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tv   The Gavin Newsom Show  Current  August 3, 2012 11:00pm-12:00am PDT

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you for your time stay tune for "the war room" with jennifer granholm. >> hello, thanks for watching the show. i'm excited to introduce to you an amazing divorce group of guests, a surgeon olympic champion and chef. you'll get a scoop from behind the scenes at the olympic games with an interview with jonny mosley. catherine mohr is a surgeon
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using a robot for surgery. >> first, the olympics are underway in london and johnny moseley is here to talk about winning and what it means beyond the games. >> thanks for coming on the show. thanks for being here. is there such thing as an exolympian? >> i think many olympians feel they are olympians through and through. >> like a politician. >> that's right. >> here you are on the sidelines, an old man, no longer a 22-year-old gold medal it. i know it's not the winter, but the summer what's it like sitting and watching at home? >> i enjoy watching the olympics. the summer olympics doesn't get me as bad. i start to have that feeling
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like i could compete again but i'm very morning when i watch the summer olympics, especially in gymnastics when i know they've put so much time to get to this one event. even when they have success, i cry, failure, i cry. i love it. i think it's because i know what has gone into it. i always think about in my situation, you know, i got a first and a fourth, so i have a medal to hang on and something to look and learn from, but i always think about the guys who were right there with me, you know, that were, they beat me very often, you know and we went back and forth and they just one little mistake in the olympics and nobody even recognized that they were that far.% >> when you're in the process an olympian with your friends and colleagues, are these guys
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friends? that bell starts, so to speak you tune these guys outs, you can't stand them, you're going to do everything you can to destroy them or camaraderie with olympians? that is one of the hard things about the olympic sports with the exception of team sports. for the most part, they're not team sports and you're going as team u.s.a. even competing on the ski team, you compete as a team, which is very odd because you're really competing against each other. i used to train as much outside of the team as possible. >> why because you were giving away? >> yeah, i felt like wanted to try to get an advantage on those guys and especially my sport where the americans were pretty good, so a lot of those guys were good. you have a certain camaraderie more so with some guys than others, some guys i didn't get along with and some guys, we were really good buddies and roomed together. when you're actually on the hill and competing, i mean, it, you know, they may as well be from poland.
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>> you don't like the polish skiers huh? >> are you happy for one another at the end or is it all false pretense it's the perfunctory thing? you're human. >> yeah, you're home. i mean, you're generally happy for guys, but it's, you're not that fired. it depends on how your performance went. if you did what you meant to do, and you lost to them just barely, it kind of hurts, you know. if you boned it and they did very well, you're probably happy. >> you went from the highlight of a gold medal and fourth, not fifth or something just right there, so close. >> yeah. >> truly what the emotional
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distance between the two? >> the fourth place in 2002 was a little complicated because i developed that trick the dinner roll, that i was owe it was a little ahead of its time and the sport hadn't quite, they didn't really put the right value on it, and there's a long story there, but from a personal standpoint, it was very difficult for me to actually do the trick and i really didn't get it incorporated with some proficiency until right before the games. so for me to actually put the whole run together really well like i did felt really good. it was a tough one. i felt like i was out of the medals and that hurt. i definitely went there to get a gold. i thought people thought that i knew i was going to lose and i did it anyway. that wasn't my thing. >> really, that was iconic for you. that drove your celebrity even that
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and you go on "saturday night live," and the whole thing, you traveling around the world doing the dinner roll. you've got a video game that comes out. >> yeah. >> all these things, what's life and is there such a thing as an exolympian or are you always sort of the cult of olympia? >> you bring up a good point. there was definitely after the 2002 olympics, they changed the rules and made my trick worth more and the whole sport everyone started doing inverted tricks. it was kind of a watershed moment in that way. after i figured i lost it, it sucked. i probably woke up for many years sort of with oh, should have done this. you know how you do. so that definitely made it feel better, and over time, it has had benefits. like i do think there's definitely benefits from a long
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term will, career branding, that type of a thing to being known as someone who, you know, affected change, and took some risks to do that. that has paid dividends. as an exolympian now it's, i think you are an exolympian. you know? i think you're finished with that. i've been able to sort of milk it out into the future pretty far, and i still, you know -- >> did you anticipate. >> i made my career out of it, but never knew it would last this long. >> did you know when you won did you realize hey things are about to get even better, because as you say, you were the top skier in the world for a couple of years, x games comes up, you're on top of the world but did you ever anticipate it would get as big as it did start showing up on reality t.v. shows and i don't know. >> sure. >> do so many different things.
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did a sense it would get that big at that moment or is it the length of time? >> as a teenager, i realized it was a bit of a business. you start making deals with the ski companies and try to support your career and then when you -- like i remember with t.v. stuff i wasn't getting any coverage around here. i started sending videos to the local ski show based out of here actually, it was on fox syndicated, it was a company across the bay called g.g.p. in san francisco and they started putting little segments on. i always had this sort of like eye towards the marketing side. as a form of survival aband as a form of interest. so i did, i was trying to hedge always and trying to create, like self-market myself, but i did not know where it would go. i did not know that i would eventually be hosting a show or be hosting in general.
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i did realize along the way that t.v. was a very key aspect to being able to have a viable career in the ski industry. >> how difficult, you know, all of that energy to win the gold, and i think of michael phelps right now in the olympics, you sort of hit a peak and he went through a process where there was a letdown. he said i don't need to do this anymore. dug through a similar process. >> i just saw the interview with michael phelps recently talking about the whole time after he won all those gold and he had the infamous bong incident and it was a time in his life when he was just done. >> done. >> it was great to see that, because i didn't know what was going on. i didn't know if he reached that or that was his normal m.o. after you win you're just done. after i won in 1998, i was just like i don't want to see another weight room or a ski hill, and
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that's skiing. you can imagine swimming, like the boring sport ever. i moved to l.a. really, what i was thinking was my shoulder hurts, i'm tired, i want to surf, and party. that's what i did and so i moved down there and i transferred to u.c.l.a. as my alibi, i guess. after a few months of that, i was like all right, i got to get back on the program. but yeah, you know, i feel like i went through a very similar phase where you are just not interested in doing the work that is necessary to get back there. it's always funny, i remember reading an article about tara lipinski after she won her medal. it said something like just
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ragging on her for not wanting to go back and get another one. i thought that the most brutal thing you. spent your whole life and win this medal where the odds are so high anyway, so against you and people are like it's only one you've got to get more. you just don't have that personal desire, you have to finds it somewhere and obviously he did. >> you talk about what's going through folks' minds. you don't just wake up and become an olympian, it's blood sweat and tears, years and years of intense emotional training. what's it like going through the last week in the olympians' minds. >> for the summer olympics, well, it's an intense, i think what a lot of people don't realize with rewards to these olympics is you never know if you're going to be on the team
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until literally two weeks before the olympics. i mean, you see the olympic trials and everything, and the world champion the year before, the best in the world by far the best in your country and you still don't have the security that you're going to the olympics. you could have been the best in the previous four years won an olympic gold medal previous olympics and still that is a very aggravating little. >> that was you from 1998 through 2002. >> exactly. even 1996-1998, i was the best skier. it just aggravated me that i wasn't guaranteed a spot. because in my mind, i want to train to get the olympics, but i have to get there and i don't have the security. they do it on purpose. they want people that are hot right before the olympics. historically, they know it doesn't matter what you did the year before, but it's incredibly
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stressful. my first olympics in 1998. when i watched the olympics as a kid, i thought the opening ceremony was coolest thing. i would have been happy to walk into the opening ceremonies and be finished. by the time the olympics came around and i got there i wasn't able to go to the opening ceremony. >> why? >> because my event was two days later and the opening ceremony was a six hour event and an hour away from where -- we didn't stay in the olympic village we state at a resort because we didn't want to ride to train. my coach said you aren't going to the opening ceremonies. we know it's too exhausting and you'll be too tired for training. to me, that was a no-brainer, because i was in contention. my teammates had a real issue for it. >> that was their real highlight. >> some of them were in contention for sure, these guys were all good, but to the point this is what you're going through one think you might be
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attending this pretty cool, you read about people hooking up in the olympic village and i'm going what is going on here. >> did you get that? >> no. >> i don't buy it. >> sincerely now having read what happened in there i made some mistakes. because i didn't stay in the village, because we were staying near our venue, which is fine. then i won and so i had this -- i was taking advantage of the attention that was coming my way, so i did the ceremony, i flew home immediately and did letterman and all that stuff. what i should have done was flown back immediately and lived it up, closing ceremonies and the whole nine yards. that was a big mistake. i'll admit that. >> so that's your regret. we're going to have to he had it this. jonny, thanks so much for coming
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on. >> coming up, will your next surgeon be a (vo) cenk uygur is many things. >>oh really? >>tax cuts don't create jobs. the golden years as the conservatives call them, we had the highest tax rates, and the highest amount of growth, and the highest amount of jobs. those are facts. >>"if you ever raise taxes on the rich, you're going to destroy our economy." not true!
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>> i want to focus on the folks that are making a difference. (vo) here's how you can connect with the gavin newsom show. >>i'm an outsider in the inside. ideas are the best politics.
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>> hello, thanks for watching the show. i'm excited to introduce to you an amazing divorce group of guests, a surgeon olympic champion and chef. you'll get a scoop from behind the scenes at the olympic games with an interview with jonny mosley. catherine mohr is a surgeon using a robot for surgery.
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>> first, the olympics are underway in london and johnny moseley is here to talk about winning and what it means beyond the games. >> thanks for coming on the show. thanks for being here. is there such thing as an exolympian? >> i think many olympians feel they are olympians through and through. >> like a politician. >> that's right. >> here you are on the sidelines, an old man, no longer a 22-year-old gold medal it. i know it's not the winter, but the summer what's it like sitting and watching at home? >> i enjoy watching the olympics. i do the summer olympics doesn't get me as bad. i start to have that feeling like i could compete again but i'm very morning when i watch the summer olympics, especially in gymnastics when i know
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they've put so much time to get to this one event. even when they have success, i cry, failure, i cry. i love it. i think it's because know what has gone into it. i always think about in my situation, you know, i got a first and a fourth, so i have a medal to hang on and something to look and learn from, but i always think about the guys who were right there with me, you know, that were, they beat me very often, you know and we went back and forth and they just one little mistake in the olympics and nobody even recognized that they were that far. >> when you're in the process an olympian with your friends and colleagues, are these guys friends? that bell starts, so to speak you tune these guys outs, you can't stand them, you're going to do everything you can to destroy them or camaraderie with
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olympians? that is one of the hard things about the olympic sports with the exception of team sports. for the most part, they're not team sports and you're going as team u.s.a. even competing on the ski team, you compete as a team, which is odd because you're really competing against each other. i used to train as much outside of the team as possible. >> why because you were giving away? >> yeah, i felt like i wanted to try to get an advantage on those guys and especially my sport where the americans were pretty good, so a lot of those guys were good. you have a certain camaraderie more so with some guys than others, some guys i didn't get along with and some guys, we were really good buddies and roomed together. when you're actually on the hill and competing, i mean, you're not thinking about it, you know, they may as well be from poland. >> you don't like the polish skiers huh? >> are you happy for one another at the end or is it all false
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pretense it's the perfunctory thing? you're human. >> yeah, you're home. i you're generally happy for guys, but it's, you're not that fired. it depends on how your performance went. if you did what you meant to do, and you lost to them just barely, it kind of hurts, you know. if you boned it and they did very well, you're probably happy. >> you went from the highlight of a gold medal and fourth, not fifth or something just right there, so close. >> yeah. >> truly what was the emotional distance between the two? >> the fourth place in 2002 was a little complicated because i developed that trick the dinner roll, that i was owe it was a little ahead of its time and the
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sport hadn't quite, they didn't really put the right value on it, and there's a long story there, but from a personal standpoint, it was very difficult for me to actually do the trick and i really didn't get it incorporated with some proficiency until right before the games. so for me to actually put the whole run together really well like i did felt really good. it was a tough one. i felt like i was out of the medals and that hurt. i definitely went there to get a gold. i thought people thought that i knew i was going to lose and i did it anyway. that wasn't my thing. >> really, that was iconic for you. that drove your celebrity even higher. you come back from that and you go on "saturday night live," and the whole thing, you traveling around the world doing the dinner roll. you've got a video game that comes out. >> yeah. >> all these things, what's life
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and is there such a thing as an exolympian or are you always sort of the cult of olympia? >> you bring up a good point. there was definitely after the 2002 olympics, they changed the rules and made trick worth more and the whole sport everyone started doing inverted tricks. it was kind of a watershed moment in that way. after i figured i lost it, it sucked. i probably woke up for many years sort of with oh, should have done this. you know how you do. so that definitely made it feel better, and over time, it has had benefits. like i do think there's definitely benefits from a long term perspective, if you will, career branding, that type of a thing to being known as someone who, you know, affected change, and took some risks to do that.
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that has paid dividends. as an exolympian now it's, i think you are an exolympian. you know? i think you're finished with that. i've been able to sort of milk it out into the future pretty far, and i still, >> did you anticipate. >> i made my career out of it, but never knew it would last this long. >> did you know when you won did you realize hey things are about to get even better, because as you say, you were the top skier in the world for a couple of years, x games comes up, you're on top of the world but did you ever anticipate it would get as big as it did start showing up on reality t.v. shows and i don't know. >> sure. >> do so many different things. did you have a sense it would get that big at that moment or is it the length of time? >> as a teenager, i realized it was a bit of a business.
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you start making deals with the ski companies and try to support your career and then when you -- like i remember with t.v. stuff i wasn't getting any coverage around here. i started sending videos to the local ski show based out of here actually, it was on fox syndicated, it was across the bay called g.g.p. in san francisco and they started putting little segments on. i always had this sort of like eye towards the marketing side. as a form of survival aband as a form of interest. so i did, i was trying to hedge always and trying to create, like self-market myself, but i did not know where it would go. i did not know that i would eventually be hosting a show or be hosting in general. i did realize along the way that t.v. exposure was a very key aspect to being able to have a viable career in the ski industry.
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>> how difficult, you know, all of that energy to win the gold, and i think of michael phelps right now in the olympics, you sort of hit a peak and he went through a process where there was a letdown. he said i don't need to do this anymore. dug through a similar process. >> i just saw the interview with michael phelps recently talking about the whole time after he won all those gold and he had the infamous bong incident and it was a time in his life when he was just done. >> done. >> it was great to see that, because i didn't know what was going on. i didn't know if he reached that or that was his normal m.o. after you win you're just done. after i won in 1998, i was just like i don't want to see another weight room or a ski hill, and that's skiing. you can imagine swimming, like
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the boring sport ever. i moved to l.a. really, what i was thinking was my shoulder hurts, i'm tired, i want to surf, and party. that's what i did, and so i moved down there and i transferred to u.c.l.a. as my alibi, i guess. after a few months of that, i was like all right, i got to get back on the program. but yeah, you know, i feel like i went through a very similar phase where you are just not interested in doing the work that is necessary to get back there. it's always funny, i remember reading an article about tara lipinski after she won her medal. it said something like just ragging on her for not wanting to go back and get another one. i thought that was just like the most brutal thing you. spent your whole life and win this medal where the odds are so
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high anyway, so against you and people are like it's only one you've got to get more. you just don't have that personal desire, you have to finds it somewhere and obviously he did. >> you talk about what's going through folks' minds. you don't up and become an olympian, it's blood sweat and tears, years and years of intense emotional training. what's it like going through the last week in the olympians' minds. >> for the summer olympics, well, it's an intense, i think what a lot of people don't realize with rewards to these olympics is you never know if you're going to be on the team until literally two weeks before the olympics. i mean, you see the olympic trials and everything, and so you could have been the world champion the year before, the
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best in the collide. gavin newsom shifts into high gear for answers on the gavin newsom show.
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>> hello, thanks for watching the show. i'm excited to introduce to you an amazing divorce group of guests, a surgeon olympic champion and chef. you'll get a scoop from behind the scenes at the olympic games with an interview with jonny
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mosley. catherine mohr is a surgeon using a robot for surgery. >> first, the olympics are underway in london and moseley is here to talk about winning and what it means beyond the games. >> thanks for coming on the show. thanks for being here. is there such thing as an exolympian? >> i think many olympians feel they are olympians through and through. >> like a politician. >> that's right. >> here you are on the sidelines, an old man, no longer a 22-year-old gold medal it. i know it's not the winter, but the summer what's it like
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sitting and watching at home? >> i enjoy watching the olympics. i do the summer olympics doesn't get me as bad. i start to have that feeling like i could compete again but i'm very morning when i watch the summer olympics, especially in gymnastics when i know they've put so much time to get to this one event. even when they have success, i cry, failure, i cry. i love it. i think it's because i know what has gone into it. i always think about in my situation, you know, i got a first and a fourth, so i have a medal to hang on and something to look and learn from, but i always think about the guys who were right there with me, you know, that were, they beat me very often, you know and we went back and forth and they just one little mistake in the olympics
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and nobody even recognized that they were that far. >> when you're in the process an olympian with your friends and colleagues, are these guys friends? that bell starts, so to speak you tune these guys outs, you can't stand them, you're going to do everything you can to destroy them or camaraderie with olympians? that is one of the hard things about the olympic sports with the exception of team sports. for the most part, sports and you're going as team u.s.a. even competing on the ski team, you compete as a team, which is very odd because you're really competing against each other. i used to train as much outside of the team as possible. >> why because you were giving away? >> yeah, i felt like i wanted to try to get an advantage on those guys and especially my sport where the americans were pretty good, so a lot of those guys were good. you have a certain camaraderie more so with some guys than others, some guys i didn't get along with and some guys, we
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were really good buddies and roomed together. when you're actually on the hill and competing, i mean, you're not thinking about it, you know, they may as well be from poland. >> you don't like the polish skiers huh? >> are you happy for one another at the end or is it all false pretense it's the perfunctory thing? you're human. >> yeah, you're home. i mean, you're generally happy for guys, but it's, you're not that fired. it depends on how your performance went. if you did what you meant to do, and you lost to them just barely, it kind of hurts, you know. if you boned it and they did very well, you're probably
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happy. >> you went from the highlight of a gold medal and fourth, not fifth or something just right there, so close. >> yeah. >> truly what was the emotional distance between the two? >> the fourth place in 2002 was a little complicated because i developed that trick the dinner roll, that i was owe it was a little ahead of its time and the sport hadn't quite, they didn't really put the right value on it, and there's a long story there, but from a personal standpoint, it was very difficult for me to actually do the trick and i really didn't get it incorporated with proficiency until right before the games. so for me to actually put the whole run together really well like i did felt really good. it was a tough one. i felt like i was out of the medals and that hurt. i definitely went there to get a gold. i thought people thought that i
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knew i was going to lose and i did it anyway. that wasn't my thing. >> really, that was iconic for you. that drove your celebrity even higher. you come back from that and you go on "saturday night live," and the whole thing, you traveling around the world doing the dinner roll. you've got a video game that comes out. >> yeah. >> all these things, what's life and is there such a thing as an exolympian or are you always sort of the cult of olympia? >> you good point. there was definitely after the 2002 olympics, they changed the rules and made my trick worth more and the whole sport everyone started doing inverted tricks. it was kind of a watershed moment in that way. after i figured i lost it, it sucked. i probably woke up for many years sort of with oh, should have done this. you know how you do.
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so that definitely made it feel better, and over time, it has had benefits. like i do think there's definitely benefits from a long term perspective, if you will, career branding, that type of a thing to being known as someone who, you know, affected change, and took some risks to do that. that has paid dividends. as an exolympian now it's, i think you are an exolympian. you know? i think you're finished with to sort of milk it out into the future pretty far, and i still, you know -- >> did you anticipate. >> i made my career out of it, but never knew it would last this long. >> did you know when you won did you realize hey things are about to get even better, because as you say, you were the top skier in the world for a couple of years, x games comes up, you're on top of the world
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but did you ever anticipate it would get as big as it did start showing up on reality t.v. shows and i don't know. >> sure. >> do so many different things. did you have a sense it would get that big at that moment or is it the length of time? >> as a teenager, i realized it was a bit of a business. you start making deals with the ski companies and try to support your career and then when you -- like i remember with t.v. stuff i wasn't getting any coverage around here. i started sending videos to the local ski show based out of here actually, it was on fox syndicated, it was a company across the bay called g.g.p. in san francisco and they started putting little segments on. i always had this sort of like eye towards the marketing side. as a form of survival aband as a form of interest. so i did, i was trying to hedge always and trying to create, like self-market myself, but i
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did not know where it would go. i did not know that i would eventually be hosting a show or be hosting in general. i did realize along the way that t.v. exposure was a very key aspect to being able to have a viable career in the ski industry. >> how difficult, you know, all of that energy to win the gold, and i think of michael >> this court has proven to be the knowing, delighted accomplice in the billionaires' purchase of our nation. >> and you think it doesn't affect you? think again.
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>> hello, thanks for watching the show. i'm excited to introduce to you an amazing divorce group of
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guests, a surgeon olympic champion and chef. you'll get a scoop from behind the scenes at the olympic games with an interview with jonny mosley. catherine mohr is a surgeon using a robot for surgery. >> first, the olympics are underway in london and johnny moseley is here to talk about winning and what it means beyond the games. >> thanks for coming on the show. thanks for being here. is there such thing as an exolympian? >> i think many olympians feel they are olympians through and
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through. >> like a politician. >> that's right. >> here you are on the sidelines, an old man, no longer a 22-year-old gold medal it. i know it's not the winter, but the summer what's it like sitting and watching at home? >> i enjoy watching the olympics. i do the summer olympics doesn't get me as bad. i start to have that feeling like i could compete again but i'm very morning when i watch the summer olympics, especially in gymnastics when i know they've put so much time to get to this one event. when they have success, i cry, failure, i cry. i love it. i think it's because i know what has gone into it. i always think about in my situation, you know, i got a first and a fourth, so i have a medal to hang on and something to look and learn from, but i
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always think about the guys who were right there with me, you know, that were, they beat me very often, you know and we went back and forth and they just one little mistake in the olympics and nobody even recognized that they were that far. >> when you're in the process an olympian with your friends and colleagues, are these guys friends? that bell starts, so to speak you tune these guys outs, you can't stand them, you're going to do everything you can to destroy them or camaraderie with olympians? that is one of the hard things about the olympic sports with the exception of team sports. for the most part, they're not team going as team u.s.a. even competing on the ski team, you compete as a team, which is very odd because you're really competing against each other. i used to train as much outside of the team as possible. >> why because you were giving away? >> yeah, i felt like i wanted to
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try to get an advantage on those guys and especially my sport where the americans were pretty good, so a lot of those guys were good. you have a certain camaraderie more so with some guys than others, some guys i didn't get along with and some guys, we were really good buddies and roomed together. when you're actually on the hill and competing, i mean, you're not thinking about it, you know, they may as well be from poland. >> you don't like the polish skiers huh? >> are you happy for one another at the end or is it all false pretense it's the perfunctory thing? you're human. >> yeah, you're home. i mean, you're generally happy for guys, but it's, you're not that fired. it depends on how your
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performance went. if you did what you meant to do, and you lost to them just barely, it kind of hurts, you know. if you boned it and they did very well, you're probably happy. >> you went from the highlight of a gold medal and fourth, not fifth or something just right there, so close. >> yeah. >> truly what was the emotional distance between the two? >> the fourth place in 2002 was a little complicated because i developed that trick the dinner roll, that i was owe it was a little ahead of its time and the sport hadn't quite, they didn't really put the right value on it, and there's a long story there, but from a personal standpoint, it was actually do the trick and i really didn't get it incorporated with some proficiency until right before the games. so for me to actually put the whole run together really well
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like i did felt really good. it was a tough one. i felt like i was out of the medals and that hurt. i definitely went there to get a gold. i thought people thought that i knew i was going to lose and i did it anyway. that wasn't my thing. >> really, that was iconic for you. that drove your celebrity even higher. you come back from that and you go on "saturday night live," and the whole thing, you traveling around the world doing the dinner roll. you've got a video game that comes out. >> yeah. >> all these things, what's life and is there such a thing as an exolympian or are you always sort of the cult of olympia? >> you bring up a good point. there was definitely after the 2002 olympics, they changed the rules and made my trick worth more and the whole sport everyone started collide.
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gavin newsom shifts into high gear for answers on the gavin newsom show. sir... excuse me, excuse me... can i get you to sign off on the johnson case... ♪ we built this city! ♪ ♪ we built this city ♪ [ cellphone rings ] ♪ on rock & roll! ♪ falafel. yeah, yeah, i love you too. ♪ don't you remember! ♪ [ orbit trumpet plays ] don't let food hang around. clean it up with orbit! [ ding! ] fabulous! for a good clean feeling... after any meal. eat. drink. chew orbit.
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>>there's not a problem that exists in america today that hasn't been solved by somebody somewhere. >>(narrator) share your views with gavin at politicallydirect.com, a direct line to the gavin newsom show. >>focus on the folks that are making a difference, that are not just dreamers, but doers. >>(narrator) join the conversation. >> hello, thanks for watching the show. i'm to introduce to you an amazing divorce group of guests, a surgeon olympic
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champion and chef. you'll get a scoop from behind the scenes at the olympic games with an interview with jonny mosley. catherine mohr is a surgeon using a robot for surgery. >> first, the olympics are underway in london and johnny moseley is here to talk about winning and what it means beyond the games. >> thanks for coming on the show. thanks for being here. is there such thing as exolympian? >> i think many olympians feel they are >>now let's get some real news. (vo) first, news and analysis
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with a washington perspective from an emmy winning insider. >>you couldn't say it any more powerfully than that. >> current tv, on the roll. (vo)followed by humor and politics with a west coast edge. >>ah, thank you. >>it really is incredible. (vo)bill press and stephanie miller, current's morning news block. weekdays six to noon. if you have copd like i do you know how hard it can be to breathe and what that feels like. copd includes chronic bronchitis
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