and mark judge is a freelance journalist and film maker. i want to welcome both of you. heather, if you would stand by, i want to start with you, mark, because i understand that you were the person who said wait. this is not right and you tried to get other publications and media outlets to pick up on your story. walk me through this. when did you first smell a rat? well, it was the most frustrating week of my 25-year journalism career because i smelled a rat by the third paragraph of the story. i subscribe to rolling stone. the day the story came out. by the time i got to the fourth or fifth paragraph, i said wait. three hours of a rape by seven people? three hours is a long time. that was the first thing that was a give away. and i immediately wrote something up about it in op ed, an opinion piece about why the story was false. and for the next three days, tried to get it placed in various web sites and publications and nobody would run it. so i got to sit there for a week
krauthammer began his journalism career here in washington. a new president was about to be sworn in. krauthammer wasn t sure what to make of barack obama. he got the chance to size him up by a small dinner party hosted by his friendhi f george will, it was a weekrati before inauguration day. i i remember before the president elect arrived, saying, you know, i haven t been able to figure this guy out. is he a centrist who will occasionally throw a bone to the left or a lefty who will occasionally throw a bone to the right? nobody had any ideas.body that was part of of mr. obama s great strength. he was a national rorschach test. we spent three hours with this new man. he leaves and we are stayingle b behind a little bit., i say the same question. centrist? is he a lefty, nobody knew. fi five years later, you think you have figured himm ou out. i figured him out after that first state of the union speech, five weeks later. we will invest $15 billion a year to develop technol
you can even choose 48 months interest-free financing on the new tempur-choice with head-to-toe customization. the triple choice sale ends sunday, thanksgiving weekend. sleep train your ticket to a better night s sleep it was january 2009. 30 years after charles krauthammer began his journalism
krauthammer began his journalism career here in washington. a new president was about to be sworn in, but krauthammer wasn t sure what to make of barack obama. he got the chance to size him up at a small dinner party hosted by his friend, george will. it was a week before inauguration day. i remember before the president-elect arrived saying, you know, i haven t been able to figure this guy out. is he a centrist who occasionally will throw a bone to the left or a lefty who will occasionally throw a bone to the right. nobody had any ideas. that was part of mr. obama s great strength. so we spent three hours with this new man. he leaves, we re staying behind a little bit, and i m saying the same question, is he a centrist, is he a lefty? five years later, you think you ve figured him out? i figured him out after that first state of the union speech. five weeks later. we will invest $15 billion a year to develop technologies
to return to russia as a legally married couple in the united states. but for anton specifically, he hasn t worked in almost a year. it seems as if his professional journalism career is over. he said hopes to do something with an international or global equality type of group, but it remains to be seen how he s going to pick up his career and move on, other than saying he s 100% not leaving russia. thomas, quickly. you re hosting the miss universe pageant this weekend. you re a married gay man. you ve been there 24 hours now. give us the sense how you re feeling about this experience you ve made the decision to do. reporter: you know, i think it s a really fantastic experience, peter, for me. not just as a broadcaster. me being openly gay, that s an interesting fact, certainly not something i m embarrassed by. but yes, patrick and i are both here. i thought this was too big, too