Thank you doc. We are talking to george burns. Rodney dangerfield, michael constantine, and Shana Alexander will be with us. The special is tomorrow. Its on cbs. It follows bing, doesnt it . Yes, bing crosby. We made a deal between us. Hes not going to fool around with red rose rag and im not going to touch white christmas. [ laughter ] you mentioned the show. You talk about acting a little bit as you do in your book. You said you didnt find it too difficulty. You just listen and react to what people say. I think so. I think its much tougher to do what we are doing right now, or standing up and doing a monologue. Youve got nobody to help you. Youre on your own, you know . And you cant do it over. Thats it. But when you are doing a movie, you get up and do a scene, if its no good they do it over, you do it again. And then youve got Walter Matthau on one side, Dick Benjamin on the other. Were there any scenes you had to do, say, more than two or three times . Not me. [ applause ] i lie a
Cspan elsa walsh, why did you write divided lives . Guest i wrote this book because i thought that women werent telling the truth about their lives, that they were presenting particularly prominent women were presenting a very idealized version of what it was like to be a woman in the 80s and the 90s, and that was a picture that didnt at all reflect what i heard other women talking about. My friends talking about, women i had interviewed as a journalist. I knew it was a lot tougher out there than the little blips in the road that you saw that women talked about in public sort of presentations. Cspan is this your first book . Guest its my very first book. We also call it my first baby. Cspan was it hard . Guest it was hard. Writing a book is much harder than i anticipated. Its something that you really have to be committed to doing. But it was also fun, gave me a good life during the period i took off. I was a reporter at the Washington Post. Im still there and im on leave. And it gave
A special judge in the Second Division of the 11th West Circuit Court sentenced Rodrick Morris to 35 years in state prison Thursday following his conviction on 79 of 82 counts related to accepting $667,384 from the Pine Bluff Urban Renewal Agency for asbestos abatement work he did not perform.
Morris sentenced to 35 years in Urban Renewal theft | Pine Bluff Commercial News pbcommercial.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pbcommercial.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Former San Francisco Giants outfielder Drew Robinson works as a mental health advocate for the team and alongside experts and other professionals to ensure his ex-teammates’ minds are as strong as their bodies.