TDY DIRTY 07:00 Hour NY-TDY-20100401-0001 DIRTY Today Show

TDY DIRTY 07:00 Hour NY-TDY-20100401-0001 DIRTY Today Show

NBC ID: AR3EYOOZMU | Production Unit: Today Show | Media Type: Aired Show

Transcript

Event Location(s): United States | Description: 07:02:32 Parts Of New England Are Still Coping With What's Being Called The Worst Flooding In 200 Years Parts of New England are coping with what's being called the worst flooding in 200 years. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano plans to travel to hard hit Rhode Island tomorrow to assess the damage. The Weather Channel's Julie Martin reports live on-camera near police cordon near a flooded area in Coventry, Rhode Island and says there are closed roads, contaminated water, and compromised structures. Martin walks along the cordon toward a building that's feared will be damaged in the floodwater. Martin says transporation in Rhode Island is "an absolute nightmare" with parts of I-95 submerged in floodwater. EJ: 07:03:20 (:22) EXT DAY WARWICK, RHODE ISLAND MS: Aerial of the Warwick Mall surrounded by floodwater. MS: Cars in the mall's parking lot almost completely submerged in floodwater (roofs visible). MS: Floodwater rushes through bridge down street near "Entering Warwick" sign. MS: Truck drives down flooded street. MS: Flooded restaurant parking lot with cars in the lot seen. 07:04:19 Pope Benedict XVI Celebrates Holy Thursday Mass Today At The Vatican As A Spokesman Says The Pope Views The Pedophilia Scandal As A Test INT VATICAN CITY 2010-04-01 MS: Long shot of Pope Benedict XVI and other religious officials on stage during Holy Thursday Mass. MS: The Pope holds an object over his head. MS: The Pope delivers a sermon. Tamron Hall VO 07:04:28 The Obama Administration Sets Tough New Fuel Standards For Cars And Trucks In Order To Get Better MPG From Vehicles INT 2 MS: Couple look at a car in a dealership. EXT DAY MS: Vehicles on a dealership's lot. MS: Information sticker in vehicle's window. MS: Overhead shot of highway traffic. Tamron Hall VO 07:04:48 Today Is Census Day, The Day The Census Bureau Hopes Americans Will Mail Back Their Completed Forms INT MS: Census 2010 form. 2 MS: Couple fill out a Census form. STILL: President Barack Obama fills out a Census form in the Oval Office. Tamron Hall VO 07:05:00 For The Second Year In A Row First Lady Michelle Obama Planted A Vegetable Garden At The White House With Help From Local Elementary School Students EXT DAY WASHINGTON DC ON THE WHITE HOUSE LAWN MS: Panning shot of local elementary students planting a vegetable garden on the White House grounds as officials including Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius watch. MS: Various shots of First Lady Michelle Obama helping students plant a garden. Tamron Hall VO 07:05:16 A Quantas A380 Super Jumbo Jet, The Largest Passenger Jet In The World, Blows Two Tires While Landing In Sydney; No One Was Injured EXT NIGHT SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA AT SYDNEY AIRPORT MS: Video footage of a Quantas A380 super jumbo jet taxiing down a runway as sparks from two blown tires are GFX highlighted. MS: The plane landed on the runway as a fire engine rushes towards the plane. MS: Officials near an emergency vehicle on the runway. Tamron Hall VO 07:05:35 A Chinese Army Recruit's First Grenade Throw Was Almost His Last EXT DAY SHENZEN, CHINA (CCTV) 3 MS: Chinese soldiers including a recruit in a bunker as the recruit throws a grenade which bounces off the wall of the bunker and lands back in the bunker as the recruit's trainer pulls the recruit to safety before the grenade explodes (video shown multiple times). Tamron Hall VO 07:07:50 Today Exclusive: Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner Discusses The Economy Matt Lauer interviewed Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner yesterday in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania where Geithner was speaking about prospects in the hard-hit manufacturing sector. The interview began on a topic that is on a lot of Americans' minds - unemployment. INT PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA MS: In interview Lauer asks "Everybody wants to talk about jobs, and the numbers are coming out on Friday. Right now, 9.7 percent. That's where it stands. And it's been stubborn. Do you see any real sign that there's going to be progress in the unemployment number?" MS: Geithner replies "Well, I think the key thing that's gonna happen is the economy is gonna start creating jobs again. You're going to start to see businesses across the country start to add to payroll again. That's going to come. The economy's growing now. That's the first step. But with growth, more jobs will come. But the unemployment rate is still terribly high, and it's going to stay unacceptably high for a long period of time. It's going to take a long time to bring it down, just because of the damage caused by this recession." MS: Lauer asks "You took some heat on Capitol Hill recently. An Ohio Democratic Representative looked at you and said, 'I don't think you're talking enough about jobs. And that's what my people, my constituents want in my community.' When you say that the-- the economy's going to start to create jobs, why hasn't it created jobs to this point?" MS: Geithner replies "Just because-- you know, this was the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression. A huge amount of damage done to businesses, families across the country. And we're going to be living with that damage for some time. It's just going to take us some time to heal that damage. But look at what the President did. You know, he came in and did the largest, most for-- most forceful package of support for the economy we had considered doing in 50 years. And he moved very aggressively to fix what was broken." MS: Lauer says "But-- but as you know, I spoke to the President just a couple of days ago, and when you bring up the prospect of a jobless recovery, he does not discount it. He doesn't say no, it definitely won't happen. He's worried that some of these jobs that we've lost over the last couple years may never come back." MS: Geithner replies "Yeah, we're all very worried that it's going to take-- time. It's going to take-- time to bring back what we lost. And-- but again, that's why he's working so hard to make sure that Congress is providing additional support for job creation, more support for small business, more support for infrastructure, more support for cities and states across the country." MS: Lauer asks "Here's what you said to the New Yorker magazine. You said, quote, 'My basic view is that we did a pretty successful job of putting out a severe financial crisis and avoiding a Great Depression. We saved the economy, but we kind of lost the public doing it.' What do you mean you lost the public?" MS: Geithner replies "Because-- as the President said, and he's said this many times, he had to do-- we had to do some very unpopular things. People looked to what had happened. They saw people in the financial community having made terrible mistakes that caused millions of lost jobs, millions of lost homes. But to help them, to protect them from the damage, we had to come in and do things that were going to help those banks, help those companies. But if we hadn't done that, Matt, if we hadn't done it, you would've seen millions more jobs lost, and hundreds of thousands of more companies having to shut their doors. And that is the basic sense of unfairness, which is driving so much anger and frustration across the country. But again…" MS: Lauer interrupts and asks "And you understand that anger and frustration?" MS: Geithner replies "Absolutely." MS: Lauer asks "When someone's out there, and they haven't gotten the job that they lost two years ago, and-- and they get the feeling that business on Wall Street has returned to normal, and-- and the executives are getting big bonuses again and they still can't pay for their mortgage, or they're under water, they say, 'Where's the fairness in this?'" MS: Geithner replies "Exactly. And it's not-- it's not fair. It's deeply unfair, and they should be angry about it. But again, what was the choice the President had to make? He had to decide whether he was going to act to fix it, or stand back because it would be-- might be more popular not to have to do that kind of stuff, and that would've been calamitous for the American economy. Much, much worse than what we went through already." MS: Lauer says "So-- so you're saying the President made the right choices to stop the bleeding at the time. Now some are worried that the choice-- the right choices are not being made to prevent the problem from happening again. When they look at financial reform that's working through the Senate right now, they say, one of the major components that's missing in this, Secretary Geithner, is the prevention of this too-big-to-fail scenario." MS: Geithner replies "Well, that's not missing. That's at the center of the reform plan." MS: Lauer asks "But do you think it's going to have enough teeth? That it will absolutely prevent companies and banks from getting to the point where the government has to step in to bail them out?" MS: Geithner replies "The President's not going to sign a bill that doesn't have strong enough teeth. Again, the-- the key things financial reform has to do, it has to give consumers, families, and businesses basic protections against fraud and predation. People who want to buy a new home, send their kids to college, buy a car, borrow to finance health care expenditure, we provide basic protections for them so they don't get taken advantage of." MS: Lauer asks "Let me go back to Wall Street for a second, and these bonuses, which is such an emotional hot button issue for people around the country. Michael Lewis, the author said recently about the Wall Street bonuses. Quote, he called them, 'a very elegant form of theft.' Do you agree with that?" MS: Geithner replies "What happened in our country should never happen again. People were paid for taking enormous risks. If those risks turned out well, they made a lot of money. If they turned out that they lost the money, they were not exposed to loss. It was a crazy way to run a financial system. And it helped contribute to the kind of excess risk taking that you saw across-- across the country. And it's the government's job-- this is a job for government, to do a better job of constraining that kind of risk taking." MS: Lauer asks "And for somebody in Pittsburgh here who's struggling to make ends meet and-- and they find out that the banks can borrow money at zero percent, and then the bank turns around and charges them 26 percent on their credit card, they say, what's up with this?" MS: Geithner replies "I mean, this system was not good for consumers, for the average American, 'cause you saw so many of them-- got taken advantage of. But it wasn't good for businesses either. You know, the key test of the financial system is did we good-- do a good job of taking the savings of Americans and using those savings to finance growing companies. That's the key test. And this system was not good for business. Because it was subject to these big booms and busts. They took a bunch of resources and put them into real estate, rather into productive companies. And that's why reforms are so important." 07:13:48 A New "Rich List" Highlights The Select Few Who Made Billions On Wall Street Last Year While The Economy Struggled In 2009 while many Americans were pinching their wallets during a weakening economy, a few were virtually untouched, making billions of dollars and fighting their way to the top of "The Rich List." They are the whales of Wall Street: hedge fund managers who operate with few rules and handle investments for the super rich. The recession was over early for hedge fund managers, who had a record year. INT NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK MS: Overhead panning shot of the interior of the New York Stock Exchange. MS: Panning shot of brokers and traders on the stock exchange floor. MS: Overhead shot of brokers and traders gathered in a group on the stock exchange floor as in VO one yells out a stock price. EXT DAY MS: Inserts of people on line outside a Work One building and of a for sale sign on a home's lawn. MS: Crowd of people walk down a sidewalk. GFX: "AR" Magazine. GFX: "AR" Magazine article "The Rich List" by author Stephen Taub. GFX: The article with a drawing of a man, the article itself, and a chart. INT MS: NBC's Lisa Myers reports live on-camera. GFX SUPERS: "$25 billion" INT MS: In interview AR Magazine's Editor Michelle Celarier says "They saw that the government was not going to let most of these big banks fail and they went in and bought the stocks at very low levels and those stocks continued to go up all year long." STILL: Hedge fund chief David Tepper. GFX SUPER: "$4 billion" STILL: Tepper. INT MS: In interview (part VO) Celarier says "Tepper was the bravest of the hedge fund managers. He was willing to go in at the bottom and say I don't think Armageddon is around the corner." EXT DAY LIVINGSTON, NEW JERSEY MS: Panning shot of the grounds and exterior of Tepper's home. EXT DAY MS: Exterior of Tepper's office. INT MS: Celarier says "He likes to call himself a typical middle class guy that makes billions of dollars." STILL: Insert of hedge fund manager George Soros. GFX SUPER: "$3.3 billion" STILL: Insert of hedge fund manager James Simons. GFX SUPER: "$2.5 billion" STILL: Hedge fund manager John Paulson. GFX SUPER: "$2.3 billion" STILLS: Aerial and regular shots of Paulson's Hamptons, New York estate. GFX: Price tag with GFX super "$41 million" STILL: Hedge fund manager Steven Cohen. GFX SUPER: "$1.4 billion" INT MS: Celarier says (part VO) "He is the quintessential living large hedge fund manager with his mansion in Greenwich, his amazing art collection." STILLS: Exterior and aerials of Cohen's Greenwich, Connecticut mansion. GFX: Superimposed Greenwich Planning and Zoning Commission document. GFX: Jasper Johns "Flag" painting and superimposed insert still of Cohen. GFX: Superimposed price tag with GFX super "$110 million" INT MS: Panning shot of brokers and traders at computers in a stock trading office. EXT DAY NEW YORK CITY MS: Low shot of the exterior of the New York Stock Exchange. MS: Rack shot of "Wall St" street sign and nearby American flags. VO: Myers signs off from Washington DC. 07:16:45 Private Boy Scouts Of America Files On Thousands Of Child Molesters Are Released As Part Of A Lawsuit Just as the Catholic Church is struggling with allegations of priests molesting boys, the Boy Scouts of America is facing similar accusations. A lawsuit now underway in Portland Oregon, has made public some very private files the Boy Scouts of America have been keeping on thousands of alleged molesters -- and one former Boy Scout says, that's proof the organization could, and should, have done more to protect boys all across the country. INT PORTLAND, OREGON IN A COURTROOM MS: Judge John Wittmayer, witness, and others. MS: Witness on witness stand as in VO lawyer asks (supered) "What did you feel?" and the witness (known as Jack Doe number 4) replies "Weird." MS: Projection screen showing photos of Jack Doe number 4 as a Boy Scout alone and with others. MS: Jack Doe number 4 testifies (supered) "He grabbed my hand and slid it up his leg into his shorts." STILL: Black and white mug shot of Jack Doe number 4's former Scout leader Timur Dykes becomes color still. INT MS: In interview "Scouts Honor" author Patrick Boyle says "The Boy Scouts started realizing soon after they were formed in 1910 that they had a problem with guys getting into scouting that should not be working with kids." EXT DAY MS: Blurry shot of boys hiking in the woods. GFX: Boy Scouts logo. GFX: Boy Scouts documents. GFX SUPERS: "suspicion of sexual abuse, sexually molested by (name redacted) scouting jamboree, fondling him" INT MS: Boyle says "What they were hoping for is whatever everybody hoped for, especially in the 70s and 80s, which was to get the molester to go away and hope nobody talks about it." CLIPS: Black and white promotional Boy Scouts newsreel clips. INT MS: Sex abuse victims' advocate Paul Livingston (as a boy Livingston was molested by a Catholic priest) sits at his computer as shot pans to nearby books "Sex, Priests and Secret Codes," "Justice Denied," and "Betrayal" on the table. MS: In interview Livingston says "When you hide files and protect perpetrators, you're as guilty as the rest. It shouldn't be done. It shouldn't be a practice in any large corporation." INT PORTLAND MS: "Circuit Court" name on courtroom door. MS: In court Wittmayer, lawyers, and others. EXT DAY ATLANTA, GEORGIA MS: Exterior of the Boy Scouts' Atlanta area headquarters. MS: Low shot of US, Boy Scouts, and Cub Scouts flags flying on flagpoles. INT MS: Insert of Boy Scouts' Chief Executive Bob Mazzuca in a videotaped statement. MS: Mazzuca says (full screen) "I do want to assure you that the safety of our youth members is our highest priority." INT PORTLAND IN COURT MS: Projection screen showing Scout documents. MS: Lawyers near the projection screen. EXT DAY MS: "Boy Scouts Of America" regional headquarters exterior. CU: "Boy Scouts Of America" name badge. EXT DAY MS: Sepia-toned footage of Boy Scouts saluting as one lowers an American flag on a flagpole. VO: NBC's Lee Cowan signs off from Los Angeles, California. 07:19:03 The Medical Examiner Has Made The Autopsy Into The Recent Sea World Whale Attack Against Its Trainer Dawn Brancheau Public We now know more about how that Sea World whale in Orlando killed her trainer. The medical examiner has made the autopsy public. The autopsy confirms that it was an incredibly brutal attack that killed 40-year-old Dawn Brancheau...a combination of blunt force trauma and drowning. INT ORLANDO, FLORIDA AT SEA WORLD MS: Trainer Dawn Brancheau feeds a whale near another trainer (faces unseen). GFX: Brancheau's autopsy report zooms to highlighted "Drowning and traumatic injuries." GFX: Autopsy report listing injuries to Brancheau. STILL: Superimposed of Brancheau. GFX HEADER (OBSCURED BY TIME CODE) OF BRANCHEAU'S INJURIES GFX SUPERS: "Scalp peeled off, Left arm torn, Ribs broken" EXT DAY ORLANDO MS: Footage of Brancheau getting a trained Orca to spin in the water. INT MS: In interview Forensic Pathologist Medical Examiner Dr. Dan Spitz says "The whale essentially grabbed a hold of the hair and the scalp and just by the movement of the whale caused the skin to tear off from the underlying bone." MS: Spitz works at his computer. MS: Spitz. INT ORLANDO 2 MS: Footage of Brancheau moving to get a trained Orca to move in the same direction as another trainer watches and Brancheau rewards the whale with fish. INT MS: Spitz says (part VO about his findings from studying Brancheau's autopsy) "Had she been able to be pulled from the whale early on she did sustain severe injuries and even with fairly immediate medical intervention it would be difficult for her to survive." EXT DAY ORLANDO MS: Low shot of a Sea World observation tower. GFX: Superimposed Sea World flag. INT ORLANDO IN COURT 2010-03-24 MS: Brancheau's family members talk. MS: Brancheau's mother Marion Loverde cries while seated in spectator's section. MS: Judge Lawrence Kirkwood and others seen as lawyer (rear shot) stands at podium. MS: Kirkwood at the bench. MS: Loverde talks to family members. EXT DAY ORLANDO WS: Overhead shot of the stadium and tank. MS: Overhead shot of an Orca in a tank. INT MS: In interview Marine Biologist Philippe Cousteau says "They are trained by cues, by hand signals so it's possible that they misread a hand signal from the trainer." INT ORLANDO 2 MS: Brancheau feeds fish to a whale in a tank as another trainer watches. MS: Slow-motion footage of Brancheau in a tank with a whale. VO: NBC's Kerry Sanders signs off from Orlando. 07:23:26 Minnesota Twins' Denard Span's Foul Ball Hits His Mother In The Chest EXT DAY TAMPA, FLORIDA (ESPN) MS: During a Spring Training game between the New York Yankees and the Minnesota Twins, Twins' Denard Span hits a foul ball and runs after the catcher (to see if the person hit by the ball is ok). MS: People in the stands stand over woman (faces unseen) lying on the ground who was hit in the chest by the foul ball (the woman was Spann's mother Wanda Wilson) as Span leans over his mother. MS: Rear shot of Wilson being escorted out of the stadium. MS: Slow-motion of Span hitting the foul ball. MS: Span leans over his mother near others in the stands. 2 MS: Span stands with a teammate. ANN CURRY AND MATT LAUER VO'S 07:31:31 There Is New Information In A Massachusetts High School Bullying Case That Resulted In One Student's Suicide THERE IS NEW INFORMATION IN A MASSACHUSETTS BULLYING CASE THAT ALLEGEDLY CAUSED A TEENAGE GIRL, 15-YEAR OLD PHOEBE PRINCE, TO KILL HERSELF. NOW, PARENTS WANT TO KNOW WHAT THE SCHOOL KNEW AND WHEN. PROSECUTORS SAY THIS WAS BLATENT. THE BULLIES WERE HARASSING PHOEBE SO MUCH, SO OFTEN...IT WAS COMMON KNOWLEDGE IN SCHOOL...EVEN TO SCHOOL OFFICIALS. YES, 9 KIDS ARE NOW CHARGED, BUT IT RAISES AN INTERESTING QUESTION. IS THE SCHOOL RESPONSIBLE TOO? THIS MORNING, PARENTS HERE ARE DEMANDING ACTION AGAINST THE ADULTS, WHO THEY SAY, DID NOTHING TO HELP. NBC's Jeff Rossen reports live on-camera outside South Hadley High School in South Hadley, Massachusetts. EJ: 07:31:56 (2:43) INT SOUTH HADLEY AT A SCHOOL BOARD MEETING MS: Parent at microphone says "…Until somebody stands up and admits that there has been failure here, complete failure we have nowhere to go." MS: School Board members listen as applause is heard in VO. EXT DAY SOUTH HADLEY MS: Exterior of Phoebe's home. MS: South Hadley High School electronic message sign on school grounds near the parking lot pans to show cars parked in the lot and the exterior of the school. MS: Students walk out of and towards the school's entrance. STILL: Phoebe. INT SOUTH HADLEY MS: Various shots of the school's hallways. MS: In interview Phoebe's friend Sergio Loubriel says (about what the bullies did to Phoebe) "Called her names, followed her home, smart remarks, dirty looks," adding she was called "Slut and Irish whore." MS: "Welcome" sign hangs over a hallway in the high school as shot pans to photos on display. MS: School hallway with superimposed insert black and white stills of three of the nine bullying suspects. MS: Signs for "School Department," Superintendent's Office," and "Personnel" seen outside a doorway. MS: At a press conference District Attorney Elizabeth Scheibel says "Prior to Phoebe's death her mother spoke with at least 2 school staff members about the harassment that Phoebe has repeated to her." MS: In interview Prince family friend Darby O'Brien says "If there are charges against these kids there should be charges against those administrators. Because they knew what was going on and they didn't take action. They were in charge." EXT DAY SOUTH HADLEY CU: Panning shot of the high school's name sign. INT SOUTH HADLEY MS: Long shot of School Board officials at table on stage and rear shot of seated parents in audience at a meeting. MS: Parent speaks into microphone as other parents listen. EXT DAY SOUTH HADLEY MS: In interview South Hadley Parent Luke Gelinas says "They should resign or step aside. If they don't we will be asking for their contracts not to be renewed on May 1st." EXT NIGHT SOUTH HADLEY MS: Students hold lit candles at a candlelight vigil for Phoebe. STILL: The students at the candlelight vigil. STILL: Superimposed insert of Phoebe. EXT DAY SOUTH HADLEY MS: Flowers and stuffed animals left at the fence of Phoebe's home. STILL: Superimposed insert of Phoebe. INT SOUTH HADLEY MS: High school hallway. MS: Hands (faces unseen) type a text message. INT MS: Computer screen showing the "Facebook" website. EXT DAY SOUTH HADLEY MS: Overhead shot of students walking towards buses outside the high school. CLIPS: Insert clips from movie "Mean Girls" with actors including Lindsey Lohan. EXT DAY SOUTH HADLEY MS: Exterior of the high school. MS: Point of view shot of approaching the school's front doorway. EXT DAY SOUTH HADLEY MS: Slow-motion black and white rolling shot of driving past homes. MS: Point of view black and white shot of walking on sidewalk. INT SOUTH HADLEY MS: O'Brien says "And you got a car with a couple kids in it, chucks a drink out the window, calls her an Irish slut, an Irish whore, why don't you go kill yourself?, and she did." EXT DAY SOUTH HADLEY MS: Flowers left in memorial at Phoebe's home's fence pans to show the exterior of Phoebe's home. MS: Note "RIP Phoebe Prince (heart) Were (sic) sorry for everything you went through at school" CU: Flowers. STILL: CU black and white of a football player Phoebe dated (who is now charged with statutory rape). STILL: Insert of the football player. STILL: Insert black and white of another student (also charged with statutory rape). STILLS: Insert black and white of the girls who harassed Phoebe, known as the "Mean Girls." INT SOUTH HADLEY MS: Loubriel emotionally says "Even though she had such pain she would always tell people to keep their chin high and just keep on walking if they ever had problems. It just hurts." Rossen reports live on-camera (does no sign-off). 07:35:13 Exclusive: Mother Of A Bullied Daughter Who Committed Suicide Tina Meier, & Friend Of A Bullied Teen Who Committed Suicide, Sergio Loubriel, Discuss Bullying Tina Meier, whose daughter Megan committed suicide in 2006 after being bullied online, seen live in-studio. South Hadley High School freshman Sergio Loubriel, a friend of student Phoebe Prince who committed suicide after being targeted and bullied by a group known as the "Mean Girls," seen in live 2-way remote from outside the high school in South Hadley, Massachusetts. Meier says children are bullied daily at school, says adults and educators have to understand bullying needs appropriate actions, says kids are embarrassed to talk about being bullied, says bullying has increased with technology, says technology has made the bullying worse, says parents need to know the policies of their children's' schools about dealing with bullying, says open communication is essential with a child, and says if parents aren't satisfied with a school's response to bullying they need to take it to a higher level. Loubriel says he's devastated, and says Phoebe kept the bullying bottled up and didn't talk about it. STILL: Insert of Phoebe Prince. 07:44:28 Today's Money: Attorney Roni Deutch Discusses Tax Tips To Know With Tax Day Two Weeks Away GFX HEADER: "Tax Tip" GFX SUPERS: "Personal exemption for 2009: $3650, $2400 of unemployment compensation will not be taxed, Multigenerational households may be eligible for tax exemptions, Deductions reduce amount of income taxed, Credits are dollar-for-dollar reductions in tax bill, Don't miss American Opportunity Education Credit, Don't miss First-Time Homebuyer Credit" Book "Beating The IRS" by Tax Attorney Roni Deutch seen. In live in-studio interview Deutch says she's referring to saving money on taxes when she discusses beating the IRS, and explains the "Tax Tip" supers. 07:51:03 Lauer and Curry Test The World's First Breathable Food, Le Whif "Le Whif" boxes and containers seen live in-studio. Lauer and Curry describe "Le Whif." Curry tastes the chocolate "Le Whif" and the Espresso "Le Whif." Lauer describes the flavors and notes where to buy them. Outside Segments 07:00:46 (:08) Panning shot of the crowd. 07:23:16 (:04) The crowd cheers. 07:30:00 (:10) Low shot of skyscrapers and Studio 1A pans to the crowd. Panning shot of the crowd, some with signs, waving and cheering. Bill Karins Segs 07:40:25 (:16) GFX: Minneapolis, Minnesota skyline. GFX HEADER: "Snowless March" GFX SUPERS: "Last time this happened was in 1878, Normal March snowfall is 10.4", Least snowiest March 0.1" March 1981, Snowiest March 40.0" March 1951" Commercials 07:21:46 Pillsbury 07:22:01 Old El Paso 07:22:16 Pure insurance 07:24:01 The Home Depot 07:24:31 Burlington 07:25:01 Motrin PM 07:25:16 Post Honey Bunches Of Oats 07:25:31 movie "Alice In Wonderland" 07:26:03 Home Goods 07:41:31 Daisy sour cream 07:42:01 Post Honey Bunches Of Oats 07:42:17 Walmart 07:42:31 Aveeno 07:42:46 Pristiq 07:44:01 Crystal Light Pure Fitness 07:48:03 Macy's 07:48:33 McCormick Perfect Pinch 07:48:48 Campbell's soup 07:49:03 Kellogg's Rice Krispies 07:49:33 Maxwell House 07:49:48 Discover credit card 07:50:03 Toys R Us 07:50:33 Chevrolet Traverse 07:52:31 Lyrica 07:53:31 Folger's 07:54:01 Amazon Kindle 07:54:31 Neutrogena skin care 07:55:01 visitlasvegas.com 07:55:37 Ameribev.org

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