before the primary begins. the first is barack obama, 20 points down when he was traversing in south carolina behind hillary clinton in 2007. you had a young and handsome state lawmaker who supported him and you know what happened. he was able to catch fire. you call yourself handsome? i did. and i spoke about myself in third person. the other comparison is scott walker. i think ron desantis is more scott walker that he is rock obama and i think voters are starting to realize that. what do you take from this, scott? what you think of his answer when it came to where he is in the polls? he is not wrong that he is doing better in the state by state polls than in the national polls, and that the state-by-state are far more significant. i just looked at a bunch of i will polls, none of them are really great in terms of quality, trump is far and away in first place in the 40s and
- the town of braddock is where andrew carnegie built his first steel mill in the 1870s. by the turn of the century, he bought another one up the river, the carrie furnaces. these smoke and fire belching behemoths were the heart of a steel-producing industry that spread throughout the monongahela river valley, generating wealth and power to the few and a decent living to many. - when tomorrow comes, you ll have a better so-called today. so you re thinking of the day will decide your destiny and your future. and if you don t succeed, it s your own fault because you didn t take control of what you think because what you think is gonna decide what you do, and what you do is gonna decide what you get. now, that s all for today, folks. let s go to work. - for the last 40 years, tony buba has been making documentaries about the fate of the working class in braddock. he grew up here during the town s heyday,
the 40s and 50s, before leaving to go to film school. why did you come back? - why did i come back? i was gone from about 68 to about 75. they i came home, and i saw everything s decaying even worse, and the people i hung out with, like there s sal carulli and other guys, they were these really characters. - chico pushed the button me. no one gonna push the button on me. nobody. nobody. the only guy that can do that is that guy up there, j.c. j. c., my man. - there s a lot of world war ii people that were starting to die off, and i was really like, this is gonna disappear, and the industry s going away. so i didn t know what else to make films about, so i just started documentaries and i just wanted to capture, and get some of these characters on film, and make them mythical. - but you stayed in braddock because braddock was your subject. - it s my subject, and i thought, okay, what if i move? if i move to los angeles, maybe i can get a job in the industry, but what if i get st
lot since the 40s and 50s and that comes a balance keepers which is a sharks. we pay attention to the ocean and have a look before we go swimming we will be fine. rachel: he says you will be fine but i don t know. for great white sharks have been spotted this season off the coast of new york and new jersey and that s why i prefer lake life. joey: will says to schofield the shark and touch him on the no s you be okay. will: rev up your memorial day weekend if you re knocking to go swimming with sharks you can watch the races you have three of the biggest races the indianapolis 500 the monaco grand prix and the nascar coca-cola 600 all happening today. rachel: the nascar cup series returns to charlotte motor speedway for the longest race with 400 laps in 600 miles of high-speed. joey: joining is now coca-cola 600 picks and predictions, i
of people, most of the people were expected to develop the dementia in the 40s and 50s and one gentleman did not develop it until he was 72, and progressed quickly after that, and within two years, he actually died from pneumonia and at that point, they looked at his brain. his brain had been donated to science and trying to figure out what is different here, and they found evidence of the genetic mutation that led to the protein deposited in one particular area of the brain. right here, sort of behind the frontal lobe area, area responsible for the memories and things like that. his brain had plaque and tangles and that sort of thing that you see with the alzheimer s, but in that one area, he seemed protected, and that is why, you know, researchers are so interested in this. it is fascinating that they are looking at the brain and how it is in some ways the facts of alzheimer s that he has that ano anomaly, and his sister shared