and not only do you have some of these bro type of commercials but one of the big targets here are mothers. they feel mothers are the better betterbetter communicators, if you re telling your son or daughter, you need to get health insurance, they are going to listen to them probably more than they listen to the president of the united states and somebody in a bro commercial mothers know best. the president s remarks, we re expecting him to discuss the cap on out-of-pocket expenses and the prohibition on denying insurance to those with preexisting conditions. these are not new points we re hearing from the president but it comes at a different time as we ve noted. this website smoothing out some of the kinks here that perhaps people won t go to deaf ears and won t be lost in the conversation about the website. tamron, before the website debacle, one of the big truths about health care law was
effective person for the obama administration but may be able to push the traffic to the website. tamron, he s going to be the primary salesman, may not be the chief person every day between now and december 23rd but the white house is putting him out today. we re going to see him on thursday with chris matthews in an interview he ll have with hard ball and touting individual components of the health care law. for those covering us, a lot of this isn t anything new, but they ll be listing and trying to move beyond and turning the page for the website. he ll talk about from now on insurers cannot deny people with preexisting. he ll be talking about there s a cap on out-of-pocket expenses and whole host of other protections in the law that weren t in weren t part of the health insurance equation before the law passed. it s going to be getting down to the basics and something they weren t able to do because the website wasn t working for two months. they know now with the president
obamacare delay, wendell? reporter: well that delay affects the cap on out-of-pocket expenses for some people whose insurers use different companies to manage medical bills and prescriptions. they haven t yet figured out a way to accurately combine those out-of-pocket costs when different companies bill them. so they have applied the cap to each. insurance industry experts say there s a learning curve. they re actually trying to recreate many of the functions that the insurance companies have spent hundreds of years getting good at doing. what they re going to learn is, this is not so easy. reporter: what it means is, that next year the cap on out-of-pocket expenses could actually double for some people to $12,700, bill. bill: wendell goler in martha s vineyard. martha. martha: raging wildfires are threatening to engulf entire neighborhoods. we re live with the very latest details on that. bill: also a small town fair