welcome back to who s talking. my next guests entertained you for years, some of the biggest movie stars and one of the most popular celebrity chefs and the man behind some of the biggest television sports ves events in history. up first, george clooney as you ve never seen him. how his wife and kids changed his life and his hits and misses on the screen. which lasts longer for you, the successes or fail yures. failures. and guy opens up about the secret to his success and answers critics who say he serves a heart attack on a plate. i m a chef. i m not your doctor. okay? right. got to have responsibility in what you eat. and later, the legendary dick everosl. he gets real about the future of sports on tv. has america s love affair with the olympics disappeared? i worked a lot on this question. are you always like this? are you saying parents are wrong? yes. will you come back? yes, of course i will. okay. tonight, we re doing something a
would mean nothing it came back as bullet points. it had to come back digging into the story. ruan was the final he heditor. he sat in the broadcast room for every one for the better part of certainly 35, 40 years. he was my teacher, my mentor, and one of the great honors of my life. you left nbc a decade ago at the age of 63. some people retire you really stopped working. i m curious, why did you decide to stop working at a relatively young age? i had the ideal set of circumstances. i never had to go beg for anything. it made my life a lot easier. seemed like the right thing. waiting at home they have it
question whether the country can survive more years of trumpism and it has our armed forces, our men and women in the armed forces who love general mattis, he is like the most famous military figure of modern times, write a resignation letter that was biting in its own way saying that this is a president who doesn t understand that our america s alliances are the glue that keeps the free world together. that this president doesn t get it. it could not be any worse for a president when you start getting corrosion with the armed forces, with the troops, questioning whether the commander in chief is fit for command. mattis departure this week overshadowed other big stories this week, for example, the market melt don, the prison reform bill i mentioned. ben, as the editor of buzzfeed news how do you try to make sure the staff has time for all of these stories? how do you a lot of resources? for every he heditor for thet
yesterday, was the two year anniversary of the signing of president obama s health care law. an occasion marked by the white house with very little fanfare, but with the supreme court ruling expected in june, issue is sure to take center stage in the presidential campaign. here to handicap the judge s decision and discuss the potential political fallout. wall street journal columnies dan henning, and opinion journal.com he heditor, james. joe, you ve been following this from the beginning, how big an issue is this. for the last two years, everyone s been saying, oh, this is ridiculous, you know, the government is limited in
and in some ways, his reach has been wider because he s been able to radicalize and, you know, inspire everyone from the fort hood shooter to the underwear bomber to the times square guy as well. this guy was big on the net. he was. he was an important guy and in the last half dozen years before usama bin laden died, al-qaida made a studied effort to recruit u.s. citizen muslims, british citizen muslims, canadian citizen muslims in order to bring this war to the english-speaking world. we know there s another who is a very important figure in al-qaida, the north carolinian is the he heditor of their engl language journal. they re bringing the wr to america. this guy was an important factor in that. he wasn t the commander in yes, ma am yemen. he was an important figure.