alisyn: man, you guys are tough up in alaska, we knew how hard commercial fishing is and going through days without sleep, i know that s par for the course for you guys, that s tough stuff. as you were speaking, both of you, we were looking at pictures from when you, chuck, and sarah were little. what was childhood like, chuck? it was pretty, pretty unique. a lot different than any of the friends that i ended up making down in the states. you know, we used to sit around after school and once in a while we didn t get to watch tv much, but i remember the old brady bunch reruns would be on and sarah, heather, molly and i, would sit there with our hands on our chins and just in awe of these people, thinking, wow, do people really live like that. we were out, literally hunting and fishing in the woods and trying to put food on the table as young as i can remember and sarah was right there with the rest of us, it was just a, you know, chop wood to stay warm, hunt food
hello everyone. i mfredric i mfredrickahere in the cnn newsroom. we begin in cairo, egypt. live pictures from tahrir square at nightfall. watching the crowd go by the hour all day long. demonstrators started gathering this morning right after an egyptian judge sentenced former president hosni mubarak to life in prison for his role in killing hundreds of anti-government protesters last year. let s bring in cnn s ben wedeman who joins us now from the balcony overlooking tahrir square. ben it is getting late there. however, it appears that the darkness isn t in any way disbursing that crowd. what is the objective here? [ no audio ] reporter: outside of cairo. hosni mubarak and his interior minister did get life sentences but cleared the corruption charges and the interior of ministry got off scot-free, that s krucrux of this and why people are so angry. remember, more than 800 egyptians were killed by government sources during this proet te protest and everybody responsibl