tv Piers Morgan Live CNN February 7, 2014 6:00pm-7:01pm PST
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mobster money anymore. >> hello, everyone. >> reporter: but in many ways, he suggests, he's never felt richer. >> some people never figure out what their purpose is. i figured it out from a little dog dying on the street. >> reporter: tom foreman, cnn. >> said it before. i'll say it again. i like dogs. that does it for us. thanks for watching, "piers morgan live" starts now. this is "piers morgan live." welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. tonight exclusive, an incredible story of justice denied for 21 years. two free men tonight after spending more than two decades behind bars for a vicious triple murder they did not commit. the killings of mr. yarbrough's mother, her 12-year-old sister and 12-year-old friend. tonight they're speaking out for the first time since they were released from prison yesterday. they will join me exclusively. plus on the 50th anniversary of the day the beatles arrived in america, the band that gave them a run for their money.
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i'll talk to barry gibb, sole surviving member of the bee gees on the price of fame. >> fame is an animal. it just takes hold of you and says this is who you are. this is what you've got to do. >> and his advice to justin bieber. >> and you have a lot of people around you that just want to have a party. and live off what it is that you're getting attention for. >> we begin tonight with our big story. it's a quite extraordinary story. freedom for antonio yarbrough and sharrif wilson after more than two decades behind bars for a triple murder they did not commit. this is their first interview since release from prison yesterday. they join me now exclusively along with their attorneys, zachary margolis and adam polmata. let me start first of all antonio and sharrif, congratulations on securing your release. antonio, how do you feel? >> i feel vindicated. i feel overwhelmed.
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this just happened yesterday. that's how i feel. i feel vindicated. >> and sharrif, how do you feel? >> i feel free. i feel great right now. i feel able to do things that i couldn't do for the last 21 years. >> it's an extraordinary story. i want to explain to the viewers exactly what's happened here. it was the summer of 1992 in new york city. two of of you spent the night partying in the west village of manhattan. sharrif, you were 15, tony, you were 18 at the time. you returned very late to coney island where you both lived. sharrif, you went to a friend's house, tony, you went home. when you went home, tony, what did you discover? >> i discovered the bodies of my mother and my little sister and my cousin. my mother any yarbrough, my little sister siobhan barnes and my little cousin natasha knox. >> they had been stabbed an
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strange eld, had their giclothe partially removed. what then happened? >> i was asked to come down to the precinct. they wanted to find out if i would know anybody that would want to hurt my mother and my little sister. when i got down there to the precinct, i was just held there for so long before anybody even decided to speak to me. and before you knew it, i had this photograph shoved in my face and i was being threatened and slapped around. they wanted me to sign a forced confession. and i wouldn't. >> now, what happened down there? the brooklyn detectives placed antonio and sharrif into separate interview rooms and they coerced false confessions from both of you. you were both later convicted in separate trials. antonio, you got 75 years to life in prison. an extraordinary aspect of this is that you two haven't seen
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each other for 23 years until literally half an hour ago. what was that moment like? sharrif, i understand it was you that went up to antonio. describe that moment for me. >> well, i just wanted to apologize to him for all that i put him through, all that i went through with him. it was great to see him. >> piers, i think it might help if we make it clear that sharrif was coerced by the authorities into testifying falsely, putting on false testimony, against tony yarbrough. and tony can speak to this. but i think that was one of the moving causes of the conviction. at the same time, it was a coercion and manipulation by the authorities. that's completely clear from the record we have now. and more importantly, on just the human level, i think tony's actually already moved past that and ready to see the culprits here who are the authorities that put the boys in this situation when they were boys.
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>> right. that's very important to make that very clear, that both these confessions were coerced and were false confessions and we'll come to some of the details which were so obviously false in a moment. you, sharrif, i know were compelled or felt compelled to testify against your friend. when you were made to do that, what were you thinking? >> i really -- at this point i really don't even know what i was thinking. i was scared, afraid. i was lied to, manipulated into believing that i was going to go home if i'd tell what happened -- what they said happened against him. >> two things. tony, i'm going to come to you in one second. but there were two things that then developed after this. you're both convicted on the back of this false confession that both of you made, and the testimony that sharrif gave against antonio. but then two things happened. one is that seven years later,
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another woman is murdered in new york city. they discover the exact same dna that was discovered, antonio, on the body of your mother, making it quite clear that the real perpetrator of the murder was not you and it wasn't sharrif but it was this other person who has never been caught. when you heard about that, or when did you hear about that? and what did you expect to them happen? >> well, when i heard about it i was extremely overwhelmed. i was happy. me and my lawyer had been fighting for so long trying to get this -- my conviction overturned. and getting me vindicated. then when the evidence popped up that it was somebody else, and not thought was somebody else but the motive was the same, not the motive the m.o. was the same. it was stabbed, strangled to death, and murdered in that -- she was murdered in that fashion the same way my mother and my little sister and my cousin was. >> hope had came. hope had finally started to come
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sink in where i was at, where i was being held after all those years. >> let me just explain the sequence real quick. in 1999 is when the murder happened. but we didn't get the dna evidence until last summer. there was ample evidence of tony's innocence which brought me into the case and his friend eric barden from attica brought me the transcripts and other things. i realized he was innocent way before we got the dna evidence. we got the dna evidence last summer. what i was going to say i will never forget the moment i was standing in the courthouse on another case and got the call from the d.a.'s office. she said i've got something to tell you. there was a hit on the dna. that just fit like a glove. it fell into place. everything else that i had seen that showed that he was innocent was confirmed by that dna evidence. i communicated that as quickly as i could to tony. i was talking to him every week from prison in attica. and from there it's been i told him you're going to get out. it may take awhile, but you're
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going to get out. it took another six months really to tee up the final dna report. it took the new d.a. in brooklyn, ken thompson, about a month to look at that report and to make the right decision. and then he made the decision that anybody would make in seeing this evidence. there was never any chance this guy was guilty of these horrendous murders. >> let me come to adam palmetto now. this must really anger you as a lawyer that there was such a breakdown in the legal process that the medical examiner was not even spoken to by the attorneys. >> you know, i describe this case as a perfect storm of everything that could go wrong in a criminal justice situation. we have coerced confessions of sharrif who was 15 years old at the time. we have dna evidence that frankly prosecutors in new york and all across the country try to dig their heels in to prevent and not test dna evidence from
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prior convictions. and it's a real problem. it's something that we're trying to change in new york but not without a fight with law enforcement, with prosecutors offices. >> and there are now a number of other cases, a lot of them dna-related which are going through the system which will also be, it would seem, travesties of justice. let's take a short break. when we come back i want to talk to antonio and sharrif about the fact you've been incarcerated for more than two decades for something you didn't do. and antonio, in your case allegedly killing your own mother and sister. i can't imagine a more horrendous set of circumstances. and i want to talk to you about how you coped with that and how you're going to cope with coming back into the real world again. it says here that a woman's sex drive increases at the age of 80. helps reduce the risk of heart disease. keep heart-healthy. live long. eat the 100% goodness of post shredded wheat.
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emotional scene when tony yarbrough was freed after 21 years for murders he didn't commit. tony yarbrough and sharrif wilson and their attorneys. we've painted a picture here of a series of travesties, the way you guys were treated by the police and bully and coerced into false confessions, the way the trial was conducted, the medical examiner and the evidence he gave which was clearly wrong.
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the result of all this, antonio and shr sharrif, you both go to prison for over 20 years. tony, what was that like for you? bad enough but to be doing it after falsely convicted for killing your own mother and sister and friend, what does that do to you? >> it was a nightmare. extreme nightmare. not only was it a nightmare, but they had me in the worst maximum security prison in the state of new york, which is attica. there they don't care whether or not you're innocent. whatever paperwork comes through that's who you are and that's how they treat you. 21 years and 7 months was more like 42 years and 7 months. where you know that you're in prison for something that you didn't do. so it was a nightmare. it was a nightmare. >> that moment, antonio, when you walked out a free man and you saw daylight and you saw family, friends, whatever you
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did, describe that to me. >> i'm still going through it right now. i haven't slept yet. i've been up for two days now. i have no words right now. i'm just extremely happy. and i thank my lawyer right here for sticking by me and helping me. >> what was the one thing, antonio, you wanted to do when you first came out? what was the one thing you missed most? >> new york air. [ laughter ] >> which is pretty cold right now, right? >> yeah. >> sharrif, let me turn to you. what has the experience been like for you? i can't even begin to imagine the horror of what you two have been through. describe to me as best you can how you dealt with it. >> it was horrible.
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try to keep faith in god and believe it one day that all this would be over with. >> and when you came out, sharrif, what was the first thing you wanted to do? >> have some new york pizza. [ laughter ] >> new york pizza, new york air. just regular things that you would have been deprived of all this time. >> yes. >> and sharrif, you also of course as we heard earlier, you've lived also with the guilty would imagine of having given evidence against your friend, evidence you knew to be wrong. >> yes. >> but evidence that you believed as a panicky young 15-year-old may get you out of a long prison sentence. >> yes. >> how have you coped with that part of this? >> well, for many years i felt horrible that i had to do that and that i actually did it. knowing that we wasn't guilty for a crime that we didn't commit. but i just feel horrible and i felt horrible then, i still feel horrible now we had to go through this long process just to get justice.
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>> piers, what really got the ball rolling with zachary on this case, sharrif wrote to tony's family and said that they had to do something, that this was a wrongful conviction, that these were -- they were both innocent and they had to do whatever they could to find their way to justice. and the way they found it was through zachary's office door. and they were lucky that they did that. >> sharrif, i wanted to ask you about this, sharrif. you wrote this letter in 2005 saying to antonio's family, we are innocent. we never did anything. tony's innocent. i was wrong for turning on him but i was scared and pressurized into it. would ask you, tough question, i why did it take you so long to write that letter? that is 13 years after you were sent to prison. >> well, i didn't know who to contact. and just out of the blue i got a letter from his aunt. and she asked me did he really
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do it. and i had to tell the truth. no, he didn't do it. and no, we didn't do it. and that i was pressured into making a false confession. >> antonio, let me ask you. when you discovered antonio that he had made this revelation to your family, what did you think? >> well, like i told him about a few hours ago, that i have no animosity towards him. i know he wasn't the one who murdered my mother. i know he wasn't the one who murdered my little sister. and i know he wasn't the one that murdered my little cousin. and so i know what they did to him because i know what they did to me. i mean, but before that i was extremely angry with him. as i had all right to be. but like he said earlier, it's the gift of god, man. and i'm just grateful that god has sent like i said before sent me some lawyers who believed in me and took a chance on me.
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because i didn't have the funds to get a lawyer. and as you know, new york lawyers are extremely expensive. and didn't have that type of money. my lawyer zachary opened up his heart. and it's the gift of god. that's all i got to say. like i'm just overwhelmed right now. all animosity, all that is all gone now. i'm here to live my life. i'll be 40 next week. and hopefully god willing i have another 40 or 50 years to live an extraordinary life. the life i should have been living. >> antonio, let me ask you this question, which is that you've been in prison since your mother and your sister and your cousin were killed. you've never, i guess, been able to properly mourn their deaths. you don't know to this day who murdered them. do you have any hope of finding their real killer now and getting justice for your mother, your sister and your cousin?
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>> yeah, i have hope. all i can tell you is that it's in god's hands now. and it's in god's hands now. so that's all i got to say right now. >> piers, i think the thing that's most revolting about this case is that if the police didn't have the tunnel vision they had a the beginning of this case, they would have picked up on clues that might have led to the real killer in this case. >> and prevented the 1999 murder. >> and that never happened. and that is a problem with policing all across the united states and prosecutors is that they become tunnel blind. they find their suspects, they target those suspects, and they miss the truth. and that's where injustice happens.
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>> and adam, the prevalence now of dna, historically years, decades after these offenses have been committed and wrongful convictions have been made, it's going to be a huge thing, isn't it now, with many cases that dna evidence is emerging which completely contradicts convictions against people. >> which is one of the reasons why we fought very hard in new york to allow people to have access to post-conviction and post-plea donna testing, which a reform that has just happened in about the last year in new york. so let me just say, piers, zach and i were both at that moment when tony and sharrif spoke. and to say thought was one of the most moving things i've ever seen, one of the most complete acts of forgiveness that you could ever imagine to witness, i can't even put words to it. it was so powerful.
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it wassan an inspiration. >> antonio summed it up he knew what sharrif went through to make these confessions. the whole case is a travesty. it changed american justice. it changed the police force in new york city who forced this through, pushed the wrongful confessions. the medical examiner, people involved in that trial. i just want to say to you guys, i wish you all the very best now in having a new life. and i think you've got the right attitude, antonio. i mean, do you think you have the ability now to be friends again, do you think you've been bonded by this awful experience enough that you can put everything behind you? sharrif, what do you feel? >> i say yes. if he's willing. >> i have to take it day-by-day. it's a day-by-day thing. i'm still trying to get my bearings right now. and right now i haven't a clue what i'm going to do. but like i said before, anything
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is possible when you've got god in your life and in your heart. >> and finally, antonio, just for people who didn't know your mother and your sister and your cousin, just tell me a little bit about them, what they were like. >> wow. my mother, anyone that knew her knew that she was -- she had a heart of gold. she was on drugs. and like i tell everybody, there's no perfect parent. but she was my perfect parent. she was my best friend. and my little sister and my little cousin, natasha, they had such a bright future in front of them. and they died together, knowing they loved each other as hard as they did, there's no words to describe them. they didn't need to die the way they died. they didn't need to be murdered the way they were murdered. they was little kids. and i miss them so much. it's like it just happened yesterday. so i'm still coping with that. i have that yet to go visit my
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mother's grave. they just were beautiful people. they were beautiful people. whoever this person was, he took some real strong, beautiful people out of this world. and hopefully if it's god's will, that person will get caught. sooner -- much sooner rather than later. and then justice really can be served. >> antonio yarbrough and sharrif wilson, you two in particular, your lawyers also, zachary and adam, thank you all for coming on the show so soon after what happened. i think anybody that's listened to this is going to share my horror and outrage at what you've had to go through. and your determination to bring the real murderer to justice and to try and ensure that other people in america do not have to go through what you've been through. and it's a very important issue.
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and i'm jt so glad that you've finally got the freedom that you should always have had. and i wish you both all the very best of luck in rebuilding your lives and thank you again for coming on and sharing your story. >> thank you for sharing our story. >> thank you, piers. >> thank you. >> a really shocking story. when when come back, 50 years after the beatles came to america there was one band that gave them a run for their money. i'll talk to the sole surviving member of the bee gees, the legendary barry begin. -- gibb. in the nation, we reward safe driving.
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♪ ♪ whether you're a brother or whether you're a mother you're staying alive ♪ >> 1958 three young brothers joined together to form a musical group called the bee gees. they helped define the disco era of the 70s. sold an incredible 220 million albums. with me now is the bounding member of the bee gees, launching a tour in may. the legendary barry gibb. so good to so you. >> good to see you. >> i thought a lot about you recently. apart from being one of the all-time great british music stars, a lot of people
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celebrating the beatles this week with the 50th anniversary. you guys did something even the beatles never did. the bee gees are the only group in music history to write, produce and record six straight number one hits. not even the beatles did that. >> well, i'm proud of that. i don't know how we did it. i think robert is the person i would point out and say he did that. robert was a genius. he opened doors for us that would never have been opened otherwise. you're never on your own. it takes a whole bunch of people to make something like that happen. just feel really lucky. >> strange thing talking to you now is that i met you with your brothers over the years. various events and things. >> i know. >> we had a lot of fun stuff. but it feels strange to me to be seeing you on your own. it must feel 100 times stranger for you to be going out on tour without any of your brothers. >> yeah. well, i did mope around for a few months. a good few months. and the whole family did. nobody really knew how to deal
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with it all. it's the loss of three brothers. >> andy of course -- >> was only 30 years old. so it was all of that. and then we have to go through that valley, the whole family. even now my mother is still one way or the other goes up and she goes down. >> your mom's in your 90s. >> she's in her 90s. >> you were the oldest brother. >> i was the oldest brother. >> it seems strange that your mom and you have outsurvived the three younger brothers >> yes. and my older sister leslie, who lives in australia. and i think last count eight children. so she's keeping it all going in her way. yes, leslie, me and mum. and we have the memories now. we have the memories. >> when you look back over it all, you must have extraordinary memories. what for you were the great highlights, the moments if i could replay them for you now you would choose? >> i would choose the time before we ever -- before anyone knew who we were. because in those days, we live
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fd on the beach, we went to school in red cliff, which was paradise. we emigrated to australia about that point. probably the most magical moments of my life. because the three of us arrived in australia in melbourne on my birthday. i was 12 years old. the rest was incredible. i mean, we did all of the first live television in australia. those are the best experiences for me. because nobody -- because it wasn't about fame. it was just about what was going to happen tomorrow. when can we get another show. >> and it had i guess an innocence about it and excitement. >> absolutely. >> you just didn't know what was going to happen. >> yeah. and not knowing is really in the end the most fun. >> when you achieve the kind of stratospheric superstardom you guys did in the 70s, the absolute sort of personification of the disco era in many ways, and of course ""saturday night fever"" and so on, with it came
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huge fame, huge money, all the trappings and glory and so on. you're hinting i guess from your previous comments that it's not all it's cracked up to be. the fame and the money and the glory that you aspire to. >> no. well, i suppose it is and it isn't. there's all the good stuff, and then there's the fact that fame is something that takes hold of you and then decides what you do with your life. and i never really enjoyed that at all. and i enjoyed sort of knowing what i was going to do, knowing what my brothers and i were going to do. but fame is an animal. it just takes hold of you and says this is who you are, this is what you've got to do. >> tell me about your brothers. start with andy. you lost him when he was 30 years old. i guess he'll always be in your head a 30-year-old young man, right? >> yes. andy was mostly like me. morris and robin were not alike but alike in also many ways. andy and i were the two guys that played tennis. morris and robin never really
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did. it just didn't really interest them. but andy was sort of like almost like my twin brother. but he was not as lanky as me. i was skinny and lanky and he was strong. >> when he died and it was you and the twins, did you feel slightly disconnected? is that inevitable when two of your brothers are twins? >> i think we became disconnected about 12 years ago. and then when we lost mo, robin and i gravitated towards each other. it's always been the twins and the older brother. there was a real difference. i think they always talked to each other more than they talked to me as twins. >> what causes that kind of rift between siblings who have been so close? is it simply being together too much? is it the pressures, outside forces of fame? >> i guess it's the difference between being in a group and being brothers in a group. or being sisters in a group. there's another kind of rivalry,
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which is really in the blood. who wants to be the favorite child. who wants to be the favorite performer. who do i love the best. and parents always love the youngest the best. so we all knew our oh, mom and dad love andy but they loved all of us and didn't know how to divide that up. we were competitive. we were always trying to thrust ourselves out front. robin was competitive with me and morris was the middle guy that would mediate. robin and i were the ones that would clash. he had a beautiful voice. and i'm always going to miss that. because there was nothing more fun than harmonizing. >> i heard when he was dying, i was going to interview robin on this show and i was so sorry not to do that. i heard you wrote a song for him and sang it for him. >> i did. and i will get down to recording.
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i've got my studio refitted. i'm going to make records with my kid, with steven and ashley. and the song is called "the end of the rainbow." and it's sort of -- it's like a lot of songs that i have. it's sort of like pits bits of around the house. i have to go look for songs. there's one in a drawer. there's one called "in a million years" which i have somebody in mind but i haven't sent it yet. but songs keep coming. >> that must have been for you a very special moment, to write a some and to sing it to robin knowing you were loosising him your last of three brothers. >> it's a very strange experience to know that you have no brothers now. that's unusual. that's weird. i have a hard time dealing with it. but my whole family has a hard time dealing with it. so coming to terms with it slowly. but i really miss them. >> i'll bet you do. >> what i miss more than anything else how much we used to laugh. we were the goons.
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anyone who hasn't heard of them should check them out. that was our way of life. we put everything into those terms. >> stay with me to talk more about the bee gees phenomenon. "saturday night fever" is one thing can but you were immortalized on "saturday night live." we'll talk about that when we come back. [ ambient street noise ] ♪ ♪ ♪ abe! get in!
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♪ how deep is your love i really need to learn ♪ >> 1977 hit "how deep is your love" number one in the u.s. for three weeks. back with bee jegees member, singer, songwriter barry gibb. you must hear this so many times, your music was template of my youth. every party i go to at some stage somebody will put on a bee gees record and the place explodes. if i said to you you can only play one bee gees record which one would you choose? >> it would have to be "how can you mend a broken heart". >> why that one? >> i think because it's really about lost love in all young people. and for me it was a reflection
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on the first crush i ever had, what it was like. i was always done. so what it was like being done. i think i was just so possessive. i always had to sort of fall in love. >> you've had one of the longest, most successful marriages. >> right. >> 44 years you'll be married. >> we met on the set of "top of the pops" when massachusetts was number one. and then we had a cup of tea in the canteen at the bbc. then we had a cuddle in a phone booth. and time stood still. >> how have you managed that? show biz is so littered with broken marriages >> yes. >> how have you managed to sustain such a lasting love, do you think? >> because i think we've juls always been in love. that's the truth of it. we never really saw other people. once it happened, that was it. >> you never looked at anyone else? >> i think we both looked. i think it's okay to look. >> i want to play a clip. this is from "saturday night
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live." brillian. justin timberlake with jimmy fallon and somebody joins him. >> it's the barry gibb show. ♪ blaming it all on the nights of broadway ♪ [ cheers and applause ] [ laughter ] >> hard to watch. >> absolutely. you were finding it hard to watch. why? >> because i hate looking at myself at different ages. when people put things in front of me to sign it's always a different age and it freaks me
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out. this is me 10 years ago, this is me 20 years ago. it's hard to go from being able to do anything with your body to not being able to get out of bed. you have to live with that stuff. but you know what, my throat still feels great. >> i was going to ask you. you're going out on tour. you're going out with your son and also morris's daughter >> yes. sammy. >> it's a wonderful way of continuing the family. >> i think it is, too. but it sort of happened organically. it's like we just sort of came towards each other and we started singing. and that worked out great. and she's lovely. and you know what, she lights up the stage. and my eldest son steven, who's this sort primeaval sort of hunk who plays guitar great and sings great. it's nice to be of on stage. when i look at the side of the stage my daughter is on the teleprompter. i get to see her eyes on that side of the stage. cane tell by her eyes whether
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things are working. >> how is your voice? the bee gees voices were so utterly unique. i'm sure it's one of the reasons that you've had such longevity. they really were unique voices. >> because we were always experimenting. and that was part of it. robin's vibrato was wonderful and great singing voice. robin wasn't a social singer. morris and i would sit around and sing all night. robin was i got to go now. he never really got into that. but when it was time to sing robin sang. >> how's your voice done now? how is it compared to what it used to be? >> it's okay! it's okay! >> do people expect you to talk like that? >> yes. >> we've got a big movie airing tomorrow night on cnn about the 60s invasion focusing on the beatles obviously. >> yes. >> a lot of nostalgia about that period. did you and the beatles hang out much or not? >> not really. i think morris did because morris was married to lulu at that period in time.
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they use to go to a lot of beatles things. there was a place called the speak easy which was underground where everybody went. you'd have the beatles and the stones and the who in one room. eating. and otis redding could be on stage. or sam and dave. those were days where there w was -- it was just an incredible world. >> let's take another break. come back and talk about justin bieber with you. you've been through teenage superstardom. want to know what advice you may have for the biebs after the break. hold your thought. it says here that a woman's sex drive
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of their type 2 diabetes with non-insulin victoza®. for a while, i took a pill to lower my blood sugar, but it didn't get me to my goal. so i asked my doctor about victoza®. he said victoza® is different than pills. victoza® is proven to lower blood sugar and a1c. it's taken once-a-day, any time, and comes in a pen. and the needle is thin. victoza® is not for weight loss, but it may help you lose some weight. victoza® is an injectable prescription medicine
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that may improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. it is not recommended as the first medication to treat diabetes and should not be used in people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. victoza® has not been studied with mealtime insulin. victoza® is not insulin. do not take victoza® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to victoza® or any of its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction may include: swelling of face, lips, tongue, or throat, fainting or dizziness, very rapid heartbeat, problems breathing or swallowing, severe rash or itching. tell your doctor if you get a lump or swelling in your neck. serious side effects may happen in people who take victoza®, including inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis), which may be fatal. stop taking victoza® and call your doctor right away if you have signs of pancreatitis, such as severe pain
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that will not go away in your abdomen or from your abdomen to your back, with or without vomiting. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. taking victoza® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. the most common side effects are nausea, diarrhea, and headache. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. if your pill isn't giving you the control you need ask your doctor about non-insulin victoza®. it's covered by most health plans. ♪ ♪ you'll never snow just what you mean to me ♪
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"jive talking" another number one hit. you've written hit songs for elvis, kenny romgers, barbra streisand, tina turner, and others. amazing. >> i never know what's going to happen tomorrow, and if somebody wants to -- first of all, janice joplin, we didn't work with, she just recorded it. so people do that. >> what advice would you have for justin bieber? you had to come through all this. >> what i see with justin bieber is sort of what i see with andy. >> your brother, andy? >> yeah. heading for a brick wall. you're heading for a brick wall, and that's a shame, because this is a great talent. he's got great gifts. i would like to do the things he
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does, i would like to dance and do all those wonderful things that justin does, justin timberlake. i just think it's time to grow up, time to grow up and be what all these young girls love you, be a good example. >> do you need people around you telling you that? is that part of the problem? >> yes. and you have a lot of people around you that just want to have a party, and live off what it is that you're getting attention for. that's always the problem. and buying wild animals is one of the first signs. andy had a baby lion, justin had a monkey. >> here we go. >> here we go. >> you see the signs. >> nothing matters, i can do what i want. it's a shame. i think it's more of a shame for his parents, because they're probably really telling him one way or the other. they love their child, but they can't do much about what's going on. i feel for him. >> i feel for him.
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i've got three kids around his age. it's difficult. i can only imagine how hard it is if you give them $100 million and say you're the biggest pop star in the road. >> but there will be a brick wall if you don't grow up. >> let's watch this from you and your brother. ♪ ♪ living in each other's lives, trying to make the fantasy some true ♪ >> very poignant lyrics there. when you go out without your brothers on this tour, i know you've already started it, when you go out in america where you've enjoyed such fame, what
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is your favorite memory of perhaps the big times with your brothers? >> being around the microphone together, just like that, singing around the microphone. and being able to feel each other's breath and knowing what it is we were all doing. we would all be able to know, this is good. what is working tonight. best moment. >> let's listen to a little bit more of this. ♪ ♪ i can't stop being close to you ♪ >> you know, i find that really sad, in a warm way, in a sense that i have such great memory of the group. >> me too. >> it permeated so much of my life just as a fan.
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there must be so many millions like me around the world. >> that was mo's lead on that song. >> what would you like the bee gees to stand for, to be remembered for, do you think? >> song writing. beyond anything else, and harmonies. >> just writing great songs that everyone can enjoy? >> yeah. not every song. not every song we loved ourselves, but we knew when we had a great one. >> i sang that on this very show. i was the dolly parton role and kenny sapg his role. fair to say i murdered your best music. barry, it's been fabulous talking to you. i'm a huge unabashed fan of you
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and your brothers. i wish you all the success with the tour. best of luck. >> been my pleasure. thank you. >> we'll be right back. [ male announcer ] this is karen and jeremiah. they don't know it yet, but they're gonna fall in love, get married, have a couple of kids, [ children laughing ] move to the country, and live a long, happy life together where they almost never fight about money. [ dog barks ] because right after they get married, they'll find some financial folks who will talk to them about preparing early for retirement and be able to focus on other things, like each other, which isn't rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade.
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♪ i'm a man without conviction >> monday i'll be joined by musician boy george. that's all for us tonight. we'll see you again back here monday night. this is a good place to both experience fantasy and reality. ♪ >> the air, explosives and food? you can't beat that. ♪ muy gracias. the stands are in the street, random strangers bring you delicious foods. it's a great count
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