tomorrow, all new. more of the biggest names in the business are waiting backstage. from chicago s famed united center, oprah s surprise farewell spectacular, part two one more hour of surprises. ladies and gentlemen, jerry seinfeld. oprah: m.j. s in the house! one more hour of legends. oprah: aretha franklin! one more hour of television history. be there for the second-to-last oprah winfrey show ever. tomorrow. oprah: thank you for being a part of this, this great night, this celebration of what you have done for the oprah winfrey show. you have made it possible for us to stand for 25 years. your presence in front of your television set and your presence here tonight honors me in the deepest way possible, and i feel the love. thank you. don t touch that dial. we will see you tomorrow for the second-to-the-last show in oprah history. [captioning made possible by king world] [captioned by the national captioning institute -www.ncicap.org ] i will dry you
of more tornadoes to come across the country. we talk to the deputy director of fema about what to do in case the worst strikes. a special edition of nightline begins right now. good evening, i m terry moran. walking around joplin tonight is just an ominous experience. this is a blasted landscape. mile after mile of it. the trees sheered off with tremendous violence. houses torn apart and crushed. cars wrecked as far as the eye can see. and the storms are still coming. the night sky will just open up and the rains pour down, drenching the ruins. this was one of the deadliest tornadoes in the history of the united states. more than 100 souls have been lost. and abc s josh elliott spent the day in this devastated community, with the first responders searching for survivors. reporter: last night, just before dinner, the town of joplin, missouri, was hit with this. what we now know to be the deadliest u.s. tornado since 1953. monster tornado. reporter: some residents we
pickup trucks and rushing them to a nearby hospital or another triage center. some held the i. poles for the patients. while seeing all around them a good evening, i m george scene from armageddon. this structure s been here a long, long time, and it s meant stephanopoulos in new york. weather difficulties have a lot to the people who work in it. temporarily disrupted our it s meant a lot to this communications with joplin, community. and that is that s a major missouri. we ll get back to diane sawyer devastation. in a moment. it is an american town reeling from the single deadliest tornado in more than 60 years. south of kansas city. and it was an incredible a six-mile path of destruction scene at that hospital, as all cut through the path of the around this city. city. once again, we were just the storm so ferocious, it standing in the middle of stripped the trees of their lightning strikes and incredible bolts of thunder. and yet the rescue teams are leaves, their
tonight, direct hit, an american tragedy in joplin. good evening, i m george stephanopoulos in new york. weather difficulties have temporarily disrupted our communications with joplin, missouri. we ll get back to diane sawyer in a moment. it is an american town reeling from the single deadliest tornado in more than 60 years. south of kansas city. a six-mile path of destruction cut through the path of the city. the storm so ferocious, it stripped the trees of their leaves, their bark. at least seven people have been rescued. rescue teams will be working through the night to rescue more. behind every door, there is another staggering story of survival and resilience, including one woman who rode out the storm in the closet, clutching her son, her husband and her dogs. reporter: are ya ll okay? yes. reporter: are you really? yes, we re alive. reporter: what happened when the tornado you could just hear glass breaking and you could just it was as if you were sta
channels like espn or nsg which cable loans is a small fraction of what other channels like that but a much smaller than us receive. before cable vision we dealt with them fairly and consistently. well we have to figure out whether we need to get at those numbers in order to sort of thing through what s the reality of this location in the marketplace or not. maybe it isn t and they conceive those numbers would help you, not hurt you but we don t know the answer to that right now. so let me fall that one over and see how we proceed. senator klobuchar. thank you very much mr. chairman for holding this and for your thought-provoking questions and i know a lot of questions have been asked but i will add a few of my own. i think you said 86% of all americans pay for their television and that s why retransmission consent is an issue that affects americans whether they ve heard of it before and know it or not and my primary focus is to make sure the consumer is protected with th