behind the trees and he shot me. what in the world was going on? that s what i wanted to know. this wife was brutally beaten. did he hire somebody? we just don t know. her husband had an alibi and something else, hala, a lover. it was shocking. we would have never expected it. and as police got closer to the truth he says i think i know who did it. the truth got closer to home. he just told me, hold on, it s about to get a lot more crazy. you won t find it on the map, but if close neighbors, good schools, and plain old civility is what you are looking for in a place called home, you can do worse than settle in grovetown, georgia. she has lived here for 14 years. you see the children outside, playing, having a good time. just a nice quiet place that you want to move and take your family to. the way we think america used to be, and seems to be, harder and harder to find. the army s fort gordon is just down the road. and a number of the city s 1
an enormous love of the arts. i was both academics. but there was an enormous love of the arts. i was always both academics. but there was an enormous love of the arts. i was always taken both academics. but there was an enormous love of the arts. i was always taken to both academics. but there was an enormous love of the arts. i was always taken to the theatre, opera, symphonies, my mother loves opera. mother loves opera. what are our mother loves opera. what are your earliest mother loves opera. what are your earliest memories - mother loves opera. what are your earliest memories of - your earliest memories of favourite films? i your earliest memories of favourite films? your earliest memories of favourite films? i would go to a lace favourite films? i would go to a place called favourite films? i would go to a place called the favourite films? i would go to | a place called the independent theatre which would show films, and we were all allowed to flop around on bea
an international star for over 30 years now. i was really looking forward to meeting nicole in london, but even as superstars, travel plans can be ruined these days, so we talked virtually. nicole kidmanjoining us from los angeles, welcome to this cultural life. thank you. thank you for having me. you were born in hawaii and moved to sydney with your australian parents at the age of four. your father was a clinical psychologist and biochemist. was it a creative upbringing? yeah, absolutely. i mean, as much as i grew up the daughter of a scientist who became a psychologist, i was also the daughter of a nurse educator, but they were both academics. um, but there was an enormous love of the arts. i was always taken to the theatre, opera, symphonies. my mother loves opera. what are your earliest memories of favourite films? i would go to a place called the independent theatre, which would show films, and we were all allowed to flop around on bean bags. they didn t have chairs, th
i will be right back. would a cupcake kill you. jesse: he will just hit you with why don t you love me anymore? it was an accident. you said you would love me no matter what i did. why would you buy a giraffe? you wanted one. jesse: there is a 53-year-old who never grew up. with hunter, every day is bring your kid to work at the white house. what do you do when your dead beat son is your bagman, who just got pinched? when trouble came his way, he said daddy, i want to go to the state dinner. hunter gets what he wants. what we saw was the president, his son wanted to come, so his son is going to come to the dinner. that was in the family circumstance of him wanting to come and the president wanting to show he loves his son and he is standing by him. it is possible he said i don t want to go and his dad set i want people to understand i am your dad and you are hereby my side. you are watching the left rediscover fatherhood. all of a sudden she thinks father
. it s 4:00 in the east. happy friday. it is just ahead of the one-year anniversary of the earthquake that completely up ended women s health and american politics. of course we re talking about the supreme court ruling overturning roe v. wade and eliminating abortion access and abortion rights for millions of american women. looking back it is hard to understate the legacy of that dobbs decision. first there is, of course, the rulings near immediate impact on women and reproductive health care in america. the new york times reports this. in the year since roe fell, 20 states enacted laws banning or restricting abortion, forcing a rapid shift in the country s patchwork of abortion access. at least 61 clinics, planned parenthood facilities, and doctors offices stopped offering abortions in the last year. most were in the 14 states that banned abortion outright, but the uncertainty surrounding laws in several other states also caused providesers there to shutdown. all of it h