you here. it also has negative repercussions on your health. have you heard this term yet, tech neck? we are about to enlighten you. looking down at your smartphones for extended periods of times is hard to avoid, but here s another reason to put down the device. abby boudreau has more. sun damage, diet and stress can wreak havoc on your skin but can looking down at your smartphone cause premature aging. cell phones, laptops, tablets, anything that is electronic captures your attention and you have to bend your neck. you are just ruining the neck muscles. reporter: it is called tech neck. dermatologist to the stars dr. harold lancer says he sees it all the time. their main concern is, doc, i have a droopy neck and they are 23 years old. reporter: dr. lancer says looking down for hours at a time can weaken your neck muscles and lead to saggy skin. the skin forms lines like
tree trunk rings. reporter: jennifer gordon is 38 and concerned her neck is showing early signs of aging. we have ipads, mini ipads, laptops and cell phones. so you are looking down a lot. yes. reporter: dr. lancer says prevention is key. keeping the neck skin out of the sun. keeping the skin well moisturized. i tell people to sleep on their backs with a round pillow behind their neck so their head is always back. reporter: so if too much tech has your neck looking loose. will it hurt. this will not hurt. deep penetrating heat can help firm the skin and tighten neck muscles. we demoed it free of charge but it will cost you upwards of 700 to $1,000 per session, or perhaps you could try this idea. maybe not look down so much. what you have to do is get, to hold your cell phone this
we hearing this kind of moment to go. she said i think you better ring the call button. i rang the call button and made my way to the front. your wife said please help land the plane. you get into the cockpit and there is the copilot tending to things. she doesn t know you from adam. did she go through some quick interview process for the job? there was about a five-second interview. she said who are you? i said i m a pilot. i was trying to be to the point. she said what do you fly? i said i m an air force guy. i flew b-1 s. she said have a seat. we are going to omaha. i need you to back me up on the checklist and work the radios. we got a picker of the lancer, the b-1 bomber you have flown in the past. that doesn t look anything like a 737. it doesn t but i ll tell you that once you get in airplanes, an airplane is an airplane. the controls are pretty
of the senate. an award-winning journalist had died. her colleague is badly hurt after a policeman in afghanistan opened fire on their car. this comes on the eve of the country s historic election. more on that in a moment. first we have a photo of the victim, anja niedringhaus, witnesses say she died instantly. her colleague, kathy gannon, the ap reports the suspect shot her twice, but that she is now in stable condition. the two journalists had spent years together covering afghanistan. according to a free lancer who was with. the they were traveling with a convoy of election workers delivering ballots. they were just sitting, waiting for the convoy to move, when all of a sudden this policeman walked up to the car yelled, allahu akbar, or god is great, and then opened fire, and then surrendered to police.
brilliant. this is other worldly. in both cases, however, athletes pave the way for diplomats to do the heavy lifting. our state department goes postal when it s cut out of a deal. former new mexico governor bill richardson, who made a pilgrimage to pyongyang to gain release of mr. bae said testily that mr. rodman had crossed the line. but wait. what if mr. rodman with his tattoos, nose rings, permanent sunglasses and general jive is actually sharing details of his junket into the bad korea with some dark corner of our own government. it wouldn t be the first time our spy handlers would engage in outlandish or unsavory free lancer. during the second world war, a legendary mobster is said to have spied for the u.s., collecting intelligence about german saboteurs of the dock