news conference tomorrow at the myrtle beach convention center. he will announce while he was encouraged the results he doesn t have the money and doesn t appear to have the sports of the polls and doesn t have the structure to go the distance. the city is proud of the race he ran. he will talk about how he thinks it is important the country restore trust in the political system and government and trust in one another, then he will step aside. he will say he didn t want to go up against barack obama. he will be out. he will not be in the debate planned for tomorrow night. there will be one left. he will have it all on new hampshire. he had a billionaire father. it is ironic mitt romney didn t see it coming. huntsman senior was in there the night huntsman juanor s disappointing showing. he needed to come in second or first. it was not the kind of night he was hoping for. as a consequence a lot of that it was a difficult choice for the huntsman family and governor huntsma
wondering what s happening to other former first kids. where are they now? that s what i asked presidential historian doug wei. he filled me in on a characteristic that a lot of presidential children have in common. they don t like public life. i interviewed 19 of these kids. and they ve tasted public life and they ve been in private life, and they prefer private. but jenna, of course, is an author and working as an nbc correspondent for the today show. what about her sister then, jenna s sister barbara bush? well, her sister is a co-founder of a nonprofit company that works with health issues. and seeking equity between africa, the u.s., and health care needs. and that s kind of her heart. very private person. she was always i think she was even a bit quieter than
more. i love stuff like this. i think viewers like that, where are they now, you know, sort of thing when you do that. thank you, doug. doug wead is a presidential historian, and he s written about a lot of these people we ve talked about. thanks for having me. a teenage girl at the mall. then it really gets wild. i thought i was just going to stop him, but he kept running. well, i thought, okay, i guess you re going down to the ground. this high school cheerleader is the last person he would want to run into. also ahead tonight, gator country. boy, do i mean it. a brave fisherman wanders right into the middle of a feeding frenzy and lives to tell about frenzy and lives to tell about it. burn sufferers, like carl,
the state s new immigration law. a judge this week blocked the most controversial parts of it. governor jan brewer fought back. but lost her bid to get a speedy appeal hearing, so that won t happen until november. but we are learning now that governor brewer may try another tactic all together. dan simons standing by live in phoenix. dan, what is the governor thinking about doing here? reporter: well, hey, don, the governor is thinking about going back to the legislature and having the republicans look at tweaking the language perhaps in a way to accelerate how it proceeds in the courts. i want to show you what we re seeing behind us right now. right now, there is a very large support rally happening at the state capital. hundreds of people are here. coming out to support 1070. obviously right now the future, a bit uncertain. senator russell pierce, who authored the bill, not wild about the idea that governor jan brewer is apparently advancing with tweaking some of the lang