Tag Archives: terry moran

Rodney King Charged Following DUI Arrest

Rodney King has been charged with misdemeanor DUI, according to reports. Stemming from his arrest July 12 in Riverside County, Calif., King was charged after officers claim they witnessed Rodney committing “multiple infractions.” Police eventually suspected he was under the influence and arrested him. King told CNN he was under the influence of a “medical marijuana prescription.” Rodney King was added to our celebrity mugshots gallery shortly thereafter. If convicted, the famous police brutality victim whose beating at the hands of four cops sparked the early ’90s L.A. riots could be facing some serious jail time. He has a prior DUI and other incidents with the law on his record.

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Rodney King Charged Following DUI Arrest

Our Idiot Interviews: Paul Rudd, Elizabeth Banks

A pair of THG favorites are about to hit the big screen together, as Paul Rudd and Elizabeth Banks anchor the cast of Our Idiot Brother , which comes out on Friday. The title pretty much makes it clear, but the film centers around Rudd’s Ned, the runt of a beautiful litter that includes sisters played by Banks, Emily Mortimer and Zooey Deschanel. The former told Movie Fanatic that she can relate to the concept: “I am the oldest, bossiest daughter of a family of four… I have a 26-year-old brother who sells pizza and maybe something else while delivering those pizzas.” Our Idiot Brother Trailer Rudd, meanwhile, said he could relate to one aspect of the film in particular: playing charades. “Despite all of the battling and fighting, we come together,” the actor said. “It was such an emotionally charged moment and scene. It was kind of heartbreaking, because at different points we all sometimes – as hard as you can be – you just want to play charades with your family, but you’re unable to.” For more from Rudd, read his full interview now.

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Our Idiot Interviews: Paul Rudd, Elizabeth Banks

Glen Campbell Gives First Post-Diagnosis Interview

Glen Campbell, the country music legend who was diagnosed with Alzeheimer’s in June, sat down with his wife, Kim, and Terry Moran of ABC World News last night. During a few pauses in conversation, Campbell relied on Kim to fill in some blanks (“I’m going to be right in the middle of a sentence, man, and it just goes” he said.), but he seemed to focus when the topic of his 30-year marriage came up. “Definitely take care of what’s today and tomorrow’s going to have what it has,” said Campbell. “There’s a verse in the Bible that says, ‘If the man findeth a good wife he’s found a good thing,’ and I found a good thing, or she found me.” What has it been like for Kim to take care of Campbell? Not always easy, but worth it, of course. She said: “We’d been noticing short-term memory loss for quite some time. You know, he repeats himself. … He’ll tell a joke, laugh at it and a few minutes later tell the same joke, laugh, and then we laugh at him because he’s just enjoying it so much. You just make the best of each day and try not to worry about tomorrow.”

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Glen Campbell Gives First Post-Diagnosis Interview

CBS ‘Early Show’ Ignores Accusations of Bias Against Judge Behind Prop 8 Ruling

While Thursday reports on both ABC’s Good Morning America and NBC’s Today featured Proposition 8 supporters questioning the impartiality of California Federal Judge Vaughn Walker’s decision to strike down the state’s referendum defending traditional marriage, CBS’s Early Show failed to provide any such arguments. On Good Morning America, correspondent Terry Moran explained: “Opponents of same-sex marriage vowed to fight on and blasted the judge for, they said, letting personal interests trump his legal duty.” A clip was played of one Proposition 8 supporter: “The judge has imposed his own agenda upon the voters and the children and the parents of California.” On Today, legal correspondent Pete Williams noted: “But opponents of gay marriage, who supported Proposition 8, denounced the ruling and began preparing to fight back.” Supporter Randy Thomasson explained: “The judge has shut the Constitution, imposed his own agenda. He’s made a lot of people happy in the gay community in San Francisco, but he is the most dangerous type of judge in America.”   The Early Show report by correspondent Priya David-Clemens only featured a couple brief sound bites of gay marriage opponents in “outright disbelief” of the ruling, but no specific criticisms of the judge being biased. In contrast, three sound bites in favor of the ruling were featured. Of the three network morning shows, only Good Morning America noted that Judge Walker was himself openly gay. Introducing the segment, co-host George Stephanopoulos mentioned: “The judge, Vaughn R. Walker, a Republican first nominated for the bench by Ronald Reagan, he is also openly gay.” Both the Early Show and Today skipped over that detail.      Following David-Clemens’s Early Show report, co-host Harry Smith discussed Judge Walker’s decision with legal correspondent Jan Crawford, who proclaimed: …this is a devastating opinion for opponents of same-sex marriage. 136 pages, he has 80 findings of fact that basically amount not only to a defense of same-sex marriage but to a defense of gay people. He says same-sex couples are identical to straight couples and that religious beliefs that homosexually is a sin harms gays and lesbians. On point after point after point he knocks down all of the arguments that were put forth by opponents of same-sex marriage and says gays and lesbians have a fundamental right to marriage under the constitution, just like straight people do. Smith then wondered if Walker’s ruling amounted to settled law: “…there are plenty of people still opposed who want to mount lawsuits against it. What kind of a chance do they have with – is this enough to set a precedent?” Crawford responded: “If this ruling stands and is affirmed by higher courts, it could affect the laws in 45 states, forcing them to redefine how they look at marriage…this is really the first federal court test and it could definitely, as it goes forward, set a precedent that will affect every person across the country.” Raising the possibility of the case going to the U.S. Supreme Court, Smith asked: “[if] the Supreme Court stays on the same side, based on the legal issues that you just outlined, will same-sex marriage become the law of the land?” Only then did Crawford acknowledge the temporary nature of the ruling: “Now, if the court agrees with that, absolutely. But that is a huge gamble that – the people who brought this case are making a huge gamble the Supreme Court is ready to do that. You know, it’s pretty closely divided, Harry, as you well know, up there.”

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CBS ‘Early Show’ Ignores Accusations of Bias Against Judge Behind Prop 8 Ruling

ABC’s Terry Moran Frets that ‘Republican Reformist’ Schwarzenegger Is Being ‘Squeezed Out’ of GOP

Nightline’s Terry Moran on Wednesday profiled Arnold Schwarzenegger as a “Republican reformist” and never once referred to him as a liberal. Instead, the co-anchor tagged the California Governor as a “lonely figure” in the GOP. Moran sympathized, “When you look at the way the Republican Party is going, here in California and around the country, rise of the tea party, candidates like Rand Paul, do you think there’s still room in the Republican Party for someone like you?” He then prompted, ” Or are you being squeezed out? ” Of course, most Republicans in California and nationwide would say that Schwarzenegger’s embrace of liberalism indicates someone who left the party, rather than being “forced out.” Although Moran noted the Governor’s massive unpopularity (his approval rating hovers around 23 percent), he never really explained why. The host also noted the state’s $19 billion deficit, but not the excessive spending. Instead, Moran spun, ” He sounds pragmatic, though many of his reform efforts have failed .” Throughout his two terms, journalists have often favored Schwarzenegger as an example of the ideal Republican. On November 20, 2006, CNN’s Bill Schneider enthused, “In California, Schwarzenegger carried independent voters handily. He reclaimed the center. Schwarzenegger did two things President Bush has never done. He flatly acknowledged his mistakes, and he changed course.” A transcript of the June 9 segment, which aired at 11:45pm EDT, follows: TERRY MORAN: Arnold Schwarzenegger. He rose from big screen action hero to Republican reformist in charge of governing California. But this real-life script hasn’t exactly enjoyed a Hollywood happy ending. Now he’s staring down his final months in office, and he’s going to end his term on something of a down note. So, what has he learned about politics and what’s next? I spent the day with Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. On primary night in California last night, the big political stars of the state took center stage. But the guy who once dominated California politics, who seemed poised a few years back to usher in a new era in the Golden State, like Ronald Reagan before him, he was out of the limelight, strangely muted. These are difficult days for Arnold Schwarzenegger, and for a guy who has lived his life in the limelight, from his championship body building days immortalized in the documentary Pumping Iron, to his Hollywood career, built on indomitable action roles like The Terminator and Conan the Barbarian. [Clips from Schwarzenegger’s movies.] SCHWARZENEGGER: You see capital gains taxes going up. MORAN: The real world of politics has not been easy for California’s Governor, and for all his relentless self-confidence, he knows it. You’ve become a very unpopular governor. SCHWARZENEGGER: You know something, it’s perfectly fine. I understand the mood. I don’t blame the people for being upset about what’s going on. MORAN: What’s going on in California is a colossal grinding fiscal and political crisis with no end in sight. A $19 billion deficit in the state’s budget. A political system in such deep partisan gridlock it makes Washington look almost functional. It’s all a recipe for deep voter disgust. And a lot of that anger is aimed right at Schwarzenegger, who has seen his approval rating collapse to 23 percent, with seven in ten saying they disapprove with the way he’s done his job. But he is determined to keep pushing. We caught up with Schwarzenegger last week aboard the USS Midway Museum in San Diego, where he was unveiling Operation Welcome Home. It’s an ambitious effort to help returning veterans in the state. SCHWARZENEGGER: We want them to move smoothly from the battlefront to the home front. MORAN: The goal? Streamline the sometimes confusing process of coming home. SCHWARZENEGGER: We are saying to the veterans, you don’t have to run around anymore. You don’t have to get the runaround. No, you just go to one place, you call and we will pay attention. MORAN: It’s the kind of program tailor made for Schwarzenegger right now. It’s got bipartisan support. It doesn’t cost much. It’s doable. Because the last thing Schwarzenegger wants to talk about, even think about now, is the end of his career as governor. And this is really a major initiative of what are your last months in office, yeah? SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, it doesn’t matter if it is my last months in office, which it’s not. It’s my last year in office. But you know, this is irrelevant. I mean we continue on until the last. We sprint to the finish line. MORAN: Schwarzenegger, though, is sprinting on his own, a lonely figure on the state’s political landscape, and in the national GOP. When you look at the way the Republican Party is going, here in California and around the country, rise of the tea party, candidates like Rand Paul, do you think there’s still room in the Republican Party for someone like you? Or are you being squeezed out? SCHWARZENEGGER: I don’t feel like I’m getting squeezed out. I feel like I need reforms. It’s not the Republican Party. It’s not the Democratic Party. It’s the system that is wrong. What we want to do is create a system where you get rewarded for compromise, rather than get punished for compromise and rewarded for getting stuck in the ideological corners. CAMPAIGN AD: After Arnold, don’t we deserve a Republican? MORAN: Schwarzenegger was hammered this primary season by Republicans running away from him and Democrats trashing him. But, Arnold Schwarzenegger is far from the only incumbent politician getting trashed these days. [Video of tea partiers.] As President Obama struggles with a stumbling economic recovery and an environmental disaster in the gulf, Arnold sounds like he’s got some sympathy for him. As a governor, how do you rate President Obama and his administration’s response to the oil spill in the gulf? SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, I mean, I think that he’s doing everything that he can. And everything that he’s doing to his knowledge. There is no one in the political arena that is an expert it in, so we all rely on experts to tell us, you know, what is the thing to do. MORAN: As the oil continues to gush into the waters of the gulf, Schwarzenegger is blunt about the blame. SCHWARZENEGGER: I think one should not lose sight of one thing. Why do we have this problem? The problem is because we failed as a country to force the oil companies to have a safety device, which, European countries have. What’s the safety feature? What device do you have? Nothing, because they lobbied and Congress voted against it. MORAN: There are people who say that because of the scale of this catastrophe, BP should, essentially, be put out of business. SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, you know, that’s all easier said than done. You can’t go just now and say this is the worst company, let’s put them out of business when the fact is that 95 percent of our, you know, energy comes from fossil fuels. I mean it’s, I think, crazy talk. MORAN: He sounds pragmatic, though many of his reform efforts have failed . But yesterday, primary day, a triumph. A Schwarzenegger-backed ballot measure that would do away with party-controlled primaries in favor of open primaries, passed handily. SCHWARZENEGGER: You will see extraordinary change in a direction that California will be going and the kind of decisions that will be made here. MORAN: And then there are programs like Operation Welcome home, something that can get done for returning soldiers like Lance Yonker. LANCE YONKER (RETURNING SOLDER): Plastic surgeon put this ear back on and put my head together with 70 staples. And, you know, I had to learn how to walk again and do all that, and, you know, I’ve seen the worst of it, and Operation Welcome Home and everything that’s going on here has really helped me. MORAN: So, as the race to succeed him revs up, Arnold Schwarzenegger is looking to make a mark where he can. And given the state’s deep and intractable problems, a question, did California terminate the governator? The old body building competitor just won’t have it. SCHWARZENEGGER: You never have the surrender kind of attitude. I remember Munich, trying to break a record, I couldn’t. It was 500 pounds on the bench press. And I tried it many times after that, but the 11th time, I did it. So, people fail in sports, people fail all the time in many other things. That doesn’t mean that you give up. It means that you continue on and you keep saying, “I’ll be back.” That is the important thing. MORAN: He’ll be back. And Schwarzenegger told me he won’t think about what he’ll do next until the day he leaves office.

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ABC’s Terry Moran Frets that ‘Republican Reformist’ Schwarzenegger Is Being ‘Squeezed Out’ of GOP