no, i don t need you talking about me. this is there s no ceo. there s no effective manager who would ever do. my we add mrl. and the line at the mess hall at the end of the day. up are the leader, you eat last. and if there s no food at the end, that s fine. is this he is the antithesis of
120 miles to the north, a bud house crazy dictator with an enormous standing army, a bad haircut, and a nuclear arsenal. this we know. but the war divided a country and a culture also divided families. altered forever the korean character. the chef s early experience working the mess hall during his mandatory military service led directly to super stardom. now from this unassuming army surplus tent, he beams his cooking show live in more than 50,000 homes today via something called the internet. and he s not the only one. there s competition. lots of it. broadcast eating, it s kind of a phenomena in korea, which is how i suppose i wound up in a tent on the outskirts of seoul. hi, how you doing?
democratic congressman denny heck, a member of the intelligence committee and our correspondents, analysts and specialists. they have full coverage of the day s top stories. first, let s start with cnn white house correspondent, abby phillip. the white house, abby, kept the president s trip under wraps, as expected, until just a couple of hours ago. reporter: that s right, jim. president trump here left the white house under the cover of darkness on christmas day, and president trump said that he had been planning this trip for several weeks, but it had been rescheduled numerous times due to security concerns. but in the three hours that they spent on the ground, they met with troops and commanders, greeted them in the mess hall, and the president delivered remarks. jim, we have to remember, this is a conflict in iraq that president trump has repeatedly called a waste of u.s. blood and treasure. but president trump is still, even as he is on the ground in iraq, saying that the u.s. i
out with tricia s location and as fast as possible. day one, breakfast in the mess hall. jimmy zeroed in on larry hall. i was waiting with my tray, look over, there he is, 20, 25 feet from me, sitting there all by himself. it felt like a magnet was compelling me to come to him. finally i bumped shoulders with him on purpose. jimmy explained he was a brand new inmate needing directions to the library. hall obliged. kind of slapped him on the shoulder, said thanks a lot, i appreciate that from a cool guy like you. after that, they occasionally talked. but the next step came when jimmy was invited to join hall s breakfast club. this in the prison system, that s a big thing of who you re invited to have your breakfast with. keene thought he was making progress. but then prison politics got in the way. i left out of the chow hall one morning and a few big muscular guys came up to me, said hey, old man wants to talk
in a constant state of alert. 120 miles to the north, a crazy dictator with an enormous standing army, a bad haircut, and a nuclear arsenal. this we know. but the war divided a country and a culture also divided families. altered forever the korean character. the chef s early experience working the mess hall during his mandatory military service led directly to super stardom. now from this unassuming army surplus tent, he beams his cooking show live in more than 50,000 homes today via something called the internet. and he s not the only one. there s competition. lots of it. broadcast eating, it s kind of a phenomena in korea, which is how i suppose i wound up in a tent on the outskirts of seoul.