this. was this version of her story finally the truth? perhaps, and in any event, mickey s family would have to be satisfied with what small consolations toni fratto offered. i know sorry is not enough and if i could go back and protect her and make sure this wouldn t happen and everything that she would still be here today. do you see her face now in your mind s eye? in some places, yeah. you ll probably be seeing her for a long time. for the rest of my life. reporter: and with that, our interview ended. toni fratto never wavering from her story, the one she told when she cut that deal with the district attorney. the deal that could set her free by the year 2030.
good news before we say good night, chicago police department teaming up with the make-a-wish foundation to help a boy become a superhero. 9-year-old cyrus who suffered from cystic fibrosis became a superhero mind s eye, the department put together a team to arrest and unfreeze his victims and following he gave the leadership award for his service as a superhero police officer and it just shows when you re in a position to do something special for somebody that you know it s going to make a difference in their life and it doesn t cost you anything, what a beautiful thing. it moves the heart. i want to take you to spain for this good news good night, that s where several dogs stranded by lava, on the volcano of the island of lipoma could be soon rescued by a drone company. there s a team of drone operators, they now have permission to use that permit try to rescue the pups. they are going to try to put a net over each dog with a maximum
Veteran Abstractionist Prabhakar Koltes seminal exhibition The Minds Eye , curated by Uma Nair was inaugurated at Treasure Art Gallery (TAG) in the Capital.One of the pioneers of Indian Abstract Expressionism, Kolte has been successfully .
and i couldn t see. i was diagnosed with bilateral panifitis. it felt like i was losing everything. i lost my independence. i lost my career i loved. i lost my eyesight. i did not cook for a while. my vision was so poor that i was nervous about it. so i understand when someone that is low vision and blind can say, i m scared, i m not getting back in there. when the pandemic happened, we know that zoom started happening, and i realized that i can do this. here is a whole community that is forgotten. so i have to be very descriptive so they can actually see what i m doing in their mind s eye. my wife s amazing. and i m just very proud of her and proud of what she s doing. so are we. and next, the january 6th committee issuing a new round of subpoenas. hear who they re targeting. plus, a judge funllfinally
the creative side that you do from the director s guidance and then it s a whole technical challenge to organise how you actually achieve what you have in your minds eye, i suppose. so to dig into this relationship with the director s vision, tell me a little bit more about the coen brothers, and because you ve made, i think, around a dozen movies with them and movies that many of us have loved over the years, i think it started with barton fink. barton fink, yes. ..and fargo, just a whole raft of great films. how does it work then between them and you? well, the first time on barton fink, we had quite a lot of prep and i sat with them for weeks and in a hotel room, working on storyboards, discussing the script and working on storyboards. but then it gradually, there was less and less discussion because as we got to know each other and funnily, sometimes it s the quietest set i ve ever been on.