orientation. not guilty or guilty? guilty. and i m talking to a sports legend has s also a good friend of my. a star so great he could only be called magic. the great magic johnson. he s here with his wife cookie, and we re going to talk about how this changed both of their lives. because of the hiv virus that i have attained, i will have to retire from the lakers. plus, tonight, only in america. presidential bracketology explained. this is arsenio hall tonight. good evening. i m arsenio hall in for piers morgan. our big story tonight is the verdict in the tyler clementi case. the rutgers university freshman who killed himself in 2010 after he learned that his roommate had used a hidden web cam to spy on his sexual encounter with another man. and today that roommate, dharun ravi was convicted on most of the charges. joining me to talk about the case that shocked the nation, attorney lisa bloom and dr. drew pinsky host of cnn s dr. drew. let s start legally. ta
are you serious? some tears, what do you want? i would love to make you cry. go on then. but only if it helped you ultimately. some sort of breakthrough. you re making me quite emotional already. oh, my god are you tearing up, i think. are you cracking into my tough british exterior, getting into my warm, cuddly heart. i m really understanding you, by the way. usually when british people talk, i hear doi, t o doi, doi, in one ear and the out the other. it s my own shallowness, and when i love law and order, and when i saw there was law and order u.k., i tivo d it, but i can t understand a word. i don t know what s going on. you do speak english you did get from us i didn t get it from you. but many years ago relatives somewhere maybe got it from you said it was our language to start with.
show me some vulher ability. what are your fears? oh, my god. are you serious? some tears, what do you want? i would love to make you cry. go on then. but only if it helped you ultimately. some sort of breakthrough. you re making me quite emotional already. oh, my god are you tearing up, i think. are you cracking into my tough british exterior, getting into my warm, cuddly heart. i m really understanding you, by the way. usually when british people talk, i hear doi, tdoi, doi, in one ear and the out the other. it s my own shallowness, and when i love law and order, and when i saw there was law and order u.k., i tivo d it, but i can t understand a word. i don t know what s going on. you do speak english you didn t get froms i didn t get it from you. but many years ago relatives somewhere maybe got it from
into my warm, cuddly heart. i m really understanding you, by the way. usually when british people talk, i hear doi, t o doi, doi, in one ear and the out the other. it s my own shallowness, and when i love law and order, and when i saw there was law and order u.k., i tivo d it, but i can t understand a word. i don t know what s going on. you do speak english you didn t get from us i didn t get it from you. but many years ago relatives somewhere maybe got it from you said it was our language to start with. so we speak it properly. okay. if you want to have an us and them kind of attitude. sure, yeah, you re right. quite bolshe, aren t you? huh? quite bolshe. i don t know what you said or what it means. i think it s based on the bolsheviks, playful.
i d like to have your reputation, it s a good one. it s cool. wow, she s so cool, sarah silverman. i ll give you a tip you don t try to be cool. that s how i m cool. i think that with you, you want to be like, i m edgy, i m a king, i m blah, blah, but i think america more wants to root for you. you have to let down some guard and be a little vulnerable. show me some vulher ability. what are your fears? oh, my god. are you serious? some tears, what do you want? i would love to make you cry. go on then. but only if it helped you ultimately. some sort of breakthrough. you re making me quite emotional already. oh, my god are you tearing up, i think. are you cracking into my tough british exterior, getting into my warm, cuddly heart. i m really understanding you, by the way. usually when british people talk, i hear doi, doi, doi, in one ear and the out the other.