ABOUT THIS BLOG

The Daily Nightly began on May 31, 2005. As Brian wrote in his first post it aims to provide a narrative of the broadcast day and a window into the editorial process at NBC Nightly News. Brian weighs in every weekday and NBC News correspondents and producers post regularly.

Brian Williams became the seventh anchor and managing editor in the history of NBC Nightly News on December 2, 2004. Read his full biography.



August 2008 - Posts

Last minute preparations

Posted: Sunday, August 31, 2008 3:50 PM by Ian Sager
Filed Under:

By Lester Holt, NBC News anchor

I am blogging via BlackBerry from New Orleans as I wait to do an interview with Secretary of Homeland Secretary Michael Chertoff. He's been making the rounds here, viewing hurricane preparations and meeting with officials.

The city would be eerie right now if it weren't in the midst of a flurry of activity. A growing "breeze" serves as a gentle reminder we are all fighting the clock. Stores along the normally busy Canal Street are all shuttered, and in many cases boarded up. Evacuees, first responders and journalists will have to identify and secure safe haven much sooner than we expected. Gustav is moving faster than earlier projections.

I'm at the bus depot, where people are still boarding buses out of town. Mayor Nagin has made it clear that anyone who chooses to stay behind does so at their own risk. But it's anyone's guess how many people will decide to ride it out. There is no public shelter of last resort. This time the Superdome is locked.

The flurry of last minute preps is a reminder that all responders — government, state, local and federal — are being measured against the experience of Hurricane Katrina 3 years ago. No one wants to fail this test.

That's all for now, I'll see you later, live from New Orleans on NBC Nightly News.

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Against the current

Posted: Sunday, August 31, 2008 1:03 AM by Petra Cahill

By Janet Shamlian, NBC News correspondent

I had the eastbound lanes of Interstate 10 to myself as I drove from Houston to Port Arthur and into the projected path of Hurricane Gustav.  It was the oncoming lanes, those headed west and away from the storm,  that were running bumper-to-bumper for at least 60 miles. Horse trailers and boats were part of the mix on the slow-moving roadway, so were cars and trucks, overloaded with families and concern.

Forget about gas, at least at those stations right along the interstate, unless you're content to idle in lines running about 10 cars per pump.  I wasn't and now fear I'll be in trouble as my gas-guzzling SUV, which could double as my hotel room for the next few nights, churns toward empty.  

CONTINUED >>

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Deja vu

Posted: Saturday, August 30, 2008 4:46 PM by Ian Sager

By Lester Holt, NBC News anchor

It is easy to recall where I was and what I was doing 3 years ago today. Sadly, I may be doing it again in just a few days.

My first stop after riding out Hurricane Katrina at the state command post in Baton Rouge, Louisiana was Gulfport, Mississippi, where it seemed nothing could top the devastation I witnessed. We soon learned the levees had broken in New Orleans, and our attention quickly shifted there, to a horror beyond imagination.

After tonight's broadcast I plan to make my way to New Orleans which is bracing for its first hurricane since Katrina. At this writing, Gustav is on a direct course to southern Louisiana and its powerful northeast quadrant is expected to hit New Orleans late Monday. As you will see on our broadcast tonight, local and federal officials are working from a much different disaster play book than the one they used three years ago. The buses are moving evacuees out now, and there is no talk of "shelters of last resort." The Superdome is not an option this time, and everyone is being ordered to leave. Whether the levees survive another major storm remains to be seen, but we all hope and pray tonight that this time, no one will be left behind. Authorities know they will be under intense scrutiny, and we already have several correspondents in place to cover the evacuation and the aftermath.

The presidential candidates are both feeling the effects of a rapidly changing news cycle.  Barack Obama's Thursday night acceptance speech was quickly overshadowed the next day by John McCain's selection of Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate.  Now, that bit of major news has quickly been eclipsed by the approach of Hurricane Gustav. That said, we will have reports on both presidential tickets as they hit the trail just ahead of the Republican National Convention.

Thanks for checking in. We'll look for you later on NBC Nightly News.

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First impressions in New Orleans

Posted: Saturday, August 30, 2008 12:27 PM by Ian Sager
Filed Under:

Don Teague, NBC News Correspondent

They’re taking security seriously in New Orleans. I flew in this morning, and the first thing I noticed were massive amounts of police officers at the airport. Not just local, many wore federal uniforms — from Air Marshals to Homeland Security. It’s an impressive show of force, and not just at the airport. 

On the drive into the city, I saw local police agencies out in force, and once in the downtown area, National Guard soldiers were everywhere. Considering the lack of real security during the height of the Katrina chaos, it seems officials are hoping the situation here will remain under control.

 

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About last night

Posted: Friday, August 29, 2008 4:18 PM by Sam Singal

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

It's now clear the television audience was sizable last night. It was quite an event we witnessed, and afterward we flew home overnight -- basically a laundry and re-fueling stop -- and then it's off to St. Paul after one broadcast in New York. We'll be in Minnesota until next Thursday night, when we leave for Los Angeles for the Stand Up To Cancer live special. With 67 days to go until we pick a new President, it's going to be like this for a while.

It got even more interesting today with Sen. McCain's pick of Gov. Sarah Palin... nicely setting up the excitement over the gathering in St. Paul.

So please join us from New York tonight, and then we'll see you from another great American City.

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Anatomy of a rumor

Posted: Thursday, August 28, 2008 4:10 PM by Sam Singal

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

We are at the cathedral of the Denver Broncos -- Invesco Field -- which for tonight only is a Democratic cathedral. 

When we arrived here in Denver days ago, the rumor was a "music legend" was going to perform prior to Obama's speech tonight. That quickly morphed into "Bruce Springsteen is playing." I guess people figured: Springsteen's a legend, and he has endorsed Obama. All true. Except: Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band never planned on playing here. They put out denials for days...then the rumor was repeated by Maureen Dowd in a New York Times column. Now we've gone to a new defcon level: they have ASKED US to tell everyone they're not coming here, and never planned to. Tonight this crowd (as was previously scheduled) will hear from Sheryl Crow and Stevie Wonder (remember that expression "music legend"?) and John Legend and others. Al Gore will speak, and then Senator Obama will give his acceptance speech -- and then we will briefly fly home, empty dirty laundry from our suitcases, replace it with clean stuff and fly to St. Paul for the GOP convention. All the while, we are watching Gustav and horrified at some of the projections for the path of the storm. I hope I don't need to repeat in this space our concern for, our interest in, or our love for New Orleans. They are on our minds as we head into the night.

Thanks for joining us again tonight. Please join us for our prime time special -- we feel confident we can offer the very best live coverage of Obama's speech.

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World's Olympic mom

Posted: Thursday, August 28, 2008 4:08 PM by Sam Singal

By Rehema Ellis, NBC News correspondent

Just when you thought you knew everything there was to love about Debbie Phelps, the world's Olympic Mom, there's more.

As the principal of a Baltimore middle school she's not just devoted to encouraging 607 students to high academic achievement, she's also created a place of learning that's comfortable and safe.

It all began to unfold three years ago when Baltimore's public schools superintendent gave her the "honor" she says, to open a brand new school called Windsor Mill Middle School and make it her own. Phelps gladly took on the challenge of not just bringing in teachers, staff and academic materials, she became the school's interior designer as well. Together with her staff, Phelps says, she chose everything from the tile on the floor, the color of the walls, even the frabic covering for the library benches and chairs.

"My heart and my handprints are all over this school", Phelps says.

The place has a professional, academic yet, homey feel to it. Why has she been so attentive to every detail? It's simple, Phelps says. " The kids spend six-and-a-half hours in the school house [five days a week] and a lot of them want to spend more time. It's a safe place for them and they love being here".

This is what every American school house should look like. It's not just clean, it's sparkling with huge windows letting in lots of light. And there are posters, paintings and quotes of inspiration all over the place. Walking around the building I kept thinking how any parent, any where, would be proud to have their child studying at Windsor Mill Middle School. And parents say they're also proud that Debbie Phelps is the principal. They're confident some of her gold medal parenting skills will rub off on their kids.

For her part, at the start of a new school year, Phelps says she's just determined to help school kids the way she helped her son, Michael become a gold medal swimmer.

"I just want to instill in (these kids) the values that were instilled in me as a young kid growing up with my mom and dad and siblings. I'm just very, very adamant about helping students to do their very best".

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Our interview

Posted: Wednesday, August 27, 2008 4:09 PM by Sam Singal
Filed Under:

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

We are just back from an interesting (exclusive) conversation with Michelle Obama -- having traveled with her husband, the candidate, it was interesting just now to sit and talk with her.  We are writing up the portion of it we will air tonight -- and thanks to some help from the Secret Service -- while we are still stressed for time, we were able to cut through some of the Denver bottlenecks to get back to our workspace.  We'll see you from here again tonight -- and don't forget about our special prime time coverage (speeches by Biden and President Clinton) tonight at 10 ET, 7 PT.

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Fallen but not forgotten: 'They're at risk as well'

Posted: Wednesday, August 27, 2008 3:03 PM by Daily Nightly Contributor
Filed Under:

By John Rutherford, Producer, NBC News, Washington

The deaths of 10 French soldiers last week in Afghanistan is a reminder that Americans aren't the only ones fighting and dying in that increasingly violent war.

Our allies from 22 other nations have suffered 24 of the 42 casualties so far this month and 364 of the 944 casualties since the war began in 2001.

"Everyone's got a chance to get attacked," MSNBC military analyst Jack Jacobs said, "and everyone's got a chance to attack the bad guys."

Generally speaking, Col. Jacobs said, the allied troops aren't as good militarily as the Americans, but they're nevertheless pulling their weight.

"The other countries do want to help," he said in a recent interview. "I mean, after all, they're at risk as well from the Taliban and al Qaeda."

Col. Jacobs expects the U.S. will soon begin pulling troops out of Iraq and into Afghanistan, but he doesn't anticipate a similar buildup of allied forces.

"I'd be terribly surprised if there'll be a substantial increase from any of the allied countries," he said. "Our allies' armies are very small and are not rich with counterinsurgency capability. The preponderance of forces will come from the United States."

I asked a soldier receiving a Purple Heart for wounds suffered in Iraq if he believes it's a good time to begin transferring U.S. troops from Iraq to Afghanistan.

CONTINUED >>

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Editor's note

Posted: Tuesday, August 26, 2008 6:24 PM by Daily Nightly Editor

Editor's note: Brian Williams will not be blogging today, due to time constraints with the Democratic National Convention. Please check back for a new post soon.

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Denver cops and protesters clash

Posted: Tuesday, August 26, 2008 1:32 PM by Daily Nightly Editor

By Mike Taibbi, NBC News correspondent

 

Mtaibbi

If you're on the protesters/security beat in Denver, as producer Mario Garcia and I have been, the question now is: “What's next?”

 

In the days and weeks before we arrived all the research we could gather about the city's law enforcement readiness amid the prospect of between 25- and 50,000 demonstrators...those were the predicted numbers on the websites of several major protest groups who'd been in contact with the Denver Police Department about their plans...suggested our beat could lead to a storyline that might impact the news generated by the Democratic Convention itself.

 

Then, on Sunday, there were around a thousand protestors in the first big march on the Pepsi Center. On Monday, around half that number walked along the crowded 16th street mall and then assembled for a “justice rally” in front of Denver's federal courthouse. And last night, perhaps 200 or 300 were involved in the first real “confrontation” with police.

CONTINUED >>

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Denver diarist

Posted: Monday, August 25, 2008 6:20 PM by Daily Nightly Editor
Filed Under:

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

 

NAMING RIGHTS...OR WRONGS?

 

In recent years, American cities strapped for cash have been auctioning off the naming rights to "civic" auditoriums and arenas.

 

Everyone can name an example, from the Staples Center to...the Pepsi Center. While these venues used to carry whatever name the various municipalities assigned them (Yankee Stadium, Madison Square Garden, Dodger Stadium, Three Rivers, etc.), these days they amount to massive advertisements.

 

Thus, at the Democratic National Convention for the next three nights, you'll hear countless on-air types saying, "Welcome back to the Pepsi Center in Denver..." which in advertising value -- through sheer, mind-numbing repetition -- will far exceed whatever Pepsi paid the City of Denver (or the local governing authority) to slap its name on the place.

CONTINUED >>

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Time flies...

Posted: Sunday, August 24, 2008 5:08 PM by Ian Sager
Filed Under:

By Lester Holt, NBC News anchor

For so many months, like the people of Beijing, I was focused on August 8, 2008. One of the things about my job that I look forward to the most is covering the Olympics. These were the fourth Olympic Games I have reported for NBC, and they have been everything I expected, and then some. 

Beijing is an amazing place, and there has been no shortage of rich, exciting and colorful stories to tell. That said, as I approach my final Weekend Nightly News broadcast here, I must admit my focus the last few days has been on August 26, 2008. This is the day I board a plane back to the United States. It's been just about a month since I arrived, and it's time to go home. 

In a few hours, Americans will witness a spectacular closing ceremony. Then, the Games that have brought so many millions of us together, will be over. Those of us working the Olympics have enjoyed talking to friends and family at home, and hearing how American audiences have united around coverage of the Beijing olympics. But we have all reached a point that conversations in the hotel lounge now revolve around "what's the first thing you're going to do when you get home?"  I've got a pretty long list, but I'm fairly certain it will involve Mexican food, preceded by sleep.

We'll have full coverage from Beijing, on this, the final day of competition and the closing ceremony. Brian Williams will join me from Denver to head up our coverage of this week's Democratic convention.

I hope you'll tune in. In the meantime, thanks for checking in.

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If it's Saturday...

Posted: Saturday, August 23, 2008 7:16 PM by Ian Sager
Filed Under:

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

...It must be Denver.  Just because we haven't been on enough airplanes lately, last night, Andrea Mitchell and I flew overnight to Denver. Andrea had been the first to report, on last night's broadcast, that barring an emergency or last-minute change: it would be Biden. By the time we were wheels-down in Denver, we had confirmation.

We both hit the ground and went right to work. I went to our local NBC Station, KUSA, and she went to the convention venue (the venerable "Pepsi Center") where we reported for Weekend TODAY. 

 We are in position in front of the Convention Site for Nightly News. From here on in—for the next week—it’s all about powering through. Thanks for tuning in, Lester Holt will join us by remote for the Beijing anchor leg, and we'll all be back on the air in the same places tomorrow night.

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Critical mass

Posted: Friday, August 22, 2008 5:04 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under:

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

It was bound to happen -- the stars have aligned, I've run out of sleep (and waking hours) and have been overrun with work and phone calls related to Denver, St. Paul and Los Angeles at the end of it all -- for our "Stand Up To Cancer" special.

With it all coming to a head and no way out except to dig in, I'll have to beg off any more extensive a post than this.

Back to work -- and we hope you can join us for tonight's broadcast. Thanks for watching throughout our travels...we will see you from Denver.

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Back home

Posted: Thursday, August 21, 2008 4:07 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under:

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

China was fascinating, and the Games were fantastic -- but nothing beats coming home to the United States.

I said this a few days ago and I'll say it again, because it happened again: while we're tough on the airline industry these days, our experience on United Airlines en route to China and en route home was enough to restore one's faith in the commercial airline business. The usual caveats apply: United was the official carrier of NBC folks for these games, and yes, there was a clear effort to take good care of us. But last night on our last leg home from Chicago (where we cleared customs from Beijing), I've never seen flight attendants work harder to treat all passengers with the same respect and level of service. The same could be said for both of our China flights.

And when we got to O'Hare, we met the incredible ground supervisor Joe Sterkowicz, who made sure all the bags got to where they were supposed to go, and gave us his personal guarantee. He's a great Chicago character. He loves his great city, United Airlines, and the Chicago Bears. He also seems to love what he does, and his customers, because the greeting we received from him, and the level of personal service, were the stuff of a United Airlines commercial. I say: Joe Sterkowicz for CEO.

Everyone we met at the airport mentioned Chicago's Olympic bid, and how badly they want the Games. I'm pulling for them -- what a spectacular event that would be. We were in Chicago just long enough to watch a little local news on our station WMAQ, so I could see all my anchor buddies on the air. Sadly, we also saw the first video of the Spanair crash as well.

Sadly as well, on the broadcast tonight we will remember Ed "Too Tall" Freeman, a Medal of Honor recipient from the battle of the Ia Drang Valley in Vietnam, whose death leaves us with just 101 recipients still living. Ed was a classic character -- a chopper pilot in Vietnam who knew no fear -- and so many men are alive today because of him. Pilots will appreciate these numbers: Ed had over 18,000 hours in choppers (1,000 of those just in Vietnam) and over 8,000 in fixed wing. Veterans will understand these numbers: two years in the Navy, 23 years in the Army, three Distinguished Flying Crosses, one Bronze Star, one Purple Heart, and the Medal of Honor. Ed was 80 years old.

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Measles alarm

Posted: Thursday, August 21, 2008 2:28 PM by Barbara Raab

By Robert Bazell, NBC News Chief science correspondent

I remember vividly when I had the measles.  It was the sickest I had ever been in my childhood. I shivered constantly from the fever and just a small amount of light brought intense pain to my eyes.

 

Of course I was not alone. 

 

Before measles vaccination became available in the 1960s, three to four million Americans, mostly children, got infected every year. In the United States every year, 48,000 had to be hospitalized from the disease, 400 to 500 died and another thousand developed chronic disability from a brain infection that can accompany measles.  I was among the lucky ones. 

Everyone my age has similar memories of many childhood diseases and therefore there was never any question most of us would vaccinate our children –- even though there was always a miniscule risk of side effects.

 

But now the situation is changing.  A tiny percentage of the population has always held genuine religious beliefs about vaccination, but that number seldom affects public health.

CONTINUED >>

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NBA granted license for Iranian basketball player

Posted: Thursday, August 21, 2008 12:38 PM by Victor Limjoco

EDITOR'S NOTE: This is an update from a previous post, "Trading with the enemy"

By Robert Windrem, Investigative Producer/Special Projects

The Office of Foreign Assets Control on Wednesday granted the NBA a license that will permit its teams to negotiate with Hamed Ehadadi, the center on the Iranian Olympic Team. Yahoo! Sports reported that the league has sent out an email to all NBA teams clearing the way for the Olympics leading rebounder—a 7’2” giant—to negotiate with any of them.

However, the league warned teams that they will have to seek league approval for any deal with Ehadadi or another Iranian player attracting NBA attention, guard Mohammadsamad Nik Khahbahrami. The league general counsel explained that transactions involving Iranian nationals need to be constructed in such a way that they don’t violate the US sanctions laws.

In an interview with the Tehran Times Tuesday, Ehadadi said, "I will undoubtedly join Memphis Grizzlies by the end of next week. I met Memphis' officials yesterday to discuss joining the team… I received many offers from European teams but just playing in the NBA is my dream. Hopefully, I can join Memphis as soon as possible without any problem."

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Wednesday from Beijing

Posted: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 4:20 PM by Barbara Raab

By Ann Curry, NBC News Anchor

Yours truly is sitting in as Brian heads home from Beijing tonight and the Nightly News team is preparing a report on today's breaking news, a major Spanish airline plane crash in Madrid.

With some 150 people killed, the cause is under intense scrutiny. There are survivors; what might they tell us? Tom Costello will have perspective.

Also tonight, Tom Brokaw on an increasing concern for America: the gap between science education in the U.S. and China; Chuck Todd will unveil some telling findings in the new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll numbers on the presidential race; and Kevin Tibbles reports on why the U.S. women's volleyball team is being loudly cheered by China. Here's a hint: you may want to remember the name Lang Ping.

Rushing now at 4 a.m. here to help prepare the broadcast. See you then.

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Fallen but not forgotten: 'I can't say enough'

Posted: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 3:14 PM by Daily Nightly Contributor
Filed Under:

By John Rutherford, Producer, NBC News, Washington

Growing up in New Jersey, Joe Valencio always held out hope that his father, missing in action in the Korean War, was still alive somewhere in Asia.

"Especially when you're a kid, there's all kinds of conjecture," Joe, now 60, said in an interview. "The Russians came forward and said there were POWs from the Korean War in Russia. He could also have been in China or maybe living somewhere in Korea, for all I knew. Those were the thoughts of a 12 year old."

By the time Joe was in his 20s, he had pretty much given up hope.

"I felt he was not coming back, and I hoped he wasn't in some camp somewhere or something like that," Joe said.

Joe's uncertainty over his father's fate ended in March when the Army notified him that the remains of Army Master Sgt. Cirildo Valencio had been recovered in North Korea and identified by the Joint POW/MIA Accounting Command's Central Identification Laboratory in Hawaii.

"Scientists used mitochondrial DNA and dental comparisons in the identification of the remains," the Pentagon said in a news release. CONTINUED >>

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A note from Bob Costas

Posted: Wednesday, August 20, 2008 6:04 AM by Sam Singal

By Bob Costas, NBC Sports

A few days ago in Beijing, Brian Williams and I had separate interviews with Michael Phelps.  Just prior to those interviews, I had been told that the previous Friday night in Jacksonville, Bruce Springsteen had informed his audience that Phelps had won his seventh gold medal and that he then dedicated “Born in the USA” to Michael.

I had every reason to believe this information was accurate, and its source was reliable.  In fact, I had intended to use it in my own interview with Phelps, but when time didn’t allow for it, I passed the story on to Brian, who did use it.  As you may have seen, Phelps lit up at the story, which rang true for the additional reason that it’s the sort of thing Bruce might very well have done.  Except that in this case, he didn’t.  I had been misinformed.  Still, the blame rests with me.  So, I just wanted to set the record straight – and apologize to my friend Brian Williams, one of the best newsmen and biggest Springsteen fans I know. 

(Now if The Boss could just cover our butts by giving Mr. Phelps a shout-out on Thursday night in Nashville, or Saturday night in my hometown of St. Louis – a show I’d definitely be at were I not in Beijing – I think I’d feel a lot better.)

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Denver looming

Posted: Tuesday, August 19, 2008 5:12 PM by Barbara Raab

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

It's a little tough to concentrate on our immediate environment here in Beijing, when our attention has been shifted ahead to Denver, and the Democratic National Convention -- which is right before the Republican National Convention in St. Paul.

Years like this come along every so often, and at this network, the imperfect storm of the Olympic Games and the political calendar conspire to keep us on the road almost constantly during the month of August. It just might have been the subject of an email to my wife last night.

As our trip here winds down, we have what I hope will be an interesting segment tonight: a trip down one of the thousands of Hutongs here in Beijing: the narrow, tiny alleys that are like veins of commerce and life, just off the major arteries of this fascinating City. It comes about three-quarters of the way through our broadcast and it's something to look for. CONTINUED >>

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Accident on the backstreets

Posted: Monday, August 18, 2008 4:22 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under: ,

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

So I'm sitting in the NBC Sports studio on the night when Michael Phelps won his eighth gold medal, and Bob Costas, who had just completed his own interview, tells me in front of a studio full of people that the one element he didn't have time to mention was the fact that Bruce Springsteen, at a concert in Jacksonville, had announced to the crowd that Phelps had just won his seventh gold medal. Bob went on to say that Bruce had dedicated "Born in the U.S.A." to Phelps.

Forced to ignore the journalist's creed, "If your Mother tells you she loves you, check it out," and one minute away from starting the interview, lights on, mics on, cameras rolling, I mentioned the Springsteen story to Phelps in a question that has already aired.

Then the posts started coming in to our blog. A quick check of Backstreets, the leading website of our community of E Street fans, indicates that those who wrote us are right: no such thing apparently happened. It's especially embarassing given my status as an E Street fan in good standing (I've attended an embarassing number of concerts on the current tour, foreign and domestic, including at the Meadowlands just before leaving on this trip), and I'm working on finding out how this happened.

Because it was so entirely plausible, (Bruce has been doing quite a number of dedications during this tour, and it sounded so much like something he would do), and because there was no time to research it to confirm it or knock it down, it made it on the air. And because I often rely on Backstreets for set lists and news and concert reviews (and they've never steered me wrong before), I'm left to apologize for our good-natured, well-intentioned flub. I feel badly for Michael and his Mom, who were pretty psyched to hear the news from the Springsteen tour!

On the pleasant surprise front: I stopped by Canada House here at the Games yesterday. Thankfully I was with two of our resident Canadians, Kevin Tibbles and Subrata De, so I was a "sponsored" guest -- and we had a great time. It's a fabulous facility (many nations have a "house" at the Olympics to sell merchandise and provide a haven for visitors from back home -- we visited USA House earlier this week) designed to give visiting Canadians a place to go and watch the coverage and cheer on their team, while enjoying a meal and a drink. Our hosts were some of the nicest, kindest people we've met on this trip. My thanks to them for their hospitality, and my family members will no doubt be thrilled with their forthcoming Canada t-shirts!

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Trading with the enemy

Posted: Monday, August 18, 2008 3:51 PM by Victor Limjoco

By Robert Windrem, Investigative Producer/Special Projects

Hamed Ehadadi is a 7’2” center for the Iranian Olympic basketball team. He has soft hands, a good attitude and a desire to be the first Iranian player in the NBA -- the Persian Yao Ming, so to speak.
 
“It is my dream to play in the NBA,” he’s told anyone who wants to listen.
 
As the Olympics’ leading rebounder, the 23-year-old has attracted the attention of “two or three teams” in the league, his coach says. He’s even reportedly spoken with Marc Iavaroni, the head coach of the Memphis Grizzlies.
 
But as tends to happen with any issue involving Iran and the United States, there’s a problem.
 
Image: Hamed EhadadiOn Friday, the NBA sent urgent letters to all 30 of its teams advising them that even talking to Ehadadi would be a violation of US sanctions against the Islamic Republic -- what used to be known as trading with the enemy.
 
“It has come to our attention that representatives of Hamed Ehadadi, an Iranian basketball player, may be contacting NBA teams to discuss the possibility of signing Mr. Ehadadi to an NBA player contract,” said the letter from the NBA’s general counsel. “We have been advised that a federal statue prohibits a person or organization in the United States from engaging in business dealings with Iranian nationals.”
 
So now, the NBA is forced to seek a license from the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control to do any business with Ehadadi. If a license is granted, any NBA team could negotiate with Ehadadi and his agent (yes, even Iranian ball players have agents). CONTINUED >>

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Walking gold

Posted: Sunday, August 17, 2008 4:29 PM by Ian Sager
Filed Under: ,

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

Watching and being around Michael Phelps last night reminded me of covering and interviewing presidents in one fundamental way: the aura of fame, importance and popularity – the palpable feeling of building anticipation — the people positioning themselves along the "route" he's expected to take, the blur of his arrival accompanied by flashes and shouts and the surge of the crowd, and then the total vacuum when he departs a given space...and it’s all over. Yesterday, there was indeed an aura around him, and an excitement – a feeling in the atmospheric bubble wherever he traveled – that was the unmistakable marker of the biggest global celebrity of the times. His entourage was actually rather small, comprised of coach, manager/PR guy, and his family. His height (6-foot-4 inches) helps call attention to his every move. His head — at times eerily backlit by the camera lights — lit his profile wherever he travelled.

His draw is undeniable.  We learned today that nearly 40 million people were watching NBC at 11pm last night.  In an on-air chat with the anchor of WNBC in New York last night, I predicted that the evening might be "the first stay-at-home-and-watch-TV Saturday night in the modern era," and I might have been right.  NBC's broadcast average (over the whole evening) of 31.1 million viewers represented the best Saturday night viewership since the "Golden Girls" spinoff program "Empty Nest" debuted before 31.4 million viewers on Feb. 24, 1990. Michael Phelps was 4 years-old.

All he wanted after yesterday’s race was McDonalds.  Before our interview, a producer asked him for his order.  He initially wanted a cheeseburger, Big Mac and fries. Then I stepped in (having done the research) and told him that the double cheeseburgers here were good, better than in the States. I told him there was no mustard on them, and that the minced onion was kept to a minimum. I could see in his eyes that he realized he was in the company of a fellow aficionado.  He changed his order  – so  excited at the thought of McDonalds for the first time since arriving here in Beijing —  and the interview began.

Portions of our interview will air tonight, with more tomorrow night. We will post the entire thing on our Web site.  Pay special attention to the conversation about his iPod, and how happy and relaxed he is.  Right now, Michael Phelps has the world on a string and history hanging around his neck.

We hope to see you tonight from Beijing.

 

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Giant of the desert

Posted: Saturday, August 16, 2008 8:02 PM by Ian Sager

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

Leroy Sievers has died.  Casual television viewers will never know how many of the moments of our lives -- how many of the news events on this planet -- were brought into our homes by Leroy.  He was a veteran producer for ABC News -- and he was simply thrilling, bordering on intoxicating -- to be around.  At 6-foot-5 inches, he always seemed like a giant.  It was fitting, then, that he was also a giant of our industry, and of his craft.

NPR listeners know that Leroy chronicled his own battle with cancer, as he did on his blog, displaying an incredible selflessness and strength of character.  While others who were close, and dear friends are better equipped to talk about his life, I will always remember him from the invasion of Iraq.  I saw him in the desert in Kuwait -- he was the largest person on the battlefield, and he was a civilian, in cargo shorts and a T-shirt.  He was embedded with Ted Koppel and riding along with the Third Infantry Division.  I had gone to their outpost, near the border with Iraq, to visit our late colleague David Bloom, and to wish them all luck prior to the invasion.

Days later, having successfully made it to Baghdad, I saw Leroy at the airport. We had arrived in the dark of night and slept a few fitful hours on a cement floor, while the booms, pops and flashes of warfare went on outside our busted-out window.  I knew Leroy was running on less that we were, and yet he was like a good gunnery sergeant -- getting his team up and ready for action.

In his love of news, and his love of those in uniform, he yielded to no one. He was as brave facing death as the fighting men and women he revered.  While you can read more about his resume, his foray into the Ivy League, his CBS News pedigree, his belly laugh and his wife Laurie, a member of our NBC News family, our thoughts tonight are rightfully with all of those Leroy leaves behind.  He leaves us all better off for having known him, and having known true bravery in the name of Leroy Sievers.

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Non-Olympic events

Posted: Saturday, August 16, 2008 4:58 PM by Ian Sager

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

Your NBC team in Beijing paused long enough this evening (daytime U.S. time) to celebrate a round number landmark birthday for Al Roker.  The number is north of 40 and south of 60, but of course I'm not at liberty to disclose it. The party was at an undisclosed location in Beijing.  There were no injuries or arrests, which, in my book, is the definition of a successful gathering.

Back to business: On tonight's broadcast, we'll have more on that insane finish in the pool last night -- Rowdy Gaines (who will be with us tonight) says the Omega timing people actually think it’s possible it came down to the amount of pressure Phelps put on the touch-pad at the finish -- an incredible quirk of science and timing. We'll also preview tonight's event. We've got politics, a tropical storm, the conflict in Georgia, and more on how timing and computing...and the spectacular television pictures come to be.

 

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Insurrection in Syracuse

Posted: Friday, August 15, 2008 4:49 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under: ,

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

While I was working on the other side of the world, my wife and son were in upstate New York touring colleges. Their plans called for them to fly from Syracuse back to JFK on Jet Blue yesterday afternoon. Then weather moved into the New York area, forcing a "ground stop" -- a fancy term for "nobody in, nobody out." All three major New York-area airports were a disaster -- and so began an 8-hour odyssey for them in Syracuse.

The biggest problem wasn't the fact that they boarded their Jet Blue flight at least once before being told to get off the plane and go back to the terminal. The problem was: the television sets in the airport were tuned (more like hard-wired) to the CNN Airport Network. Nothing against my friends at CNN, mind you (I've spent many an hour in many a lounge watching the CNN Airport Network) but: the Olympics are on. Phelps was swimming. Women's Gymnastics. Costas. Rowdy. Bella. America.

My wife apparently appealed to the airport management (in the most polite way) and was turned down at every turn in her quest to have just one television set tuned to the Games. The only other television, in the airport bar, was apparently not up to the task. Telephone calls were made to city officials. The crowd of viewers who wanted to see the Olympics was peaceful and civil, but growing and insistent. There was no effort to light torches, pillage or scare the good townspeople of Syracuse -- but it was close. The answer to the telephone inquiries came back saying the "Syracuse Commissioner" (is that the same as "Theodoric of York" or the "Chancellor of the Exchequer?") had turned down the outlandish and highly unusual request to change the channel, saying the city had a binding contract with CNN. CONTINUED >>

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A generation finds its voice

Posted: Friday, August 15, 2008 12:58 PM by Barbara Raab

By Ian Williams, NBC News correspondent 

Ian Williams, CorrespondentMianzhu, Sichuan--I sat with Alex Qiang in a sunny square in his home town of Nanjing, a few days before the Olympics.

Wearing a cloth cap and ponytail, the twenty seven year old was cradling an iced coffee, and looked every bit a child of the new China.

His resume also looked the part, having studied urban planning in the Netherlands and worked in Hong Kong, with an apartment in the sought-after Mid-Levels area of Hong Kong Island.

But he told me he'd now quit the Hong Kong job, and had been visiting his old professors at the architecture department of Nanjing University to persuade them to get involved in re-building in the Sichuan earthquake zone, to which he was preparing to return.

"I am going to go back and see what else I can do to help. I'm keeping in touch with all the guys down there, all the volunteers," he told me.

Alex was one of any army of young volunteers who'd flocked to Sichuan soon after the May 12th quake struck, and he was part of a group I'd followed for Nightly News.

CONTINUED >>

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Plain sight

Posted: Thursday, August 14, 2008 4:51 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under: ,

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

For all the blessings we have to count (being here to witness these games, having occasional access to tickets and history-making feats of athleticism), the one thing we miss all too often is NBC primetime coverage. Due to logistics, electronics and timing, we often have to find out results and story lines from the folks back home.

Last night, I was fortunate enough to see the swimming events -- followed by a classic Beijing downpour that soaked us to the skin during a run of 200 yards. We had some ferocious thunderstorms last evening -- light rain during the middle-of-the-night walk to work -- but we're hoping for a good day ahead.

The often-mentioned air pollution has mostly manifested itself in a constant state of eye irritation, and the occasional rain does clean the air and increase visibility between showers.

On a one-to-one level, the Chinese people have been wonderful; kind and accomodating and hard-working. I do not know of a single negative encounter with a single member of our traveling party on this trip. Two of our staffers had an interesting outing to a local restaurant last night -- a menu featuring donkey meat (in a pot), braised bullfrog, hog hoof, and turtle. Our pals went with the Kung Pao chicken.

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Rise and shine

Posted: Wednesday, August 13, 2008 4:46 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under: ,

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

Our trip has become a merged version of "Lost In Translation" and "Groundhog Day."

We talked about it as we walked to work in the 2a.m. (local time) darkness today in a spitting rain.

We were all feeling pretty fortunate to be here last night, when the boss sent out an email inviting several of us to the swimming event. The ride over to swimming in the mini-van should probably be a television show of its own. Picture this: me, Matt Lauer, Meredith Vieira, Ann Curry, Al Roker -- all in one vehicle en route to the venue, and then at the venue. It was a blast, and it was truly an honor to be there for another piece of Olympic history, as Michael Phelps became the most highly-decorated athlete of all time.

I later went shopping with Al Roker -- which could easilly be the pilot for a 13-week sitcom.

We are working on several stories that I hope you will find interesting. We're starting the writing, and pushing through to airtime.

I just had a cup of newsroom coffee that brought back memories of the firehouse. I don't trust coffee I can't chew. Onward.

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Fallen but not forgotten: Identifying the missing

Posted: Wednesday, August 13, 2008 9:03 AM by Daily Nightly Contributor
Filed Under:

By John Rutherford, Producer, NBC News, Washington

Bart Young was only 8 years old when his father's reconnaissance plane was shot down over Laos in 1972.

"One day my mom called my two sisters and me in, sat us down on the bed and told us she had been notified that his plane had been shot down and he was missing in action," Bart, now 44, said in an interview.

U.S. Air Force Maj. Barclay Young's AC-130A Spectre gunship had been hit by a Soviet surface-to-air missile and crashed while on an armed reconnaissance mission over southern Laos on March 29, 1972. Rescue efforts were called off after several days because of heavy Communist activity in the area.

"Over the years I got letters in the mail all the time letting me know anytime the Air Force had reports from villagers or anything that pertained at all to the plane crash," Bart said.

But he was taken completely by surprise when the Air Force notified him in March that his father's remains had been recovered and identified.

"I had no expectation that anything like that was coming," he said. CONTINUED >>

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Love of the games

Posted: Tuesday, August 12, 2008 4:36 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under: ,

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

Watching interviews with the athletes during the Olympic coverage last night -- especially the swimmers -- I found them so incredibly impressive. While anyone willing to work that hard toward a single goal is to be admired, I found them all especially gracious, incredibly thankful and emotional. They truly carried themselves in keeping with the spirit of these Games, and represented the best of the Olympic ideal. It hasn't always been the case. It seems to be the norm at these Games so far.

It turns out the Forbidden City isn't at all. We had a great (but hot) walk through the entire distance of it yesterday.

We've run across a wonderful story that we will package together on videotape to show you: it's the story of a young Chinese college student who works in the NBC Olympic ticket office. It turns out she learned English in school by listening to tapes of NBC Nightly News. I went to go meet her two days ago, and she just could not be nicer. She's an accomplished musician who will soon be coming to the United States to attend college. She is from the earthquake zone, and nevertheless was thoughtful enough to bring me a gift from home. It was a wonderful kind of "reunion" which apparently, for her, matched a face with the voice. We can't wait to bring you her story.

Since I haven't done music in a while: the top songs on this trip (and since everyone in our open workspace is sadly forced to listen to my music over my iPod speakers) are, in order, "Dreamin' Of You" the new Dylan single; "Vul'indela" by the late great Brenda Fassie; "Ooh Ahh" by Grits; and a holdover fave from the Afghanistan trip, the fantastic "Buildings and Mountains" by Republic Tigers. I apologize to all Beijing-based co-workers who do not share my enthusiasm for these particular gems.

That's it from the night shift in China. We hope you can join us for tonight's broadcast.

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Calling Maui

Posted: Monday, August 11, 2008 8:38 PM by Daily Nightly Editor

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

So tonight from Tiananmen Square I opened the broadcast by saying, in part, "as far as we can tell and as far looking back this is the first live network evening newscast to originate from here since 1987, the last time NBC Nightly News broadcast from here.”

It was wrong. It wasn't the most momentous mistake we've ever made, but wrong is wrong. We were alerted to our error the moment we got off the air -- by a posting (relayed to us from New York) on a website that covers our industry, saying Dan Rather had broadcast live from the Square for a portion of the CBS Evening News on May 20 of 1989 -- right before their plug was pulled and they were forced to finish broadcasting from another nearby location. Tom Brokaw, here with us, remembered it that way too with the prompting that the posting provided.

I knew there was only one man to call to confirm, for good, whether or not we screwed up: Lane Venardos, a legendary producer, now retired and (here's a reason to hate an otherwise loveable man) living in Maui. Lane had a number of big jobs at CBS News, but was Executive Producer of the their special reports unit at the time of Tiananmen Square. Because I last worked at CBS before joining NBC, I've known Lane for years -- make that decades -- (his daughter Kelly is a Nightly News producer) and I worked with him in Berlin the night the wall fell, among other times and places. Full disclosure: he's one of the funniest people I've ever known, and I love the guy. Sometimes love helps bad news go down easier. Not today.

Lane answered his cellphone (for all I know, he was at the beach) and while I stood in Tiananmen Square, I asked him if the web report was true, meaning we'd been wrong. He confirmed that we had indeed screwed up. He joked that from his home in Hawaii, he had 5 hours to wait until he saw our mistake air -- and since that thought (a mistake being repeated as the time zones head west) was too much to bear, we did another live feed, correcting our error. My apologies to Dan and Lane (who got a hearty chuckle out of this -- he's also a veteran hearty chuckler) and to the members of my former team. My thanks to whoever posted the correction, calling us out on what we got wrong. My current team is awfully proud of what we pulled off tonight -- something of a technical marvel...even if my own memory is not!

Now if you'll excuse me, I'm off to see the Forbidden City.

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If it's nightime, it must be daytime

Posted: Monday, August 11, 2008 4:01 PM by Daily Nightly Editor

Most of us continue to operate (if not fully function) on a U.S. clock, 12 hours opposite of local time.  It means going down for the night at the height of the afternoon, and waking up in the middle of the night.  Luckily, I've done my share of shift work in my life (I think just about everyone has worked the night shift at one time or another) and I'm sustained by the hope that I won't suffer as badly from jet lag once I'm home.  You can't help but feel robbed, however, because of the daylight (and the sights that come with it) that you're not allowed to enjoy in this fascinating place.  Seeing my friend Matt Lauer last night (or was it this morning? It was morning somewhere...) I was reminded that the Today Show staff works a "traditional" work day here -- they prepare during daylight hours, then go on the air starting at 7pm local time each evening.

Today's post will be brief as I'm writing a rather long piece for tonight's broadcast and compiling tapes to go with it.  It’s about the "charm offensive" here in China to welcome the visiting guests.  The headline in tonight's broadcast is in large part the broadcast itself: this hasn't been done (a live network evening newscast) from Tiananmen Square since 1987, when Tom Brokaw anchored the last one.  He will be with us on the air from the Square tonight.  It is the largest open urban space of its kind in any city in the world, and it is nothing short of breathtaking.  As they say: you really feel like you're in China.  The same cannot be said of sitting in the hotel room, reading TIME magazine and watching CNBC on the hotel cable system.

How about that relay race last night?

We'll see you tonight.

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Congratulations, Mr. Phelps

Posted: Sunday, August 10, 2008 7:28 PM by Ian Sager
Filed Under: ,

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

I was the lucky recipient of a ticket to this weekend's swimming event, and so, with two American presidents present, I was able to watch Michael Phelps shatter the world record and win the gold medal. 

It was an absolute treat, and I felt so fortunate to be there.  We sat with some wonderful folks in the stands -- and had the pleasure of sitting two rows behind former Australian Prime Minister John Howard and his family -- who were joined by a rabid Australian cheering section. It's axiomatic at Olympic games: everyone loves the Australians... they are so much fun, so full of life, such great boosters for their team -- and they sing their anthem louder than those from any other nation. 

The Aussies had a great outing and may well have launched a new global star when Stephanie Rice won her 400M event and revealed her beautiful smile on the medal stand, later wrapping herself in the flag of her nation during the required victory lap of the venue.  Later (when the boss offered me a ticket) I was able to attend the U.S.-China basketball game, which truly had the air of a global event.  It's raining non-stop here, and we're hoping it will clear both the air over Beijing and the atmosphere -- perhaps clearing the way for blue skies.  During the hours when we're in the workspace, we're glued to television coverage of the war in Georgia. We're all horrified by the civilian loss of life and the rapid and violent escalation.  Right now I'm sewing a button onto a blazer, signaling the end of the glamorous portion of my day.  Yesterday, I was able to greatly improve life at the hotel room and at our workspace by scoring a pair of iPod speakers at the Apple Store in Beijing.  An experience in itself.  We're about to buckle down and get to the writing for tonight. 

An early reminder: Monday's broadcast will be a rare one: a remote from Tiananmen Square.  We're excited about bringing it to you, as we are tonight's broadcast.

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Under the flame

Posted: Saturday, August 09, 2008 4:00 PM by Ian Sager
Filed Under: ,

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

The flame in the cauldron snaps and dances in the nighttime air as it curls above the Bird's Nest stadium — visible, depending on air quality, for either a city block or several of them. The buzz surrounding Michael Phelps — deafening before the start of the games —has gotten even louder.  The murder of a visiting American is getting a lot of attention as well. The heat (combined with the humidity) is positively withering, but the teeming crowds here in Beijing are in fine spirits and there is a palpable wave of excitement as these games get underway. President Bush obviously had a grand old time for himself today.

In the meantime, the world has a new war.  A violent, dangerous, awful, and (so far) little war. The first pictures are both scary and devastating.  Soviet fighters and bombers releasing their loads, bombed-out buildings in small towns that look like Cherbourg in France during the height of World War II.  As with all the conflicts in that part of the world, this one is emotional and complicated, and could burst wide open with the tiniest spark.  We're putting together an extensive package of coverage tonight.

We'll also remember Bernie Mac.  As a fan of the "Oceans" films, I loved his work in Ocean's Eleven, Twelve and Thirteen.  He was a gifted entertainer and we'll miss him.

We'll look for you from Beijing tonight.

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Another opening

Posted: Friday, August 08, 2008 4:37 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under: ,

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

I was on standby at the Broadcast Center during the Opening Ceremonies (which U.S. audiences will see tonight on NBC) so while I could not attend, I watched it all.

There was an interesting juxtaposition when the coverage got underway this morning. We here are able to see a satellite feed of WNBC-TV programming in New York, where this morning on local news, just before the Opening Ceremonies, the lead story was about an overpass that was hit by a truck and collapsed onto the roadway on the Major Deegan Expressway back home in New York. Traffic during the morning commute was tied up for miles. The heavy construction effort to lift up the wreckage (say nothing of repair and replacement) hadn't yet begun. It looked like a collapse of the aging New York City infrastructure, and it was jarring to go from that image to this city's gleaming, high-tech public "coming out", the unveiling of Beijing for the world.

CONTINUED >>

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Celebrating the opening ceremony

Posted: Friday, August 08, 2008 4:20 PM by Daily Nightly Editor
Filed Under:

By Mara Schiavocampo, Nightly News digital correspondent

I can't tell you anything specific about the Olympic Opening Ceremony, because they haven't aired yet in the US. But I can tell you this: they're spectacular. This is my first Olympics, so one might assume that I'm just easy to please. But I overheard some of my veteran colleagues talking about how the ceremonies were among the best they've seen. It's really a fantastic show.

I watched it along with the locals here in Beijing, those who couldn't get into the stadium, but celebrated wildly nonetheless. The Olympic spirit really is alive and well here. People were in such a good mood all night, watching the ceremonies, smiling, drinking, laughing and taking pictures of fireworks with the enthusiasm of children. And there was lots of good-natured ribbing between people from different countries in the streets. So if you can catch the ceremonies tonight you definitely should. They might just put you in a festive mood.


video:In the streets of China, a celebration 

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Following The Lucky Number

Posted: Friday, August 08, 2008 1:48 PM by Garrett Haake
Filed Under:

By Ian Williams, NBC News Correspondent

Qian Li looked a little nervous as she walked arm in arm with her groom, passed a long row of fish tanks and into the packed restaurant. Her friends and family clapped and cheered, shouting encouragement and wishing them a life of love and happiness.

It was a few hours before the opening of the Olympic games, in the southern suburbs of Beijing, and the smiles on their faces suggested the happy couple was pretty confident of good fortune. After all, it was the eighth of the eighth of the eighth, and they had deliberately chosen the date.

Banquet halls across Beijing have been booked for months; more than 16,000 couples in Beijing alone tied the knot Friday, some simply because it was the Olympics; most because the number eight is regarded as a lucky number, a number they associate with wealth and prosperity. And 08-08-08 comes around only once every hundred years.

"It's great to have all the numbers linked together," Qian Li told me. "We will have a happy life."

CONTINUED >>

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Long day's journey

Posted: Thursday, August 07, 2008 4:29 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under: ,

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

We're tough on the airlines around here, as you may know, but we had a rare treat en route here: a commercial airline experience that was absolutely excellent in every way. We flew from LaGuardia to Dulles to catch a direct United flight to Beijing, and I can't remember when I had such a pleasurable flight or met quite so many nice people.

Beginning with the United ground staff at Dulles, and continuing on board with the best bunch of veteran flight attendants I've met in years, it started off our trip to Beijing in spectacular fashion.

The airport here in Beijing is a sight to behold, as is much of downtown Beijing. It hasn't been that long since Nixon's visit to this country, and I remember so well being glued to the coverage of the American President's trip--to Peking. So many things were changing, and there was so much we didn't know then.

Today, it is oppressively hot, and all of our people on the ground say the air quality is worse today than at any other time recently. You can feel it on your skin, you can feel it in your eyes. Our workspace is across from the "bird's nest" stadium, which all but dissapears into--the air. CONTINUED >>

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The Salim Hamdan verdict

Posted: Thursday, August 07, 2008 4:26 PM by Daily Nightly Editor

By Jim Miklaszewski, NBC News Pentagon correspondent

This week's conviction of Salim Hamdan and relatively minor charges  and  the light sentence he got from the military jury first appeared to be a huge setback for the Bush administration's military tribunals. But administration and Pentagon officials are quietly celebrating the results as if it were some stay of execution for the military tribunal process.

Hamdan, who insists he was only Osama Bin Laden's driver, was captured in the opening days of the war in Afghanstan with two shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles in his car. After wringing all the information they could get from Hamdan on al Qaeda and Bin Laden through coercive interrogations, the military shipped him off to Guatnanamo Bay. And for the first time in nearly 7 years in U.S. captivity, things appeared to be turning his way.

In the first U.S. war crimes trial since World War II, the 6-member military jury convicted Hamdan on five counts of providing "material support for terrorism," but rejected the prosecution's attempts to tie him directly to the 9/11 attacks on the U.S. Hamdan was found not guilty on two counts of conspiracy with al Qaeda to launch terrorist attacks. But it got even better.

During the sentencing hearing, the tribunal judge, Navy Captain Keith J. Allred refused prosecutor's attempts to introduce the 9/11 attacks as a factor in sentencing. Capt. Allred also called Hamdan a "small player" and ruled that Hamdan would be sentenced on only one of the five counts on which he was convicted, because he said they were pretty much the same charge, which he characterized as "driving Mr. Bin Laden around Afghanistan."

Although Hamdan faced a possible life sentence, the military jury gave him only five-and-a-half years. Since Capt. Allred had already given Hamdan credit for 61 months of time already served in captivity, he will serve only 5 months of the sentence.

Does that mean that at the end of his sentence Hamdan will be given a new suit and a free ticket home? Not exactly. The U.S. will still hold Hamdan as an "enemy combatant," and it will then be up to a Pentagon review board to determine if Hamdan is no longer a threat and can be freed. According to one Pentagon official, "He (Hamdan) won't be going anywhere anytime soon."

What was the White House reaction to all this? "We're pleased that Salim Hamdan received a fair trial" according to a White House statement. But administration critics ask "What fair trial?"

Despite the outcome in Hamdan's case, legal critics and human rights advocates still argue the Pentagon's military tribunal system is fatally flawed and stacks the deck against defendants by denying them many of their basic legal rights. In Hamdan's case for example, defense attorneys weren't permitted to see the stacks of prosecution evidence against their client until the night before trial, because it was classified. In some cases a defendant may never see all the government's evidence against him.

Bush administration and Pentagon officials are unfazed. After all, they got a guilty verdict, and a seemingly, exceedingly fair trial. But that's not all. This week's results appear to throw the courtroom doors wide open for a series of military tribunals against al Qaeda terrorists, much bigger than Hamdan.That includes the self confessed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheik Mohammad and others charged with conspiracy and murder in connection with the terrorist attacks on the U.S.   Those who lost loved ones on 9/11 have to be thinking, "It's about time."

In fact, Military prosecutors are pushing for their trials to begin within a month. Defense attorneys say they've never gone to a capital murder trial on such short notice, and accuse the administration of "rushing to judgement" to give President Bush a "9/11 conviction before he leaves office."

It's difficult to imagine that the administration and Pentagon could have scripted the outcome of the Hamdan trial any better to their apparent advantage. According to one Pentagon official, "We certainly didn't plan it that way, but we'll take it."

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Journey to Beijing

Posted: Thursday, August 07, 2008 10:53 AM by Daily Nightly Editor
Filed Under:

By Mara Schiavocampo, Nightly News digital correspondent

Wednesday morning I boarded a flight to Beijing for the Olympic Games. The plane was full of others heading to China for the same reason; passengers included athletes, family members and journalists. People were excited, as though the flight was headed to a big party (which in a lot of ways, it was). The flight attendants waved American flags and led the plane in a round of applause for the athletes. My seat mate, a first time Track & Field Olympian told me about how going to the Olympics was always a dream, but one she never thought would come true. The Olympic spirit was alive and well on that flight.

While on board I thought about all of the other planes, coming from other countries, full of people from other nations just as excited about the possibilities in front of them. The opening ceremonies will be held Friday, and then the competitions start, with dreams fulfilled and crushed. But right now, this city - and the world - are living high on anticipation, just like my fellow passengers on the flight to Beijing.

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A special summer camp

Posted: Wednesday, August 06, 2008 8:49 PM by Sam Singal

By Tiki Barber, NBC News correspondent

Imagine being told by your peers that you are crazy because you’ve fallen on the ground and gone into an uncontrollable epileptic seizure that you don’t remember. 

Confusion, embarrassment, shame, self-consciousness, and isolation are just a few of the feelings that kids with epilepsy experience on a daily basis.

Thank goodness there are people in the world like Sandy Weinstein, and her all- volunteer staff of counselors, doctors and nurses. They know that all kids need a place where they can feel “normal”. 

At Camp Great Rock, for one week each summer, children that suffer from epilepsy don’t have to feel a stigma.

As Sandy puts it: "They're the insiders. Those without epilepsy are the outsiders."

As Sandy's husband, Steve, a neurologist and chief M.D. for Camp Great Rock puts it: Kids who suffer from epilepsy are just like any other kids; the only difference is that once in a while their brains “short-circuit.”

The doctors and counselors engage the kids in frank discussions during support group time about epilepsy.  There is no sugar-coating here.

And it's important to note: when you’re having a seizure, you don’t exactly “feel” it. 

And for many of these kids-- it’s the first time they witness a seizure because they can't see their own.

Dr. Steve uses seizures as “teachable moments” so that the kids develop an understanding of their epilepsy.

With understanding comes an end to the confusion, and embarrassment, and shame, and self-consciousness, and most importantly, that sense of being alone. 

And that’s what makes this camp different from the 25 others across the U.S. that serve kids with this condition.

Sandy keeps track of the kids who attend her camps and found that there was concrete improvement in their adaptive coping skills.  What does that mean, exactly?  It means that when one kid asks another why her eyes are fluttering, she says without hesitation:  “…they are part of my seizures.”  She has taken control of her condition. That is powerful.

There are no excuses at Camp Great Rock.

Camp Great Rock was an amazing place for me to visit, partly because I have the opportunity to tell this amazing story but also because of my personal connection with this seizure disorder.  My twin brother and I suffered from febrile seizures when we were younger. 
CONTINUED >>

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Holding down the fort

Posted: Wednesday, August 06, 2008 4:18 PM by Barbara Raab

By Amy Robach, NBC News Anchor
 

What a week of firsts!  I am excited and honored to be working with such an amazing group of people here at NBC.
As Brian makes his way to Beijing tonight, with their help I am holding down the fort here in New York for the evening, my first stint anchoring weekday Nightly News.  

Tomorrow night, Brian will be back broadcasting live from China, and I will soon be following him overseas, covering my first Olympics. 
 
Tonight we'll have the latest on the unprecedented security in and around Beijing as the official start to the Olympics is just two days away. 

We'll also have the new developments in the Anthrax investigation. As I write this, the Justice Department is laying out its case against the main suspect.

We hope you'll join us this evening, thanks for being with us tonight.

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Fallen: Medal of Honor recipient

Posted: Wednesday, August 06, 2008 2:34 PM by Daily Nightly Contributor
Filed Under:

By John Rutherford, Producer, NBC News, Washington

Alton Knappenberger, a "one-man army" who was awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroics during World War II, was buried last Thursday at Arlington National Cemetery.

Knappenberger died June 9 at the age of 84 in Pottstown, Pa. He had suffered five heart attacks over the past 30 years.

Army Pfc. Knappenberger was only 19 when he received the military's highest honor for single-handedly holding off a German counterattack near Cisterna di Littoria, Italy, on Feb. 1, 1944.

"Under tank and artillery shellfire, with shells bursting within 15 yards of him, he held his precarious position and fired at all enemy infantrymen which he could locate," his Medal of Honor citation read.

When the smoke cleared, 60 Germans lay dead. Knappenberger's only injury was a blister on his heel.

"A one-man army, that's what you are," a general barked at him after the battle. "A blasted one-man army."

Knappenberger was a fearless fighter but an errant soldier. Accompanied by an escort, he was brought back to the States for a meeting at the Pentagon with the Army brass.

"I gave him the slip and took off," Knappenberger told the Allentown Morning Call in 2004. "I just wanted to go home."

He returned home to Pennsylvania and married his 16-year-old girlfriend. The next day he skipped a VFW parade in his honor, but the local VFW commander wasn't annoyed.

CONTINUED >>

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Almost off

Posted: Tuesday, August 05, 2008 5:06 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under:

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

I spent the day recovering from something of a train wreck of an outing last night -- I made a ton of mistakes during the broadcast (calling the Tropical Storm Eduardo and not Eduard, putting Basra 3 miles from Baghdad and not 300 -- and of course I KNEW BETTER than to make such sloppy errors) which I can only chalk up to a lack of concentration -- and way too much going on during the 23.5 hours when we're not actually on the air each day.

As a practical matter, while most of our broadcasts go smoothly, I hate the rocky ones. While we fixed all flubs for subsequent feeds, the first one always feels awful once it's out there beyond retrieval.

We're in the final hours before our departure for China, which means tonight I empty the suitcase I had packed for Iran, and Berlin before that.

Earlier today, Charlie Gibson and Katie Couric and I taped an appearance on Larry King Live for this evening. We had a great time and I recommend it -- it's all for a good cause: our combined efforts in fighting cancer -- the live 3-network special from Los Angeles on September 5th. It seems so far away now -- it will arrive, given our travel schedule in the interim, with a gallop.

Off to concentrate (for a change) on tonight's broadcast. Thank you for joining us.

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Prostate cancer debate

Posted: Tuesday, August 05, 2008 1:35 PM by Barbara Raab

By Robert Bazell, NBC News Chief science correspondent

Very few topics in medicine create more emotional debate and confusion than prostate cancer. 

The latest position statement from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force that men aged 75 and above need not be tested for the disease is the latest shot in an ongoing war among many factions who hold various positions on this disease. The task force, set up by Congress to try to set standards of care for American medicine, has said there is not enough evidence to say one way or another whether men under aged 75 should be tested.

 

Other organizations think that this position is outrageous and dangerous.  They point to an approximately one-third drop in the death rate from prostate cancer (adjusted for the aging population) over the past decade, and see this as a triumph of extensive testing and the treatment that often follows.

 

At its core, the arguments about prostate cancer stem from our ignorance of much about the biology of the disease.  Biopsies of men who died of other causes show that most men develop prostate cancer before they die and most of the time the cancer grows so slowly that it would never threaten a man’s life.  But there are a large minority of prostate cancers that grow rapidly, spread throughout the body, most often to the bones, and cause a painful death.

 

The argument about testing is that testing, starting with a blood test called PSA and continuing with a biopsy, often finds the non-life threatening cancer.  But men get treated anyway and often the treatments, be they surgery or radiation, often leave men impotent or incontinent or both.

 

What is needed are better methods of differentiating the cancer that is truly dangerous and needs to be treated, from the cancer that poses no risk. Such research is underway. Meanwhile, the National Institutes of Health has been running a study of 74,000 men since 1993, trying to determine whether screening saves lives. So far, it has not come to enough of a conclusion that the results have been released.

 

As with so many other aspects of this disease, men and their doctors must decide for themselves.

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Days away

Posted: Monday, August 04, 2008 3:42 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under:

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

I'm watching the incoming reports from China with the curiosity of an Olympic visitor...which makes sense, I guess. As I mentioned last week, there will be very few "normal" weeks over the next month or so, and this week is no exception: we leave in a few days to make Beijing our home for awhile, as the world's attention is focused on the games in China.

We've been sorting through the day's news -- from Morgan Freeman's accident (and we're all hoping and praying for his full recovery), to the discomfort and danger in Texas, to the sudden drop in the oil market this morning, to the new consumer spending number.

We'll have all of it for you tonight, as we begin another week. Thank you for being with us.

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Ready, set...

Posted: Sunday, August 03, 2008 4:16 PM by Sam Singal

By Lester Holt, NBC News anchor

Hello from Beijing, a city obviously anxious to "let the games begin."  There are few if any signs of last minute preparations. As one Beijing resident told me, the country is like someone who has packed for a big trip a month early, and is now impatiently waiting around and eager to get going.
 
Back at home the big stories we will be reporting on the newscast tonight include the blistering heat wave gripping parts of the country, and fascinating new information about the scientific smoking gun that investigators believed help cinch their case against the suspect in the 2001 anthrax attacks. 
 
Here in China, it is hard to believe it was less than 3 months ago that a catastrophic earthquake struck the Sichuan region killing nearly 70,000 people and leaving thousands still missing. Today the Olympic torch run passed through the quake zone on its way to the games in Beijing. On our program tonight correspondent Ian Williams returns to the hard hit city of Hanwang, where he saw first hand how the government is managing to re-located over 3,000,000 people who lost their homes in the quake.  
 
Thanks for clicking on. We'll look for you later on NBC Nightly News.

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Beijing first impressions

Posted: Saturday, August 02, 2008 4:34 PM by Daily Nightly Editor
Filed Under:

by Lester Holt, NBC News Anchor

Each day they trickle into the hotel lobby: The steady flow of NBC personnel just off their 12-13 hours flights from the states. To a person they are amazingly alert and refreshed-looking.  Adrenaline and the excitement of being in a new place will do that to you.  On Thursday I was one of those new arrivals, strolling into the hotel feeling pretty good. But three days into my nearly month-long assignment here I now understand those knowing smiles I got from those who have been here a while. It was that look that said, "Just wait kid."

The fact is, there is no getting around the body clock melt down that comes with a 12 hour time difference -- 15 for our west coast-based staffers.  I am nodding off at the most inopportune times, and prone to the "thousand yard stare." When I come on the air live from Beijing "tonight," the sun will have just come up here "this morning." That's Sunday morning. And "last night" I did the TODAY Show from here "this morning."  That would be Saturday morning.  In full disclosure, I write about this not only as a point of interest but also to keep it straight in my mind. 

More to the point, in my waking hours I have found Beijing to be simply remarkable.  The scale of everything here seems to have been super-sized.  The avenues and buildings are enormous. The Olympic venues are stunning in their design, and are particularly impressive at night when they are bathed in a changing pallet of colored lights.  Those of you who caught my TODAY broadcast got a sneak peak of at least one element of Friday's opening ceremony when fireworks erupted from the Olympic stadium behind me during a rehearsal. What you couldn't see were the thousands of Chinese families who crowded the nearby streets to watch.  The people here are very excited and clearly proud their city is hosting these games.  And I am equally excited to be here to witness this historic event.

I'll see you live from Beijing all this weekend on Nighty News.

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The week that was

Posted: Friday, August 01, 2008 4:10 PM by Barbara Raab
Filed Under:

By Brian Williams, Anchor and managing editor

Having started the week in Tehran, it seemed like an easy proposition to leave work last night, stop by the Daily Show to tape their broadcast for air last night, then get to Giants Stadium in time for the final concert of the Springsteen tour at the Meadowlands.

It was only because of an overturned propane tanker -- which clogged the New Jersey Turnpike and the Garden State Parkway -- that we were able to get to the concert before it started. That's because the 7:30 start time was pushed back to 9:15, to accomodate all of the folks who were struggling to get there. At one point, the parkway was stopped -- cold -- for 18 miles. So while we may be a little worse for wear today, we pulled it off.

Now if we can only pull off one more broadcast, we can pronounce the week complete and put another one in the books. Fair warning: the next few weeks will be frantic -- for us, at least -- but if we do our jobs right, not for our viewers.

We have Beijing, Minneapolis and Denver to get to, then as September arrives, so does the live cancer benefit in Los Angeles -- a cause we're all anxious to support with our attendance.

There will also be events that happen along the way, and we'll be as ready as we can be to pounce.

By this time next week, we'll be in China, covering a story that has become about so much more than the Olympic Games. As they say, the whole world will be watching--and we'll be in a position to see it up close.

Thanks for watching this past week, we hope you will join us tonight. Have a great weekend.

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