take care. bill: you may think that, you may think he is forever young. that s what he said. rod stewart teasing a career change. today s hemmer celebrity news. get your cameras ready. the music legend is leaving rock-n-roll behind. i m not retiring but i want to move on. everything has to come to an end sooner or later. i m looking forward to doing something else. he says he has recorded an album of swing music next year. he is 78. he can swing and doing it for decades. dana: maybe people will dance at their weddings next year. bill: i met him here on 47th street. the long acre. dana: that is gone. bill: long acre is right there. it s back. dana: i don t think so. bill: i know it is. dana: studio l? that s what we called it. bill: across the street.
which is like 26th street, to the higher numbers, like we re in the 60s right now, it s like you re doing better in life. - yeah. - you re doing better in life. - climbing up, yeah. - so in the 80s, we got to 47th street, and we were one of the only méxicano families in the whole neighborhood, in the whole neighborhood. - for miles, yeah. - we weren t accepted. we were not accepted. - how did they show that you weren t accepted? - they burned down our garage. - oh, snap. - they graffitied our house. - when we first moved here, i think it was i was 11, so like mid- 80s or whatever, and we went to the park, marquette park, and that s the first time that i ever heard spic and wetback. - yeah, exactly. - and razor, go back to your country. i was in seventh grade, dude. like, you don t want to hear that when you re in seventh grade. like, that hurts, dude. - yeah. - and i would get into fights, you know? but when i met these guys, i was like. - high school years. - 16, 17. - we just beca
which is like 26th street, to the higher numbers, like we re in the 60s right now, it s like you re doing better in life. - yeah. - you re doing better in life. - climbing up, yeah. - so in the 80s, we got to 47th street, and we were one of the only méxicano families in the whole neighborhood, in the whole neighborhood. - for miles, yeah. - we weren t accepted. we were not accepted. - how did they show that you weren t accepted? - they burned down our garage. - oh, snap. - they graffitied our house. - when we first moved here, i think it was i was 11, so like mid- 80s or whatever, and we went to the park, marquette park, and that s the first time that i ever heard spic and wetback. - yeah, exactly. - and razor, go back to your country. i was in seventh grade, dude. like, you don t want to hear that when you re in seventh grade. like, that hurts, dude. - yeah. - and i would get into fights, you know? but when i met these guys, i was like. - high school years. - 16, 17. - we just beca
like we re in the 60s right now, it s like you re doing better in life. - yeah. - you re doing better in life. - climbing up, yeah. - so in the 80s, we got to 47th street, and we were one of the only méxicano families in the whole neighborhood, in the whole neighborhood. - for miles, yeah. - we weren t accepted. we were not accepted. - how did they show that you weren t accepted? - they burned down our garage. - oh, snap. - they graffitied our house. - when we first moved here, i think it was i was 11, so like mid- 80s or whatever, and we went to the park, marquette park, and that s the first time that i ever heard spic and wetback. - yeah, exactly. - and razor, go back to your country. i was in seventh grade, dude. like, you don t want to hear that when you re in seventh grade. like, that hurts, dude. - yeah. - and i would get into fights, you know? but when i met these guys, i was like. - high school years. - 16, 17. - we just became boys. - so what made you become friends? - we w
charging so much more i think i would be angry if i went to disneyland or world and tried to take my family with me. my a credit card would hurt afterwards. again, not excuse or violence. todd: true story in the research pack we were given not true story in your life, you did not get in a fight for the peter pan right? cheryl: no, no, no. i would own up if i did. kennedy: she is a phenomenal athlete, todd i want to tell you a story perry last night it was walking down 47th street, it s a great establishment here in midtown. these two women jumped out of sanctuary, which is the bar next door, and they were like come on, let s go! ready to fight and i went up to her and said it s not worth. and my mom voice i said it s not worth it and she kind of stopped and i said it s not worth it. have you done anything that brave? todd: i am not. i m a complete loss. [laughter] racing one of these points you have made, we have a predilection to violence in the society. everyone will blame it