are coming forward and saying, but three days later. there was a story i didn t pay for my yankee ring. i have four yankee rings. i had to produce the check. it took three or four days to find all the checks. by then it s old news. and you get a retraction on page 16 and it looks like the whole big mayor got $20,000 worth of rings. and then, the press asked me when i had the rings aren t they worth more because they re your rings? oh, great. that means if i buy a suit i should pay more because it s my suit. a lot of people are saying that dr. carson actually won that news cycle because over the weekend he apparently raised $3.5 million. he tweeted that out and said thank you mainstream media because he was able to rally his pace. he has something going i didn t have or chris didn t have during bridgegate or a couple of other things, that this is playing swat in republican religious base. what he s talking about is a religious conversion. it s quite legitimate.
return tomorrow night. four stories tomorrow night. 26 new episodes, still out shooting season two. i got to run. you probably have to go now. i probably have to do something crazy that you ll see this season. people have a story, they inherit something strange they can be on your show? they can be. several episodes came from a viewer. and follow my travels and adventures at jamiecolbytv. i love hearing from the viewers. you re doing a great job. i look forward to a brand-new season. thanks, brian. fun stuff. meanwhile straight ahead, hopefully this will be interesting for you. you have a skier falling 1600 feet down a mountain. and survives. the dramatic video that you re witnessing. and first it was the saggy pants that i wear on weekends. then the popped polo collars that jesse famous. the newest fashion trend for men might be the most bizarre one yet. steve s participating. it s the man bun.
new drug. you think about the cancer patients that could potentially be helped. in your right to try, you give examples and you brought some along today. andrea sloan, what s her story? she was a heartbreaking story. she was about our anyone. she was a great advocate. she quit her job to help people who were troubled and be an advocate for the poor. after seven years, she exhausted all her options with ovarian cancer. it took so long for the fda to finally approve that, within a few beaks of finally getting approval under compassionate use, she passed away. in texas, her family and friends fought and it s actually called the andrea sloan right to try act. as her mother said, it took the fda 24 days to turn it around. when you re terminally ill, 24 days is a lifetime. right. what we re saying is that physician says life or death. if a physician says something is indicated for you, you should
well, heart-stopping video. watch this. and it goes on and on. this happened in alaska. the skier, ian mcintosh is heard screaming as he plunges 1600 feet down a snowy alaska mountain. that s about 116 stories. amazingly he was able to sit up at the end of the ordeal and talk. listen. i m okay. i m okay. wow mcintosh says he lost control with his footing from a five foot deep trench he didn t see. amazingly, he s alive to tell that story. and could this be the perfect gift for the guy in your life? this is a clip-in man bun? it s now arrived. boy, women are so happy about this everywhere. it s a hair piece to give you all that hipster swagger, steve.
any questions? very effective. it has been recognized as one of the top commercials of all time. but all these years later many people still don t realize there is proven research that that story is true. your brain on drugs. today we continue our discussion on addiction in america. we re joined by a man who has committed his life to understanding drug addiction. the director of the laboratory for behavioral and molecular neuroimaging at the institute for medical research. pleasure. thank you very much. so yesterday we had compelling story about a woman whose husband lost his life to heroin. we re going to talk tickly about heroin because it is such first of all how big a problem is heroin becoming in the united states? i ve been talking to kids for decades. and i ve never seen a drug explode on the scene as much as the open yet iates have. i think some of the statistics