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May 27, 2013
05/13
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. >> meet 21-year-old drag race driver lizzie mussey. >> the feeling of sitting in the car and warming it up, i love warming it up in the morning. just, i love it. >> and when she lines up to start -- >> we staged, we have two sets of golds up there. both amber lights come on and i have what is called a transbrake, a button, and you let go of it. once you see the amber light go off, you react real quick. and then you floor it and then it just launches on the last amber. >> lizzie's qualifying run earlier in the day in her beloved blue camaro goes off without a hitch. she's interviewed by the track's cameraman. >> that was fun! >> yeah? it looked fun. >> i had a great time. >> good deal. >> but in lizzie's first official race of the day, things go wrong in a hurry. >> i felt the car a little bit drag to the right and it took a hard left and kind of went from there. i won't forget that one second of it just because everything kind of started slowing down. then i felt the car lift up and i see the wall, like, and sparks flying. i didn't know where is this car going to go, flip over? i jus
. >> meet 21-year-old drag race driver lizzie mussey. >> the feeling of sitting in the car and warming it up, i love warming it up in the morning. just, i love it. >> and when she lines up to start -- >> we staged, we have two sets of golds up there. both amber lights come on and i have what is called a transbrake, a button, and you let go of it. once you see the amber light go off, you react real quick. and then you floor it and then it just launches on the last amber....
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May 15, 2013
05/13
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lizzie underwent a double mastectomy at the age of 27. great to have you both here.g gone through this, what was your takeaway? your reaction to it? >> first of all, i just really feel for anybody who has to make this decision, make the call to have a preventive double mastectomy, so my first reaction was sympathy. i also think that it's great. it's going to be great for women who are thinking about testing for this gene. this raises awareness about hereditary breast cancer, and it can help women to decide whether taking the gene test is right for them, of course, in consulation with their genetic counsellor or a doctor, and i really also liked about what she said about not losing her femininity. i think that's a really important message. not just for women who have had a preventive mastectomy, but for many women, that there is life after mastectomy. >> you found yourself in position, you did genetic testing, and i should be clear, i was slightly erroneous before. it was a nowtation on that gene. everyone has that gene, it's a fewmation, a fairly rare mutation. i jus
lizzie underwent a double mastectomy at the age of 27. great to have you both here.g gone through this, what was your takeaway? your reaction to it? >> first of all, i just really feel for anybody who has to make this decision, make the call to have a preventive double mastectomy, so my first reaction was sympathy. i also think that it's great. it's going to be great for women who are thinking about testing for this gene. this raises awareness about hereditary breast cancer, and it can...
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workers to plow the fields i couldn't live like this it was all too much for one person i couldn't cope lizzie expense says. cheer it is better because someone may pity and help here. without a welfare system the citizens of canberra must pay for everything even public toilets since houses don't have these luxuries. the average commuter is two roughly two dollars that is a woman and you have to pay for your room you have to buy a water you have to pay for the toilet to go to you have to pay fully electricity have to pay for school fees you have to buy food you have to buy food with the food yes. there's no. it's free market. we have so maybe many people can't afford to be billy food because of the bad if you. buy everything to each. war. for decades now the world food program organization has been providing food to the pupils in canberra schools. at this school three hundred children receive aid. some of these children sometimes you see only mean if they did that they get so they going to school move so they have bad flu tell me i mean addition it provides an incentive for children to come to
workers to plow the fields i couldn't live like this it was all too much for one person i couldn't cope lizzie expense says. cheer it is better because someone may pity and help here. without a welfare system the citizens of canberra must pay for everything even public toilets since houses don't have these luxuries. the average commuter is two roughly two dollars that is a woman and you have to pay for your room you have to buy a water you have to pay for the toilet to go to you have to pay...
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you know, lizzie, i thought originally if i work overtime i take the cash i get paid time 1/2. i thought with this bill i only get one day for one day. i don't get 1.5 days. >> right. dennis: further inspection you do get 1.5 days when you work overme day. i might rather have the comp day. what do you think?. >> i get it. time and again, yes, you your boss has to give you that? say to the boss, give me a day off. have it set up that way because what happens is you have enforcers come in. a bureaucrat coming in to that job, saying to that employer you're not doing it right. dennis: right. >> you have to fix what you're doing wrong. dennis: maybe last question we'll move to the second topic i tell you about in a minute but, richard, the republicans rather deftly presented this as a proworkersrs rights bill saying you have a choice and go ahead and get your comp time if you want to. what it is doing giving more freedom to the employer, isn't it? >> i think giving more freedom to both. there is a law that dictates they must pay 1 1/2 times. dennis: they must. >> yeah they must. den
you know, lizzie, i thought originally if i work overtime i take the cash i get paid time 1/2. i thought with this bill i only get one day for one day. i don't get 1.5 days. >> right. dennis: further inspection you do get 1.5 days when you work overme day. i might rather have the comp day. what do you think?. >> i get it. time and again, yes, you your boss has to give you that? say to the boss, give me a day off. have it set up that way because what happens is you have enforcers...
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coming up when live in prison lizzie only life you can afford some cold day in ohio again the homelessnd people with disabilities because they can't afford to pay small slice of the details in just a few minutes stay with us. is israel's massive attack near damascus days ago why do serious raging civil war then there's the issue of chemical weapons should western support of assad's enemies people draw on if it's proven that the rebels are using them against their own people. do we speak your language as i think about the war not a damn. good news programs and documentaries i'm spanish more matters to you breaking news that will turn into bangalore's stories. for you here at. troy altie spanish find out more visit actuality all tito is calm. if we. welcome back with international forces packing up in afghanistan the region's big call houses china and india are getting very worried about the spread of radicalism so much so that the two sides who usually don't see eye to eye all brainstorming over how to contain afghanistan's especially vera lynn brand of extremism than it is you can expl
coming up when live in prison lizzie only life you can afford some cold day in ohio again the homelessnd people with disabilities because they can't afford to pay small slice of the details in just a few minutes stay with us. is israel's massive attack near damascus days ago why do serious raging civil war then there's the issue of chemical weapons should western support of assad's enemies people draw on if it's proven that the rebels are using them against their own people. do we speak your...
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tracy: lizzie mack will be all over the story for a long time. ashley: welcome back, emac. >> sure.till to come, potential problems for president obama's commerce secretary nominee. thanks to her family, oh, yeah, offshore tax trusts. we're live in washington next. tracy: you can't make this up. investing in tech. find out where you can get the best bang for your buck in that sector. because the rest of the market has totally lagged. first as we do every day this time. day, let's look how oil is trading. moving slightly up. $96.05 a barrel. we'll be right back this is america. we don't let frequt heartburn come between us and what we love. so if you're one of them people who gets heartburn and then treats day afr day... block the acid with prilosec otc and don't get heartburn in the first place! [ male announcer ] e pill eachmorning. 24 hours. zero hetbur and don't get heartburn in the first place! for sein a whole new way. for seeing what cash is coming in and going out... so you can understand every angle of your cash flow- last week, this month, and even next year. for seeing you
tracy: lizzie mack will be all over the story for a long time. ashley: welcome back, emac. >> sure.till to come, potential problems for president obama's commerce secretary nominee. thanks to her family, oh, yeah, offshore tax trusts. we're live in washington next. tracy: you can't make this up. investing in tech. find out where you can get the best bang for your buck in that sector. because the rest of the market has totally lagged. first as we do every day this time. day, let's look how...
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May 8, 2013
05/13
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from twitter, lizzy bordon writes she shot a man twice, stabbed him 30 times and slit his throat earear. how is that not deliberate and with cruelty. not if she did it in self-defense. that's her claim. did she offer evidence she had been abused or her life was in jeopardy? no. has she convinced one juror she should not have the possibility of dying? we'll know soon enough. trace gallagher is live with us this afternoon. all things considered they got it done quick. >> pretty quickly. 16.5 hours of deliberations is quickly. to the point you read the note from the viewer, you are talking about key points and interest in the case. you talk to experts and they point to a few things. the medical examiner's testimony was key. he came out saying when travis alexander had been shot in the head, he was either dead or he was dying going on to say the self-defense claim, going on to stab him 27 times and slashing his throat, wouldn't work in self-defense because he would have been dead or would have been dying and unable to come after her, as she said. that kind of doesn't bode well for her. t
from twitter, lizzy bordon writes she shot a man twice, stabbed him 30 times and slit his throat earear. how is that not deliberate and with cruelty. not if she did it in self-defense. that's her claim. did she offer evidence she had been abused or her life was in jeopardy? no. has she convinced one juror she should not have the possibility of dying? we'll know soon enough. trace gallagher is live with us this afternoon. all things considered they got it done quick. >> pretty quickly....
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May 24, 2013
05/13
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puts under pressure to do something that you know is wrong, we're fingering and targeting a group to lizzy's point, you are losing your morals. >> and there is nothing wrong with the irs clarifying a body of law that governs different organizations. neil: but you better clarify it for all. >> enforce it. >> this is happening during an an election season. so that is why there needs to be a special prosecutor. neil: a lot of committee hearings. >> the tea party said this is what happens with big government, and that is the irony, they were getting inves investigated for those same issues they brought up. neil: coming to. what did the president know, and when did he know it a damning defense for a president who once prized himself for being hands on, and now he is essentially hands off. glen hubbard on dangers of a president now playinn roll of popeye. what do you make of that? >> we have issues facing the country, these scandals distract us from the purpose issues, with the irs, are very troubling. >> you know, glen, where was this detachment, that president had with this management style he s
puts under pressure to do something that you know is wrong, we're fingering and targeting a group to lizzy's point, you are losing your morals. >> and there is nothing wrong with the irs clarifying a body of law that governs different organizations. neil: but you better clarify it for all. >> enforce it. >> this is happening during an an election season. so that is why there needs to be a special prosecutor. neil: a lot of committee hearings. >> the tea party said this...
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May 15, 2013
05/13
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note $3,000 is just the cost for the genetic testing that would, angelina jolie underwent and that lizzie underwent. this is not something a lot of people can afford and it's not necessarily covered by insurance. >> absolutely and let me just say to your guests, i really think she's very brave and i really appreciate her coming forward and talking about this. when i watched the news this morning, the first thing that came to my mind, i lost two maternal aunts to breast cancer and i was like, wow, maybe i could get that test. at 3,000, that's just the screen. then the you're talking about the mastectomy and most important for women is the reconstructive surgery that comes afterward and i am sure that really is a barrier in three areas. the dos of the screen, the surgery and then the reconstruction. so to me, as we hoo move move forward implementing health care reform, i want to look forward to the day that all women have access to this test, the surgery and the reconstruction. >> it may be worth noting my test was not $303-000. they tested my mother first and only had to look for the part,
note $3,000 is just the cost for the genetic testing that would, angelina jolie underwent and that lizzie underwent. this is not something a lot of people can afford and it's not necessarily covered by insurance. >> absolutely and let me just say to your guests, i really think she's very brave and i really appreciate her coming forward and talking about this. when i watched the news this morning, the first thing that came to my mind, i lost two maternal aunts to breast cancer and i was...
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May 16, 2013
05/13
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KQED
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i remember dennis saying to me that in an early draft that he showed to lizzie dahl she said somethingeah, yeah. i mean, i guess -- if you haven't seen it, this might ruin it but lissi said in an early version i think i got carried away where the character, was having fun with the character and she said "you u.s. where remember, she's a murderer." and that stayed with me. and even though -- this is roald dahl and it's kind of like kids get swung around and people get -- we have the world's biggest burp happens and she still has to be very dangerous. >> it has to be life like even though it's larger than life. i think particularly because it's a musical and there's snobbery particularly in britain about people musicals. people say "i don't like musicals. and i can't believe it, why do people burst into song?" which is in some ways there's nothing naturalistic about theater, any theater. there's a convention that people up there are who they say they are and you use your imagination to believe that those people are doing what they say they're doing. we know it's not true. and there's not
i remember dennis saying to me that in an early draft that he showed to lizzie dahl she said somethingeah, yeah. i mean, i guess -- if you haven't seen it, this might ruin it but lissi said in an early version i think i got carried away where the character, was having fun with the character and she said "you u.s. where remember, she's a murderer." and that stayed with me. and even though -- this is roald dahl and it's kind of like kids get swung around and people get -- we have the...
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May 12, 2013
05/13
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CNNW
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this is on par with the 1892 coverage of lizzy borden and her alleged ex-murders of her father and thethat came out there that riveted the country in some ways, almost supersedes what's played out -- nothing knew. >> thanks for that historical perspective. one african-american who got a lot of attention in this story, charles ramsey. he heard the cries of amanda berry and broke that door down and led to the rescue of her and her 6-year-old child. let's take a brief look at one interview done by cnn's anderson cooper. >> do you feel like a hero? >> no. no. i'm a christian, an american and i'm just like you. we bleed same blood, put our pants pants. >> being greeted as a hero. were the media to record him hero status, do you think? >> i don't think the media was too quick to report him hero status because what he did was heroic and the first person to tell you that he he was not a hero. what he did was heroic. that said, i do think the 24-hour news cycle requires a new story every day. se, so, on one day he's a hero and second day he's a joke and on the third day this hero has been taint
this is on par with the 1892 coverage of lizzy borden and her alleged ex-murders of her father and thethat came out there that riveted the country in some ways, almost supersedes what's played out -- nothing knew. >> thanks for that historical perspective. one african-american who got a lot of attention in this story, charles ramsey. he heard the cries of amanda berry and broke that door down and led to the rescue of her and her 6-year-old child. let's take a brief look at one interview...
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May 15, 2013
05/13
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author and journalist lizzie stark and congresswoman karen bass. thank you so much. that's it for this evening. "the rachel mad do you show" starts right now. good evening, rachel. >> thank you very much and thanks to you at home for joining us this hour. new york city is the largest city united states. we all think of it as a sprawling mega metropolis, and because it is so big, even while you are in new york city, it's very easy to forget that where you actually are is on an island in the north atlantic. manhattan is surrounded by water. staten island, is as the name implied, surrounded by water. all the new york city boroughs have coastlines and it is possible to do some very good fishing, some north atlantic fishing in, say, brooklyn new york. i know this for a fact because i caught this fish in brooklyn on friday morning before i came to work. if i seemed unusually happy on friday night's show it's because look at that size of that striper that i caught in brooklyn! you can fish in brooklyn. there's good fishing in brooklyn, and there's a lot of people who do it
author and journalist lizzie stark and congresswoman karen bass. thank you so much. that's it for this evening. "the rachel mad do you show" starts right now. good evening, rachel. >> thank you very much and thanks to you at home for joining us this hour. new york city is the largest city united states. we all think of it as a sprawling mega metropolis, and because it is so big, even while you are in new york city, it's very easy to forget that where you actually are is on an...
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May 19, 2013
05/13
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when rutherford and lizzie -- lucy returned from the white house, this place was still important to themit was the nucleus of the household. it is where the family spent their informal time. they are older, they have got grandchildren, which they love it when grandchildren visit them here. one of lucy's favorite items in this room is an advertisement that features a very happy baby it so reminded her of her eldest grandchild that she hung that picture in here by her bag. this is also the room where lucy's story ends. she was sitting in one of the chairs here in this room. she was working on some needle points and watching her younger children play tennis outside the windows here. she suffered a massive stroke and slumped over in her chair and the family rushed in and carried her to the bed and this is where she passed away. they are now buried right here. >> how old was she when she passed away? >> she was 57 when she died. she had her funeral there and was laid out in the front hallway. thousands of people came through. one of the great stories of her funeral was the procession went bac
when rutherford and lizzie -- lucy returned from the white house, this place was still important to themit was the nucleus of the household. it is where the family spent their informal time. they are older, they have got grandchildren, which they love it when grandchildren visit them here. one of lucy's favorite items in this room is an advertisement that features a very happy baby it so reminded her of her eldest grandchild that she hung that picture in here by her bag. this is also the room...
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May 27, 2013
05/13
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behind the wheel of her blue camaro, lizzy musey. race, the camaro swerves out of control. the machine is airborne headed directly toward the camera and the cameraman behind it. >> the butt end of that car came right into his lens. and pieces just flying. >> and then comes that point where you think you're so safe, he realizes i'm getting out of the way. >> he dives over the wall just in time. musey walks away without a scratch. >> that sucks. >> and so does the cameraman. >> that was a close one, man. >> with a shot to almost die for. >> that's one for the reel, boys! >> a hot air balloon slams into a radio tower leaving passengers stranded 700 feet above the ground. >> he's on the tower. >> october 2004. the drama unfolds at the albuquerque, new mexico, balloon festival. after a microburst of wind blows this smokey bear balloon off course. >> suddenly the balloon crashes into a radio tower which carries 70,000 watts of electricity. >> you're now basically atop of this 700 foot radio tower and the basket is weaving back and forth. >
behind the wheel of her blue camaro, lizzy musey. race, the camaro swerves out of control. the machine is airborne headed directly toward the camera and the cameraman behind it. >> the butt end of that car came right into his lens. and pieces just flying. >> and then comes that point where you think you're so safe, he realizes i'm getting out of the way. >> he dives over the wall just in time. musey walks away without a scratch. >> that sucks. >> and so does the...
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May 15, 2013
05/13
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tracy: lizzie mack will be on this. ashley: thank you, emac. >> sure.more big-time sporting events are defecting to cable from traditional online broadcasters. you can add another one that may be about to go. dennis kneale has the details. dennis. >> hello, ashley. can anybody stop these guys? it's as of espn wants to own the world. the disney-owned juggernaut confirming to me it is in talks to raid the u.s. open tennis tournament from cbs where it has been a mainstay for 45 years. espn reportedly willing to pay $90 million a year for the u.s. open. that is 50% more than the $60 million that cbs now pays. a person at cbs sports declines to comment on whether the eye will blink at that price. now this would be on top of cb's agreement to let the finals of the march madness college basketball tournament switch over to its cable partner, time warner with tnt and tbs in 2016. and appear on cbo only every other year after. espn is arguably the most powerful cable channel a year. it rakes $10 billion a year in revenue. 6 billion in fees paid by cable systems.
tracy: lizzie mack will be on this. ashley: thank you, emac. >> sure.more big-time sporting events are defecting to cable from traditional online broadcasters. you can add another one that may be about to go. dennis kneale has the details. dennis. >> hello, ashley. can anybody stop these guys? it's as of espn wants to own the world. the disney-owned juggernaut confirming to me it is in talks to raid the u.s. open tennis tournament from cbs where it has been a mainstay for 45 years....
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May 14, 2013
05/13
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when rutherford and lizzie returned from the white house, this place was still important to them.t was the nucleus of the household. it is where the family spent there in formal time. they are older, they have got grandchildren, which they love it when grandchildren visit them here. one of lucy's favorite items in this room is an advertisement that features a very happy baby it so reminded her of her eldest grandchild that she hung that picture in here by her bag. this is also the room where lucy's story ends. she was sitting in one of the chairs here in this room. she was working on some needle points and watching her younger children play tennis outside the windows here. she suffered a massive stroke and slumped over in her chair and the family rushed in and carried her to the bag -- bad and this is where she passed away. and this is where she passed away. they are now very -- buried right here. >> how old was she when she passed away? >> she was 57 when she died. she had her funeral there and was laid out in the front hallway. thousands of people came through. one of the great
when rutherford and lizzie returned from the white house, this place was still important to them.t was the nucleus of the household. it is where the family spent there in formal time. they are older, they have got grandchildren, which they love it when grandchildren visit them here. one of lucy's favorite items in this room is an advertisement that features a very happy baby it so reminded her of her eldest grandchild that she hung that picture in here by her bag. this is also the room where...