it s going to have wrinkles, of course. just wash a couple times and it looks like new. hamburger. this is crystal for those not from the south, southern white castle, and you know, t-shirt. we made it look like a hamburger. they gave them out at about 250 restaurants all over the south. this is creative. all right. i m taking this. see you. see you later. thank you. i have never seen anything like this before. personalized customized brand. so color process so anything you want on here, all the way to full color picture we can get that for you. are companies using this to give out to people to wrap presents with or using it to wrap their own presents? at times using it to wrap their own presents for corporate gifting programs or fund-raising programs. that s great. it s not just wrapping paper you have here. you have chocolate die-cut boxes. these right here can be imprinted both on the outside and the inside. color imprint with whatever you need on that. and then
unformed. she d gone down there that morning to have a good time and to be with her friends and to act out. and that s sort of she wasn t really terribly political about it. and so that s the first sort of paradox about the picture. when you see a picture like that, you think somebody who looks so hateful is ir redeemable. in fact, her life changed after that. she got married. she had children. and within five years of the moment that picture was taken, on her own without any encouragement from anyone, she called up elizabeth and apologized. now, how did you find this out? i m fascinated by your reportage. how d you know this? i went down to little rock to do a bill clinton story. i saw a poster of the two of them together that had been taken in 1997 like old friends. and i thought how dowe get from the black and white picture, that hateful picture, that picture that epitomizes race hatred in this country to this color picture of these grown
she d gone down there that morning to have a good time and to be with her friends and to act out. and that s sort of she wasn t really terribly political about it. and so that s the first sort of paradox about the picture. when you see a picture like that, you think somebody who looks so hateful is ir redeemable. in fact, her life changed after that. she got married. she had children. and within five years of the moment that picture was taken, on her own without any encouragement from anyone, she called up elizabeth and apologized. now, how did you find this out? i m fascinated by your reportage. how d you know this? i went down to little rock to do a bill clinton story. i saw a poster of the two of them together that had been taken in 1997 seemingly looking like old friends. and i thought how do we get from the black and white picture, that hateful picture, that picture that epitomizes race hatred in this country to this color picture of these grown
that picture that epitomized race hatred in this country to this color picture of these two grown women reconciled seemingly getting along, and i knew to get from point a to point b would be a story. what s the larger question of the south i? grew up in the north in, a big city, philadelphia. northern and southern racial prejudices were different. one is about who was calling the shots. the other was about keeping your distance from each other. in the south what s it like today? do these people know each other? any kind of social integration? still boss and worker? i think it s very superficial. there s much more. you walk you land at the airport in little rock and look at the county commissioners, and half of them are black, so superficially things are much better but the races are still very much separate. even at central high school they are very separate and that story is in a way repitmized by the relationships of these two people. after they reconciled, there was a cert
it s your day for some special attention an occasion to be wined and dined you should get everything that you wish for and the whole world should kiss your behind all right. wow! very nice. bernie goldberg, you re first! right over there. thank you very much. that s so nice, the jibjab people did that. that s incredible. no next with the people, big heads. they can t get a color picture of you? that s right. part of the olden days. it was an homage. happy birthday, steve. thank you very much, jibjabers. now to the headlines, police