I always wondered what it would be like to have a studio audience. We have one today. They have piled . A bunch of people in our studios and including a group of people who are contest winners. Thanks for coming, you guys. San diego, beautiful family there. Thank you, everybody. So yesterday at 4 00, the nation was riveted and glued to the soccer match. Yep. It ended up, as you guys know, the u. S. Lost 21 in extra time, but at the end of the game, there was a guy who emerged as such a hero, you guys know him as the hero named tim howard. This guy made 16 saves, which is the most in world cup history. Someone said since the 1960s and some said in world cup history. Regardless, the guy saved 16 goals. Hes incredible. And matt asked him earlier in the show, he said, was this the best game youve ever played and his answer was no, it wasnt the best game ive ever played because we lost. Yeah. And he just shows hes a team player. Yeah. And hes a great guy. Everyone was watching into another
Tim howards legs to the rescue. U. S. Goalkeeper tim howard joins us live from brazil after his heroic performance in that grueling match against belgium. Well talk about his future and the future of team usa today, wednesday, july 2nd, 2014. From nbc news, this is today. With matt lauer and Savannah Guthrie live from studio 1a in rockefeller plaza. Good morning. Welcome to today on a wednesday morning. 7 00 out on the west coast. Savannahs off today. Als off today. Natalie is down in brazil. Peter, tamron and dylan are here. Wow, what a game. It was amazing. What an effort our team put up. America has a new secretary of defense. 16 saves, record for a world cup game at least since 1966. They played out over the course of 120 minutes or so. Here they are in about 25 seconds. Just take a look. Tim howard and it just went on and on and on. It was an incredible performance. Hes being singled out. It was an historic performance. Were going to be talking to tim howard about that in just a l
Would be like to have a studio audience. We have one today. They have piled . A bunch of people in our studios and including a group of people who are contest winners. Thanks for coming, you guys. San diego, beautiful family there. Thank you, everybody. So yesterday at 4 00, the nation was riveted and glued to the soccer match. Yep. It ended up, as you guys know, the u. S. Lost 21 in extra time, but at the end of the game, there was a guy who emerged as such a hero, you guys know him as the hero named tim howard. This guy made 16 saves, which is the most in world cup history. Someone said since the 1960s and some said in world cup history. Regardless, the guy saved 16 goals. Hes incredible. And matt asked him earlier in the show, he said, was this the best game youve ever played and his answer was no, it wasnt the best game ive ever played because we lost. Yeah. And he just shows hes a team player. Yeah. And hes a great guy. Everyone was watching into another moment that really touched
And good morning. Im richard lui. We begin with a major prostitution and cocaine crackdown ahead of the super bowl. Police say the ring was selling party packs of drugs and sex in new york city. Theyre accused of advertising on Public Access cable tv and taking credit cards and using texts to market their services. Police say they have been watching the ring for 11 months but decided to act now just in case anything was brewing for the super bowl. We have identified in the last year more than 3 million in credit card charges related to this enterprise. And keep in mind that most johns pay cash. So thats a staggering number. 18 people are charged and more than half have already been arrested. Now that the Super Bowl Weekend is here, the crowds and the excitement is building as the performers and players prepare for kickoff. Nbcs sarah dahloff is in times square right now. A lot of fun happening no doubt, but i have to wonder about the traffic too as they block off those streets. Reporte
Data from a small number of card readers days after it told customers it discovered the security breech and removed the virus. I want to say how deeply sorry we are for the impact this incident has had on our guests. Apologies may not be enough. The breech at target was discovered not by the company, but by Justice Department investigators. January 17 article in the New York Times states your systems were open and quote, particularly vulnerable to attack. One small step would transition american retailer frs credit cards with magnetic readers to the kind of credit cards with computer chip ids that europe has been using for decades. We think the answer comes down to money. Its expensive to update the technology at the point of sale. Its expensive to reissue cards. There is also a push for new laws to require businesses to inform customers of problems more quickly. Even give consumers the right to sue companies that lose their data. This information is not yours. Its entrusted to you. It