991 votes separating the two candidates and a quarter of the vote yet to count. well, folks so maybe not so fast. here s what we re going to do. karl rove said that we should figure out what the deal is with this decision desk. the decision desk is in a different place. megan, i will escort you down the steps here, so you can go and interview them. such a gentleman. all right. watch your step. thank you, thank you, i don t want to fall in front of all of these millions of people. okay. all right. megan is going to go to the decision desk and interview them. they re way down the hall. so we ll do a little interrogation and see if they stand by their call. this is the decision desk. now we re in the heart of the decision desk room. you tell me whether you stand by your call on ohio, given the doubts karl rove just raised? we re actually quite comfortable with the call in ohio. what do you make of it, chris? there just aren t enough republican votes left. p
other end of the line, refreshing the page every few seconds. i think this is premature. we ve got to be careful about calling things when we have like 991 votes separating the two candidates and a quarter of the vote yet to count. well, folks so maybe not so fast. here s what we re going to do. karl rove said that we should figure out what the deal is with this decision desk. the decision desk is in a different place. megan, i will escort you down the steps here, so you can go and interview them. such a gentleman. all right. watch your step. thank you, thank you, i don t want to fall in front of all of these millions of people. okay. all right. megan is going to go to the decision desk and interview them. they re way down the hall. so we ll do a little interrogation and see if they stand by their call. this is the decision desk. now we re in the heart of the decision desk room. you tell me whether you stand by your call on ohio, given the doubts karl rove just
991 votes separating the two candidates and a quarter of the vote yet to count. well, folks so maybe not so fast. here s what we re going to do. karl rove said that we should figure out what the deal is with this decision desk. the decision desk is in a different place. megan, i will escort you down the steps here, so you can go and interview them. such a gentleman. all right. watch your step. thank you, thank you, i don t want to fall in front of all of these millions of people. okay. all right. megan is going to go to the decision desk and interview them. they re way down the hall. so we ll do a little interrogation and see if they stand by their call. this is the decision desk. now we re in the heart of the decision desk room. you tell me whether you stand by your call on ohio, given the doubts karl rove just raised? we re actually quite comfortable with the call in ohio. what do you make of it, chris? there just aren t enough republican votes left. p
to be counted and that you have provisionals. what we re saying is that the amount of raw vote that s in these counties that s out there still waiting to come in, is so large and the historical trend is so strong and the polling is so strong about how democratic these counties are it s just not no matter what the republic precincts out there are it s not going to make it. megyn: is this possibly exit poll thing that we saw. the exit polls were so wrong in 2004. they were say nothing way that george bush can overcome it no way, no way, no way and then he did. is this similar to that? what we are looking at is actual raw vote by county by county, city by city and what we re seeing is sufficient vote in ohio on the democratic side to mean that ohio will go for obama. megyn: percent certainty. 99.95%. megyn: there you have it. i can t hear bret or the folks back at the studio. they seem very confident. we will take it back to you and see whether carl is
monday. i did everything i could to avoid the situation. i did everything i could. when people say certain things in prison, punk, bitch, lame, something like that, it s an automatic fight word. it s hard to explain to somebody not in the prison system. most of you say, like, i don t care, one day, i m walking away, no matter what happens. but it s not that easy all the time. i wish it was. i had to do what i had to do. sometimes it goes like that. both inmates involved in the fight are brought in front of the icc to discuss the incident. this was not necessarily a real simple case of a fight in prison. essentially, it was a black inmate and white inmate that got into a fist fight in the dining rooming. 99.95% of the time in a prison setting, that s a keg of dynamite.