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tv   Caught on Camera  MSNBC  January 13, 2013 4:00pm-5:00pm PST

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>> they're creating t-shirts and calendars and books featuring nora. >> i'm going to write a positive life philosophy book. it's called "nora's piano life guide to a perfect life on how to make every day a catnip day." >> and they hope her music will continue to inspire people all over the world for years to come. >> she's like a little miracle that's actually happening. she has a lot of piano-playing years ahead of her, but even when that's over, those videos will live on. >> can you play some more? >> there's really no formula for creating a popular viral video. they can be caught on camera any time, anywhere. and as you've seen, they can star just about anyone. if you have a video you'd like to send to us, send them to our website. i'm contessa brewer. that's it for this edition of "caught on camera."
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set your vcr to record. >> this late night talk show host, these intrepid reporters, this politician, and this city bus driver may seem to have nothing in common, but they all share a common bond. embarrassing, funny, scary. and unbelievable scenarios that all happened on the job. "caught on camera: a hard day's work." hello, i'm contessa brewer.
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welcome to "caught on camera." one of the most embarrassing moments ever at the worst possible time in the worst possible place -- on the job. in this story you'll see professionals doing what they do best until they trip up or slip up and then go with the old saying, laugh at yourself and the world will laugh with you. >> this is fashion week over in paris. there was a problem out there today. a model fell down twice. >> it looked so funny. i'm still laughing when i see that video. >> you're just tickled over that. >> it was clear i don't have this anymore. i hope they go to commercial now because i'm about to lose my job. >> wait a minute. let's start over from the beginning. kamila is a supermodel living in
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poland. jim vance is a veteran newscaster from washington, d.c. they may live worlds apart, but jim and kamila will forever be linked to each other and it's all because of a pair of ridiculously high heels, a watering can, and one very embarrassing video that went viral. kamila loves her job and was particularly excited to be booked for a fall fashion show, being put on by one of her favorite designers. >> i love vivian west. she's an amazing designer, so when i went for the casting and i got the job, i was so happy. >> at least until the spring/summer 2007 show turned into the fall show. prior to her stumble. kamila had been through a fitting for the spring/summer show and everything had gone smoothly. >> i went for the fitting, and everything was all right. tried the shoes. the clothes were made perfectly for me. >> and since the theme of the show was springtime, kamila was
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given a special prop. >> they gave me a watering can, and the idea was for me to walk outside with the watering can and put the water on the flowers and keep walking until the end and back. and on the rehearsal, everything, okay, she was okay, watering can, okay. >> unbeknownst to her, there was a last-minute addition right before the show. her watering can had been filled to the brim. >> it was so heavy i couldn't lift it up. now i have to keep walking with this in this shoes. >> no human being can walk in those things. >> it was like your foot is put if a funny way so it's hard to walk. >> the watering can was bad enough, but what was so funny was the desperate attempt of this, i'm sure, wonderful woman to stay vertical with these absurd shoes. >> jim prides himself on taking his job very seriously, but not
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on this day. >> and when she went down with the can, again, it was like, whoop, there she goes again. that was embarrassing. this was at least the second time. >> well, you are all really just tickled by that, aren't you? you try walking in those shoes. >> we want to apologize. >> hold on, hole on. >> nothing could have prepared kamila or jim for the attention that came once the video went viral. >> i was the star. i was everywhere. i was in the newspaper, in every single news from australia to new york. >> there was not a continent except antarctica from which i have not heard. >> and then they put the movie on youtube, so everyone like -- i wasn't kamila anymore.
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but i was, oh, this is the girl from the vivian westwood show. >> for both of them there's a silver lining. >> i'm really happy that something i did causes other people to feel a little bit of joy. >> hold on hold on. >> everyone can have a rough day, but it doesn't mean anything. next time you need to wake up and do your job as good as you can. coming up, a 911 operator's worst nightmare comes true. >> 911, emergency. >> there's a fire. >> i had to ask her twice to make sure i had the right address. and i realized it was my house. >> and a city bus worker's on-the-job catastrophe. >> i looked out the windshield and realize that the bridge pillar is coming, and we're not stopping. >> when "caught on camera: a hard day's work" returns. ok. don't you have any usefull apps on that thing? who do you think i am, quicken loans? ♪ at quicken loans,
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what's your emergency?
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>> there's a fire, a big fire. >> i had to ask twice to make sure i had the right address. >> the flames are about 100 feet in the air. >> i realized it was my house. >> for veteran 911 operator mike bose, this is not a typical day at the office. bose along with his parents have lived in quincy, massachusetts, for years. >> it's a nice neighborhood right across from a school. never any trouble on the street. we'd have everybody over during the holidays, christmas, thanksgiving. kids would always stop by. kids were there. it was great. >> bose always enjoys his job with the city and provides himself on staying cool with the pressure. >> okay, was it a motor vehicle accident? >> the people of quincy want someone who's on the other end who won't go crazy or lose it when you call. you have to stay calm and help the city out. >> friday, bose's shift starts
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like any other. >> it was a very busy night. about 10:30, 10:45 it actually started to slow down. we figured we had another hour left on the shift and we'd be gone and it would be over. >> but for bose his night is just starting when this 911 call is received. the call is from his neighbor. >> 911, what's your emergency? >> there's a fire next door to my house. 102 hollis avenue. >> let me get the fire department. stay on the phone. >> okay. >> the 911 line, all at once about nine calls started coming in. we figured because of the time of night it was a car accident. so the first call we picked up that i received was my next-door neighbor saying the neighbor's garage and house was on fire. there was an explosion. when i asked her the address, she told me it's 99 hollis ave. i had to ask twice to make sure i had the right address and i realized it was my house. >> a neighbor catches it on camera. not only is bose's house on
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fire, but his parents are inside. >> 911, what's your emergency? >> there's a fire, big fire at 99 hollis. >> a fire or a fight? >> the whole place, the garage and everything is on fire. this is michael bose's mother. >> okay, mrs. bose, we have it. we'll be right there. >> the first reaction was to make sure my parents were safe. they were in the house and i tried calling several times. there was no answer. >> mike o'shea is the neighbor who captures it all on camera. >> flames were about 100 feet into the air, and, yeah, you could definitely feel the heat and you could see the houses next to it the paint was just melts and chipping away. >> win minutes bose arrives on the scene. fortunately, his parents escape the burping home as they make their 911 call. >> the first thing i know is my parents were on the street with my neighbor. i knew they were fine. it was almost work like slow motion. you don't believe that something's going on and when you look in the back, i could
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see down the driveway. there was no garage. it was gone. i knew the kitchen, the bedroom area was going to be gone. the roof was gone, the second floor was gone. >> as soon as they got it under control, they started smashing out the windows and laying into the upstairs of the house with hoses. >> bose realizes that everything he and his parents own is destroyed. >> the new tv i bought, gone. computers, gone. everything inside the house was gone. just the shirt on our back and that was all we had. >> fortunately bose's cousin is a quincy firefighter who arrives first on the scene. >> he ran into the house. and there were several pictures of grandkids, wedding pictures of my parents that he was able to save all the pictures that were in there. it meant a lot. when something like this happens, you have friends that come together, but the city of quincy and the quincy police department have been unbelievable, they're with you 24 hours a day helping out. they're doing what they can, even their families, wives,
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girlfriends, even the kids get involved, which is unbelievable. >> for o'shea who witnesses the fire, the scene has a dramatic impact. >> it's sad. it's very sad. i went out a couple of days later and bought more smoke detectors. >> despite the devastating fire, bose has an optimistic attitude. >> thank you, sergeant. >> my main thing is my parents and my neighbor got out and no injuries. nobody was hurt, no lives were lost. the fire department, nobody was injured. it's a house that can be rebuilt. everything can be replaced. it's going to take a while. but we can get back. >> within two weeks bose is back on the job working the 911 phone lines. >> one of the first calls we took last night was for a house fire. at first it was -- normal routine. transferred to the fire department and sent a cruiser down there and you have to be there when they call 911. that's what we do. >> from one dedicated city worker to another. on a saturday evening in
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albuquerque, new mexico, a bus driver's routine ride takes a frightening turn when he slams into another vehicle then crashes into a bridge pillar. it all starts a little after 5:00 p.m. on october 17th, 2009. the bus drops off several passengers at a busy stop and is heading west on central avenue toward oak street, not far from the university of new mexico campus. albert sanduval is the bus driver. >> i took off and i was just driving and i was going right through my green light and at about the middle of the intersection i looked and there was a little car right in front of me. >> the incoming car which is turning left in front of the bus is not slowing down, and the two vehicles collide. >> not even really time to look in the mirror and tell anybody, you know, to brace yourself or nothing it happened that quick. >> christian moore is the
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security guard onboard the bus. >> i hold onto the bar in front of me and try and stable myself. i looked out the windshield and realized that the bridge pillar is coming and we're not stopping. >> not only does the bus hit the car, but the momentum carries the bus forward with the car smashed against it right into a bridge pillar. the bus passengers are flung from their seats. >> that's when everything came to a stop, and i was looking at the little car and looking at the pillar and saying i hope those people are okay. >> moore's training kicks in and he and sanduval get the passengers off the bus. >> we're lucky that it happened on a saturday evening just because the bus wasn't as crowded. if it was monday through friday at that time, it could have been a lot worse. >> no one on the bus is seriously hurt. so their attention goes to the driver of the crashed car, which is smashed against the pillar. >> it's a little car, and this
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is a 20, 30-ton vehicle that i'm driving. and it did lift it up and pushed it up against the pillar, and i'm looking at the car here and the pillar right there. my thinking was, you know, i hope those people are okay. >> miraculously, the sole occupant of the car, a 24-year-old driver, suffers four broken ribs but no critical injuries. christian moore is back to work the next day. sanduval suffers whiplash but no broken bones. despite his hard day's work, sanduval is ready to get back behind the wheel. >> i'm really looking forward to getting back on my bus and getting back on my normal routine driving every day and just enjoy, you know, the passengers. coming up, a novice politician gets an introduction into the rough and tumble world of politics. >> later. and later, if you think the reporter's job is all fun and games, you won't believe what some do all for the sake of the story.
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when "caught on camera: a hard day's work" continues. th. i have a cold, and i took nyquil, but i'm still "stubbed" up. [ male announcer ] truth is, nyquil doesn't unstuff your nose. what? [ male announcer ] it doesn't have a decongestant. no way. [ male announcer ] sorry. alka-seltzer plus fights your worst cold symptoms plus has a fast acting decongestant to relieve your stuffy nose. [ sighs ] thanks! [ male announcer ] you're welcome. that's the cold truth! [ male announcer ] alka-seltzer plus. ♪ oh what a relief it is! ♪ [ male announcer ] to learn more about the cold truth and save $1 visit alka-seltzer on facebook.
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the reforms i'm proposing -- >> what do barack obama, george w. bush, and bill clinton all have in common? >> bill, this is the center of the aids epidemic. >> they've been heckled. >> and that's why i'm running for president, to do something about it. >> and politician ben coniff is proud to be in their company. >> it's a rite of passage. >> liar. >> we're here again -- >> it's not something that i anticipated. >> it all starts in march 2009 when lucas county commissioner ben coniff decides to run for mayor of toledo, ohio. >> i wanted to give something back. i enjoy politics. i actually find it interesting, stimulating, challenging. >> we're here today -- >> and when a local television station films him struggling to talk over a relentless heckler, his hard day at work becomes a caught on camera sensation.
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>> are you done? >> no. i'm going to keep going. >> okay. well, it wasn't what i signed up for. i didn't enter this race for mayor in hopes of becoming a youtube star. that's politics. >> maxwell austin is a toledo resident who follows politics closely and takes them to task. especially contiff, who he said he broke a pledge of ethics not to run for mayor. >> he said i plan to stay my term, i'm going to do what i'm going to do, not running for mayor, only a few weeks later to come out and say, you know what, i'm going to run for mayor. >> this is an important issue. i want to be able to actually communicate it with people. >> austin is not happy when he sees him campaigning literally at his front door. >> i was sitting on my porch one morning. people showed up. someone approached me to let me know who was going to be coming, and would i want to put on a t-shirt and come down there and join. i let him know what i thought and told them no. >> his staff updates him on the
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situation. >> i think there was some indication that there was a guy there who was, you know, a bit ornery, but we decided to go forward with it. >> we have a situation in toledo. >> as he launches into his talking points about faulty water line, austin makes his voice heard. >> run for mayor somewhere else. i seized my opportunity to boo him and call him a liar. >> liar. >> over and over. >> liar. >> and over. >> liar. >> and over again. >> we are had -- >> boo, liar, boo. >> this is really annoying. i wanted to try and take the high road. >> why don't you let me talk and then you can talk. that's fair. honestly i wouldn't have minded having a dialogue with the heckler. >> let's get it out of the way and then i can say my piece and you can say your piece and we'll go from there. we'll be civilized about it. no? you're not coming down here? >> when he gave me the opportunity, why don't you come down here and talk to the cameras, nope, that's not my job. you know, i'm not running for politics. i think i'm doing a great job sitting on my porch relaxing.
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>> do you want us to move? >> eventually the heckler forces him and his campaign staffers to change location. >> we moved down the block and doing our thing and going on with the day and not thinking a whole lot about it until obviously the video became viral as they say. >> you know, it's six degrees of separation in america or maybe even the world, you know. you've got a friend in california. you e-mail it over to them. they're going to spread it to all their friends in california who might have a friend somewhere else and i think it's pretty much what happened. >> if you've seen this video, then you're one of tens of thousands around the globe. >> it wasn't what i was really wanting to talk about and frankly really wasn't what the community probably should have been talking about, but, you know, i could see it. it was a big story. >> liar. >> it's a big story that dovetails with another big story, the beer summit president obama holds at the white house to mend fences between a cambridge, massachusetts, police officer and a harvard professor
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over a controversial arrest. >> and we decided to take a cue from the president. >> in that spirit a local toledo television station decides to organize a beer summit of its own featuring ben and maxwell. >> good to see you. >> nice to finally meet you. >> i feel like a bond, you know what i mean. >> a little bit. yeah, yeah, yeah. >> here you go. >> thank you very much. >> a peace offering. >> we had our beer. we talked about the city, talked about some of the issues facing young people in the city, facing downtown toledo, which he also had some interest in. so we found some common ground. >> it's a very productive evening for me at least. i hope it wasn't too bad for you. >> nope, not at all. i got a free beer out of it. >> got a free beer. >> i would be willing to move past our heckling incident and try to get him involved in some way constructively for the community. >> but austin prefers to do his opining from the sidelines and doesn't see politics in his future. >> have i ever thought about running for office? no. during the whole booing incident people said, you should run for
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mayor. you should run for mayor. i don't want to do that. >> as for ben, he loses the mayor's race, but he gains a thick skin. and he says, don't count me out yet. >> i still am a county commissioner, i'm still interested in giving back to the community and i think public service and politics is a great way to impact the future of toledo. >> coming up, would you ever volunteer to get tased? >> what about step into a lion's den? two reporters who did just that all for the story when "caught on camera: a hard day's work" continues. unteer to help those in need. when a twinge of back pain surprises him. morning starts in high spirits, but there's a growing pain in his lower back. as lines grow longer, his pain continues to linger. but after a long day of helping others, he gets some helpful advice. just two aleve have the strength to keep back pain away all day. today, jason chose aleve. just two pills for all day pain relief.
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i'm milissa rehberger. here's what's happening. unusually cold weather has gripped california. growers in the central valley were relieved as most orange and lemon crops were not affected by the night temperatures in the high 20s. and an egyptian court
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overturned former president mubarak's life sentence and o ordered a retrial. more news later. now back to "caught on camera." welcome back to account caught on camera." i'm contessa brewer. reporters may go to great lengths for a story. well, what kind of lengths? take a look. television personalities often try what's called the show and tell. a chance for the viewer to see just how something is done. >> ow, that hurt. >> but reporter thomas bonet takes the show and tell to a level one might call shocking. bonet, a lifelong alaskan, lives in fairbanks, a former gold rush boom town that prides itself on
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natural beauty. while covering crime stories in 2003, bonet learns that police are using taser guns as a crime-fighting tool. his interest is peaked when an officer makes an off hand comment. >> he sort of jokingly said you should do it. it's a lot of fun. i said, sure, why not. fateful statement. >> fateful, indeed. a self-described risk taker bonet decides to try it and capture it all on camera. >> when i told my co-workers what i was planning to do, i was met with a lot of blank stares. i don't think they really believed me. >> have you ever seen thomas pace before? i never have. >> i became more and more nervous. you know, i was trying to play it off like, i'm not afraid at all but that was absolutely not true. >> bonet decides despite his fear, he should not only go
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through with the plan, he should make the experience as real as possible. >> i figures if i'm going to do this, i'm going to go all out. and they gave me all sorts of options like do you want to get tased for one second, three seconds or five seconds? >> five seconds. that's all there is to it. it will seem a little longer on the other end. it will seem longer than five second but that's all it is is five seconds. >> i opted for five seconds. >> the barbs are literally an eagle claw fish hook. once they go in they don't come out without a little effort. >> the big moment arrives. bonet is feeling more at ease. he hears sergeant eric jukes, a taser instructor at the fairbanks police department has been tased himself numerous times. >> i've been shocked with it, i don't know, five, six, seven, eight, ten times, and once it's over, it's over. you're done.
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you get up and you stand up. there's no clean-up. there's really not a whole lot of recovery. it's over. you're just left with memories. >> but when bonet sees the paramedics walk in, he wonders what kind of memories. >> the emts wheeled in a gurney with a crash cart on it and started asking around, what's this for? we don't need this, right? they said, oh, that's just in case. just in case of what? >> overcoming his cold feet, bonet finally steps onto the mat. >> all right. let's do this. >> all right. >> so stand right here. >> that's it. that looks good. >> so, like i said, we can see this laser on his back. so the top arm will go there, bottom barb will go down. are you ready? >> yeah. >> hold him, hold him. hold him. >> ow. >> he shoots ee and after that there's nothing in my mind except for the sheer pain.
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there's nothing. it was just horrendous pain. >> hold him, hold him. hold him. >> and before the electricity was applied, i could actually feel the barbs hit my back and plant themselves and then it just hurt like heck. it was insane. and that five seconds felt like an eternity. >> how do you feel? >> fine. >> right now? do you feel any pain? >> no. i feel a tickle from where the problems hit my back. >> do you feel like you can move? >> yeah. >> do you feel like you have a clear head? >> like i had hoped there was no residual pain whatsoever. one moment i'm in complete agony and the next what am i doing on the floor. >> hold him, hold him, hold him. >> whenever i see video or even just think of it, of someone being tased, i always think back to myself being tased. that's simply not something you'll forget. from one unforgettable
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moment to another. when this travel reporter visits the legends resort in south africa, he gets more adventure than he bargains for. >> cut, cut, cut. >> hey! >> charlie smith is a travel writer for "the daily telegraph" in london and a host of tourism videos. he has the perfect job for an adrenaline junky. >> i think a few people think i've got a death wish. i've been wing walking on a plane. flying around doing loop de loop. it's pretty terrifying. i've done the biggest bungee jump in the world, the skeleton bobsled which is on this tray where you go down this chute and you go about 60 miles an hour. it's pretty terrifying but it's all good fun. >> but charlie takes the terrifying moments in stride. >> i do this job because of the excitement, because it beats being behind the desk every day and to get the opportunity to
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travel and if it means i have to get a bit scared at the time, i don't mind that. it's a good trade. >> a good trade indeed. for a recent story he and his co-host are out taping tourism videos at a gulf course in south africa. >> to do some safari, play some golf. it was all meant to be quite relaxed. none of the adrenaline adventures. >> we're here at legends on the 18th green and we're meant to be going up to the mountain for the extreme 19th but unfortunately the weather has been a little delayed because the clouds are low. >> another plan has been hatched. >> i've been told we're going into the lion's den. >> no, no, that's been changed again. that's not we're going into the lion's den. you're going into the lion's den. >> he said, why don't you go and meet the lion handler. he's got a baby lion. i thought that will be sweet. we're just off to get breakfast before i become the lion's breakfast. >> charlie doesn't realize how accurate he is.
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>> turned up that the lion handler's cage and there was a lion that looked enormous. i said that's not a baby. he said it's called baby lion. that's his name. charlie decides that despite his doubts, the shoot must go on especially after being reassured by the lion handler. >> i wasn't sure whether i should go in. you see the sign, prowling up and down pouring at the cage. i spoke to the lion handler. he's raised lions and leopards and hyenas. he said it's safe. i've got control over it. i can tell if it's in a bad mood and if it is i wouldn't let you in. >> right before charlie steps into the cage, the lion handler gives him some unsettling advice. >> he says, if anything goes wrong, you can't run and you have to try to look like you're not scared. in i went and the door closed behind me. at first i was there crouching down stroking the lion and it's sort of poring at me a bit. >> scratch the lion's belly. >> it scratched my leg. but nothing. it's just playing around. >> he likes you. >> even when the lion gets into
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a tussle with his handler, charlie's not ruffled. >> hey, hey. he just wants to play. >> but the playful lion now turns to charlie. >> then it started to get up and it got up on its hind legs and that's when i felt the claws go into my back legs. and they're an inch long. >> the lion's claws, and then its teeth, are now digging into charlie's body. >> i started to feel pain, like burning pain which went in. and then he let go. i mean thankfully otherwise i'd probably be missing, you know, a good quarter of my leg. >> charlie's instinct is to run away from the lion but he remembers what the handler told him. >> the handler said before we went in, you have to try to not look scared. if you run, you become prey and the natural instinct will be to kill you.
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>> just when charlie thinks the lion is under control, it comes back for more. >> you can hear it roaring and growling and you can hear your own heart beat. you're so scared. >> in an instant charlie comes eye to eye with the animal. >> it seems slow motion. but you sort of look around and see the mouth open, see its eyes which are kind of yellow eyes and when they fix the stare on you, you just feel like you're an ant. you feel like so small and you're its little play thing. that's the moment when i thought i'm in trouble. >> when the handler distracts the lion charlie is able to make his escape. >> i looked like a kind of tarzan figure with all these shredded trousers and cut t-shirt and jacket. >> charlie goes to the local hospital for stitches on his shoulder and his leg. he had made a last-minute wardrobe change before entering the den which may have saved his life.
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>> africa is usually pretty hot but this morning it was cold so i was just wearing a t-shirt and thankfully grabbed my ski jacket, which gives you padding. because basically the lion's claws would go through the material. it's tough material and it gets stuck so it couldn't pull away. if it was just a t-shirt it would go into your flesh and pull through and then it would have been a different story. i probably would have been in hospital for a lot longer or worse. >> despite his brush with death charlie keeps his torn clothes for memories. >> i thought after maybe i should throw it away but then i thought i should keep it for the grandkids. >> needless to say charlie doesn't have any plans to enter a lion's den any time soon. >> i put them in two different categories. the scary things that are scary because you get frightened doing them but they're not dangerous. you're not going to die from them. it's if you've got the guts. then this lion incident, that's just dangerous and in hindsight pretty stupid to do. coming up, this preacher's
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slip of the tongue becomes a youtube sensation. >> you heard nothing else. this is church, my gosh. >> a salesclerk's frightening encounter. >> stay back. >> and a cop's dance moves has everyone talking. >> everybody out of the pool. when "caught on camera: a hard day's work" continues. ♪ i have direct deposit on my visa prepaid. my paycheck is loaded right on my card. automatic. i am not going downtown standing in line to cash it. i know where my money is, because it is in my pocket. i got more time with my daughter, we got places to go. [ freeman ] go open a new world, with visa prepaid. more people go with visa.
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this preacher packs the house every sunday. >> my name is blake and i'm the national campus pastor. >> but he's known for a slip of the tongue during a sermon a few years ago. >> we talked about how lot goes to go pinch his -- excuse me. >> his embarrassing moment is witnessed first by his congregation of 300 people.
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>> stop laughing, all right? man. and then by thousands around the world when his blooper goes viral. >> i hope this isn't on videotape because i'm -- i'll have no job now. >> blake bergstrom gets flustered while sharing a biblical of abraham and his nephew lot with a large youth group at a church in colorado where he had been a youth pastor for only two months. >> pinch his tents is what i said. and you heard nothing else here. >> lot said, i want the green land that's plush. the bible said he pitched his tent. and it was too close to sodom and gomorrah. he said, listen, the people you will hang out with will become. bad company always corrupts good character and so i was talking about that. and then i was talking about he pitched his tent too close to
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those two cities. man, it was a great message. but the message gets muddied. >> i was challenging you guys not to do is to pick friends that were going to lead you -- stop laughing, all right? >> i just jacked it up. i said lot chose to pinch his -- >> i'm just like trying to push through like -- >> am i red right now? holy cow. >> i'll just act like we're good. we're going to keep rolling. so what i was saying is that -- >> inside blake fears the worst. >> i just thought, oh, great. i just moved here. i've got four kids. we don't even have a place to stay yet. this is horrible. we are so done. this is over. i'm going to be fired. you know, i just thought it was over. >> his wife ali is in the audience thinking the same thing. >> the very moment that those words came out of his mouth --
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>> to go pinch his -- excuse me. >> a million thoughts went through my mind like did he really just say that? he really just said that. is he going to have a job tomorrow? and i think i sat there with my hand over my mouth like, oh, my goodness, this really happened. this is happening. it really happened. i think i was a bit in shock. >> but their shock turns to relief when laughter fills the church. then i saw everybody laughing, the parents laughing and it was like, okay, this is -- it's going to be okay. this is funny. this is just funny. there's nothing you can do about it. >> blake's popularity among his youth group soars. >> at that ministry after that happened, my teenagers started putting it on their ipods and they started taking it to the school and when they'd go to the school, they're showing it to their friends like, dude, you've got to meet my pastor, this is hilarious. this is what he said. >> and he becomes that guy on
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youtube in christian circles. brian deshawn interviewed him for a pastor job at nashville's cross point church. >> at the time i had no idea he was that guy, had no idea he was that guy on youtube. so i had this great conversation with him. a couple days later we had a meeting and they explained. i thought, oh, my gosh, that's him. that was that guy. >> but blake said his ability to laugh at himself after his embarrassing "caught on camera" moment has made him not holier than thou but someone everyone can relate to. >> pitch his -- is what said and you heard nothing else. this is church, my god. >> katrina had just happened and there was a whole bunch of people that shot me e-mails that said thank you. i haven't laughed in that long. they said this is such an encouragement to me and i actually want to go back to church now. because i was able to laugh -- it was funny and i laughed. and i made a mistake and i own it. it's like all of a sudden people
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are like, i like that guy. he's kind of a dork like me. >> stop laughing, all right? man. >> from a slip of the tongue to a slip on the floor makes a hot hollywood actress and a favorite late night talk show host in a playful sketch and what go you get, big ratings, right? well, for conan o'brien, teri hatcher's appearance on his show in october of 2009 really knocks him out. it starts when hatcher suggests she and o'brien do a mock triathlon together. >> it was supposed to end with teri racing into the studio, rushing down the steps and coming right here to the finish line. >> but watch what happens when the two approach the stage for the big finish. >> and i'm a big guy. i'm a big guy, i'm about 6'4" and i went back and hit my head. in that moment i saw stars but i
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tried to keep going. >> the audience is laughing and conan, the consummate professional doesn't let on he's hurt. >> let's see a slow motion replay of what happened right there. i believe i won. god. >> that was so close. >> i did not win. the winner is teri hatcher, ladies and gentlemen. >> after the taping conan goes to the hospital. that fall was no laughing matter. conan suffers a concussion. back at work within days he tells parents to have their children watch his fall as a cautionary tale. coming up -- a salesperson attacked by a customer, plus a cop with some arresting moves. >> by the way, i do wear knee pads if anybody's interested. >> when "caught on camera: a hard day's work" continues. by the armful? by the barrelful?
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a retail clerk is viciously attacked by a customer wielding a tire iron. on september 24th, 2009, at the name brand clothing exchange in mesa, arizona, it's another routine day. britney scribner is a manager at the store. >> the woman had come in and went over to the men's section, was shopping, looking through things. >> but when this shopper brings three shirts to the register, she attacks with a deadly weapon in hand. >> as soon as the drawer popped open, she took out a tire iron and hit her on the neck right here. of course, it, stunned her. she stepped back. didn't realize that it had been a tire iron at the time. you know, she just thought the girl hit her. >> the girl did hit her and delivered blow after blow to the cowering clerk.
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>> she put up her hands to block the next hit and ended up hitting her wrists or her hand area. >> with the cash drawer open, the assailant takes the money from the register while threatening the clerk. >> stay back. stay back right here. right here. >> unfortunately, for this robber, several surveillance cameras posted around the store capture her every move. within a few days, police have a break in the case. >> we have very good video surveillance of her, and that provided the information that we needed to be able to identify her. >> police arrest karla janeth jauregui, a student at a university. how's this for irony, the suspect's major? criminal justice. her stated motive, money troubles. jauregui pled guilty to aggravated assault and armed robbery and was sentenced to five years in prison. police say the surveillance footage was a critical component to the investigation.
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>> any time a business has good surveillance video, it's going to be helpful. whenever you have someone who commits a violent crime, you want to get them off the street as soon as you can because there's a tendency of them committing another violent crime. >> as for the clerk, she suffers hand injuries and returns to work almost two weeks after the attack. finally, for everyone out there who's put in a hard day's work, an example of someone making the best of it. as you'll see, this officer takes his beat quite seriously. in providence, rhode island, there's tony lapour with his white gloves and whistle directing traffic. >> i'm not going to argue with that truck. he was too big. >> he may look like an ordinary cop, but the residents of this new england town have found that tony is anything but ordinary. >> everybody out of the pool. through a flurry of whistle,
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tweets and flashy dance moves, tony, a retired beat cop, performs the routine that he's been perfecting for more than 25 years. >> always wanted to be a performer growing up. so i could look at dance steps and know what to do just watching them on television. i would go out and do a couple of hand movements and a couple of spins. and once i saw our boss come down the street, i would go back and do it the traditional way so they wouldn't catch me. i did it consistently after that for a half hour to 45 minutes a day. >> tony was already a local legend by the time he made an appearance on "nightly news" with tom brokaw. >> well, i can tell it's monday. i haven't gotten one smile today yet. >> "countdown with keith olbermann." >> finally to providence, rhode island, where no holiday season would be complete without tony lapore directing traffic as the dancing traffic cop.
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>> and the "today" show. >> it's the return of tony lapore, the dancing traffic cop. he's entertained them for years with his fancy footwork. >> i love that guy, sarah. >> isn't he great? >> and since providence is still buzzing about the dancing cop, we decided to check out his act. [ whistles ] ♪ [ whistles ] ♪ >> tony is, in fact, so well known around providence that he credits his celebrity status with helping to fight crime. >> i've caught bank robbers, guys with guns down here because people actually knew who i was by first name. and they would tell me, hey, something's going down in the
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outlook garage, or something's going down at the bus station. boom, boom, boom, i would go. >> you think i didn't recognize you? how you doing, buddy? they may not have gone to another police officer. >> tony finds dancing provides stress relief during a hard day's work. and he turns an intersection into a stage. on this fall day, a few minutes into his routine, people start to gather on the sidewalk. some staring in disbelief. watch what happens as tony gets into his groove. >> i have certain moves with certain traffic movement, and i have names for them when i go back. i call it the butterfly. then i have another one i call the crazy leg. then i do the john travolta. did you ever watch "saturd

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