Jump to October 2010 archive page: 1 2
  • The new face of terrorism--or a toner cartridge?

    One comment on the story that has occupied our day, and forced us to do no fewer than five special reports on the television network: While we are expected to pass along stern Government warnings--delivered by officials with stern expressions, from the President on down, and including terms like "credible terrorist threat"--it's a bit tough to get past the fact that these appear to be copy machine toner cartriges with white powder on them. One of them has what appears to be the back of an AM pocket radio circuit board attached with three screws and some would-be fasteners.

    While it caused an international air cargo scare today, and while there is certainly a lot more we don't know, this story looks strange on the face of it. Our own Richard Engel, who knows Yemen and the region well, late today called this "an attempt to discombobulate." All day, Richard has been saying this reminds him of some fake IEDs he's seen planted by the side of the road in Iraq just to test the U.S. military response...in order to launch an attack the next time.

    The good news? We're getting a whole lot better at finding and following the red flags. We'll pass along everything we know about this incident on our broadcast tonight.

    We hope you can join us tonight--have a happy Halloween, and we'll see you back here on Monday.


  • On being able to watch...but not talk

    Thursdays and Fridays are great in this building--as I've noted before--because when SNL is "in season," you can see selected rehearsals and promos as they happen in Studio 8H. It's great to watch--I'm very excited to see this week's show as hosted by Jon Hamm--though part of the Employee Creed is never to talk about what you see. Starting on Thursday nights, when we exit this building into the night, we often see the first few die-hards, with sleeping bags, on the sidewalk along 49th Street--they are the Super Fans, and they wait days for a scarce few stand-by tickets on the day of the show. Rain or snow, good shows…and clunkers…they are the stalwarts. By the looks of rehearsals, they won't be disappointed come 11:30 Eastern time Saturday night.

    We have a number of the members of our political team here in New York tonight--so it's been a day of catching up and talking politics. We hope you can join us tonight.


  • What you don't want to hear on the redeye

    Let's just all agree: It's a fallacy that you're ever going to get a "night's sleep" on a redeye flight from LA to NY—or, for that matter, from NY to most locations in Europe. First, you have an hour's worth of announcements about frequent flier plans and seat belt-buckling techniques. Then, no fewer than 20 warnings about electronic devices (though last night our flight attendant was clearly visible operating her iPod and phone throughout taxi, takeoff and climb, while making announcements to the contrary!) and then the clanking and banging in preparation for whatever meager service is offered on board. Last night, flying from LA to NY, an unwanted consequence of the current robust jet stream over the nation: Just after I'd taken a "sleep aid," the pilot (apparently Chuck Yeager) comes on to say "Good news folks...we'll only be four hours, 17 minutes en route to New York tonight." There are rockets that fly slower than we flew last night.

    This was NOT welcome news. Hearing that guarantees I'll be walking through the terminal, at 5am, drug-addled and unable to pick out my own bag among the sea of 200 black rolling bags. Remember what the sign says next to the obnoxious buzzer on the carousel: "MANY BAGS LOOK ALIKE." Try it under the influence of a "sleep aid." On this trip, however, there was a linguistic upside: I did add a new expression or two to my travel lexicon. One announcement at LAX told waiting passengers their luggage would be "down-belted" shortly. Down-belted! Sounds like something L.L. Bean would sell. Another announcement at JFK informed us our bags would be "displayed" on Carousel 3!

    Wow! Like the Price Is Right! Imagine! My bag...my old, battle-worn bag with no luggage tag and a broken zipper: They care enough about it to display it! How can I ever repay that nice woman?

    We hope you can join us for the broadcast tonight.


     

  • Sony is making a PlayStation phone

    What we're following:

    - Decision 2010: 6 days to go...

    - GOP volunteer who stepped on protestors head may face charges

    - Indonesia scrambles to deal with deadly tsunami and a volcano eruption

    And did you see...

    - The PlayStation Phone

    - Like attention spans, TV commercials get shorter

    - General Motors makes progress in reliability

    Tell us what you're talking about on Facebook and Twitter @nbcnightlynews

  • With thanks to a member of the NBC family

    Leo Cullum/Condé Nast Publications, via Cartoon Bank

    I was honored to participate today in Maria Shriver's Women's Conference. It is an unbelievable experience to look out in the audience and see Justices Sandra Day O'Connor and Ruth Bader Ginsberg. First lady Michelle Obama was backstage waiting to speak, as was her predecessor, Laura Bush. It was such a great atmosphere--and while Maria says this is her last conference, I don't see it stopping. We'll have to talk about that!

    Also tonight, because we cannot live without a little joy each day, we pause to remember Leo Cullum. Please enjoy the slideshow of his spectacular work on the website of the New York Times. He never failed to make me laugh. We honor his work, we honor his service to his country (200 combat missions as a Marine pilot during the Vietnam war) and we honor the joy he brought into the lives of the people he never got to meet. Our condolences to his family.

    We'll see you again tonight from Los Angeles--and thanks to the miracle of the jet age and the misery of the redeye, we'll be back in New York tomorrow night!

  • Surfacing in Los Angeles

    After missing two weekday posts--last Thursday and Friday--and traveling to Chicago and now to Los Angeles, I'm back. I'm in LA to take part in Maria Shriver's Women's Conference in Long Beach over the next few days. Our broadcast will originate from our Los Angeles Bureau tonight.

    Two things to bring to your attention: A harrowing story of "the use of electronics" on board an aircraft, which will be of interest to anyone who flies a lot--and some new music obsessions. They are:

    “Green Lights” by Aloe Blacc
    “Old Fashioned” by Cee Lo Green
    “Johnny, Johnny, Johnny” by Kitten
    “Jimmie Rodger's Dream” by Elton John & Leon Russell
    “The Mash” by Thundamentals
    “The Poet” by Ryan Bingham

    That should hold you over for a few days. Warning: Cee Lo's music gets stuck in your head. In a great way. He's one of the great soul singers of our time, who too few people know by name.

    We'll see you tonight from LA. Tons of election coverage... we're getting close now--under 200 hours to go! We hope you can join us.


  • Making a Difference gets its very own theme song!

    Remember that '70s hit song "Smokin' in the Boys Room"? Well, the boys of Brownsville Station--the band behind that classic rock hit--are back...and they've written a song inspired by our very own Making a Difference series.

    It's called, naturally, "Make a Difference," and you can listen to it here:
    The inspiration for the song was NBC Correspondent Ron Mott's recent feature on a Christian church in Memphis, Tennessee that invited a Muslim congregation next door to worship in their church while a new mosque was being built--just as the controversy surrounding the planned Islamic center near Ground Zero in New York was reaching a fever pitch.

    One of the members of the church congregation was Henry Weck, the original drummer for Brownsville Station. After seeing the below report, he and bandmate Michael Lutz were inspired to produce the song.


  • Sony kills the Walkman

    What we're following:

    - Assessing the damage after tornadoes rip through Texas

    - Fears cholera could hit Haiti camps

    - Afghan leader says cash payments from Iran "normal"

    And did you see...

    - Researchers find oil on the seafloor in the Gulf

    - Sony announces the death of the Walkman

    - Pan American Airways announce their return to the skies

    Tell us what you're talking about on Facebook and Twitter @nbcnightlynews

  • Drugs, Weapons and Mexico

    Richard Engel writes: I just returned to New York from Mexico. The drug war in Mexico is truly an amazing story with major implications for the United States. When seen from the ground it is clear that this is a battle for control of Mexico, a war for the rule of law, as the Mexican government struggles to take power back from seven main drug cartels. The United States and Mexico are intertwined in this struggle. The cross-border smuggling goes both ways, with drugs flowing north to American consumers, and weapons and money traveling south to the cartels. Officials from the Drug Enforcement Administration, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, and the Department of Homeland Security have repeatedly confirmed this two-way street. Perhaps Billy Hoover, a senior ATF official said it best. In an article in US News & World Report last year Hoover is quoted as saying, “No trucker wants to waste a trip by traveling with an empty load, and, likewise, the people who bring narcotics north simply put weapons into their cars for the trip south.”

    Several viewers, however, wrote in to point out that I erred when describing the exact kind of weapons moving to Mexico. I said assault rifles and .50 caliber "machine guns.” According to a veteran ATF official, it would have been more accurate to say “.50 caliber rifles -- bolt action or semi-automatic.” Thank you for the sharp ears. I apologize for any confusion. More stories on Mexico are coming up. Hope you keep watching.

  • Meeting across the river

    Editor's Note: Due to spending much of the day offsite for the below interview, Brian won't be posting today -- but you can watch more of his interview with N.J. Governor Chris Christie tonight on Nightly News:


  • Watching the news...from London

    As I write this, we are watching the 10pm news in London, on our affiliate ITN. We just listened to a man, a recipient of British welfare benefits, saying he'll no longer be able to live in the U.K. because of what happened there today.

    While the circumstances are wildly different, as are our two countries, try to envision today's news in the U.K. happening here. Try to imagine the reaction to the across-the-board cuts, which will change life in the U.K. No new schools for years. No new aircraft carriers for years. It’s a re-structuring of a modern society, the likes of which we've not seen in the modern era. It may be a useful exercise for all "Western" nations.

    We hope you can join us tonight.


  • Is your car a ticket target for police?

    What we're following:

    - Justice Thomas' wife asks Anita Hill for an apology

    - Britain to make deepest spending cuts since World War 2

    - NBC/WSJ poll shows Democrats facing a potential election day "Hurricane"

    And did you see...

    - Put yourself in Bernie Madoff's shoes... literally

    - Do some cars really get targeted for more tickets?

    - Canadian Football players brawl with fans in the stands

    Check out Nightly's most popular video on our website

  • Breast Cancer: 'Not a cookie-cutter business'

    Years ago I asked Dr. Elizabeth Barrett-Connor, one of the leading experts on hormone replacement and a professor of epidemiology at the University of California, San Diego, for her help in reporting on the issues surrounding hormone replacement therapy.

    "I think it's been a very trying time for the practitioner," she said. "I think we're at a very elementary stage of how to prescribe hormones."

    I pointed out that some patients wonder how, 60 years into the game, the science of the hormone estrogen can still be at an elementary stage.

    "Yes. It is interesting. But I ... do think we've made a lot of progress."

    With a good deal of encouragement from drug companies, but little substantive evidence, millions of women came to see hormone replacement as a "cure" for the "disease" of aging. We now know that was fanciful.

    There is no question that hormone replacement effectively treats hot flashes, mood swings and other symptoms of menopause. It also lessens the bone thinning of osteoporosis. But no one knows if it cuts the number of hip fractures, the biggest danger of osteoporosis. While doctors once thought hormone replacement reduced the risk of heart disease, the Women's Health Initiative (WHI), a placebo-controlled trial of 16,000 women--a sort of gold standard of medicine--found that it did not. Most importantly, in 2002 the WHI was halted because of the increased incidence of breast cancer in women taking the most common hormone replacement, estrogen and progestin, sold as PremPro. New results out today show that the cancer associated with that increased risk are more dangerous than many doctors had assumed.

    The results show the importance of controlled clinical trials and the need to not rely on more casual observational studies before millions of people take a medication. There are countless questions about hormone replacement still to be answered

    This is the new era of medicine where both patients and doctors know there is no right answer and today's answer might be different tomorrow. "I think both the doctor and the woman need to realize that every woman is different, Barrett-Connor said. "This isn't a cookie-cutter business."

  • Unraveling a confusing story

    One topic has consumed our newsroom for much of the afternoon: A big story, just out, about breast cancer. Our correspondent and producers have known about the embargoed story (which is not uncommon when dealing with publications and journals) for several days, and have been reporting on it—and as they got further into it, they discovered more caveats and tangents and opinions than we ever imagined we'd find. We are now deciding how to distill what we've found out in the best possible way for tonight's broadcast.

    Additionally, Chuck Todd will be here to debut our new poll numbers and what they might mean for the election 14 days away.

    We hope you can join us tonight.

  • Notes on a Monday: 'Mad Men', NFL hits, and a farewell to Freddy

    Bravo to "Mad Men" for a terrific final episode. We watched some characters change, some remain the same. Some became hugely prominent, setting up next season. Overall, it was a superbly well-acted episode--downright loose at times, as if someone had ordered shots of tequila for the whole cast. It's been a great year for "Mad Men." How will we ever get by until the next? Can you believe she talked about her teeth? The large white elephants in the room?

    If you've ever been to a Yankee game--or if you listen closely to them on radio or TV, you know the sound. It starts about midway through the game, and sounds like--well it sounds like someone is hitting a metal surface with a spoon. That's exactly what it is--what it WAS until a few days ago, when we learned that Freddy died. Freddy "Sez" Schuman was a fixture at the stadium for two decades or more--always carrying a hand-painted sign cheering on the team, and walking around with a well-worn spoon and a badly beaten frying pan. It was a rite of passage for those seated in the area he circulated in to grab the spoon for a few good whacks at the pan, clanking it loudly...sometimes to a smattering of applause for the effort. I'm happy to have had the honor once or twice. Freddy was 85, and had been in failing health when he died this weekend. I knew Freddy had value to Yankee fans, and I sensed it even more when my son rushed to find me at home last night to tell me he'd just heard the news on TV. I saw Freddy (heard him first, as usual) at the last home game I attended a few weeks back, not knowing it would be the last time. We will miss him at the stadium.

    Finally, the violent weekend in football: The Sunday Night Football post-game highlights were hard to watch last night, showing collision after collision in the NFL and college ball. Something must be done. Those of us who played any kind of organized football were always taught how to AVOID injury and how to tackle, and it never involved helmet-to-helmet collisions. While having the most "paint" on your helmet was always a badge of honor, especially for defensive players and linemen (meaning, the helmet color of your opposing team) it has reached insane levels, and action is now required at every level of the sport. We can all name the "hit men" of the sport, but that's not why we play or love the sport. And we've learned again this past weekend it can have tragic consequences.

    We hope you can join us tonight.

  • Chilean endurance has precedence

    By Antoine Sanfuentes, Deputy Bureau Chief for NBC News Washington

    As I watched the efforts of my Chilean compatriots lift the 33 miners rise from their hellish ordeal last week, I was reminded of another amazing rescue in Chilean history, one that succeeded without the marvels of modern technology.

    My father of Chilean descent proudly raised us to appreciate our roots. The Sanfuentes' left Spain at the beginning of the 19th century, seeking new opportunities in Latin America. As a child, I had always heard about my relative Juan Luis Sanfuentes, who served as Chile's President from 1915-1920. But it wasn't until much later that I learned he played a part in the country's other great rescue.

    In 1914, the great explorer Ernest Shackleton and a crew of 28 men set out to explore the Antarctic plains. As the tall ship Endurance arrived on the edge of the ice, its hull was soon consumed by this frozen impenetrable place. Shackleton was faced with an impossible task as he and the members of his crew, miles from nowhere and no way of communicating to the outside world, faced certain death. After watching the ship sink and setting camp on a nearby island, Shackleton seemingly had only one choice: To sail a small boat across a vast stretch of sea and ice to seek a rescue for the rest of his crew.

    Fourteen months passed before Shackleton and a small crew sailed the 23-foot whaler 800 miles to the nearest inhabited island of South Georgia. Even by today's nautical challenges, this primitive boat had all the odds stacked against it. The 22 sailors left behind waited at the camp on the ice, keeping themselves alive by eating mostly seal and penguin. It took another five months for Shackleton to successfully return after President Sanfuentes dispatched the navy ship Yelcho to the rescue. Pilot Luis Alberto Pardo Villalon heroically braved the Antarctic peninsula after being beaten back three different times by the ice. On his fourth attempt, he was successful.

    President Sanfuentes' urgent telegram read "please greet Sir Ernest Shackleton and place the Government patrol boat Yelcho at his disposition, in order that this celebrated explorer, who I hope will be extremely successful, may be able to rescue his gallant comrades."

    Growing up, we spent many vacations exploring Chile's vast territories: On one father-son trip we drove the Carretera Austral, the road built to link the Patagonian region to the modern cities to the north. Our trip took us through the fjords, where we overcame many obstacles, including washed-out roads and steep ledges, as we drove hundreds of miles of rocky terrain. At the time, there were no hotels or even restaurants, but this was not an issue, as we relied on the kindness of complete strangers--and there were plenty to help us along the way. That trip taught me that Chileans understand survival with a great sense of national pride.

    During college I spent a summer to the north of Copiapo, in Arica, situated at the Peruvian border. It was there that I learned of the earliest Chileans, the "Chinchorros." In some ways their resistance to the desert, along with their complex family structures and beliefs in the afterlife, allowed them to thrive for thousands of years. It is perhaps this strong sense of family and core beliefs which has always unified this country, something that has always been the fabric of Chile. With a great desert to the north, through Patagonia and to Tierra del Fuego to the south, domesticating this land is part of their DNA.

  • Soundtrack of survival: Any suggestions?

    The dramatic rescue of the Chilean miners last week had us doing a little musical free-association around here -- below is the start of our suggested soundtrack.

    "Way Down in the Hole" [Preferred version: Tom Waits Live]

    "In this Hole" Cat Power

    "Rock Steady" Aretha Franklin

    Chutes too Narrow [album] - The Shins

    "Heart of Gold" Neil Young

    Bonus track

    "Live Through This" Hole

    Certainly we've overlooked some obvious (and maybe not-so-obvious) additions -- send us yours!

  • Donations to charities suffer worst drop in 20 years

    What we're following:

    - New CPR guidelines make chest compressions most important

    - Facebook apps transmitting users personal information

    - Decision 2010: Debate gets ugly as rival candidates refuse to shake hands

    And did you see...

    - Holiday airfares are more expensive this year

    - Charities see big dip in donations

    - Airline introduces "cuddle class" seating

    Check out Nightly's most popular video on our website


  • The two most powerful letters in the news business

    She is known, and always has been, as "M.L." I've introduced her around the world--to people who speak English, and people who speak little or no English, simply as "M.L." While it stands for Mary Laurence, around this network you don't need to say the rest. I mention my friend M.L. Flynn because today was her last day in her OLD job, and Monday she starts her NEW job. What has she been doing all these years? What has she done that you've seen? All of our overseas coverage. For decades. All of our Olympic coverage. For decades. And series of reports on topics like water, the environment and countless others. She's been to more places than most people will ever see, she surfed the heyday of our industry and travelled the world with Tom Brokaw before me. She's been shot at by the professionals, pulled a lifetime of all-nighters and flown on her share of rickety planes. She taught me the ropes overseas--and without her on the trip to South Africa for the Mandela election, I would have been lost and would not have gotten on the air. She still, after a lifetime in this often-challenging line of work, manages to find the endless good cheer to mentor young people, check up on all of our family members and call everyone "kiddo." She's now going to a bigger job (with a better view from her office, I might add), where she will have a vast hand in the direction of our coverage--specifically, the "big" issues, where we make our bones as a news organization. So when you see us do a deep-dive into a topic--when you see us go after something as only this news division can, just think of two letters: M.L.

    Thanks, M.L.

    Have a good weekend, everybody.

    We hope you can join us tonight.

  • Noise can affect the flavor of your food

    What we're following:

    - The Fed is ready to step in and help the economy

    - No increase in social security benefits next year

    - Rescued Chile miners begin to leave the hospital

    And did you see...

    - Noise can affect the flavor of your food

    - Cancer bracelets raise debate over school codes

    - Your gadgets are a breeding ground for viruses

    Check out Nightly's most popular video on our website


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