this is about 25 minutes. maiden name is yvonne watson. i grew up in los angeles. i was born here, born on what s the east side of los angeles. went to elementally school near usc. my mother came my mother and father came here from texas in 1921. and she had been a teacher in texas, but when she came here, she became a real estate broker and a seamstress. my dad had been a farmer in texas, but when he came here, he came here and he worked in the studios. he was a janitor in the studios, and he worked there for 28 years. but while he was there, he organized the service employees union within the studios. so i grew up really in the center of the labor movement. i grew up with parents who were very, very ambitious and aggressive, and had when i say ambitious, ambitious for me. i was very fortunate that they made sure that even though we had very little money, we had opportunities, and i had a chance to take piano lessonses from the time i was 5. violin lessons. every kind
the festivities are continuing this hour. it was the parade that was the main piece of it. anne mackovic reports. reporter: with the revving of engines from the dikes on bikes, the 41st annual san francisco pride parade was off and running, and dancing and dragging its way down market street. it s a celebration of love and happiness and acceptance of yourself and acceptance of the community and the whole world. reporter: in attendance, people of all colors of the rainbow, including enthusiastic politicians, law enforcement, a lot of children. it s fantastic! reporter: and great supporters. we have a lot of people in our family who a gay, to show them support and that we care. reporter: chaz bono, the transgender son of sonny and cher. this is huge for me. this is the city of pride. seems everything begins here. it s good to be here. reporter: because people being here can make an impact nationwide. it s really important that we have visibility like this, b
states, including california, oregon, virginia, washington state, delaware, maryland, a great many others, permit independent corporate expenditures for these purposes? a lot is spent on money for elections in california. have corporations corrupt the process there? i think some experiences cannot be more important than the 100-year-old dutchman of congress that these expenditures would 100-year-old judgment of congress that these expenditures would cause corruption. congress has their own interests. . . in fact, corporate and union money go o in fact, corporate and union incumbents. this may be the single most if you look at the last election cycle and look at corporate pac money and ask where it goes, it goes ten times more to incumbents than to challengers. and in the prior election cycle, even more than that. and for an obvious reason. because when corporations play in the political process, they want winners. they want people who will produce outcomes for them. a
again and again, reaching his goal of 100 jumps in one day. that is a new record in minnesota, the old record was just 60 jumps. kelly: how much gas did that cost? julie: i don t know, man i can stretch a story like nobody s business, fox news sunday starts now. chris: robbing reform in trouble with a new warning will increase government spend, not cut it and the president s top domestic priority can it be saved? we ll ask, two key players, peter orszag, the white house budget director. and, republican senator judd gregg, who is a leader critic. then. the eagles has landed. chris: 40 years since man first walked on the moon. we ll mark the anniversary of the apollo 11 mission with former astronaut, buzz aldrin the second man to step on the lunar surface, buzz aldrin only on fox news sunday. plus were the supreme court confirmation hearings like a seinfeld episode, about nothing? our sunday panel tells us, how judge sotomayor talked a lot but revealed little. and