Tag Archives: nightline

“Stolen Faith: The Hunt For Ephran Taylor” (Pastor Eddie Long’s “Good Buddy” Robs Congregations Of Millions) [Video]

SMH @ Ephran’s wife rocking the “east coast” and not wanting to answer any questions… ABCNEWS Nightline -youtube

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“Stolen Faith: The Hunt For Ephran Taylor” (Pastor Eddie Long’s “Good Buddy” Robs Congregations Of Millions) [Video]

Chad Johnson Gets Evelyn Lozada Tattoo; Basketball Wives Star Tells Him to Get Help on Nightline

Safe to say Chad Johnson missed Evelyn Lozada ‘s interview on Nightline . The Basketball Wives star told ABC she hasn’t spoken to her hubs since the “humiliating” incident in which Chad head-butted her , and probably won’t again. “I would like for him to tell me he got help and that he’s working on himself,” said Evelyn, adding that her husband “made a bad choice that destroyed his life.” Ocho, meanwhile, just got a new tattoo of Evelyn’s FACE on his leg: Fans, not surprisingly, were a bit confused as to why Chad would get the tattoo, given the fact that Evelyn filed for divorce after six weeks of marriage. The former Miami Dolphin was not happy with the Twitter inquiries. When @TeeSplash101 wrote “I really want to know why @ochocinco tatted Evelyn’s face on his leg post divorce,” Chad responded “Divorce? Child please… that’s my WIFE.” Then, after @CCHx3REH asked “I thought she filed for divorce tho?”, Johnson replied “I dont give a flying pretzel in skittle rainbow hell what she filed for…” Chad Johnson, everybody. Here’s Ev’s interview on Nightline:

Janet Jackson to Join The X Factor?

I’m not a judge on The X Factor. You’re not currently a judge on The X Factor. No, I am not. But that’s all I really think I should say. And, with that exchange between Anderson Cooper and Janet Jackson yesterday, the singer made it sound very much like she’ll be a panelist on season two of Simon Cowell’s singing competition. Over the last couple weeks, a variety of names have been bantered about for the judging gig, from Beyonce to Mariah Carey to Kelly Rowland. But Janet appears to be the most likely possiiblity yet. Do you think Janet Jackson would make a good X Factor judge?

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Janet Jackson to Join The X Factor?

Sara E. Mayhew asks Deepak Chopra

Nightline Faceoff: Does God Have a Future? Sara E. Mayhew asks Deepak Chopra how are we able to distinguish what is true from what we simply want to be true, without science. Watch the entire program here: bit.ly Sam Harris and Michael Shermer vs. Deepak Chopra and Jean Houston Filmed 2010 at Caltech. http://www.youtube.com/v/t7bBJGOC0Wg?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata See the rest here: Sara E. Mayhew asks Deepak Chopra

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Sara E. Mayhew asks Deepak Chopra

Marc Anthony Opens Up About Divorce: Was It Infidelity?

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Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony’s divorce is underway. The couple announced their decision to separate in July, and while Jen spoke to Vanity Fair about the split, Marc opened up to Nightline in an interview that will air tonight. TMZ has a sneak peek video: What can you tell us about what went wrong? I’ll tell you that it wasn’t some sensationalistic happening. Was it infidelity? No, absolutely not. Nothing sensationlistic. There are reports of an affair with a flight attendant. It was the ‘flight attendant,’ it was the ‘pilot,’ I heard. There was this guy sitting next to me at a rehab in Houston, I’ve heard it all. Celebrity watching and speculation, it’s almost like a sport. What was the real reason for the break-up? It was a realiztion on both our parts. It wasn’t shocking. These things happen. These things happen. Do you want this divorce? It’s a decision that we made jointly. And that’s how I’ll answer that. Do you still love Jennifer? I’ll always love Jennifer. Yeah. I’ll always love Jennifer. She knows that. The importance is that she knows that and that my kids know that. J.Lo’s Post-Split Interview: “Love Is Still My Biggest Dream, But I Was Compromising Myself” J. Lo & Marc Anthony Split! All Of J.Lo’s Men: From Beginning To End [PHOTOS]

Marc Anthony Opens Up About Divorce: Was It Infidelity?

Defending the Indefensible: ABC’s Moran, Stephanopoulos Shill for Obama’s Gulf Address

Despite widespread criticism of President Barack Obama’s Oval Office address on the Gulf oil spill–including flak from MSNBC’s left-wing posse of Chris Matthews, Keith Olbermann, and Howard Fineman–ABC’s Terry Moran and George Stephanopoulos on the June 15 “Nightline” fawned over the president’s speech and ignored its obvious shortcomings. In recapping the address, Moran could not contain his adulation for Obama’s ability to assert his presidential authority and inspire the nation: “For the first time in the Oval Office, President Obama addressed the nation. A nation anxious and doubtful about his leadership on the environmental catastrophe that’s unfolded in the Gulf for 57 days. So, the main goal tonight, show the country he’s truly in charge.” “President Obama, who finished a two-day trip to the Gulf Coast this afternoon, clearly wanted to project power in his handling with the oil spill, and the most direct way to do that is to use the language of war of the commander-in-chief.” “As the cleanup efforts continue to grapple with the giant spill, residents all along the coast have grown more and more worried, more and more angry and the president spoke to that directly tonight, and he made a promise.” “At the end, like so many in the Oval Office before him, President Obama asked for prayers.” Moran praised Obama for taking charge of the Gulf, but failed to acknowledge critics who point out that the commander-in-chief dawdled for 57 days before addressing the nation. The “Nightline” anchor lauded Obama for engendering in Gulf Coast residents a sense of hope, but he ignored the cries of local fishermen who have criticized the president’s handling of the spill. Gushing like an uncapped oil well, Moran discarded journalistic integrity and reported only portions of the address he wanted his viewers to see. In contrast, NewsBusters reported that MSNBC’s liberal panel excoriated the president. Olbermann quipped, “Maybe I missed something. I thought it was a great speech if you’ve been on another planet for the last 57 days.” Matthews promised to “barf” if the president mentioned the Energy Secretary’s Nobel Prize again. Fineman lamented, “We want to explain how we`re going to clean up the Gulf. We want to talk about long-range goals. But this 15 or 16 or 17-minute speech really didn’t go into any of those things in detail.” After adorning Obama with plaudits, Moran brought on Stephanopoulos, a former Bill Clinton operative turned political correspondent, who made the unconscionable claim that Obama’s speech was brimming with detail. “First of all, this was the first time the president put all of the facts and figures and details to what he’s done in one place,” declared Stephanopoulos. “You know, 30,000 personnel, the ordering of 17,000 National Guards, men and women down to the area.” While the “Good Morning America” anchor quenched his thirst for a detailed plan of action, MSNBC’s liberal panel was starving for specifics. “Nothing. Nothing specific. Nothing specific at all,” bemoaned Olbermann. “Yeah, you said he aimed too low,” proclaimed Fineman. “I don’t think he was specific enough, Keith.” “[Energy legislation is] the hardest thing in the world, and he’s saying ‘I’m going to do it,’ and then no more information,” bellowed Matthews. Stephanopoulos also compared Obama’s address to FDR’s famous fireside chats, but that was a bridge too far even for Moran, who observed, “Franklin Roosevelt, those are big shoes to fill.” A transcript of the segment can be found below: ABC Nightline 6/15/10 12:39 a.m. TERRY MORAN: Just a few hours before President Obama made his first address to the nation from the Oval Office, a shocking new estimate was released of how much oil is gushing into the Gulf each day, up to 60,000 barrels, a number up roughly 200% over the original estimate. It was the latest reminder of how high the stakes are in this historic environment catastrophe. For the first time in the Oval Office… PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: Good evening. MORAN: …President Obama addressed the nation. A nation anxious and doubtful about his leadership on the environmental catastrophe that’s unfolded in the Gulf for 57 days. So, the main goal tonight, show the country he’s truly in charge. OBAMA: Make no mistake. We will fight this spill with everything we’ve got for as long as it takes. We will make BP pay for the damage their company has caused. And we will do whatever is necessary to help the Gulf Coast and its people recover from this tragedy. MORAN: President Obama, who finished a two-day trip to the Gulf Coast this afternoon, clearly wanted to project power in his handling with the oil spill, and the most direct way to do that is to use the language of war of the commander-in-chief. OBAMA: Tonight, I’d like to lay out for you what our battle plan is going forward. I’ve authorized the deployment of over 17,000 National Guard members along the coast. The one answer I will not settle for is the idea that this challenge is somehow too big and too difficult to meet. You know, the same thing was said about our ability to produce enough planes and tanks in World War II. MORAN: As the cleanup efforts continue to grapple with the giant spill, residents all along the coast have grown more and more worried, more and more angry and the President spoke to that directly tonight, and he made a promise. OBAMA: The sadness and the anger they feel is not just about the money they’ve lost. It’s about a wrenching anxiety that their way of life may be lost. I refuse to let that happen. Tomorrow, I will meet with the chairman of BP and inform him that he is to set aside whatever resources are required to compensate the workers and business owners who have been harmed as a result of his company’s recklessness. And this fund will not be controlled by BP. MORAN: And typical of this president’s grand–some say grandiose ambitions, a call for a new national energy policy to reduce American dependence on fossil fuels. OBAMA: Now is the moment for this generation to embark on a national mission to unleash America’s innovation and seize control of our own destiny. MORAN: At the end, like so many in the Oval Office before him, President Obama asked for prayers. OBAMA: We pray for the people of the Gulf. And we pray that a hand may guide us through the storm towards a brighter day. Thank you, God bless you, and may God bless the United States of America. MORAN: And we’re joined by our Chief Political Correspondent and “Good Morning America” anchor George Stephanopoulos for his take on the President’s address. George, an Oval Office address to a nation that has had real doubts about President Obama’s leadership on this crisis. Did he do the job tonight in showing he can take charge? GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS, ABC chief political correspondent: I think he did what he needed to do, saying it, but I say that knowing full well that it’s not going to make a difference until we stop seeing that oil on our television and computer screens every day. I think the White House knows that, as well. I think one of the reasons the President decided to give the speech tonight is that they now believe what he did say in the speech, that within a couple of weeks, 90% of the oil coming out of that leak, it will be siphoned off, will be captured and they believe that will set the stage for future political gains and for getting this whole mess under control. MORAN: So, he was able to deliver that bit of news. But he said a lot of these kinds of things before in the various places he’s been talking about this. What else was new? What did we learn tonight from him? STEPHANOPOULOS: Well we–I think we learned a few things tonight. First of all, this was the first time the president put all of the facts and figures and details to what he’s done in one place. You know, 30,000 personnel, the ordering of 17,000 National Guards, men and women down to the area. What we did see new tonight is he named the head of restoration project for the Gulf, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus, a former governor of Mississippi, former ambassador to Saudi Arabia to come up with a restoration plan, which is critically important to the people of the Gulf. As the President said tonight, so many of them fear that they’re going to lose their entire way of life. We heard a new name for the head of that Minerals and Management Service, which has just been plagued, really by corruption, and by lax regulation of the industry. The President putting in a former prosecutor, Michael Bromwich. He has new men in place to help lead this effort. We also saw him come down pretty hard, as you might expect, on BP. On British Petroleum, saying he’s informing them they have to come up with this escrow fund, some in Congress calling for up to $20 billion. Now there is some question of whether President has the legal authority to do that. He’s just asserting it. MORAN: Let’s take a step back. It’s a historic moment in the Obama presidency. First Oval Office address to the nation. Optics. That’s a big word in the political class right now. How did he look up there? How do you think people received this moment of Barack Obama addressing from the Oval Office? STEPHANOPOULOS: You know, usually the public, especially those than tune in who tend to want to support the president anyway have a good reaction to these kinds of speeches, and they get all of his information unfiltered. Now for me it was just, you know, I’m not used to watching the president speak sitting down. You know, he gives so many of his big speeches standing up and I think that was a new way to look at the president. I think he was certainly reaching for the language of Oval Office addresses, all of these have military language–siege, assault on our shores, battle plan. White House aides tell me that the President was trying to recreate the feel of Franklin Roosevelt’s fireside chats because he wanted people to understand how serious this moment is. That said, I think all presidents are a little bit nervous going into their first Oval Office address. I think the President showed a little bit of that at the beginning as well. MORAN: Franklin Roosevelt, those are big shoes to fill. George Stephanopoulos, thanks very much for being with us tonight. –Alex Fitzsimmons is a News Analysis intern at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.

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Defending the Indefensible: ABC’s Moran, Stephanopoulos Shill for Obama’s Gulf Address

Twilight Saga Star Robert Pattinson, I’m Going To Die At 30

Twilight Saga Star Robert Pattinson, I’m Going To Die At 30 as he said because he worried God may say he has asked for too much. In a new Nightline interview airing on Monday, The 24-year-old British actor told that so many good things have happened to him at such an early age. According to Robert Pattinson, “I guess I just thought if too many good things happen, then you’re going to die at 30,” “I didn’t want that to happen. Yeah, so probably, I’m going to die at 30. Actually, it’s God saying, ‘Hey, you shouldn’t have asked for too much.” Read More Twilight Saga Star Robert Pattinson, I’m Going To Die At 30 is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Centurion Red Band Trailer: He Didn’t Need That Throat Anyway

Jesse James’ Sister: Claims About Dad "Completely True"

Jesse James’ sister is standing by him. Julie James England tells E! News exclusively that the beleaguered star’s revelation on Nightline about his dad physically abusing him as…

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Jesse James’ Sister: Claims About Dad "Completely True"

Jesse James: Fame and Fortune Were Hiding a "Scared, Abused Kid"

Not that Jesse James is making excuses at this point, but he has finally offered up a bit of the psychology that may have contributed to the relentlessly thoughtless chain of behavior that…

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Jesse James: Fame and Fortune Were Hiding a "Scared, Abused Kid"