the highly anticipated women s marathon is under way here in japan as we speak. anne thompson has more. reporter: marathoner molly sidle pursuing the olympics most solitary achievement through the neighborhoods of flagstaff, arizona. why did you want to run? i ve always loved it. if i was stress or my brain wasn t working right, i d go off and the woods. my brain just worked. molly seidel gets second in her first marathon ever. reporter: at the time molly was working in boston as a baby-sitter and a barista. her sister izzy insisted she enter the race. have i more confidence in molly than she has in herself. reporter: an amazing comeback that seemed impossible after what happened at the 2016 olympic trials. i basically self-destructed before i even got to line.
black people in the room. is it working? she got a lot of heat for that. what did you make of that exchange? that set the bar for your show. i said it to her and that moment, but she said she likes hot sauce. maybe she wasn t pandering. the best part of that exchange was when she looked me in the eye and said it wasn t working right. very honest response. i did some research myself and i thought she did talk about it and has been talking about it for years but most people don t do the research to see this is something real. don t know how much it worked. she didn t win. technically. that is for the history books. let me ask about the guy who did when. how would you handle an
then by posting it on the internet, which is forever, that is going to be out there as long as they all live. ainsley: that s a tough one. he is tough which i like and doing something about the bullying. he didn t know it would viral. ainsley: i cringe when they post these videos they are shaming their kids. carley: you didn t shame your face. if you have ever been bull idea and then the parents, how many times do we wish the parents of the person bullying you were strong and tough and do something about it. steve: hold them account being. carley: there is not going to be a third time. she is not going to bullien the bus. brian: don t post it, too cold, too far. good to see a parent actually say my kid was wrong rather than well, wait a second, there has got to be more to the story and the school has got to be wrong and the bus wasn t working right and this bus driver has got to take control. the guy said okay my daughter is a problem. the way in which he did it almost as if he wan
so what brought you to hardball ? american university. hardball was just an excuse to hang out with these fine young people. you know, i ve had just wonderful experiences here. first time i spoke here, actually, was when i was running for the presidency and ted kennedy announced his endorsement here. obviously he was an incredible friend and had spoken here about immigration. i always have a wonderful interaction with the young people here. they re doing a great job. well, let s play hardball. let s do it. you have a great audience here of college age people and graduate students and faculty. there s some resistance out there among young people. have seen it in the polls to enrolling in the exchanges and get involved in taking responsibility for their health care. what s your argument why they should do that? well, first of all, i understand why people would have been resistant to going on a website that wasn t working
should do that? well, first of all, i understand why people would be resistant to going on a website that wasn t working right. take a look for yourself. most college students, because of the law, can t stay on their parents s plan. and your first job where you don t have full health insurance benefits may mean that you stay on your parents s plan a little bit longer. but at some point, say when you turn 26, if you re between jobs or you ve got a passion, you want to start a business and you re not going to have health insurance, this gives you the opportunity to get high quality health insurance. and for most people under 30