Jump to February 2011 archive page: 1 2
  • Watching Great Britain watch North Africa

    Every night at 5 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, we watch the late news live from London on our broadcast partner ITV. It's always interesting to see the choice of stories and how different or similar it is to our coverage of major stories on any given day. Tonight they are reporting from Tripoli, and reporting on the exodus to the borders to the east and west. Think of it: Some Libyans are heading to Tunisia, others to Egypt -- and in both cases, the "government" is a relatively new, still-changing entity. China is blocking certain searchwords on the web, protests in Oman heated up today, the U.S. is opening the door to military action of some sort, and Khaddafy spoke today...and was quickly denounced by the U.S. as delusional.

    So we'll continue watching it all.  We hope you can join us tonight.

  • When service comes alive

    Our intrepid Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel has been on a several day trek across the Libyan desert for days -- a journey that started where I last saw him in Cairo.  Armed with conversational Arabic and an unbeatable knowledge of the region and culture, he has driven from city to city, town to town, hamlet to wide spot in the road. Throughout, he's had no telephone communications with us, and no computers. On rare occasion he uses a portable uplink to talk with us, but his cellular phone has been dead. That's notable in a nation with 100% cell phone penetration.  While internet use is limited to 5-10% of the Libyan population, cell phones are ubiquitous. He's actually been writing his stories for our broadcast via text message, which our foreign producer Andy Franklin somehow cobbles together into Richard's amazing stories all this week. Then, suddenly, this afternoon our time...Richard's cell phone sprung to life. Full service. Right there, where he stood, in the dark of night in Benghazi, Libya, his cell phone started to ring. He answered. It was a robocall from a telemarketing firm, offering a lower credit card interest rate.  And, that's how Richard Engel knew life was returning a bit closer to normal today, in Libya.

    We hope you can join us tonight.  Please have a good weekend, and look for us back here on Monday.

  • Are you affected? Latest information on Toyota recall

    Replace the driver side floor carpet cover and its two retention clips. 

    Approximately 372,000 2004 through 2006 and early 2007 RX 330, RX 350, and RX 400h vehicles.

    Approximately 397,000 2004 through 2006 Highlander and Highlander HV vehicles

    Modify the shape of the plastic pad embedded in the driver’s side floor carpet.

    20,000 2006 and early 2007 Model Year GS 300 and GS 350 All-Wheel Drive vehicles

    Toyota has amended its recall from November 2009, adding three models to address the potential for unsecured or incompatible floor mat entrapment of the accelerator pedal.  The models added include:
     
    • Approximately 603,000 2003 through 2009 4Runner

    • Approximately 17,000 2008 through 2011 Lexus LX 570; and

    • Approximately 761,000 2006 through 2010 RAV4

    Click here for more more on the recall.

  • Watching the weather and covering a launch

    While our attention has been riveted on several major stories: Libya, New Zealand and Wisconsin, it's important to remember that millions of our viewers in the South are about to be in the path of an angry and churning weather system. It is actually shaped like a trailing tornado cloud...an intense tail of a moving front bringing severe weather to several places, and the Weather Channel is ready for what the storms may bring.

    And we watched as the Shuttle Discovery launched today, one last time for the spacecraft that took John Glenn back into space. During takeoff, the fuel burned off could fill two average size swimming pools every minute. It never ceases to be a magnificent sight.

    We hope you can join us tonight.

  • The man who calls himself "The Colonel"

    There's no humor in violence and repression. There's no telling how the current storyline in Libya will end. Today was quieter in Tripoli, in part because pro-Khaddafy forces have been trying to take back and consolidate power and territory. There's no disputing the fact that much of the country is no longer under his control.

    I last saw him at a conference of unaligned nations a few years back. The last journalists to interview him these past few years have described the usual traits: lack of eye contact, an altered state (many believe he's a heavy drug user), long, rambling sentences and disconnected thoughts strung together. Khaddafy has always been an event: A narcissist, cartoonish, clownish—and ruthless. Count him out at your peril. Affecting an image is vital to him—to the very foundation of his four-decade-long rule. So it’s in that spirit that I offer the following—again, via Gawker this morning: A collection of the many (and unintentionally comical) looks of the leader of Libya. At the time of this writing, we don't know how much longer we'll be able to say that.

    We hope you can join us for tonight's broadcast.

  • It's about time

    Our friends over at Gawker have a great piece today...predicated on a great piece in the Wall Street Journal. It’s the kind of writing I love to read on Gawker, about the kind of writing in our profession that should have stopped long ago. It’s about honorifics—the very formal and dated-seeming practice of a formal title before a second reference, like "Mr. Bin Laden," and other tricks of our trade, like "this reporter," when you mean: me. Anyway, it’s a dwindling practice and its time has come.

    I'm listening to Richard Engel in Libya via satellite phone right now—making a point he will make on our air tonight. This is no longer a people's uprising—it’s an armed rebellion, that looks suspiciously like a war in some places. It appears large portions of the country are gone—outside of Khaddafy's control. We continue to follow the story, and we'll have a live update tonight—in addition to the latest on the four Americans killed by pirates, the quake in New Zealand, and the protests in Wisconsin and Ohio. I hope you can join us tonight.

  • Dale would have loved this kid

    A kid who was 10 years old when Dale Earnhardt died has won the Daytona 500, on the weekend that marked the 10th anniversary of Dale's death. During the 3rd lap of yesterday's race—in one of the remarkable sights I've ever seen—seemingly every one of the 180,000 fans at the track fell silent and held up three fingers to signify the #3 black Goodwrench Chevrolet, and the man who drove it. It’s hard to explain to those who aren't fans of the sport, but that man had a powerful hold on millions of us. It is why I still display the number 3 on the back of my two cars, it’s why I still proudly wear my 3 hat, and my 3 jacket, every chance I get. There are enough 3s in my life to guarantee that I think about him every day (I can see at least three 3s from where I'm sitting in my office right now), and I miss my friend Dale terribly. Last night I reminded my son (who is the same age as the Daytona 500 winner) that he has a special history with the greatest driver in NASCAR history.

    The shelf behind my desk in my office.

    Of course, Dale was missing from the after-party in Daytona yesterday. I just know the grand master would have come up behind young Trevor and given him one of his trademark bear hugs— just as The King, Richard Petty and others came to pay their respects to the new kid in town.  And a word here about the Wood Brothers: The youngest driver in the history of Daytona Victory Lane rode to victory with the oldest established team in the business. These guys ran with Tiny Lund, David Pearson, Cale Yarborough, Buddy Baker, Parnelli Jones, Dan Gurney and both Waltrips. They have come roaring back. How exciting to see them drenched in champagne—the beverage the race winner isn't old enough to legally consume! It was a great day for NASCAR—a new star has come up just in time, on the very day when we fans paused to remember the last great icon of the sport—the Intimidator, Dale Earnhardt.

     


     

  • Remembering Dale Earnhardt

    This year's Daytona 500 marks the 10-year anniversary of the great Dale Earnhardt's death. Dale was a friend—one of my heroes, one of my son's heroes, and a hero to millions of Americans.  Like millions of NASCAR fans, I was watching the race that day, and like other Earnhardt fans, I considered his collision with the wall almost gentle—benign by NASCAR standards, and by the standards of what Dale had survived in the past. But the day ended in tragedy. Dale's life ended at the age of 49. He was the last NASCAR driver to die during competition, and the sport has never quite recovered from his loss. When he died, the New York and Washington-based mainstream media caught on to the size of his fan base and the outpouring of grieving across the country. Knowing I was a fan and a friend, the editor of TIME Magazine asked me to write an essay explaining Dale's appeal and attraction. Today, heading into race weekend and in Dale's memory, I am reprinting below what I wrote on my way home from Dale's funeral in North Carolina. I still miss him terribly.

    The below originally appeared in the March 5, 2001 edition of TIME:

    The Last Lap: No. 3 and Me

    Millions of Americans, mostly in the red states, if you recall your election charts, lost a hero the instant the black car veered violently into the wall. Every major newspaper south of the Mason-Dixon Line rushed to put out a special section, while millions living north of that line wondered what the big deal was.

    Dale Earnhardt left school in the ninth grade and entered his first race, legend has it, for grocery money. At the time of his death, his income had reached nearly $27 million a year. Mostly the money came from sales of merchandise: hats, jackets and the No. 3 logo sticker on the back of my family car that occasionally earns me a knowing honk and a wave from a like-minded fan, even during my blue-state commute to New York City.

    Dale was a friend of mine. He visited my office, and I visited his. He even flew with my family to tracks throughout the South to watch him drive a car. We talked about our daughters, both the same age. His little girl hunts rabbits; mine plays hockey. The flowers and personal notes that piled up last week outside his headquarters briefly threatened to make him America's Diana with a push-broom mustache. News chiefs in their New York City offices were more than a little mystified by the clips of mourners weeping as if they'd lost their best friend. They had.

    I've driven a Winston Cup stock car. They're unhinged monsters, all engine and frame and harnesses that were meant to prevent what happened to Dale. He once told me he hated how confining the modern car is; he liked the old days, his right arm slung over the backseat, steering with his left. And he hung onto as much of the past as he could, including the antique open-faced helmet that might have contributed to his death. But those who suggested the new style were subject to a stare that could pierce his mirrored sunglasses; real drivers--the rebels, the cowboys, the guys he looked up to, with names like Fireball Roberts and Tiny Lund--had a certain look.

    Two years ago, my son asked Dale for permission merely to touch the fabled black machine before the start of a race at Talladega in Alabama. Dale loved the idea for the good luck it might bring him and insisted only that I bring my son to Victory Lane if he won. Cut to Dale holding the kid aloft, my son holding the trophy aloft--the whole giddy, heady scene captured in the photos I'm now left with.

    Last week my son kept asking, "Is there any chance he'll just wake up and everything will be O.K.?" That's probably my fault. I may have told him once or twice that Dale Earnhardt would never die.

     

     


     

     

     

  • Lissie lights up the stage at 30 Rock

    Please enjoy our latest musical entry—in my other life and on my music website, BriTunes. Our featured artist is Lissie—she stopped by to see us on the day of her first New York show, and I hope you enjoy her work and our conversation. She is a highly talented and supremely motivated young artist who has great gifts and creates extraordinary music.

  • About last night's broadcast

    A number of viewers emailed us about our reporting and treatment of the Lara Logan story last night. Some viewers wondered why we showed her photo (she's a public figure who makes her living on television), while others wondered why we reported that she had been a victim of a sexual assault—and then reporting the family is requesting privacy. It’s important that everyone knows that the news about Lara, and the brutal attack she suffered in Cairo, was issued by CBS News in a statement. It would not have been made public without Lara's permission. Lara and I are on the board of the Committee to Protect Journalists, and it’s my strong suspicion that as a veteran foreign correspondent, she didn't want what happened to her to join the numerous unreported incidents around the world each year. I have communicated with her but I have no personal knowledge of her motivation in releasing this news. I was cheered today (we all were) by word that she's been released from the hospital. But back to the viewer complaints we received: Everyone should know that the details and nature of her attack that we reported was directly from her own network's statement...as was the request for privacy.

    We hope to see you tonight for NBC Nightly News.


  • Confessions of a hopeless patriot

    As I've said here before: I'm the guy who actually reads the President's Thanksgiving Day Proclamation every year.  I'm the guy who, during the saying of Grace at the table at Thanksgiving and Christmas, pauses to say a few words about our troops overseas--especially those I know and have been in contact with that day to thank them for their service.  Today at the White House, another event I always try to watch, every year, under every president: The Presidential Medal of Freedom was appointed today to 15 recipients, one more amazing than the next.  Producer Megan Marcus is compiling them all for our broadcast tonight, but below is the roster of recipients.  I don't think there was a dry eye in the East Room during portions of the ceremony.  It was lovely to watch, and I happen to know I wasn't the only one in our newsroom with tears in my eyes while watching. It's one of the great honors we bestow as a nation, and one of the great things presidents get to do. If you have the time or inclination, watch the raw feed of the ceremony below  If you're inclined to watch Nightly News, we'll show you the best of the ceremony.  Either way, I do hope you can join us tonight.

    Medal of Freedom Recipients

    Former President George H.W. Bush

    Basketball star Bill Russell

    Businessman Warren Buffett

    Civil rights activist Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga.

    Angela Merkel, German Chancellor

    John H. Adams, co-founder of Natural Resources Defense Council

    Maya Angelou, poet and author

    Jasper Johns, artist

    Gerda Weissmann Klein, Holocaust survivor and author

    Dr. Tom Little (posthumous), optometrist murdered on humanitarian mission in Afghanistan

    Sylvia Mendez, civil rights activist of Mexican and Puerto Rican descent

    Stan Musial, Hall of Fame baseball player

    Bill Russell, professional basketball player and first African American to coach in the NBA

    Jean Kennedy Smith, founder of VSA, a non-profit organization that promotes the artistic talents of people with disabilities

    John J. Sweeney, President Emeritus of the AFL-CIO

     


  • Rep. John Lewis to receive Presidential Medal of Freedom

    Civil rights icon Rep. John Lewis will be given the nation's highest civilian honor from President Barack Obama today. Lewis  was born the son of southern sharecroppers and went on to organize lunch counter sit-ins in Nashville, and later spoke at the 1963 March on Washington before the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. gave his "I Have a Dream" speech. In 1965, Lewis led the march from Selma to Montgomery to petition for voting rights. He has been a Georgia congressman since 1987. When the 70-year-old Lewis learned he would be among this year's honorees, he said he was nearly moved to tears.

    Shortly after the election of Barack Obama, Rep. Lewis spoke with Brian Williams about the significance of the event, both personally and historically. You can watch the interviews below:

  • About last night...

    As a big Arcade Fire fan, I couldn't be happier about what happened at the Grammy Awards last night. And it was impossible for the giant, baby-faced Win Butler to hide his pure happiness during the last song, his wife Regine Chassagne(when was the last time a thank-you speech was delivered in French?) hammering one of two drum kits behind him. There were some great performances last night: the cover of Dolly Parton’s “Jolene” was excellent—what a great arrangement for two guitars and vocals. Eminem brought the house down, so did Mick—and so did Dylan. I couldn't help but note that at midnight Eastern time, the #5 most popular Google search topic in the nation was "How old is Bob Dylan?"—but having seen him in concert in New Jersey a few weeks ago, I was up to speed on the controlled, weathered rasp that his voice has become. It was notable that he did "Maggie's Farm"— which happens to be the song he played at Newport when he "went electric," plugging into an amp and shocking the folk community to its core.

    I swear, a new iPod playlist is en route. Two new releases to get you started: The new albums from Amos Lee and Teddy Thompson. Fantastic.

    Last night was a nice diversion from the relentless news we've been covering. And now, tonight, in the wake of the Egypt turmoil, Iran is back in the news. We hope you can join us tonight—and happy Valentine's Day to all!

     


     

Jump to February 2011 archive page: 1 2