touch screen technology in the 1960s to be used by whom? i ve never heard of england of e.a. johnson. a lot of them make sense. i m actually studying air traffic control and i haven t heard of him, so i don t think it s b, but. [sighs] it seems like a risky one, but i think i m gonna ask the audience. okay, audience, david needs your help. on your keypads, vote now. [percussive music] oof. 42% say meteorologists, 33 for air traffic controllers, 20 for telephone operators. that s interesting. i didn t get anything clear out of that so it wasn t something obvious i was missing, i don t think.
satisfaction of the terrorists all around the world. i thought he did a phenomenal job of keeping his emotions under control. he was contemplating the challenges he had as president. the job of president is an awesome job and he has a unique responsibility to preserve, protect and defend. and i suspect he recognized that obligation as he sat in that classroom. he didn t come back in the holding room right away and aloud us to get things in place so the president would be able to meet his responsibility. i told the telephone operators to get the fbi operator on the phone. get a line open to the vice president. get communications back to the white house. get the crew back on air force one. get some remarks written for the president because there are are a thousand people in the gymnasium next door. all that was being done as the president sat in that classroom and i think he was together right thing. megyn: he talked about how it was like watching a silent
there were a couple interesting ones. a machine operator, 32% divorce rate. telephone operators, 29%. other entertainers and performers 28%. waiters were on the list at 28%. maids 26%. i ll be darn. yeah. my gosh. we could talk all morning about that. let s move on to another one. this next one will make parents feel good. central high school in bridgeport, cheer leaders had a controversy with the uniforms. it wasn t the parent that is said they were too skimpy, the cheer leaders themselves said they are too skimpy, we don t want to wear these. they requested new uniforms. it was granted. the midriff was showing.
mail clerks, telephone operators, travel agents, video store clerks. i am bummed out about this. so is lily tomlin. of course, because the telephone operators. you know what, i think we need more telephone operators. do you know how hard and frustrating it is to call 411 and get the automated system and they never understand who, what you want, what number you want? you re like chuck e cheese and they go, febreez? no, chunk e cheese. oh, charles belize. no, you can use the internet. that s why you need a real person. like lily tomlin. one ringy dingy. two ringy dingy oh, gracious, good afternoon, mr. beetle. i m miss tomorrow lynn, your representative from the telephone company. they should not make that extinct. we need her. the mail clerks, i m a small town guy. i use the mail clerk and i know some people go to
human instinct tells us that would be better if no one ever lost a job. politicians often demand that unions be protective but americans would not be better off if telephone operators and clerks had their jobs protected by a compassionate law. those workers lost jobs because now money once paid by them is put to better use. in the media we almost never tell such a story. it s partly because we can only report on what we easily see and we can only see the people that get fired or take pictures as they leave their jobs on that last day when the factory closes and they have new things they may find. the exciting product that they will produce we cannot see that. you go to different colleges,