boston. cheers. and seeing as it's such a historic city,
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♪ >> hey! hey! i have two sons, a 5-year-old and 3-year-old. >> justice, are you hungry? >> my wife's name is amber. she is been such a huge encouragement for me. >> mommy is it ready? >> just about. we always do breakfast and spend as much time as we can as a family. >> what do i have here. >> i love wine to water, but since i got married and had kids, they are the most important thing in my world. >> father thank you for the day and the food. in je seuss name, amen. >> let's eat.
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>> who wants biscuits and gravy? >> me. >> something as simple as breakfast together on a saturday morning. i feel like the happiest man in the world. you want to go on an airplane? come with daddy on the next trip? >> a lot of times when doc is gone, i feel like a single mom. it gets lonely, but i know where i fit. that's what makes a difference in the world. >> i'm watching. >> he has such a big heart. all he wants to do is help these people that have nothing. >> there you go. good job. >> i wouldn't want to do it any other way. i want my kids to see that and grow up with that type of love and passion. >> i missed a lot of things that a father is not supposed to miss. good job. beatie will start school soon.
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it's hard to put into words, the amount of love i have toward them. you got it. it counts. bouncing counts. >> amber has a saying she tells me over and over. itis not the quantity of time, it's the quality of time. leaving my family at home will never be easy, but i have work to do. the best way for wine to water to reach more people and expand is to go there in person and find and develop new partnerships. i was put in touch with an organization in columbia. it seems promising, so i'm off. i just arrived in a small town in columbia. it's deep in the amazon jungle along the borders of peru and
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brazil. this, right now, is the 16th country for wine to water. i already feel a special connection to the people here because everybody is riding a motorcycle. this little minimetropolis in the amazon jungle. a lot of cities are quite developed. however, in the jungle, there is quite a few communities lacking basic resources such as clean drinking water. to me, one of my favorite things to do is go into a new country for the first time, get on the ground, not really know what's going to happen. you know, that unknown newness is something i look forward to. >> hey. >> how are you? >> good to see you. >> you look different than on
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skype. >> you, too. you look skinnier. >> he's the founder and director of a local columbian organization that has access to a drilling machine. i'm excited to have the opportunity to meet with him and get to know him and see if this partnership can work out. are you from here originally? >> i was born in a town in the amazon. i moved here in 1990, about 23 years ago. >> the very first thing i look for in any type of partnership is trust. the second thing is a like-minded vision. >> we are bringing water to people. but, water also means life. >> both sides, you are bringing physical, clean water and also trying to help with spiritual water. >> exactly. >> very cool. this is great. how many wells have you drilled altogether with the rig? >> about 24. >> okay.
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>> about 80% i find water. >> that's not bad. see what's going on with it, what you have had problems with. >> sounds like a plan. >> cool, man. >> very cool. ♪ >> we drill wells in southeast asia, east africa and hopefully here in the amazon. it's not as deep and the soil is very soft, not very rocky. hopefully we'll be able to do a lot more with a lot less. the machine we got is fairly stout. it's completely a rotary machine. it's fine for what we are using it for. >> okay, go. crank it.
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i love that sound. okay. >> it was definitely a relief to get the engine running. he told me about a couple small issues. i think we will be able to start drilling a well with it. the game plan for tomorrow is hop on a boat and head out to the village. this is country 16. sweet 16 for wine to water, if we can get the well in the ground. ery late night, every weekend worked, every idea sold... ♪ ...you deserve a cadillac, the fastest growing full-line luxury brand in the united states. including the all new 2014 cadillac cts, motor trend's 2014 car of the year. get the best offers of the season on our award winning products. like a 2014 ats and srx.
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right when you get out of the city just a little bit, it feels like you are absolutely in the middle of nowhere. we are heading up the river to a village that translates directly in the the miraculous or the miracle. we got the amazon river and all these tributaries leading into the amazon river. there's water all over the place, but it's absolutely fill think. they are bathing and washing their dishes. all right there in the same water source. that's the thing that is causing them to get sick. >> when i come to the amazon d
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mud. >> that means the village leader? >> yes. they elect every four years. this is doc hendley. this is rosa and luis. >> very nice to meet you both. [ speaking foreign language ] >> okay, great. foreign. >> we hope to hit water. the people hope we hit water, but we're not sure.
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we can't make any promises. all it is right now is we are going to try our best. this place probably floods good. all the houses are on stilts. >> this is the way we have to do it here. >> how much a year is it under water? >> three or four months. >> when it happens, the kids walk out the door and have to hop in a canoe and go to school? >> yeah. another source of water, when there's no rain, this is a main source of water. everybody. dogs here and go there and drink that water. >> it looks nasty to me. >> mm-hmm. it's pretty bad. >> did she tell you a place they would like to have the well? >> we decided this would be the best place, right there. >> x marks the spot right there. i like it. ♪
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>> this is my first time to the amazon jungle. it's hot, i tell you. you think about these folks, they have to come down to the river a lot. they are in this heat every day and they have to get a lot of water. by drilling a well, we have access to clean water and it's going to keep them from having to boil their water over and over and cutting down more trees and the water making them sick. the main challenge is we can't crank up the drill machine until we have a constant force of water to drill in the hole. >> everything okay? >> this one is the in. this one, i couldn't find anything to attach it to. these hoses are heavy duty. they probably had to go to the market to find used ones. the connections are all different. it's like a big puzzle.
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sometimes it could be four to six hours just to set up before they can start drilling. if we can work together and work on systems, make we can shrink it down to an hour or two hours time. also equipment, anything broken we can look at that. what it sounded like starting up, but once you see it working, you don't know what the potential risks and problems are to that. >> we were able to get the water fairly close. we didn't have enough piping to get it all the way to the machine. people have to carry the water by hand. ♪ >> it's a lot of hard work. the fact they are willing to do it all day long in this heat we have going on here. it's showing us they really want this. they really want this well.
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all right, let's get this rolling. when you are digging a well, the two biggest problems we have is actually reaching it and >> a drilling rig forces a series of pipes into the ground with a drill bit secured on the end. water is pumped into the bore hole through the pipes so that the sand and the dirt can be forced out to continue space. pipes are added one by one until the acquifer is reached. [ speaking foreign language ]. >> our bit is completely buried.
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>> when you are changing a pipe over and you stop forcing a pipe into a hole you can collapse the hole. we have a drill bit and 50 feet of pipe stuck in the ground it's not for the minute going anywhere. we don't make promises. there is no guarantees. this shows that. ♪ [ male announcer ] if we could see energy... what would we see? ♪ the billions of gallons of fuel that get us to work. ♪
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so i got the windows nokia tablet. it's, well, impressive. it's got the brightest hd screen, super-fast 4g lte, so my son can play games and movies almost anywhere, and it's got office for school stuff. but the best part? i got the lumia 928 for my daughter for free, with the best low-light smartphone camera this side of the north pole. dad for the win. mm! mm! mm! ♪ honestly, i want to see you be brave ♪
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. right now we got a drill bit and about 50 feet of pipe stuck in the ground. a place like this, we're right near the edges of a river. any time you have sandy soil you have the problem of it collapsing in on itself. we have to try to get it out. if we can't, it stays in the ground. >> let's move some of the dirt and get some of the weight off. i like it. let's do it. the problems happen and they happen quite often. you have to figure out how to get around those problems and keep pushing forward. >> we are going to take forced water and slowly pound the sand from the top down. it's like redrilling a smaller hole next to the hole we have already drilled. >> we have to have water coming out. i have seen wells collapse on
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themselves. when you switch a pipe you have to do it quickly. every second you are not forcing water into the bottom, is a second that the sand can be collapsing in on your bit and on your pipes. yeah! woo! we got the bit and the pipes free. hopefully we can work fast and keep the bit moving and the water flowing so we can do it again. >> fast, fast. >> go down, go down. yeah! >> we have now hit the water table which is a great thing. even though it is pretty late we have to put the casing in as
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fast as we can and make sure we keep the hole from collapsing. [ bell ringing ] ♪ >> the main reason why we picked this village to work in is because it is a community that has the most need right now in this area for clean water. >> [ speaking foreign languag ] language ]. ♪
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>> we were able to get water to come out of the well. now we have it falling out of the sky. this is definitely been a success. ♪ the journey here in colombia has been absolutely awesome. i believe we are do have a new really strong partnership with them here in colombia now. i think what the true meaning of life is is trying to figure out
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how not to just serve yourself all the time but how to serve others, your family, community and also people around the world. in the end for me, i definitely want to be able to provide as much clean water for as many people as i can around the world. but at the same time i hope i'm able to inspire people who are afraid of taking that first step to do what they want to do. you can be an everyday individual and you really truly can change the world. >> all right, now what next? for more information and donations please go to www.winetowater.org. >> right here's a good spot. okay, come here, justice.
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reel, reel, reel. that's good. that's good. >> this is a monster. want to pet it? >> yeah. >> we have to let him back quick, though. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com for korean americans, according to the stereotype, anyway, it used to be that you grew up to be a doctor, a lawyer, an engineer. there were a specific set of rules and expectations. are you asking me to be in a porno? is that what you're asking me? >> thanks to some remarkably bad koreans, things are beginning to change. >> i went to one years of law school and walked out. >> so you're a bad korean. >> any advice to someone about to marry a korean woman? the answer -- don't do it. ♪ ♪ i took a walk through this beautiful world ♪

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