meschach taylor was in south africa, and just as apartheid was on the way out, he learned that that show had been quite beloved there because it was so promising to them, that they could see people working together like that. tavis: you have worked pretty regularly in your career, thankfully. but when you have been on a show that is that popular and it goes away, how do you navigate forward? >> well, you know, i always had plenty to do. i quit in 2002 because one of my children was having some trouble in school. he was diagnosed with a learning difference, and i could not work 15 hours a day and address the issues that he needed to be addressed. at that point, i had done 17 seasons strait of tv, so i was a little tired. i am such a workaholic, i will just go until i am hanging from my straps. what stopped me was the kids needed attention, and i did not have the time to give it to them. i was doing "any day now" for lifetime. i was down here at the theater in town. it is fabulous. it won the pulitzer prize. i looked at it, and our wonderful writer, nancy miller, it did 88 of those. she di