first jury deadlocked, burke strunsky went back to court armed with his new evidence for a brand new panel of hall s peers. jurors heard medical experts testify about the injuries to christi s head and once again heard lindsay s 911 call. i saw him put her under water. cristi s co-workers testified for the prosecution. and jerry winkle traveled from idaho to tell jurors what he thought of chris hall. i was ashamed to admit that he was once a police officer. but, if the prosecution had upped its game in the year between the two trials, so had the defense. that s when well-known attorney steve harmon and paul grech entered the scene, and they came out swinging. that story about cristi s affair, for example? there s a shadow hanging over all of this stuff. very human sort of shadow, which is that she was having a little
in the year between the two trials, so had the defense. that s when the well-known attorneys entered the scene and they came out swinging. that story about cristi s affair, for example there s a shadow hanging overall of this stuff. a very human sort of shadow, which is that she was having a little affair. right? had a boyfriend. yes. if the husband knew about it, but the wife never ever mentions it and tells the husband. no one tells the husband. reporter: quite right, says the judge. there was no evidence that he knew about his wife s affair. he ruled it out of the trial. and the story about shooting himself for retirement benefits that was just absolutely a lie. that s wrong. there was never, never any evidence or indication or not even a moment s breath that he shot himself.
i mean, people encourage their children to go on field trips all the time. still, again, it s a part of our basic, human sort of mental structure that we blame ourselves for something like that. so what will need to be extended to the people feeling this range of emotions? you know, doctors tell me it s different for every person. and also that it s different culturally. so it s probably a little difficult for us to sit here not being a part of that culture because it differs from culture to culture. in the u.s., for example, some people benefit from retelling their story. for example, retelling the story how i escaped from the boat. or apparently telling the story, a parent, how they heard their child was in danger and found out unfortunately they couldn t be found. some people really benefit from retelling, and other people, that s not such a benefit and they really need distance. that distance helps them. so it s different for every person. and i think, you know what psych ki tr
augmented glasses learn the difference between a wink and a blink, which sounds really simple, but actually for a computer to understand the difference between those two is pretty difficult. so are we heading to a future like her where the computer will be able to speak to us in a human sort of way? it s possible. i had scarlett johansson read your whole article to me out loud. all right, i think we should leave it there. yeah. i think this stuff is super cool. thank you so much. definitely. up next, the real life guy version of carrie bradshaw tackles love s biggest questions. is cheating ever okay? do soulmates exist? can true love conquer all? you ll want to hear these answers. welcome to the age of uninnocence. no one has breakfast at tiffany s and no one has a paris to remember. instead, we have breakfast at 7:00 a.m. and affairs we try to forget as quickly as possible.
by a car and everything was turned upside down. how did she recover? she ll teach us. then, the crisis in america. we call it that. it s alzheimers disease. the numbers are alarming and on the rise. this year, there will be an estimated 5.4 million americans living with the disease. a lot of people asking about the numbers all the time. there s a new report out from the alzheimers association saying an ageing baby boomer generation will cause that number to rapidly escalate. you could guess that. they say the number of cases will increase from 5.4 million to 16 million by the year 2050. it s devastating. it s a devastating brain disease that erases your ability to remember moments, experiences and people in your life. it destroys nerve cells that allow you to think clearly. it can wipe away your ability to function like walking and swallowing. the news isn t all grim. that s what we want to talk about. what s remarbleable is while there s no cure, we learned some brain chan