too much and become an evangelical host and that s not a good thing. then you become as messianic as the people you re criticizing. but i didn t hesitate to say what i thought and in many ways i m penalized for that. i mean, nobody likes a scold, a negative person. and that s i think the problem that we ll always confront, the liberal. i have to ask you what i was going to ask you at the start of this segment, which is the american dream. in many ways you personify the great american dream. i think so, too. what s happened to that dream now? is it the same? well should it be adapted for the modern era? what do you think? look at my own early history. i worked in a steel mill when i was 18 years old in the summer. i was a student at notre dame and i worked republic steel in
and that s i think the problem that we ll always confront, the liberal. i have to ask you what i was going to ask you at the start of this segment, which is the american dream. in many ways you personify the great american dream. i think so, too. what s happened to that dream now? is it the same? well should it be adapted for the modern era? what do you think? look at my own early history. i worked in a steel mill when i was 18 years old in the summer. i was a student at notre dame and i worked republic steel in canton, summer job. i don t know if do steel mills have summer jobs anymore? i m not sure. but, you know, that s an experience for a 17, 18-year-old. i saw the fouled air and the soot and the grime and the heat from the open harts and
that we ll always confront, the liberal. i have to ask you what i was going to ask you at the start of this segment, which is the american dream. in many ways you personify the great american dream. i think so, too. what s happened to that dream now? is it the same? well should it be adapted for the modern era? what do you think? look at my own early history. i worked in a steel mill when i was 18 years old in the summer. i was a student at notre dame and i worked republic steel in canton, summer job. i don t know if do steel mills have summer jobs anymore? i m not sure. but, you know, that s an experience for a 17, 18-year-old. i saw the fouled air and the soot and the grime and the heat from the open harts and shoveling the coal in there and
i mean, nobody likes a scold, a negative person. and that s, i think, the problem that we ll always confront, the liberal. i have to ask you what i was going to ask you at the start of this segment, which is the american dream. in many ways you personify the great american dream. i think so, too. what s happened to that dream now? is it the same? well should it be adapted for the modern era? what do you think? look at my own early history. i worked in a steel mill when i was 18 years old in the summer. i was a student at notre dame and i worked republic steel in canton, summer job. i don t know if do steel mills have summer jobs anymore? i m not sure. but, you know, that s an experience for a 17, 18-year-old. i saw the fouled air and the soot and the grime and the heat
i was hoping it was a nightmare and ifgs going to wake up and kept pinching myself hoping it wasn t real. roxana and john green. this is piers morgan tonight. good evening. i probably wouldn t be doing this job tonight if it wasn t for this man. he did an astounding 6,000 shows over a quarter of a century and pretty much invented the daytime talk show. he s talked to everybody and tonight i m delighted to say i have the great honor of being the latest person that phil donahue talks to. when i said i was interviewing you, extraordinary reaction. i put it on twitter this morning. you ve done one tweet. is that right? there s a phil donahue twitter site. that s my secretary s creation. i m afraid i don t twitter. i do text. i don t when i m driving. i ve already been stopped for being on the phone. i got this amazing reaction. the general themes were mr. america, icon, tv legend. the outpouring of affection for you and respect, real respect, was extraordinary, probably m